D
DL82
Guest
Firstly, blessings and congratulations to any Copts on this board on the election of HH Theodore II. Many years.
Secondly, many press reports focused on the process of election by a blindfolded child drawing lots (doubtless after careful consideration of all the candidates whose names were offered). This got me to thinking - are there any similarly unusual processes for appointing bishops, patriarchs and other leaders in the Eastern Churches in communion with Rome?
Finally, I started to think of the bizarre array of electoral practices common in Europe before the Council of Trent, bishops appointed by kings, monasteries, orders of knights, etc. At that time, the Pope still retained a veto, but this was only exercised by exception, not by rule. I know the same is true now of Papal confirmations of appointments by synods in some Eastern Churches - the Pope can say no, but is expected not to. I wonder if the concerns many Orthodox have about the universal jurisdiction claimed by the Holy Father is not so much about the claim, which can be evidenced early in Church history, but in the normative use of that claim (the Pope is the normal first and last word on the appointment of every Catholic bishop, although this was not always so).
Anyway, just some ramblings. May God bless the Copts.
Domine, ut unum sint.
Secondly, many press reports focused on the process of election by a blindfolded child drawing lots (doubtless after careful consideration of all the candidates whose names were offered). This got me to thinking - are there any similarly unusual processes for appointing bishops, patriarchs and other leaders in the Eastern Churches in communion with Rome?
Finally, I started to think of the bizarre array of electoral practices common in Europe before the Council of Trent, bishops appointed by kings, monasteries, orders of knights, etc. At that time, the Pope still retained a veto, but this was only exercised by exception, not by rule. I know the same is true now of Papal confirmations of appointments by synods in some Eastern Churches - the Pope can say no, but is expected not to. I wonder if the concerns many Orthodox have about the universal jurisdiction claimed by the Holy Father is not so much about the claim, which can be evidenced early in Church history, but in the normative use of that claim (the Pope is the normal first and last word on the appointment of every Catholic bishop, although this was not always so).
Anyway, just some ramblings. May God bless the Copts.
Domine, ut unum sint.