Eastern Orthodox: Do your children attend religious education?

  • Thread starter Thread starter lax16
  • Start date Start date
Status
Not open for further replies.
The Copts are much more strict than the EO, it seems. Not only can we not marry non-Christians, but we’re also not supposed to marry outside of the (OO) communion, either, with the exception of within Alexandria itself (where the rules are different because there are so many Coptic/Greek couples). I don’t think it’s like that in every church, though. I’ve heard that the Armenians are more lax than we are.

I’m hoping that this becomes less and less an obstacle as the Church grows in the West. Maybe then we can also finally lose this idea of everywhere outside of Egypt (or wherever the old country is) being the “disapora”. Diaspora? Some of us have never been anywhere else. 😉
 
The Copts are much more strict than the EO, it seems. Not only can we not marry non-Christians, but we’re also not supposed to marry outside of the (OO) communion, either, with the exception of within Alexandria itself (where the rules are different because there are so many Coptic/Greek couples). I don’t think it’s like that in every church, though. I’ve heard that the Armenians are more lax than we are.

I’m hoping that this becomes less and less an obstacle as the Church grows in the West. Maybe then we can also finally lose this idea of everywhere outside of Egypt (or wherever the old country is) being the “disapora”. Diaspora? Some of us have never been anywhere else. 😉
Well yeah, ideally you’re marrying Orthodox, and there’s a lot of…I don’t want to say pressure, but maybe expectation? I routinely hear parents telling their kids “marry Orthodox.” Orthodoxy is just so difficult with a non-Orthodox, I don’t know how anybody could do it, honestly. Even with a Roman Catholic, it’d be near-nigh impossible.

And oh man, the diaspora! The diaspora! :rotfl: It does sort of take one back when you’re referred to as part of the “diaspora” by a bishop from the “old country” and you’re not of that ethnicity. “No, Master, not everyone here is part of this 'diaspora.” To be fair this is more an issue in some jurisdictions, and understandably when you look at what their old country is - we can see, for example, why the idea of the ‘diaspora’ is so big in the Greek Communion. Same with the Copts. Still, I too would like people be more realistic; this isn’t a diaspora.
 
My Orthodox parish puts much emphasis on catechesis for both adults and children.

On most Sundays elementary school aged students and high school aged students are instructed in separate classrooms after the conclusion of the Divine Liturgy.

Adult catechumens meet for a one hour sessions on both Saturday and Sunday.

Our regular parish catechetical school meets on Wednesday evening. All ages are welcome. Attendance is not mandatory. Standing room only.

Our parish has plans for a weekday preschool as well as a elementary school.

'Sakya.
 
Well, yes and no. Yes because in America there are very few other Orthodox, so we practically have to date outside The Faith. I think I know of one couple where after marriage he remained Roman Catholic and she remained Orthodox. Other than that the spouse has always converted or eventually asked for a divorce (not just because of The Church, obviously). The “flirt and convert!” strategy is alive and well in Orthodoxy.

The end result is almost everyone in my parish, if married, is married to another Orthodox, and the same for the other parish in town.

Those who aren’t married to an Orthodox are, however, married to a Christian. There is no amount of ekonomia that can extend to allowing an Orthodox Christian to marry a non-Christian. It’s not done. No dispensation or anything. Can’t take place in The Church and if you leave to get married elsewhere you’ve done just that - left.
Hi Rawb - Do Orthodox mix when dating/marrying? (For example, Greek and Lebanese).

How many Orthodox live in the U.S. and does that include all of the different groups?

thanks!
 
The Copts are much more strict than the EO, it seems. Not only can we not marry non-Christians, but we’re also not supposed to marry outside of the (OO) communion, either, with the exception of within Alexandria itself (where the rules are different because there are so many Coptic/Greek couples). I don’t think it’s like that in every church, though. I’ve heard that the Armenians are more lax than we are.

I’m hoping that this becomes less and less an obstacle as the Church grows in the West. Maybe then we can also finally lose this idea of everywhere outside of Egypt (or wherever the old country is) being the “disapora”. Diaspora? Some of us have never been anywhere else. 😉
dzheremi - It’s really neat to hear how “old” the Orthodox customs are! Please explain diaspora.

thanks!
 
Well yeah, ideally you’re marrying Orthodox, and there’s a lot of…I don’t want to say pressure, but maybe expectation? I routinely hear parents telling their kids “marry Orthodox.” Orthodoxy is just so difficult with a non-Orthodox, I don’t know how anybody could do it, honestly. Even with a Roman Catholic, it’d be near-nigh impossible.
Which part is difficult? Is it the many fasts and customs?
And oh man, the diaspora! The diaspora! :rotfl: It does sort of take one back when you’re referred to as part of the “diaspora” by a bishop from the “old country” and you’re not of that ethnicity. “No, Master, not everyone here is part of this 'diaspora.” To be fair this is more an issue in some jurisdictions, and understandably when you look at what their old country is - we can see, for example, why the idea of the ‘diaspora’ is so big in the Greek Communion. Same with the Copts. Still, I too would like people be more realistic; this isn’t a diaspora.
Again I ask…diaspora?😃
 
My Orthodox parish puts much emphasis on catechesis for both adults and children.

On most Sundays elementary school aged students and high school aged students are instructed in separate classrooms after the conclusion of the Divine Liturgy.

Adult catechumens meet for a one hour sessions on both Saturday and Sunday.

Our regular parish catechetical school meets on Wednesday evening. All ages are welcome. Attendance is not mandatory. Standing room only.

Our parish has plans for a weekday preschool as well as a elementary school.

'Sakya.
Kirovsakya - How wonderful to hear there is standing room only! And plans for a school!

Where do you live?
 
dzheremi - It’s really neat to hear how “old” the Orthodox customs are! Please explain diaspora.

thanks!
A diaspora is the migration or dispersion of people away from their ancient, established homeland. Applied to churches, it takes the form of considering everyone who is outside of that homeland (i.e., the place where the church was established) as forming a kind of “diaspora” – the Coptic diaspora, the Greek diaspora, the Maronite diaspora, the Chaldean diaspora, etc. It is funny and frustrating for the reason that Rawb explained: To some people (including bishops; I have read more than one letter or book by a Coptic bishop addressed to the children of the Church “in the diaspora”), everyone who is a member of the Church outside of its ancestral homeland(s) is a member of this “diaspora”, even if you’re a convert who is not ethnically or culturally related to the dominant group in their particular church (e.g., Russians, Greeks, Lebanese, Syrians, whatever). Somehow I’m a member of the “Coptic diaspora”, even though I’m not Coptic (ethnically/culturally), and I’ve never been to Egypt. Usually you have to have come from some place else at some point as part of a massive migration to be considered part of a diaspora. 🙂
 
The Copts are much more strict than the EO, it seems. Not only can we not marry non-Christians, but we’re also not supposed to marry outside of the (OO) communion, either, with the exception of within Alexandria itself (where the rules are different because there are so many Coptic/Greek couples). I don’t think it’s like that in every church, though. I’ve heard that the Armenians are more lax than we are.

I’m hoping that this becomes less and less an obstacle as the Church grows in the West. Maybe then we can also finally lose this idea of everywhere outside of Egypt (or wherever the old country is) being the “disapora”. Diaspora? Some of us have never been anywhere else. 😉
Yep, Armenians can marry Orthodox, Catholic, or some mainstream Christians.
 
Which part is difficult? Is it the many fasts and customs?
I would think the difficulty would be obvious. It is much easier to live out one’s faith, whatever that faith may be, if the family prays and worships together.
 
They should be brought up orthodox, baptised and being taught in the faith and prepared.
 
Hi Rawb - Do Orthodox mix when dating/marrying? (For example, Greek and Lebanese).
Oh yeah, that’s not a big deal at all (except maybe for some staunch immigrant babushki). I know a Greek priest who has told his kids “I don’t care if they’re Greek, but they better be Orthodox.”

In Orthodoxy one is not a “Greek Orthodox” or “Russian Orthodox” officially. In colloquial terms someone may call themselves such, but it has no ecclesiastical meaning. Thus a person can attend a Russian Orthodox parish one week, a Greek the next, a Serbian the next and round off the month with an Antiochian, receiving Communion in them all and just letting the priest know beforehand that he’s Orthodox. This would be discouraged, of course, because it doesn’t allow the proper development of relationships so necessary for good Orthodoxy.

So marriage between a Greek and a Russian wouldn’t be considered ‘intermarriage.’ Both are Orthodox, it’s One Church - The Orthodox Church.
How many Orthodox live in the U.S. and does that include all of the different groups?
Um…tough to answer. When compiling the census data a lot of people combine Eastern and Oriental Orthodox, and those are two different Churches. So how many there are total…I honestly don’t know. We’re clustered in some areas - San Francisco has a lot, as does Nevada, some upper midwest and Texas. We’re not huge though, I know that.
Which part is difficult? Is it the many fasts and customs?
Imagine you marry an Orthodox (girl? Sorry I didn’t check your gender). So imagine you marry an Orthodox girl. Devout Orthodox. The wedding has to take place in her Orthodox parish. The best man or maid of honor (preferably the best man) has to be Orthodox. Your children have to be raised Orthodox. They’ll be baptized Orthodox, Chrismated Orthodox, and only receive Holy Communion in Orthodoxy. Their Godparents will be Orthodox only. Wouldn’t you feel your church is brushed aside?

Your wife will only attend the Divine Liturgy at her Orthodox parish, where you can’t receive Communion. She complains your church is too legalistic, and finds ample support from her priest and parish community. She may disdain statues and have one wall of your home covered in Icons. You don’t know she’s secretly annoyed that you don’t lead the family chanting in Evening prayer every night. You can probably live with not eating meat or dairy every Wednesday and Friday.

It gets better. Great Lent arrives. You’re surprised to find one Monday morning that all the meat, dairy, red wine, oil, eggs, and fish have disappeared from your home. You discover just how many ways there are to eat lentils, and when Sunday comes around you discover nope - no break, we fast on Sunday too (if you’re lucky you can have oil!). On Wednesday you come home from work to find her bundling the up the kids for Church. You hadn’t heard about Pre-Sanctified Liturgies before. Liturgies on Sunday are suddenly longer and people are getting down on their hands and knees “like Muslims.” Exhausted one night you reach over to embrace your wife in bed and get rebuffed - no sexual relations for all of Great Lent, or any of the fasting periods or the night before Church? On many years your Easter will be ignored by your wife as she’s still in Great Lent, and come Holy Week your family will be trucked down to the temple for upwards of 13 services, all lasting hours.

And that’s just touching on it. Your kids don’t spend time learning the Hail Mary because they don’t know anybody who prays it - they know “It is truly meet and right…” and only call her “Theotokos.” The Sacred Heart is forbidden in your own home. Your wife wears her wedding ring on her right hand. Your family doesn’t pray the rosary together. They don’t go to Mass together. Your kids never have a “First Communion” or Confirmation day. Your wife drinks holy water. No Advent Wreath, no May Crowning, no Fatima or Lourdes for your kids. You get to Epiphany to discover it’s called Theophany and is all about Christ’s baptism, not the Magi. The pope is looked at as suspicious, heretical, and dangerous by your wife and her friends.

Now I was trying to be kind of funny here, and some of those would only be true for a very devout Orthodox woman (the kind who probably wouldn’t marry outside The Faith anyway) but it just highlights differences, and honestly, a lot of those differences are going to come up. There’s not that far of a difference between our ‘hugely devout’ and our ‘regular attendees’ when it comes to expectations about The Church. Where to go to church, which church the kids are baptized in, how Feasts are celebrated, attitudes towards the prayers of the other church, etc etc.

Honestly, your home should be the one place in your life where you faith isn’t challenged. Don’t borrow problems by marrying someone outside your church.
 
Oh yeah, that’s not a big deal at all (except maybe for some staunch immigrant babushki). I know a Greek priest who has told his kids “I don’t care if they’re Greek, but they better be Orthodox.”
Things may have changed for the Greeks a little. The few Greek families we knew would not allow the children to marry anyone but a Greek. Maybe there are not enough to marry so it makes sense to focus on the faith instead of ethnic background.
In Orthodoxy one is not a “Greek Orthodox” or “Russian Orthodox” officially. In colloquial terms someone may call themselves such, but it has no ecclesiastical meaning. Thus a person can attend a Russian Orthodox parish one week, a Greek the next, a Serbian the next and round off the month with an Antiochian, receiving Communion in them all and just letting the priest know beforehand that he’s Orthodox. This would be discouraged, of course, because it doesn’t allow the proper development of relationships so necessary for good Orthodoxy.
Thanks for explaining that.
So marriage between a Greek and a Russian wouldn’t be considered ‘intermarriage.’ Both are Orthodox, it’s One Church - The Orthodox Church.
Okay, makes sense.
Um…tough to answer. When compiling the census data a lot of people combine Eastern and Oriental Orthodox, and those are two different Churches. So how many there are total…I honestly don’t know. We’re clustered in some areas - San Francisco has a lot, as does Nevada, some upper midwest and Texas. We’re not huge though, I know that.
I think here in Utah there are mainly Greek Orthodox. Is the Orthodox community large in other countries then? I would assume so in Russia, Egypt…
Imagine you marry an Orthodox (girl? Sorry I didn’t check your gender). So imagine you marry an Orthodox girl. Devout Orthodox. The wedding has to take place in her Orthodox parish. The best man or maid of honor (preferably the best man) has to be Orthodox. Your children have to be raised Orthodox. They’ll be baptized Orthodox, Chrismated Orthodox, and only receive Holy Communion in Orthodoxy. Their Godparents will be Orthodox only. Wouldn’t you feel your church is brushed aside?
Your wife will only attend the Divine Liturgy at her Orthodox parish, where you can’t receive Communion. She complains your church is too legalistic, and finds ample support from her priest and parish community. She may disdain statues and have one wall of your home covered in Icons. You don’t know she’s secretly annoyed that you don’t lead the family chanting in Evening prayer every night. You can probably live with not eating meat or dairy every Wednesday and Friday.
So that’s why our Orthodox friends always gave our children icons as presents!
It gets better. Great Lent arrives. You’re surprised to find one Monday morning that all the meat, dairy, red wine, oil, eggs, and fish have disappeared from your home. You discover just how many ways there are to eat lentils, and when Sunday comes around you discover nope - no break, we fast on Sunday too (if you’re lucky you can have oil!). On Wednesday you come home from work to find her bundling the up the kids for Church. You hadn’t heard about Pre-Sanctified Liturgies before. Liturgies on Sunday are suddenly longer and people are getting down on their hands and knees “like Muslims.” Exhausted one night you reach over to embrace your wife in bed and get rebuffed - no sexual relations for all of Great Lent, or any of the fasting periods or the night before Church? On many years your Easter will be ignored by your wife as she’s still in Great Lent, and come Holy Week your family will be trucked down to the temple for upwards of 13 services, all lasting hours.
I had heard that the Orthodox Lent was more strict than the Catholic Lent. I had no idea it was this different!
And that’s just touching on it. Your kids don’t spend time learning the Hail Mary because they don’t know anybody who prays it - they know “It is truly meet and right…” and only call her “Theotokos.” The Sacred Heart is forbidden in your own home. Your wife wears her wedding ring on her right hand. Your family doesn’t pray the rosary together. They don’t go to Mass together. Your kids never have a “First Communion” or Confirmation day. Your wife drinks holy water. No Advent Wreath, no May Crowning, no Fatima or Lourdes for your kids. You get to Epiphany to discover it’s called Theophany and is all about Christ’s baptism, not the Magi. The pope is looked at as suspicious, heretical, and dangerous by your wife and her friends.
Why would the image of the Sacred Heart be forbidden?
So that’s why our friends made “snarky” comments about the Pope! 😛
Now I was trying to be kind of funny here, and some of those would only be true for a very devout Orthodox woman (the kind who probably wouldn’t marry outside The Faith anyway) but it just highlights differences, and honestly, a lot of those differences are going to come up. There’s not that far of a difference between our ‘hugely devout’ and our ‘regular attendees’ when it comes to expectations about The Church. Where to go to church, which church the kids are baptized in, how Feasts are celebrated, attitudes towards the prayers of the other church, etc etc.
Actually, your post is hilarious and informative!
This was very helpful in understanding the day to day differences between Orthodoxy and other faiths.
Honestly, your home should be the one place in your life where you faith isn’t challenged. Don’t borrow problems by marrying someone outside your church.
Oh, so true! I married outside the faith and it has been difficult at times. Thanks be to God I am able to raise our children in the Catholic faith and our children are very devout.
 
They should be brought up orthodox, baptised and being taught in the faith and prepared.
I really admire the Orthodox for their commitment to their children and passing on the faith.

I think as Catholics, and I am also speaking for myself, we are so encouraged to mix with other people, often times there is intermarriage. This often ends up watering down the faith when it comes to the children.

I see it a lot in Utah. Many Catholics marry non-practicing Mormons.
 
A diaspora is the migration or dispersion of people away from their ancient, established homeland. Applied to churches, it takes the form of considering everyone who is outside of that homeland (i.e., the place where the church was established) as forming a kind of “diaspora” – the Coptic diaspora, the Greek diaspora, the Maronite diaspora, the Chaldean diaspora, etc. It is funny and frustrating for the reason that Rawb explained: To some people (including bishops; I have read more than one letter or book by a Coptic bishop addressed to the children of the Church “in the diaspora”), everyone who is a member of the Church outside of its ancestral homeland(s) is a member of this “diaspora”, even if you’re a convert who is not ethnically or culturally related to the dominant group in their particular church (e.g., Russians, Greeks, Lebanese, Syrians, whatever). Somehow I’m a member of the “Coptic diaspora”, even though I’m not Coptic (ethnically/culturally), and I’ve never been to Egypt. Usually you have to have come from some place else at some point as part of a massive migration to be considered part of a diaspora. 🙂
Thanks for explaining! I did not know this.
 
So that’s why our Orthodox friends always gave our children icons as presents!
Yeah Icons are like rosaries in RCism lol. “Ionna is getting baptized, what should we get her?” Icon. “Joseph and Anastasia are getting married, what should we get them?” Icon. “Thomas’ birthday is coming up and he has no idea what he wants.” Get him an Icon. One can never have too many Icons.
Why would the image of the Sacred Heart be forbidden?
It might not, but it very well could. Some Orthodox regard the RC Sacred Heart devotion as sort of…odd. It developed Post-Schism so is automatically suspect, and ultimately it is sort of seen as a sort of spiritual vivisection. Separating Christ’s body from His soul and honoring one part of Him isn’t helpful in maintaining a proper knowledge of Christ’s totality. It’s sort of Nestorian.

There are now some Icons by painted by Orthodox Iconographers of the Sacred Heart but that’s the result of copying Western religious art, not the norms of Iconography. I brought it up because I know a lot of Roman Catholics enshrine the Sacred Heart in their homes, and there are Orthodox who wouldn’t allow that.

I don’t want to get into an argument about the Sacred Heart, I just brought it up as a difference.
 
I can’t speak to what’s forbidden or not (particularly among the EO, for obvious reasons), but I don’t like the Sacred Heart stuff. I didn’t when I was RC, either. I am with St. Athanasius the Apostolic, who writes the following which is taken by Orthodox as Patristic witness against this kind of devotion (even though it hadn’t developed yet in his time; as Rawb writes, it’s a post-Schism development):

“We do not worship a created thing, but the Master of created things, the Word of God made flesh. Although the flesh itself, considered separately, is a part of created things, yet it has become the body of God. We do not worship this body after having separated it from the Word. Likewise, we do not separate the Word from the body when we wish to worship Him. But knowing that “the Word was made flesh,” we recognise the Word existing in the flesh as God.” (Ep. ad Adelph., par. 3)
 
Many Catholic children attend either Catholic school or religious education classes once a week. Do you have a similar way of educating your children in their faith?

How much of what your children learn comes from home?

I teach religious education and am curious how our Orthodox brothers and sisters pass on their faith to their children.

thank you! 🙂
Hello lax16, here’s an interesting link.

saintsophiaschool.org 🙂
 
Yeah Icons are like rosaries in RCism lol. “Ionna is getting baptized, what should we get her?” Icon. “Joseph and Anastasia are getting married, what should we get them?” Icon. “Thomas’ birthday is coming up and he has no idea what he wants.” Get him an Icon. One can never have too many Icons.
That’s really funny.
It might not, but it very well could. Some Orthodox regard the RC Sacred Heart devotion as sort of…odd. It developed Post-Schism so is automatically suspect, and ultimately it is sort of seen as a sort of spiritual vivisection. Separating Christ’s body from His soul and honoring one part of Him isn’t helpful in maintaining a proper knowledge of Christ’s totality. It’s sort of Nestorian.
What is spiritual vivisection? (I guess I could google it but your explanations are far more entertaining! :D)
There are now some Icons by painted by Orthodox Iconographers of the Sacred Heart but that’s the result of copying Western religious art, not the norms of Iconography. I brought it up because I know a lot of Roman Catholics enshrine the Sacred Heart in their homes, and there are Orthodox who wouldn’t allow that.
I don’t want to get into an argument about the Sacred Heart, I just brought it up as a difference.
Thanks for explaining. I never thought about the Sacred Heart image* being totally *Catholic, if you know what I mean.
I have no intention of arguing about it. I think Catholics and Orthodox should feel free to discuss our differences without an argument. 🙂
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top