- Nov 26, 2019
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Do you realize most Christians aren't going to be able to follow what you said without having to do a lot of Googling?
If true that’s an unintentional, indeed serendipitous, occasion . I want to challenge people to explore the history, theology and the vast array of beautiful traditions of worship and devotion that define the wonderful, uniquely ethnically and culturally diverse religion that is Christianity.
The Orthodox do not believe in Papal Supremacy (two of the Patriarchs use the style Pope, the Eastern Orthodox Pope of Alexandria and the Coptic Pope of Alexandria, because prior to the Chalcedonian Schism the Bishop of Alexandria had been called Pope since 231 AD, whereas the Bishop of Rome was not styled Pope until the mid 6th century.I'm talking about Catholic and Orthodox practices, beliefs, traditions and teachings that are familiar Protestants in their familiar terms, which they don't hold to. Things such as the veneration of Mary. The venation of saints. Praying to Mary. Lighting candles for the dead. Praying to and for the dead. The Magisterium of the Pope and Cardinals. Holy water. Confessing to a priest to receive absolution. The transubstantiation of the Eucharist. Praying with a Rosary. Basically that which Catholics and Orthodox do that Protestants don't do - because they are not found in scripture.
The Orthodox do not have Cardinals.
The Orthodox do not pray the Rosary, but some Anglican Protestants do.
The Orthodox, like the Lutherans, believe in the Real Preaence of Christ in the Eucharist but not in the Thomistic Scholastic concept of transubstantiation, which depends on Ariatotelian categories.
But most of what you listed are things some Protestants also do, such as High Church Anglicans, Lutherans, even some Methodists.
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