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A Byzantine cross by the sea marks the border between Mount Athos and the 21st century. The monks come there, as they always have, for the beauty, the tranquility and the isolation. But mostly they come for the religious way of life that has hardly changed in more than a thousand years.
Father Iakovos is one of a few Americans on the mountain; he’s been there more than half his life. “You have to understand, the words that we’re saying in today’s liturgy, are the same words that Christ was saying, are the same words that saints from the first century, the second century, the third century, the fourth century,” he told “60 Minutes” correspondent Bob Simon.
cbsnews.com/stories/2011/04/21/60minutes/main20056101.shtmlAnd nothing has changed in orthodoxy since then - it’s the only branch of Christianity that can make that claim.
Mt Athos, of course, is world famous as a site of male monasticism. But is the claim that nothing has changed in orthodoxy correct?