D
dochawk
Guest
I rather thought that that was overboard and offensive.I’m a cafeteria Catholic?
Silly you, followng the teachings of +Benedict rather than older documents.
What does he know about the issue, anyway?
I rather thought that that was overboard and offensive.I’m a cafeteria Catholic?
What about in the Church Slavonic or in the English language? The Orthodox do not accept the filioque in many different languages, not just Greek.The filioque is needed in Latin but would be heresy in Greek because of the translation issue.
If the filioque is needed in Latin, was the infallible Roman Catholic Church wrong for hundreds of years when it said the creed without the filioque hundreds of years before the filioque was introduced into the creed.The filioque is needed in Latin
Seems the news out there is differentsteve-b:![]()
Russia has only broken communion with the Ecumenical Patriarchate due to the situation in Ukraine. Russian has not broken communion with “everyone in union with them.” If they had done this, Russian would be out of communion with all of Orthodoxy as no one else has broken communion with the EP.If what you say is true
why did 60%+ of the Orthodox (the Russians) not only boycott the 2016 council meeting, they now or claim to be , no longer in union with Constantinople now Istanbul, and everyone in union with them?
Seems you don’t want to read what I wrote.Seems the news out there is different
How would that work with women “priests” and with clergy in SS marriage?Anglicanism, well High Church Anglicans anyways, and Lutherans are probably the most likely from the Protestant side to have a chance of reconciliation.
Not to mention…how destructive would it be to the dialogue between the Catholic & Orthodox churches that the actual in-person joint statements by Paul VI and Athenagoras could be ignored in favor of older documents?On the one hand, we have the central point of a declaration by Paul VI and Athenagoras (and his synod) that was read to the bishops of the world gathered for Vatican II.
Otoh, we have something from a formal condemnation that is not central to the condemnation and is only remembered because it was no.38 on a compiled list appended to an encyclical.
I know which one I believe is more authoritative. I do not even understand how anyone could think the other is.
Before lecturing me, think about your objections to what is posted. At least I quote references and properly reference them.steve-b:![]()
Seems you don’t want to read what I wrote.Seems the news out there is different
You asserted Russia broke communion with Constantinople and, "everyone in union with them.’’ your assertion is wrong as no other church has broken with either Russia or Constantinople, regardless what App. Yevsrtatiy has said should happen.
How can I take you seriously when you don’t get the facts straight, even with your supposedly properly referenced references?
Yes… According to the Orthodox, the Orthodox Catholic Church was founded in 33 AD by Jesus and the Roman Catholic Church split off from the Orthodox Catholic Church in 1054 citing such things as a married priesthood practiced by the Orthodox Catholic Church. But Jesus himself choose a married man to be first Pope and many of the apostles were married. So it was the Roman Church which disagreed with the norms set down by Jesus on the acceptability of a married clergy. The Orthodox Catholic Church has always accepted the norms of Jesus in this regard and remained faithful to these norms.I was disappointed in Horn for making it seem like in 1054 the patriarchs themselves just formed their own church. It wasn’t like that
Why should the statement of one Ukrainian “Archbishop” from a schismatic church (The so-called Ukrainian Autocephalous Orthodox Church - Kievan Patriarchate) be what determines whether I am to be taken seriously?Look, if you want to discount an Orthodox Archbishop, go ahead. But ya gotta do so with more than YOUR personal pinions if YOU want to be taken seriously.
Yet the Orthodox Church does not today allow married bishops (and they did not at the time of the schism), so are they not also disregarding the accepted norms of Jesus in this matter? I mean, the Bible and history are both pretty clear about having had married bishops at one point in history.Thomasbradley312:![]()
Yes… According to the Orthodox, the Orthodox Catholic Church was founded in 33 AD by Jesus and the Roman Catholic Church split off from the Orthodox Catholic Church in 1054 citing such things as a married priesthood practiced by the Orthodox Catholic Church. But Jesus himself choose a married man to be first Pope and many of the apostles were married. So it was the Roman Church which disagreed with the norms set down by Jesus on the acceptability of a married clergy. The Orthodox Catholic Church has always accepted the norms of Jesus in this regard and remained faithful to these norms.I was disappointed in Horn for making it seem like in 1054 the patriarchs themselves just formed their own church. It wasn’t like that
The very manner in which ecumenical councils were conducted presupposed the active participation of the pope, represented by the presence of his delegates in the council and finally by his own personal assent. So the East had to have accepted it.I had stated the East has never accepted that approval by the Pope was the determinative factor in assessing the ecumenicity of a council.
During WWII, Orthodox Serbs in Croatia were given a choice of being sent to the death camp at Jasenovac or converting to Roman Catholicism. There are photos of Catholic priests baptizing Orthodox Serbs in Croatia during WWII.I can tell you from personal knowledge that the practice of conditional baptism of Orthodox converts did not definitively cease with Vatican II.
At the first Ecumenical Council of Nicea in 325 AD, the Roman legates attempted to pass Canons requiring celibacy of all clergy, priests and bishops. These attempted amendments failed. According to the Rev. John Fulton: “ Marriage was no impediment to ordination even as a Bishop; and bishops, Priests and Deacons, equally with other men, were forbidden to put away their wives under pretext of religion *.” p.365, Vol. XIV, The Seven Ecumenical Councils of the Undivided Church. Later on, the Church enforced celibate Bishops in order to stop Nepotism. But married priests were still allowed in the Orthodox Catholic Church. Acceptance of a married priesthood was cited in the papal bull of 1054 as one reason for the Roman Church to split off from the Orthodox Catholic Church at that time.Yet the Orthodox Church does not today allow married bishops
This is why there will not be any reunion soon. Catholics are demanding that the Orthodox bend to Roman Catholicism. I don’t see many Orthodox who want to bend their teachings and their liturgy to fit the tastes of Roman Catholics. Take a look at some of the Roman liturgical celebrations we have recently seen and compare that with the Orthodox liturgy.If so, you should agree that the Orthodox should be the ones to bend because the Catholic Church’s teachings are necessarily true