Thanks for sharing 👍🏼
I started studying church history not long ago, so there’s a lot that I don’t know. From what I can see the biggest obstacle people have with Eastern Orthodoxy is the lack of unity and divide along national lines, which is influenced by politics and can lead to fragmentation. Doctrinally there really aren’t many disagreements, at least with Catholics from what I can see. But I’m not church historian or theologian.
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A common critique for sure 🤝. I am a neophyte (my family and I were baptized last February) and, like you, started familiarizing myself with Church History fairly recently (the COVID era allowed for a deep dive into money and Christianity for me). I was a blank slate too, as I did not grow up in any sort of church so Orthodoxy seemed so obvious to me. A few years back I read "The Life of Moses" by St. Gregory of Nyssa and "Hymns on Paradise" by St. Ephraim the Syrian and they blew my mind and sent me in a direction I never thought I'd go and it made me wonder why we didn't hear more about these Holy men here in the West and how they've defended the faith for millenia.
I really enjoy all of the dialogue going on between Rome, Protestants, and the Orthodox though my immaturity in the faith often leads to an over zealous stance on things that I am far too retarded to defend.