S
Seraphim73
Guest
There have been tons of councils.Oh.
You have bishops.
Have they ever called an ecumenical council?
There have been tons of councils.Oh.
You have bishops.
Have they ever called an ecumenical council?
The pope has no authority to call and ecumenical council. What are you driving at?
Who does?
The bishops.
Oh.
You have bishops.
Have they ever called an ecumenical council?
Were any of the councils called by the Eastern Orthodox bishops Ecumenical Councils?There have been tons of councils.
It is interesting that you do not mention St. Maximos’ later attitude towards Rome when the see begrudgingly entered into union with the monothelites. As the historian Steven Runcman points out, appealing to the supremacy of Rome was more like a rhetorical trope or a game used by ecclesiastics in the East to cause embarrassment to some opposing party, that nevertheless had little force in terms of authority. This is why you find plenty of Eastern ecclesiastics and saints whose opinions of Rome often changed on a dime so to speak.So St. Maximus, if he converted, would be excommunicated and considered a traitor? Because in reading the above post, he sure seems to be saying that anyone not in communion with Rome, should hasten to get back in communion with Her.
**Let him hasten before all things to satisfy the Roman See, for if it is satisfied, all will agree in calling him pious and orthodox. …and does not satisfy and implore the*blessed Pope of the most holy Catholic Church of the Romans, that is, the Apostolic See,which is from the incarnate of the Son of God Himself,and also all the holy synods, according to the holy canons and definitions has received universal and surpreme dominion, authority, and power of binding and loosing over all the holy churches of God throughout the whole world.(Maximus, Letter to Peter, in Mansi x, 692).JToday 2:47 pm.
Who called all of the ecumenical councils in the first millennium?Who has the authority to call an Ecumenical Council?
Randy we covered this ad nauseam a while back and I’m not going to get into it again. No one has the authority to call a council of the heads of the Churches because no one person has authority over these bishops. A council is convened by consensus.Were any of the councils called by the Eastern Orthodox bishops Ecumenical Councils?
Who has the authority to call an Ecumenical Council?
I have no clue.Who called all of the ecumenical councils in the first millennium?
Nobody rejects communion with the Pope. If he is willing to confess the Orthodox faith in its entirety then we will have communion.
Let’s assume for a moment that this happened.
Do you think it would be possible for the five “heads of the Churches” to call an Ecumenical Council by consensus?Randy we covered this ad nauseam a while back and I’m not going to get into it again. No one has the authority to call a council of the heads of the Churches because no one person has authority over these bishops. A council is convened by consensus.
Well there are 14 authocephalous Churches, not five. And yes it is possible. It’s happened many times and it’s happening next year.Do you think it would be possible for the five “heads of the Churches” to call an Ecumenical Council by consensus?
It would be presided over by the highest ranking bishop.If so, who would preside? And how was this handled in the past?
As I said Randy, you already have a thread where we went over these questions over and over and over. I’m not going to get into again.What would happen if the Patriarch of the West approved or disapproved of the final decisions of the council and one or more of the Eastern Patriarchs took the opposite position?
There are too many variables to know what would happen. If it was a serious enough issue there would be schism.
Would it thereby fail to be an Ecumenical Council simply because the “whole church” did not accept it?
But then what does that say about the council(s) that the Oriental Orthodox (who were still part of the “whole Church” at the time) rejected? We both consider some councils to be ecumenical despite the fact that part of the Church (the OO) did not accept them.
So, would it be possible for a council called and attended by representatives of all five patriarchs to be accepted as Ecumenical by three or four of the five but not all five?
Wise decision.As I said Randy, you already have a thread where we went over these questions over and over and over. I’m not going to get into again.
The First Council of Nicaea, Emperor ConstantineWho called all of the ecumenical councils in the first millennium?
Thank you!The First Council of Nicaea, Emperor Constantine
First Council of Constantinople, Emperors Gratian and Theodosius I
The Council of Ephesus, Emperor Theodosius II
The Council of Chalcedon, Emperor Marcian
The Second Council of Constantinople, Emperor Justinian
The Third Council of Constantinople, Emperor Constantine IV
The Second Council of Nicaea, Emperor Constantine VI and Empress Irene
What do you mean by Ecumenical?Thank you!
What is your opinion about who has the authority to call an Ecumenical Council today?
An ecumenical council is a conference of ecclesiastical dignitaries and theological experts convened to discuss and settle matters of Church doctrine and practice in which those entitled to vote are convoked from the whole world (oikoumene) and which secures the approbation of the whole Church.What do you mean by Ecumenical?
Yes.And by today, do you mean with the current state of affairs?
Catholic Church: The PopeAn ecumenical council is a conference of ecclesiastical dignitaries and theological experts convened to discuss and settle matters of Church doctrine and practice in which those entitled to vote are convoked from the whole world (oikoumene) and which secures the approbation of the whole Church.
Yes.
Who has the authority to call for an Ecumenical council today?
Oh wow that settles it. Good thing we’ve got “radioreplies” to straighten us all out.1256. Did the Patriarchs of the Greek Orthodox Church at any stage after the death of Christ recognize the Pope as supreme and infallible head of the Church?
We cannot speak of the “Patriarchs of the Greek Orthodox Church” prior to the Greek Schism commenced by Photius in 867 A.D. Until then there were simply Patriarchs of Constantinople, presiding there and subject to the Pope. Dr. Orchard, when a Congregationalist, wrote, “An examination of the circumstances of the Great Schism shows that the Eastern Church did then repudiate a supremacy which it had previously been in the habit of conceding to the Roman Patriarchate.” The First Council of Constantinople in 381, which only Eastern Bishops attended, demanded that the Bishop of Constantinople should rank next after the Bishop of Rome, and before the Bishops of Alexandria and Antioch. The Council of Chalcedon in 451, attended by the Eastern Bishops, ended its discussion with the unanimous cry, “Peter has spoken by Leo,” when the Pope’s decision was given. A century and a half later Pope Gregory I. could still write, “Who doubts that the Church of Constantinople is subject to the Apostolic See?” No one then doubted it; and no one disputed it until Photius came along in 867 to plunge the East into schism. The Patriarch of Constantinople, and all the Eastern Bishops signed the formula of Hormisdas, who was Pope from 514 to 523. That formula contained these words, “We follow the Apostolic See in everything and teach all its laws. I hope to be in that one Communion taught by the Apostolic See in which is the whole, real, and perfect solidity of the Christian religion.” Dean Milman writes, “Before the end of the third century the lineal descent of Rome’s Bishops from St. Peter was unhesitatingly claimed and obsequiously admitted by the Christian world.”
radioreplies.info/radio-replies-vol-2.php?t=139&n=1268
787. Apart from their rejection of Papal Infallibility, has purity of doctrine from the Catholic point of view been maintained by the Eastern Orthodox Churches?
Not entirely. **Besides denying Papal Infallibility they would, of course, deny Papal Supremacy. **They grant that the Pope has a primacy of honour, but not that he has supreme jurisdiction over the whole Church. They deny, also, the dogma of the Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary as regards her exemption from original sin, although holding that she was ever personally sinless. In cases even of a valid marriage they permit divorce and remarriage. Other differences could be regarded as belonging to the area of non-essentials. Meantime, what the Catholic Church does recognise in the Eastern Orthodox Churches is the validity of their priestly ordinations; the legitimacy of their Eastern liturgical rites which are much the same as those in Eastern Rite Catholic Churches; and their general affinity of outlook with the Catholic Church in matters of faith and morals. Needless to say, they are much nearer to the Catholic Church than any of the forms of Western Protestantism. [My emphasis].
radioreplies.info/radio-replies-vol-5.php?t=15&n=787
LOL!Oh wow that settles it. Good thing we’ve got “radioreplies” to straighten us all out.
They have called many councils. It is for the Church to declare later whether or not any of them should be termed “ecumenical”Oh.
You have bishops.
Have they ever called an ecumenical council?