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nablaise
Guest
Hi everyone,
I was reading this article on chiesa about the difficulties on agreements on the meaning of the primacy of the pope. A quote from the Russian Patriarchate is presented as a sign of how difficult it may be…:
Now, I am thinking that perhaps the Orthodox are so bent into geography that they seem to want to theologise on it. It seems to me that this is why the Pope dropped the title of ‘Patriarch of the West’. First, I didn’t like it, then I realised that that title would not really be meaningful in our age of airplanes, trains, and internet, Ordinariates. The Pope was perhaps trying to spare them spinning their heads over geography so they can focus more on theology. However, the Orthodox seem to have understood it as an attempt to point out his universal primacy more strongly.
Well, I see the universal Church as a big family, with bishop as the Fathers of each local family. All bishops being brothers, I see the Pope as the first (elder) of the Bishops; almost like the model of the first born of a family. So while each bishop is chief in his own diocese, when it comes to universal matters, the Pope as the ‘first born’/eldest have the last word. This is I think a simple understanding of ‘presiding in love’.
So how is this hard to understand between the two talking sides? They seem to recognize it, yet…
I think at the end, theologising regions will be seen as errors and will be dropped, including theologising on Rome. Catholic seem to theologize Rome, and the Orthodox keep up the same attitude over their juridictions. This is where the confusion is perhaps coming from. Is the Pope, Pope because he is the bishop of Rome, or because he is the successor of Peter? I think Peter was first among the Apostles before the became bishop of Rome!
How if (God forbid), the Rome was to be destroyed, and the Pope exiled or even killed? whouldn’t the cardinals gather wherever and elect a new Pope? even though he may not be a bishop of Rome?
I think the Lord is calling the Church for more purity and clarity of Faith. If Rome were to disapear off the map of the world, I am sure the Catholic Church would survive and we would have a Pope. How? perhaps this is what the two great Churches have to figure out.
I have often wondered if it would be theologically wrong for a Pope to reign from his original diocese after being elected by Cardinals. Of course it is way way way better to do Pope affairs from the Vatican because it is all set up for that matter. But I think it could do great things for the universal Church for Popes to reign from their native lands. I think it will eventually happen. Or they can decide that ‘Vatican’ does not have to be in the Vatican if you see what I mean…a Universal Church Headquarters could be moved elsewhere in special cases.
I hope they don’t keep getting stuck in geopolitics. Personnaly I think that’s the problem that fueled the schism, it could be the problem to solve for the curse of this schism to be lifted.
My biggest point is: Peter was Pope before he became the Bishop of Rome.
So a priest is made Pope before he is bishop of Rome. While this is a great and noble tradition, considering that it is in Rome where the remains of the blessed Apostle Peter are, but I don’t think it is a sort of dogmatic issue!
Or am I missing something?
I was reading this article on chiesa about the difficulties on agreements on the meaning of the primacy of the pope. A quote from the Russian Patriarchate is presented as a sign of how difficult it may be…:
I was suprised because this is how I seem to have always understood the Church in the first millenium too. I don’t see how Catholics can have problem with that. I have always seen the Pope as being Pope for the whole Church, but patriarch of the West only, while the other Patriarch were for other different regions.“For the Orthodox participants, it is clear that in the first millennium the jurisdiction of the bishop of Rome was exercised only in the West, while in the East, the territories were divided between four patriarchs – those of Constantinople, Alexandria, Antioch and Jerusalem. The bishop of Rome did not exercise any direct jurisdiction in the East in spite of the fact that in some cases Eastern hierarchs appealed to him as arbiter in theological disputes. These appeals were not systematic and can in no way be interpreted in the sense that the bishop of Rome was seen in the East as the supreme authority in the whole universal Church. It is hoped that at the next meetings of the commission, the Catholic side will agree with this position which is confirmed by numerous historical evidence.”
Now, I am thinking that perhaps the Orthodox are so bent into geography that they seem to want to theologise on it. It seems to me that this is why the Pope dropped the title of ‘Patriarch of the West’. First, I didn’t like it, then I realised that that title would not really be meaningful in our age of airplanes, trains, and internet, Ordinariates. The Pope was perhaps trying to spare them spinning their heads over geography so they can focus more on theology. However, the Orthodox seem to have understood it as an attempt to point out his universal primacy more strongly.
Well, I see the universal Church as a big family, with bishop as the Fathers of each local family. All bishops being brothers, I see the Pope as the first (elder) of the Bishops; almost like the model of the first born of a family. So while each bishop is chief in his own diocese, when it comes to universal matters, the Pope as the ‘first born’/eldest have the last word. This is I think a simple understanding of ‘presiding in love’.
So how is this hard to understand between the two talking sides? They seem to recognize it, yet…
I think at the end, theologising regions will be seen as errors and will be dropped, including theologising on Rome. Catholic seem to theologize Rome, and the Orthodox keep up the same attitude over their juridictions. This is where the confusion is perhaps coming from. Is the Pope, Pope because he is the bishop of Rome, or because he is the successor of Peter? I think Peter was first among the Apostles before the became bishop of Rome!
How if (God forbid), the Rome was to be destroyed, and the Pope exiled or even killed? whouldn’t the cardinals gather wherever and elect a new Pope? even though he may not be a bishop of Rome?
I think the Lord is calling the Church for more purity and clarity of Faith. If Rome were to disapear off the map of the world, I am sure the Catholic Church would survive and we would have a Pope. How? perhaps this is what the two great Churches have to figure out.
I have often wondered if it would be theologically wrong for a Pope to reign from his original diocese after being elected by Cardinals. Of course it is way way way better to do Pope affairs from the Vatican because it is all set up for that matter. But I think it could do great things for the universal Church for Popes to reign from their native lands. I think it will eventually happen. Or they can decide that ‘Vatican’ does not have to be in the Vatican if you see what I mean…a Universal Church Headquarters could be moved elsewhere in special cases.
I hope they don’t keep getting stuck in geopolitics. Personnaly I think that’s the problem that fueled the schism, it could be the problem to solve for the curse of this schism to be lifted.
My biggest point is: Peter was Pope before he became the Bishop of Rome.
So a priest is made Pope before he is bishop of Rome. While this is a great and noble tradition, considering that it is in Rome where the remains of the blessed Apostle Peter are, but I don’t think it is a sort of dogmatic issue!
Or am I missing something?