Well this is my first new topic that I have done so here it goes.
If someone was in a certain kind of christian religion and decides to take communion in another christian religion, is that bad? ???
For example: a person who is orthodox decides to take communion in a catholic church, is that bad? ???
Comments
The issues you have raised relate to:
1) Coptic Orthodox Church and other churches.
2) What did Jesus say about this.
Before we begin, I would like to share with you a short story that is perhaps relavant to this.
One Sunday afternoon I went along to Hyde Park Corner - a common place know for people to speak freely about any topic of their choice. People have a choice to either walk away for if the like to debate the topic in hand. In all cases, people have the upmost respect for one another; for their different views and opinions. On this Sunday I witnessed an American preacher dress as a cowboy speaking about Christianity - I stoped to liscen for I would to do with anything relating to Christ. His dress code was a bit odd for London but it may had been part of the act to attrack attention. The preacher was speaking about God. In the crowed there was a couple who would attick the preacher's words and they always refered to the Catholic church and how they believed it to be corrupt. At the end, I was fortunate enough to speak with the young couple. It was clear to me that the had lost faith in Christ because of a church that happened to be Catholic. I am not a Catholic, so I had no vested interest in their salvation. Nor did I attempt to convert them to Coptic Orthodoxy for the simple reason that these people needed God. After our discussion I am glad to say that they were clear to differnitate between the two.
Following this we may attempt to address your questions:
1) The Coptic Orthodox Church came after Jesus as did many churches. All churches have a vested interest in looking after their flock and maintainiing their faith. Churches do share a lot in common but they also have differences. Some of these differences include commuion and their rules. Are these rules set in stone? Are there any exceptions to the rule? Who is to decide these issues?
2) This brings me nicley onto Jesus. What did Jesus say about the Coptic Orthodox Church? What did he say about any other church? Did he make a split between his flock or did he seek the lost penny and the lost sheep? Did the church exist before Jesus? If Jesus taught us all we needed through his time and carried in the Bible, well why did he not speaj about different factions within his faith? And most importantly, what did Jesus say at the last supper? Did he make any rules specially for Orthodox, Coptic, Catholic, Protestant or any other section?
I for one believe, and it is my belief and not necessary the answer for evrybody, is that NOTHING should come between God and I - may it be a church, rules, priests, people, etc...........
I have taken communion at the Coptic Orthodox, Greek Orthodox (best organised and best vocal choir), Catholic and Protestant churches. Certainly most of these churches are glad to give me commuion and have had no objection for being Christined a Coptic Orthodox. Following on the same theme but without side stepping the convcersation I would also visit Jerusalim for I believe that no politics or man made rules should keep me away from my God.
I do and have made a clear distinction between Church and God. Many people perhaps never thought about it or believe there is no difference. Even when the Romans found nothing to condem Jesus, it was the people and the politics of the Jewish temple (Church equivalent) that attempted to even dictate the Lord himself.
In saying the above, I am sure you will also get a response that will differe from mine. Certainly the Coptic Orthodox Church veiw is very strict. However in saying this they do have exceptions. You may well get a statement from those boys in blue that monitor the web site that would almost certainly differe.
I would say to that your first port of call is to ask your priest, for it is he and he alone that would put you straight on the matter. Be very careful about the internet responses for they do contain some material that is factually inaccurate and we don't know published by who. So seeks advice from your priest and church.
If you decide that you will take commuion at different churches do it with respect to that church and its rules. I am sure that God came for us all (Copts and others) and would not harm you for accepting his body and blood - if in doubt look at the text in the Bible with reference to the last supper and tell me where it refers to Coptic/Orthodox/Catholic/Protestant/...................
Bless you.
Communing with those outside of the Orthodox Church is considered a severe offence in the Orthodox Church; essentially you are automatically ex-communicated by the Church i.e. you cease to be Orthodox; the Church no longer recognises your “membership” and as such it refuses to allow you to partake of the Holy Eucharist offered upon her Altar, until you consult your priest or Bishop with regards to rectifying the matter. The reason for this is grounded upon our very Orthodox understanding of the Church and our Orthodox understanding of the Eucharist as an expression of the One True Orthodox faith. Only one who is ignorant regarding one or the other is prone to reduce the significance of the matter to nothing. Allow me to paste for you an answer regarding the Orthodox perspective in relation to this issue as it was written in an online article on the website of the British Orthodox Church (which used to be located at: www.uk-christian.net/newboc/97edit.shtml, but is however no longer available): The Entirety of the late Metropolitan Paulos Mar Gregorios’ article partially quoted above (Eucharistic Hospitality) can be found here: http://www.paulosmargregorios.info/English Articles/Euchasristic_Hospitality.html Peace.
The Orthodox stance on this matter is quite elaborately and clearly laid down in my above post. This stance is contingent upon the Orthodox understanding of The One True Church and of the Holy Eucharist.
My question for you is simple; if you do not respect the Coptic Church’s authority, and do not personally adopt the faith that she has preserved and sustained, and which she preaches and lives, then WHY are you a Coptic Christian? On many occasions you have flaunted a sort of pride in being a Copt, yet clearly this is merely empty and hollow lip-service, for it seems you would rather disregard the Church and elevate your opposing personal opinion over and above the Holy Tradition of the Church which is no less than the very life of the Trinity.
If you reject the Church, then that would indeed be a loss, and I would be very sad for one, however, Orthodoxy represents the unadulterated fullness of truth – there is no compromise. You either accept the fullness of truth as experienced by the Church, or you are outside the Church.
This is not a personal attack on you, it is simply the harsh truth bluntly stated. The Coptic Church was established by the Apostle St Mark, who was succeeded in his Apostolic ministry by the clergy he appointed to preside over the See of Alexandria. The authority given by Christ to the Apostles was thus handed to the Church. The only vested interest that the Coptic Church has is in maintaining the One and True Orthodox Faith – the Apostolic and Patristic faith that she has preserved for little less than 2000 years, by the power of the Holy Spirit. All “other” Church’s i.e. the heteredox Church’s, are deviant sects founded upon heresy or schism; their vested interest is ungodly. As thoroughly explained in my above post, our differences regarding the “rules” of communion, are based on our very understanding of the Eucharist itself. This understanding of the Eucharist is an eternal truth preserved, sustained, and testified to by the Church Tradition which the Apostles witnessed, experienced, received, and delivered both orally and textually to the Church that was established by them. The preservation and teaching of this Tradition was entrusted to the authority of the Bishops and Presbyters that were appointed by the Apostles to succeed them in the ministry.
St Clement of Rome, a Second Century Church Father, Bishop, and a disciple of the Apostles, affirmed the above truth in his letter to the Corinthians:
"The Apostles preached to us the Gospel received from Jesus Christ, and Jesus Christ was God's Ambassador. Christ, in other words, comes with a message from God, and the Apostles with a message from Christ. Both these orderly arrangements, therefore, originate from the will of God. And so, after receiving their instructions and being fully assured through the Resurrection of our Lord Jesus Christ, as well as confirmed in faith by the word of God, they went forth, equipped with the fullness of the Holy Spirit, to preach the good news that the Kingdom of God was close at hand. From land to land, accordingly, and from city to city they preached; and from among their earliest converts appointed men whom they had tested by the Spirit to act as bishops and deacons for the future believers" (Chapter 42). Metropolitan Paulos Mar Gregorios’ says:
"The Orthodox have a principle of oikonomia or economy, which permits the canonical authorities to make exceptions to rules where such exception becomes pastorally necessary. But neither the term inter-communion nor the expression eucharistic hospitality make any theological sense to the Orthodox. In its place the Orthodox would use the terms Communion and Economy, which for them make better theological sense.
So far I do not know of any instance in which the Orthodox have invoked the principle of economy to give communion to non-Orthodox in ecumenical meetings. Theoretically this seems possible, if the pastoral need was felt to be compelling. The principle of economy is usually used in situations of emergency, and a conference does not seem to be a situation of emergency. Economy is used usually in relation to persons rather than to groups, though there may be instances in which the principle is extended to groups as well."
If there are extreme or special circumstances in which one may need to commune with another Church it is up to the Bishop to decide with regards to the facts and context of the circumstances and reasons in question, as far as I know. According to Orthodoxy; the Biblical text is not the sole authority – we are not Protestants; there is no fallacious conception of sola scriptura. The Biblical text is a written aspect of the Apostolic tradition which is integral to the ultimate Church Tradition. The power and authority of Tradition is grounded in the Apostolic and Patristic traditions of the Church which constitute a unified expression of the revelation of the Holy Trinity through Christ in the world, who possesses the ultimate and supreme authority which He exercises by His Holy Spirit and through the Apostles and their Successors.
Christ however, did condemn deviant sects through His Holy Apostles, who rebuked those who deviated from the gospel truth, and the traditions delievered to the Church. The Bible is a written form of the Apostolic tradition, but it does not account for the fullness of truth as it is experienced in the Orthodox Tradition of the Church. According to St Basil (a great Saint of the Coptic Church, whose liturgy we perform weekly):
"Of the dogmas and messages preserved in the Church, some we possess from written teaching and others we receive from the Tradition of the Apostles, handed on to us in mystery. In respect to piety both are of the same force. No one will contradict any of these, no one, at any rate, who is even moderately versed in matters ecclesiastical. Indeed, were we to try to reject unwritten customs as having no great authority, we would unwittingly injure the gospel in its vitals; or rather, we would reduce [Christian] message to a mere term. (Basil, The Holy Spirit, 27:66).
You will find that even the Bible itself denies that it encompasses all the truth, for it is beyond being contained by any book (to paraphrase St John the Apostle). You can find good Biblical quotes and arguments in relation to this on the following Coptic Orthodox websites:
http://www.suscopts.org/messages/lectures/holylecture5.pdf
http://www.suscopts.org/messages/lectures/holylecture1.pdf
http://www.suscopts.org/messages/lectures/holylecture2.pdf
http://www.suscopts.org/messages/lectures/holylecture3.pdf By communing at other Church’s due to your own personal views and self-attributed discretion and authority, you separate yourself from the One true Church, and hence ultimately from God. "No one can have God as his Father who does not have the Church as his Mother” - St. Cyprian
Peace.
Dear gurl-servant,
Communing with those outside of the Orthodox Church is considered a severe offence in the Orthodox Church; essentially you are automatically ex-communicated by the Church i.e. you cease to be Orthodox; the Church no longer recognises your “membership” and as such it refuses to allow you to partake of the Holy Eucharist offered upon her Altar, until you consult your priest or Bishop with regards to rectifying the matter. The reason for this is grounded upon our very Orthodox understanding of the Church and our Orthodox understanding of the Eucharist as an expression of the One True Orthodox faith. Only one who is ignorant regarding one or the other is prone to reduce the significance of the matter to nothing. Allow me to paste for you an answer regarding the Orthodox perspective in relation to this issue as it was written in an online article on the website of the British Orthodox Church (which used to be located at: www.uk-christian.net/newboc/97edit.shtml, but is however no longer available):
I was just trying to make a point that we all believe in the same God and therfore our eucharist and the one in the catholic church both symbolize the same thing: Christ! So I don't understand the whole division >:(
I heard from one Bishop that "what is against God is against our religion" but I don't think that God would turn away one of his children for taking communion in another church that symbolizes the same thing!
No offence but we make our religion seem like the only christian religion which is obviously false. Catholics are our brothers and sisters and therefore I don't understand this whole seperation between both churchs.
P.S. I had deleted my account and re-registered.
It's irrelevant whether we "believe in the same God", because our conceptions of God are very different, and even our conceptions of the Eucharist are different also. Since the Eucharist is an expression of unity in faith, and since the Catholics have deviated from the fullness of truth we simply do not share communion with them period. My above posts thoroughly explained and justified this.
Peace.
Our Lord Jesus bless you all.
gurl_servant said: I read all the topic threads, I do agree with the deep replies in such a serious topic (esp. by Iqbal) - no offense gurl_servant!
All humanity not just Catholics must be our brothers and sisters. Any and each Church says it's the only one right! I met people from one Catholic Church who further affirm they're the only Church to deserve the Kingdom! I also met people who changed to Orthodoxy.
It's a fact God is One and thus Jesus is One so the Church cannot be divided, we are all members (or cells) of His Body - do we humans deserve this honor as sinners except it's because of His Grace. He gave us Salvation, He willingly paid the price instead of us: nothing and nobody else would fulfill this issue but Him. Also, nobody can ever claim he is the true and sole Head of the Church but Our Lord Jesus Himself. Why do I repeat here notions we already believe?
Our Lord Jesus taught us on many occasions that not all who believe in Him or pray will be saved: it is obviously not enough. There are few conditions we should cover (not price but conditions). Now please read all these verses in your Bible: Mathew 7 (the whole chapter) or here (& notice the side titles):
http://bible.gospelcom.net/passage/?book_id=47&chapter=7&version=31
there are many other chapters and verses in the Bible that guide and warn us. It is not our job to judge others (lest we be judged) but we must leave these matters to our trusted legitimate Orthodox religious Leaders who think and act guided by the Holy Spirit. Churches are trying to unite and our Church has made a lot of efforts and progress in this area.
God has Saints in every Church and He knows who are to be in His flock.
My friendly advice for you is to ask God for guidance in this and please do not jump to quick conclusions whether positive or negative, do not either judge our Church or its torn members (the other Churches were once One Church and they split willingly mainly due to their leaders decisions) Satan's directions (directly or indirectly) caused these damaging human mistakes. This led to further mistakes with time and caused many 'new' divisions to appear in the last 500 years.
There is only one Church of course. Our Church is in fact BOTH catholic & orthodox in doctrine. Any new human-rooted additions to faith by other Churches are studied - and refused if conflicting with our legacy (which is both from the Bible and all Disciples chosen by our Lord Jesus Himself).
My friend beware of Satan's malicious deadly ways! I heard these kinds of ideas before: let's act now and remove all differences between us, why wait further if it's God's will? etc
Please do not leave the safest and most reliable Church even in the name of Love, but instead gather and drive others to it for both their benefit and your own!
gurl_servant: we may all find many more details to put here so I hope this conveys some nice solution to you !
with respects and Love, Lord bless you all.
(pray fro me)
nyways the coptic orthodox orbana [holy bread] isnt made like teh catholic. The hamal [orbano chosen to be the body of christ] is made the night before. The people who make it, read and finish all teh psalms an pray continusly until the hamal is done. the catholic is just waffers.
the catholics store their eucharist if it isnt done, we coptic orthodox must finish it.
teh story of moses and how god passed by and killed the first born nd how jesus came nd he said to slaughter an unblemished lamp and to put its blood on teh door and u must finish it all. that represents the hamal we must finish it ALL. how cood u keep it. its wrong
--chipsy :P
Oh by the way....if somebody wants to REALLY partake real Communion, he/she will, even if with a little effort, and there are a lot of examples....but the problem is we're lazy and wanting everything to come on a silver plate....
Finally, EVERYBODY are our brothers and sisters....and we have to love them ALL, but does that mean that we delve into their wrong stuff and forget the depth of my Mother Church, when saying "We all believe in Jesus Christ"? Think about it....
I advise anybody still thinking to read Effesus 4 (Affassos in Arabic)...specifically the part that says "Raab wa7ed imaan wa7ed ma3moodia wa7eda..." (Sorry, don't know it in english....try to understand this phrase in context of this thread....
IN HIS Name,
Rami Zachari
that is a reallllly weird thing, because ur not even suppose to send money in the mail, let alone the body of our lord.
Hope the helped
-Pete
Before the priest says the prayer over the Bread, it's just bread. No one sends the Consecrated Body of Christ in the mail - that's ridiculous. And yes the Latin Catholics use wafers - but they are thin wafers of bread, baked by nuns in a monastery.
The only reason we aren't allowed to take communion in the catholic church is because despite beliving in the same god, there area curtial differences between us and them. For example, the catholics belive that communion is only a simple of christ's body and blood, while we belive that the holy spirit actually decends on the communion making it christ's real body and blood. having communion in their church would symbolise a union that we are still trying to achieve. there 29 differences in our belifes, so until we reach an understanding with them, this is the way things r. tho I also find it hard to belive that jesus would turn away one of his children for having communion in another church. still if you're that unsure, try talking to a preist or something. :)
Yet there seems to be an array of trajectories to reaching that one God, thorugh the one faith.
My question then, is what precisely does it take to satisfy the expectations of that one true God, for yourself?
When you speak of taking the sacrement of the Holy Eucharist in a different church, you are actually pre-supposing the Sacramnet to be univocally defined (to mean the exact same) in both their church and ours.
Yet, beyond the dogmatical and theological apparent differneces,
what about the basic difference of how we approach the Holy Eucharist.
I define the "basic" differences as such;
a.) Time taken to prepare for the Holy Eucharist (ncluding prayers and hymns before and after)
b.) Quality of preperation for the Holy Eucharist
c.) An orthodox depiction of the Holy Eucharist (how close our understanding of the Holy Body and Blood of Christ is to what Christ defined it as)
If you cosider all three of these premises, you will find that very few churches have reached as close as a proximity to the respect deserved for Christ's Body and Blood as our Coptic Orthodox church has.
The real question, then, should not be is it wrong to take the Holy Eucharist in another church, but rather; IS IT WRONG FOR ME TO TAKE THE HOLY EUCHARIST IN ANOTHER CHURCH?
The moment you accept another means of taking the Body and Blood that is less orthodox then our Coptic Orthodox means, you have degraded the value of that sacrament, even if uintentionally.
To each his own. For "From everyone who has been given much, much will be demanded; and from the one who has been entrusted with much, much more will be asked." (Luke 12:47 NIV)
Therefore, do not place yourself in the same position as those who are not familiar with the Orthodox teachings. Many will recieve the kingdom of God, but only those who have been faithful to what they are given. You are given a sacramental which gives the utmost respect and veracity to the Holy Body and Blood of Christ.
Thus, the moment you place that means as "optional" or and as "univicol" to less orthodox means you degrade the reverence for Our Lord's Sacrament. You're basically saying; "It doesn't matter to me, how I recieve the Holy Eucharist, just that I am recieving it and not something else."
Please be careful how you approach the Holy Eucharist. As it is written in Cor 11:27; "Therefore whoever eats this bread or drinks this cup of the Lord in an unworthy manner will be guilty of the body and blood of the Lord."
Although, you may have worthy intentions and even a "worthy" spirit, be sure you receive the Sacramnet by "worthy" means as well,..... lest you find yourself in a state of perdition.
God bless.