This is a guest post from Andrew Boyd, the Director of the Department of Youth, Young Adult, and Campus Ministries for the OCA. Andrew graduated from the University of Connecticut in 2008, where he was an active OCF member, and graduated from St. Vladimir's Seminary in 2012. Andrew is also a former member of our Student Advisory Board.
I think many people are attracted to Orthodoxy because of its outward, monolithic appearance. When you compare it to modern Protestantism, with its kaleidoscope of different denominations and theologies, our Church does indeed look impressively uniform. I can walk into any Orthodox Church and within a minute or two, know what’s going on—regardless of the language. I can rest assured that those I am in communion with share my beliefs about the trinity, Christ, and what He came to do for us. We have a shared history of saints, stories, and customs. Tapping into Orthodoxy is like having an instantaneous social network of strangers that have the same formative experiences of God and religion.
Photo from College Conference East 2013 |
Coming from the Slavic tradition, OCF showed me the beauty of diverse practices. I had never experienced the moving communal prayer to the Mother of God, called the Paraklesis, before my first college conference. I learned the lives of the martyrs of Byblos and of St. Nektarios of Aegina, unfamiliar to me growing up. Most importantly, I was able to share the incredible stories from my tradition, like the native Alaskan melodies preserved in our Church's worship in Alaska. One night at a Student Advisory Board meeting, several of us snuck out to St. Raphael of Brooklyn's grave on the edge of Antiochian Village. We all took turns singing hymns to him in our traditional melodies, and ended by singing "The Angel Cried" together.
Diversity and unity expressed at the same time.
Image from holy-icons.com |
May Saint Raphael guide all of us as we work towards unity in our Church in North America, not to make a boring Church of sameness, but that sharing in communion with our God, we can see more clearly the value in each other's diversity and with one mind confess Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.
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