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Benedicta00

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thereselittleflower said:
No its not. . . we don't go starting threads accusing the Eastern Orthodox of being heretics or condemning them as was here:
Quoted from Vanshan
but I must condemn any who falsely lay claim to being established by Christ, like the modern Roman Catholic Church, .
Rome also teachings the 1000 year after Christ teaching of substitutionary atonement which is heterdox, and very damaging.

your church cannot be the Church Christ established.


Heterdox is simply a fancy way of sayin heretical . . .



We do not look at the Orthodox Church as heretical, or that you are not part of the Church . . . . Or that you better become Catholic "before its too late" . . .


This is nonsense InnerPhyre .. . why are you defending such actions and with such an argument that the Catholic Church views the Orthodox in this way?


I am deeply offended that one of our Orthodox brethern would come to GT and make such a post in favor of his own faith which need to also slam ours . . .


ESPECIALLY at Advent .. .. . I am really sorry to see you defending such an act.




No . . it is not that simple . .it was never that simple . . .and it was not one leaving the other, it was the result of two mutual PERSONAL excommunications of the two individuals representing each side, and the one on the Catholic side was not the pope, but his representataive . . .

It was a mutual separation by two hot heads . . The Churches themselves did not see themselves as really separated. .

The Catholic Church does not see the separation the same way the Orthodox apparently do . . .




Come on now . . both are true . . .

It's not an either/or . . . it is a both/and

That the Orthodox saw the Pope as having a final authoirty is seen in the practice of the Church, otherwise, why did the Patriarch of Constantinople St Ignatius appeal specifically to the Pope when he was unlawfully deposed and young Photius put in his place?




I am very displeased that my orthodox brethren, especially at Advent, would make usch nagative statements against us in the fitst place, then to go on and on without ever providing anything objective to back it up just puts icing on the cake . . .





That's EXACTLY what I am saying InnerPhyre . . . . but the Catholics didn't start this thread or the spitting here . . it started with the OP . . .so please do something to help our orthodox brethern to realize this is very uncharitable . . .



Peace to all . . .

My thoughts exactly.



We're not the ones who started this and we're not the ones who damns the other, we’re not the ones to be scolded.

I don’t see humility and penance when I read OP’s like that one, all I see is a lot of pride among the Orthodox, a lot of judgmental attitudes and actions even amongst their own priests and bishops with one another.
 
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vanshan

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I'm sorry, Therese, for insighting your rage. Sometimes keeping things in the grey is more peaceful than black and white. I am only stating the position of the Orthodox Church on the Roman Catholic Church, not maliciously lashing out at anyone. The Orthodox Church has never taught that we are two branches of one divided Church, they have shown through history how the Roman Church slowly marched away in it's own direction. Rather than the whole Church being led into error, which Christ promises will never happen, the faltering branch of Rome was cut-off in one decivive anathema. This is history--these are objective events which all the readers of this thread can study. Yes, you have your side as well, but the entire Universal Church lined up under the other Four Patriarchs, againt the single Patriarch of Rome and the bishops under his control. History is clear--this is what I'm leading everyone to look into for themselves.

I did not begin this thead to write a huge thesis about the history of the faith or to outline the history of doctrinal inovation in the Roman Catholic Faith. Large works exist on these subjects, written by much more accomplished scholars than me. My only goal was to challenge some who are ready to hear it, to study these issues. Check my allegations. All my claims are recorded in history for all to check. Check my facts. Did the Roman Church get anathametized by the entire Church? Yes, in 1054 A.D. this began to finalize the Roman bisoprics fate. It was declared to be outside the Universal Church and without grace. Don't get angry at me, as if I'm responsible for the Roman sees corruption which led to this expulsion from the One True Universal Church.

Here are some links teaching about the Orthodox Church, and some about the Schism. Post your own Catholic ones, so everyone can compare the two arguments, as I already have.

www.orthodoxyinamerica.org/about_orthodoxy.html?PHPSESSID=f3fe66cee590723837491b90bbd9ed7d

www.kosovo.com/history.html

www.orthodoxresearchinstitute.org/articles/church_history/michael_theschism.htm

www.orthodoxinfo.com/general/greatschism.aspx

www.pravoslavie.ru/enarticles/040318113935

www.orthodoxinfo.com/inquirers/twopaths.aspx

There are many articles drawing the distinction between Orthodoxy and Roman Catholicism at this single sight:
www.orthodoxinfo.com/inquirers/inq_rc.aspx

www.myriobiblos.gr/texts/english/roman_church.htm

I hope these help anyone interested in knowing more.

Basil
 
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joyfulthanks

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To my Catholic brothers and sisters,

I want to point out a little something here. Perhaps it feels a bit disagreeable to you to hear an EO make the claim that you are outside of the true church. Perhaps it even makes you angry.

I beg of you, please remember how this feels when you are dealing with protestants, and telling us that we are in an imperfect union with the one true church.

I grant you, the Catholic Church does not, in this day and age, teach that protestants are, by default not a part of the true church, but rather says that those who have been baptized into Christ as protestants are in some kind of an imperfect union with the Roman Catholic Church. That is not quite as inflammatory as claiming someone is outside the true church altogether. Nevertheless, the feelings that a person may have when hearing repeatedly about the whole issue of "the one true Church" may be quite similar.

Now, I'm not asking you not to claim that you're the one true church founded by Christ. To do so would go against what you believe. What I am asking you to do is to remember how it feels when someone says something like that about you, and then try to speak what you believe to be the truth in love and gentleness, showing consideration for and patience with the person to whom you are speaking. I think you will make a lot more headway in convincing others that you are the one true church that way. The same, of course, goes for EO's and anyone else who claims to be the one true church.

Thanks for listening...

Blessed Advent!

With love in Christ,
Grace
 
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thereselittleflower

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vanshan said:
I'm sorry, Therese, for insighting your rage. Sometimes keeping things in the grey is more peaceful than black and white. I am only stating the position of the Orthodox Church on the Roman Catholic Church, not maliciously lashing out at anyone. The Orthodox Church has never taught that we are two branches of one divided Church, they have shown through history how the Roman Church slowly marched away in it's own direction. Rather than the whole Church being led into error, which Christ promises will never happen, the faltering branch of Rome was cut-off in one decivive anathema. This is history--these are objective events which all the readers of this thread can study. Yes, you have your side as well, but the entire Universal Church lined up under the other Four Patriarchs, againt the single Patriarch of Rome and the bishops under his control. History is clear--this is what I'm leading everyone to look into for themselves.

I did not begin this thead to write a huge thesis about the history of the faith or to outline the history of doctrinal inovation in the Roman Catholic Faith. Large works exist on these subjects, written by much more accomplished scholars than me. My only goal was to challenge some who are ready to hear it, to study these issues. Check my allegations. All my claims are recorded in history for all to check. Check my facts. Did the Roman Church get anathametized by the entire Church? Yes, in 1054 A.D. this began to finalize the Roman bisoprics fate. It was declared to be outside the Universal Church and without grace. Don't get angry at me, as if I'm responsible for the Roman sees corruption which led to this expulsion from the One True Universal Church.

Here are some links teaching about the Orthodox Church, and some about the Schism. Post your own Catholic ones, so everyone can compare the two arguments, as I already have.

www.orthodoxyinamerica.org/about_orthodoxy.html?PHPSESSID=f3fe66cee590723837491b90bbd9ed7d

www.kosovo.com/history.html

www.orthodoxresearchinstitute.org/articles/church_history/michael_theschism.htm

www.orthodoxinfo.com/general/greatschism.aspx

www.pravoslavie.ru/enarticles/040318113935

www.orthodoxinfo.com/inquirers/twopaths.aspx

There are many articles drawing the distinction between Orthodoxy and Roman Catholicism at this single sight:
www.orthodoxinfo.com/inquirers/inq_rc.aspx

www.myriobiblos.gr/texts/english/roman_church.htm

I hope these help anyone interested in knowing more.

Basil


Posting links that force one to read through copios amounts of material is not the same as providng objective evidence . . . . .

Provide the exact evidence that supports your claims . . . .You are in a debate forum . .this is a debate thread.

You have made claims against our Church.

The BURDEN OF PROOF is on YOU Basil . . not me . . .

Until you demonstrate that you are willing to back up your negative statements with obkective evidence and do so in a legitimate manner (pposting numerous links to sites that require a person to do copious amounts of reading and then take a guess at what in particular you are using for your objective evidence does not cut it), your statements cannot be taken with even a grain of salt.

Basil . . I am well educated on the history of the Early Churc, the events leading up to the schism and beyond . . . I do not need to read through copious material in your links . . I have already done that.

What I am requiring from you is the actual objective evidence you are relying on, if any, to back up your negative statements . . .

Instead of producing numerous links, quote the portions you feel are objective evidence along with the link(s) they come from and we can talk about it.

If you don't want to do this, then it appears to me that you aren't prepared to back up your negative statements against Our Faith and Church.



And we still have the matter of your negative statements to me that I had better return to the Orthodox Church before it is too late . . .

Please provide the objective evidence that if I personally don't return to the Orthodox Church that I will not go to heaven . . . (ie , I am going to hell if I die without returning to the Orthodox Church).

I am waiting . . .





It appears from what was posted above and elsewhere in this thread there has been a failure to:
    1. understand my objections
    2. understand my mental and emotional state
    3. undestand what it means to make negative statements about anothers faith when you have no objective evidence to back it up . . . (to give a hint, it means that such negative statements are baseless and simply an expression of personal opinion devoid of factual, objective evidence)

Regardless of the motives behind your OP, you still made negative statements about our faith in this thread. You rmotives do not absolve you of any need to back them up with objective evidence. We want to see the objective evidence that supports your negative statements against Our Faith.

Until you provide the requested objective evidence to back them up, they remain unfounded and baseless accusations against Our Church.


What is sad is that your faith couldn't be presented without making negative statements about the faith of others . . . .

I don't think that is a very good witness or testimony to our faith vanshan . ..



What I find intersesting is that it seems that non-Catholic faiths appear to have a need to justify the rightness of those beliefs which are, or appear to be, contrary to the teachings of the Catholic Church by comparing themselves to the Catholic Church in such a manner that it paints the Catholic Church in an unfavorable light . . ie by making negative statements about the Catholic Church and our Faith . .

It is even MORE interesting that the Catholic Church can justify Her beliefs without comparing Herself to another christian faith at all . . .




Peace to all
 
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InnerPhyre

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thereselittleflower said:
No its not. . . we don't go starting threads accusing the Eastern Orthodox of being heretics or condemning them as was here:

Heterdox is simply a fancy way of sayin heretical . . .

Wrong. Heterodox means "other belief." You do not believe the same things we Orthodox do so, you believe other things...hence heterodox.



thereselittleflower said:
We do not look at the Orthodox Church as heretical, or that you are not part of the Church . . . . Or that you better become Catholic "before its too late" . . .

Again, I beg to differ. We absolutely 100% reject the infallible doctrine of the Immaculate Conception. Therefore we commit heresy. Simple as that. No sense in sugar coating it. As for the latter part, look at some of the things people said to me when I decided to leave Rome and head East and reconsider.


thereselittleflower said:
This is nonsense InnerPhyre .. . why are you defending such actions and with such an argument that the Catholic Church views the Orthodox in this way?

I see nothing wrong with stating Orthodox belief. I see nothing wrong with stating Catholic belief. How many times do Catholics say "we are the Church....all the true Church submits to the authority of the Pope...etc?" Does it bother me? Not a bit. Does it bother me that the Catholic Church says I am a schismatic for leaving? Not even a tiny bit. If I cared, I would still be Catholic. So why get all up in arms over this? The Orthodox Church says that Rome gradually drifted away from Orthodoxy. This is what we believe. We can't put it any other way. We don't say this as a way of snubbing Catholics. It's just our point of view.


thereselittleflower said:
I am deeply offended that one of our Orthodox brethern would come to GT and make such a post in favor of his own faith which need to also slam ours . . .

In discussing why the Orthodox Church is the true church, it is necessary to say why those that broke away are not. I didn't read anything terribly uncharitable in the first few posts here. Just statements of doctrine and commentaries on how Catholic doctrine has changed and new ones have been invented. This is not a slam. Yes, slams came later, which is when I jumped in and said that we each need to stop tearing each other apart over this.





thereselittleflower said:
No . . it is not that simple . .it was never that simple . . .and it was not one leaving the other, it was the result of two mutual PERSONAL excommunications of the two individuals representing each side, and the one on the Catholic side was not the pope, but his representataive . . .

It is that simple, because when I talk about one side leaving, I'm not talking about the schism in 1054, but the gradual drifting apart that lead to it. It didn't happen overnight. It took centuries.



thereselittleflower said:
The Catholic Church does not see the separation the same way the Orthodox apparently do . . .

Maybe not this century since things have become more ecumenical, but read some vatican documents that are a couple of centuries old and you'll find very similar language used from the Catholic side against the Orthodox.



thereselittleflower said:
Come on now . . both are true . . .

It's not an either/or . . . it is a both/and

That is a logical impossibility. Either all bishops have equal authority or one is infallible and has more authority than the others. Bishops cannot be equal and still have less power than the Pope. That makes no sense. We cannot both be right.


thereselittleflower said:
That the Orthodox saw the Pope as having a final authoirty is seen in the practice of the Church, otherwise, why did the Patriarch of Constantinople St Ignatius appeal specifically to the Pope when he was unlawfully deposed and young Photius put in his place?

Please stop trying to get me to debate with you. That's not why I'm here. Note that nowhere here have I said Oh you Catholics are all wrong etc. I simply said only one of us CAN be right, not both. And minimalizing the differences between us does nothing to bring us back together. It only leads to false superficial unity, which is worthless.




thereselittleflower said:
I am very displeased that my orthodox brethren, especially at Advent, would make usch nagative statements against us in the fitst place, then to go on and on without ever providing anything objective to back it up just puts icing on the cake . . .


Again, he was simply stating Orthodox belief...laying it all out there...this is what we believe. Just like when a Catholic says that Protestants left the true faith...you don't always provide objective evidence. You simply say that's Catholic doctrine, and that's fine.





thereselittleflower said:
That's EXACTLY what I am saying InnerPhyre . . . . but the Catholics didn't start this thread or the spitting here . . it started with the OP . . .so please do something to help our orthodox brethern to realize this is very uncharitable . . .

The intent of this thread was misunderstood, and as always in this wretched place, fists started flying immediately. If a Catholic member were to start a thread about why Catholicism is just grand and included a part that said "and even when the Orthodox broke away in the schism, our faith remained the same" or something like that, somehow I don't think you'd see a ton of Orthodox screaming about it, because we know that's what you believe, even though we could not disagree anymore strongly.

The point is, sugarcoat our differences if you will, but we are extremely different. Our faiths are not the same. The way we see sin is not the same. The way we see salvation is not the same. These are fundamentals. They can't be glossed over. We are not one Church. We are not part of your church and you are not part of ours. We haven't been for a millenium. Saying that we are in order to make nice will not make it so, nomatter how much the Pope wants it to be so.
 
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thereselittleflower

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GraceMercyPeace said:
To my Catholic brothers and sisters,

I want to point out a little something here. Perhaps it feels a bit disagreeable to you to hear an EO make the claim that you are outside of the true church. Perhaps it even makes you angry.

GraceMercyPeace . . .

No . . you have misunderstood completely!

It is NOT disagreeable to us that anyone makes the claim we are outside of the true Church.

What IS disagreeable is when it happens over, and over and over again and the claims are presented as incontrovertable facts and NO objective evidence is presented even AFTER numerous requests have been made . . .

It seems that people who are against the Catholic Church want to be able to make their negative statements as if they were fact and not be challenged to prove them with objective evidence.

THIS is what is disagreeable to us . ..

We KNOW what many think about us . . stating it is not the problem . . stating it without objective evidence to back it up is.

We are more than happy to examine the evidence and give our explanations and enter into LEGITIMATE debate . . . but that is not what is happening here in this thread or in many others.

Do you see the difference?

We are not afraid at all about the evidence that people think they can provide to support theuir negative claims against Our Faith . . .we have seen it all before and have delved deeply into it and are very confident as to what the objective evidence reveals.

I beg of you, please remember how this feels when you are dealing with protestants, and telling us that we are in an imperfect union with the one true church.

GraceInHIm . .. how many times do we start a thread saying that protestants are in imperfect union with the Church?

Tell me .. how many times?

This is grossly unfair GraceInHim . . . we are DRAGGED INTO DEFENDING AGAINST WRONG interpretations of the words of our Church, specifically Unam Sanctum, and so it is forced to be talked about.

That is VERY DIFFERENT from someone starting a thread with the purpose of building one's faith up in a way that requires them to tear down another's . .

You are not comparing apples to apples.


I grant you, the Catholic Church does not, in this day and age, teach that protestants are, by default not a part of the true church, but rather says that those who have been baptized into Christ as protestants are in some kind of an imperfect union with the Roman Catholic Church. That is not quite as inflammatory as claiming someone is outside the true church altogether. Nevertheless, the feelings that a person may have when hearing repeatedly about the whole issue of "the one true Church" may be quite similar.

And that is not the real issue . . the real issue is that we don't go parading around GT saying that . . we only get into it when we are forced to defend what we really mean against negative statements by others that falsely represent our beliefs. . . .


Now, I'm not asking you not to claim that you're the one true church founded by Christ. To do so would go against what you believe. What I am asking you to do is to remember how it feels when someone says something like that about you, and then try to speak what you believe to be the truth in love and gentleness, showing consideration for and patience with the person to whom you are speaking. I think you will make a lot more headway in convincing others that you are the one true church that way. The same, of course, goes for EO's and anyone else who claims to be the one true church.

Thanks for listening...

Blessed Advent!

With love in Christ,
Grace

Grace . . thank you for sharing your thoughts . . however, we haven't even gotten to the point where what you are suggesting can happen . . . . first, there has be be a valid argument to deal with .. so far, there have been none . . . And Grace, I have been through this with Vanshan before . . this is not the first time. Please do not view this as something that is isolated . . you have no idea what I have tried in the past when debating such issues with him or othres who choose to present their views in the same manner he has. . . . To judge that anything here was inappropriate needing correction or admonishment is to make such a judgement in the absence of all the facts.

Perhaps a PM would be better than to publicly admnonish another especially when one doesn't have all the facts . . . judging on appearances can lead to erroneous judgements . . . Christ Himself was not a gentle meek lamb all the time . . . .


Peace to all
 
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joyfulthanks

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thereselittleflower said:
GraceInHIm . .. how many times...

...This is grossly unfair GraceInHim . . .
I'm not GraceInHim - I'm GraceMercyPeace. Perhaps I would feel this was a bit more of a respectful dialogue if you cared enough to figure out who it is that you're talking to.

thereselittleflower said:
. . To judge that anything here was inappropriate needing correction or admonishment is to make such a judgement in the absence of all the facts.

Perhaps a PM would be better than to publicly admnonish another especially when one doesn't have all the facts . . . judging on appearances can lead to erroneous judgements . . . Christ Himself was not a gentle meek lamb all the time . . . .
Peace to all

I can say with a clear conscience that I had no individual at all in mind when I wrote what I wrote. I also wasn't judging that anything here "was inappropriate or needing admonishment." I was simply using an analogy to try to let my Catholic brothers and sisters know how I, as a protestant have felt in the past when Catholics bring out the one true church card over and over again without thinking about how they are presenting it. This had nothing whatsoever to do with you personally, and I honestly don't know why you took it that way. I'm sorry if I offended you in any way. It was completely unintentional.

Blessed Advent!

With love in Christ,
Grace
 
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JimfromOhio

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"Jesus reserved his hardest words for the hidden sins of hypocrisy, pride, greed and legalism." "Whatever makes us feel superior to other people, whatever tempts us to convey a sense of superiority, that is the gravity of our sinful nature, not grace." Phillip Yancey
 
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joyfulthanks

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GraceMercyPeace said:
I'm not GraceInHim - I'm GraceMercyPeace. Perhaps I would feel this was a bit more of a respectful dialogue if you cared enough to figure out who it is that you're talking to.

Please forgive me, therese. This was too harsh and I'm sorry. Mixing us up is an easy mistake to make.

With love in Christ,
Grace
 
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vanshan

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thereselittleflower said:
Posting links that force one to read through copios amounts of material is not the same as providng objective evidence . . . . .

Those links provide anyone interested in looking deeper the ability to do so. If you have concluded your study on the subject then disregard the links.



thereselittleflower said:
It is even MORE interesting that the Catholic Church can justify Her beliefs without comparing Herself to another christian faith at all . . .

I don't see my statements as trying to hinge the validity of Orthodoxy on the teachings of the Roman Catholic faith. Rather than try and justify our teachings by comparing us with the Roman Catholic teachings, I mentioned those erroneous teachings of the Roman Church, that we reject, showing how different we are, so that those who are studying this subject won't mistakingly compare us to the Roman Catholic faith. We are worlds apart.

I gave the doctrines we reject, rather than give me another finger lashing with your keyboard, why don't you try to defend the list of teachings I have declared innovations. I think I know why. Some of those teachings cannot be substatiated in the writings of the early fathers, so you would have to admit it's by faith in your hierarchy that you believe those teachings were in the Church from the beginning. You must trust the Roman Catholic Church, because the fathers never said anything about the infallibility of the pope, the supremecy of the Pope (unless you misinterpret flattering addresses made to him out of resepect for his position as "first among equals." You have no defense for changing the wording of the ancient Nicene-Constantinopolitan creed, other than your hierarchy saying that as the Church they are allowed to change over time. Does God change? Has the deposit of faith first given by the Apostles changed? No. Neither has the Church. To change is to depart and that's exactly what the Roman Church has done.

The burden of proof to show that those concrete doctrines I have pointed out are rooted in the early Church, as testified by the writing of the early Fathers, is on you Therese. Show us all that those doctrines were in the Church from the very beginning. Here's a helpful link to the writings of the Church fathers so you can cut and paste them for us. It would be easier for you to cut and past the doctrines you find in their writings, than for me to copy and past the complete texts here for everyone to read through to find them missing. Here: www.ccel.org/fathers2/

Basil
 
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vanshan

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I'm sorry that this thread has gone the direction it has gone. Everyone forgive me. It is not Therese's fault, I did say things that were obviously inflammatory to her.

Therese, if you are so certain you are in the true faith, then don't let challenges make you so defensive. It just makes you come across as insecure in your belief. Forgive me if I get this Latin phrase wrong, a professor used to tell us this in seminary, "Illegitimus no corbundum." Which I think means, "Don't let the bast[a]rds rub you the wrong way." I forget who he was quoting, does anyone know? Anyway, don't let me, a sinner, cause you to stumble--that would be the worst of all possible results of this thread, of which I will have to give an account of in the Final Judgement of Christ. I do not intend to respond in this thread again with anything controversial.

Basil
 
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thereselittleflower

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InnerPhyre said:
Wrong. Heterodox means "other belief." You do not believe the same things we Orthodox do so, you believe other things...hence heterodox.

And since those "other" things are heresies to the Orthodox Church, what does that make it?

You are arguing semmantics InnerPhyre . . . it all boils down to the same thing . .


Again, I beg to differ. We absolutely 100% reject the infallible doctrine of the Immaculate Conception. Therefore we commit heresy. Simple as that. No sense in sugar coating it. As for the latter part, look at some of the things people said to me when I decided to leave Rome and head East and reconsider.

Actually, I don't remember when that happened . . did that happen while debi and I were gone?

When I came back and saw you were Orthodox I was taken aback . . . but I never once challenged your decision and you know that.

I see nothing wrong with stating Orthodox belief. I see nothing wrong with stating Catholic belief. How many times do Catholics say "we are the Church....all the true Church submits to the authority of the Pope...etc?" Does it bother me? Not a bit. Does it bother me that the Catholic Church says I am a schismatic for leaving? Not even a tiny bit. If I cared, I would still be Catholic. So why get all up in arms over this? The Orthodox Church says that Rome gradually drifted away from Orthodoxy. This is what we believe. We can't put it any other way. We don't say this as a way of snubbing Catholics. It's just our point of view.

Tell me InnerPhyre . . . why does an OP, in order to justify the rightness of the Orthodox faith, have to put down the Catholic faith?

I have no problem with people stating their position regarding the Catholic Church. I do have a problem when they do so without providing the objective evidence to back it up, especially after they have been asked to do so . .

Why do you feel it is OK to make negative statements about another's faith and not have to back it up with objective evidence?


In discussing why the Orthodox Church is the true church, it is necessary to say why those that broke away are not.

No its not . . because if you are the true Church, then you are the true Church REGARDLESS of what any other christian Church has done . . .

It has to stand on its own IP . . . if it has to stand on the supposed failure of others in order to prove it is right, then that is a very weak position to be arguing frrom . . . it calls into questoin the EO's claims of being the true Church. . .

One should be ready to address challenges to such a claim, but one should never make, as part of its basis, the arguing of the error of others as somehow proving that the EO is right . .

If the EO is right that the others made erros, that does not prove that the EO has not made errors as well . . do you see this?

To rely on the mound of (supposed) fallen Churches as proof that the EO is the true Church doesn't go very far . . that is no proof that the EO is the true Church and neither does it support an argument that it is the true Church.

Showing where you believe others are wrong does not prove that you are right.

So, there is no legitimate reason for tearing down the faith of others to build up legitimacy for one's own . . .


Do you see this? Yet this is exactly what the OP did. Something is very wrong with that IP . . . .


Think about it . .


I didn't read anything terribly uncharitable in the first few posts here.
Just statements of doctrine and commentaries on how Catholic doctrine has changed and new ones have been invented. This is not a slam. Yes, slams came later, which is when I jumped in and said that we each need to stop tearing each other apart over this.

Beauty is in the eye of the beholder IP . . just because you personally don't see it doesn't mean its not there or that others don't see it . . .

And yes, I agree it got worse later . . and being told I am personally gong to hell unless I return to the Orthodox Church really takes the cake . . . I think such statements show the true motivations of the OP . . .

It is that simple, because when I talk about one side leaving, I'm not talking about the schism in 1054, but the gradual drifting apart that lead to it. It didn't happen overnight. It took centuries.

Actually, the gradual drifting apart happened mostly AFTER the Great Schism . . . No one actually thought it was going to have any real lasting consequences . . it was just another in a series of political squabble between the East and West . . . The drifting just seeemed to happen . . I will try to find my resources on this again if you are interested . . .

And I think this is somthing that would good for EO and Catholics here to discuss . . remember we tried to get a sub forum to do so last year, but it never made it off the ground . . ..

I think the best way is to have a "debate" that has limited participation to prevent those who want to be inflammatory from disrupting it . . the only place I can think of where that could happen would be in the formal debate section . . .but I would envision a more casual discussion . . .


Maybe not this century since things have become more ecumenical, but read some vatican documents that are a couple of centuries old and you'll find very similar language used from the Catholic side against the Orthodox.

Yes, polemics being what they are . . . :(


That is a logical impossibility. Either all bishops have equal authority or one is infallible and has more authority than the others. Bishops cannot be equal and still have less power than the Pope. That makes no sense. We cannot both be right.

You know the old saying . . Too many cooks ? . . ..

Look at all the squabbling that goes on between Eastern Orthodox bishops . . now I know it does because I have witnessed it myself . . I come from a family of Orthodox Priest and Biships . . so I was in contact with Bishops of the Orthodox Church on occasion and saw it first hand.

There has to be somewhere where the buck stops. That doesn't mean that the Bishops are not equal, it means that when the need arises, and only when the need arisese, that the Bishop of Rome, the Pope, exercises a CHARISM of infalliblity when it comes to defending the deposit of faith . . .and when it comes to ecclesial matters, his is the final decision, but would only be when the necessity arose . . .

Now . . This was seen in the frst few centuries of the Church.

Callistus was Pope . . .He made a decree reducing the penance required for certain sins (adultry being one if I remember right) . . . Tertullian, who by this time was a Montanist and heretic and no longer cared about the Bishop of Rome) took great issue with this . . .

Now ask yourself. why would a heretic who had left the Church under the Bishop of Rome, to be part of a heretical group which was outside the physical jurisdiction of the Patriachy of Rome (ie he was outside the physical jurisdiction of the Patriarch of Rome and within the Patriarchy of another Bishop) care about a decree that was made by the Bishop of Rome if the Bishop of Rome and no jurisdiction outside his own Patriarchy?

Have you thought about this?

Tertullian was furious regarding such a relaxation of penance. And he didn't dispute it becaues Callistus did not have the authority to make such a decreee. On the contrary, the reason why he was furious is because he understood that Callistus HAD the authority to make such a decree and that the decree was not just for the Patriarchy of Rome, but had a wide sweeping scope of authoirty - for the whole Church of Christ. This is why Tertullian sarcastically called him Pontifex Maximus and Bishop of Bishops among other things. . . . He didn't want any relaxation of the penances required by the Church.

Tertullian is the only one that history records having taken issue with this decree and act by Callistus which affected the entire Church.

There is a need for one to be over all for the issue of unity and government. . . but Eastern Orthodox tends to paint the Papacy with extreme brushes - but this tempered by the writings of Eastern Orthodox Scholars:




Fr. Afanassieff made the following notations about the famous passages of Irenaeus’ work (in speaking of St. Irenaeus of Lyons work Against All Heresies, where he refers to the priority of the Roman Church). The notations confirm the observations of Dr. Lawson and Dr. Jalland about the role of the Roman See as being pre-eminent from the earliest of times:
This passage in Irenaeus [from Against Heresies 3:4:1] illuminates the meaning of his remarks about the Church of Rome: if there are disputes in a local church, that church should have recourse to the Roman Church, for there is contained the Tradition which is preserved by all the churches.​
Rome's vocation [in the pre-Nicene period] consisted in playing the part of arbiter, settling contentious issues by witnessing to the truth or falsity of whatever doctrine was put before them. Rome was truly the center where all converged if they wanted their doctrine to be accepted by the conscience of the Church. They could not count upon success except on one condition -- that the Church of Rome had received their doctrine -- and refusal from Rome predetermined the attitude the other churches would adopt. There are numerous cases of this recourse to Rome... [10]
[10] Fr. Nicholas Afanassieff: "The Primacy of Peter" Ch. 4, pgs. 126-127 (c. 1992)

He also said:
As we study the problem of primacy in general, and especially the primacy of Rome, we must not be ruled by polemical motives: the problem is to be solved to satisfy ourselves and Orthodox theology. The solution of the problem is urgent, since Orthodox theology has not yet built up any systematic doctrine on Church government. And although we have a doctrine concerning Ecumenical Councils as organs of government in the Church, we shall see presently that our doctrine is not enough to refute the Catholic doctrine of primacy...​
The epistle is couched in very measured terms, in the form of an exhortation; but at the same time it clearly shows that the Church of Rome was aware of the decisive weight, in the Church of Corinth's eyes, that must attach to its witness about the events in Corinth. So the Church of Rome, at the end of the first century, exhibits a marked sense of its own priority, in point of witness about events in other churches. Note also that the Roman Church did not feel obliged to make a case, however argued, to justify its authoritative pronouncements on what we should now call the internal concerns of other churches... Apparently Rome had no doubt that its priority would be accepted without argument. [1]
[1] Fr. Nicholas Afanassieff: "The Primacy of Peter" Ch. 4, pg. 92 (c. 1992)



This was taken from the Orthodox source titled The Primacy of Peter: Essays in Ecclesiology and the Early Church (edited by JohnMeyendorff)


Fr Afanassieff was a professor of canon law and church history at the Orthodox Theological Institute in Paris.


continued . . . . .
 
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thereselittleflower

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InnerPhyre . .why didn't Irenaeus and the Bishops of the Church question the Authoirty of Pope Victor to excommunicate the churches of Asia as heterodox? They didn't question his authoirty . . the questioned his reasons . . . They urged him to reconsider . . . But never did they question his authority to do so . .





From Eusebius of Caesaria’s Church History Book V Chapter 24 (320 AD):
But the bishops of Asia, led by Polycrates, decided to hold to the old custom handed down to them. He himself, in a letter which he addressed to Victor and the church of Rome, set forth in the following words the tradition which had come down to him…​
"Among these are Philip, one of the twelve apostles, who fell asleep in Hierapolis; and his two aged virgin daughters, and another daughter, who lived in the Holy Spirit and now rests at Ephesus; and, moreover, John, who was both a witness and a teacher, who reclined upon the bosom of the Lord, and, being a priest, wore the sacerdotal plate. He fell asleep at Ephesus. And Polycarp in Smyrna, who was a bishop and martyr; and Thraseas, bishop and martyr from Eumenia, who fell asleep in Smyrna. Why need I mention the bishop and martyr Sagaris who fell asleep in Laodicea, or the blessed Papirius, or Melito, the Eunuch who lived altogether in the Holy Spirit, and who lies in Sardis, awaiting the episcopate from heaven, when he shall rise from the dead? All these observed the fourteenth day of the passover according to the Gospel, deviating in no respect, but following the rule of faith…​
For those greater than I have said 'We ought to obey God rather than man'." He then writes of all the bishops who were present with him and thought as he did…Thereupon Victor, who presided over the church at Rome, immediately attempted to cut off from the common unity the parishes of all Asia, with the churches that agreed with them, as heterodox; and he wrote letters and declared all the brethren there wholly excommunicate. But this did not please all the bishops. AND THEY BESOUGHT HIM TO CONSIDER THE THINGS OF PEACE, AND OF NEIGHBORLY UNITY AND LOVE. Words of theirs are extant, sharply rebuking Victor. Among them was Irenaeus, who, sending letters in the name of the brethren in Gaul over whom he presided, maintained that the mystery of the resurrection of the Lord should be observed only on the Lord's day. He fittingly admonishes Victor that he should not cut off whole churches of God which observed the tradition of an ancient custom.​
They BESOUGHT him to CONSIDER . . .



They didn't say . . what in the heck are you doing . . you have no right to do that, you have overstepped your authority . . .

Do you see this?




Fr. Alexander Schmemann was dean of St. Vladimir's Seminary for over twenty years where he taught church history and liturgical theology.
Finally we come to the highest and ultimate form of primacy: universal primacy. An age-long anti-Roman prejudice has led some Orthodox canonists simply to deny the existence of such primacy in the past or the need for it in the present. But an objective study of the canonical tradition cannot fail to establish beyond any doubt that, along with local 'centers of agreement' or primacies, the Church has also known a universal primacy...​
It is impossible to deny that, even before the appearance of local primacies, the Church from the first days of her existence possessed an ecumenical center of unity and agreement. In the apostolic and the Judaeo-Christian period, it was the Church of Jerusalem, and later the Church of Rome -- "presiding in agape," according to St. Ignatius of Antioch. This formula and the definition of the universal primacy contained in it have been aptly analyzed by Fr. Afanassieff and we need not repeat his argument here. Neither can we quote here all the testimonies of the Fathers and the Councils unanimously acknowledging Rome as the senior church and the center of ecumenical agreement.​
IT IS ONLY FOR THE SAKE OF BIASED POLEMICS THAT ONE CAN IGNORE THESE TESTIMONIES, THEIR CONSENSUS AND SIGNIFICANCE. It has happened, however, that if Roman historians and theologians have always interpreted this evidence in juridical terms, thus falsifying its real meaning, their Orthodox opponents have systematically belittled the evidence itself. Orthodox theology is still awaiting a truly Orthodox evaluation of universal primacy in the first millennium of church history -- AN EVALUATION FREE FROM POLEMICAL OR APOLOGETIC EXAGGERATIONS. [18]​
Russian Orthodox convert Vladimir Soloviev:
All Orthodox Christians are agreed that the apostolic power of binding and loosing was not conferred upon the Twelve as private individuals or in the sense of a temporary privilege, but that it is the genuine source and origin of a perpetual priestly authority which has descended from the Apostles to their successors in the hierarchy, the bishops and priests of the Universal Church. But if this is true, then neither can the two former attributes connected particularly with St. Peter in a still more solemn and significant manner be individual or accidental prerogatives; the less so, in that it was with the first of these prerogatives that our Lord expressly connected the permanence and stability of His Church in its future struggle against the powers of evil.​
If the power of binding and loosing conferred on the Apostles is not a mere metaphor nor a purely personal and temporary attribute, if it is on the contrary the actual living germ of a universal permanent institution comprising the Church's whole existence, how can St. Peter's own special prerogatives, announced in such explicit and solemn terms, be regarded as barren metaphors or as personal and transitory privileges? Ought not they also to refer to some fundamental and permanent institution, of which the historic personality of Simon Bar-Jona is but the outstanding and typical representative? The God-Man did not establish ephemeral institutions. In His chosen disciples He saw, through and beyond all that was mortal and individual, the enduring principles and types of His work. What He said to the college of the Apostles included the whole priestly order, the teaching Church in its entirety. The sublime words which He addressed to Peter alone created in the person of this one Apostle the undivided sovereign authority possessed by the Universal Church throughout the whole of its life and development in future ages.​
The fact that Christ did not see fit to make the formal foundation of His Church and the guarantee of its permanence dependent on the common authority of all the Apostles (for He did not say to the apostolic college: "On you I will build My Church") surely goes to show that our Lord did not regard the episcopal and priestly order, represented by the Apostles in common, as sufficient in itself to form the impregnable foundation of the Universal Church in her inevitable struggle against the gates of hell. In founding His visible Church Jesus was thinking primarily of the struggle against evil and in order to ensure for His creation that unity which is strength, He crowned the hierarchy with a single, central institution, absolutely indivisible and independent, possessing in its own right the fullness of authority and of promise: "Thou art Peter, and upon this rock I will build My Church: and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it". [19]




http://matt1618.freeyellow.com/papalprimacy.html




Please stop trying to get me to debate with you.

Then don't go making claims in a debate thread and expect silence from the ones you are talking to . .

This is a debate forum . . if you don't want to debate, then please stop posting claims that invite refutation.

That's not why I'm here.

To be frank, I tried to enter an honest discussion with you, because it appeared you wanted one . . now I am not sure why you are here to begin with.

Note that nowhere here have I said Oh you Catholics are all wrong etc. I simply said only one of us CAN be right, not both. And minimalizing the differences between us does nothing to bring us back together. It only leads to false superficial unity, which is worthless.

I agree . . but you know, for having been Catholic, and given what you have said above, I don't think you understood the positon of the Catholic Church.

It is a both/and IP . . . There are different methods and means of administrating decisoins of the Church . . some are in Church Council . .that is the college of Bishops acting together . . the infallible decres that come from that cannot be overturned by a pope . . . so yes, the bishops act equally . .

But there is also the primacy of the See of Peter, where final authority rests for particular things and in particular circumstances . .

It most definitely is a both/and . . . It seems you have simply failed to understand this and are pitting one against the other . . .


Again, he was simply stating Orthodox belief...laying it all out there...this is what we believe.

Yeah . . its too bad that Orthodox belief has to include a denouncement of another's faith in order to bolser its claims to be the true Church . .

The true Church needs no such bolsering to make its prima facia case . . .


Just like when a Catholic says that Protestants left the true faith...you don't always provide objective evidence. You simply say that's Catholic doctrine, and that's fine.

When requested we provide it IP . . a FAR cry from what has happened in this thread . . .

And no . . we don't need to go around posting OP's that put down Protestantism in order to make our claim regarding who and what is the true Church . . .


The intent of this thread was misunderstood,

Was it? The intent of this thread has nothing to do with the issue I raised. REGARDLESS of the intent of this thread, negative claims regaridng Our Church and Faith, and later about me personally, were made by the OP and he has not once produced any objective evidence to back them up . . . (and posting numerous links for us to go read copious amounts of literature and then try to guess what it is in it he specifucally uses for "objective evidence" is not the same as providing the objective evidence requested).

Pleae don't confuse the issue I brought up with something else ..


and as always in this wretched place, fists started flying immediately. If a Catholic member were to start a thread about why Catholicism is just grand and included a part that said "and even when the Orthodox broke away in the schism, our faith remained the same" or something like that, somehow I don't think you'd see a ton of Orthodox screaming about it, because we know that's what you believe, even though we could not disagree anymore strongly.



Several fallacies in there IP . .first, we don't go around starting such threads . . and second, even if we did, to state that the Orthodox is in SCHISM is an ENTIRELY DIFFERENT THING than what was stated in the OP and subsequent Posts . . To state one is in schism is not the same as accusing one of being heterodox . ie heretic . . or any of the other things I pointed out:
but I must condemn any who falsely lay claim to being established by Christ, like the modern Roman Catholic Church, .


Rome also teachings the 1000 year after Christ teaching of substitutionary atonement which is heterdox, and very damaging.

your church cannot be the Church Christ established.

To be in schism is something entirely different than what was posted above by the OP about the Catholic Church.




The point is, sugarcoat our differences if you will, but we are extremely different.

The point is, no sugarcoating at all . . but an HONEST LOOK at our differences instead of relying on the polemics of the past . . are you up for it?


Our faiths are not the same. The way we see sin is not the same. The way we see salvation is not the same. These are fundamentals. They can't be glossed over. We are not one Church. We are not part of your church and you are not part of ours. We haven't been for a millenium. Saying that we are in order to make nice will not make it so, nomatter how much the Pope wants it to be so.

I am really sorry you are not able to see past the polemics so common now in many places within the Orthodox Church, that seems to put blinders on to the very real realities of cultural and semmatical differences that make things appear other than they really are . .

I have no such blinders on IP . . . I do my best to take into consideration the cultural and semmatic issues that are a necessary and unavoidable component of the issues that separate the two Churches . . .

One day I hope that the majority of Orthodox will see the importance of doing so as well . . .

Till that day . . . .


Peace to all . . ..
 
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Annabel Lee

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In case anyone missed this post.

JimfromOhio said:
"Jesus reserved his hardest words for the hidden sins of hypocrisy, pride, greed and legalism." "Whatever makes us feel superior to other people, whatever tempts us to convey a sense of superiority, that is the gravity of our sinful nature, not grace." Phillip Yancey
 
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JimfromOhio

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Due to unawareness of religious pride and arrogant, there are those of us who are "stiff-necked people, with uncircumcised hearts and ears! You are just like your fathers: You always resist the Holy Spirit!" (Acts 7:51). There is a proverb saying that "all we learn from history is that we learn nothing from history". On the other hand, an interesting paradox can be observed about tradition/history. The same word (paradosis) used by Paul in 1 Corinthians 11:2 was also used by Jesus in Matthew 15:1-3. Jesus said to the Pharisees, “Why do you break the command of God for the sake of your tradition?”

Disagreements regarding "denominations" will always continue. I always like Philip Yancey's quote, "Whatever makes us feel superior to other people, whatever tempts us to convey a sense of superiority, that is the gravity of our sinful nature, not grace." Many of us like Philip have experienced denomination battles.
 
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thereselittleflower

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vanshan said:
I'm sorry that this thread has gone the direction it has gone. Everyone forgive me. It is not Therese's fault, I did say things that were obviously inflammatory to her.

Therese, if you are so certain you are in the true faith, then don't let challenges make you so defensive. It just makes you come across as insecure in your belief.

Vanshan .. thank you for understanding. :) I greatly appreciate it.

Have you ever heard the expression, "the straw that broke the camel's back" ?

Take a look at what has been going on in the Catholic Church threads andother threads here in GT .. it has been terrible . . We have been put through a terrible ordeal . .then, coming from that, I find your thread, from one of our Orthodox brethern . . Would I have reacted so strongly to your posts if all the other junk wasn't going on? Most probably not . . .so please, I hope you will undestand my reaction in light of all of the circumstances.

It was not being defensive . . . it was simply enough is enough. If people are going to make negative statements about our faith then they need to back them up . . that is not being defensive . . that is asking for those making those statements to be reasonable about them by backing them up with objective evidence, or not make them in the first place . .that is all.

I think if this were the norm, there would be alot less posting such negative statements about anyone's faith and a lot more peace here in this forum.

I am truly sorry too that I came across so strongly. Please forgive me. :hug:

Forgive me if I get this Latin phrase wrong, a professor used to tell us this in seminary, "Illegitimus no corbundum." Which I think means, "Don't let the bast[a]rds rub you the wrong way." I forget who he was quoting, does anyone know? Anyway, don't let me, a sinner, cause you to stumble--that would be the worst of all possible results of this thread, of which I will have to give an account of in the Final Judgement of Christ. I do not intend to respond in this thread again with anything controversial.

Basil

Thanik you Basil. :) Now you are going to make me cry. :)

God bless you. :hug:



Peace to all
 
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Perceivence

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This thread was just strange.

An Eastern Orthodox believer comes with unsupported...stuff in favour of Eastern Orthodoxy and against all other Christian denominations. A Catholic moves to defend her faith, settings reasonable standards and such...but the EOer refuses to meet her challenge and so do what people entering the topic, reading the topic title might expect him to do: ie, illustrate why others might want to convert to Eastern Orthodoxy...

...then everyone berates the Catholic because of her formatting style and persistence...?

O_O
 
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thereselittleflower

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GraceMercyPeace said:
Please forgive me, therese. This was too harsh and I'm sorry. Mixing us up is an easy mistake to make.

With love in Christ,
Grace

You know .. I knew it was you I was talking to, but for some reason it didn't translate right from my brain to my fingers . . like typing one word when you mean another . .

Honestly, my brain does not see it until much later when I catch such things and wonder how the heck I did that . ..

It was totally unconcious and unitentional . . . But I did mean to be addresing you GraceMercyPeace. :)


Peace to all
 
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thereselittleflower

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Perceivence said:
This thread was just strange.

An Eastern Orthodox believer comes with unsupported...stuff in favour of Eastern Orthodoxy and against all other Christian denominations. A Catholic moves to defend her faith, settings reasonable standards and such...but the EOer refuses to meet her challenge and so do what people entering the topic, reading the topic title might expect him to do: ie, illustrate why others might want to convert to Eastern Orthodoxy...

...then everyone berates the Catholic because of her formatting style and persistence...?

O_O

Thank you too for understanding. :)


Peace to all
 
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