True, the Orthodox Church has historically always taught and preached in the local language of the people (as this is a requirement of The Bible) and has done so for many centuries, especially during the height of the Byzantine Empire. Unfortunately, this has not happened as much in recent decades, due to the political and economic decline of many traditionally Orthodox nations.
Yes. The Greek Orthodox Church successfully evangelized Western Europeans due to a willingness to teach others in their unique languages.
True.
true
no and yes because the did run successfully but at the end sadly no
Stupid question because most people have understood and accepted the fact that this is the only life you have. We evolved.
The best may is allowed to be non-Orthodox. This is because Orthodox weddings do not actually include a best man. The tradition of best man is a Western one, so because it is not an Orthodox tradition, the best man is allowed to be non-Orthodox.
Obviously this is not a serious question, because the Orthodox Church was never abolished.
Orthodox is an adjective, because it describes a noun. Your entrance to the freeway during rush-hour traffic was somewhat less than orthodox.
because they are all equally important, and Eastern Orthodox church is pretty big
yes it has been used successfully .....because of what.......
Being Orthodox is the same as being Christian, because it is the religion that started Christianity.
Orthodox Christians baptize babies because they want their children to have the Holy Spirit in them as soon as possible.
Because they have different beliefs.
Do you mean Greek Orthodox, Russian Orthodox, Jewish Orthodox? Arguably, not a huge amount because orthodox usually denotes a high value being placed on procedure and tradition - which they all share to an extent.
Because the Romanian Orthodox Church adopted the new (Gregorian) calendar in 1924, along with the Greek Orthodox Church. The largest Orthodox church (the Russian Orthodox) continued to use the old (Julian) calendar, along with the Serbian Orthodox, to celebrate Christmas on 7 January each year.