T
Traditional_Ang
Guest
Steve:
This probably is off topic, but when my Father’s Parish became orthodox (they had been a Mission Church of one of the first dissident parshes that left PECUSA in the 1970’s) they weren NOT rebaptized, but they were CONDITIONALLY rechrismated…
steve b:
Blessings to you and your parish family.
Michael
This probably is off topic, but when my Father’s Parish became orthodox (they had been a Mission Church of one of the first dissident parshes that left PECUSA in the 1970’s) they weren NOT rebaptized, but they were CONDITIONALLY rechrismated…
steve b:
…This proves this is NOT the doctrine of the ANTIOCHAN ORTHODOX CHURCH.I’ll get to the URL’s later.
With regards to rebaptism, between the CC and the EO, if both taught this as necessary between both parties for a candidate who jumped one ship for another, this to me would suggest that both parties thinks the other really isn’t the Church regardless of what the rhetoric says. Therefore rebaptism is necessary because each party thinks the other is outside the Church and therefore their sacraments are null and void.
Anyone who was guilty of heresy under Cyprian’s watch was required to be rebaptised before being accepted back into communion, bishops included. And a heretic, even a bishop, couldn’t validly baptise or confect any sacrament until being rebaptised. Pope Stephen at the time disagreed with Cyprian on this.
But this is off the topic of the Trinity and procession
Blessings to you and your parish family.
Michael