J
JohnVIII
Guest
…Continued
I keep on comparing things to my Russian Orthodox experience, so I will do likewise again: Met. Philaret once offered 2 epistles to the Patriarch of Constantinople, Met Philaret tried to “correct” the Patriarch. But he didn’t claim to have authority over the Patriarch of another jurisdiction, it was only a “this is not right” letter. The same is so for St Clements letter to the Corinthians. He didn’t claim to have the authority to make them do anything, he was just saying that something wasn’t right that happened there in Corinth.
Only if every autocephalous church actually is represented can it be truly an Ecumenical Council. If some local church decides not to have representation there it is much the same as the canon rule that says that bishops of a local church must meet twice per year (unless they have an excuse such as sickness), but if a bishop does not he must be content with his own communion. It makes no difference if the bishop is the Pope or if it be any other bishop. If the Pope decides not to have representation there (as he did for the 2nd EC) then then Rome must be content with its own communion. Any church that wishes to continue to have all that goes along with so-called “full communion” must have representation at the counsel.…I would not admit it.Though the High and Absolutist Petrine views both affirm the necessity of the Pope for a Council to be truly “ecumenical,” there is a big difference in our respective understandings of that principle. The Absolutist Petrine view claims that the Pope’s approval is the ONLY thing necessary for a Council to be considered “ecumenical.” The High Petrine view, in distinction, believes that the approval of the Pope AND his brother bishops are equally necessary for a Council to be considered “ecumenical.” You can see this tension between the two positions in the debate I am having with brother SteveB in the other thread.
Within an Ecumenical Council if all bishop agreed that the presiding bishop for the council would be the bishop of Cyprus, then the bishop of Cyprus would rule at the council. Of course that would never happen. The council would certainly have the Pope preside and he would rule over the proceedings of the council, but not because of anything that is magical about the Pope, but only because he is recognized as the 1st hierarch by the council.That depends on how one conceives of the term “ruler.” If one assumes that St. John Chrysostom was using the term in the secular sense of “lording it over,” I would agree with you. But if he understood that being a “ruler” in the Church must be defined according to Christ’s prescription (as he who serves the most), then I have no problem with accepting the Truth of St. Chrysostom’s statement about St. Peter.
The canons say that it is “sacrilege” to demote a bishop to a priest. Surely it must also be true that an apostle cannot be made into a bishop! Hence, St. Peter was never made a bishop of either Antioch nor of Rome. And unless St Clement is an Apostle, St John had to out rank him! I’m not sure that the church of Corinth asked St Clement for help, they may have, but it is also possible that St. Clement wrote his epistle to them on his own initiative. The issue there in Corinth was that their 1st hierarch was unjustly deposed by the elders in Corinth (in the opinion of St Clement). He didn’t rule over them, he just offered his opinion because he thought he could help.It’s not a matter of the Apostles being headless, but of the Church being headless. According to Tradition, St. Peter chose his successor, and his successor would have become the head of the Church. Now, would the Apostles have considered St. Peter’s successor as their head? If the Apostles understood that any office of leadership in the Church is about service and not about “lording it over others,” then I do not and cannot doubt that they would have accepted St. Peter’s successor as the new head of the Church.
IMO, no. I believe they would at best be equal. the Church in Corinth could indeed have appealed to St. John instead of Pope St. Clement to settle their troubles. They chose to appeal to Pope St. Clement. But that demonstrates nothing more than that they chose to appeal to Pope St. Clement instead of St. John - nothing more, nothing less. It would seem that those who somehow divine that Pope St. Clement was greater than St. John because of this episode have an agenda — an agenda that I cannot fathom and thus cannot accept.
Blessings,
Marduk
I keep on comparing things to my Russian Orthodox experience, so I will do likewise again: Met. Philaret once offered 2 epistles to the Patriarch of Constantinople, Met Philaret tried to “correct” the Patriarch. But he didn’t claim to have authority over the Patriarch of another jurisdiction, it was only a “this is not right” letter. The same is so for St Clements letter to the Corinthians. He didn’t claim to have the authority to make them do anything, he was just saying that something wasn’t right that happened there in Corinth.