"Triumph of Orthodoxy" according to the "Orthodox" ecumenist, it happened in Cologne, Germany...
http://www.antiocheurope.com/Images/Alb ... hotos.html
"Triumph of Orthodoxy" according to the "Orthodox" ecumenist, it happened in Cologne, Germany...
http://www.antiocheurope.com/Images/Alb ... hotos.html
You could give this to little kids as a puzzle: "What's wrong with this picture?"
jgress wrote:You could give this to little kids as a puzzle: "What's wrong with this picture?"
In this picture is a heretic Roman Catholic Bishop (in the video you could see at least two ones), they were praying and carrying icons in the procession among the "Orthodox" bishops (they walked just behind the priests), to make matters worse this event was on the Sunday of Orthodoxy.
Priest Siluan wrote:jgress wrote:You could give this to little kids as a puzzle: "What's wrong with this picture?"
In this picture is a heretic Roman Catholic Bishop (in the video you could see at least two ones), they were praying and carrying icons in the procession among the "Orthodox" bishops (they walked just behind the priests), to make matters worse this event was on the Sunday of Orthodoxy.
Haha, yes exactly! I was thinking, however, of those simple puzzles you find in children's comic books, which often include drawings or pictures in which you are told there is something wrong or unexpected, and the goal is to find out what it is. We could teach our children of the dangers of ecumenism using photos like the one you provided, with captions like "Find the heretic in this scene!" I meant it as a joke, but maybe it doesn't have to be.
jgress wrote:Priest Siluan wrote:jgress wrote:You could give this to little kids as a puzzle: "What's wrong with this picture?"
In this picture is a heretic Roman Catholic Bishop (in the video you could see at least two ones), they were praying and carrying icons in the procession among the "Orthodox" bishops (they walked just behind the priests), to make matters worse this event was on the Sunday of Orthodoxy.
Haha, yes exactly! I was thinking, however, of those simple puzzles you find in children's comic books, which often include drawings or pictures in which you are told there is something wrong or unexpected, and the goal is to find out what it is. We could teach our children of the dangers of ecumenism using photos like the one you provided, with captions like "Find the heretic in this scene!" I meant it as a joke, but maybe it doesn't have to be.
Dear Jonathan:
I think it would not be a bad idea, and regrettably there are already many pictures so, so many generations of children could play with them without getting bored ))