Father, with due respect, that seems to me to be the same Constanipolitan polemic as before. :banghead: Indeed the Sees existed, but NOT as Byzantine. And that’s the point.
Boy ain’t that the truth. I prefer the eye-roll to the head-bang, though…it’s easier on the noggin, given how often I find myself reacting with underwhelmed, unsurprised annoyance at the claims made by certain people whenever this topic comes up.
To Fr. John Morris:
If it does not edify the discussion for a non-Chalcedonian to argue that the Chalcedonian Patriarchs of Antioch or Alexandria are not legitimate, then certainly it does not edify the discussion for a Chalcedonian such as yourself to claim that the Syriac Orthodox Patriarchate is illegitimate, as you have in posts in this very thread (I can only see what others quote of your posts, but the quote of your post in post #956 by Malphono is a good example). That is hypocrisy of the most blatant sort, and is absolutely unacceptable and rejected. The non-Chalcedonians will not abide by your request that we do as you say, not as you do simply because you have your own version of history that you repeat again and again in the face of all evidence which contradicts it. Case in point: In a previous post in this thread I observed that St. Severus, very much a central figure in the Syriac Orthodox Church, was deposed some 23 years prior to Jacob Bardaeus’ ordination, so to read in the same quoted portion of your post in post #956 that “the Apostolic Succession of the Syriac Church came not from the ancient Patriarchates of Antioch, but from Jacob Baradaeus who was responsible for spreading the schism” frankly makes no sense at all, as St. Severus predates him by quite some time (and St. Severus was of course not the first Orthodox non-Chalcedonian Patriarch of Antioch).
In this context, your appeal to the good relations between OO and EO in Antioch and Alexandria leaves me cold. It seems more like an effort on your part to get those who hold to traditional Oriental historical stances to be quiet when they have objections to your Byzantine polemics, lest we hurt efforts at reunion between the OO and EO of those Sees. Is a union where one side can say whatever it wants and treat the other as though they have no grounds to objection even to wildly inaccurate caricatures of their churches the type of union you want? I know it’s not the type of union I want (either with the EO or the RC), but I am asking you this because EO seem to have no problem objecting to union with Rome on very similar grounds (that Rome is patronizing, polemical, and wrong), and yet turning around and doing the same to the OO, as is amply evident in your own posts. Perhaps now you see why I posted as I did earlier regarding “New Rome” and “Old Rome” essentially being the same.
We are not your pets, nor children here to take direction or correction from your church on the “real” history of Orthodoxy. Go ahead and disrespect or disagree with the Oriental communion as much as you want, but do not expect to post more polemics as though they are unbiased history without facing objections, and when those objections arise don’t think that you can point to the Orientals as standing in the way of reunion for not swallowing your blatantly offensive, hypocritical ignorance as though it were the Gospel truth.
I am truly sorry I had to write any of this, but there is only so much a person can take. I know it may not seem like it, but hopefully my history of interactions with EO here (which has been mostly very positive) will bear witness to the love I really do feel for those of your communion. As I have written elsewhere (e.g., the Trisagion thread), I assert the OO position here on CAF because I am Coptic Orthodox, so obviously it is what I believe to be true, but it is not to the degrade any other traditions as they may have developed elsewhere. I would be perfectly fine saying, with regard to the source of the current conflict, that the EO have their own tradition regarding their Patriarchate in Antioch and Alexandria, and we OO have our own (and since neither Antiochian Patriarchate was stable until some time after the schism, it is foolish to pretend as though the history is cut and dry), and while we do not agree with each other, we do share many Patriarchs and saints from before the schism which speak to a deep connection that is older than the subsequent polemics that developed on either side over the centuries (and so for course we should nurture the former and not the latter). The problem, as I see it, is that the EO will not affirm the same, but instead insist that their history is the only
real history. Given the OO penchant for diversity, this is rather baffling to me, but so be it. If you would rather continue to spread ahistorical falsehoods regarding the OO, who you clearly do not understand or seek to understand, that is your business. I just want to go on record as saying that I will not stand for it, and will oppose you at every possible opportunity – not out of hatred or ill-will, but out of love and fidelity for the truth, and for the Orthodox faith as I know it, and as it has been preached and taught since time immemorial in every place – Antioch definitely included.