|
|
What
is Orthodoxy?
by
the Rev'd. Dr. Theodore Pulcini
|
|
- TO
BE AN ORTHODOX CHRISTIAN...
Is to experience the Apostolic Faith
They
knew that something was different about him, this carpenter from
Nazareth. He spoke with authority. He cleansed lepers. He raised
the dead. And through he suffered crucifixion and death, he rose
from the dead and appeared to his followers ... And now nothing
seemed the same! Death had been trampled down by death; the reign
of sin and corruption had been shattered. They knew this, those
first followers of Jesus of Nazareth, because they experienced
it. Their faith was not the by-product of systematic logic or
disinterested analysis. These people were not fooled; they were
not the gullible bumpkins that we arrogant moderns, so complacent
with our self-proclaimed sophistication, often assume they were.
These people would not have dropped everything, risked what little
security that they had managed to attain, or put their lives on
the line had it not been for a convincing experience of the Risen
one.
But
once Jesus returned to the Father, how could such an experience
be conveyed to the next generation? Jesus recognized this problem,
so he promised his disciples that he would not leave them orphans.
He would send an Advocate, who would bear witness to him, conveying
his presence among those who believed. And this Advocate, of course,
is the Holy Spirit, whom the exalted Christ, having ascended in
glory, asked the Father to send to the nascent community of believers
that had gathered around the Apostles.
And
so the Spirit was sent to these Apostles and o the Mother of God
in the city of Jerusalem, the mother of all Churches. Because
of this indwelling of the Spirit, the Church, from the moment
of its inception, was "catholic," whole, lacking nothing.
The experience that forged the faith of the first believers could
now be had by anyone who confessed Christ and, through incorporation
into his Body by baptism, entered into the life of the Spirit.
The
experience of the Apostolic Faith ... This is what makes a Christian.
And that is why the Church is important. Holy Orthodoxy does not
claim to be a politically powerful Church or a wealthy Church
or a particularly erudite Church. But it does claim to possess
the indwelling of the Spirit who bears witness to Christ, the
Spirit who fosters the experience of the Risen Lord that enabled
the Apostles to believe. To be an Orthodox Christian is to have
access to that experience in unmitigated form, for Orthodox Christians,
without impugning the goodness and sincerity of other Christians,
affirm that it is in the Orthodox Church that the fullness of
Christian truth -- and the fullness of the Spirit who bears witness
to this truth -- are to be found.
- Is
to experience the events of salvation
To
be an Orthodox Christian is to live liturgically. One cannot seriously
maintain that he or she is Orthodox without participating in the
liturgical life of the Church. Why do we Orthodox put such strong
emphasis on liturgy? Not because we hold that liturgical participation
is legally obligatory. Not because we think that liturgy is a
good way to experience an aesthetic "high." Liturgy
is for us not just a didactic exercise or a means of historical
commemoration. For us Orthodox Christians, liturgy is the means
by which we experience directly the saving power of the events
of salvation history. To be sure, these are historical events
which occurred once and for all at particular points in history.
They cannot be "repeated." They cannot be "returned
to." But there is no "before" or "after"
for God, who dwells in eternity. God is not bound by time as we
know it; and in his "time" all things are eternally
present. In liturgy the "eternal present" of God's time
breaks into our time, and we are confronted personally and directly
with the saving impact of all the events of salvation that we
celebrate liturgically -- especially the saving event par excellence:
the Paschal Mystery, the great mystery of the death and resurrection
of Christ. All other events in salvation history point to or refer
back to this Passover of the Lord in which death was put to death,
the reign of sin overturned, and the Kingdom of God ushered in.
- Is
to be transformed ... and to transform
The
Orthodox Christian is called to transformation. He or she is called
to engage in the process as theosis, or deification. That's right:
we are meant to be "gods." In fact, according to Orthodox
theology, it is precisely for this reason that Christ came among
us. God became a human being in Christ so that human beings could
become gods. This may sound strange, but it is in this doctrine
of theosis that the beauty of the Christian proclamation is revealed.
To be sure, we human beings can never become divine. We are and
always will be human beings. But, Orthodoxy teaches us, the human
being was never meant to exist in separation from God. It is only
in contact with the divine -- only in being "energized"
by grace (which of us Orthodox is never a created commodity but
the very presence of the Uncreated One) -- can human nature be
what it is truly meant to be. When we speak of deification, we
are really speaking of n humanization. The Orthodox doctrine of
theosis teaches that in order for one to become human, he or she
must be energized by the deifying presence of God -- what we normally
call grace. We are meant to be "partakers of the divine nature
(2 Peter 1:4).
Now
this deifying presence of God is none other than the Holy Spirit,
who , as we saw, dwells in the Church. It is for this reason that
we Orthodox Christians affirm the importance of the Church. We
are all meant to be "deified." This deification is the
work of the Holy Spirit. And that Holy Spirit is found in the
Church. Our lifelong process of acquiring the Holy Spirit can
thus be achieved only within the Church.
Nor
is the process of theosis isolationistic. In being deified, the
Orthodox Christian is not called upon to avoid others or to sever
all ties with the world. The Christian is not only to be transformed;
he or she is called upon to make the deifying presence of God
operative in the world around us -- to transform this world. To
be sure, this transformation will not be complete until the Kingdom
is fully revealed on the Last Day, but we Orthodox Christians
must work to manifest the Kingdom which is already partially actualized
among us. Thus, social action and political responsibility must
be taken extremely seriously by the Orthodox Christian.
- Is
to assume responsibility for the Christian Tradition
The
Orthodox Church is the Church of Tradition. Notice the capital
"T". This Tradition is absolutely not to be equated
with the transient cultural and other merely human aspects of
the Church. Tradition, in the Orthodox view, is not a specific
thing or set of things. It is, rather a critical faculty, a discerning
sense, which enables the Church to assimilate some things as consonant
with genuine Christian experience and to reject other things as
contrary to Christian authenticity. Tradition is simply the faculty
present in the Church by virtue of the indwelling of the Holy
Spirit, who gorges the "mind" of the Church. Tradition
is the expression of this Spirit-formed "mind".
Tradition
has crystallized in a number of forms: in Scripture, of course,
the primary deposit of Tradition; in patristic writings (the writings
of the Church Fathers); in church art; in conciliar decrees; in
liturgical texts; in the example provided by the saints .... All
of these are testimony to the operation of the Spirit in the Church.
And
this Tradition is not a relic, locked away be ecclesiastical authorities
for safekeeping. It is a living, vital force accessible to each
of us. In fact, every Orthodox Christian is responsible for discerning,
preserving, enriching, and passing on this precious deposit of
Tradition. How? Above all, by acquiring the Divine Person who
forges and maintains it -- namely the Holy Spirit. Thus theosis
is crucial not only to the transformation of individuals and of
the world, but for the health of the Church as well. In Orthodoxy,
it is not an authoritative magisterium which safeguards the Faith;
it is the faithful themselves! For the faithful to be able to
assume this responsibility -- and privilege -- they must immerse
themselves in the life of the Spirit through prayer, sacramental
participation, and spiritual training.
- Is
to proclaim the Faith of the undivided Church
Orthodoxy
believes that it has maintained, without distorting addition or
damaging detraction, the Faith of the Apostles, the Faith of the
undivided Church. It rejoices in this Faith and feels the urge
to proclaim it to all. Orthodoxy is not just for Greeks or Slavs
or Arabs or Romanians. It is for all who would receive it as the
most appropriate expression of the Christian experience. For this
reason, the Orthodox Church is a missionary Church, and we Orthodox
Christians are called to be missionaries. To be an Orthodox Christian
is to respond to this challenge.
WHAT
IS THE ORTHODOX CHURCH?
Orthodox
Christians affirm that their Church is the living continuation
of the Apostolic Church, founded by Christ himself; they believe
that it has maintained, without distorting addition or damaging
detraction, the ancient faith of the undivided Church. The Orthodox
make these claims in all humility, readily admitting the shortcomings
of their Christian witness. They have no intention of calling
into question the sincerity and integrity of other Christians.
But they do assert that "if a person carefully examines the
history of Christianity, he or she will soon discover that the
Orthodox Church alone is in complete sacramental, doctrinal, and
canonical continuity with the ancient undivided Church as it authoritatively
expressed itself in the great Ecumenical Councils."
GREEK,
RUSSIAN, OR WHAT?
You
may have heard of the Greek Orthodox Church and the Russian Orthodox
Church, and perhaps some other Orthodox Churches such as the Antiochian,
the Serbian, the Romanian, etc. Are they different Churches? No,
they are all Orthodox Churches. The national name associated represents
the country where they are established, just as "Presbyterian,
USA" identifies a Presbyterian Church in the United States,
as opposed to its sister Churches in Scotland and England.
But
then, why are all these Orthodox Churches in America? The answer
is that whenever Greeks or Russians or Serbs or Romanians immigrated
to America they brought their own Church with them, just as the
Scots brought their Calvinist Presbyterian Church, the Germans
their Calvinist Reformed Church, and the Dutch their Calvinist
Dutch Reformed Church. The same thing happened with the Lutherans
- until recently there were Lutheran Churches in America that
thought of themselves (in addition to being American) as Swedish,
Danish, or German. And, just as it took over a hundred years for
most of the Lutherans to become one Evangelical Lutheran Church
in America, the process of uniting the Orthodox Churches in America
is a slow process, but one that is gradually occurring.
The
various Orthodox Churches are all sister Churches, all part of
the One, Holy, Orthodox Catholic Church. Members of one are recognized
as fellow Orthodox by the others, and welcome to receive the sacraments
at the other Orthodox Churches and to become members of whatever
Orthodox Church is convenient for them. Most Orthodox churches
in America now have as members people of all ethnic backgrounds,
including many converts, regardless of what "nationality"
the parish has in its title.
v

Article
© by Fr. Theodore Pulcini. Used with permission.
The
Reverend Theodore Pulcini is the pastor of St. Mary's Antiochian
Orthodox Christian Church in Chambersburg, PA. He is also Assistant
Professor of Religion at Dickinson College, Carlisle, PA. His
teaching responsibilities focus on exploring the Biblical texts
in their historical, social, and comparative contexts. He also
specializes in Islam, early Christianity, and Eastern Orthodox
Christianity. Research interests include relations between Islam
and Christianity, both past and present. He writes: "St.
Mary's in Cambridge Massachusetts is really my 'home parish.'
I was a parishioner there before I was ordained, and then served
as subdeacon and deacon there during the pastorate of Fr. Gregory
Phelan, of blessed memory."
The webmaster thanks him for the use of his writings.
http://www.dickinson.edu/departments/relgn/pulcini.htm
|