I wish the Greek Orthodox would reunite with us

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I can think of no better examples of why it is not in the interests of the Greeks (or any of the Orthodox churches or jurisdictions) to unite with the Roman communion than the attitudes of some posters in this thread. I know, I know…you can’t judge a church of over a billion communicants by some posts on an internet forum, but one thing I have learned is that for every one person making inflammatory, short-sighted, and arrogant posts on the internet, there are thousands not on the internet (since on a global level the RCC tends to be a very poor, third world church) who echo those same opinions due to lack of exposure to Orthodoxy. This is one of the reasons why the missionary imperative is so important to bringing the true faith to every person, and in that the Greeks (and others) are seeing results. It would be interesting if instead of arguing over who has big/little brother syndrome we could instead see who is doing the work of the apostles. At least from the ex-Catholics turned Orthodox I’ve talked to from places like Mexico, Bolivia, and other traditionally Catholic countries, it seems like one of the things that makes Orthodoxy attractive is that it is not an institutional religion in their countries and cultures, while RCism is. It’s sort of like the argument against (business) monopolies, y’know…when there’s only one game in town, the incentive to be responsive to customers’ needs and concerns is essentially not there.

I know that’s not a fair depiction of Catholicism in absolutely every case, but it does put Randy Carson’s number game in a new light.

And, although I know the answer is already “it doesn’t matter how many; the objection will remain, since it bears no relation to what you actually do”, I do have to wonder exactly how many places Orthodoxy needs to reach before amateur RC apologists drop this whole “Catholicism is found in more places than Orthodoxy, so it is true and Orthodoxy is false” non-argument. Even my communion, which is much smaller than the EO, has had great success recently in Latin America – a Roman Catholic stronghold – as well as in the Caribbean and in certain parts of subsaharan Africa. I mean, if hundreds of new Orthodox Christians in Bolivia, South Africa, Pakistan, Trinidad, France, Britain, Fiji, Guatemala, and many, many other places do not prove that people who say that Orthodoxy is somehow not universal or less universal than Catholicism are either lying or at best extremely ignorant, then what will? If you can dismiss all evidence to the contrary as neophytes, historical accidents, and offshoots of “ethnic” churches that hence shouldn’t count, what can you reasonably say about the Catholic Church in literally every single place outside of Europe – that is to say, in every thing that you take as evidence of your own communion’s “catholicity”? So this is definitely not an argument that anyone of the Roman Catholic communion should want to make, and yet as this thread shows, it is persistently made by the same people over and over. Enough already .You are hurting your own church with your weak, ham-fisted pseudo-apologetics from numbers and atlases.
 
If I am painting with a broad brush, it is perhaps because the more I read on this subject, the broader my perspective becomes. 👍

It’s really very simple:

Catholic Church - 1.2 billion
Orthodox Church(es) - 300 million

While the Catholic Church has gone into every corner of the globe and made disciples of all nations (try not to be overly literal here, Cav), the Orthodox have simply failed to achieve the kind of success in evangelization on a global scale that would provide evidence that they really are the one true Church commissioned by Our Lord in Matthew 28. Your church(es) remain largely isolated in a few eastern European and Asian countries.

But we’ve argued this point point many times before in other threads and subforums, so there really isn’t any need to play it out again.
Read history Randy. The Orthodox Church has suffered terrible persecutions while the Catholic Church has follewed in the wake of Spanish conquests. This may be oversimplifying things but in comparison to your claim …
 
But from reading about World War I in Europe, it destroyed alot of people’s faith or atleast shakened it…then came WWII. Fr Pacwa visited our parish and said it was his opinion that World War II destroyed alot of Christianity in Europe.

So Latins were later hit with two world wars of the last century. Orthodoxy has suffered so much, and we are seeing the Syrian Christians being destroyed in Syria and Iraq right now…when does the Latin Church experience this source…as Spain, Sicily, and Sardenia did in times past.
 
Out of curiosity, what was the primary reason for your conversion?

Was there one thing that just bugged you about Catholicism until you had to make the break from Rome?
The correct teaching and greater emphasis in Orthodoxy on the Holy Spirit. Also, the continued presence in Orthodoxy of lay asceticism.
 
I can think of no better examples of why it is not in the interests of the Greeks (or any of the Orthodox churches or jurisdictions) to unite with the Roman communion than the attitudes of some posters in this thread. I know, I know…you can’t judge a church of over a billion communicants by some posts on an internet forum, but one thing I have learned is that for every one person making inflammatory, short-sighted, and arrogant posts on the internet, there are thousands not on the internet (since on a global level the RCC tends to be a very poor, third world church) who echo those same opinions due to lack of exposure to Orthodoxy.
But even that is flawed because the reality is that most people in the third world don’t even know Orthodoxy exists. In fact people in the western world barely know of Orthodoxy’s existence so its not very possible for large numbers to have an opinion on orthodoxy (nevermind a faulty one) when they don’t even know that such a denomination exists…
I know that’s not a fair depiction of Catholicism in absolutely every case, but it does put Randy Carson’s number game in a new light.
And, although I know the answer is already “it doesn’t matter how many; the objection will remain, since it bears no relation to what you actually do”, I do have to wonder exactly how many places Orthodoxy needs to reach before amateur RC apologists drop this whole “Catholicism is found in more places than Orthodoxy, so it is true and Orthodoxy is false” non-argument. Even my communion, which is much smaller than the EO, has had great success recently in Latin America – a Roman Catholic stronghold – as well as in the Caribbean and in certain parts of subsaharan Africa. I mean, if hundreds of new Orthodox Christians in South Africa…
Well there might be a few parishes opened im South Africa but to be honest Orthodoxy’s presence here is virtually non-existent. The only oriental churches I know of are from Egyptian and Ethiopian immigrants and those I’ve only seen on the internet. I’ve only seen ONE orthodox church (A Russian Orthodox Parish in my neighborhood) in my entire life and I’ve been to many places in my country (South Africa) so its hard for me to believe the claim of “great success”. Orthodoxy (Oriental and Eastern) is barely 3% of South Africa’s Christian population.

I however agree that numbers is not a strong argument and I’m not a fan of it but Randy does make a point in that the the fulfillment of the great commission is one of the signs of the true church.
 
But even that is flawed because the reality is that most people in the third world don’t even know Orthodoxy exists.
What does the post you’re responding to say? Lack of exposure to Orthodoxy is a problem.
In fact people in the western world barely know of Orthodoxy’s existence so its not very possible for large numbers to have an opinion on orthodoxy (nevermind a faulty one) when they don’t even know that such a denomination exists…
Did you move to the West just to reply to this post? I thought you live in South Africa…
Well there might be a few parishes opened im South Africa but to be honest Orthodoxy’s presence here is virtually non-existent. The only oriental churches I know of are from Egyptian and Ethiopian immigrants and those I’ve only seen on the internet. I’ve only seen ONE orthodox church (A Russian Orthodox Parish in my neighborhood) in my entire life and I’ve been to many places in my country (South Africa) so its hard for me to believe the claim of “great success”. Orthodoxy (Oriental and Eastern) is barely 3% of South Africa’s Christian population.
Did I anywhere mention South Africa in particular, or does the world not in fact revolve around you and your particular neighborhood or past travel itinerary? As luck would have it, there are Orthodox churches in South Africa (Wikipedia lists 12 churches, a school, and a vocational training center, serving approximately 15,000 faithful in the Coptic Church alone; I don’t know about other churches, though as you mention there are also Ethiopian churches there), though I don’t know if they’re anywhere near you. Maybe you should check them out before passing judgment on something you admit to not knowing anything about outside of the internet.
I however agree that numbers is not a strong argument and I’m not a fan of it but Randy does make a point in that the the fulfillment of the great commission is one of the signs of the true church.
So it’s not a strong argument, but you agree with it anyway? Yeah, that makes a lot of sense… 🤷
 
Did you move to the West just to reply to this post? I thought you live in South Africa…
The internet is a place to meet people. How many times on,CAF alone do you see American posters or other s from around the world state that they didn’t know,about orthodoxy?
I know I’ve seen en it too many times for them to be a minority… Enough times to get a good idea of how many people on average would know about EO and OO
Did I anywhere mention South Africa in particular, or does the world not in fact revolve around you and your particular neighborhood or past travel itinerary? As luck would have it, there are Orthodox churches in South Africa (Wikipedia lists 12 churches, a school, and a vocational training center, serving approximately 15,000 faithful in the Coptic Church alone; I don’t know about other churches, though as you mention there are also Ethiopian churches there), though I don’t know if they’re anywhere near you. Maybe you should check them out before passing judgment on something you admit to not knowing anything about outside of the internet.
12 Churches that are Ethiopian. Yeah pretty good evangelizing. These churches are pure outgrowths of Ethiopian immigrants as there are MANY of them here.

Even if I have not been every where Dzheremi, the fact that I have lived for over two decades in my country, been to almost every province and major city (where moat immigrants stay) and have not ONCE seen an oriental parish is quite something. Nevermind the people I know and family from all over the country whenever I speak about the orthodox not a single one of them know what or who they are. Always have to explain who they are. That’s why amongst other reasons, its hard to stomach your claim of great evangelism. It appears that it is not evangelism down here but immigration.

Now the OO may be making strides im Ireland as the other poster noted but then again the CC is making strides in a lot of other places too. The CC in Africa I predicted to double in roughly ten years time nevermind Asia and the underground church in china. Catholicism as a whole is predicted to keep growing , just that the growth appears to be coming from the new world areas as opposed to Europe and the Americas.
So it’s not a strong argument, but you agree with it anyway? Yeah, that makes a lot of sense… 🤷
Yes because the great commission is a duty and sign of the church, no?
Yet it cannot be your sole argument .
 
The internet is a place to meet people. How many times on,CAF alone do you see American posters or other s from around the world state that they didn’t know,about orthodoxy?
I don’t know how many times I’m going to have to say that it doesn’t matter whether or not Americans embrace something. I guess at least once more, because there it is again. Quite odd that you, a South African, would single out American knowledge of something as the litmus test of…well, anything. Either the evidence of conversion to Orthodoxy among Subsaharan Africans, European Americans, South Americans of all races, etc. is evidence of the great commission being fulfilled or it isn’t, but if it isn’t, then you can’t then turn around and point to the great growth of the RCC in various places as evidence of how much better off it is. They’re both conversions, assuming that it’s not all immigration in the RCC case, as you’ve wrongly insinuated about the Orthodox.

If this message board is to be taken as representative of the world, as you would seem to want it to be by referencing how often people who come here don’t know about Orthodoxy (shocking! People searching for information on Catholicism don’t know about Orthodoxy?! :eek:), then you might want to go back and visit the table I linked earlier from Wikipedia about Coptic Orthodox missions and parishes in Subsaharan Africa. In it, you will find at the bottom a total of 400,000+ faithful across all the listed countries. This messageboard has about 468,000 members. So, slightly larger, but roughly comparable (after all, we don’t know how many are included in that “+”). Can I then take this roughly similar amount of Orthodox Christian worshipers in Subsaharan Africa (keeping in mind that these are Coptic Orthodox Christians only; if we add in the Ethiopians, the Armenians, and the Eastern Orthodox, the number undoubtedly becomes much higher) as evidence that Orthodoxy is in fact known, and that you are wrong to not take the roughly comparable number of people who obviously know it as evidence of the reality of the situation, given that you have no trouble taking a similarly-sized sample from one internet website as evidence of your own assertions?
12 Churches that are Ethiopian. Yeah pretty good evangelizing. These churches are pure outgrowths of Ethiopian immigrants as there are MANY of them here.
12 churches that are COPTIC (which is not bad, considering they’ve only been in SA for a few decades; how many Latin parishes were in SA within 50 years of the arrival of Bartholomew Diaz? I’m going to guess it was less than a dozen, since your own bishops admit that evangelization was not the priority in those days). Please read more carefully. And Ethiopian immigrants? Pretty impressive of these “Ethiopians” to learn the local language so fluently, isn’t it? Hey…wait a minute…none of those priests are Ethiopians! What’s going on here? It’s almost like you’re…wrong! :eek:😃
Even if I have not been every where Dzheremi, the fact that I have lives for over two decades in my country, been to almost every province and major city (where moat immigrants stay) and have not ONCE seen an oriental parish is quite something.
Not as much as you’d think, or else you’d think it’d be pretty easy to find numerous counter-examples to your dismissals of the presence of the Orthodox in your country before you post the sorts of things you have, as I have in about five seconds, even limiting myself to only one particular church…
Nevermind the people I know and family from all over the country whenever I speak about the orthodox not a single one of them know what or who they seem.
That’s funny…the same thing happens when I talk to people I know and family from all over my country, too. I guess that means there are no Orthodox Christians in America, either. I wonder where it is that I keep going every two weeks for the past three years, then…and who all the people who happen to be in that building, consecrated for the use of a religion that doesn’t exist, are…what a befuddling situation!
That’s why amongst other reasons, its hard to stomach your claim of great evangelism. It appears that it is not evangelism down here but immigration.
It appears that way because you don’t know what you’re talking about, and are predisposed to dismiss any evidence that disagrees with your preconceptions.
Yes because the great commission is a duty and sign of the church, no?
Yet it cannot be your sole argument .
And yet that’s the only argument you’ve made in response to my posts which you have replied to. Whereas I wrote (very consciously) “thousands”, and linked to estimates kept by the Coptic Church herself of her own faithful, you’ve found reason to dismiss everything because there just aren’t big enough numbers, either via those links or in terms of what you yourself have seen, to be taken seriously.

Fair enough…you want to dismiss 400,000+ people in your general area as being all immigrants, even when you can see from the videos posted that these are native priests, and many, many native worshipers (did you spot any Copts in the Coptic Sunday school clip? I didn’t), that’s on you. But evangelism continues on regardless, whether or not someone on the internet can see it. 🤷
 
I will reply in full tomorrow when I get the time but with regards to the parishes … According the Census of SA the twelve parishes serving in south Africa identify as Ethiopian. The other orthodox in the census represent EO and are 0.5% of the Christian population.
 
I will reply in full tomorrow when I get the time but with regards to the parishes … According the Census of SA the twelve parishes serving in south Africa identify as Ethiopian. The other orthodox in the census represent EO and are 0.5% of the Christian population.
I believe that Coptic-internal data knows better than the Census of SA. It is extremely likely that, to the extent that the difference clearly exists on the ground (see: the video I posted of the Coptic liturgy; again, this is clearly not an Ethiopian church), it probably doesn’t on available census forms, given how the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church has only been autocephalous for maybe 60 years. This confusion is still common throughout the world, given that we’re talking about ~60 years of autocephaly vs. 1600 of governance by the Coptic Orthodox Church While there appear to be at least 11 EOTC churches in SA, they are not the same as the Coptic Orthodox churches there (e.g., you won’t find in this list St. Mark’s in Johannesburg).
 
Here is a list of all the countries and territories in the world where the Catholic population comprise less than 3% of the country:

Afghanistan (0.0003%), Algeria (0.01%), Azerbaijan (0.03%), Bangladesh (0.22%), Bhutan (0.13%), Bulgaria (1%), Cambodia (0.16%), China (0.75%), Comoros (0.5%), Cyprus (1.28%), Denmark (2%), Djibouti (0.2%), Egypt (0.35%), Estonia (0.36%), Ethiopia (0.7%), Finland (0.14%), Gambia (2.1%), Georgia (0.8%), Greece (0.41%), Guinea (2.66%), India (1.58%), Indonesia (2.91%), Iran (0.02%), Iraq (1.19%), Israel (1.5%), Jamaica (2.6%), Japan (0.4%), Jordan (1.2%), Kazakhstan (0.66%), North Korea (0.017%), Kyrgyzstan (0.56%), Laos (0.6%), Libya (0.7%), Macedonia (1%), Maldives (0.02%), Mali (1.54%), Mauritania (0.15%), Moldova (0.46%), Mongolia (0.04%), Myanmar (1.05%), Niger (0.01%), Oman (0.1%), Pakistan (0.79%), Palestine (2%), Russia (0.53%), Saudi Arabia (2.5%), Sierra Leone (2.9%), Somalia (0.001%), Sudan (1%), Sweden (1.62%), Syria (2%), Taiwan (1.39%), Tajikistan (0.55%), Thailand (0.44%), Tunisia (0.22%), Turkey (0.05%), Turkmenistan (0.54%), Ukraine (2.2%), Uzbekistan (0.01%), Western Sahara (0.06%), Yemen (0.02)

That’s 61 countries and territories out of a list of 196. So a little under 32% of the countries for which there is available data via the CIA World Fact Book have the same percentage or less (in many cases much less) of Catholics as there are Orthodox in SA, according to Wandile. Doesn’t make Catholicism look so great at first blush, does it? Add to that the fact that in many of these places, e.g. Central Asia, the Catholics are composed of distinct ethnic minorities…just like Wandile’s claim about the Orthodox in subsaharan Africa. As concerns South Africa in particular, you can note at the source that SA’s population of Catholics is 7.1%. If we take Wandile’s claim that Orthodox in South Africa comprise 3% of SA’s Christians, that would mean that despite the Roman Catholic church’s approximately 463-year head start, they’ve only managed to grow 4.1% more than we have…an increase of less than 1% per ‘extra’ century. In light of that, considering that the Orthodox have only been in South Africa for about half a century, 3% is not bad at all. It could be more, of course, but…well, check back with us in another 40-50 years. Maybe we’ll be at 6%, or 10%, or 2%. And in another 400 years? We can’t really say, but then since no Orthodox person makes an argument from numbers in the first place (not because we can’t; as I’ve just shown, we’ve grown quite a bit more than the RCC did during its formative years in SA, relative to the overall length of time of mission so far), we don’t really have to, either.
 
If after reading this thread anyone still questions why we aren’t all out for union, read again.

Of the two Catholic posters in this thread who show any sympathy toward us, one is now “suspended”. Meanwhile several not-suspended Catholics have written insulting posts (strangely enough accusing us of being bigoted)

If this forum were my only exposure to Catholicism I would probably be a pretty virulent anti-Catholic.

I confess I do get a small kick out of it when Catholics claim (as someone did) that it is the evil Russian Orthodox Church that prevents union. I guess in these posters minds the Baptism of the Kiev was the true reason for the Great Schism. To anyone who seriously thinks union is being thwarted by the Moscow Patriarchate - I say only that you have no understanding of who or what we are, if you want to be taken seriously at least try a study of our ecclesiology.

As for Randy and his as populum arguments - he’s been told many times why they are bad arguments by many different posters, yet he repeats the exact same one. Is there really any point to engaging him?

Rant over.
 
If after reading this thread anyone still questions why we aren’t all out for union, read again.

Of the two Catholic posters in this thread who show any sympathy toward us, one is now “suspended”. Meanwhile several not-suspended Catholics have written insulting posts (strangely enough accusing us of being bigoted)

If this forum were my only exposure to Catholicism I would probably be a pretty virulent anti-Catholic.

I confess I do get a small kick out of it when Catholics claim (as someone did) that it is the evil Russian Orthodox Church that prevents union. I guess in these posters minds the Baptism of the Kiev was the true reason for the Great Schism. To anyone who seriously thinks union is being thwarted by the Moscow Patriarchate - I say only that you have no understanding of who or what we are, if you want to be taken seriously at least try a study of our ecclesiology.

As for Randy and his as populum arguments - he’s been told many times why they are bad arguments by many different posters, yet he repeats the exact same one. Is there really any point to engaging him?

Rant over.
Just a little to note that I join with Peter J and Jharek Carnelian in sympathizing with the Orthodox and in rejecting arguments based on population.
 
If after reading this thread anyone still questions why we aren’t all out for union, read again. (snip)
With all due respect, my brother, I would suggest that experiences on an internet forum should not unduly affect our desire for reunion. While I acknowledge the same negative attitudes you have encountered here, this is a small sample of the Roman Catholic population, and I think we must also acknowledge the voices of sympathy and understanding we encounter here, although fewer in number.
 
Just a thought experiment, if I may: Imagine if you will that a Oneness Pentecostal and a Catholic were talking, and the Oneness Pentecostal said “I don’t know why you think that you and I have different beliefs. We both believe in Jesus.” Would you say “You’re right”? No, right? Because while you share some very basic/fundamental belief with them (e.g., there is one God), there are other basic beliefs (e.g., the divinity of Christ, traditional Triadology, etc.) that you guys do not share, in addition to many more less basic beliefs that you do not share. I believe that a Oneness Pentecostal and a Catholic are farther apart in doctrine than a Catholic and an Orthodox Christian, if we look at things only in a checklist manner (i.e., there would be more basics in common between Catholics and Orthodox, precisely because they both share some form of Trinitarian belief and believe in Christ’s divinity that the Oneness Pentecostal does not), but in that same way there are many less basic beliefs that are held by Catholics that are not held by Orthodox, even outside of the obvious differences in ecclesiology: the Filioque, the Sacred Heart and related devotions, the Immaculate Conception, Purgatory, etc. These are not matters of ecclesiology or jurisdictional principles, but they are all beliefs that the Orthodox do not embrace. I take it that’s what you mean by “different unrelated beliefs”.

The problem is that the Orthodox do not agree with this idea. Everything else is not acceptable to them, though it may be acceptable to you.

There is a difference between nuance within a recognized framework agreed upon within the church in question (read: internal consistency, whether or not anyone outside of the church would agree with what is taught there), and what those outside of the church would call nuance. To both communions under discussion in this thread (which I am not a part of, but I don’t doubt that you’d both agree with this point), of course their own explanations and views are nuanced and correct – though the “other side’s” are not. I don’t think it would take too much digging to find Orthodox posters challenging RCs on the Filioque (to use but one example), nor to find RC posters challenging EO posters on that communion’s limited allowance of divorce and remarriage (ditto). Both churches’ explanations of either matter are nuanced, but to those outside of each respective communion, that is not enough to make them right.

This is highly, highly optimistic by any stretch of the imagination, though I wish you both luck just the same.
In your opinion what are the impassable things that must be resolved i.e. what must the Catholic do in order to realize a reunification? I would like to compare them…
 
That is a question for EO (which I wouldn’t doubt has been addressed many times here before, should you wish to do the requisite searching).
 
If I am painting with a broad brush, it is perhaps because the more I read on this subject, the broader my perspective becomes. 👍
What good is a supposedly broad perspective when one makes myopic generalizations?
It’s really very simple:

Catholic Church - 1.2 billion
Orthodox Church(es) - 300 million
Simple, yes. That is what makes this argument so specious, like hemlock sweetened with honey. The Nestorians once also outnumbered the Chalcedonian Church. Would you have become a Nestorian in the year 600? Thinking that some notion or idea can be known to be true because more people believe it than another seems like a rather poor theory of knowledge to me.
While the Catholic Church has gone into every corner of the globe and made disciples of all nations (try not to be overly literal here, Cav)
Those are, of course, the words by which you attempt to make your argument indefeasible, because when a list of nations is produced where the Latin Church has very little presence, you can simply dismiss it as being “overly literal”. But since you already acknowledge that the Latins have not “gone into every corner of the globe and made disciples of all nations” in a literal sense, you then also should be willing to acknowledge that this phrase must have been meant in a figurative sense, which means that without a mutually agreed upon definition of what Christ meant by the words of the Great Commission, any comparison of who has fulfilled it “better” will be meaningless equivocation.
the Orthodox have simply failed to achieve the kind of success in evangelization on a global scale that would provide evidence that they really are the one true Church commissioned by Our Lord in Matthew 28. Your church(es) remain largely isolated in a few eastern European and Asian countries.
And what would you have said in the year 1300 or in the year 600 as to which is the true church? This form of argument is actually remarkably un-Catholic, as it fails the Vincentian canon and could not have been thought true by the faithful everywhere at all times,
But we’ve argued this point point many times before in other threads and subforums, so there really isn’t any need to play it out again.
Then why write it in a public forum, if you wish not to discuss it, have your views challenged, and “play it out again”?
 
I don’t really know much about Orthodoxy but I think I know a tiny bit about the Schism. The Ecumenical Patriarch wanted to be head of the Church, the Pope wanted to be head of the Church and they both had different ideas of what that entailed.

I don’t know if something like that can be mended. If the two churches were joined, either the Pope or the Ecumenical Patriarch wouldn’t be head and the other would, or they would both be. In any of those cases, a lot of Catholics or Orthodoxes wouldn’t accept that the E.P/Pope is now the head of the combined Church, or they wouldn’t accept that there are too leaders. Quite a few people could leave both Churches over this. And we’d still have the problem of them being having different levels of power. The Pope is the leader of the Church and he’s in charge of the bishops, while the Ecumenical Patriarch is the first among equals.

I really wish that our two Churches could be united but I don’t see how it would work.
 
If Orthodox cannot accept change because it wasn’t passed down from patristic sources, and the Catholic Church teaches things as they are continually being revealed, how can there be unification?

The very concept of continual revelation is at odds…

But with God, I hope that all things are possible.

What would the united Church be called?

With the Church being united again, surely this would lead many Protestants to join the One Holy Catholic Apostolic Church. And then world-wide conversion. OK, getting ahead of myself…
 
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