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Ask an Eastern Orthodox Christian: Is the Eastern Orthodox Church a very conservative church?

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What would you like to know about the Eastern Orthodox Christian faith? Submit your question.

By Nick Damascus

Is the Eastern Orthodox Church a very conservative church?

If churches change their beliefs, doctrines, and traditions then are they considered liberal churches? Are these churches adjusting and reconstructing their beliefs giving way to the demands of their societal norms?

The Center for the Study of Global Christianity at Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary as of 2012 estimated that there are 43,000 organized Christian denominations (mostly western churches).   It would seem that many western Christian churches are constantly evolving, changing, or adapting to the needs and diversity of cultural lifestyles.

If conservative means that the Eastern Orthodox Church has adhered to the original teachings, practices, and Holy Traditions of Christ and the Apostles without addition, subtraction, or alteration of that faith, from the beginning of Christianity for 2000 years, then yes the Eastern Orthodox Church is a conservative Church.

One might say that the focus or central theme in Eastern and Western churches differ. It is difficult to understand the centerpiece or theme of Western Christianity because of its diversity; however, it often appears to be primarily focused in the justification of one’s salvation and ignoring or taking a passive role in sanctification.

In Eastern Christianity, the focus is on the “transformation” of the “person” through a process known as theosis. In conjunction with the sacramental life of the Church, this process which is similar to deification changes a person from within to become, by God’s grace and mercy, what God is by nature.

God became man so that man can become God-like. The path of becoming a Christian is always a work in progress, never perfect, but struggling to be so.   As it is written in the scriptures, Christ has this expectation for us.

1 Peter 1:16 …. “because it is written, “Be holy, for I Am Holy.”

Numbers 15:40 …. and that you may remember and do all My commandments, and be holy for your God.

Galatians 5:14 …. For all the law is fulfilled in one word, even in this: “You shall love your neighbor as yourself” (also quoted in six other scriptural passages).

1 John 3:10 …. In this the children of God and the children of the devil are manifest: Whoever does not practice righteousness is not of God, nor is he who does not love his brother.

In conclusion and holding to the conservative traditions, dogma, and beliefs of the Eastern Orthodox Church one can understand the general theme of our Christian theology in the following three statements.

  1. God is Love as stated in

1 John 4:8 “He who does not love does not know God, for God is love.”

  1. Man is created in God’s image and likeness.

Gen 1:26 “Then God said, “Let Us make man in Our image [love], according to Our likeness [holiness].”

  1. Therefore, since we are created in His image and likeness, man is also love which might be best described as an action of giving of oneself to another.

As Eastern Orthodox Christians our focus, as commanded by God, is to transform from our “prison of self-centeredness” into “a community of love” and grow in the struggle of righteousness to attain holiness. In this conservative yet challenging approach, man can only become fully human in a community of love and by doing so defining his personness.

Nicholas Damascus
Nicholas Damascus
As an infant, I was baptized as an Eastern Orthodox Christian. However, I would say that becoming a Christian is a work in progress, and I often wonder would there be enough evidence to convict me of becoming a Christian. The Orthodox Church is the ancient Church that Christ and the Apostles established. It is not a religion but rather a way of life. It is not about rules and regulations but rather guide posts to make choices to transition to what we were designed to become. Becoming Orthodox is not a conversion but more so a transformation of self. It’s not about being right: it is about “right being.” In John 14:6, Christ says I am the Way (to love and serve one another), the Truth (there is only one reality), and the Life (that life source is love). I invite you to submit any topics or questions to “Ask An Eastern Orthodox Christian” on the website. Join me in finding our way back home to the original teachings of the Church. When you change the way you look at things, things change the way they look.

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