Maximus said:
If you study what St. Ignatius had to say about the relationships of bishops, presbyters, and deacons, you will see that he envisioned a hierarchy (duh!) that is aptly summarized in this passage:
". . . be eager to do everything in God's harmony, with the bishop presiding in the place of God and the presbytery in the place of the council of the apostles and the deacons, most sweet to me, entrusted with the service of Jesus Christ" (Letter to the Magnesians, 6).
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What was the context for this writing? (i.e. Who are the Magnesians? Were they within St. Ignatius' flock?) (implication being to ask if this was a "localized" epistle -- in which case it would be "bad history" to extrapolate and assume that the content applied elsewhere)
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Maximus said:
It occurred to me that if such an arrangement is God's plan for the local churches, why would God use something different for the universal Church as a whole?
I mean, why would God concentrate authority at the local level in the hands of one man and not create a similar executive office for the Church as a whole?
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Those are fair and logical questions. It remains, however, that conciliarity is what God DID choose for His [Orthodox] churches. (Remember that there is no such thing as "THE" Orthodox Church.)
Maximus said:
I know I will get jumped on for thinking along those lines, but what about it?
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It would be wrong to "jump" on you. I hope you don't misunderstand what I write in this reply, and think that I am "jumping" on you.
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Maximus said:
Why concentrate authority in one individual at the local level only to leave the universal Church a potential chaos of competing bishops?
I honestly don't know why He decided as He did. If I may be permitted a "theologoumena" (personal speculation that carries zero authority, but does not deny the faith) (the loosest of definitions!) -- perhaps conciliarity is another reminder of the Holy Trinity, and the essential unity among many.
Thanks for your post, Maximus!
Orthodox6
(who is glad that you seem to be staying on)