A
Alexander_Roman
Guest
Dear Steve,The filioque was approved East and West at the council of Florence 572 years ago. Don’t be a part of keeping this fight going. Please read the link at the bottom.
The Greek bishops and theologians attended the council of Ferrara from 9 April 1438. The council was transferred to Florence on 10 January 1439. There, in the session on 6 July 1439, the decree of union with the Greek church was approved. Subsequently decrees of union with the Armenian and Coptic churches were approved. Finally the council was transferred to Rome on 24 February 1443. There other decrees of union with the Bosnians, the Syrians and finally with the Chaldeans and Maronites of Cyprus, were approved. The last session of the council was held on 7 August 1445.
Please read session 6 (1439)
ewtn.com/library/councils/florence.htm
No serious student of the history of East-West relations would ever say that the Filioque was “approved” for the Eastern Church at Florence. The Greek bishops, iin their majority, signed it for the sake of military aid, as per the pressure from their Emperor. These same bishops, except for a very few, disowned their approval when they got home and certainly the faithful of their flock were very much against such union.
Also, what was approved at Florence? That Filioquism and the phrase “Through the Son” were equal. In fact, the phrase “through the Son” has to do with the Economic Trinity in Orthodoxy in the first instance and was emphasized by “Latinizing Greeks” or “Latinophrones” as they were called.
The idea that Florence was somehow an authoritative council for Orthodoxy is simply - not so and it only confirmed to the East that the only way for union is the “way of the Latins.” That whole approach is rejected by the Catholic-Orthodox dialogue.
In addition, Rome has, in effect, walked away from the notion of the legitimacy of those historic “unions” with various Eastern Churches, as Rome continually reminds representatives of the Russian Orthodox Church. Even the Pope recently told a ROC prelate, very apologetically, that “we inherited the unia” as if to say “it isn’t our fault, living in the 21st century.”
So get with the current program and please refrain from quoting old documents and events that have little or completely no relevance to contemporary times.
If you would like my opinion about Rome’s ostpolitik with the ROC, well . . . I guess you wouldn’t like it.
Alex