Joasia wrote:Interesting comment...do you have any names in particular? Just to clarify things for me...what Church does OOD belong to and which one do you belong to? I'm asking because, your comment doesn't make sense to me if I don't know where people are from. I'm with ROCOR.
I am a layman of the Malankara Orthodox Syrian Church (non-Chalcedonian). OOD can specify which Church he is a member of if he wants.
Some of the saints I had in mind...
Saint Nicetas the Goth was, if I am not mistaken, an Arian. In addition, Saint Constantine was baptised by an Arian. Many Greek churches are named for an emperor who was baptised by a guy who confessed the heresy for the condemnation of which he (Constantine) convoked the First Ecumenical Council.
Saint Isaac of Nineveh belonged to the Persian Church--in other words, he was a Nestorian. Some say he was canonised because his ascetical writings are very valuable. That may be the case, but he was still outside of the Church. And what if it may not be the case? After all, how can good fruit come from a rotting tree?
Saint David of Garej and other early Georgian saints were Monophysites*. The Georgians were allowed to "keep" these upon uniting with the Byzantines, in spite of the fact that they were heretics and thus "outside" the Church (cultural attachments aside, I find this very inconsistent, and wonder how this is justified in particular by the Georgian Orthodox Church, supposedly known for its anti-ecumenical stand, particularly against Monophysites).
I am curious how one can reconcile the claim often heard here that heretics are de facto outside the Church with the fact that there are at least a handful of saints on your calendars who belonged to churches which you would call heretical and outside of the true Church, and yet who are regarded as having been saints, whose writings are read, whose example is imitated, and to whom prayers, liturgical and private, are offered.
*One note. My use of the term "Monophysite" does not mean that I accept that term as an accurate description of the group these saints came from, as they came from us.
Rather, I think it is useful in this instance to use terms you are more comfortable with and which would get your attention and spark further thought on the matter.