Tuesday, December 30, 2008

St. Andrew Western Rite Church in Oklahoma City's New Home (And More)

A new picture of the interior of St. Andrew Orthodox Church (Western Rite).

Fr. Mark Wallace of St. Andrew Orthodox Church, a member of the Antiochian Western Rite Vicariate, has posted a number of photographs of the church's new location. Fr. Wallace writes, "On Christmas Eve, 2008, the congregation of St. Andrew Orthodox Church was blessed to begin services in its own rented space at 6444 N.W. Expressway in Oklahoma City."Congratulations and Godspeed to St. Andrew's, Fr. Mark Wallace, and all its faithful!

The site has also added a Daily Lectionary. (The church celebrates the Liturgy of St. Tikhon.) Finally, you can read or listen to Fr. Wallace's sermons (and you should). Enjoy.

Update: Ooops! I changed the title to reflect the correct church name, St. Andrew, not "St. Mark." I had a rare Freudian slip, or I may well have had a prophecy about its priest. It was none other than Fr. Mark Wallace who pointed out my error. (Blushing.)




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Tuesday, December 23, 2008

Keep the "Mass" in Christmas

From the Orthodixie blog, Fr. Joseph Honeycutt writes that the Church needs to adopt a slogan besides "Keep Christ in Christmas":
[S]houldn’t we be encouraging people to keep the MASS in Christmas? Face it, if we believe as we claim to: Christ is already there!

Yet it is the MASS, the Divine Liturgy for the Feast, that constitutes Christ’s Mass – CHRISTMAS!
Hear the whole thing here. (Plugged in part because I really enjoy Orthodixie, in part for the use of the term "Mass"!)

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Thursday, November 13, 2008

New OCA Metropolitan JONAH

Met. JONAH (Paffhausen) of the OCA

The Orthodox Church in America (OCA) has elected a new Metropolitan: His Eminence JONAH (Paffhausen). Its website announced:
On Wednesday, November 12, 2008, His Grace, Bishop Jonah of Fort Worth was elected Archbishop of Washington and New York and Metropolitan of All America and Canada at the 15th All-American Council of the Orthodox Church in America.
After joining the Orthodox Church in 1978, he earned two Master's degrees from St. Vladimir's Orthodox Theological Seminary, then began working toward a Ph.D. at Graduate Theological Union in Berkeley. (If he went to Berkeley and remained Orthodox, that is a very good sign.) He went on to live in Russia, then to join Valaam Monastery, where his spiritual father blessed him to become a priest-monk. (Imagine, a monk who belonged to an established monastery, who waited on others to confirm his call.) He has been a priest since 1995, tonsured a monk at St. Tikhon's Monastery, and helped found numerous missions.

In the spring of 2008, the Holy Synod of the Orthodox Church in America elevated Fr. Jonah to the rank of Archimandrite and he was given the obedience to leave the monastery and take on the responsibilities of auxiliary bishop and chancellor for the Diocese of the South.

Bishop Jonah's episcopal election took place on September 4, 2008, at an extraordinary meeting of the Holy Synod of Bishops. Earlier in the summer, his candidacy was endorsed by the Diocese of the South's Diocesan Council, shortly after Bishop Jonah had participated in the diocese's annual assembly.

Bishop Jonah was consecrated Bishop of Forth Worth and Auxiliary Bishop of the Diocese of the South, at St. Seraphim Cathedral, Dallas, TX, on Saturday, November 1, 2008.
Incidentally, Met. JONAH is a former Episcopalian.

Several members have provided links to media for this occasion:

Videos
Audio
He is not entering the hierarchy at a time of smooth sailing. May God lead him in this difficult time. Many years to him.

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Wednesday, August 20, 2008

Audio: A "New" Ex-CEC Member on "True Convergence"

It had been nearly eight months since its last update, so I wondered if it had died out, but thankfully the "True Convergence" podcast has come roaring back to life. You can now hear: True Convergence Episode #6, recorded two weeks ago. The new episode features the testimony of Noel Gnotti, a former member of the Charismatic Episcopal Church, now a member of St. Anthony's Orthodox Church in San Diego, California. Also on this episode is Fr. Patrick Cardine, of St. Patrick Antiochian Orthodox Church (Western Rite) in Warrenton, Virginia, a longtime friend of the newly chrismated Noel. We also hear from Matt Cuthberton of St. John the Theologian Orthodox Church in San Juan Capistrano, CA. (Matt has just opened the Byzantine chant site: chantbootcamp.com.)

As with all the previous episodes, this is well worth listening to, especially for CEC members, charismatics, or evangelicals considering the Orthodox Church. (You can get a a run-down of earlier shows here.) Noel's words about being a "professional Christian" are touching (and convicting). The guests also discuss such topics as:
  • Developing a less "casual" view of truth;
  • The Convergence Movement's hidden pitfalls: syncretism and self-deception;
  • The deep theological content of Orthodox services;
  • How charismatic "revelations" are commonplace in Orthodoxy;
  • True Convergence occurs within the Orthodox Church;
  • What holds us back from pursuing truth; and
  • Satisfying spiritual hunger.
You can download all the episodes here.

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Thursday, July 31, 2008

The Newest "Threat to Christianity!"

Stop me if you've heard this one before: the secular media report a recent archeological discovery that is supposed to shake Christianity's most sacred doctrines down to their foundation. Except, when one examines the fine print, the facts don't quite add up. It's happened again. (The media earns points for originality by releasing it sometime other than Lent, unlike the last few stories.)

I'd meant to write something about the newest chapter in this saga, but put it off until I heard Dr. Clark Carlton's newest podcast on the subject. Although I frequently find myself differing with him, Carlton hit the nail on the head about this one.

The newest drive-by assault on our religion has to do with the proper interpretation of the Suffering Servant written of in Isaiah 53. (The passage actually begins in the last few verses of chapter 52.)

The London Times headline blares, "Dead Sea tablet 'casts doubt on death and resurrection of Jesus.' " That sounds like they found the Body, doesn't it? So, what's so all-fired important? A recently discovered stone, which is written on and not engraved, contains an apocalyptic text known as "Gabriel's Vision of Revelation." The New York Times says this stone dates from the first century B.C. The media report this text, if correctly interpreted, discusses a Messiah named Simon who suffers and dies for Israel's redemption, then rises after three days.

For one thing, it's not at all clear that the text is correct. You see, "A previous paper published by the scholars Ada Yardeni and Binyamin Elitzur concluded that the most controversial lines were indecipherable." The New York Times adds, "the stone is broken, and some of the text is faded, meaning that much of what it says is open to debate."

But the (London) Times goes forward, "Israel Knohl, a biblical studies professor at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, argued Monday that line 80 of the text revealed Gabriel telling an historic Jewish rebel named Simon, who was killed by the Romans four years before the birth of Christ: 'In three days you shall live, I, Gabriel, command you.'
" (He also says the tablet calls this leader the "Prince of Princes." This is rather like the Apocalypse's "King of Kings," don't you think?)

The New York Times spins, "If such a messianic description really is there, it will contribute to a developing re-evaluation of both popular and scholarly views of Jesus, since it suggests that the story of his death and resurrection was not unique but part of a recognized Jewish tradition at the time." Moreover, this was Knohl's desire. "Mr. Knohl posited in a book published in 2000 the idea of a suffering messiah before Jesus, using a variety of rabbinic and early apocalyptic literature as well as the Dead Sea Scrolls. But his theory did not shake the world of Christology as he had hoped, partly because he had no textual evidence from before Jesus." (Emphasis added.)

The story continues:

He says further that such a suffering messiah is very different from the traditional Jewish image of the messiah as a triumphal, powerful descendant of King David.

“This should shake our basic view of Christianity,” he said as he sat in his office of the Shalom Hartman Institute in Jerusalem where he is a senior fellow in addition to being the Yehezkel Kaufman Professor of Biblical Studies at Hebrew University.
I see. So, an artifact that "is very different from the traditional Jewish image of the messiah" and presents a fundamental contradiction to anti-Messianic polemics voiced in the pitched battles against Christians "should shake our basic view of Christianity"? Gotcha....

Unfortunately for the secular media, Christians have always taught that the Hebrew Scriptures foretold a Suffering Servant, and that Jesus fulfilled this prophecy in His life. This tablet, if true, would be the smoking gun to prove Christians were right. If Knohl were correct, this discovery would not shake up Christology but destroy one steadfast argument against a Christological interpretation of the Old Testament.

In fact, it has been an underpinning of certain individuals who oppose Christianity that Judaism had no "suffering servant" view of the Messiah. They insist that Christianity invented this doctrine after the Crucifixion. Take, for instance, Jews for Judaism. Answering the question of whether the prophecy in Isaiah 53 of the Suffering Servant referred to Jesus, the group writes emphatically:
It is apparent from the Gospels that before and for sometime after the crucifixion Jesus' own disciples didn't view Isaiah 53 as referring to a suffering messiah who would die for the sins of the people and then be resurrected. It was only in the post-crucifixion period that these notions developed among the followers of Jesus. There is simply no evidence that this was a Jewish interpretation of the passage. The Question remains as to who are the Jews contemporary with Jesus that supposedly held to what has become the present Christian understanding of the meaning of Isaiah 53? They simply cannot be identified because they never existed.
Thanks be to God the Ethiopian eunuch did not go to them!

But this revisionist viewpoint did not begin with this 21st century group. Origen, later condemned as an heretic, discussed how Jews in his day held "that these predictions bore reference to the whole people, regarded as one individual, and as being in a state of dispersion and suffering, in order that many proselytes might be gained, on account of the dispersion of the Jews among numerous heathen nations."

However, a different interpretation of Isaiah 53 has continued to this day. In fact, Rabbi Alan J. Iser referred to this on one episode of "The Illumined Heart" on Ancient Faith Radio.

On the other hand, Christians have been teaching a Messianic interpretation since the very beginning, both in the New Testament and in the earliest patristic writings.

Some Christian apologists have taught there were two traditions of a Messiah at the time of Christ, but only the second was preached. That was Messiah Ben David, the conquering king. But he was preceded, in Jewish tradition, by Messiah Ben Joseph, who was to be a Suffering Servant, and if this Messiah had been taught, it would have been more obvious that Jesus had come in this role.

What is clear is that this stone casts no doubts on Christianity but affirms one of its central tenets. It undermines arguments against Christianity. And the anti-Christian media spun the story exactly backwords, because that fit their agenda.

(Mind you, there are some "Orthodox" who think the Crucifixion was incidental, and we in no way should value, emphasize, or meditate upon it in conjunction with our ever-present focus on the Resurrection. Maybe this will cause them to rethink their extremist position, as well.)

You can hear Dr. Clark Carlton's podcast here.

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Thursday, May 29, 2008

Audio: Crowning the Queen with the Ethiopian Hail Mary

The Hail Mary, chanted, from EthiopianOrthodox.org.

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Friday, April 18, 2008

New Blog Added

I've added a link to this site: Maria Lectrix. It features "public domain audiobooks six days a week," with an emphasis on patristic texts. Prepare to fill an entire hard drive. :)

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Monday, January 14, 2008

Audio: Orthodox Converts from the CEC

Those from the Charismatic Episcopal Church who are considering the Orthodox Church, especially the Western Rite, would enjoy this new(er) podcast, True Convergence. So far, they have already produced four episodes:

  1. Episode One, in which Fr. John Denzil Roland of Sts. Peter and Paul (Hot Springs, AR) and Fr. Patrick Cardine of St. Patrick Orthodox Church (Warrenton, VA) discuss their journey from the CEC into the Antiochian Orthodox Western Rite;
  2. Episode Two, in which soon-to-be Father Mark Wallace of St. Andrew Orthodox Church (Oklahoma City, OKC) discusses his journey from CEC into the Western Rite of Antioch. Frs. Cardine and Roland also discuss the history of the Convergence Movement;
  3. Episode Three, in which Frs. Roland and Cardine discuss the role of Charismatic Gifts in Orthodoxy; and
  4. Episode Four, featuring Bishop THOMAS and Fr. Peter Gillquist, in which the latter denies he told the CEC's Bishop Adler not to join the Orthodox Church. The growing entourage includes Frs. Roland and Cardine, Mark Wallace, and two catechumens from St. John the Theologian Church.

Keep your eyes peeled. (Ouch!) If they hold according to schedule, they should have a new episode out today.

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Tuesday, November 20, 2007

New Audio: Fr. Waggener's Story, and Fr. Angwin's Passing

Our friends at Christ in the Mountains have a new podcast featuring the second half of Fr. Andrew's interview with Fr. Alban Waggener and a comment on the passing of Fr. Joseph Angwin (RIP).

I also greatly appreciate Fr. Andrew's closing meditation on the spermatikos Logos, and God's omnipresence, even in "secular" moments. "There are no secular moments," he reminds us. "There are no places where God is not present, no places where His voice is not speaking."

Download it here.

Another excellent podcast. We're impressed with CITM's podcasts thus far. Good work!

(The solo is OK, but I think I like the extra dose of Swedish bluegrass....)

(Hat tip: Fr. Andrew)

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Tuesday, November 13, 2007

The Western Rite and...Swedish Bluegrass?

Christ in the Mountains has a new podcast: an interview with Fr. Alban Waggener, formerly Bishop Robert Waggener in the Continuing Anglican movement. According to the description, it also includes clips of Swedish bluegrass. A once-mitred "convert" to the Western Rite and High Lonesome Abba? Get it now!

(Hat tip: Fr. Andrew)

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Tuesday, September 25, 2007

Audio: For Lutherans

Yet more audio lectures from Western Rite Orthodox! At the recent "Faith of our Fathers" Lutheran Colloquium in Detroit, Fr. John W. Fenton of Holy Incarnation Orthodox Church gave an address on Orthodox Confessions of Faith (MP3). Enjoy.

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Saturday, September 08, 2007

Audio: From Charismatic to the Western Rite

Here's yet more Western Rite audio: the story of Fr. John of Sts. Peter and Paul Mission in Hot Springs, Arkansas. We reported its reception from the Charismatic Episcopal Church (CEC) into the Western Rite of Holy Orthodoxy. Now you can hear its priest's own compelling (and funny!) words.

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Sunday, August 05, 2007

Audio Files About the Western Rite

This is late in posting; there are now several audio files available for listening or download about the Western Rite:
Happy listening!

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