Such as those people who are embarrassed at the literalness or inverted Aristotelianism that Transubstantiation is all about and so aspire to keep the word itself but rework the meaning into something more like "an enhanced way of saying Real Presence?" I agree, but then again, the Articles are still right to have rejected the actual meaning of Transubstantiation and, after all, the church that introduced it to the Christian world is still promoting the word, even while trying to downplay its historic meaning.
I don't think that is really a fair description of that particular issue. The Roman Church would say there is nothing wrong with the Aristotelian description, per se. What is a change is not insisting on it as the only appropriate description, which really changes the nature of the dispute.
That isn't revisionism though, its a change in how it is treated. That stuff happens all the time in theological and doctrinal disputes, and its often completely legitimate.
Well, we were talking elsewhere about Anglicans having to swear to them in the CofE and maybe also in some other churches in order to be ordained. If that is so, even if the Articles are steadily weakening, they have to be considered meaningful...or at least that they were until recently, which is enough for some to say that they aren't going to become revisionists.
I don't think most serious Anglicans could say they were never important. The question is what kind of meaning or authority they have now. What are they for, what do they tell us?
The people that have the more liberal type of understanding are really, IMO, on a totally different page. Someone who sees Scripture and the Church as essentially without authority isn't going to see it in the articles either.
But all of the Articles can be accepted and that understanding still stand just as you described it. We are after all "reformed Catholics," not unreformed Catholics who just happen to speak English, etc.
Sure, they could. But I don't think that we can have that understanding and say that it is
necessary that they are.
How could the Council of Nicaea be authoritative, having been held 300 years after the start of the Church Age? Or how could Vatican II be authoritative in the Roman Church, coming as it did 1900 years after?
Well, do you think all the councils of the Church have been authoritative? Or the councils of the Roman Church? Many who think the articles have authority, maybe particularly the more Reformed sorts, do not accept all of them, in which case I don't see how they can give the Articles any sort of more permanent authority.
I think there are two things I'd want to say here. One is that I am not at all sure that the articles are compatible with all of the ecumenical councils.
Which brings me to the second point - the advantage the ecumenical councils have is that they were ecumenical. THe mode for change in the Church was, until the Pope began to declare inappropriate authority and there were serious fractures, the assent of the whole Church. The idea being that the Holy Spirit, eventually, would guide the Church into the right way of thinking or acting.
Once you have serious fractures in the Church, an ecumenical council or other decision by the Church as a whole (which could be a decision from silence) becomes impossible. If we really think the Church is fractured in that way, we are admitting that we think all Churches have and do err.
The reason the Romans maintain their subsequent councils are infallible, and the Orthodox say they could have an ecumenical council if they wanted to and they have the infallible protection of the Holy Spirit, is that they both consider that they are in fact the whole of the institutional Church.
Anglicans make no such claim, we admit freely to being only part of the Church, in schism from some other parts. As such, we can make no claim to permanent authoritative documents, councils, or whatever. We believe all can err, including ourselves. There is no way that the Articles could somehow be shielded from that possibility. We can only claim that possibly for the ecumenical councils, and for Scripture, and as you know many would apply the same logic to Scripture.