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Orthodox vs. Protestant belief differences?

Constantine the Sinner

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It was during a Greek fest, and they were giving tours of the church! Don't tell me I'm wrong, I was there, and YOU were not!
So, what, you're saying they gave tours to everyone else as the festival, but refused you in particular? You do know Greeks will be a very small minority at a Greek Fest, right?
 
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Constantine the Sinner

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The John Paul who kissed the Koran?

Please, stop conflating what the Ecumenical Patriarch (who is ultimately just a bishop) does, with the official Church stance, with the stance of our saints. We do not recognize Rome as being Orthodox. When Rome is prepared to officially renounce the Pope's claim to power over fellow bishops, to drop the Pope's claim to infallibility, to drop the doctrine of Purgatory, to drop the doctrine of supererogation, to drop the Filioque, to drop Marian dogmas, and several other things, then we can talk.
 
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Monk Brendan

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It was signed by the Melkite Catholic bishops.

They WALKED OUT! After first saying: The Eastern Church attributes to the pope the most complete and highest power, however in a manner where the fullness and primacy are in harmony with the rights of the patriarchal sees. This is why, in virtue of an ancient right founded on customs, the Roman Pontiffs did not, except in very significant cases, exercise over these sees the ordinary and immediate jurisdiction that we are asked now to define without any exception. This definition would completely destroy the constitution of the entire Greek church. That is why my conscience as a pastor refuses to accept this constitution.

Soldiers were then sent to seize Gregory, they took him back to Rome, and THREW him at the foot of the Pope, and held him there BY FORCE until such time as Pius could put his foot on Gregory's head. THAT was not voluntary.
 
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Constantine the Sinner

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And warrants excommunication. Do you think the infallibility of the Pope is heresy? By staying in communion with him after he declares it and literally stomps on your head, you are sharing the cup with a heretic. The Orthodox Church is not a formula of a + b, it is a COMMUNION. If the Pope is not Orthodox, and you are in Communion with him, YOU ARE NOT ORTHODOX.

And the bishops did sign that declaration that he was infallible in doctrine, it was only administrative issues that they added that caveat on.
 
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Monk Brendan

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So, what, you're saying they gave tours to everyone else as the festival, but refused you in particular? You do know Greeks will be a very small minority at a Greek Fest, right?

That may be, but again, I am telling you what happened to me. You were not there. And to be honest, I don't know and don't care how many Greeks are at a Greek Fest.
 
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Constantine the Sinner

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That may be, but again, I am telling you what happened to me. You were not there. And to be honest, I don't know and don't care how many Greeks are at a Greek Fest.
Whatever reason you were barred, it wasn't ethnicity. If it were ethnicity, they would not be asking you to convert, they would say you can't.
 
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Constantine the Sinner

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How is a sinner transformed? What steps does the sinner take in order to be transformed?
I'm going to let Saint Theophan the Recluse answer that, quoting from The Path to Salvation,

"The grace-filled Christian life is supposed to begin in baptism. But those who preserve this grace are rare; the majority of Christians lose it. We see some people who are more or less depraved in their present lives, because they had poor beginnings which were allowed to develop and take root in them. Others perhaps had good beginnings, but during the early years of their youth, whether by personal inclination or through temptation from others, forgot these beginnings and acquired evil habits. Such people no longer lead a true Christian life. Our holy faith offers the Mystery of Repentance for this. We have an advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous (I Jn. 2:1). If you have sinned, acknowledge the sin and repent. God will forgive the sin and once again give you a new heart...and a new spirit (Ez. 36:26). There is no other way: Either do not sin, or repent. Judging by the number of those who have fallen away from Baptism, one could even say that repentance has become for us the only source of true Christian life.

"It is necessary to know that in the Mystery of Repentance some merely have to be cleansed, and the gift of the grace-filled life, previously assimilated and operating within them, will be rekindled. For others, the beginning of this life has just been established within them, or it is being given and accepted anew. We will be examining the latter case.

"With regard to the second item we have mentioned, it is a decisive change for the better, a breaking of the will, a turning away from sin and a turning to God, or a kindling of the fire of zeal for exclusively God-pleasing things, with renunciation of the self and everything else. It is above all characterized by an extreme breaking of the will. If a person has acquired evil habits, he must now rend himself. If he has offended God, he must now grieve in the fire of just judgment. A repentant person experiences the pain of a woman giving birth, and, in the feelings of the heart, he encounters, as it were, the tortures of hell. To the lamenting Jeremiah, the Lord commanded destroy and build and plant (Jer. 1:10). The lamenting spirit of repentance is sent by the Lord to the earth so that when it passes into those who accept it, to the dividing asunder of soul and spirit, and of the joints and marrow (Heb. 4:12), it destroys the old man and lays the foundation for the creation of the new. Within the repentant person there is first fear, then the lightness of hope; sorrow, then comfort; terror to the point of despair, then the breath of the consolation of mercy. One thing replaces another, and this supplies or keeps a person who is in a state of corruption or parting with life in the hope, however, of receiving new life.


"It is something painful, but it saves. It is therefore inevitable that whoever has not experienced such a painful break has not yet begun to live through repentance. It is impossible for a person to begin cleansing himself in everything without having gone through this crucible. Decisive and active resistance to sin comes only from hatred of it. Hatred of sin comes only from a sense of evil from it; the sense of evil from it is experienced in all its force in this painful break within repentance. Only here does a person sense with his whole heart what a great evil sin is; afterward he will run from it as he would from the fire of Gehenna. Without this painful experience, even if he begins cleansing himself in some other way, he will be able to cleanse himself only slightly, more outwardly than inwardly, more in actions than in disposition. That is why his heart will remain unclean, like unsmelted ore.

"Such change is brought about in the human heart by divine grace. This alone can inspire a man to raise his hand to himself and bring himself to God in sacrifice. No man can come to Me, except the Father which hath sent me draw him (Jn. 6:44). God Himself gives a new heart and spirit (cf. Ez. 36:26). Man grieves for himself. Having been fused with flesh and sin, he became one with them. Only an outside, higher force can separate him and arm him against himself.

"Thus, grace produces change in the sinner, but this does not come about without free assent. In Baptism, grace is given to us at the moment the mystery is performed upon us; however, free will comes later and assimilates to itself what has been given. In repentance, then, free assent must participate in the very act of change.

"Change for the better and turning to God must seemingly be instantaneous or sudden, and so does it happen. In preparation, however, change undergoes several stages signifying the combining of freedom with grace, where grace gains mastery of the freedom and freedom is subordinated to grace. These stages are necessary for everyone. For some, the stages go by quickly, while for others, the process continues for many years. Who can keep track of everything that is going on here, especially when the ways of action of grace within us are so varied, and the conditions of people in whom they begin to act are infinite in number? It is necessary, however, to expect that, with all this variation, there is one general aspect of change that no one can escape. Every repenting man is a man who lives in sin, and every such man is recreated by grace. Therefore, it is on the basis of an understanding of the sinner's condition in general, and the basis of the relationship of freedom with grace that we are able to depict this process and characterize it through principles."

And he goes on quite a bit more on all this, very good book.

 
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Constantine the Sinner

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That may be, but again, I am telling you what happened to me. You were not there. And to be honest, I don't know and don't care how many Greeks are at a Greek Fest.
I'll tell you what I do care about: you making accusations that there are Orthodox parishes which won't let you through the door unless you're the right ethnicity. What happened to you was clearly not that.

You might have noticed we have a lot of animosity toward you: it is not because you are Catholic, I have seen Eastern Rite Catholics post on our board and they were treated in a very friendly manner. It is because you think you can make yourself a part of our Church without joining it, and then becoming indignant when we do not recognize you as a member. It is because you seem to think you are entitled to be recognized as our brother, and then come into a thread posted by someone considering joining the Church and simply tell him he might be rejected if he is not the right ethnicity. If you're any indicator of the standards of Melkite monastic tradition, I'm frankly quite glad you're not Orthodox.
 
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Constantine the Sinner

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Covenant of Works? You mean, obeying God's will? That was always expected of us, and still is, though obviously to do that we must put our own will to death with Christ. Being saved in Christ doesn't free us from the obligation to follow God's will; you are either a slave to God, or to Satan.

But there is also the law of death, the one requiring an eye-for-an-eye, the law that says man is appointed to die; it is like a prison law we fell under with the fall, being incarcerated with Satan as the warden. But through Christ we are freed from prison, and though obeying the king is still important, we no longer are subject to the rules for inmates (like circumcision and eating kosher); these sorts of works are what we understand Paul to mean when he says "works of the law". This is the law of blood sacrifice, an eye-for-an-eye, and though God made it, he does not want us to be under it, he rather wants us to be under the law of mercy (Matthew 9:13); almost an anti-law, really. This anti-law calls us to forgive everything, to never ask for money owed, to be a servant to all, to love all, to pray for those who persecute us (imagine praying for members of ISIS after they killed your family for being Christians!)
 
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Constantine the Sinner

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If you don't believe Christ and the Spirit are God Almighty, you don't belong on this forum, and you're not a Christian.

As for your crack about Bibles, we never stopped translating them and making them available to the laity. We always urged the laity to read the Bible, and if they couldn't afford one (remember, prior to the printing press books were very expensive), they were urged to at least get one Gospel or some Epistles, and if they couldn't read, to ask someone who could to read to them.
 
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Constantine the Sinner

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Propitiation and expiation are two translations of the same word, so this is going nowhere.

If you want to talk about Christ as placating God's wrath, there's really nothing wrong with that, so long as it is in an Orthodox understanding: in our understanding, God's wrath is his brilliance experienced as agony rather than happiness (think of how demons scatter before God's light), whereas God's love means his brilliance experienced as joy and bliss; the experience of God's brilliance differs based on how much you harmonize with it. We believe in God's wrath in the same way we believe in the Hand of God. That is, it's a term referring to something real, but it is totally an analogy. God, in Orthodoxy, is completely without emotion; God does not change, he is eternally the same in all places and times, and beyond all place and time. But he didn't actually have "moods" or need catharsis (that is what I meant by "venting" wrath). God changes things externally to himself; the results are sometimes understood for ease as wrathful, but God's disposition goes completely unchanged; YOU cannot do something that affects God, nothing you do can affect him; nothing can affect him. And even what we sometimes call "wrath" in terms of results, might actually lead to misunderstanding: God might do something to you that causes a lot of pain, but it's probably for your own good (Proverbs 3:12). Even death was for our own good.
 
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ladodgers6

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I am a Protestant, a Christian, a Calvinist, a Reformed. No I have encountered this confusion before. Its not new to me. Just like people caricaturing Calvinism. I also consider myself a Lutheran in some aspects. Because I love Luther, he taught me a lot.

Protestant
a member or follower of any of the Western Christian churches that are separate from the Roman Catholic Church and follow the principles of the Reformation, including the Baptist, Presbyterian, and Lutheran churches.


Okay.
 
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ladodgers6

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Thanks for your comments. I will share this with you. People have a misconception of "OMNIPOTENCE" of God. God "CANNOT" lie, die, or sin. He cannot not be God. He cannot change any of his attributes. The comment that you have quoted from my post is Biblical. Playing down a sinner condition before a Holy God; also plays down what Grace really is. Yes sinners have a free-will. But their free-will is in bondage to it. Eph. 2-3
 
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Silmarien

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I literally mean where it says "Calvinist" on the site here, under your name, right beneath the numbers and above your marital status. I didn't notice that before. I'm culturally Protestant, so familiar with the denominational breakdown.
 
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ladodgers6

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God could theoretically have simply repealed death, but this comes with several issues.

1. God warned man he would surely die with the fall. God is consistent and isn't going to flip flop on a warning like that.
Wait, something is missing here. How did man Fall? And why does EOC position does not believe in a angry God who hates sin? What's your position on sin before a Holy God?

2. Immortality without transformation is a problem. God could have let man eat from the tree of life, but he said no. This is for our own sake: if we had eaten from the tree of life in a fallen orientation, we probably would have become as demons.
In the Protestant view the Tree of Life was the reward for eternal life if the first Adam perfectly fulfill the Covenant of works (God's Holy Law) with perfect obedience. But with One Act of disobedience he received the sanction of death, and CONDEMNATION. That is why the second or Last Adam entered the Covenant of Grace with to fulfill the broken Covenant of Works for the ungodly. To make them Perfectly Righteous before God through the person and works of Christ who is OUR redemption, righteousness, and sanctification/holiness. We are clothed in Christ through Faith Alone!

But contrite is not what SAVES us! Our doing or feeling does nothing to save us. Its Christ and Him alone that saves the ungodly! The good news for sinners and believers, because even believers need to hear the Gospel everyday.

Romans 4:5 5However, to the one who does not work but trusts God who justifies the ungodly, their faith is credited as righteousness.

So I asked this question to another member of the EOC. And he did not have an answer. So I will ask you. Why did not God create man in that state in the first place?
 
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ladodgers6

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Sorry for my ignorance. Please clarify for me what is "The grace-filled Christian life"? This language sound a lot like N.T. Wright and the New Perspective on Paul. The thing I see missing again is Christ fulfilling even the sanctification part of redemption for the ungodly. In Protestantism Christ is also "OUR" sanctification/holiness which is given freely to the ungodly. God did just save us from sin, to leave us stranded halfway to fin for ourselves.


So much focus on OUR doing, instead of what God did in Christ for the ungodly!


Sorry, but people have only evil habits? We are evil to the bone! This evil people need to hear the Law that condemns evil people. Too expose their cravings of lust and evil deeds, because they seek it and LOVE the darkness and HATE the light. Not unless God saves us from this evil fallen condition first, we will not walk in holiness! Trying to do so is just foolish. Because no flesh will be justified through the works of the Law. The Law drives sinners to Christ, because that the only place we find Mercy for such evil people.

But we should not place our comfort or confidence on OUR doing. Like repentance or any evangelical obedience; but only on the Mercy and Grace of God who justifies the ungodly apart from works. Once this is done by God. Then being free from the curse of the Law that condemns sin. We can walk free in the Grace of God, and perform good works. Because of His Grace, not our doing!

This sounds a lot like Arminianism. Its all base on our Choice; though they do not have it at first?
This last part sounds a lot like Catholicism. A process of gaining more and more Grace through our works.
 
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ladodgers6

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ladodgers6

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In Protestantism the Covenant of Works was made with the first Adam with sanctions and blessings. If he broke this Covenant of Works he would die and be condemned. If he were to fulfill this Covenant of Works. He would earn the Tree of Life and live forever. But when Adam broke that Covenant of Works, he bought death and condemnation on us all. That's why the second Adam (Christ) came into the world to fulfill not abolish the Law of God for US/the ungodly. This is the good news. Not that we have to DO this or that. Because no one of us can do it! And why Christ died to pay the penalty of the broken Covenant of works, so that we can receive the righteousness of God and live forever with Him. This is the Gospel that Paul preached; a crucified Christ!


Yes believers must perform good deeds. But they perform them because they are already saved! Christ has done everything for us. Christ's final words on the Cross to God, "IT IS FINISHED". The Last fulfilled what He came to do, that the first Adam failed to do.

I forgot the Methodist preacher I was reading about. Anyway, he was sharing a story of a man who killed his son. After struggling and wrestling with it. He prayed to God to help him understand it. After reading the Gospel in the Bible, he forgive him for killing his son. And had this convicted killer come to live with him in his home. A couple of years past and this killer was converted and married, this Methodist's daughter. And this Methodist married them in his church. When I read that it melted my heart, because there is enough evil in this world. To be honest I don't know if I could do that. Being honest here.
 
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ladodgers6

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So God in your theology does not punish the wicked? Not using analogy here. God hates sin. And has condemn the ungodly for it. Look at the flood for example?
 
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