It depends on which 'Orthodox' you are referring to. "Orthodox" simply means someone who is very strict in their religious observance. There are 'orthodox' in almost every religious group. "Orthodox Christians" usually refers to the eastern European Christian churches including the Russian Orthodox and Greek Orthodox, among others. There are also Orthodox Jews. There are even some that you could call Orthodox Mormons, although they tend to belong to the main body of the church rather than splitting off into their own group.
The difference is between truth (Orthodox) and error (Baptists).
Orthodox Jews abide by the commands of the Torah and the Oral Torah (Talmud).
Mainly the major difference between the two is that the Serbians are of the Eastern Orthodox Faith, and the Croatians are Catholics.
Catholics don't squat 350.
Hasidim are a portion of Orthodox Jews. They follow Judaism on a strictly Orthodox level.
A: There are many differences between Greek Orthodox Church and Russian Orthodox Church, so posing the question that broadly is meaningless. Regular Christianity is too heterogeneous if at all useful notion.
Orthodox Jews follow strict tradition and Jewish law, whereas the Conservative movement has relaxed some of the observances.
There are no priestesses in Greek Orthodoxy as it showed the difference between them and Pagan religions.
Mostly that we, the mormons, believe in the book of Mormon, and methodist's don't. that is the biggest difference that I know of!!
Orthodox is a religion. They believe in the Bible, and in God. The difference is they are cool.
No difference in their beliefs. They are both part of the Eastern Orthodox Church, but the Antiochians are mainly Orthodox people from Lebanon, and the Greeks are mainly Orthodox people from Greece.
Do you mean Greek Orthodox, Russian Orthodox, Jewish Orthodox? Arguably, not a huge amount because orthodox usually denotes a high value being placed on procedure and tradition - which they all share to an extent.