Syro-Malankara, please don’t overstate the case. The Syriac Orthodox Church certainly recognizes the primacy of St. Peter as foremost among the apostles (and explicitly identifies its Patriarch as the rightful successor to St. Peter), but this does not translate into claiming the kinds of privileges that Rome claims for its Pope. Indeed, these appear to be separate issues in practice, as the same Church that writes of the
indisputable primacy of St. Peter also specifies the limits to which the Patriarch, the true successor of St. Peter, is subject in the exercise of his considerable and commendable authority. These limits should look
very familiar to anyone of the Oriental tradition, and quite distinct from the Roman ideas about their own Pope. Given that you are Malankaran, I probably don’t need to do any more than remind. From the above article on the concept of jurisdiction in the SOC, we read of the authority invested in the synod to undertake the following actions:
1: elect the Patriarch and enthrone him in the patriarchal residence at a suitable time and to receive the resignation of the Patriarch and the metropolitans
and to order their dismissal.
2: to agree on or to reject the decisions of the Patriarch to candidate the monks for the rank of episcopate in the case of their election and appointment.
3:
to investigate the Patriarch and the metropolitans and to judge them according to canon law.
4: to look into the religious heresies which are against the faith and traditions of the church and its by-laws and to issue judgments against whomever committed them, whether clergy or laity, with all of the punishments of the church.
5: to meet, presided over by the oldest metropolitan, if the Patriarch has not called the Synod for three successive sessions.
6: to shift Metropolitans from one archdiocese to another and to establish, to renew and to abolish archdioceses or to change its geographical borders or to sell a part or all of the endowments of the Patriarchate.
7: in case of a vacancy in the See, the Synod is to elect one of the metropolitans as an interim authority according to the principals and articles of the constitution.
As per (1) and (3), the synod is permitted to judge, discipline, and even dismiss the Patriarch as necessary. Quite far from the RCC model, don’t you think?