I appreciate your reasoned response. As I am sure last night I received a very insulting response from an irate poster.
The Eastern Orthodox Church has never denied that Rome held a primacy. The issue that divides us is over what that means. I believe that was a primacy of honor as first among equals and that the Pope did not have universal jurisdiction or infallibly. For in the ancient Church there was local autonomy. In each province the local Bishops were led by the Bishop of the provincial capital or Metropolis, thus the title Metropolitan who presided over meetings of the Bishops that together made all important decisions. Canon IX of the Council of Antioch 341
Canon IX.
It behoves the bishops in every province to acknowledge the bishop who presides in the
metropolis, and who has to take thought for the whole province; because all men of business come together from every quarter to the metropolis. Wherefore it is decreed that he have precedence in rank, and that the other bishops do nothing extraordinary without him, (according to the ancient canon which prevailed from [the times of] our Fathers) or such things only as pertain to their own particular parishes and the districts subject to them. For each bishop has authority over his own parish, both to manage it with the piety which is incumbent on every one, and to make provision for the whole district which is dependent on his city; to ordain presbyters and deacons; and to settle everything with judgment. But let him undertake nothing further without the bishop of the metropolis; neither the latter without the consent of the others.
This canon establishes the principle of administration by councils. Notice that the Metropolitan did not have veto power but had to administer the Archdiocese with the consent of the others. Canon V of the 1st Ecumenical Council, Nicaea 1 in 325 required that the Bishops of each province meet at least twice a year. Thus the Church was administered by what we call the Holy Synod of the Bishops presided over by the Metropolitan. Canon VI of 1st Nicaea established 3 Metropolitnates, Rome, Alexandria and Antioch. Although Rome had a primacy of honor, each Metropolintate administered its own affairs and elected the local Bishops and Metropolitan (canon IV of 1st Nicaea). After the founding of Constantinople on the site of the ancient village of Byzantium, the Bishop of Byzantium was raised to the level of Metopolitan of Constantinople at the 2nd Council, I Constantinople in 381 and given a rank of honor equal to the Old Rome by canon 28 of Chalcedon in 451. The Bishop of Jerusalem was given Metropolitan rank by Chalcedon. Eventully, the Metropolitans were called Patriarchs in the Constantinople, Antioch and Jerusalem, and Popes in Rome and Alexandria. All decisions were made by councils, some local and some international. The ultimate authority in the Church was an Ecumenical Councils representing all 5 Patriarchates. All Patriarchs including the Pope were under the authority of an Ecumenical Council.
It is on this issue that we differ. Eastern Orthodox continue to follow the old form of polity. The Roman Catholic Church evolved differently into papal rule. The problem that I have with the modern papacy is that the authority that belonged to council in the ancient Church has been concentrated into the hands of one man, the Pope by giving the Pope an absolute veto and instead of electing Bishops locally giving the Pope the authority to appoint the Bishops. Despite the passionate arguments to the contrary, the ancient Popes had no such authority, but like every other Patriarch had to abide by the decisions of his Synod and of an Ecumenical Council. As holding a primacy of honor, the Pope had great influence, but did not have absolute authority or veto power as do modern Popes. That is where we disagree. I believe that Roman Catholicism concentrates too much power in the hands of the Pope and has made a major mistake by not making the Pope accountable to the College of Cardinals or an Ecumenical Council and by giving him the authority to unilaterally make ex cathedra declarations on the teachings of the Church. In the age of the ancient undivided Church doctrinal decisions were made by Ecumenical Councils which had authority over every Bishop of the Church including the Bishop of Rome.
Despite the fervor of the defenders of the papacy, the papacy as we know it today did not exist in the age of the undivided Church. No serious historian will argue that it did. The Popes slowly gained authority, first over the rest of the West, and then tried to gain authority over the East. When the papacy tried to gain authority over the East, the Eastern Patriarchs refused to give up their ancient right of autonomy and submit to the power of the Popes, and the result was the schism.
Archpriest John W. Morris