Malphono’s last paragraph is pretty much the point of all my posts, Yeoman. Apologies if I’ve offended you in any way. I didn’t mean that you should butt out at all, only that the suggestions of those who aren’t actually there (you, me, etc.) are generally counterproductive, especially when they begin to take the form of “don’t you guys want to unite with Rome now? Wouldn’t that help?” The answer is basically no, but sometimes it’s hard to phrase that nicely, and the constant repeating of “poor Middle Eastern Christians; they’re all going to disappear” from well-meaning outsiders is particularly grating when very few actually do anything about it (not that I’m so great, either, but I am not suggesting that anyone come under HH Pope Tawadros II as an answer to their ills, either). From the Christians I know from Iraq, Palestine, and Lebanon it seems like what is most needed is infrastructure and security, not a visit from the Roman Pope. Rome is worse than a band aid. I mean, geez, in a region where the enemies cannot even bother to distinguish between different communions (e.g., the bombing of the Syriac Catholic Church in Baghdad was supposedly in retaliation for the fake/non-existent “kidnapping” of two Coptic Orthodox women who Islamic extremists said had converted to Islam and were being held against their will by the Coptic Church), what exactly do you think native Christians joining forces in any way with a Roman/European institution would signal to those who are convinced they are locked in some kind of cosmic struggle to the death against “the West” as a metaphysical enemy? A Christian is already at least half a Westerner to most everyday Muslims, to say nothing of those who are specifically out to wipe the religion off the map while the Roman Pope sends his good wishes to dying flocks in the Holy Land or wherever. Bah.
Remember/read up on the East Syrians’ Synod of Dadisho (424 AD). At that time, the Persian’s big enemy was the Byzantine Empire, which was obviously symbolic of Christianity, so it caused a lot of problems for the native East Syrian Christians within the Persian Empire. Their patriarch was repeatedly jailed for being a suspected Byzantine sympathizer or spy. The parallels between this and what has happened in recent years to the
translators who worked with the now-departed American troops in Iraq is pretty hard to miss. So if you think that Rome/the Roman Pope will be some kind of umbrella of protection for native Christians, think again. Many who are
already under Rome are complicating efforts to protect Christians, as well, so committed they are to “dialogue” with people who want to kill them, and the idea that violence is somehow indiscriminate (despite the fact that
Christians still living in Iraq say “If anyone wants to send a message to the USA, he targets Christians or bombs churches”).
Christians in the Middle East have a lot of problems, and Rome is not the answer to any of them.