F
frjohnmorris
Guest
I will try to diplomatically respond to your rant. However it is difficult to respond calmly to such a stream of insults towards the Eastern Orthodox Church. Your attitude does nothing to further the cause of Orthodox Catholic reconciliation. Much progress has been made in the American and International Orthodox Catholic Dialogues, but attitudes like yours threaten to destroy all that progress and make it more difficult for us to overcome our differences and once again be one Body in Christ. It is most unfortunate that you do not recognize that sincere Christians can disagree without resorting to insults.
Christ did not give St. Peter unlimited authority over the other Apostles or the rest of the Church. That is why he had to have the consent of the Apostles at the Apostolic Council recorded in Acts 15 to liberate Gentile converts from the Jewish laws.
There is nothing in the history of the ancient Church that can be used to support Rome’s claim to universal jurisdiction much less infallibility. The exact opposite is true. St. Irenaeus of Lyons did not hesitate to correct Pope Victor when he tried to exceed his authority by threatening to excommunicate the Churches in Asia Minor during the dispute over the date of Easter. St. Cyprian openly rejected Pope St. Stephen’s argument concerning the Baptism of heretics. He even presided over a local council in Carthage that rejected Pope St. Stephen’s position on the issue commenting that all Bishops have equal authority and that there is no such thing as a Bishop of Bishops. Thus there is no historical evidence that the pre-Nicean Church recognized the Bishop of Rome as having anything more than a primacy of honor.
The Ecumenical Councils exercised authority over the whole Church including Rome. That is why the 1st Ecumenical Council passed Canon VI which limited the authority of Rome to the areas already under Roman jurisdiction and affirmed the independence of Alexandria and Antioch. The Tome of Pope St. Leo only became an official statement of the doctrine of the Church only after it was read, studied and approved by the Council of Chalcedon. The Council of Chalcedon also passed a canon giving clergy the right to appeal a decision against them by their Bishop or Metropolitan not to Rome, but to Constantinople. Significantly Pope St. Leo I did not object to this canon although it took away from Rome the limited right to hear appeals given at Sardica and gave much more authority to hear appeals to Constantinople. The 5th Ecumenical Council certainly showed that it had authority over the Popes when it threatened to excommunicate Pope Vigilius if he did not accept its decrees. Pope Vigilius was wrong to threaten to reject the decrees of the 5th Ecumenical Council. It was necessary to condemn the 3 Chapters to insure that Chalcedon was interpreted as originally intended, that is in conformity with the Christology of St. Cyril of Alexandria. By itself, it is possible to misinterpret Chalcedon in a Nestorian way as did the heretic John Calvin.
As an Orthodox Christian, I accept Canon 28 of Chalcedon because it was passed by an Ecumenical Council. The ancient Church followed the administrative divisions of the Roman Empire. The ancient Patriarchates of Rome, Alexandria and Antioch became Patriarchates because they were the capitals of the province. When Constantinople became the new capital of the Empire, it was only natural that it should be given equal status with the Old Rome.
The charge of Caesaropapism is a myth. Whenever the Emperors meddled in doctrinal affairs the Church stood up to them. The Church supported St. Athanasius against the Arian Emperor Constantinus II. The Church canonized St. John Chrysostom who had been exiled by the Empress Eudoxia. The Church eventually supported St. Maximus the Confessor who was condemned by Emperor Constans II The Church stood up to the Emperors during the iconoclastic controversy.
You forget that the Pope closed the Byzantine Churches in Southern Italy before Patriarch Michael closed the Latin Churches in Constantinople. I have never heard or read any reliable historical source that reported that the Eucharist in the Latin Churches in Constantinople was ever desecrated. That sounds like one of many of Cardinal Humbert’s false accusations against the Eastern Church. You also forget that Pope Leo IX used the forged Donation of Constantine to support his claims to universal authority over the Church.
I do blame Cardinal Humbert for starting the schism. For one thing he had no authority because Pope Leo IX had died and when a Pope dies the authority of his legates ceases. He failed to treat Patriarch Michael I with the respect due a Patriarch of the Church. For another, he insulted the married clergy of Constantinople calling their wives whores and their children bastards. He also made false accusations against the Eastern Church such as accusing us of dropping the filioue clause from the Creed. Then on his own authority Humbert marched into the Agia Sophia Cathedral and laid a bull of excommunication on the Holy Table. The Crusaders finalized the schism by throwing Orthodox Bishops out of their sees and replacing them with Latin Bishops. Read Runciman’s The Great Schism for a scholarly discussion of the schism.
With the prayer that you will recognize that sincere Christians can discuss their disagreements without resorting to exchanging insults and will remember that our goal is the reunification of Orthodoxy with Catholicism not continuing the schism.
The Very Rev. John W. Morris PhD
Christ did not give St. Peter unlimited authority over the other Apostles or the rest of the Church. That is why he had to have the consent of the Apostles at the Apostolic Council recorded in Acts 15 to liberate Gentile converts from the Jewish laws.
There is nothing in the history of the ancient Church that can be used to support Rome’s claim to universal jurisdiction much less infallibility. The exact opposite is true. St. Irenaeus of Lyons did not hesitate to correct Pope Victor when he tried to exceed his authority by threatening to excommunicate the Churches in Asia Minor during the dispute over the date of Easter. St. Cyprian openly rejected Pope St. Stephen’s argument concerning the Baptism of heretics. He even presided over a local council in Carthage that rejected Pope St. Stephen’s position on the issue commenting that all Bishops have equal authority and that there is no such thing as a Bishop of Bishops. Thus there is no historical evidence that the pre-Nicean Church recognized the Bishop of Rome as having anything more than a primacy of honor.
The Ecumenical Councils exercised authority over the whole Church including Rome. That is why the 1st Ecumenical Council passed Canon VI which limited the authority of Rome to the areas already under Roman jurisdiction and affirmed the independence of Alexandria and Antioch. The Tome of Pope St. Leo only became an official statement of the doctrine of the Church only after it was read, studied and approved by the Council of Chalcedon. The Council of Chalcedon also passed a canon giving clergy the right to appeal a decision against them by their Bishop or Metropolitan not to Rome, but to Constantinople. Significantly Pope St. Leo I did not object to this canon although it took away from Rome the limited right to hear appeals given at Sardica and gave much more authority to hear appeals to Constantinople. The 5th Ecumenical Council certainly showed that it had authority over the Popes when it threatened to excommunicate Pope Vigilius if he did not accept its decrees. Pope Vigilius was wrong to threaten to reject the decrees of the 5th Ecumenical Council. It was necessary to condemn the 3 Chapters to insure that Chalcedon was interpreted as originally intended, that is in conformity with the Christology of St. Cyril of Alexandria. By itself, it is possible to misinterpret Chalcedon in a Nestorian way as did the heretic John Calvin.
As an Orthodox Christian, I accept Canon 28 of Chalcedon because it was passed by an Ecumenical Council. The ancient Church followed the administrative divisions of the Roman Empire. The ancient Patriarchates of Rome, Alexandria and Antioch became Patriarchates because they were the capitals of the province. When Constantinople became the new capital of the Empire, it was only natural that it should be given equal status with the Old Rome.
The charge of Caesaropapism is a myth. Whenever the Emperors meddled in doctrinal affairs the Church stood up to them. The Church supported St. Athanasius against the Arian Emperor Constantinus II. The Church canonized St. John Chrysostom who had been exiled by the Empress Eudoxia. The Church eventually supported St. Maximus the Confessor who was condemned by Emperor Constans II The Church stood up to the Emperors during the iconoclastic controversy.
You forget that the Pope closed the Byzantine Churches in Southern Italy before Patriarch Michael closed the Latin Churches in Constantinople. I have never heard or read any reliable historical source that reported that the Eucharist in the Latin Churches in Constantinople was ever desecrated. That sounds like one of many of Cardinal Humbert’s false accusations against the Eastern Church. You also forget that Pope Leo IX used the forged Donation of Constantine to support his claims to universal authority over the Church.
I do blame Cardinal Humbert for starting the schism. For one thing he had no authority because Pope Leo IX had died and when a Pope dies the authority of his legates ceases. He failed to treat Patriarch Michael I with the respect due a Patriarch of the Church. For another, he insulted the married clergy of Constantinople calling their wives whores and their children bastards. He also made false accusations against the Eastern Church such as accusing us of dropping the filioue clause from the Creed. Then on his own authority Humbert marched into the Agia Sophia Cathedral and laid a bull of excommunication on the Holy Table. The Crusaders finalized the schism by throwing Orthodox Bishops out of their sees and replacing them with Latin Bishops. Read Runciman’s The Great Schism for a scholarly discussion of the schism.
With the prayer that you will recognize that sincere Christians can discuss their disagreements without resorting to exchanging insults and will remember that our goal is the reunification of Orthodoxy with Catholicism not continuing the schism.
The Very Rev. John W. Morris PhD