S
SyroMalankara
Guest
The Syriac Orthodox and Catholic Church have an intercommunion agreement in place. Within the OO, each Church has its own relationship with the Catholic Church. The Armenians and Syriacs are the closest, allowing for Communion among members, as well as Confession, Matrimony and Baptism.I fully agree you with this, Cavaradossi.
If one is a Coptic Catholic, you have to decide which of the two terms is the noun and which is the adjective. Are you a Catholic who happen to be Coptic or a Copt who happen to be Catholic? If the former, you will have to accept any other rite that one is not fully familiar with because the communion is the same. If the latter, would it be any surprise if yoru mother communion is not so welcoming?
Also, a Syriac church who welcomes a Catholic to communion sounds awfully suspicious to me. From what I know OO have even more closed communion than Catholics.
Also, the line of questioning here - "Are you a Catholic who happen to be Coptic or a Copt who happen to be Catholic? " is misleading. One cannot be Catholic without belonging to one of the Churches. One could as a Latin the same, are you a Latin or a Catholic, which comes first? It would make as much, or as little sense.