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| #Post#: 9047-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Council of Nicea | |
| By: Kerry Date: September 15, 2014, 5:46 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| First here is a list of the 20 canons passed by the Council of | |
| Nicea. Some canons have been shortened in this particular list. | |
| CANON 1 Eunuchs may be received into the number of the clergy, | |
| but those who castrate themselves shall not be received. | |
| CANON 2 Those who have come from the heathen shall not be | |
| immediately advance to the priesthood. For without a probation | |
| of some time a neophyte is of no advantage. But if after | |
| ordination it be found out that he has sinned previously, let | |
| him then be expelled from the clergy. | |
| CANON 3 "The Great Synod has stringently forbidden any bishop, | |
| presbyter, deacon, or any one of the clergy whatever, to have a | |
| subintroducta dwelling with him, except only a mother, or | |
| sister, or aunt, or such persons only as are beyond all | |
| suspicion." | |
| CANON 4 "It is by all means proper that a bishop should be | |
| appointed by all the bishops in the province. But should this be | |
| difficult, either on account of urgent necessity or because of | |
| distance, three at least should meet together, and the suffrages | |
| of the absent bishops also being given and communicated in | |
| writing, then the ordination should take place. But in every | |
| province the ratification of what is done should be left to the | |
| Metropolitan." | |
| CANON 5 Such as have been excommunicated by certain bishops | |
| shall not be restored by others, unless the excommunication was | |
| the result of pusillanimity, or strife, or some other similar | |
| cause. And that this may be duly attended to, there shall be in | |
| each year two synods in every province--one before Lent, the | |
| other toward autumn. | |
| CANON 6 "Let the ancient customs in Egypt, Libya, and Pentapolis | |
| prevail: that the Bishop of Alexandria have jurisdiction in all | |
| these, sine the like is customary for the Bishop of Rome also. | |
| Likewise in Antioch and the other provinces, let the Churches | |
| retain their privileges. And this is to be universally | |
| understood: that if any one be made bishop without the consent | |
| of the Metropolitan, the Great Synod has declared that such a | |
| man ought not to be a bishop. If, however, two or three bishops | |
| shall from natural love of contradiction, oppose the common | |
| suffrage of the rest, it being reasonable and in accordance with | |
| the ecclesiastical law, then let the choice of the majority | |
| prevail." | |
| CANON 7 "Since custom and ancient tradition have prevailed that | |
| the Bishop of Aelia [Capitolina = Jerusalem] should be honored, | |
| let him (saving the due dignity to the Metropolis [Caesarea | |
| Maritima]) have the next place of honor." | |
| CANON 8 If those called Cathari come over, let them first make | |
| profession that they are willing to communicate with the twice | |
| married, and to grant pardon to the lapsed. And on this | |
| condition he who happens to be in orders, shall continue in the | |
| same order, so that a bishop shall be a bishop. Whoever was a | |
| bishop among the Cathari let him, however, become a | |
| Chorepiscopus, or let him enjoy the honor of a presbyter or a | |
| bishop. For in one church there shall not be two bishops. | |
| CANON 9 Whoever are ordained without examination, shall be | |
| deposed if it be found out afterwards that they had been | |
| guilty." [of, e.g., blasphemy, bigamy, heresy, idolatry, magic] | |
| CANON 10 "If any who have lapsed have been ordained through the | |
| ignorance, ore even with the [previous knowledge of the | |
| ordainers, this shall not prejudice the Canon of the Church. For | |
| when they are discovered, they shall be deposed." | |
| CANON 11 As many as fell without necessity, even if therefore | |
| undeserving of indulgence, yet some indulgence shall be shown | |
| them and they shall be prostrators for twelve years. | |
| CANON 12 Those who endured violence and were seen to have | |
| resisted, but who afterwards yielded to wickedness, and returned | |
| to the Army, shall be excommunicated for ten years. But in every | |
| case the way in which they do their penance must be scrutinized. | |
| And if anyone who is doing penance shows himself zealous in its | |
| performance, the Bishop shall treat him more leniently than had | |
| he been cold and indifferent. | |
| CANON 13 The dying are to be communicated. But if any such get | |
| well, he must be placed in the number of those who share in the | |
| prayers, and with these only. [This refers to those who have | |
| been excommunicated, or who are undergoing a major penance.] | |
| CANON 14 "Concerning catechumens who have lapsed, the Holy and | |
| Great Synod has decreed that after they have passed three years | |
| as mere hearers, they shall pray with the Catechumens." | |
| CANON 15 Neither bishop, nor presbyter, nor deacon shall be | |
| transferred from city to city. But they shall be sent back | |
| should they attempt to do so, to the Churches in which they were | |
| ordained. | |
| CANON 16 Such presbyters or deacons as desert their own Church | |
| are not to be admitted into another, but are to be sent back to | |
| their own diocese. But if any bishop should ordain one who | |
| belongs to another Church without the consent of his own bishop, | |
| the ordination shall be canceled. | |
| CANON 17 Since many enrolled among the clergy, following | |
| covetousness and lust of gain, have forgotten the Divine | |
| Scripture, which says, `He heat not given his money upon usury | |
| (Ex. 22.25; Deut. 23.29),' and in lending money asks for 1% per | |
| month interest, the Holy and Great Synod thinks it just that if | |
| after this Decree anyone be found to receive interest, whether | |
| he accomplish it by secret transaction or otherwise, as by | |
| demanding `the whole and one half', or by using any other | |
| contrivance whatever for filthy lucre's sake, he shall be | |
| deposed from the Clergy and his name stricken from the list." | |
| CANON 18 Deacons must abide within their own bounds. They shall | |
| not administer the Eucharist to Presbyters, nor touch it before | |
| Presbyters do, nor sit among the Presbyters. For all this is | |
| contrary to the canons and decent order. | |
| CANON 19 Paulianists must be rebaptized, and if such as are | |
| clergymen seem to be blameless let them be ordained. If they do | |
| not seem to be blameless, let them be deposed. Deaconnesses who | |
| have been led astray, since they are not sharers of ordination, | |
| are to be reckoned among the Laity. | |
| CANON 20 On the Lord's Day and at Pentecost all must pray | |
| standing and not kneeling. | |
| #Post#: 9048-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Council of Nicea | |
| By: Kerry Date: September 15, 2014, 6:02 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Now for more in depth discussion, I'll quote the longer | |
| versions. | |
| Canon 1 If anyone due to sickness has undergone a surgical | |
| operation, or if he has been castrated by barbarians, he is | |
| allowed to remain among the clergy. But if anyone enrolled among | |
| the clergy has castrated himself when in perfect health, it is | |
| good for him to leave the ministry. From now on, no such person | |
| should be promoted to the clergy. But since this applies only to | |
| those who willfully castrate themselves, if anyone has been made | |
| a eunuch by barbarians, or by his master, and is otherwise fit | |
| for office, church law admits him to the clergy. | |
| It is said that self-castration was popular among the Arians, so | |
| it is possible that this canon was directed at them. It strikes | |
| me as somewhat odd to allow some castrated men to serve as | |
| priests and not others. If this was based on the Old Testament, | |
| the reason wouldn't matter. There were men then who thought | |
| Jesus meant self-castration in Matthew 19:12; but I do not see | |
| how that could be since castrated men could not serve as priests | |
| under any conditions. In fact, they could enter the | |
| congregation, restricting them to the Court of Women and the | |
| Court of Gentiles. Of course, self-castration was a pagan rite | |
| as well with devotees of Cybele or Attis sometimes castrating | |
| themselves in a religious frenzy. | |
| Strangely enough, this issue is resurfacing although today the | |
| reason for castration is different. Some churches are | |
| ordaining transgendered people who were born as men and who had | |
| operations to become women. | |
| #Post#: 9049-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Council of Nicea | |
| By: James Date: September 15, 2014, 8:13 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| transgendered people | |
| Then because they have instigated the castration they have self | |
| mutilated their bodies. Does this mean they are in or out as | |
| priests? I would have thought they should not be taken into the | |
| church by the canon (1) | |
| #Post#: 9050-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Council of Nicea | |
| By: Kerry Date: September 15, 2014, 10:45 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| [quote author=James link=topic=862.msg9049#msg9049 | |
| date=1410786833] | |
| transgendered people | |
| Then because they have instigated the castration they have self | |
| mutilated their bodies. Does this mean they are in or out as | |
| priests? I would have thought they should not be taken into the | |
| church by the canon (1) | |
| [/quote]Hi James, | |
| I' pretty sure the Catholic Church and the various Orthodox | |
| Churches would not allow transgendered priests; but it has | |
| become acceptable in several "mainstream" denominations here in | |
| the US and Canada to have transgendered clergy. | |
| The Methodists have had two. One is named Weekley. Calling it | |
| the most "deeply personal message" of his career, Weekley, 58, | |
| told his congregation that the man who had ministered to their | |
| spiritual needs, married them, buried their parents and baptized | |
| their children -- was actually born a girl. From ABC | |
| http://abcnews.go.com/Health/MindMoodNews/congregation-embraces-transgender-min… | |
| "It was a little unnerving," the Methodist minister said about | |
| his Aug. 30 sermon in which he disclosed to his congregation at | |
| Epworth United Methodist Church that he was transgender. | |
| VIDEO: Transgender pastor in Oregon opens up to his congregation | |
| 27 years after changing his sex. | |
| null | |
| "I was grateful for the day. The service began like any other | |
| and I called the message that day 'My Book Report,' because the | |
| congregation knew I was working on a manuscript but they didn't | |
| know what the book was about. That it was my history, my life | |
| story, my life in the church," he said. | |
| When he finished his speech the congregation burst into | |
| applause. | |
| Weekley is only the second transgender Methodist minister to | |
| openly disclose his former gender, and is but one of a small | |
| number of transgender clergy people ministering to congregations | |
| across the country. | |
| I doubt the Catholics and Orthodox, who require priests to be | |
| men, would be convinced that people born as women had become | |
| men. | |
| The United Church of Canada has one according to The Star | |
| http://www.thestar.com/news/insight/2011/05/15/how_transgender_united_church_mi… | |
| In 2008, the church�s governing body, the General Council, asked | |
| members to encourage the participation of transgender clergy and | |
| laity in the life of the church. A motion approved by the | |
| council�s executive began: �God has brought forth human beings | |
| as creatures who are male, female, and sometimes dramatically or | |
| subtly a complex mix of male and female in their bodies.� | |
| A year ago, Moderator Mardi Tindal preached at the ordination of | |
| the church�s first known transgender minister, Rev. Cindy | |
| Bourgeois, who � after graduating with a Master of Divinity � | |
| was appointed to Central United Church in Stratford. �Not only | |
| is it no problem,� says Tindal, �it was a day of great | |
| celebration.� | |
| Baptists are doing it. From Baptist church ordains transgender | |
| woman | |
| http://abpnews.com/culture/social-issues/item/28922-baptist-church-ordains-tran… | |
| A transgender woman who attended George W. Truett Theological | |
| Seminary and pastored a church in Central Texas as a man has | |
| returned to the pulpit. | |
| Allyson Robinson began June 23 as transitions pastor at Calvary | |
| Baptist Church in Washington. The calling is temporary � helping | |
| with preaching, mentoring and pastoral care duties along with | |
| the deacons until the church names a longer-term intentional | |
| interim pastor � probably this fall. | |
| Calvary Baptist reaffirmed Robinson�s ordination June 15, prior | |
| to Pastor Amy Butler�s departure to become senior minister of | |
| the historic and progressive Riverside Church in New York City. | |
| The Presbyterians are joining the trend. From | |
| https://www.mtholyoke.edu/offices/co...6minister.html | |
| https://www.mtholyoke.edu/offices/co...6minister.html: | |
| After struggling with gender issues for decades, ordained | |
| minister Eric Swenson had a sex-change operation. Now known as | |
| the Reverend Erin Swenson, she will preach and conduct a | |
| workshop on transgender issues this week. | |
| The Reverend Erin Swenson, a transgendered Presbyterian | |
| minister, will be the guest preacher at the April 26 Protestant | |
| worship service. The following day, she will conduct a workshop | |
| titled "Transgender: Minding the Body or Embodying the Mind?" | |
| At the worship service, Swenson will speak on the church's | |
| acceptance of difference in the New Testament. Her sermon is | |
| titled "Join This Chariot." The workshop will allow Swenson to | |
| discuss the issues of gender in our culture and describe her | |
| experiences of gender and truth in both her family and the | |
| church. The workshop is open only to the MHC community, but the | |
| worship service is open to all. | |
| Swenson was born male, married, and fathered two daughters, but | |
| struggled with gender issues for decades. Swenson was ordained | |
| as a minister in the Presbyterian Church before she had a | |
| sex-change operation. After completing the surgical procedures | |
| to change gender, Swenson asked Presbyterian officials to let | |
| her retain the ordination she'd received as Eric Swenson. The | |
| church's response marked "the first time that any mainstream | |
| church had upheld the ordination of a transsexual Christian | |
| minister," according to a Newsweek article on the decision. The | |
| magazine quoted Swenson as saying, "I'm no she-male or drag | |
| queen, and I don't want to fight society. But I have as much | |
| right as anyone to practice my livelihood." | |
| And of course, the Episcopal Church got into the act. I read | |
| they had a transgender priest at the National Cathedral | |
| recently. From Episcopal Church Votes to Allow Transgender | |
| Ministers | |
| http://www.christianpost.com/news/episcopal-church-votes-to-allow-transgender-m… | |
| A day after a legislative body of the Episcopal Church voted to | |
| sell the denomination's New York headquarters amid budget cuts | |
| and declining membership, church leaders on Saturday adopted | |
| legislation to give transgenders the right to become lay and | |
| ordained ministers. | |
| At the church's ongoing week-long General Convention in | |
| Indianapolis, Ind., the House of Bishops approved proposal that | |
| would amend two canons to prohibit discrimination based on | |
| "gender identity or expression" in the lay and ordained ministry | |
| discernment process and in the overall life, worship and | |
| governance of the church, Episcopal News Service reported. | |
| [hr] | |
| Three things seem clear, no, make that four. | |
| 1. The early Church had castrated men acting as priests. No | |
| one thinks to make a law prohibiting something unless people are | |
| doing it. So is it acceptable or not? Some early Christians | |
| seemed to think it was okay, but. . . . | |
| 2. The overall consensus at the Council was against the | |
| practice. | |
| 3. We now have mainstream denominations who say they believe in | |
| the Nicene Creed (more about that later, and that's highly | |
| controversial too with its own scandalous history since I will | |
| show that nobody today uses the original Nicene Creed) and they | |
| say the Catholic Church was just fine when this Council was | |
| held; but these denominations have now rejected other things the | |
| Council of Nicea made rulings on. | |
| 4. Almost no one takes anything the early Church taught too | |
| seriously and they feel free to ignore history if it's something | |
| they don't want to accept. They will advertise the bits they | |
| like as being authentic historical Christianity but gloss over | |
| the bits where they disagree. When we get to other canons, we | |
| will see that even the Catholic Church has done this and the | |
| Orthodox Church has done it too; indeed they felt free to start | |
| breaking the rules almost as soon as they wrote them. No one | |
| today takes all these things seriously; and history shows the | |
| early Bishops also didn't. | |
| #Post#: 9051-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Council of Nicea | |
| By: Kerry Date: September 15, 2014, 11:18 am | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Canon 2. It has occurred that men who recently converted to the | |
| faith from heathenism, after a short period of instruction, have | |
| been immediately brought to the spiritual bath and then advanced | |
| to the priesthood or even episcopate as soon as they have been | |
| baptized. Whether this has been done because of a lack of | |
| ministers or simply from impatience, it is contrary to church | |
| law. Therefore we have decided that this will not be done in the | |
| future. A catechumen needs more time for a longer trial after | |
| baptism. The apostolic saying is clear, �He must not be a recent | |
| convert, or he may become blinded and fall into judgment and the | |
| Devil�s snare?� [1 Tim 3:6]. If, as time goes on, the man is | |
| discovered to have committed some sensual (psychikos) sin, and | |
| is convicted by two or three witnesses, let him leave the | |
| clergy. Anyone who violates these enactments will imperil his | |
| own position among the clergy, as a person who presumes to | |
| disobey the great Council. | |
| Modern churches aren't as bad as the early churches were on this | |
| one. Today most churches require their clergy study for years; | |
| and while some people may not understand the need for this, I | |
| think Canon 2 gives a good reason other than the studying part. | |
| It's simply unwise to make someone a minister until you see if | |
| he has stay powering or not, until you see if he's attracted by | |
| power, by money or by lust. But even after the Council of | |
| Nicea ruled on this, the practice continued. People felt they | |
| could break this rule if they wanted to. We have two examples | |
| of prominent men being made Bishops in quite a rush. | |
| Ambrose was elected Bishop of Milan before he had even been | |
| baptized. From Wikipedia | |
| http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ambrose: | |
| In the late 4th century there was a deep conflict in the diocese | |
| of Milan between the Catholics and Arians. In 374 the bishop of | |
| Milan, Auxentius, an Arian, died, and the Arians challenged the | |
| succession. Ambrose went to the church where the election was to | |
| take place, to prevent an uproar, which was probable in this | |
| crisis. His address was interrupted by a call "Ambrose, | |
| bishop!", which was taken up by the whole assembly. | |
| Ambrose was known to be Catholic in belief, but also acceptable | |
| to Arians due to the charity shown in theological matters in | |
| this regard. At first he energetically refused the office, for | |
| which he was in no way prepared: Ambrose was neither baptized | |
| nor formally trained in theology. Upon his appointment, Ambrose | |
| fled to a colleague's home seeking to hide. Upon receiving a | |
| letter from the Emperor Gratian praising the appropriateness of | |
| Rome appointing individuals evidently worthy of holy positions, | |
| Ambrose's host gave him up. Within a week, he was baptized, | |
| ordained and duly consecrated bishop of Milan. | |
| Ambrose will probably show up later as this thread goes on; but | |
| the point for now is how lightly people took these canons from | |
| Nicea. It's true he had been reared in a Christian family; but | |
| for some reason, he was not baptized. This also calls into | |
| question the Catholic assertion that infant baptism was | |
| regularly practiced in the early Church. It appears to me that | |
| their position has changed over time. | |
| Then we have an example in the Eastern Church of Nectarius who | |
| became an Archbishop most irregularly. Gregory of Naziensus had | |
| been Archbishop and he was supposed to preside over the Council | |
| of Constantinople; but no sooner had that council convened when | |
| several Bishops objected to Gregory since he too had been | |
| ordained irregularly -- in violation of canon 15 or 16 (we will | |
| discuss his case later). So Gregory resigned, and the Emperor | |
| was given a list of candidates and he chose a man who was | |
| unbaptized! | |
| When the Emperor Theodosius I wanted the Bishops at the Council | |
| to suggest new candidates and reserving to himself the right of | |
| making the choice, the Bishop of Antioch put at the bottom of | |
| his list, Nectarius' name. The Emperor having read the lists, | |
| declared Nectarius to be his choice. This caused some amazement | |
| amongst the Fathers who wanted to know - who and what was this | |
| Nectarius? He was still only a catechumen. There was much | |
| astonishment at the emperor's unexpected choice, but the people | |
| of Constantinople were delighted at the news as was the whole | |
| council. | |
| Nectarius was duly baptized and his clothes were changed for the | |
| robes of a Bishop of the Imperial city and became at once | |
| president of the Second Ecumenical Council. | |
| Nectarius ruled the church for upwards of 16 years, and is | |
| thought of as having been a good prelate. His name heads the 150 | |
| signatures to the canons of the Second Ecumenical Council. The | |
| 3rd canon declares that, "...the Bishop of Constantinople shall | |
| hold the first rank after the bishop of Rome, because | |
| Constantinople is the new Rome." However, it was not until 1439 | |
| that the Roman Catholic Church recognized the Patriarchate of | |
| Constantinople as holding this position at the Council of | |
| Florence. | |
| Isn't it strange? The Bishops objected to Gregory as being | |
| made Archbishop against canon law but then voted in another | |
| person in violation of canon law? Of course, it led to | |
| trouble. Most of the Bishops at Constantinople were Eastern; | |
| and the Pope and others in the West objected. | |
| Unfortunately the Bishops of the West opposed the election | |
| result and asked for a common synod of East and West to settle | |
| the succession and so the Emperor Theodosius, soon after the | |
| close of the second council, summoned the Imperial Bishops to a | |
| fresh synod at Constantinople; nearly all of the same bishops | |
| who had attended the earlier second council were assembled again | |
| in early summer of 382. On arrival they received a letter from | |
| the synod of Milan, inviting them to a great general council at | |
| Rome; however they indicated that they must remain where they | |
| were, because they had not made any preparations for such long a | |
| journey. However, they sent three --Syriacus, Eusebius and | |
| Priscian�with a synodal letter to Pope Damasus I, archbishop | |
| Saint Ambrose and the other bishops assembled in the council at | |
| Rome. | |
| The Roman synod to which this letter was addressed was the fifth | |
| under Damasus. No formal account remains of its proceedings, nor | |
| of how its members treated the question of Nectarius. | |
| Theodosius, did however, send commissaries to Rome in support of | |
| his synod. | |
| In his 15th letter (to the bishops of Illyria) he indicated that | |
| the church in Rome had finally agreed to recognize both | |
| Nectarius and Flavian. | |
| Six letters from Nectarius remain extant in the files of his | |
| predecessor Gregory Nazianzus. In the first he expresses his | |
| hearty good wishes for his episcopate. The last is of great | |
| importance, urging him not to be too liberal in tolerating the | |
| Apollinarians.[1] | |
| In 383 a third synod at Constantinople was held. In spite of the | |
| decrees of bishops and emperor, the Arians and Pneumatomachians | |
| continued to spread their doctrines. Theodosius summoned all | |
| parties to the Imperial city for a great discussion in June, | |
| hoping to reconcile all differences. Before this he had sent for | |
| the Archbishop and told him that all questions should be fully | |
| debated.[1] | |
| After this, Nectarius returned home, full of anxiety and | |
| consulted the Novatianist Bishop Agelius, who felt himself | |
| unsuited to arbitrate on such a controversy. However he did have | |
| a reader, Sisinnius, a philosopher and theologian, to whom he | |
| referred the argument with the Arians. Sisinnius suggested that | |
| they should produce the testimonies of the old Fathers of the | |
| Church on the doctrine of the Son, and first ask the heads of | |
| the several parties whether they accepted these authorities or | |
| desired to anathematize them. | |
| Both the Archbishop and the Emperor agreed to this suggestion | |
| and when the Bishops met, the Emperor asked whether they | |
| respected "...the teachers who lived before the Arian division?" | |
| They confirmed that they did and he then asked if they | |
| acknowledged, "...them sound and trustworthy witnesses of the | |
| true Christian doctrine?". | |
| This question however produced divisions and so the emperor | |
| ordered each party to draw up a written confession of its | |
| doctrine. When this was done, the Bishops were summoned to the | |
| Imperial palace, where the emperor received them with kindness | |
| and retired to his study with their written confessions. | |
| Theodosius however rejected and destroyed all except that of the | |
| orthodox, because he felt that the others introduced a division | |
| into the Holy Trinity. | |
| After this, Theodosius forbade all sectaries, except the | |
| Novatianists, to hold divine services or to publish their | |
| doctrines or to ordain clergy, under threat of severe civil | |
| penalties. | |
| In 385 the emperor's wife Aelia Flaccilla (or Placilla) and | |
| their daughter Pulcheria died. The archbishop asked Gregory of | |
| Nyssa to preach the funeral sermons for both of them. | |
| Towards the close of his episcopate, Nectarius abolished the | |
| office of presbyter penitentiary, whose duty appears to have | |
| been to receive confessions before communion. His example was | |
| followed by nearly all other Bishops. The presbyter penitentiary | |
| was added to the ecclesiastical roll about the time of the | |
| Novatianist schism, when that party declined to communicate with | |
| those who had lapsed in the Decian persecution. Gradually there | |
| were fewer lapsed to reconcile, and his duties became more | |
| closely connected with preparation for communion. A disgraceful | |
| occurrence induced Nectarius to leave the participation in holy | |
| communion entirely to individual consciences and abolish the | |
| office. | |
| Nectarius died in office on 17 September 397 and was succeeded | |
| by Saint John Chrysostom. | |
| This last succession was also against the canons of Nicea and | |
| led to great conflict in the Eastern Church and to great | |
| personal tragedy for Saint John Chrysostom. | |
| #Post#: 9052-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Council of Nicea | |
| By: Kerry Date: September 15, 2014, 12:08 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Would anyone care to comment on this one? | |
| Canon 3 The great Council has stringently forbidden any bishop, | |
| priest, deacon, or any of the clergy, to have a woman living | |
| with him, except a mother, sister, aunt, or some such person who | |
| is beyond all suspicion. | |
| #Post#: 9053-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Council of Nicea | |
| By: coldwar Date: September 15, 2014, 1:24 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| ^ 'Canon 3 The great Council has stringently forbidden any | |
| bishop, priest, deacon, or any of the clergy, to have a woman | |
| living with him, except a mother, sister, aunt, or some such | |
| person who is beyond all suspicion" | |
| I'm reading with interest. It's so hard for me to understand | |
| where this all came from to be perfectly honest. (more on that | |
| shortly) | |
| Canon 3 seems especially reprehensible, to forbid a normal | |
| married relationship for any and all Clergy, especially as | |
| you've (rightly) observed how some of the other Canons have lead | |
| to some allowance of abnormal relations among Clergy. Please | |
| excuse my use of the terms "normal and abnormal" --- it's the | |
| way I see things personally, but others here might prefer the | |
| terms "traditional" ad "non-traditional" --- OK let's stick with | |
| that. My point is, this is only a few hundred years removed from | |
| Old Testament times, when it was mandatory for Temple and | |
| Synagogue Priests and Rabbis to be in a traditional | |
| relationship, and now this is just as dogmatically saying that | |
| this is to be stringently forbidden! To me, it seems | |
| anti-Semitic and satanic, and obviously would, and has, led to | |
| all sorts of trouble. | |
| Then there's the "beyond all suspicion" part. Suspicion of | |
| what?" Sex? A Bishop's mother obviously had sex, otherwise the | |
| Bishop wouldn't exist. I know what it means - I don't need an | |
| explanation for that; what I do need is an explanation of why | |
| the Roman Church so strictly adheres to this Canon even up to | |
| our day. Eastern Clergy does not forbid marriage, yet the great | |
| Filioque controversy between east and west was not over this | |
| matter at all. For some reason, my brain cannot even comprehend | |
| what the Filioque controversy was all about - I can't comprehend | |
| the difference between the two sides. It seems to me that this | |
| Canon 3 business should have been regarded as far more important | |
| than the Filioque! Am I making sense? | |
| All Clergy should be allowed to be married, but if some choose | |
| not to be, that ought to be also OK. I'd qualify that by saying | |
| that the unmarried ones ought to be monitored more closely than | |
| the married ones... we recently here in New Brunswick had a | |
| (un-named) City Councillor sentenced to 18 years for child porn | |
| and taking advantage of children in his care as both a church | |
| and broader community youth worker... and he was not, and never | |
| was, a Roman Catholic. In fact, I knew the guy, and served with | |
| him in connection with the Vineyard Church leadership for a | |
| short time, and also knew he was connected with the Anglican | |
| Church. He got away with absolutely un-speakable things for a | |
| very long time, and nobody suspected a thing. | |
| #Post#: 9054-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Council of Nicea | |
| By: James Date: September 15, 2014, 1:33 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Coldwar got there just before me , I was going to say that since | |
| we have already seen that the laws could be bent when suited, I | |
| wonder they are not actively flouted following the revelations | |
| concerning the priesthood and the ill use of children. | |
| Would this law not be seen as the reason so many men gave way to | |
| their perversion. | |
| #Post#: 9055-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Council of Nicea | |
| By: coldwar Date: September 15, 2014, 1:38 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Regarding the entire collection of Canons, it seems to be a | |
| whole lot to do with "jostling for places of honour" - something | |
| the Lord expressly forbade. Some of the doctrinal positions are | |
| biblical, but most aren't. Curiously, Canon 19 mentions | |
| "Paulianists" - that they must be re-baptised. Wierd! Our former | |
| C of E Priest wouldn't re-baptise anybody, even if they | |
| requested it, if they were already baptised as an unknowing | |
| infant. | |
| There is very little here which I actually understand! | |
| #Post#: 9057-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Council of Nicea | |
| By: Kerry Date: September 15, 2014, 8:33 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| [quote author=coldwar link=topic=862.msg9053#msg9053 | |
| date=1410805441] | |
| ^ 'Canon 3 The great Council has stringently forbidden any | |
| bishop, priest, deacon, or any of the clergy, to have a woman | |
| living with him, except a mother, sister, aunt, or some such | |
| person who is beyond all suspicion" | |
| I'm reading with interest. It's so hard for me to understand | |
| where this all came from to be perfectly honest. (more on that | |
| shortly) | |
| Canon 3 seems especially reprehensible, to forbid a normal | |
| married relationship for any and all Clergy, especially as | |
| you've (rightly) observed how some of the other Canons have lead | |
| to some allowance of abnormal relations among Clergy. Please | |
| excuse my use of the terms "normal and abnormal" --- it's the | |
| way I see things personally, but others here might prefer the | |
| terms "traditional" ad "non-traditional" --- OK let's stick with | |
| that. My point is, this is only a few hundred years removed from | |
| Old Testament times, when it was mandatory for Temple and | |
| Synagogue Priests and Rabbis to be in a traditional | |
| relationship, and now this is just as dogmatically saying that | |
| this is to be stringently forbidden! To me, it seems | |
| anti-Semitic and satanic, and obviously would, and has, led to | |
| all sorts of trouble.[/quote]Ha, ha! The language in Canon 3 is | |
| so imprecisely written, I had to read it three times and still | |
| wouldn't have derived its proper meaning from it alone -- I | |
| would have thought they meant no women period. | |
| Did you notice that the list does not include "wife"? The | |
| language is not very precise! They had married priests then. | |
| The Orthodox Church still allows married clergy. | |
| [quote]Then there's the "beyond all suspicion" part. Suspicion | |
| of what?" Sex? A Bishop's mother obviously had sex, otherwise | |
| the Bishop wouldn't exist. I know what it means - I don't need | |
| an explanation for that; what I do need is an explanation of why | |
| the Roman Church so strictly adheres to this Canon even up to | |
| our day. Eastern Clergy does not forbid marriage, yet the great | |
| Filioque controversy between east and west was not over this | |
| matter at all. For some reason, my brain cannot even comprehend | |
| what the Filioque controversy was all about - I can't comprehend | |
| the difference between the two sides. It seems to me that this | |
| Canon 3 business should have been regarded as far more important | |
| than the Filioque! Am I making sense?[/quote]"Beyond suspicion" | |
| is a wonderfully vague phrase. If someone thought the Pope was | |
| involved in an incestuous relationship with his daughter, would | |
| that mean the daughter couldn't live with her father? I don't | |
| know if Lucrezia Borgia ever lived with her father Alexander VI; | |
| but we do know that her mother did not. From Wikipedia | |
| http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vannozza_dei_Cattanei: | |
| Vannozza dei Cattanei (13 July 1442�24 November 1518) Giovanna | |
| dei Cattanei, nicknamed "Vannozza" was an Italian woman who was | |
| one of the many mistresses of Cardinal Rodrigo Borgia, later to | |
| become Pope Alexander VI. Among them, she was the one whose | |
| relationship with him lasted the longest. | |
| Born in 1442, most likely in Mantua, Vannozza moved to Rome | |
| where she was landlady of several inns (Osterie), at first in | |
| the Borgo, then in Campo de' Fiori. Before becoming Borgia's | |
| mistress, she allegedly had a relationship with Cardinal | |
| Giuliano della Rovere, the future Pope Julius II. | |
| Everyone knew about Alexander's affairs; but it seems that his | |
| mistresses did not live with him, and he almost felt obliged to | |
| have his daughter married. At least some effort was put into | |
| maintaining "avoiding the appearance of wrong doing." I could | |
| be wrong; but I believe Pope Pius XII was the first Pope to have | |
| a woman living in the Vatican. Again from Wikipedia | |
| http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pascalina_Lehnert: | |
| Madre (Mother) Pascalina Lehnert (25 August 1894, Ebersberg, | |
| Kingdom of Bavaria, German Empire � 13 November 1983, Vienna, | |
| Austria), born Josefina Lehnert, was a German Roman Catholic nun | |
| who served as Pope Pius XII's housekeeper and secretary from his | |
| period as Apostolic Nuncio to Bavaria in 1917 until his death as | |
| pope in 1958. She managed the papal charity office for Pius XII | |
| from 1944 until the pontiff's death in 1958. She was a Sister of | |
| the Holy Cross, Menzingen order. | |
| "Madre Pascalina", as she was called, led the Pacelli household | |
| in the nunciature in Munich, Bavaria from 1917 to 1925 and in | |
| the nunciature to Germany and Prussia in Berlin from 1925 to | |
| 1929, where Nuncio Pacelli was Dean of the Diplomatic Corps. | |
| There she became known for organizing the Pacelli parties, | |
| "which were auspicious, tastefully sprinkling glitter with the | |
| strictest European etiquette.... The nunciature was soon a major | |
| center of Germany�s social and official worlds. Streams of | |
| aristocrats, including President Paul von Hindenburg (one of | |
| Germany�s Field Marshals during World War I), were frequent | |
| callers, blending with students and workers, anyone whom | |
| Pacelli, the shrewdest of diplomats, chose to smile upon".[1] | |
| Pacelli was recalled to Rome in 1929 to become Cardinal | |
| Secretary of State. Madre Pascalina soon resided as housekeeper | |
| with two other sisters in the Vatican, and were the only women | |
| inside the Papal conclave, which, on 2 March 1939, elected | |
| Pacelli to become the successor of Pope Pius XI. | |
| Did it lead to suspicion? Yes. From archeloas.com | |
| http://www.archelaos.com/popes/details.aspx?id=299: | |
| In 1918, while on holiday in Menzingen, Switzerland, Archbishop | |
| Pacelli met Sister Pasqualina Lehnert, a German nun. She later | |
| moved in with him as his housekeeper. Rumours grew over the | |
| obscure relationship until Pius XII himself demanded a full | |
| investigation. His sister and nephew both pleaded with him to | |
| remove her. On Mar 2, 1939, the cardinals voted unanimously in | |
| defense of Pius XII's innocence, and to allow him to continue | |
| his "peculiar way of living". Because she often decided who | |
| could have an audience with Pius XII or which Vatican documents | |
| he could even see, she was nicknamed "La Popessa" (Popess). | |
| After Pius XII's death in 1958, she was removed from the Vatican | |
| city. | |
| I don't know if anything was going on, but I do know it lead to | |
| speculation. The Pope was ignoring canon 3; and the Cardinals | |
| enabled him. When canon 3 talks about "beyond all suspicion," | |
| I take that as a reference to: | |
| 1 Thessalonians 5:22 Abstain from all appearance of evil. | |
| Your point is well taken about how far things have gone. Few | |
| men ever become rabbis if not settled down in marriage; and I | |
| still believe Paul meant that Bishops must be married or | |
| widowers. I do not think it wise to promote an unmarried priest | |
| to Bishop. It may not be wise to have unmarried priests even. | |
| 1 Timothy 3:2 A bishop then must be blameless, the husband of | |
| one wife, vigilant, sober, of good behaviour, given to | |
| hospitality, apt to teach; | |
| 3 Not given to wine, no striker, not greedy of filthy lucre; but | |
| patient, not a brawler, not covetous; | |
| 4 One that ruleth well his own house, having his children in | |
| subjection with all gravity; | |
| 5 (For if a man know not how to rule his own house, how shall he | |
| take care of the church of God?) | |
| 6 Not a novice, lest being lifted up with pride he fall into the | |
| condemnation of the devil. | |
| 7 Moreover he must have a good report of them which are without; | |
| lest he fall into reproach and the snare of the devil. | |
| 8 Likewise must the deacons be grave, not doubletongued, not | |
| given to much wine, not greedy of filthy lucre; | |
| 9 Holding the mystery of the faith in a pure conscience. | |
| 10 And let these also first be proved; then let them use the | |
| office of a deacon, being found blameless. | |
| 11 Even so must their wives be grave, not slanderers, sober, | |
| faithful in all things. | |
| 12 Let the deacons be the husbands of one wife, ruling their | |
| children and their own houses well. | |
| [quote]All Clergy should be allowed to be married, but if some | |
| choose not to be, that ought to be also OK. I'd qualify that by | |
| saying that the unmarried ones ought to be monitored more | |
| closely than the married ones... we recently here in New | |
| Brunswick had a (un-named) City Councillor sentenced to 18 years | |
| for child **** and taking advantage of children in his care as | |
| both a church and broader community youth worker... and he was | |
| not, and never was, a Roman Catholic. In fact, I knew the guy, | |
| and served with him in connection with the Vineyard Church | |
| leadership for a short time, and also knew he was connected with | |
| the Anglican Church. He got away with absolutely un-speakable | |
| things for a very long time, and nobody suspected a | |
| thing.[/quote]If you read that section from 1 Timothy 3 again, I | |
| think you can see that Paul means there are big advantages to | |
| having married clergy with a proven record of knowing how to | |
| deal with people in their own families. I can see allowing | |
| some clergy to be unmarried; but I think the position of Bishop | |
| is so important that only married men or widowers who were | |
| happily married should be considered for the job. | |
| There are too many risks for scandals like the one you mention. | |
| You get the men who are secretly gay or those who are attracted | |
| to children. If I get the time, I may post some scandals from | |
| the Orthodox Churches like the Bishop involved in a heterosexual | |
| **** and the Bishop who enjoyed almost everything including | |
| underaged girls and boys and male strippers. They might have | |
| done better to have a live-in girlfriend -- I'm joking, of | |
| course -- they would have done much better to have been married. | |
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