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Greek Orthodox Thread - 4/22/2008 3:05:07 PM
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Ephesians4_32
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Any thoughts?
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RE: Greek Orthodox Thread - 4/22/2008 3:20:33 PM
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Ephesians4_32
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Well, I've studied a little of Roman Catholicism and turned from it when I saw people kissing statues. I can't stand the thought of kissing icons.
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RE: Greek Orthodox Thread - 4/22/2008 4:00:11 PM
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Lurker
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http://www.goarch.org is the official website of the Greek Orthodox Church in America. I'd recommend you look into the theology behind icons and statues before condemning them. :) As for me, I like the Greeks, but their chanting style is a bit too somber. I prefer the Russians and Ukranian stylings.
_____________________________
Do not be afraid of Christ! He takes nothing away, and he gives you everything. When we give ourselves to him, we receive a hundredfold in return. Yes, open, open wide the doors to Christ—and you will find true life. -Pope Benedict XVI
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RE: Greek Orthodox Thread - 4/22/2008 4:04:04 PM
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earthless
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quote:
ORIGINAL: Lurker http://www.goarch.org is the official website of the Greek Orthodox Church in America. I'd recommend you look into the theology behind icons and statues before condemning them. :) As for me, I like the Greeks, but their chanting style is a bit too somber. I prefer the Russians and Ukranian stylings. I believe she meant that about the RCC....
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Probing Today's Religious Movements | Promoting Doctrinal Discernment & Critical Thinking | Providing Reasons for Christian Faith & Ethics
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RE: Greek Orthodox Thread - 4/22/2008 4:22:26 PM
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john_mark
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having the desire to know more about the orthodox church i read the book light from the christian east. what i found was that there many points of agreement between my understanding of the bible and theirs. that has prompted me to look deeper and removed some of the mystry
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RE: Greek Orthodox Thread - 4/23/2008 12:07:29 PM
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Ephesians4_32
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I'm sorry, Greek Orthodox members. I don't want to offend anyone, but I will never believe that the earliest Christians were kissing icons.
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RE: Greek Orthodox Thread - 4/23/2008 2:46:09 PM
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rcjames
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quote:
ORIGINAL: Ephesians4_32 I'm sorry, Greek Orthodox members. I don't want to offend anyone, but I will never believe that the earliest Christians were kissing icons. It does seem strange that it was not reported in the New Testament, especially since the EOC contribute the earliest ICONS to Luke. Thanks RC
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Just a country Preacher's humble opinion
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RE: Greek Orthodox Thread - 4/23/2008 3:16:36 PM
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drmark
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The fascinating parallel between sanctification in the Wesleyan tradition and theosis in the Eastern Orthodox tradition have been discussed by historians in many scholarly articles. Here is one I found for those interested in doctrinal development: THEOSIS AND SANCTIFICATION:JOHN WESLEY'S REFORMULATION OF A PATRISTIC DOCTRINE
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Jeremiah 31:31-34. The time is NOW, fellow saints!
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RE: Greek Orthodox Thread - 4/23/2008 3:36:39 PM
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ladyichigo
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How very very interesting that this thread has come up as I was just thinking about the EOC while I fell asleep last night! I was thinking about it because right before I went home from work yesterday, I found out that my former youth pastor, who was an evangelical pastor for a charismatic protestant church had decided to join the EOC after leaving the pastoral ministry from a complete burn-out. I wanted to see if there was a thread regarding the Orthodox Church on CW, but didn't see it yesterday. Then this morning, here it was! HERE is the link that I found on his blogsite.
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Mari Attending church and being confirmed does not define what a Christian is, though it may define a “religious” person. David Wright - AiG
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RE: Greek Orthodox Thread - 4/23/2008 5:10:11 PM
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Heavendweller
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quote:
ORIGINAL: ladyichigo How very very interesting that this thread has come up as I was just thinking about the EOC while I fell asleep last night! Lady, how interesting. For the past week I've wanted to start a discussion on the Orthodox Church. Ephesians stole my thunder! quote:
I was thinking about it because right before I went home from work yesterday, I found out that my former youth pastor, who was an evangelical pastor for a charismatic protestant church had decided to join the EOC after leaving the pastoral ministry from a complete burn-out. I wanted to see if there was a thread regarding the Orthodox Church on CW, but didn't see it yesterday. Then this morning, here it was! I'm not at all surprised. I've read about a number of Evangelical Protestants that have become Orthodox. Increasingly, I am leaning in this direction. I would consider myself a Catechuman, in the stages of learning about Orthodoxy. Each time that I study this faith tradition, my spirit wants to leap like a gazelle. I find it so refreshing. I can go to any Orthodox website, read Orthodox material, and actually get answers as to what they believe. It's not like going to 50 different websites and discovering that they disagree. I'm able to learn about the Orthodox teaching on the Deity of Christ, the Incarnation, the Trinity, Eschatology, the Church, Apostolic Succession, the angels, Satan, sin, Eucharist, Baptism, the Sacraments, etc. etc. And to my surprise, I have discovered that there is a unity of belief, a communion that is shared in the Christian Orthodox Church that has not changed. It is a faith that is universally held by all Orthodox. This unity does not mean, however, that there won't be differences in which liturgy is used, whether or not there are pews in the church, head coverings for women, attire of the clergy, which calendar is preferred, etc. But these are not differences in doctrine, but rather tradition. What has led me in this direction is disillusionment within Evangelical/fundamentalist Protestantism. The disunity, plethora of interpretations about every major Christian doctrine, the schisms, sects, and church split all have convinced be something has seriously gone awry. I'm discovering there is a Church, mystical and visible, that has held to, protected, and believed in the Apostolic teaching since her conception. "One Lord, one faith, one baptism." Let's keep this discussion going. BTW, you can learn and chat about the Orthodox faith in the thread titled, "The New Testament Church and Apostolic Succession." May God bless you on your journey of faith. Heavendweller
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RE: Greek Orthodox Thread - 4/23/2008 5:18:16 PM
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Heavendweller
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Ephesians, I just wanted to say that I read the article that was connected to your "icon" thread that was shut down. That article was not from an Orthodox website and misconstued the Orthodox faith. One could do the same with the Lutheran faith, or the Methodist faith or any other Protestant faith if they wanted to. When I wanted to learn about the Roman Catholic Church, I went to Roman Catholic sites, read Roman Catholic books, read Papal Encyclicals, attended mass, had counsel from a priest, attended RCIA classes. IOW, I went to the proper sources. The same is true for the Orthodox faith. You need to learn about it from Orthodox sources, Orthodox people, and attend Divine Liturgy. And attending one or two times isn't enough. I am discovering, as someone on these forums has told me, that "Orthodoxy is a way of life." God Bless you, Heavendweller
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RE: Greek Orthodox Thread - 4/23/2008 5:20:11 PM
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Heavendweller
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quote:
ORIGINAL: Cloak My favourite church. If we go back to the Bible and the early Christians, this IS what the church of biblical times looked like! My icon says it all. What faith tradition were you prior to being Orthodox? Or were you raised Orthodox? HD
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RE: Greek Orthodox Thread - 4/23/2008 5:30:46 PM
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Heavendweller
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quote:
ORIGINAL: Ephesians4_32 I'm sorry, Greek Orthodox members. I don't want to offend anyone, but I will never believe that the earliest Christians were kissing icons. Ephesians, You may just be surprised to discover that the earliest Christians did not believe that The Lord's Supper and Baptism were ordinations and only symbolic. You may discover that the Early Church did not believe that the church universal is only mystical. You may discover that they did not hold to Once Saved Always Saved, a very popular teaching within Protestantism. You may discover that they believed it was necessary for a Christian to "endure to the end to be saved." It wasn't a done deal upon initial conversion. There are many stark differences between the modern Evangelical Protestant Church and the Early Church. This has been such an eye-opener for me. Over the past several years I have discovered that Protestantism must neccessarily have schisms, splits and controversy due to its foundational principals. Believe me, I never, ever would have chosen to go in this direction. I was rather content being an Evangelical Protestant. God Bless you, Heavendweller
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RE: Greek Orthodox Thread - 4/24/2008 12:18:40 AM
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Ephesians4_32
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quote:
ORIGINAL: Heavendweller Ephesians, I just wanted to say that I read the article that was connected to your "icon" thread that was shut down. That article was not from an Orthodox website and misconstued the Orthodox faith. One could do the same with the Lutheran faith, or the Methodist faith or any other Protestant faith if they wanted to. When I wanted to learn about the Roman Catholic Church, I went to Roman Catholic sites, read Roman Catholic books, read Papal Encyclicals, attended mass, had counsel from a priest, attended RCIA classes. IOW, I went to the proper sources. The same is true for the Orthodox faith. You need to learn about it from Orthodox sources, Orthodox people, and attend Divine Liturgy. And attending one or two times isn't enough. I am discovering, as someone on these forums has told me, that "Orthodoxy is a way of life." God Bless you, Heavendweller I normally do the same although it is not always advisable. If you want to learn about Mormonism, for example, I suggest learning from an ex-Mormon first before you are sucked in. When I wanted to know about Catholicism, I went to a Catholic priest. Later I visited St. Peter's in the Vatican and other cathedrals in Italy. I believe I got the real picture. Now just because some information is at a non-Eastern Orthodox site, does not make it inaccurate information. Forgive me, but that sounds rather presumptuous. I no longer remember the link I posted previously. The Orthodox honor the saints through icons by kissing them. I'm sorry, folks, but I do not agree with this practice.
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RE: Greek Orthodox Thread - 4/24/2008 9:47:26 AM
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mcleod
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quote:
ORIGINAL: Ephesians4_32 Why is there a skull and cross bones on this cross? http://wb5gug.com/of%20Christ/cross01.gif You got me there. Where did you get that picture?
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RE: Greek Orthodox Thread - 4/24/2008 10:54:18 AM
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Lurker
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It's the skull of the forefather, Adam. Legend says that Adam is buried beneath Golgotha. And Christ's blood dripped onto Adam's skull
_____________________________
Do not be afraid of Christ! He takes nothing away, and he gives you everything. When we give ourselves to him, we receive a hundredfold in return. Yes, open, open wide the doors to Christ—and you will find true life. -Pope Benedict XVI
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RE: Greek Orthodox Thread - 4/24/2008 11:01:28 AM
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rcjames
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quote:
ORIGINAL: Lurker It's the skull of the forefather, Adam. Legend says that Adam is buried beneath Golgotha. And Christ's blood dripped onto Adam's skull So folks just sit around and make up these "Legends" or do they use mind altering drugs to help? Thanks RC
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Just a country Preacher's humble opinion
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RE: Greek Orthodox Thread - 4/24/2008 11:28:38 AM
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Lurker
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quote:
ORIGINAL: rcjames quote:
ORIGINAL: Lurker It's the skull of the forefather, Adam. Legend says that Adam is buried beneath Golgotha. And Christ's blood dripped onto Adam's skull So folks just sit around and make up these "Legends" or do they use mind altering drugs to help? Thanks RC Well, theologically it does kinda make sense. By Christ's death on the Life Giving Cross, the sin of Adam was made clean by the application of the Precious Blood of Our Lord. Perhaps the legend grew around the teachings of how the stain of Adam's sin was cleansed through Christ's death on the cross.
_____________________________
Do not be afraid of Christ! He takes nothing away, and he gives you everything. When we give ourselves to him, we receive a hundredfold in return. Yes, open, open wide the doors to Christ—and you will find true life. -Pope Benedict XVI
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RE: Greek Orthodox Thread - 4/24/2008 3:09:48 PM
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Ephesians4_32
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quote:
ORIGINAL: mcleod quote:
ORIGINAL: Ephesians4_32 Why is there a skull and cross bones on this cross? http://wb5gug.com/of%20Christ/cross01.gif You got me there. Where did you get that picture? Why is there a skull and cross bones on this cross? http://wb5gug.com/of%20Christ/cross01.gif The site is called "St. John of Damascus Orthodox Mission."
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RE: Greek Orthodox Thread - 4/24/2008 6:12:40 PM
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drfuss
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quote:
ORIGINAL: Heavendweller You may just be surprised to discover that the earliest Christians did not believe that The Lord's Supper and Baptism were ordinations and only symbolic. You may discover that the Early Church did not believe that the church universal is only mystical. You may discover that they did not hold to Once Saved Always Saved, a very popular teaching within Protestantism. You may discover that they believed it was necessary for a Christian to "endure to the end to be saved." It wasn't a done deal upon initial conversion. Heavendweller drfuss: Not sure where you looked in Protestantism, but most protestant denominations do not believe in Once Saved, Always saved. However, the Baptists are very vocal about thier belief in it, so I can see why you could conclude that it is popular among Protestants.
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