K
Kevin12
Guest
I know that with Mormons, if they convert to Catholicism the Church’s policy is the re-baptize them because what Mormons mean by “I baptize you in the name of the Father and of the Son and the Holy Spirit” in reference to who the Father, Son and Holy Spirit are, is to far from the Church’s understanding; whereas Orthodox or Protestants would not need to be re-baptized, because their understanding is close enough to ours that it means the same thing.
However, I know that the Coptic Orthodox have different understanding of the hypostatic union than either Catholics, Eastern Orthodox, or Protestants, i.e. they believe Jesus was two persons with two natures, one human and one divine, rather than one person with two natures.
I’ve tried to look it up, and it actually seems that Coptics do demand re-baptism from what you might call Chalcedonian Christians, but this often causes problems and tension, as Catholics and Copts as Christians living in an environment that is extremely hostile to Christianity in general will often end up celebrating in each other’s churches if their isn’t a Catholic or Coptic church they can safely attend. So since the tension seems to be coming from the other direction, it sounds like we would not in fact re-baptize a Coptic convert. But I don’t really have any evidence of that, since all searches I do only talk about the Catholic-to-Coptic issue.
However, I know that the Coptic Orthodox have different understanding of the hypostatic union than either Catholics, Eastern Orthodox, or Protestants, i.e. they believe Jesus was two persons with two natures, one human and one divine, rather than one person with two natures.
I’ve tried to look it up, and it actually seems that Coptics do demand re-baptism from what you might call Chalcedonian Christians, but this often causes problems and tension, as Catholics and Copts as Christians living in an environment that is extremely hostile to Christianity in general will often end up celebrating in each other’s churches if their isn’t a Catholic or Coptic church they can safely attend. So since the tension seems to be coming from the other direction, it sounds like we would not in fact re-baptize a Coptic convert. But I don’t really have any evidence of that, since all searches I do only talk about the Catholic-to-Coptic issue.