Z
Zhenia
Guest
I don’t know the reason why ROCOR alone amongst the Orthodox jurisdictions will rebaptize Roman Catholics. I do know that until 2007 they were not in communion with the other Orthodox jurisdictions, so perhaps (I don’t know this for sure) they had to be allowed to continue holding that view as one of the terms for going back into communion?It is definitely an important issue. After all, the Orthodox, like Catholics, believe that baptism is the means through which a person is born again. And being born again is essential for salvation. If a person is not validly baptized, then he is not born again and his salvation is in jeopardy. So this is definitely an important issue.
Yes, this is what I am referring to. Why this difference? Either baptism by pouring is valid or it is not valid. So either the ROCOR have maintained the true apostolic traditions, or they are in error because they rebaptize. But one of the strong claims made by the Orthodox is that they are in line with tradition. Then why this difference?
And then, if I may add, which Orthodox church has maintained the true apostolic traditions and how do we decide that?
One thing that non-Orthodox often fail to understand (and I also did not understand this for a long time) is that all Orthodox jurisdictions which are in communion with each other hold the same doctrines and beliefs. The only real difference is that many are ethnically-based and have different CUSTOMS peculiar to their ethnicities.
For example, Russian Orthodox churches always require women to cover their heads. Greeks, not really. Greeks tend to do a combination of sitting and standing during their services, whereas the Russians almost always stand for the entire service. These are cultural differences, not doctrinal ones.