pouts
My parents never elected me Pope!
pouts
My parents never elected me Pope!
Urban II.
Don’t just stand their pouting, appoint yourself. What do you need votes for? Religious leaders aren’t usually democratically elected and I see no reason for you to be an exception.
Yeah, but it’s the thought that counts.
I think the Catholic Church has been Sedevacantic since AD 381 when they allowed those that believe in God ex nihilo to be practicing Catholics. Fucking Second Ecumenical Council (Constantinople II)
Wow! I never had heard of the existence of this theological issue and had to look it up. Interesting and makes sense, by the way.
Sorry for not explaining more since those who don’t know any better than I did are probably left wondering, but I can’t really try to explain something I learnt the very basics of 5 minutes ago.
I don’t know this subject very well, but I have two questions:
By “believe in God ex nihilo,” do you mean that they believe in God’s emergence from nothing, or that their belief comes from nowhere, as opposed to being informed by catechism (or whatever they did in the 4th century)?
Whatever the answer to the first question is, how does it conflict with Catholic doctrine, either then or now?
I’m thinking a fenced compound that was built to stop people “escaping” inside.
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In the early Church, the believe that God had always been, infinite in time and unchangable. The question that involved the Arianism heresy and the ecumenical councils’ handling of that situation was if the Son and the Holy Ghost were likewise timeless and of the same substance as the Father. Arianism and its derivatives said no and the Church said yes.
The Nicene Creed condemned those that held heretical views but the condemnation was taken out of the second Creed. Was it editing? I think not because the 150 Bishops published
It is ALMOST saying the same but IMO allows a little wiggle room that allowed for the Church to take back relapsed heretics that could not accept the Trinity as One but Three. Perhaps God ex nihilo is not a good phrase but rather changable Jesus. Getting back to the OP, I was playing with the idea that changing a policy or clarifying a position = the Church leadership is invalidated is ridiculous.
Given that this is entirely your interpretation, and that all Trinitarians today still hold the old belief (which is virtually every Christian everywhere) unchanged, I would submit you’re being a little crankish. I certainly wouldn’t read the creed as being any less opposed to Arianism, but simply not making a specific point of it. The Creed is a positive statement, not a negative denial of specific heresies.
This is intended to define their relationship, not depict their status.
I think the Arian heresies and early Church reaction are pretty well documented so i’m pretty sure this is the standard interpretation. And the original Nicene Creed did explicitly condemn the heretical view that the Father existed for a time before the Son and that condemnation was taken out of the Creed in 381.
And don’t forget that the second Ecumenical Council was exclusively eastern (the Pope did not participate) and that the Athanasian Creed was floating around the Eastern Church about that time which does say that the trinity is three people of the same godhead and as a direct response to Arianism explicitly states all three in the Trinity are co-eternal. This last element is exactly the part taken out of the second Creed but later took the dogmatic definition of the Trinity so if a person today believes that there existed for a time the Father (or maybe the Father and the Holy Spirit) without the Son then yes they are technially heretics.
I was aware of this debate, but when I looked up “ex nihilo”, I found an entirely different issue : namely that god didn’t create the universe ex nihilo, but rather from something, like a primordial chaos. I now forgot what interesting issues I thought it raised, but here’s the wiki page