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Phillip_Rolfes
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I don’t believe the Armenian Orthodox are currently in communion with the Byzantine Orthodox since they are considered “non-Chalcedonian.” Nor were they in communion with them at the time of Florence. Not having been to an Armenian Catholic Church, I cannot comment on whether or not they use the filioque in the Creed. Byzantine Catholics (Melkites, Romanians, Ukrainians, Russians, Ruthenians, Italo-Byzantines, etc.) do not use the filioque. To my knowledge the Melkites never did, nor did the Russians. The Ukrainians and Ruthenians did for awhile, but have removed it from the Creed in the wake of Vatican II, per the Vatican’s instructions.The Council of Florence, dealing with the Armenians states
Other than the filioque issue, which has been more-or-less resolved, I see nothing in what you quoted that contradicts the Orthodox Faith.
Also it should be pointed out that these quotes are directed at the Armenians. What applies to one Eastern or Oriental Church does not necessarily apply to all as all have their own unique expression of the Faith. As our brother, Marduk, would quickly point out, Coptic theology is in many ways more similar to Latin/Roman theology than it is to Byzantine theology. The Melkite and Maronite Churches have their own unique approach based off of their Middle-Eastern and Syriac cultures. Likewise, the so-called “Thomas Christians” of India have their own approach to the Faith that is unique to Indian culture. Even within the Churches of the Byzantine tradition the Slavs (Russians, Ukrainians, Ruthenians) often have a different expression of their tradition than do the “Greeks” (i.e. Greeks, Melkites, Romanians, Italo-Byzantines, etc.). In short, what I’m saying is that the passages you quoted can be considered to apply only to the Armenians who, at that time, were seeking communion with Rome. At the Union of Brest, when the Ukrainians (Byzantine) sought communion with Rome, they were not required to deny anything that they had believed as Orthodox Christians, nor were they required to affirm anything other than Papal primacy, something that was already believe anyhow based off of the Canons of the Councils of Nicaea I and Constantinople I. When the Melkites re-established communion in 1724, they weren’t required to make any sort of offcial statement or declaration, they simply declared their (comm)union with Rome. Since that time they have been some of the most avid defenders of the Byzantine tradition within the Catholic Church, culminating especially in the declaration of the Melkite Synod of Bishops in 1994:
“I believe everything that Orthodoxy teaches.”
“I am in communion with the bishop of Rome as first among equals, according to the limits recognized in the First Millennium before the separation.”
Although Rome did speak out against Archbishop Elias Zoghby’s initiative of dual communion, it never spoke out against his above “Confession of Faith” that was subsequently adopted by the Melkite Synod of Bishops with overwhelming majority support (only two of the bishops did not sign the decree).