Christian Division Requires Christians to Sin

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The definition of ancestral sin according to Orthodox Christianity, as I understand it, offers insights.  Ancestral sin is theoretically defined like an inherited disease with ‘moderate to severe’ tendencies to sin personally but without being responsible for anyone else’s sins.  

Practically, Christian schism requires the individual Christian to be responsible for the sins of those Church leaders who created and continue Christian division in the following ways.   First, the individual Christian is responsible for the sin of a divided Christianity created by others just by being a member of a church.  This inherited scandal is felt more acutely when the individual Christian disagrees and determines ours is a false division but has no authority to change the reality.  (The phrase ‘false division’ refers to how churches have not followed Jesus’ own requirements for oneness nor St. Paul’s guidance to the Corinthians, as noted above.) 

Second, the individual Christian must personally sin by maintaining and creating new Christian divisions in their own life.  Take the example of upholding the created custom where baptized Christians are prevented from receiving God until that person first agrees with the community/denomination in which they are worshiping God.  Once they join that church community by believing its theology and teachings then God is accessible to them. 

The Gospels show a different process for receiving God.

Everyone who approaches Jesus Christ with faith that He is the Messiah and that He can help and heal them receive Him, often immediately, and without needing to agree with any community or even be baptized first.   The focus is only on the person receiving God for their own salvation; the community that is God!

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[1] https://www.oikoumene.org/resources/documents/homily-by-the-ecumenical-patriarch-hah-bartholomew

[2] https://www.ewtn.com/catholicism/library/scandal-of-division-7509