Based on the foregoing, the watershed agreements at Chambesy, Switzerland between Oriental and Eastern Orthodox representatives by the end of the 1990s–all in all 4 informal talks and 4 formal sessions of dialogue–put the issue to rest in the realm of dogma. (The conversations/dialogues also significantly influenced the favorable accords between the OO and the Catholic communion.) They do indeed share a common faith, but perhaps the most historically significant issue is the tacit recognition (especially by the EO reps.) that there can be a common orthodox (“small o”) faith AND that such faith can have more than one legitimate manner in which it can be rightly expressed. This is SO important, because many of the problems that led to the disintegration of relations between the Rome-Byzantium group and the Alexandrine-Antiochene-Armenian group in antiquity is each side’s contention that ONE and only one system legitimately express the truth…in this case, the Hypostatic Union. The Catholic Church, for its part, has also recognized the legitimacy of multiple, philosophically-based systems to help “impart the word of truth.” In my opinion, this is one of the greatest advances in the whole project of modern ecumenism.
And that is also part of the problem. Despite the OO/EO accords, several issues remain:
The 29 (more or less, depending on one’s reckoning) autocephalous churches of the three Orthodox Communions–Eastern Orthodox, Oriental Orthodox and the Assyro-Chaldean “Church of the East” (which until lately we called Nestorian) are by and large satisfied with the status quo. Despite the fact that the EO and OO worked out the dividing doctrinal issues among the respective ecumenical dialogue partners (most of whom are bishops and world class theologians), the issue simply “died in committee” and the respective supreme hierarchs and their synods simply did nothing–with the exception of protocols worked out in Antioch and Alexandria which established limited, provisional sacramental sharing between the EO and OO–due to the current period of distress under varying degrees of Islamist domination. To boot, too much is going on at home for the Middle Eastern Orthodox dealing with Isalmic oppression or Arab/Turkish secular repression, or too much to deal with re-consolidating the post-Soviet EO in E. Europe.
To reunite the EO and OO as a whole would practically require certain repudiations of the former regarding what have been proven historically inaccurate or outright wrong evaluations of certain persons or theological positions that were condemned at Chalcedon and Constantinople II. (For example, the dialogues have vindicated the theology or Dioscorus and Severus of Antioch–they were NOT “monophysites” in the sense of being Apolonarian, which was the *true *heresy claiming that Christ’s humanity was obliterated or nearly so because of the incarnation. That ain’t gonna happen anytime soon, especially with reactionary groups found in some sectors of Mt Athos, or among similar groups of the Russian and Greek Churches who would be less-than-comfortable with such an admission. Remember, for these sectors, ecumenism is a heresy (and that’s one of the nicer things they call it…)
(There is also the issue of how the OO with few if any exceptions among their senior theologians regard Ayssyro-Chaldean Christology as orthodox. This is another issue…We must remember that the respective Christologies are somewhat “polarized” that of Alexandria (and Cyril) on one hand and that of the older Antiochene school represented by Theodore of Cyr and Theodore of Mopsuestia. (And I’m not including Nestorius, because even he himself in a certain level of disrepute among the A-C churches! Sorry for the digression…)
Finally, the big problem is getting people to “play nice in the same sandbox.” Remember, around 30 autocephalous or “self-heading” groups have known division as normative…most of the churches within the EO and OO have just accepted the 1700 years of division as business as usual. It strikes me as a matter of, “well, we’ve gotten along without you this long, so why bother?” How can that be overcome?
And, to make it more tragic, both communions share the same basic dogmatic belief system, which would make it (seemingly) even easier to unite as a single communion with each other than it would for, say, the Catholic Church given the issue of petrine primacy. But it would ultimately be a question of qui bono–what good, what difference would it make in my diocese, my parish, my life? Until or if there is a popular movement toward answering these questions, keeping in mind that the Lord God desires one, universal, apostolic communion of believers, division will continue.
To the state of the question, then–yes, yes indeed miaphysites and diaphysites, so-called, share the same core orthodox faith. But getting them together in the same church–aye, that’s the rub.
May the Sprit himself forgive us and direct our paths!