MKJ
Contributor
It is doable, but should it be a requirement for being entered into the clergy of the Church?
You must examine the reason that this requirement was made. In the time of the Great Councils, there were many places where there were no scrolls or written scriptures. Sometimes the only "Bible" the Church had was the Priest or Bishop. As the Psalms were and are an integral part of the Orthodox services, knowledge of the Psalms was necessary to the office of the Bishop and Priest.
In today's world, a person can print the entire service onto paper for less than a candy bar. As you can tell, there is not as much need to devote time to memorization of the psalter as there is to, for instance, outreach and intercultural studies. Time that used to be devoted to repetitiously reciting the psalms can be devoted to learning how to best reach the community to which you are being sent. We can devote that time to developing methods to reach new groups of people, like the OCF's new outreach to the Deaf Community at Gallaudet University. We can have our bishops and priests in training obtain practical hands-on training by arranging missions trips.
Instead of learning what to shepherd our flock into, our clergy can learn HOW to shepherd the flock properly, and how to seek the lost sheep.
The Church never changes, but her methods, her actions toward the outside world, those change. Every day, we slowly work toward being better at reaching our community. We, as the people (not the Church), become better at reflecting the peace God gives.
The Church must be stable, unmoving, and strong in doctrine. But it is also called to be dynamic, adaptive, and proactive in outreach. It is truly a Church of and by God, but FOR the people. It is a hospital, a safehouse, a bank, and many other things as the needs of the people change in the ages. But it is timeless in its services.
I am not disagreeing at all. Some kinds of rules are intended for particular circumstances, and some are meant to be general.
Upvote
0