Anastasios wrote:I find that Fr Seraphim was holy but focused too much on issues that only affected the Russian Church--notice we Greeks did not have these controversies over such minor issues as "the Dogma of Redemption" spill over into our Church. If the "Dogma of Redemption" were really such a big issue, it would have made it into other local churches and be something we'd all have heard about. but we haven't, and your focusing on it is well, a bit overdone in my opinion. Ecumenism is a much bigger issue than "the Dogma of Redemption."
Anastasios
Pardon me- but this sounds like it came from the same demons who whisper you can believe in evolution and still be a Christian...Think! Anastasios, please think! How could the central pivot of the Christian faith be a side issue? We are talking here of one of the central Mysteries of the Faith! Also how could someone ( like Romanides) who spent most if not all his life outside of the Church help others to accquire a thoroughly Orthodox mindset as you say?
False ecumenism arises out of modernism which again rises out of a lack of ascetic struggle. The idea that we just have to say our morning and evening prayers, go to Temple on Sunday, keep the fasting laws and give occasionally to the poor and God is then in His Heaven and all is right with the world- this is what brought on the revolution and if we really want to see the Empire restored we must struggle hard to accquire the Mind and the life of the Fathers to be the best of our very limited ability if its not already to late. That means purging ourselves of all the corruption of Christianity that has taken place in World Orthodoxy.
Please read the Sermons of St Symeon the New Theologian that Blessed (?) Seraphim translated in the "First Created Man" and than read the first two books of the "Life in Christ" by Nicholas Cabasilas aswell as chapters 4 and 5 of the fourth book before going back to read Romanides book "The Ancestral Sin"- then very probably the fact that so many people admire it will fill you with terror. Have you read the Arena by St Ignati?
Theophan.