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The Orthodox Faith
Orthodoxy
holds that the eternal truths of God’s saving revelation in Jesus Christ are
preserved in the living Tradition of the Church under the guidance and
inspiration of the Holy Spirit. The Holy Scriptures is at the heart of the
Tradition and the touchstone of the faith. While the Bible is the written
testimony of God’s revelation, Holy Tradition is the all-encompassing experience
of the Church under the abiding guidance and direction of the Holy Spirit.
Essentially, Orthodox Christians consider that their beliefs are very similar to
those of other Christian traditions, but that the balance and integrity of the
entire Apostolic faith once delivered to the Saints has been preserved
inviolate.
We believe that God is One in substance and Triune in persons. We worship One
God in Trinity, and Trinity in Unity, neither confusing the persons nor dividing
the substance. Creation is the work in time of the Blessed Trinity. The world is
not self-created, neither has it existed from eternity, but it is the product of
the wisdom, the power, and the will of the One God in Trinity. God the Father is
the prime cause of creation and God the Son and God the Holy Spirit took part in
creation, God the Son perfecting creation and God the Holy Spirit vivifying
creation.
We believe that Our Lord Jesus Christ is truly God. He is Jesus, that is, the
Savior and Christ, the Lord’s Anointed, a Son not created of another substance,
as is the case with us, but a Son begotten of the very substance of the Father
before all time, and thus consubstantial with the Father. He is also truly man,
like us in every respect, except sin. The denial either of his divinity or of
his humanity constitutes a denial of his incarnation and of our salvation. The
Holy Spirit proceeds from the Father. The faith of the Church about the
procession of the Holy Spirit was confirmed by the Second Ecumenical Council,
which added to the Creed the following clause: “And I believe in the Holy
Spirit, the Lord, the Giver of life, who proceedeth from the Father.” The Church
is the Holy institution founded by our Lord Jesus Christ for the salvation of
men, bearing his holy sanction and authority, and composed of men having one and
the same faith, and partaking of the same sacraments. It is divided into the
clergy and laity. The clergy trace their descent by uninterrupted succession
from the Apostles and through them from our Lord Jesus Christ. The Church is ONE
because our Lord Jesus Christ founded not many, but only one Church; HOLY
because her aim, the sanctification and salvation of her members through the
sacraments, is holy; CATHOLIC because she is above local limitations; and
APOSTOLIC because she was “built upon the foundation of the Apostles, Jesus
Christ Himself being the cornerstone” (Eph. 2:20). The Head of the Church is our
LORD, JESUS CHRIST.
We recognize seven sacraments:
1) Baptism is the door through which one enters into the Church.
2) Confirmation is the completion of Baptism.
3) In the sacrament of the Holy Eucharist, with the bread and wine, we partake
of the very Body and the very Blood of our Lord Jesus Christ for remission of
sins and eternal life. Both the New Testament and Sacred Tradition bear witness
to the real Presence of our Lord in the Holy Eucharist.
4) In the sacrament of Confession Jesus Christ, the founder of the sacrament,
through the confessor, forgives the sins committed after Baptism by the person
who confessed his sins and sincerely repents of them.
5) In the sacrament of Ordination through prayer and the laying–on of hands by a
Bishop, divine grace comes down on the ordained enabling him to be a worth
minister of the Church. Apostolic succession is fundamental to the Church.
Without it there can be no continuity of the Church.
6) In the sacrament of Marriage, divine grace sanctifies the union of husband
and wife.
7) In the sacrament of Holy Unction the sick person is anointed with sanctified
oil and divine grace heals his bodily and spiritual ills.
At death, man’s body goes to the earth from which it was taken, and the soul,
being immortal, goes to God, who gave it. The souls of men, being conscious and
exercising all their faculties immediately after death, are judged by God. This
judgment following man’s death we call the Particular Judgment. The final reward
of men, however, we believe will take place at the time of the General Judgment.
During the time between the Particular and the General Judgment, which is called
the Intermediate State, the souls of men have foretaste of their blessing or
punishment. Further, we venerate and honor the saints and we ask their
intercession with God, but we adore and worship God the Father and the Son and
the Holy Spirit. Of all saints, we honor exceedingly the Mother of our Lord
because of the supreme grace and the call which she received from God. Though
she was not exempt from original sin, from which she was cleansed at the time of
the Annunciation, we believe that by the grace of God she did not commit any
actual sin. We venerate the sacred icons and relics. Yet this veneration,
according to the decisions and canons of the Seventh Ecumenical Council, related
not to the sacred images as such, but to their prototypes, or to the persons
whom they represent.
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