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Since the early years of
the last century, the Orthodox Church has been actively engaged in
dialogue with other Christians. Orthodox Christians believe that the
purpose of conversation with other Christians is twofold: First, to
identify differences in teaching and worship among those who claim Christ
as Lord and Savior, to clarify disagreements and work to overcome, if
possible, all errors and divisions; and second, to cooperate in doing good
works where such cooperation for the good of humanity – such as feeding
the hungry, aiding the poor, settling refugees, etc. – is possible and
desirable.
In doing this, Orthodox
Christians are following the example of their Lord and Savior, Jesus
Christ, who conversed with the Samaritan woman at the well (known in our
tradition as St. Photini) and even drank water from the cup she offered
Him, contrary to all Jewish law and practice of His time, because
Samaritans were:
1.) heretics who did not
worship at the Temple in Jerusalem but had set up their own Temple in
Samaria; and
2.) not a part of the
chosen people but an ethnically different stock than the people of Israel.
Heretic and sinner that
she was in the eyes of the Judaism of her time, we believe that her
encounter with Christ Jesus led her to holiness and eternal life. Orthodox
Christians must act as did our Lord Jesus, being willing to speak with
anyone, knowing that the Holy Spirit may use even our poor witness to His
glory. In doing so, we follow not only the example of our Lord but the
witness of canonized saints such as Philaret of Moscow, Tikhon of Moscow,
Nicholas of Zica and Nicholas of Japan.
An excellent introduction
to the challenges and opportunities presented by the participation of
Orthodox Christians in the ecumenical movement over the last century is:
The
Challenges and Potential of Orthodox Participation in Ecumenical Dialogue
This is an article
written by Paraskevè (Eve) Tibbs a parishioner here at St. Paul's and a
professor at Fuller Seminary in Pasadena, CA who also serves as a lay
representative of the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America to the
National Council of Churches, based in New York.
Another excellent
resource is the collection of numerous articles on Orthodox participation
in the Ecumenical Movement – and the internal debate within Orthodoxy as
to the value of such participation – is found at the website of the
Orthodox Peace Fellowship and is entitled:
Orthodoxy
and Ecumenism
This resource, compiled by Peter Bouteneff, a
professor at St. Vladimir's Seminary in New York and Jim Forest, a
well-known writer and lecturer, contains the texts of foundational
ecumenical documents such as the 1920 Encyclical of the Ecumenical
Patriarchate addressed "To the Churches of Christ everywhere" as
well as articles by leading Orthodox theologians such as Fathers John
Meyendorff and Thomas Hopko, both of whom have served as deans of St.
Vladimir’s Orthodox Seminary in New York.
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