Sunday, July 14, 2013


DOGMA – The Enemy of Contemporary Christianity

So as to guard the right path of faith, The Church has had to forge strict forms for the expression of the truths of faith: it has had to build up the fortresses of truth for the repulsion of influences foreign to the Church.  The definitions of truth declared by the Church have been called, since the days of the Apostles, dogmas.   In the Acts of the Apostles we read of the Apostles Paul and Timothy that as they went through the cities, they delivered them the decrees (dogmata) for to keep, that were ordained of the apostles and elders which were at Jerusalem (Acts 16:4; here the reference is to the decrees of the Apostolic Council which is described in the fifteenth chapter of the Book of Acts).  [Here we see in the early Church there is no concept of independent churches or congregational autonomy.  Everyone was not doing their own thing. All local churches were subject to the decrees of the apostolic council.]  Among the ancient Greeks and Romans the Greek word dogmat was used to refer a) to philosophical conceptions, and b) to directives which were to be precisely fulfilled.  In the Christian understanding, “dogmas” are the opposite of “opinions,” that is, inconstant personal conceptions.

Excerpt from Orthodox Dogmatic Theology by Father Michael Pomazansky published by St. Herman of Alaska Brotherhood.