You can love your family and stay faithful to the Church. This isn’t either-or.
The calendar question hits everyone who becomes Orthodox. Your mom’s planning Christmas dinner for December 25th. Your parish celebrates the Nativity on January 7th. Easter’s on different Sundays. Somebody’s going to be disappointed, and you’re worried it’ll damage relationships or make you look like you’ve joined some weird sect that can’t even get Christmas right.
Here’s the thing. You don’t have to choose between your family and your faith. But you do need to think clearly about what matters most and then make practical decisions with your priest’s guidance.
The December Dilemma
Let’s start with Christmas, since that’s usually the first big one new Orthodox Christians face. The Orthodox Church celebrates the Nativity on December 25th according to the Julian calendar, which falls on January 7th on the civil calendar we all use. It’s not a different holiday. It’s the same feast, same Christ, same celebration of the Incarnation. We’re just using an older calendar for our liturgical life.
Can you show up at your Baptist mother-in-law’s house on December 25th? Yes. Can you exchange gifts with your kids that morning? Yes. Can you eat turkey and watch your nephew open presents and generally participate in family life? Yes.
What you can’t do is replace the Church’s celebration with your family’s celebration. The Nativity services at your parish matter. The fasting that leads up to them matters. Your presence at the Divine Liturgy on January 7th matters. If you can do both, and most people can, do both. Go to your family gathering on the 25th. Explain gently that your Church celebrates on January 7th and you’ll be at services that day too. Invite them to come with you.
Some families get it right away. Others think you’ve lost your mind. Your job isn’t to win the argument. It’s to be faithful and kind at the same time.
Pascha Is Different
Easter’s trickier because Pascha is the center of everything we believe. It’s the Feast of Feasts. The whole rhythm of Orthodox life builds toward Holy Week and Pascha. Great Lent, the services of Holy Week, the Paschal Vigil, you can’t just skip these and show up at your sister’s house for ham on Western Easter Sunday and call it good.
When the dates don’t align, you need to keep the Orthodox Paschal cycle. That means fasting when the Church fasts, attending services when your parish has them, and celebrating Pascha when the Church celebrates it. If your family’s Easter falls during your Holy Week, you’re still fasting. If their Easter is a week or two before yours, you can visit but you’re not breaking your fast or missing your own parish’s Paschal services.
This is harder on relationships than the Nativity question. People get their feelings hurt. Your dad might say, “So you’re too good for us now?” You’re not. You’ve just joined a Church that takes Pascha seriously, and you’re trying to be faithful.
Talking to Family Without Starting a Fight
Don’t make this about their wrongness. Make it about your commitment. “Our Church follows a different calendar for liturgical feasts” lands better than “You’re celebrating on the wrong day.” “I’d love to see you on the 25th and also be at my church on January 7th” is better than “I can’t do Christmas with you anymore.”
Most people in Southeast Texas understand religious conviction. They might not like that you’re Orthodox, but they respect that you take it seriously. Be warm. Be clear. Don’t apologize for being Orthodox, but don’t be a jerk about it either.
And here’s something practical: invite them to your feast. After the Nativity Liturgy on January 7th, have them over. Let them see what you’re celebrating. After the Paschal Vigil, bring them to the parish breakfast. They might not come, but the invitation itself says, “I’m not rejecting you. I’m inviting you into something.”
When You Need Flexibility
There’s a pastoral principle called economia. It means your priest can apply the Church’s rules with mercy in particular situations. Maybe you’re caring for an elderly parent who’d be devastated if you missed their Christmas. Maybe your work schedule in the plants means you can’t get to both gatherings. Maybe you’ve got small kids and a mixed marriage and it’s all just complicated.
Talk to your priest. He can help you figure out what’s possible. Economia doesn’t mean “do whatever you want,” but it does mean the Church understands that real life is messy and sometimes you need guidance for your specific situation.
What Actually Matters Here
You’re trying to be faithful to the Church without destroying your family relationships. That’s good. That’s what you should be doing. The Church doesn’t want you to become some isolated weirdo who can’t have dinner with your relatives. But she also doesn’t want you to treat the liturgical life like it’s optional, something you do when it’s convenient.
Fr. Thomas Hopko used to say that our lives should be our primary witness. Your family will learn more about Orthodoxy from watching you fast, pray, and show up at services than from any explanation you give them. Be there for the Nativity. Be there for Pascha. Be faithful. And also be at your mom’s house when you can, because love isn’t theoretical.
Some years it’ll work out smoothly. Other years it won’t. You’ll miss something or someone will be upset or you’ll feel torn in half. That’s part of living as Orthodox Christians in a place where most people aren’t Orthodox. But you’re not the first person to navigate this, and the Church has been helping people figure it out for two thousand years.
Talk to your priest before the holidays hit. Plan ahead. Be honest with your family about what you’re doing and why. And then do your best to love everybody involved, including Christ and His Church.
