We're not talking the poetics, but about to whom one comes under. Jesus or Mary.
We are talking about figurative language; read it literally and you'll end up telling me Jesus did not have wings - which I know. I also know that when we pray to St. Mary we are asking her to pray to Jesus for us - to Him, through her - ditto with wings and protection.
And why was Arias excommunicated and declared heretical?
Because the Council of Nicaea decided he was preaching heresy.
And Nestorius was excommunicated and declared heretical, why?
See the above. He denied that the Blessed Virgin was the Mother of God - and rather objected to Marian veneration ....
So JW (Jehovah Witness) says Christ is a created archangel and you'd agree. I guess as you've been saying, OO didn't draw a line. Or do your brethren OO agree with your opinion here?
We have a synod and a Pope, and they have determined that the JW's are heretics; that's good enough for me. And, of course, since not one of the ECFs and none of the Councils ever declared any such stuff as the Lord's Christ being any sort of angel, how would one begin to agree?
The OO family of Churches believes firmly in the Faith once established as understood through the three ecumenical councils. We also practice Marian veneration, as our forefathers have for as far back as anyone can go. We also reject the novel idea of Protestants that the Bible alone provides all the things we need to know for worship; we also reject the strange idea that asking others to pray for you is somehow wrong; our forefathers did that as far back as anyone can go. We see no great need to keep pronouncing dogma on everything under the sun, but recognise that the Western mindset has about it a scholastic turn which delights in such things; this we admire in its own way; but it is not our way.
We hold that St. May was ever-Virgin, that she intercedes before the throne of God for us broken-hearted sinners, and that she has made appearances to the faithful at times of trial.
We see our EO and RCC brothers and sisters as separated from us by history and misunderstandings which we would like to clear up, and we recognise and work with them to do this.
What we don't understand is why, if the Bible self-interprets, there are so many Protestant sects; still less do we understand why some of them turn up in Egypt thinking to 'convert' us when we were Christians when their forefathers were bowing to heathen gods. But then, as my great grand mother used to tell me solemnly, people from the West thought they knew everything that was worth knowing and that they were doing us a favour by telling it to us; we should never, she went on, tell them that they sounded a little conceited because, after all, they meant well. She was a very charitable old Coptic lady, and I have always tried to follow her advice - although often reminded of the cause of it

(Always wondered if she included my great grandfather in that, as he was British

)
peace,
Anglian