I don’t like this discipline of allowing EO to receive communion. For one, it doesn’t respect the Bishops of the EO who don’t allow their faithful to do this.
That’s not true. The relevant canons
explicitly stress the need for Christians to obey the rules of their own churches, regardless of what we invite them to do. When such an exhortation is written into the very permission to receive, it makes no sense to say that such permission constitutes a lack of respect for EO bishops.
Also, we are not in communion with one another. It almost seems to be a disguised way of proselytizing.
No, it’s essentially an exercise of what eastern Christians call economy. The flexibility of which economy is capable often surprises Latin Catholics.
But it must also imply that rejection of papal supremacy isn’t a big deal–which it might not be.
See my reply to Hesychios below.
It’s not a flawed comparison at all:
the Orthodox have valid Sacraments from a Catholic viewpoint, so the latter have provisions permitting the former to receive communion from them.
the Catholics have valid Sacraments from an Anglican viewpoint, so the latter have provisions permitting the former to receive communion from them.
Well said.
As much as I love the Orthodox, I do not agree with it too. By removing the command on the Sacraments from the Church and placing it on individual ministers who may be heretics (I am not saying the Orthodox are heretics, but a case in example is someone like Fr. Cutie who left the CC and became Episcopalian, but the Church still recognizes his valid priesthood and thus he is able to give valid Sacraments if done in the right formula) then we have allowed the Sacraments to be at the mercy of those who do not profess the belief we profess. I think the Orthodox got it right, and we should follow suit.
But we know they’re not heretics… well, I admit an
individual Orthodox could
privately be a heretic, but so could an individual Catholic. We can only judge the public faith… and we know as Catholics that the faith of the Orthodox is, well, orthodox.
(If you’re going to ask about papal supremacy… see my comments below)
It is a very open and direct way that we are stating that we are ready for a reunion. That we do not question any of their beliefs.
Yes, I think that’s what it is, too.
Of course, it’s also essentially an exercise of economy, even if Latin Christianity lacks that concept. The fact of offering Holy Communion to those in schism from us nonetheless demonstrates that the substance of economy is absolutely present and operative in our canons on this matter.
It is a contradiction. Roman Catholics who do not believe in the Papal dogmas are not free to commune (that many do anyway is another matter), yet their own non-Roman Catholic neighbors who also do not believe in the Papal dogmas are accepted at the table. It is not a consistent practice.
From our perspective, it is not a contradiction.
Recall the following principles:
(1) Catholic teaching professes that revelation ended with the death of the last Apostle - so despite “development of doctrine,” the early Church had the fullness of the Faith as much as we do.
(2) Catholic teaching, which has dogmatized papal supremacy, therefore considers it to have been present and operative all along in some form.
(3) It follows, then, that if the Orthodox profess to hold the Orthodox faith of the Fathers, they
implicitly profess the Catholic dogmas they misunderstand.
Furthermore, the practical rejection of these dogmas by the Orthodox faithful most often entails some level of misunderstanding of these dogmas, anyway…