Rev.
Dr. Emmanuel Clapsis,
The
Orthodox Church today maintains cordial relations with other
Christian churches and participates with them in joint efforts to
recover the visible unity of all Christians. In this effort, it
gives primacy to those aspects of faith that brings all Christian
churches and communions closer without ignoring the substantive
doctrinal and theological differences that caused their separation.
While most of the faithful perceive the involvement of the Orthodox Church in this joint quest for unity to be guided by the Holy Spirit, others express fear that the faith of the Church is somehow compromised for the sake of unity not always grounded in truth. In this short article, we will try to address these concerns by responding to two important questions: Why have the Orthodox churches decided to be involved in the ecumenical movement for the unity of God’s Church, and how does this involvement relate to their claim to be the embodiment of the One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church?
While most of the faithful perceive the involvement of the Orthodox Church in this joint quest for unity to be guided by the Holy Spirit, others express fear that the faith of the Church is somehow compromised for the sake of unity not always grounded in truth. In this short article, we will try to address these concerns by responding to two important questions: Why have the Orthodox churches decided to be involved in the ecumenical movement for the unity of God’s Church, and how does this involvement relate to their claim to be the embodiment of the One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church?
The
Ecumenical Patriarchate[i],
in an encyclical addressed to all Orthodox churches in 1902, invited
the Orthodox churches to move towards more dynamic inner communion,
conciliarity and cooperation, in order to work with other Christian
churches and communions towards the visible unity of all Christians.
This is the desire of our Lord Jesus Christ (John 17) and the prayer
of the Church in her liturgy. This unity is presented in the
encyclical as a gift of God’s Spirit whose reception requires the
ardent efforts of all who believe in Christ and "walk in the
paths of the evangelical love and peace." In 1920, the
Ecumenical Patriarchate issued a second encyclical addressed to all
Christian churches suggesting the formation of a " league of
churches" for common witness and action. It envisioned that the
churches could move towards greater unity if they could overcome
their mutual mistrust and bitterness by rekindling and strengthening
the evangelical love. This could lead them to see one another not as
strangers and foreigners, but as being part of the household of
Christ and "fellow heirs, members of the same body and
partakers of the promise of God in Christ" (Eph. 3:6). Such
unity couldn’t be advanced simply by just overcoming doctrinal
differences, but it demands interchurch diakonia and common witness
to God’s love for the life of the world. In 1986 the Third
Preconciliar Pan-Orthodox conference unequivocally stated that the
"Orthodox participation in the ecumenical movement does not run
counter to the nature and history of the Orthodox Church. It
constitutes the consistent expression of the apostolic faith within
new historical conditions."[ii]
The
Orthodox churches understand their participation in the ecumenical
movement to be inspired and guided by the Spirit of God who wills
all to be united with the risen Christ. Thus, it is not simply a
response to God’s reconciling love, but a movement of the Holy
Spirit in which the churches participate. The Spirit of God invites
all to break down the walls of enmity, overcome isolation and
self-sufficiency, and become a communion of love for God’s glory.
The late Greek Orthodox theologian Nikos Nissiotis, in his opening
address as Moderator of the Faith and Order Commission of the WCC in
Bangalore (1978), stated that the churches transcend their
confessional boundaries and heal their divisions when they let the
Spirit of God guide their lives. "The Spirit is the advocate of
the dynamic over the static, of the multiform over the uniform, of
the exceptional over the regular, of the paradox over the
normal."[iii]When
the separated Churches gathered together, affirming faith in Christ
and searching for ways to actualize and experience their unity in
God’s eschatological promise, reflect in their fellowship and
efforts towards unity the presence and operation of God’s Spirit.
"The operation of the Spirit fills the gaps, unites the
oppositions, bridges the distances, links the different gifts of
grace."
The
endorsement of the ecumenical involvement does not necessarily mean
that the Orthodox churches have abandoned their ecclesiological
claims; on the contrary, they participate in the ecumenical movement
without compromising its essential faith to be the fullness of the
one, holy, catholic and apostolic Church. What facilitated the
fuller participation of the Orthodox Churches in the ecumenical
movement is the statement on "The Church, the Churches, and the
World Council of Churches" produced in 1950 in Toronto by the
World Council of Churches.[iv] The
‘Toronto statement’ assured the churches that their
participation in the World Council of Churches in no way prejudices
the outcome of the ongoing quest for unity, neither would the
churches be obliged to change their ecclesiology. Although the World
Council of Churches is understood as a "fellowship of
churches," the Toronto statement noted that the "the
member churches of the World Council consider the relationship of
other churches to the Holy Catholic Church which the creed profess
as a subject for mutual consideration. Nevertheless, membership does
not imply that each Church must regard the other member churches as
churches in the true and full sense of the word." It also
recognized that member churches retain the "constitutional
right to ratify or to reject utterances or actions of the Council."
The Toronto statement facilitated the involvement of the Orthodox
churches in the ecumenical movement without compromising their
understanding about the nature, mission, and witness of the Church.
While
the Orthodox churches may view involvement in the Ecumenical
movement as consistent with their ecclesiology, they have been
unwilling to address the claims of other Christian churches and
communions concerning their relation/identity with the One, Holy,
Catholic and Apostolic Church. This has immediate consequences in
the ecumenical witness of the Orthodox churches and makes ecumenism
a divisive issue within the Orthodox Church. "We Orthodox,"
Bishop Kalistos (Ware) of Diokleia[v] notes,
" do not at the moment have an agreed attitude towards
non-orthodox Christians." Among the Orthodox churches,
different visions of ecumenism and of inter-Christian
reconciliations lead to conflicts about ecumenism. "Some of us
[Orthodox] see ecumenism as a sign of hope, others as a pan-heresy.
Some of us think that Roman Catholics have true priesthood; others
consider that they should be re-baptized. When we meet other
Christians, we speak with a divided voice. Consequently, our
participation in the ecumenical movement has been far less effective
than it could and should have been."
Any
attempt to address this problem theologically requires that we take
seriously the faith and the sensitivities of the Orthodox Church
about the unity of the Church. The Orthodox Church is especially
sensitive in maintaining its continuity with the faith, life and
witness of the apostolic Church. Every division in the history of
the church has been viewed as a denial of its nature, a separation
from Christ’s body, a departure from the temple of the Holy
Spirit. The Church, coping with schism and apostasies, emphasized
the importance of unity and promulgated canons to fortify its unity
and communicate its belief that those who separate themselves from
the una
sanctadepart
from the domain of God’s salvific grace extra
ecclesia nulla salus.
While the Orthodox Church never refuted this belief, it refused to
accept its practical consequences. Metropolitan John
Zizioulas[vi]believes
the problem of the limits of the Church and of the implication for
those individuals and communities who exist outside of these limits
continues to be an unresolved issue for Orthodox theology. He
states: " it is certainly not easy to exclude from the realm
and the operation of the Spirit so many Christians who do not belong
to the Orthodox Church." He believes that baptism creates the
limits of the Church and that "within this baptismal limit it
is conceivable that there may be division, but any division within
these limits is not the same as the division between the Church and
those outside the baptismal limit." From this perspective,
without baptism, there is no Church; within baptism, even if
divisions exist, one may still speak of the Church.
The
Orthodox churches seem to have adopted an ecclesiological
agnosticism that avoids reflection on the ecclesiological claims of
other Christian churches concerning their relation of the One, Holy,
Catholic and Apostolic Church. This ecclesiological agnosticism has
been challenged by Fr. George Florovsky[vii] who
has consistently argued that the Orthodox churches make implicit
judgments about the ecclesial nature of the other Christian churches
by the manner in which they admit their members to the Orthodox
Church either through re-baptism, chrismation, or mere recital of
the creed. The Orthodox churches, he maintains, need to rethink
their understanding of schism in relation to una
sancta.
Florovsky
observes that in the history of the Church there are occasions when
the Church by her very actions gives one to understand that the
sacraments of sectarians – and even of heretics – are valid,
that the sacraments can be celebrated outside the strict canonical
limits of the Church. The Church customarily receives adherents from
sects – and even from heresies – not by the way of baptism,
thereby obviously meaning or supposing that they have already been
actually baptized in their sects and heresies. In many cases, the
Church receives adherents even without chrism, and sometimes clergy
in their existing orders. Fr. George Florovsky interprets the
practices of the Church as a sign that, in the Orthodox tradition,
the "mystical territory" of the Church extends beyond "her
canonical borders." He argues that the Church as "a
mystical organism" and "the sacramental body of Christ"
couldn’t be adequately described by an exclusive use of canonical
terms and categories. He also suggests that neither the recognition
of sacramental grace outside of the boundaries of the Orthodox
Church can be grounded in the notion of economia which
in his view entered the life of the Orthodox churches during a time
of theological confusion and decadence.
The
belief of St. Cyprian that outside of the canonical boundaries of
the Church there is no salvation must be respected as a strong urge
to maintain and respect the unity of God’s Church. However,
today’s needs require it to be supplanted with the theology of
schism advanced by St. Augustine. For St. Augustine, schismatic and
heretical communities, in spite of their formal separation from
the una sancta, continue to maintain bonds of unity with
it. All the separated Christian churches are related to each other
and in communion, however imperfectly, with the One, Holy, Catholic
and Apostolic Church. The recognition of this relationality is
warranted by the fact that there are many still unbroken bonds
whereby the schismatic communities are held in certain unity with
the One Church. These bonds, in the words of Florovsky, include "
right belief, sincere devotion, the Word of God, and above all the
grace of God, which ever heals the weak and supplies what is
lacking." There is thus in every schismatic and heretical
community something of God that connects them with the life of the
God’s Church. "What is valid in the sects is that which is in
them from the Church, that which remains with them as their portion
of the sacred inner core of the Church, that through which they are
with the Church. "
What
does this mean for the participation of the Orthodox churches in the
Ecumenical movement? Recognizing the operation of God’s Spirit in
other Christian churches, which are not in communion with the
Orthodox Church, implies at least the theoretical acknowledgment
that these churches in their ecumenical commitment have the
potential to enhance the life and the ministries of the One Church
as well as these churches to be enhanced by the catholicity of the
Orthodox church. As the churches recognize their limitation in their
separation from one another and the need to move towards unity in
faith, life and witness, they need to receive with humility and
appreciation the gifts that God’s Spirit has bestowed in each one.
The
refusal of the Orthodox churches to be in sacramental communion with
other Christian churches, despite the affirmation that they are in
an imperfect and incomplete manner members of the One Church of God,
should not be perceived as a sign of arrogance; neither it should be
a source of Orthodox triumphalism or self-sufficiency. It is a
painful reminder for all that the unity of God’s Church requires
the fullness of the apostolic faith and tradition. It does not allow
the churches to become complacent with present relative unity and
collaboration. This leads to an irrevocable and unabated commitment
of the Orthodox Churches to the fellowship of Christian churches
that seek jointly to discover their unity in the faith, life and
witness of God’s Church.
Rev.
Dr. Emmanuel Clapsis is the Archbishop Iakovos Professor of Theology
at Holy Cross Greek Orthodox School of Theology
[i]Gennadios
Limouris ed., Orthodox
Visions of Ecumenism: Statements, Messages and Reports on the
Ecumenical Movement, 1902-1992 (Geneva:
World Council of Churches, 1994), pp. 1-8
[ii]Ibid.,
p.112
[iii]Nikos
Nissiotis, "The Importance of the Faith and Order Commission
for Restoring Ecclesial Fellowship," in Sharing
in One Hope (Geneva:
World Council of Churches, 1978), p.13ff
[iv]"The
Church, the Churches and the WCC," in Lukas Vischer edit.,A
Documentary History of the Faith and Order Movement 1927-1963(Saint
Louis,MI:Bethany Press, 1963), pp.166-7
[v]
Metropolitan
Kallistos of Diokleia, "The Witness of the Orthodox Church,"
Ecumenical
Review 52(2000)
p. 50
[vi]
Metropolitan
John of Pergamon, "The Self-understanding of the Orthodox and
their Participation in the Ecumenical Movement," inThe
Ecumenical Movement, the Churches and the World Council of Churches:
An Orthodox Contribution to the Reflection Process on the ‘Common
Understanding and Vision of the WCC,
George Lemopoulos ed., (Geneva: World Council of Churches, 1966) p.
45
[vii] Fr.
George Florovsky, "The Doctrine of the Church and the
Ecumenical Problem," Ecumenical
Review 2(1950)
p. 161.
Sourse:
Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America
Sourse:
Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America