Interview with Fr. Andrew Stephen Damick, Author of Orthodoxy and Heterodoxy
A couple months ago, I grabbed a copy of Orthodoxy and Heterodoxy: Exploring Belief Systems through the Lens of the Ancient Christian Faith, by Fr. Andrew Stephen Damick, and even though I have two religion degrees I discovered facts I never knew and learned ways of expressing ideas that were incredibly helpful.
Fr. Andrew does the seemingly impossible in a mere 224 pages. He gives a broad scope of Orthodox belief, but details every imaginable brand of Christianity, cult, and world religion.
The book originally began as a podcast series on Ancient Faith radio with the same name, but don't be afraid of redundant content, there is plenty of new information expressed clearly for the religion teacher and the non-specialist.
Last week, two Mormon missionaries stopped by front door, leading to a brief but cordial conversation. Retelling this encounter to a friend, prompted the idea of a future series in our Sunday School that will use this book as our textbook.
Fr. Andrew was gracious enough to take interview questions, and you will find the questions and thoughtful answers below.
Thanks again Fr. Andrew!
Theron Mathis
Fr. Andrew does the seemingly impossible in a mere 224 pages. He gives a broad scope of Orthodox belief, but details every imaginable brand of Christianity, cult, and world religion.
The book originally began as a podcast series on Ancient Faith radio with the same name, but don't be afraid of redundant content, there is plenty of new information expressed clearly for the religion teacher and the non-specialist.
Last week, two Mormon missionaries stopped by front door, leading to a brief but cordial conversation. Retelling this encounter to a friend, prompted the idea of a future series in our Sunday School that will use this book as our textbook.
Fr. Andrew was gracious enough to take interview questions, and you will find the questions and thoughtful answers below.
1.
For me, the Catholic section of the book was extremely helpful, because
this is
an area where I could shore up my knowledge. Have you had any
Catholic
reaction or interaction with the book?
Fr. Andrew: Almost everyone who contacts me about the book is either already
an Orthodox Christian or in the process of either considering
Orthodoxy or becoming Orthodox. So I don't think I can recall any
direct reaction from any current Roman Catholics on the book.
That said, there were some Roman Catholics present when I
delivered the lectures in Emmaus (which were the ones recorded for the "Orthodoxy and Heterodoxy" podcast). Some mainly
listened. A couple of them criticized what I was saying. Some of their criticisms
were based in ignorance of what their own church teaches (or perhaps,
the ignorance of their teachers), and some were criticisms based essentially in the reality that we didn't share the same
theology. But some turned out to be things I had gotten wrong or
emphasized wrongly. So I used some of their criticisms to correct the
text as it was being prepared for publication. I also consulted
friends who could help me delve more deeply into their theology beyond the
kind of thing one finds in official catechisms and papal statements.
2.
I often get basic questions about "What is Orthodoxy?", and
they are
usually in contexts where I can't give a
historical dissertation or
theological lecture. Usually someone is
asking whether I am Jewish, and
just needs cliff notes version. Have you
developed an "elevator speech"
that you you use in these situations?
Fr. Andrew: Honestly, I'm not really a fan
of the "elevator speech" for serious topics like the meaning of life and the universe (which is what religion is about). Nevertheless, I do think one should
have a ready answer, even when there are only a few minutes to deliver it.
But you can't say everything, and our faith strongly resists being
summarized.
So I think the best approach is to try to leave a
"hook" in people's minds, something that can later be used to hang a future
experience of Orthodoxy upon. I might say something like,
"Orthodoxy is the first and oldest of all Christian churches" or "Orthodoxy is
the church that still lives in the places where the Apostles were" or even
"Orthodoxy is the faith that connects with the whole human being -- not
just his mind and emotions, but all his senses, too." It very
much depends on what I imagine might connect with the person standing in front
of me.
I also keep a business-sized "contact card" on hand
with basic information about my church (location, website, phone number,
that we have daily church services, etc.), so that I can hand it to
people and
let them follow-up later.
3.
It seems that a lot of the book was developed organically in your parish
life, as you designed these lectures to help
equip people in their faith and
interaction with others. What
specifically did you learn when writing?
Were you surprised by anything?
Fr. Andrew: My family's original name from Lithuania (Domeika) comes from a Lithuanian word meaning "to be interested in
something." So I suppose we're curious people. I wasn't really surprised, exactly,
though I did learn much that I had never heard of while doing the
research, and people in my family often delight in collecting a vast array of details on any particular topic. We seem to like
encyclopedias, and in some sense, this was a chance to make something like that of
my own.
What honestly did surprise me, though, was not really in the
writing, but rather in the delivery, first at my previous parish in
Charleston, West Virginia, and now in my current one in Emmaus,
Pennsylvania, and
that was this: People actually are interested in theology.
Now, if you say, "Hey, let's talk theology," most folks' eyes
glaze over, but try saying, "Do you think that you can 'get saved' and you
keep that forever, no matter what you do after that?'" I find
questions like that gain fascinating engagement. And even though
advertising a class in "comparative theology" might turn people's minds
snoozing, saying "Hey, let's talk about the religions of our neighbors and
friends and how they're different from ours" turns out to be pretty interesting to a lot of folks.
I was extremely surprised both of the times I delivered the
lectures that I had dozens of people show up from multiple churches.
Most of the classes I do draw perhaps a dozen to twenty people, but the
"Orthodoxy and Heterodoxy" series never had fewer than
fifty, and sometimes as many as a hundred.
And of course I also remain surprised at how much attention both
the podcast and the book have gotten. You can ask my wife --
I'm not really sure what to do about it!
4. I am really glad that you included
non-Christian religions in the book,
considering our pluralistic society and the
need for us and our children to
interact with people of various faiths.
Are there any non-Christian people
that you have been able to interact with, and
discuss Orthodoxy? If so,
what have you learned?
Fr. Andrew: As I said above, relatively few non-Orthodox people have
contacted me about the podcast or book. But I have had a few
non-Christians say things to me like, "After reading all this, if I ever
became a
Christian, Orthodox is the only kind I could ever be."
5. Here's a big question: Your book
truly has a worldwide appeal, and not
focused primarily to an American audience
(outside those forms of
Christianity that arose here), but you
minister in America. What can
Orthodox people do to make greater inroads
into American life?
Fr. Andrew: Primarily, we have to reject the secularist idea that almost
every other religious body has tacitly acceded to in America, namely,
the idea that religion is something that is private and that it is
not
polite to talk about it publicly, and that therefore it is appropriately relegated to one hour or two of the week but has
little to do with the other 166 hours. That is utter nonsense.
What could be of more public concern than the meaning of life? Is it
really worth it to remain quiet and polite when eternal souls are at
stake?
And do we actually think the brief training in holiness we
receive on Sunday mornings is enough to teach us to be citizens of the
Kingdom of Heaven, when we spend 34 hours a week being trained by our
televisions
to be consumers (not to mention all the other kinds of training
we receive). I think our biggest problems are probably
cowardice and laziness.
That said, our main task in bringing America into the Orthodox
Church is to become actually cognizant that we should be doing that!
If the roughly one million active Orthodox Christians in America
actually all
agreed with the sentence, "It is my duty to bring all of my
family, friends, neighbors and co-workers into Christ's Church,"
you probably wouldn't even be asking me that question.
We could of course talk about numerous questions of technique
and method, but I think our biggest obstacle is that, collectively,
we've got our identity wrong.
6. Any future
projects?
Fr. Andrew: I'm currently working on another book with Conciliar Press (title forthcoming), whose purpose will be to introduce Orthodox
Christianity to the unchurched and the ex-churched, people who either have no
real religious affiliation at all or who gave up on it, probably out
of disgust or hopelessness. With that audience in mind, it
will deal with the most primal and basic questions of Christian faith:
How do
we know anything about God? What is worship, and why
should we do it? Whom can you trust to tell you about God? What is
the point in being moral?
It's a tough assignment, and these and related questions haunt
me at times, because I'm not always sure I know the answers, but I
believe that we have to ask these questions, even those of us who are
already
"churched." Because if we don't know why we're
there, then what are we doing there, anyway? And if we don't know why we're
there, then what business do we have in inviting someone else?
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