Pope Fiction

  • Thread starter Thread starter Algernon
  • Start date Start date
Status
Not open for further replies.
Your first quote from St. Augustine only states that disputations cause the Church to greater refine her teachings. I notice that St. Augustine refers to “heretics.” If the doctrines that the heretics denied were not taught in their essence at the time of their heresy (having been only taught as part of the Faith at the ecumenical councils, which provided their condemnation) then there could have been no condemnation of the beliefs of the heretics before the ecumenical councils, yet we see this repeatedly, in the case of Marcion (whom I mentioned earlier) and the arch-heresiarch, Arius. If the doctrine wasn’t known enough to be taught, no serious condemnation could have been provided. Rather, confusion and pleas for obedience for the sake of obedience would have been provided. You’ve yet to explain why the Church’s historical responses to heresy reflect a Church where doctrine is known and taught at all times instead of a Church gradually progressing to full awareness of her Faith.

And the second quote from St. Augustine reveals a further defense of the Orthodox position. Notice that St. Augustine says that the rebellion of heretics forces the Church to “defend” her teachings. Common sense dictates that only something that is known can be defended. I’m curious as to how this strengthens your case that the beliefs of the Fathers don’t have to be the beliefs of the present Church.

Your quote from St. Vincent of Lerins, which I briefly eluded to above, adds further precision to the Orthodox argument. As you observe, St. Vincent says that progress can occur, but no alteration of the faith can occur. Even the most casual observer of our discussion can see that this affirmation of no alteration to the faith reflects the position I’ve stated and defended, while your position stated so concisely a few posts back as saying, “Finally, it is erroneous to suggest that what is believed today must match exactly that which was believed by the fathers”, reveals a different position, as the process of current belief not approximating past belief involves, to some degree, an alteration of the ancient faith, even if only be addition of new beliefs. St. Vincent goes on to state the difference between “progress” and “alteration.” While this distinction stated alone would be ambiguous, the further clarifications of St. Vincent remove all possible doubt as to his meaning. Our saint goes on to say that man’s intelligence, wisdom and spiritual growth may increase, but that this progress only occurs in the same doctrine that retains its same meaning. I think it is evident that we are dealing here with a saint here who is unaware of the practice of finding new doctrines (even if new in a relative sense) in the deposit of Faith. If you were to argue that St. Vincent’s mention of the progress being “latent” in the Church is confirmation of your teaching of the development of doctrine (as opposed to only the form of doctrines), it is essential that you read this in light of the entire quote you posted, which clearly affirmed that progress is made within the same doctrine and meaning the faith has always possessed (thus causing the latent progress to refer to the exterior progression of the teaching not the essential belief, itself), which is another way of saying that what is believed today must match exactly what was believed by the Fathers and which you unfortunately denied.

I will close with another quote from St. Irenaeus, which provides even greater clarity to the Orthodox case:

Now all these [heretics] are of much later date than the bishops to whom the apostles committed the Churches; which fact I have in the third book taken all pains to demonstrate. It follows, then, as a matter of course, that these heretics aforementioned, since they are blind to the truth, and deviate from the
way, will walk in various roads; and therefore the footsteps of their doctrine are scattered here and there without agreement or connection. But the path of those belonging to the Church circumscribes the whole world, as possessing the sure tradition from the apostles, and gives unto us to see that the faith of all is one and the same, since all receive one and the same God the Father, and believe in the same dispensation regarding the incarnation of the Son of God, and are cognizant of the same gift of the Spirit, and are conversant with the same commandments, and preserve the same form of ecclesiastical constitution, and expect the same advent of the Lord, and await the same salvation of the complete man, that is, of the soul and body​
” – St. Irenaeus, Against Heresies, Book 5: Chapter 20, 1.

As you can see, the heretics in St. Irenaeus’ discourse are condemned primarily because they establish their teachings after that of the apostles, thus causing us to conclude that the apostles teaching was such that it was taught and passed on in such fashion as to perpetually enable the Church to determine heresy from truth based on their teaching. This is an affirmation that renders moot any affirmation that the apostles’ teaching and manner of doctrinal transmission left open the possibility of drawing from the deposit of Faith teachings, hitherto unknown at least in their fullness. In fact, if this were the manner of transmitting doctrine, the heretic would have to be treated with respect since he may be only a rather over-eager “developer of doctrine” – a position that stands condemned on its own inability to conform to the writings of the Holy Fathers, including the one above.

God bless,

Adam​
 
Oh, sorry that Schism, I thought you meant the East-West Schism. Yea, that was a problem yet it has been resolved. That problem was purely political by the way, nothing doctrinal.
You base all your hopes on submission to the pope.

And then a lifetime not knowing who the right one is, isn’t a problem.

Just tells me how unimportant recognizing the pope must be.
 
So three popes/supreme pontiffs doesn’t bother you? So much for the unity of St. Peter.
I already stated that I thought you were talking about the East/West Great Schism. I don’t see how this has anything to with this either.
No, just didn’t sink with that ship, but stayed the course.
I believe we are the Reactionaries, you started the issue.
You mean united to Rome, usually in the wake of a Crusade or state persecusion of the Orthodox. I’m not impressed.
Many are recent, some are not. I use this as an example to show how you can keep your traditions and return to the Faith of the Early Church.
 
Pope St. Leo I

“Our Lord Jesus Christ . . . established the worship belonging to the divine religion. . . . But the Lord desired that the sacrament of this gift should pertain to all the apostles in such a way that it might be found principally in the most blessed Peter, the highest of all the apostles. And he wanted his gifts to flow into the entire body from Peter himself, as if from the head, in such a way that anyone who had dared to separate himself from the solidarity of Peter would realize that he was himself no longer a sharer in the divine mystery. . . . [You, my brothers], must realize with us, of course, that the Apostolic See—out of reverence for it, I mean—has on countless occasions been reported to in consultation by bishops even of your own province [Vienne]. And through the appeal of various cases to this see, decisions already made have been either revoked or confirmed, as dictated by long-standing custom” (Letters 10:2–3 [A.D. 445])

I have a question. Do you Orthodox denounce St. Leo, because he was the Pope. Because I see my Church as more universal, because we except all Early Church Fathers. One cannot say they accept this statement, yet do not follow the Bishop of Rome.
Do you accept Pope Leo III, who forbade the filioque.

Or do you accept pope Leo IX, who inserted it?

We accept Pope St. Victor, although the “whole Church” rebuked him.

You all accept St. Gregory and St. Meletius, who produced the Creed while in schism/excommunication from Rome. We accept Pope St. Leo, fallible as he was.
 
You base all your hopes on submission to the pope.

And then a lifetime not knowing who the right one is, isn’t a problem.

Just tells me how unimportant recognizing the pope must be.
Do you even understand the issue? How could we prevent that? Do some research.
 
For starters, can you give a LITTLE context of St. Cyril’s quote?
I’d be interested as well.
In particular, what you have excerpted doesn’t say a thing about a charism passed from Peter to only his successors at Rome,
Session 3 of the Ecum Council of Ephesus has this:
Philip the Roman presbyter asserted:
“There is no doubt, and in fact it has been known in all ages that the holy and most blessed Peter, prince and head of the Apostles, pillar of the faith, and foundation of the Catholic Church, received the keys of the kingdom from our Lord Jesus Christ, the Saviour and Redeemer of the human race, and that to him was given the power of loosing and binding sins: who down even to to-day and forever both lives and judges in his successors. The holy and most blessed pope Coelestine according to due order is his successor and holds his place…”

Pope St. Cyril replied:
“The professions of…Philip the most religious presbyter of the Roman Church, stand manifest before the holy synod…let there be added to the already prepared acts the proceedings of yesterday and today, and let them be shewn to their holiness…”

The Ecumenical Council of the Catholic Church in the 5th century certainly had no problem with the claimed prerogatives of the bishop of Rome. And neither does the Catholic Church today.
important as St. Gregory writes to St. Cyril’s successor claiming that Rome, Alexandria and Antioch are one Petrine See.
…WITHOUT denying the headship of the bishopric of Rome, it must be added. The principle of a head bishop is clearly apostolic. It is only the Eastern Orthodox Church which seems to deny it, or at least lets so many of its members deny it. The Oriental Orthodox Church has no part in this Eastern Orthodox innovation.

Blessings,
Marduk
 
So you claim to have never followed the Bishop of Rome. I guess St. Peter, who Christ established as the leader of the Church was never your leader.
Actually he was our leader at Antioch, where his successor still presides, long before he set foot in Rome.
More like excommunicated your Church.
We keep getting conflicting accounts of this from the other side, that the pope had died, etc.

Yes, and therefore you have very few doctrines, and are not able to allow Christ to govern your Church.
May I ask what the Roman Church “invented”? I cannot think of anything.
Then you are not looking: infallibility, supreme pontiff, merits, indulgences, purgatory as a third place, immaculate conception,…
This is merely the typical Protestant response that the Church makes up things as it sees fit.
sorry, the rehearsed arguments against your protestant siblings won’t work against us.
We have already proved, although you will not accept it that a form of Papal Infallibility existed before 1054, so what are the doctrinal innovations? Do not say change in Liturgy, because Liturgy is not doctrine. Furthermore the Catholic currently has over 30 different Liturgies. Yours does too, (language matters).
As pointed out, as late as 1870 (yes, seventy) Latin catechism, with nihil obstant/imprematur, dismissed infallibility as a protestant slur.
 
Do you accept Pope Leo III, who forbade the filioque.
Yes, Pope St. Leo III. He forbade allowing the Filioque into the Creed, however he did believe in it. He just suggested it not put into the Creed. People did it against his will at the time.
Or do you accept pope Leo IX, who inserted it?
Yes we accept him.
We accept Pope St. Victor, although the “whole Church” rebuked him.
We accept him as well. I don’t see what your point is. If it’s an argument against Infallibility, then once again you don’t understand it. The Council of Ephesus III and the Council of Chalcedon IV did not forbid the Church to redefine the Creed in order to stop the spread of heresy. Show me where it does, it doesn’t. Furthermore it shows change of your Church that you accepted the Creed at the Council of Lyons and the Council of Florence II. 🤷
 
Look, it’s merely a cop-out to say that Matthew 28:16 does not support the Papacy. It’s just one of the many Biblical quotes that prove our point. Billions of people have come to this realization, including some of your Orthodox brethren, that have returned to the faith. None, of the Early Church Fathers explicitly stated this, however because they all knew what was true. I’m sure without a doubt that there is not one Church Father, who said that every single Bishop of the Pentarchy was absolutely equal. Exactly like that, taken in context. Finally to prove my point.

St. Ignatius of Antioch

“You [the church at Rome] have envied no one, but others you have taught. I desire only that what you have enjoined in your instructions may remain in force” (Letter to the Romans 3:1)
And Rome is the only Church whose bishop he does not address or mention. In fact, he doesn’t talk of the episcopacy at all alone in that letter.

Btw, no one claimed all the bishops were absolutely equal. Just ontologically.
 
Actually he was our leader at Antioch, where his successor still presides, long before he set foot in Rome.
His martyrdom in Rome shows the final expression of faith by St. Peter. Regardless, no Church Father gave Antioch the authority they gave to Rome, nor did the Antiochian Church ever claim to have that authority, it always gave it to Rome.
Then you are not looking: infallibility, supreme pontiff, merits, indulgences, purgatory as a third place, immaculate conception,…
Start another thread if you want to argue this. I think that Protestant forums may have some articles about this.
As pointed out, as late as 1870 (yes, seventy) Latin catechism, with nihil obstant/imprematur, dismissed infallibility as a protestant slur.
I don’t understand your point.
 
And Rome is the only Church whose bishop he does not address or mention. In fact, he doesn’t talk of the episcopacy at all alone in that letter.
A major Church without a bishop:eek: Are you claiming it did not have a bishop? Are you stating that all his statements in his other letters regarding the unity of the bishop and his Church somehow no longer applies to the See of Rome?:confused:

Your argument makes no sense in the CONTEXT of his letters.

Blessings,
Marduk
 
Origen doesn’t say that " those whose faith doesn’t match the faith of the fathers, perfectly" are in error. He says that that is believed which is not at variance with what has been handed down. In fact, he explicitly rejects your interpretation in the very next section of the work:

"It ought to be known, however, that the holy Apostles, in preaching the faith of Christ, treated with the utmost clarity of certain matters which they believed to be of absolute necessity to all believers, even to those who seemed somewhat dull in regard to the investigation of divine knowledge. Naturally, they left the grounds of their assertions to be investigated by those who would deserve the excellent gifts of the Spirit, and to those who would receive in a pre-eminent degree through the same Holy Spirit the gifts of language, of wisdom, and of knowledge. In other matters, indeed, they stated that certain things are so; but as to the how and wherefore of their being so, they were silent. They did this, indeed, so that such of their successors as were more studious and who would be lovers of wisdom might have a subject of exercise on which to display the fruit of their talents – those persons, I mean, who should prepare themselves to be fit and worthy for the recption of wisdom."

The contention that your making here is really that the deposit of faith was completely explicit by the death of the last Apostle, and that if it wasn’t explicitly professed then, it isn’t a part of the deposit. This simply cannot be sustained. It would rule out, for one, the entire practice of the interpretation of Scripture that was practiced by the fathers. It would present tremendous problems for fathers who introduced new interpretations of this or that Scripture, something that happened all the time.
Note:“Apostles” “absolute necessity” “utmost clarity” “all believers.”

Not deciding nearly two thousand years that the immaculate conception, papal infallibility and the Assumption must be believed on pain of hellfire.
 
Note:“Apostles” “absolute necessity” “utmost clarity” “all believers.”

Not deciding nearly two thousand years that the immaculate conception, papal infallibility and the Assumption must be believed on pain of hellfire.
To God, a thousand years is as one day. And we are taught by Scripture to put on the mind of Christ. No matter WHEN the Church declares the Truth as the viva voce of God, and for whatever reason or season the Holy Spirit has decided that the Truth must be proclaimed and defended, it is God’s Truth nonetheless.

I can’t believe the monothelite controversy was only settled about 600 years after apostolic times. I guess the Holy Spirit wasn’t doing His job?:rolleyes:

Your argument based on WHEN Truth is proclaimed makes no sense in light of Scripture.

Blessings,
Marduk
 
The first piece of text I put in italics shows how St. Peter has a Primacy over the other Patriarchs. So far you can’t argue with that or leave it open to another form of interpretation.
First, it’s St. Peter and the other Apostles.
And of those Patriarchs of the Pentarchy, two are successors of St. Peter.
Now we see that St. Peter is the head of the Church in which all the other gifts flow. Because authority flows from the head Church in Rome, all the other Churches have there authority from Rome. Rome has control over them.
Jerusalem and St. James had her authority before Rome had a Church in her, and it flowed to Rome via Antioch. Only Alexandria, can it be claimed, received her authority from Rome, through St. Mark.
Lastly we can see that Rome has long been exercising it’s authority over the other Churches.
The Churches have been governing themselves with no impute from Rome, until the Crusaders came.
Papal Infallibility merely means that since Rome is THE Church it can teach correctly.
So much for the protest that infallibility leaves only one bishop.
 
Not deciding nearly two thousand years that the immaculate conception, papal infallibility and the Assumption must be believed on pain of hellfire.
Good one, we don’t believe that will send one to Hell. Don’t act like others did not believe this as well in the Early Church.
 
We have tried to keep the Liturgy the same for thousands of years. Now one can go to a Liturgy in any language.
We’ve had that for nearly two thousand years.
I don’t understand what Rome did that tried to destroy your Church.
Reduce her to one bishop.
Do some research Constantinople held primacy over the other three Sees.
Not in the ultramontanist sense, although the present EP likes to pretend otherwise.
You are aware that Jerusalem and Antioch, amongst other Apostolic sees in the East, predate Rome?
 
First, it’s St. Peter and the other Apostles.
And of those Patriarchs of the Pentarchy, two are successors of St. Peter.
I already said that the See of St. Peter is Rome. All Church Fathers confirm this. No one said that it was Antioch. And we believe that St. Peter and the Apostles had authority, however St. Peter had the primacy.
Jerusalem and St. James had her authority before Rome had a Church in her, and it flowed to Rome via Antioch. Only Alexandria, can it be claimed, received her authority from Rome, through St. Mark.
First of all St. Peter lived and taught in Jerusalem. I mean that the authority they have is in submission to Rome.
The Churches have been governing themselves with no impute from Rome, until the Crusaders came.
Whats your point.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top