C
Cavaradossi
Guest
Which is why looking at history and praxis is important, in my opinion.You’d be hard pressed to find *unanimous *patristic consent on anything.
Which is why looking at history and praxis is important, in my opinion.You’d be hard pressed to find *unanimous *patristic consent on anything.
That’s very much true, yet even history gives mixed signals in the case of the Papacy. Nothing is really clear-cut.Which is why looking at history and praxis is important, in my opinion.
Sure… but you originally wrote, “They can attend an Eastern Catholic DL”… and the Extraordinary Form is purely Latin Catholic.Umm hello! There is the Extraordinary Form! So two options![]()
The Unanimous Consent of the Fathers is a phrase with a specific meaning in Catholic theology: what the large or total majority of Fathers taught. There must have been some basis for this phrase to be coined, with at least a few examples where such a concensus is to be found.You’d be hard pressed to find *unanimous *patristic consent on anything.
That’s understandable.I don’t want to start listing “errors”. I see some things that are incompatible with my belief system and some things that are not. But I’m no expert. I am just learning.
Assuming that being in communion with Peter (i.e., the pope) is equivalent to being in communion with the Church. Let’s leave that debate for another day though.I think the greatest error is not being in communion with Peter.
Indeed. A good question. One hopes ByzCathCantor and other Eastern Catholics will put in a word.I believe an Eastern Catholic would be better able to respond to that question since they understand the Orthodox faith (presumably) and still chose to be Catholic. Why?
The term is Consensus Patrum. Unanimous means that all agree. I’m not a native speaker of English, so forgive me if I’m mistaken.The Unanimous Consent of the Fathers is a phrase with a specific meaning in Catholic theology: what most or all Fathers taught. There must have been some basis for this phrase to be coined, with at least a few examples where such a concensus is to be found.
Yes, the consensus patrem in Catholicism seems to be based more on having a majority than something unanimously believed.The term is Consensus Patrum. Unanimous means that all agree. I’m not a native speaker of English, so forgive me if I’m mistaken.
From the Orthodox point of view, the Roman Pontiff did change the very nature of the Catholic Church, and all they are asking is a return to orthodoxy.So basically, if this is what the Orthodox wants, the Orthodox wants to in fact diminish the Pope’s Role as the Vicar of Christ and make him just another Bishop.
That would change the very nature of the Catholic Church.
Heaven forbid!
You don’t want to make concession on the faith, right? For the Orthodox, a bishop ruling other bishops is unorthodox.So then why should the Catholic Church reconcile? During a negotiation there are often concessions on both parts. Where are the Orthodox concessions?
They become orthodoxThe Orthodox gets what they want and the Catholic Church gets nothing, except the possibility to celebrate mass together with the Orthodox?
Well, orthodoxy is the faith. How can one be Orthodox if one is not orthodox? If they themselves depart from the faith then they themselves have left the Orthodox Church.So no union until the Catholic Church becomes Orthodox, as defined by the Orthodox Church?
Seriously?
Please tell me if I am misunderstanding this.
Great, I’ll help with the sour cream!No worries - we can always make more pierogis !![]()
I believe an Eastern Catholic would be better able to respond to that question since they understand the Orthodox faith (presumably) and still chose to be Catholic. Why?
Is there a word limit for this requested treatise?Indeed. A good question. One hopes ByzCathCantor and other Eastern Catholics will put in a word.
The most significant factor, I think, was the wishes of the world’s Catholic bishops. Even in infallibly dogmatizing the Immaculate Conception of our Lady, Pope Pius IX was acting quite collegially.The key here may be in the timing.
If you notice, the first dogma of the two was declared in 1854AD, in the early part of the Pope’s reign. It was unprecedented, such a dogmatization by an individual’s fiat had never been done before, it had always ever before been done in Council. The retro-active recognition that he could have legitimately done such a thing on his own came toward the end of this same Pope’s long reign, in 1870AD, when he might have been thinking he would not be around much longer to defend it.
Indeed, and this sure was foolish of them. As Bishop Gasser said in his Relatio - and please note I’m paraphrasing here - “Some say councils will no longer be necessary. I answer: they will be necessary in the future as they were necessary in the past.”Many in the Curia were shocked when Blessed John XXIII had called a second Vatican Council not only because he was viewed as a “transitional Pope”, but also because many had come to believe that councils were no longer necessary as a consequence of Pastor Aeternus.
Definitely.Which is why looking at history and praxis is important, in my opinion.
Exactly. I find too many Catholics and Orthodox ignore this.That’s very much true, yet even history gives mixed signals in the case of the Papacy. Nothing is really clear-cut.
Meh.From the Orthodox point of view, the Roman Pontiff did change the very nature of the Catholic Church, and all they are asking is a return to orthodoxy.
Sure! I never turn down an an opportunity to learn. What’s the title and author?Do you want to read the book I’m reading on The Primacy of Peter?![]()
Now I’m salivating.Is there a word limit for this requested treatise?![]()
Well, I wouldn’t want to disappoint!Now I’m salivating.![]()
‘Collegially’ is an interesting assertion, especially when we see RC Traditionalists ranting about the ‘errors of collegiality’. Yet this is precisely the defense offered for the legitimacy of this practice!The most significant factor, I think, was the wishes of the world’s Catholic bishops. Even in infallibly dogmatizing the Immaculate Conception of our Lady, Pope Pius IX was acting quite collegially.
I think I understand.ECs, particularly Ruthenians in America, are hard to understand yet even harder perhaps to explain. To put is as simply as I can, we have a unique spiritual DNA, which includes a unique combination of markers - Catholic fidelity, Orthodox spirituality and extraordinary survival instinct (what my grandmother would have called our “Rusyn stubbornness”). Its hard to deny any one of those elements which, in combination, make up our identity in faith.
Fifty thousand will do.Is there a word limit for this requested treatise?![]()
I, a Roman Catholic, via adult conversion (RCIA) years & years ago, prefer the Eastern Christian Spiritual Life most. The Jesus prayer, the 7 Hours of daily prayer, prostrations, the frequent fasting, the many & long & beautiful set Prayers before Communion, I like visiting the monasteries, headcovering during prayer, reading the Prologue of Ohrid daily and reading the Bible every day slowly and prayerfully. I like how a prayer rule is used to measure my progress or lack there of reminding me how fallen and in need of a Savior I am.For those who have sought other outlets for spiritual life, why were you attracted to a certain Church or religious community vs. others? Did you feel you made the right choice once you were in the new community for some time?