Primacy

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Dear brother Dcointin,
I think that primacy needs to be addressed before infallibility because the infallibility of an ecclesiastical head such as the Pope makes no sense if it hasn’t been demonstrated that there is indeed such a head. If there is, however, then his relationship to the infallibility of the Church can be discussed, e.g. if he possesses infallibility when speaking as the head of the Church in matters of faith and morals.
Thank you for that perspective. That makes sense.
I admit that I am focusing on one clause within the promulgation of Vatican I because it’s the one which concerns me the most as an Eastern Orthodox. I realize that it is placed within the context of issues such as the infallibility of the Church, but the issue remains for me that it is explicit that the Pope does not require the consent of the Church in promulgating dogma. The decree seems to be saying two contradictory things, and I think that’s why we’re talking past each other. One the one hand, as you argue, it places the infallibility of the Pope within that of the Church, and when he promulgates a dogma he does so at the request of and on behalf of the Church in accordance with Holy Tradition. On the other hand, as I argue, it states that he does not require the consent of the Church in promulgating dogma, which places him apart from and above the Church. Perhaps you could help me reconcile these two things.
Thank you again for explaining. You understand that the Pope promulgates a dogma only at the request and on behalf of the Church. You keep asking, “where is the consent?” I think what is missing in your consideration is the fact that the Church has already been involved in the formulation of the dogma. I tried to evince this in my prior posts, but I guess not too well. I wish you had answered forthrightly the question I repeated, but for some reason you have not (i.e., “in the two scenarios given, can you explain where the agreement of the Church is wanting?”). Perhaps a dialectic will be more clear and persuasive. Please respond to each question:
  1. When the Church through her bishops requests the Pope to dogmatize a teaching, will she fail to submit all the necessary patristic evidence to the Pope in support of the teaching?
  2. If the Pope dogmatizes the matter, is he opposing or confirming the Faith of the Church?
  3. Do you think the Church would oppose the very teaching that she had requested the Pope to dogmatize?
  4. In such an instance, please explain where the Church’s agreement is wanting.
  5. On an issue of faith or morals, one group of bishops is in disagreement with another group of bishops. Both groups submit their disagreement to the Pope for a resolution.
  6. Do you think each side will fail to submit to the Pope all the necessary patristic evidence for a just and proper resolution?
  7. Since both sides have come to the Pope for his judgment, should the losing party submit to the decision or be permitted to start a schism?
  8. Assuming you (brother Dcointin) oppose schism, please explain where the agreement of the Church is wanting?
Here’s another way to look at it. In an Ecumenical Council, the bishops formally make agreement on an issue, and then submits its decision to the Pope for his confirmation. In an exercise of papal infallibility, the bishops informally submit an issue to the Pope for his resolution.

The statement that dogmatic decrees are “irreformable by their nature, not because of the consent of the Church” is not a denial of the Church’s participation in a dogmatic decree by the Pope. Rather, it is simply an assertion about the nature of Truth once a dogma has been promulgated. Once the Pope, with the participation of the Church in its formulation, promulgates the dogma, no one can gainsay that dogmatic decree. There is no call nor justification for anyone to doubt that the dogma so proclaimed is an eternal Truth from God.

Once again, I strongly urge you to answer the 8 questions proposed above.
I would say that the development of the Papacy was based on more than its response to secular powers however. For example, one important factor was the collapse of the Western Roman Empire, which left the Papacy as its strongest remaining institution and forced it to take on political negotiations and power which influenced its understanding of its authority.
I agree that the development of the papacy was fueled by its response to the secular powers. And, as stated earlier, I admit that the strength and will necessary for the papacy to oppose the encroachment of the secular State upon matters properly belonging to the Church almost naturally transferred to the Pope’s internal relations within the Church (i.e., with his brother bishops). But I don’t agree with the popular theory that the fall of the Western Roman Empire left some kind of political vacuum that the Pope had to fill. I believe the theory was fabricated by Protestant historians as an attempt to diminish the theological basis for the primacy. To wit, “if we can somehow show that the font of papal authority has a merely secular origin, then its claims to being biblically based would be weakened.” But the facts don’t support the theory. The fall of the Western Roman empire is placed at 480 A.D. However:
  1. The papacy had been claiming primacy in the whole Church before that time.
  2. The East had been recognizing the primacy of the bishop of Rome in the whole Church before that time.
I would ask you – can you please identify the difference(s) between the papal claims to primacy before the fall of the Western Roman empire and the papal claims to primacy after the fall?

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I always found it disingenuous for Catholics to accuse the East of confusing secular and religious authority in the Emperor when the Pope was the head of the Papal States with a standing army (and remains a head of State to this day).
Agreed, though I personally don’t find anything wrong with the existence of the Vatican State. It can’t be doubted that without the Vatican, the world would not have a moral compass to which even the secular heads of state listens to. Without the Vatican, Christianity would not have a focal voice representing it among the secular powers of the world. In the Middle Ages, despite its excesses, the Vatican proved its value for the Church by preventing secular control of the Church. In modern times, despite the complaints of a few Jews, and the lies of the media, the Vatican State was responsible for saving more Jews by non-military means than any other institution. The necessity of the Vatican has also amply proven itself in its role in the downfall of communism. Who knows what else the future may hold.
The issue of whether or not the East recognized the Pope as the head of the Church or not, and if so what it understood by this, seems to be the critical one. Eastern Orthodox are willing to agree that the Pope was the first among the bishops (i.e. “protos”), and therefore received greater honor, but not that he possessed greater authority or jurisdiction.
I don’t like the notion of “jurisdiction” much either (in fact, I don’t like it at all), which I believe was an invention of the secular State that unfortunately invaded the mentality of the Church. Be that as it may, it cannot be doubted that both the practice and canons of the undivided Church from the first century demonstrate that the bishop of Rome was the final court of appeal for the entire Church. Such a fact would indicate both a greater authority than your local bishop and a universal role that no other bishops possessed. Comments?
The reasons for this honor were not just it’s foundation by St. Peter, but also its foundation by St. Paul,
St. Paul cannot actually be the founder of the Church in Rome, for in his epistle to the Romans, he admits that someone else had done so. Sts. Peter and Paul both founded the Church of Rome with their blood, based on the ancient Roman aphorism that the blood of the martyrs is the seed of the Church. But it was St. Peter who actually (and traditionally) started the episcopal lineage of the See of Rome. St. Paul founded many Churches in the Levant and along the Mediterranean which still exist today, but no Church claims apostolic succession from him. I personally do not understand the rhetorical value of the statement, “St. Paul founded Rome along with St. Peter.”
its status as the capital of the Roman Empire,
Can this really be a factor? Why did the bishop of Rome continue to have the primacy even after it was no longer the capital of the empire, and even after the Fall of Rome? I suspect this factor is only a Protestant polemic, adopted by modern Eastern Orthodox polemicists, in an attempt to diminish the theological basis for the primacy of Rome.
In the East the secular importance of the city in particular was consider a very important factor in its ranking as demonstrated by canon 28 of the Council of Chalcedon (which was rejected by the Pope).
Doesn’t this demonstrate that the socio-political status of a See is a late factor introduced by the secular State, and not from the Apostles? The primacy of the Roman See existed long before Canon 28 (or Canon 3 of Constantinople) was even conceived, which demonstrates that the Roman primacy has nothing to do with any secular factors such as Rome being capital of the empire.
It’s true that disputed matters were sometimes referred to the Pope, but they were also referred to other bishops as well because of the honor of their See, not necessarily because they possessed greater authority.
Yes. Bishops could appeal to their own Metropolitan or their Patriarch, but not to another Metropolitan or Patriarch. However, there was only one bishop to whom all bishops, both East and West, could appeal – the bishop of Rome.
I admit that some Eastern fathers speak favorably of Papal primacy and understand it in terms of authority, but there are also those who speak to the contrary, and the evidence seems quite mixed.
I can only think of two Fathers in the first millennium who speak unfavorably of papal primacy – St. Cyprian and St. Photius. St. Cyprian is really a weak example because before his disagreement with Pope St. Stephen, he was appealing to the Pope to discipline bishops in Gaul and Spain. So basically you have one example – St. Photius. But even the matter involving Pope St. Nicholas and St. Photius is not without indications of the primacy of the bishop of Rome. The whole conflict was instigated by two incidents supporting the notion of papal primacy – 1) Patriarch St. Photius himself sent letters to the Pope asking for his approval and communion; 2) a group supporting Patriarch St. Ignatios appealed to the Pope to restore him.

There does not seem to be much support from the early Church on the idea that papal primacy did not involve real authority.

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I don’t believe that Peter possessed an office that was in any respect different than that of the other apostles. The exegetical argument most often used is that “Thou art Peter…” (Matt. 16:18) establishes him as the foundation of the Church, but this refers to his confession, not his person, or if to his person, only insofar as he confessed the orthodox faith
While I agree that Peter is “Peter” because of his confession, your interpretation does not take into account two very significant facts:
  1. Simon was not in fact the first to make the confession for which he is famous. That honor belongs to Nathaneal when Jesus first called him to be an Apostle– “Teacher, you are the Son of God! You are the King of Israel!”
  2. Jesus actually changed Simon’s name to “Peter,” and no other Apostle had that honor, even though they would obviously promote the same confession.
    How do you explain these, if there was nothing special about Peter according to God’s plan for His Church?
(remember that he was later called Satan as well).
Do you have any patristic evidence that supports this interpretation? From my understanding, Jesus was ordering Satan to get away from Peter, not calling Peter “Satan.”
The keys which he possesses the same as those given to the other apostles; Jesus said “I will give to thee the keys…”, which was fulfilled later in Matt. 18:18.
I have to disagree just based on the bare facts of the matter. Matt 18:18 does not say anything about “keys.” I do believe that the keys are the possession of the whole Church, but these were given through Peter and Peter alone.
The command to “feed my sheep” was a reinstatement of his office as apostle after his denial of Jesus, not the giving of a unique authority; each apostle “shepherds” the flock.
But all the Apostles except John denied Jesus (Mt 26:56). Can you explain why He did not make the same “feed my sheep” speech to all the other Apostles? Also, can you explain the connection between Mt 24:45 (“who then is the faithful and wise servant whom his master has set over the household, to give them their food at the proper time?”) and Jesus’ charge to St. Peter to “feed my sheep?” Is that just a really big coincidence?
Likewise the command to “strengthen thy bretheren” while given specifically to Peter is certainly the responsibility of all apostles to each other, and indeed of all Christians, and can’t be understood on that basis as the establishment of a unique office.
Since all the Apostles (except John) denied Jesus, where is this general command to “strengthen each other” contained in Scripture? Why Peter alone? Does not Luke record that Satan will sift all the Apostles? Would it be correct to say that EO must take certain liberties with Scripture in order to support their own interpretations?
While it’s true that Peter often took a leading role and acted as the spokesman of the apostles, this is very different from having a different office,
  1. Is any other Apostle regarded by the Fathers as the leader and spokesman for the Apostles?
  2. What do you suppose is meant by the term “office?” Is not “leader” and “spokesman” an office?
and he shared a special place of honor along with James and John.
We know the reason for their special place of honor. St. James was the bishop of the Church in Jerusalem. St. John’s special place of honor has always been in relation to his position as the companion of St. Peter. Neither takes away from St. Peter’s unique role as coryphaeus of the Apostles, does it.
I admit that a single visible head of the Church would have practical advantages, I just don’t see this as having been established by Christ
Did Christ establish the principle of Apostolic Succession? If St. Peter was the coryphaeus of the Apostles, based on the principle of Apostolic Succession, why would not the body of bishops today or in any age also have their own coryphaeus? Apostolic Canon 34/35 hits this home rather clearly and forcefully.
or exercised universally in Church history.
I need some clarification on this. What do you mean by “universally?” The word has several connotations, such as, “all the time in a given period,” “everywhere in a given period,” “consistently in the history of the Church,” etc., etc. Not knowing exactly what you mean, I can only generally respond that one should not expect papal primacy to be so evident in history. That is because it is not intended to be exercised in such wise so as to micromanage the Church. If you think that is what primacy means (whether on a metropolical, patriarchal, or universal level), then there should be no opposition to papal primacy because that is not what it means.

Blessings,
Marduk

P.S. As a reminder, please answer all the questions that were asked.
 
I will do my best to answer your questions, but each could easily have an essay written in response, if not a book, and I’m sure my answers would only begin to address the questions. I’m definitely not a patristics scholar, so most of these answers are just what seems correct to me based on what I’ve read, and I’m certainly willing to change my mind if I feel other arguments are more convincing.

“1) When the Church through her bishops requests the Pope to dogmatize a teaching, will she fail to submit all the necessary patristic evidence to the Pope in support of the teaching?”

I’m not familiar with this process, so I have no idea how it takes place, what evidence is provided, etc. I’m certainly interested in learning more about it though.

“2) If the Pope dogmatizes the matter, is he opposing or confirming the Faith of the Church?”

I don’t think it’s possible to answer that question generally, as it depends on whether or not the doctrine the bishops brought to him to dogmatize was really in accordance with Holy Tradition or not. The way to determine this is through an ecumenical council, where the participants confess what has been believed “everywhere, always, and by all”.

“3) Do you think the Church would oppose the very teaching that she had requested the Pope to dogmatize?”

Again I would need to know how such a request were made, e.g. would it be made by a few bishops, by a council, etc.

“4) In such an instance, please explain where the Church’s agreement is wanting.”

See answer to question three.

“5) On an issue of faith or morals, one group of bishops is in disagreement with another group of bishops. Both groups submit their disagreement to the Pope for a resolution.
  1. Do you think each side will fail to submit to the Pope all the necessary patristic evidence for a just and proper resolution?”
I’m sure they both would, but the issue for me is whether or not the Pope has the authority to made an infallible promulgation on which (if either) of the sides confession Is correct. I believe that such authority rests only with the Church meeting in council.

“7) Since both sides have come to the Pope for his judgment, should the losing party submit to the decision or be permitted to start a schism?”

Are we assuming this situation takes place in the post-schism Catholic Church? The Church should always try to win back those that are in heterodoxy, but if they refuse, I see no other alternative than to let them go into schism if they choose to (e.g. the Monophysite schism).

“8) Assuming you (brother Dcointin) oppose schism, please explain where the agreement of the Church is wanting?”

Of course I do, but I’m not sure what we’re talking about here. Where is the agreement of the Church wanting in the issue of the hypothetical schism? It depends on the situation and if it were handled as a Papal decision or an ecumenical council.

I’ll continue again in a new post.
 
“I agree that the development of the papacy was fueled by its response to the secular powers. And, as stated earlier, I admit that the strength and will necessary for the papacy to oppose the encroachment of the secular State upon matters properly belonging to the Church almost naturally transferred to the Pope’s internal relations within the Church (i.e., with his brother bishops). But I don’t agree with the popular theory that the fall of the Western Roman Empire left some kind of political vacuum that the Pope had to fill. I believe the theory was fabricated by Protestant historians as an attempt to diminish the theological basis for the primacy. To wit, “if we can somehow show that the font of papal authority has a merely secular origin, then its claims to being biblically based would be weakened.” But the facts don’t support the theory. The fall of the Western Roman empire is placed at 480 A.D. However:
  1. The papacy had been claiming primacy in the whole Church before that time.
  2. The East had been recognizing the primacy of the bishop of Rome in the whole Church before that time.
I would ask you – can you please identify the difference(s) between the papal claims to primacy before the fall of the Western Roman empire and the papal claims to primacy after the fall?”

It’s my understanding that many factors were important in establishing the primacy of Rome, both secular and theological, and that this is the scholarly consensus across denominational lines. Catholics historically have focused on the theological reasons, and primarily its foundation by St. Peter, but I think that’s only a part of the historical witness (although an important part). My problem is not so much that Rome had a primacy, but how this primacy was understood and practiced. I don’t disagree that there is evidence of claims to primacy before the fall of the Western Empire, only that these claims grew over time in ways that the East could not accept. The primary difference that concerns me is the claim to universal jurisdiction, which according to the Catholic Encyclopedia includes the following:
  • it is his to set forth creeds, and to determine when and by whom an explicit profession of faith shall be made
  • the pope alone can prescribe the liturgical services employed in the Church.
  • he can legislate for the whole Church, with or without the assistance of a general council
  • if he legislates with the aid of a council it is his to convoke it, to preside, to direct its deliberations, to confirm its acts
  • it is his to nominate to bishoprics, or, here the nomination has been conceded to others, to give confirmation. Further, he alone can translate bishops from one see to another, can accept their resignation, and can, where grave cause exists, sentence to deprivation
I don’t see any evidence for this kind of primacy in the early Church, but I would be happy to listen if you disagree.

“Agreed, though I personally don’t find anything wrong with the existence of the Vatican State. It can’t be doubted that without the Vatican, the world would not have a moral compass to which even the secular heads of state listens to. Without the Vatican, Christianity would not have a focal voice representing it among the secular powers of the world. In the Middle Ages, despite its excesses, the Vatican proved its value for the Church by preventing secular control of the Church. In modern times, despite the complaints of a few Jews, and the lies of the media, the Vatican State was responsible for saving more Jews by non-military means than any other institution. The necessity of the Vatican has also amply proven itself in its role in the downfall of communism. Who knows what else the future may hold.”
I don’t have a problem with the Vatican per say, just the accusations of cesaero-papism against the Orthodox. I do think that the secular authority of the pope was far too great at one point in history (e.g. paying the Spanish to invade England and return it to the Catholic Church), but since that’s no longer the case I won’t make an issue of it.

Continued.
 
“I don’t like the notion of “jurisdiction” much either (in fact, I don’t like it at all), which I believe was an invention of the secular State that unfortunately invaded the mentality of the Church. Be that as it may, it cannot be doubted that both the practice and canons of the undivided Church from the first century demonstrate that the bishop of Rome was the final court of appeal for the entire Church. Such a fact would indicate both a greater authority than your local bishop and a universal role that no other bishops possessed. Comments?”

I’m not sure I would agree that Rome was a court of final appeal. It’s true that people appealed to Rome, but not that they necessarily accepted it’s decisions if it ruled against them. I would have to research historical examples to expand on this, but this was my impression from the reading I’ve done.

“St. Paul cannot actually be the founder of the Church in Rome, for in his epistle to the Romans, he admits that someone else had done so. Sts. Peter and Paul both founded the Church of Rome with their blood, based on the ancient Roman aphorism that the blood of the martyrs is the seed of the Church. But it was St. Peter who actually (and traditionally) started the episcopal lineage of the See of Rome. St. Paul founded many Churches in the Levant and along the Mediterranean which still exist today, but no Church claims apostolic succession from him. I personally do not understand the rhetorical value of the statement, “St. Paul founded Rome along with St. Peter.”

I misspoke by calling St. Paul a founder of the Church of Rome. What I should have said is that his martyrdom and burial of his relics in Rome added considerable prestige to the church there.

“Can this really be a factor? Why did the bishop of Rome continue to have the primacy even after it was no longer the capital of the empire, and even after the Fall of Rome? I suspect this factor is only a Protestant polemic, adopted by modern Eastern Orthodox polemicists, in an attempt to diminish the theological basis for the primacy of Rome.”

Again, I do think the secular authority of Rome was one factor among many in its primacy. It retained this primacy, in addition to theological considerations, because it had been established as such for centuries before the fall of the Western Roman Empire and was still one of the most important cities in the Meditteranean world. If theological considerations were the only factor at work, then I would imagine Jerusalem would have been the first see, not Rome, as the place where Christ died and rose, of the Last Supper, of Pentecost where the Church was born, etc. Again I would also point again to canon 28 which demonstrates that for the East, secular importance was one reason for ecclesiastical ranking. I don’t think it’s dating proves that it was a “new” concept, anymore than the canons of Nicea I regarding Rome mean that its primacy was new. There were many apostolic churches in the East that were never a part of the pentarchy, and if their apostolic foundation were really the only factor in their importance, they should have been.

“Yes. Bishops could appeal to their own Metropolitan or their Patriarch, but not to another Metropolitan or Patriarch. However, there was only one bishop to whom all bishops, both East and West, could appeal – the bishop of Rome.”

I’m not sure that bishops were not allowed to appeal to other patriarchs other than Rome, do you have any evidence supporting that?

“I can only think of two Fathers in the first millennium who speak unfavorably of papal primacy – St. Cyprian and St. Photius. St. Cyprian is really a weak example because before his disagreement with Pope St. Stephen, he was appealing to the Pope to discipline bishops in Gaul and Spain. So basically you have one example – St. Photius. But even the matter involving Pope St. Nicholas and St. Photius is not without indications of the primacy of the bishop of Rome. The whole conflict was instigated by two incidents supporting the notion of papal primacy – 1) Patriarch St. Photius himself sent letters to the Pope asking for his approval and communion; 2) a group supporting Patriarch St. Ignatios appealed to the Pope to restore him.

There does not seem to be much support from the early Church on the idea that papal primacy did not involve real authority.”

Again I’m not arguing that Rome had no primacy, only that the way it understands its primacy has changed in ways that the Orthodox can’t accept. Didn’t pope Benedict say something about the need for the Church to return to its first millennium understanding of papal primacy as a basis for reunion?

I’m currently reading “The Primacy of Peter” edited by John Meyendorf, so I’ll leave any further discussion of Peter until I’ve finished.

Take care,

Don
 
Dear brother Don,

I just remembered this thread via a reference from another thread. Give me a while to read through your latest posts. I should be able to respond within 2 days.

You said you were reading Meyendorff’s book? How is it? I’ve never read it myself.

I look forward to continuing this discussion.

BLESSINGS,
Marduk
 
Dear brother Don,

Thank you for your patience.
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dcointin:
mardukm said:
1) When the Church through her bishops requests the Pope to dogmatize a teaching, will she fail to submit all the necessary patristic evidence to the Pope in support of the teaching?
I’m not familiar with this process, so I have no idea how it takes place, what evidence is provided, etc. I’m certainly interested in learning more about it though.

I’m not aware of a special process for this to happen. I am just assuming, with confidence in the office of the bishop, that if a group of them brings a theological question to the Pope, they will provide him with all the necessary background information for a determination. The reason I asked this question was to impress the fact that bishops, when bringing a theological question to the Pope to be settled, are functioning fully as shepherds of the Church. So if the Pope makes a determination based on their submissions, it would not be a case of the Pope acting without the Church. Would you agree with that?
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dcointin:
mardukm said:
2) If the Pope dogmatizes the matter, is he opposing or confirming the Faith of the Church?
I don’t think it’s possible to answer that question generally, as it depends on whether or not the doctrine the bishops brought to him to dogmatize was really in accordance with Holy Tradition or not. The way to determine this is through an ecumenical council, where the participants confess what has been believed “everywhere, always, and by all”.

I have in mind occasions such as the dogmatization of the IC or the Assumption, where the majority of bishops proposed the dogmatization. If the Pope dogmatizes the matter, is he opposing or confirming the Faith of the Church? I suppose the question is rhetorical. I ask it to impress the idea that infallibility is exercised by the Pope as spokesman for the Church. Do you have any objections to the idea of infallibility being exericised by the Pope in the capacity as spokesman for the Church, as spokesman for the Faith of the Church? To the point, can you imagine a circumstance where the bishops of the world are impeded from coming together in an Ecumenical Council to decide an issue of faith? Can you imagine a circumstance where many bishops are in opposition (or apparent opposition) to another group of many bishops? Can you imagine a circumstance where most of the bishops of the world are in agreement on a doctrinal issue and ask the Pope for a dogmatization of the doctrine (i.e., there is no warrant for the calling of an Ecumenical Council). These have in fact occurred in the history of the Church, and there is no reason they may not occur again, and these are circumstances where the infallibility of the Church must be exercised in a unique way to make important decisions for the Church.
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dcointin:
mardukm said:
3) Do you think the Church would oppose the very teaching that she had requested the Pope to dogmatize?
Again I would need to know how such a request were made, e.g. would it be made by a few bishops, by a council, etc.

Let’s assume it is by the great majority of bishops (for that is really one of the very few scenarios possible). Do you think the Church would oppose the very teaching that the majority of bishops requested the Pope to dogmatize?
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dcointin:
mardukm said:
4) In such an instance, please explain where the Church’s agreement is wanting.
See answer to question three.

I hope I’ve explained the situation enough for you to provide a response. Namely, in an instance where the great majority of the Church’s bishops requests the Pope to dogmatize a matter, and the Pope dogmatizes it infallibly, where in that scenario could you, brother Dcointin, find the agreement of the Church wanting?
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dcointin:
mardukm said:
5) On an issue of faith or morals, one group of bishops is in disagreement with another group of bishops. Both groups submit their disagreement to the Pope for a resolution.
  1. Do you think each side will fail to submit to the Pope all the necessary patristic evidence for a just and proper resolution?
I’m sure they both would, but the issue for me is whether or not the Pope has the authority to made an infallible promulgation on which (if either) of the sides confession Is correct. I believe that such authority rests only with the Church meeting in council.

I personally have no doubt that if a group of bishops is opposing another group of bishops on a doctrinal issue, the Pope would call an Ecumenical Council, and not feel qualified to judge it himself. But that’s beside the point. Let’s be real, judging by the events of the early Church. The beliefs of those bishops will not change within or without an Ecumenical Council. The question remains – who should settle the issue? With the guidance of the Holy Spirit, would you say that orthodoxy belongs to the party with whom the bishop of Rome – the head bishop – sides, or to the other party? All the Ecumenical Councils seem to indicate that the agreement of the bishop of Rome was the standard of Orthodoxy. See also the next section for a further patristic consideration.

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dcointin:
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mardukm:
  1. Since both sides have come to the Pope for his judgment, should the losing party submit to the decision or be permitted to start a schism?
Are we assuming this situation takes place in the post-schism Catholic Church? The Church should always try to win back those that are in heterodoxy, but if they refuse, I see no other alternative than to let them go into schism if they choose to (e.g. the Monophysite schism).
OK. I guess my question was more geared towards which side would be regarded as orthodox. Catholics believe God’s special protection for the Church (i.e., infallibility) extends to her head bishop in a special way during those times when the Church as a whole is in crisis on a matter of Faith. It is a supernatural aid for the Church. Can you, as a simple Christian (not Orthodox or Catholic) admit to such a supernatural aid for the Church? I know you might be inclined to say that such supernatural aid comes in an Ecumenical Council, but remember we’re talking about an instance where a group of bishops opposes another group of bishops, within or without an Ecumenical Council (though it doesn’t matter, let’s say within an Ecumenical Council).

The early Church actually provided for this situation. The solution was established by the Council of Sardica. It should be noted that the Council of Sardica was originally intended to be an Ecumenical Council. The bishops of the world were called to Council by the Emperor for the settlement of the Arian controversy. Unfortunately, about half of all the bishops, almost all the East, were Arian heretics. They refused to attend the Council, and it therefore never attained Ecumenical status. But the Fourth Ecum and the Seventh Ecum confirmed the canons of this Council.

Though this thread is about papal primacy, I feel compelled to make mention of the Sardican canons’ relation to the issue of papal infallibility. It is important to understand that though the bishop of Rome’s appellate authority on canonical matters is easily implied by the Sardican canons, their main thrust was actually doctrinal. The Sardican canons on universal papal appellate authority were established for situations such as St. Athanasius had experienced. St. Athanasius was deposed for doctrinal reasons. The judge (i.e., the Pope) must be able to discern orthodoxy in order to render a just verdict in such instances. Some non-Catholics have argued that the Sardican canons refer only to Pope St. Julius. But such rhetoric does not take into account the fact that the canons are formulated in very general terms. It seems the Fathers of the Sardican Counciil (including St. Athanaasius) took for granted that the bishops of Rome (even future ones) were the standard of orthodoxy.
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dcointin:
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mardukm:
The fall of the Western Roman empire is placed at 480 A.D. However:
  1. The papacy had been claiming primacy in the whole Church before that time.
  2. The East had been recognizing the primacy of the bishop of Rome in the whole Church before that time.
I would ask you – can you please identify the difference(s) between the papal claims to primacy before the fall of the Western Roman empire and the papal claims to primacy after the fall?
I don’t disagree that there is evidence of claims to primacy before the fall of the Western Empire, only that these claims grew over time in ways that the East could not accept. The primary difference that concerns me is the claim to universal jurisdiction, which according to the Catholic Encyclopedia includes the following:

(1) it is his to set forth creeds, and to determine when and by whom an explicit profession of faith shall be made
(2) the pope alone can prescribe the liturgical services employed in the Church.
(3) he can legislate for the whole Church, with or without the assistance of a general council
(4) if he legislates with the aid of a council it is his to convoke it, to preside, to direct its deliberations, to confirm its acts
(5) it is his to nominate to bishoprics, or, here the nomination has been conceded to others, to give confirmation. Further, he alone can translate bishops from one see to another, can accept their resignation, and can, where grave cause exists, sentence to deprivation

I don’t see any evidence for this kind of primacy in the early Church, but I would be happy to listen if you disagree.
The author of that piece seems to adhere to an Absolutist Petrine perspective. Personaly I don’t agree with the first, second or third, insofar as the Pope must act collegially in all matters that affect the universal Church.

I agree with the fourth. Head bishops normally convoke and preside over their local synods. In the past, it was the emperor who did this for an ecumenical council, and who appointed its president, but we no longer live in caeseropapistic times, so it is natural that the protos of the Church should do this. Deliberations of the Council should be free, and the Pope should intervene only on the advice or request of his brother bishops (as was the case during the Vatican Councils). The confirmation of a universal Council by the Pope is already a well-established practice from ancient days. Even the Second Ecumenical Council, which did not have Western participation, sought confirmation from the bishop of Rome afterwards.

I disagree with the fifth, which seems to have been written with no regard for the rights of other head bishops in the Church. Canon law also disagrees with the fifth, in point of fact. What the author states is true of the Latin Catholic Church with his role as Patriarch of the Latins in mind. But his statements do not apply to the Church as a whole. Each Patriarch has the prerogative in his Church to do what he presumes only the Pope can do throughout the Church.

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dcointin:
I don’t have a problem with the Vatican per say, just the accusations of cesaero-papism against the Orthodox. I do think that the secular authority of the pope was far too great at one point in history (e.g. paying the Spanish to invade England and return it to the Catholic Church), but since that’s no longer the case I won’t make an issue of it.
I understand your concern. I should point out that caesero-papism is not the same as papo-caesarism. Caesaro-papism is the encroachment of the secular power into ecclesiastical affairs. Papo-caesarism is the ecclesiastical power attempting to control secular affairs, which was prevalent in the late Middle Ages in the Latin Church. Both are wrong. I think it is true that the East was generally more docile and supportive of caesaro-papism, while the West was always and more consistently opposed to it. I should also point out that not just Catholics, but Oriental Orthodox also normally charge the EO with caesero-papism. Many believe that the Chalcedonian Schism was fuelled primarily by political interests. I’ve even met some OO who believe the current Christological accords between Catholics and the Oriental Orthodox in some measure add credence to that ancient OO perception of the matter.
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dcointin:
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mardukm:
I don’t like the notion of “jurisdiction” much either (in fact, I don’t like it at all), which I believe was an invention of the secular State that unfortunately invaded the mentality of the Church. Be that as it may, it cannot be doubted that both the practice and canons of the undivided Church from the first century demonstrate that the bishop of Rome was the final court of appeal for the entire Church. Such a fact would indicate both a greater authority than your local bishop and a universal role that no other bishops possessed. Comments?
I’m not sure I would agree that Rome was a court of final appeal. It’s true that people appealed to Rome, but not that they necessarily accepted it’s decisions if it ruled against them. I would have to research historical examples to expand on this, but this was my impression from the reading I’ve done.
Does opposition to a ruling mean that a judge has no normative inherent authority? I’m sure you agree that the Apostles had authority. Would you say that because Judaizers did in fact exist who opposed the authority of the Apostles, then is it a valid conclusion that the Apostles had no authority at all?

As far as Rome being the court of final appeal, please read the canons of the Council of Sardica. Not only was this Council originally intended to be Ecumenical, but its canons were confirmed by the Fourth and Seventh Ecumenical Councils (as well as the Synod of Trullo, which the Easterns accept as Ecumenical). After reading these canons, ponder the following scenario: a bishop is deposed by his Synod. He then appeals to the Patriarchal Synod who judges against him. He then appeals to the bishop of Rome who judges against him. Short of starting a schism, what other avenue of appeal do you suppose this bishop has? I pray you give this some serious thought. I would appreciate a response.
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dcointin:
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mardukm:
Can this really be a factor? Why did the bishop of Rome continue to have the primacy even after it was no longer the capital of the empire, and even after the Fall of Rome? I suspect this factor is only a Protestant polemic, adopted by modern Eastern Orthodox polemicists, in an attempt to diminish the theological basis for the primacy of Rome.
Again, I do think the secular authority of Rome was one factor among many in its primacy. It retained this primacy, in addition to theological considerations, because it had been established as such for centuries before the fall of the Western Roman Empire and was still one of the most important cities in the Meditteranean world. If theological considerations were the only factor at work, then I would imagine Jerusalem would have been the first see, not Rome, as the place where Christ died and rose, of the Last Supper, of Pentecost where the Church was born, etc.
I doubt it. The OT predicted that there will come a time when the Sacrifice will no longer be offered in Jerusalem. That must have influenced the perception of the early Christians towards Jerusalem. Further, Jerusalem was strongly associated with the Judaizing element in early Christianity. It seems logical for Gentile Christians in the early Church to dissociate themselves from the Jerusalem Church for that simple theological reason. As the Church became more cosmopolitan, and less Jewish in character and population, it seems natural that the Jerusalem Church would never have gained any prominence.

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Again I would also point again to canon 28 which demonstrates that for the East, secular importance was one reason for ecclesiastical ranking. I don’t think it’s dating proves that it was a “new” concept, anymore than the canons of Nicea I regarding Rome mean that its primacy was new. There were many apostolic churches in the East that were never a part of the pentarchy, and if their apostolic foundation were really the only factor in their importance, they should have been.
In point of fact, prior to State interference, the only Sees of major importance in Christianity were Rome, Alexandria, and Antioch (Ephesus had some importance, but not as great, proven by the fact that it never gained patriarchal status). Is their Petrine origin a mere coincidence? I see no evidence that the civil status of a city was a factor in its importance for the early Church prior to the marriage of Church and State in the mid-4th century. Interestingly, succession from St. Andrew was not explicitly claimed by Constantinople until the latter 5th century, perhaps occasioned by Pope St. Leo’s rejection of Canon 28, which assigns Constantinople’s ecclesiastical importance to its civil status. It seems the East slowly changed their position, so that when Canon 28 was renewed at the Trullan Synod, mention of Constantinople as the imperial capital was removed.
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dcointin:
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mardukm:
Yes. Bishops could appeal to their own Metropolitan or their Patriarch, but not to another Metropolitan or Patriarch. However, there was only one bishop to whom all bishops, both East and West, could appeal – the bishop of Rome.
I’m not sure that bishops were not allowed to appeal to other patriarchs other than Rome, do you have any evidence supporting that?
Sorry I left out an important detail. Bishops in the East could appeal to the Patriarch of Constantinople. However, Constantinople only had canonical solicitude (i.e., jurisdiction) for the East, while the bishop of Rome had a recognized canonical solicitude (i.e., jurisdiction) for the entire Church. This universal solicitude was extant even before it was canonically recognized by Sardica in 343 A.D., and there are many evidences for the fact:
  1. St. Clement’s ruling for the Church in Corinth enshrined in his apostolic letter to that Church.
  2. St. Ignatius’ letter to Rome, stating that the Church of Rome was the president, and actually asking for permission to be martyred.
  3. St. Polycarp’s traveling all the way to Rome to try to settle the issue of the date of Easter with Pope St. Anicetus.
  4. Pope St. Victor’s ruling against the Churches in Asia regarding the date of Easter (many opposed the ruling, yet no one questioned that he had the authority to make a ruling; it was actually Pope St. Victor who instructed all the Churches to hold local synods to discuss the matter of Easter in the first place).
  5. St. Irenaeus’ statements regarding the Church in Rome, indicating that it was the succession of Rome, not the civil importance, which made the Church in Rome pre-eminent, whereby agreement with it was “a matter of necessity.”
  6. Pope St. Dionysius of Rome’s correction of Pope St. Dionysius of Alexandria.
  7. St. Cyprian’s appeal to the bishop of Rome to discipline errant bishops in Gaul and Spain.
  8. In 314, a Synod in Gaul dealing with Donatism addressed the Pope thus: “Very dear Father, heaven should have seen to it that you were present for this grand spectacle. You would have helped to render more severe the judgment against certain criminals. Had you been with us, the joy of the entire assemblage would have been great. But since you could not leave the city, the preferred seat of the Apostles, where their blood is witness to the glory of God, we report to you…And wish that you, whose authority is the most recognized, may be the one to convey our decisions to all of the Churches.
  9. The First Ecum’s recognition that the bishop of Rome had the primacy.
    It is important to understand that in this pristine period of Church history, there was no such thing as “jurisdiction,” which was only introduced when the Church married the State. Being head bishop was a matter of solicitude, care, and love, not a matter of law (i.e., canon).
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dcointin:
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mardukm:
I can only think of two Fathers in the first millennium who speak unfavorably of papal primacy….There does not seem to be much support from the early Church on the idea that papal primacy did not involve real authority.
Again I’m not arguing that Rome had no primacy, only that the way it understands its primacy has changed in ways that the Orthodox can’t accept. Didn’t pope Benedict say something about the need for the Church to return to its first millennium understanding of papal primacy as a basis for reunion?
Yes, he did. And also Pope JP2 of thrice-blessed memory. But many Orthodox don’t seem willing to admit even just the patristic prerogatives of the bishop of Rome as protos. On the Catholic side, the Absolutist Petrine view needs to be excised, especially the idea that bishops function only because the Pope “lets” them. On the EO side, the Low Petrine view needs to be excised, especially the idea that there is no such thing as a head bishop, or that a head bishop is a merely honorific title. Once these two extremes are rooted out, the Churches can move forward in its discussions regarding ecclesiology.

Blessings,
Marduk

P.S. I look forward to your responses regarding the primacy of St. Peter. If you remember, you stated you would provide responses (specifically to my post # 21) after you read Meyendorff’s book.
 
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