M
mardukm
Guest
Dear brother John,
From the first moment the EO party disembarked at Constantinople, the whole episode was fraught with uncanonical AND unethical irregularities. According to sources, some bishops complained to the laity when they disembarked that they had been forced to become “azymites.” That, brother John, was a lie. The Council never forced the use of unleavened bread on the EO. Then we have Mark of Ephesus telling people that they were now forced to believe in Purgatorial fire. That, brother John, was also a lie - purgatorial fire was not even mentioned in the decree. Mark of Ephesus also tells the people that the they are forced to believe that the Son is the Source of the Spirit. That, brother John, is also a lie. Though there are indeed several problems (to say the least) with the Florentine decree on filioque, that is not one of them. The decree never assigns the Son the prerogative of being the “SOURCE” of the Holy Spirit, and actually explicitly affirms that the Father is the Source and Principle of ALL deity. And I’m sure, despite the complaints against papal primacy, none of the anti-Council party ever divulged the fact that the negotiators managed to extract from the Latins during their formal discussions/debates that the Pope should not have any prerogatives in the primacy different from what he had when the Church was united.
So the populace was incited with all these exaggerated misrepresentations of the Council (though there were certainly legitimate grievances). The populace could not be controlled, and souces say that locals had been incited to the point of violence. Many bishops were forced from their sees by the animus of their flock, even if they repented for having signed on at Florence (this had the unfortunate effect that when Metropolitan Metrophanes was intalled by the Emperor, he appointed Latin bishops to fill the vacant dioceses). All this things had already occurred before a merely titular council was finally called by three Patriarchs that made rulings against the Florentine Council and the bishops that supported it.
To repeat, I don’t deny that the EO in principle accept the hierarchical structure of the Church. And I don’t deny, but fully accept as a Catholic, the principle that the laity are involved in the defense of the Faith, not just the hierarchy. The problem I have is that these events after Florence were clearly aberrations from the good order established by Christ and the apostles and affirmed by the canons of the early Church. Yet every EO apologist always holds up these events as the ultimate exemplar for the principle that the laity have an active role in the preservation of the Faith. So, by bronzing these events so candidly, do EO support the actions of the laity in forcing out their God-appointed hierarchs even without benefit of a synod to judge them? That’s the problem I have with the EO ecclesiology (as far as this topic is concerned - the low Petrine view is another matter). Though in principle it sounds good, how can we sure you don’t actually support the kind of mob action that occurred after Florence?
I hope you understand my reservations.
Blessings
I don’t think you’ve been reading my posts very carefully. I have admitted that the EO claim that it is not just the laity, but rather the entire hierarchy involved in a decision for the Church. What I have a problem with is the whole MANNER in which the Council of Florence was rejected by EO’xy at that time.Dear mardukm, you have continued to misrepresent the Orthodox faith in these statements of yours. The Council of Florence was rejected by the Church, which is made up of Bishops, Priests, Deacons and the Laity. Acceptance of the judgements of the Council of Florence in the East was always going to be determined by a subsequent council of bishops in the East. That acceptance never occurred, quite the contrary in fact.
This whole concept of the ‘primacy’ of the laity is a complete strawman fallacy. I know that some Orthodox may have erroneously put forward such a view in the past, but it is not what we believe. The Church is the pillar and ground of truth, all of the Church. Not just the bishops, not just the priests and deacons, not just the laity, but all of them together.
From the first moment the EO party disembarked at Constantinople, the whole episode was fraught with uncanonical AND unethical irregularities. According to sources, some bishops complained to the laity when they disembarked that they had been forced to become “azymites.” That, brother John, was a lie. The Council never forced the use of unleavened bread on the EO. Then we have Mark of Ephesus telling people that they were now forced to believe in Purgatorial fire. That, brother John, was also a lie - purgatorial fire was not even mentioned in the decree. Mark of Ephesus also tells the people that the they are forced to believe that the Son is the Source of the Spirit. That, brother John, is also a lie. Though there are indeed several problems (to say the least) with the Florentine decree on filioque, that is not one of them. The decree never assigns the Son the prerogative of being the “SOURCE” of the Holy Spirit, and actually explicitly affirms that the Father is the Source and Principle of ALL deity. And I’m sure, despite the complaints against papal primacy, none of the anti-Council party ever divulged the fact that the negotiators managed to extract from the Latins during their formal discussions/debates that the Pope should not have any prerogatives in the primacy different from what he had when the Church was united.
So the populace was incited with all these exaggerated misrepresentations of the Council (though there were certainly legitimate grievances). The populace could not be controlled, and souces say that locals had been incited to the point of violence. Many bishops were forced from their sees by the animus of their flock, even if they repented for having signed on at Florence (this had the unfortunate effect that when Metropolitan Metrophanes was intalled by the Emperor, he appointed Latin bishops to fill the vacant dioceses). All this things had already occurred before a merely titular council was finally called by three Patriarchs that made rulings against the Florentine Council and the bishops that supported it.
To repeat, I don’t deny that the EO in principle accept the hierarchical structure of the Church. And I don’t deny, but fully accept as a Catholic, the principle that the laity are involved in the defense of the Faith, not just the hierarchy. The problem I have is that these events after Florence were clearly aberrations from the good order established by Christ and the apostles and affirmed by the canons of the early Church. Yet every EO apologist always holds up these events as the ultimate exemplar for the principle that the laity have an active role in the preservation of the Faith. So, by bronzing these events so candidly, do EO support the actions of the laity in forcing out their God-appointed hierarchs even without benefit of a synod to judge them? That’s the problem I have with the EO ecclesiology (as far as this topic is concerned - the low Petrine view is another matter). Though in principle it sounds good, how can we sure you don’t actually support the kind of mob action that occurred after Florence?
I hope you understand my reservations.
Blessings