C
Cavaradossi
Guest
We have nothing to say about your popes and your magisterium until you bring them up. Clearly because we do not believe in the authority of the pope and of the magisterium, we will not hold to some beliefs (like the IC), which have been made into dogma by the Roman Catholics, and in addition to that, our ecclesiology is rather incompatible with the amount of power that the pope has in the modern Roman Catholic Church. If somebody is truly interested in learning about Orthodoxy, however, then they will have to read about and confront these facts because they are a legitimate difference in belief. You mistakenly see propaganda where we see honesty about our own beliefs.This would be a good medium, remembering your being informed about Orthodoxy from an Orthodox media and not be influenced by any antiCatholic misinformation. From experience Orthodoxy tend to explain their own theolgical understandings at the same time by refuting the authority of the Popes and the magisterium the Catholic church not to mention Church councils.
Here is a list of books from a convert from Orthodoxy to Roman Catholicism; Here it from the Horses mouth here;
Jim Lokoudis “Ending the Byzantine Schism”, “Modern Eastern Orthodoxy” and “Divine Primacy of the Bishop of Rome”.
I stand by Hesychios’ statement: if you want to learn about the Orthodox, ask the Orthodox themselves; just like how if one wanted to learn about the Roman Catholics, he would be better off asking the Roman Catholics. Reading Jim Lokoudis’ opinion of Orthodoxy makes about as much sense as reading a Scott Hahn book when you’re trying to learn about Protestantism. Things written by Jim Lokoudis aren’t from the horse’s mouth, by virtue of the fact that he left Orthodoxy.
If I were really trying to feed somebody anti-Catholic propaganda, there are plenty of books written by Roman Catholics who left for Orthodoxy out there, but I refrained from recommending them because of the natural anti-Catholic perspective which they will present. The books which I recommended are all rather fair and non-polemical, and have very little to say about the Roman Catholic Church (some have some positive things to say, like John Zizioulas who insists that the ecclesiology of the East and West are naturally complimentary to and have a need of each other), and I even recommended one book written by a Roman Catholic priest, Byzantium and the Roman Primacy. Furthermore, one of the books I recommended, The Filioque: History of a Doctrinal Controversy is a scholarly work with a 30 page bibliography and nearly 90 pages of endnotes. I honestly do not know what could possibly be unfair about the books which I recommended.