Thank you for all your postings on the Eastern Churches. I'm still unclear about something: do these churches recognize the Pope as the Supreme Pontiff and consider themselves subject to him as the Roman Catholics do?
(That is not quite the same as "the Roman Pontiff working to assure the health and well-being of the Eastern Catholic Churches.")
Do the Eastern Churches use the same Catechism? Do they accept the Four Marian Dogmas? I understand about the validity of the Mass, but I've never been clear on whether Roman and Eastern are truly united in their theology?
Thank you so much for your informative posts!
Yes. They recognize the authority of the pope and recognize that they are subject to his authority. They have equal standing as Catholics to anyone of us in the Latin Rite.
They accept all of the 21 ecumenical councils, as well as the Marian dogmas. By definition, we are one Faith; east and west may emphasize different things sometimes, but we all adhere to the same doctrine.
Although I am a Latin Rite Catholic by birth, and am presently involved in a parish authorized to use the Tridentine Mass, for the entire decade of the 1980's, I was attending the Melkite (Byzantine Rite) Catholic cathedral almost exclusively. They do not genrally use the "western" catechisms (Baltimore, the current CCC, etc.) since they have developed their own over the years. But they acknowledge the legitimacy of the western catechisms, just as the Western Church acknowledges theirs. As it is, the Melkite priests and bishop I know often quote from the CCC, even if it is more of a "western" work.
By the way, as I implied above, any Catholic may fulfill his or her Sunday obligation at *any* other Catholic rite from their own. You are free to attend the Melkites, Maronites or any other of the 23 Catholic rites any time you wish.