D
dzheremi
Guest
No, I wouldn’t. You guys (what would become the Roman Catholic Church and the Eastern Orthodox Church) were already in union for about 600 years in the post-Chalcedonian environment, and that did not make us change our minds about the issues that originally led to the Chalcedonian schism. Occasionally a non-Chalcedonian Orthodox person will convert to Chalcedonian Orthodoxy (or Catholicism), but not so much in the modern era now that there are not imperial pressures to do so (it generally happens in very Chalcedonian environments, e.g., Greece). I think there is a sense in which we would like to see EO and RC together, if only for the sake of ending at least one of the major schisms in world Christianity, but it has basically nothing to do with the Oriental Orthodox communion in particular, and would not budge me even a little bit. The issues surrounding the Great Schism of 1054 are completely different than the one that actually directly affects us.