Yes, the filioque is an important issue…but I’m referring to the original Creed. No disagreement, right? And related to that, can you give me any example of Catholics who deny the Creed? I thought that’s what you said, but Catholics routinely pray and profess the Creed, so I really don’t understand what you mean by saying some Catholics don’t accept the Creed.
I did not know that Orthodox Christians don’t agree that the 7 sacraments understood and taught by the Catholic Church are the only sacraments. Can you provide more detail here?
Is the text you refer to (For the Life of the World) an authoritative teaching of all Orthodox Christians?
Thanks.
It is no more authoritative than anything published by any Orthodox priest. The Eastern Orthodox have no ability to issue binding statements of faith beyond the limits of a single autocephalous church, but doing so by one brings it to considerable examination and pressure from the others. They simply have no mechanism aside from a grand synod; even then, the faithful could reject the teaching in sobor, and cause the bishops to reconsider.
There are Eastern Orthodox who flat out deny Catholics are
in any way Christian. At least one of them is a bishop in the Russian Orthodox Church. (I forget his name.)
There are a good number who deny that Catholics have sacraments, because in accepting the filioque, they “left the [Eastern] Orthodox Church.”* And because of their particular ecclesiology, based in the writings of St Cyprian**, that means no licity/validity to any of the Catholic sacraments, except maybe baptism.***
There are a considerable number**** of Orthodox bishops who openly doubt the validity of Catholic Ordinations; these are ones who do not openly deny them, merely state “We don’t know.” The OCA has such a declaration on its website. The one bishop who openly disagreed was force-retired for other reasons.
As for the number of sacraments; Fr. Schmemman’s point (which I’ve seen elsewhere, but not as easily understood) is that the big seven (9 if the major ordinations are counted separately) are clearly sacraments because of biblical, but goes further and states that they are all part of the sacrament which is the Orthodox Church; all the actions of the church are part of the Sacrament of the Church, in the same way…
I’ve heard similar from Orthodox Priests in Alaska; whilst a minority opinion, Rev. Fr. Schmemman is iterating one of several Orthodox views. (ironically, his books are required by the Eparchy of Phoenix for the deacon training program…)
*insertion of “Eastern” for clarity, so as not to be confused with the Oriental Orthodox.
** those writings, however, to me seem very self serving, as Cyprian’s descriptions of ecclesiology are apparently an appeal against papal intervention into his episcopacy.
*** Baptism can be done outside the church, but Roman Rite baptisms are oft considered invalid by lack of form - pouring rather than immersion
**** from what I’ve read, nearly half who have stated an opinion.