H
Hesychios
Guest
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What does this mean?If the early church, Christ and the Apostles, all the early saints and martyrs, did not need another definition, what makes you think you are entitled to one?
:ehh:Using your metaphor, the pope has totally modified Jesus’ car - it’s pimped out now with crome spinning wheels, a new hydrolic system installed, there’s even dice on the rearview mirror now.Remember, Jesus commended the dude who multipled the talents and He expected Peter to modify His car.
Either the earlier Popes who rejected the Filioque were wrong, or the later ones who accepted it were wrong.If the pope didn’t have the authority to override existing truth, then how is the replacement of NO FILIOQUE with FILIOQUE explained?
Yes, it is quite a quandary. You see the contradiction, which is good, but the solution is apparently unacceptable to even some of your fellow Catholics, which should give you pause.How do the very distinct differences about our own God jive, if we don’t accept that the popes have the authority to override the truth with the new and distinct truth which is then the new & current truth? Both were taught by popes but in different centuries. We are bound the follow the current pope, right?
Was the incarnation a change in God? From the prayers of the Divine Liturgy of St. Basil, we see the following confession from the priest (which the laity confirm themselves in response):God doesn’t change & yet we have seen that He does change through the dogma of the Incarnation & also with the Filioque. It’s a mystery!The Trinity is a mystery too, something our finite minds can not fully grasp.
Eek, indeed. Truth remains truth yesterday, today, and tomorrow. I am frankly a little shocked that any Catholic would say otherwise, but this is a major sticking point in the relations between the RCC and the Orthodox, as Hesychios has pointed out. It is not acceptable to the Church of the Councils (whether we’re talking 3 or 7). I’m not exactly filled with confidence at reading some of this stuff, I must be honest…though I will continue to try to give you the benefit of the doubt, I hope a fellow Catholic can make more sense of what you’ve written in some way that is a little less disturbing than how I’m reading you.We Catholics must adhere to the current Church teaching. If we believe as the ealier Catholics believed, that is to say that if we chose to reject one or more of the newly defined dogmas, then we have placed ourselves outside of our own Church.![]()
Why should we have to believe something not a part of the deposit of faith? That a doctrine has been added to the Christian truth handed down from generation to generation should send up a red flag for all who believe in the equal importance of Sacred Scripture and Sacred Tradition.I don’t think that’d be more accurate. And let me tell you why.
In the case of the filioque, there were popes who flat out rejected it and now popes accept it. The popes who rejected it, certainly did not recognize it as an implicit teaching within the deposit of faith otherwise they too would have accepted it. Because the popes rejected it, we can know for certain the filioque wasn’t there in the original deposit of faith; however, it is a part of our faith now and we, Catholics, are bound to believe in it while Catholics of prior centuries were required under their popes to Not accept it.
So, in the future, could the pope theoretically reject the filioque again? Would you subscribe to the “new truth” that he had promulgated?I agree with you that Truth is Truth. Where we differ is that as Catholics we can know for sure what is truth is because it’s whatever the pope is currently teaching as truth.
I may not select the most perfect words to describe stuff, but I do my best.![]()
I fully believe Jesus is true to his words to St. Peter that ANYTHING he looses on earth will be loosed in heaven and ANYTHING he binds on earth will be bound in heaven. The popes have now “bound” that original ANYTHING to just Faith and Morals. To know what truth is, the question of Pilate, we must listen to the current pope, not past popes unless they happen to agree with the current because Jesus can not be made into a liar.![]()
Either Jesus gave the popes the power to bind & loose in heaven & earth or He didn’t. I’m Catholic and I believe He did. There is no limit to what the Pope can do and affect on heaven or on earth when it comes to any matter either Faith & Morals. Belief about Who God is is a matter of Faith and if the Trinity was not including filioque (the Holy Spirit proceeded from the Father only), but now He is (the Holy Spirit now proceeds from both the Father and the Son) than God did change yet He can’t change - a complete mystery. _ a mystery like the Trinity which is a matter of faith to be accepted.
The definition of binding and loosing that you ascribe to the role of the pope is, according to the Catholic Encyclopedia(!), a recent development in itself:The pope is infallible, but I am not. If I’m wrong, show me.![]()
This post is disturbing.The pope has always traditionally worn a crown, the papal crown, which signifies he does rule our Church. In past times the pope ruled both secularly & spiritually and but now his secular authority only remains in the Vatican City and still the rest of the universe spiritually. The pope is not Jesus, but rules in His place as Jesus appointed the pope to. Just as the Pharaoh had appoint Joseph to rule over Egypt.
Using your metaphor, the pope has totally modified Jesus’ car - it’s pimped out now with crome spinning wheels, a new hydrolic system installed, there’s even dice on the rearview mirror now.Remember, Jesus commended the dude who multipled the talents and He expected Peter to modify His car.
If the pope didn’t have the authority to override existing truth, then how is the replacement of NO FILIOQUE with FILIOQUE explained? How do the very distinct differences about our own God jive, if we don’t accept that the popes have the authority to override the truth with the new and distinct truth which is then the new & current truth? Both were taught by popes but in different centuries. We are bound the follow the current pope, right?
God doesn’t change & yet we have seen that He does change through the dogma of the Incarnation & also with the Filioque. It’s a mystery!The Trinity is a mystery too, something our finite minds can not fully grasp.
We Catholics must adhere to the current Church teaching. If we believe as the ealier Catholics believed, that is to say that if we chose to reject one or more of the newly defined dogmas, then we have placed ourselves outside of our own Church.![]()
My brother (or sister)… are you a new Catholic?I may not select the most perfect words to describe stuff, but I do my best.![]()
We both agree Truth is Truth. Therefore, how can one believe that which was (as you say) not within the deposit of Faith? What of the commands in the Epistles, then? “Hold fast to what has been handed down to you, by word or mouth”; “… contend for the faith that was once for all delivered to the saints.”I don’t think that’d be more accurate. And let me tell you why.
In the case of the filioque, there were popes who flat out rejected it and now popes accept it. The popes who rejected it, certainly did not recognize it as an implicit teaching within the deposit of faith otherwise they too would have accepted it. Because the popes rejected it, we can know for certain the filioque wasn’t there in the original deposit of faith; however, it is a part of our faith now and we, Catholics, are bound to believe in it while Catholics of prior centuries were required under their popes to Not accept it.
I agree with you that Truth is Truth. Where we differ is that as Catholics we can know for sure what is truth is because it’s whatever the pope is currently teaching as truth.
Indeed. As do we all, myself included.I may not select the most perfect words to describe stuff, but I do my best.![]()
All I can say is that, based off the context of the passage, Jesus was granting to Peter (either first, or as a reaffirmation, depending on the chronology) the power to bind and loose sins- e.g., the right to grant Absolution to a penitent who has confessed their sins. It definitely has nothing to do with the ability to bind and loose reality; only God can do such things, and only then on creation, since God is immutable and does not change.I fully believe Jesus is true to his words to St. Peter that ANYTHING he looses on earth will be loosed in heaven and ANYTHING he binds on earth will be bound in heaven. The popes have now “bound” that original ANYTHING to just Faith and Morals. To know what truth is, the question of Pilate, we must listen to the current pope, not past popes unless they happen to agree with the current because Jesus can not be made into a liar.
Either Jesus gave the popes the power to bind & loose in heaven & earth or He didn’t. I’m Catholic and I believe He did. There is no limit to what the Pope can do and affect on heaven or on earth when it comes to any matter either Faith & Morals. Belief about Who God is is a matter of Faith and if the Trinity was not including filioque (the Holy Spirit proceeded from the Father only), but now He is (the Holy Spirit now proceeds from both the Father and the Son) than God did change yet He can’t change - a complete mystery. _ a mystery like the Trinity which is a matter of faith to be accepted.
Au contraire, the burden of proof is upon you. I make no claims about the Pope exercising infallibility. However that, my friend, is for another thread methinks.The pope is infallible, but I am not. If I’m wrong, show me.![]()
:ehh:
But alsofor “the dude who multiplied the talents”. That must be in the Bill & Ted’s Excellent Adventure Version of the Bible…
Either the earlier Popes who rejected the Filioque were wrong, or the later ones who accepted it were wrong.
I have received some negative feedback and I’m surprised about that as we have to be able to reconcile some difficult positions. Someone said something like a thousand difficulties do not add up to a single doubt.Yes, it is quite a quandary. You see the contradiction, which is good, but the solution is apparently unacceptable to even some of your fellow Catholics, which should give you pause.
God was once only God & with the incarnation God became both God and change. I’d like to understand how is that not a change?Was the incarnation a change in God? From the prayers of the Divine Liturgy of St. Basil, we see the following confession from the priest (which the laity confirm themselves in response):
Amen. Amen. Amen. I believe, I believe, I believe and confess to the last breath, that this is the life-giving body that your only-begotten Son, our Lord, God and Saviour Jesus Christ took from our lady, the lady of us all, the holy Theotokos Saint May. He made it one with his divinity without mingling, without confusion and without alteration. He witnessed the good confession before Pontius Pilate. He gave it up for us upon the holy wood of the cross, of his own will, for us all. Truly I believe that his divinity parted not from his humanity for a single moment nor a twinkling of an eye. Given for us for salvation, remission of sins and eternal life to those who partake of him. I believe, I believe, I believe that this is so in truth. Amen. (emphasis mine)
We do not believe that the incarnation was a change in God. God, by taking on the human nature, did not become something other than He had been. To think otherwise smacks of Eutychianism and it is a heresy. Consider also the prayer recited here as part of the celebration of the Nativity. Lots of stuff in there about “blessing my (human) nature in Yourself”, the Infinite coming to us on earth, etc. Nothing about God changing, only humbling Himself for our sake, which is something both Catholics and Orthodox agree on.
I hope another Catholic can explain it better, in a different way, that would be great.Eek, indeed. Truth remains truth yesterday, today, and tomorrow. I am frankly a little shocked that any Catholic would say otherwise, but this is a major sticking point in the relations between the RCC and the Orthodox, as Hesychios has pointed out. It is not acceptable to the Church of the Councils (whether we’re talking 3 or 7). I’m not exactly filled with confidence at reading some of this stuff, I must be honest…though I will continue to try to give you the benefit of the doubt, I hope a fellow Catholic can make more sense of what you’ve written in some way that is a little less disturbing than how I’m reading you.
No, almost 20 yrs now. I’m lucky to be in a community that is very faithful to the pope. You?My brother (or sister)… are you a new Catholic?
The crown symbolizes the kingdom of God on earth, which is in the Church. The bishop if the visible sign of the Church. Every bishop wears a crown. The mitres of Latin bishops are fashioned to be crowns. Eastern bishops wear mitres that actually looks like a crown:The pope has always traditionally worn a crown, the papal crown, which signifies he does rule our Church. In past times the pope ruled both secularly & spiritually and but now his secular authority only remains in the Vatican City and still the rest of the universe spiritually. The pope is not Jesus, but rules in His place as Jesus appointed the pope to. Just as the Pharaoh had appoint Joseph to rule over Egypt.
The “dude” with multiple talents (talents by the way are currency, not abilities) multiplied the talents (made more money), he didn’t come back to the king with something else of value like land, diamonds, gold or anything else.Using your metaphor, the pope has totally modified Jesus’ car - it’s pimped out now with crome spinning wheels, a new hydrolic system installed, there’s even dice on the rearview mirror now.Remember, Jesus commended the dude who multipled the talents and He expected Peter to modify His car.
Have you even done any research yourself?If the pope didn’t have the authority to override existing truth, then how is the replacement of NO FILIOQUE with FILIOQUE explained?
If our truth today is different from the truth in early centuries, then what we have today is not the truth. As St. Paul said, a false teacher is one who teaches a Jesus other than the Jesus they taught. If we change the teachings of the Apostles, then we are heretics. The Pope is a successor to the Apostles, not a successor to Christ.How do the very distinct differences about our own God jive, if we don’t accept that the popes have the authority to override the truth with the new and distinct truth which is then the new & current truth? Both were taught by popes but in different centuries. We are bound the follow the current pope, right?
God does not change, and neither the truth of Christ. Christ taught something in the first century and He said that is the way to salvation. If we change it, how can it be the same way? The path is narrow, to deviate one bit is to be off the path. If we changed what is taught, then we are off the path.God doesn’t change & yet we have seen that He does change through the dogma of the Incarnation & also with the Filioque. It’s a mystery!The Trinity is a mystery too, something our finite minds can not fully grasp.
If we do not believe as the earlier Catholics believe, then we believe a different faith. It means we made stuff up. It means we are in heresy. It means we are going to hell. It is simple as that.We Catholics must adhere to the current Church teaching. If we believe as the ealier Catholics believed, that is to say that if we chose to reject one or more of the newly defined dogmas, then we have placed ourselves outside of our own Church.![]()
Wow.No, almost 20 yrs now. I’m lucky to be in a community that is very faithful to the pope. You?
As it says in the prayers I reproduced in my previous post, the divinity of our Lord was not mingled, mixed, or altered by the taking up of the human nature. Rather, it was our nature that was elevated by His sanctification of it – “…and took the form of a servant, and blessed my nature in Yourself”, etc.God was once only God & with the incarnation God became both God and change. I’d like to understand how is that not a change?
Fair enough.I see it as something that is true like the Trinity but that can not be fully explained /understood until we get to heaven.
I am less than a year old in the faith. See my siggy.No, almost 20 yrs now. I’m lucky to be in a community that is very faithful to the pope. You?
Soon after my conversion I attended and learned in person from Fr. John Corapi when he began teaching from the Catechism of the Catholic Church. I know he’s recently gone his own way, but he was a pillar in the mid-1990s.Wow.
I seriously, with all sincerity and love and concern, advice you to seek a very good theologian and teach you what the Catholic Church actually teaches.
I am not trying to troll here or be a meanie, but everything you just posted is outright heresy. Even the most Papal Supremacist would never claim the Pope can change Church teaching.
You agree with me that in the incarnation God became sometime He had not previously been, Human.As it says in the prayers I reproduced in my previous post, the divinity of our Lord was not mingled, mixed, or altered by the taking up of the human nature. Rather, it was our nature that was elevated by His sanctification of it – “…and took the form of a servant, and blessed my nature in Yourself”, etc.
Fair enough.
Well, HERESY as defined is any teaching that is not consistent with what the Apostles taught. So for a Pope to teach a new “truth” is not only heretic in itself, what he teaches is heresy by its very definition.Soon after my conversion I attended and learned in person from Fr. John Corapi when he began teaching from the Catechism of the Catholic Church. I know he’s recently gone his own way, but he was a pillar in the mid-1990s.
History is also very important and has to be reconciled with current Church teachings. How is it that popes of prior times taught against the filioque and current popes teach the filioque in light of our Church’s teaching that popes can not error in matters of faith?
I’m saying that they all are correct at the time.
Heresy. Really? Rather than throwing around the H word, if you have a better explanation, I’m all ears. I really want to hear it![]()
Sad. Because the fullness of truth is Christ. Not the Pope.I believe that only with the Pope can the fulness of Truth be found.
I said “with” not “in”. Big difference.Well, HERESY as defined is any teaching that is not consistent with what the Apostles taught. So for a Pope to teach a new “truth” is not only heretic in itself, what he teaches is heresy by its very definition.
Sad. Because the fullness of truth is Christ. Not the Pope.