This Anaphora is employed by the Ethiopian Orthodox Church, and is attributed to the the fifth century Bishop Dioscorus of Alexandria. While The Coptics, Syriac and Oriental churches revere Dioscorus as a saint, the Orthodox and Catholics traditionally regarded him as a heretic. Recent scholarship and ecumenical dialog has greatly softened this stance.
This Anaphora is employed by the Ethiopian Orthodox Church, and is attributed to the the fifth century Bishop Dioscorus of Alexandria. While The Coptics, Syriac and Oriental churches revere Dioscorus as a saint, the Orthodox and Catholics traditionally regarded him as a heretic. Recent scholarship and ecumenical dialog has greatly softened this stance.
This Anaphora is employed by the Ethiopian Orthodox Church, and is attributed to the the fifth century Bishop Dioscorus of Alexandria. While The Coptics, Syriac and Oriental churches revere Dioscorus as a saint, the Orthodox and Catholics traditionally regarded him as a heretic. Recent scholarship and ecumenical dialog has greatly softened this stance.
This Anaphora is employed by the Ethiopian Orthodox Church, and is attributed to the the fifth century Bishop Dioscorus of Alexandria. While The Coptics, Syriac and Oriental churches revere Dioscorus as a saint, the Orthodox and Catholics traditionally regarded him as a heretic. Recent scholarship and ecumenical dialog has greatly softened this stance.