Real Celtic Christianity: Early Orthodoxy in Wales

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  • Опубликовано: 20 янв 2025

Комментарии • 31

  • @RobHeath-o7z
    @RobHeath-o7z 5 месяцев назад +15

    I live in Cornwall and attend our only Orthodox Church here, called St. Piran's. If you ever visit again, it'd be great to see you there. I work at a heritage tin mine, organizing and conducting tours, so I have learned quite a bit about Cornwall's history with the tin trade. I'm currently trying to put together an essay on the Holy Grail being made out of Cornish tin. This is clearly just speculation on my part, but I like the idea of building on the myth of Joseph being a tin trader and returning the cup to where its material life first began. I'm really enjoying this series of videos. Meur ras

    • @IIZCHAOS
      @IIZCHAOS 5 месяцев назад +3

      Glory to God please lin the essay here when you finish.
      A fellow celtic history nerd

    • @andreafirth577
      @andreafirth577 5 месяцев назад +1

      Hi , where is it in Cornwall please ?

  • @unionofsa
    @unionofsa 5 месяцев назад +4

    This is so great to watch as a soon to be convert and catechumen into Western Rite Orthodoxy who lives in the UK.
    May the UK return to this earliest form of true Christianity.

    • @orthodoxexchange
      @orthodoxexchange  5 месяцев назад +4

      I'm very glad to read this. Be of good cheer as you move forward, knowing that you are joining so great a company of saints!

  • @daveyjuice7710
    @daveyjuice7710 5 месяцев назад +4

    Blimey good stuff i think it goes back even further when i read names and places in the OT and there are a good number of a familiar sound.

  • @primalcauldron
    @primalcauldron 5 месяцев назад +4

    Thank you Fr !! Was very interesting and i learned some new things today from your video 🙏 God bless 🙏

  • @DeiniolJones-ge6ov
    @DeiniolJones-ge6ov 2 месяца назад

    Great video. The earliest layers!

  • @Tony_Lewis
    @Tony_Lewis 5 месяцев назад +5

    Thank you Father!!!

  • @Chrisc-sn6uh
    @Chrisc-sn6uh 5 месяцев назад +6

    Thank you Father.

  • @wingzzz1232
    @wingzzz1232 5 месяцев назад +4

    I am really appreciating this series. Thank you for your efforts on it Fr.

  • @Hope_Boat
    @Hope_Boat 5 месяцев назад +6

    Blessings from Greece.
    Kyrie eleison ☦️

  • @ChristianRenewalAlliance
    @ChristianRenewalAlliance 3 месяца назад

    Well made video. Thanks for bringing our history alive. Have you looked into the history of Pelagius? Reveals a lot about early Celtic Christianity vs Rome?

  • @johnbeckett51
    @johnbeckett51 5 месяцев назад +4

    Thank you.

  • @thereccereport1172
    @thereccereport1172 5 месяцев назад +3

    Thakyou Father. This was an interesting video

  • @Maverick1.
    @Maverick1. 5 месяцев назад +4

    Fascinating video!!

  • @lifelongcatechumen
    @lifelongcatechumen 5 месяцев назад +1

    These are great videos, Father.
    I look forward to the next time you visit Glasgow. I missed you the last time you visited.

    • @orthodoxexchange
      @orthodoxexchange  5 месяцев назад +1

      @@lifelongcatechumen I will endeavour to return soon! In the meantime, God be with you!

  • @lotsoffun4108
    @lotsoffun4108 2 месяца назад

    My ancestry is pre 7th century hermit heritage in Wales. They were Welsh. 😊 my surname is a hermit clan name. They were holy men. I'm loving this 😊 thank you for the video.

  • @megangoldsney8214
    @megangoldsney8214 4 месяца назад +2

    I'd love to know if Celtric tribes lived intergenerationally in the same houses or if new couples were often built their own new house

    • @orthodoxexchange
      @orthodoxexchange  4 месяца назад +1

      @@megangoldsney8214 I suspect it was the former. If you watch my video called ‘Real Celtic Christianity’, I actually filmed it from a Celtic dwelling of the sort that would have been in use from around 500 BC to the second century at least and it would have been plenty big enough for a large group. You can see it here: ruclips.net/video/LGq55w9eTXo/видео.htmlsi=bBy9lM6QuvtZ-M5q

  • @johnbruce2868
    @johnbruce2868 5 месяцев назад +4

    I believe you are completely correct and I want to give you the evidence. I have discovered the Pictish epigraphic orthography which transcribes their inscriptions into Old Irish literary orthography, enabling their previously untranslated ogham inscriptions composed between the 6th. and 9th. centuries A.D., to be read within the Five Components of Language. Typologically, the language is an isolating creole, an advanced pidgin with a morpheme to meaning relationship of 1:1, which used the Old Irish lexicon as its lexifier.
    The majority of the inscriptions are ecclesiastical, the largest group relates to eulogies of individual saints. Others relate to John 6:63. Two are contemplations, one upon Sola Fide.
    This discovery also changes the place names of Scotland. The prefix aber- is not Welsh for 'confluence' (the towns are either not on a confluence or on a river of the same name) but Old Irish for Lord + Great after which always follows an ecclesiastical epithet. e.g. Aberbothrie = ab + er + both + rie = (O.I.) ab + ér + both + rí = Lord Great Creation King = 'Great Lord King of Creation'. Abercrombie = Ab + erc + rom + bie = (O.I.) Ab + erc + rom + bie = Lord + heaven + preeminent + shall be.
    Many other towns have ecclesiastical names. The name Meigle simply means 'bleating' and describes the people of the town relative to Psalm 23 and Psalm 100. The name Aboyne means Ab + oen = Lord + one = One Lord.
    Here is an example of an inscription (Buckquoy spindle whorl)
    Transliteration: ETMIQAOSALLC
    Non scriptio continua: ETH MI QA O SALLC
    Transcribed: eth mi- ca o saləch
    Old Irish: et mi- ca ó salach
    English: Jealous evil-man made of moral impurity
    Inspiration Galatians 5:19-21. The cloth they wear is imbued with the wisdom of the Lord even during its manufacture. Thus, the idea of putting on the Body of Christ upon conversion was a literal act.
    I will write to you. I will visit you and give you all the evidence. You are welcome here. What I have discovered will change the history of the Church and you are far better informed to comment upon that than I am.

  • @acm01864
    @acm01864 3 месяца назад

    It's the Princes universal catechism, as it was delivered by the ruling princes of the celestial empire anciently and shared and the knowledge of it is preserved by their descendent princes to the present! An historic record in all ancient civilizations!😊

  • @lets_discuss5352
    @lets_discuss5352 5 месяцев назад

    What was practiced before Christianity? Is there any knowledge of that or Christianity wiped out the previous practices and culture?

    • @Beingtomframpton
      @Beingtomframpton 3 месяца назад +1

      Christianity didnt “wipe out” previous culture. Pagans converted to Christ willingly and brought old tradition with them. Hence why celtic christianity has its own flavour.
      Celtic Christianity had a firm monastic tradition that grew completely independently from the Roman and Byzantine tradition. Celts loved Christ

    • @ThenorthFace-ib2yi
      @ThenorthFace-ib2yi Месяц назад

      some studies show it was called natsarim, because the son of god Yahsuah Ha Mashiach was born in natsereth, it was when roman emperor consatine in 321 A.D at the council of nicea mixed natsarim wiith their many pagan god worship and their ways and cutures, it birthed what we know as cathoolacism(universalism) then when they removed gods holy name (YHWH=i am salvation) from the book and the only begotten sons name (YAHUSHA=he is salvation) and repalced it with the title god or lord and replaced yahusha name with jesus christ wich birthed christianity .. the true ways of god are he ways of nature and the ways of his son yahusha correct me if im wrong pease halleluayh ❤

  • @davewatson309
    @davewatson309 5 месяцев назад +4

    Please forgive the atheism of our people, i am aging now but grew up in a chapel tradition, everybody in those days belonged to a church, and they were deeply sectarian, hateful and often hipocritical. They had often forgotten to love. This bore fruit, i believe, in the troubles in Northern Ireland.

    • @marikoxeuimel
      @marikoxeuimel Месяц назад

      So sad. I hope it is different now.

  • @lets_discuss5352
    @lets_discuss5352 5 месяцев назад

    www.youtube.com/@MythVisionPodcast

  • @sharenerobertson5574
    @sharenerobertson5574 5 месяцев назад +1

    😂😂 funny the Celtic people I decent from were pagan 🤯🤯 it's a fact my bloodline and every branch of my family tree predates forced Christianity 🤯🤯 way back to the Aincent kingdoms of Scotland Ireland and Wales. From the Picts the Gawls the Druids the Celts 🤯🤯 an funny Scotland and Ireland were prodomanently Catholic countries before colonisation by English rule and forced Christianity 🤯