dzheremi
Coptic Orthodox non-Egyptian
- Aug 27, 2014
- 13,897
- 14,168
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- United States
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- Male
- Faith
- Oriental Orthodox
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One thing I do know, however, is that christians need to treat other christians (and other christian traditions) rather better than we have. The secular world looks on and says, 'you will know they are christians by the way the rip each others arms off'. This is bad for our common witness. None the less I have as no more desire to lose my Anglican Heritage as @dzheremi has to lose his Coptic heritage, and I don't want him to, for I want to learn from him.
While I very much do appreciate the sentiment, and am glad that we can agree that we value our respective heritage, I'm not sure I understand this idea of "common witness" and how the world must judge us according to our divisions. Certainly if there was such unity among non-Orthodox and Orthodox without sacramental communion, by virtue of some nebulous "common witness", then the Presbyterians would not have come to Egypt beginning in the 1850s, nor the Roman Catholics some two centuries or so earlier, seeking to make converts of the native Christians after finding the Muslims too difficult to convince. Yet that is very much what happened. Our Christ isn't good enough, or we're not following Him well enough as some latter-day westerners would have it. What can ya do. I'm sure I've told before the bishop of Asyut's response to the Presbyterians (which, knowing Copts as I do now, I believe more than likely came from a place of genuine curiosity), which was "We've been living with Christ for almost 2,000 years now; how long have your people been living with Him?" Common witness, indeed.
Concerning the second point, in the few historical sources that we have from non-Christians who actually lived in Egypt that mention any differences between the Christians there, we do not get the sense from reading them that any cared to understand the differences between the confessions. Al Maqrizi (15th century), for instance, mentions that the Greeks and the Copts hate each other, are forbidden to marry one another, and often fight one another, and that the Greeks are the rulers over the Copts, even though the Copts are many times more numerous and spread throughout the country, as they are the native people of Egypt. There is nothing as to why this might be the case, only that it is the case. Being that this is the norm in the small number of works that distinguish between this type of Christian and that one, on what basis are we to believe that any non-Christian cares that we are not 'united', or better yet that this is the reason or even a primary motivating reason (rather than, say, theological concerns) why they do not take seriously the Christian message? I think this idea is born of a view from within Western history that places great importance on the intricacies of the conflicts between this church or communion and that one, because of course if your identity as whatever it is that you are is or was largely historically shaped by its opposition to what the other people are, then what the other people are becomes very important. But to the outside world, it seems like this is all unimportant nonsense, and they'd rather think in macro categories of "X or not X". Witness, for instance, that the terrorists who killed worshipers inside of Siadat an-Najat Syriac Catholic Church in Baghdad claimed to have done so in retaliation for the Church-orchestrated 'kidnapping' of a Coptic priest's wife in Egypt following her supposed conversion to Islam (none of which actually happened, but hey...what are 50+ Christians' lives worth to Islamists anyway).
Because of course we all know that the Syriac Catholic Church in Iraq calls the shots for the Coptic Orthodox Church in Egypt. "Disbelief is one nation", they say.
So I don't really understand. People either want unity for the sake of being one in faith, or want to place whatever it is that they believe and do that is not Orthodox on the same level as Orthodoxy when it just isn't. Everyone is welcome to come to the one faith, but the latter stance is not acceptable at all. That's not to say that everyone must become Coptic or Armenian or whatever (that's emphatically not the point -- or else I certainly wouldn't be here, as it's not like I just love eating Egyptian food and listening to people yell at each other in Arabic all the time -- and besides, the OO are already more organically heterogeneous than the other communions in terms of liturgy and canons, as I'm sure you know), but we have to have some standards by which we can say "this (practice, belief, etc.) is acceptable, and this other thing is not", and we do.
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