Dear brother Dzheremi,
Yes, I understand from this and your last reply that this is how you view Catholicism. That’s fine and all, but it still doesn’t really help answer what I asked in reply to Ghosty: What is a person supposed to do if the scholastic method does not produce the results it is presumed to produce?
I referred to the beauty of Catholicism to indicate that even though one may not share or understand a certain approach to the Faith, you can find another approach and
still maintain the same Faith. Thus, unity is maintained. If you focus on
the Faith itself as the bond of unity, instead of questions on how you can approach God, or how you can experience God, or how you can understand God, then Christ’s command for unity may be fulfilled, according to the Spirit, will be fulfilled. To put it simply, focus on the
“WHAT”, first and foremost, and, only if necessary, the
“WHY” (as far as the Spirit leads the Church), instead of the “HOW.” Focusing on the “how” will never lead to the mark of Catholicity. The HOW would be relevant to maintain a parochial sort of unity at the local level, but will never lead to the mark of Catholicity at the universal level (unless you believe uniatism is the proper model for unity).
In short, you don’t need to leave the Catholic Church just because you cannot accept or understand the more rational approach of the Western Church. If you believe in the uniatist model of unity, however, then I can see why you would want to leave the Catholic communion.
I think this is a negative side to your sort of “big tent” approach: Not all things actually fit together, and repeating how great they are doesn’t help. Some things, as they are described by Latins or pro-Latin camps, don’t actually work even with other Latins (keep in mind, I was canonically Latin through my 4-5 years in the CC; I did not develop a distaste for their way of doing things before/without actually doing things that way).
Again, focus on WHAT we believe, instead of WHY or HOW we approach God. There are many ways to approach God within orthodox Catholicism, but what unifies us is WHAT we believe. You don’t need to understand or accept the Western approach to God in order to remain united to them IN FAITH (i.e., in WHAT we believe).
Yes, theology is nothing more than “the expression of Faith”. So I am curious how it is that you think we can somehow “look beyond” it to search for a common faith not dependent on it. Is there some sense by which I can agree with you without taking a certain theological stance as a result?
That’s a very good question. Using the model of the dialogue between the OO and the CC, the Catholics asked their Oriental Orthodox partners, “
WHAT is it that you are actually trying to teach by your miaphysite expressions of Faith?” Likewise, the Oriental Orthodox asked their Catholic partners, “
WHAT is it that you are actually trying to teach by your diaphysite expressions of Faith?” By focusing on that question, by searching deeply for an answer to that question, both sides came to understand that they were actually
teaching the same thing about Christ - and, hence, that they actually
believed the same thing about Christ.
As another example is the matter of leavened and unleavened bread. Once one focuses on WHAT we believe about the Eucharist, the WHY or HOW becomes secondary.on the level of UNIVERSAL unity (though, as stated earlier, the “why” and “how” are certainly important for LOCAL unity).
The examples can be multiplied; such an approach can help on all the other issues that currently and seemingly divide the Churches.
This seems like a strange sort of dualism that reduces rather than strengthens our commitment to whatever truth we do find in common (and I recognize that there is some, but I don’t think it implies that we can be unified now; see below.).
ISTM the appearance of dualism is only relevant for those who DON’T focus on the “
WHAT” of the matter. The approach of uniatism is to focus on the “why” and the “how,” seeking to impose that on others; that imposes an artificial dualism where none exists. True ecumenism focuses on the “what.”
And yet there is no communion between the two. Perhaps because respect for each others traditions is something far less than sharing them/endorsing them as correct.
Christology is not the only issue to resolve, so I don’t know why one should expect formal communion at this point.
I would not be surprised if the statement is meant as a general comment on the Chalcedonian/non-Chalcedonian divide, as I have read similar things coming out of dialogues and pan-Orthodox unity, from which there has also resulted no communion.
It is a general principle on how to achieve unity, though not all issues have been resolved.
In any case, I certainly wouldn’t take this as the slightest bit of a sign that Rome is in any way considered Orthodox by actual Orthodox churches. That’s plainly false.
Who said anything of the sort? However, it’s a fact that there is
official, formal recognition between the OO and Catholic Churches on the orthodoxy of each others’ Christology. The same cannot be said of the EO and OO. There is still a strong uniatist element in EO’xy preventing formal agreement on the matter of Christology.
This is something that I would expect an OO leader to say in the interests of trying to heal the Chalcedonian/non-Chalcedonian divide.
Are you saying that the OO and Catholic hierarchies are just being two-faced politicians - that they don’t actually believe what they are saying?
CONTINUED