F
frjohnmorris
Guest
That is not true. Roman Catholic authorities persecuted Orthodox and pressured them to submit to Rome. The Bishops who signed the Union of Brest sent a delegation to Rome. When they got there they found that almost everything promised by Rome during the negotiations was not honored and that they had to submit completely to Roman Catholic doctrine. After the union a period of intense Latinization began. Meanwhile those who remained faithful to their Orthodox heritage faced savage persecution. King Sigismund III banned the Eastern Orthodox Church in his kingdom. This was not an age of religious toleration or separation of Church and state. The rulers usually determined what religion had to be followed by all the people under their authority. This was true all over Europe.We’ve talked about your casual use of the word “force” before. Given the relatively benign circumstances of the union as compared to its destruction, and the fact that the union was the idea of the Eastern Bishops themselves, not connived through murder, incarceration, and faux synods as in the liquidation of the GCCs in the last century, it would be very decent of you to avoid this outrageous language.
The persecution of the Eastern Catholics in the last century was not done by the Orthodox Church. It was done by Stalin, who was responsible for the murder of millions of Christians. Stalin did not discriminate. He persecuted all Christians, Catholic, Orthodox and Protestant. Do no blame us, our people suffered much longer under Communism than the Eastern Catholics.
Besides, the post World War One government of Poland was hardly fair or tolerant towards Eastern Orthodox. They blew up and destroyed the Russian Orthodox Cathedral in Warsaw, and actively persecuted the Orthodox in all areas of Poland.
As is almost always the case when dealing with things of this nature, there were wrongs on both sides. To continue to resent Orthodox because of the events of the past is both un-Christian and waste of emotions. You cannot undo the injustices of the past. Once again the truth is that there were wrongs on both sides of the divide between Eastern Catholics and Eastern Orthodox. Objectively speaking both sides were at fault. It is not a pretty aspect of church history.
Fr. John W. Morris