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Orthodox diaspora and mission

Author: Stephen Hayes
Date: 16.06.2010
Category: Diaspora

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MISSION AND EMIGRATION -- THE DIASPORA

Orthodox diaspora has been established in Southern Africa by immigrant communities, and this is true of many other parts of the world as well, particularly Australia and the eastern parts of North America.

Where such emigration of people from Orthodox countries took place, Orthodox hierarchs were usually very slow to respond to the needs of these communities, especially to such distant places as Australia. In some cases, the emigrants went as refugees, and in the circumstances in which they left their home countries, there was no opportunity for the home church to care for the needs of its emigrants, because of the crisis it faced at home. So, for example, many Arabs emigrated to America as a result of the Druze-Christian war in Lebanon in 1860, or the Zionist occupation of Palestine in the 1940s. Russians left after the Bolshevik revolution, where the church had to battle to survive at home and so on.

Orthodoxy entered China largely through a group of prisoners of war taken in a border clash between China and Russia, and continued for a long time as part of the diplomatic relations between Russia and China. It was a rather strange combination of mission as statecraft and mission as diaspora. It did not spread much among Chinese people until after the Boxer rebellion, when there was a remarkable growth for a while. Then refugees came from Russia after the Bolshevik Revolution, and Orthodoxy in China took on more of a diaspora character.

In the countries from which the emigrants came, the church was an integral part of the community, but in most cases the church did not accompany people when they emigrated. Not only did emigrants find themselves in a strange land and a strange culture, but even those who shared their religion were often very different. In places like Greece, different villages and islands had different traditions and customs. When they arrived in a strange land, there was a natural desire to stick together, to have a familiar anchor. But even the familiar was unfamiliar.

It was perhaps easier for emigrants from places like Syria and Palestine, where Orthodox Christians were still a minority, though the minority mentality still clung to those who were no longer minorities in their homelands, but whose ancestors had been under Turkish rule until quite recently. In their new countries, therefore, immigrant community organisations were set up by lay leaders, and the structures were not well-defined. Class, regional and ideological antagonisms were carried over from the home countries, and disputes were common. Orthodox migrant conflicts have often assumed an intra-ethnic form, pitting fellow expatriates against each other (Doumanis 1992:61).

In the cities of Australia and South Africa, the early Greek communities were modelled on traditional forms of Greek local government, which gave rise to institutions known as koinotiteskoinotites, usually referred to in English as "communities". The same committee managed cultural, educational, sporting and religious activities. The church collections were used to fund any or all of these various activities. The koinotites jealously guarded their authority, and perceived one of the greatest threats to their authority as coming from the clergy (Doumanis 1992:65). When clergy did reach the immigrant communities, they were regarded as salaried employees of the koinotites. When the Patriarch of Constantinople decided to send a bishop to Australia in 1924 the decision was greeted with outrage by some sections of the community, and schisms resulted. The Sydney koinotia refused to allow the bishop into their church, while in Melbourne the anti-episcopal faction broke away to form a schismatic congregation elsewhere (Doumanis 1992:66).

Keywords: Orthodoxy, Orthodox Church, diaspora, emigration, mission

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PhContributeBy
Reply Flag 0 Thumbs Up Thumbs Down Joseph_Paul_Cadariu (5)  
United States

Several questions:

1. Do you believe Orthodox Christians are Evangelical?

2. Do you believe the "most holy traditions" of the Orthodox Church are co-equal in redemption with Jesus’ sacrifice on the cross?


21.08.2010
PhContributeBy
Reply Flag 0 Thumbs Up Thumbs Down hayesstw (-2)
South Africa
@ Joseph_Paul_Cadariu:

I’m sorry, I don’t understand the questions.


 


In the case of the first question, it depends what you mean by "Evangelical". If you mean being concerned about, and interested in evangelism, then clearly the lady who said "The Orthodox Church is not missionary because its purpose is to preserve Greek culture" is not evangelical. But I quited her view because it was extreme.


The second question I find quite bizarre. It looks like a classic case of "mastaking the map for the territory".


22.08.2010
PhContributeBy
Reply Flag 0 Thumbs Up Thumbs Down Joseph_Paul_Cadariu (5)  
United States
@ hayesstw:

Dear Brother: Sorry I didn’t get to you sooner. My password failed, and I finally found a human who could fix the problem.  Ah! 


The first question meaning, as a denomination, is the Orthodox Church (and its followers) interested in spreading the gospel of Jesus Christ?


Sorry you find the second question "bizarre."  When I queried a Romanian Orthodox priest on how does salvation come to man, heCross...AND "the most holy traditions of the Orthodox Church."


To me, this means they have co-equal status for the redemption of man.  "Mistaking the map for the goal..."  There’s only one road on God’s map to salvation.


24.08.2010
PhContributeBy
Reply Flag 0 Thumbs Up Thumbs Down hayesstw (-2)
South Africa
@ Joseph_Paul_Cadariu:

I think it should be clear from the article that the main difficulty with Orthodox (or indeed any other) Christians in diaspora is to get them interested in spreading the gospel of Jesus Christ, because they tend to form rather introverted communities.


Concerning what the Romanian priest said, I think there are many ways that salvation can come to people. Like St Paul, it can come through direct inspiration of the Holy Spirit. Like the blind man, it can come through healing (Mk 10:52). But for most of us it comes through the holy tradition of the Church (II Tim 2.2), which leads us to repentance (Lk 19.9).


24.08.2010

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