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ByzCathCantor
Guest
It sounds like you found a good home in Catholicism, and you have managed to find that which appeals to your needs for spiritual nourishment in both the Latin and Eastern Catholic Church traditions. That’s great!I, a Roman Catholic, via adult conversion (RCIA) years & years ago, prefer the Eastern Christian Spiritual Life most.
This goes to the point of my question. Now that you have found your spiritual home, so to speak, does your spiritual life seem like a stronger, more integral part of your very being?
At the risk of giving away my hypothesis, I do feel that well grounded Catholic and Orthodox faithful alike tend to veiw their spiritual life (including their Church affiliation) as a very essential part of the core of their being. That’s one reason why ecumenism is so very challenging.
We see the same dynamic in party politics, for example. In America, most of us may claim to be Democrat or Republican (or at least assoicate more closely with one or the other), yet it becmes very difficult to reach consensus on anything without remembering that we are, above all, Americans.
I do believe, praise God, that there always will be such a thing as a Catholic identity and an Orthodox identity, much as we know them today. What we have to figure out is how, in re-establishing a more perfect communion, we can together stand as Christians of the True Faith first and foremost.