Christian Forums

This is a sample guest message. Register a free account today to become a member! Once signed in, you'll be able to participate on this site by adding your own topics and posts, as well as connect with other members through your own private inbox!

Orthodox Christianity

Jennifer Rogers

Supporter
Perhaps somewhere, you have heard of the word orthodox Christianity. So do you have a good understanding of orthodox Christianity? If not, please join me to learn about this topic.


What is Orthodox Christianity? It is the faith life of the Orthodox Church, inseparable from that concrete, historic community and constituting its entire way of life. The orthodox Christian faith is the faith “once passed on to the saints” (Jude 3), handed down to the apostles by Jesus Christ, and then handed down from generation to generation another system in the Church, not adding or subtracting anything. fruits of the spirit wall art
The purpose of Orthodox Christianity is the salvation of each person, uniting us with Christ in the church, transforming us into holiness, and giving us eternal life. This is the Good News, the good news, that Jesus is the Messiah, He rose from the dead, and as a result, we can be saved.
Historically, the presence of what is now known as Orthodox Christianity in the Slavic regions of Eastern Europe dates back to the 9th century, when, according to church tradition, missionaries from the capital of The Byzantine Empire in Constantinople (now Istanbul, Turkey) spread the faith deeper into Europe. Orthodoxy first came to Bulgaria, Serbia, and Moravia (today part of the Czech Republic), and then, starting in the 10th century, to Russia. After the Schism between the Eastern (Orthodox) and Western (Catholic) churches in 1054, traditionalist activity expanded throughout the Russian Empire from 1300 to 1800.
While Orthodoxy spread across Eurasia, Protestant and Catholic missionaries from Western Europe traveled abroad, across the Mediterranean and the Atlantic Ocean. The Portuguese, Spanish, Dutch, and British empires, among others, brought Western Christianity (Catholics and Protestants) to sub-Saharan Africa, East Asia, and the Americas - the region that in the 20th century had a much faster population growth rate than Europe. In general, Orthodox missionary activity outside of Eurasia has received less attention, although the main synagogue churches have achieved some conversions in places as far away as India, Japan, East Asia, and the United States. Africa and North America.
Today, the largest Orthodox Christian population outside of eastern Europe is in Ethiopia. The centuries-old Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church has about 36 million adherents, nearly 14% of the world's total Orthodox population. Its orthodox outlook has grown much faster than that of Europe over the past 100 years. And, second, Ethiopian Orthodox Christians have more religious views, by some conventional measures, than Orthodox Christians in Europe. This is consistent with a broader pattern, in which Europeans are on average less religiously committed than those in Latin America and sub-Saharan Africa, according to Pew Research Center surveys. This is true not only of Christians in Europe but also of Muslims in Europe, who are less religious in general than Muslims in other parts of the world).
 
Perhaps somewhere, you have heard of the word orthodox Christianity. So do you have a good understanding of orthodox Christianity? If not, please join me to learn about this topic.


What is Orthodox Christianity? It is the faith life of the Orthodox Church, inseparable from that concrete, historic community and constituting its entire way of life. The orthodox Christian faith is the faith “once passed on to the saints” (Jude 3), handed down to the apostles by Jesus Christ, and then handed down from generation to generation another system in the Church, not adding or subtracting anything. fruits of the spirit wall art
The purpose of Orthodox Christianity is the salvation of each person, uniting us with Christ in the church, transforming us into holiness, and giving us eternal life. This is the Good News, the good news, that Jesus is the Messiah, He rose from the dead, and as a result, we can be saved.
Historically, the presence of what is now known as Orthodox Christianity in the Slavic regions of Eastern Europe dates back to the 9th century, when, according to church tradition, missionaries from the capital of The Byzantine Empire in Constantinople (now Istanbul, Turkey) spread the faith deeper into Europe. Orthodoxy first came to Bulgaria, Serbia, and Moravia (today part of the Czech Republic), and then, starting in the 10th century, to Russia. After the Schism between the Eastern (Orthodox) and Western (Catholic) churches in 1054, traditionalist activity expanded throughout the Russian Empire from 1300 to 1800.
While Orthodoxy spread across Eurasia, Protestant and Catholic missionaries from Western Europe traveled abroad, across the Mediterranean and the Atlantic Ocean. The Portuguese, Spanish, Dutch, and British empires, among others, brought Western Christianity (Catholics and Protestants) to sub-Saharan Africa, East Asia, and the Americas - the region that in the 20th century had a much faster population growth rate than Europe. In general, Orthodox missionary activity outside of Eurasia has received less attention, although the main synagogue churches have achieved some conversions in places as far away as India, Japan, East Asia, and the United States. Africa and North America.
Today, the largest Orthodox Christian population outside of eastern Europe is in Ethiopia. The centuries-old Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church has about 36 million adherents, nearly 14% of the world's total Orthodox population. Its orthodox outlook has grown much faster than that of Europe over the past 100 years. And, second, Ethiopian Orthodox Christians have more religious views, by some conventional measures, than Orthodox Christians in Europe. This is consistent with a broader pattern, in which Europeans are on average less religiously committed than those in Latin America and sub-Saharan Africa, according to Pew Research Center surveys. This is true not only of Christians in Europe but also of Muslims in Europe, who are less religious in general than Muslims in other parts of the world).
Excellent article. Most Christians don't know the council of Nicea were mainly Orthodox (Byzantine) Catholics who decided the Holy Trinity. Although I consider myself Eastern Orthodox, as a Iconoclast no one else would agree. I look forward to robust discussion under this heading. The Filioque in particular, the Orthodox are right! Peace. Don't hold my iconoclasm against me. Your icons are safe, I disagree with them intellectually, not physically.
 
A question, do you think the Trinity is biblical?
Yes. The concept is woven into the fabric of scripture, where three Persons act as God, and there is only One God.

Its also implied by Christ, the "Name" (which expresses the essence of the thing named) is singular, because God is One Infinite Ocean of essence; but three Divine Persons are named:

"Go therefore and make disciples of all the nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, (Matt. 28:19 NKJ)

Moreover, I believe the "Johannine Comma" is authentic scripture:

For there are three that bear witness in heaven: the Father, the Word, and the Holy Spirit; and these three are one. (1 Jn. 5:7 NKJ)

Athanasius was the Great Expositor of the Holy Trinity at Nicea. The bishops meeting in Nicea didn't invent the concept, it was universally believed and passed on to them from the days of Christ by the apostles. But the rise of Arius and new ideas about God compelled the Church establish the doctrine.

It is admittedly hard to fathom God One in essence, but Three as to Persons.

But then again, God is infinite, so everything about Him is "hard to fathom" for limited creatures.
 
Back
Top