IS 
THERE RELIGIOUS DIVERSITY IN HEAVEN?
Bishop 
Brian J. Kennedy, O.S.B.
HOLY 
TRINITY CELTIC ORTHODOX CHURCH
TOLEDO, 
OHIO
HOMEPAGE: 
http://www.celticorthodoxy.com/bkceltic-orthodox-church
 
The 
Irish playwright George Bernard Shaw once said, "There is only one religion, but 
there are a hundred versions of it." In our effort to embrace tolerance we have 
become victim to the thinking that error is as worthy of protection as is truth; 
that truth and error can peacefully coexist.  Religious tolerance has become the 
greatest religious good, the all-consuming goal of religious people and gave 
rise to the heresy of Universal Salvation. Like George Bernard Shaw, they 
believe all religions lead to the same God and the same heaven. They believe 
there will be religious diversity in heaven.
 
Biblical 
Orthodoxy believes each person must make a choice and that choice must be for 
the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ and choose to accept Jesus Christ as 
the Incarnate Word of God, true God and true man, and the only way to the 
Father; the one Mediator between God and man. Universal Salvation denies that 
there is no salvation apart from Christ but God’s Word teaches, “There is no 
other name under heaven by which man can be saved.” (Acts 4:12)   
 
Those 
who believe one religion is as good as another embrace the idea that truth and 
error are equally valid. These people believe that it is intolerant to assert 
that one religion is the true religion and others, which disagree, are false. 
Those who accept error being as valid as truth teach salvation is possible 
without submission to Jesus Christ or even belief in God. Universal Salvation is 
the only ‘tolerant” and “loving” view. Universal Salvation says even 
Non-Christians can be saved, but Jesus said “but as for these enemies of mine, 
who do not want me to reign over them, bring them here and slay them in my 
presence.” (Luke 19:27)   
 
Universal 
Salvation does not require a standard Creed except be a “good person” but the 
truth of God’s Word teaches, “Your personal righteousness is as a filthy 
menstrual rag in the sight of God”. (Isaiah 64:6)  Universal Salvation denies the 
Scriptures are the Word of God that must be followed by all mankind.  The Scriptures are clear that all men 
are not saved, even though it is the will of God that none should perish; God 
will not reward sin and apostasy with the beatific vision. 
 
God 
will not reward with the blessing of the promises of Christ and the promises of 
God’s Word those who kiss the Koran and call the Koran a holy book.     
 
The 
inescapable conclusion for those teaching Universal Salvation is no one religion 
possesses the entire truth, but only bits and pieces of it.  If the Hindu or the Muslim and other 
pagan groups can be saved and will find safe harbor in Heaven, then it must be 
false that Jesus is the only way to the Father, but Jesus teaches “I am the way, 
the truth and the life, no one goes to the Father save through me.” (John 14: 6) 
 
If 
those worshipping pagan gods can be saved we can no longer assert there is but 
one God.  If all religions are equal 
and have a right to be tolerated than all religions contain error as well as 
truth.  The contrasting teachings 
cannot be reconciled without redefining the truth beyond recognition. Such 
redefinition of truth at best diminishes truth as being no longer absolute and 
at worst is a denial of truth.  Both 
views are an abomination in the sight of God and will provoke God’s righteous 
anger and condemnation.  There is no 
religious diversity in heaven.
 
Universal 
Salvation denies the basic tenants of Christianity: “Truly, truly I say to you 
unless one is born of water and the Spirit he cannot enter into the Kingdom of 
God” ( John 3:5) This is not a suggestion, it is a fact 
and a command.  “Unless you eat the 
body and drink the blood of the son of man you have no life in you.” (John 6: 
53)  It is not a suggestion, it is a 
command. 
 
There 
will be no religious diversity in heaven.  
Only those who belong to Christ can have synergy with the Father and 
without synergy with the Father in Christ only perdition and condemnation await 
the soul in eternity.
 
ONLY 
IN HELL IS THERE RELIGIOUS DIVERSITY
 
| 
        BAPTISM 
      IN THE CELTIC ORTHODOX CHURCH  | 
    
          | 
| 
        AUTHOR: Bishop Brian J. 
      Kennedy, O.S.B.  | |
| 
          | |
BAPTISM WITHOUT THE EUCHARIST IS FUTILE AND WITHOUT EFFECT
THE 
CELTIC ORTHODOX CHURCH IN THE UNITED STATES 
INSISTS 
ON INITIATION INTO THE CHURCH THROUGH BAPTISM, 
CHRISMATION 
(CONFIRMATION) AND THE FIRST EUCHARIST AT THE SAME TIME
Dom 
Lambert Beauduin (1873-1960) was a Roman Catholic 
Benedictine in Belgium. He was universally recognized as a brilliant Liturgist, 
Theologian and Pastor. Let him speak for himself and let his words of wisdom 
introduce this article.
Baptism 
destines us for the great Mysteries; it is oriented entirely toward them; it 
calls for them and postulates them; it is directed, oriented toward the 
Eucharist, like a magnet toward the pole. The Eucharist is in Baptism like the 
fruit is in the flower. The Words of the Master, Unless 
you eat the Flesh of the Son of Man and drink His Blood you have no life in you, 
(John 6:53) makes us see the intimacy and the depths of these relations. If this 
inseparable and vital union is lacking, Baptism is futile and inefficacious; it 
is a useless means that misses its goal, a temple without a sanctuary and 
without an altar. The baptized one who remains a stranger to the Eucharist is a 
son without filial piety and without love: an aborted saint. (BAPTISM AND THE 
EUCHARIST 1946)
NOTE: 
He says Baptism without the Eucharist is WITHOUT EFFECT, IS FUTILE AND 
INEFFICACIOUS.
BAPTISM 
REQUIRES A GRACE FILLED PRIEST
OR 
BISHOP ORDAINED BY A GRACE FILLED BISHOP IN 
APOSTOLIC 
SUCCESSION FROM THE FIRST APOSTLES:
“Even 
if a woman is learned and Saintly, she still must not
presume 
to baptize”  Council of Carthage 419 
A.D.
LAY 
PERSONS, DEACONS, NUNS AND MONKS 
WHO 
ARE NOT ORDAINED CANNOT BAPTIZE.
 
When 
we study the Scriptures, when we start quoting the Scriptures it is seldom 
accurate to isolate a given verse from the whole of Scripture. Those who quote 
the necessity of Baptism and neglect the absolute necessity of reception of the 
Eucharist do so to their own peril.
 
Rightly 
such can be called Protestants as they are protesting against the very Word of 
God they claim to serve. They protest against the life giving Holy Spirit who 
has taught the church through the centuries giving direction as to the 
development of the Liturgy and method of administration of the Sacred Mysteries. 
The directives of Scripture must be understood in the light of the life of the 
church that comes from the indwelling of the Holy Spirit. 
In 
prophecy and parable Jesus spoke of the Kingdom of God as a banquet “I say to 
you, many will come from the east and the west, and will recline with Abraham, 
Isaac, and Jacob at the banquet in the kingdom of heaven” (Matthew 8:11). God 
has invited the whole human family to join in a great heavenly banquet. We 
respond to this invitation through the Sacraments of Initiation. 
 
Let’s 
say a friend invites you to dinner. You would take off your work clothes, wash 
up, take a shower and then you would dry off and put on clean clothes before 
setting out for dinner.
This 
sequence of events is perhaps the simplest way to understand the Sacraments of 
Initiation. God has invited each of us to dine with Christ at the Eucharistic 
banquet. When we come to this table for the first time, we first put off the 
“old self” (see Romans 6:6, Ephesians 4:22 and Colossians 3:9) and wash away the 
defect of Sin. This is the sacramental bath of Baptism. Second, we dry off. In 
the first and second centuries, however, Romans would rub their bodies with oil 
after bathing to moisturize the skin and to dry off. In our sacramental system 
the bath of Baptism is followed by the oil of Confirmation. Lastly, clothed with 
the Holy Spirit, we venture forth to the Eucharistic 
table.
 
We 
do not find much written specifically about Confirmation in the early church, 
because when the early Christian authors wrote about Baptism they implied both 
the water bath and the anointing with oil, what we would call Baptism and 
Confirmation.
 
Baptism 
and Confirmation are also intimately related in another way. When we take a 
bath, we get clean by washing off the dirt. We can speak of “getting clean” and 
we can speak of “washing off dirt” but, actually, removing “dirtiness” and 
receiving “cleanliness” go together. They are two ways of looking at one action. 
In a similar way, early Church writers described Baptism with the “washing off” 
metaphors and spoke of Confirmation with the “getting clean” metaphors. Baptism 
washes away all sin and Confirmation gives us the grace and presence of the Holy 
Spirit. Taking away sin and being filled with grace are but two ways of speaking 
of the same action, something like “washing off” and “getting clean.” The two 
actions go together even if we call them by different names: Baptism and 
Confirmation. 
This 
analogy of “washing up, drying off, going to eat” works especially well for 
“Baptism, Confirmation, Eucharist” when they are celebrated in that sequence all 
at the same time as they were in the early Church, and as they are today in the 
Celtic Orthodox Church and in the larger Orthodox Church East and 
West.
In 
the West receiving “Communion” 
at their Baptism was the norm until Rome broke away from the rest of the larger 
church catholic, and the aberrant praxis was the norm by the 12th 
century. The priests in the Celtic churches give infants Holy Communion by 
dipping his little finger into the consecrated wine and placing it on the tongue 
of the infant. This still works out the best in trying to give the Eucharist to 
a child or infant. 
 
To 
deny a child the Eucharist at Baptism is the ultimate form of child abuse as the 
child is all dressed up expecting a banquet and then finds he is to be excluded 
because of age discrimination. The child is all dressed up and finds he has no 
place to go. 
WITNESS 
OF THE EARLY CHURCH – THE EARLY CHURCH FATHERS
Theophilus 
of Antioch
 
"Are 
you unwilling to be anointed with the oil of God? It is on this account that we 
are called Christians: because we are anointed with the oil of God" (To Autolycus 1:12 [A.D. 181]).  
Tertullian
 
"After 
coming from the place of washing we are thoroughly anointed with a blessed 
unction, from the ancient discipline by which [those] in the priesthood . . . 
were accustomed to be anointed with a horn of oil, ever since Aaron was anointed 
by Moses. . . . So also with us, the unction runs on the body and profits us 
spiritually, in the same way that baptism itself is a corporal act by which we 
are plunged in water, while its effect is spiritual, in that we are freed from 
sins. After this, the hand is imposed for a blessing, invoking and inviting the 
Holy Spirit" (Baptism 7:1-2, 8:1 [A.D. 203]). 
 
"No 
soul whatever is able to obtain salvation unless it has believed while it was in 
the flesh. Indeed, the flesh is the hinge of salvation. . . . The flesh, then, 
is washed [baptism] so that the soul may be made clean. The flesh is anointed so 
that the soul may be dedicated to holiness. The flesh is signed so that the soul 
may be fortified. The flesh is shaded by the imposition of hands [confirmation] 
so that the soul may be illuminated by the Spirit. The flesh feeds on the body 
and blood of Christ [the Eucharist] so that the soul too may feed on God. They 
cannot, then, be separated in their reward, when they are united in their works" 
(The Resurrection of the Dead 8:2-3 [A.D. 210]). 
 
Hippolytus
 
"The 
bishop, imposing his hand on them, shall make an invocation, saying, O Lord God, 
who made them worthy of the remission of sins through the Holy Spirit's washing 
unto rebirth, send into them your grace so that they may serve you according to 
your will, for there is glory to you, to the Father and the Son with the Holy 
Spirit, in the holy Church, both now and through the ages of ages. Amen. Then, 
pouring the consecrated oil into his hand and imposing it on the head of the 
baptized, he shall say, I anoint you with holy oil in the Lord, the Father 
Almighty, and Christ Jesus and the Holy Spirit. Signing them on the forehead, he 
shall kiss them and say, The Lord be with you. He that has been signed shall 
say, And with your spirit. Thus shall he do to each" (The Apostolic Tradition 
21-22 [A.D. 215]). 
 
Cyprian 
of Carthage
 
"It 
is necessary for him that has been baptized also to be anointed, so that by his 
having received chrism, that is, the anointing, he can be the anointed of God 
and have in him the grace of Christ" (Letters 7:2 [A.D. 253]). 
 
"Some 
say in regard to those who were baptized in Samaria that when the apostles Peter 
and John came there only hands were imposed on them so that they might receive 
the Holy Spirit, and that they were not re-baptized. But we see, dearest brother, that this situation in no way pertains to the 
present case. Those in Samaria who had believed had believed in the true faith, 
and it was by the deacon Philip, whom those same apostles had sent there, that 
they had been baptized inside - in the Church. . . . Since, then, they had 
already received a legitimate and ecclesiastical baptism, it was not necessary 
to baptize them again. Rather, that only which was lacking was done by Peter and 
John. The prayer having been made over them and hands having been imposed upon 
them, the Holy Spirit was invoked and was poured out upon them. This is even now 
the practice among us, so that those who are baptized in the Church then are 
brought to the prelates of the Church; through our prayer and the imposition of 
hands, they receive the Holy Spirit and are perfected with the seal of the Lord" 
(ibid., 73[72]:9). 
 
"[A]re 
not hands, in the name of the same Christ, laid upon the baptized persons among 
them, for the reception of the Holy Spirit?" (ibid., 
74[73]:5). 
 
"[O]ne 
is not born by the imposition of hands when he receives the Holy Ghost, but in 
baptism, that so, being already born, he may receive the Holy Spirit, even as it 
happened in the first man Adam. For first God formed him, and then breathed into 
his nostrils the breath of life. For the Spirit cannot be received, unless he 
who receives first has an existence. But . . . the birth of Christians is in 
baptism" (ibid., 74[73]:7). 
 
Council 
of Carthage VII
 
"[I]n 
the Gospel our Lord Jesus Christ spoke with his divine voice, saying, Except a 
man be born again of water AND THE SPIRIT, he cannot enter the kingdom of God 
[John 3:5]. This is the Spirit that from the beginning was borne over the 
waters; for neither can the Spirit operate without the water, nor the water 
without the Spirit. Certain people therefore interpret [this passage] for 
themselves wrongly, when they say that by imposition of the hand they receive 
the Holy Ghost, and are thus received, when it is manifest that they ought to be 
born again [initiated] in the catholic Church by both sacraments" (Seventh 
Carthage [A.D. 256]). 
 
Cyril 
of Jerusalem
 
"After 
you had come up from the pool of the sacred streams, there was given chrism, the 
antitype of that with which Christ was anointed, and this is the Holy Spirit. 
But beware of supposing that this is ordinary ointment. For just as the bread of 
the Eucharist after the invocation of the Holy Spirit is simple bread no longer, 
but the body of Christ, so also this ointment is no longer plain ointment, nor, 
so to speak, common, after the invocation. Further, it is the gracious gift of 
Christ, and it is made fit for the imparting of his Godhead by the coming of the 
Holy Spirit. This ointment is symbolically applied to your forehead and to your 
other senses; while your body is anointed with the visible ointment, your soul 
is sanctified by the holy and life-giving Spirit. Just as Christ, after his 
baptism, and the coming upon him of the Holy Spirit, went forth and defeated the 
adversary, so also with you after holy baptism and the mystical chrism, having 
put on the panoply of the Holy Spirit, you are to withstand the power of the 
adversary and defeat him, saying, I am able to do all things in Christ, who 
strengthens me" (Catechetical Lectures, 21:1, 3-4 [A.D. 350]). 
 
Council 
of Laodicea
 
"[T]hose 
who have been illuminated are, after baptism, to be anointed with celestial 
chrism and thus become partakers in the kingdom of Christ" (Canon 48 [A.D. 
360]). 
Ignatius 
(Ep. ad Smyr., viii): “It is not lawful to baptize or celebrate the agape 
without the bishop.” St. Jerome (Contra Lucif., ix) 
witnesses to the same usage in his days: “Without chrism and the command of the 
bishop, neither priest nor deacon has the right of conferring baptism.” 
Deacons 
are only extraordinary ministers of solemn baptism, as by their office they are 
assistants to the priestly order. St. Isidore of 
Seville (De Eccl, Off., ii, 25) says: “It is plain that baptism is to be 
conferred by priests only, and it is not lawful even for deacons to administer 
it without permission of the bishop or priest.” That deacons were, however, 
ministers of this sacrament by delegation is evident from the quotations 
adduced. In the service of ordination of a deacon, the bishop says to the 
candidate: “It behooves a deacon to minister at the altar, to baptize and to 
preach.” Philip the deacon is mentioned in the Bible (Acts 8) as conferring 
baptism, presumably by delegation of the Apostles. 
In 
Acts Chapter 8 we learn that the Samaritans were baptized in water by Philip the 
Evangelist (a Deacon) but not in the Holy Spirit (Confirmation) and they would 
not have received the Eucharist either so therefore it was necessary for the 
Apostles to visit them and make perfect that which they had received in an 
imperfect way. Ananias, Bishop of Damascus, in Acts 9 baptizes Saul of Tarsus 
(St. Paul).  Chrismation and 
reception of the Eucharist was given to Saul of Tarsus (St. Paul) by Ananias who 
had been Consecrated Bishop by Barnabas and Peter.  Some say that Ananias was a lay person, 
but this is just not the case. 
The 
word Christian means “one who shares in the anointing” of the anointed one 
(Christ means anointed one).  It is 
in Confirmation and through the reception of the Eucharist that the soul becomes 
Christian / a sharer in the anointing of the Christ. 
Only a Priest or Bishop can anoint with Holy Oils and baptize in the Holy Spirit 
and administer the life saving body and blood of 
Christ. Only a Priest or Bishop can baptize.
 
St. 
Cyprian to Jubaianus his brother, greeting. You have 
written to me, dearest brother, wishing that the impression of my mind should be 
signified to you, as to what I think concerning the baptism of heretics; who, 
placed without, and established outside the Church, arrogate to themselves a 
matter neither within their right nor their power. This baptism we cannot 
consider as valid or legitimate, since it is manifestly unlawful among them . . 
. we established this same matter once more by our judgment, deciding that there 
is one baptism which is appointed in the church catholic; and that by this those 
are not re-baptized, but baptized by us, who at any time come from the 
adulterous and unhallowed water to be washed and sanctified by the truth of the 
saving water. (Epistle 72:1) 
St.. Firmilian, the bishop of 
Caesarea, was of the same mind as St. Cyprian on the matter: 
Moreover, 
all other heretics, if they have separated themselves from the Church of God, 
can have nothing of power or of grace, since all power and grace are established 
in the Church where the elders preside, who possess the power both of baptizing, 
and of imposition of hands, and of ordaining. For as a heretic may not lawfully 
ordain nor lay on hands, so neither may he baptize, nor do anything holily or 
spiritually, since he is an alien from spiritual and deifying sanctity. (Epistle 
74:7) 
 
SAINT 
AMBROSE 
This 
proves again what I have always said and reflects the teaching of the undivided 
church catholic that Chrismation (Confirmation) and the Eucharist 
MUST 
be part of the baptism if it is to have effect. 
Below, 
you'll find an excellent description of baptism by Saint Ambrose as 
It 
relates to water and the Holy Spirit:
"You 
were told before not to believe only what you saw. This was to prevent 
you 
from saying: Is this the great mystery that eye has not seen nor ear 
heard 
nor man’s heart conceived? I see the water I used to see every day; 
does 
this water in which I have often bathed without being sanctified really 
have 
the power to sanctify me? Learn from this that water does not sanctify 
without 
the Holy Spirit.
You 
have read that the three witnesses in baptism – the water, the 
blood
and 
the Spirit – are one. This means that if you take away one of these the 
sacrament 
is not conferred. What is water without the cross of 
Christ?
Only 
an ordinary element without sacramental effect. Again, without water 
there 
is no sacrament of rebirth: Unless a man is born again of water and 
the 
Spirit he cannot enter into the kingdom of God. The catechumen believes 
in 
the cross of the Lord with which he too is signed, but unless he 
is
baptized 
in the name of the Father, and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit he 
cannot 
receive the forgiveness of sins or the gift of spiritual 
grace.
The 
Syrian Naaman bathed seven times under the old law, 
but you were 
baptized 
in the name of the Trinity. You proclaimed your faith in the 
Father 
– recall what you did – and the Son and the Spirit. Mark the sequence 
of 
events. In proclaiming this faith you died to the world, you died to the 
world, 
you rose again to God, and, as though buried to sin, you were reborn 
to 
eternal life. Believe, then, that the water is not without 
effect.
The 
paralytic at the pool was waiting for someone. Who was this if not the 
Lord 
Jesus, born of a virgin? At his coming it is not a question of a shadow 
healing 
an individual, but Truth himself healing the universe. He is the one 
whose 
coming was expected, the one of whom God the Father spoke when he said 
to 
John the Baptist: He on whom you see the Spirit coming down from heaven 
and 
resting, this is the one who baptizes in the Holy Spirit. He is the one 
witnessed 
to by John: I saw the Spirit coming down from heaven as a dove and 
resting 
on him. Why did the Spirit come down as a dove if not to let you see 
and 
understand that the dove sent out by holy Noah from the ark was a figure 
of 
this dove? In this way you were to recognize a type of this 
sacrament.
Is 
there any room left for doubt? The Father speaks clearly in the Gospel: 
This 
is my beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased; the Son too, above whom 
the 
Holy Spirit showed himself in the form of a dove; and also the Holy 
Spirit, 
who came down as a dove. David too speaks clearly: The voice of the 
Lord 
is above the waters; the God of glory has thundered; the Lord is above 
the 
many waters. Again, Scripture bears witness for you that fire came down 
from 
heaven in answer to Gideon’s prayers, and that when Elijah prayed, God 
sent 
fire which consumed the sacrifice.
Do 
not consider the merits of individuals but the office of the priests. If 
you 
do not look at merits, consider the merits of Peter and also of Paul in 
the 
same way you consider the merits of Elijah; they have handed on to us 
this 
sacrament which they received from the Lord Jesus. Visible fire was 
sent 
upon them to give them faith; in us who believe an invisible fire is at 
work. 
That visible fire was a sign, our invisible fire is for our 
instruction. 
Believe then that the Lord Jesus is present when he is invoked 
by 
the prayers of the priests. He said: Where two or three are gathered, 
there 
I am also. How much more does he give his loving presence where the 
Church 
is, where the sacraments are!
You 
went down into the water. Remember what you said: I believe in the 
Father 
and the Son and the Holy Spirit. Not: I believe in a greater, a 
lesser 
and a least. You are committed by this spoken understanding of yours 
to 
believe the same of the Son as of the Father, and the same of the Holy 
Spirit 
as of the Son, with this one exception: you proclaim that you must 
believe 
in the cross of the Lord Jesus alone."
Ex 
Tractátu sancti Ambrósii epíscopi De mystériis (Nn. 19-21. 24. 26-28: 
SCh 
25bis, 
164-170)   
SOME 
ORTHODOX CLERGY ARE NOT REAL PRIESTS AND BISHOPS
IF 
THE BISHOP WHO ORDAINED YOU WAS RECEIVED INTO 
ORTHODOXY
WITH 
A PROTESTANT BAPTISM AND NEVER DID RECEIVE AN ORTHODOX CATHOLIC BAPTISM YOU ARE 
NOT ORDAINED.  YOU REMAIN IN THE LAY 
STATE. 
BAPTISM 
OUTSIDE THE LARGER CHURCH CATHOLIC
Bishop 
Brian Kennedy, O.S.B.
The 
question has been brought forth that would accuse the Celtic Orthodox Church of 
being “unloving” because we reject as of no account the baptism of those outside 
the larger church catholic. From these ancient documents one can readily deduce 
that our praxis is that of the ancient church.  The larger church catholic 
is defined as those having a valid Priesthood.  It is an undeniable fact 
the ancient church followed this practice and did not give recognition to the 
baptisms of those baptized outside the church by supposed clergy who “have no 
altar” meaning are not validly ordained Priest by Bishops in Apostolic 
Succession.  It was not until the time of Pope Stephen that the ancient 
practice was abandoned.  Eventually the East fell into the same 
error.  
 
The 
adverse effect on the church caused by this fracture from the ancient faith, 
order and worship of the church has resulted in some 
ranked among the clergy in the Roman Church and in all the Eastern Orthodox 
Churches who are not true clergy in that they never received an 
orthodox-catholic baptism.  There are prominent men listed as Bishop in the 
various Orthodox Churches who are not validly ordained or consecrated because 
they were received into the church through chrismation and profession of faith 
when they should have first been baptized by a Priest who had been ordained by a 
Bishop in Apostolic Succession from the Apostles.   
 
The 
dire consequences upon the faithful is they present themselves to the altar to 
receive the precious body and blood of Christ and in truth all they receive is 
bread and wine for lack of a true consecration.  They humble themselves to 
receive absolution in the Sacrament of Confession and leave no better off than 
when they walked into the church.   They present their precious 
children for baptism and they leave the church with their child still not 
baptized because of the lack of a validly ordained Priest. 
 
Today 
the norm among the Roman Church and the Neo Orthodox Churches is to accept the 
baptism performed by Protestants.  Sadly this was foretold in holy writ and 
is another sign of the present age of Apostasy from the faith as once delivered 
by the saints.
 
Not 
content to blaspheme the Holy Spirit by their never ending innovations in the 
faith, some boldly acclaim the baptism done by even atheist who deny the very 
existence of God.  In their ever mutating heresies they use the Sacrament 
of Baptism as a weapon against those they find at odds with them over political 
matters.  
The 
Russian Church will not accept the baptism of those in the Ukrainian Orthodox 
Church in the Ukraine and so they would attempt to re-baptize any from the 
Ukrainian Church who want to join the ROC. The motivation is politics.  
They would accept the baptism of a Protestant without a valid Priesthood but the 
Ukrainian Orthodox Church who has a valid Priesthood they reject. 
 Ask 
then, who is being “unloving”?    
APPENDIX 
I
Holy 
Canons dealing with Baptism
1. 
Canons of the Holy Apostles (as recorded by St. Clement, Bishop at 
Rome)
Canon 
XLVI (46)
            
We order that a bishop or presbyter that recognized the baptism or sacrifice of 
heretics be defrocked. For ‘’what accord has Christ with Belial? Or what has a 
believer in common with an unbeliever?’’ (2 Cor. 6:15). (P, p. 51.)
 
Canon 
XLVII (47)
            
If a bishop or presbyter baptize anew anyone that has had a true baptism, or 
fail to baptize someone that had been polluted by the impious, let him be 
defrocked, on the grounds that he is mocking the cross and death of the Lord, 
and fails to distinguish priests from false priests. (P, p. 55.)
LOCAL 
COUNCILS
Carchedon-Carthage, 258 
A.D.
Canon 
[I] (of St. 
Cyprian)
Decreeing now also by 
vote what we firmly and securely hold for all time, we declare that no one can 
possibly be baptized outside the catholic Church, there 
being but one baptism, and this existing only in the catholic Church. For it has 
been written: ‘’They have forsaken me the fountain of 
living water, and they dug for themselves broken cisterns that cannot hold 
water’’ (Jer. 2:13). And, again, Holy Scripture forewarning says: ‘’Keep away 
from another’s water, and drink not from another’s well’’ (cf. Pr. 
5:15).
How can he who was not 
able to rid himself of his own sins, being as he is outside the Church, baptize 
and grant remission of sins to another? And even the question asked at the 
baptism is witness to the truth. For when we say to the examinee, ‘’Do you 
believe you shall receive eternal life and remission of sins?’’ we are saying 
nothing else than that in the catholic Church remission 
of sins can be given, and that it is impossible to receive this form the 
heretics, where the Church is not. And that is why the advocates of the heretics 
are obliged either to ask the question, or to do justice to the truth, unless 
they attribute the Church to them also. Moreover, it is necessary that he who 
has been baptized be chrismated, so that receiving the 
chrism he become a partaker of Christ. But the heretic cannot sanctify oil, 
seeing that he has neither altar nor Church. It is not possible for there to 
exist any chrism whatsoever among the heretics. For it is obvious to us that oil 
can by no means be sanctified among them for such worthy use. And we ought to 
know and not ignore that it has been written: ‘’Let not the oil of a sinner 
anoint my head,’’ which the Holy Spirit even long ago declared in the Psalms 
(140:6); lest anyone be tracked down and led astray from the right way and be 
chrismated by the heretics, the enemies of Christ. We 
understand remission of sins as being given through the Church. But how can one 
give what he does not himself have? Or how can one do spiritual works when he 
himself has not received the Holy Spirit? For this reason he who comes over to 
the Church ought to be renewed, so that within [the Church] he be made holy by 
the holy, as it is written: ‘’You shall be holy, even 
as I am Holy, says the Lord’’ (cf. Lev. 19:2; 20:7). And thus he who was deluded 
in error – being a man who, coming to God and seeking a priest, yet under the 
sway of error joined a sacrilegious [imposter] – might in the Church’s true 
baptism put off this very error. For to accept with approval those whom the 
heretics  have baptized is to endorse the baptism 
they administer. For one cannot be only partially capable. If he had the power 
to baptize, then he could also impart the Holy Spirit. But if he was incapable 
of giving the Holy Spirit, in that being outside [the Church] he does not have 
it to begin with, then he does not have the power to baptize anyone who might 
come to him.
 
 
 OUR 
APOSTOLIC LINE OF SUCCESSION IS ACCEPTED BY WORLD ORTHODOXY. 
REMEMBER 
AS YOU READ THESE LETTERS OF AFFIRMATION THE BISHOPS BEING ACCLAIMED AS PART OF 
WORLD ORTHODOXY WITH GRACE FILLED AND SPIRIT FILLED ORDERS ARE NOT SUBJECT TO 
ANY OLD WORLD PATRIARCH, YET THE PATRIARCHS ACCEPT THEM AS EQUAL BISHOPS IN THE 
LARGER CHURCH WITH THE SAME APOSTOLIC MISSION.  
 
LETTER 
OF RECOGNITION FROM THE O.C.A.
http://www.celticorthodoxy.com/bkceltic-orthodox-church/oca_recog.jpg
 
LETTER 
OF RECOGNITION FROM ALEXANDRIA
http://www.celticorthodoxy.com/bkceltic-orthodox-church/alexandria.jpg
 
LETTER 
OF RECOGNITION FROM THE GREEK ORTHODOX CHURCH
http://www.celticorthodoxy.com/bkceltic-orthodox-church/greek_orthodox_affirmation.jpg
 
WE 
ARE SUCCESSORS TO THE APOSTLES, IN UNION WITH THE ORIGINAL 12 AND ALL THOSE WHO 
CAME AFTER THEM AND WITH ALL THOSE WHO WILL COME AFTER US. 
APOSTOLIC 
SUCCESSION 
http://www.celticorthodoxy.com/bkceltic-orthodox-church/succ.html
______________________________________
 
HOLY 
TRINITY CELTIC ORTHODOX CHURCH 
 CELTIC ORTHODOX BENEDICTINE 
FATHERS
IS 
A NOT FOR PROFIT CHURCH CORPORATION 
UNDER 
SECTION 501 ( c ) 3 OF THE INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE 
.