And how many times have you flip flopped between doctrines? Outwardly you don’t change but when you really assess deeply? You guys have changed many time. Once you believed in catholic roman primacy now you believe in first among equals novelty. You once acknowledged the filioque and at two reunion councils you acknowledged it, now you don’t.
The Russian church affirmed the immaculate conception of Mary explicitly for at least two centuries and held its a secure doctrine without any controversy. Today its heresy! At the council of Jerusalem you taught indulgences, purgatory and original sin all catholic style. Today you call these ideas heretical.
You haven’t changed in outward practice but have changed a lot in the essentials and substance of the faith. What you believe today, is not the faith of the ancient fathers of the east
You have challenged me, so i will have to be a bit more direct. xD
You taught indulgences, not the Orthodox. I believe you stopped with that practice. Orthodox Church always believed in primes inter pares, that is why the Church was ruled by 5 Patriarchates. Just look at Roman-Catholic Church today and you will realize there is only one Patriarch and few Eastern Catholic Patriarchs that are not even valued as cardinal. Oh i mentioned cardinals, there were no cardinals in the early Church. Oh i mentioned early Church? The Church in which Ecumenical Council was called by the emperor, not pope as it happened when Rome failed to excommunicate the Constantinople, Rome ended up as excommunicated one.
You tell us of some papal early suprimacy.
But let me tell you first interesting things from the Orthodox point of view.
First, we don’t even have clear historical evidence that saint Peter was first pope of Rome. The Church in Rome was organized by Peter and Paul together. On the other hand, we know that st Peter was the first bishop of Antioch, if i am not wrong.
"The blessed apostles having founded and established the church, entrusted the office of the episcopate to Linus. Paul speaks of this Linus in his Epistles to Timothy.
That is Linus is entrusted by the Apostles (plural). It is suggested that this evidence means that Linus was pope whilst Peter was still alive. Rome’s church could be said to be founded (or organised) on both Peter and Paul.
7 Ecumenical Councils deny papacy.
Ecumenical Councils were called by the Emperor, not by the pope. Popes were mostly not even present at the Holy Councils.
1st Ecumenical Council. Even that pope’s Council in 320 condemned Aries’s heresy, Ecumenical Council was needed in 325 again to condemned it. Also 4th canon of the 1st Ecumenical Council says that bishops are appointed locally, and this goes against Roman-Catholic canon law that elects pope world-wide and that says that pope can intervene against the election of local bishop in area anywhere.
2nd Ecumenical Council was presided by Patriarch Melitius of Antioch, who was not even in communion with Rome.
3rd Ecumenical Council summoned Nestorius to answer for his teaching, even though he was already condemned as heretic by Pope Celastine I. So the Church did not consider pope’s condemnation as definitive. In today’s Roman-Catholic Church, if pope someone condemned as heretic, that would be definitive, unlike in those time when Rome was in communion with the Orthodox Catholic Church.
4th Ecumenical Council was called, even against the expressed wish of the Pope of Rome. In today Roman-Catholic Church, so called Ecumenical Council could not be called against the expressed wish of the pope.
5th Ecumenical Council. Pope of Rome Vigalius defended the Three Chapters. Assembled bishops condemned Three Chapters (written by Theodore, Theodorit and Ibas), while pope Vigalius defended Three Chapters. Holy Council threatened to defrock Pope Vigalius. Then Pope Vigalius repented and blamed devil for his mistake. Also 5th Ecumenical Council was summoned without the assent of the Pope of Rome.
6th Ecumenical Council proclaimed Pope Honorius of Rome and Patriarch Sergius I of Constantinople heretics, and cast them out from the Church. In 11th Century, when Rome it-self removed itself from the Church, rejected Holy 6th ecumenical Council and proclaimed Pope Honorius not heretic.
The holy Council said: After we had reconsidered, according to our promise which we had made to your highness, the doctrinal letters of Sergius, at one time Patriarch of this royal God-protected city to Cyrus, who was the bishop of Phasis and to Honorius some time Pope of Old Rome, as well as the letter of the latter to the same Sergius, we find that these documents are quite foreign to the apostolic dogmas, to the declarations of the holy Councils, and to all the accepted Fathers, and that they follow the false teachings of the heretics; therefore we entirely reject them and execrate them as hurtful to the soul.
7th Ecumenical Council declared its adhesion to the anathema in it’s decree of faith. Thus an Ecumenical Council could rule on the faith of a Pope and expel him from the Church.
Council of Constantinople 880 condemned Filioque and Papacy. This Council was rejected officially in 11th century by Rome, because this Council disagreed with this new post-schism Rome.
The 14 Synods Rome claims are Ecumenical, which Rome held after breaking away from the Church were completely of new nature. They had no opposition to the Pope of Rome, and if i am not wrong, they were all called by Pope and they were all presided by Pope, which was not the case when Rome was part of the Orthodox Catholic Church, when Pope was mostly not present, nor Pope presided, some were even called against the expressed wish of the Pope. As i have listed it already.