C
Cecilianus
Guest
I am glad that Vatican II served the Eastern Churches well, as did the Popes both before and after (Pius XII and John Paul II). But its most obvious effects in general were on the Western Church.Vatican II has been the most important and influential Council for Eastern Catholics since the Seventh. Thank God our bishops were emboldened to be authentically Eastern Catholic.
Why are you associating ultramontanism with Latinizationism? Provide me some evidence of Popes exercising authority over the Eastern Church in order to Latinize it - all the Popes have been the staunchest advocates of the Eastern tradition, including some of the strongest and most “ultramontane” popes - Innocent III, for example.Otherwise we would still be in the midst of latinized accretions under the influence of “staunchest ultramontanists”.
Nor can I reasonably call Vladimir Soloviev or Abbot Mekhitar “Latinizers”, nor for that matter. Nor St. Maximos the Confessor, who gave the “blessed Pope of the holy Roman Church” as much unconditional authority over his own church as over the west - "government, authority, and power to bind and to loose over all the churches that are in the world, in all things and in every way.” St. Basil the Great and St. Theodore Studites, who were hardly Latinizers, complained that the Pope did not show enough solicitude in rooting out heresy in the East. And St. Cyprian of Carthage, who was technically on the Western half of the Empire but who would have used a (now-defunct) rite different from that of Rome, was over the top in his ultramontanism.