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frjohnmorris
Guest
I am going to give you an honest answer. I do not want to offend you or any other reader of this site, but I will give an honest answer, because you should at least try to understand my point of view as an Orthodox Christian. Remember, Rome recognizes the full validity of the Sacraments of the Eastern Orthodox Church and considers me a real Priest ordained by a Bishop in full Apostolic Succession. You understand that I can only speak for myself, I cannot speak for the Eastern Orthodox Church, but I cannot accept the decrees of the 1st Vatican Council. Even if I accepted the full Roman Catholic interpretation of St. Matthew 17-18, and St. John 21:15-19, I do not believe that one can build a whole doctrine of Church polity on two relatively short sections of the Gospels. At the very most these texts tell us that St. Peter was the leader of the Apostles. Something which we Orthodox acknowledge. Just because the Bishop of Rome has a legitimate claim to be the head Bishop or leader of the Church, that does not mean that they have absolute supremacy over the entire Church, universal jurisdiction or infallibility. I am historian with a Ph.D in history and taught history on the college level. It was my study of history that led me to Orthodoxy. I was raised a Methodist, but as a teenager felt a need to seek affiliation with the ancient historic Church. I became an Episcopalian believing that they had Apostolic Succession and were truly Catholic. I learned much to my distress that my Priest, a sincere and good but misled man, taught me his idea of Anglicanism. Unfortunately his idea of Anglicanism had little resemblance to the real Anglican Church, which despite a few Catholic trappings is not only completely Protestant, but liberal Protestant. My disillusion finally led me to Eastern Orthodoxy because my studies of church history convinced me that the Eastern Orthodox Church has kept the beliefs and practices of the ancient Church better than any other group of Christians.… but in the end I just do not see it that way and I rather doubt that those who or have authority in such matters if they really want reunion will go the way you think it needs to go.
I cannot find in the consensus of the Holy Fathers, or the proceedings of the 7 Ecumenical Councils anything that can be reconciled with the modern Roman Catholic doctrine of papal supremacy. The Popes had a primacy of honor as senior Bishop, could receive appeals but had to submit the case to a council of Bishops, and could not render the decision himself. As the head of the Church in the capital of the Empire, the Pope had great influence, but did not have universal jurisdiction, authority over an Ecumenical Council or the authority to unilaterally issue binding declarations on the doctrine of the Church. Thus I believe that the Pope had a primacy of honor as “first among equals.”
The closest that a Pope came to speaking “ex cathedra” during the first 1,000 years of church history was Pope St. Leo I the Great’s Tome on the issue of Monophysitism. However, even St. Leo had to turn to an Ecumenical Council to have the decisions of the Robber Council of Ephesus of 449 revoked and his Tome accepted as the official doctrine of the Church. The Council of Chalcedon did not approve the Tome of Leo just because it came from Rome, but appointed a committee that studied it for 5 days to determine whether or not it was orthodox. Only after the committee determined that the Tome was orthodox was it approved by the council. That incident alone disproves the claim that the ancient Church recognized papal infallibility. Canon 28 of Chalcedon clearly sates that Rome is first in rank because it is the old capital of the Empire. The canon makes no mention of the Bishop of Rome as successor to St. Peter. I know that Rome did not accept that canon, but that is irrelevant, because it shows the attitude of the Ecumenical Council towards Rome.
CONT.