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"Orthodoxy is the
Church of Christ on earth. The Church of Christ is not an
institution; it is a new life with Christ and in Christ, guided
by the Holy Spirit. Christ, the Son of God, came to earth,
was made man, uniting His divine life with that of humanity.
This divine-human life He gave to His brethren, who believe on
His name. Although He died and rose again and ascended
into heaven, He was not separated from His humanity, but remains
in it. The light of the resurrection of Christ lights the
Church, and the joy of resurrection, of the triumph over death,
fills it. The risen Lord lives with us and our life in the
Church is a mysterious life in Christ."
Sergius
Bulgakov, The Orthodox Church
When a man leaves on a journey, it is a good idea to know where he is
going. With literally hundreds of choices to choose from, how
does one decide where and how to worship the Lord Jesus Christ?
For many, the answer is simple: "I was raised in the [fill
in the name of the denomination] church, it's where my parents went
to church, it's really all I've ever known, and besides, I rather like
it here!" But for some, that question begins to nag at
them at some point in their life, as they notice the following:
-
the Bible speaks
(Eph. 4:5) of "one Lord, one faith, one baptism", yet
denominations abound, with profound differences
-
the Bible warns
(Mat. 7:21) "Not everyone that saith unto Me, 'Lord, Lord,' shall
enter the kingdom of heaven"
-
their own church
seems to view Jesus more as their personal valet, their helper,
rather than as holy Lord and Master
As a result, such a
person may begin to take a look at "what else is out there" in terms of
church life. One such person is Peter Gillquist, who in the 1960's
was the Big Ten regional director of Campus Crusade for Christ. He
and many of his fellow leaders in Campus Crusade set out to find the
"New Testament Church". Writing in Becoming Orthodox: A Journey
to the Ancient Christian Faith:
...we had agreed
on the front end to do and be whatever we found that the New
Testament Church did and was, and we followed her through
history. If we found we were wrong, we would change.
We were committed to believe her doctrine, to enter into her
worship, and to reflect her government as best we could discern
it. Or to put it another way, if we found that all
Christians everywhere believed a certain truth or held to a
certain practice, if it was done by all and it squared with the
Holy Scriptures, we would alter our course accordingly and
follow the faith of our fathers.
Today Peter Gillquist is
a priest in the Orthodox Church.
The Orthodox Church
claims to be the true Church. Yet while probably most
Christians have no difficulty believing Christianity is the one,
true religion, many Christians may have quite a bit of difficulty
believing that there is one true expression of Christianity.
However, as one former Baptist in the South recently described what he
and his sister felt:
We had wondered
why the Church of the Apostles would abruptly cease, to be
revived some fifteen hundred years later in northern Europe.
Today that man is a
bishop in the Orthodox Church.
But what is the
Orthodox Church? Some have likened it to an onion - having peeled
back one layer, you then see there is yet another layer beneath that,
and then another layer after that, and so on. In fact, Orthodoxy
is more than can be described on a website. So rather than attempt
to describe it further to you, we invite you to come "taste and see"!
And, in the meantime, you can get a few glimpses into what Orthodox
worship is like on the "Services" page of
this website. |
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