In another thread, I spoke of those talking about the ROCA "never declaring the MP as graceless". It is not this statement, in itself, that I meant to speak against in my post. If one is willing to say "Such and such a bishop, and such and such at a council, spoke positively of the MP," then I am perfectly willing to discuss this (since obviously some people did speak well of the MP). However, when these scattered quotes turn into a claim that the ROCA always thought the MP had grace, that's where I must disagree vehemently.
Why do I make such a big issue out of it? Well, if you wish to say that the MP had grace, and that Bishop so and so in 1974 thought so, then that's fine and we can discuss such a claim. However, if you wish to say that all bishops thought the MP had grace, and that Bishop so and so from 1974 was merely articulating what the rest of the Church believed, then how can their be a discussion? We will end up in the same position that the Fundamentalists are mostly in on their message boards: we'll be talking past each other. There can't be any productive discussion in such a case since we disagree on the essential and underlying premises of the discussion.
I spoke of making a decision in another thread, and indeed the ROCA must. But this decision cannot be based on an artificially constructed history. Whether the MP had or has grace are two different subjects, both of which need to be discussed. Also needing to be discussed is to what extent the ROCA saw there being a difference between the "pious people and priests" of the MP, and the "hierarchy" of the MP. I believe that it is signficant that, while some members or ROCA were bold enough to speak favorably of the lower clergy and laity in the MP, none spoke favorably of the hierarchy of the MP; contrarily, many spoke in a strongly negative way of the hierarchy. The ramifications of this dichotomy of criticism needs to be explored before we can go head-long into discussions of whether the MP (as a whole, then or now) has grace.
Perhaps these discussions have already taken place: if they have, I haven't seen them (and I've read a good deal of both pro-MP-union and anti-MP-union literature over the past two years). How can we proceed if we don't have the fundamental issues of the discussion agreed upon--or at least discussed exhaustively? And certainly we can and should point to the past for help at getting at an answer. Yet, we should not take from the past what simply was not there. Personally, I'd like to see an end of us beating a "lifeless horse," as mentioned by Ania. However, that end would come through, IMO, a deeper discussion, not leaving off discussion altogether. Those ends would be the result of entirely different means (ie. getting the underlying premises agreed upon and pre-suppositions exposed), and would necessitate that people on both sides stop posting long lists of proof-quotes.
PS. I certainly don't say that I am the one who should be engaging in such discussions...