Why be an Eastern Catholic and not an Orthodox Christian?

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My observation has been that the online EC convert community tends to have some of the strongest believers in “Re-union now”, but after a period of time, a significant percentage become disenchanted with Eastern Catholicism as practiced by the majority and convert to the Orthodox Churches. The many I’ve encountered online tend to initially see the EC Churches as the best place to work for reunion from.
 
My own POV on this is that those who become EC’s do so for the sake of Eastern spirituality as per se.

When they feel that there is a purer form of this in this or that EO jurisdiction, they will move on.

For many cradle EC’s and EO’s, church membership has to do with the totality of one’s identity i.e. “who I am” religiously, culturally and the like where our Particular Church is what we owe our allegiance to, not an ethereal form of spirituality which converts will deem to be “better” than what they’ve encountered in their own churches etc.

I also know converts to Eastern Orthodoxy who, having finished a course of church-hopping, including the EC churches, then begin a new round of similar Orthodox “jurisdiction-hopping” in the hope of finding the “right one” for them.

This is something that is quite foreign to the experience of cradle EC’s and EO’s.

Alex
 
I don’t think that the Orthodox Churches, all due respect, are what they should be, and I stand by what I said before. In fact I think they have suffered a number of maladies because they broke with Rome. For one thing, there is the truncated doctrinal development - they haven’t been able to adapt and develop their doctrine, and this has gotten them into trouble. Those Churches in communion with Rome have been able to develop the doctrine without altering it, so as to better respond to the new challenges of each age. Too, Orthodox Churches haven’t been able to hold an Ecumenical Council even once, though they hold that that is the only way to pronounce new doctrine. The reason for that, I believe, is that the Churches are in disagreement on many issues, and if they were to come together, there would be too serious a disagreement to come to a consensus. Without a visible leader (someone somewhat like the Pope) to pronounce a Council valid, there’s no real reason to adhere to it.
Yours sounds like a very Latin point of view. I have read many posters in this forum who struggle with the “doctrinal development” of the Roman church, post Schism. So, they try to assuage their cognitive dissonance with dogma such as purgatory and indulgences, the IC and papal infallibility by arguing for an “Eastern understanding” of these theologies. Based on my readings here, many Eastern Catholics would very much prefer to simply define themselves as “Orthodox” and find the doctrinal development as more problematic than beneficial.

I know for myself, my discomfort with having to affirm many post Schism RC dogma is one of the reasons I feel more comfortable with Constantinople rather than Rome.

What is the “trouble” that Orthodox churches have got themselves into by not developing doctrine? I know what the Roman Catholic trouble is (e.g. the Protestant Reformation, Old Catholics, SSPX, etc.). Orthodoxy never seemed to suffer these “maladies”.
 
What is the “trouble” that Orthodox churches have got themselves into by not developing doctrine? I know what the Roman Catholic trouble is (e.g. the Protestant Reformation, Old Catholics, SSPX, etc.). Orthodoxy never seemed to suffer these “maladies”.
What about “Old Believers”?
 
My own POV on this is that those who become EC’s do so for the sake of Eastern spirituality as per se.

When they feel that there is a purer form of this in this or that EO jurisdiction, they will move on.

For many cradle EC’s and EO’s, church membership has to do with the totality of one’s identity i.e. “who I am” religiously, culturally and the like where our Particular Church is what we owe our allegiance to, not an ethereal form of spirituality which converts will deem to be “better” than what they’ve encountered in their own churches etc.

I also know converts to Eastern Orthodoxy who, having finished a course of church-hopping, including the EC churches, then begin a new round of similar Orthodox “jurisdiction-hopping” in the hope of finding the “right one” for them.

This is something that is quite foreign to the experience of cradle EC’s and EO’s.

Alex
So where do Americans with no other cultural background than the U.S. go for a more a spiritual christian life? Many of the the Latin Rite churches may be full on Sunday but most that attend are spiritually empty.
 
What about “Old Believers”?
The “Old Believers” controversy is evidence of exactly the opposite to the problems of “truncated doctrinal development”. That is, doctrinal development has caused more problems than lack of doctrinal development in the Russian Orthodox church.

So “Truncated doctrinal development” is not an aspersion that would nettle most Orthodox, I think. I actually find that comforting.
 
So where do Americans with no other cultural background than the U.S. go for a more a spiritual christian life? Many of the the Latin Rite churches may be full on Sunday but most that attend are spiritually empty.
Go to one of the more traditional parishes.
 
How do you know many of the people that attend RC parishes are spiritually empty? What criteria are you using? I’ve been both Orthodox and Roman Catholic and have attended different parishes in both Churches through the years. There are devout and not so devout who attend both.
So where do Americans with no other cultural background than the U.S. go for a more a spiritual christian life? Many of the the Latin Rite churches may be full on Sunday but most that attend are spiritually empty.
 
So where do Americans with no other cultural background than the U.S. go for a more a spiritual christian life? Many of the the Latin Rite churches may be full on Sunday but most that attend are spiritually empty.
It would depend on what is meant by “more spiritual Christian life.” If we are saying that the Latin Catholic Church is totally bereft of such - then this is simply not the case!

As for how spiritually empty the Latin Churches are - that is not for us to judge. There are MANY Latin Catholics whose spiritual lives are filled to over-brimming! How do we know their spiritual lives are “empty?” According to whose standards?

And the lives of Eastern Catholics who attend the Divine Liturgy and consider that to be the sum total of their spiritual commitment?

I’ll leave that with you for now.

There are parishes with English-language Liturgies - I’m not saying that anyone isn’t welcome in the EC parishes.

I was invited to give a talk in St Nicholas’ parish in Toronto yesterday, basically to talk about the icons and iconography. After about two hours, one of the people patiently listening to me (😉 ) asked this very question - shoudl the Ukrainian Church become less Ukrainian to allow other non-Ukrainians to come in etc.

There is no reason why there cannot be both - maintain the cultural identity of the Church (for that is also reflected in the particular spirituality of that Church) AND devise ways to have Liturgies in other languages (as Patriarch Svyatoslav has said himself).

My point is simply to draw attention to the behaviour of some converts who focus exclusively on “spirituality” and who drift from parish to parish, jurisdiction to jurisdiction, in search of “just the right spirituality.”

And the converts I have known who have done precisely this, in my humble view, wouldn’t know “spirituality” if it jumped up and slobbered all over them in broad daylight.

Alex
 
My problem with this idea within Catholicism of either going to the older, more traditional, true-to-the historic Mass tridentine liturgies versus the modern Novus Ordo that is loaded with human-centered trappings and Protestant-style worship is that this is a choice the Church shouldn’t offer. Modernity should have no place in the worship of the Lord Almighty. No choices should be on the table—ancient, true, dignified, kingly, God-centered or nothin’ in my book. 👍 That is one thing I’m really appreciating when looking into Orthodoxy like I am right now. There is no plan B. There is no Divine Liturgy where there are people holding hands, playing Amazing Grace, there are no extraordinary Eucharistic ministers handling the Host and trying to “bless” children and adults, there is no worship without incense, no worship with the priest facing the people, no worship where the liturgy isn’t sung, it’s always the same. Liturgically, IMO, this is more catholic/universal!
Go to one of the more traditional parishes.
 
I’m not sure we can use geography as a measuring stick for truth, though? Orthodoxy is NOT very accessible where I am. I have to drive about 45 minutes. I’m not happy about that. But when I get there I am wowed at the beauty and truth of the liturgy as well as its lack of innovation and pandering to modernity. I don’t see a wiff of protestantism in it at all. Plus the Orthodox tend to make more sense to me.

As far as doctrinal development, the Orthodox seem to me to represent the classic maxim “if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.” And when it does need fixin’ you hold a council and do things holistically, not depending on a few scholastics to innovate. And there have been few times in which a council has even been needed since the Schism, which is a testimony to the goodness and complete nature of Orthodoxy. Orthodoxy hasn’t had a Reformation. I think that is telling. If the Church doesn’t theologically innovate, no need for a reaction to the reaction of those heretics from within because you won’t have heretics! 😛

As far as Eucharistic Ecclesiology, that is more historically the approach and praxis of the ancient Church from what I’ve read, especially in Meyendorff’s works.

Promoting intellectual growth, is that the purpose of the Christian religion? I am truly asking myself that. Faith, marveling at the divine mysteries, theosis, the journey, they all trump intellect.
  1. Magisterium.
In Catholicism there can be many unorthodox parishoners, but you can point out an official statement from Rome or a bishop elsewhere that quotes the official party line and say to those people. You are wrong!

In Eastern Orthodoxy you can’t do this, because I’ve tried. I tried correcting a Greek Orthodox person that was saying a teaching that I knew was against Greek Orthodoxy. I quoted a paper from his “Church” the Greek Orthodox Church of America to refute him. I however was rebuffed that it wasn’t his Church you see he was Canadian and in the Greek Orthodox Church of Canada. (What the other bishop said was not binding even though he was a recognized bishop of his Tradition). The only way I could correct him was to narc and tell his direct bishop… which I didn’t want to do (I wanted to correct him not excommunicate or humilate him).
  1. Catholicism is more truely catholic in its repesentation world wide. It has a Ecclesiology of the Body besides a Eucharistic ecclesiology. and I would add even with full blown Latinization has been better to Oriental Churches that united with it then the EO that pretty much forced them to give up their unique liturgical heritage.
  2. Promoting Intellectual growth, theology etc. A number of great saints were intellectuals; being philosophers, or other kind of academics. Since the Great Schism, and with conflict with Latin Scholastics, this form of spirituality has been played down by the EO (to the point where some writers seem anti-intelectual) and their has been a disappearance of the Justin Martyr style saint among them as well.
Catholisim has however continued this tradition…
 
I’m not sure we can use geography as a measuring stick for truth, though? Orthodoxy is NOT very accessible where I am. I have to drive about 45 minutes. I’m not happy about that. But when I get there I am wowed at the beauty and truth of the liturgy as well as its lack of innovation and pandering to modernity. I don’t see a wiff of protestantism in it at all. Plus the Orthodox tend to make more sense to me.

As far as doctrinal development, the Orthodox seem to me to represent the classic maxim “if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.” And when it does need fixin’ you hold a council and do things holistically, not depending on a few scholastics to innovate. And there have been few times in which a council has even been needed since the Schism, which is a testimony to the goodness and complete nature of Orthodoxy. Orthodoxy hasn’t had a Reformation. I think that is telling. If the Church doesn’t theologically innovate, no need for a reaction to the reaction of those heretics from within because you won’t have heretics! 😛

As far as Eucharistic Ecclesiology, that is more historically the approach and praxis of the ancient Church from what I’ve read, especially in Meyendorff’s works.

Promoting intellectual growth, is that the purpose of the Christian religion? I am truly asking myself that. Faith, marveling at the divine mysteries, theosis, the journey, they all trump intellect.
Well, you are on a fascinating journey! For my part, I marvel at the tremendous spiritual insights you’ve gained along the way. God be with you!

Alex
 
My problem with this idea within Catholicism of either going to the older, more traditional, true-to-the historic Mass tridentine liturgies versus the modern Novus Ordo that is loaded with human-centered trappings and Protestant-style worship is that this is a choice the Church shouldn’t offer. Modernity should have no place in the worship of the Lord Almighty. No choices should be on the table—ancient, true, dignified, kingly, God-centered or nothin’ in my book. 👍 That is one thing I’m really appreciating when looking into Orthodoxy like I am right now. There is no plan B. There is no Divine Liturgy where there are people holding hands, playing Amazing Grace, there are no extraordinary Eucharistic ministers handling the Host and trying to “bless” children and adults, there is no worship without incense, no worship with the priest facing the people, no worship where the liturgy isn’t sung, it’s always the same. Liturgically, IMO, this is more catholic/universal!
Well Scott there is a Western Rite Orthodoxy, but I am very unfamilar with it. You know anything about it? As far as accessibility goes, its even harder. I would have to drive to Lynchburg for it, and well, thats just too far, thats an hour easily from where I live. The OCA parish near me is as solid and ancient as it comes, and I am blessed to be only 15 minutes away.
 
I have to strongly disagree. 🙂
The Orthodox are what they “should be”. The image of Orthodox Churches coming into the Catholic Church is unthinkable. Union if and when that comes would have to be like the Church before West and East divided. If there ever comes a day when there is unity again then we Eastern Catholics will disappear having returned to our mother Orthodox Churches. At present they are quite often a home for us. On any given feast day I think Eastern Catholics, and canonically Latin Church Catholics are quite often found worshiping in Orthodox Churches because we lack access to our own Eastern Catholic Churches, or they have become Latinized shadows of their true selves.
Unity would solve alot of problems for folks like myself and others. What a witness to Protestantism it would be to see the Apostolic Churches of the East and West reunified. Then, I think some more Catholic minded Anglicans would come into the fold. Others who are more Protestant minded would remain out and establish Anglicanism once and for all as a Protestant tradition.

If the doctrinal differences could be worked out, that would be amazing. The biggest obsticle is how to reunite without either side having to admit they erred, to hold up the church’s belief in infallibility.
 
My problem with this idea within Catholicism of either going to the older, more traditional, true-to-the historic Mass tridentine liturgies versus the modern Novus Ordo that is loaded with human-centered trappings and Protestant-style worship is that this is a choice the Church shouldn’t offer. Modernity should have no place in the worship of the Lord Almighty. No choices should be on the table—ancient, true, dignified, kingly, God-centered or nothin’ in my book. 👍 That is one thing I’m really appreciating when looking into Orthodoxy like I am right now. There is no plan B. There is no Divine Liturgy where there are people holding hands, playing Amazing Grace, there are no extraordinary Eucharistic ministers handling the Host and trying to “bless” children and adults, there is no worship without incense, no worship with the priest facing the people, no worship where the liturgy isn’t sung, it’s always the same. Liturgically, IMO, this is more catholic/universal!
I’d have to agree with you. That is one of the trials and tribulations the Church is facing, and it is not the first time the Church has faced trying times. But the Church shall overcome as it always has, with the Spirit’s guidance.
 
Well Scott there is a Western Rite Orthodoxy, but I am very unfamilar with it. You know anything about it? As far as accessibility goes, its even harder. I would have to drive to Lynchburg for it, and well, thats just too far, thats an hour easily from where I live. The OCA parish near me is as solid and ancient as it comes, and I am blessed to be only 15 minutes away.
I’m about an hour from Lynchburg as well. 😉 I don’t know Fr. Alban at Holy Trinity that well, but I know he was an Anglican bishop before received into Orthodoxy. I do want to go visit them sometime and show my support for Western Orthodoxy. 👍

In Christ,
Andrew
 
My problem with this idea within Catholicism of either going to the older, more traditional, true-to-the historic Mass tridentine liturgies versus the modern Novus Ordo that is loaded with human-centered trappings and Protestant-style worship is that this is a choice the Church shouldn’t offer. Modernity should have no place in the worship of the Lord Almighty. No choices should be on the table—ancient, true, dignified, kingly, God-centered or nothin’ in my book. 👍 That is one thing I’m really appreciating when looking into Orthodoxy like I am right now. There is no plan B. There is no Divine Liturgy where there are people holding hands, playing Amazing Grace, there are no extraordinary Eucharistic ministers handling the Host and trying to “bless” children and adults, there is no worship without incense, no worship with the priest facing the people, no worship where the liturgy isn’t sung, it’s always the same. Liturgically, IMO, this is more catholic/universal!
This is what prompted me to post. There is no Divine Liturgy A and B. Just the Divine Liturgy. There is no modernizations or protestant overtones in their Masses while in the Roman it is in obvious use. There is no significant changes but preservation. The Catholics are a wash which I find difficult accepting. I could be traditional but there are many who aren’t. That is the main reason I am looking into Orthodoxy. It is as it is. What I find equally troubling is I would not be thinking of looking into Orthodoxy if the Roman Catholic Church had just stayed with the old rite and not made any changes. There were no problems like this before the sweeping changes.
 
Promoting intellectual growth, is that the purpose of the Christian religion? I am truly asking myself that. Faith, marveling at the divine mysteries, theosis, the journey, they all trump intellect.
I’m just some guy, but I really don’t think so. In my parallel journey to Orthodoxy, what I have noticed is that I grow closer to church I have been looking at not through argument or philosophical musing, but by very simple, almost childlike actions and instruction. The actions are prayer, fasting, and seeking blessings. The instruction, such that I have been able to grow from it so far in relative isolation from the church (since there isn’t one around me right now), has had to come from hymns, talks, and various explanations of the liturgy that have come from people trying to prepare me for what I will eventually be experiencing. The thing is, my Coptic friends have told me that it wouldn’t be any different if I were attending liturgy with them. The liturgy itself, in its simplicity and timelessness, educates even those who have been born into the church. There isn’t some sort of separate “school of apologetics” for Orthodoxy, wherein X,Y,Z is argued for based on some philosophical “hole” left by a given position (e.g., the Immaculate Conception vis-a-vis the Latin understanding of original sin). It is precisely by not philosophizing in that way that the Orthodox church has no holes to fill in the first place.

And so it is with everything. The hymns, likewise, are simple but profound. I spent 10-15 minutes yesterday in preparation for prayer chanting a three-line hymn based on Psalm 150. Granted, it was in 3 languages, but that’s not so much a problem with something so easy to understand (there’s not much more to than would be required to pray “Kyrie eleison”). Even the fact that the church would spend that time on that hymn (it is chanted annually on Saturdays and Sundays during Great Lent) tells me something about them and how different they are than what I am used to. It might seem boring to the outsider, but I think it is great, as this is no doubt how the faith has been passed down from generation to generation. And I can understand why, because that’s what I’m experiencing. Sometimes less really is more.
 
I’m just some guy, but I really don’t think so. In my parallel journey to Orthodoxy, what I have noticed is that I grow closer to church I have been looking at not through argument or philosophical musing, but by very simple, almost childlike actions and instruction. The actions are prayer, fasting, and seeking blessings. The instruction, such that I have been able to grow from it so far in relative isolation from the church (since there isn’t one around me right now), has had to come from hymns, talks, and various explanations of the liturgy that have come from people trying to prepare me for what I will eventually be experiencing. The thing is, my Coptic friends have told me that it wouldn’t be any different if I were attending liturgy with them. The liturgy itself, in its simplicity and timelessness, educates even those who have been born into the church. There isn’t some sort of separate “school of apologetics” for Orthodoxy, wherein X,Y,Z is argued for based on some philosophical “hole” left by a given position (e.g., the Immaculate Conception vis-a-vis the Latin understanding of original sin). It is precisely by not philosophizing in that way that the Orthodox church has no holes to fill in the first place.

And so it is with everything… I can understand why, because that’s what I’m experiencing. Sometimes less really is more.
I understand this. I need less dogma, less theology and more spirituality. More fasting, more prayer and more almsgiving.

The prostrations of Holy Wednesday–Bridegroom Matins-really struck me, as we all identified with the harlot rather than Judas by prostrating. At least she came in repentance with tears. My eyes are usually dry.

Yes, more simple, childlike actions.
 
As far as doctrinal development, the Orthodox seem to me to represent the classic maxim “if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.” And when it does need fixin’ you hold a council and do things holistically, not depending on a few scholastics to innovate. And there have been few times in which a council has even been needed since the Schism, which is a testimony to the goodness and complete nature of Orthodoxy. Orthodoxy hasn’t had a Reformation. I think that is telling. If the Church doesn’t theologically innovate, no need for a reaction to the reaction of those heretics from within because you won’t have heretics! 😛

As far as Eucharistic Ecclesiology, that is more historically the approach and praxis of the ancient Church from what I’ve read, especially in Meyendorff’s works.

Promoting intellectual growth, is that the purpose of the Christian religion? I am truly asking myself that. Faith, marveling at the divine mysteries, theosis, the journey, they all trump intellect.
We are on similar paths.

I have changed my soteriology through reading Orthodox authors. “God became man so that man could become God”, as St. Athanasius wrote. Salvation is an eternal journey of becoming Christlike which depends relatively little on intellect and dogma.
 
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