D
dzheremi
Guest
I agree with Pope Francis.I think one thing that we all have to be very careful with is being too insular. We are all commanded by Christ to preach the Gospel. I’m struck especially by the address our new Pope gave just prior to the conclave that elected him in which he said: “When the Church does not come out of itself to evangelize, it becomes self-referential and then gets sick.”
I’m not sure what you’re talking about here. I don’t think the thousands upon thousands of poor Kenyans, Zambians, and Tanzanians served at the Coptic Hospital in Nairobi or by the orphans project in six sub-Saharan African countries would recognize a “lack of care and concern with people who are not us”, either. So I’m not sure what this has to do with what I posted. Truly preaching the apostolic Orthodox faith means exactly the opposite of that mentality.I also think that this ‘going out of oneself’ must extend beyond just theological dialogue and into what are traditionally referred to as corporal acts of mercy. I sadly see in many people I know a lack of care and concern with people who are “not us”.
We already do. Every person is at least a potential brother or sister in Christ. This says nothing about non-Orthodox Christian groups and their doctrines, however, and that’s usually what ecumenism is about.Perhaps if we could look at every single person as our brother or sister and bring Christ to them both physically, spiritually, and morally the world would be a little better.