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Anglo_Trad
Guest
The standard by which an ecumenical council is ecumenical is determined by its acceptance. I understand that you will not agree with this. I do not accept what the Roman Catholic Church calls an ecumenical council as being that. They are called by one man, the Pope. One man alone decides what is on the agenda, the Pope. One man decides what decrees are published from that council, the Pope. That is not ecumenical. That is solely papal. An ecumenical council needs all the bishops. The decisions must be what the majority determines. There must be belief that the Holy Spirit will allow such a council not to lead the Church into error. There is absolutely no need for one bishop to makes all the decisions.What I mean is that they are, for example, entirely unable to hold an ecumenical council for lack of any standard by which its ecumenical nature could be universally recognized. Likewise there can be no equivalent of a Papal encyclical or anything of that nature, as there is no Patriarch with authority to teach the whole Church.
I think the issue with this understanding of schism is that one bishop (Rome) is deciding who is in schism and who is not. The bishops as a college are better placed to determine who is in schism not a single bishop.As for schism being unidentifiable, obviously when a schism occurs each side will think it is the right one. What I meant is there is no objective standard for determining who is in communion and who is out, other than a vague concept of “orthodox doctrine” which every Christian presumably believes themselves to have. Lack of a single unmistakable point of unity allows any side of a dispute to simply say “I’m right, therefore it is you who are cast out of the Church not me.”