E
Evlogitos
Guest
So, just hypothetically speaking, Tony, what would happen if you just up and said, “despite the fact that the pope has explicitly and expressly approved his orthodoxy, I’m breaking communion with my diocesan bishop… but not with the pope, of course”?
If you ask me, that seems like an awfully canonically precarious position to take for a Roman Catholic (very SSPX, in a way). If communion flows from the see of Rome, in plenitude through the supreme ordinary jurisdiction of a bishop within his diocese, then logically, breaking communion with one of the bishops is tantamount to breaking communion with the papacy itself, regardless of your flowery protests to the contrary. We know Maximus was orthodox, so we cannot ascribe Donatism to him. I just don’t see any way to frame the issue other than that Maximus explicitly denied the sacramental validity of the Roman communion, over and against the papacy, if it did not conform to received Truth. Help me out here.
As to your quotes:
-Chalcedon falls under the third fallacy I listed earlier: Laudatory and flattering language toward the papacy does not infallibility make.
-Same with Anatolius.
-Maximus is a combination of Western fatherdom (I believe that was written during his lengthy stay in Carthage), laudation directed Romeward, and and praise for general Roman orthodoxy.
-Nikephoros is praise for Roman orthodoxy and laudation directed Romeward. Note that he does not describe exclusivity in papal prerogatives; he merely says that Roman approval was a vital and indispensable part of obtaining conciliar catholicity in the Church. No Orthodox historian would deny this. You’re reading too much into it.
-Theodore is a slight whiff of “Peter = pope,” and of course every novelty should be referred to Rome’s consideration, given its status as the largest Patriarchate in the Empire and the one with the best track record of Orthodoxy. That doesn’t mean Roman approval is the sine qua non of orthodoxy, though.
-Theodore’s second quote seems to me to be a defense of conciliarity, a twisting of grammar (is he saying the pope calls an ecumenical council, or the emperor?), and a suggestion of the pope’s extraordinary rights of appeal.
-I would like to see broader context for Methodius, but even if we take his words at bare and literal face value, he’s late enough that his single voice should not be taken as representative of the consensus fidei (just like John Chrysostom, Tertullian, and a few others, while a weighty testimony, are insufficient to prove that the Virgin was not sinless).
If you ask me, that seems like an awfully canonically precarious position to take for a Roman Catholic (very SSPX, in a way). If communion flows from the see of Rome, in plenitude through the supreme ordinary jurisdiction of a bishop within his diocese, then logically, breaking communion with one of the bishops is tantamount to breaking communion with the papacy itself, regardless of your flowery protests to the contrary. We know Maximus was orthodox, so we cannot ascribe Donatism to him. I just don’t see any way to frame the issue other than that Maximus explicitly denied the sacramental validity of the Roman communion, over and against the papacy, if it did not conform to received Truth. Help me out here.
As to your quotes:
-Chalcedon falls under the third fallacy I listed earlier: Laudatory and flattering language toward the papacy does not infallibility make.
-Same with Anatolius.
-Maximus is a combination of Western fatherdom (I believe that was written during his lengthy stay in Carthage), laudation directed Romeward, and and praise for general Roman orthodoxy.
-Nikephoros is praise for Roman orthodoxy and laudation directed Romeward. Note that he does not describe exclusivity in papal prerogatives; he merely says that Roman approval was a vital and indispensable part of obtaining conciliar catholicity in the Church. No Orthodox historian would deny this. You’re reading too much into it.
-Theodore is a slight whiff of “Peter = pope,” and of course every novelty should be referred to Rome’s consideration, given its status as the largest Patriarchate in the Empire and the one with the best track record of Orthodoxy. That doesn’t mean Roman approval is the sine qua non of orthodoxy, though.
-Theodore’s second quote seems to me to be a defense of conciliarity, a twisting of grammar (is he saying the pope calls an ecumenical council, or the emperor?), and a suggestion of the pope’s extraordinary rights of appeal.
-I would like to see broader context for Methodius, but even if we take his words at bare and literal face value, he’s late enough that his single voice should not be taken as representative of the consensus fidei (just like John Chrysostom, Tertullian, and a few others, while a weighty testimony, are insufficient to prove that the Virgin was not sinless).