That is rather absurd. The very definition of autocephaly is that a synod does not require any outside approval when electing its own primate, and by virtue of this, self-governing (this is in contrast to a merely autonomous church which is able to conduct most of its affairs without external approval, but which cannot elect its own primate without the approval of some other ecclesiastical body).
Either a synod is able freely to elect its own primate or it is not.
But are these two bodies capable of electing their own primate? If so, then they are autocephalous, and if not, then they are autonomous. That a higher ranking bishop in the diptychs might be allowed to mediate internal disputes or disputes between different autocephalous churches is irrelevant, for this is one of the prerogatives which comes with a primacy of honor.
It’s not absurd at all. The fact is that “autocephaly” is not restricted to the definition you propose. It also denotes the concept of not being subject in any way to the jurisdiction of another authority. It is more absurd to suggest that the only difference between an autocephalous Church and an autonomous Church is that the former gets to choose its own bishop without (name removed by moderator)ut from an outside agency, whereas the latter does so. There is more to it than that. It’s a fact that Metropolitan Churches are subject to the canon law of the Patriarchate to which they belong. That is a big part of the reason for the difference between autocephaly and autonomy (it’s not just a matter of choosing head bishops).
We know that even Patriarchates are subject to the laws of an Ecum Council, so Patriarchates are not strictly autocephalous in the full sense of the word. In that same full sense, only the Church universal is a truly autocephalous entity, for there really is no other canonical authority above it on earth.
The Russian Orthodox Church clearly recognizes the Ecumenical Patriarch as being the highest ranking see and the holder of the primacy of honor in its recent response to the Ravenna statement. The position of the Ecumenical Patriarch in the canonical taxis of sees and its resultant presidency in love has never been in question.
That’s all good on paper, but the MP often tries to challenge the EP in its jurisdictional claims. I believe the MP is in the wrong in such instances. It should never forget that unlike the EP, the Moscow Patriarchate got its status from the EP, not an Ecum Council.
This is a misunderstanding of what ethnophyletism is…
Two points:
(1) I know what ethnophyletism is. I said the problem was in the diaspora, not the Traditional territories. I do believe the initial creation of Patriarchates in the Slavic EOC were acts of ethnophyletism, but mostly depending on whether the act ever caused schism. If it did not, I am not inclined to call it such. If it initially did, the matter was obviously resolved, and the status quo in the Traditional territories does not cause schism. Hence, as stated, ethnophyletism is not an issue in the Traditional territories, but it is a relevant issue in the diaspora.
(2) The tradition of creating ecclesiastical jurisdictions along the lines of civil jurisdictions may justify the creation of eparchies/episcopal sees, and even metropolitan sees, but not patriarchates. I believe it is the excessive creation of patriarchates in the first place that has resulted in the jurisdictional disputes in the diaspora. Would we have these jurisdictional disputes if the ROC was not a Patriarchate, but simply Constantinople? As suggested earlier, perhaps if patriarchates created
not by an Ecum Council, but by a Patriarch, recognized that they do not
exactly have the same ecclesiastical status as their mother Church (which was established by Ecumenical authority), and simply submitted to the ruling of the mother Church, I think these ecclesiastical disputes would not occur. What do you think?
The problem with this way of thinking is that one would be hard pressed to define just how divergent practices should have to be in order to justify the creation of parallel jurisdictions. Does the fact that the Russians follow the St. Sabbas typikon and that the Greeks follow the Violakis typikon constitute, for example, a great enough difference that parallel jurisdictions should be allowed? (After all, the Violakis typikon differs from St. Sabbas quite noticeably in how Sunday Orthros and Liturgy are composed.) I think we are simply better off admitting that parallel hierarchies fall short of the Christian ideal.
According to your paradigm, it would not seem to justify it because the parallel jurisdiction would result in two bishops for the same territory (or people within a territory). But the paradigm of personal jurisdiction focuses on the people, not the territory, so there is no parallel jurisdiction to speak of since the same people won’t have two bishops over them.
Blessings