It must be remembered that the decree establishing Sunday as the day of Pascha was made, jointly, by the various synods of bishops that were convened at the request (not command) of Rome. Judging from this majority response, Pope St. Victor moved to excommunicate those who didn’t follow the mind of the Church on this matter. Notice that he didn’t move to do this because the Asian dioceses opposed his personal desire, but because it didn’t approximate the decision of the majority of the Churches. This is very important for it shows that the very desire of Pope Victor to excommunicate the Asian dioceses was more an application of a collegial decision rather than any attempt at universal jurisdiction by a single bishop (thus explaining why there is no condemnation of Pope Victor - his attempt at excommunication was based on the result of a collegial decision, thus giving it the appearance of enforcing collegial tradition instead of exercising universal jurisdiction). Given this information, I think it is more likely that Pope Victor thought that his excommunication attempt was the logical conclusion of the bishops and he was simply being the servant of the consensus of the Church. However, as Eusebius states, Victor was wrong and this was not the desire of the bishops. And, per Orthodox ecclesiology, the bishops won out over the decision of the Pope. We have no record of Pope Victor responding to his “stern rebuke” by appeals to authority, thus lending much credence to our position that the entire episode was about the first of the bishops incorrectly discerning the mind of the Church and not about the first exercise of universal jurisdiction (although one does cringe at this example of hastiness on the part of the Bishop of Rome).
God bless,
Adam
It’s really not clear that these synods were made per a request versus an order. There’s no conclusive evidence either way. The point is that at Pope St. Victor’s request, bishops all over the world called synods to deal with this question. This really isn’t a small thing. For one bishop to call one synod was a rather significant venture, but to have countless do so all at once is remarkable, and speaks very powerfully to at a bare
minimum the influence that the bishop of Rome had over all of the bishops.
The suggestion that St. Victor’s excommunication was based on the decision of all of the synods doesn’t dimish this, and perhaps even strengthens it. Even if he did see himself as serving the consensus of the Church, the fact is that he took it upon himself to excommunicate bishops who were not under his Patriarchate, and not a soul denied his ability to do so. Some admonished him for taking so severe an action, and some begged him to reconsider, but nobody denied that he could do so. Victor certainly thought that he, as bishop of Rome, could excommunicate those not inside his Patriarchate, and nobody rejected this - that’s the bottom line.
It happens today in the Church that the universal Church makes a decision only to have it enacted by the pope. Of course Catholics would argue that all of the ecumenical councils are a case of this, but it’s inarguably the case that what we consider the last 15 ecumenical councils were put together by the Church universal and then enacted/ratified by the bishop of Rome. It’s in no way contrary to Catholic ecclesiology to suggest that this is what happened with Victor.
I think you are mis-interpreting certain quotes. As you know, in the hymnology of our Church as also in the ancient world, many lofty titles and acclamations are/were used of individuals and even Churches. These quotes certainly have significance, but only within the community of faith that is the Church or the cultural context, as the case may be. What’s more important than quotes (and we can provide non-papal quotes similar to those given to the Popes), are actions. And the actions of the Church of the Seven Ecumenical Councils reveals the Roman See to be very important, but only insofar as she was a servant of Holy Tradition and her chief way to defend doctrine was to take her place of honor at an ecumenical council not act independently of such an organ of infallibility.
It’s fair to argue that I may be misinterpreting quotes, but the quotes of Flavian and Anatolius have nothing whatsoever to do with titles. They refer to objective authority. Anatolius says that the confirmation of Chalcedon rests entirely in Leo’s authority. Flavian says that a letter from Pope St. Leo will make calling a council “superfluous.” Those are explicit references to things the pope can do, and to the level of his authority, not flowery titles.
Certainly, the good Patriarch didn’t mean an automatic infallibility that makes the Pope the final arbiter of orthodoxy, as Roman Pontiffs even long after the Great Schism were saying that Popes could err. To have this patriarch contradicting this ancient and unopposed tradition while Rome never raised the Pope to this status, bears the mark of a misunderstanding of the historical record. Besides, the emphasis of the Fathers in their debates with the Arians was the latter’s failure to accept Holy Tradition. Rome, like any apostolic church, could be pointed to as witness to this Tradition, but the final judge of orthodoxy is always referenced as Tradition (and the portions of this Tradition that were dogmatized at ecumenical councils). Rome hardly rises above an apostolic Church that has preserved her apostolic faith in a praiseworthy fashion (a fact that we don’t begrudge first-millennium Rome and we will never impinge the spotless faith of any apostolic Church, even while admitting that through the sin of heresy, it remains unoccupied)
No Catholic has ever claimed, nor does today, that the Pope is
de facto infallible. The point is that infallible means infallible. No matter how anyone tries to spin it, that’s what it means, and Patriarch John meant that the pope was infallible in at least
some way. This is consistent with Agatho, writing about the same time, who clearly believed that the pope was infallible at particular times. What’s more, this is consistent with the current Catholic teaching on the infallibility of the pope.
As far as the claim that Rome was merely a witness to the tradition that was the
true arbiter of truth, Tradition, is
exactly like Protestant claims that the ecumenical councils were merely witnesses to the true arbiter of the faith, the Scriptures. The problem is the same in each case - there’s no objective judge of just what the Scriptures of the Tradition says. There must be some court of final appeal, and according to the fathers, this is the bishop of Rome. Time They say in several places that in order to know whether one remains faithful to the tradition, one must remain in communion with the bishop of Rome. For example,
"For it is a matter of necessity that every Church should agree with this Church[Rome], on account of its preeminent authority, that is, the faithful everywhere, inasmuch as the apostolic tradition has been preserved continuously by those who exist everywhere.’ - Irenaues, Against Heresies, 3, 3, 2
This passage is of tremendous importance, coming from Ireanaues, a disciple of St. John through Polycarp. He’s writing at the very beginning of the Church. Afanassieff writes concerning this passage, “our interpretations are just hypotheses, some plausible and others not.” (Meyendorff,
Primacy of Peter, 131)
If someone does not hold fast to this unity of Peter, can he imagine that he still holds the faith? If he desert the chair of Peter upon whom the Church was built, can he still be confident he is in the Church?" - Cyprian of Carthage, Unity of the Catholic Church, 4
“You wrote also, that I should forward to Cornelius, our colleague, a copy of your letter, so that he might put aside any anxiety and know immediately that you are in communion with him, that is with the Catholic Church.” - Cyprian of Carthage, Letter to Antonianus bishop in Numindia, 55
There are of course other examples of this. In the doctrine of the fathers, to hold to tradition is to maintain communion with Rome.
It is unusual (by Latin standards) that St. Cyprian was never accused of being schismatic or heretical because he didn’t agree with the Bishop of Rome (any such accusations were due to a supposed incompatibility with Tradition). In fact, any bishop following Cyprian’s position vis-à-vis the Pope of Rome in the modern Roman Catholic Church would not only not be free from schismatic and heretical charges, but would lack the episcopal support that St. Cyprian possessed.
This occured when there was still disagreement over the particulars of baptism. It was through the work of Pope Stephen that the doctrine of baptism developed. It didn’t change, of course, but it developed in that it became clear that heretics were capable of baptizing validly. Until Stephen brought about a decision on this matter, there would have, strictly speaking, been freedom regarding it. That being said, this is really at it’s core simply another case of the issue of obedience. Many
clearly heretical bishops had ecclesial support throughout history. The issue is not whether support existed, but whether that support was consistent with proper authority. Now according to the principles you put forth of holding to tradition, the final arbiter of just what tradition is would be essentially what everyone in the Church believed, but there were times - such as prior to the Council of Nicaea - where virtually the entire Church recognized Arianism to be faithful to tradition. Something else is needed to be obedient to, such as a Council. The pope can also be that something else, and I believe history shows has been at times.