Dear brother Thomas48,
I’m not sure I understand what part of the Syro-Malabar union was forced. From my understanding of your Church’s history, it goes something like this:
- The first several decades after the Portuguese came was peaceful co-existence, with some Malabar Christians willfully becoming Latin Christians
- After several decades, some Latin missionaries wanted to enforce Latinizations everywhere.
- This caused a formal split among the Malabar Christians into a Latin group, and the Traditional East Syrian group.
- Later, the majority of East Syrians willfully joined the Latin jurisdiction, while a smaller group maintained their East Syrian identity.
- A few years later, a Syriac Orthodox bishop came (West Syrian), and one part of the remaining East Syrian group willfully became West Syrian, while the other part willfully joined the Catholic communion while maintaining their East Syrian Tradition. This latter group was the origin of your particular Church.
Is there some part of that history that you feel is incorrect? Again, I’m not sure where the formation of your Church was forced.
I do have a question however - when did contact with the ACOE end?
Are there any definite historical records on that (as opposed to mere assumptions or deductions from the historical record)? I mean, before the formation of the Syro-Malabar Church, there seems to have always been a group that resisted Latinizations. I assume that group maintained contact with the ACOE throughout those years?
Blessings,
Marduk