S
Sepharad
Guest
Oh, I agree quite well with your last paragraph. I have always known the Eastern Orthodox churches to be quite antiJewish. In fact in some ways they put the medieval Catholics to shame.I take great pride in Orthdoxy. As for myself, I don’t say usually that I am Orthodox as I do not live up to it, but merely that I am chrismated Orthodox.
The Orthodox Church, the New Israel, is the authoratative interpretor of the OT, her bishops the succesors of the Apostles, the successors of the patriarchs, the Orthodox Patriarch of Jerusalem sits on David’s throne on earth as the promised Messiah Christ sits on it in Heaven. I shall never tire of repeating these truths, nor in defending them in face of denials of them.
And I know a lot of Orthodox from generations back. If you think that would make them more congenial to your interpretation of the place of the Jews, I’d guess again.
My paternal family is from the Ukraine; they came to the USA in 1908, when my grandfather was a boy of 11. The Tsar liked to recruit Jewish boys at the age of 12 into his army, in the hopes they would assimilate and forget they were Jewish (because age 12 is one yr before the Bar Mitzvah.)
I also remember my grandfather telling me of the pogroms (Russian for “violent riots”) that would take place against the Jews, every time it was a Christian holyday and the (Eastern Orthodox) priests would rile the people against “the christ killers”. Jews in the Ukraine knew to stay in doors on Christian holydays such as Good Friday and Easter, because that was usually when the worst pogroms would happen.
So yes, I know FULL WELL what the Eastern Orthodox of older generations think of us Jews, unfortunately. And you’re right: a convert to it cannot even come close to the way they thought of Jews!