Our feelings and desires are trained by our culture to seek satisfaction. In our spiritual life, we often need to learn how to be disappointed. Fr. Stephen looks at the “disappointment of religion.” Fr. Stephen Freeman is an Orthodox (OCA) priest in USA. Continue reading “The Disappointment of Religion”
Orthodoxy: The hope of the people of Europe
(Our awareness of ourselves as Orthodox Christians does not permit us to overlook the fact that Orthodoxy and Western Christianity cannot share a single ‘Christian identity’. On the contrary, it compels us to stress the fact that Orthodoxy is Europe’s long-forgotten original Christian faith, which at some point should once again serve as the basis of its Christian identity)
By Archimandrite George († 2014, June 8), Abbot of the Holy Monastery of St. Gregorios, Mount Athos Continue reading “Orthodoxy: The hope of the people of Europe”
What does an abortion cost? A human life!
Like everyone else, you probably know exactly when you were born. But, did you ever imagine your ‘self’ before it was born? Your mother has never forgotten your first capers inside her body, or your movements later on as a baby, telling her how you wanted to come out, into the light! Continue reading “What does an abortion cost? A human life!”
Faith And Science In Orthodox Gnosiology and Methodology (Part 2)
D. God-Man dialectic
Continue reading “Faith And Science In Orthodox Gnosiology and Methodology (Part 2)”
Faith And Science In Orthodox Gnosiology and Methodology (Part 1)
A. Problem or pseudo-problem?
The antithesis and consequent collision between faith and science is a problem for western (Franco-Latin) thought and is a pseudo-problem for the Orthodox patristic tradition. This is based upon the historical data of these two regions. Continue reading “Faith And Science In Orthodox Gnosiology and Methodology (Part 1)”
The Sickness of Religion and its Orthodox Cure
Introduction by Father George Metallinos
PEOPLE have begun writing articles of late about the relationship between Orthodoxy and religion.
It is a fact that, after the first few centuries [of Christianity], our Faith has also been characterized as a religion. But in what sense is it a religion? Continue reading “The Sickness of Religion and its Orthodox Cure”