13 April 2020

Surprising, but True: The Western Church Actually Originated From the Eastern Church

Remember, before he was Bishop of Rome and the first Pope, St Peter was Bishop of Antioch, a Church which still celebrates an Eastern Rite, the Antiochene.

BTW, Mr Rolfes needs a remedial maths course! 9/36 is not 'nearly 1/3'. It is exactly 1/4!

From uCatholic  

By Phillip Rolfes


“The Latin church originated from the Greek church as a branch grows from a tree trunk.”
I’ll admit, that quote stopped me dead in my tracks when I first read it. I had to go back and read it a few times to really let it sink in. And the surprising thing? It was written by a Roman Catholic cardinal!
The full quote comes from the book The Spirituality of the Christian East by Tomas Cardinal Spidlik (a book I highly recommend if you’re at all interested in diving into the spirituality of the Christian East). “We must stress one principle and stress it hard” he says, “the Latin church originated from the Greek church as a branch grows from a tree trunk. The Church was implanted by the Greeks and expressed itself in the greek [sic] language until the end of the fourth century.”
We in the 21st century have become so accustomed to equating the Catholic Church with the Roman Catholic Church, using those two titles synonymously, that reading such a statement can be jarring at first. After all, the Church in Rome has, for so long, held the central role of influence over the Catholic Church, it’s easy for us to fall into the misunderstanding that our Faith originated in Rome.
But nothing can be further from the truth.
Pope St. John Paul II reminded us of this in his Apostolic Letter Orientale Lumen. In it he says, “My gaze turns to the Orientale Lumen (Jesus Christ) which shines from Jerusalem, the city where the Word of God, made man for our salvation… died and rose again.” The saintly pope then reminded us that it was from Jerusalem that the Church spread first throughout the Greek-speaking Mediterranean and Asia Minor, before making its way into the heart of the Roman Empire, Rome itself.
And, as the Second Vatican Council was very adamant to remind us, the basic beliefs of the Catholic Faith that we profess every Sunday in the Creed (more properly known as the Nicene or Nicene-Constantinopolitan Creed) were hammered out in the East: “the basic dogmas of the Christian faith concerning the Trinity and the Word of God made flesh from the Virgin Mary were defined in ecumenical councils held in the east.”
It was in the Greek-speaking East that our beliefs about God as Trinity, the relationship between Jesus’ divine and human natures, our understanding of the Holy Spirit, and our belief in Mary as the Mother of God were formed. And to this day you can hear remnants of this Greek influence in the Roman Catholic Mass every time you sing Kyrie eleison, Christe eleison. Those are Greek phrases!
Finally, take a quick look at the 36 “Doctors of the Church,” those theologians whom Rome itself has said have had a formative impact on the Church’s thought. You’ll find that nearly 1/3 of them are from the East:
1. Athanasius
2. Basil the Great
3. Cyril of Alexandria
4. Cyril of Jerusalem
5. Ephraim (of Nisibis) the Syrian
6. Gregory Nazianzus
7. John Chrysostom
8. John of Damascus
9. Gregory of Narek (an Armenian)
That’s 9 out of 36 Doctors of the Church who come from the East! And, as a side note, St. Thomas Aquinas himself often quotes St. John of Damascus in his Summa Theologiae—referring to him affectionately as “the Damascene.”
So is Tomas Cardinal Spidlik’s comment at the beginning of this article an exaggeration? The Church doesn’t think so! Which is why Pope St. John Paul II himself said that “the first need for Catholics is to be familiar with that (the Eastern) tradition,” and that the “members of the Catholic Church of the Latin tradition must also be fully acquainted with this treasure.”

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