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To: The_Reader_David
Once you use the papacy as the locus of unity, rather than the Apostolic Faith, you, indeed lose help from the East, since we are bound to uphold our own understanding of ecclesiology.

I understand. But in Catholic theology, we do not have to choose between the papacy and the Apostolic Faith as the loci of unity. My original point to Blogger (in 2756) was that if we go by our own personal interpretation of Scripture we end up with division upon division. And I think that is also true if we each go by our own determination of the "Apostolic Faith". Without a living authoritative judge of what is the "Apostolic Faith", views will be all over the map.

-A8

2,816 posted on 12/22/2006 10:31:15 PM PST by adiaireton8 ("There is no greater evil one can suffer than to hate reasonable discourse." - Plato, Phaedo 89d)
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To: adiaireton8

All over the map on non-essentials for the most part. Pretty close together on most essentials for Protestants.

We may differ on mode and reason for baptism, and on such things as speaking in tongues and eschatology (timing); but on the essentials, such as who Jesus is, what the Trinity is, Virgin birth, sacrificial death, etc., you will find a lot of unity.

Of course, you have some liberal groups in all religions (including Catholics) that have thrown the basics (including Scripture) out altogether since they reject the miraculous. I'm not speaking of them, nor do I think you would put them in your fold.


2,818 posted on 12/22/2006 10:41:55 PM PST by Blogger
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To: adiaireton8; The_Reader_David
"And I think that is also true if we each go by our own determination of the "Apostolic Faith". Without a living authoritative judge of what is the "Apostolic Faith", views will be all over the map."

Surely you don't believe that Orthodoxy is "all over the map" and we certainly have no single living person as the authoritative judge of what the Apostolic Faith is and never have. The authoritative judge of what is The Faith is The Church, the hierarchy, the clergy and the People of God acting together in a synergy. That hardly qualifies as each of us making a private determination of what The Faith is.

Certainly, the role of the Pope of Rome has been an important one in the history of The Church. On more than one occasion, before the Great Schism, it was the Pope and the Church of Rome which preserved Orthodoxy while much of the East went into the darkness of heresy. There are a number of Popes who are great saints in Orthodoxy as there are Patriarchs who are great saints of the Latin Church. I have always found it disingenuous, however, for the Latins to claim that no pope ever, ever erred on a matter of faith or morals. In Orthodoxy we have absolutely no problem whatsoever accepting +John Chrysostomos' comment that the floor of hell is paved with the skulls of bishops. He said that no merely because worldliness got them there, but more importantly because they have lead the faithful astray. For us, the ascribing of infallible powers to any bishop is a presumption against God's promise that the gates of hell would not prevail against The Church, not +Peter. The danger posed by an infallible Vicar of Christ on Earth is that one can confuse The Church with the Pope.

I have found it fascinating how well The Church worked when it was united in its Orthodoxy. On so many occasions, as I said, it was the Pope who held things together for Orthodoxy and it was the theology and spirituality of The East, most especially the consensus patrum of mostly the Eastern Fathers which tempered the influence of the Arian and pagan tribes which came gradually into The Church in the practical Latin West. Once the Great Schism took place, I think the East found that without an Orthodox pope presiding at Rome, dealing with heresy and heterodox opinions became more difficult, or perhaps better said, more cumbersome than in the past. The East lost something but it has lurched along pretty well for the past 1000 years or so with no major heresies troubling The Church. What we have found is that +Ignatius' definition of The catholic Church actually works well in the "real world", even the quite hostile real world where much of Orthodoxy has existed over the past centuries.

The Latin West, however, lost big time after 1054. Almost immediately after the schism the Dictatus Papae were written, something which the East never, ever would have tolerated. The Latin Church in its ecclesiology became distorted, a sort of top down pyramid which became increasingly authoritarian. Patristics became confused with pagan philosophy by a group of bookish monks who, at least in my opinion, misinterpreted +Thomas Aquinas and scholaticism was born, a method foreign to the theology of the pre-schism Church. Eventually matters were perceived as being so bad that the Reformation took place and like so many revolutions, went far, far beyond any reasonable reforming ends. Western Christianity plunged into a century and more of religious wars among people all claiming to be Christians and eventually Christianity in the West became the fractured disgrace we see today. If the Pope's role is as a unifier, it hasn't been effectively fulfilled. And there can be absolutely no claim made that his reputed infallibility has been rejected soundly, even by Roman Catholics. The foregoing notwithstanding, the Church of Rome abides, just as the East does because God's promise was a true one.

I think both A and The Reader are right when they speak of what the witness needs to be to the Protestants. Some, as A certainly knows from personal experience, will be attracted by the centralized authority of the Latin system. They've seen what happens when "every man's a pope" and not understanding how Orthodoxy works, they perceive there, wrongly, a very ethnic apparently dangerous religious anarchy; what they are leaving except in a foreign language. On the other hand, some Protestants will read the Fathers, eventually even the Desert Fathers, attend a Divine Liturgy or two, maybe even a Pascal Liturgy after spending Great Week praying at the services and recognize in those devotions the very Faith The Fathers write of, preserved and lived out through 2000 years without any central infallible authority. And decide that's what they want. I must say to both of you, whose pasts certainly qualify you to have your opinions, that no matter where any given Protestant ends up, Rome or Orthodoxy, I don't think we need to loose any sleep about their potential for theosis.

Final point; A you have commented that the issue of the proper exercise of the Petrine Ministry will be decided by people way above our pay grades. Maybe that's true for you. It absolutely is not true for The Reader and me. In the end, in Orthodoxy, that decision will be made by all the Orthodox People of God which will include all sorts of folks just like the two of us. Any basic assumption that the likes of us will accept a central individual infallible final word authority in The Church will inevitably lead to a big disappointment.

A Blessed Feast of the Nativity to both of you.
2,826 posted on 12/23/2006 5:40:36 AM PST by Kolokotronis (Christ is Risen, and you, o death, are annihilated!)
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