How do I become a Coptic Catholic?

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The OP does not say where in the US she is located, but as far as I am aware, those are the only two churches in the US.
her best bet may be another Catholic church, of a differnt rite.

Aydan, some have suggested Syriac Catholic, Maronite, Chaldean Catholic, or another Eastern rite.

they are still in communion with Rome, but the liturgies will likely be more traditional, and the language and culture may be closer to what you are looking for in a Coptic Catholic church.
 
I don’t hate the Latin it’s just not for me I have friends that love the Latin Mass I don’t because I don’t like the language but I think my question has been more than answered now as I’ve said we do not any Eastern rite except the Byzantine rite which is not for me. The reason I’m attracted to Coptic is because I feel closer to that especially since they speak Arabic and there is Arabic in Turkish so there is a relationship there and I like many other things as well on the other hand Latin has absolutely no commonality with Turkish but if I can not be Coptic I don’t want to be anything else because I don’t want to be Byzantine either so I might as well stay with my Latin Church and just stay as far away as I can from the traditional Latin Mass. But anyway I have my answers now it’s clear that I can’t be Coptic so that’s all I wanted to know thank you everyone for your help.
 
Hey, do the Catholic Copts say the Trisagion of Peter the Fuller “…who was crucified for us”…? What is the status of post schism coptic saints?
 
Hey, do the Catholic Copts say the Trisagion of Peter the Fuller “…who was crucified for us”…? What is the status of post schism coptic saints?
are you asking about the Coptic Orthodox church or the Coptic Catholic church?
 
Why the anger? You may feel more in touch and comfortable with the Coptic Liturgy but why the anger you have for the Latin Mass? I feel much more spiritually connected to the East but I hold no anger to the TLM. In fact I think the TLM is beautiful!
In a Tridentine High Mass, the Priest and the Deacon are in dialog with each other and the choir, which represents the laity. If the laity knows the material, they sing with the choir. That, and incense, finishes the recipe for the high mass. Unfortunately not all TLM are sung, and I have never, ever liked Low Masses, in which nearly everything is said silently and almost nothing is sung. Gregorian Chant is the great legacy of the Latin church, and yet how many RCC parishes use it?

I was at a Greek Orthodox Divine liturgy, and despite some liturgical eccentricities, it’s everything you could ever want from a TLM High Mass. It also helps that Koine/Liturgical Greek bears some resemblance to its Latin linguistic neighbor. Slavonic hymnody, IMHO, is heaven on earth.

Anyway, there are many parallels between TLM High mass and Orthodox services. So count me in as another vote for “appreciative” of both TLM and the Orthodox liturgy.
 
In a Tridentine High Mass, the Priest and the Deacon are in dialog with each other and the choir, which represents the laity. If the laity knows the material, they sing with the choir. That, and incense, finishes the recipe for the high mass. Unfortunately not all TLM are sung, and I have never, ever liked Low Masses, in which nearly everything is said silently and almost nothing is sung. Gregorian Chant is the great legacy of the Latin church, and yet how many RCC parishes use it?

I was at a Greek Orthodox Divine liturgy, and despite some liturgical eccentricities, it’s everything you could ever want from a TLM High Mass. It also helps that Koine/Liturgical Greek bears some resemblance to its Latin linguistic neighbor. Slavonic hymnody, IMHO, is heaven on earth.

Anyway, there are many parallels between TLM High mass and Orthodox services. So count me in as another vote for “appreciative” of both TLM and the Orthodox liturgy.
okay I think it’s wonderful that you like the Latin Mass I just don’t have connection with that. when I first saw the Coptic Orthodox liturgy and how many connections it has to what matters to me most I felt the same way as both of you feel about the Latin Mass you have no idea how excited I was to find out that there was a Coptic Catholic church I thought it was a dream come true. But then I find out there’s no way I can be Coptic simply because I can’t get to the church. It’s not that I hate the Latin rite I don’t but how would you feel if you fell in love with the Latin Mass and then found out you couldn’t go because the church is on the other side of the country. Do you have any idea how awful and devastating that is? Yes I’m angrybut it’s out of sheer frustration and heartbreak not because I hate the traditional Latin Mass. I just don’t want to go to one at all because I don’t see it the same way you guys do. Wouldn’t you be a frustrated if you couldn’t belong to the riteof your choice??
 
Dear Sister in Christ Aydan:

There have been many responses to this thread, but I would like to take a few moments to clarify some things about Coptic Christianity.

First of all the term Copt, strictly used, refers to the indigenous inhabitants of Egypt, regardless of religion. It is commonly used to refer to Egyptian Christians.

Most (around 15 million worldwide) Egyptian Christians belong to the Coptic Orthodox Church. Somewhat fewer (300,000 or so) belong to the Greek Orthodox Patriarchate. Even fewer (less that 250,000 worldwide) belong to the Coptic Catholic Church. Of these only around 50,000 live outside of Egypt.

The official liturgical language of the Coptic Orthodox Church is Coptic. Coptic is the last form of the ancient Egyptian language which was spoken during Egypt’s Christian period. The language was suppressed in public life by the Moslem conquerors of Egypt, and is rarely spoken outside of Church anymore. Coptic uses an alphabet similar to the Greek, and is read from right to left, like Greek. It is not related to Arabic (or Turkish) at all.The Liturgy, and most Church publications also use Arabic extensively, and in countries of immigration the local language will be used as well.

There are no Coptic Churches (Catholic or Orthodox) operating in Turkey, nor are there any Coptic monasteries. The Syriac Orthodox Church Church has several very ancient Monasteries in Turkey. The Monks there wear headcoverings which look like black hoods with 12 white crosses on them, just like the Coptic Monks, so perhaps this is where the confusion arose. There are Coptic Monasteries outside of Egypt, in Europe, the US and I believe Australia as well as the Holy Land, but not Turkey. The Syriac monks use Syriac in their services, and Turkish as well because it is the local language. The Syriac Church was nearly exterminated in Turkey over the course of the 20th century, and today most Syriac Christians live elsewhere.

It should also be noted in the interest of historical accuracy, that the Turkish people (as opposed to people who happen to live in Turkey), migrated to Anatolia from Central Asia in the 11th Century and were already Moslem when they arrived. Most of the Saints from the area which is now Turkey were of other ethnic groups (Greek, Cappadocian, Assyrian, etc).
Hope this helps
 
Dear Sister in Christ Aydan:

There have been many responses to this thread, but I would like to take a few moments to clarify some things about Coptic Christianity.

First of all the term Copt, strictly used, refers to the indigenous inhabitants of Egypt, regardless of religion. It is commonly used to refer to Egyptian Christians.

Hope this helps
I have been struggling to figure out how to post what the Catholic faith is worldwide. Brother Kryillos, according to CNEWA.ORG as of 2008, there were 9 Mil Coptic Orthodox. and 1.5 Mil Greek Melkite Catholics for a total of .84% of all Catholics worldwide.

Isn’t it unbelieveable we have a Universal Church? And Brother Kryillos, please bear with me. I feel more and more people as I do, continue to look for a place. I am a nobody, just a sinner.

May God bless you Aydan!
 
I have been struggling to figure out how to post what the Catholic faith is worldwide. Brother Kryillos, according to CNEWA.ORG as of 2008, there were 9 Mil Coptic Orthodox. and 1.5 Mil Greek Melkite Catholics for a total of .84% of all Catholics worldwide.

Isn’t it unbelieveable we have a Universal Church? And Brother Kryillos, please bear with me. I feel more and more people as I do, continue to look for a place. I am a nobody, just a sinner.

May God bless you Aydan!
The exact number of Christians in Egypt is a political football. The government wants to minimize the number and the Church wants to maximize it. Best independent estimates put the Coptic Orthodox inside Egypt at +/- 10 million, with another 5 million living outside Egypt.

By way of comparison,the Ethiopian Orthodox number around 55 million, Russian Orthodox as many as 140 million (depending on who is counting).

There are over 1 Billion Catholics of all types worldwide.
 
Grace,

Where do you live? Perhaps you could attend the Syro-Malankara Church and see if it suits you - we celebrate the Liturgy as the Syriac Orthodox/Indian Orthodox and are in full Communion with the Bishop of Rome and the other Eastern Catholic Churches…
 
Actually in Turkey most of the Catholic Churchs are Latin as well but they do have an Orthodox Coptic monastery there that my friend was telling me about and I found out about the Coptic Catholic Church by reading about it. I believe there may only be one Coptic Catholic church in the US because that one in LA seems to be a dead end I’m not even sure if it exists anymore because the web site is not working …
I sometimes assist at the Liturgy in the Coptic Catholic Church here in LA, (St. Mary’s) It is thriving, they have one priest who was raised in Egypt, every time he goes home for a vacation or a religious meeting, the parish is fearful that he will stay in Egypt. They also have a priest from Loyola University who offers Mass in the Latin, Maronite and Coptic Rites. He was raised Coptic Catholic, and became a Jesuit (which is why he is multi ritual) the Liturgy starts at 10AM and a core of people spend most of the day (until around 5PM) in the social hall, then vespers and home. Unlike the Coptic Orthodox who tend to cluster in one area around parishes, Coptic Catholics tend to drive longer distances (some at St. Mary’s drive three and four hours to attend. Due to the distance, many attend once a month or so and the rest of the time attend the local Latin Churches. Deacon George assists at the Latin Church in his area Monday to Saturday, and serves in the Coptic Rite on Sundays and major Holy Days.
 
The exact number of Christians in Egypt is a political football. The government wants to minimize the number and the Church wants to maximize it. Best independent estimates put the Coptic Orthodox inside Egypt at +/- 10 million, with another 5 million living outside Egypt.

By way of comparison,the Ethiopian Orthodox number around 55 million, Russian Orthodox as many as 140 million (depending on who is counting).

There are over 1 Billion Catholics of all types worldwide.
Brother Kyrillos:

You are right, depending on who is counting, nevertheless, according to CNEWA.ORG, the numbers are what they are. My real point, which begs the issue, is no one is any better or different than another. Even with 15 Mil Coptic Catholics, that is 1.20% versus the .83% of worldwide Catholics.

If our Russian Orthodox, the largest Orthodox rite, were 140 mil versus the 110 mil identified, that would equate to over 11.28% of our worldwide Catholics.

Is China waiting?
 
It should also be noted in the interest of historical accuracy, that the Turkish people (as opposed to people who happen to live in Turkey), migrated to Anatolia from Central Asia in the 11th Century and were already Moslem when they arrived. Most of the Saints from the area which is now Turkey were of other ethnic groups (Greek, Cappadocian, Assyrian, etc).
Hope this helps
Its sad that so few in the west really know this or how the original inhabitants were exterminated by those occupying the land now. Thank you for a great post!
 
yes you are absolutely right after reading your post I went back and checked the two monasteries are in fact Syriac Orthodox and somehow I got them confused with Coptic thank you for clearing that up. Despite this I’ve been studying the Coptic Church I’ve been watching Coptic Orthodox liturgy and even though there isn’t any Coptic churches or monasteries in Turkey nevertheless I still feel more attracted to the church because they speak Arabic which to me is much closer to my values than the Latin Church ever will be. my heart is definitely with the East. I still feel like God might be calling me to be Coptic I’m planning to start learning Arabic very soon and I’m already trying to learn Coptic
Dear Sister in Christ Aydan:

There have been many responses to this thread, but I would like to take a few moments to clarify some things about Coptic Christianity.

First of all the term Copt, strictly used, refers to the indigenous inhabitants of Egypt, regardless of religion. It is commonly used to refer to Egyptian Christians.

Most (around 15 million worldwide) Egyptian Christians belong to the Coptic Orthodox Church. Somewhat fewer (300,000 or so) belong to the Greek Orthodox Patriarchate. Even fewer (less that 250,000 worldwide) belong to the Coptic Catholic Church. Of these only around 50,000 live outside of Egypt.

The official liturgical language of the Coptic Orthodox Church is Coptic. Coptic is the last form of the ancient Egyptian language which was spoken during Egypt’s Christian period. The language was suppressed in public life by the Moslem conquerors of Egypt, and is rarely spoken outside of Church anymore. Coptic uses an alphabet similar to the Greek, and is read from right to left, like Greek. It is not related to Arabic (or Turkish) at all.The Liturgy, and most Church publications also use Arabic extensively, and in countries of immigration the local language will be used as well.

There are no Coptic Churches (Catholic or Orthodox) operating in Turkey, nor are there any Coptic monasteries. The Syriac Orthodox Church Church has several very ancient Monasteries in Turkey. The Monks there wear headcoverings which look like black hoods with 12 white crosses on them, just like the Coptic Monks, so perhaps this is where the confusion arose. There are Coptic Monasteries outside of Egypt, in Europe, the US and I believe Australia as well as the Holy Land, but not Turkey. The Syriac monks use Syriac in their services, and Turkish as well because it is the local language. The Syriac Church was nearly exterminated in Turkey over the course of the 20th century, and today most Syriac Christians live elsewhere.

It should also be noted in the interest of historical accuracy, that the Turkish people (as opposed to people who happen to live in Turkey), migrated to Anatolia from Central Asia in the 11th Century and were already Moslem when they arrived. Most of the Saints from the area which is now Turkey were of other ethnic groups (Greek, Cappadocian, Assyrian, etc).
Hope this helps
 
I’m really confused about something because I keep getting different answers on this. I really like the Coptic because they speak Arabic and it makes me feel more connected to Turkey and the East than the Latin Church does but as I’ve said there’s no Coptic Church in my area that Catholic there’s only a Coptic Orthodox church. So I’ve been trying to figure out some sort of compromise like one of the things I really like about the Coptic Church is the liturgy of the hours but rather then do the Orthodox liturgy of the hours I do that Catholic liturgy of the hours instead. Are we allowed to watch other liturgies because I’ve been watching the Coptic Church liturgy? I would like to keep watching it because I really enjoy watching it But of course I will continue to attend my Latin Church because I want to remain Catholic. Also can somebody tell me if there are any other Eastern Catholic churches that speak Arabic that I could look into it?
 
I’m really confused about something because I keep getting different answers on this. I really like the Coptic because they speak Arabic and it makes me feel more connected to Turkey and the East than the Latin Church does but as I’ve said there’s no Coptic Church in my area that Catholic there’s only a Coptic Orthodox church. So I’ve been trying to figure out some sort of compromise like one of the things I really like about the Coptic Church is the liturgy of the hours but rather then do the Orthodox liturgy of the hours I do that Catholic liturgy of the hours instead. Are we allowed to watch other liturgies because I’ve been watching the Coptic Church liturgy? I would like to keep watching it because I really enjoy watching it But of course I will continue to attend my Latin Church because I want to remain Catholic. Also can somebody tell me if there are any other Eastern Catholic churches that speak Arabic that I could look into it?
Don’t the Turks speak Turkish and not Arabic? If you want to go to an Arabic language Church why not go to an Antiochian Orthodox Church for Saturday night Vespers and then your Latin Church for Sunday Mass?
 
of course they speak Turkish and not Arabic! However since the contrary is 99% Muslim there are a lot of Arabic words in Turkish since they pray in Arabic! And these works are part of the Turkish daily language and even some Christians use them as well. That is not an option for me because I go to my Latin Church on Saturday night for vigil Mass. I use Arabic words in my Latin Church when I pray by the way.
Don’t the Turks speak Turkish and not Arabic? If you want to go to an Arabic language Church why not go to an Antiochian Orthodox Church for Saturday night Vespers and then your Latin Church for Sunday Mass?
 
I’m really confused about something because I keep getting different answers on this. I really like the Coptic because they speak Arabic and it makes me feel more connected to Turkey and the East than the Latin Church does but as I’ve said there’s no Coptic Church in my area that Catholic there’s only a Coptic Orthodox church. So I’ve been trying to figure out some sort of compromise like one of the things I really like about the Coptic Church is the liturgy of the hours but rather then do the Orthodox liturgy of the hours I do that Catholic liturgy of the hours instead. Are we allowed to watch other liturgies because I’ve been watching the Coptic Church liturgy? I would like to keep watching it because I really enjoy watching it But of course I will continue to attend my Latin Church because I want to remain Catholic. Also can somebody tell me if there are any other Eastern Catholic churches that speak Arabic that I could look into it?
Melkite Catholics, Maronite Catholics, and Chaldeans all speak Arabic, and incorporate it into the Liturgy. The Melkites also include Aramaic into the Liturgy. I’ll have to think, I seem to be missing another Catholic Rite that uses Arabic.
 
Melkite Catholics, Maronite Catholics, and Chaldeans all speak Arabic, and incorporate it into the Liturgy. The Melkites also include Aramaic into the Liturgy. I’ll have to think, I seem to be missing another Catholic Rite that uses Arabic.
perfect I know we have a Maronite church here I’m not sure if we have any of the others that you mentioned but I will look into the Maronite I would be able to receive the Eucharist right?
 
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