J
John1
Guest
Please forgive me for my ignorance about this, but I was wondering is the Coptic Church was part of the Eastern Orthodox Church?
Not exactly. Properly speaking, the Coptic Orthodox, (along with the Syriac Orthodox, Armenian Orthodox, & Ethiopian Orthodox) is considered one of the Oriental Orthodox Churches. (The Assyrian Church of the East is not technically part of that.) Likewise, the Coptic, Syriac, & Armenian Churches in union with Rome (including, among others, the Maronite and Chaldean Churches), are considered Oriental Catholic Churches (sui juris).Please forgive me for my ignorance about this, but I was wondering is the Coptic Church was part of the Eastern Orthodox Church?
The Copts are Non-Chalcedonian Orthodox (they don’t accept the definitions of the council of Chalcedon, but believe the same exact things as the Eastern Orthodox) as are the Syriac Orthodox, Ethiopian Orthodox, Eritrean Orthodox, and Armenian Apostolic. from what I hear, they are pretty close to reunion with the Chalcedonian Orthodox (otherwise known as the Eastern Orthodox, or simply “the Orthodox”).Please forgive me for my ignorance about this, but I was wondering is the Coptic Church was part of the Eastern Orthodox Church?
Not exactly. There is a powerful traditionalist faction among the Eastern Orthodox who still regard the Oriental Orthodox as heretics. One of the most prominent groups among that faction are from Mt. Athos, whose influence among the EO is not a light one. Besides that, the Atonement theology and penitential spirituality of the Oriental Orthodox would present the same problems among EO as many EO imagine it does with the Latin Catholic Church. There is also the issue of marriage - the EO permit for divorce and remarriage in circumstances unheard of among the OO, and one cannot forget that the OO generally hold to the doctrine of the indissolubility of marriage, which the EO do not. Further, the OO have an appreciation for Natural Law that is largely missing from the EO. Another point of variance would be the EO belief in a “Cyprianic” ecclesiology, which the OO do not hold. In the latter matters, as well as a few others, the OO and the CC are much closer than the OO and the EO.The Copts are Non-Chalcedonian Orthodox (they don’t accept the definitions of the council of Chalcedon, but believe the same exact things as the Eastern Orthodox) as are the Syriac Orthodox, Ethiopian Orthodox, Eritrean Orthodox, and Armenian Apostolic. from what I hear, they are pretty close to reunion with the Chalcedonian Orthodox (otherwise known as the Eastern Orthodox, or simply “the Orthodox”).