H
Hesychios
Guest
In the non-Catholic Forum I read with interest and surprise these comments relating to the Melkite Catholic and the Latin Catholic churches Sui Iuris. I was interested to read this because of an ongoing series of talks between Holy Orthodoxy and the bishop of Rome, possibly with the idea of establishing just this sort of relationship.
Is this person correct in his comments about the Melkites and their relationship to Rome?
I wonder if the Eastern Catholics here have anything to add to this information. I thought of posting this in apologetics as well, but it seems more relevant here.
Thanks,
*Michael
Is this person correct in his comments about the Melkites and their relationship to Rome?
I wonder if the Eastern Catholics here have anything to add to this information. I thought of posting this in apologetics as well, but it seems more relevant here.
Thanks,
*Michael
The Melkite Church is as a sui juris entity has equal dignity but not equal jurisdiction with Rome. Rome has never approved the Melkite position on doctrinal matters. According to Eastern Canon Law, such approbation by Rome is required for acts of Patriarchs or Synods to have effect. Lacking such approval, the Melkite position is without force and irrelevant to East West discussion.
As for the meaning of the word ecumenical, it’s specific meaning in this context cannot mean Imperial as everyone agrees that these are ecumenical talks. And there is no credibility to the idea that these are imperial talks. Furthermore, what made an ancient council ecumenical was not that they were imperial but that they were approved as binding by all the churches–that is, that they were world wide. If a council were called by the Eastern Emperor but not approved by Rome, it could not be considered ecumenical. So Rome’s approval was more essential to ecumenicity than the role of the Emperor.
You may read the context of the post here…The Melkite position is illogical and irrational. It is a political position which cannot hold up under even a moment’s intellectual scrutiny. The absolute claims of the councils of the Catholic Church cannot be abandoned or regarded as regional. That would be a case of relativism. In the long term the various rites of the church cannot have different truths. In the post modern age nor in any other age, neither the Orthodox nor the Catholic Church can accept a communion of mutually exclusive claims. What is proposed by the Melkites is neither Catholicism nor Orthodoxy but Anglicanism. And we are all witnesses to the disastrous consequences of the English approach to religion.