9.
One
particular aspect of Church life that the textbook often brings out is the
contribution which each individual Church center made to theology in ancient times.
Each center put forth understandings and approaches to understandings which
were often synthesized at the General Councils, guided by the Holy Spirit. What
were the two theological focal points which separated Rome from this harmonious
system?
(1) Papal claims of universal
jurisdiction and unlimited sovereignty over the Universal Church. Rome's spirit of lust for
power and its papal pretenses were contrary to the traditions and customs of
the Church, for, as noted earlier, the
Church is not and never was monarchical in structure, centered around a single bishop. In spite of that fact, however,
the pope became an absolute dictator set up over the Western Church,
one who issued orders not only to his ecclesiastical subordinates, but to
secular rulers as well. As one writer notes, the medieval Frankish-Teutonic
conception of the pope entails the greatest adulteration of Christianity and
was the source of further distortion of Christianity in the West.
The Vatican still maintains that papal primacy is
beyond question. On June 9, 2000, the pope approved a
so-called “Note” of one Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger. This “Note” states that “no
Roman pontiff ever recognized... [an]... equalization of sees or accepted that
only a primacy of honor be accorded to the see of Rome.” A similar document
titled Dominus Iesus was published on
September
5, 2000, by the Vatican's
Congregation for the Doctrine of Faith (formerly the Office of the Inquisition). Both statements are an attempt to
seduce people into Rome's web of deceit concerning papal primacy and the primacy of the Latin
Church.
(2) The matter of Rome's addition of the
word filioque to the Creed. This
change of wording in the Creed was introduced in the early medieval Western Church
some centuries before the separation of Rome from the Universal Church. Rome took it upon itself
to change the Creed without consulting the rest of the Church, and the addition
had ruinous effects upon Western theology.
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