Eastern Christianity ✦ | RECOMMENDED |

Icons are not mere art but "windows to heaven," serving as crucial venerated focal points in worship, regarded as holy and mediating the presence of the saint or scene depicted. Worship and Spirituality

Eastern Christians make the Sign of the Cross differently than Western Christians, touching the forehead, chest, right shoulder, then left shoulder, often accompanied by a bow. History and Structure A Light from the East: Eastern Christianity (Part 1) eastern christianity

The central goal of Eastern Christian life is theosis , the process of becoming more like God through grace, transformation, and participation in the divine life. It is not becoming God by nature, but partaking in His divine nature (2 Pet. 1:4). Icons are not mere art but "windows to

Theology is deeply mystical, favoring an "apophatic" approach—focusing on what God is not, recognizing the divine is ultimately incomprehensible and known through experience rather than merely intellectual study. It is not becoming God by nature, but

The Divine Liturgy is the heart of community life. Worship is highly sensory and participatory, involving incense, standing (rather than sitting), communal chanting, and often the use of vernacular or ancient liturgical languages (Greek, Slavonic, Syriac, Coptic).