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Marybeloved
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I started this thread to reply to this comment because the Mod has asked posters to start another thread for those who wish to discuss the Filioque.And we still do think. The main reason why some Orthodox theologians are open to it now with qualification is because Roman Catholic theologians have largely moved away from the medieval model of understanding the procession of the Holy Spirit. For example, I often see Metropolitan John (Zizioulas) misconstrued as being an Orthodox proponent for the Filioque, but that is not the case. He is only saying that if Roman Catholics believe in the Filioque as being equivalent to saying the Spirit progresses essentially from the Son (which I must point out is not the same as saying that the Spirit receives the divine nature from the Son), or manifests eternally through the Son, but does not share in the free, personal causality of the Father (this phrasing, I must point out, is rather unique to Metropolitan John, I have not seen other Orthodox writers speak of causality in this fashion), then it could be conceived of as bring consistent with Orthodox theology. In this case, the softening of the Orthodox stance seems to have come about because of a shift of contemporary Roman Catholic theology towards Orthodox thought, not really because of one within Orthodox thought itself.
Cavaradossi, does your statement have a real basis in fact and History? Has the West shifted its understanding of the Filioque to fit Orthodoxy or have those Easterns you quoted shifted their misunderstanding of the Western filioque?