Oops. I somehow lost track of your reply, JackQ, until I received the notices about the newest replies. My apologies.
What do you mean “fundamentally different ways of being religious communities”? How are they different? For all I can see, you could be referring to hat styles.
Well, there is that…
No, really, I mean that the experience of being Orthodox and the experience of being Catholic are fundamentally different. Those who have been Catholic and converted to Orthodoxy could explain the details much better than I could (sadly, it looks like most are currently on sabbatical or banned), as I have not “swam the Nile” yet, as it were (though I suppose none of them did, either). Still, even from where I am now compared to where I was then, there has been a lot of change. I wouldn’t say a 180-degree change or anything (as I was always open to the East and the Orient; my RC confirmation saints were Sts. Cyril and Methodius), but whereas before I was looking at a church with apostolic roots, with Orthodoxy it seems more like finding the apostolic faith itself, which the church naturally grows by.
Our realities are different? Do I see an ostrich where you see a chair? Is there an interdimensional aspect to this?
No. I am not sure, but it seems like you’re looking at things from a worldly perspective. My point is that Catholics and Orthodox look at things very differently. Their approaches to the faith are very different. For instance, whereas Catholics see the church as built upon the person of St. Peter, Orthodoxy sees the church as built upon Peter’s confession of faith. This has profound implications on how the people relate to the church.
What’s different about our experiences? What’s different about our mindsets? I’m not even sure I have a mindset.
Everyone’s got a mindset, my friend. I quoted here on CAF some months ago a passage from a book I like in which a Coptic monk in the desert gives a word to a Catholic monk who is visiting the monasteries and trying to understand the Orthodox faith. The monk says: “In the ancient tongue, alpha means ‘eagle.’ It is the bird of heaven, that which represents God – transcendent, over all. Beta is the Hebrew word; we hear it in the name ‘Bethel.’ It means ‘house, home’, the place in which we are familiar, comfortable, in control, the place where we live our lives day to day. But these two words, so opposite, have been conjoined: ‘alpha’ and ‘beta’, because in Christ Jesus, heaven is wedded to earth. Christ is the Word made flesh to dwell among us, to pitch His tent in our midst. We are not estranged any longer. This is easy; this is simple. Every child knows the alphabet, and so any heart can accept our Faith.”
I should note that when I posted this (in the context of a thread that asked why the Catholic church has so many doctrines, if I remember correctly), the only reply I got was decidedly negative, from people who disagreed with this idea that the faith is simple. I rather agree with the monk. I don’t have a monk’s mindset, but I have a mindset that would agree with a nameless monk over the Pope and the millions of reams of Catholic official documents that try to explain and categorize and define this very simple thing.
What is “Western Christianity’s” trajectory? Where is it headed. What don’t you like about it?
See above.
Actually, thus far it’s been incomprehensible to me. You suggest that it may be because I’m too Western to get it.
I don’t think I said anything about you specifically, or if I did I was in error, as I don’t mean anything towards you particularly, or Westerners as a general category. I too am a Westerner, through and through. It’s not about some sort of silly East v. West dichotomy. Orthodoxy is where orthodoxy is, and heterodoxy is where heterodoxy is.
But, tell me: what kind of Christianity is incomprehensible to a significant portion of the world’s population?
I’m not sure what you mean by “what kind”. Christianity itself is incomprehensible to an ever-growing number of people in many parts of the world, it seems. I suppose it always has been, to some degree. Our Lord told us it would be that way. But we know, no matter what church we’re in, that it is not actually incomprehensible so much as not a worldly philosophy, and so it does not make sense to many. I would go one step further and say that any kind of Christianity that seems to be in accord with the world has likely obscured elemental truths of the faith, and as such is to be discarded.
There you go with the reality again. How is our reality different? What divisions and points are we concerned with, and what is it about our reality that makes them materialize?
Many of the particular points of doctrine or dogma that are found in the West don’t even seem like reasonable things to think about outside of that tradition. For instance, transubstantiation. I have not yet met any Eastern or Oriental Christian who cares for this idea either way. Why label and classify a mystery, they ask. Sort of like the Ethiopians’ reaction to finding out that the rest of the Christian world does not consider Pontius Pilate a saint. “Really? Why not?”
Well, being of one mind, might be attainable if we…you know…try, as opposed to just going off and being a separate religion. I don’t think I understand your other points in this paragraph.
Well, I think that’s what all of the ecumenical dialogues are all about. Trying to understand each other and see if there is any greater unity to be had. We can’t just not try. As far as being a separate religion, I think that is what people on all sides are afraid of…how far apart is too far, y’know? I don’t know. All we can do is pray.