I notice the EO church has many rules about the precise way of doing things, for example, when placing the cross on yourself there is a rule about the arrangement of your fingers and another rule about touching your right shoulder before your left. I understand you follow these rules because these are the ways it has always been done and you want to imitate your spiritual predecessors.
I am not criticizing this phenomenon - I would just like to understand it better. As a westerner it surprises me. I wonder whether it makes any objective difference which shoulder you touch first when crossing yourself. I wonder whether God the Father minds which way you do it. I wonder whether the apostles ever stipulated one way or the other, since the New Testament epistles do not legislate about such minutiae but instead focus on doctrine and ethical behavior. In the New Testament there seems to be plenty of leeway about peripheral questions. For example in Romans chapter 14 Paul isn't concerned that some Christians eat meat while others abstain, or that some Christians regard particular days as special while others regard all alike. But Paul is concerned that no Christian looks down on his brother or condemns his brother who thinks differently about these peripheral matters. And in Colossians chapter 2 Paul warns against becoming captive to human traditions (he is not warning against following human traditions but about becoming captive to them).
I can understand the EO church wants to be very careful to preserve its doctrine and ethical standards, but why do you extend this inflexibility into the ways you express your devotion? Thank you.
I am not criticizing this phenomenon - I would just like to understand it better. As a westerner it surprises me. I wonder whether it makes any objective difference which shoulder you touch first when crossing yourself. I wonder whether God the Father minds which way you do it. I wonder whether the apostles ever stipulated one way or the other, since the New Testament epistles do not legislate about such minutiae but instead focus on doctrine and ethical behavior. In the New Testament there seems to be plenty of leeway about peripheral questions. For example in Romans chapter 14 Paul isn't concerned that some Christians eat meat while others abstain, or that some Christians regard particular days as special while others regard all alike. But Paul is concerned that no Christian looks down on his brother or condemns his brother who thinks differently about these peripheral matters. And in Colossians chapter 2 Paul warns against becoming captive to human traditions (he is not warning against following human traditions but about becoming captive to them).
I can understand the EO church wants to be very careful to preserve its doctrine and ethical standards, but why do you extend this inflexibility into the ways you express your devotion? Thank you.