Pope Leo XIV and Patriarch Barthlomew's commitment to Church unity.

On Saturday 29th November, Pope Leo XIV and the Ecumenical Patriarch signed a declaration proposing unity of the Catholic and Orthodox Churches, with a commitment to visible unity which presumably means shared Communion.

We all know that it's a long way from a commitment by two Patriarchs to its existence in reality. At 71, I don't expect to see it in my lifetime. However I am overjoyed that they are even talking about it. Of course, ever since the papacy of St John Paul II, such gestures and overtures have been made, but it seems to have reached a new level of commitment.

I think most Christians are conscious of the fact that we're all in breach of Christ's command that we should all be ONE, but do many Christians care much about any of this? To reconcile the 45,000 iterations of Christianity that exist in our world today would be impossible, but all but two of them are Protestants, those two being the Catholic and Orthodox Churches, the "two lungs" of Christinity as Pope St John Paul II called them.

Should Christians be working harder to obey Christ's command. Do may care much about this? What steps could be taken by various churches to work towards such a lofty goal.
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Comments

  • cgichardcgichard Shipmate
    Pope Leo XIV is head of the Roman Catholic Church, but the Orthodox Church is conciliar and its head is Christ alone.
    Patriarch Barholomew can speak for only a portion of Orthodox Christians (mainly those in Greece and a few in Turkey).
  • ArethosemyfeetArethosemyfeet Shipmate, Heaven Host

    Should Christians be working harder to obey Christ's command. Do may care much about this? What steps could be taken by various churches to work towards such a lofty goal.

    Rome giving up its claim of Papal Supremacy would help, as would accepting the ministry of women on an equal basis with men. Which is a slightly acerbic way of saying that divisions persist largely because there are things we each value more than unity.
  • Alan29Alan29 Shipmate
    The progress in my lifetime in terms of cooperation has been astonishing. The work of the various joint theological commissions has been significant too. But I don't think high level agreements are necessarily mirrored in the pews. So locally for example there are those who refuse to attend joint services in our RC church because we are papists. And I'm sure we have folk who feel the same about other churches. And communion is imperfect among the various national Orthodox churches. Humans are tribal.
    On the other hand we have got to a level of unity in joint action in some places that is amazing.
  • Gramps49Gramps49 Shipmate
    I am 76 and in not the best health, but I look forward to seeing Christian Unity. Three issues are on the table, as I see it.

    Primarily, is the question of filioque. The Spirit proceeding from the Father. It is the issue that divided the church in the first place. I note Leo admited that it was not in the original document and was inserted by Pope Benedict in 1014 the official Anglican Communion and the Lutheran World Federation have already agreed with the Orthodox position and are making moves to drop the clause in our denominational documents.

    The Primacy of the Pope. Leo has not said much about this yet; but, given his ecumenical history, I do not think it is much of a step for him. It is the curia of the church that will move slowly on this. Ever since I was a seminarian, I have been taught we Lutherans could accept the Pope as a bishop among bishops. I think something like the World Council of Churches would be the structure other denominations can come together in unity.

    As @Arethosemyfeet the modern issue is the role of women in the church. Anglicans and LWF Lutherans have no problem with women's full participation in the ministry. The Roman Catholics and Orthodox may take some time to reach parity, but I think there can be movement.

    Attached to that are other gender identity issues.

    We have come a long way in my lifetime. I look forward to seeing more fellowship among the denominations.

  • Should Christians be working harder to obey Christ's command. Do may care much about this? What steps could be taken by various churches to work towards such a lofty goal.

    Rome giving up its claim of Papal Supremacy would help, as would accepting the ministry of women on an equal basis with men. Which is a slightly acerbic way of saying that divisions persist largely because there are things we each value more than unity.

    I’m not sure it’s a matter of people “valuing things more than unity,” as if they consider themselves to be able to change things, but are choosing not to. I think in many cases, it’s a matter of people believing that they literally can’t change the reality of those things as they understand them to be.
  • On Saturday 29th November, Pope Leo XIV and the Ecumenical Patriarch signed a declaration proposing unity of the Catholic and Orthodox Churches, with a commitment to visible unity which presumably means shared Communion.

    We all know that it's a long way from a commitment by two Patriarchs to its existence in reality. At 71, I don't expect to see it in my lifetime. However I am overjoyed that they are even talking about it. Of course, ever since the papacy of St John Paul II, such gestures and overtures have been made, but it seems to have reached a new level of commitment.

    I think most Christians are conscious of the fact that we're all in breach of Christ's command that we should all be ONE, but do many Christians care much about any of this? To reconcile the 45,000 iterations of Christianity that exist in our world today would be impossible, but all but two of them are Protestants, those two being the Catholic and Orthodox Churches, the "two lungs" of Christinity as Pope St John Paul II called them.

    Should Christians be working harder to obey Christ's command. Do may care much about this? What steps could be taken by various churches to work towards such a lofty goal.

    Some of this depends on definitions of Catholic and Protestant, just as a side note. Some of us in the Anglican crowd consider Anglicanism to be Catholic as well.

    There are also the Coptic Christians.
  • ChastMastr wrote: »
    On Saturday 29th November, Pope Leo XIV and the Ecumenical Patriarch signed a declaration proposing unity of the Catholic and Orthodox Churches, with a commitment to visible unity which presumably means shared Communion.

    We all know that it's a long way from a commitment by two Patriarchs to its existence in reality. At 71, I don't expect to see it in my lifetime. However I am overjoyed that they are even talking about it. Of course, ever since the papacy of St John Paul II, such gestures and overtures have been made, but it seems to have reached a new level of commitment.

    I think most Christians are conscious of the fact that we're all in breach of Christ's command that we should all be ONE, but do many Christians care much about any of this? To reconcile the 45,000 iterations of Christianity that exist in our world today would be impossible, but all but two of them are Protestants, those two being the Catholic and Orthodox Churches, the "two lungs" of Christinity as Pope St John Paul II called them.

    Should Christians be working harder to obey Christ's command. Do may care much about this? What steps could be taken by various churches to work towards such a lofty goal.

    Some of this depends on definitions of Catholic and Protestant, just as a side note.
    It also depends, I think, on what we mean by “unity” or “being one.” Does it mean organizational unity? Does it mean baptismal unity. The ability to gather at the Lord’s Table despite disagreements or lack of organizational unity? Something else!

    Is unity something we work to achieve, or is it a gift we already have if we’d only recognize it?


  • Nick Tamen wrote: »
    ChastMastr wrote: »
    On Saturday 29th November, Pope Leo XIV and the Ecumenical Patriarch signed a declaration proposing unity of the Catholic and Orthodox Churches, with a commitment to visible unity which presumably means shared Communion.

    We all know that it's a long way from a commitment by two Patriarchs to its existence in reality. At 71, I don't expect to see it in my lifetime. However I am overjoyed that they are even talking about it. Of course, ever since the papacy of St John Paul II, such gestures and overtures have been made, but it seems to have reached a new level of commitment.

    I think most Christians are conscious of the fact that we're all in breach of Christ's command that we should all be ONE, but do many Christians care much about any of this? To reconcile the 45,000 iterations of Christianity that exist in our world today would be impossible, but all but two of them are Protestants, those two being the Catholic and Orthodox Churches, the "two lungs" of Christinity as Pope St John Paul II called them.

    Should Christians be working harder to obey Christ's command. Do may care much about this? What steps could be taken by various churches to work towards such a lofty goal.

    Some of this depends on definitions of Catholic and Protestant, just as a side note.
    It also depends, I think, on what we mean by “unity” or “being one.” Does it mean organizational unity? Does it mean baptismal unity. The ability to gather at the Lord’s Table despite disagreements or lack of organizational unity? Something else!

    Is unity something we work to achieve, or is it a gift we already have if we’d only recognize it?

    Amen!
  • Gramps49Gramps49 Shipmate
    This image. was accompanied by this explanation:
    This is quite a photo. Never before in all of Christian history have the patriarchs representing all five ancient sees of the Church — the Pentarchy (“five rulers”) — stood together in one place.
    The Pentarchy, first formally recognized under Emperor Justinian I (r. 527–565), described the five major episcopal centers of the undivided Church: Rome, Constantinople, Alexandria, Antioch, and Jerusalem. Together, these patriarchates once formed the united leadership of the Christian world.
    This week, in Nicaea (modern İznik, Turkey), that ancient vision came remarkably close to reality. Christian leaders from across the East and West gathered to commemorate the 1700th anniversary of the First Council of Nicaea (AD 325) — the council that:
    - affirmed the divine nature of Christ the Son and His unity with the Father,
    - formulated the first part of the Nicene Creed,
    - established a common date for Pascha (Easter), and
    - issued the earliest canons governing Church life.
    Pictured here (following the order of ancient precedence):
    - Rome – Pope Leo XIV (Roman Catholic)
    - Constantinople – Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I (Greek Orthodox)
    - Alexandria – Patriarch Theodoros II (Greek Orthodox)
    - Antioch – Patriarch Ignatius Aphrem II (Syriac Orthodox)
    - Jerusalem – [edited] unrepresented by a patriarch
    While the Greek Orthodox patriarch of Antioch and Greek Orthodox and Latin patriarchs Jerusalem were unable to attend, this gathering nonetheless marks one of the most extraordinary moments of visible unity among Christian leaders in modern history — a powerful sign of shared faith in Christ that transcends centuries of division.
    Laus Tibi Domini

    Source: Evidencia Biblica
  • Sure to get them hated by most people on their own sides. Any Big Agreement about unity will receive the Florence treatment, and several minor saints will arise for having "fought the good fight" against rapprochment.
  • What I think vexes me so often with talk about "Church Unity" is that the "big Churches" (i.e. Anglican, Roman Catholic, Orthodox) so often fail to even recognise the existence of a multiplicity of other churches "on the ground". Some of these are long-established, some are new; some are episcopalian, others congregational; many are Pentecostal and most have "low" views of both ordination and the sacraments. I - a Baptist - was for many years a member of Churches Together in England's "Theology and Unity Group"; one issue we bumped into repeatedly was an apparent reluctance by some traditions to understand or accept how we operated.

    Here in Wales I am a member of the "Commission of Covenanting Churches" which was set up by five major denominations 50 years ago with the aim of "complete structural unity". Since then both the church scene in general, and the ecumenical scene in particular, have changed beyond measure; a high point should have been the appointment of an Ecumenical Bishop in 2012 but this foundered. All these factors are leading us to seriously consider whether there is much point in continuing.
  • Postscript: I have now discovered that the proposals for an Ecumenical Bishop were watered down from a Wales-wide brief to a particular part of Cardiff. However preparations went as far as devising costings and preparing an order for the consecration service. But it never happened.
  • ArethosemyfeetArethosemyfeet Shipmate, Heaven Host
    ChastMastr wrote: »

    Should Christians be working harder to obey Christ's command. Do may care much about this? What steps could be taken by various churches to work towards such a lofty goal.

    Rome giving up its claim of Papal Supremacy would help, as would accepting the ministry of women on an equal basis with men. Which is a slightly acerbic way of saying that divisions persist largely because there are things we each value more than unity.

    I’m not sure it’s a matter of people “valuing things more than unity,” as if they consider themselves to be able to change things, but are choosing not to. I think in many cases, it’s a matter of people believing that they literally can’t change the reality of those things as they understand them to be.

    I'm not saying there aren't reasons for valuing those things.
  • There are certain positive steps which could be taken to begin with. The Western Churches should drop the Filioque. Although I've read theological arguments for and against it, it was a late addition added without the approval of the Eastern Churchrs. The Pope readily admits this. Both the Catholic Church and the Church of England have shown they can live without it, vut the Orthodox Churches can't live with it, so it hss to go.

    I think that, in return for such a gestute, the East should adopt the Western date for Easter. While they could rightly say that their calendar is older, it's a matter of practicality. The Western date is accepted by the vast majority of the world.

    As for Papal Infalibility as far back as Pope St John Paul II, he said that in any reunion of the churches, the Orthodox (and presumably other churches) couldn't be expected to embrace doctrines inovated after the split. Perhaps a return to the Bishop of Rome's position in the early Church, of primus inter pares, is an idea that could float.

    On matters such as the role of women in the church, Amdany other issues, there would need to be a large area of agreeing to difffer as history rolls along. There is a very strong chance that the Archbisop of Canterbury designate, Dame Sarah Mullally will visit the Pope quite early in her tenure, and it will be interesting to see how she and the Pope interract. Healing the Great Schism of 1054, and the multifragmented Protestant schism of the 16th century would be a task of gargantuan proportions, and there would be many hold outs who would be unable to make the huge compromises necessary to achieve it, but we should all keep in mind that the Church is an affront to Christ in its multiplicity.
  • Alan29Alan29 Shipmate
    With the best will in the world I cannot envision a world where the Russian Orthodox and the Elim Pentecostals achieve corporate union. I find it easier to imagine a world where the churches represented by the ancient patriarchates in the photo above get to intercommunion, maybe also including the non-Chalcedonian churches too. And maybe those churches that arose as a result of the reformation might also get there as a separate entity. But there might be problems about what core beliefs are required to join - Salvation Army etc.
    Which is why I always return to active cooperation and mutual respect being the way forward. And why I am astonished that so much progress has already been achieved during my 76 years.
  • @Alan29 I completely agree with your analysis, including the necessity of getting the non-Chalcedonian Churches on board, as they are often neglected fine Christian people. As an Anglo-Catholic, I could get on board with this quite easily, but you are right that many groups would struggle to do so.
  • peasepease Tech Admin
    Should Christians be working harder to obey Christ's command. Do may care much about this? What steps could be taken by various churches to work towards such a lofty goal.
    Rome giving up its claim of Papal Supremacy would help, as would accepting the ministry of women on an equal basis with men. Which is a slightly acerbic way of saying that divisions persist largely because there are things we each value more than unity.
    There is no lofty goal. The primary reason for churches talking more seriously about unity, and maybe working more closely together, is existential - a threat to their existence.

    Even then, it seems to me that many churches would, given the choice, be more likely to aim for unity by virtue of being the last ones standing.
  • Alan29Alan29 Shipmate
    pease wrote: »
    Should Christians be working harder to obey Christ's command. Do may care much about this? What steps could be taken by various churches to work towards such a lofty goal.
    Rome giving up its claim of Papal Supremacy would help, as would accepting the ministry of women on an equal basis with men. Which is a slightly acerbic way of saying that divisions persist largely because there are things we each value more than unity.
    There is no lofty goal. The primary reason for churches talking more seriously about unity, and maybe working more closely together, is existential - a threat to their existence.

    Even then, it seems to me that many churches would, given the choice, be more likely to aim for unity by virtue of being the last ones standing.

    I think there is a danger of only having in mind the "first world" when considering the future of the Church. While it continues to decline in the developed world, it continues to grow in Africa, for example. And red hot issues here in Europe are not the same across the globe.
  • ArethosemyfeetArethosemyfeet Shipmate, Heaven Host
    Alan29 wrote: »
    pease wrote: »
    Should Christians be working harder to obey Christ's command. Do may care much about this? What steps could be taken by various churches to work towards such a lofty goal.
    Rome giving up its claim of Papal Supremacy would help, as would accepting the ministry of women on an equal basis with men. Which is a slightly acerbic way of saying that divisions persist largely because there are things we each value more than unity.
    There is no lofty goal. The primary reason for churches talking more seriously about unity, and maybe working more closely together, is existential - a threat to their existence.

    Even then, it seems to me that many churches would, given the choice, be more likely to aim for unity by virtue of being the last ones standing.

    I think there is a danger of only having in mind the "first world" when considering the future of the Church. While it continues to decline in the developed world, it continues to grow in Africa, for example. And red hot issues here in Europe are not the same across the globe.

    While the African church is still growing, I doubt it will be too long before birth rates start to fall, with a knock-on effect on churches. In many countries church membership is already growing more slowly than the population.
  • I think that, in return for such a gestute, the East should adopt the Western date for Easter. While they could rightly say that their calendar is older, it's a matter of practicality. The Western date is accepted by the vast majority of the world.
    There have been compromise proposals, such as the Aleppo proposal.


  • PomonaPomona Shipmate
    Alan29 wrote: »
    pease wrote: »
    Should Christians be working harder to obey Christ's command. Do may care much about this? What steps could be taken by various churches to work towards such a lofty goal.
    Rome giving up its claim of Papal Supremacy would help, as would accepting the ministry of women on an equal basis with men. Which is a slightly acerbic way of saying that divisions persist largely because there are things we each value more than unity.
    There is no lofty goal. The primary reason for churches talking more seriously about unity, and maybe working more closely together, is existential - a threat to their existence.

    Even then, it seems to me that many churches would, given the choice, be more likely to aim for unity by virtue of being the last ones standing.

    I think there is a danger of only having in mind the "first world" when considering the future of the Church. While it continues to decline in the developed world, it continues to grow in Africa, for example. And red hot issues here in Europe are not the same across the globe.

    I think generalising about continents in such a broad way is as unhelpful as terms like "developed"/"developing" and the Cold War 1st/2nd/3rd World terminology. Neither Europe nor Africa are monolithic in terms or development goals or in terms of adherence to Christianity. Nobody would suggest that South America or Asia are homogenously "developing" continents.

    Iirc two of the countries with the healthiest (in terms of size) Christian populations are Brazil and ROK (Republic of Korea aka South Korea). Both are vastly different countries with different socio-economic circumstances.
  • One of the things which the Council of Nicea did was to decide the date of Easter celebrations. The assembled bishops did not wish to celebrate Easter on the 14th day of Nisan,the date of the Passover celebrations. Although both of these celebration were in some way connected to the Vernal Equinox the bishops decided to celebrate Easter on the SUNDAY after the first full moon following the Spring Equinox and most Christians have continued with this until now.

    The difference between most Eastern and Western Christians has to do with the introduction of the Gregorian calendar in the 1580s which aligned the calendar more closely with the actual Spring Equinox. Since the calendar was reformed in the wake of the Council of Trent by Pope Gregory XIII the Orthodox persisted with the older out of line Julian calendar untainted by ideas of possible papal supremacy. Pope Gregory also changed the date of the New Year from 25th March to 1st January.

    (I always like the little detail that the Scottish Parliament decided in the early 1600s to accept the Gregorian calendar, as it made it easier to transfer former Crhristmas celebration from the popish Christmas to a more secular New Year. England on the other hand did not change to the Gregorian calendar until the late 1700s).
  • stetsonstetson Shipmate
    edited December 2
    @Pomona

    Iirc two of the countries with the healthiest (in terms of size) Christian populations are Brazil and ROK (Republic of Korea aka South Korea). Both are vastly different countries with different socio-economic circumstances.

    The ROK is not a good example for your point, as it's only about 31% Christian, as opposed to Brazil at 83%.
  • peasepease Tech Admin
    Alan29 wrote: »
    pease wrote: »
    There is no lofty goal. The primary reason for churches talking more seriously about unity, and maybe working more closely together, is existential - a threat to their existence.

    Even then, it seems to me that many churches would, given the choice, be more likely to aim for unity by virtue of being the last ones standing.
    I think there is a danger of only having in mind the "first world" when considering the future of the Church. While it continues to decline in the developed world, it continues to grow in Africa, for example. And red hot issues here in Europe are not the same across the globe.
    Yes and no.

    I think the "it" that is growing in Africa is more of a "they" - lots of different kinds of church and groups of churches, many of them getting on and doing their own thing. Including developing their own ecumenical discussions and movements.

    I imagine many of them are looking forward to a time when they no longer get told what to do by a bunch of people living around the Mediterranean or further-flung reaches of the Northern Hemisphere.
  • stetsonstetson Shipmate
    @pease
    I imagine many of them are looking forward to a time when they no longer get told what to do by a bunch of people living around the Mediterranean or further-flung reaches of the Northern Hemisphere.

    In what ways do you think these churches would want to depart from the Northern Hemisphere's way of doing things?
  • Gramps49Gramps49 Shipmate
    pease wrote: »
    Alan29 wrote: »
    pease wrote: »
    There is no lofty goal. The primary reason for churches talking more seriously about unity, and maybe working more closely together, is existential - a threat to their existence.

    Even then, it seems to me that many churches would, given the choice, be more likely to aim for unity by virtue of being the last ones standing.
    I think there is a danger of only having in mind the "first world" when considering the future of the Church. While it continues to decline in the developed world, it continues to grow in Africa, for example. And red hot issues here in Europe are not the same across the globe.
    Yes and no.

    I think the "it" that is growing in Africa is more of a "they" - lots of different kinds of church and groups of churches, many of them getting on and doing their own thing. Including developing their own ecumenical discussions and movements.

    I imagine many of them are looking forward to a time when they no longer get told what to do by a bunch of people living around the Mediterranean or further-flung reaches of the Northern Hemisphere.

    I think the greater concern is from the Northern Hemisphere when the Southern Hemisphere has more clout. You should see the reactions I get in Lutheran circles when I mention looking forward to African missionaries coming to our shores.
  • Voices are not as cohesive as they appear, but being a gay man, I'm sceptical, and ready to head for the hills.
  • IMHO we may be over-emphasizing organizational unity as if it were the only form of unity—and if we ever did achieve a single bureaucracy, no doubt we’d have a schism in 30 years tops. Is that even what Christ was talking about?

    I’m more inclined to look at what various Christians do — cooperation in feeding people, etc plus recognizing one another’s baptism. Speaking well of each other and pointing out the good to be seen in what each other does. Working together in evangelism, mission, materials development and publication, etc. A lot of this is already happening very quietly, it just doesn’t hit the secular news very often.
  • Alan29Alan29 Shipmate
    Pomona wrote: »
    Alan29 wrote: »
    pease wrote: »
    Should Christians be working harder to obey Christ's command. Do may care much about this? What steps could be taken by various churches to work towards such a lofty goal.
    Rome giving up its claim of Papal Supremacy would help, as would accepting the ministry of women on an equal basis with men. Which is a slightly acerbic way of saying that divisions persist largely because there are things we each value more than unity.
    There is no lofty goal. The primary reason for churches talking more seriously about unity, and maybe working more closely together, is existential - a threat to their existence.

    Even then, it seems to me that many churches would, given the choice, be more likely to aim for unity by virtue of being the last ones standing.

    I think there is a danger of only having in mind the "first world" when considering the future of the Church. While it continues to decline in the developed world, it continues to grow in Africa, for example. And red hot issues here in Europe are not the same across the globe.

    I think generalising about continents in such a broad way is as unhelpful as terms like "developed"/"developing" and the Cold War 1st/2nd/3rd World terminology. Neither Europe nor Africa are monolithic in terms or development goals or in terms of adherence to Christianity. Nobody would suggest that South America or Asia are homogenously "developing" continents.

    Iirc two of the countries with the healthiest (in terms of size) Christian populations are Brazil and ROK (Republic of Korea aka South Korea). Both are vastly different countries with different socio-economic circumstances.

    Well I had several shots at finding acceptable terminology. However my point remains, that while Christianity declines in the Northern Hemisphere, it grows in the Southern. And this effects the kinds of adjustment various churches might have to make to achieve
  • Patriarch Bartholomew is already persona non grata in some Orthodox circles so whatever declaration he signs won't cut any ice with the raving traditionalists on Mount Athos or Putinista hierarchs in Russia and Eastern Europe.

    Sadly.

    I agree with @LambChopped that the key is grassroots collaboration and mutual respect rather than decretals and statements from 'on high'.

    I have much sympathy with @Baptist Trainfan's view that the independent and post-radical Reformation churches are often overlooked - quite apart from what one might call the post-1830s Protestant denominations - Churches of Christ, Plymouth Brethren etc.

    Part of the problem there isn't so much that they are regarded as "heretickal conventicles" as the historic Churches don't really know 'where to start' when it comes to engaging with them.

    When one hears about the antics of various Pentecostal and independent US style fundamentalist churches in majority RC or Orthodox countries then we can readily understand the hesitation. There are exceptions of course but both sides have to try harder and dig deeper in order to find common ground.

    I still come across 'cradle Orthodox' who think that the Anglicans are simply an English-speaking version of themselves but who would regard Baptists and other independent Protestant churches as cultic or deluded.

    But we have to start somewhere. Personal relationships are key.
  • DafydDafyd Hell Host
    Which is a slightly acerbic way of saying that divisions persist largely because there are things we each value more than unity.
    Indeed. In other words, unity is not really unity if it's reached by throwing other people under the bus.

  • @Gamma Gamaliel To whom do the traditionalists turn if Patriarch Bartholomew is persona non grata? Patriarch Kyrill has been abandoned by many parishes because of his support for the Ukraine war and his cosying up with Putin over it.

    I've seen a lot of pushback on several FB groups against the accord, many from Orthodox priests who seem to think the whole of Christendom, especially the Pope, should be grovelling on its belly in repentance for its schism. And of course that Bartholomew is a heretic to let it happen.

    It brought a great joy to me that the two leaders made the effort. That they're willing to take a step in the direction of repairing a breach lasting more than a millennium. But they'll never take their flocks with them, which will be even harder on the Orthodox side.
  • I think the three centers of gravity in Orthodoxy against any reconciliation with Rome are the Moscow Patriarchate (half of all Orthodox!), Mount Athos, where many monks consider any hints of ecumenism as heresy, and Orthobro converts from Protestantism in the West, who deliberately rejected the RCC when they chose Orthodoxy.

    So even if the Pope managed to remove the filioque and reinterpret Papal universal ordinary jurisdiction, Papal infallibility, and the Immaculate Conception as just formalities that don’t contradict Orthodox tradition, I don’t think you could get many Orthodox leaders outside of the Ecumenical Patriarchate and a few of the smaller, more Western autocephalous churches to be in favor of moving toward reunion because the only kind of reunion Russia and the hardcore conservative Orthodox want is for the RCC to capitulate on everything and remake itself in the image of Orthodoxy in every liturgical, aesthetic, and ecclesiological thing it can - perhaps even by letting a lot of the rest of the world be autocephalous so that the Roman Patriarchate wouldn’t outnumber the Eastern Churches in a hypothetical united church to a degree far greater than the Moscow patriarchate currently outnumbers the rest of Orthodoxy.

    As someone who avidly wants to see a reunion of East and West, I wish I could be more hopeful than this.
  • mousethiefmousethief Shipmate
    edited December 3
    Agree that the Ortho east needs to move to the modern Gregorian calendar, simpliciter. It wouldn't require a council, just a redefinition of the council that harnessed them with the misrable Julian calendar in tie first place.
  • @Gamma Gamaliel To whom do the traditionalists turn if Patriarch Bartholomew is persona non grata? Patriarch Kyrill has been abandoned by many parishes because of his support for the Ukraine war and his cosying up with Putin over it.

    I've seen a lot of pushback on several FB groups against the accord, many from Orthodox priests who seem to think the whole of Christendom, especially the Pope, should be grovelling on its belly in repentance for its schism. And of course that Bartholomew is a heretic to let it happen.

    It brought a great joy to me that the two leaders made the effort. That they're willing to take a step in the direction of repairing a breach lasting more than a millennium. But they'll never take their flocks with them, which will be even harder on the Orthodox side.

    I think @stonespring is pretty .u h on the money.

    I think the 'Churches of Russian tradition' in the West would be more amenable than Moscow to possible rapprochement. I might even have envisaged Moscow changing its tune to some extent if Patriarch Kyrill was less of a Kremlin stooge.

    Given the current schism in the Orthodox world I don't have a great deal of faith in our ability to heal our own wounds and divisions let alone patch things up with Rome, the Copts and other 'Oriental Orthodox' let alone the Protestant churches.

    On a grass-roots and friendship level I can see things improving though.

    @pablito1954 - there is a 'rebel monastery' on Mount Athos which considers Patriarch Bartholomew beyond the pale for his ecumenism and not a few monks in the other monasteries who'd take a similar line.

    The Ecumenical Patriarch isn't a Pope, more like the Archbishop of Canterbury. At a parish level things pretty much tick over regardless of the kerfuffles at the top.
  • stetsonstetson Shipmate
    mousethief wrote: »
    Agree that the Ortho east needs to move to the modern Gregorian calendar, simpliciter. It wouldn't require a council, just a redefinition of the council that harnessed them with the misrable Julian calendar in tie first place.

    Aw, c'mon. Ya wanna deprive slack-ass local reporters' of the opportunity to do a second round of feel-good xmas stories in January?
  • @Gamma Gamaliel I read @stonespring 's message before I read yours, and I agree that it says it all really. It's great to feel that excitement when the Pope and the Ecumenical Patriarch pray together in Nicaea and make grand pledges about the future, but we still live in our fragmented and divided world, in which probably very little will change.
  • ArethosemyfeetArethosemyfeet Shipmate, Heaven Host
    IMHO we may be over-emphasizing organizational unity as if it were the only form of unity—and if we ever did achieve a single bureaucracy, no doubt we’d have a schism in 30 years tops. Is that even what Christ was talking about?

    I’m more inclined to look at what various Christians do — cooperation in feeding people, etc plus recognizing one another’s baptism. Speaking well of each other and pointing out the good to be seen in what each other does. Working together in evangelism, mission, materials development and publication, etc. A lot of this is already happening very quietly, it just doesn’t hit the secular news very often.

    A salutary reminder.

    I was also reminded of the words of the hymn And now, O Father, mindful of the love:

    Draw us the nearer, each to each, we plead, by drawing all to thee O Prince of Peace

    Unity will ultimately come from drawing closer to Christ.
  • peasepease Tech Admin
    stetson wrote: »
    @pease
    I imagine many of them are looking forward to a time when they no longer get told what to do by a bunch of people living around the Mediterranean or further-flung reaches of the Northern Hemisphere.
    In what ways do you think these churches would want to depart from the Northern Hemisphere's way of doing things?
    A really short answer would point to decolonisation.

    In more depth, for example, from Re-Imagining Ecumenical Theology in Africa: Toward Promoting the African Union Agenda 2063:
    One must understand its uniqueness, history, and culture to appreciate Africa’s robust and continuous engagement of ecumenism. Beyond that, acquiring the intellectual ability to conceptualize the context is essential. Therefore, what is Africa, one or many, a unity or a diversity? For Ernst Wendland, it is unity in diversity (Wendland 132). The idea of unity in diversity acknowledges, celebrates, and maintains the tension of our interconnectedness and fractions at various continent levels. The concept of unity in diversity is essential in understanding ecumenism in Africa and the Agenda 2063. However, it confines the concept of Africa to geographical locations and cultures. Africa may be more than that. Willem Fourie, a scholar of dogmatics and Christian ethics, problematized the conceptualization of Africa with the question of why we choose to cluster this particular collection of persons and groups together and call it Africa. (Fourie). Fourie argued that there are various concepts of Africa, and they are not ethically neutral. On this, Fourie outlines four concepts of Africa: Africa as a place, a commodity, and a condition. And fourth, African as Ideal. Each of these concepts of Africa is based on a particular logic with both strengths and weaknesses.
    The concept of Africa as a condition is predicated on the colonial ideology that Africa is a dark continent and its people primitive, barbaric, and unenlightened. Therefore, Africa needs “civilization” to improve its condition in this state. This condition was the “absence of European civilization.” (2015, 6). Thus, Europeans self-identified as agents responsible for the “betterment” of Africans via Western civilization. This uncritical conceptualization of Africa portrays the ignorance of Europe of African culture and values or the overwhelming entitlement to European superiority and the theological, anthropological, and sociological rigidity and conditioning of Africans. This worldview, according to Chammah Kaunda, “influenced the way colonizers and missionaries perceived African people as objects at the disposal of their service.”(Kaunda 80). The European descriptive ideologies of African people, their land, and their resources as a geographical location, political and economic commodity, and a condition are deeply entrenched in racialization, slavery, colonization, and evangelization projects in the continent. … To recognize the impacts and effects of colonization on the African mind, body, and land, Africans had to embark on anti-colonial nationalist-driven decolonial struggles aiming for an independent, united, peaceful, and prosperous continent. It led to the Africans conceptualizing Africa as an ideal. (Fourie 7).

    Gramps49 wrote: »
    I think the greater concern is from the Northern Hemisphere when the Southern Hemisphere has more clout. You should see the reactions I get in Lutheran circles when I mention looking forward to African missionaries coming to our shores.
    Brazilian missionaries have been treating Europe as a mission field for years.
  • Alan29Alan29 Shipmate
    Things seem to be a bit more straightforward between the RCC and the non Orthodox Eastern Churches - the Armenians, Syrians, Copts etc where intercommunion has been agreed in certain circumstances, and where theological cooperation has led to a better understanding of what is actually meant by the definitions of Chalcedon. Some of these Churches are suffering mightily from persecution and emigration and might see an advantage in having an advocate with a world-wide voice.
    The situation with the Orthodox is difficult. The mutual excommunications between Rome and Constantinople were lifted at the end of Vatican 2, decades ago. But as others have said this isn't always reflected in grass-roots attitudes.
    Also I'm thinking about the way that people continue to set themselves up as small breakaway bodies and give themselves and their denominations extraordinary and highfalutin titles. It makes me think that there will never be one "fold."
    And I'm wondering if there are parallels between discussions with the Orthodox (who do you discuss with that represents the whole movement) and increasingly with the Anglicans.
  • IMHO we may be over-emphasizing organizational unity as if it were the only form of unity—and if we ever did achieve a single bureaucracy, no doubt we’d have a schism in 30 years tops. Is that even what Christ was talking about?

    I’m more inclined to look at what various Christians do — cooperation in feeding people, etc plus recognizing one another’s baptism. Speaking well of each other and pointing out the good to be seen in what each other does. Working together in evangelism, mission, materials development and publication, etc. A lot of this is already happening very quietly, it just doesn’t hit the secular news very often.

    A salutary reminder.

    I was also reminded of the words of the hymn And now, O Father, mindful of the love:

    Draw us the nearer, each to each, we plead, by drawing all to thee O Prince of Peace

    Unity will ultimately come from drawing closer to Christ.

    Sure but what does this mean in practice?

    Beardy-wierdy Orthodox monks on Mount Athos think they are drawing closer to Christ by reciting the Jesus Prayer ad infinitum whilst remaining arsey about everyone else.

    Young Earth Creationists think they are drawing closer to Christ by holding unfeasible positions on geology and paleontology.

    Christian nationalists think they are drawing closer to Christ by promoting phyletism and xenophobia.

    Heck, in the interests of balance, some uber-liberal Christians think they are drawing closer to Christ by undermining any semblance of traditional creedal Christianity...

    How do we square any of those circles?
  • ArethosemyfeetArethosemyfeet Shipmate, Heaven Host
    IMHO we may be over-emphasizing organizational unity as if it were the only form of unity—and if we ever did achieve a single bureaucracy, no doubt we’d have a schism in 30 years tops. Is that even what Christ was talking about?

    I’m more inclined to look at what various Christians do — cooperation in feeding people, etc plus recognizing one another’s baptism. Speaking well of each other and pointing out the good to be seen in what each other does. Working together in evangelism, mission, materials development and publication, etc. A lot of this is already happening very quietly, it just doesn’t hit the secular news very often.

    A salutary reminder.

    I was also reminded of the words of the hymn And now, O Father, mindful of the love:

    Draw us the nearer, each to each, we plead, by drawing all to thee O Prince of Peace

    Unity will ultimately come from drawing closer to Christ.

    Sure but what does this mean in practice?

    Beardy-wierdy Orthodox monks on Mount Athos think they are drawing closer to Christ by reciting the Jesus Prayer ad infinitum whilst remaining arsey about everyone else.

    Young Earth Creationists think they are drawing closer to Christ by holding unfeasible positions on geology and paleontology.

    Christian nationalists think they are drawing closer to Christ by promoting phyletism and xenophobia.

    Heck, in the interests of balance, some uber-liberal Christians think they are drawing closer to Christ by undermining any semblance of traditional creedal Christianity...

    How do we square any of those circles?

    We can discuss why we think these things draw us closer to Christ, but surrendering things we believe are of Christ in the pursuit of visible unity is to get things backwards.
  • TurquoiseTasticTurquoiseTastic Kerygmania Host
    IMHO we may be over-emphasizing organizational unity as if it were the only form of unity—and if we ever did achieve a single bureaucracy, no doubt we’d have a schism in 30 years tops. Is that even what Christ was talking about?

    I’m more inclined to look at what various Christians do — cooperation in feeding people, etc plus recognizing one another’s baptism. Speaking well of each other and pointing out the good to be seen in what each other does. Working together in evangelism, mission, materials development and publication, etc. A lot of this is already happening very quietly, it just doesn’t hit the secular news very often.

    A salutary reminder.

    I was also reminded of the words of the hymn And now, O Father, mindful of the love:

    Draw us the nearer, each to each, we plead, by drawing all to thee O Prince of Peace

    Unity will ultimately come from drawing closer to Christ.

    Sure but what does this mean in practice?

    Beardy-wierdy Orthodox monks on Mount Athos think they are drawing closer to Christ by reciting the Jesus Prayer ad infinitum whilst remaining arsey about everyone else.

    Young Earth Creationists think they are drawing closer to Christ by holding unfeasible positions on geology and paleontology.

    Christian nationalists think they are drawing closer to Christ by promoting phyletism and xenophobia.

    Heck, in the interests of balance, some uber-liberal Christians think they are drawing closer to Christ by undermining any semblance of traditional creedal Christianity...

    How do we square any of those circles?

    This is an interesting and disturbing thing to me.

    It is like Milton Jones's cartoon: "I've been a Christian for over 40 years" Response: "How come you are still not very nice?"

    All the groups mentioned above clearly have some sort of intense faith and you would perhaps hope that God would work through that in some sort of positive way. And yet it is not obvious that that is what happens, to put it mildly.

    But why?
  • @Arethosemyfeet When we talk about changes to the creed, or to the date of Easter, we're talking of major compromises to beliefs deeply held for more than a thousand years. That requires courage on a huge scale. I don't in any way resonate with people belonging to one interpretation of one world religion, who believe they have such a monopoly on truth, that they can't make any compromises. That attitude is of this fallen world.
  • The only consistent principle I have ever found in the gospels is to love. When the compromise involves legitimating hatred, that can go away.
  • @ThunderBunk I don't think that the compromises suggested by this historic meetings in any way legitimise hatred. The hatred tends to come from those with such entrenched positions that they hate anyone who disagrees with them. There has been a lot of such vitreol on social media since last week's event.
  • Where the call is defenestrate gay men, or throw them off roofs, then my desire for unity and tolerance of compromises evaporates. Or any other form of "traditional" hatred. That's just the example closest to my heart.
  • That one verse of John's gospel has compromised the preaching of a gospel of love more than any others.
  • Alan29Alan29 Shipmate
    People use religion to bolster their existing prejudices, and to bolster their tribalism. They use anything, and religion is just another example.
  • Oh I entirely agree with that. I just don't think that unity should be used to create a union of bigots against a world of "sin", i.e. love.
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