What's your opinion on Orthodoxy?

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And I think Blessed John Paul II was wise and right not to do so. Mediatrix of All Graces is a confusing and deeply misleading title, at least in English. And honestly, what it actually means - that all graces come to us through her, because it is she who in cooperating with God gave us Jesus - seems to me to already be implicitly present in Catholic teaching anyway. So why dogmatize it by adding a highly misleading title to the Blessed Mother?
Is it that all graces do or must come through her, or that all graces can come through her if we humbly seek her intercession? It seems from this account that the petition was to declare that she is the sole source of grace (“all graces come to us through her”), and thus grace could only be obtained through her.

“Mediatrix” (formal, feminine form of “mediator”) does not connote a source, but rather an intermediary or advocate.

In Eastern tradition, the Theotokos is often described using these terms (Mediatrix, Intercessor, Advocate), ever mindful that she is indeed full of grace in her own right, but that does not imply that the Queen of heaven is a source of grace.

A very popular Rusyn Hymn, on the theme:
We hasten to your patronage, O Maiden full of grace.
We seek your help in every need, our Queen and Advocate.
And keep us free from sinful deed, O Virgin most beloved.
We ask you to foresake us not, seek mercy from above.
I understood that the dogmatic consideration was whether to declare formally that she has a superior intercessory role and power, higher than all the saints, given her state of grace and relationship with God. I would certainly agree that this is a widely held belief already, among Catholics and Orthodox. This would also not preclude that graces can be sought through the intercession of the saints.
 
By the priests telling us during Mass about the petitions to sign after Mass.
Well, it’s not wrong to do so. And I don’t question that individual priests might be enthusiastic for this sort of thing. But I don’t see an official policy either encouraging or discouraging it.
And as far as I know, the Pope has never asked or ordered the bishops, priests or laity to “stop it”, but the Pope accepts the petitions confirming it’s a normal and acceptible practice.
Well, he has more important things to attend to. We can circulate petitions all we like, and there’s really no reason why he should be bothered by it. Honestly, this seems to me something of purely local concern anyway: i.e. if it *did *become problematic, the local bishop should be the one to say “stop it.”
If you don’t agree with it, get a petition going & send it to him asking him to put a stop to the practice - jk 😃 jk 😃 I just couldn’t resist joking with you. 😃 I hope this made you laugh, at least a little, if not alot 😃
Haha 😃
That is problematic.
I disagree, but I do admire the specificity and clarity of your objection, and I certainly think it merits a thoughtful response.
So then the bishop of Rome is to other bishops what the bishop is to his presbyters, i.e., a bishop of bishops.
Oooh, you went straight for the jugular there, didn’t you? 😃 Maybe you know that I often like to explain the papacy by pointing out that that is exactly what the pope is not, and that he is* not* to other bishops what a bishop is to his priests.
Just as a presbyter who defies his bishop is considered to have gone rogue, so too bishops out of communion with the bishop of Rome are considered to have gone rogue.
I maintain that each of these situations is different.

A priest is entirely under his bishop, who is the true head of his local church. If a priest defies his bishop, while (in Catholic theology) he may still be a priest sacramentally speaking, he has separated himself from precisely that which gives to his authority all its legitimacy: his bishop.

If a bishop breaks communion with the bishop of Rome, he is not only still Sacramentally a bishop, but his church and his authority over it remain intact, for he possesses his authority not by papal delegation but by virtue of his Orders: the divinely established constitution of the episcopate includes authority over the faithful.

So a bishop who separates himself and his church from the Church of Rome has not separated himself from the only source of his authority’s legitimacy.

This, for instance, is why Catholic theology says that eastern Orthodox priests do have the power to hear confessions and absolve penitents, despite the fact that Catholic theology also says that a priest needs to be given the authority to do so by his bishop for him to validly do so: because the permission and commission of eastern Orthodox bishops counts, even though they’re in schism from the Church of Rome.
This, in effect, means that bishops in and of themselves have no power to manifest the Catholic Church in one place and in one eucharist outside of their communion with the bishop of Rome, as a bishop outside of communion with Rome can confect a valid eucharist, but is somehow separated from the One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church.
You may have noticed here the way my explanation only works if you accept the distinction Catholic theology makes regarding validity vs. legality. Orthodox churches do manifest the Catholic Church in some sense precisely because they offer a valid Eucharist, even though they’re technically not part of the Catholic Church.

Sound paradoxical? Yes. As crazy as it may sound, Catholic teaching essentially says that you guys are not members of the Catholic Church (even in the St. Ignatius sense), and yet, you may indeed be (and almost certainly are) “inside” the Catholic Church (again, in the St. Ignatius sense) because your churches are true churches united under the hierarchy that our Lord established (bishops, presbyters, deacons) and offering a valid Eucharistic Liturgy in union with your bishop.
Is it that all graces do or must come through her, or that all graces can come through her if we humbly seek her intercession? It seems from this account that the petition was to declare that she is the sole source of grace (“all graces come to us through her”), and thus grace could only be obtained through her.

“Mediatrix” (formal, feminine form of “mediator”) does not connote a source, but rather an intermediary or advocate.

In Eastern tradition, the Theotokos is often described using these terms (Mediatrix, Intercessor, Advocate), ever mindful that she is indeed full of grace in her own right, but that does not imply that the Queen of heaven is a source of grace.
Yes, great points. I fully agree with you and recant my ambiguous wording.

I think the confusion inherent in my post illustrates why, at least in English, this title is a bad idea.
 
Orthodox Christians share many things in common with Catholics. But unfortunately we are divided. The truth is that of our separation isn’t because of the papacy or the filioque. It’s because the empire fell in the west and continued in the east. We all know that the schism didn’t immediately begin then but it was only a matter of time. The Orthodox Church is the Roman Imperial church. Even Russia picked up the Imperial mantle after 1453 (Two Romes have fallen, but the third stands, and a fourth there will not be-The Russian Monk Philotheus c. 1520). In the west, the papacy developed further into a political entity of its own.

We can argue which bishop holds what keys or if that even matters but the reason why the Orthodox Church and the Catholic Church are what they are today is because of the historical facts. And because of those facts, there can never be a reunion. The Catholic Church cannot renounce papal supremacy without ceasing to be the Catholic Church. And the Imperial Church bows only to the Emperor, when one exists.
 
Generally it has been the Catholic Church since Vatican II that has initiated reconciliation efforts with others. Although we are skeptical of actual union resulting (for the reasons you yourself mentioned), we support them, and have at times launched our own initiatives, because it helps us to understand each other (the very reason I’m a member of this forum). Just because we can’t celebrate the Eucharist with each other doesn’t mean we can’t have good relations, support each other, and generally just get along.
There was never a talk of reunion before John 23XXIII
What changed
 
There was never a talk of reunion before John 23XXIII
What changed
While that is completely false, it is true that the approach to unity softened considerably with Vatican II. The reason for that is something you should be asking Catholics. I don’t know the answer, ans as a non-Catholic, I don’t particularly care why. The simple truth is that it undeniably has.
 
While that is completely false, it is true that the approach to unity softened considerably with Vatican II. The reason for that is something you should be asking Catholics. I don’t know the answer, ans as a non-Catholic, I don’t particularly care why. The simple truth is that it undeniably has.
As a non-Catholic, do you think VII was a good thing, bad thing or indifferent when it comes to possible reunion of our Churches?
 
The pope, as I’m sure you know, does indeed act within the bounds of Sacred Tradition when he exercises the infallibility of the Church.
I don’t know in what sense you mean this.

Father John Hardon wrote this (I assume he paraphrases, as there is no reference):
“Among the community of believers only the hierarchy, under the Pope, is divinely authorized to determine infallible truth. And between the hierarchy and Pope: he is normative for them, not they for him.

They are infallible if they agree with him; he can teach infallibly without, in the same way, depending on them.”

If this is what you mean, I respectfully disagree.

There should be be another way of defining the infallibility of the church. This is not it.
 
But outsiders will respect this move more than what has happened in the Catholic Church where there is less transparency. In fact, I believe the reason the OCA did what it did was to show that they have learned by the mistakes of others. Also to quell the suspicion that the synod conspired against Met. Jonah.
 
As a non-Catholic, do you think VII was a good thing, bad thing or indifferent when it comes to possible reunion of our Churches?
While there was no hope of reunion while the Catholic Church had its pre-VII attitude, there also isn’t any hope of reunion until the Catholic Church can bring order to the anarchy that has resulted.
 
While there was no hope of reunion while the Catholic Church had its pre-VII attitude, there also isn’t any hope of reunion until the Catholic Church can bring order to the anarchy that has resulted.
Well, that sums it up …
 
Not only is there another thread already dealing with that, but that really isn’t a fight a Catholic should want to pick.
Have to give you that one!
 
Not only is there another thread already dealing with that, but that really isn’t a fight a Catholic should want to pick.
I wasn’t really trying to pick a fight. I just thought it was interesting that the OCA sacked its Metropolitan over a single rape allegation. I guess that is a good move if your vying for the “respect” of “outsiders”.
 
I wasn’t really trying to pick a fight. I just thought it was interesting that the OCA sacked its Metropolitan over a single rape allegation. I guess that is a good move if your vying for the “respect” of “outsiders”.
Would you rather that they just reassign the priest (which Met. Jonah did) and pretend it never happened?

Speck, meet plank.
 
I always wonder,what Catholics and Protestants think about Orthodoxy?In general,we (Orthodox) are hostile to Catholics (because of the arrogance of the Popes) and a bit to Protestants.
Feel free to share your opinion 🙂

PS I’m not hostile to anyone.We are all Christians.
They are Orthodox.👍
 
I wasn’t really trying to pick a fight. I just thought it was interesting that the OCA sacked its Metropolitan over a single rape allegation. I guess that is a good move if your vying for the “respect” of “outsiders”.
Really sounds like a fight is being picked. We live in a fragile glass house, no stone throwing please.
 
I wasn’t really trying to pick a fight. I just thought it was interesting that the OCA sacked its Metropolitan over a single rape allegation. I guess that is a good move if your vying for the “respect” of “outsiders”.
It’s also a good move if you want the continued respect of insiders.
 
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