Looking for a new church

I'll always argue that if you're looking for a new church, go to the Old Church.

Between Orthodoxy and the RCC, I'd be less disappointed to see someone go to an Orthodox church. I can't personally recommend it because there are other issues that Orthodoxy has (they are actually wrong on the doctrine of the filioque, even though they are right to have separated with Rome over it), but God will have to deal with them on that, it's not my place to try to correct an entire branch of Jesus's church.

When I read Clayton's assessment above I'm thinking 'yeah that's great, it's like 90% dead on' but there's a ton of other context & stuff I'd add and I don't even know the half of it. I'm not trying to do it, really, but just for example: Orthodox would think 'ok why is apostolic succession even important?' and may come up with an answer like 'because we don't believe in a God who would just ascend into heaven and then leave the world in doubt for the 1500 years protestants essentially believe in'. But I'm aware that's not only in itself a simplification, it's also going to lead to a fight with the protestants here that I don't want to have, which brings me to another point.

No fighting here. It's a fair point and any Protestant theologian/pastor/etc. who doesn't take that seriously isn't worth paying attention to. The break in apostolic succession is a big deal. One response is to just go full-Mormon, "You guys were all wrong from the very beginning" but then you might as well be Mormon! But there is another response, which is to ask why did God himself arrange for the Reformation to occur in history, as it did? Because he is surely sovereign over all things. Major historical events in the church matter, even if they make us squirm in our seat. I would argue that the Reformation was essentially the beginning of God's judgment on the church of Rome itself. From the standpoint of succession, the Reformed churches can fairly argue that they were not dishonoring their spiritual father and mother, rather, their spiritual father and mother abandoned them. If the choice really is between obeying God or obeying men, then the prophetic voice, moved by the Holy Spirit, will always choose to obey God rather than men. "But even if he does not [deliver us from the flaming furnace], we want you to know, O king, that we will not serve your gods or worship the image of gold you have set up." (Dan. 3:18) The Orthodox long ago separated from Rome due to its prideful self-idolatry. It is kind of strange that the Orthodox expect the people of the West to remain in submission to a known and denounced group of prideful self-idolators.
 
Between Orthodoxy and the RCC, I'd be less disappointed to see someone go to an Orthodox church. I can't personally recommend it because there are other issues that Orthodoxy has (they are actually wrong on the doctrine of the filioque, even though they are right to have separated with Rome over it), but God will have to deal with them on that, it's not my place to try to correct an entire branch of Jesus's church.
Yeah I don't understand where you went with that. If someone gets down into the weeds about the filioque, great. The more theological hair-splitting that goes on, the more we're essentially in agreement.
All I'll say about it is the non-Western view on the Great Schism is different. Rome was one patriachate of five, and that's not counting the non-Chalcedonians who IIRC are on our side there, too. We didn't separate from Rome - we declared how Rome had separated from what we had all understood and unanimously decided in council 700 years earlier. At a certain point one has to recognize the pattern - when you change something because oh there's kind of an argument in favor of this and the full effects aren't really well understood and the people trying to present the counterargument aren't really listened to, it rarely ends up well.

No fighting here. It's a fair point and any Protestant theologian/pastor/etc. who doesn't take that seriously isn't worth paying attention to. The break in apostolic succession is a big deal. One response is to just go full-Mormon, "You guys were all wrong from the very beginning" but then you might as well be Mormon! But there is another response, which is to ask why did God himself arrange for the Reformation to occur in history, as it did? Because he is surely sovereign over all things. Major historical events in the church matter, even if they make us squirm in our seat. I would argue that the Reformation was essentially the beginning of God's judgment on the church of Rome itself. From the standpoint of succession, the Reformed churches can fairly argue that they were not dishonoring their spiritual father and mother, rather, their spiritual father and mother abandoned them. If the choice really is between obeying God or obeying men, then the prophetic voice, moved by the Holy Spirit, will always choose to obey God rather than men. "But even if he does not [deliver us from the flaming furnace], we want you to know, O king, that we will not serve your gods or worship the image of gold you have set up." (Dan. 3:18) The Orthodox long ago separated from Rome due to its prideful self-idolatry. It is kind of strange that the Orthodox expect the people of the West to remain in submission to a known and denounced group of prideful self-idolators.

One of my happiest moments in the last 2 years was knowing that Mike Pence had been pretty well clobbered out of the running. That guy openly admitted not knowing the first thing about what's going on in Ukraine right now with respect to the Church, and basically said the head of the Ukrainian church explained it all to him.
Of course, the head of the Ukrainian church he talked to is a puppet who was basically put into place through pressure from the US state department. The real Church in the Ukraine is supposed to be under the Moscow patriarchate, and that clearly wasn't going to do, so it was forcibly eliminated and there actually are priests and monks getting abused over it right now. There is a very real rift there that is affecting a lot of people.

This is just the most recent example. Every Lent we commemorate the Triumph of Orthodoxy which happened on the first Sunday of Lent in 843, when we finally put the long persecution of the use of icons to rest. And don't even get me started on the hagiography: we're constantly bombarded with stories of saints who had their skin peeled off or crushed with weights or lashed or blinded or any number of horrible things.

Not to mention our historical special relationship with Islam....

I have a good friend who is a bishop (and therefore also a monk), and when the Ukraine thing happened, and he was telling us about it, someone asked "so what can we do?" And his answer was "Pray. And that's about it. This is His Church, and it's His mess."

The same guy told me about being in Russia in 1993 - he went to go live in a monastery there for a while. He was just walking down the street - which was still pretty new to see a monk walking around openly in Russia in 1993. Well apparently some old guard communist saw him and walked right up to him and decked him in the face.
When he got back to the monastery and told the other monks what happened, all they told him was "Ah, you've been deemed worthy."

There is always going to be persecution for faith, and the closer you are to the real faith, the more Satan will work to get you to leave it.

I will admit, however, I don't know what you meant by " that the Orthodox expect the people of the West to remain in submission to a known and denounced group of prideful self-idolators".
 
Yeah I don't understand where you went with that. If someone gets down into the weeds about the filioque, great. The more theological hair-splitting that goes on, the more we're essentially in agreement.

[NOTE: I'll use the word "Reformed" instead of "Protestant" from now on (the label "Protestant" is reductive IMO), but understand that I'm just using it as a synonym for the way most people use the word Protestant. "Reformed", in turn, is short for "Reformed Catholic", meaning, someone in the Western church who rejects the papacy as a legitimate apostolic seat.]

As a Reformed Christian, the filioque is a little bit like when your parents are fighting, and they're both wrong. Rome says, "The Scriptures teach the filioque!" and they're right. Orthodoxy says, "We don't agree. We still love you anyway, but you're being a jerk about it!" and they're right. So, Reformed tend to disagree with both sides, on different points. We disagree with Rome for being a jerk about the filioque. We disagree with Orthodoxy because their doctrine on this point is simply in error.

All I'll say about it is the non-Western view on the Great Schism is different. Rome was one patriachate of five, and that's not counting the non-Chalcedonians who IIRC are on our side there, too. We didn't separate from Rome - we declared how Rome had separated from what we had all understood and unanimously decided in council 700 years earlier. At a certain point one has to recognize the pattern - when you change something because oh there's kind of an argument in favor of this and the full effects aren't really well understood and the people trying to present the counterargument aren't really listened to, it rarely ends up well.

Yep, I'm familiar with the Orthodox view of the Schism and, again, if I had to choose between the two at gunpoint, I'd choose Orthodox because, "If I have the gift of prophecy and can fathom all mysteries and all knowledge, and if I have a faith that can move mountains, but have not love, I am nothing." (1 Cor. 13:2) The Truth is of utmost importance, but it's still better to have love than to be right. :)

This is just the most recent example. Every Lent we commemorate the Triumph of Orthodoxy which happened on the first Sunday of Lent in 843, when we finally put the long persecution of the use of icons to rest. And don't even get me started on the hagiography: we're constantly bombarded with stories of saints who had their skin peeled off or crushed with weights or lashed or blinded or any number of horrible things.

Amen, Jesus is the Cornerstone, the Foundation than which none other can be laid, and the Martyrs are the first course of stones laid upon that foundation, upon which we all rest, to the glory of God alone.

The same guy told me about being in Russia in 1993 - he went to go live in a monastery there for a while. He was just walking down the street - which was still pretty new to see a monk walking around openly in Russia in 1993. Well apparently some old guard communist saw him and walked right up to him and decked him in the face.
When he got back to the monastery and told the other monks what happened, all they told him was "Ah, you've been deemed worthy."

:tears:

There is always going to be persecution for faith, and the closer you are to the real faith, the more Satan will work to get you to leave it.

Amen again. Suffering is, in a paradoxical way, the ultimate proof of Truth. This is how we know that Jesus IS the Truth, because he went to the Cross. No one, absolutely no one will go to the Cross for a lie...

I will admit, however, I don't know what you meant by " that the Orthodox expect the people of the West to remain in submission to a known and denounced group of prideful self-idolators".

I'm referring to the apostolic succession. I find it ironic that Orthodoxy has always agreed with Rome that Reformed Christians of the West are schismatics/heretics. Why does a scepter, a mitre, a throne and papal robes make them (Rome) non-schismatic, and we schismatic? I never understood that. If the bishops descend into debauchery and blunt heresy, there is no "non-schismatic" solution except that they publicly repent of their sins and cleanse the church of the wickedness they have brought into it. Failing that, the only option is to leave, because the body of Christ cannot be joined to a prostitute. Luther had no intention of dividing the church of Rome, he sincerely believed that it could be reformed (hence, "the Reformation"). And when Rome dug its heels in and refused the correction of the Holy Spirit not only through Luther, but through a great assembly of witnesses to Rome's error and corruption, that is when the break occurred in the West. This is what I mean by comparing the Reformation to parental abandonment. Those who hold the Reformed to be schismatics are accusing the abandoned children of being disobedient and dishonoring their parents (Rome). We did not disobey or dishonor anyone, they simply abandoned the Faith. What makes the Orthodox position on the Reformation particularly puzzling to me is that Orthodoxy itself had already removed the bishop of Rome from communion, so Orthodoxy itself recognizes the very same problem in the church of Rome that the Reformers would later be forced into schism over! To quote one of the Reformers (can't remember which off the top of my head): "We did not leave Rome. Rome left us." I have often speculated that if the Reformers had been located on the border of the Eastern empire, they would have just joined Orthodoxy. There are some serious doctrinal differences, but those doctrinal differences happen to be exactly the same issues that Rome has with Orthodox, sans the papacy -- the filioque being one notable example. I hope that makes sense.
 
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Scripture itself is a Holy Tradition. And the Holy Spirit doesn't fit inside a book.

True, however, Scripture is still the highest authority because it is the word of God, full-stop. The Holy Spirit, being the author of Scripture, never contradicts himself, so his prophetic work is always consistent with the Scriptures. Human tradition is a safeguard against error, but it is not a greater authority than God's own Word. This is actually played out in the gospels themselves... a central point of contention between Jesus and the Jewish authorities is that they have tradition, so he cannot disagree with them. After all, they sit in Moses's seat (Matt. 23:1), so they are the final court of appeal (in their opinion). And how did Jesus prove them wrong? In two ways: (a) prophecy and (b) the crucifixion. Thus, the answer to the errors of tradition that have crept into the church over time (yes, there are errors in tradition) is (a) to prophesy against it (which is a work of the Holy Spirit, and no man) and (b) to suffer patiently as a witness to those within the church whose hearts have grown hard by whatever trick of the enemy, causing them to regard tradition above the Word of God himself, whose word is given to us in the holy Scriptures. The purpose of this patient witness is not to "win the argument", it's so that God will woo them back to his flock and the Holy Spirit will correct their errors in the perfect way that only he can do. Human pride and ego-contests over "whose tradition (or doctrine) is THE ONE TRUE tradition/doctrine" can only lead to schism between brothers (spiritual fratricide).

I think of the churches of apostolic succession (Rome, Orthodoxy) as battle-hardened veterans who easily fall into grumpy "get off my lawn" combativeness against younger churches (from the Reformation) who really are their allies, but whose approach is different not in order to be innovative, but because this is simply the work that the Holy Spirit is doing in the world, whether anybody likes it or not. So, the very thing that gives the churches of apostolic succession their honor and dignity (their war-scars) can also lead them to be overly defensive and to treat everybody as a heretic, even when they are really and truly on the same team. Arianism is one thing. Ecumenism is one thing. Eroding away the authority of the bishops is one thing. Tearing down traditions for the sake of novelty is one thing. But "you're not of the same stock as us" is another thing altogether. Where is the Holy Spirit in that? Where is the love in that? Where is the determination to know nothing but Jesus and him crucified, in that? Is it not partisanship and factionalism? I won't unify with a Mormon church, but I'm pretty sure there are individual Mormons out there who sincerely love Jesus and are on the narrow path that leads to life. To say otherwise is to attempt to place manacles on the wrists of the Holy Spirit, which is absurd. So, there is a way to unify without devolving into base ecumenism. It is possible to be discerning, without becoming institutionalized. PS: All of this is written in the spirit of unity and love, not argumentation...
 
I'm all for holy traditions, as long as they go all the way back to the apostles. If something is a later accretion to the faith, it may well be a valuable and worthwhile thing for Christians and churches to practice, and I may well be won over to it, but it can never be an essential to the faith. And if a church treats any of these later accretions as essentials, saying, "If anyone does not join us in affirming and doing such-and-such and in condemning those who differ from us on this, let him be anathema." then while that tradition itself may have been of value, this extra step of calling it an essential, so as to disqualify the apostles themselves from what is declared to be the sole true catholic and orthodox Church cannot possibly be right. And this alone is proof that the Church that does it cannot be the sole true catholic and orthodox Church.
 
[NOTE: I'll use the word "Reformed" instead of "Protestant" from now on (the label "Protestant" is reductive IMO), but understand that I'm just using it as a synonym for the way most people use the word Protestant. "Reformed", in turn, is short for "Reformed Catholic", meaning, someone in the Western church who rejects the papacy as a legitimate apostolic seat.]
Fair enough - when I was a Lutheran I didn't like the term "protestant" either. That's what Henry was. As you said, Luther didn't want to break from Rome.
I'm all for holy traditions, as long as they go all the way back to the apostles. If something is a later accretion to the faith, it may well be a valuable and worthwhile thing for Christians and churches to practice, and I may well be won over to it, but it can never be an essential to the faith. And if a church treats any of these later accretions as essentials, saying, "If anyone does not join us in affirming and doing such-and-such and in condemning those who differ from us on this, let him be anathema." then while that tradition itself may have been of value, this extra step of calling it an essential, so as to disqualify the apostles themselves from what is declared to be the sole true catholic and orthodox Church cannot possibly be right. And this alone is proof that the Church that does it cannot be the sole true catholic and orthodox Church.
I think the most important division though, and the one I focus on, is that there are three entities that believe in the Church as a physical entity - the Chalcedonian and non-Chalcedonian Orthodox, and Rome. Scripture mentions the Church a lot. If you subscribe to a tradition that interprets that as something more than an invisible entity, you have those three choices. If you subscribe to a holy tradition that doesn't believe the Church is something concrete, then you have everybody else.
I never found evidence that the latter of those traditions existed prior to the 1500s.
For me that clearly puts this teaching into the category that the reformed Christians are constantly trying to shove the historic churches into.

As a Reformed Christian, the filioque is a little bit like when your parents are fighting, and they're both wrong. Rome says, "The Scriptures teach the filioque!" and they're right. Orthodoxy says, "We don't agree. We still love you anyway, but you're being a jerk about it!" and they're right. So, Reformed tend to disagree with both sides, on different points. We disagree with Rome for being a jerk about the filioque. We disagree with Orthodoxy because their doctrine on this point is simply in error.

I think if there was a competition to find a modern slogan for Orthodoxy it would be "Would you people please stop making me defend Rome". Our divorce was finalized a thousand years ago.

So, bearing in mind I'm not really arguing with you and moreso explaining how I got where I am FBO the OP...

There was a whole council about this. Councils are such a big deal that once you get into theological fine print, which councils you accept as valid becomes a yardstick for where a Christian entity is theologically. There is a point at which Christians start to disagree on what was decided in council - but what we're talking about is before that point. The Nicene Creed was written down with the procession of the Holy Spirit from the Father. Period.

I'm not going to get into the Scriptural evidence of the Filioque for two reasons. First because it's above my pay grade, just as the split at Chalcedon is above my pay grade.
Second, because it's a waste of my time. For these reasons, and in this order.

1) The argument about the Filioque is to me similar to the argument about the American "Civil War". Ok, yeah, there's this main topic that everyone wants to talk about and the conversation just drives straight into it. But in both cases the thing everyone wants to talk about isn't the point: the point is you didn't have the authority to do that. People who came before us clearly and unanimously decided things and when they were changed they were just changed. No running it through anyone, no discussion.
318 bishops and as many as 1900 total attendees were in concert about the Nicene Creed. Some of them showed up in support of Arius but then backtracked when they heard the counterarguments.
In the end, the verbiage of the Nicene Creed was not something that was handed down from on top. It happened by discovery after everyone prayerfully hashed it out. It was only after that when the Filioque showed up and it was, for a second example in this post, exactly the thing that reformed Christians complain about: theological novelty that became a tradition that became a non-negotiable.

2) I judge these entities by their fruits. As I had children I realized that if there was one thing I would want for them, it would be not to go through what I went through as a child in my faith. I spent the first eight years of my life as a rock-solid confessional Lutheran, which I still commend to this day as better than most. The trouble is, the seeds for theological change were sewn prior to my birth - and so I got to grow up through the stages of Lutheranism when the trappings of confessional Lutheranism were being removed. It started with the music changing, and nobody noticed that the new music wasn't as good, and if they did, they were told it didn't matter. Then the words in the music started changing, and more people noticed, but they'd already been told the music didn't matter, so then of course the words didn't matter. Then when I was in high school, that's when they started monkeying with the creeds. It's when they got the artsy altar paraments that incorporated window screen as design elements. It's when they started having women serve as communion assistants.

And that's when some of the old timers finally piped up and said that was a bridge too far. They played right into the narrative - they got upset, and some of them yelled, and ultimately they didn't have an argument. Because the theological fight they were having was started before they were born. The 50+ crowd knew it wasn't right but they had never been told why. And I still clearly remember the 30-something who stood up in that assembly and said 'hey wait a second, there are people here who are clearly upset about this and it seems to me there's an alternate position that isn't getting adequately presented here. Everyone has 3 minutes to speak and it's not enough time to address this, so I don't think we should push forward with women lay assistants until we understand the issue.'
And he was summarily ignored, and the vote continued, and they democratically decided the theology of who serves communion that day.

And this was the 'conservative' bunch of Lutherans. And the 30-something who piped up against making the decision was a guy I sang in a contemporary choir with, so it's not like he was the old guard. But it was unequivocally pointed out that day that we were absolutely not to look into what the historic faith has to teach on topics of doctrine - we were to decide it ourselves under the guidance of a single clegyman who was clearly not allowing actual dissent.

Microcosm, macrocosm.

Several of these doctrinal problems cropped up and by the time I was 35 I was just done with it. The egalitarian theology method has serious problems. So does the hierarchical method. But the egalitarian method is a high speed motorcycle accident from 500 years ago and a billion people all think that hammering the bits of rider into the pavement is the answer.

I want my theological change to be absent. In cases where it might actually be required, I want it to be so slow as to not even notice and I want it to be deliberate.
If Orthodoxy has changed something that it doesn't openly admit, then I haven't noticed yet.
I do concede that there have been changes. For instance, the office of deaconess no longer exists. And Orthodoxy admits this - and responds that the only reason why it existed is because so many adults were being baptized and at the time baptisms were done nude, so they existed pretty much strictly to perform baptisms on adult women. In every instance of this I've seen it's similar - 'Yeah we did change that. This is why. Go work on yourself instead of worrying about this.' The problems with hierarchical theology are comparatively manageable.

It was a Lutheran pastor - Todd Wilken of Issues, Etc - who taught me that you can't divorce practice from doctrine. You do the things you do because of what you believe. Some people innately understand this. They don't get huffy about window screen paraments because they're just old timers who can't update their thinking. They get upset because doing that makes a public statement that bumps into the historic teachings of the Church specifically about respect. If you take advantage of their lack of theological training and skills in rhetoric to push a theological agenda, well, then, that's what you're doing.

Just yesterday my BIL showed me a photo of Zelensky giving a talk at a dinner. The dinner was quite obviously set up inside an Orthodox church. They had put up a big screen behind him so you couldn't see the altar, and there were round conference tables with diners all throughout the nave. There are tons of reformed Christians reading that and thinking "yeah, so what we do that all the time" but that's my point - this was a profound and intentional disrespect, and Christians of the East know this and feel this way.

I don't want to raise children who have to get embroiled in arguments about this sort of thing. I want my children to see the photo and think "ok, yeah, not even looking into what that guy had to say there. That's wrong and if he didn't know that then he can learn it's wrong and apologize and then I might listen." Life is too short and there's too much to learn to waste our time on such people's ideas, whether they are corrupt dictators, simple Lutheran pastors, or popes. I admit that the hierarchical method has many of the same problems. But I don't see it as often or as severely.

Apostolic Succession means different things to different people. This is what it means to me. It's the best shot I have at having children who will raise their children to believe the same things I do. I'm willing to budge on relics if that's what I'm getting for it, and particularly if the arguments in favor of them are at least present.

Yep, I'm familiar with the Orthodox view of the Schism and, again, if I had to choose between the two at gunpoint, I'd choose Orthodox because, "If I have the gift of prophecy and can fathom all mysteries and all knowledge, and if I have a faith that can move mountains, but have not love, I am nothing." (1 Cor. 13:2) The Truth is of utmost importance, but it's still better to have love than to be right. :)
What is Truth?

"I am the way and the Truth and the life. No one comes to the Father except by me." John 14:6

This was another selling point for me. Western Christianity teaches that Jesus died for you. Oh yeah there was a resurrection but that really only happened to prove who he said he was. You need to believe in that. Here's a book. Good luck.

Orthodoxy's main point is that you can have a personal relationship with Christ. And though we're not going to say you can't have that relationship outside of the Church (in fact there are plenty of hagiographies that dissuade us of that notion) our position is "here is what works".
I mean, I get it. I've been that guy a lot in my life.
Forget the hello world nonsense, I want to know how to handle function pointers in Python.
Forget the plywood stitch and glue, I want to jump straight to a fiberglass monocoque boat.
Forget the barrel helm, I want to jump straight to making Maximillian harness.

Anyone who is recognized as doing those things well will say to the beginner "woah back up there and start simple, prove you can do that, learn what you don't know, and then continue". But when the topic shifts to Christianity everyone outside of those aforementioned 3 entities seems to agree that there's no need for basics and no need for shepherding.

If you go to confession, and you keep going, you might learn what it's for. You might get introduced to the idea of having a spiritual father - someone who will take you under his wing and guide you in how to grow in your relationship with Christ. You might get advice in other things that you can do that will help, too. And yes, almost none of it is going to be specifically prescribed in Scripture.

But the point is, it stands as good a chance of working as it always has. It's a practice that matches the belief. I can admit that there are exceptions where people didn't do it and turned out saved. I can also probably find someone who owned a car that drove for 200000 miles without changing the brake pads. That doesn't do anything to invalidate the axiom that you have to change your brake pads. It's the exception that proves the rule.

I'm referring to the apostolic succession. I find it ironic that Orthodoxy has always agreed with Rome that Reformed Christians of the West are schismatics/heretics. Why does a scepter, a mitre, a throne and papal robes make them (Rome) non-schismatic, and we schismatic? I never understood that.

See that's where you lost me. I don't know any Orthodox who consider Rome non-schismatic. I mean it's called "The Great Schism" for a reason.
I think of it this way. We consider Rome to be our estranged cousins. There's bad blood between us and we've openly fought more than once.
But they're still our cousins. That puts them on better footing with us than the reformed Christians are on. But they're still very much in error.
The best example I can think of is my vote I cast for Trump last month. I'm not with him, I don't agree with him, I can instantly enumerate several ways I vehemently oppose him, but if you force me to take sides, I gotta go with him.

If the bishops descend into debauchery and blunt heresy, there is no "non-schismatic" solution except that they publicly repent of their sins and cleanse the church of the wickedness they have brought into it.
You've inspired me to go watch Man of God again. Orthodox are constantly admonished to take the long view, and I think this film really elegantly and poignantly drove that home.

Failing that, the only option is to leave, because the body of Christ cannot be joined to a prostitute. Luther had no intention of dividing the church of Rome, he sincerely believed that it could be reformed (hence, "the Reformation"). And when Rome dug its heels in and refused the correction of the Holy Spirit not only through Luther, but through a great assembly of witnesses to Rome's error and corruption, that is when the break occurred in the West. This is what I mean by comparing the Reformation to parental abandonment. Those who hold the Reformed to be schismatics are accusing the abandoned children of being disobedient and dishonoring their parents (Rome). We did not disobey or dishonor anyone, they simply abandoned the Faith. What makes the Orthodox position on the Reformation particularly puzzling to me is that Orthodoxy itself had already removed the bishop of Rome from communion, so Orthodoxy itself recognizes the very same problem in the church of Rome that the Reformers would later be forced into schism over! To quote one of the Reformers (can't remember which off the top of my head): "We did not leave Rome. Rome left us." I have often speculated that if the Reformers had been located on the border of the Eastern empire, they would have just joined Orthodoxy. There are some serious doctrinal differences, but those doctrinal differences happen to be exactly the same issues that Rome has with Orthodox, sans the papacy -- the filioque being one notable example. I hope that makes sense.

So, I don't recommend people read this normally, but you brought it up. ;)
http://orthodoxinfo.com/inquirers/tca_luther.aspx

I ran into this prior to becoming Orthodox, and to be perfectly honest, it probably delayed my Chrismation by at least a year.
On first read I thought "hang on, the Lutheran reformers seemed like they were really interested in forming a relationship with the Church in the East and they basically got knocked back. That ain't right."

My view has evolved a lot since then. The TL;DR is that I don't subscribe to the same thought as you do, about parents and children.

Reading between the lines a bit, and knowing how things work in Orthodoxy, Patriarch Jeremias kinda went out of his way to lovingly illustrate the ways in which the Augsburg Confession would absolutely not be accepted in the East. Was he harsh by not bending a whole lot? I originally thought so.

But he wasn't treating them like children. He was treating them like adults, by taking a whole lot more time and words to basically say "here I stand, I can do no other".
How many times do you have to explain something to an adult before you expect it to sink in? After the third time, unless the person in question has a legitimate disability, the expectation is you either get it or we're done.
If you're addressing children then the amount of expected patience with misunderstanding is actually less. But with adults, there are going to be two dynamics, generally: one where the assumption is an authority is speaking to a non-authority, and one where the assumption is there are equals in discussion. And I think the problem with this discussion between the Lutherans and Patriarch Jeremias boils down to that the Lutherans assumed it was a discussion of equals, and Jeremias assumed he was the authority.

I haven't gone and read through the original correspondence, and it does seem like this was written from the Orthodox perspective without considering what the Lutheran perspective would have been - but I still believe there was more that could have been done and discussed in order to try to bring the Lutherans to a more Orthodox position. Especially since it hadn't been that long since they believed some of the things Jeremias was saying. But the thing I understand now like 14 years after reading this the first time, is that this kind of boils down to the same problem they had with the Filioque: some Franks invented some novel theology and weren't really interested in hearing the counterarguments.

To hopefully make an ounce of sense out of all of this, I've lived two Christian lives. One where I had to point to the Augsburg Confession and say "what we're doing 500 years later bears no resemblance to this", and one where I point to the same confession and say "Think of how much world history would have been completely different if Jeremias had sent a whole team to go try to humbly point out their errors". I can see the wrong on both sides. But the overarching point is, there's nothing Jeremias said in that exchange that I can't find still taught in Orthodox churches, and there's very little of the Augsburg Confession that I can find still taught in Lutheran churches. I know them by their fruits.
 
I know them by their fruits.

I'll try to come back later and reply in detail, but I'll give a quick response here --

I agree that we must measure all branches of the church by the fruit they produce. The problem that I perceive in both Rome and Orthodoxy (as an outside observer), is there is a tendency to just assume "we are the people we are waiting for." As a Reformed Christian, my challenge to both of the main traditional branches of the church is this: What if God's plan includes something more? Something that you didn't think of? Something that is in the Word of God (not a novelty), but which Jesus chose, for his own reasons, not to fully explain to you? This question is not arbitrary, nor is it mere partisanship or apologetics for the Reformation -- it is the four gospels all over again. Who sits in "the seat of Moses" today? (Matt. 23:1 and context) If anyone could be described with that language it would be the Pope and I would include the Patriarchs of Orthodoxy, also. There is no equivalent in Reformed Christianity unless you want to mention the Archbishop of Canterbury, for Anglicans. There is a universal tendency among the leadership of church institutions to assume that God's plan is to make the whole world into church, and heaven is basically church forever. But what does Scripture say?:

"I did not see a temple in the city, because the Lord God Almighty and the Lamb are its temple. The city does not need the sun or the moon to shine on it, for the glory of God gives it light, and the Lamb is its lamp." (Rev. 21:22,23)

"No longer will a man teach his neighbor, or a man his brother, saying, 'Know the LORD,' because they will all know me, from the least of them to the greatest," declares the LORD. "For I will forgive their wickedness and will remember their sins no more." (Jer. 31:34)

"It is written in the Prophets: 'They will all be taught by God.' Everyone who listens to the Father and learns from him comes to me." (John 6:45)

In addition, there is also a prophesied Great Apostasy coming. (Matt. 24, 2 Thess. 2:3 and context) The institutional church is in perpetual denial of this prophetic reality for the same reason we all live in low-key denial of our own impending bodily death. The church, as we know it, is going to end. This is prophecy. It will be replaced with the eternal church but the eternal church will be something different from what we have ever known, just as our resurrection body will be different from our earthly body. Most Reformed Christians will not mention these prophecies, either, because most of them are also institutionalized in their thinking. This is one of the biggest ecclesiological issues I see today.

I agree with you that the fruits of holding fast to the Gospel are essential. But we must add to those the fruits of rightly dividing the word of Truth and listening carefully to the the Holy Spirit's prophetic voice, because that is how the Good Shepherd speaks to his flock...
 
I'm really enjoying this discussion.

I just wanted to add something that touched me pretty deeply when I visited a Coptic church over the summer. There are already icons of the 21 martyrs of Libya from 2015.

iu


The immediacy of the thing is what really hit me.

This happened less than 10 years ago. And all the icons I see of it are careful to have Matthew Ayariga from Ghana featured as prominently as they can. By some accounts he was not already a Christian and responded to the faith of the others and joined them in martyrdom. It would be far from the first report of this happening.

The Copts are also my estranged cousins - less so than Rome but there are distinct differences between us. But not here. We have no illusions about our impending death. Because this still happens to us - not here in America, but when it happens elsewhere, we hear about it. We read their account. We immortalize them in paint. We plea to retrieve their remains, and we build shrines around them.

I only wanted to bring it up because you basically described an icon-shaped hole in Western theology. I'm not the person to describe the first thing about the theology of icons. But I know enough to say I'm pretty sure you described some of the reason we do this.
 
I'm really enjoying this discussion.

I just wanted to add something that touched me pretty deeply when I visited a Coptic church over the summer. There are already icons of the 21 martyrs of Libya from 2015.

iu


The immediacy of the thing is what really hit me.

This happened less than 10 years ago. And all the icons I see of it are careful to have Matthew Ayariga from Ghana featured as prominently as they can. By some accounts he was not already a Christian and responded to the faith of the others and joined them in martyrdom. It would be far from the first report of this happening.

The Copts are also my estranged cousins - less so than Rome but there are distinct differences between us. But not here. We have no illusions about our impending death. Because this still happens to us - not here in America, but when it happens elsewhere, we hear about it. We read their account. We immortalize them in paint. We plea to retrieve their remains, and we build shrines around them.

I only wanted to bring it up because you basically described an icon-shaped hole in Western theology. I'm not the person to describe the first thing about the theology of icons. But I know enough to say I'm pretty sure you described some of the reason we do this.

Truly moving. Yes, all believers are united in the Lord Jesus Christ, whether that be through martyrdom or other suffering on the narrow path to Life.

Since you love icons, if you haven't heard of Jonathan Pageau, I'm sure you will enjoy his channel:

 
This is a great discussion.

I actually looked into joining an Orthodox Church a year ago. I couldn't bring myself to do it because the Orthodox Church also practices the sacrament of confession.

The last few weeks I have been attending an Assembly of God Church. It is okay, but at the back of my mind something doesn't feel right about it.
 
I actually looked into joining an Orthodox Church a year ago. I couldn't bring myself to do it because the Orthodox Church also practices the sacrament of confession.

What is it about confession that you have an issue with?

I'll be perfectly open with you, I have issues with it, too. I don't go as often as I'm supposed to and I end up making up something that's not really bothering me a lot of the time. And I often get a response or advice that I don't find helpful.

But the thing is, I can clearly see I'm pretty alone in my assessment. I see other people going every week (including immediate family members) and they're clearly getting more out of it than I do.
So my ultimate analysis is that this is a thing that has a lot of utility - that it does impart grace and improves relationships with Christ - and that I'm the one who has the problem.
 
For me, I think the biggest thing is being honest with one self. No deceit with yourself. Admit all your short coming to yourself. Realize the past is not changeable and live in the moment. Accept the decisions you make now as your responsibility.
After that if you want to read scripture go at it. I see no need for validation from others because I know my own heart and intentions. I would have no need for congregating unless it is simply for social experience.
God and Religion is a personal experience.
That is my take. Good luck!
 
What is it about confession that you have an issue with?

I'll be perfectly open with you, I have issues with it, too. I don't go as often as I'm supposed to and I end up making up something that's not really bothering me a lot of the time. And I often get a response or advice that I don't find helpful.

But the thing is, I can clearly see I'm pretty alone in my assessment. I see other people going every week (including immediate family members) and they're clearly getting more out of it than I do.
So my ultimate analysis is that this is a thing that has a lot of utility - that it does impart grace and improves relationships with Christ - and that I'm the one who has the problem.

Show me in the Bible where I confess my sins to another man. I'll never be totally honest in confession so what is the point? It is also a way to control people. When the parish priest has everyone's dirty laundry he has control over people. I'm not willing to give up control to another person.
 
Show me in the Bible where I confess my sins to another man. I'll never be totally honest in confession so what is the point? It is also a way to control people. When the parish priest has everyone's dirty laundry he has control over people. I'm not willing to give up control to another person.

It's certainly true that the priest is in a position to misuse the information he gets during confession.

I guess the counterargument is that in church bodies that don't have confession, there's no headship in the pastor, and congregations have a much greater tendency to run buck wild. I'm not saying it doesn't happen in traditional churches - just that there's more of a tendency for the church council or the elders to go their own way as opposed to really trying to apply the teachings of Christ. Certainly every time I've seen someone get massively abused by a church, it's been a situation where the church leadership has clearly been ignoring the entire point of the religion. And the older I get the more clear it becomes that 4+ decades of reinforcing the idea that you don't ever have to confess to anyone eventually leads to congregations full of adults whose pride leads them into sin.

But, as I've already insinuated, confession isn't even for such people. Confession is for people who want to improve their relationships with Jesus Christ. If you want a church where everything is always fine and everyone has a great relationship with Jesus and it's just a gosh darn shame that we had to threaten legal action against the Joneses for their infant crying during services and the less we talk about that the better... then take your pick. That's literally everyone else.

If you want to be regularly reminded that you're supposed to be examining yourself and whether you're living a life that leads to a better relationship with Christ, and you want a church that has a way to encourage that, and you want a church that has an authority figure who is able to pull people aside when they're massively out of line and that it's not in any way ok to agitate for people you don't like getting kicked out and you probably literally have a demon, and you want to have at least a little recourse if something like that happens to you or someone you know... then that's a package deal and it includes confession. Well I can think of some other groups that manage to have that without confession but they also have rejected enough core teachings of Christianity that they're not really considered Christian by anyone but themselves.

In fact when I think about it, I notice that even in churches that practice confession, the ones where you may not get to go this week because there are so many people waiting, those are the ones that are really healthy parishes. And the ones where you have to make a special appointment because the pastor is busy doing other things, those are the ones that are unhealthy.
So I admit there are some places where confession isn't used appropriately. I just don't have any examples where the priest abuses his power - only examples where he doesn't use it at all.


Also, dude, the entire OT is full of examples of confessing to others - I mean the whole sackcloth and ashes thing is literally a public confession. There's also James 5:16 but I'm aware that post-1517 Christians wish they could just get rid of that whole book.
 
It's certainly true that the priest is in a position to misuse the information he gets during confession.

I guess the counterargument is that in church bodies that don't have confession, there's no headship in the pastor, and congregations have a much greater tendency to run buck wild. I'm not saying it doesn't happen in traditional churches - just that there's more of a tendency for the church council or the elders to go their own way as opposed to really trying to apply the teachings of Christ. Certainly every time I've seen someone get massively abused by a church, it's been a situation where the church leadership has clearly been ignoring the entire point of the religion. And the older I get the more clear it becomes that 4+ decades of reinforcing the idea that you don't ever have to confess to anyone eventually leads to congregations full of adults whose pride leads them into sin.

But, as I've already insinuated, confession isn't even for such people. Confession is for people who want to improve their relationships with Jesus Christ. If you want a church where everything is always fine and everyone has a great relationship with Jesus and it's just a gosh darn shame that we had to threaten legal action against the Joneses for their infant crying during services and the less we talk about that the better... then take your pick. That's literally everyone else.

If you want to be regularly reminded that you're supposed to be examining yourself and whether you're living a life that leads to a better relationship with Christ, and you want a church that has a way to encourage that, and you want a church that has an authority figure who is able to pull people aside when they're massively out of line and that it's not in any way ok to agitate for people you don't like getting kicked out and you probably literally have a demon, and you want to have at least a little recourse if something like that happens to you or someone you know... then that's a package deal and it includes confession. Well I can think of some other groups that manage to have that without confession but they also have rejected enough core teachings of Christianity that they're not really considered Christian by anyone but themselves.

In fact when I think about it, I notice that even in churches that practice confession, the ones where you may not get to go this week because there are so many people waiting, those are the ones that are really healthy parishes. And the ones where you have to make a special appointment because the pastor is busy doing other things, those are the ones that are unhealthy.
So I admit there are some places where confession isn't used appropriately. I just don't have any examples where the priest abuses his power - only examples where he doesn't use it at all.


Also, dude, the entire OT is full of examples of confessing to others - I mean the whole sackcloth and ashes thing is literally a public confession. There's also James 5:16 but I'm aware that post-1517 Christians wish they could just get rid of that whole book.

You're making a lot of good points. I need to put my pride aside and give up control.

I'm not a biblical scholar so I can't refute what you said about confessing to others, specifically James 5:16.

I'm torn because right now I'm going to an Assembly of God Church and honestly I don't like it. The only reason I go to this Church is because it is a bilingual service.

I have a question for you. In the Orthodox Church do people actually know and study the Bible? I ask this because Roman Catholics don't know the Bible. Maybe there are a few Roman Catholics who read and study the bible, but I have never met any.
 
I have a question for you. In the Orthodox Church do people actually know and study the Bible? I ask this because Roman Catholics don't know the Bible. Maybe there are a few Roman Catholics who read and study the bible, but I have never met any.

I know a biblical scholar who worked on an important Bible translation. After it was published he gave a copy of it to his devout Roman Catholic mother, who said, "A Bible?! What am I going to do with that?!"
 
You're making a lot of good points. I need to put my pride aside and give up control.
Gosh me too... I apologize for some of the tone in my last post. On re-reading it comes off harsher than I meant.

I have a question for you. In the Orthodox Church do people actually know and study the Bible? I ask this because Roman Catholics don't know the Bible. Maybe there are a few Roman Catholics who read and study the bible, but I have never met any.

I'm happy to say absolutely. There are readings in the services (more on that later, it's important) and there are absolutely Bible studies. But if you ever visit an Orthodox parish you need to know that things seem... skewed. At first. But it's a false impression that seems silly after a while.
Not at first, of course. When you're coming from protestantism and first exposed to Orthodoxy you think 'man these people are spending WAY too much time talking about Mary and the saints - that's all time they could be going over Scripture'. Or at least that was my impression. My wife grew up in both worlds, and she was a lot more plugged into what was going on in Orthodox services, so when I complained to her that I didn't see as much Scripture in Orthodox services, she did a double-take and said something like 'what are you talking about, the whole thing is Scripture'.

For one currently relevant example, this is a Christmas hymn.


Most of the Orthodox liturgical music is like this. We don't have any bad Christmas music that has very little to do with what's happening - but we also don't have 'good' Christmas carols. We have Scripture pretty much directly set to music.

Even if it's a hymn that's not straight from Scripture, it always reads like this:
May heaven and earth rejoice prophetically this day.May angels and people spiritually celebrate,
for God appeared in the flesh to those groping in the darkness and resting in a shadow.
Having been born of a Virgin, a cave and a manger received Him.
Shepherds relate a miracle;
the Magi from the East bring gifts to Bethlehem,
while we, with unworthy lips, render Him angelic praise:
Glory to God in the highest and peace on earth,
for the hope of nations has arrived.
Having come, He has saved us from hostile bondage.

FYI, if you're wondering about the cave... Scripture never specifically says "a manger in a standalone stable" and we don't believe it was. There are traditional references to Mary giving birth in a cave and Orthodoxy holds to that because of the parallels - there are further hymns referring to Christ born in a cave and then his crucified body being placed in a cave and noting the significance of that. (There's a reason Pageau is Orthodox.) The point I'm ineptly making is we don't have hymns like Silent Night - a beautiful song that I enjoy very much, but comparatively it does little to teach Scripture nor to help foment understanding. I mean the hymn I quoted above is just a fragment offered for flavor - it goes on, and on.

Here's a better example from Easter. This part of the liturgy is the first thing that happens for Pascha at 11:30pm on Holy Saturday. But this is a particularly good example of how the liturgy draws from Scripture, and teaches Scripture as a result. It covers the creation, the Exodus, Isaiah, Jonah, Daniel, Habakkuk, just from memory, and ties it all together and says this thing that we're celebrating tonight is what all those stories are fundamentally about.


So the approach to this within Orthodoxy is generally like this. Orthodoxy is an experiential religion. You have to *do* it. That way, you get surrounded and inundated by references to Scripture. Also, Scripture is just straight chanted as readings. If a parish does all of the services for a year (TBH this is generally only at monasteries) then it's possible to hear all of Scripture read aloud in services in one year - minus Revelation. I can't say I 100% agree with this tradition but it isn't chanted in services - but the reason is because it's so easy to misinterpret & go off the rails (which I admit is a fact abundantly in evidence). Nevertheless, my parish is just finishing up a formal study on Revelation.

Which is a good segue into the fact that yes we do have studies, too. The approach of surrounding people with Scripture, and hammering in 'here's why we believe these doctrines, here are the references' isn't exactly the same as having formal studies. But it absolutely leads to formal studies. Because after a while hearing this stuff you naturally want to look it up (I was motivated to look up that Paschal reference to Habakkuk just last year) and you naturally want to ask questions. And Orthodoxy is, in my opinion, pretty dang great at having priests take the time to work with you.

As one last fun example: my brother-in-law priest serves at Saints Peter and Paul Orthodox in Philadelphia. It was there and from him that I learned why one of the two styles of icon of Saints Peter and Paul looks like this:

iu



This is also taken from Scripture. Their argument is recorded in Galatians 2. But the Church depicts them as embracing. It's not just a reference to Scripture - it's also a theological statement. Even the apostles got into serious arguments. But no matter what they did in life, this is how they're spending eternity, and what we should strive for with each other.
 
You're making a lot of good points. I need to put my pride aside and give up control.

I'm not a biblical scholar so I can't refute what you said about confessing to others, specifically James 5:16.

Note that James 5:16 was not written to the clergy of the church of Rome (neither historically, nor in any other sense). To whom was it written? " To the twelve tribes scattered among the nations:" (James 1:1) So, it was written to Jewish believers throughout the world (by proxy, it was also written to the Gentile believers since we are grafted into the 12 tribes by faith in Jesus, see Rom. 11:17,18 etc.) Therefore, James 5:16 is not establishing the sacrament of confession as Rome fancies it but, rather, it is exhorting us to practice confession and repentance between each other. See also Matt. 18:15-17, note particularly "just between the two of you". The root error is that Rome teaches a franchise priesthood (a subset of believers are priests), whereas Scriptures teaches the universal priesthood of all believers (1 Pet. 2:5,9, Rev. 1:6, 20:6). Thus, we are to confess our sins to one another, which logically entails that we are to hear those confessions from one another, as priests. Because that's what we are if we believe in Jesus. Sometimes, a brother needs to confess something to get it off their chest. Hearing confession is a service that believers in Jesus can perform for one another. But that's not even the particular topic in James 5:16. To amplify it a bit, "Don't wait for your brother to rebuke you when you sin; rather, proactively confess your sins to one another." Look at the verses prior (vv. 14,15) which are actually one thought with v. 16: "Is any one of you sick? He should call the elders of the church to pray over him and anoint him with oil in the name of the Lord, and the prayer offered in faith will make the sick person well; the Lord will raise him up; if he has sinned, he will be forgiven; therefore confess your sins to each other and pray for each other so that you may be healed. The prayer of a righteous man is powerful and effective." (James 5:14-16) Notice the flow of logic -- if someone is sick, call the elders to pray over him; (even) if he has sinned, he will be forgiven (and thus healed); THEREFORE (since no one wants to be sick) confess your sins to one another (proactively!) and pray for each other (for forgiveness and healing!) so that you may be healed.
 
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