It can be difficult to speak in generalities about Orthodoxy because in some cases their circumstances that are complex and differ from one another for example;
Isn’t this true of every church?
If we take the Armenian Church (Monophysite) Who hold to the same faith as the Coptic who are in communion with the Jacobites, yet the Armenian Church are not in communion with either one.
Two very basic things: (1) Oriental Orthodox Christology is not Monophysite (it is Cyrillian), and we reject the heresy of Eutyches not any less than any other church. (2) The Armenian Orthodox are absolutely in communion with both the Syriac Orthodox (‘Jacobite’ is not really the correct term) and the Coptic Orthodox. We are all in communion with one another.
Then there is the Gregorian Armenian Church who have a "celibate class of priesthood called “Vertapeds” are better disposed to reunion with Rome.
“Gregorian Armenian Church”?

You mean like St. Gregory the Armenian? I don’t know what you’re talking about. There is ONE Armenian Orthodox Church It has two Sees (Holy Etchmiadzin, which is primary and recognized as such, and Holy Cilicia), but they in full communion with one another, and with all OO in turn. Neither are in communion with Rome. (Both have Vardapets, which has nothing to do with Latin celibacy rules. There are both married and unmarried priests in the Armenian Apostolic Church.)
You misunderstand my posts, forgive me if I was not clear to you. The Eastern heretical church’s “monphysites, monothelites, nestorians” some of these (autocephalous) independent Eastern Church’s have left their heretical teachings and reunited with Rome.
Grumble grumble It’s Holy Week…calm blue ocean…
My point to all of this is that many of these in union with Rome mirror the Orthodox Church’s in language, culture and liturgy who refuse communion with Rome. This is my simple point.
That’s not much of a point if you’re trying to prove that there are Orthodox who are in communion with Rome. I guess you disagree with my earlier contention that Orthodoxy is not a matter of “language, culture and liturgy” (well, not
external form of liturgy, anyway), but that is to be expected, I suppose.
I respect your Orthodox “Opinion” that when your sister church’s become in union with Rome, you reject communion with them because they left your weird Orthodox opinion that you reveal here is Orthodox because you refuse to be united with Rome.
I can’t make sense of this sentence, but I feel vaguely insulted…sort of. Why is “opinion” in quotes? I’m not writing (post-)ironically.
I would disagree with you here, because it was never so in the first 1100 years of Christianity when both Rome and the Eastern Church’s defeated these Eastern Church heresies in unity.
Mhm. :ehh::compcoff:
Yet you “appear” to be coming across here (correct me if I have mistaken you), that in order to be Orthodox, you have to be out of communion with the Popes in order to be Orthodox? This has never been Orthodoxy in the beginning all the church’s were united with Peter’s Chair.
Lord have mercy. I cannot comment on your imagining of unity as it was with the Byzantines pre-1054, but I think you’ll find actual EO disagreeing with it, so no matter. Just to be clear, though, I am not saying that anything in Orthodoxy revolves around or is necessarily related to being united with Rome. As I tried to explain before, this is a Latin preoccupation that is not shared by the rest of us (either EO or OO). And “Peter’s Chair” is likewise (some EO I’ve heard argue
primarily) in Antioch, as is recognized by the feast formerly held by the Latins on May 22 to commemorate the Saint’s time in Antioch as demonstrated in the
Martyrologium Hieronymianum. So there is no Orthodox Church that is not in union with the Chair of Peter via their respective Antiochian Patriarchs.
My posts only reflect that the Orthodox who refuse communion or unity with the Pope, maintain the same Eastern Rites and practices that mirror the Eastern Rite Catholics who have come into unity with Rome.
Earlier you put it as being the other way around, which is more historically accurate. Anyway, this is beating a dead horse by this point.
Our disunity relates to “authority” yet we both maintain the valid sacraments, valid liturgies and valid priesthoood.
Nope, nope, nope, and nope. Validity is a non-concept. You’re either in the communion or you’re not.
Grant it that there are some staunch Orthodox who believe that the Pope was never baptised, but this only reveals the diverse and complicated circumstances between each “independent” Orthodox church and the Roman Church, that trickles down more division between the Orthodox Church’s out of communion with one another.
Again, nothing in Orthodoxy necessarily has to do with the Roman Pope. If you ask individual Orthodox people what they think about the Roman Pope (or any other Western Christian figure), you’re likely to get a range of answers, but since nothing we say about those outside of our communion is a matter of dogma, this isn’t really “disunity” at all (and I have never heard anyone, at any level, in either the OO or RC communion say that “the Roman Pope is not baptized”; that wouldn’t even make sense…why would anyone care or speculate on such things that have nothing to do with our Church?)
You have not offered any new insights to this topic other than Orthodox is Orthodox because Orthodox is not in communion with the Popes?
That is your reading of my posts, not anything that I have actually written.
I hope our readers can distinguish between what is fact and what is of opinion here
Amen.