Talk:Standing Conference of Canonical Orthodox Churches in Australia

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Revision as of 10:31, March 15, 2006 by Chrisg (talk | contribs) (Byzantine not including Oriental)
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Dear Dcndavid

The Standing Council of Orthodox Canonical Churches in Australia was established only for Eastern Orthodox jurisdictions. The bias was there at establishment.

My correction showed this historical bias.

Your removal of my correction, for whatever reason, removes the historical truth.

Is that what you meant to do?

chrisg 2006-03-15 1820 AEDT

Without wanting to intrude: the term 'byzantine' (in 'byzantine Orthodox') is usually used comparatively - whether comparing byzantine and slavic (as the main Eastern liturgic traditions), comparing byzantine with roman (although that's usually 'greek' and 'roman'). The only interpretations that I saw for explicitly saying 'Byzantine Orthodox' was that it excluded either the Orthodox following slavic customs (eg Serbians, Russians), or those following the Western Rite (which, afaik, didn't exist in Australia at the time of founding), or those in the Oriental Orthodox Churches (which would, indeed, be covered under the MCB). --— by Pιsτévο talk complaints at 02:01, March 15, 2006 (CST)

In 1991 the Church of Antioch decided:-

1. We affirm the total and mutual respect of the spirituality, heritage and Holy Fathers of both Churches. The integrity of both the Byzantine and Syriac liturgies is to be preserved. [Pastoral Agreement 1991]

The adjective Byzantine had been used in that sense.

chrisg 2006-03-15 2132 AEDT