I don’t see that. Can you elaborate a little on this? IMHO, the Roman Catholic Church has really not budged one bit from points which separate them from the Eastern Orthodox Church. As far as I can see, there has been no movement from the Roman Catholic side on the following issues:
The Catholic Church has made a lot of movement in these areas, although I can see where someone outside of the Catholic Church may not see it. Most of that progress has been in understanding and respecting your position. The fact that the Catholic Church does not publish (any more) such laundry lists as the one below is proof that it has come a long way.
- Papal infallibility and universal papal supremacy.
This is where I have seen the most movement in the Catholic Church. Beginning with at least John Paul II the Roman Popes have gone out of there way to show to the other Patriarchs (and Apostolic Churches) that it treats them as equals. John Paul II called the eastern and western churches the 2 lungs of the church, for instance.
As a Catholic, I would love to see the Popes distance themselves further from Papal Infallibility. But again, every indication I have seen shows a Papacy moving in that direction. In any case the Papacy have indicated that it would be more than happy to be in communion with eastern churches who do not believe in papal infallibility.
- Remove the filioque from the creed of the Roman Catholic Church.
I don’t think I will ever get why this is so important to some people in the eastern Churches. My pastor told us a story, that I don’t think is true but nonetheless reflects my feelings on the filioque.
St. Augustine had a vision where he is walking along the beach and a little boy is taking water from the ocean and putting it into a hole. St. Augustine asks what the boy is doing. The boy replies I am going to pour all of the water of the ocean into this hole. St. Augustine says the ocean is too vast to do that. To which the boy replies, neither can you fit the mystery of the Trinity into the human mind.
To those who say why does the Catholic Church then just remove it if it is so trivial, I reply maybe they should add it. Is Luke’s gospel any better or any worse than Mark’s because he added some things? Should we try to force all the Gospels to agree with each other on whether a roof was made of tile or grass? Or, should we keep them how they are, even where they disagree. For, by examining the differences we can determine what is important and what is not.
- Replace all statues with traditional icons.
I know that that is not the case because I trust in eastern tradition, but the little I know about icons seems suspiciously close to idolatry, from the Catholic point of view. If you simply transplanted the eastern idea of iconography into the Catholic tradition of sacred objects, you could easily end up with a whole mess of heresies. That works both ways.
Why?
- Allow all priests to marry before ordination.
Again, what is it to you? The west is more than happy to let the east do what it wishes in this area. It even allows certain married Protestant converts to remain as priests. Why should you treat discipline like you treat dogma?
- Allow Church approved divorce and remarriage, as was allowed in the early Church. Restrict the use of annulments to extremely serious situations, such as an undisclosed previous marriage.
As far as I can tell the Orthodox practice of divorce and remarriage is far from what occurred in the early Church. I think this is an area where we can both learn from each other.
- Impose stricter fasting regulations for Holy Communion and during Lent, in line with those of the Eastern Orthodox Church.
How is your tradition so much superior than ours? The earliest Church did not even celebrate Easter, much less lent. Are you claiming to be superior to the church of the Apostles.
- Agree to a common date for Easter, as calculated by the Eastern Orthodox Church.
It certainly would be nice to have one date for Easter, but how is this a prerequisite for talks. The Catholic Church is quite willing to accept any Church into communion no matter what there date for Easter is. Can you even go that far?
- Baptise only by triple immersion, except in case of emergency when pouring would be allowed.
Why? Like so many things on this list, it is the type of thing that can be discussed at a Synod or council after we first agree to have mutual respect for each others position. Or, for that matter, we can simply agree to disagree.
- No instrumental music to be played during Mass (except for bells). Only the human voice singing is allowed. Also, no profane or modernistic rock type music.
And while you are at it how about no modern air condition or heating? Or no churches built with modern material? Or maybe we should go back to having church only in houses?
- Make the sign of the cross correctly as was done in ancient times from right to left.
The sign of cross wasn’t made at all in the earliest Church and yet they somehow managed to be faithful Christians.
IMHO, if the Roman Catholic Church were to move on 3/4 of these in a direction favorable to the Eastern Orthodox Church, it would indicate a serious intention on the part of the Roman Catholic Church to establish unity with the Eastern Orthodox Church.
I apologize for being overly terse. There are some legitimate concerns in that list, but overall it seems to be designed to tear apart rather than to build.