The Orthodox Church is founded on the mystery of God's Word. As the Father has sent me, I also send you (John 20: 21). It is a fundamental conviction of the Orthodox believer that the Church has been sent into the world to live and bear witness to the loving vocation, with which God enfolds humankind from the beginning of its existence, through the presence within herself of God's Word,. "For God so loved the word that he gave his only begotten Son... God did not send his Son into the world to condemn the world, but that the world through him might be saved" (John 3: 16-17).
According to the Orthodox point of view,
the vocation and responsibility of the Church is to hold to the truths, which
are revealed by the historical appearance of Jesus Christ, and preserve them,
under the guidance of the Holy Spirit, as a living tradition within the
ecclesial body. The Church is described in the Bible as the pillar and
ground of the truth (I Tim. 3: 15). This means that every perfect gift
and every truth revealed in Christ is kept intact in the Church and transmitted
as a dynamic tradition and a life giving reality in every historic now» The
very being of the Church is understood as Orthodox communion.
The issue of tradition is of capital
importance for the understanding of the faith, work and life of the Orthodox
Church. Tradition is not simply the transmission of an abstract teaching, but
rather the maintenance of the eternal truth of the Gospel. Tradition is lived
in time and history. This means that the Church has received the faith of the
Apostles, maintains it and lives this faith as a divine heritage and dynamic
process. Thus, the Orthodox Faith, once delivered to the Apostles and the
Saints, is preserved as a living inheritance in specific situations; it has,
under the guidance of the Holy Spirit, a historic continuity and actuality.
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