Have you thought about simply converting. Becuase it would be different if the situation were reversed - the Anglicans would openly embrace you.
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While it's true that if he were a Catholic or an Orthodox, the Anglicans would still allow him to take communion, he couldn't do that and still stay in good standing with his own Church.Have you thought about simply converting. Becuase it would be different if the situation were reversed - the Anglicans would openly embrace you.
It exists already in the spiritual realm.I thought about that. It is just too sad to me that Christendom is in such a divisive state. I wonder what Jesus thinks about the divisive sectarian rancor. I pray for eventual re-unification into one holy, catholic and apostolic church.
I thought about that. It is just too sad to me that Christendom is in such a divisive state. I wonder what Jesus thinks about the divisive sectarian rancor. I pray for eventual re-unification into one holy, catholic and apostolic church.
If that principle were actually applied, half the members of the parish would not be permitted to commune. Obviously, that isn't happening.
Most Sundays at an Orthodox Liturgy, you will see several members of the parish abstaining from Holy Communion because they have not prepared themselves adequately by fasting and confessing their sins. This is normal. Better to hold off for a week than to bring condemnation upon yourself by communing when not prepared.
Most Sundays at an Orthodox Liturgy, you will see several members of the parish abstaining from Holy Communion because they have not prepared themselves adequately by fasting and confessing their sins. This is normal. Better to hold off for a week than to bring condemnation upon yourself by communing when not prepared.
I'm sure, but that wasn't the issue I was commenting on. Rather, it was that the priest doesn't actually have any way of screening out all those members of his own parish who might be unworthy, according to Orthodox standards, of communing. If a member's secret sins should prevent him from communing, but he does so anyway, it narrows the difference between those churches that practice a limited open communion and those which practice a closed communion.
We do not have secret sins. We confess our sins to God in the presence of our priests, who in turn protect the chalice and determine whether or not we should be receiving Holy Communion.
And those who decline to confess some of their sins? The theory you advance is nice, but I was speaking of the reality.
And those who decline to confess some of their sins? The theory you advance is nice, but I was speaking of the reality.
It seemed to me that InnerPhyre addressed that - the priest of course would not under normal circumstances have any way to know that someone gave a dishonest confession.
But I think the clear teaching that it is required, and the fairly rigorous application, gives people quite a different attitude than one typically sees in Anglican settings. I cannot easily imagine some of the things that happen commonly in an Anglican Eucharist happening in an Orthodox setting.
Holding back sins in confession is a very serious matter, which is why the priest gives this warning at the beginning of the mystery.
If in spite of this warning, you knowingly withhold sins that you have committed and still decide to approach the chalice, knowing that you are going around a priest who has taken every effort to determine whether or not you should be receiving because he cares for the state of your soul, you need to reexamine why you are even going to an Orthodox Church in the first place.
That's hardly any different from the practice in open communion churches...and therefore, it is not worth an argument trying to make it seem as though there IS any big difference.
I realize this is a low blow, but I think it is to the point: no one in an Orthodox parish would ever think of communing someone's dog.