Great, thanks!
Wow, that’s very interesting! I wonder why the Coptic Orthodox seem to be an outlier…?
Actually, since becoming an Eastern Orthodox catechumen last fall (after deciding not to revert to my status years ago of a Catholic layperson), I’ve attended Coptic and Catholic liturgies. I don’t receive communion there though, since Eastern Orthodox aren’t ecclesiastically allowed to do so and I haven’t received any sacraments from the Eastern Orthodox yet anyway. We “apostolic Christians” have to stick together in the face of attacks from (Evangelical) Protestantism, secularism, and Islam; attending each other’s services can be, and is, mutually beneficial and edifying.
Wow, I would never have expected such a thing. I hope my Eastern Orthodox hierarches do similar for their counterparts in other Churches.
It’s a nice idea, and in fact I’m not against going to Catholic and Oriental Orthodox liturgies, as indicated above. ACROD (American Carpatho-Rusyn Orthodox Diocese) hierarches aren’t strict like their Russian Orthodox counterparts, who forbid their faithful to pray even with Catholics.
Haha, I understand where you’re coming from. But individuals aren’t equipped by themselves to resolve the theological problems that block reunion.
I agree with you that the Eastern Orthodox bishops have to act collectively in a way that facilitates reunion with the Oriental Orthodox Church. It’s in this case that “we [truly] have almost the same teachings”. But this doesn’t hold true for the differences between Eastern and Oriental Orthodox on the one hand and Catholics on the other. Thorny, headache-inducing questions like the filioque and the Vatican I papacy are on the table; these constitute real, tangible disagreements. Either the filioque and Vatican I papacy are erroneous as the Orthodox say, or these doctrines are correct as the Catholics assert. There’s no way to meet in the middle.
Thanks for your perspective. I haven’t studied the relevant history in enough depth to be able to comment.
This just isn’t possible, though:
- Vatican Council I solemnly and definitively declared that the pope enjoys charisms of universal ordinary jurisdiction and doctrinal infallibility.
- The Catholic Church claims to be the visible body of Christ and protected by the Holy Spirit from officially declaring erroneous doctrine.
- To revisit and modify the papal dogmas declared at Vatican Council I would refute the Catholic Church’s claim–in the eyes of the faithful and the world–to being the visible body of Christ and protected by the Holy Spirit from officially declaring erroneous doctrine.
- Therefore, such a process can never take place, unless Catholic hierarches are prepared to discard previously-declared dogmatic teachings and lose all credibility.
This might be possible.
Interesting–thanks for sharing this little-known info.