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Isa_Almisry
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Isa Almisry;2770328:
Context, context, context.
More like “deny,deny,deny”.Was this the same Leo who got a decree from the Emperor Valtentian confirming Rome position on the basis of St. Peter’s primacy (and the Emperor’s credentials?).Then why did he request the decree? Also see your account below of the calling of the Council of Chalcedon.The popes never based their ecclesiastical primacy upon secular power.
And the Church ignored his protest of canon 28.Six centuries? See below.Canon 28 was struck from council records after the pope rejected it,and for six centuries it was not regarded by the Eastern churches or Eastern historians as part of the council.
In the end a council was convened no matter St. Flavian’s opinion you quote.Oh, did they? Who wrote this?It was Pope Leo who got the Emporers to call the Council of Chalcedon,after having been appealed to by Flavian and other bishops. And the Council of Chalcedom recognized Pope Leo as presiding over the council through his legates.
So I take it bishops don’t preside at Councils, as someone : whistle : said that they don’t participate in a council the way that bishops do, so if Chalcedon recognized them as presiding, well…The Council of Constantinople consisted mainly of local bishops. There was no participation from Western bishops. The presence of a few papal legates did not make the council ecumenical. Legates do not participate in a council the way that bishops do.
Rome, you claim, denied Constantinople’s second place, here affirmed. Rome also was otherwise ignored.And so he did:It was only the clergy of Constantinople that affirmed,against tradition,Constantinople’s second place. And they certainly did not ignore the pope – they begged the pope to agree with Canon 28.
The famous third canon declares that because Constantinople is New Rome the bishop of that city should have a pre-eminence of honour after the Bishop of Old Rome. Baronius wrongly maintained the non-authenticity of this canon, while some medieval Greeks maintained (an equally erroneous thesis) that it declared the bishop of the royal city in all things the equal of the pope. The purely human reason of Rome’s ancient authority, suggested by this canon, was never admitted by the Apostolic See, which always based its claim to supremacy on the succession of St. Peter. Nor did Rome easily acknowledge this unjustifiable reordering of rank among the ancient patriarchates of the East. It was rejected by the papal legates at Chalcedon. St. Leo the Great (Ep. cvi in P.L., LIV, 1003, 1005) declared that this canon has never been submitted to the Apostolic See and that it was a violation of the Nicene order. At the Eighth General Council in 869 the Roman legates (Mansi, XVI, 174) acknowledged Constantinople as second in patriarchal rank. In 1215, at the Fourth Lateran Council (op. cit., XXII, 991), this was formally admitted for the new Latin patriarch, and in 1439, at the Council of Florence, for the Greek patriarch (Hefele-Leclercq, Hist. des Conciles, II, 25-27). The Roman correctores of Gratian (1582), at dist. xxii, c. 3, insert the words: “canon hic ex iis est quos apostolica Romana sedes a principio et longo post tempore non recipit.”
newadvent.org/cathen/04308a.htm
And so it now stands, as Rome has spoken:bowdown2: