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Δευτέρα 6 Φεβρουαρίου 2012
THE FUNCTION OF THE PROPHET
By
Archbishop Dmitri of Dallas (OCA), August 9, 1995.
The
function of the prophet of the Old Testament was twofold: to foretell the
future, the coming of the Messiah and the fulfillment of the vocation of the
Hebrew people; to call them to account for their sins and disobedience and for
their departures from God's righteousness. The prophets called them to
repentance for their transgressions, chief among which was being influenced by
the idolatrous and barbarous religions of their neighbors and adopting their
ways.
Our Lord
Jesus Christ Himself, in His own prophetic ministry, condemned false religion
and false thinking about religion, and, in doing so, He deeply offended the
self-righteous religious leaders who were responsible for guiding the people of
Israel.
Throughout
her history, the Church has been beset by the assaults of the Evil One,
heresies that would undermine the doctrine of the person of the Lord Himself
(Arianism, Nestorianism, Monophytism, etc.), surrender to pressures for
conformity (iconoclasm), and politically motivated alliances (the false union
of Florence). Many Christians, at times a majority of them, were attracted by
these destructive movements, and were offended at the prophetic voice, which
was never lacking, that perceived the real dangers in them. The Church, by
God's grace, overcame them all and reached the twentieth century intact.
It is my
opinion that many Orthodox Christians today are willing for the Church to
surrender to the temptation to conform to the role that contemporary society
assigns to religion: to bless this world's so-called progress in the moral and
spiritual spheres, to reject all exclusivity or uniqueness in the interest of
unity, and to concern itself with the world of the here and now rather than
with the world to come. Many are unaware of the primary danger that the Church
faces: the gradual infiltration of materialistic, humanistic and secularist
thinking, that the ground is being laid for a western captivity far worse than
those of the past, latinizations and protestantizations.
Prophetic
voices are needed to call us all back to the real-ization that the forces of
this world still want to destroy the Church, the precious Truth that has been
entrusted to her—to understand that what the Church has is essential for the
life of the world and its salvation and that this cannot be mitigated. These
voices will offend - so
be it!
One such
voice is that of the author of "Letters to Father Aristotle." Frank
Schaeffer has come to us from where that secularism has already done a great
deal of its damage, and he is in a unique position to discern the signs of the
times. He is an intensely loyal Orthodox layman, loyal also to his local church
and the jurisdiction to which it belongs. He is one of us, and we American
Orthodox should give heed to what he has to say.
ORTHODOX HERITAGE. VOL10, ISSUE 01-02. BROTHERHOOD OF ST. POIMEN.
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