The Universal Catholic Church

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Enough with the semantical gamesmanship. I never heard of the preposterous claim before today and I am shocked anyone takes it seriously.

Michael
Its not senimental gamemanship. With the Apostolic Churches things are not always clear cut when it comes to who is in communion with who and if a group does not officially break communion with the Catholic Church, their might be good reason to assume that they were never out of communion with the Church.
 
In saying: The Universal Catholic Church - I see a redundancy in terms…

Catholic means Universal.

So I would be saying, " The Catholic Catholic Church" or The Universal Universal Church".

Just an observation, that’s all.

Pax Domini sit semper vobiscum.
 
I am saddened to observe the birth of a new Catholic myth right here on this internet forum.

As it stands, the Syro-Malabar church was a part of the Church of the East for many many centuries. As part of that church it was indeed out of communion with Rome, and it is disingenuous to suggest otherwise. That would be like suggesting that the church of Paris never broke with Constantinople, when everyone knows it followed Rome.

I don’t know the blokes who do the copywriting for the Popes, but people over there are playing fast and loose with the facts and they should be ashamed. Is it that hard to find something nice to say on the occasion of some centenary that they must resort to fabrications like this? The Pope is fully responsible for any statements he makes that mislead people. I suppose that in the future we will have local parish priests in that church repeating this nonsense as if it were fact, and pointing to these quotes as proof!

Are we to imagine that there are now three Sui Iuris churches that never broke with Rome? Why not a fourth…any takers? I suggest the Eritrean Catholic church, that should be obscure and bedazzling enough for you.

Michael
Michael,thanks for the posting the correct history of the Syro-Malabar Church!

Christ is Risen! Indeed He is Risen!

U-C
 
In saying: The Universal Catholic Church - I see a redundancy in terms…

Catholic means Universal.

So I would be saying, " The Catholic Catholic Church" or The Universal Universal Church".

Just an observation, that’s all.

Pax Domini sit semper vobiscum.
As long as it is not the universal catholic church in San Diego that is very liberal.

But in this case I think the OP just picked up on two words.

And we do use descriptive words with the same meaning.
ex. The beautiful, gorgeous flower won an award for outstandingly huge and fragrant, scented blossoms that filled the atmospheric, air, so no one could miss the lingering scent as they entered the “orchid” flower garden show.
 
Hesychios:

First of all, the point made by East and West is not mere semantics. I should think that as an EO you would certainly get the point. One could ask: When ROCOR broke communion with the MP, which side did the Serbian Orthodox church take? Of course the question is nonsensical: there is no “transitive law” of communion, or broken communion.

Second, while the historical claims of the Syro-Malabar church, may surprise you, the perspective is not original to posters on this thread. If you like wikipedia :
…the Maronite Church claims never to have been separated from Rome, and has no counterpart Orthodox Church out of communion with the Pope … The Italo-Albanian Catholic Church has also never been out of communion with Rome …The Syro-Malabar Church, based in Kerala, India, also claims never to have been knowingly out of communion with Rome.
Fr. Roberson makes the salient point this way:
Members of [the Syro-Malabar Church] are direct descendants of the Thomas Christians that the Portuguese encountered in 1498 while exploring the Malabar coast of India (now the state of Kerala). As mentioned above [see Thomas Christians], they were in full communion with the Assyrian Church in Persia. But they greeted the Portuguese as fellow Christians and as representatives of the Church of Rome, whose special status they had continued to acknowledge despite centuries of isolation.
I think the key word here is isolation, not ex-communication. You may call attention to the divisions that followed the Jesuit latinization of the the Thomas Christians, but the point actually relevant to this topic is not how bad the Jesuits were, but that the relationship, although it deteriorated over some time, began with acceptance of each other, in communion.

Hesychios, you accuse other of selective readings, but miss the pointers in the links that suggest a more subtle relationship between the Thomas Christians and the Church of the East than you appear to imagine.
From the 4th century onwards the Church in India, established communication with the Middle East and soon began to introduce books and share rites. Thus the Indian Church became a member of the Syro-Chaldean Patriarchate for practical reasons, not for doctrinal reasons.
Code:
  The head of the Indian Church was then called “The Metropolitan and Gate of All India” and had jurisdiction all over the country. When the Chaldean prelates came to India as the spiritual heads of the independent Metropolitan provinces under the East Syrian Patriarch, the administration of the Indian Church was done by a native priest with the title “Archdeacon of all India” or ‘Jathikkukartavian’
link

Fr Roberson puts it this way:
…they were a distinct religious community fully integrated into Indian society. They were also in full communion with the Assyrian Church of the East, which in early centuries had regularly sent bishops to India to ordain deacons and priests. The head of the Thomas Christian Church, which had considerable autonomy, was a Metropolitan of the Assyrian Church of the East from at least the 8th century, and occupied the tenth place in the Assyrian hierarchy with the title, “Metropolitan and Gate of All India.” But because the Metropolitans generally did not speak the local language, real jurisdiction was placed in the hands of an Indian priest with the title “Archdeacon of All India.” He was effectively the civil and religious superior of the entire community until the arrival of the Portuguese in Kerala at the end of the 15th century.
One could reasonably infer that in the aftermath of Ephesus the traditional relationship with the Assyrians was maintained, but that relationship involved little. Because, of the real local autonomy of the Thomas Christians and the language barrier between the Assyrians and the Thomas Christians, this continuing relationship did not have immediate effects on theology and communion. (This relationship, btw, had long cultural antecedents in the spice trade.) This perspective makes it possible to understand the surprising initial comity of the Portuguese and the unified church of the Thomas Christians
 
…This perspective makes it possible to understand the surprising initial comity of the Portuguese and the unified church of the Thomas Christians
Too bad the comity did not last, after the honeymoon it was a horrible experience for them.

I suppose we might hear some day that the OCA never “broke communion” with Rome, it has the same relationship to Moscow that the Saint Thomas Christians of Kerala had to Seleucia-Ctesiphon. Using this kind of conjecture over obscure points of church history, people can claim anything. Does Father Roberson list this church as one that “never broke communion” with Rome? I don’t recall his book (which I have), nor the CNEWA website ever making such a claim.

As we all know, the Church of the East was very extensive, reaching southern India, Tibet and China. Some say they might have reached 80 million adherents at one point (which was pretty good for those days). Kerala was at the crossroads of important trade routes for millenia, they were not “lost” in any real historical sense, they were close to the midpoint of the civilized world in a great arc extending from Spain to northern China. They had commercial ties in every direction, and this was clear from the historical records in the middle ages of Europeans going to India seeking out the tomb of Saint Thomas, and Chinese ships visiting the country from the east. Even Marco Polo passed by.

The isolation we think of for these people was due to the rise of Islam and the later destructions of Tamerlane. But they were only to some partial extent isolated from their own Patriarch who continued to appoint bishops for them. That was the only ecclesiastical connection of practical importance to them other than a desire to connect with Christians around the world we all share. From Rome, Constantinople, Antioch and Alexandria they had already severed ecclesiastical relations in 431AD by refusing the Council of Ephesus. They were no more in communion with Rome nor Constantinople than Seleucia-Ctesiphon was.

And Ireland was no more in communion with Seleucia-Ctesiphon than Rome was (using this same logic) The Patriarch of the Assyrians could probably claim “the Celtic Church of Ireland had never broken communion with Seleucia-Ctesiphon” because there are no formal records of Irish bishops hurling anathemas at the Assyrians. Quite meaningless ultimately, and silly.

It would be interesting to see what references Pope John Paul II used to justify his statement, if he was not actually misquoted.
*
Michael*
 
Too bad the comity did not last, after the honeymoon it was a horrible experience for them.
Yes it is too bad. But what is your point? That history is retroactively changed by later events? Oh, that’s right, you’ve made an analogous claim about persecution and coercion at the Union of Uzhhorod.
I suppose we might hear some day that the OCA never “broke communion” with Rome, it has the same relationship to Moscow that the Saint Thomas Christians of Kerala had to Seleucia-Ctesiphon. Using this kind of conjecture over obscure points of church history, people can claim anything. Does Father Roberson list this church as one that “never broke communion” with Rome? I don’t recall his book (which I have), nor the CNEWA website ever making such a claim.
I doubt we would hear such a claim made in seriousness. The first key issue is, as I noted, was isolation. In these times it is, unfortunately perhaps, difficult to find such isolation. There is also the ecclesiological issue of the lack of transitivity in breaking-communion. However, there is plenty of documentation of the OCA’s position on communion. Can you give me the same for Syro-Malabar church? It is, of course, a gross anachronism to talk about the OCA - a church whose history is confined, unlike the Syro-Malabars, to an era in which communication is easy, “sides” are clear, and the question of “whose side are you on” is all too evident.
As we all know, the Church of the East was very extensive, reaching southern India, Tibet and China. Some say they might have reached 80 million adherents at one point (which was pretty good for those days). Kerala was at the crossroads of important trade routes for millenia, they were not “lost” in any real historical sense, they were close to the midpoint of the civilized world in a great arc extending from Spain to northern China. They had commercial ties in every direction, and this was clear from the historical records in the middle ages of Europeans going to India seeking out the tomb of Saint Thomas, and Chinese ships visiting the country from the east. Even Marco Polo passed by.
I think that it was along the path of the silk route that there was great missionary growth, with the spice route was relatively isolated. Kerala was in “the middle” of the great arc that you mention in longitude, but down in a remote corner in latitude. The isolation was by no means total. But Marco Polo refers to the tomb of St. Thomas with these words: “The body of Saint Thomas the Apostle lies in the province of Malabar, at a certain little town having no great population; 'tis a place where few traders go .” Moreover, the question is what was there connection with other Christian churches What was the nature of their interactions in matters of theology/heresy? What documentation do you have that mitigates the idea that this church was largely isolated?
The isolation we think of for these people was due to the rise of Islam and the later destructions of Tamerlane. But they were only to some partial extent isolated from their own Patriarch who continued to appoint bishops for them. That was the only ecclesiastical connection of practical importance to them other than a desire to connect with Christians around the world we all share.
The connection to their Patriarch did indeed, as you note, also have a degree of isolation. Appointments were not regular; communication infrequent.
From Rome, Constantinople, Antioch and Alexandria they had already severed ecclesiastical relations in 431AD by refusing the Council of Ephesus. They were no more in communion with Rome nor Constantinople than Seleucia-Ctesiphon was.
Yes I understand that is what you are claiming. However, this is the claim that is resisted in accounts of the Syro-Malabar church history. What makes your account better? You claim that “they had already severed ecclesiastical relations in 431AD by refusing the Council of Ephesus”. Prove that they severed relations. Prove that they considered, in their local churches, accepting or rejecting the Council of Ephesus. Prove that this was even discussed in India. What is their oral history of that era?
And Ireland was no more in communion with Seleucia-Ctesiphon than Rome was (using this same logic) The Patriarch of the Assyrians could probably claim “the Celtic Church of Ireland had never broken communion with Seleucia-Ctesiphon” because there are no formal records of Irish bishops hurling anathemas at the Assyrians. Quite meaningless ultimately, and silly.
Again a rehash of the claim. I agree that the argument is silly. So let’s stay with not silly things.

The idea certainly exists within Orthodoxy that a church can be in communion with churches that are not in communion with each other. Certainly one could give all sorts of examples where this notion seems silly. After that boring exercise, it’s time to dig deeper. Since it is not always silly, then what are the conditions that apply when it is it not silly; how are these conditions relevant - or not - to the case of Thomas Christians. That is interesting, IMO to discuss. A decent respect for Syro-Malabar history means not drawing certain conclusions while uncertain on basic facts.
 
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Catherine
 
To make things a little more complicated there are acutally three Latin Rite: the Millanese or Ambrosian rite in the diocese of Milan, the Mozarabic rite in a diocese in Spain and the rite of Braga. Acutally I am not sure if the rite of Braga is celebrated since Vatican II. There are also various Latin rite usages. The Carmelite Order and the Dominican Order had a slighty different order of Mass. I don’t know if they still do after Vatican II. The other usage is the Mass celebrated by the Catholic Anglicans (Episcopalians) which is based on the Book of Common Prayer.
 
@Hesychios:

You can not support your point of view with anything other than your attempt to support your Orthodox bias. We have used reputable sources that agree with us, yet yours does not. I may ask what concern is it to you whether the Syro-Malabarian Catholic Church was always in Communion or not?
Dear friend in Christ Holden,

You ask what interest it is to me whether the Syro-Malabar church has ever broken communion with Rome. My interest is in the historical Truth.

You directly assault my integrity by implying that my Orthodox bias is the reason I challenge this assumption, which I know to be false. But you are implying that if I had a Catholic bias and knew this to be a false, I would keep quiet about it. You obviously do not know me and did not know me when I was a Catholic.

Nor do you know most Catholics I know, who (unless I miss my guess) would not perpetrate or promote, aid or abet, a fiction for the cause of religion.

Christ does not, and never will, require that kind of witness.

Michael
 
Its not senimental gamemanship. With the Apostolic Churches things are not always clear cut when it comes to who is in communion with who and if a group does not officially break communion with the Catholic Church, their might be good reason to assume that they were never out of communion with the Church.
Yes, exactly. Unless anyone knows a bishop from the Syro-Malabarian Church that lived a long time ago, forget it.
 
@Hesychios:

I am merely going off of what I have learned and that is that the Syro-Malabarian Church has always been in Communion with Rome.
 
@Hesychios:

I am merely going off of what I have learned and that is that the Syro-Malabarian Church has always been in Communion with Rome.
I support what Brother Michael has posted, there is no bias, but actual history. It is also wholly inappropriate of you to claim what he recounts is wrong simply because he is Orthodox. What bias would he have anyway when he is discussing two churches (Church of the East, Syro-Malabarian) who are not apart of his communion?

Here, I am a Catholic, so no no attacks on my bias: Historical revisionism, you are wrong, and so is who taught you.

**Please do not perpetuate the false history of a church. It is both disrespectful and dishonest. **

Peace and God Bless!
 
Yes, exactly. Unless anyone knows a bishop from the Syro-Malabarian Church that lived a long time ago, forget it.
This is a fallacy, and also implies your own argument is unprovable. An appeal to an authority proves nothing of your far fetched point. If that were true then the Great Papal Schism would still be a crisis, as well as any other historical event.

Peace and God Bless!
 
So did the Syro-Malabar Church ever OFFICIALLY break communion with the Catholic Church?
 
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holdencaulfield:
The Old Party (Pazhayakuttukar) remained in communion with Rome and constitutes the Syro-Malabar Church.The Present Syro-Malabar Church is only a fraction of the ancient Indian Church of the Thomas Christians.Source
This does not indicate that they were always in communion. This refers to the division that occured within the Malabar church after the Portugese bishops were evangelizing to them and had begun communion. There was a split in the Malabar Church and the Malankara church split off and joined the Syrian Orthodox Jacobite patriarch. The Malabar Church remained. It has nothing to do with perpetual unity of the Malabar Church with the Roman Church. The fact is that they were not always in communion. As your own link says,
Saint Thomas Christians** remained in communion with the Church of the East until their encounter with the Portuguese in 1498**.With the establishment of Portuguese power in parts of India, clergy of that nationality, in particular certain members of the Society of Jesus, attempted to Latinize the Indian Christians.
 
So did the Syro-Malabar Church ever OFFICIALLY break communion with the Catholic Church?
The Syro-Malabar were a part of the Assyrian Church of the East, which did OFFICIALLY :rolleyes: break communion with the Catholic Church (which constituted all other Apostolic Churches at the time). They remained under one communion until the 15th century!

Do people realize the implications here? If the Syriac Orthodox came into communion with the Catholic Church would it be appropriate to say they never broke communion with Rome in the first place because they followed the Alexandrians? Would any historian in his or her right mind support such a claim? Give it a rest, people.

**
Enough with the historical revisionism!** :mad:
 
So did the Syro-Malabar Church ever OFFICIALLY break communion with the Catholic Church?
Yes, they officially were a part of the Church of the East. They rejected all councils after Constantinople I in 381. Ephesus declares them heretics because they refuse to call the Virgin Mary theotokos. Consequently they were considered Nestorians(although this is a false accusation). They joined the Catholic Church when the Portuguese went to India. Many of them also broke subsequently when they got sick of the oppressive Portuguese and they joined the Jacobites(the Syriac Orthodox Church which rejects the council of Chalcedon and all councils after it.)
 
Yes, they officially were a part of the Church of the East. They rejected all councils after Constantinople I in 381. Ephesus declares them heretics because they refuse to call the Virgin Mary theotokos. Consequently they were considered Nestorians(although this is a false accusation). They joined the Catholic Church when the Portuguese went to India. Many of them also broke subsequently when they got sick of the oppressive Portuguese and they joined the Jacobites(the Syriac Orthodox Church which rejects the council of Chalcedon and all councils after it.)
Thank you. This was all I wanted to know.
 
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