The Churches of the East do recognize that their Catholicate was at one time hierarchically dependant on the Patriarch at Antioch, do they not?
SyroMalankara,
In another thread, I brought up what H.G. Mar Bawai has written in his book:
“Since the Church of the East was closer to Antioch than to the other Metropolitan Sees, it came to be as if the church in Persia had no prerogative of its own, that it branched out from and was dependent upon Antioch.” (pg. 14). This is the premise that he tries to argue against, that is, the premise which gave our church no prerogative of her own, that it branched out of Antioch, and was dependent upon Antioch.
So, I would answer your question in the negative, if by the term dependent, you mean the same thing as what Mar Bawai means by it. Basically, our position is that since we never branched out of Antioch, then we were never dependent upon Antioch. Our existence and history was not depended upon the existence and history of Antioch. We originated from Jerusalem, and Antioch originated from Jerusalem. We were autonomous from Antioch.
However, if by the term dependent, you mean a bond of communion and peace, then yes, in the early centuries, the bishops and later Catholicos of the Church of the East were in a bond of communion and peace with Antioch (and the rest of the West). Likewise, if by the term dependent, you mean the “right of appeal”, then yes, we do have the example of Mar Papa bar Gaggai, when he appealed to the “Western” bishops for support and intervention during his own crisis with the bishops of the East. Mar Papa did this because he recognized that he was not cut off from the rest of the body of the universal Church.
For us in the Persian East, the major See of Antioch and the other smaller bishoprics in the Eastern Roman Empire served as a bridge (for lack of a better term) with the rest of the Western Sees in the Roman Empire. The major events of the West were communicated to us by way of the representatives of Antioch (like the event of Nicaea), and we then made our official decisions upon those events, often years after the fact (For example, we officially accepted Nicaea 85 years after the fact).
It was not until the Synod of Dadisho in 424, that this right of appeal to the West was suspended. I believe that this synod is the point of the beginning of the departure and isolation of the Church of the East from the bond of ecclesial communion with the Churches in the Roman Empire. This is a widely accepted position, though not by all scholars. Lack of an appeal to the other Patriarchates isolates one from the rest of his brethren in the universal Church.
It wasn’t until relatively recently that the Catholicos became Catholicos-Patriarch and then dropped the Catholicos title altogether and simply began calling itself a Patriarchal Church…
The title of Patriarch was used early on in the history of our Church of the East. In the 6th century, the historian Mshikha-zkha describes the letter that the Western bishops sent to Mar Papa after he appealed to them, and in their reply to him, they mentioned that just as there were many patriarchs in the West (Roman Empire), so there ought to be a patriarch in the East (Persian Empire). Currently, each of the three patriarchal Churches of the East (the Chaldean Church, the Assyrian Church, and the Ancient Church), continues to use the full title of Catholicos-Patriarch for its respective chief hierarch.
Interestingly, this would lend some support to some Malankara claims that state that the Syriac supported Catholicate was moved to Kerala…
For the Antiochene perspective, these claims would be consistent, I guess, though I would say it would be more consistent for the perspective to consider the Syriac Orthodox Catholicate in Iraq (Tikrit/Mosul) from 559 (Which began with Ahudemmeh) to 1859 (which ended with Behnam VI). After this period, the claims for India can then make more sense for the perspective.
Also, that chart should show the historical dependency that the Malankara Catholic/Orthodox Churches had on the Assyrian/Chaldean Church, possibly with dashes, similar to the Melkite bubble.
Like all diagrams, this one can be further improved. Perhaps, the Malankara bubble should say something like: Malankarese of the Assyrian-Chaldean tradition, but now follow the Antiochene tradition.
God bless,
Rony