InnerPhyre said:
I'm not here to start a debate. I ask this question honestly. If the Holy Spirit does not proceed from the Son also, what do you make of:
Jn 20:22 He breathed on them and said to them, "Receive the Holy Spirit."
You are confusing the temporal mission of the Spirit with the Eternal Procession of the Spirit. Note this passage:
John 15:26-27
"When the Helper comes, whom I will send to you from the Father, that is the Spirit of truth who proceeds from the Father, He will testify about Me, and you will testify also, because you have been with Me from the beginning."
It is certain that the Son sends the Spirit to us. This not the origin of the Spirit, but the origin of His mission. The Spirit, as Christ Himself stated, proceeds from the Father. The Father is the fountainhead of the Holy Trinity. The Logos is His only begotton Son, and the Spirit proceeds from Him alone.
InnerPhyre said:
Doesn't the OC believe that Jesus and the Father are One?
I certainly hope you are not questioning our belief in the Holy Trinity. I will assume that you are suggesting that because the Father and the Logos are one, that the Spirit must proceed from both. This is obviously flawed logic. If it held, then we must conclude also that the Son is begotten of Himself.
Markh said:
I say, "comprimise on a few doctrines (like purgatory, which loads of Orthodox accept anyway) and be vague about a few contraversial doctrines (like immac. concep) to allow both sides of the coin to be believed, that way we can just have full communion again and have a reunion party.
It is clear that you do not understand the basic differences between Orthodoxy and Catholicism.
Purgatory as taught by Rome is completely incompatable with the Orthodox understaning of righteousness and justification. Some Orthodox accept the idea of an intermediated state, but it vastly different from the Catholic idea of Purgatory.
Concerning the Immaculate Conception, there is nothing for us to discuss. We do not accept the Catholic idea of Original Sin. We do not believe, nor can we believe, that Mary's conception was in any way different from ours.
Finally, "be[ing] vague ... to allow both sides of the coin to be believed" is simply not acceptable to us. We require a true unity in faith, not a superficial unity hiding deeply seated problems. Do you think the Fathers ever considered "be[ing] vague ... to allow both sides of the coin to be believed" when it came to Arianism? Perhaps St John of Damascus was wrong. Maybe he should have "be[en] vague ... to allow both sides of the coin to be believed" when addressing the Iconoclasts. I understand your desire for unity. After discussing the Catholic Church's recent dealings with the Lutheran Church in PRE, it seems to me that Rome does not object to a superficial unity based on vague definitions that both sides know are not truly agreed upon. However, this "unity" is not acceptable to Orthodoxy.