When the Propaganda sent its missionaries to Egypt in the 19th century, it requested the then-current Pope (I forgot who it was at that particular time, perhaps Pio Nono, perhaps Pope Leo XIII) …There’s no one-sidedness there as far as I see - it’s just a matter of the Pope helping to preserve the local traditions established by the local hierarchy. Can you think of other circumstances that justifies a perception that it is “one-sided?”
Likely your example involved Leo XIII. (In my wildest imagination I can’t conceive of Pio Nono in that role but I digress.) And whereas it may have been so in the CCC and perhaps also in the UGCC, I don’t think it hold water in regard to the Syro-Malabars. Remember that there, the latinizations were imposed from without, and even today, despite all the “reforms” etc, what one finds is a craps-shoot. Some dioceses (e.g. Chanangassery) are considered “Oriental” whilst others (e.g. Ernakulum & Thrissur) are still highly latinized and are now in the Novus Ordo mode. And now, even without the likes of the direct latinizers, I still don’t see Rome doing anything concrete to correct that last, do you?
And can you tell me please what the need for Propaganda (my, but that is such an apropos name, isn’t it?) missionaries in Egypt was in the first place? What? To “convert” the Coptic Orthodox? Sounds just like the Anglican Protestants who were there to “convert” the Coptic Orthodox, doesn’t it?
But, anyway, while none of that is where I was going earlier, it does play to the point. Why was/is Rome involved at all? Beyond the recognition of Communion, there’s really no reason for such involvement. I said “pesky Easterners & Orientals” because the attitude from “on high” is that we are but naughty kids who need a den-mother to keep us in our place. Reminds me something our old friend, bpbasilphx, used to say: “get to the back of the bus.” We get dealt with as the “powers that be” see fit. If they want to interfere directly, they will. If they don’t, they won’t. But of course there is still that lovely Oriental Congregation to watch over those pesky kids.

And even without it, we really cannot do anything that is not subject in one way or another to review by one or another of the
other Roman Congregations. Sadly, it’s all a fact of life.
Can you give a link to this document? I admit I’ve never read it.
Sorry, I don’t. I downloaded it years ago and no longer have the link, but perhaps Diak or someone else does.
Well, shouldn’t we be? The bishop of Rome should focus on his particular Church and I’m sure he has enough to worry about having the largest Church to watch over. He should pay attention to us only if our hierarchy appeals to him. Why should you complain that he is
not micromanaging us?
Yes, so the focus should be but in reality we all know it is not so. The Roman bureaucracy is like an octopus, and you know it as well as I do.
Anyway, I’m not complaining about “micromanagement” per-se (and when we need it we don’t get it: see the Syro-Malabar note above. And more personally to me, the Maronites, e.g, need a very strong dose of Summorum Pontificum right now, although we we’re not getting it but I digress again) but rather it’s the many facets (or is that “tentacles”?) of the octopus that get to me.
We have our own canons and particular laws that were not written by Latins. The general canons of our Churches (the CCEO) refers to it all the time.
Yes, and…? They may not be written by Latins, but let’s face reality and admit that the canon lawyers involved are all, each and every one, products of the Roman system. And here we see yet another of those tentacles grasping away.
OK. It’s a matter of perception. I admit I’ve lived most of my life outside the Catholic Church, so I don’t understand this “second-class” mentality fully. I see how Latins can be rather imposing and triumphal in their approach to us here on the internet, but I’ve rarely if ever met the same in real life (thankfully), and I don’t tend to let my worldview be dominated by what is on the I-net (your experience is obviously different, and I respect that). I don’t see the papacy as some foreign power in my Church, but as divinely established as one of the organs for the unity and preservation of the Faith of the entire Church, set there by God to help my Church when it is needed.
Indeed, my life experience is different. I see the influence every single day. No, Rome doesn’t commonly become directly involved, (and as I mentioned above, often when something should be done, they just sit on their hands and wait for it all to go away. Go figure …), but the influence of Rome has been – and remains – highly toxic.
Please, marduk, with all due respect, are you trying to tell me that the use of the versus populum table in the CCC came about without Novus Ordo influence? Or that the adoption (whether voluntarily accepted or imposed) of latin devotional practices was not due to Roman influence? Or that the CCEO itself is not the product of the latin mindset?