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31 of 33 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars In response the to the man from Eagle River Alaska
I sympathize with you for the hurt caused by any clergy of the church. Alas, even though the Eastern Orthodox church gaurantees true worship, and true doctrine, it does not gaurantee perfect clergy. Anyone reading the review please do not judge the clergy of the Orthodox church as a whole, based on the actions of some in particular. There will always be sin, greed,...
Published on July 10, 2001 by David Mario Capparuccini

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11 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars No Place Like Home
Perhaps the most interesting development in the growing movement towards historic Christianity is the decision of many Protestant clergy to cross not just ecclesial boundaries but also cultural ones by joining Eastern Orthodoxy. Leaving successful ministries for small parish missions, they have rejected well-established Western traditions (i.e., Catholicism, Anglicanism)...
Published on February 22, 2006 by Labarum


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31 of 33 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars In response the to the man from Eagle River Alaska, July 10, 2001
This review is from: Coming Home (Paperback)
I sympathize with you for the hurt caused by any clergy of the church. Alas, even though the Eastern Orthodox church gaurantees true worship, and true doctrine, it does not gaurantee perfect clergy. Anyone reading the review please do not judge the clergy of the Orthodox church as a whole, based on the actions of some in particular. There will always be sin, greed, legalism, and lack of care in this world. Sadly, this will even be seen in the body of Christ. Granted, people/clergy will act like a jerks, over glorify the priesthood, and abuse their leadership roles. A quote from John Chrysostom says "The road to hell will be lined with the skulls of bishops." As we know from the Bible, leaders will be judged more harshly for their actions. Please, do not dare to say that clergy from the Orthodox church will not lead you closer to God. Not only is that speaking rashly, but it is denying the grace that God has given these men for performing their specific roles. I know many clergy that have sacrficed everything in their lives to help others grow closer to God. I am truly sorry to hear how these men have treated another human being, created in the image of God. Let us pray for our clergy, that have "come home". For they are human too, and subject to greed and struggles with sin. Let us pray, not judge, and not dismiss the claims of the one, true apostolic church. The battle is spiritual, and precisely what the devil wants us to do is leave the truth, or have divisions among us. I pray that you and I, everyone, will trust the Lord, seek Him first, and not allow the actions of men to destroy our relationship with Him. God Bless!!
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13 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Not What I Expected, November 1, 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: Coming Home (Paperback)
For those searching to learn more about the Orthodox Faith, I do recommend the book. However, I was expecting it to be more along the lines of why not how. Just know that the book is not about the beliefs and practices of the Orthodox, but about how the writers of the stories came in to contact with the Church and their journeys to join it.
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11 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars No Place Like Home, February 22, 2006
By 
Labarum (Philadelphia, PA United States) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)   
This review is from: Coming Home (Paperback)
Perhaps the most interesting development in the growing movement towards historic Christianity is the decision of many Protestant clergy to cross not just ecclesial boundaries but also cultural ones by joining Eastern Orthodoxy. Leaving successful ministries for small parish missions, they have rejected well-established Western traditions (i.e., Catholicism, Anglicanism) for (in their view) the most authentic expression of the ancient Church.

Coming Home, edited by prominent convert Peter Gillquist, is a compilation of conversion stories by former Protestant clergy who found in Orthodoxy an answer to their quest for the Church of the Apostles. The authors are sincere, the stories at times moving, the sacrifices great, and one can feel genuinely happy for these pilgrims in their discovery of historic Christianity. However, even though their stories are pleasant reading and it is easy to be sympathetic to their plight in the confusion of modern Protestantism, the reader is repeatedly left with the feeling something has been left out. The stories seem to jump over important issues and stop abruptly.

The biggest problem is there are just too many stories. By having close to twenty conversions covered, Gillquist limits each to roughly ten pages apiece. The development needed to explain their former Christian tradition and why they were led to Orthodoxy as the truest expression of the Christian Faith simply cannot be condensed into such a short amount of space. If they fully develop the issues in their move to Orthodoxy, they shortchange their earlier experience and the conversions all sound the same - losing the individuality fostered by a better understanding of where they had been before. If they fully develop their earlier experience, they are left with "Oh yeah, and then I read the Church Fathers and realized I should be Orthodox." Either way, the reader is shortchanged through no fault of the writers. Interestingly, this is born out by the fact that the most satisfying accounts are those of former Anglicans who already are immersed in liturgy and Church history and so have far less to explain.

It is interesting to compare the results of this book to Surprised by Truth, a similarly motivated book of Catholic conversions edited by Patrick Madrid. By limiting it to fewer stories, Madrid allowed a fuller development of the issues leading to their conversion missing here. Coming Home is by no means a terrible book and it is at times interesting reading, but the end result is far less than it could have been.
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23 of 29 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Conversion Stories of Protestants to Orthodoxy, May 26, 2001
This review is from: Coming Home (Paperback)
This book, edited by Peter Gillquist, more or less accomnplishes what it sets out to do. Compiled stories of ex-protestants and their reasons for becoming orthodox. All of the contributers write in a very easy to understand and likeable style. All show great amounts of charity towards their evangelical brothers and sisters and believe God used those expierences to bring them up to orthodoxy.

So why the average rating? Well, it is becuase, these contributers barely touch on doctrinal matters. This not to say their reasons are not legitimate, but 18 different conversions stories all sounding pretty much the same, does get a little tiresome when presented in one book. They speak about the liberal incroachment in protestantism (true), lack of unity (ture), and so forth; however, they do not present much on the differences in apporaches in regards to doctrines, and therefore, much of the book feels incomplete.

Therefore, it is worth reading. But I think a book with less contributers, but more in-depth expierences would have been much better. Still, a very easy read and likable read.

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17 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Another excellent text from Father Peter Gillquest!, June 19, 1998
By A Customer
This review is from: Coming Home (Paperback)
This book was essential to my conversion to Orthodoxy. The title of the book says it all, and in the book, there are various stories from different protestant clergy who converted to Orthodoxy from all different backgrounds - Evangelicals, Baptists, Methodists, Presbyterians, Episcopals - name the protestant group, and there are enthusiastic converts to Orthodoxy. The ferver found in many protestant denominations will eventually lead the true seeker to the Eastern Orthodox Church, and even though most people in the US still don't know what the 'Orthodox Church' is, those who study Holy Scripture and the history of Christiandom can come to no other conclusion. Father Peter Gilquest and others whose stories he shares are good food for thought.
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10 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Inspiring, but very light on theology, March 16, 2005
This review is from: Coming Home (Paperback)
Fifteen years ago AGAIN Magazine, the quarterly publication of the Antiochian Evangelical Orthodox Mission, did a special issue on the growing trend of American Protestant clergy becoming Orthodox. COMING HOME, edited by Peter Guillquist (himself a convert), is a collection of some of these testimonials.

The collection is a mixed bag, of course. Some essays, like that of Thomas Renfree offer theological arguments, but most, such as Frank Milanese's essay, are just personal testimonials light on argumentation. That of Daniel Matheson, a convert from the United Church of Canada, is downright incoherent. And unfortunately, the majority (all?) of these converts are to the Antiochian Church, which was then a popular destination for former evangelicals, and so there's no perspectives on coming into the Orthodox Church of America as many are doing today. Happily, however, nearly every writer here is charitable towards the brothers and sisters in Protestantism which he has left behind, and many are grateful for the valuable experiences of Protestant seminaries.

This book will probably persuade no one to join the Orthodox Church, but rather serves as waybread for those making the transition and uncertain of their future. Pastors worried about losing their jobs and income for the sake of their faith will be especially cheered up by these priests who seem to have ended up well enough. I think ANGLICAN-ORTHODOX PILGRIMAGE, a similar book of the same period also published by Conciliar Press, has a better collection of writings, and is worth reading even for those who aren't moving from the Episcopal Church.
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20 of 27 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The far west has forgotten its roots., December 16, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Coming Home (Paperback)
An excellent collection of the accounts of a number of clergy converts who have returned to the Holy Mother Church. A good beginning point for people to learn about the history of the Apostolic Church. In the far West it is ironic that we accept the Bible that emerged from the Apostolic Church yet reject that church itself. (All of the Ecumenical Counsels that formed the Church and the Bible were held in Constantinople and environs, not Rome.) A very good read for anyone remotely interested in "re-entering the fold" or just understanding a bit better the history of the Church which is still a driving force in Greece, Romania, Bulgaria, Russia, Ukraine, Serbia, Ethiopia, Albania.
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7 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Path Home, September 20, 2004
By 
This review is from: Coming Home (Paperback)
Coming Home is a simple yet interesting collection of stories about formerly Protestant Clergy who converted to the Eastern Orthodox Church. Each brief story of the individual's journey to Orthodoxy is unique, yet they all have the same theme; each wanted more from their Christian worship and faith, and found their home in Orthodoxy. The stories are unpretentious, never preachy, very human, and a joy to read, which is in part due to Peter Gillquist's great job of editing.
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6 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars This Book Leaves Out Something, October 27, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Coming Home (Paperback)
When I first read this book, I thought that Orthodoxy was The Way To Go and it exemplified why I, too, was converting to Orthodoxy. But then I got into it. Instead of finding The One True Way, I realised that the "reformed" clergy at my church (all of whom come from someplace else, originally) were just as legalistic and concerned with what they saw on attendence records as opposed to how you were spiritually as many Protestant clergy are-- only worse. There are six priests in most churches and they don't disagree, so calling one insensitive only gets the wrath of all of them. Struggling to get to church with six kids? Well they will tell you to just get up earlier on Sunday mornings (as if this never occured to a struggling parent.) Your children are a blessing and if you suffer with health problems while hearding your kids in the narthex of the church without child care during the service, GOD WANTS YOU TO SUFFER and you'd better get there on time every time! This book glorifies reasons that Protestant clergy come to Orthodoxy, but it never touches on the misogyny within the church that may appeal to a lot of male converts or to the safety in numbers of being able to act like a jerk.

It's easy to honour the Theotokos-- she is in Heaven. Tell women to think of her suffering and the suffering of the saints and create more pain for people.

There are some really wonderful philosophies and beliefs within Orthodoxy that Coming Home speaks of, that probably attract a lot of well intentioned clergy. If you are seeking to come closer to Christ, you most likely won't get it through clergy in the Orthodox Church. The God within me hasn't preformed any miracles or walked on water lately, but He is a heck of a lot kinder than the one that insulted my wife via various priests (Representatives of God) who advised her during a rough period of her young motherhood. She won't set foot inside another church because of her experiences with these clergy who have "come home" and I don't blame her.

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18 of 74 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars This Book Leaves Out Something, October 27, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Coming Home (Paperback)
When I first read this book, I thought that Orthodoxy was The Way To Go and it exemplified why I, too, was converting to Orthodoxy. But then I got into it. Instead of finding The One True Way, I realised that the "reformed" clergy at my church (all of whom come from someplace else, originally) were just as legalistic and concerned with what they saw on attendence records as opposed to how you were spiritually as many Protestant clergy are-- only worse. There are six priests in most churches and they don't disagree, so calling one insensitive only gets the wrath of all of them. Struggling to get to church with six kids? Well they will tell you to just get up earlier on Sunday mornings (as if this never occured to a struggling parent.) Your children are a blessing and if you suffer with health problems while hearding your kids in the narthex of the church without child care during the service, GOD WANTS YOU TO SUFFER and you'd better get there on time every time! This book glorifies reasons that Protestant clergy come to Orthodoxy, but it never touches on the misogyny within the church that may appeal to a lot of male converts or to the safety in numbers of being able to act like a jerk.

It's easy to honour the Theotokos-- she is in Heaven. Tell women to think of her suffering and the suffering of the saints and create more pain for people.

There are some really wonderful philosophies and beliefs within Orthodoxy that Coming Home speaks of, that probably attract a lot of well intentioned clergy. If you are seeking to come closer to Christ, you most likely won't get it through clergy in the Orthodox Church. The God within me hasn't preformed any miracles or walked on water lately, but He is a heck of a lot kinder than the one that insulted my wife via various priests (Representatives of God) who advised her during a rough period of her young motherhood. She won't set foot inside another church because of her experiences with these clergy who have "come home" and I don't blame her.

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Coming Home
Coming Home by P E Gillquist (Paperback - May 15, 2006)
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