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IgnatianPhilo
Guest
We can point out our differences as is always pointed out but in the end it all comes down to whether the Pope is who he claims to be.
We can point out our differences as is always pointed out but in the end it all comes down to whether the Pope is who he claims to be.
Gabriel is right,As noted, not only does ecumenical mean universal but the fact that the Orthodox choose to limit themselves to 7 Ecumenical Councils merely defines the limitations of their own choosing which extend to Papal primacy and infallibility. Further regressions from doctrine are expressed in the Orthodox rejecting the dogma of the Immaculate Conception, and permitting divorce and remarriage.
As Dr Warren Carroll has pointed out in The Building of Christendom, 1987, (Vol. 2 of A History of Christendom), p 365, note 80: “There can be no reasonable doubt that St Athanasius as Patriarch of Alexandria and St John Chrysostom as Patriarch of Constantinople fully recognised and accepted Papal primacy (Chapters 1 & 3).”
Can you explain to me what this means?Second, the authority to change the Creed was agreed upon by all (including Rome) in the Second Ecumenical Council. It is not a notion out of thin air that the East believed, it is a canon set in stone by the entire Church.
The developments aren’t good. They are necessary, but not something to praise or be proud of. They were necessary to conquer errors that had infiltrated the Church, but in reality they don’t offer us anything new or explain anything. No one understands God better because of Nicaea and Constantinople. They just safe gaurd against particular errors, that had affected the Church. Is the Church better with the creed and definitions from the councils? No, it is the same. But definitions have a tendency to explain things that are unexplainable, and to concretize that which isn’t concrete. Everyone should be wary of new councils and developments and definitions of the faith. Sometimes we need them, but we shouldn’t be enthusiastic about them.So the entire church would have been better off had we simply been satisfied with the gospel revelations that God is Father, Son and Holy Spirit? All the subsequent talk whereby we ruled out false understandings of what that meant and defined the Trinity as being three “persons”, but one God was all just dangerous speculation that we should never have bothered with?
I don’t think you really think that. But surely you must admit that we’d not have ruled out false understandings of the Trinity had we not had those arguments, fights and battles against heretical understandings? Even the Arians believed in Father, Son and Holy Spirit in a sense. I doubt you’re suggesting that the church would have been better off leaving the issue vague to avoid the fighting.
So why apply that policy to OTHER issues of revelation? It seems like a break with our shared history. That’s what I don’t get about the EO approach to theology.
I wouldn’t listen to a word Abu says. He is a jerk who likes to fling insults at people. He doesn’t know anything about the subject, and has nothing positive to add.Why don’t you try reading the canons of your churches many councils rather than throwing insults (I’m assuming you were calling me selfish). Immaculate Conception has an athema attached to it. As does denying the infallibility of the Pope and his universal jurisdiction. Little things that have nothing to do with Christ.
I’m not even going to touch on your other accusation, out of respect for other posters here.
What about it that you don’t understand? I can’t think of a way how to explain it any other way.Can you explain to me what this means?
It means there is an actual canon that pronounces anathema on anyone who alters the Nicene Creed.Can you explain to me what this means?
It is an Eastern Orthodox misunderstanding of the Council ruling. The Oriental Orthodox added more to the Creed than the Catholic Filioque.Can you explain to me what this means?
That is an amazing article I’ve used it myself (every Catholic should read it in order to understand the filioque).Here, Augustine uses ‘begotten’ as a synonym for ‘spirates’ – a reference to the Spirit’s one spiration (from the Father). And this is what Augustine says just before the quote presented by Mr. Quattrone, thus establishing the context of what Augustine means when he says that the Spirit proceeds from both Father and Son “at the same time”. The reference is to the eternal, consubstantial communion between Father and Son (the context of a collective procession – “proienai”), not to the procession from the Father alone (“ekporeusis”) as the Spirit’s ultimate Cause or Source. Augustine’s statement that the Spirit “does not proceed from the Father into the Son” is clearly not a denial of “the Father giving the procession” but is intended to dispute the Arian error that the Son is merely a temporal recipient of the Spirit – the same error that the 11th Council of Toledo condemns above. For, when viewed in context, what Augustine is referring to is how the Spirit does not proceed from Father and Son in the sense that a child proceeds from a human father and mother. His full quote reads:
…the Holy Spirit is not said to be begotten, but rather to proceed; since if He, too, was called a Son, He would certainly be called the Son of both, which is most absurd, since no one is son of two, save of father and mother. But far be it from us to surmise any such thing as this between God the Father and God the Son. Because not even a son of men proceeds at the same time from both father and mother; but when he proceeds from the father into the mother, he does not at that time proceed from the mother; and when he proceeds from the mother into this present light, he does not at that time proceed from the father. But the Holy Spirit does not proceed from the Father into the Son, and from the Son proceed to sanctify the creature, but proceeds at once from both; although the Father has given this to the Son, that He should proceed, as from Himself, so also from Him. (On the Trinity, xv; 27)
Full article: catholic-legate.com/apologetics/thechurch/articles/filioque.aspx
Yes! It is the best and most detailed explanation of the Filioque I have ever read.That is an amazing article I’ve used it myself (every Catholic should read it in order to understand the filioque).