S
steve_b
Guest
Here’s what the pope knew and tried to influence in favor of the East, and here is how the East responded. Check out the followingDear Steve,
I saw your question - but didn’t understand its relevance. The Russian Church is the largest EO Church, to be sure.
Mark of Ephesus is a saint of the Orthodox Church, he came to Florence as a unionist and was undoubtedly free of the fear of the emperor back home. Unlike his bishop-compatriots who changed with the wind, Mark never wavered from his position, at Florence or at home. Pope Eugenius could not have been unaware of the politicall pressure on the Greek bishops - which is why he is said to have remarked, at Mark’s leaving without signing the union, “We have accomplished nothing.”
Florence was a Latin Council, espousing Latin ideas onto a Greek episcopal audience anxious to effect a union at a time when their home country’s continued existence depended on Western aid.
(all emphasis mine)
"The submission of the Greek bishops had not been sincere. On their return to Constantinople most of them openly rejected the decrees of the council and declared for the continuance of the schism. Eugene IV vainly endeavoured to stir up the Western nations against the ever-advancing Turks. Some help was given by the Republics of Venice and Genoa; but Hungary and Poland, more nearly menaced, supplied the bulk of the forces. A victory at Nish (1443) had been followed by two terrible defeats (Varna, 1444, and Kosovo, 1449). The whole of the Balkan peninsula, except Constantinople, was now at the mercy of the infidels. The emperor, Constantine XII, sent messages to Rome imploring the pope to summon the Christian peoples to his aid. Nicholas sternly reminded him of the promises made at Florence, and insisted that the terms of the union should be observed. Nevertheless the fear that the Turks would attack Italy, if they succeeded in capturing the bulwark of the east, induced the pontiff to take some action — especially as the emperor professed his readiness to accept the decrees of the council. In May, 1452, Cardinal Isidore, an enthusiastic Greek patriot, was sent as legate to Constantinople. A solemn function in honour of the union was celebrated on 12 Dec., 1452, with prayers for the pope and for the patriarch, Gregorius. But the clergy and the populace cursed the Uniates and boasted that they would rather submit to the turban of the Turk than to the tiara of the Roman Pontiff. After many obstacles and delays a force of ten papal galleys and a number of vessels furnished by Naples, Genoa, and Venice set sail for the East, but before they reached their destination the imperial city had fallen and the Emperor Constantine was no more (29 May, 1453). "
newadvent.org/cathen/11058a.htm
I ask you,
- if you were the pope, knowing what has happened, and the toxic feeling of the clergy and the people in the East towards you and the CC, how would YOU react to this plea from the Emperor? Would you do what Eugene IV did or would you do something else?
- if you were someone the pope was trying to rally, to go fight for the East to save these “poor innocent folks” from their fate, and you knew full well the history of the East, all the intrigues, particularly Easterners toxic attitude towards the pope, the CC, and the West in general, what would YOU do? Be honest

We cannot separate theology from politics, to be sure. Florence was an abject failure in its aims and the later unias, such as at Brest, that was based on it were also abject failures, if modern RC scholarship that repents of them is anything to go by.
Again, Florence did not take Orthodox Triadology seriously - it only assumed that Latin Triadology was the true standard for orthodox Trinitarianism.
That was the main flaw - it elevated the Latin theologoumenon as a sine qua non of an orthodox understanding of Triadology for the universal Church.
So much for diversity in unity.
Alex
- The West comprehends the Triadology of the EO just fine.
- Cudos to the Eastern churches that DID unite with the pope. That was NOT a failure but a great success
- moral of this story, be careful what you wish for, you just may get it…