D
dzheremi
Guest
I was raised Presbyterian by my mother, then she passed on and I stopped attending that church and just sort of floated around for about a decade without any church. Then I came into the RC church because that’s what the other half of my family is (Hispanics and Irish). I attended my last RC mass in July of 2009. After moving to another area that has a Coptic Church in August of 2011, I began attending liturgy there. There is also a Greek Orthodox Church here, but my previous experience with the EO (mostly via Russian Orthodox and OCA people, though there is a good mix of ethnicities at the local OCA, and it’s mostly converts) lead me to believe that the Coptic Orthodox is a better option, for some of the reasons mentioned earlier, but also because it was really through the Desert Fathers (who I know belong to everybody, but have a special resonance and significance in the Coptic Church, for obvious reasons), some of the Syrian church figures (St. Ephrem, Bar Hebraeus, etc.), and the teachings I’ve read and heard by HH Pope Kyrillos VI and HH Pope Shenouda III that I came to have an appreciation of Orthodoxy as something that could actually be lived by someone like me, that is in fact very practical and immediate without being shallow or emotionally-driven. In fact, looking back on it even as an RC I always had a special spot for the OO. My old father of confession (a Dominican, so very Latin/Western) used to read to me from the hymns of St. Ephrem both in and outside of confession, as he had similarly developed a love for the Syrian fathers as a result of studying in seminary with a Chaldean Catholic priest.
Short version: It just seems to fit my spiritual outlook better.
Short version: It just seems to fit my spiritual outlook better.
