- Jan 26, 2007
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When it comes to "development of doctrine," I ask myself what is the deadline for legitimacy? I mean, at what century or decade do we stop calling men "Fathers" and start claiming they are developing doctrine?
And I think for me the problem I've ALWAYS had as an Orthodox Christian, to say it frankly, is the Fathers! In Catholicsm, there is great love for the Fathers, but the Church recognizes their diversity of thought and that not all of them were right about everything all the time in every place. So the Popes and magisterium have taken it collectively, holistically, and made the Fathers vast treasury of statements of theology and moral teachings, something coherent and unified, something we can sink our teeth into.
In Orthodoxy, you have zillions of saints and fathers taking positions on things and a huge array of varying and sometimes opposing viewpoints. That's why we can have a long thread debating "Toll Houses" and Father Seraphim Rose, etc. These men took one angle or one theological opinion, and almost put a stamp of infallibility on it.
In Orthodoxy, there are a zillion voices talking at the same time and for me, it is almost like I hear none of them. In Catholicism, they could silence them, come to an orderly, coherent, palatable set of theological dogmas, and I could grasp it.
well, the deadline was Pentecost. that was when the Spirit was poured out on all flesh and Christ said that Spirit would lead them into all Truth. so there is nothing to add since Pentecost. all of the councils and such have always followed the pattern of what has always been believed since the beginning. we may have new ways to express that belief (ie you won't find the phrase God is Trinity in the Bible), but the belief itself does not update.
where there is debate and discussion, that does not fall under dogma, because our dogmas are not up for debate.
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