Exactly what it says on the tin. Have at it!
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And most importantly, is his hat more fabulous than the Roman Pope's?Do you have a pope? If so, who is he?
Exactly what it says on the tin. Have at it!
Exactly what it says on the tin. Have at it!
Exactly what it says on the tin. Have at it!
I don't think the Greek Orthodox and the Ecumenical Patriarchate have, but then again Eastern Catholics have a much smaller presence in the southern Balkans and in Turkey compared to elsewhere. That said, I find that revanchism and phyletism (AKA ethnic tribalism) is much less of an issue among Eastern Catholics than among our Orthodox brethren.Have you given up the dream of retaking the Second City?
That depends on the Eastern Catholic Church in question--there are 22 sui iuris (self-governing) Eastern Catholic Churches. Some of us have our own Patriarchs (like the Coptic Catholics, Syriac Catholics, Chaldean Catholics, Maronite Catholics, Armenian Catholics, and Melkite Catholics), but some other Eastern Catholic Churches just have Metropolitans (AKA archbishops) or major archbishops (who are Patriarchs in all but name). The Ukrainian Greek-Catholics technically only have a Major Archbishop named Sviatoslav, but he is called a Patriarch by the members of his church. The Ukrainians are basically my second home whenever I'm at university and away from my Byzantine Catholic parish.Do you have a pope? If so, who is he?
By far.And most importantly, is his hat more fabulous than the Roman Pope's?
Ehhhh... There are two answers to this question.Geographically speaking, where does Eastern Catholicism start and Western Catholicism end?
Theologically, Eastern Catholics are basically identical to their Eastern Orthodox and Oriental Orthodox counterparts, except we also accept the post-Schism Roman doctrines and dogmas. We accept the authority of the Pope as stated by Vatican I and II. We have our own Saints, many of whom are not found on the Roman calendar--for example, the Oriental Catholics have St. Severus of Antioch and Pope Dioscorus of Alexandria as Saints, both of whom are traditionally not well-received in the Byzantine and Roman Churches. Likewise, we Byzantine Catholics have St. Photios the Great of Constantinople and St. Gregory Palamas, the former of whom was denounced by Roman Catholics as a schismatic and borderline heretic for centuries (and many old-school Romans still hate his guts), and the theology of St. Gregory Palamas was severely misunderstood as being some kind of heresy by Romans for about 500 years before they finally started to figure out what it is that he actually taught.Are there anything specific that it differs from Roman Catholicism other than the authority of the Pope, liturgy, and role of the priest and marriage? Are there more intimate differences within both Churches or are they mostly theological?
Most Eastern Catholics are born into it--we make up a pretty tiny portion of the Catholic Church (only 18 million of us, compared to 1 billion Catholics total), and given that we're mainly a diaspora in countries that already have a strong Roman Catholic presence with established dioceses, there's nowhere else that we can really spread to and be the dominant Catholic Church in outside of our heartlands. There are some Roman Catholics like myself who are drawn to the Eastern Catholic Churches because we find that the spirituality of the Eastern Churches fits us better--we enjoy the prayer life, the different emphases within spirituality, an increased emphasis on the Church Fathers and asceticism, more fasting, and a far more robust and reverent liturgical tradition (ever since the Roman Church completely gutted and watered down the Mass to make it more Protestant-like after Vatican II). Interestingly, Eastern Orthodox who convert to the Catholic Church are also automatically assigned to the Eastern Catholic Church that is their counterpart--for example, a Coptic Orthodox would automatically become a Coptic Catholic, a Russian Orthodox a Russian Catholic, an Antiochian Orthodox a Melkite Catholic, etc.). In the case that a Roman Catholic marries an Eastern Catholic, any children they have are automatically considered Eastern Catholic.What is, in your experience, the most common reason people follow that form of Christianity?
Interestingly, Eastern Orthodox who convert to the Catholic Church are also automatically assigned to the Eastern Catholic Church that is their counterpart--for example, a Coptic Orthodox would automatically become a Coptic Catholic, a Russian Orthodox a Russian Catholic, an Antiochian Orthodox a Melkite Catholic, etc.). In the case that a Roman Catholic marries an Eastern Catholic, any children they have are automatically considered Eastern Catholic.
In layman's terms, pretty much, except that there are a group of Eastern Catholic Churches who came from the Oriental Orthodox, and not the Eastern Orthodox. We also accept all the post-Schism Roman Catholic doctrines and dogmas, we are completely fine with the Immaculate Conception of Mary, St. Augustine's idea of Original Sin, Papal Infallibility, the Filioque and Purgatory, even if we have alternative explanations for the theological things on that list.Is Eastern Catholicism just Eastern orthodoxy under the jurisdiction of Rome, or does it have any unique doctrine and practices not found in EO?
Many Eastern Catholics will pray the Rosary and the Divine Mercy Chaplet, and my Ukrainian Greek-Catholic parish up near where I go to university prays the Rosary before the Divine Liturgy on Sundays. Normatively, however, we try to discourage Latinization in our churches; there was an era where Eastern Catholic churches were heavily Latinized, including the removal of our iconostases (the icon-screens that separate the sanctuary from where the congregation stands/sits) from our churches, installing altar rails, forbidding married Eastern Catholic men from becoming priests outside of our traditional territories in the diaspora, and other things like this. I've heard different Eastern Catholics saying whether that was mandated by the Roman Church or whether the Eastern Catholics themselves were instituting these changes to fit in with the Roman Catholics and be more socially acceptable, though.Has anything from Roman Catholicism made it's way into Eastern Catholicism? For example, praying the rosary or the differentiation between venial and moral sin?
Hoo boy, here's the doozy. Volumes can and have been written on this subject. Because of that, I'm going to keep this at the entry-level, but feel free to ask for further elaboration.What's the differences (theologically & otherwise) between Eastern Catholicism & Orthodox Christianity, and Eastern Catholicism & Roman Catholicism?
Continued...What's the differences (theologically & otherwise) between Eastern Catholicism & Orthodox Christianity, and Eastern Catholicism & Roman Catholicism?
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Ehhhh... There are two answers to this question.
Answer 1--According to traditional boundaries, Roman Catholicism stretches form the westernmost part of Europe until it hits the border between Poland and Belarus, Subcarpathian Ruthenia, and the Balkans. Everything from then on, including the Caucus Mountains and parts of India is Eastern Catholic/Eastern Orthodox/Oriental Orthodox. Eastern Catholicism also spreads down into Egypt, Eritrea and Ethiopia. (And as a fun fact, just last year the Eritrean Catholic Church got independence from the Ethiopian Catholic Church. I have met one of their bishops before, when he came to my parish to meet with the Eritrean community that worships with us, since they don't have their own priest.) Beyond those points, Roman Catholicism kicks back in--being under oppressive Muslim rule where only Islam was legally allowed to spread, the Eastern Christians were wholly unable to evangelize any further eastward, whereas Roman Catholicism spread with colonialism. So between Eastern Europe, Northeast Africa and Western Asia are the Eastern Catholic heartlands (and by extension, the Eastern/Oriental Orthodox heartlands).
Answer 2--the immigration age has really muddled the boundaries. You'll find Eastern Catholics all over the world now--in fact, my own Ruthenian (Byzantine) Catholic Church was established in the US, and we number a little over 100 thousand faithful, let alone all the other Eastern Catholics from all the other Churches here in the country. As more people emigrate from traditionally Eastern Christian countries, they will bring their Eastern Catholicism and their Orthodoxy with them to their new homelands.
Continued...