Dear in Christ, OOD,
I have had to break down your last post into five sections in order to let you know how I went with your suggestions
OrthodoxyOrDeath wrote:I was in the OCA at one time and have had the opportunity to discuss this issue with a half-dozen of their priests at one time or another. I have found that this is in fact their belief, and it is by no means limited to the Latins.
If I lived in 8th century Costatinople, I'm sure I could have found at least six Iconoclast priests- however, I could not say that Iconoclasm was a teaching of the Church in Constantinople on the basis of this.
OrthodoxyOrDeath wrote:If I recall, there have been people on this forum who have made inquiries to the OCA "official" website and received the same results.
I did a google search of euphrosynoscafe.com with the keywords "OCA, baptism" with no results:
Your search - +OCA +baptism site:euphrosynoscafe.com - did not match any documents
OrthodoxyOrDeath wrote:And if you explore orthodoxinfo.com, you will also find that the Dean of St. Vlad's - Erickson (sp?), the layman who trains their priests, also believes this as well as Hopko and Schmemann.
I also did a Google site search of the orthodoxinfo.com website using several combinations of keywords with no results. Here are some examples of the results:
Your search - St. Vladmir's Seminary Dean site:orthodoxinfo.com - did not match any documents
Your search - Vladmir's Seminary site:orthodoxinfo.com - did not match any documents
Your search - Erickson site:orthodoxinfo.com - did not match any documents
Your search - Erikson site:orthodoxinfo.com - did not match any documents
Your search - Hopko site:orthodoxinfo.com - did not match any documents
Your search - Schmemann site:orthodoxinfo.com - did not match any documents
OrthodoxyOrDeath wrote:This beleif is also exhibited strongly in their practice. It is a high crime in the OCA to "baptize" someone like their bishop Tikhon who claims to have received the Baptism of the Church by the Lutherans!
As discussed earlier in this thread, if St. Basil the Great wrote a Canon accepted by the Sixth Ecumenical Council which states that all Arians are to be received into the Church through Chrisimation, and all Nestorians are to be recieved into the Church without any Mysterion at all, but merely by signing retractions of their heresy, then the OCA is not innovating by stating that all Lutherans are to be received by Chrisimation.
OrthodoxyOrDeath wrote:And besides, how does a "un-official" document make its way to the internet and "officially" posted on "official" websites of certain synods (the State church of Greece is one), especially since this espouses an ecclesiastical heresy? Where is the "official" denounciation of this "unofficial" document?
I went to the Church of Greece website and hit the link to "Ecumenism." The statement is certainly there, but again, it's precence signifies no official recognition. This is further evidenced by the fact that on the same page is Archbishop Christodoulos’ speech in international academic symposium “Orthodox Theology and Ecumenical dialogue” 1-3 June, 2003.
I would say that this is an "official voice of the Church of Greece. What is surprising is that these are the words of a New Calendarist ecumenist. Here are some quotes from it:
'we accept neither the “branch theory”, nor the theory of “shared truth”.'
"We enter into the dialogues with love in Christ for our Christian brothers and sisters and with respect for them. But love is neither compromise, nor syncretism, but the confession in humility in our part, of the Truth in Christ."
"We cannot, therefore, accept the Tradition of the Church to be ignored, especially since this tradition was united at the first centuries; nor can we accept a form of tolerance that a part of the Church can retain its own positions on essential issues of Faith and pastoral care that are alien and opposite to the positions of the seven Ecumenical Councils."
Together with this, on the same page with the "ecumenism" links on the Church of Greece website is paper presented by Fr. George Dragas The Manner of Reception of Roman Catholic Converts into the Orthodox Church which was read at the Orthodox/Roman Catholic dialogue in the US in 1998. This paper is probably one of the best explanations of the reception into the Church through akrivia and economia, quoting extensively from the Fathers and the Canons, and clearly stating that Roman Catholic baptism is inadequate for initiation into the Church.
I'm not simply trying to be be difficult OOD. The only way any question or dispute can be resolved is if we honestly seek the truth. I still see no evidence that any Church claiming the title "Canonical Orthodox" (including the OCA) recognises baptisms outside the Church.
In Christ,
George