| The Orthodox Church is the first Christian Church, the Church founded by the
Lord Jesus Christ and described in the pages of the New Testament.
Her history can be traced in unbroken continuity all the way back to
Christ and His Twelve Apostles. Incredible as it seems, for nineteen and a half centuries she has continued
in her undiminished and unaltered faith and practice.
Today, her apostolic doctrine, worship, and structure remain intact.
The Orthodox Church maintains that the Church is the living Body of Jesus
Christ.
Many of us are surprised to learn that for the first 1000 years of Christian
history there was just one Church. It was in the eleventh Century that a disastrous split
occurred, resulting in the Western Church, under the pope, separating itself
from the Orthodox Church. The
papacy sought to establish itself over all of Christendom and finally succeeded
in the West. But the rest of the
Church rejected this innovation, knowing no so-called universal head apart
from Jesus Christ himself.
The Real Difference
One writer has compared Orthodoxy to the faith of Rome and Protestantism in
this basic fashion: Orthodoxy has maintained the New Testament tradition,
whereas Rome has often added to it and Protestantism subtracted from it.
For example, Rome added to the ancient Creed of the Church, while numerous
Protestant Churches rarely study or recite it.
Rome has layers of ecclesiastical authority; much of Protestantism is
anti-hierarchical or even independent in polity.
Rome introduced indulgences and purgatory; in reaction, Protestantism
shies away from good works and discipline.
In these and other matters, the Orthodox Church has steadfastly maintained
the Apostolic Faith. She has
avoided the excesses of papal rule and of congregational independence.
She has maintained the Faith once for all delivered to the saints.
She understands the clergy as servants of Christ and His people and not
as a special privileged class. She
preserved the Apostles doctrine of the return of Christ at the end of the
age, of the last judgment and eternal life, and continues to encourage her
people to grow in Christ through union with Him.
In a word, Orthodox Christianity simply does not change!
The Orthodox Church in North America
It was from the religious and political Western world that the vast majority
of early colonists came to make their homes in the New World.
Here they could be free to live without fear or threat of recrimination
from either Roman Catholic or Protestant dictums.
But with them also came the religious environment and convictions of the
Western Europe they left.
When the Orthodox latecomers finally arrived in North
America, they were often ignored as a foreign minority.
The religious and cultural climate of the New World was already deeply
entrenched. Thus, rather than
mingle with the culture religiously, Orthodox Christians tended to maintain
their Old World ethnic identity, even to the point of retaining their native
languages in their worship. People
who visited their churches were often unable to understand what was said or
done.
But times are changing. The
Orthodox Church today is being taken seriously in this hemisphere.
People devoted to Christ, but distressed and frustrated by the directions
being taken in both Roman Catholic and Protestant circles, and desiring a more
full worship and spiritual life, are turning to the changeless Orthodox Church. It only makes sense that the Church from which the Bible came
would be the Church where the faith described in the Bible could be lived out
and preserved.
The
Church, which brought Orthodoxy to North America, is now bringing North America
to Orthodoxy. Constantly, people are being introduced to the faith and
worship of the Orthodox Church. New
churches are beginning in cities and towns from coast to coast.
With renewed vision, many established churches have made the transition
to English language services. Not
surprisingly, there is also a breadth of interest in Orthodoxy being expressed
on college and university campuses in the U.S. and Canada.
Students are discovering Orthodoxy as a place where the search for
spiritual reality finds fulfillment.
Consider:
- On
the one hand, it is the oldest Church in Christendom.
On the other hand, its new to most North Americans.
- It
is the second largest body in Christendom with 225 million people
worldwide. But in the U.S.
and Canada there are less than six million.
- In
the twentieth century alone, more than 20 million Orthodox Christians have
given their lives for their faith, primarily under communism.
So high is the commitment of many Orthodox Christians to Christ and
His Church, she has often been called the Church of the Martyrs.
- She
is the Church of some of historys greatest theologians, scholars, and
writers people like John Chrysostom, Jerome, Augustine, Dostoyevsky,
and Alexander Solzhenitsyn.
Click
here to view a timeline of the Orthodox Church
For a more extensive and
comprehensive account of Orthodox Church History, please
click here to read an article written by one of St. George
Antiochian Orthodox Church's (Phoenix, Arizona) parishioners, Wayne Williamson.
Note: The link is to a PDF file and you must have Adobe
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