RUSSIA-VATICAN - Moscow Patriarchate to Pope: On Easter a gesture of goodwill, but we will not overturn old traditions [AN]

  • Thread starter Thread starter Catholic_Press
  • Start date Start date
Status
Not open for further replies.
C

Catholic_Press

Guest
Russian Orthodox Church awaits greater detail of Pope Francis’ idea to celebrate Easter on a single date. But not basing Easter on the first full moon after the spring equinox, as established by the Council of Nicea, “unacceptable” for the Orthodox Russians.

More…
 
It’s beginning to look as though Francis was making an improvised, offhand comment, intended to convey no more than that, if other churches wish to move to a fixed Easter, then the Catholic Church will raise no objection. In other words, a willingness to go along with someone else’s initiative, in the event that there should be one, rather than a proposal for change originating from the Catholic Church.

At least one other pope has said the same thing, though I don’t remember whether it was St. JP2, in the closing years of his pontificate, or B16.
 
Well, that was quick. It seems we still have a ways to go in instilling ecumenism in other faith traditions.
 
As long as the Russian orthodox church continues viewing us as some competitor when we really aren’t ecumenism towards the orthodox will remain stalled. Maybe they will grow out of it like the Anglicans but it looks like the far future still.
 
Yes, I do. However, I believe the response to be far from positive. At the very least it reflects complete inflexibility over a date of all things. Seems pretty darn anti-ecumenical to me. And the “to me” part is what a forum is all about. That is why my post was tempered by the phrase “it seems” so as not to appear offensive. Now, if one defines ecumenism as “join us, but we aren’t going to budge on anything no matter how trivial”, then I would say that ecumenism and proselytizing are very close to the same thing.
 
While I wouldn’t call the date of Easter “trivial” I must disagree with most of your post. A couple weeks’ difference in the celebration of Easter is not a great matter. I do not agree with the Old Calendarist position of making the Old Calendar a central matter of the Faith. Ask me abut issues like Papal Infallibility and the procession of the Holy Spirit, and you will get a different answer.

With all due respect for your wife, reunion with Rome is something all Orthodox should be desiring, as long as essential matters of doctrine are not compromised.
 
I guess I’ll just have to differ with you and them on this one. I am just glad we have the pope we do, and ministry of Peter that we have, to unify and lead us with the guidance of the Holy Spirit.
 
I guess I’ll just have to differ with you and them on this one. I am just glad we have the pope we do, and ministry of Peter that we have, to unify and lead us with the guidance of the Holy Spirit.
Sigh.

So, you do realize that some Eastern Catholic churches use the Julian calendar, just like us stubborn, rebellious, arrogant Orthodox. (See, Ukranian Catholic Church in Canada, for one of many examples.)

If you’re going to play the unity-under-the-Pope card, you really should be certain that the uniformity you claim actually exists. Latin praxis is not the sine qua none of Roman Catholicism.
 
Sigh.

So, you do realize that some Eastern Catholic churches use the Julian calendar, just like us stubborn, rebellious, arrogant Orthodox. (See, Ukranian Catholic Church in Canada, for one of many examples.)
Yes, and I did not call you stubborn, rebellious or arrogant. Unity does not require agreement.
 
Yes, I do. However, I believe the response to be far from positive. At the very least it reflects complete inflexibility over a date of all things. Seems pretty darn anti-ecumenical to me. And the “to me” part is what a forum is all about. That is why my post was tempered by the phrase “it seems” so as not to appear offensive. Now, if one defines ecumenism as “join us, but we aren’t going to budge on anything no matter how trivial”, then I would say that ecumenism and proselytizing are very close to the same thing.
So you think that Easter should be celebrated whenever, because it’s just a " trivial date" and it’s not really important when?

…I’m at a complete loss for words.
 
So you think that Easter should be celebrated whenever, because it’s just a " trivial date" and it’s not really important when?

…I’m at a complete loss for words.
No. I did not say that.

It would make no sense to celebrate Easter on just any date. However, there is no morally right way do determine the day, and no doctrine that compels one way or another.

It could be fixed, like Christmas and most Feast, movable to a fixed Easter, like Labor day and Memorial Day, tied to the Jewish Passover, like the Gregorian Calendar, or tied to the Julian Calendar that was in use at the time. Perhaps some other system could be used. I do not think the particulars are important. I am at a loss to understand why anyone would fight over this issue.
 
No. I did not say that.

It would make no sense to celebrate Easter on just any date. However, there is no morally right way do determine the day, and no doctrine that compels one way or another.

It could be fixed, like Christmas and most Feast, movable to a fixed Easter, like Labor day and Memorial Day, tied to the Jewish Passover, like the Gregorian Calendar, or tied to the Julian Calendar that was in use at the time. Perhaps some other system could be used. I do not think the particulars are important. I am at a loss to understand why anyone would fight over this issue.
But do you not see the irony here? Rome changed it in the first place. (And even some of her own churches have not followed.) Now when Orthodox say, “Thanks, but we’re good,” it seems some Romans are getting bent out of shape yet again? Seriously, get your own house in order. It’s hard to take seriously at times like this, and again when watching how Rome “handles” the ECs. Perhaps yet another “innovation” is not what is needed here.

(And before anyone calls it “just another date”, bear in mind that the ancient churches are the ones who still follow the historical fasts, and hold Lenten-time feasts during Lent…whereas Rome abandoned them. So yes, perhaps to RCs, it really is “just a date”, having grown so far from your roots. But to other Christians, it really matters, affecting liturgy, fasting, etc, in a very profound, daily way.)

On another tack, have any of the Protestant churches responded to the RC statement?
 
But do you not see the irony here?
No, and I am a Catholic, not a Roman, so pardon me if I take your post with a grain of salt.
Seriously, get your own house in order.
I do not know what you mean, but if we have the “wrong” date, then that implies there is such a thing as a right date. I fail to grasp the moral implications here.
 
On another tack, have any of the Protestant churches responded to the RC statement?
I am curious on that as well, though the differing denominations I know all use the Gregorian calendar, at least at this time.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top