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  1. Feb 25, 2024 · Christianity is a broad religion centered on Jesus Christ, while Orthodox Christianity is a traditionalist branch maintaining early Christian beliefs and practices. Key Differences. Christianity, a major world religion, is based on the life and teachings of Jesus Christ.

  2. Four key differences between the Orthodox and Protestants. Daniel B. Clendenin. Image: Bogdan Kurylo / Getty Images. Most Americans think of religion in terms of the "Big Three"—Protestants,...

    • View of Nature
    • Interaction with The Sciences
    • Bibliography

    Orthodox theology has a positive attitude towards the natural world as a good creation of a good God. Nature is never worshiped; it is God-creator who is worshiped through creation. The Fathers of the Church loved nature, but were never captured by the imagery of nature, which could prevent them from having a spiritual life in God. Thus nature was ...

    In the first centuries of Christianity, the attitude to the sciences was established in the context of its encounter with classical Hellenistic culture. Since Clement of Alexandria (c. 150–215), philosophy and the sciences were considered human activities cooperating in ultimate truth, as useful tools in order to defend faith and make it demonstrab...

    breck, john. the sacred gift of life: orthodox christianityand bioethics. crestwood, n.y.: st. vladimir's seminary press, 1998. cavarnos, constantine. biological evolutionism. etna, calif.: center for traditionalist orthodox studies, 1994. gregorios, paulos mar. the human presence: ecological spirituality and the age of the spirit. new york: amity ...

  3. Church and state in Eastern and Western. theology. The two main forms of the relationship between church and state that have been predominant and decisive through the centuries and in which the structural difference between the Roman Catholic Church and Eastern Orthodoxy becomes most evident can best be explained by comparing the views of two ...

  4. At the outset we can discern at least one basic difference between Eastern Christianity and most of Western—their differing uses of the word orthodoxy.

    • Alexander Melnyk
  5. Orthodox, (from Greek orthodoxos, “of the right opinion”), true doctrine and its adherents as opposed to heterodox or heretical doctrines and their adherents. The word was first used in early 4th-century Christianity by the Greek Fathers.

  6. Aug 29, 2011 · The US Religious landscape survey of the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life in 2008 provides some helpful insights on who the Orthodox faithful are and how integrated they are into the American religious landscape.

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