P
Pax_et_Caritas
Guest
You mean he proceeded off the edge
Seems you’ve fallen off the edge.
You mean he proceeded off the edge
Seems you’ve fallen off the edge.
I think the guy is brilliant.Seems you’ve fallen off the edge.
But let us again push for honesty. Nothing can be said of God without erring by defect or omission. It is a limitation of language itself and not the intent of the speaker.
It is hubris to think WE can figure it out. When we thirst for detail about things which we cannot comprehend, our imagination hijacks our thinking.Are you saying it is impossible for God to reveal a truth about Himself to us without erring?
Using your logic, how can you be sure there are really three persons in the One God? And if He can reveal to us that truth to us, why can’t He also reveal to us that the Holy Ghost proceeds from the Father and the Son?
Not according to Holy orthodoxy.Neither heresy nor schism nullify the validity or orders or of the sacraments.
Long before the phrase was ever coined, Holy Orthodoxy knew itself as the church of the Christ, commencing in the upper room at Pentecost.The term “sister church” may cause them to think that they are somehow part of the one truth Church…
In order to be part of the True Church, it is necessary to submit to the Roman Pontiff
Pope Noah,What is the Catholic view of the Filioque? I understand that Catholics believe the Holy Spirit proceeds from the Father and the Son, but does the Father send the Holy Spirit through the Son, or do the Father and the Son act together in sending forth the Paraclete? As a 15 year old, I’m confused.
One of the problems Catholicism has always had to battle is the notion that the Pope may appear to be a devil but when he is acting or speaking “ex cathedra” his words and deeds are said to be infallible. This is a story of such popes - those who led armies, who jocked for political position, who tortured, maimed, committed sacrilege so dreadful that it was only a whisper.
Yet, if one is a faithful Catholic, one would say that this is all just appearances - that they were REALLY the representative of Christ on Earth only they didn’t act like it. It seems they never asked that ubiquitous question, “What would Jesus do?” It is hard to select the “worst” one…what is more awful - to massacre your opponent or to commit adultry on the throne? To lead a slaughter of “infidels” or join with Earthly political powers. Urban is a real winner, my candidate for Bad Pope of the Millenium but others are also listed.
This is not, by the way, an anti-Catholic tirade. If anything, the Church can claim to be truly divinely blessed for having survived these creatures.
What is AFAICT?Within the Trinity, the only distinction truly possible is that of the relationship of persons (hypostasi). Whenever they do something, the act is carried out together: eg:
John 5:19 Then answered Jesus and said unto them, Amen, Amen, I say unto you, The Son can do nothing of himself, but what he sees the Father do: because whatever he does, the Son also does likewise.
Anything else spoken of God as Trinity is something of a fiction.
But, Jesus is an exception since on earth it is his Person (hypostasis = rational substance) which became en-fleshed by the action of the whole Trinity. Therefore, Jesus lowered himself and became able to speak of his human nature as less than God, and allowing his acts/experience to be spoken of distinct from those of the Trinity since flesh has separable parts.
The Trinity, and the filioque are really a meditation on the meaning of the titles revealed in scripture.
For the trinity, then, we have three names from Moses and also three in the new testament. In the OT the names are veiled as variations on “being”, and divinity, and action/might,
but in the NT we are given relational names.
Father
Son
Spirit ( Pneuma=breath, and also Paraclete=advocate)
The word Paraclete can be set aside for this discussion,
because that relates to his (Paraclete=masculine) relationship
to us before the Father, and not to the inner life of the Trinity
(AFAICT).
God is beyond male and female, and there is no seperate female principle in God – who is one. We are made in a nearest copy of God having pieces, as male and female – married. (andro-gynus).
So, the words revealing the nature of God have to be looked at
as analogies to what the common image of human being would
say regarding the names given.
The doctrine of the Trinity rests on the relationship of the three words given as the fullest revelation of the persons:
Father, Son, and Spirit (Breath)
Clearly, Father signifies the one who begets the Son – and hence the origin of the Son is the Father. But what about the Spirit (literally the BREATH / PNEUMA ) of God?
The word itself signified life universally to both Hebrews and Greeks, and therefore it belongs to whomever is “alive”.
So the Spirit is the source of the Father and the Son, as He makes Them alive?One can’t say Father and Son are equal if one is alive and the other is not. The filioque, then, boils down to whether or not the emphasis should be on the fact that the Son would have no life if God the Father had not begotten him and therefore the Breath ultimately comes from the Father (Both eastern and Latins accept this), or whether one notices that both the Father and Son are alive (breathe/spirate) and hence the Spirit must exist and therefore come from both of them (But there is only one Spirit).
Then the Son must beget too, as the Father does that.… because, whatever the Father does, the Son does likewise – the Breathing of the Father mysteriously implies that the Son breathes the same breath (same act).
Actually, very relevant.The word “through” or “and” is irrelevant,
On Religious grounds: the Fathers at the Ecumenical Council said “proceeds from the Father.” The Frankish kings, picking up the filioque from the creed altered for the Visigoth kings, forced it on Rome.really, since there
can only be one Spiration, but somehow the East got to be
really picky about it… and I have never fully understood why except on political grounds.
My guess is that it means ‘As Far As I Can Tell’.What is AFAICT?
The Orthodox did NOT accept the council of Florence. The bishops there did not represent all the Orthodox Churches, St. Mark bishop of Ephesus refused to agree and sign, those who signed said they had to meet in synod in the East to approve the decrees, which never happened.The Orthodox accepted the council of Florent (1438 - 1445) and came back into union with Rome. The following is the teaching of the Dogmatic Council of Forence, which, as was said, the Orthodox accepted.
Council of Florence, Bull Cantata Domino: “The sacrosanct Roman Church, founded by the voice of our Lord and Savior, firmly believes, professes, and preaches one true God omnipotent unchangeable, and eternal, Father, Son, and Holy Ghost; one in essense, three in persons; Father unborn, Son forn of the Father, Holy Ghost proceeding from Father and Son. … the Holy Ghost alone proceeds at the same time from the Father and Son.… For the fact that the Son is of the Fathers and without beginning, and that the Holy Ghost proceeds from the Father and the Son. … Whoever, therefore, have adverse and contrary opinions the Church disapproves and anathematizes and declares to be foreign to the Christian body which is the Church.” (Denz. 703, 704, page 225-226).
That would include the Fathers of Constantinople who wrote the original Creed.Now we know what to believe: That the Holy Ghost proceeds from the Father and the Son. To those who do not believe this doctrine “the Church disapproves and anathematizes and declares to be foreign to the Christian body which is the Church”.
You have to agree first to reneg.So?
The rest of the eastern clergy and layity repudiated Nicaea I, yet we hold that Council to be ecumenical. Just becuase some bishops and laymen reneg doesn’t make the council anyless valid.
Council of Lyons-
The Orthodox clearly stated that their signatures and oaths were contingent upon approval of a synod of and in the East (and not under the duress of the pope’s control) which did not happen.The Orthodox by signing the decrees, canons, and taking oaths did indeed accept this council as ecumenical. It’s only when the Mohhamedans replace the Patriarch of Constantinople with an anti-western patriarch do we see the great repudiation of Florence. Don’t sit here and tell me the Orthodox did not recognize Florence. To say anything else wouuld be egregiously false.
Authorized by whom? The emperor? (I thought you guys didn’t believed in caesaropapism).Those at the council who were the authorized representatives for the Orthodox did accept the Council documents.
But what is important about the quote from the council of Florence is not whether or not certain heretics and/or schismatics accepted it, but that it teaches what Catholics are bound to accept. In other words, it clears the matter up for those true Christians who want to know the truth.
That is the great thing about the clear teaching Councils. One may not agree with what they say, but at least they know what is being taught. And for those true Christians (the ones who do want to know the truth), they find such clear and unambiguous teachings to be very refreshing.
Yes that is the great thing about the clear teaching Councils, such as Constantinople I and Ephesus, whose canons (I and VII) declare that the Creed “shall remain and shall not be set aside” and:If the Orthodox do not accept the doctrine, it has absolutely no effect on the truth. But they need to realize that if they reject it, “the Church disapproves and anathematizes” them, declaring them “to be foreign to the Christian body which is the Church.”
And they said we couldn’t agree on anything.Neither heresy nor schism nullify the validity or orders or of the sacraments.
With respect to the term “sister Church”, you said it is “strange language for people who are ‘foreign to the Christian body’.” This we agree on.
I think it is a mistake to use that term to refer to a church that is not part of the one True Church. Why do I think it is a mistake? For the same reason I think it was a mistake for John Paul II to repeatedly say that the old Covenant “was never revoked by God”. In my opinion, it is a misleading statement.
He’s your infallible head, so that’s your problem to explain.How easy is it for a Jew (or a Catholic) to hear that statement and conclude that the old Covenant will save a Jew, contrary to what the Catholic Church infallibly teaches? Likewise, how easy is it for an Orthodox to hear the term “sister church” and conclude that they are not completely separated from the one True Church?
That would exclude the first 1870 years of the Church.In order to be part of the True Church, it is necessary to submit to the Roman Pontiff and to adhere to the doctrines that have been revealed by God, such as the Infallibility of the Roman Pontiff (under limited conditions), and the Primacy of the Roman Pointiff.
Anyone who rejects any dogma that has been revealed by God, or refuses to acknowledge the Pope as the visible head of the Church, immediately becomes a heretics or schismatic and is cut off from the Church.
Mortal sin destroys the life of the soul, but does not cut one off from the Church. On the other hand, heresy and schism, not only destroy the life of grace, but cut a person off from the Church.
Pope Pius XII: “For not every sin, however grave it may be, is such as of its own nature to sever a man from the Body of the Church, as does schism or heresy or apostasy.” (Mystici Corporis Christi (# 23), June 29, 1943)
Council of Florence, Cantate Domino: “Therefore the Holy Roman Church condemns, reproves, anathematizes and declares to be outside the Body of Christ, which is the Church, whoever holds opposing or contrary views.”
We don’t hear this clearly taught anymore, but it is true none-the-less; and using terms of affection to refer to various groups does not change the truth. And what is the truth? In the same document quoted earlier from the Council of Florence, Contate Domino, we are told what the truth is with respect to those who are outside of the Roman Catholic Church:
Council of Florence, Contate Domino: "The most Holy Roman Church firmly believes, professes and preaches that none of those existing outside the Catholic Church, not only pagans, but also Jews and heretics and schismatics, can have a share in life eternal; but that they will go into the eternal fire which was prepared for the devil and his angels, unless before death they are joined with Her; and that so important is the unity of this ecclesiastical body that only those remaining within this unity can profit by the sacraments of the Church unto salvation, and they alone can receive an eternal recompense for their fasts, their almsgivings, their other works of Christian piety and the duties of a Christian soldier. No one, let his almsgiving be as great as it may, no one, even if he pour out his blood for the Name of Christ, can be saved, unless he remain within the bosom and the unity of the Catholic Church." (Pope Eugene IV, the Bull Cantate Domino, 1441.)
In my opinion, it is no act of charity to use affectionate terms that mislead people. Charity is speaking the truth with kindness, considering the other person; not avoiding the truth and misleading people for fear of offending someone, or for the sake of a false unity.
Hmmm. How indeed? Seems similar to what Ephesus says:How could anyone who believes what the Council of Florence teaches with respect to salvation, be so uncharitable as to mislead heretics, schismatics, Jews, etc, into believing that they will attain ever lasting life? Such a person either lacks faith in what the Church teaches, or they lack of charity for others.
Jimmy is correct, “As far as I can tell.”What is AFAICT?
What do you mean?So the Spirit is the source of the Father and the Son, as He makes Them alive?
That’s purposely perverted. The son and father do the begetting together – in the sense that a single act is shared by both of them. The father is the source of the act – the son is the destination. Can the Father beget without a son being begotten? There is no time in God so that the son is begotten at some time, even PAST TENSE. Yet if the verbs are timeless – whatever the Father is doing is happening NOW – when the son already has existed forever.Then the Son must beget too, as the Father does that.
elucidate.Actually, very relevant.
Perhaps I’m too tired to get the historical praxis argument being expressed here? I am not arguing on that ground but from the image itself and scripture, which predate any later historical development / argument. I find the Latin position to be consistent with scripture, and the image given to us describing the trinity.On Religious grounds: the Fathers at the Ecumenical Council said “proceeds from the Father.” The Frankish kings, picking up the filioque from the creed altered for the Visigoth kings, forced it on Rome.
That is strange, what is the whole sentence in Greek?When these things had been read, the holy Synod decreed that it is unlawful for any man to bring forward, or to write, or to compose a different (ἑτέραν) Faith as a rival to that established by the holy Fathers assembled with the Holy Ghost in Nicæa.
The Creed of Constantinople was directed against the error of Macedonius who denied that the Holy Ghost proceeded from the Father. Therefore, to counter this error, the Creed specifically stated that the Holy Ghost proceeds from the Father. The Creed did not say the Holy Ghost does not proceed from the Son, only that it proceeded from the Father. It is not preaching a new faith to add that the Holy Ghost proceeds from the Son, especially given the fact that this was a common teaching during the time the Constantinople Creed was written.Yes that is the great thing about the clear teaching Councils, such as Constantinople I and Ephesus, whose canons (I and VII) declare that the Creed “shall remain and shall not be set aside” and:
“When these things had been read, the holy Synod decreed that it is unlawful for any man to bring forward, or to write, or to compose a different (ἑτέραν) Faith as a rival to that established by the holy Fathers assembled with the Holy Ghost in Nicæa.
But those who shall dare to compose a different faith, or to introduce or offer it to persons desiring to turn to the acknowledgment of the truth, whether from Heathenism or from Judaism, or from any heresy whatsoever, shall be deposed, if they be bishops or clergymen; bishops from the episcopate and clergymen from the clergy; and if they be laymen, they shall be anathematized”.
This appears to be a serious change in Catholic teaching, because it was stated in an earlier creed that the Holy Spirit proceeds from the Father.The Catholic teaching, defined at the 4th Lateran Council (among others), is that the Holy Spirit proceeds from the Father AND the Son. This was declared to oppose to the error that the Holy Spirit proceeds from the Father THROUGH the Son.