The Split that Created Roman Catholics and Eastern Orthodox Catholics
Eastern
Orthodox Catholics and Roman Catholics are the result of what is known as the
East-West Schism (or Great Schism) of 1054, when medieval Christianity split
into two branches.
The Byzantine
split with Roman Catholicism came about when Pope Leo III crowned Charlemagne,
King of the Franks, as Holy Roman Emperor in 800. From the Byzantine viewpoint,
this was offensive to the Eastern Emperor and the Byzantine Empire itself — an
empire that had withstood barbarian invasions and upheld the faith for
centuries. After Rome fell in 476, Byzantium was the only vestige of the Holy
Roman Empire.
Charlemagne’s
crowning made the Byzantine Emperor redundant (useless, superfluous), and
relations between the East and the West deteriorated until a formal split
occurred in 1054. The Eastern Church became the Greek Orthodox Church by
severing all ties with Rome and the Roman Catholic Church — from the pope to
the Holy Roman Emperor on down.
Over the
centuries, the Eastern Church and Western Church became more distant and
isolated for the following reasons:
·
Geography: The West
encompassed Western Europe and the northern and western areas of the
Mediterranean and the East took up Asia Minor, the Middle East, and Northern
Africa.
·
Ignorance: The
Byzantine Church knew less and less Latin and even less Latin tradition, and
vice versa. So most patriarchs in Constantinople couldn’t read any Latin, and
most popes in Rome couldn’t read any Greek. Byzantines in the East used
leavened bread in their Divine Liturgy to symbolize the Risen Christ, and
Latins in the West used unleavened bread as was used by Jesus at the Last
Supper.
·
Different
theologies: Both were valid, but each had its own
perspective. The West (Latin) was more practical and, although fully believing
in the divinity of Christ, put emphasis on his humanity when depicting Jesus in
art — especially by making realistic crucifixes. The East (Byzantine) was more
theoretical and, although fully believing in the humanity of Christ, focused on
his divinity, which was much more mysterious.
·
Personalities
and politics: Michael Cerularius, Patriarch of
Constantinople, and Pope St. Leo IX weren’t friends, and each one mistrusted
the other. Cerularius crossed the line when he wrote in a letter that the Latin
use of unleavened bread was Jewish but not Christian. He was denying the
validity of the Holy Eucharist in the Western Church. Leo countered by saying
that the patriarchs had always been puppets of the Byzantine emperors.
In the end,
Pope Leo and Patriarch Michael excommunicated each other and their respective
churches. But more than 900 years later, in 1965, Pope Paul VI and Patriarch
Athenagoras I of Constantinople removed the mutual excommunications.
Comprehension Questions: 1. When did the Great Schism occur? 2. Why did
Charlemagne being crowned Holy Roman Emperor offend the Byzantines? 3. How were
the theologies different? 4. Who excommunicated each other? 5.When were the
mutual excommunications removed?
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