J
John_of_Patmos
Guest
I think the Church of Cyprus is 5th. Then again, I am citing Wikipedia:shrug:Not according to any list I’ve ever seen.
I think the Church of Cyprus is 5th. Then again, I am citing Wikipedia:shrug:Not according to any list I’ve ever seen.
Why would that be assumed? Could just as easily be an Orthodox guest, no?In most EC parishes I have attended the ‘unknown’ persons strolling up for communion are assumed to be Latin Catholics.
No.Why would that be assumed? Could just as easily be an Orthodox guest, no?
That happens too sometimes.Now, if you said they strolled up for communion and stuck out their hands to receive, that assumption would certainly be validated.![]()
Why would that be assumed? Could just as easily be an Orthodox guest, no?
Now, if you said they stolled up for communion and stuck out their hands to receive, that assumption would certainly be validated.![]()
We’ll, I’m not sure what you were driving at or what you may have observed, but you did say EC, so I assumed you meant Eastern Catholic. Did you perhaps mean EO (Eastern Orthodox)?That happens too sometimes.
When I look on Wikipedia it says Cyprus is 10th and Russia is 5th. Not sure which page you’re looking at though. It isn’t unusual for Wikipedia to condradict itself on two different pages.I think the Church of Cyprus is 5th. Then again, I am citing Wikipedia:shrug:
From EO Church Organization page, WikipediaWhen I look on Wikipedia it says Cyprus is 10th and Russia is 5th. Not sure which page you’re looking at though. It isn’t unusual for Wikipedia to condradict itself on two different pages.![]()
Actually on that Wiki page you’re looking at it notes that it is ranking them in order of year of creation. Below it notes that the list is the four ancient, followed by the five junior, though without putting them in order.From EO Church Organization page, Wikipedia
But on OrthodoxWiki:
- The Church of Constantinople, under the Ecumenical Patriarch
- The Church of Alexandria
- The Church of Antioch
- The Church of Jerusalem
- The Church of Cyprus (est. 431)
- The Church of Georgia (est. 486)
- The Orthodox Church of Mount Sinai (est 527)*[clarification needed]
- The Church of Bulgaria (est. 919)
- The Church of Serbia (est. 1219)
- The Church of Russia (est. 1448)
- The Church of Greece (est. 1833)
- The Church of Romania (est. 1872)
- The Church of Albania (est. 1922)
- The Church of Poland (est. 1924)
- The Church of Czech and Slovak lands (est. 1951)
- The Orthodox Church in America* (est. 1970)
Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople
Patriarchate of Alexandria
Patriarchate of Antioch
Patriarchate of Jerusalem
Patriarchate of Moscow
Patriarchate of Serbia
Patriarchate of Romania
Patriarchate of Bulgaria
Patriarchate of Georgia
Church of Cyprus
Church of Greece
Church of Poland
Church of Albania
Church of the Czech Lands and Slovakia
Orthodox Church in America
You’re Orthodox. I’ll take your word for it.
Peace:byzsoc:
I’m not sure how you got to that particular wikipedia page, but the article on the Eastern Orthodox Church has a list that far more closely corresponds to the order given on OrthodoxWiki.From EO Church Organization page, Wikipedia
But on OrthodoxWiki:
- The Church of Constantinople, under the Ecumenical Patriarch
- The Church of Alexandria
- The Church of Antioch
- The Church of Jerusalem
- The Church of Cyprus (est. 431)
- The Church of Georgia (est. 486)
- The Orthodox Church of Mount Sinai (est 527)*[clarification needed]
- The Church of Bulgaria (est. 919)
- The Church of Serbia (est. 1219)
- The Church of Russia (est. 1448)
- The Church of Greece (est. 1833)
- The Church of Romania (est. 1872)
- The Church of Albania (est. 1922)
- The Church of Poland (est. 1924)
- The Church of Czech and Slovak lands (est. 1951)
- The Orthodox Church in America* (est. 1970)
Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople
Patriarchate of Alexandria
Patriarchate of Antioch
Patriarchate of Jerusalem
Patriarchate of Moscow
Patriarchate of Serbia
Patriarchate of Romania
Patriarchate of Bulgaria
Patriarchate of Georgia
Church of Cyprus
Church of Greece
Church of Poland
Church of Albania
Church of the Czech Lands and Slovakia
Orthodox Church in America
You’re Orthodox. I’ll take your word for it.
Peace:byzsoc:
NO!!! I made a poster with the Orthodox patriarchs in what I thought was the order of precedence.:crying:I’m not sure how you got to that particular wikipedia page, but the article on the Eastern Orthodox Church has a list that far more closely corresponds to the order given on OrthodoxWiki.
On that wikipedia page, as on OrthodoxWiki, the Orthodox Church of Russia is fifth in precedence, behind only the four historic patriarchates of Jerusalem (4th), Antioch (3rd), Alexandria (2nd), and Constantinople, the Ecumenical Patriarchate (1st).
Yes, I know, I was a member once.You are always welcome in our church!
Based on the pre-eminence of the Russian Empire when all the rest were weak or non-existant.NO!!! I made a poster with the Orthodox patriarchs in what I thought was the order of precedence.:crying:
Can some one explain why Russia is number 5?
Also, in a reunited scenario, would Rome be #1, instead of the EP?
Awesome! From the Orthodox side, what do you think us Catholics would have to do, as far as governing goes? (Other things welcome too)As for Rome, while I don’t think that should be a natural given, I think it is a point that the Orthodox Churches should be willing to concede if it is asked of us.
You didn’t ask me, but I would say to repudiate the dogma of Papal universal jurisdiction is an essential beginning, because true communion between churches is a mutual act.Awesome! From the Orthodox side, what do you think us Catholics would have to do, as far as governing goes? (Other things welcome too)
I’m not Orthodox, but I’m confident the answer is yes. Most Orthodox I’ve talked to make a careful distinction between Roman primacy and Roman supremacy, claiming to reject the latter but accept the former.Also, in a reunited scenario, would Rome be #1, instead of the EP?
Understood according to Marduk’s explanation, the pope’s “universal jurisdiction” does not entitle him to exercise authority whenever and wherever he wants but has verifiable limits.You didn’t ask me, but I would say to repudiate the dogma of Papal universal jurisdiction is an essential beginning, because true communion between churches is a mutual act.
You probably disagree, but Alexander Roman in another thread unearthed this quote:No one really expects that to happen, so prospects for reconciliation are slim from the git-go.
I know that Orthodoxy is not a monolithic whole, and that individual Orthodox often differ about certain matters. It seems that some are against union for the other reasons you allude to (that we won’t go into in this thread), and that they would be perfectly willing to accept union according to Marduk’s so-called “High Petrine” view if they were convinced that Rome were orthodox in other ways.Fr. Prof. Meyendorff once quoted an Orthodox teacher as saying, “Do not argue with the Latins about the Petrine primacy. The primacy is good for the Church. Only ask if the Petrine minister (i.e. pope of Rome) confesses the faith of Peter (i.e. Creed without the Filioque) and, if he does, then let him enjoy the primacy of Peter.”
It might be possible, but you would have to understand that for Orthodox it would be something like the thought of vesting Martin Luther as the Pope would be to Roman Catholics.I’m confident that most Orthodox are of the opinion that in a reunited church, the canonical default would be for precedence to be given to the Church of Rome.
There are limits to the authority of all clerics. Verifiable limits or not, there is no way to remove a bad Pope, so the theory of ‘limits’ as a way of making a false teaching palatable is meaningless on a practical level as well as a moral one.Understood according to Marduk’s explanation, the pope’s “universal jurisdiction” does not entitle him to exercise authority whenever and wherever he wants but has verifiable limits.
It is one opinion of many, and I am not fixed either way at present. If the Pope and his church were actually Orthodox believing Christians the traditional order of precedence might be accorded to it, but so far it does not deserve it.You probably disagree, but Alexander Roman in another thread unearthed this quote:
The reality in the Roman Catholic church is there is no ‘high’ Petrine anything in theory nor practice. So there is no point in even discussing it.I know that Orthodoxy is not a monolithic whole, and that individual Orthodox often differ about certain matters. It seems that some are against union for the other reasons you allude to (that we won’t go into in this thread), and that they would be perfectly willing to accept union according to Marduk’s so-called “High Petrine” view if they were convinced that Rome were orthodox in other ways.
We haven’t had a bad pope in a long time…We probably won’t have one again. I really believe the bad pope phenominon was a middle ages thing. Plus, may I mention that with Europe morally collapsing, we have no need in fighting aech other…There are limits to the authority of all clerics. Verifiable limits or not, there is no way to remove a bad Pope, so the theory of ‘limits’ as a way of making a false teaching palatable is meaningless on a practical level as well as a moral one.
Rome historically always had the honor of being first.It might be possible, but you would have to understand that for Orthodox it would be something like the thought of vesting Martin Luther as the Pope would be to Roman Catholics.
Yes, it did.Rome historically always had the honor of being first.
The Orthodox didn’t ‘break away’ from anything.Consider this theoretic. Peter goes to Antioch. He never goes to Rome. Therefore, the East has the Pope. Hit 1054, and the West would have broken away. I honestly think that whichever side didn’t have the pope would have broken away.