M
Mannyfit75
Guest
I don’t think Noah has a problem with the bishops and Pope. I think he has a problem with the Bride of Christ. tisk tisk…
Here’s a good piece on the EO and contraception:An Orthodox Spiritual Father may on rare occasion allow a couple to use NFP or another barrier method only in the most extreme of cases: like possible death. Otherwise, the Orthodox Church as a whole deems all forms of trying to control a couples fertility as forbidden including NFP. Just as eating when you are not physically hungry is gluttony so is having sex without being open to possible new life and waiting to only have sex when you are relatively sure you will not pro-create lust. Both are considered sins by the Orthodox Church.
I understand where you are coming from. You want to be faithful to the original deposit of Faith and remain in full union with the Church of the Early Church Fathers. You are noticing that many of the practices/beliefs of the Catholic Church seem to vary from that and that Orthodoxy has continued to remain faithful.I’m having a struggle within my soul, and you’re accusing me of being a cafeteria Catholic. When my heart screams something, and the Church fathers seem to support it, and then I see that it is not taught anymore in Rome, while it is taught in Orthodoxy, I need an explanation. And you call me a cafeteria Catholic. Thank you, sir.
You’re overlooking the fact that the eastern church submitted to the papal primacy at Florence, so that if the primacy is an innovation or heresy, the eastern church fell into heresy too.Eastern Orthodoxy sounds better every day…
And I’d refer you to the Canons of St. John the Faster on this issue. Using any type of birth control is equal to having an abortion for which the penance is years of strict fasting (no more than 1 meal a day after the 9th Hour (3 pm) consisting of only bread and water) with 100 or was it 250 prostrations a day and the inablility to receive the Holy Eucharist until the years of penance has been fullfilled under the close supervisor of one’s spiritual father or spiritual mother.Here’s a good piece on the EO and contraception:
socrates58.blogspot.com/2007/03/does-orthodoxy-allow-contraception-or.html
In order for a Church Council to be valid, the Orthodox Church as a whole has to accept it. The Orthodox Church rejected this Council whole heartedly. Reexamine your history. Read, “Life After Death” which was translated into English and is available at: St. Anthony’s Greek Orthodox Monastery in AZ - this gives details of the Orthodox Fathers who were involved in that Council from their own words.You’re overlooking the fact that the eastern church submitted to the papal primacy at Florence, so that if the primacy is an innovation or heresy, the eastern church fell into heresy too.
In fact, however, the primacy of jurisdiction is not an innovation. The letters of Pope St. Leo show that he was prepared to exercise his jurisdiction over bishops and councils alike. He had a papal vicar in Thessalonica to exercise jurisdiction over the east.
You should read these epistles.
I suggested for him to investigate the Eastern Rite Churches…Melkite Greek Catholic Church seems to be the best optionI understand where you are coming from. You want to be faithful to the original deposit of Faith and remain in full union with the Church of the Early Church Fathers. You are noticing that many of the practices/beliefs of the Catholic Church seem to vary from that and that Orthodoxy has continued to remain faithful.
I converted to the Orthodox Church 4 years ago after about 7 years of prayer, study and heartache. I many, many times tried to get Catholic responses to the Orthodox’ strong positions…calling Catholic priests, Catholic Answers, the Coming HomeNetwork, etc. to no avail.
However, after nearly 4 years of being an Orthodox Christian, I have come across some new (new to me that is) Early Church Father quotes which I must investigate further. The result may be 1. Me being a stronger Orthodox Christian
2. I may end up back into the Catholic Church.
You may be interested to know that the Eastern Catholic Churches, such as the Melkite Greek Catholic Church, still teach and practice the same theology as the Orthodox Church does such as: Theosis, “no such thing as Purgatory”, etc. Their only difference between Orthodox and the Melkite Greek Catholic Church is that they ***are *** in full union with the Church of Rome and the Pope. You may want to check out their website…www.melkite.org.
Best of wishes to you during your heartache. I call it that because that is how it felt to me. The fact that no one from the Catholic Church seemed to understand when I went through this made it even harder.
My suggestions would be:
- Keep up and increase your prayer life.
- Start visiting Eastern Catholic Churches.
- Seek out a spiritual father or a spiritual mother who knows both sides.
Before he starts church or rite shopping, he needs to examine the veracity of his dissents which I believe are as follows:I suggested for him to investigate the Eastern Rite Churches…Melkite Greek Catholic Church seems to be the best option
Not all the bishops signed the decrees of Nicea; not all the bishops signed the decrees of Chalcedon-- you think you can reexamine those?In order for a Church Council to be valid, the Orthodox Church as a whole has to accept it. The Orthodox Church rejected this Council whole heartedly. Reexamine your history. Read, “Life After Death” which was translated into English and is available at: St. Anthony’s Greek Orthodox Monastery in AZ - this gives details of the Orthodox Fathers who were involved in that Council from their own words.
With all due respect to Dave Armstrong, he hasn’t really interacted with the position of the Orthodox Church on the use of contraception. He takes some quotes by individual Orthodox in the West and statements of the OCA and GOARCH and concludes that Orthodoxy has endorsed contraception. At best, these comprise only 5% of Orthodoxy. He hasn’t ever (to my knowledge) interacted with what the Russian, Serbian, Romanian and Greek Orthodox Churches have stated on contraception. I suspect that he doesn’t do this because he knows that if he actually mentioned what 95% of Orthodoxy taught on contraception that he would find a position to the right of his own Church.Here’s a good piece on the EO and contraception: socrates58.blogspot.com/2007/03/does-orthodoxy-allow-contraception-or.html
And this is problematic. It quite resembles situation ethics.I assure you the the rare occasion of laxing the Churches teaching is done on a case by case basis with the one one one guidance by one’s personal spiritual father or spiritual mother.
It’s actually more like your Church’s concept of “double-effect.” The common denominator is that sometimes in order to do the right thing, people must commit an action of a pastoral nature that remains objectively wrong, but carries no guilt with it due to the circumstances that the action is committed under.And this is problematic. It quite resembles situation ethics.
Of course, all of this proves the point that they have varying truths with varying people because they really have no Magisterium. There’s a difference between the Magisterium and the Church at large.He takes some quotes by individual Orthodox in the West and statements of the OCA and GOARCH and concludes that Orthodoxy has endorsed contraception. At best, these comprise only 5% of Orthodoxy. He hasn’t ever (to my knowledge) interacted with what the Russian, Serbian, Romanian and Greek Orthodox Churches have stated on contraception. I suspect that he doesn’t do this because he knows that if he actually mentioned what 95% of Orthodoxy taught on contraception that he would find a position to the right of his own Church.
One of the results of the Protestant Reformation, for example, was to deprive the Church of her specific ec clesial teaching authority. For the Protestants, Chris tian truth could be found only in Scripture. Moreover, the ultimate judgment about the meaning of Scrip ture — “the authentic interpretation of the Word of God” — was held to reside primarily in the private judgment of the individual Christian. Thus, from the beginning, Christian communions stemming from the Protestant Reformation have precisely lacked a definite ecclesial teaching authority: they have lacked a Magisterium.
The Eastern Orthodox Church, by contrast, recognizes that Christ did endow his Church with a specific teaching authority; but the Orthodox have nevertheless been severely constrained by their idea that the full teaching authority received from Christ somehow became truncated or suspended after having been exercised only in the first seven general (or ecumenical) Councils of the Church recognized by both East and West. The Orthodox have admirably attempted to carry on bearing authoritative witness to the teachings of Christ, and have sometimes utilized in their teaching for this purpose statements and decisions of various synods and patriarchs subsequent to the ancient Councils. Mostly, however, the Orthodox Church now simply relies on Tradition, as the Protestant Churches rely on Scripture.
Thus, even though the Orthodox have not failed to preserve essential truths taught by the ancient Coun cils, the Orthodox Church appears to lack a defined and clear-cut on-going ecclesial Magisterium in the full sense of the word — just as the Protestants appear to lack any Magisterium at all in the sense in which the Catholic Church understands — and exercises — the Magisterium with which Christ en dowed his Church. Is it possible, for example, to imagine either the Pro testants or the Orthodox ever producing such an authoritative compendium of Christian teaching as that contained in the Cate chism of the Catholic Church — wholly faithful to both Scripture and Tra dition, yet completely contemporary and relevant, specifically addressing and answering not a few of the burning questions posed today for faith and morals?
.To produce such a Catechism, a living Church Magis terium was necessary — just as a living Church Magis terium has been required to deal authoritatively with the morality of typical modern dilemmas and developments from birth control and cloning to nuclear warfare
“I follow no leader but Christ and join in communion with none but your blessedness [Pope Damasus I], that is, with the chair of Peter. I know that this is the rock on which the Church has been built. Whoever eats the Lamb outside this house is profane. Anyone who is not in the ark of Noah will perish when the flood prevails” (Letters 15:2 [A.D. 396]).
The answer from an Orthodox perspective is much more complex. The communion of churches that holds to orthodox teaching is the Church. Which communion is this? How can you be so sure? Without the certainty provided by the Chair of Peter, which the early Church had, the answer is totally subjective. Perhaps the Old Believers in Russia constitute the “true” Church. They claim that mainstream Eastern Orthodoxy has departed from Tradition and introduced novelties. Again, perhaps it’s the Oriental Orthodox. The Orthodox believe that a council is valid when it is accepted by the “whole church”. Well the Oriental Orthodox could argue that Chalcedon was never accepted by the Church as Alexandria and Antioch rejected it (becoming the modern Oriental Orthodox Churches)!“The church here is split into three parts, each eager to seize me for its own. . . . Meanwhile I keep crying, ‘He that is joined to the chair of Peter is accepted by me!’ . . . Therefore, I implore your blessedness [Pope Damasus I] . . . tell me by letter with whom it is that I should communicate in Syria” (ibid., 16:2).
Every Orthodox bishop didn’t agree to this Council. For example, the Russian Church rejected the Council of Florence.You’re overlooking the fact that the eastern church submitted to the papal primacy at Florence, so that if the primacy is an innovation or heresy, the eastern church fell into heresy too.
If this is true, this papal vicar held more power than the various Patriarchs of the East. If this is correct, we should see these papal vicars acting with more authority than these Patriarchs. However, the fact remains that these Patriarchs acted with more authority than any papal vicar ever did. I find it interesting that as Papal Rome’s authority grew after the Great Schism of 1054, that the Eastern Patriarchs that Rome appointed were virtually the Pope’s legates. This is a far cry from the powerful, independent Eastern Patriarchs of the first millennium. This is a strong sign that there was a shift in your Church’s ecclesiology after the Schism. If there weren’t a shift and development in the Pope’s claims to universal jurisdiction, these patriarchal styles wouldn’t have differed so radically after 1054.In fact, however, the primacy of jurisdiction is not an innovation. The letters of Pope St. Leo show that he was prepared to exercise his jurisdiction over bishops and councils alike. He had a papal vicar in Thessalonica to exercise jurisdiction over the east.
I thought that the “Magisterium” was the teaching authority of all the bishops. We still have this teaching authority in our bishops. However, the Roman Catholic Church has this teaching authority only in name. In reality, the bishops of your Church have no teaching authority unless they are in union with one bishop - the Pope. Isn’t this simply the teaching authority of one that the others gather around?Of course, all of this proves the point that they have varying truths with varying people because they really have no Magisterium. There’s a difference between the Magisterium and the Church at large.
It’s about time that somebody made known the facts, one of which is that the popes exercised jurisdiction in the east through their vicariate at Thessalonica.Every Orthodox bishop didn’t agree to this Council. For example, the Russian Church rejected the Council of Florence.
If this is true, this papal vicar held more power than the various Patriarchs of the East. If this is correct, we should see these papal vicars acting with more authority than these Patriarchs. However, the fact remains that these Patriarchs acted with more authority than any papal vicar ever did. I find it interesting that as Papal Rome’s authority grew after the Great Schism of 1054, that the Eastern Patriarchs that Rome appointed were virtually his legates. This is a far cry from the powerful, independent Eastern Patriarchs of the first millennium. This is a strong sign that there was a shift in your Church’s ecclesiology after the Schism. If there weren’t a shift and development in the Pope’s claims to universal jurisdiction, these patriarchal styles wouldn’t have differed so radically after 1054.
God bless,
Adam
And thus lies the One. This is a pretty good article on the subject. newadvent.org/cathen/15006b.htm And here’s part of it:I thought that the “Magisterium” was the teaching authority of all the bishops. We still have this teaching authority in our bishops. However, the Roman Catholic Church has this teaching authority only in name. In reality, the bishops of your Church have no teaching authority unless they are in union with one bishop - the Pope. Isn’t this simply the teaching authority of one that the others gather around?
God bless,
Adam
Properly speaking, this magisterium is a teaching authority; it not only presents the truth, but it has the right to impose it, since its power is the very power given by God to Christ and by Christ to His Church. This authority is called the teaching Church. The teaching Church is essentially composed of the episcopal body, which continues here below the work and mission of the Apostolic College. It was indeed in the form of a college or social body that Christ grouped His Apostles and it is likewise as a social body that the episcopate exercises its mission to teach. Doctrinal infallibility has been guaranteed to the episcopal body and to the head of that body as it was guaranteed to the Apostles, with this difference, however, between the Apostles and the bishops that each Apostle was personally infallible (in virtue of his extraordinary mission as founder and the plenitude of the Holy Ghost received on Pentecost by the Twelve and later communicated to St. Paul as to the Twelve), whereas only the body of bishops is infallible and each bishop is not so, save in proportion as he teaches in communion and concert with the entire episcopal body.
At the head of this episcopal body is the supreme authority of the Roman pontiff, the successor of St. Peter in his primacy as he is his successor in his see. As supreme authority in the teaching body, which is infallible, he himself is infallible. The episcopal body is infallible also, but only in union with its head, from whom moreover it may not separate, since to do so would be to separate from the foundation on which the Church is built. The authority of the pope may be exercised without the co-operation of the bishops, and this even in infallible decisions which both bishops and faithful are bound to receive with the same submission. The authority of the bishops may be exercised in two ways; now each bishop teaches the flock confided to him, again the bishops assemble in council to draw up together and pass doctrinal or disciplinary decrees. When all the bishops of the Catholic world (this totality is to be understood as morally speaking; it suffices for the whole Church to be represented) are thus assembled in council the council is called oecumenical. The doctrinal decrees of an oecumenical council, once they are approved by the pope, are infallible as are the ex cathedra definitions of the sovereign pontiff. Although the bishops, taken individually, are not infallible their teaching participates in the infallibility of the Church according as they teach in concert and in union with the episcopal body, that is according as they express not their personal ideas, but the very thought of the Church.