Sunday, November 27, 2022

Erick Ybarra on Roman Catholic Claims only winning out Eastern Orthodox Claims by a Narrow Margin

 The following notes come from

 

Erick Ybarra, The Papacy: Revisiting the Debate Between Catholics and Orthodox (Steubenville, Ohio: Emmaus Road, 2022)

 

As the reader can guess, this entire book is a publication seeking to revisit the debate on the subject of the papacy between Catholics and Orthodox. Admittedly, when I commenced my studies, I had thought the case for Catholicism was far more compelling than any case for Orthodoxy could afford. As of now, I am thoroughly convinced that this debate is not concluded with a first round knockout for either side. I now sense that if Catholicism does win this debate, it only wins going the full distance of twelve rounds and by a remarkably close call. This is because the Byzantine claims can be well supported by good historical evidence. (p. xvi)

 

[in summarizing the Pre-Nicene evidence for the Papacy]:

 

. . . the historical is left with a number of explanations, none of which needs to be the logic of the First Vatican Council. This does not mean that they were unaware of a theory of Roman primacy that accords with the Vatican Council. My observations here are simply in light of the limited amount of data and documentary evidence that exists today which we can reconstruct the beliefs of the pre-Nicene era. (p. 157)

  

. . . there is still criteria of falsification that would disprove the papacy and therefore Catholicism. And here is explained why, if Catholicism wins the debates, it is by milligrams and not a landslide. If it could ever be shown, as St. John H. Newman admitted, that the magisterium of the Catholic Church has contradicted itself in the solemn pronouncements on faith or morals, then everything written in this book, or in any book, in defence of Catholicism would immediately shatter to pieces. And to be both honest and fair, I have surveyed at least two major instances that the Orthodox can choose that would make a big problem for Catholics, namely, the events surrounding both Pope Honorius and Pope Vigilius, especially their seeming subjection to the authority of ecumenical councils. In particular, the Fifth Council, as I noted in the relevant chapter, comes very close to favoring some kind of conciliarism over papalism by its eighth session, rejecting that one person, the pope in particular, can determine the faith of the whole Church by his own individual decrees. On the contrary, they look to the Apostles and the Fathers and see the tradition, which says that final decisions must be made altogether with the brethren in councils.

 

There is this, and there is also the hypothetical situation that the Orthodox can pose about what happens when the pope himself becomes a source of disunity? I have provided my reflections on this, but I must be candid in saying the Orthodox have many solid punches that land clean in this debate over primacy. This calls to mind the relatively simple yet profound criticisms levelled against papal infallibility by the late French Cistercian monk who converted to Eastern Orthodoxy from Catholicism, Archimandrite Placide (Deseille) Simonopetritis, in his Stages of a Pilgrimage. On the sentence of the Sixth Council against Honorius, he wrote: “In any case, a similar condemnation of a pope would be unthinkable today. One must thus admit that there has been an evolution” (“Stages of a Pilgrimage,” in The Living Witness of the Holy Mountain, ed. Hieromonk Alexander Golitzin [South Canaan, PA: St. Tikhon’s Seminary, 1996] 81). Who can deny the force of that? On top of this, each and every time the pope was suspected of being guilty of heresy in the first millennium, even the bishops of the West, not to mention the East, felt no anxiety over removing the pope’s name from the diptychs of communion. Could we picture something like this happening today? (Perhaps further light on this will be shed when the Church looks more upon what to do in the case of an overtly heretical pope) What these actions show is that sizable portions of the Church were not convinced of an invincible rule that one had to be in communion with the pope of Rome for their eternal salvation. Otherwise, they would have avoided severance from unity with the Apostolic See just like one would avoid denying the name of Christ before his persecutors. And with that single element gone, potentially the whole doctrine of the papacy is ground to powder. We also saw the peculiar case of St. Maximum the Confessor who originally pressed hard on the a priori infallibility of Rome, but when pushed under trial, perhaps against his will, he seems to indicate that he was willing to sever his unity with the See of Rome if the latter caved in to union with heretics.

 

These are powerful points to consider, and Catholics should not wave them off. On the other hand, the Orthodox might have good points to make on Vigilius and Honorius but then there is an issue with their wholesale rejection of something their Fathers and saints held to be traditional orthodoxy, namely, the essential Petrine-Roman constitution of universal primacy. (pp. 689-91)

 

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