Sorry, I took your words at face value. The two types of examples that you give hardly constitute “each and everything”. In particular, the charge is just wrong in the context of this thread.
And what are you suggesting here? That the EOs are not dogmatic on the Real Presence? On Theotokos, Mother of God, All holy, Immaculate Ever-virgin? Really?
They really are not. Their views of the mysteries are, to my mind, wholly inadequate, although they may be superior from the point-of-view of someone with superior spiritual insight to myself.
The Orthodox theory of the Real Presence: “It’s just really Jesus”. Not to mention that Transubstantiation, with all of the Aristotelian underpinnings, was accepted as canonical by the Orthodox Church at the Synod of Jerusalem in 1672 on the basis of the
Confession of Peter Moghila (Marcus Plested,
Orthodox Readings of Aquinas, Oxford University Press, 2012. p. 182).
The Orthodox doctrine of Hell: “It exists”.
On how to get there? Soul-sleep, toll-houses, demons dispensing the justice of God, wandering through Hades… it goes on.
**If you are looking for anything approaching any form of doctrinal exactitude, Eastern Orthodoxy is not for you. ** Orthodox will agree with you on this. Many take pride in having little doctrinal exactitude, except for the exactitudes set down exactly as they were by the Eight Ecumenical Councils [sic: see below]).
This to some may be a strength, who believe that Christ did not come to set forth a system that could be partially explained and elucidated by the philosophy of men, even though Barlaam of Calabria was the anti-logical one, and Gregory Palamas engaged in constructive engagement with Western philosophy and Latin scholasticism, and was open to the use of apodictic syllogisms, which he uses in his
Capita 150 repeatedly, along with the same used in his
Triads (op cit pp. xiv, xv, 22, 35, 98-101, etc.); he even borrows verbatim from the Planoudes translation of
De Trinitate, while drawing some different conclusions, when he desires greater philosophical and doctrinal precision in order to rebut heretics (yes, he uses Augustine to attempt to rebut Western pneumatology) (
Orthodox Readings of Augustine, St Vladimir’s Seminary Press, 2008, pp. 63-80 [Reinhard Flogaus’ essay, entitled *Inspiration-Exploitation-Distortion]).
Not to mention that, contra those “Clash of Civilizations theologians” who pit “Latin essentialist scholasticism” against “Eastern personalist mysticism”, Greeks were the original scholastics: there was a distinct “Byzantine Scholasticism” fully-formed by the time of John Damascene, who wrote what is possibly the first Western-style
Summa of philosophical theology, his
Exposition of the Orthodox Faith, which was a primary source for Aquinas, and from its writing acquired, and to this day has retained, great authority throughout Orthodox Christendom (
Orthodox Readings of Aquinas pp. 42-50, cf. p. 51 fn. 69).
In Orthodox, doctrines are only defined that were defined at the eight ecumenical councils, and only insofar as those councils defined them. This is not an absolute, but a generalized rule. Note that I speak of “eight” councils precisely: almost all Orthodox treat the 1351 Hesychast Council (which canonized Palamas and his doctrine) as fully canonical and binding, with every part of the authority of an ecumenical council, even if some try to say it’s not technically considered one (others, such as Romanides and Giannaras, let the logic flow and do consider it one, as it “walks like, talks like, and quacks like”).
To others the lack of doctrinal precision is a mortal weakness, as it was to me. Well, that and the philosophically-incoherent essence-energies distinction, which, I believe, the very fact that a foundational doctrine of Orthodox soteriology - and, I would say, the primary Orthodox “doctrinal distinctive” - is philosophically incoherent (any attempt to approach it philosophically or to “precision-ify” it ends up in apostasy: either with 2 uncreated Trinities, or polytheism of two gods [ditheism]), predisposes Orthodox in general to have a very dim view of applying philosophy to theology in any way - because of how one of their primary doctrines implodes if examined with precision or philosophy, and not just taken on “mystical faith”.
Barlaam’s anti-Westernism, anti-logicalism, anti-philosophicalism, et cetera was wedded to the not-inherently anti-Western, logic-using, pro-philosophy system of Gregory, leading to the modern “neo-Palamites”, which are better described as “Barlaamite Palamites” or “Barlaamites who accept the essence-energies distinction”, such as Romanides, Giannaras, and to a lesser extent, Lossky and Meyendorff (who I like to call in total the “Clash of Civilizations Theologians”). The movement towards wedding Barlaamism and Palamism came about only after the Greek War of Independence, although it occurred mainly in Russia, starting with the Slavophile movement and having a trajectory through the Sophiologists on to modern proponents of the Fell Marriage.
The best modern Orthodox theologian, Zizioulas, a disciple of Florovsky (who was a Palamite who didn’t marry himself to Barlaamism), answering the latter’s call for a “neo-patristic synthesis” to overcome the “pseudomorphosis” of Russian scholastic theology, has ended up with a theology that is markedly
non-Palamite, that is, the essence-energies distinction plays hardly any role in it.