auf der Webseite der sog. Alt-Römisch-Katholischen Kirche in Europa habe ich diesen Text, in dem es um eine Union zwischen dem Patriarchat von Antiochien und der ARKK geht, gefunden:
http://www.oldromancatholiceurope.com/a ... alexandria
In einem anderen Artikel ist das zu lesen:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Old_Roman_ ... _in_EuropeArchbishop Mathew had been in contact with people interested in extending the presence of the Eastern Orthodox Church to Western Europe. On 5 August 1911, at a conference in Bredon's Norton, Worcestershire attended by Archbishop Gerassimos Messarra, Archbishop of Beirut, Legate of the Greek Orthodox Patriarch of Antioch, Archbishop Mathew and others. After a long and full discussion the faith of the Old Roman Catholic Church under Archbishop Mathew was considered in full accord with that of the Eastern Orthodox Church. Archbishop Mathew was then solemnly received by Mgr Messarra on behalf of Gregory IV (Haddad) and the Old Roman Catholic Church into union with the Greek Orthodox Patriarchate of Antioch as an autocephalous jurisdiction of the Holy Synod and on 26 February 1912, Photius, Pope and Patriarch of Alexandria, also accepted this union.[1] As this status has never been formally withdrawn or repudiated, it may be reasonably argued that Old Roman Catholic bishops are not in fact episcopi vagantes (an oft used term of disparagement by critics) but bishops of a canonically autocephalous church in communion with two historical patriarchal sees of the ancient undivided Church
Sind diese Informationen korrekt? Wenn ja: Ist die Union (zumindest theoretisch) auch heute gültig? (Die ARKK scheint mir keine sehr seriöse Gemeinschaft zu sein.)
Liebe Grüße
Petrus