Part, Chapter, Paragraph
1 I,Intro | Catholicism without the Pope, but something quite dis-~
2 I,Intro | discussed theology with the Pope and Cardinals at Rome, yet ~
3 I,Intro | Catholic ~Church under the Pope of Rome; in the Byzantine
4 I,Intro | equivalent position to the Pope in the Roman Catholic Church.
5 I, 2,2 | Lateran Council (1215) did the Pope formally recog-~nize Constantinople.
6 I, 2,2 | of Saint Leo the Great, Pope of Rome (died 461), ~in
7 I, 2,2 | supremacy.. Orthodox regard the Pope as ~the bishop .who presides
8 I, 2,2 | with confidence to the Pope. Not only the Bishop of
9 I, 2,2 | Patriarchs, so with the Pope: the primacy assigned to
10 I, 2,2 | equality of all bishops. The Pope is the first bishop in the
11 I, 3,1 | two other legates of the Pope entered the building and ~
12 I, 3,1 | Day in the year 800 the Pope crowned Charles the Great,
13 I, 3,1 | east acknowl-~edged the Pope as the first bishop in the
14 I, 3,1 | monarchy . the monarchy of the Pope. ~ This initial divergence
15 I, 3,1 | force ~of circumstances, the Pope assumed a part which the
16 I, 3,1 | invasions. Now so long as the Pope ~claimed an absolute power
17 I, 3,1 | interfere in the ~east. The Pope, however, believed his immediate
18 I, 3,1 | The Greeks assigned to the Pope a primacy of honor, but
19 I, 3,1 | regarded as his due. The Pope viewed infallibility as
20 I, 3,1 | decision rested not with the Pope ~alone, but with a Council
21 I, 3,1 | eleventh century. In 808 Pope Leo III wrote in a letter
22 I, 3,1 | quarrel between Photius and Pope Nicholas I (usually known
23 I, 3,2 | involved in a dispute with Pope Nicho-~ 27~las I (858-867).
24 I, 3,2 | Photius sent a letter to the Pope announcing his ~accession,
25 I, 3,2 | and sent no answers to the Pope.s letters. Thus an ~open
26 I, 3,2 | Nicholas was a great reforming Pope, with an ~exalted idea of
27 I, 3,2 | in a letter of 865, the Pope is endowed with authority .
28 I, 3,2 | appeal to Rome, and the Pope, if he sees cause, can order
29 I, 3,2 | not to be conducted by the Pope himself at Rome, but by
30 I, 3,2 | Constantinople, which declared Pope Nicholas excom-~municate,
31 I, 3,2 | remained unbroken. The ~Pope at this time, John VIII (
32 I, 3,2 | 1009, the newly-elected Pope Ser-~gius IV sent a letter
33 I, 3,2 | did not in-~clude the new Pope.s name in the Diptychs:
34 I, 3,2 | with him. After 1009 the ~Pope.s name did not appear again
35 I, 3,2 | before 1009 often ~lacked the Pope.s name, simply because new
36 I, 3,2 | forgot why and when the Pope.s name had first been dropped
37 I, 3,2 | men such as Hildebrand (Pope Gregory VII) it gained a
38 I, 3,2 | ciliatory attitude and wrote to Pope Leo IX, offering to restore
39 I, 3,2 | offering to restore the Pope.s name to the Diptychs. ~
40 I, 3,2 | Thrusting a letter from the Pope at him, they retired without
41 I, 4,1 | immediate ~protection of the Pope. Cyril.s action in appealing
42 I, 4,1 | the Germans ig-~nored the Pope.s decision and obstructed
43 I, 4,3 | the jurisdiction of the Pope. This was the very period
44 I, 4,3 | replied to messengers from the Pope. ..The ~tradition of the
45 I, 5,2 | Orthodox ~submit to the Pope. With the arrival of the
46 I, 5,2 | to submit en bloc to the Pope, and the .union. could then
47 I, 5,2 | recognized the supremacy of the Pope, but were allowed to keep
48 I, 5,2 | matter by saying that the Pope had now joined the Orthodox
49 I, 7,3 | is known officially as .Pope and Patri-~arch.: in Orthodox
50 I, 7,3 | Orthodox usage, the title .Pope. is not limited solely to
51 II, 0,12 | the Orthodox Patriarchs to Pope Pius the Ninth (1848)~6~
52 II, 0,12 | Synod of Constantinople to Pope Leo the Thirteenth (1895)~
53 II, 2,1 | universal~jurisdiction of the Pope, Orthodoxy thinks in terms
54 II, 2,2 | principle in the~Church is the Pope whose jurisdiction extends
55 II, 2,3 | their Letter of 1848 to Pope Pius the Ninth: ‘Among~us,
56 II, 2,3 | statement, Khomiakov wrote: ‘The Pope is greatly mistaken in supposing~
57 II, 2,3 | other in the person of the~Pope — though they do not thereby
58 II, 2,4 | proclaimed as a dogma by Pope Pius the~Ninth in 1854,
59 II, 2,4 | Assumption (Immediately after the Pope proclaimed the Assumption~
60 II, 6,2 | the infallibility of the Pope; but the~Roman Catholic
61 II, 6,2 | they speak only of the Pope and his prerogatives,~but
62 II, 6,2 | Orthodox agree~that the Pope is first among bishops:
63 II, 6,2 | willing to ascribe to the Pope a~universal supremacy of ‘
64 II, 6,2 | suggested two formulae. ‘The Pope, among the bishops,~is the
65 II, 6,2 | father being absent.’ ‘The Pope is the mouth of the Church
66 II, 6,2 | increasing~year by year. Pope Paul the Sixth and Patriarch
67 II, 6,2 | Constantinople; in 1979 Pope John Paul the Second visited
|