Cavaradossi,
I’ll still wait for your response to my last post but in the mean time I want to respond to some of what you wrote in your last post in my coming posts.
I don’t think I ever pointed to the source of this alternate Byzantine theory (the innovation), but was asserting that the theory is found in that Canon. After looking more into it, I think I may be in error about that, and I would like to amend my position. It seems to be that this 28th Canon isn’t talking about Rome’s primacy in the sense of jurisdiction, but instead the Patriarchical rights of Rome (Rivington, Scott ) (I’ll get to that later.) But the authors of that Canon (and we’ll see that it was a minority of Bishops) did get some things wrong. Luke Rivington writes: “It was not true, as they asserted, that the Fathers (if the Nicene Fathers were meant) ‘gave’ her (patriarchal [16]) privileges to the See of Rome; they only recognised what was already ancient. It was not true that what the Nicene Fathers recognised as ancient custom was due to the secular position of the See of Rome. Her privileges were settled by herself as See o[f] St. Peter. It was not true that the Fathers of Constantinople had bestowed anything in the way of jurisdiction, but merely the second rank in the way of honorary precedence. It was not true that Constantinople had any right over Pontus, Thrace, and Asia Minor.” This must have been what St. Methodius was getting at in retrospect.
About those who drafted up Canon 28, your words seem to paint a picture that doesn’t accurately portray the historical situation surrounding the situations under which that Canon was put forward and the controversy it caused, some of which I will fill in.
To start, “When the archdeacon Aetius brought forward the question of the privileges of the [c]hurch of Constantinople, the [Papal] legates said that that question was not one which came in the terms of their commission, and withdrew, and the ‘Senate’ did the same ; and most of the [Council] Fathers had already left for home.” (Scott, pg. 193.) Scott says that only 84 of the 630 members signed Canon 28, but another source says: “only about 150 bishops out of the original 600 could be induced to sign [Note: Rivington made an error here. The correct number is 192 signatories.], and that St. Leo could fearlessly call it an ‘extorted subscription,’ even after some few at the session had denied that they were compelled to subscribe. St. Leo knew that his legates were right in their estimate of the kind of influence that had been brought to bear upon these subservient bishops.” (Rivington)
–Just a side note Patriarch Anatolius may have had more to do with Canon 28 than I had thought and commented on earlier, but the citation I gave I feel shows that if this was so, he later tried to distance himself from it in his communication with Pope St. Leo.—
As you probably know, Pope St. Leo, who the Council sent the Acts to for his ratification, rejected Canon 28. Scott also notes that, regarding Canon 28, “There are ancient manuscripts which bear the signatures of the legates after the first twenty-seven canons.” Also, as Mark Bonocore points out, “…for the next 6 centuries, all Eastern churches speak of only 27 canons of Chalcedon – the 28th Canon being rendered null and void by Rome’s ‘line item veto.’ This is supported by all the Greek historians, such as Theodore the Lector (writing in 551 AD), John Skolastikas (writing in 550 AD), Dionysius Exegius (also around 550 AD); and by Roman Popes like Pope St. Gelasius (c. 495) and Pope Symmachus (c. 500) – all of whom speak of only 27 Canons of Chalcedon.” (Source:
philvaz.com/apologetics/a35.htm)
The Anglican S. Herbert Scott makes some good points in that Canon 28 is only addressing Rome’s Patriarchical rights.
Sources:
“The Eastern Churches and the Papacy”, S. Herbert Scott, London: Sheed & Ward, 1928
Luke Rivington, “The Primitive Church and the See of Peter”, from:
mwt.net/~lnpalm/byzantin.htm
Mark Bonocore, “The Council of Chalcedon and the Papacy”, from:
philvaz.com/apologetics/a35.htm
Continued…