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To: MarMema; gbcdoj; Hermann the Cherusker; FormerLib
Also not to worry, we still consider you heretics

That's as what Photius was syaing at the incomplete 8th Ecumenical Council. Because the Latin West added a word (filioque) to the Nicene Creed, which was not there when the Creed was formulated and which addition was not approved by an Ecumenical Council (or any of the popes up to and shortly after the Great Schism), the West was guilty of heresy then as it is now, and if Eastern Orthodox are schismatics who separated from the heretics, then there is no doubt who is who when it comes to catholicity of the original Church.

So, if heresy is all that is keeping us apart, then heresy is on the West and not the East. The fix is easy, easier than you think. And for a brief moment in 1995 the two Churches were closer than in over 1,000 years.

Following Vatican II, and bilateral pronouncements of good will on both sides, the Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople visited Rome and celebrated Liturgy with Pope John Paul II in 1995.

One might ask: If the Vatican is in heresy with the filioque, how could the Ecumenical Patriarch (Batholomew I) pray and participate in the Eucharist with heretics (i.e. Roman Catholics)? We all know that it is strictly forbidden for Eastern Orthodox to pray with or paritcipate in religious services with heretics, non-Christians and pagans.

For this particular Liturgy, the Nicene Creed was recited in Greek without the filioque, simply stating that the Holy Ghost proceeds form the Father and not from the father and the Son. This may seem like a trivial change, but it is not. When the Greek bible was traslated inot the latin Vulgate, the Latin word for proceed is not equivalent in meaning to the one used in the Greek original which actually implies procession from a source and not through a source. The correct theological construct is that the Spirit proceeds (like water from a spring) from the Wisdom and is expressed through the Word although as it is expressed it also proceeds but not in the original sense. By implying that the Widsom of God proceeds (i.e. originates in the Greek meaning of the word) from the Father and the Son, it is also implied that the Son's Divine Economy is the same as that of the Father, which is not what the Church teaches. There is no doubt that the Church to this day maintains the "monarchy" of the Father in the Holy Trinity.

The Roman Catholic Church knows that this is so, but it cannot go back on its teaching. The Roman Catholic Church knows why this heresy was snuck into the Nicene Creed and allowed, under the table so to say, to perpetuate itself despite public pronouncements of the popes against it. The heresy was introduced to combat the Arian heresy among Spanish Visigoths (German tribes) converted to Christianity by "elevating" the Son to a more "godly" status. Arianism maintained that Jesus was a "lesser" god.

As Greek ceased to be used in the West as the Church language by the 4th century, and transaltions of even very prominent Western Christian theologians (i.e. Augustine) resulted in trnaslational errors that were passed down the ages to become "truth," so did the filoque heresy outlive its original reason (albeit it was wrong to combat heresy with heresy!), in time it became so ingrained in the Western practice that one of the last popes in the still united Church had to officially prohibit its use and remind that Nicene Creed may not be altered, but the practice continued among Franks and other Germanic converts regardless -- so much so that they accused the Greeks of removing the filoque from "their" Creed.

So, heresy, born to combat heresy, became "truth" and truth was turned into "heresy" by the West, and so it goes to this day, so much so that the hereticson this Forum call Greek Christians heretics for refusing to be with the Church that started the heresy.

What was great in 1995 in the Vatican was a demonstration of what it would take for us to at least become closer and to celebrate Christ together as One. That Orthodox Chrisitnaity is fully Cahtolic is obvious form the fact that, except for removing the filoque from the Creed, the successor of Peter could celebrate Liturgy with the Ecumenical Patriarch as if the Church never parted.

How fully Catholic is Orthodoxy is best demonstrated by the fact that Byzantine Catholics (Greek-Catholics) do not have to change their Nicene Creed or anything in their worship to be considered fully in communion wiht Rome, so long as they accept the pope as their lord.

Besides the filoque, the major stumbling blocks are papacy as defined in the Vatican I and the Immaculate Conception. The issue of papcy is another lengthy one so it is bets left undistrubed here, and the issue of the Immaculate Conception is that it was unkown to Christianity until about 200years ago and run completely contrary to the pre-Augustinian Christian understanding of Man's Fall to which Rome subscribed for centuries. In fact, even Thomas Aquinas, could not reconcile the Immaculate Conception which did not become a dogma until the 18th century.

45 posted on 05/11/2004 2:19:14 AM PDT by kosta50 (Eastern Orthodoxy is pure Christianity)
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To: kosta50; MarMema; gbcdoj; FormerLib
Oh boy! Here's where we go off the deep end.

Because the Latin West added a word (filioque) to the Nicene Creed, which was not there when the Creed was formulated and which addition was not approved by an Ecumenical Council (or any of the popes up to and shortly after the Great Schism), the West was guilty of heresy then as it is now

This could only be the case if the word was certainly an "illegitimate addition" in the words of the Council of 879-880. That of course depends on the purpose of the west in adding it, and the meaning attached to it. I would maintain that there is a perfectly Orthodox sense in which the filioque can be understood, as many of yout saintly theologians have said, such as St. Maximus the Confessor, Patriarch Gregory VII, St. Gregory Palamas, Fr. John Meyendorf, Fr. John Romanides, and others, and that it was in this Orthodox sense that the addition was intended.

When the Greek bible was traslated inot the latin Vulgate, the Latin word for proceed is not equivalent in meaning to the one used in the Greek original which actually implies procession from a source and not through a source. The correct theological construct is that the Spirit proceeds (like water from a spring) from the Wisdom and is expressed through the Word although as it is expressed it also proceeds but not in the original sense. By implying that the Widsom of God proceeds (i.e. originates in the Greek meaning of the word) from the Father and the Son, it is also implied that the Son's Divine Economy is the same as that of the Father, which is not what the Church teaches.

It is only implied that when misconstrued back again into Greek. The origin (the derivation or source) of the Holy Spirit we say is from the Father alone by spiration, and not generation, but his cause (the thing that brings about an effect) is from the Father and the Son. I believe this is the same as what you say at Balchernae in that the Spirit "proceeds" from the Father, and is "manifested" by the Son. I think there are a number among the Orthodox who are coming to the same conclusion. I recognize that the way we speak is not the same as the way you speak, but I would hope you recognize that our theological language is just as old as the Cappodocian work. It is certainly used at the same period by Sts. Ambrose and Hilary.

There is no doubt that the Church to this day maintains the "monarchy" of the Father in the Holy Trinity.

No there is not. That is the position of the Catholic Church when it says with St. Augustine that the Holy Spirit proceeds from the Father as principle (fundemental source). "The Holy Spirit proceeds from the Father as Principle (principaliter) and, through the latter's timeless gift to the Son, from the Father and the Son in communion (communiter)." (De Trinitate XV , 25, 47, PL 42, 1095).

The heresy was introduced to combat the Arian heresy among Spanish Visigoths (German tribes) converted to Christianity by "elevating" the Son to a more "godly" status.

Its easy to find it quite a bit earlier than the time of the Visigothic invasion.

As Greek ceased to be used in the West as the Church language by the 4th century

Greek had never been commonly used in the West except among the Greek inhabited coastal colonies and in Rome. The Latin Bible was produced by the second century (St. Jerome revised the existing Latin Bible, he didn't create a new one), and most of the peculiar Latin theological terminology by the middle of the third by Tertullian, St. Cyprian, and Pope St. Cornelius among others.

How fully Catholic is Orthodoxy is best demonstrated by the fact that Byzantine Catholics (Greek-Catholics) do not have to change their Nicene Creed or anything in their worship to be considered fully in communion wiht Rome, so long as they accept the pope as their lord.

That's a rather anachronistic way of phrasing the concept in English. The Eastern Catholics accept that communion with the Pope ensures communion among all Catholics, and that part of this communion is adherence to his teachings to settle disputes, and acceptance of the right of final appeal in canonical and theological questions. The Pope does not "rule" the eastern Churches though, unlike the Latin Rite, which he does rule as Patriarch.

and the issue of the Immaculate Conception is that it was unkown to Christianity until about 200years ago and run completely contrary to the pre-Augustinian Christian understanding of Man's Fall to which Rome subscribed for centuries. In fact, even Thomas Aquinas, could not reconcile the Immaculate Conception which did not become a dogma until the 18th century.

The concept of the Immaculate Conception is clearly present in first millenium eastern thought. Stripped of western theological language anfd baggage to help your understanding, it is the assertion that Blessed Mary was conceived, and her soul infused into her body, filled with the divine grace of the Holy Ghost which united her from her origin to the life of God - the moment of her redemption from the common fate of the children of Adam was at her Conception, instead of her Baptism. It says nothing more and nothing less than this.

St. Thomas actually did hold this doctrine (as did St. Augustine and St. Ambrose before him). The doctrine has nothing to do with the bugabear of "pre- and post-Augustinian doctrines of original sin". "Purity is constituted by a recession from impurity, and therefore it is possible to find some creature purer than all the rest, namely one not contaminated by any taint of sin; such was the purity of the Blessed Virgin, who was immune from original and actual sin, yet under God, inasmuch as there was in her the potentiality of sin." (Commentary on the Book of Sentences, c. 44, q. I ad 3). Where he eventually ran into a difficulty was with his Aristotelean belief that the rational human soul was not infused until some time after conception, when the human body was finally formed (around 40 days). Even so, the famous article in the Summa is concerned with refuting the arguement that Blessed Mary was sanctified prior to animation. Of course, the Catholic Church does not teach that, for the very simple reason he points out - a person without a rational soul cannot be sanctified since they have no soul yet in need of sanctity.

46 posted on 05/11/2004 5:46:15 AM PDT by Hermann the Cherusker
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