D
Diak
Guest
One will be very challenged to provide a compelling argument that the hand of the Emperor was not involved in the deposition of Dioscorus - which the Copts argue was uncanonical as his own Church of Alexandria did not do it, and on a purely Cyprianic level of ecclesiology they may have an argument.The Council of Chalcedon deposed the former Patriarch Dioscorus and installed Proterius as the new Patriarch of Alexandria. This was not an imperial decision so much as a decision of the Church through an Ecumenical Council.
This opens up another interesting point that was made earlier that the Orthodox Churches were truly autocephalic. In the case of Alexandria this was not the case as his own Church apparently wished him to stay as Patriarch and did not depose him.
The objective facts remain - a parallel jurisdiction made up of non-native clergy using quite a different liturgical tradition was imposed on a Church with a much longer-standing liturgical and cultural tradition. Civil force was used to attempt to make more of the population accept that foreign hierarchy.
It really did not make much success for itself, either, in terms of numbers of who remained Copt. Like Catholic movements of unity, the Alexandrian example of uniatism never really took hold over the larger parts of Coptic church and is certainly a valid example of how the Orthodox have used a uniatistic approach themselves.
Regarding Antioch - the Byzantine/Constantinopolitan “era” came centuries after the Syriac churches were well established and they certainly did not elect any representative of the Emperor as the Patriarch.
Yes, while a Macedonian may have founded Antioch, we know Peter was the first of the Apostles visit there and call them Christians. So it’s really Rome’s after all…
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