Eric B said:
The stuff with Cyril, the jealousy over others' position, misconstruing Nestorius' position, and the emperor so involved in Church affairs, which is not in itself necesarily corruption, but it shows the secular political nature of the Church by then.
Assuming any of this was true, which seems disputed, it hardly indicates a general corruption of the Church if some bishop did something wrong or whatever. My goodness, if that is a general corruption of the church, what do we say about protestants with Jimmy Swaggart etc?
The groups I referred to as agreeing to disagree generally aren't accusing each other of idolatry.
Most of them aren't, but with Orthodoxy they are!!! What are you going to do about that??
I didn't deny he said that. Still, if you have never heard of that used as an argument for the Papacy, I don't know where you've been. The pope is a bishop who rules over all the other offices, and they believe it goes back to Peter.
Yes but none of that is in Ignatius.. There is no mention of a bishop ruling all the other offices or a pope or Peter etc. There is no argument here and you're trying to create one where none exists.
You still assert this with no real proof, as if just slapping on the name "orthodox" is proof in itself.
One would think if they weren't Orthodox some protestant would have proved it by now. I can't prove a negative.
And how do you determine that the calendar was not dogma? Those favoring Easter Sunday certainly seemed to be dogmatic about it, and all such Jewish sabbath practices were later condemned in the councils. (Another example of the corruption I was talking about, above) Once again, it is a cycle; of using "dogma" to define tradition. Yet tradition defines dogma!
It's the same as with the canon. How do you know the canon is dogma? How do you know the canon is apostolic? How do you know the Church didn't get it wrong? The objections are the same, and the response is the same.
And that's what I was trying to say. But you are the one who spoke of people leaving and then having never really been in the Church to begin with. Whether you call a patriarchate an abstraction or not, it is still a whole section of the Church, and all the individuals in it, who have broken communion with the East.
A break in communion doesn't necessarily put any side out of the Church. It is a break in communion plus a major shift in dogma. In the case of the Roman schism, the break in communion allowed the West easier ability to go off unfettered making new dogma, but it doesn't mean that anybody in the West in say 1054 immediately changed their beliefs. Possibly the next generation for example may have been more and more off track.
As for the icons, you keep using as an excuse 1)that figures were used in the OT Temple and 2)we have pictures of loved ones. But a figure commanded directly by God is different from a picture we draw, and nobody even knows what Mary and the others look like (unless you belive there was a graphic/visual 'tradition' passed down as well). So what is the point of having some fictional cartoon, basically, and caling it a saint, and then praying to it? In all of this, we forget the scripture where John twice bowed to the angel speaking to him and was told "do not do that...worship God!" According to you, the angel should have accepted the "reverence", or whatver. And a picture of a loved one is not for religious veneration, so I do not see how that even compares.
Well hang on now, I didn't ask you if you like icons, I asked if they were acceptable and if you can commune with Christians that use them. I'll address your concerns, but that's the real question I want you to answer. Since you say Orthodoxy is a legitmate Church, I think you really have to say it is acceptable don't you?
As for your comments. the OT iconsgraphy at least indicates that the Jews had a nuanced understanding of images. It wasn't just "images = bad". It was only images worshipped as a false god.
This is a cultural thing. Imagine for a second that an important respected person visited your church. I reckon what would happen is you'd gather together for a group photo, then you'd have a meal, and people would go around snapping photos. The next week you'd come and find the photos pinned up on the notice board. And nobody would make a murmur about idolatry.
Well they didn't have cameras back then, but the thinking was the same and the culture was the same, both Jew and Christian. And their thinking was nuanced enough to distinguish between unlawful images of false Gods, and normal everyday images, and images used for other legitimate purposes.
As for not knowing what Mary looked like, icons are very deliberately non-realistic. Perspective is reversed, and things are drawn to make a theological statement.
Concerning bowing, Orthodox bow to each other, living or dead. The priest bows to the congregation, the congregation bows to the priest. We're not doing anything to the dead that we wouldn't do to the living. It's just a cultural thing again. Do you object to the Japanese culture of bowing when you meet someone?
As for a picture of a loved one not being for "religious veneration", what is religious veneration? If loved ones are not venerated "religiously", then neither are the saints. You're going to have to clarify what you mean.