By the way, Isaiah45_9, not to put too fine a point on it, but you do realize that the diversity you see within the Latin Church in particular is a result of European colonialism, not that Vietnamese, Mexicans, Filipinos, etc. just happen to love the Roman Catholic Church, right? I don’t mean to doubt any particular non-European’s commitment to the RCC, but only to point out that I don’t think the RCC itself these days would want credit for having been the colonial church it very much was in the past, even though that position is what permitted it to become a church full of Asians, Africans, Hispanics, and white people.
At least in the case of the Coptic Orthodox Church (and most OO churches, really, except for the Ethiopians), we never had that advantage. Instead, the Romans and others came to us, like our Roman Fathers Abba Maximos and Abba Demetrios, and Abba Arsenios, who all came to the deserts of Egypt to learn monasticism and establish monasteries (like one of our most famous “Deir Baramous” = The Monastery of the Romans). And likewise we count Persians (ex. John the Persian), Palestinians (St. George), Syrians (St. Ephrem), Greeks (St. Demetrius of Thessalonica and about a million others), Ethiopians (St. Moses, Abdelmasih el Habashy), Indians (even converted Latins, like Mor Julius of Goa), and many, many others among our saints.
And you can ask the many hundreds of converts in South and Central America why Orthodoxy is so ethnic that
we have the audacity to have liturgy in their language. The Church in Bolivia began with one Coptic family who were visited by a priest. They later left, but by that time the priest was so beloved by the surrounding community (of Bolivians, not Copts) that many had asked to become Orthodox and be baptized by him. Now there are 400+ who attend liturgy at the cathedral in the capital alone, with many, many more in the countryside (the video linked above was in Santa Cruz de la Sierra, one of the larger cities, but I have seen others outdoors in various locations). This is how Orthodoxy spreads, and not only in Bolivia, but also in
rural Africa, Malaysia, Japan, Mexico, and everywhere. So of course there are less of us than you…you guys got a 500-or so year head start and came with colonial administrations. We come with one priest, or one tiny group, or like in Las Cruces this last weekend, through a pre-established friendship with a Copt and a non-Orthodox person (the Mexican lady who attended liturgy last week specifically stated that she was interested in Coptic Orthodoxy because it has never been a colonial church, unlike the RC church in her native Mexico).
(Note: I don’t write any of this to demonize the RCC or its faith, as I know that great strides have been taken, particularly since the 1960s, to nativize the liturgy in a given place and to move away from colonial trappings. These things take time, and nobody should fault the RCC for its history when it is trying to do better now. That history nonetheless remains what it is, and has made a deep impact on many people in formerly European-colonized countries who are now trying to find native forms of Christianity they can make their own. The growth of the COC in Africa is very much helped by its being the only Apostolic Church to be born in Africa and made up mostly of native African people.)