If you think truth attracts I urge you to look at the society around you. People are attracted to things that are shiny, or easy. The truth is seldom one of these things.
Amen. Christ’s message of taking up our crosses and following Him, the examples of the saints, monks, and martyrs who have died to the world in order to rise with Him…these things will never be attractive to the world at large, but it’s not for lack of inviting people to embrace them anyway. We are to take off the old man and put on the new and superior one (to quote a
Coptic hymn), and invite all others to do the same. But it is easier to not do that, of course. I don’t see how that indicts or exonerates any particular communion, since that resistance to change is found everywhere.
How can you “make disciples of all nations” without some numerical success?
A more appropriate question as concerns the Orthodox Church specifically would be how you’re supposed to measure ‘numerical success’ under harsh conditions like aggressive atheistic communism and Islamism. I’m not Byzantine, and I’m new to this whole Orthodoxy thing, but literally everyone at my little Coptic church knows at least one person back home in Egypt who converted from Islam to Christianity. They don’t talk about it openly, for obvious reasons, but they have mentioned it as a source of secret joy for the Church at large. I could tell some stories that would blow your mind if that were any way of making a point, but it’s not. There are also Catholics in many of these countries who are even smaller in official numbers…does that mean that the Catholic Church is somehow less true in, say, Albania or Egypt than it is in Italy or Poland?
Numerical success is not, strictly speaking, the goal. Spiritual success (read: Theosis) is. If we are 40 believers in one place (as we are here in ABQ) but 400 in another, it is the same; because the faith is the same, and the faith – not the number – is what matters.
If “all nations” (meaning lots of people in lots of countries) become disciples, then wouldn’t large “numbers” be evidence of their conversion?
I wouldn’t think so. As I recall, Mass attendance is pretty lousy these days in most of formerly Catholic Europe (and I don’t mean those countries that came under the sway of the Protestant reformation in the 16th century, I mean countries that were solidly,
actively Catholic as recently as 80-100 years ago, like Ireland and Italy). In many places in Eastern Europe, while the vast majority of people may be baptized Eastern Orthodox, their attention is also elsewhere. There are cultural but essentially not practicing Catholics/Orthodox everywhere, which makes using numbers as evidence of conversion very unwise. You can be baptized and not become a disciple, and that’s as true in Spain or Mexico or wherever as it is in Russia, Greece, Armenia, or anywhere else.