Title: Servants Preparation Program
1- Servants Preparation Program
- CMP 102, Denominations
2The Catholic Church After Vatican II
- And you shall know the truth, and the truth
shall make you free. - (John 832)
- Fr. Marcus Mansour
- St. Mark Coptic Orthodox Church
- Phoenix, Arizona
- Servants Preparation 2005-2006
3Introduction
- In addition to the dogmatic differences we
discussed in the previous lecture, the Catholic
Church has introduced new concepts in
understanding their faith during its last
Catholic Council known as Vatican II, 1964-1968. - Careful study of these new concepts is a must
before entering into any dialogue with the
Catholic Church.
4The Catholic Church After Vatican II
- 1. Faith and Reason
- The Roman Catholic Church places a high value on
human reason. Its history shows the consequence
of that trust. - For example, in the Latin Middle Ages, the 13th
century, the theologian-philosopher, Thomas
Aquinas, joined "Christianity" with the
philosophy of Aristotle. - From that period till now, the Latins have never
wavered in their respect for human wisdom, and it
has radically altered the theology, mysteries and
institutions of the Christian religion.
5The Catholic Church after Vatican II Faith and
Reason
- Following the Holy Fathers, Orthodoxy uses
science and philosophy to defend and explain her
faith. - Unlike Roman Catholicism, she does not build on
the results of philosophy and science. - The Church does not seek to reconcile faith and
reason. She makes no effort to prove by logic or
science what Christ gave His followers to
believe. - If physics or biology or chemistry or philosophy
lends support to the teachings of the Church, she
does not refuse them. - However, Orthodoxy is not intimidated by man's
intellectual accomplishments. She does not bow to
them and change the Christian Faith to make it
consistent with the results of human thought and
science.
6The Catholic Church after Vatican II Faith and
Reason
- St. Basil the Great advised young monks to use
Greek philosophy as a bee uses the flower. - Take only the honey, the truth, which God has
planted in the world to prepare men for the
Coming of the Lord. - However, the Catholic Church does not mind
teaching that the story of creation in the book
of Genesis is merely symbolism in order to
reconcile with the theory of evolution.
7The Catholic Church after Vatican II The
Development of Doctrine
- The teaching of the Church has always been that
Christianity has remained unaltered from the
moment that the Lord delivered the Faith to the
Apostles (Matt 2818-20). - She affirms that "the faith once delivered to the
saints" (Jude 3) is now what it was in the
beginning.
8The Catholic Church after Vatican II The
Development of Doctrine
- On the other hand, the Roman Catholic Church is
unable to show a continuity of faith. - In order to justify new doctrine, it erected in
the last century, a theory of doctrinal
development. - Basically, Catholicism began to define and teach
the idea that Christ only gave us an original
deposit of faith, a seed, which grew and
matured through the centuries.
9The Catholic Church after Vatican II The
Development of Doctrine
- The Holy Spirit, they said, amplified the
Christian Faith as the Church moved into new
circumstances and acquired other needs. - Consequently, Roman Catholicism pictures its
theology as growing in stages, to higher and more
clearly defined levels of knowledge. - The teachings of the Fathers, as important as
they are, belong to a stage or level below the
theology of the Latin Middle Ages
(Scholasticism), and that theology is lower than
the new ideas which have come after it, such as
Vatican II.
10The Catholic Church after Vatican II The
Development of Doctrine
- All the stages are useful, all are resources the
theologian may appeal to the Fathers, for
example, but they may also be contradicted by
something else, something higher or newer. - On this basis, theories such as the dogmas of
papal infallibility and the immaculate
conception of the Virgin Mary are justifiably
presented to the faithful as necessary for their
salvation.
11The Catholic Church after Vatican II The
Development of Doctrine
- On the other hand, Orthodoxy recognizes external
changes (e.g., vestments of clergy, monastic
habits, new feasts, canons of ecumenical and
regional councils, etc.), but nothing has been
added or subtracted from her Faith. - The external changes have a single purpose To
express that Faith under new circumstances. - For example, the Bible and divine services were
translated from Hebrew and Greek into the
language of new lands, or new religious customs
arose to express the ethnic sensibilities of the
converted peoples, etc. - Nevertheless, there has always been "one faith,
one Lord, one baptism" (Eph 44).
12The Catholic Church after Vatican II God
- Roman Catholicism teaches that human reason can
prove that God is, and, even infer that He is
eternal, infinite, good, bodiless, almighty,
all-knowing, etc. He is a most real being, a
true being. Humans are like Him (analogous),
but we are imperfect beings. - The God of Roman Catholicism, born in the Latin
Middle Ages, is not the God of Abraham, Isaac
and Jacob, but the God of the savants and the
philosophers, to adapt the celebrated phrase of
Blaise Pascal (1623-1662).
13The Catholic Church after Vatican II God
- Following the Holy Fathers, Orthodoxy teaches
that the knowledge of God is planted in human
nature and that is how we know Him to exist. - Otherwise, unless God speaks to us, human reason
cannot know more. The saving knowledge of God
comes by the Savior. - Speaking to His Father, He said, And this is
life eternal, that they might know You, the only
true God, and Jesus Christ, whom You have sent
(John 173).
14The Catholic Church after Vatican II God
- Roman Catholicism teaches, also, that, in the Age
to Come, man will, with his intellect and with
the assistance of grace, behold the Essence of
God. - However, the Fathers declare that it is
impossible to behold God in Himself. Not even
divine grace will give us such power. - The saved will see, however, God as the glorified
flesh of Christ.
15The Catholic Church after Vatican II God
- Finally, Roman Catholicism teaches that the Holy
Spirit proceeds from the Father and the Son
(filioque). - In so doing, it spurned the Apostolic Tradition
which always taught that God the Father is the
single Source (monarchy) of the Son and the
Spirit. - Thus, the Latins added words to the Nicean Creed.
They made this change on the authority of the
Pope, in the 11th century, not via a Council of
the whole Church (Ecumenical Council).
16The Catholic Church after Vatican II The Church
- The Roman Catholic view of the Church
(ecclesiology) differs from the Orthodox teaching
on this subject in several ways. - The Latins teach that the visible head of the
Church is the Pope, the successor to St. Peter,
who was appointed to that sacred position by the
Lord Himself with the words, you are Peter and
upon this rock I shall build my Church . . .
(Mat 1618).
17The Catholic Church after Vatican II The Church
- According to their understanding
- The Pope is then, the Bishop of the Catholic
Church, her teacher, the vicar (agent, deputy)
of Christ on earth. - He is the interpreter of the Christian Tradition.
- When he speaks for the whole Church from his
throne (ex cathedra), the Holy Spirit does not
permit him to err. - He is, therefore, infallible on matters of morals
and doctrine. Other bishops are his lieutenants.
He is the symbol of the episcopate's unity.
18The Catholic Church after Vatican II The Church
- The Orthodox Church, on the other hand, teaches
that all bishops are equal. To be sure, there are
different ranks of bishops (patriarch,
archbishop, metropolitan, bishop) nevertheless,
a bishop is a bishop. - Such differences apply to the administration of a
church or group of churches, not to the nature of
the bishop. - The president of a synod of bishops is called
archbishop (Greek custom) or metropolitan
(Russian custom).
19The Catholic Church after Vatican II The Church
- According to Latin ecclesiology, each local
parish is part of the universal or whole Church.
The totalities of Catholic parishes form the body
of Christ on earth. This visible body has a
visible head, the Pope. - This idea of the Church implies that the local
parish has two heads the Pope and the local
bishop. But a body with two visible heads is a
monster. - Also, the local bishop seems stripped of his
apostolic authority if the Pope may contradict
his orders.
20The Catholic Church after Vatican II The Holy
Canons
- A canon is a rule or guide for governing the
Church. - Canons were composed by the Apostles, the
Fathers, the local or regional and general or
ecumenical Councils. - Only the bishop, as head of the church, applies
them. He may use them strictly (akreveia) or
leniently (economia). However, strictness is
the norm.
21The Catholic Church after Vatican II The Holy
Canons
- The Catholic Church continues to change its
canons, ignoring the old for the new. - Not more than two decades ago, Rome revised its
Canon Law. It composed new canons to keep up with
the times. - On the other hand, Orthodoxy, albeit adding
canons from time to time and place to place,
never discards the old ones, for they, too, are
inspired by the Holy Spirit. - In any case, human problems and spiritual needs
do not really change. New canons are generally
simple refinements of old canons.
22The Catholic Church after Vatican II The Nature
of Man
- Human nature was created good, even in communion
with the blessed Trinity which made him. Male
and female were created in the image and
likeness of God (Gen 126) - likeness in virtue image meaning to rule
the earth rationally, to act wisely and freely. - The woman was made as a helper to the man (Gen
218 1 Cor 118-9). They were to live together
in harmony and mutual respect.
23The Catholic Church after Vatican II The Nature
of Man
- Roman Catholicism differs with Orthodoxy on the
nature of mans fall and the human condition. - Following Augustine of Hippo, the Latins teach
that Adam and Eve sinned against God. The guilt
of their sin has been inherited by every man,
woman and child after them. - All humanity is liable for their original sin.
24The Catholic Church after Vatican II The Nature
of Man
- Following the Holy Fathers, the Orthodox Church
holds that when Adam sinned against God, he
introduced death to the world. - Since all men are born of the same human stock as
Adam, all men inherit death. - Death means that the life of every human being
comes to an end (mortality) but also that death
generates in us the passions (anger, hate, lust,
greed, etc.), disease and aging.
25The Catholic Church after Vatican II Marriage
Between Catholics and Non-Believers
- The Roman Catholic Church may perform the
sacrament of matrimony between one of its members
and a non-believer. - The excuse they use is the permission St. Paul
gave to a believer to stay with the unbelieving
spouse (1 Cor 713). - The Catholics went as far as performing the
marriage on the Catholic member without the
presence of the spouse if he/she does not want to
enter the Church, or allow the priest to place
the cross on his/her head! - They claim that the unbelieving husband is
sanctified by the wife, and the unbelieving wife
is sanctified by the husband (1 Cor 714).
26The Catholic Church after Vatican II Marriage
Between Catholics and Non-Believers
- The Orthodox Church does not accept this kind of
marriage, affirming that St. Paul was talking
about a married couple prior to accepting Jesus
Christ. - This is very clear from the same chapter of the
first letter to the Corinthians A wife is bound
by law as long as her husband lives but if her
husband dies, she is at liberty to be married to
whom she wishes, only in the Lord (1 Cor 739).
- In addition, the Scriptures teach us that man is
the head of the woman who should obey him as the
Church obeys Christ. So, how can this take place
if the husband is an unbeliever?
27The Catholic Church after Vatican II Salvation
of Non-Believers
- Vatican II declared Finally, those who have not
yet received the Gospel are related in various
ways to the people of God But the plan of
salvation also includes those who acknowledge the
Creator. In the first place amongst these there
are the Mohamedans, who, professing to hold the
faith of Abraham,
28The Catholic Church after Vatican II Salvation
of Non-Believers
- The Catholics use St. Paul again to justify their
new dogma for when Gentiles, who do not have
the law, by nature do the things in the law,
these, although not having the law, are a law to
themselves (Rom 214). - Actually, this verse proves exactly the opposite
of what the Catholic Church has approved!
29The Catholic Church after Vatican II Salvation
of Non-Believers
- They use also a verse from St. Peter But in
every nation whoever fears Him and works
righteousness is accepted by Him (Acts 1035). - It seems that they overlooked the fact that St.
Peter said this at the house of Cornelius who was
a Gentile and the people in his house had
accepted the Lord and were baptized. - The Scriptures are clear that those who were
justified were justified by faith (Rom 43
321,22 326 51 )
30The Catholic Church after Vatican II Salvation
of Non-Believers
- Catholics support their position by what St. Paul
did in Athens when he said, Men of Athens, I
perceive that in all things you are very
religious for as I was passing through and
considering the objects of your worship, I even
found an altar with this inscription TO THE
UNKNOWN GOD. Therefore, the One whom you worship
without knowing, Him I proclaim to you (Acts
1722-25). - They overlooked the fact that St Pauls spirit
was provoked within him when he saw that the city
was given over to idols (Acts. 17 16).
31The Catholic Church after Vatican II Salvation
of Non-Believers
- Catholics also argue that not all people received
the message of Jesus Christ overlooking the fact
that it is Gods responsibility to call upon all
those who diligently seek Him, and that He did
not leave Himself without a witness (Acts 1417).
32The Catholic Church after Vatican II Salvation
of Non-Believers
- Not only have the Catholics used wrong
interpretations of the Scriptures, they ignored
the general message of the Scriptures regarding
this issue. For example - Jesus Christ said Most assuredly, I say to you,
unless one is born again, he cannot see the
kingdom of God (John 33). So, how may the
unbelievers enter the Kingdom of God? - John the Baptist said, He who believes in the
Son has everlasting life and he who does not
believe the Son shall not see life, but the wrath
of God abides on him (John 336).
33The Catholic Church after Vatican II Salvation
of Non-Believers
- St. Paul said to his disciple Timothy Remember
that Jesus Christ, of the seed of David, was
raised from the dead according to my gospel, for
which I suffer trouble as an evildoer, even to
the point of chains but the word of God is not
chained. Therefore I endure all things for the
sake of the elect, that they also may obtain the
salvation which is in Christ Jesus with eternal
glory (2 Tim 28-10).
34The Catholic Church after Vatican II Salvation
of Non-Believers
- St. Paul also said Rather, that the things
which the Gentiles sacrifice they sacrifice to
demons and not to God (1 Cor 1020). - David the psalmist said, Let all be put to shame
who serve carved images, who boast of idols (Psa
977).
35The Catholic Church after Vatican II Salvation
of Non-Believers
- St. Paul says about the Jews who did not believe
in the Lord Jesus Christ For you also suffered
the same things from your own countrymen, just as
they did from the Judeans, who killed both the
Lord Jesus and their own prophets, and have
persecuted us and they do not please God and are
contrary to all men (I Thes 214-16).
36The Catholic Church after Vatican II Salvation
of Non-Believers
- The Scriptures teach us that unbelievers will go
to Hell It is done! I am the Alpha and the
Omega, the Beginning and the End. I will give of
the fountain of the water of life freely to him
who thirsts. He who overcomes shall inherit all
things, and I will be his God and he shall be My
son. But the cowardly, unbelieving, abominable,
murderers, sexually immoral, sorcerers,
idolaters, and all liars shall have their part in
the lake which burns with fire and brimstone,
which is the second death (Rev 216-8).
37The Catholic Church after Vatican II Other
Differences
- There are other differences of lesser importance
between Orthodoxy and Roman Catholicism, such as - The absence of almost all fasts from the Catholic
Church. - Although Catholics do baptize infants, the
sacrament of confirmation is delayed until at
least the age of 8. - The above point leads to not serving communion to
little children until they are confirmed.
38The Catholic Church after Vatican II Other
Differences
- Baptism is mostly by sprinkling the water on the
head of the person and not necessarily by
immersion. - The use of unleavened bread instead of leavened
bread for communion. - It is the choice of the person to receive the
Blood of Christ receiving only the Body is
sufficient. - Giving permission to the deacons and the nuns to
serve communion at hospitals.
39The Catholic Church after Vatican II Other
Differences
- Not allowing divorce, even in cases of adultery.
- Not necessary for churches to face East at the
time of prayer. - A priest may serve more than one liturgy per day,
on the same altar, and participate in the
communion each time. - Catholics may participate in the communion
provided that they fast at least two hours from
food and one half hour from drink.
40The Catholic Church after Vatican II Other
Differences
- Two other major differences between Catholics and
Orthodox - The Catholics allow any person (even a
non-Christian) to perform baptisms - They may administer communion to anyone, even
unbelievers.