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lax16
Guest
RyanBlack - I agree that it would seem unlikely that an Orthodox priest would counsel a couple in this manner, but that is what the wife has said to me.It seems unlikely to me that an Orthodox priest would counsel a couple that they are not required to attend Sunday DL on a regular basis due to a busy work schedule, but if that busy work schedule actually requires them to work on Sundays (especially in a job that is essential, like working in a hospital, or as a police officer, firemen, etc.), then I suspect the priest would counsel them that they are not sinning by failing to attend DL on those Sundays when they work. As far as official church teaching, the Orthodox don’t really have the idea of days of obligation like Catholics do, but one should not fail to attend DL simply because you’d rather not go, or for trivial reasons.
As far as the question about having children and how you regulate births, I suspect you would get a range of answers. First of all, there is no Orthodox equivalent to Humanae Vitae that provides answers for the entire Church. Traditionally, the Orthodox have frowned upon contraception, and even today, any use of contraception is generally viewed as less than ideal, and permission to contracept is a matter of accommodating human weakness and frailty–an exercise of oikonomia. It is my understanding that many Orthodox clergy condemn the use of oral contraceptives due to their potential to be abortifacient, and will counsel couples to use forms of birth control that are not abortifacient.
No, they do not work on Sunday, but put in a very full Monday-Saturday with work and children’s activities.
She told me that their priest said it was fine to limit their family to their two children.
The reason I ask - it seems to me that everyone that goes to church is following the guidance of someone. In other words, all church-goers do have a “pope” who is teaching them what to do and think.
We have a friend who left the Catholic Church and now attends a very small evangelical church in town. The pastor is giving him marital advice, biblical interpretations (that just happen to be anti-Catholic
I don’t see how anyone can get away from the idea of following a person that they believe is teaching or guiding them infallibly. Our Orthodox friends are very strong and clear that their priest is right. How is that different then the Pope?