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Eastern
rite lures Western seekers
By UWE SIEMON-NETTO, UPI religion correspondent
Wednesday,
1 August 2001 11:24 (ET)

WASHINGTON,
Aug. 1 (UPI) -- If you stand on the shores of Lake Michigan
and watch a man with a long gray mane and beard labor on sailing
boats, don't automatically assume that he's an aging flower
child. He may just be Father Luke, an orthodox cleric, trying
to make ends meet.
Luke,
58, could not even pay his rent with a mission priest's $1,000
stipend. So he has two other jobs. He works for a boat vendor
and keeps book for the Chicago Diocese of the Orthodox Church
in America.
Three
years ago, when Luke was known as the Rev. Robert Nelson, his
material life was easier. Then he was the pastor of Salem, a
Lutheran congregation on the South Side of Chicago.
He
had a reasonable income then and some 300 parishioners, chiefly
black, who loved him and whom he loved. "Leaving them was
the hardest part about converting to Orthodoxy," he told
United Press International Tuesday.
But
leave he did, driven by his "search for a spiritual source,"
as he described it. Now he is pastor to 30 faithful in Christ
the Savior Orthodox Church in the center of Chicago.
Luke
is anything but an oddball. In the Midwest alone, the Orthodox
Church maintains a dozen mission churches among whose priests
are four former Lutheran ministers, one former Episcopalian
and an Amish.
And
if you look beyond, converts are an increasingly important feature
in two [Orthodox representations] in America, the Orthodox Church
in America and the Antiochian Orthodox Christian Archdiocese.
"About half our bishops come from other traditions,"
said Archpriest Leonid Kishkovsky, the OCA's ecumenical officer.
Kishkovsky
ticks off some names: Dimitri Royster, bishop of Dallas, a former
Southern Baptist; Seraphim Storheim, bishop of Canada, formerly
Lutheran, then Anglican; Pierre (now Peter) Huillier, bishop
of New York and New Jersey, a former Catholic from France.
Most
stunning perhaps was, in 1996, the conversion of Jaroslav Pelikan,
Yale University's celebrated church historian and Luther scholar.
Here is a man who has co-edited 22 of the 55 volumes of Luther's
Works in English, and then late in life he "moved East,"
as some theologians like to say.
"I
was the Lutheran with the greatest knowledge of the Orthodox
Church," Pelikan reportedly quipped, "and now I am
the Orthodox with the greatest knowledge of Luther."
He
is has also been quoted as saying, "When the Lutheran Church-Missouri
Synod became Baptist, and the Evangelical Lutheran Church in
America became Methodist, I became Orthodox."
Presumably,
his implication was that the former two denominations were on
the verge of losing their doctrinal clarity.
But
he does not talk to the media about this move that exemplifies
a trend of sorts among some Protestants and Roman Catholics.
"I
have received hundreds of requests for interviews and decided
not to respond to any of them," he told UPI Tuesday.
Some
former associates say that he simply does not wish to hurt his
former Lutheran coreligionists. But a ranking Orthodox cleric
gave a clue: "Pelikan said he joined us after he had
read a work on the Cappadocian Fathers for a fifth time in the
original Greek."
The
Cappadocian Fathers were St. Basil the Great, St. Gregory
of Nazianzus, and St. Gregory of Nyssa, three brilliant
leaders of philosophical Christian orthodoxy in the late 4th
century.
The
study of such church fathers is, of course, en vogue among seekers
in the West, who are often disenchanted with Protestantism and
with what some call the tainted teaching of modernist Catholic
theologians.
Outsiders
aver three principal motives for the conversion of Western Christians
to Orthodoxy, according to journalism professor and religion
columnist Terry Mattingly, a Southern Baptist pastor's son,
who has himself journeyed this way.
"First,
people allege that converts are those who could not live without
certainty," he said. "Second, there is supposed to
be the attraction of the liturgical beauty, the smells and bells,
the icons.
"But
in my case, the third reason applies: the beauty of the doctrine
and faith."
Purity
is what Mattingly's former pastor, Father Gregory of Holy Cross
Orthodox Church outside Baltimore, was seeking. Luke, whose
congregation, like so many [Orthodox] parishes in the U.S.,
consists predominantly of converts, was once Gary Mathewes-Green,
an Episcopal priest.
His
wife, Frederica, a prolific writer, described in one of her
books how he became a "spiritual wanderer," to use
Mattingly's words.

She
wrote, "It became fashionable to doubt Jesus' miracles,
the Virgin birth, even the bodily resurrection ... Gary at last
decided he could no longer be under the authority of apostate
bishops."
A
meeting with another, by now famous, "spiritual wanderer"
ultimately swayed this Episcopal clergyman to become one of
5 million Orthodox Christians in America, Frederica Mathewes-Green
said.
That
man was Peter E. Gillquist, a former Campus Crusade for Christ
staff member, who led more than 2,000 evangelicals into the
Orthodox Church.
Back
in the late 1960s, Gillquist and some friends were "looking
for the true New Testament church," said his wife,
Marilyn, who participated in this venture.
"We
had become convinced that the church was the means to fulfill
the great commission," he later wrote. Gillquist and his
fellow evangelicals then became, in a sense, forerunners of
one particular set of contemporary seekers: the ones who systematically
study what most non-liturgical Protestants have been deprived
of -- the Church Fathers.
"Our
background as evangelical Christians meant that we somewhat
knew our way backward to the Protestant Reformation, and that
we knew our way forward to A.D. 95, the end of the New Testament
era," he wrote. In other words, they had missed out on
what happened theologically between the 2nd and the 16th centuries.
What
Gillquist and his friends found out was this: "From the
start the church of Christ and his apostles were liturgical
and sacramental, with a clearly defined laity, governed by bishops,
presbyters and deacons."
So
they founded, in a sense, little orthodox house churches, vested,
burned incense, celebrated the liturgy, and became the Evangelical
Orthodox Church that was eventually accepted by the Antiochians.
If
there is an amazing story about American Christianity in flux,
this is it. Here were low-churchmen, whose pastors did not even
wear a preaching gown, much less vestments.

Here
were people whose churches had a congregational polity and frowned
on distant hierarchs. And now they are under the roof of an
ancient church whose patriarch lives in Damascus and whose primate
in America, Philip Saliba, reigns from Englewood, N.J.
And
now Father Peter E. Gillquist is archbishop Philip's director
of Mission and Evangelism, doing what he used to do for Campus
Crusade for Christ: gathering souls, except this time for a
church [Antioch] where the Apostle Paul had his own conversion
experience, which changed him from a persecutor of Christians
to the Church's first and most important theologian.
Note:
another famous Orthodox convert is Frank Schaeffer, son of the
famous evangelical theologian Francis Shaeffer.
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