Why I'm Not Eastern Orthodox...
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Welcome back to Samus Pulri. I'm Joe
Heshmire and I spend a lot of time on
this channel responding to objections
raised against Catholicism by Protestant
apologists or by non-Christians. And I
think because of that, a significant
portion of my audience is actually
Orthodox. Now, as a Catholic, I'm very
grateful to have you here. We have a lot
of areas of agreement, as I think the
rest of my videos show. I also know
though that many of the people watching
this channel might be Protestants who
are right now discerning whether they're
meant to remain Protestant or become
Orthodox or become Catholic. And that
can be a heavy question to discern. So
today I want to address that question
outright. Why be Catholic and non-eern
orthodox oriental Orthodox? So we're
going to look at some of the areas we
disagree. And I'm going to actually
answer this by telling you my reasons.
Now other people have their own lists.
My reasons may or may not click for you.
I hope you'll let me know either way in
the comments. And speaking of clicking,
if you click on the link in the
description below to shamelessjo.com,
that's my Patreon. You can get bonuses
there like had free episodes and Q&As's
for as little as $5 a month. And by the
way, special thank you to McKenzie over
on Patreon for asking me to make this
episode. Now, I'm grateful both to her
and for everybody supporting this
channel over at shamelessjoe.com. So
let's begin with four areas where I
think Catholics and Orthodox at least
broadly speaking agree. First of all, we
reject the idea of self-shepering sheep.
There's this model of Christianity
associated with Protestantism in which
the individual searching for the right
church has to first settle all the big
theological questions for themselves and
then once they figured out their own
interpretation of everything in the
Bible, they find the denomination or the
church that best agrees with them. But
this approach is not biblically sound.
Nobody in the Bible behaves like this.
Worse, it results in the individual
sheep of the flock of Christ shephering
themselves instead of being led by the
shepherds that God has given to us.
Second, this is a heavy burden to place
on somebody. Go get your PhD in
theology. Go settle the Reformation and
the Great Schism. Child's play, right?
And then, and only then, you can be sure
you're joining the right church. Well,
third, this approach also doesn't work
very well in real life. Father George
Masterton Tonus, a Greek Orthodox
theologian, points out that the church,
not you, is infallible. So trusting in
yourself and your interpretation, that's
not going to work. And is in fact how
you get a bunch of different
denominations teaching contradictory
doctrines. So if your answer to the
question, should I be Orthodox or should
I be Catholic? Requires advanced
theology or obscure church history, I
suspect that you're making it too
complicated.
Second area of common ground. Ecumenical
councils are really important. When a
theological controversy breaks out in
Acts chapter 15, the church meets the
council, settles it, and does so
speaking on behalf of the Holy Spirit.
Both Catholics and Orthodox recognize
ecumenical councils as a means by which
the Holy Spirit speaks infallibly
through the visible church. Simple
enough. Third area of common ground.
When Jesus founds the visible church, he
makes St. Peter the leader of the other
apostles. Now, I've said this before as
a place where Catholics and Orthodox
actually agree. And some commenters
disagreed and they didn't like that too
much. But the Orthodox Church in
America, for instance, refers to the
holy, glorious, and all praised leaders
of the apostles, Peter and Paul. And
they honor their joint feast day with a
reading from St. Augustine in which he
says that Jesus entrusted his flock to
St. Peter in John 21 because Peter was
first among the apostles and as such the
representative of the church. Besides
which, having turned in this instance to
Peter alone as to the top apostle,
Christ by this confirms the unity of the
church. So we agree on this. There's
some sense in which St. Peter is the top
apostle. He can speak on behalf of the
whole church and this confirms the unity
of the church. That brings us to the
fourth area of common ground. Both east
and west have always recognized that
Peter and Paul establish the church of
Rome and that this church somehow
continues in a role of leadership
presiding over the other churches. Now,
there's plenty of disagreement about
what that's meant to look like, but
history is too clear to deny it
entirely. So, for instance, the Greek
speaking Saint Irenaeus, who grew up in
the church of Smyrna in the east,
described how the church of Rome was
founded by St. Peter and St. Paul, and
that is a matter of necessity that every
church should agree with this church on
account of its preeminent authority.
Now, that was in 180, but we see that
authority exercised all throughout
church history. So for instance in the
mid-300s there's this fight over
christologology between theians in
Antioch and St. Athanasius of Alexandria
and Ucius writes to the pope and tries
to get him to call a council and to be
himself the judge if he's so pleased to
condemn Athanasius. Well, Pope Julius
writes back rebuking Ucius and the
Antiochians for not writing to him
sooner and asking if they're somehow
ignorant that had they had doubts about
Athanasius's orthodoxy, they were
supposed to first write to Rome and then
await a just verdict on the matter. St.
Cyprian of Carthage referred to this
kind of practice of taking disputes to
Rome as going to the throne of Peter and
to the chief church whence priestly
unity takes its source. So look, a
simple positive Catholic case would be
this. Jesus establishes Peter as the
leader of the apostles. Not so that
Peter is going to boss everybody around
all the time, but so there would be both
a visible leader and a visible sign of
unity. So you knew if you were in union
with Peter, you were in union with the
visible church. And this sign of unity
continues on with Peter's successors,
the popes of Rome. Now that connection
is made pretty explicitly by early
Christians like St. Octatus in the 300s.
If we're in union with the church of
Rome, we're in union with the visible
church. That's why, as Irenaeus had said
before, it's a matter of necessity that
every church should agree with this
church. But okay, let's say you reject
all that. You decide that no, whatever
may have been the case in the early days
of the church, we can no longer trust
the church of Rome. Now, in that case,
where should we go? You might say become
Orthodox, but that's really not a good
enough answer. So for instance, should I
become Eastern Orthodox or should I
become oriental orthodox? Both Catholics
and Eastern Orthodox accept the council
of Calcedon, which taught that Christ is
one person with two natures, human and
divine. The Oriental Orthodox reject
Paladon is a false council, referring
instead to the one nature of Christ that
is both fully human and fully divine. So
to resolve the eastern verse oriental
question, do I need to go do a deep dive
on the differences between
monophysitism, diophysitism, and
neophysitism and figure out which side I
think is correct? Because that sounds
very much like the kind of
self-shepering that we should rightly
reject. On the other hand, maybe you
just say, well, we'll decide it
geographically. If you live in Serbia,
you join the Serbian Orthodox Church and
accept Calcedon. If you live in Armenia,
you join the Armenian Orthodox Church