Shift in the Western Understanding of Filioque to Eastern View?

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Is that needed? Where do you get this information?
The Greeks who attended the council demanded it.
At face value it would seem they did. Their legates agreed and signed on the dotted line. Those were their representatives. Also, we must remember Jerusalem, Antioch and Alexandria were under the rule of Islam at the time.
The Patriarchs didn’t recognise the authority of their legates when they returned home. A little bit like what Pope Leo did at the Council of 449.
I have no doubt the Islamic rulers did not wanted to see a united Christian church. I am thinking that all hell broke loose when they found out what happened. Massive threats and political pressure came down on those Patriarchs and they rolled over. I bet that is what happened.
The Patriarchs didn’t want to betray Orthodoxy. That’s what happened.
Who says this and who gets to decide what is heresy?
The Fathers and the Seven Ecumenical Councils, neither recognised univeral papal jurisdiction, but, in fact, contradicted it quite often.
 
And which Council condemned that teaching?
Nicaea I, canon 6.

“Let the ancient customs in Egypt, Libya and Pentapolis prevail, that the Bishop of Alexandria have jurisdiction in all these, since the like is customary for the Bishop of Rome also. Likewise in Antioch and the other provinces, let the Churches retain their privileges.”
 
And which gesture of good will, my brother, are the Orthodox willing to make?
That’s not how it works. It’s not tit for tat. It’s not a political negotiation where each side makes a concession in perfect balance. It’s about the demands of Christian charity. If the Orthodox have so stringent a view of the true faith that they can’t make any concessions at all, that is their infirmity (or maybe they’re just right), but it doesn’t excuse Catholics from making as many concessions as they can.
 
The Patriarchs didn’t want to betray Orthodoxy. That’s what happened.
Well, that sounds good. I am not quite sure if it is true.

Why would they send legates who do not know what position they are to represent? In those times there was no modern communications. When you sent a representative they knew what your position was.

I do not think the three Patriarchs who lived under muslim rulers all coincidentally sent legates who went rouge and betrayed the faith.

I think when the legates returned home and the local secular islamic rulers found out it hit the fan. The Patriarchs were told to denounce this council and the legates who attended it or their heads would be on a pole. Then they would find another Patriarch who would.

What version do you think is more probable?
 
What version do you think is more probable?
Mine. The Orthodox were pressured by both the Pope (who gave them almost no rations) and the Emperor, who wanted to save his dying empire. Besides, Russia didn’t recognise the union either, and they weren’t controlled by the muslims. Read the journal of Syropoulos who was there.
 
The council of Florence, with its tiny delegation of Greek bishops (two dozen or so), can hardly be called Ecumenical from our viewpoint. Surely that is an understandable sentiment is it not? That is basically the same approach that the West takes with Trullo.
You may not recognize it as an ecumenical council for various reasons, but I’m not sure if the representation argument is the best one…after all, there were a number of councils that the West does indeed recognize as ecumenical that had viritually no Latin representation at all! In any event, numbers aren’t everything. It has often been suggested that the Melkite bishops, despite their minute numbers next to the overwhelming majority of Latin bishops, were a very vocal and influential voice at Vatican II.
 
Mine. The Orthodox were pressured by both the Pope (who gave them almost no rations) and the Emperor, who wanted to save his dying empire.
That sounds like political spin. I also think that means little to those who went to their deaths by lions. But anyways, for the entire eastern sides representatives to make agreement at a historic council except for one person and then later toss it out the window sounds just a little suspicious. I hope you can understand.
The Greeks who attended the council demanded it.
The same Greeks who agreed to the council decisions? Where are you getting this information. Where can I read it?
 
That sounds like political spin. I also think that means little to those who went to their deaths by lions. But anyways, for the entire eastern sides representatives to make agreement at a historic council except for one person and then later toss it out the window sounds just a little suspicious. I hope you can understand.
Perhaps, but even those who lived in christian countries tossed it out of the window. Not everything is a political conspiracy.
The same Greeks who agreed to the council decisions? Where are you getting this information. Where can I read it?
Sylvester Syropoulos’ memoirs. It must be somewhere on the internet.
 
I was hoping for a link but I will look into it. Thanks.
I only have a physical copy of a French translation, so that wont help you I’m afraid. The only English translation on the internet that I could find only translated section 4. I did however find a manuscript, but I don’t think that one is useful either.
 
This is a translation from a Russian work about Florence mainly based on the works of Syropoulos. Enjoy.
 
And which Council condemned that teaching? There were Fathers who asserted it, just not all of them, and no Council contradicts it.
On the contrary, which Ecumenical Council accepted that teaching? Mind here that “Ecumenical” has a deeper sense that just labeling a council that is deemed “infallible”.
 
It proves what many Orthodox have claimed right here at CAF before and that I’m sure you’re aware of - they can reject a council even if their Bishops participate and vote on it and accept it. What’s your proof that Florence was not ecumenical like the councils of the first 8 centuries? Please give actual proof and not mere condescension that proves nothing (like asking me if I know what a ecumenical council is without even bothering with so much as an attempt to show why a council like Florence cannot be so) - and while you’re at it, be sure to explain why Chalcedon or any other council after it should be considered ecumenical per that standard you’re using (whatever it is). Thanks. 👍
Ecumenical means “the inhabited world” from the Greek “Ekumene”. For a council to be Ecumenical, all bishops must accept it, not just those who attended the council. And a council only becomes Ecumenical after all the bishops accept it, not because someone declared it to be so.

And not all bishops at the council accepted it. Mark of Ephesus rejected it.
 
On the contrary, which Ecumenical Council accepted that teaching? Mind here that “Ecumenical” has a deeper sense that just labeling a council that is deemed “infallible”.
Which meaning I’m still waiting for you to give us as you exclude some for apparently no reason…since Orientals participated in none from chalcedony going forward.
 
Well, alright, but don’t many orthodox here argue that they don’t have to accept an ec. council’s pronouncements if they don’t feel that it’s orthodox? Considering that, then surely CTG’s statement that they would merely by virtue of holding an ec.council is at best an overstatement. The very history of the church (conciliar) testifies to the truth that it’s never so neat and tidy (or easy) as far as unity of the church is concerned.
As mentioned about, you do not hold an Ecumenical Council. A Council is declared Ecumenical later on when ALL bishops agree to it.
 
Which meaning I’m still waiting for you to give us as you exclude some for apparently no reason.
I just did, I think I posted at the same time you did. I’ll wait for your response to my other posts.
 
As mentioned about, you do not hold an Ecumenical Council. A Council is declared Ecumenical later on when ALL bishops agree to it.
Right. So why on God’s green earth is any of the seven ecumenical? Some were rejected by nestorians and going forward, chalcedon and all that followed were rejected by Orientals. Are there only one or two councils - if that- that are ecumenical?
 
Nicaea I, canon 6.

“Let the ancient customs in Egypt, Libya and Pentapolis prevail, that the Bishop of Alexandria have jurisdiction in all these, since the like is customary for the Bishop of Rome also. Likewise in Antioch and the other provinces, let the Churches retain their privileges.”
This doesn’t contradict Universal Ordinary Jurisdiction at all. It simply says that the Bishop of Alexandria and Antioch have extra-metropolitan jurisdiction. In the Catholic Church we call that a Patriarch. Nothing in this Canon impedes the Universal Ordinary Jurisdiction of Rome, but rather it extends the jurisdiction of certain locales over that of other nearby Bishops.

Constantine:
On the contrary, which Ecumenical Council accepted that teaching? Mind here that “Ecumenical” has a deeper sense that just labeling a council that is deemed “infallible”.
You’re going off the rails again. I asked which Council condemned the teaching because Cyrillic stated that “Universal Ordinary Jurisdiction” was heresy, and therefore voided the Council of Florence. A teaching can’t be called heresy unless it’s condemned, so perhaps you can point to the condemnation?
As mentioned about, you do not hold an Ecumenical Council. A Council is declared Ecumenical later on when ALL bishops agree to it.
How many Ecumenical Councils have been agreed to by ALL bishops, your words? Show me one, just one.

Peace and God bless!
 
This doesn’t contradict Universal Ordinary Jurisdiction at all. It simply says that the Bishop of Alexandria and Antioch have extra-metropolitan jurisdiction. In the Catholic Church we call that a Patriarch. Nothing in this Canon impedes the Universal Ordinary Jurisdiction of Rome, but rather it extends the jurisdiction of certain locales over that of other nearby Bishops.
Don’t you see how it gives jurisdiction of Egypt to Alexandria and Syria to Antioch, and not both to Rome? Egypt cannot have two heads, like a monster. I’ll add Chalcedon’s canon 28 which declared that Constantinople New Rome had equal authority (isa presbeia). Does that mean that the Ecumenical Patriarch has Universal Ordinary Jurisdiction as well?

Ok, another one, the defeat of conciliarism and the fact that the Pope was declared to be *above *an Ecumenical Council.
 
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