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Saint Michael's Orthodox Church
465 Morris Street Clymer, PA 15728
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Orthodox Church
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The Orthodox
Christian Church was born on Pentecost in AD 33 with the outpouring of
the Holy Spirit upon the apostles (see Acts 2:2-4). Through the
missionary labors and martyric witness of countless men and women, and
through the unbroken handing-down of the pure apostolic faith, it
spread to every corner of the world: first the Near East, then Europe,
Africa, and Asia.
Monastic
missionaries from Russia planted orthodoxy in North America in the late
18th century. Today the worldwide Orthodox Church has more than 225
million members. Each national Church (Russian, Greek, Serbian, etc.)
is independent and self-administering, but is united in faith and
sacraments with all the others. Some five million Orthodox from diverse
ethnic backgrounds now live in the United States and Canada.
Orthodoxy
believes that the eternal truth of God's revelation in Jesus Christ is
preserved in its full integrity in the living tradition of the Church,
under the guidance and inspiration of the Holy Spirit. Orthodox
Christians recognize that other Christian groups have maintained many
elements of the apostolic faith, but often in attenuated and distorted
forms. With profound humility and a consciousness of her own weakness
and her responsibility before God, Orthodoxy believes and proclaims
that the complete and integral faith delivered to the saints by Jesus
Christ has been preserved without alteration or diminution only within
the communion of the Orthodox Church.
Through
the turbulent early centuries of the Church's life, this faith was
articulated and defended by councils of bishops. When false gospels
were in circulation, the bishops of the Church compiled and proclaimed
the true canon of Scripture, giving us the Bible read by all Christians
to this day. When heretics distorted the apostolic faith, the bishops
spoke with one voice, defending the truth with divinely inspired depth
and clarity. Whether they know it or not, all Christians today are the
inheritors of this tradition whenever they acknowledge Christ as the
incarnate Son of God, or offer praise to the Holy Trinity. The
Scriptures and the faith alike are the gift of Orthodoxy to the world,
and Orthodoxy prays fervently that all who bear Christ's name may
return again to the bosom of the one, true, and unchanging apostolic
faith.
The
word "Orthodox," from the Greek word orthodoxia, means both "right
belief" and "right glory" or "worship." In Orthodoxy faith and worship
are intimately linked. According to the maxim of a fourth-century monk,
Evagrius of Pontus, "a theologian is one who prays truly." Orthodoxy is
by very definition an experiential faith. It is not a set of rational
beliefs, held more or less abstractly, but an all-encompassing way of
life. For Orthodoxy, the touchstone of this life and faith is her
liturgy, her corporate and public worship. Her worship has never lost
its direct continuity with the worship of the ancient Church; the
central hymn of the Church's service of evening prayer was referred to
by St Basil the Great in the fourth century as being so ancient that no
one remembered who composed it. Orthodoxy experiences this liturgical
faithfulness as a gift of the Holy Spirit. Far from being a lifeless
adherence to the past, her liturgy is a miraculous wellspring of the
inspiration that God has bestowed on generations of faithful men and
women: prophets and poets, ascetics and visionaries.
Orthodox
liturgy binds together the whole people of God, living and departed,
present, past and future, into the communion of love that is the very
life of the Holy Trinity. This hallowed world of prayer is a world of
unparallel depth and beauty, a world within which countless Orthodox
have found "the one thing needful," and have reached the heights of
spiritual life. When in the tenth century envoys of Great Prince
Vladimir of Kiev first experienced the Divine Liturgy in the Great
Church of Hagia Sophia in Constantinople, they reported that they did
not know if they were in heaven or on earth. An open heart can
experience this heavenly beauty, this living, mysterious presence of
the Kingdom of Heaven on earth, even in the humblest parish church.
Orthodox
Christianity remains steadfastly committed to a moral life consistent
with holy Scripture and with traditional Christian faith, and therefore
resists in the strongest terms the characteristic evils of our age:
abortion, euthanasia, and all manifestations of a disregard for human
life; sexual immorality and the disintegration of the family; the
destruction of human community and the debauching of the human spirit
in idolatrous commercialism and materialism; the tragic waste of human
life and work in the demonic enterprise of war. These two inseparable
aspects of the life of Orthodoxy - an unbending adherence to
traditional moral life, doctrine, and worship, and the mysterious
presence of the beauty, simplicity, and holiness of the ancient Church
- have led many seekers and converts to embrace the Orthodox faith. No
longer confined to immigrant communities, Orthodox Christianity in
America has taken her proper place as a faith for all people. As the
Apostle Philip said to Nathaniel who was sitting under the sycamore
tree, "Come and see..." (St John 1:46).
And
the Orthodox Church extends this invitation to you as well. Come and
see the priceless treasure that is Orthodoxy: a gift of which none of
us is worthy, but which God in His rich mercy has bestowed upon us.
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Very Rev. Father Stephen Kundla, Pastor
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