says this about the Orthodox church and the accuracy of its membership numbers
Which AI?
Catholic and Orthodox practice appears to treat the question as
"how many people have ever joined the Orthodox church" rather than "how many still identify as Orthodox"
In the case of the Orthodox, that’s simply untrue. Because we are an episcopal church in terms of polity, we have to know how many people attend each parish or mission and what their status is (inquirer, catechumen, communicant) because that is used to determine resource allocations to that parish, with smaller parishes and missions getting monastic clergy or volunteers, and married clergy who are available full time going to larger parishes, and some parishes requiring multiple presbyters. Thus, careful records are kept.
So then when you drop the name of someone baptized as an infant but not attending any longer how do you know that they are not simply attending some other Orthodox church and you have dropped them by mistake?
Forgive me, but this statement indicates that you have no idea how the Orthodox Church operates.
So, the aforementioned records I mentioned are kept by individual churches, but in the case of the diaspora, which is the only place where you have numerous overlapping jurisdictions, the Orthodox Churches share information and coordinate so that if someone stops attending, for example, the OCA, and starts attending a different jurisdiction like ROCOR or GoArch, that movement will be tracked. In the US, all Orthodox churches are members of either the Society of Canonical Orthodox Bishops of North America for the Eastern Orthodoxy or the Society of Canonical Oriental Orthodox Churches for the Oriental Orthodox,. Although in the case of the Oriental Orthodox, it is extremely unusual for someone to move between churches, because each of the Oriental Orthodox has a different liturgical rite; the Coptic Orthodox have one, the Syriac Orthodox another, the Armenians yet another, and the OCA another still; practically speaking, it would only likely occur due to marriage, but such marriages will nonetheless be tracked.
Likewise if someone moves from one diocese to another in the same church.
Where the numbers are inaccurate is in certain Islamic states, in terms of the numbers officially published by the government, which are inconsistent with the church numbers - the Muslims have a vested interest in showing there are fewer Orthodox Christians than is actually the case in order to conceal their ongoing genocides and ethnic cleansing against us, and they also do this to other Christian denominations such as Assyrian Church of the East, Protestant denominations in Pakistan, and the Eastern Catholic denominations, and probably to your church if you have any parishes in places like Syria or Pakistan.
says this about the Orthodox church and the accuracy of its membership numbers
Appeal to unqualified authority fallacy, and I note you also don’t say which AI or what the exact prompt you supplied it was. As a systems programmer and software engineer who has been working with LLMs since 2020, I can’t begin to emphasize how important it is that we know not only which AI model said that, but also see the entire conversational history and also your global memory configuration and preferences in order to assess the reliability of that information, to see if the answer is repeatable. Otherwise, its literally semantically equivalent to “someone said” without any information on who said it or in what context. But even then, AI can be wrong, with the accuracy and knowledge of the models varying greatly, so it would still be an appeal to unqualified authority.