C
cath4alltime
Guest
Your Popeye?I am what I am.
Your Popeye?I am what I am.
Says you. We however say differently.Toward Rome.
I’ll respond to the quote part since I assume those were directed at my posts.Says you. We however say differently.
Quote mining is not a very effective tool when the said quotes are taken out of context. Flowery, complentary language directed at the See of Rome is not an indicator of subordination. The current Ecumenical Patriarch, HAH Bartholomew uses such language but you certainly won’t see me communing in a Roman Catholic Church tomorrow because of it.
The question of Rome’s Primacy was never questioned, As has been pointed out before, Antioch precedes Rome as a “Petrine See.” Rome is special for two main reasons:
1.) It was the capital of the Empire (much less important than # 2)
2.) The blood of both St. Paul and St. Peter consecrated that ground…it is special EQUALLY on the count of Paul AND Peter…an exclusivist Petrine claim is head scratching, to say the least.
Being an arbiter of disputes and a court of appeals for Church matters is not the same as having the power to depose any bishop at will, or to redraw Diocesan lines at will, or pretty much anything that the Modern Pope can do…
One might protest that the Pope “doesn’t work like that” well…actually, in the past he has worked like that. Just because the Papal Tiara was disposed of and the Modern Popes are “nice” doesn’t mean that all of that power the office has accumulated is legitimate, just because he “doesn’t operate like that anymore”
You do realize that Pelikan converted to Orthodoxy, right?Lutheran historian Jaroslav Pelikan writes:
The churches of the Greek East, too, owed a special allegiance to Rome . . . One see after another had capitulated in this or that controversy with heresy. Constantinople had given rise to several heretics during the fourth and fifth centuries, notably Nestorius and Macedonius, and the other sees has also been known to stray from the true faith occasionally. but Rome had a special position. The bishop of Rome had the right by his own authority to annul the acts of a synod. In fact, when there was talk of a council to settle controversies, Gregory asserted the principle that “without the authority and the consent of the apostolic see, none of the matters transacted [by a council] have any binding force.”
(The Emergence of the Catholic Tradition (100-600), Univ. of Chicago Press, 1971, 354; cites Gregory’s Epistle 9.156)
St. Basil in his epistle 66 refers to Antioch as the most vital of churches to the whole world, and he also calls it by way of metaphor the head church. In the same letter, he writes to St. Athanasius, “But plainly the discipline of the Church of Antioch depends upon your reverence’s being able to control some, to reduce others to silence, and to restore strength to the Church by concord.” Similarly, in his epistle 69, he writes to St. Athanasius, “I have thought that I could not make a more fitting beginning than by having recourse to your excellency, as to the head and chief of all, and treating you as alike adviser and commander in the enterprise.”As for your assertion that these quotes being taken context (as if you are trying to say they don’t really mean what they look like they mean), that is just your assertion and you have not backed that up except for the usual objection of flowery language which doesn’t even apply to 2 very compelling citations. You said such language is still in effect amongst the Eastern Orthodox Patriarch. May I ask, can you produce a citation where he refers (or someone says about or to him) that he is the head over all the churches and that this is because of Jesus set it up that way and cites the classic Petrine texts?
Compare that to the fifth ecumenical council’s excommunication of pope Vigilius, on the grounds that he was not teaching the Orthodox faith.I will add this citation over here as it is relevant I believe and it is one Eastern Patriarch writing to other Easterners.
From John, Patriarch of Jerusalem (A.D. 575-593), to the Catholicos of the Georgian monks in his see:
“‘As for us, that is to say, the Holy Church, we have the word of the Lord, who said to Peter, chief of the apostles, when giving him the primacy of the Faith for the strengthening of the Churches, ‘Thou art Peter, etc. . . .’ 22 To this same Peter he has given the keys of heaven and earth; it is in following his faith that to this day his disciples and the doctors of the Catholic Church bind and loose; they bind the wicked and loose from their chains those who do penance. Such is, above all, the privilege of those who, on the first most holy and venerable see, are the successors of Peter, sound in the Faith, and according to the Word of the Lord, infallible.’”
Source: “The Eastern Churches and the Papacy”, S. Herbert Scott, London: Sheed & Ward, 1928. Pg. 359 (emphasis mine)
Note: S. Herbert Scott, who was an Anglican if I’m not mistaken, cites for this quote Pere Salaville in an article in Echos d’Orient, 1910, pg. 171. He also says it was discovered & published in an Armenian version in Etchmiadzin (1896), although Scott says the original was probably published first in Greek.
If I understand correctly, you are saying you are disagreeing with the Patriarch John of Jerusalem?Compare that to the fifth ecumenical council’s excommunication of pope Vigilius, on the grounds that he was not teaching the Orthodox faith.
Justinian in his decree to the council (read during the seventh session), declared that Vigilius, “made himself alien to the Catholic Church by defending the impiety of the aforesaid chapters,” and proclaimed that, “his name is alien to Christians and is not to be read out in the sacred diptychs, lest we be found in this way sharing in the impiety of Nestorius and Theodore.” The council approved Justinian’s decree, striking Pope Vigilius from the diptychs, for the reason that he defended the Three Chapters, thereby implicating himself in the heresy of Nestorius and Theodore (of Mopsuestia).If I understand correctly, you are saying you are disagreeing with the Patriarch John of Jerusalem?
Also, I gather that we are getting your gloss here on what the 5th Ecumenical Council had to say.
Yes. One cannot just demonstrate that some believed in one or two of the three papal claims (immediate extraordinary jurisdiction, being the source of all legitimate episcopal jurisdiction, and infallibility when speaking ex-cathedra), but rather it is necessary that it be demonstrated that all three were commonly held in practice. And I might add that the evidence, in order to be good evidence for the three above, needs to be focused in order to exclude other possibilities. For example, if one finds a situation where the bishop of Rome attempted to intervene in the affairs of a local synod and was rebuffed without sanctions being applied to such a local synod for doing so (this happened, for example with the Church in North Africa in the fifth century), this cannot be counted as evidence for immediate extraordinary jurisdiction, no matter what authority the pope himself may have claimed, but rather it serves as evidence for the opposite, that the pope was not recognized as possessing such jurisdiction, instead only having, at best, a form of mediate jurisdiction.If I understand correctly, you are saying you are disagreeing with the Patriarch John of Jerusalem?
Yep.You do realize that Pelikan converted to Orthodoxy, right?
One step closer.You do realize that Pelikan converted to Orthodoxy, right?
Orthodoxy is not some halfway house to Roman Catholicism.One step closer.
Not at all.Orthodoxy is not some halfway house to Roman Catholicism.
I have read the passage in question, and I disagree, because nowhere does Justinian limit that phrase to just the East, and even if he did, then it is no evidence for the modern claim of Roman primacy, because we know that the headship of Constantinople did not involve extraordinary immediate jurisdiction, and he would not have used such a term unless the headship of Constantinople were in some sense analogous to the headship of Rome.Regarding, Justinian’s codex, S. Herbert Scott in the work I am citing says he probably has in mind the churches of the East.
Worlds apart, frankly. Concerning many theological matters (like justification, grace-nature, etc.) Roman Catholicism and Protestantism share a mutual framework (within which they disagree), that the Orthodox do not have.Not at all.
You’re just a half-step or two away.
However, in Canon 3 of First Council of Constantinople (381):St. Basil in his epistle 66 refers to Antioch as the most vital of churches to the whole world, and he also calls it by way of metaphor the head church. In the same letter, he writes to St. Athanasius, “But plainly the discipline of the Church of Antioch depends upon your reverence’s being able to control some, to reduce others to silence, and to restore strength to the Church by concord.” Similarly, in his epistle 69, he writes to St. Athanasius, “I have thought that I could not make a more fitting beginning than by having recourse to your excellency, as to the head and chief of all, and treating you as alike adviser and commander in the enterprise.”
Because it is new Rome, the bishop of Constantinople is to enjoy the privileges of honour after the bishop of Rome.