Orthodox Priest on the Possible Expanse of Unity, July 7, 2009
[Rather than do bulk italicized typography, I'll put F. Harry's content in violet.]
''It is important for people to realize that there is not just "Protestant" and "Catholic," but also that there is "Orthodox," a third perspective that was never tied up in the "Reformation" or "Counter-reformation" so to speak, and that it is my job to make it known. So, I am doing so here. For those unaware of what I am referring to, here is an definition Of the Orthodox Church:
“official name Orthodox Catholic Church one of the three major doctrinal and jurisdictional groups Of Christianity. It is characterized by its continuity with the apostolic church, its liturgy...and has a worship service that is theologically and spiritually rich • (Eastern (Christianity) Britannica Online Encyclopedia).
Orthodox Christianity is neither Roman Catholic nor protestant. It is not a denomination. Denominations came in the protestant reformation, and have been multiplying ever since. I WANT TO MAKE IT CLEAR that the ONLY ONE OF THE THREE FORMS OF CHRISTIANITY, the youngest form, Protestantism has produced “denominations”, in that this was something that did not exist before the protestant reformation. Some of you judge Roman Catholicism based on a preconceived caricature of it and have never set foot inside a Roman Catholic Church (others of you left, and Of course, I am not referring to you). But most of you, as already mentioned, have not, before this forum, even heard of Orthodoxy, nor did you know that it was distinct from both Protestantism and Roman Catholicism.
It should be said that the following writing Of Timothy Ware may not be as applicable as it once was, in that Roman Catholicism is in the process of rediscovering its ancient eastern roots, and the dialogue between Roman Catholicism and Orthodox Christianity has drawn closer. Nonetheless, it gives the view that Orthodoxy had for centuries on the “Protestant-Catholic” debates:
"'All Protestants are Crypto-Papists,' wrote the Russian theologian Alexis Khomiakov to an English friend in the year 1846. ‘. . . To use concise language Of algebra, all the West knows but one datum a; whether it be preceded by the positive sign + , as with the Romanists, or with the negative sign -, as with the Protestants, the a remains the same. Now a passage to Orthodoxy seems indeed like an apostasy from the past, from its science, creed, and life. It is rushing into a new and unknown world. Khomiakov, when he spoke of the datum a, had in mind the fact western Christians, whether Free Churchmen, Anglicans, or Roman Catholics, have a common background in the past.
All alike (although they may not always care to admit it) have been profoundly influenced by the same events: by the Papal centralization and scholasticism of the Middle Ages, by the Renaissance, by the Reformation and Counter-Reformation. But behind the members of the Orthodox Church-Greeks, Russians, and the rest-there lies a very different background. They have known no middle ages (in the western sense) and have undergone no Reformations or Counter-Reformations. ; that have only been affected in an oblique way by the cultural and religious upheaval which transformed western Europe in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Christians in the west, both Roman and Reformed, generally start by asking the same questions, although they may disagree about the answers.
In Othodoxy, however, it is not merely the answers that are different-the questions themselves are not the same as in the west. Orthodox sees history in another perspective. Consider, for example, the Orthodox attitude toward western religious disputes. In the West it is usual to think of Roman Catholicism and Protestantism as oppostite extremes; but to an Othodox, they appear as two sides of the same coin.” (Ware, The Othodox Church, p.2)
Again, this statement of Khomiakov is certainly less applicable today, as T. Ware later points out that' Orthodoxy has in the recent past (first part of the 20th century) had a very cordial relationship with Anglicanism, and also has, in the even more recent past, found very much common ground with Roman Catholicism, as the two have drawn especially close in the past decades as Roman Catholicism has been rediscovering both its ancient roots in the east and west, and the two have been in very cordial and open dialogue, discovering less differences in thinking than what was previously thought. Nonetheless, Orthodoxy also sympathizes with the Protestant Reformation on a few points. Much of the Reformation came about because of innovations of the Roman Church such as indulgences, the "temporal fires" of purgatory, limbo, papal infallibility, the de-emphasis on Scripture (for a time, but NOT applicable today) etc. [note, to be fair, from the Orth. point of view they are innovations, from the Roman
Catholic point of view they are doctrinal developments]. However, also to be fair, we must acknowledge that Rome also has some of the same sympathies for the past.''