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Catholic, Orthodox, Adventist & Other Protestant — Denominational Positions

Researched: 2026-05-13 by Claude (Sonnet 4.6) Founder pastoral review required before any of this is exposed to customer-facing AI. I cannot guarantee full theological accuracy. These positions reflect publicly available denominational statements, official documents, and scholarly sources as of early 2026. Nuances and local congregation variance exist. Oriental Orthodox Christology in particular is frequently mischaracterized — the miaphysite position is NOT monophysitism; see notes below.


Tradition Overview

This file covers four distinct tradition families:

  1. Roman Catholic — single global body under Vatican; positions authoritative via Magisterium (Scripture + Sacred Tradition + Teaching Authority). Catechism of the Catholic Church (CCC, 1992/1997) and Code of Canon Law (1983) are primary sources.

  2. Eastern Orthodox — communion of autocephalous churches sharing Holy Tradition and the Seven Ecumenical Councils (431 Chalcedon included). No papacy; no filioque; no purgatory; 7 mysteries (sacraments); married priests but celibate bishops. All North American jurisdictions share traditional positions on marriage and sexuality.

  3. Oriental Orthodox — pre-Chalcedonian (451 AD Chalcedonian split). Miaphysite Christology: Christ has one united nature (divine and human) out of two — this is categorically different from Monophysitism (which claims only one divine nature, absorbing the human). Oriental Orthodox explicitly reject the Monophysite label. Otherwise share much with Eastern Orthodox in liturgy and moral theology.

  4. Adventist — 19th-century American revivalist roots; distinctive doctrines include Saturday Sabbath, soul sleep/conditional immortality, sanctuary doctrine (1844 investigative judgment), and prophetic gift of Ellen G. White (not equal to Scripture but authoritative for the SDA). Grace Communion International (GCI) is formerly Armstrong's Worldwide Church of God, now fully reformed to mainstream evangelical orthodoxy.

  5. Other Protestant — EFCA, Evangelical Covenant Church, and non-denominational evangelical Bible churches. All broadly evangelical, post-Reformation, congregational or loosely presbyterian polity, sola scriptura.


Denominations

Roman Catholic Church (RCC)

  • Founding: Apostolic foundation (Petrine succession); current canonical structure developed through 1st millennium
  • Aliases: Catholic Church, Roman Catholic, RCC
  • Lens: Catholic / Apostolic / Magisterial
  • Typical orientation: Traditional-conservative (doctrinal); social teaching spans left-right spectrum
  • Heritage: Catechism of the Catholic Church (CCC 1992/1997), Code of Canon Law (1983), Vatican II documents (1962-65), papal encyclicals, conciliar tradition
  • Approx. members (US): ~52 million baptized Catholics; ~22% of US population
  • Primary sources: vatican.va, usccb.org, CCC, Code of Canon Law

Positions:

#IssuePositionConfidenceSource
1lgbtq_affirmingno — but Fiducia Supplicans nuancehighCCC 2357-2359 names homosexual acts "intrinsically disordered"; same-sex marriage not recognized. Fiducia Supplicans (Dec 2023) permits brief non-liturgical blessings of individual same-sex couples as persons, NOT blessing the union. Marriage doctrine unchanged.
2women_ordinationno — definitively closedhighOrdinatio Sacerdotalis (1994) — Pope John Paul II declared definitively that ordination to priesthood is reserved to men alone; this teaching is not open to debate. Women serve in laity, religious orders, parish admin, catechesis, music, and many leadership roles; sacramental orders alone are restricted.
3baptism_modepouring/sprinkling (infusion); immersion also validhighCCC 1239-1240; Code of Canon Law 854. The essential rite involves water and Trinitarian formula; mode is infusion (pouring) in practice but immersion is valid. Infant baptism normative (paedobaptism).
4baptism_meaningsacramental_regenerationhighCCC 1213-1284. Baptism removes original sin, forgives all personal sin, incorporates into the Body of Christ, confers sanctifying grace. Not merely a symbol — an effective sacrament that accomplishes what it signifies.
5communion_viewtransubstantiationhighCCC 1373-1381; Council of Trent; Vatican II (Sacrosanctum Concilium). Christ's body, blood, soul, and divinity are truly, really, and substantially present. The bread and wine are substantially changed at consecration.
6communion_practiceclosed — Catholics only (or reception after RCIA)highCode of Canon Law 844; USCCB guidelines. Non-Catholics are not to receive communion; Catholics in grave sin must receive absolution first. Exceptions exist in emergencies for Eastern Orthodox with compatible beliefs.
7eschatologyparticular judgment + general resurrection + purgatory + heaven/hell; not premillennial dispensationalhighCCC 1020-1060. Death → particular judgment → purgatory (if needed) → heaven or hell. General judgment at end of time. No millennial reign on earth.
8spiritual_giftsopen; charism valid, regulatedhighCCC 799-801; Vatican II (Lumen Gentium 12). Charisms are given by the Spirit for building up the Church. Charismatic Renewal is officially recognized (approved 1975 by Paul VI). No cessationism.
9soteriologygrace + faith + works (cooperation with grace); infused righteousnesshighCCC 1987-2005; Council of Trent. Justified by grace through faith, but justification is ongoing and includes cooperation with grace (synergistic, not sola fide). Merit is real but derivative of grace.
10divorce_remarriagemarriage indissoluble; annulment process for declaration of invalidityhighCCC 1629; Code of Canon Law 1141. Valid sacramental marriage cannot be dissolved. Annulment (declaration of nullity) declares a valid marriage never existed. Divorced-and-remarried Catholics without annulment are not to receive communion (CCC 1650).
11biblical_interpretationScripture + Tradition + Magisterium; historical-critical methods used but guided by ChurchhighCCC 74-141; Dei Verbum (Vatican II). Scripture is inerrant in "that truth which God wanted put into sacred writings for the sake of salvation." Historical-critical method is employed but interpreted through Tradition and Magisterium.
12polityepiscopal / hierarchical (monarchical papacy)highCCC 874-896; Code of Canon Law. Pope has full and supreme authority; bishops govern dioceses; priests serve parishes; deacons (ordained, including permanent deacons — married men may serve).
13politics_engagementsocial teaching — both/neither partisan; common good, subsidiarityhighUSCCB "Forming Consciences for Faithful Citizenship." Abortion strongly opposed; social justice, immigrants, climate, poverty also emphasized. Neither Republican nor Democrat alignment.
14marriage_definitionone_man_one_woman; sacramenthighCCC 1601-1666; Code of Canon Law 1055. Marriage is a sacrament between baptized man and woman; ordered to good of spouses and procreation. Same-sex unions not recognized. Fiducia Supplicans (2023) does not change this.

Intra-denomination notes: The Catholic Church is not monolithic in practice. Pope Francis's pontificate (2013-present) has emphasized pastoral accompaniment, environmental justice, and outreach to the margins. Fiducia Supplicans (Dec 2023) allowing blessings of same-sex couples-as-persons (not unions) generated fierce pushback from African bishops and traditionalists. The Synod on Synodality (2021-2024) opened deliberation but no doctrinal changes resulted. Significant tension exists between progressive Western Catholics and traditionalist global South and Eastern European bishops. The Latin Mass community (attached to pre-Vatican II Tridentine rite) is a distinct subgroup. Women's diaconate is an open academic question (Pope Francis formed a commission) but Ordinatio Sacerdotalis closed the priesthood question definitively.


Eastern Orthodox

Shared Tradition Notes for All Eastern Orthodox Jurisdictions: All canonical Eastern Orthodox churches in North America share the following positions without significant variation. Differences between jurisdictions are primarily ethnic/cultural, not doctrinal.

  • 7 Holy Mysteries (Sacraments): Baptism, Chrismation, Eucharist, Confession, Holy Orders, Holy Unction, Matrimony
  • Apostolic succession required for valid clergy
  • Married priests permitted (must marry before ordination); celibate bishops (usually from monastics)
  • No papal infallibility; no purgatory; no filioque in the Creed
  • All-male ordained orders; deaconesses existed historically but no active restoration as of 2026
  • LGBTQ: universally traditional across all jurisdictions
  • Marriage: blessed mystery, indissoluble; economy (oikonomia) permits ecclesiastical divorce in limited pastoral circumstances; up to three marriages allowed (with increasing canonical restrictions)
  • Eschatology: general resurrection, particular and final judgment; theosis as salvation goal; no premillennial dispensationalism
  • Biblical interpretation: Scripture as canonical within the life of the Church; Holy Tradition interprets Scripture; historical-critical scholarship acknowledged but Tradition is primary
  • Communion: closed — Orthodox in good standing only; no intercommunion with non-Orthodox or Catholics

Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America (GOA)

  • Founding: 1922 (reorganized from earlier Greek parishes)
  • Aliases: GOA, Greek Orthodox
  • Lens: Eastern Orthodox / Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople
  • Typical orientation: Traditional; under Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I (active in ecumenical dialogue and environmental advocacy)
  • Heritage: Ecumenical Patriarchate; Holy Tradition; Nicene-Chalcedonian orthodoxy
  • Approx. members (US): ~500,000

Positions:

#IssuePositionConfidenceSource
1lgbtq_affirmingnohighGOA and Ecumenical Patriarchate traditional statements; Holy and Great Council (Crete 2016) did not address; consistent patristic teaching
2women_ordinationnohighApostolic tradition; no ordination of women to priesthood or episcopate; deaconess question is discussed but not active
3baptism_modeimmersion (triple)highCanon 50 of Apostolic Canons; Orthodox practice is triple full immersion; infants baptized; chrismation follows immediately
4baptism_meaningsacramental_regenerationhighMystery of Baptism — regeneration, forgiveness of sin, gift of Holy Spirit through Chrismation (immediately following)
5communion_viewreal_presence (Body and Blood)highDivine Liturgy theology; the bread and wine become the Body and Blood of Christ; no Scholastic transubstantiation terminology required; real presence affirmed
6communion_practiceclosed (Orthodox only)highGOA Archdiocesan guidelines; only baptized and chrismated Orthodox in good standing may receive
7eschatologygeneral resurrection, judgment, theosis; no premillennial dispensationalismhighOrthodox patristic tradition; salvation as theosis (deification); no Rapture theology; no millennial reign on earth
8spiritual_giftsopen; charisms acknowledgedmediumNo official cessationist position; gifts of the Spirit active in the life of the Church; monasticism as pneumatic community
9soteriologytheosis (deification); healing/union modelhighAthanasius: "God became man that man might become god." Salvation is participation in divine life; not primarily forensic/legal
10divorce_remarriageoikonomia permits; up to 3 marriageshighGOA ecclesiastical divorce process; 2nd and 3rd marriages have penitential rites; adultery, abandonment recognized as grounds
11biblical_interpretationScripture within Holy Tradition; Septuagint primary OThighOrthodox hermeneutic: Scripture is the Church's book; Holy Tradition interprets; Septuagint used liturgically
12polityepiscopal / autocephalous under ConstantinoplehighEcumenical Patriarchate; Archbishop of America; hierarchical episcopal structure
13politics_engagementnot partisan; Patriarch Bartholomew: environmental, ecumenismmediumGOA does not issue partisan political statements; Patriarch active on climate change ("Green Patriarch"), ecumenical dialogue
14marriage_definitionone_man_one_woman; holy mysteryhighGOA Marriage Guidelines; ecclesiastical divorce process; consistent with Orthodox Holy Tradition

Orthodox Church in America (OCA)

  • Founding: 1970 (granted autocephaly by Russian Orthodox Church)
  • Aliases: OCA
  • Lens: Eastern Orthodox / Autocephalous (recognized by Moscow, not yet by Constantinople or GOA)
  • Typical orientation: Traditional; more American-focused identity
  • Heritage: Russian Orthodox roots; fully English-language liturgy developed; Seminary at St. Vladimir's (Crestwood, NY)
  • Approx. members (US): ~85,000

Positions:

#IssuePositionConfidenceSource
1lgbtq_affirmingnohighoca.org; consistent Holy Tradition
2women_ordinationnohighApostolic tradition; same as all Eastern Orthodox
3baptism_modeimmersion (triple)highOrthodox canonical tradition
4baptism_meaningsacramental_regenerationhighSame as Eastern Orthodox shared tradition
5communion_viewreal_presencehighSame as Eastern Orthodox shared tradition
6communion_practiceclosed (Orthodox only)highSame as Eastern Orthodox shared tradition
7eschatologygeneral resurrection, theosis; no premilhighSame as Eastern Orthodox shared tradition
8spiritual_giftsopenmediumSame as Eastern Orthodox shared tradition
9soteriologytheosishighSame as Eastern Orthodox shared tradition
10divorce_remarriageoikonomia permits; up to 3 marriageshighOCA canonical practice
11biblical_interpretationScripture within Holy TraditionhighSame as Eastern Orthodox shared tradition
12polityepiscopal / autocephaloushighSelf-governing; Metropolitan of All America and Canada
13politics_engagementnot partisanmediumOCA has not issued partisan political statements
14marriage_definitionone_man_one_womanhighHoly Tradition; OCA pastoral letters

Intra-denomination notes: OCA's autocephaly (granted by Moscow in 1970) is still disputed by the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople and some other Orthodox bodies. This is a jurisdictional/canonical dispute, not a doctrinal one. OCA and ROCOR reconciled in 2011. OCA is known for producing significant English-language Orthodox theological scholarship (Alexander Schmemann, John Meyendorff).


Antiochian Orthodox Christian Archdiocese of North America (AOCA)

  • Founding: 1895 (organized among Arab Orthodox immigrants)
  • Aliases: AOCA, Antiochian Orthodox
  • Lens: Eastern Orthodox / Patriarchate of Antioch
  • Typical orientation: Traditional; notable for receiving evangelical converts (1987 Evangelical Orthodox Church reception)
  • Heritage: Patriarchate of Antioch (Damascus); significant convert community
  • Approx. members (US): ~75,000

Positions:

#IssuePositionConfidenceSource
1lgbtq_affirmingnohighantiochian.org; consistent Holy Tradition
2women_ordinationnohighSame as Eastern Orthodox shared tradition
3baptism_modeimmersion (triple)highSame as Eastern Orthodox shared tradition
4baptism_meaningsacramental_regenerationhighSame as Eastern Orthodox shared tradition
5communion_viewreal_presencehighSame as Eastern Orthodox shared tradition
6communion_practiceclosed (Orthodox only)highSame as Eastern Orthodox shared tradition
7eschatologygeneral resurrection, theosis; no premilhighSame as Eastern Orthodox shared tradition
8spiritual_giftsopenmediumSame as Eastern Orthodox shared tradition
9soteriologytheosishighSame as Eastern Orthodox shared tradition
10divorce_remarriageoikonomia permitshighSame as Eastern Orthodox shared tradition
11biblical_interpretationScripture within Holy TraditionhighSame as Eastern Orthodox shared tradition
12polityepiscopal / under Patriarchate of AntiochhighMetropolitan of North America; hierarchical
13politics_engagementnot partisanmediumNo official political alignment
14marriage_definitionone_man_one_womanhighHoly Tradition

Intra-denomination notes: In 1987, the AOCA received ~2,000 members of the Evangelical Orthodox Church (formerly Campus Crusade for Christ leaders who journeyed through Protestant renewal and into Orthodoxy). The Antiochian Archdiocese has a higher proportion of converts than most other Orthodox jurisdictions in North America.


Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia (ROCOR)

  • Founding: 1920 (established by Russian bishops in exile after Bolshevik Revolution)
  • Aliases: ROCOR, Russian Orthodox Church Abroad
  • Lens: Eastern Orthodox / Russian Tradition; under Moscow Patriarchate since 2007
  • Typical orientation: Traditional-conservative; known for strictness in canonical discipline
  • Heritage: Russian Orthodox tradition; full communion with Moscow restored 2007 after 1927 break
  • Approx. members (US): ~30,000

Positions:

#IssuePositionConfidenceSource
1lgbtq_affirmingnohighROCOR is among the more conservative Orthodox jurisdictions; strong traditional stance
2women_ordinationnohighSame as Eastern Orthodox shared tradition
3baptism_modeimmersion (triple)highSame as Eastern Orthodox shared tradition; ROCOR sometimes rebaptizes converts from other traditions
4baptism_meaningsacramental_regenerationhighSame as Eastern Orthodox shared tradition
5communion_viewreal_presencehighSame as Eastern Orthodox shared tradition
6communion_practiceclosed (Orthodox only)highROCOR canonical strictness; may be stricter than some other jurisdictions about who may receive
7eschatologygeneral resurrection, theosis; no premilhighSame as Eastern Orthodox shared tradition
8spiritual_giftsopenmediumSame as Eastern Orthodox shared tradition
9soteriologytheosishighSame as Eastern Orthodox shared tradition
10divorce_remarriageoikonomia permits; stricter application in ROCOR practicehighROCOR canonical guidelines; known for stricter pastoral discipline
11biblical_interpretationScripture within Holy TraditionhighSame as Eastern Orthodox shared tradition
12polityepiscopal / semi-autonomous under MoscowhighSelf-governing in internal affairs; in communion with Moscow Patriarchate
13politics_engagementnot partisan; historically anti-Soviet; post-2022 Russia-Ukraine war has strained some ROCOR communitiesmediumROCOR's relationship with Moscow is complex post-2022 invasion of Ukraine; some North American ROCOR parishes have expressed concern
14marriage_definitionone_man_one_womanhighHoly Tradition; strong position

Serbian Orthodox Church in North America

  • Founding: Diocese of America and Canada established 1921
  • Aliases: Serbian Orthodox Church, SOC
  • Lens: Eastern Orthodox / Patriarchate of Serbia
  • Typical orientation: Traditional
  • Approx. members (US): ~70,000 (estimated)

Positions: All 14 positions identical to Eastern Orthodox shared tradition (see above). Serbian Orthodox Church is consistently traditional on all positions. No notable deviations from Eastern Orthodox consensus.

Intra-denomination notes: The Serbian Orthodox Church in North America experienced a jurisdictional split in the 20th century (Metropolitanate of New Gracanica vs. Diocese of America and Canada under Belgrade). The two were reunited in 1992. The Patriarchate of Serbia is under Patriarch Porfirije since 2021.


Romanian Orthodox Episcopate of America (ROEA)

  • Founding: 1929; currently part of OCA (under ROEA-OCA since 1960)
  • Aliases: ROEA, Romanian Orthodox
  • Lens: Eastern Orthodox / administratively under OCA
  • Typical orientation: Traditional; ethnically Romanian immigrant community plus converts
  • Approx. members (US): ~12,000 (estimated)

Positions: All 14 positions identical to Eastern Orthodox shared tradition. The ROEA is part of the OCA ecclesiastical structure but maintains Romanian liturgical tradition.

Intra-denomination notes: There is a separate Romanian Orthodox Archdiocese of the Americas under the Romanian Patriarchate (Patriarchate of Bucharest) that is distinct from the ROEA. The ROEA chose OCA jurisdiction in 1960 over Bucharest jurisdiction. Both jurisdictions are present in North America and hold the same doctrinal positions.


Oriental Orthodox

Shared Christological Note — Critical: Oriental Oriental Orthodox churches hold miaphysitism: Christ has one nature (mia physis) that is fully divine and fully human united without confusion. This is NOT the same as Monophysitism (one divine nature only, which denies Christ's full humanity). The Council of Chalcedon (451 AD) formulated "two natures, one person" — Oriental Orthodox rejected this as having Nestorian flavor, not because they deny Christ's humanity. Ecumenical dialogues (Orthodox-Oriental dialogues 1989-1993) have acknowledged that both communions hold the same faith in different terminologies. Do not label these churches "Monophysite" — they consider it a mischaracterization and a slur.

All Oriental Oriental Orthodox churches share traditional positions on marriage, LGBTQ, and women's ordination. Differences from Eastern Orthodox are primarily Christological and jurisdictional, not moral/ethical.


Coptic Orthodox Church

  • Founding: Tradition: founded by Mark the Evangelist (~1st century); separated from Chalcedonian communion 451 AD
  • Aliases: Coptic Orthodox, Coptic Church
  • Lens: Oriental Orthodox / Miaphysite
  • Typical orientation: Traditional-conservative
  • Heritage: Egyptian/African church; Pope of Alexandria (currently Pope Tawadros II); large diaspora in US
  • Approx. members (US): ~250,000-300,000

Positions:

#IssuePositionConfidenceSource
1lgbtq_affirmingno — strong condemnationhighlacopts.org formal statement; Pope Shenouda III and Tawadros II statements condemning homosexuality, same-sex marriage, and ordination of LGBTQ persons
2women_ordinationnohighCoptic tradition; deaconesses existed historically for specific liturgical functions; no ordination to priesthood or episcopate
3baptism_modeimmersion (triple)highCoptic liturgical tradition; infant baptism followed immediately by Chrismation and First Communion
4baptism_meaningsacramental_regenerationhighAll three mysteries (Baptism, Chrismation, Eucharist) administered together to infants
5communion_viewreal_presencehighCoptic Eucharistic theology affirms real presence of Christ; no Scholastic terminology
6communion_practiceclosed (Coptic/Oriental Orthodox in good standing)highCommunion given only to baptized and chrismated members in good standing
7eschatologygeneral resurrection, judgment; no premillennial dispensationalismhighPatristic tradition; resurrection of the body; final judgment; no Rapture or millennial reign on earth
8spiritual_giftsopen; monastic/ascetic pneumatic traditionmediumRich monastic tradition (Egyptian desert monasticism origins); charisms acknowledged in monastic context
9soteriologytheosis / salvation as deification and healinghighSame patristic framework as Eastern Orthodox; salvation as participation in divine life
10divorce_remarriagerestricted; Coptic Church grants ecclesiastical divorcehighDivorce permitted on grounds of adultery, apostasy, long imprisonment; Pope must approve bishop's divorce in some cases
11biblical_interpretationScripture within Holy Tradition; Coptic Canon includes some deuterocanonical bookshighCoptic Biblical canon is slightly larger than Western Protestant; Holy Tradition primary interpretive context
12polityepiscopal / patriarchalhighPope of Alexandria (currently Tawadros II); bishops; priests; deacons
13politics_engagementnot partisan; advocacy for Egyptian Coptic diaspora rightsmediumCoptic leadership historically cautious on US politics; some advocacy around Middle East Christian rights
14marriage_definitionone_man_one_womanhighConsistent patristic and canonical tradition; explicit formal condemnation of same-sex marriage

Armenian Apostolic Church

  • Founding: Tradition: founded by apostles Thaddaeus and Bartholomew (~1st century); autocephalous 374 AD; separated from Chalcedonian communion 451 AD
  • Aliases: Armenian Apostolic, Armenian Orthodox
  • Lens: Oriental Orthodox / Miaphysite
  • Typical orientation: Traditional; two catholicosates (Etchmiadzin in Armenia; Cilicia in Lebanon)
  • Heritage: First Christian nation (Armenia 301 AD); Catholicos of All Armenians (Etchmiadzin); Eastern Diocese of the Armenian Church of America under Catholicos of Cilicia (New York)
  • Approx. members (US): ~400,000-500,000

Positions:

#IssuePositionConfidenceSource
1lgbtq_affirmingnohighArmenian Apostolic Church consistent traditional position; no official LGBTQ affirmation
2women_ordinationnohighApostolic tradition; female monastics; no ordination to male orders
3baptism_modeimmersion (triple) preferred; pouring usedmediumArmenian liturgical practice; triple immersion traditional but practice may vary
4baptism_meaningsacramental_regenerationhighSeven sacraments/mysteries; Baptism, Chrismation, and Eucharist administered together to infants
5communion_viewreal_presencehighArmenian Eucharistic theology; real presence; uses unleavened bread (unique among Oriental Orthodox)
6communion_practiceclosed (Armenian Apostolic and Oriental Orthodox)highCommunion restricted to baptized and chrismated members in good standing
7eschatologygeneral resurrection, judgment; no premillennial dispensationalismhighPatristic Oriental Orthodox tradition
8spiritual_giftsopenmediumMonastic and liturgical context
9soteriologytheosis / healinghighSame patristic framework
10divorce_remarriagerestricted; ecclesiastical processmediumArmenian canon law permits divorce on specific grounds; church-recognized divorce required
11biblical_interpretationScripture within Holy Tradition; Armenian Bible (5th century Mesrob translation)highHoly Tradition primary; Armenian language is unique in having a Bible translation from the classical period
12polityepiscopal / patriarchal (two catholicosates)highCatholicos of All Armenians (Etchmiadzin, Armenia); Catholicos of the Great House of Cilicia (Antelias, Lebanon) — both in North America
13politics_engagementadvocacy for Armenian recognition (genocide)mediumArmenian Genocide recognition is a significant advocacy issue; not partisan on US domestic politics
14marriage_definitionone_man_one_womanhighConsistent canonical and theological tradition

Intra-denomination notes: The Armenian Apostolic Church in North America is split between two jurisdictions: the Eastern Diocese and Western Diocese (under Etchmiadzin/Armenia) and the Armenian Church of America Diocese (under Cilicia/Lebanon). These are in communion with each other but administratively separate. The split has historical roots in disagreements over the Catholicos election and political relations with Soviet-era Armenia. No doctrinal difference between the two.


Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church

  • Founding: Tradition: founded by the Ethiopian eunuch of Acts 8 and Frumentius (~4th century); autocephaly granted 1959
  • Aliases: Ethiopian Orthodox, EOTC, Tewahedo
  • Lens: Oriental Orthodox / Miaphysite; "Tewahedo" means "made one" — refers to the unified nature of Christ
  • Typical orientation: Traditional; large and growing North American diaspora
  • Heritage: Ethiopian tradition; Holy Synod of Ethiopia; unique liturgical practices (Old Testament dietary laws followed, Saturday + Sunday Sabbath observed)
  • Approx. members (US): Estimated 500,000-750,000 (significant diaspora; fastest-growing Oriental Orthodox community in North America)

Positions:

#IssuePositionConfidenceSource
1lgbtq_affirmingnohighEthiopian Orthodox traditional position; no departure from patristic teaching
2women_ordinationnohighEthiopian Orthodox tradition; female monastics; no ordination to priesthood
3baptism_modeimmersion; infants baptized (boys at 40 days, girls at 80 days after birth — following Levitical purification pattern)highDistinctive Ethiopian practice following Old Testament pattern
4baptism_meaningsacramental_regenerationhighSeven sacraments; Baptism-Chrismation-Eucharist together
5communion_viewreal_presencehighEthiopian Eucharistic theology consistent with Oriental Orthodox
6communion_practiceclosed; with dietary preparation requiredhighFasting required before communion; closed to non-members
7eschatologygeneral resurrection, judgment; no premilhighPatristic tradition
8spiritual_giftsopen; strong exorcism and healing ministry traditionmediumEthiopian Orthodox churches known for prayer for healing and deliverance
9soteriologytheosis / healinghighPatristic Oriental Orthodox framework
10divorce_remarriagerestrictedmediumChurch canon; divorce grounds limited; unclear US diaspora practice
11biblical_interpretationScripture within Holy Tradition; Ge'ez liturgical language; Ethiopian canon includes additional books (e.g., Book of Enoch, Jubilees)highEthiopian Biblical canon is the most extensive of any Christian tradition — 81 books
12polityepiscopal / patriarchalhighPatriarch of Ethiopia (currently Abune Matthias); Holy Synod
13politics_engagementnot US-partisan; advocacy for Ethiopian Christian communitymediumNot politically engaged in US partisan politics
14marriage_definitionone_man_one_womanhighConsistent tradition

Intra-denomination notes: The Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church has unique Old Testament observances not found in other Oriental Orthodox churches: Saturday Sabbath alongside Sunday, Old Testament dietary restrictions (no pork, shellfish), circumcision of male children, and a 81-book Biblical canon that includes Enoch, Jubilees, and other texts. This makes EOTC particularly significant for AI agent customization — Ethiopian Orthodox church chatbots/voice agents should reflect these distinctives. The Eritrean Orthodox Tewahedo Church (separate since 1998 Eritrean independence) is closely related but distinct.


Syriac Orthodox Church

  • Founding: Tradition: Apostolic (Antioch); Patriarchate of Antioch established 1st century; separated from Chalcedonian communion 451 AD
  • Aliases: Syriac Orthodox, West Syriac, Syrian Orthodox, Jacobite (historical/informal — considered pejorative by many members)
  • Lens: Oriental Orthodox / Miaphysite
  • Typical orientation: Traditional; significant diaspora from Syria, Iraq, Turkey, India (Malankara)
  • Heritage: Syriac liturgical language (closest living relative of Aramaic); Patriarch of Antioch (currently Ignatius Aphrem II, based in Damascus)
  • Approx. members (US): ~70,000-100,000

Positions:

#IssuePositionConfidenceSource
1lgbtq_affirmingnohighConsistent Oriental Oriental Orthodox traditional position
2women_ordinationnohighApostolic tradition; female deacons exist in some affiliated Malankara contexts
3baptism_modeimmersion (triple preferred)highSyriac liturgical tradition
4baptism_meaningsacramental_regenerationhighSeven mysteries; Baptism, Chrismation, Eucharist together
5communion_viewreal_presencehighSyriac Eucharistic theology consistent with Oriental Orthodox
6communion_practiceclosedhighRestricted to baptized and chrismated members
7eschatologygeneral resurrection, judgment; no premilhighPatristic tradition
8spiritual_giftsopenmediumMonastic and liturgical context
9soteriologytheosis / healinghighPatristic Oriental Orthodox framework
10divorce_remarriagerestricted; limited pastoral groundsmediumSyriac canon law permits divorce on specific grounds (adultery, apostasy)
11biblical_interpretationScripture within Holy Tradition; Peshitta (Syriac Bible) is primary biblical texthighThe Peshitta (classical Syriac) is the oldest continuously used Bible in Christian history; Holy Tradition interprets
12polityepiscopal / patriarchalhighPatriarch of Antioch and All the East; bishops; priests
13politics_engagementadvocacy for Middle East Christian rightsmediumNot US-partisan; significant advocacy for Syrian Christian survival
14marriage_definitionone_man_one_womanhighConsistent canonical tradition

Intra-denomination notes: The Malankara Orthodox Syrian Church and Malankara Mar Thoma Syrian Church (Indian Kerala) share Syriac heritage but are in different communions — the Malankara Orthodox is in communion with the Syriac Orthodox; the Mar Thoma is Protestant-reformed in theology. North American Syriac Orthodox parishes often include significant communities from Syria, Iraq, and India.


Adventist

Seventh-day Adventist Church (SDA)

  • Founding: 1863 (General Conference organized); roots in 1844 Millerite movement
  • Aliases: SDA, Adventist, Seventh-day Adventists
  • Lens: Adventist / Evangelical with distinctives
  • Typical orientation: Conservative evangelical; holistic health emphasis
  • Heritage: 28 Fundamental Beliefs (adopted 1980; #11 added 2005); Ellen G. White "prophetic gift" writings (not equal to Scripture but authoritative guidance); Andrews University and Adventist Health network
  • Approx. members (US): ~1.2 million; ~21 million worldwide
  • Primary sources: adventist.org, gc.adventist.org, "Seventh-day Adventists Believe" (official commentary on 28 Fundamentals)

Positions:

#IssuePositionConfidenceSource
1lgbtq_affirmingnohighgc.adventist.org official statement; 2014 guidelines prohibit membership for those practicing homosexuality; SDA pastors and churches may not perform same-sex weddings; not open to LGBTQ ordination
2women_ordinationcontested; official: no; regional: some unions ordain womenhigh2015 General Conference voted 58% against women's ordination; North American Division and several unions (Pacific, Columbia, etc.) have continued ordaining women in defiance; GC leadership has applied discipline but not resolved; deeply contested
3baptism_modeimmersion only (believer's)highFundamental Belief #15; immersion of adult or post-conversion believers; infant dedication practiced but not baptism
4baptism_meaningordinance_public_declarationhighBaptism as public declaration of faith and commitment; regeneration not automatic through water; SDA is more Baptist-adjacent on baptism meaning than sacramental traditions
5communion_viewmemorial / ordinancehighFundamental Belief #16; Lord's Supper as memorial of Christ's death; open to all Christians ("open communion"); foot washing practiced as Ordinance of Humility before communion
6communion_practiceopen (all Christians welcome)highSDA practices open communion; non-SDA Christians may participate
7eschatologypremillennial; second advent; soul sleep; investigative judgmenthighFundamental Beliefs #24-28. Christ's literal, visible, imminent second coming. Soul sleep (unconscious state in death). Millennium = believers in heaven while earth is desolate; at end of millennium, New Jerusalem descends, final resurrection of wicked, final judgment, earth made new.
8spiritual_giftsopen; Ellen G. White as prophetic gifthighFundamental Belief #17-18; all spiritual gifts operational; Ellen G. White's writings as "a continuing and authoritative source of truth" — distinctive SDA position
9soteriologygrace through faith; Arminian (free will); Christ's mediating work in heavenly sanctuaryhighArminian soteriology (free will, universal atonement, conditional perseverance); investigative judgment doctrine (Fundamental Belief #24): pre-Advent judgment began in 1844 in heavenly sanctuary, examining lives of professing believers
10divorce_remarriagerestricted; immoral sexual conduct as groundshighSDA Church Manual; divorce permitted on grounds of sexual immorality and abandonment; remarriage of innocent party permitted; pastoral counsel encouraged
11biblical_interpretationhistorical_grammatical_inerrant; sola scriptura; Ellen G. White as lesser lighthighFundamental Belief #1-2; Scripture is the ultimate standard (sola scriptura); Ellen G. White's writings are authoritative "lesser light" to guide to Scripture
12polityrepresentative / General ConferencehighGeneral Conference (global); Divisions (regional); Unions (national); Local Conferences; congregational-presbyterian hybrid
13politics_engagementreligious liberty emphasis; separation of church and statehighSDA has historically been strong advocates for religious liberty and separation of church and state (Fundamental Belief #12); historically politically non-partisan; Adventist Review and Liberty magazine cover religious liberty
14marriage_definitionone_man_one_woman; biblicalhighSDA official statements; 2014 cultural guidelines; consistent with 28 Fundamentals

Distinctive SDA Notes:

  • Saturday Sabbath: 7th-day Sabbath (sundown Friday to sundown Saturday) is a core Fundamental Belief (#20); not Sunday worship. This is the most externally-visible SDA distinctive.
  • Soul Sleep (Conditional Immortality): At death, the person is unconscious ("asleep") until resurrection. There is no conscious existence in heaven or hell between death and resurrection. Fundamental Belief #26.
  • Annihilationism: The wicked are not tormented eternally; they are ultimately destroyed (second death). Fundamental Belief #27.
  • Investigative Judgment / Sanctuary Doctrine: In 1844, Jesus moved from the Holy Place to the Most Holy Place of the heavenly sanctuary, beginning a pre-Advent investigative judgment. This is perhaps the most distinctively SDA and most externally-questioned doctrine. Fundamental Belief #24.
  • Health Message: Vegetarianism encouraged; abstinence from alcohol, tobacco, caffeine standard. No official prohibition on clean meats but vegetarianism is the SDA ideal. This flows from stewardship of the body as temple (holistic health).
  • Ellen G. White: Her writings (Steps to Christ, Desire of Ages, Great Controversy, Ministry of Healing, etc.) are considered a "prophetic gift" — authoritative guidance for the SDA community, but subordinate to Scripture. SDA do not consider her writings a third Testament or equal to Scripture.

Grace Communion International (GCI) / formerly Worldwide Church of God

  • Founding: 1933 (as Radio Church of God by Herbert W. Armstrong); renamed Worldwide Church of God (WCG) 1968; Reformed to mainstream evangelical 1995-2009; renamed Grace Communion International 2009
  • Aliases: GCI, Grace Communion, Worldwide Church of God (historical), WCG
  • Lens: Evangelical Protestant (post-reform); Trinitarian; Incarnational Trinitarian theology (Torrance-influenced)
  • Typical orientation: Moderate evangelical; known for dramatic doctrinal reform
  • Heritage: Armstrong-era distinctives (British Israelism, Saturday Sabbath, dietary laws, denial of Trinity, Holy Days) all abandoned post-1995. Now holds Trinitarian evangelical positions. Member of National Association of Evangelicals.
  • Approx. members (US): ~36,000 (significantly reduced from WCG peak; many members left to other Armstrong-heritage groups like United Church of God, Living Church of God)
  • Primary sources: gci.org, GCI Statement of Beliefs

Positions:

#IssuePositionConfidenceSource
1lgbtq_affirmingno (traditional evangelical position)mediumGCI holds traditional position; no public advocacy for LGBTQ inclusion; NAE Statement of Faith alignment
2women_ordinationyes-pastormediumGCI ordains women; inclusive polity
3baptism_modebeliever's; immersion preferredmediumEvangelical Protestant practice; adult/believer's baptism normative
4baptism_meaningordinance_public_declarationmediumMainstream evangelical; baptism as public declaration; not sacramental regeneration
5communion_viewmemorial / symbolicmediumMainstream evangelical memorial view
6communion_practiceopenmediumEvangelical open table
7eschatologyopen; evangelical; not Armstrong-era prophetic speculationmediumArmstrong's specific prophetic predictions (British Israelism, specific end-time national scenarios) abandoned; now holds broadly evangelical eschatology
8spiritual_giftsopenmediumEvangelical; no official cessationist position
9soteriologygrace through faith; evangelicalhighSola fide; salvation by grace through faith; formerly works-heavy (under Armstrong's legalism); now evangelical
10divorce_remarriagepastoral discretionmediumEvangelical pastoral approach; less legalistic than WCG era
11biblical_interpretationinerrant; evangelicalhighBible as inspired, infallible, authoritative Word of God; NAE alignment
12polityrepresentative; congregational-leaningmediumGCI polity has evolved; relatively flat governance
13politics_engagementnot partisanmediumNo official political alignment
14marriage_definitionone_man_one_woman (traditional evangelical)mediumTraditional position; consistent with NAE membership

Intra-denomination notes: The WCG-to-GCI transformation is one of the most dramatic doctrinal reformations in 20th-century American church history. Under Joseph Tkach Sr. (1986-1995) and Joseph Tkach Jr. (1995-present), the church abandoned virtually all Armstrong-era distinctives: Saturday Sabbath, British Israelism, denial of Trinity, dietary laws, rejection of Christmas/Easter, prophetic speculation about US/UK end-time role, and requirement to tithe to the WCG exclusively. The result was that roughly 75% of WCG members departed to form splinter groups (UCG, LCG, PCG, etc.) that preserve Armstrong's original theology. GCI represents the mainstreamed remnant. Their Incarnational Trinitarian theology (influenced by T.F. Torrance) is now a distinctive emphasis.

Armstrong-heritage splinters (NOT covered in this document): United Church of God, Living Church of God, Philadelphia Church of God, and ~200 other groups still hold Armstrong-era positions (Saturday Sabbath, British Israelism, dietary laws, denial of certain Trinitarian formulations). Do NOT apply GCI positions to these groups.


Other Protestant (Evangelical, Non-Affiliated)

Evangelical Free Church of America (EFCA)

  • Founding: 1950 (merger of Scandinavian-heritage evangelical free churches)
  • Aliases: EFCA, Evangelical Free
  • Lens: Evangelical / Baptist-adjacent / Broadly Reformed
  • Typical orientation: Traditional-conservative evangelical; complementarian
  • Heritage: 10-article Statement of Faith (revised 2019); congregational polity with regional district affiliation; Trinity Evangelical Divinity School
  • Approx. members (US): ~400,000 (1,400+ churches)
  • Primary sources: efca.org, EFCA Statement of Faith (2019), efca.org/theological-positions

Positions:

#IssuePositionConfidenceSource
1lgbtq_affirmingnohighEFCA Human Sexuality Statement; efca.org/theological-positions; traditional marriage defined as man-woman
2women_ordinationno (complementarian); women in ministry yeshighEFCA holds complementarian convictions; ordination to pastoral office restricted to men; women serve in ministry roles, leadership, and teaching (other than ordination); efca.org states explicitly
3baptism_modebeliever's preferred; other modes not requiredhighEFCA SOF Article 9; believer's baptism by immersion is traditional EFCA; other modes (sprinkling, pouring) not disqualifying; paedobaptism also not disqualifying for membership
4baptism_meaningordinance_public_declarationhighBaptism as public identification with Christ and the church; not sacramental regeneration
5communion_viewmemorial / symbolichighLord's Supper as proclamation and remembrance; open to debate on precise theology within evangelical range
6communion_practiceopen (to believers in good standing)highEvangelical open table; all who are believers and have examined themselves
7eschatologypremillennial (historic) with open posturehighEFCA SOF historically premillennial; current SOF (2019) allows eschatological diversity; premillennialism is traditional and common
8spiritual_giftsopen_but_cautioushighEFCA SOF Article 10; all spiritual gifts given by the Spirit; EFCA churches include both cessationist and continuationist; no binding mandate
9soteriologygrace through faith; sola fide; broadly Reformed influencehighEFCA SOF Article 6-7; salvation by grace through faith; not strictly 5-point Calvinist but Reformed evangelical
10divorce_remarriagerestricted; grounds recognizedmediumEFCA does not have a binding denominational divorce policy; individual churches and pastors exercise pastoral discretion; traditional evangelical grounds (immorality, abandonment) typical
11biblical_interpretationinerrancy; sola scripturahighEFCA SOF Article 1; Scripture is "verbally inspired by God and without error in the original writings"
12politycongregational with district affiliationhighEach local church is self-governing; affiliated with EFCA district; no binding authority from denomination on local church governance
13politics_engagementnot partisanmediumEFCA does not issue partisan political statements; individual churches vary; broadly conservative evangelical culture
14marriage_definitionone_man_one_womanhighEFCA SOF; Human Sexuality Statement; efca.org/theological-positions

Evangelical Covenant Church (ECC / Covchurch)

  • Founding: 1885 (Swedish Pietist immigrant churches — Swedish Evangelical Mission Covenant Church of America)
  • Aliases: ECC, Covenant Church, Covchurch, Evangelical Covenant
  • Lens: Evangelical / Pietist / Moderate
  • Typical orientation: Moderate evangelical; egalitarian on gender; traditional on marriage
  • Heritage: 6 Affirmations; Swedish Pietist roots; emphasis on personal conversion + Scripture + community; North Park University and Theological Seminary (Chicago)
  • Approx. members (US): ~330,000 (900+ churches)
  • Primary sources: covchurch.org, ECC Human Sexuality Guidelines, ECC 6 Affirmations

Positions:

#IssuePositionConfidenceSource
1lgbtq_affirmingno (official); some internal pressurehighECC Human Sexuality Guidelines; "faithfulness in heterosexual marriage, celibacy in singleness is the Christian standard" (2004 reaffirmed 2015); Minneapolis First Covenant expelled 2019 for LGBTQ affirmation
2women_ordinationyes-pastorhighECC ordains women to all offices including senior pastor; longstanding egalitarian position; a distinctive of the ECC over EFCA
3baptism_modeopen; both infant and believer's acceptedhighECC accepts both paedobaptism and credobaptism; individual choice within church membership; a deliberate Pietist ecumenical posture
4baptism_meaningflexible; ordinance and/or sacramentalmediumECC's openness on baptism mode extends to meaning; congregational variation
5communion_viewopen; memorial to real presence rangemediumECC does not require a specific communion theology; congregational variation
6communion_practiceopen (to believers)highECC practices open communion; all who confess faith in Christ
7eschatologyopen; broadly evangelicalmediumNo binding ECC eschatological position; premil, amil, postmil all present
8spiritual_giftsopenmediumNo official cessationist or continuationist mandate; Pietist emphasis on Spirit-led community
9soteriologygrace through faith; Arminian-leaning; universally-intended atonementhighPietist-Arminian heritage; personal conversion emphasized; salvation available to all who respond; not strictly 5-point Calvinist
10divorce_remarriagepastoral discretionmediumECC does not have a binding denominational policy; pastoral care approach
11biblical_interpretationScripture as primary authority; inspiration affirmedhighECC Affirmation #1: "we affirm the Bible as the only perfect rule for faith, doctrine, and conduct" — within Pietist reading emphasizing community and prayer
12politycongregational with denominational affiliationhighLocal church self-governing; Superintendent-led denominational structure; Annual Meeting
13politics_engagementnot partisan; social justice concern presentmediumECC has Serve Globally / Covenant World Relief; concern for immigrant communities; not partisan
14marriage_definitionone_man_one_woman (official)highECC Human Sexuality Guidelines; marriage defined as man-woman; enforced against First Covenant Minneapolis 2019

Intra-denomination notes: The ECC occupies an interesting middle space: egalitarian on women's ordination (like mainline Protestants) but traditional on marriage (like conservative evangelicals). This combination creates ongoing internal tension. Quest Church and Awaken Church (both Pacific Northwest) generated controversy 2023 for LGBTQ inclusion moves. ECC leadership has held the traditional line but acknowledges pastoral complexity.


Non-Denominational Evangelical / Independent Bible Churches

  • Group description: This is not a single denomination but a family of independent churches sharing broadly evangelical convictions. Includes: megachurches (Saddleback, Willow Creek historically), Acts 29 network, Southern Baptist-adjacent independents, Bible churches, Community churches, Calvary Chapels, Vineyard (overlapping), and thousands of independent evangelical congregations.
  • Aliases: Non-denom, Independent evangelical, Bible church, Community church
  • Lens: Evangelical / Congregational / Interdenominational
  • Typical orientation: Conservative evangelical to moderate evangelical; huge variation by congregation
  • Heritage: No single confession; often adopt the NAE Statement of Faith or a local statement; influenced by Dallas Theological Seminary (dispensationalism), Wheaton College, Fuller Seminary, and numerous evangelical networks
  • Approx. members (US): Estimated 10-20 million attending non-denominational evangelical churches (fastest-growing segment of American Christianity since 1990s)
  • Primary sources: NAE Statement of Faith; individual church statements; no single body

Positions (composite typical; individual churches vary widely):

#IssuePositionConfidenceSource
1lgbtq_affirmingno (typical); some affirmingmediumThe vast majority of non-denom evangelical churches hold traditional position; a small and growing minority (particularly in urban, progressive areas) are affirming; no central body to enforce
2women_ordinationmixed (complementarian majority; some egalitarian)mediumActs 29, Calvary Chapel, many independent Bible churches are complementarian; some megachurches (e.g., Willow Creek) are egalitarian; no denominational standard
3baptism_modebeliever's immersion (typical)mediumBeliever's baptism by immersion is most common; some churches accept other modes or infant dedication + later believer's baptism
4baptism_meaningordinance_public_declarationhighEvangelical consensus; baptism as public identification and declaration of faith; not sacramental regeneration
5communion_viewmemorial / symbolic (typical)highEvangelical consensus; memorial view predominates; Lord's Supper as proclamation and remembrance
6communion_practiceopen (to professing believers)highTypical practice; open to all who profess faith in Christ
7eschatologypremillennial dispensational (common)mediumDallas Seminary influence; Rapture theology common in independent evangelical churches; amillennial also present
8spiritual_giftsmixed (cessationist to continuationist)mediumSignificant variation; Calvary Chapel and some Bible churches are cessationist or cautiously open; Vineyard is charismatic; most churches hold open-but-cautious position
9soteriologygrace through faith; sola fide; varied Reformed/ArminianhighEvangelical consensus on grace-faith salvation; theological range from 5-point Calvinist to Arminian within the family
10divorce_remarriagepastoral discretion (typical)mediumNo central policy; typical evangelical pastoral approach recognizing adultery and abandonment as grounds
11biblical_interpretationinerrancy; sola scripturahighEvangelical consensus; Chicago Statement on Biblical Inerrancy is common reference point; literal-grammatical-historical interpretation normative
12politycongregational (typical)highIndependent local churches; some loosely affiliated in networks (Acts 29, C3, etc.); no binding denominational authority
13politics_engagementvaries widely; often conservative-leaning culturemediumNo corporate political position; individual pastors vary; many non-denom evangelical churches lean culturally conservative but avoid explicit partisan endorsement
14marriage_definitionone_man_one_woman (typical evangelical)highEvangelical consensus; vast majority hold traditional definition

Intra-denomination notes: Non-denominational evangelical churches are the fastest-growing segment of American Protestantism and one of the hardest to characterize. A megachurch of 15,000 and a house church of 20 may both call themselves "non-denominational evangelical" and differ substantially on music, preaching style, charismatic gifts, and even secondary doctrine. The common denominators are: Bible as authority, personal conversion, salvation by grace through faith, and the Great Commission. AI voice agents and chatbots serving non-denom evangelical churches should ask the church to specify their own statement of faith rather than assuming uniformity.


Summary Table

DenominationLGBTQWomen OrdBaptism ModeBaptism MeaningCommunion ViewCommunion PracticeEschatology
Roman Catholicno (Fiducia nuance)no (definitively closed)any (infusion typical)sacramental regenerationtransubstantiationclosed (Catholics)particular judgment + purgatory + resurrection
Greek Orthodox (GOA)nonoimmersion (triple)sacramental regenerationreal presenceclosed (Orthodox)theosis; general resurrection
OCAnonoimmersion (triple)sacramental regenerationreal presenceclosed (Orthodox)theosis; general resurrection
Antiochian (AOCA)nonoimmersion (triple)sacramental regenerationreal presenceclosed (Orthodox)theosis; general resurrection
ROCORnonoimmersion (triple)sacramental regenerationreal presenceclosed (stricter)theosis; general resurrection
Serbian Orthodoxnonoimmersion (triple)sacramental regenerationreal presenceclosed (Orthodox)theosis; general resurrection
Romanian Orthodox (ROEA)nonoimmersion (triple)sacramental regenerationreal presenceclosed (Orthodox)theosis; general resurrection
Coptic Orthodoxno (explicit)noimmersion (triple)sacramental regenerationreal presenceclosed (Coptic/Oriental)general resurrection; no premil
Armenian Apostolicnonoimmersion preferredsacramental regenerationreal presenceclosedgeneral resurrection; no premil
Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedononoimmersion (at 40/80 days)sacramental regenerationreal presenceclosed (fasting req)general resurrection; no premil
Syriac Orthodoxnonoimmersion (triple)sacramental regenerationreal presenceclosedgeneral resurrection; no premil
SDAnocontestedimmersion only (believer's)ordinance/declarationmemorial (open communion)openpremil; soul sleep; sanctuary
Grace Communion Int'lnoyesbeliever's preferredordinancememorialopenopen evangelical
EFCAnono (complementarian)believer's preferred (flexible)ordinancememorialopen (believers)premil (open)
Evangelical Covenantnoyes (egalitarian)open (infant + believer's)flexibleflexibleopen (believers)open
Non-denom Evangelicalno (typical)mixedbeliever's immersion (typical)ordinancememorialopen (believers)premil dispensational (common)

Research date: 2026-05-13. Sources: CCC (vatican.va), Code of Canon Law, Ordinatio Sacerdotalis (1994), Fiducia Supplicans (2023), goarch.org, oca.org, antiochian.org, lacopts.org, adventist.org, gc.adventist.org, efca.org, covchurch.org, gci.org, NAE Statement of Faith, Wikipedia denominational articles, HRC Faith Stances database.