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يعجبني كثيرا دائما آن آلتقي شخص آاخر يعرف العربية!Arabic/Coptic bilingual (much better at the Arabic than at the Coptic). I don’t think I’ve picked up a new word of Coptic (“demoted Demotic”) since I was 7 years old and started school.
Wow, that’s quite ambitious. Good luck!I’m an outright polyglot now, currently working on Mandarin Chinese (with some success in the reading department, or at least memorizing all of the radicals), and then Russian - I don’t plan more than two ahead in languages or any other subject of learning (although I may plan half-a-score courses or books ahead), as I learned long ago that doing so would overwhelm me, and I’d never get number one completed, let alone two or three.
Hey! Mandarin, that’s the language I grew up with, although as a consequence of growing up in America, my ability to read Chinese is hampered quite significantly.Arabic/Coptic bilingual (much better at the Arabic than at the Coptic). I don’t think I’ve picked up a new word of Coptic (“demoted Demotic”) since I was 7 years old and started school. I’m an outright polyglot now, currently working on Mandarin Chinese (with some success in the reading department, or at least memorizing all of the radicals), and then Russian - I don’t plan more than two ahead in languages or any other subject of learning (although I may plan half-a-score courses or books ahead), as I learned long ago that doing so would overwhelm me, and I’d never get number one completed, let alone two or three.
Hahaha. The hymn is eight minutes long… but, thankfully, it doesn’t consist of that repeated for all that time.I’ll listen to it. I have to open another web browser, etc. to be able to play Flash.
Edit: from what I hear, it’s the Coptic Orthodox version of “Kyrie Eleison” (that is, “Lord have mercy, Lord have mercy”) with a few differences:
Have mercy on us (six times I think, he sings it for a full minute)
[Lord] have mercy, [Lord] have mercy, [Lord] have mercy
Have mercy God our Savior
Have mercy God our Savior
Have mercy, have mercy upon us God our Savior
Have mercy, have mercy, have mercy upon us God the Father, Ruler of All
Have mercy, have mercy, have mercy upon us God the Savior
Have mercy, have mercy upon us God, and have mercy.
[Lord] have mercy, [Lord] have mercy, [Lord] have mercy.
And then I stopped listening.
Ahh. After the Coptic part at the beginning, a guy starts singing in Modern Standard Arabic and then (as far as I can tell) a lady takes over in Egyptian Arabic.I think that’s the bulk of it, repeated. It’s kind of like the Paternoster in Coptic: I know the words, but I don’t always know what they mean, as I memorized all of it by rote when very young.
I’ve detected a resemblance to the Islamic melismatic style of Qur’anic recitation. I’m delighted to see Christians using something characteristically Islamic (or what Westerners might consider to be such) to give praise to Jesus. I myself find the style to have an aura of profound solemn beauty, but perhaps the novelty will eventually wear off…It sounds a bit like the Muslim Adhan now that my ear is used to English. I suppose the scales used are the same. (Ironically, as a Muslim, the adhan I believed beautiful; now it sounds like fingernails screeching on a chalkboard.)
The token Lutheran, I am.But if you were gone, then we’d have no one to argue with about intrinsic efficacy of grace!
Trebor, I’m also curious about your own religious beliefs. You come off as a typically orthodox Christian (That is, with a small “o” and not referring to any of the Orthodox churches). I know you say you’re still working on that part- Mind sharing where you are in that regard? What’s your current leaning, if you don’t mind answering?If you ever feel inclined to write about it, I’d very much like to hear your conversion story from Coptic Orthodox Christianity, then to Islam, and finally to Catholic Christianity.
Thanks for your interest.Trebor, I’m also curious about your own religious beliefs. You come off as a typically orthodox Christian (That is, with a small “o” and not referring to any of the Orthodox churches). I know you say you’re still working on that part- Mind sharing where you are in that regard? What’s your current leaning, if you don’t mind answering?![]()
Hi, Trebor.Thanks for your interest.
Well, I’ve been in limbo for some months now. I bought a couple books and asked for some others for Christmas that I was hoping would aid me in settling the Catholicism/Eastern Orthodoxy dilemma. I haven’t been able to read them, partly because the ones I had didn’t scan so well (print books are inaccessible to me since I’m completely blind), and partly because the rest haven’t arrived (they were ordered online). When the school year ends, all the books should have come and the scanning can resume.
What I’d like to do is to read a general survey of the early church describing how councils worked and disputes were resolved. I’ve been pointed to Warren Carroll for material that purportedly fits the bill. Hmm, I’ll have to request that for my birthday…
What troubles me most is that, while I’m not aware of any informed Catholics or Orthodox who became Protestant because they discovered that theology to line up best with St. John Chrysostom and St. Augustine, well-read posters on these forums have become Catholic as well as Orthodox in light of their research into Early Church history. The issues dividing Catholics from Protestants are relatively easy to wrap one’s head around–sola scriptura, sola fide, Mary and the saints, sacramentalism. But the disagreements between Catholics and Orthodox seem so convoluted that no ordinary person should be expected to figure them out–the papacy, the filioque, original sin, Scholasticism/Hesichasm.
This whole situation nearly caused me to lose my faith in the past couple months; what rescued it were a Pentecostal friend’s recounting of a startling episode at church involving her personally and the argumentation/information set forth in various and sundry articles at The Christian Thinktank. I’m just worried that I may never know what path to take, given how difficult these questions are.
And my soul hangs in the balance, as do those of perhaps many around me who might be influenced by my choices: I’m one of the few practicing Christians among my family and friends. We could pray for the rapture to take place on May 21st this time around so my dilemma would become a non-issue!
I really do need a miracle here.
Searching for the truth can be hard. Know that you are definitely not alone, as quite a few other posters here are in the same boat, trying to discern whether the Catholic Church or Holy Orthodoxy contains the truth. Have faith in the Lord that He in his compassion and loving kindness will lead you where you need to be.Thanks for your interest.
Well, I’ve been in limbo for some months now. I bought a couple books and asked for some others for Christmas that I was hoping would aid me in settling the Catholicism/Eastern Orthodoxy dilemma. I haven’t been able to read them, partly because the ones I had didn’t scan so well (print books are inaccessible to me since I’m completely blind), and partly because the rest haven’t arrived (they were ordered online). When the school year ends, all the books should have come and the scanning can resume.
What I’d like to do is to read a general survey of the early church describing how councils worked and disputes were resolved. I’ve been pointed to Warren Carroll for material that purportedly fits the bill. Hmm, I’ll have to request that for my birthday…
What troubles me most is that, while I’m not aware of any informed Catholics or Orthodox who became Protestant because they discovered that theology to line up best with St. John Chrysostom and St. Augustine, well-read posters on these forums have become Catholic as well as Orthodox in light of their research into Early Church history. The issues dividing Catholics from Protestants are relatively easy to wrap one’s head around–sola scriptura, sola fide, Mary and the saints, sacramentalism. But the disagreements between Catholics and Orthodox seem so convoluted that no ordinary person should be expected to figure them out–the papacy, the filioque, original sin, Scholasticism/Hesichasm.
This whole situation nearly caused me to lose my faith in the past couple months; what rescued it were a Pentecostal friend’s recounting of a startling episode at church involving her personally and the argumentation/information set forth in various and sundry articles at The Christian Thinktank. I’m just worried that I may never know what path to take, given how difficult these questions are.
And my soul hangs in the balance, as do those of perhaps many around me who might be influenced by my choices: I’m one of the few practicing Christians among my family and friends. We could pray for the rapture to take place on May 21st this time around so my dilemma would become a non-issue!
I really do need a miracle here.
How sweet.I just want to apologize to all Orthodoxs and Protestants,if I have ever offended you or your respective faiths in any manner. It is not my goal or intent to put-down anyone’s faith or tradition you follow. I know at times I may be a bit “hard” but I really mean no harm or malice. I know we all cannot agree on everything. So that being said…I apologize,God Bless
How long would we last without doing so?log in with armor on!
Hello, Khalid.Warren Carroll fits the bill extraordinarily well, but is very long - it would take over a thousand hours to listen to, I think (I am thinking of “A History of Christendom”, five vol.). Probably well over a hundred just to read.
Leo Donald Davis, SJ has “The First Seven Ecumenical Councils”, which is decent, but not nearly as comprehensive. Jaroslav Pelikan has “The Christian Tradition”, five volumes written from a Protestant-ecumenical perspective. Orthodox dissident theologian Vladimir Solovyev has “Russia and the Universal Church” (which deals with more than just Russia, but the entire Orthodox tradition), and an abridgment, “The Russian Church and the Papacy”, which are those parts that deal with the papacy. He’ll shove you firmly in to one camp or the other, and gets to the center of important issues about valid church government, namely, how can a church have government, if it subscribes to the conciliar model, but can not call a council?
Also, I do not know books on the issue, but look in to the major changes in Orthodox doctrine and practice that have been made since the schism (which occurred over about 700 years, starting with the Photian schism and completing in the 1450s, not 1054 like is always said), and the semi-ecumenical councils that have been convoked - the Hesychast councils, the Synod of Jerusalem, the Pan-Orthodox Synod of 1872 (which declared what is heresy if practiced by Slavs is orthodox if practiced by Greeks), etc.
Indeed. “Dialect” is just the term I hear from Arabic speakers, whether my professor or other students. I’ve been learning MSA and Lebanese; I’ve found that I can talk to Egyptians in Lebanese but, for me to understand, they have to respond in MSA. It’s unfortunate that the varieties of Arabic spoken in Egypt, Lebanon, and elsewhere are held in such low regard…Yes, from what I know (not much), the polyglot character is characteristic of Coptic Orthodoxy. As an aside, “Arabic” is much like “Chinese”, not “English” - it is a family of languages, more than a family of slightly-different dialects. Egyptians and Jordanians, or Saudis and Lebanese, for example, can not understand each other unless both are university educated and can code switch to MSA. Thankfully, Egypt being the cultural leader of the Arabic-speaking world, almost everything is in Egyptian or MSA, and very little in the other Arabic languages (“dialect” seems to be the wrong term).