Rohzek it appears you are forcing the issue. You have succinctly been proven wrong with explicit quotes. The primary source quotations of Honorius speaking of only humanity are served to show that he was not a monothelite. There is a passive acknowledgment of orthodox teaching when the abbot John says “not of his divinity and humanity” thus implying the acknowledgment of wills in each. Nevermind that the west and the abbot John were actually orthodox and he is the man who wrote the sentence. You cannot claim it doesn’t clear Honorius because the whole purpose of stating that it was an acknowledgment one will in Christ’s humanity was stated by the abbot for the purpose of distancing himself and the Pope from the eastern monothelite heresy. Hence the west jumped to defend Honorius when shocking news surfaced that the heretics claimed him as their own. The west knew Honorius and his doctrine and nee he was at least theologically orthodoxy.
You misunderstand me. Again, what the abbot says doesn’t absolve Honorius. The Monothelites made the same argument. They argued that because Christ did not have a lower will, there is no way to prove that his human will was distinct from his divine will. Therefore, the Monothelite would argue that there was one will and it resides in the personhood of Christ rather than his nature.
Further Pope John IV presided over a council which proclaimed christs two wills in the west in the Lateran and at the same council stated that which I quoted about Honorius not being a monothelite, but was only concerned with one will in the humanity of Christ. To interpret this to somehow imply monothelitism is to force Honorius to be something that his words do not even proclaim. Rather this is the tactic of the heretics which St Maximus explicitly mentioned. The west knew and understood honorius and he was never seen as a heretic in the west. Rather he was seen as bot doing his duties correctly by being negligent. Hence even centuries after the whole controversy Venerable Bede praises Pope Honorius as “sound in doctrine” and almost makes him a saint.
What are you talking about? Every pope after the 8th century took an oath condemning Honorius. You don’t just get to dismiss that out of hand, especially when it is coupled with another affirmation of his condemnation at the 7th Ecumenical Council and the 8th (presumably 869) with no fanfare whatsoever.
As for Bede, I’m assuming that you are referring to his brief letters that he records from Honorius in his
Ecclesiastical History of the English People. Bede praises him for settling the debate in Britain over the proper date for celebrating Easter. He never addresses the Monothelite debate. I consider that a plus for Honorius, but it’s another issue altogether.
As for what Pope John IV says with regards to the two wills in the human nature part, I’ll repeat myself again. Even if, which is likely, that Pope Honorius was only speaking about the one will with regards to Christ’s humanity, it does not absolve the issue. This same argument was used by the Monothelites, which the Catholic Encyclopedia, if it means anything however so it may be dated, even concedes.
We stated he was condemned for negligence and provided quotes. They are explicit but you realise this but wish to condemn an innocent man regardless of the evidence provided because, as many easterners, any attempt to make the roman pontiffs heretics is a victory. This attitude is all too common. There is no debate here. There once was but now that the evidence has been laid bare, you really have no legs left to stand on other than your stretched and laboured inferences from silence and strained hypotheses.
But I will counter your post later when I get time.
Yes, I know that you have provided quotes, AND I have addressed them. You still have yet to explain the issue with the phrase “one with these the Roman Honorius,” the adverb pariterque, and the emphasis on the verb consentio. These are serious issues with regards to understanding Leo’s views.
And as for Honorius’ letters themselves, no one has addressed my charge that Honorius rested the will of Christ within his person, rather than within his nature. If I am wrong, then show me where Honorius rests the wills of Christ within his natures instead of his personhood. I’ve highlighted specific segments of his two letters with regards to this, yet I haven’t received an answer with specific quotes and explanations. These are fair requests on my part, so I don’t appreciate the attacks on my personal integrity by virtue of my religious denomination. I never said the same about any Catholic here, so I would at least expect the same respect.
And finally, I respectfully ask that you keep the fact that I am Orthodox out of the discussion. It’s not related to my position whatsoever. If I were still Catholic I would be making the same argument, because to me it seems abundantly clear that whatever Honorius said, it clearly does not qualify as
ex cathedra. When I was Catholic I never regarded this issue as a potential threat to my faith or a point of favor towards another, because to me it never really concerned the essential doctrine of
ex cathedra.