F
frjohnmorris
Guest
Everything else is not open. There are definite boundaries between Orthodox teaching and heresy. The doctrine of the Eastern Orthodox Church is very clearly defined. You cannot support abortion and be a faithful Orthodox Christian, for example. Actually, Eastern Orthodox are much stricter than Latin Rite Catholics on most issues. When I was growing up they always served fish in the school cafeteria for the Catholics. Now Catholics do not fast on Friday, except during Lent. Orthodox fast not only on Friday, but also on Wednesday and during the entire Lenten period. We do not just have only one Lent. We have the Lent of the Nativity of Christ (Advent) beginning on November 15, Great Lent before Pascha, Lent of the Apostles Peter and Paul, the length of which depends on the date of Pascha, since the feast of Sts. Peter and Paul is a fixed feast on June 29 and we do not fast during the Pascal season. Finally, we have Lent of the Theotokos during the fist two weeks of August.Then again, maybe it is simply that the Orthodox have an official position on the essential things, and then leave everything else open. So as Augustine said, unity in essentials, freedom in the non essentials, in all things charity.
We also fast after midnight before we receive Holy Communion at a morning Liturgy, or after Lunch if we receive Holy Communion at an Evening Divine Liturgy.
However, the fasting rules do not apply if one has a medical problem that requires them to eat certain foods. I cannot fast strictly because I am under doctor’s orders not to give up meat because I have severe hypoglycemia. I cannot fast before Communion or I will have serious low blood sugar problems.
On most moral issues we agree with the Catholic Church. The only exception is over conception control. Most Orthodox authorities do not consider the use of non-abortive methods of birth control sinful when used rightfully within marriage. We agree on abortion, but would not expect a woman to die if an abortion is necessary to save her life. Sometimes there are no good choices.
Fr. John