Orthodox relations.Thank you for Margaret O'Gara's article on Pope Benedict XVI Movement toward unity or cooperation among the Christian churches. The first major step in the direction of ecumenism was the International Missionary Conference of 1910, a gathering of Protestants. ("Ecumenism's Future," July 15). Regarding relations with Orthodoxy, there is a passage in one of Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger's books that offers some intriguing possibilities. In Principles of Catholic Theology: Building Stones for a Fundamental Theology (Ignatius Press Ignatius Press was founded in 1978 by Father Joseph Fessio SJ, a Jesuit priest and former pupil of Pope Benedict XVI [1]. Ignatius Press, named for Ignatius Loyola, founder of the Jesuit Order, is a Catholic publishing house headquartered in San Francisco, California. ) Ratzinger writes: "As far as the doctrine of the primacy is concerned, Rome must not require more of the East than was formulated and lived during the first millennium. When Patriarch Athenagoras, on the occasion of the visit of the pope to the Phanar on July 25, 1967, addressed him as 'the successor of Peter, the first in honor among us, the one who has the presidency in love,' we hear from the mouth of the great church leader the essential content of the first millennium's statement about the primacy--and Rome must demand no more than this. Reunion could take place on this basis: that for its part the East should renounce attacking the Western development of the second millennium as heretical he·ret·i·cal adj. 1. Of or relating to heresy or heretics. 2. Characterized by, revealing, or approaching departure from established beliefs or standards. , and should accept the Catholic Church as legitimate and orthodox in the form which it has found through this development, while, for its part, the West should acknowledge the church of the East as orthodox and legitimate in the form which it has maintained." This implies that the Roman Church would have to recognize that all its councils since 1054 have not been true ecumenical councils but rather local councils of the Western Church and thus not universally binding. Paul VI paved the way for this development when, on the seven-hundredth anniversary of the Council of Lyon The Council of Lyon refers to either the 13th or 14th ecumenical councils of the Roman Catholic Church, both held in Lyon, France during the 13th century:
n. 1. The territory, rule, or rank of a patriarch. 2. See patriarchy. patriarchate Noun the office, jurisdiction or residence of a patriarch Noun . JERRY RYAN Winthrop, Mass. |
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