M
mardukm
Guest
As many may already know, I translated (not converted) to Catholicism from Coptic Orthodoxy not because I perceived anything wrong with the doctrines of Coptic Orthodoxy, but because I discovered that what I had learned ABOUT Catholicism from my Coptic Orthodox teachers were false.
A case in point:
suscopts.org/literature/literature.php?subaction=showfull&id=1084916893&archive=&start_from=&ucat=3
While I accept wholeheartedly the section in that article entitled “The Coptic Orthodox view on the Prayer for the Departed,” most everything else in that article ABOUT the Catholic Faith is simply false. The Catholic Faith teaches that the efficacy of Purgatory relies on the one Sacrifice of Christ, for it is (in short) an application of the superabundant merits of Christ that originated from the Cross. Non-Catholics think that Purgatory is completely separated from the Sacrifice of the Lamb - “another way to heaven,” as many put it - but that is an utterly false notion about the Catholic teaching on Purgatory.
Just very recently in another thread, an EO poster claimed that the case of Honorius, who was declared a heretic by the Church, upends the Catholic teaching on “papal infallibility,” but when asked how a Pope being declared a heretic affects the Catholic teaching, he simply could not provide an answer (all he could do was robotically repeat, “he was declared a heretic”).
(On a good note, another EO poster actually understood that the matter of Honorius does not affect the Catholic teaching on “papal infallibility,” but does refute the claim by certain Catholics that on matters of doctrine/morals, the Pope cannot be in error at all).
The examples can be multiplied and the misunderstandings cover every point about Catholicism (particularly Latin Catholicism) that Coptic Orthodoxy (and Orthodoxy in general) claims is wrong.
The plain fact of the matter is, the great majority of Orthodox (even those who used to be in the Catholic communion) don’t know what the Catholic Faith teaches, and almost everything they learn about Catholicism (doctrinally speaking) from Orthodox or other non-Catholic sources is, more often that not, sheer myth.
So I invite my Orthodox brethren, for the sake of peace and unity, to study and know about the Catholic Faith from the Catechism or other reliable sources (in union with the bishop of Rome). Take what you read ABOUT the Catholic Church from your own sources with a grain of salt. I invite my Protestant brethren to do the same.
I hope everyone can agree with the principle that if you want to learn about the horse, take it from the horse’s mouth.
Blessings,
Marduk
A case in point:
suscopts.org/literature/literature.php?subaction=showfull&id=1084916893&archive=&start_from=&ucat=3
While I accept wholeheartedly the section in that article entitled “The Coptic Orthodox view on the Prayer for the Departed,” most everything else in that article ABOUT the Catholic Faith is simply false. The Catholic Faith teaches that the efficacy of Purgatory relies on the one Sacrifice of Christ, for it is (in short) an application of the superabundant merits of Christ that originated from the Cross. Non-Catholics think that Purgatory is completely separated from the Sacrifice of the Lamb - “another way to heaven,” as many put it - but that is an utterly false notion about the Catholic teaching on Purgatory.
Just very recently in another thread, an EO poster claimed that the case of Honorius, who was declared a heretic by the Church, upends the Catholic teaching on “papal infallibility,” but when asked how a Pope being declared a heretic affects the Catholic teaching, he simply could not provide an answer (all he could do was robotically repeat, “he was declared a heretic”).
The examples can be multiplied and the misunderstandings cover every point about Catholicism (particularly Latin Catholicism) that Coptic Orthodoxy (and Orthodoxy in general) claims is wrong.
The plain fact of the matter is, the great majority of Orthodox (even those who used to be in the Catholic communion) don’t know what the Catholic Faith teaches, and almost everything they learn about Catholicism (doctrinally speaking) from Orthodox or other non-Catholic sources is, more often that not, sheer myth.
So I invite my Orthodox brethren, for the sake of peace and unity, to study and know about the Catholic Faith from the Catechism or other reliable sources (in union with the bishop of Rome). Take what you read ABOUT the Catholic Church from your own sources with a grain of salt. I invite my Protestant brethren to do the same.
I hope everyone can agree with the principle that if you want to learn about the horse, take it from the horse’s mouth.
Blessings,
Marduk