Ecumenical Patriarchate Press Office
Source: Faith Matters, TOWARD THE HOLY AND GREAT COUNCIL: Retrieving a Culture of Conciliarity and CommunionRev. Dr. John Chryssavgis
Introduction: primacy and conciliarity in context
Allow me to begin by articulating some personal sentiments on my relationship with this school and Church.[1]
I am not sure that there could be more touching an affirmation of my
regard for the legacy of this community than the honor of delivering the
Father Alexander Schmemann Memorial Lecture. My admiration for the late
Fr John Meyendorff and Fr Alexander Schmemann has proved formative in
my academic and church life both in Australia and the United States,
where I have been privileged to serve—over the last twenty-five out of
thirty-one years in my priesthood, in one capacity or another—His
All-Holiness Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew, presently on a full-time
basis with the gracious consent of His Eminence my own Archbishop
Demetrios of the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America.
I would be hard pressed to identify
another contemporary clergyman with the breadth of perspective and
boldness of Fr Alexander Schmemann, whose name graces this memorial
lecture. Fr Alexander was fearless in his analysis because he discerned
the temptation of a Church shamelessly grandstanding, but shamefully
disregarding its role “in this world, yet not of this world” (Jn
17.16-18):
We are paying the price,” he writes in his Journals,
“of the crisis of Orthodoxy because we created so many idols . . . We
are concerned with the fate of many patriarchates . . . and deeply
engulfed in many jurisdictions, all of them brandishing various canons.
We try to conquer the West with what is weak and ambiguous in our
heritage. This arrogance, self-satisfaction, and pompous triumphalism
are frightening.[2]
In 1963 he wrote: “[A] synod is not
‘power’ in the juridical sense of this word, for there can exist no
power over the church body of Christ. [A] synod is, rather a witness to the identity of all Churches as the Church of God in faith, life, and agape.”[3]
Forty-five years later, in a similar
assessment that I consider historical and definitive for the Orthodox
Church, addressing the Fifth Synaxis of the Heads of Orthodox Churches
(Phanar, Constantinople, October 8, 2008), His All-Holiness Ecumenical
Patriarch Bartholomew candidly, albeit unassumingly alerted the world’s
Orthodox primates:
We have received and
preserve the true faith . . . We commune of the same . . . sacraments.
We basically keep the same liturgical typikon and are governed by the
same Sacred Canons . . . Despite this, we must admit in all honesty that
sometimes we present an image of incomplete unity, as if we were not
one Church, but rather a confederation or a federation of Churches.[4]
As I listened to this critique and
questioned how and where the leadership would come from to address the
absence of unity in my beloved Church, the words of Fr John Meyendorff
writing in 1978 resonated in my mind:
It is unquestionable
that the Orthodox conception of the Church recognizes the need for a
leadership of the world episcopate, for a certain spokesmanship by the
first patriarch, for a ministry of coordination without which
conciliarity is impossible . . . [T]he Patriarchate of Constantinople
was n[ever] deprived of its “ecumenicity,” being always answerable to
the conciliar consciousness of the Church. In the present chaotic years,
the Orthodox Church could indeed use wise, objective and authoritative
leadership from the Ecumenical Patriarchate.[5]
Fr John died just months after Patriarch
Bartholomew’s election to the throne of Constantinople. I cannot help
but wonder how he might today have welcomed his visionary leadership,
especially in light of the forthcoming Holy and Great Council, to which I
would now draw your attention. It has been a unique and humbling
blessing that His All-Holiness invited me to witness and assist the
Pan-Orthodox process leading up to this extraordinary synod.
A council of healing and unity
Of course, it may be
better to avoid any kind of meeting of bishops; I know of no good to
have come from even a single synod; I know of no solutions that
resulted, but only additional problems that arose. Their only outcomes
are arguments, ambitions and rivalries; bishops prefer to reprove others
rather than resolve internal church issues
This description doubtless echoes my
experience in recent years with regard to the futility and frustration
of hierarchal meetings at the highest level. But these words actually
belong to St Gregory the Theologian.[6]
Who am I to disagree with such a prominent saint and hierarch? And
admittedly there are even enlightened Orthodox hierarchs and
theologians—along with uninformed and malevolent critics—who diminish or
denounce the importance of the forthcoming Holy and Great Council.
Given St Gregory’s admonition and
contemporary skepticism, why bother to convene a council? Where did the
idea come from? Will this meeting be recognized as the Eighth
Ecumenical Council? What issues will and will not be addressed? What
are the rules of engagement? Will the council be a source of unity or
disunity? These are the questions I hope to consider partially, since
presuming to know the answers would be the height of arrogance when everything still seems so unpredictable; or, more accurately, when everything depends almost exclusively on the grace of God.
At the aforementioned Synaxis of
Primates in 2008, the First Hierarchs issued a communiqué reaffirming
their obligation: 1) to safeguard Orthodox unity; 2) to heal every
canonical anomaly in the so-called diaspora; as well as 3) to resume and
escalate preparations for the Great Council. Almost two years ago, when
the primates assembled again for their Sixth Synaxis at the Phanar in
March 2014, arguably their foremost and unanimous decision was the
convocation of the Great Council, scheduled to take place around the
Feast of Pentecost this year at the Church of Haghia Irene in
Constantinople, the site of the second ecumenical council of 381 where
the divinity of the Holy Spirit was professed. The council was to be
held around Pentecost of 2016 unless unforeseen circumstances arise.
Some Churches emphasized the date and venue; others stressed the phrase
“unless something unforeseen occurs.”[7]
In fact, unforeseen circumstances did occur; and in January 2016, the
Synaxis of Primates voted to move the venue to the Orthodox Academy of
Crete.
The Holy and Great Council has been on
the table for discussion and preparation since at least the early 1960s
(in Rhodes)—although there were proposals for such a council as early as
the 1920s (in Constantinople[8]) and the 1930s (on Mt Athos[9]); the Church of Russia did not send representatives to the earlier meetings,[10]
doubtless because of complicated relations at the time with the state!
However, this year’s council is unprecedented inasmuch as it will mark
the first-ever gathering of delegates from fourteen autocephalous
Orthodox Churches, including the ancient patriarchates, apart from Rome.
Never before has such an extensive initiative been undertaken; never in
history has such a truly universal council convened. In the first
millennium of the Christian era, there were only five church centers,
located exclusively around the Mediterranean and monitored rigidly by a
secular imperial authority—because someone had to supervise the episcopate!
Theological commentators and historical
analysts should bear in mind that the process in the Orthodox Church may
not often appear as orderly or organized as in Western Churches
precisely because it is contingent on a sense of conciliarity, rather
than on any imposition of authority.[11]
It is also naïve to dismiss disagreements among individual Churches,
implying that these result merely from ecclesiastical rivalry. While
such an impression is not entirely erroneous, and while the process is
without question hopelessly frustrating, it is in some ways a far more
nuanced—a profound, even if painful—representative process than often
perceived. In many ways, it is more “republican” than the Orthodox
themselves like to admit and more “democratic” than frequently
characterizes church structures in the West; in the hierarchical system
of the papacy, absolute authority descends from above, vertically; while
the horizontal structure of Protestantism dispels—in fact,
transfers—the same absolute authority horizontally. By contrast,
Orthodox authority is essentially “circular,” at least fundamentally
symbolical of conciliarity and communion.
An ecumenical council?
Of course, despite assessments by
critics and pundits, both cynical and constructive, we should not expect
from the Holy and Great Council of the Orthodox Church such radical
changes in terms of influence or consequence as wielded by the Second
Vatican Council over the worldwide Roman Catholic Church. First, the
“universal” aspect of unity is differently understood in the Orthodox
Church; while the Ecumenical Patriarch has a responsibility and
authority in terms of jurisdiction and function as the “first among
equals,” he would never imagine or impose a top-down primacy without the
exercise of collegiality. Second, each of the autocephalous Orthodox
Churches would also be called to a procedure of reception with regard to
decision-making, a methodology that ultimately itself recognizes and
validates the “ecumenicity” of any particular council. And third, while
change in the Orthodox Church is normally subdued, even imperceptible,
it is always a natural and organic process, never a reform from above or
a revolution from below. This is how we understand the continuity of a
living tradition, the succession of apostolicity and authority.
When the Second Vatican Council convened
in Rome, from October 1962 to December 1965, it marked the twenty-first
ecumenical council of the Catholic Church. Seven of these councils are
shared with the Orthodox Church. By contrast, the Orthodox have neither
summoned nor sanctioned an ecumenical council since the seventh
ecumenical council of 787. Some Orthodox sources—including the
Encyclical of the Eastern Patriarchs in 1848—maintain that the Council
of Constantinople, held in 879-880 under the chairmanship of St Photius
and referring to itself as “a holy and ecumenical council,”[12]
was the eighth ecumenical council inasmuch as it incorporated all
Churches of the time, including Rome. Others claim that the Councils of
1341 and 1351, held in Constantinople and ratifying the teaching of St
Gregory Palamas, should also be regarded as ecumenical. The same is
sometimes said of the Council of Constantinople in 1484 that repudiated
the union of Florence.[13] However, most theologians continue to speak of seven ecumenical councils.
There is of course some validity to
returning to or resuming the vitality of earlier councils, especially
those of the fourteenth century. In some ways, every council is a
confirmation and prolongation of previous councils, the perpetuation of
Pentecost. Perhaps the Great Council is called to continue where the
last councils left off. Is there no correspondence between the problems
of the hesychast controversy and the challenges of our time? Palamite
theology formulated a theology about the deification of human nature and
the transfiguration of the whole world, much like our own age that
desperately yearns for a vision of light and a worldview of hope. The
Great Council should be an instrument of God’s presence, an affirmation
of God’s love in the world, the covenant and conviction that God is in
all things “true, honorable, just, pure, loved, gracious, excellent, and
praiseworthy.” (Phil 4.8)
So, then, can the forthcoming Great
Council be considered ecumenical? The church canons do not discuss or
define criteria of ecumenicity. There is no formal or external mark, no
general or clear principle that establishes ecumenicity or
infallibility—at least, not in any mechanical or automatic sense. In the
final analysis, there is only one test, and that is retrospective:
namely, a council’s acceptance and adoption by the people of God (the pleroma, the sensus fidelium or consensus ecclesiae).[14] Outside of this, none of the external criteria is either definitive or decisive:
- Numbers and representation: 560 bishops attended the council of Ariminum-Seleucia in 359—more than most any ecumenical councils.
- Conviction and doctrine: Several councils claimed ecumenical status but were ultimately rejected by the Church.
- Imperial or papal recognition: Many councils were convened and ratified by emperors (such as Hieria in 754) but rejected by the Church, while at Ferrara-Florence, Archbishop Bessarion declared: “Despite the greatness of the Roman Church, it is less than an ecumenical council and the universal Church.” However, since convocation or chairmanship by the Byzantine emperor is frequently brandished as a fundamental criterion for the ecumenical status of a council, we should remember that imperial recognition was never—and never could be—an ecclesiological principle but only an historical accident.
- Conciliar recognition: While an ecumenical council confirms the decisions of its predecessors, ratification in itself is insufficient; otherwise, the entire series becomes invalidated.
Of course, while the Church is not
democratic, neither is it, strictly speaking, hierocratic—to adopt the
terminology of Professor Ioannis Karmiris.[15] It is, we might say, a hierarchal democracy, involving the reciprocity of charismata,
a mutual interdependence between the ministerial priesthood of the
hierarchy and the royal priesthood of the laity. As the Eastern
patriarchs affirmed in their response of 1848 to Pope Pius IX:
Among us, neither
patriarchs nor councils could ever introduce new teaching, for the
defender of religion is the very body of the Church—that is to say, the
people itself—which desires that its doctrine should remain unchanged
from age to age, identical to that of its fathers.[16]
In the model Council of Jerusalem (Acts
15), it is the “elders and apostles who met in order to consider
matters” (v. 6). “The multitude kept silent” (v. 12), though the
community was hardly passive. For—much like we tend to forget that, in
the eucharistic consecration, the descent of the Holy Spirit is invoked “upon us and on the gifts before us,” so too—“it seemed good to the apostles and elders with all the Church”
(v. 22). The power to discern between authenticity and fallacy—“rightly
to divide the word of truth”—is granted, not to the hierarchy in
isolation, still less to any hierarch as individual, but to the people
of God in its entirety.
I will return to the role and rights of
the laity; however, at this point, it behooves us to recall the appeal
of St Paulinus of Nola: “Let us hang upon the lips of our faithful; for
the spirit of God breathes upon every one of them.”[17]
I should add, however, that it is also imprecise to speak of the
conscience of the Church as if it were an alternative source of truth or
authority, somehow distinct from or superior to the ecumenical council.
We must generally disabuse ourselves of the temptation to “objectify”
or “externalize” the truth, identifying it with the letter of Scripture,
the office of bishop, or the institution of council. Ever present in
the Church, God speaks through episcopal councils as in popular
conscience. A council is accepted as true and ecumenical by the church’s conscience because it is
true and ecumenical. In essence the ecumenical status and doctrinal
stature of a particular assembly was determined retrospectively and
confirmed retroactively.
It would perhaps be more appropriate and
accurate to consider the Holy and Great Council as a continuation not
only of the early Ecumenical Councils of the first Christian millennium,
but also of the later “Great” or “Greater” (Μείζονες) Councils of the
second Christian millennium.[18]
Such councils have convened through the centuries following the “great
schism” of 1054 in order to resolve issues of doctrinal, canonical or
administrational character.
Deciphering the agenda
What, in that case, will be discussed at
the Holy and Great Council? The various items on the agenda were first
debated in the late 1960s, determined by the mid-1970s, and defined by
the mid-1980s. Certain detractors are quick to dismiss the forthcoming
council as insignificant or inconsequential, claiming that no “weighty”
doctrinal issue will be addressed or resolved. Admittedly, I am not sure
that bishops always arrived at earlier councils with the
predetermination or realization that they were, through divine
inspiration, about to settle a major theological debate and
ecclesiastical dispute. That would have been arrogance of the highest
degree, even for ordained clergy! In fact, the majority of councils were
not at all focused on theological disputes but rather on internal
governance and administration. That is quite natural: Councils are how
the Church is supposed to function. This is why, in the felicitous and
at once witty remark of Patriarch Daniel of Romania at the last Synaxis
of Primates (Chambésy, January 2016), “the forthcoming Great Council
should not be seen as an eschatological phenomenon, in the sense of our
last chance to meet before ‘the last times,’ but as a significant
historical event reinforcing conciliarity.”[19]
Councils are what bishops are expected to schedule on their calendars!
How did we ever lose sight of that? Once assembled, they simply dealt
with issues at hand. We should always remember that, it was when the
disciples were “gathered in the same place, on the day of Pentecost, . .
. that they were all filled with the Holy Spirit” (Acts 2.1-4).
The agenda of the Holy and Great Council
should be an occasion and opportunity to reveal the mystery of Orthodox
faith and the heart of Orthodox life to a world that yearns “for an
account of the hope that is in us” (1 Pet 3.15). Yet, there is an air of
paranoia that clouds the council’s agenda. Paranoia is not an
excessively inflated term to describe much reaction to the Holy and
Great Council. Fr Schmemann might describe it as “the Pentecost of the
devil”[20];
it is the polar opposite of what a council is, namely the expression of
Pentecost! How else would one justify the apprehension on the part of official Orthodox Churches
regarding enforcement by the Phanar of a “hidden agenda,” an imposition
of the Phanar’s “papist ambition,” or even a “general sell-out” of
traditional doctrine? Or how does one explain formal church Web sites—there
is no point even mentioning personal or political blog-sites—that
suspect involvement by “top US officials and the US State Department
trying to set the agenda, specifically for homosexuality” or retired university professors
who alert their devotees to “Phanariote schemes plotting unity with the
Papacy and Protestantism”? Or how does one respond to experienced Orthodox hierarchs,
who express their fear about “secret meetings” of Inter-Orthodox
committees or ask whether the Great Council will condemn the heresies of
the world, especially “the disease of ecumenism”?
In fact, for other conservative
detractors, who contend that an ecumenical council only meets to
annihilate treacherous heresy or perilous unbelief, surely the role and
responsibility of the Church in today’s world is a pressing matter for
our faithful. The notion that contemporary problems somehow do not rival
the “glamor” of early heresies is simply another ruse for subverting
the value of the Great Council.[21]
I sincerely strive to sympathize with those who dust the pews in search
of contemporary Arians or look in religious haystacks for current
Nestorians.[22]
But they will more profitably find their contemporary heretics among
those Orthodox believers who tolerate or propagate the exclusion of
refugees on the basis of race, as well as among Orthodox clergy and
laity who conveniently reconcile the gospel creed with secular greed.[23]
Paradoxically—and tragically—they may well find their modern heresy
cajoling a synaxis of primates or an assembly of bishops to justify the
grave sin of ethnophyletism and defending the jurisdictional boundaries
of mother Churches either as “differences of missionary approach” or on
the pretext of pastoral practice.[24] Are these not vital issues of life and death? Are they not challenging matters of truth and salvation? Is it just the filioque and the papacy that scandalize us?
The “final ten” of the agenda
The items for discussion and decision at the Holy and Great Council have been painstakingly determined since the early 1970s,[25] with some of them going back to the early 1960s.[26] Actually, in 1961 (Rhodes), there were over a hundred items (!) on the agenda, subdivided into eight distinct categories.[27]
In fact, as the late Metropolitan Damaskinos of Switzerland, first and
founding director of the patriarchal secretariat for the preparations of
the Great Council, was fond of saying: “Even if there was only a single
item on the agenda for discussion, it would be worth convening the
Great Council. This,” he would add, “is the hour of Orthodoxy!” The
“final ten” items now on the agenda are well known and public:
a) Internal relations among the Orthodox Churches:
1. The Orthodox diaspora
2. Autonomy, and how it is proclaimed
3. Autocephaly, and how it is proclaimed
4. The diptychs
b) Issues of pastoral or practical nature:
5. A common calendar
6. Impediments to marriage[28]
7. Regulations for fasting[29]
c) External relations with other Churches and the world:
8. Bilateral and multilateral dialogues
9. Orthodoxy and the rest of the Christian world
10. The contribution of Orthodoxy to peace, freedom, solidarity, love, and the elimination of discrimination.[30] This item has been retitled as: The Mission of the Orthodox Church in the Contemporary World
Over the past eighteen months, two
special committees, a Pan-Orthodox Preconciliar Consultation, and a
Synaxis of Primates of bishops has labored to update and finalize
position language for each of the agenda items. Six of these items have
been agreed upon and finalized for referral and adoption by the Holy and
Great Council.
The first matter of the Orthodox
diaspora has not been solved, but progress has been made because of the
newly created Assemblies of Bishops, which will be explained in detail
later.
While a document was adopted on the
second item (i.e., autonomy), no conclusion was reached and no
conversation was conducted on the third and fourth matters, dealing with
the land mine of how autocephaly is determined and the hypersensitive
ranking of Churches on the diptychs. As His All-Holiness Ecumenical
Patriarch Bartholomew lamented at the Synaxis of 2016, “no Church wants
to forfeit its place in the order!” It would not take a professor of
statistics and probabilities to predict these items would somehow be
diplomatically circumvented.
With regard to number five (on a common calendar), no revision was made to the original language dating to 1986.[31]
In summary the text concerning the calendar was supposed to consider
the date of Easter on the basis of scientific calculations, which could
facilitate a common celebration of Pascha; but, the favorable impact of
such an endeavor for Orthodox communities in the West notwithstanding,
the mere prospect of any alarm created by even the utterance of the word
“calendar” was sufficient to bury this subject in its entirety! At the
last Synaxis of Primates, held at Chambésy in January, 2016, it was
agreed that this item should be dropped from the Council’s agenda.
As for item six (on marriage
impediments), a hasty revision under pressure to stand up to “evil
forces in the world” resulted in a rather incompetent and incomplete
statement. The text on marriage impediments might well have brought some
consolation and dignity to hundreds of widowed (even divorced)
clergymen seeking honorably and honestly to vacate their celibacy;[32]
but it appears easier—perhaps even convenient and expedient—for the
Church to handle issues of sexuality by denunciation or denial. The
omission, moreover, of painful albeit pragmatic issues related to
inter-Christian marriages of lay Orthodox faithful is another tragic
reflection of the sanctimonious insensitivity of much of our Church
leadership to pastoral issues of our age.
As for item seven on rules of fasting,
while a revised text was approved, there was a fundamental shift of
emphasis from the original intention, which was to discuss fasting
regulations in missionary fields and in Western societies; but again,
when it is a matter of how to understand tradition, it is sometimes far less challenging simply to underline tradition for fear of undermining tradition.
Finally, items eight and nine pertaining
to dialogues with other Churches and the ecumenical movement were
combined into a single text, while the text on the Orthodox Church’s
contribution to the world (item number ten) was adopted by all but not
signed by Moscow and Georgia until amended with a conservative tone by
the most recent Synaxis of Primates in January, 2016. I will analyze the
diaspora, ecumenism, and consensus in greater detail below.
Clearly the texts remain imperfect, even
incomplete. The Hierarchs are in some ways dissatisfied, while readers
and the general public will in many ways be disappointed. But was it
realistic to expect more? In response to one Hierarch’s plea that his
“Church sees no reason for the Great Council to convene unless we
improve the documents to the level of those produced by Vatican II”
(sic!), Archbishop Chrysostomos II of Cyprus pointed out during the
recent January 2016 Synaxis of Primates, that “what was achieved was the
best we could do.” It was spiritually refreshing and heartening to hear
Archbishop Anastasios of Albania contend: “Let’s admit our humility,
our inefficiency, our poverty,” to which he added: “Our documents are
the deficient, even defective ‘prosphoron’[33] that we offer to God, who alone can transform them into Body and Blood of Christ.”
Missing the mark?
Yet how do we imagine that people might
understand the issues, on which our hierarchs have reached agreement or
chosen to quarrel? Will they be seen as missing the mark? Will they
interpret ostensible consensus or ostentatious controversy as
misplacement in the hierarchy of values? Will they recognize the glaring
omission of some items, such as the treatment of laity and the
second-class role of women in the Church? Why was there so little
agreement on the role and responsibility of Orthodoxy in the world? Or
why was there little if any headway on the pastoral issues related to
marriage and fasting? Why would there be so much disagreement on
autocephaly and the diptychs? Are we signaling that our primary concern
lies in “the exercise of authority” (Mk 10.42) and decisions about who
is “first” or “last” (Mt 19.30 and 20.16), rather than the fulfillment
of the “new commandment [of love], by which all may know that we are
disciples of the Lord” (Jn 13.34-35)—that is to say, by whether we
discriminate against and judge people of other Christian confessions and
faith communities, but also by the way we demonstrate compassion for
people in our own Churches and congregations? Are we implying that,
while we delight in emphasizing our unity in doctrine and liturgy, we
are in fact divided at the most sacred and critical moment of the Divine
Eucharist, namely at the very heart of communion, when the diptychs are
recited from the royal doors? Have we forgotten St John Chrysostom’s
warning that “the desire to rule is the mother of heresies”?[34]
Let me further probe this line of
inquiry. Would it not be scandalous if participants at the Holy and
Great Council argued over issues of ecclesiastical priority and primacy
at the expense of addressing areas of concern and anguish for people
throughout the world? Would it not be a dismal reflection of the level
of our compassion and pastoral care if a document related to the
function and obligation of Orthodoxy in the world—instead of in its own
world!—does not include reference to the immorality of social and
financial injustice, as well as of racial and sexual discrimination,
before which many of its autocephalous Churches are often guilty of
silence, if not collusion?
Moreover, for a Church so infatuated
with tradition and memory, how can our hierarchs conveniently misplace
the original objective of many agenda items? Is it not ironic and tragic
that hierarchs, who envisioned and planned the Great Council more than a
generation ago—whose spiritual protégés are, in many cases, the church
leaders attending preconciliar consultations and primatial assemblies
today—were far more moderate than their militant successors and
radically more progressive and pastoral than current trends in their
Churches? How otherwise can we possibly reconcile the paranoia of some
church leaders unwilling even to entertain the scientific inaccuracy of
our paschal calculation, which was the motivation behind item five on
the agenda (on “a common calendar”) for fear that their congregations
would misinterpret this as yet another heinous calendar reform? Or, how
else can we understand the eagerness and forcefulness of some Churches
to debate and berate same-sex unions, when the original intention of
item six on the agenda (on “impediments to marriage”) was intended to
provide essential pastoral consolation to those adversely impacted by
medieval marriage regulations or to widowed clergy and lapsed monastics
uncharitably refused the prospect of marriage? Finally, how can we
explain that item seven on the agenda (on “regulations of fasting”)
originally had nothing whatsoever to do with preaching about dietary
restraints and their spiritual benefits, but everything to do with
assessing and adapting fasting regulations in missionary territories and
the “new world”?
I would respectfully submit that, while
the issues of autocephaly and the diptychs are doubtless vital to the
growth of the Orthodox Church, many Orthodox—including hierarchs
involved in the conciliar process—may in fact be unaware that the
importance of these issues pales in comparison to the other items on the
agenda. For example, the ecumenical openness and conciliar engagement
of an otherwise profoundly traditionalist Church is of crucial
importance, especially in light of isolationist and nationalistic
circles in both the Greek and Slavic worlds.[35] The way in which the Orthodox Church handles modernity—both in the light as in the wake
of the Great Council—is of profound relevance for the resonance of its
teaching in the public sphere. By the same token, the conciliar nature
of the Church presupposes openness to risk and surprise through
encounter and exchange among the various autocephalous Churches.[36]
Internal relations: “Orthodox diaspora”
I would like to explore in greater
detail the very first item on the agenda—an indication of its paramount
importance to the “founding fathers” of the forthcoming council—that
concerns the role of the Orthodox Church in non-traditional Orthodox
lands (“The Orthodox Diaspora”). This relates to the manner of achieving
the proper canonical status of one bishop in each diocese (or city)
where an existing diocese currently includes a number of ethnic Orthodox
jurisdictions and, frequently, more than one bishop. Will our church
leaders confer—or concede—some standing of autonomy, some status of
self-administration in the diaspora? More importantly, will our bishops
even be interested in a more unified, collaborative organization? Or
will they abide by and remain attached to narrowly nationalistic
interests? Father Schmemann articulated the challenge starkly:
[W]e constantly
congratulate ourselves about all kinds of historic events and
achievements, . . . yet, if we were true to the spirit of our faith we
ought to repent in “sackcloth and ashes,” we ought to cry day and night
about the sad, the tragic state of our Church. If “canonicity” is
anything but a pharisaic and legalistic self-righteousness, if it has
anything to do with the spirit of Christ and the tradition of His Body,
the Church, we must openly proclaim that the situation in which we all
live is utterly uncanonical regardless of all the justifications and
sanctions that every one finds for his “position.”[37]
From this perspective, perhaps the most
consequential and enduring pronouncement of the Great Council will be
its deliberation and determination regarding the organization and
administration of the Orthodox Church throughout the world. The question
is whether churches abroad, such as in the United States, Western
Europe, and Australasia—comprised of Orthodox immigrants and converts
long established in their new homelands, miles away and cultures apart
from the “mother Churches” where they originated—have reached the
maturity or acquired the single-mindedness and commitment to minister to
their people in harmony and manage their affairs in unity.
Regrettably, most Orthodox Churches seem
to be retreating into a stifling, sheltered and safe provincialism,
which they explain—or excuse—as attending to internal affairs, which are
in turn reckoned as more important pastorally than concerns for
collegiality and communion. What is again unfortunate is that
contemporary church leaders, who have been exposed to and educated in
the modern world and its global challenges—at least by comparison with
their predecessors, who were perhaps restricted by the “iron curtain” or
an oppressive xenophobia—appear less interested in transcending
parochialism and prejudice.
Earlier, I referred to issues that are
sufficiently urgent and vital for a Pan-Orthodox council to convene. Is
not the grave sin of nationalism or ethnophyletism yet another such
issue? Why is it so often and so brazenly justified—even theologically
and canonically—under the pretext of pastoral grounds, in retaliation
for jurisdictional boundaries, or out of fear for the loss of supremacy,
paranoia for an ulterior “agenda,” or suspicion for some
“predetermination” of . . . unity?[38]
Ethnophyletism was patently “decried, denounced, and condemned,” while
its proponents were “emphatically declared schismatics,” at the
Pan-Orthodox Council of Constantinople in 1872.[39]
A 137 years later, at the Fourth
Pan-Orthodox Preconciliar Conference held in Chambésy, on the outskirts
of Geneva, a momentous decision was unanimously made to create
Assemblies of Bishops in countries with overlapping jurisdictions; this
decision has been referred for approval to the Holy and Great Council.
In fact, the clear and explicit mandate of the Assemblies of Bishops,
their “unswerving obligation” is (to cite the Chambésy, Rules of
Operation, Article 5.1a in 2009) to safeguard the unity of the Church
and (to quote the Primates’ Message [Paragraph 13.1-2] in 2008) to
advance “the swift healing”[40] of the canonical anomalies, especially the problem of the parallel presence of multiple bishops in one and the same city.[41]
The deplorable rise of religious nationalism in the nineteenth and
twentieth centuries rendered the Orthodox Churches increasingly
independent of and imperious over one another, a practice that
ultimately differs little from the Orthodox censure and caricature of
Roman primacy. How ironic that the First Vatican Council (in 1870) that
championed papal primacy was held almost contemporaneously as the
Pan-Orthodox Council of Constantinople (in 1872) that denounced
ethnophyletism.
In the same revolutionary address at the Synaxis of Primates in 2008, Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew noted:
[W]e lack a unified
voice . . . [which] is the healthy significance of the institution of
autocephaly: while it assures the self-governance of each Church with
regard to its internal life and organization, on matters affecting the
entire Orthodox Church and its relations with those outside, each
autocephalous Church does not act alone but in coordination with the
rest of the Orthodox Churches. If this coordination either disappears or
diminishes, then autocephaly becomes “autocephalism” (or radical
independence), namely a factor of division rather than unity for the
Orthodox Church.[42]
Despite justifications and
vindications—such as maintaining relations with mother Churches, serving
the needs of recent migrants, or suspecting hidden agendas of unity—we
must candidly admit that our Churches in the United States have
flagrantly diverged from the canonical and ecclesiological principles of
two millennia. For a Church that prides itself on tradition, it is
surely embarrassing to defend our contention and competition based on a
preference for ethnic fascination, a priority ascribed to historical
foundation, or a preeminence attributed to numerical force. We know very
well that no Church has ever existed without clear and concrete
geographical parameters. So we must frankly acknowledge that we are
enticed by the ideologies of pan-hellenism, pan-slavism, and
pan-arabism, while being exasperated with the theology behind Canon 6 of
Nicaea I (325), Canon 28 of Chalcedon (451) and Canon 2 of
Constantinople II (553) that provide at least a starting point for
discussion. I am not arguing against embracing the broader social and
cultural, or even political and financial dimensions of the contemporary
phenomenon of global immigration. But our ultimate vision should always
be ecclesial and ecclesiological. Indeed, this is precisely why the
Ecumenical Patriarchate has advanced and advocated the Assemblies of
Bishops as a positive and constructive method to determine the best way
forward under these new circumstances.[43]
Otherwise, we are guilty of preaching what Fr Schmemann was fond of
labeling as “words that are in vain and do not bind, words that are part
of the ritual and resemble checks without funds.”[44]
Perhaps we should not so critical of the
preconciliar process, imputing it with overlooking the question of the
Orthodox diaspora. The recent Synaxis of January 2016 issued a formal
decision (no. 3, para. A):
The assemblies of
bishops on the one hand tangibly reveal the unity of the Orthodox Church
. . . and on the other hand ascertained the impossibility of
immediately transitioning to the strict canonical order of the Church.
Therefore, the Synaxis resolved to propose to the Holy and Great Council
the preservation of this institution until such time when circumstances
mature for the application of canonical precision.
In some ways, then, this issue has
already been resolved by being referred to the Great Council. While
there may be no adopted text on the Orthodox diaspora, there is an
agreed procedure.
The creation, then, of the Assemblies of
Bishops is itself a test of our willingness and readiness—ultimately of
our integrity—to be and to work together, to acknowledge and affirm our
unity. However, might we deliberately be avoiding our responsibility
and shunning the solution to the delicate question of church unity,
which has been placed—by the Orthodox autocephalous Churches, that is to
say by our own “mother Churches,” and by Pan-Orthodox decision—in our
humble hands? And if so, have we squandered an
invaluable—once-in-generations—opportunity to advance the Church in this
country? Like the newly ordained deacon, who holds the precious Body of
Christ in his fragile hands, the promise to shape the Church has been
placed before us—“we have this treasure in our earthen
vessels.” Have we become so dysfunctional through division and ambition
that we have either lost the will or lack the humility to remember and
realize the vision of Church unity?[45]
External relations: ecumenical affairs
The other agenda item I would like to
examine in depth concerns the external relations with other Churches.
Orthodox hierarchs and theologians can no longer disregard or dismiss
the phenomenon of fundamentalism,[46]
which is increasingly disguised under the façade of conservatism?
Doesn’t the absolute tyranny of a fragmented detail of truth often blind
people to the fullness or wholeness of truth? “The spirit of truth
leads us into all the truth” (Jn 16.13); it does not obsess
about partial or partisan truth. Heresy (αἳρεσις) selectively ignores
truth (ἀλήθεια), which implies remembering (ἀ-λήθει-α, as the practice
of “not forgetting” and certainly “not dismembering”) and embracing the
disparate and sublime dimensions of the whole truth, which we can never
fully grasp or embrace in its entirety. Dogmatic definitions as symbols
of faith do precisely that: they bring and hold together (σύμβολον,
συμβάλλω) all the pieces of the puzzle, “the whole truth and nothing but
the truth.” By contrast, the heresy of “piecemeal” truth complacently
idolizes the formalism of certain “dogmas” and “canons,” or else
conceitedly isolates the stature of only select “confessions” or
“councils.”
Think of the calculated and biased
parody of such saintly theologians as Photius the Great and especially
St Mark of Ephesus, those genuine confessors and giant pillars of
orthodoxy (St Nikodemus calls the latter an “Atlas”!), who are
frequently presented as mirroring the conscience of the most orthodox of
the Orthodox, but who were nonetheless far more susceptible to dialogue
and animated for union than many of their reactionary and small-minded
contemporary cheerleaders.[47]
Is not such a perverse and divisive distortion of theology and division
among believers sufficiently urgent ecclesiological heresy for a
council to convene? Will we see a condemnation of separatist groups and a
renewed commitment to ecumenical openness? A united and unequivocal
response to extremist factions and subversive elements—sometimes within
circles influenced by rigid hierarchs or repressed monastics—would be a
compelling affirmation of and committed emphasis on the “royal way” of
discernment and moderation adopted by the classic teachers of the early
Church. Orthodox fundamentalism or fanaticism regards any conversation
with Churches and confessions of the West as a threat to the fullness of
truth. How can we, they ask, have an exchange or encounter with other
Christian denominations, when we Orthodox possess the full truth? How
can we speak of any division in the Body of Christ, when we Orthodox
comprise the truth and fullness of the Church? Indeed, how can we even
adopt labels, like “Church,” for those who have lapsed from the Church?
For them, this approach constitutes betrayal of Orthodoxy and surrender
to error.[48]
While such attitudes—read: abuses and
aberrations—are sometimes endorsed within hierarchal and monastic
circles, nevertheless they do not reflect the conciliar history or
catholic experience of the Church. Indeed, they are even incompatible
with apologetic statements “To the Latins” by St Mark of Ephesus at the
Council of Florence:
There is truly a
need for much investigation and conversation (πολλῆς ἐρεύνης δεῖται καί
συζητήσεως) in matters of theological disputation (ὃσα τῶν δογμάτων
ἀμφισβητήσιμα), so that the compelling and conspicuous arguments might
be considered. There is profound benefit to be gained from such
conversation if the objective is not altercation but truth, and if the
intention is not solely to triumph over others; indeed, there are
occasions when we should even endure defeat . . . [I]nspired by the same
spirit [as the apostles at the council of Jerusalem] and bound to one
another by love, the goal should be to discover the truth, and we should
never lose sight of the purpose that lies before us (μή ἁμαρτήσεσθαι
τοῦ προκειμένου σκοποῦ); even when its pursuit is prolonged, we should
still always listen carefully to and address one another amicably so
that our loving (ἀγαπητικῶς) exchange might contribute to consensus
(συντείνοντι πρός ὁμόνοιαν).[49]
On the Sunday of Orthodoxy, at the outset of Great Lent in 2010, a Synodal Encyclical of the Ecumenical Patriarchate professed:
Orthodoxy must be in
constant dialogue with the world. The Orthodox Church does not fear
dialogue because truth is not afraid of dialogue. On the contrary, if
Orthodoxy is enclosed within itself and not in dialogue with those
outside, it will both fail in its mission and no longer be the
“catholic” and “ecumenical” Church. It will instead be reduced to an
introverted and self-contained group, a “ghetto” on the margins of
history.
We acknowledge that the Church is
neither a sect nor a denomination. It is the one holy catholic and
apostolic Church; and this is what defines and prescribes the parameters
of ecumenical dialogue. Yet, this only affirms and accentuates the
solemn responsibility of the Orthodox Church to bear witness to the
truth in the world. It does not imply parity among denominations or
unity as confessional adjustment. Nor again does it entail acquiescence
to doctrinal relativism or resignation to denominational minimalism. The
Church is concerned with—nothing less than—the whole truth about the
whole of humanity within the whole created cosmos. And when a Church
lays claims to the fullness of truth, then surely its obligation to
enter into dialogue and collaboration with all other Christian
denominations in a spirit of love, humility, and service is also
greater. If we ignore or condemn the life and beliefs of other
Christians, then not only will our knowledge be deficient and defective,
but our vocation and responsibility to Christ’s gospel will be found
untruthful and unfaithful.
Rules of engagement
One of the paralyzing factors in the
conciliar process is the introduction of the concept of consensus as a
way of indiscriminately appealing to or appeasing all Churches. Under
Article 10 of the Rules of Operation for Episcopal Assemblies, adopted
by the 2009 Fourth Preconciliar Pan-Orthodox Conference at Chambésy,
Switzerland, decisions of the Episcopal Assemblies (including,
therefore, our own Assembly of Bishops in the United States) shall be
“taken by consensus.” The same is now true of decisions at the Holy and
Great Council. In the Assemblies of Bishops and the Great Council, then,
when it comes to matters of corporate or legal nature, decisions are
reached by vote. However, on all other ecclesiastical, theological, and
doctrinal matters, decisions are taken by consensus. Decision-making by
consensus is supposed to build trust. It is a process that seeks the
common mind of the meeting and the will of God without resorting to a
formal vote, a method of genuine dialogue that is mutually respectful
and supportive. The Church of Russia that proposed and promoted the
principle of consensus seems to delight in flaunting this process as a
victory trophy. But is the current interpretation and application of
this principle by the Orthodox primates either convincing or even
conventional?
How did voting take place in the early
Church? Unanimity is regarded as echoing uniformity; no individual
Church—not even the Church of Rome—could veto or direct the ultimate
decision. Thus, from at least the mid-third century, on the basis of
Roman civil and legal models, decision by majority was the general
practice. Majority vote was considered proof of tradition and refutation
of error: “Quod apud multos invenitur unum, non est erratum sed
traditum.”[50]
However, it was divine inspiration—neither mortal numbers nor
institutional power, nor again historical seniority—that brought about a
majority of votes. Accordingly, in order to acknowledge or supplicate
the Holy Spirit, a copy of the Bible became a prominent fixture in the
councils. For Ramsay Macmullen, emeritus professor of history and
classics at Yale University:
Wherever there is debate, there must be force in majority. . . . Democracy teaches the equation: many is good; therefore, more is better. Yet a truer understanding of the Christian community suggests instead, or also, the equation: many is . . . God.
In voting a power beyond the human might assert itself . . .
Theological argument that went off the tracks invited God’s rebuke.[51]
MacMullen believes that the method of
voting in councils, including ecumenical councils, is a matter of
conjecture. The evidence is scant and obscure: Out of more than 15,000
councils that possibly convened between the fourth and sixth centuries,
we can only identify about 250.[52]
We know that these councils were well attended and generally
representative. Church historian Philostorgius (368-439) claims that,
during the first council of Nicaea, a paper was circulated for each
bishop to sign. At another council, bishops or Churches changed places
to join another group, not unlike presidential caucuses in the United
States. Sometimes, voting reflected the voting system in the Roman
senate, which resembled decision-making at the British House of Commons
or the Oxford Union, with the “yeas” standing on the right and the
“nays” on the left. The fact remains that, while majority vote was
irrefutably the way that decisions were taken, there was no clearly
established manner of determining this majority, so long as hierarchal
seniority and fair representation were assured.
Needless to say, fair representation
raises the delicate issue of observers at the Holy and Great Council.
Would the Orthodox primates permit the participation—or, at least, the
presence—of delegates other than bishops? In the early 1970s—again, in
an era paradoxically distinguished by greater flexibility, transparency,
and communication than ours—Olivier Clément[53] and Panagiotis Nellas[54] (inspired and intuitive lay
Orthodox theologians) recommended that the council should include and
involve bishops, clergy, monks, theologians, laity, and youth in order
to instill and ensure a sense of catholicity. Nellas insisted that a
council should not be the exclusive prerogative of hierarchs or
specialists[55]; Clément contended that it should be the fruit of prayer and not power.[56]
At its latest Synaxis (Chambésy, January 2016), the Primates of the
Orthodox Churches decided that each delegation at the Great Council is
entitled to six advisors (or “coworkers in Christ,” as Archbishop
Anastasios of Albania preferred to label them). These could be clergy or
laity, married or monastic, men or women.
At the same time, however, it is
incumbent upon some Orthodox Churches not to obscure or obfuscate
consensus with unanimity; otherwise, it may be exploited or manipulated
for purposes of obstruction or procrastination. This only attracts
derision. Here is a derisive, albeit painfully tragic description of the
delays in the preconciliar process by Joseph Olšr and Joseph Gill
writing in 1951!:
The deferring of the Prosynod[57]
leaves the situation pretty much where it was before. The Slav
Churches, under the aegis of Russia, challenge the theory of the
prerogatives of Constantinople, and in practice studiously ignore them.
The Ecumenical Patriarchate, supported firmly by the Church of Greece
and less firmly by Alexandria (Antioch is the recipient of Russian
bounty, and Jerusalem is fully occupied by local problems), defends its
traditional practice and refuses to yield any part of its claims . . .
In the struggle for position in the Orthodox world, the Slav Churches
have the advantage of overwhelming numerical superiority; the Greek
Churches that of antiquity, while the Ecumenical Patriarchate has behind
it a long tradition of pre-eminence and leadership . . . But if the
Prosynod must await a common Orthodox outlook before it is called, it
will, one would think, have to wait a long time.[58]
Unfortunately, the overemphasis on
consensus in preparations for and at the sessions of the Great Council
only reflects the unfortunate lack of conciliarity in the Orthodox
Church.[59]
This was especially evident during deliberations of the Special
Committee that met in Athens (December 15-19, 2015) to draft the
Procedural Regulations for the Holy and Great Council; sessions were
debilitated and ultimately suspended because one Church insisted on
incorporating an article whereby disagreement or departure by one member
church at the council would result in dissolution of the entire
council. Such an attitude persisted even during the sessions of the
Synaxis of Primates in January, 2016; however, Ecumenical Patriarch
Bartholomew exercised his presidential prerogative to facilitate a
reasonable resolution in accordance with conventional church practice.[60]
There is no doubt in my mind that the
Ecumenical Patriarch has submitted, even surrendered, to interminable
complaints and veritable coercion from some Churches, focusing on one
thing: “forgetting what lies behind and straining forward to what lies ahead; pressing on toward the goal and prize” (Phil 3.13-14) of finally meeting together in council.
St Paul’s word for “strain forward” is
ἐπεκτείνομαι, which implies struggle to the degree of stretching and
elasticity to the point of distortion. How else can one explain the
Ecumenical Patriarch’s sacrifice of the autonomous Church of Estonia
(one of the most refined and informed of our international Churches),
which in turn means the surrender of the autonomous Church of Finland
(one of the most enlightened and pioneering of our worldwide Churches)
to meet a single Church’s ultimatum for estrangement from the communion
of autocephalous Churches, especially when one considers that Finland
and Estonia are the only independent Orthodox Churches integrally
associated and immediately acquainted with the West? Or how else can we
interpret the flexibility of the Ecumenical Patriarch to hold the last
Synaxis in Chambésy (Geneva, January 2016) in order to facilitate the
Primates, and again his generosity to offer Crete as an alternative
venue in response to those scandalized by a venue like Haghia Irene,[61]
particularly since this reveals that the convocation of the Great
Council for the benefit of the entire Church as his sole ingenuous
motive? Finally, how otherwise could one justify the insistence of
Moscow on consensus, when this virtually ensured that the council—and,
indeed, all of its preparatory conferences and consultations—would be
unable to reach any agreement on matters of vital importance?[62]
This is extremely important in light of the fact that there has been no
discussion or definition of how this principle might constructively or
positively guide the sessions of the Great Council.
Still, no one seems to protest Moscow’s
maneuvering—one would not dare suggest manipulating—of the process or
prospect whereby a single Church could control any fruitful discussion
and constrain any meaningful resolution. People conveniently forget the
fact that, despite its prominence in Western democratic procedures and
effective ecumenical meetings, consensus has never really been the
procedural model in church councils. Indeed, while consensus is not
unequivocally orthodox or traditional, voting as Churches rather than as
(individual) bishops is neither unorthodox nor untraditional. In almost
every council convened and chaired by the Ecumenical Patriarch after
the Fourth Ecumenical Council in the mid-fourth century (451), most
Churches were represented by a limited number of delegates, usually just
two or three bishops; in fact, most bishops in attendance were from the
Church of Constantinople.
Personal rights and votes in fact
reflect modern individualism, often merely serving as a way for
rambunctious critics to have their “day in court.” At any rate, I would
humbly remind church leaders that you cannot claim “rights” for
yourselves when you withhold fundamental rights from lay people,
including the right to participate actively in a council and other vital
forms of church administration! Moreover, returning to the matter of
consensus, such a notion would be utterly inconceivable and intolerable
in the internal synodal procedure of any Church today—even Moscow;
indeed, even Constantinople! Notwithstanding, even after securing this
unprecedented and subversive methodology, Moscow has been criticized for
applying it capriciously or (to quote an exasperated Metropolitan John
of Pergamon) “à la carte”—insisting on consensus when expedient, while
ignoring it when otherwise inconvenient.
There are many models of consensus
building, but no single right way of achieving it. Perhaps before
expecting consensus to function effectively, and without reducing
consensus to the power of veto, we should consider it as a process
rather than a product, a methodology of procedure instead of some magic
of persuasion. In Philippians 2, St Paul urges:
Be of the same mind,
having the same love, being in full accord and of one mind. Do nothing
from selfish ambition or conceit, but in humility regard others as
better than yourselves. Let each of you look not to your own interests
but to the interests of others. Let the same mind be in you that was in
Christ Jesus (vv. 2-5).
And in 1 Corinthians 1, he adds: “I
appeal to you, by the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, that all of you be
in agreement, and that there be no divisions among you, but rather that
you be united in the same mind and the same purpose” (v. 10).
Conclusion: retrieving conciliarity and communion
Let me conclude by entertaining some
reflections on key terms—catchphrases, in fact—on our way toward the
Holy and Great Council. Retrieving conciliarity and communion involves a process of relearning, which in turn implies renunciation of preconceptions about hierarchy and status; it also involves receptiveness
to fresh ways of being and working together. In order to discover or
recover the conciliar nature of the Church, our bishops must—first of
all and above all—assemble and sit together in humility, without any
presumption or assumption of power. The Greek word for “council” is
σύνοδος (more than just convocation or cooperation, or even sobornost),
which literally means “being on the same road with one another” (σύν +
ὁδός). And the Greek word for “communion” is κοινωνία (more than just
fellowship or connection, or even unity), which actually signifies
“discerning what we have in common” (κοινόν) with one another.
Moreover, in order to retrieve the lost
sense of conciliarity, Orthodox hierarchs must first exercise a
re-conciliatory spirit. The Greek word for “reconciliation” is
συγχώρησις (which we normally translate as “forgiveness” but), which
literally and quite simply means “being in the same space” as one
another. If we are honest with ourselves, with each other and with God,
we will admit that we have unfortunately misplaced the experience of
conciliarity that prevailed in earlier centuries and councils. We have
become estranged from the culture of conciliarity and communion. It will
take a long process of education—a lifetime of cultivating and
convening councils—to retrieve and relearn this culture as an intrinsic
awareness and gracious etiquette of church life.
That is precisely why conciliarity is a
matter of culture and not just a problem of communion or, indeed,
consensus. It is something learned over time and earned through
practice; and the truth is that we have lost the sense and
sensitivity—the culture and refinement—of being-and-acting-in-council.
Is it really that surprising that so many of our Churches are
characterized by an un-Western or anti-Western bias?[63]
Our Churches are torn between past and present; they are like “hybrid”
Churches. It’s not so much that they’re opposed to the West; but they’re
not adequately exposed to the West. It’s not so much that they’re
allergic to modernity, but they’re exceedingly allured by antiquity.
It’s not so much that they’re resistant to ecumenism, but they’re
fatally asphyxiated by their isolation.[64]
Culture matters, and culture matures with time. To quote one of Fr
Schmemann’s favorite writers, Julien Green: “Culture cannot be
improvised.”[65]
Meeting in council, then, “being in the same space” with one another, is not merely beneficial (part of the bene esse) but essential (of the esse)
for the Church; to paraphrase an Archbishop of Canterbury, who once
said: “I can think of no reason why bishops-in-council would be
beneficial for the Church, but many reasons why councils-of-bishops are
essential to the Church!” It is imperative that bishops confess and
confirm the ecumenical and catholic dimension of the church. Over forty
years ago, then Bishop Demetrios of Vresthena (now Elder Archbishop
Demetrios of America) observed that conciliarity is not a luxury for the
Church; it is, more correctly, indispensable for the life of the
Church. Archbishop Stylianos of Australia put it more starkly in 1965:
“If at any time the Church were to reject from its life, even for a
moment, the idea of the synodical system, it would automatically cease
to be Church.”[66]
For St John Chrysostom, the term “Church” means two things:
“institution” and “synod”: Ἐκκλησία γάρ συστήματος καί συνόδου ἐστίν
ὂνομα.[67]
There can be no Church without council; in the absence of a council,
the Church may well function institutionally, but it is not a Church!
It is when the bishops are gathered
together that “the sound [of the spirit] can descend from heaven”; and
it does so “suddenly” (Acts 2.1-2)—that is to say, unexpectedly,
surprisingly, breathtakingly.[68]
Then the response, the result, is unforeseen and extraordinary. Then
even the individual statements—miraculously produced by “agreement
through consensus” (although, admittedly, the sessions I attended looked
more like how St Gregory the Theologian described bishops’
councils)—will prove less important than the promise and presence of the
Spirit, which “appeared as tongues of fire” (Acts 2.3), albeit only
when the apostles had held their own tongues. Then, the bishops of the
Holy and Great Council can confidently, if boldly address us with the
apostolic words: “It seemed good to the Holy Spirit and to us” (Acts
15.28).
Of course, only time will demonstrate
just how much the Orthodox autocephalous Churches yearn for the Great
Council; just as time will determine the status of this council for the
life of the Church. It will indeed be telling to observe just how much
the individual Churches are prepared to lay aside temptations of worldly
power and trends of secular nationalism. After all, I was surprised to
hear one primate at the January 2016 Synaxis vehemently protest that he
had “never heard more outrageous and offensive a statement in
Pan-Orthodox meetings” than another Primate reprimanding the plenary for
ethnocentrism! But if our church leaders can indeed lay aside their
nationalism and antagonism, then the Holy and Great Council promises to
be a watershed event in church history, promising a series of regular
conciliar gatherings, even if the conscience of the Orthodox faithful
will alone finally reveal whether these stand in the line of the general
or great councils of the first two millennia.
So “I am worried. There seems
to be little unity and many passions, much mistrust. But my life-long
experience is reassuring: the grace of the Holy Spirit never leaves the
Church! . . . To work with bishops is almost always difficult; but, in
our better moments, we know that in the Church ‘difficult’ is good.”
Again . . . these are not my words; they are entries from Fr Schmemann’s
Journals in the late 1970s.[69]
In some ways, “good change” that comes from divine grace is already
transpiring, albeit at glacial speed, with the various encounters—even
if frequent confrontations—during the Pan-Orthodox consultations and
Inter-Orthodox committees over the last decades. It may seem that little
has resulted from over fifty years in anticipation of the Holy and
Great Council; but in fact a lot has happened in the preparatory process
itself, where the rediscovery of the universal and ecumenical nature of
the Church, together with the celebration of its sacramental or
doctrinal culture has little-by-little at least exposed the stifling
boundaries of “autocephalism.” The truth is that we would not have
gathered at all, were it not in order to prepare for the council.
I was struck by the piercing spiritual
insight of Archbishop Anastasios of Albania at the Synaxis of January
2016, who reminded his brother primates, that “the Great Council is not a
new—or a facsimile—ecumenical council that needs to resolve every
menacing problem. Our Council is something else. What we are telling
people with our Council is: ‘In a troubled world, we do not remain
silent; at a dark time, we have a word of hope and light.’”
Something has profoundly and permanently
changed for the Orthodox Church; things will not be the same moving
forward. The spotlight is focused on us and people will now be able to
recognize clearly who is playing political “Hunger Games” or even
obsessed with “Trivial Pursuit.” The Orthodox Church can play a major
role in our world; it can serve as the critical and prophetic conscience
of the peoples entrusted to it. However, in order to do so, it must
first disabuse itself of the idolatry of nationalism and embrace a more
ecumenical Orthodoxy, where the dialectic of unity-in-diversity is
reclaimed and enabled to thrive. It must free itself of all national or
regional—ultimately provincial and parochial—arrogance and adversarial
temptation if it seeks to provide an unbiased witness to all humanity.
For this to happen, all of the Church’s indispensable structures (its
bishops and councils) as well as all of its essential features (its
liturgy and spirituality) must be placed at the service of God, the
gospel, and the Body of Christ. Then, the centers of primacy will no
longer appear as centralizing powers but as places of conciliarity and
communion. What a refreshing and revolutionary example this would prove
for a Church that claims to be “in the world” but not “of the world”!
[1] Portions herewith were delivered during an academic convocation at St Vladimir’s Orthodox Seminary in New York as the 33rd Annual Father Alexander Schmemann Memorial Lecture on January 31, 2016. The address was broadcasted by Ancient Faith Radio.
[2] Alexander Schmemann, The Journals of Father Alexander Schmemann, Juliana Schmemann, trans., (Crestwood, NY: St Vladimir’s Seminary Press, 2000), 29.
[3] John Meyendorff, “The Idea of Primacy in Orthodox Ecclesiology” in John Meyendorff, ed., The Primacy of Peter (Crestwood, NY: St Vladimir’s Seminary Press, 1963; revised in 1992), and also reprinted in John Chryssavgis, ed., Primacy in the Church: The office of primate and the authority of councils, vol. 1, (Crestwood, NY: St Vladimir’s Seminary Press, 2016), 353-354.
[4] Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew, Speaking the Truth in Love: Theological and Spiritual Exhortations of Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew, John Chryssavgis, ed. (Bronx, NY: Fordham University Press, 2011), 119.
[5] John Meyendorff in the official publication of the Orthodox Church of America, The Orthodox Church xiv, 4 (1978), 4. Emphasis mine.
[6] St Gregory, Epistle CXXX, to Prokopios, PG 37.225. See also Epistles 132-136, PG 37.228-232.
[7] A well-known Greek theological quarterly recently published an issue entitled “unless something unforeseen occurs . . .” Synaxis,
no. 133 (January-March, 2015). The phrase “ἐκτός ἀπροόπτου” was added
to the official message of the Synaxis of Primates (March 6-9, 2014) at
the insistence of the Church of Russia, which somehow seems surprised
each time something “unforeseen” arises, especially since the same
Church “continues to be the most actively involved in the pre-Council
process.” See “Russian Church doubts Pan-Orthodox Council possible in
current situation,” http://www.pravoslavie.ru/english/89239.htm.
December 29, 2015.
[8] See the record of the meeting in Constantinople (May 10 to June 8, 1923) in Πρακτικά καὶ ἀποφάσεις τοῦ ἐν Κωνσταντινουπόλει Πανορθοδόξου Συνεδρίου,
(Constantinople: Patriarchal Press, 1923), esp. 44, where it is noted
that “the purpose of the meeting is to prepare the ground for the
convocation of a Pan-Orthodox Council in order that the entire Hierarchy
of the Orthodox Church may take decisions in common” on—at that time—a
total of twenty-one issues.
[9]
A “preliminary committee of the holy Orthodox Churches” assembled at
Vatopedi Monastery from June 8-23, 1930, for further discussion on
proposed items for the agenda. In many ways, the interwar years
(1917-1939) were the period during which the Holy and Great Council was
conceived; finally, in the early 1950s Ecumenical Patriarch Athenagoras
enjoined the Orthodox Churches to materialize the vision of a
Pan-Orthodox Council. See V. Stavridis, “On the name of the future
council,” Theologia 38 (1967), 529-532 [in Greek]. The next
preparatory meetings took place in Rhodes (1961-1964), which in turn led
to the five Preconciliar Pan-Orthodox Consultations in Chambésy
(1976-2015).
[10] See Fr (now St) Justin Popovic, On the Proposed “Great Council” of the Orthodox Church
(Athens, 1977), 17-20, where the author refers to the lack of freedom
in the Eastern bloc as an impediment for the Great Council. Fr John
Meyendorff agreed with such an appraisal in an article entitled “On the
Way to an Ecumenical Council,” in Messenger (Vestnik) of the Russian Student Christian Movement
101-102 (1971), 138-141. Fr Justin’s text, which comprises a “Letter to
the Holy Synod of the Church in Serbia,” dated April 23 (with the
Julian Calendar], 1971, further suggests the dangers of convening a
council, the difficult circumstances of the times, and the heretical
intentions of Patriarch Athenagoras as reasons for cancelling or
resisting the proposed council.
[11]
See the recent article by Bruce Clark, editor of the Erasmus Blogspot:
“When Bartholomew Meets Kirill: The Orthodox prepare for a great
gathering” in The Economist. http://www.theworldin.com/article/10502, December 4, 2015.
[12] G.A. Rallis and M. Potlis, eds., Syntagma of the Holy and Sacred Canons, vol. 2 (Athens: Chartophylax Press, 1852), 705.
[13] Rallis and Potlis, Syntagma, vol. 4 (Athens: Chartophylax Press, 1854), 143.
[14]
Some councils are recognized within a generation or two (Nicaea I in
325 was accepted at large in Constantinople I in 381); others take
significantly longer (Constantinople I in 381 is not recognized by Rome
until 517); and for others, the process of acceptance has proved
incomplete (Chalcedon in 451 was repudiated by the non-Chalcedonians
over many centuries).
[15] Ioannis Karmiris, A Synopsis of the Dogmatic Theology of the Orthodox Catholic Church
(Athens: University of Athens, 1957), 94 [in Greek]; English
translation by Rev George Demopoulos (Scranton, PA: Christian Orthodox
Edition, 1973).
[16] Cited in Ioannis Karmiris, The Dogmatic and Symbolic Monuments of the Orthodox Catholic Church (Athens: no publisher, 1952-1953), 920 [in Greek]. Reprinted in 1960. Translation mine.
[17] St Paulinus, Letter xxiii, 36 PL61.280. See also Hippolytus, Apostolic Tradition 1.
[18]
The most recent such Pan-Orthodox or Great Council was the well-known
Council of 1872, held in Constantinople to consider and condemn
“ethnophyletism.” However, there have been over a dozen such councils
since the twelfth century (for example, in 1156, 1341, 1351, 1368, 1484,
1590, 1593, 1638, 1642, 1672, 1691, 1718, 1722, and 1727). I am
indebted to Prof. V. Pheidas for this historical insight.
[19]
From memory and conversation with His Beatitude Patriarch Daniel. See
also
http://basilica.ro/chambsy-discuii-privind-impedimentele-la-casatorie-si-misiunea-bisericilor-ortodoxe-in-lume-111615.html.
January 26, 2016.
[20] Schmemann, Journals, 99.
[21]
This is the motivation behind a provocative communiqué by acerbic
Metropolitan Seraphim of Piraeus (Church of Greece) to his diocese,
dated March 27, 2014. See
http://www.imp.gr/2012-03-27-20-22-23/744-ορθόδοξος-και-οικουμενική-η΄-οικουμενιστική-η-συγκληθησόμενη-αγία-και-μεγάλη-σύνοδος-του-2016.html.
The patristic basis for this argument is found in the commentary by St
Nikodemus of Mt. Athos in Agapios and Nikodemus, The Rudder
(Athens, Papademetriou Editions [in Greek]), 1970, 118-122, here at 118.
Another caustic cynic in the Church of Greece and professor emeritus of
theology at the University of Thessaloniki, Fr Theodoros Zisis—formerly
a clergyman of the Ecumenical Patriarchate and participant in
ecumenical proceedings—has also scorned the longstanding preparations
for the Great Council as unprecedented in church history, claiming that
the Church convened in council as soon as a doctrinal issue arose
instead of holding preparatory conferences; Fr Zisis overlooks
iconoclasm, which endured over 125 years, as well as the fact that his
obstructionism is part of the very problem he reviles! Zisis is the
editor of Theodromia, journal (1999-), with such representative
titles in its latest issue (17: 3, 2015) as “Ecumenism as a Judaizing
heresy” and “The demonic method of ecumenism.”
[22]
Even respected hierarchs and theologians are lured into this trap. For
instance, in an interview published on November 12, 2015, in the Greek
journal Ark of Orthodoxy (Κιβωτός Ὀρθοδοξίας),
Metropolitan Ierotheos of Nafpaktos spoke of a theological crisis: “From
the studies I have done I do find that there is a theological crisis,
because today there are prevailing some theological movements that
differ from patristic theology. I do not think that the Pan-Orthodox
Synod of 2016 will address these issues. And this is the big problem.
The themes that have been fixed and the topics that will be discussed
are not serious theological issues. I mean that it will not deal with
the ‘filioque’ and the ‘actus purus,’ which the Eighth and Ninth
Ecumenical Synods dealt with, so in my opinion, this shows that the
Pre-Synodal Pan-Orthodox Conferences did not prepare in the best way the
themes for the Holy and Great Synod of the Orthodox Church, to be
convened. I believe that the Synod of Saint Photios the Great (879-80)
is a continuation of the Second Ecumenical Synod and the Synod of Saint
Gregory Palamas (1351) is a continuation of the Sixth Ecumenical Synod.
When we do not deal with such serious theological issues, this indicates
that there is a theological crisis.” This argument is based on an
official lecture by Metropolitan Ierotheos to the entire hierarchy of
the Church of Greece on October 8, 2015.
See http://www.johnsanidopoulos.com/2015/12/the-theological-crisis-and-its-impact.html. December 29, 2015.
[23] See, for example, Fr Michael Butler and Andrew Morriss, Creation and the Heart of Man, Dylan Pahman, ed. (Acton Institute: Grand Rapids, MI, 2013).
[24]
See the transcript of interview with Fr Patrick O’Grady (on October 21,
2015) on Ancient Faith Radio, entitled “Antioch on the Record,”
published on October 23, 2015, 4-5.
http://www.ancientfaith.com/podcasts/aftoday/antioch_on_the_record_orthodox_administrative_unity_in_north_america.
November 15, 2015.
[25] See Towards
the Great Council: Introductory Reports of the Inter-Orthodox
Commission in preparation for the next Great and Holy Council of the
Orthodox Church, London: SPCK, 1972. Then Archimandrite (and later
Metropolitan of Tranoupolis/subsequently Metropolitan of Switzerland)
Damaskinos Papandreou, as director of the Orthodox Center in Chambésy,
was appointed secretary of the preparatory and planning committee in
1969. The First Preconciliar Pan-Orthodox Conference at Chambésy
(November 21-28, 1972) determined the methodology and five of the
original items for the agenda: the sources of revelation; the fuller
participation of laity in church life and worship; adaptation of fasting
rules; impediments to marriage; the issue of the paschal calendar; and oikonomia
in the application of canons. This limited agenda was defined in order
to expedite the conciliar preparation and process. The Third
Preconciliar Pan-Orthodox Conference at Chambésy (October 28 to November
9, 1985) finalized the existing agenda comprising ten items.
[26]
Some would even date the initiative or conception of the council to the
renowned encyclical by Ecumenical Patriarch Joachim III to the heads of
all Orthodox autocephalous Churches on June 12, 1902, where the
patriarch raises the issue of the Orthodox Churches’ meeting together in
order to dispel their stifling introversion and isolation, even
competition. The same encyclical raised the issues of reforming the
calendar and relations with other confessions. In 1920, at the end of
the First World War and the outset of the Russian Revolution, the
Ecumenical Patriarchate issued another encyclical, arguably spawning the
emergence of the ecumenical movement and effectively facilitating a
platform for greater Orthodox cooperation. See C.G. Patelos, ed., The Orthodox Church in the Ecumenical Movement: Documents and Statements (1902-1975) (Geneva: World Council of Churches, 1978), 30ff.
[27]
See the official report edited by Metropolitan Damaskinos [Papandreou]
of Tranoupolis on the work of the preparatory commission, Saint et Grand Concile de l’Eglise Orthodoxe, Paris: Contacts, 1972. Supplement to no. 80, 4, 1972, 64 pages.
[28] This text has been retitled “The sacrament of marriage and its impediments.”
[29] This text has been retitled “The significance of fasting.”
[30] This text has been retitled “The mission of the Orthodox Church in the contemporary world.”
[31]
The Third Pan-Orthodox Preconciliar Consultation, held in Chambésy in
1986, marked the first occasion that formal texts were approved on an
Inter-Orthodox level.
[32]
How unfortunate that Inter-Orthodox discussions and resolutions almost a
century ago are either disregarded or disassociated today. In 1923, a
Pan-Orthodox Conference held in Constantinople upheld the option for
widowed clergymen to remarry, based on the pastoral needs and canonical
dispensation of each local Church, until the matter is resolved at a
Great Council. The preparatory meetings of the forthcoming Great Council
have effectively buried any such consideration or deliberation. It is
ironic, if not tragic that Churches in 1923 could propose a “charitable
and compassionate” review of the relevant canonical regulations
(including and especially the Churches of Romania and Serbia), even
quoting historical precedents and patristic evidence in support of such a
decision, while Ecumenical Patriarch Meletios [Metaxakis] IV could
candidly profess that such an exercise of economy and philanthropy does
not contravene scriptural or traditional practice. See Metropolitan
Daniel of Kaisariani, The Second Marriage of Clergy in the Pan-Orthodox Conference of Constantinople, 10 May to 8 June, 1923 (Kaisariani, Athens, 2007) [In Greek].
[33] The bread prayerfully prepared by Orthodox faithful and humbly offered for the celebration of the Eucharist.
[34] St John Chrysostom, Commentary on Galatians 5.13.
[35]
Isolationism leads to a kaleidoscope of deviations, including
individualism (an unhealthy and imbalanced expression of spirituality),
conservatism (an isolationism of and obsession on the past), and
nationalism (an isolationism through inferiority or insecurity). On
individualism and pietism, see Christos Yannaras, The Freedom of Morality
(Crestwood, NY: St Vladimir’s Seminary Press, 1984). For legalistic and
conservative influences on Orthodox spiritual life, see Christos
Yannaras, Orthodoxy and the West: Hellenic Self-Identity in the Modern Age (Brookline, MA: Holy Cross Orthodox Press, 2007). On nationalism as an ecclesiological heresy, see the special issue of St Vladimir’s Theological Quarterly 57 (2013): 3-4.
[36] On conciliarity and consensus, see the quarterly issue of Theologia [in Greek] 86 (2015): 2.
[37] Alexander Schmemann, “Problems of Orthodoxy in America,” in St Vladimir’s Seminary Quarterly 8, 2 (1964), 67-85, at 67-68. Cf. also John Meyendorff, “One Bishop in One City,” in St Vladimir's Seminary Quarterly 5, 1-2 (1961), 54-62.
[38]
See the transcript of interview with Fr Patrick O’Grady (on October 21,
2015) on Ancient Faith Radio, entitled “Antioch on the Record,”
published on October 23, 2015, 4-5.
http://www.ancientfaith.com/podcasts/aftoday/antioch_on_the_record_orthodox_administrative_unity_in_north_america.
December 29, 2015.
[39] Acts of the Holy and Great Council
(Constantinople: Vretos Printing, 1872), 91. It should be noted—and
perhaps it is not coincidental—that the Patriarchate of Jerusalem and
the Church of Russia did not sign this Pan-Orthodox decision;
nonetheless, it is canonically binding for all Churches inasmuch as the
council was Pan-Orthodox.
[40]
No one at Chambésy spoke of Churches being “immature” for such a
process; and none of those who signed were apprehensive about “placing
the cart before the horse.” See footnote 20 above.
[41] Contrary to Canon 8 of the First Ecumenical Council (Nicaea, 325)
[42] Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew, Speaking the Truth in Love, 120.
[43]
In June 2009, twelve such Assemblies of Bishops were established by
unanimous Pan-Orthodox decision at the Fourth Preconciliar Pan-Orthodox
Consultation in 2009; since the Assembly of Bishops in the United States
was approved as a separate body in April 2014, there are now thirteen
bishops’ assemblies. See http://www.assemblyofbishops.org. December 23,
2015.
[44] Schmemann, adapted from his Journals, 169.
[45] Cf. Fr Thomas Hopko in Adam DeVille, Orthodoxy and the Roman Primacy (Notre
Dame, IL: University of Notre Dame Press, 2011), 48. In the same book,
DeVille describes the assemblies as “strikingly new and potentially
revolutionary,” 162.
[46]
On the issue of conservatism or fundamentalism, see George
Demacopoulos, “Orthodox Fundamentalism,” on
https://blogs.goarch.org/blog/-/blogs/orthodox-fundamentalism. November
11, 2015.
[47] On Photius the Great, see Francis Dvornik, The Photian Schism: History and Legend
(Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 1948); repr. 1970. Fr
Dvronik overturns the classic (and conservative) conception of Photius
as “prevaricator” of the papal claims and “patron” of papal resistance.
For St Mark of Ephesus, see his Homily to Pope Eugene IV found in Acta Graeca, Book
1, 26-34 [here at 31], where Mark demonstrates his filial respect to
the Roman primate and his fervent aspiration to doctrinal union. In
fact, possibly drawing on the Letter of Pope John VIII to the Emperors
presented to the Constantinopolitan synod of 879, Mark even appeals to
Pope Eugene Pope to give his authoritative assent to remove the needless
scandal separating the two Churches. I am grateful to Rev Prof
Christiaan Kappes for this detail. See Theodore Xanthopoulos and
Dorotheus of Myteline, Quae supersunt Actorum Graecorum Concilii Florentini.
Concilium Florentinum Documenta et Scriptores, Series B, Volume 5,
Books 1-2, Joseph Gill, ed. (Rome: Pontifical Institute of Oriental
Studies, 1953). Also see J. Décarreaux, Les grecs au concile de l’union Ferrare-Florence 1438-1439.
Société des Études Italiennes 6 (Paris: Éditions A. et J. Picard,
1969), 34-36; and N. Constas, “Mark Eugenikos,” in C.G. Conticello and
V. Conticello, eds., La théologie byzantine et sa tradition, vol. 2, Turnhout: Brepols, 2002, 411-475, esp. 460.
[48] Christos Yannaras, The Freedom of Morality (Crestwood, NY: St Vladimir’s Seminary Press, 1984), 119-136.
[49] See Mark’s second theological apology on the notion of purgatory, in Louis Petit, Documents relatifs au concile de Florence, vol. 1 Patrologia Orientalis
XV, Fasc. 1, No. 72], Turnhout: Brepols, 1990, 108-109. I am again
grateful to Rev Prof Christiaan Kappes, who kindly located this passage
at my request.
[50] Tertullian, Contra Julianum II, 33, 37.
[51] Ramsay MacMullen, Voting about God in Early Church Councils (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2006), 41-42 and 47.
[52]
Ibid. Local councils were mandatory; according to Canon 5 of the First
Ecumenical Council in Nicaea, provinces were supposed to assemble their
bishops twice a year.
[53] Olivier Clément, “Let us prepare all together for the Council,” Contacts 76, 4 (1971). [In French]
[54] Panagiotis Nellas, The Holy and Great Council of the Orthodox Church: theological reflections and perspectives, Thessaloniki, 1972, 19 pages. Reprinted in Synaxis
76 (2000) and 133 (2015). [In Greek] A conference on the Great Council
was organized jointly by the Institut de Saint-Serge, the Center for
Ecumenical Research at KU Leuven in Belgium and the Collège des
Bernardins on October 18-20, 2012; topics covered by Orthodox, Roman
Catholic and Protestant scholars included the reception of the council
and the role of observers, liturgical reform and calendar, autocephaly
and autonomy, diaspora and ecumenism, as well as organizational matters
such as diptychs and practical matters such as fasting. The papers were
first published in Contacts 243 (July-September, 2013) and
subsequently appeared in Greek in Καιρός Συνεσταλμένος τό Λοιπόν . . . Ἡ
Μέλλουσα Πανορθόδοξη Σύνοδος. Ζητήματα-Διλήμματα-Προοπτικές, P. De Mey
and M. Stavrou, eds. (Athens: Ἐν Πλῷ Editions, 2015). For the English
edition, see the recent double issue of St. Vladimir’s Theological Quarterly 60, 1-2 (2016) entitled The Forthcoming Council of the Orthodox Church: Understanding the Challenges.
[55] P. Nellas, The Contribution of Orthodox Youth to the Preparation for the Holy and Great Council of the Orthodox Catholic Church (Athens 1973). [In Greek]
[56] See the article by Olivier Clément in Episkepsis 42 (November 16, 1971), 3-13. [Greek translation]
[57]
The Preconciliar Conferences first proposed by Ecumenical Patriarch
Athenagoras to all the heads of the Orthodox autocephalous Churches on
February 12, 1951.
[58]
See Joseph Olšr and Joseph Gill, “The Twenty-eighth Canon of Chalcedon
in Dispute between Constantinople and Moscow,” in Alois Grillmeier and
Heinrich Bacht, eds., Das Konzil von Chalkedon: Geschichte und Gegenwart (Würzburg: Echter Verlag, 1951), vol. 2, 765-783, at 783.
[59] See Radu Bordeianu’s comments in:
http://publicorthodoxy.org/2015/10/30/the-2016-pan-orthodox-council-and-ecumenical-relations. November 19, 2015.
[60]
There are several examples of individual bishops and even entire
Churches either prevented from attending, refusing to attend, or even
not invited to attend councils. In those cases, not only did the council
proceed (routinely reaching decisions, which were valid and binding for
all churches irrespective of attendance or presence), but on occasion
the council denounced the absentee bishop. Thus, at the Fourth
Ecumenical Council of Chalcedon (451), the Acts of the Council noted
that “Dioscorus [of Alexandria] was condemned not for heresy” but for
arbitrarily storming out of the assembly because the bishops had
reinstated those previously condemned by the “robber council” of Ephesus
in 449, one of whom was the well-known Theodoret of Cyrus. After being
invited three times to return to the council, Dioscorus was denounced
and defrocked. Consensus is not unanimity: Nicaea (325) Canon 6, and
Antioch (341) Canon 19.
[61]
Those who adopted this pretext claimed that Haghia Irene served as an
arsenal for many years, selectively forgetting the fact that,
previously, it was a Christian Church for one thousand years, while
conveniently turning a blind eye to practices in their own countries,
where religious complexes were once used as political prisons. However,
what is paramount here is the generosity of Ecumenical Patriarch
Bartholomew to offer Crete as an alternative venue in response to the
recent breakdown in political relations between Russia and Turkey as
well as for security reasons due to the latest terrorist bombing that
resulted in the death of tourists near Haghia Irene.
[62]
For example, few are surprised by (and certainly not a single bishop
out of over 250 in attendance at the Bishops’ Conference in Russia
suspected) the following stark incongruity reported by the Department
for External Church Relations of the Russian Orthodox Church: In
February 2015, His Beatitude Patriarch Kirill proudly claimed
responsibility for proposing “the principle of consensus after long and
not-always-easy discussions” during the Synaxis of Primates at the
Phanar a year earlier; yet, in the same address to the bishops of the
Moscow Patriarchate, Patriarch Kirill “stated his regret that the . . .
preparations for the Pan-Orthodox Council progressed not quickly
enough”! See https://mospat.ru/en/2015/02/02/news115086. November 29,
2015. This insistence on consensus is foreshadowed in a lecture by
Metropolitan Hilarion (Alfeyev) of Volokolamsk, entitled “Primacy and
Synodality from an Orthodox Perspective,” delivered at St Vladimir’s
Seminary on November 9, 2014. See
https://mospat.ru/en/2014/11/09/news111091/, December 1, 2015.
[63]
Some political commentators have suggested that this bias, which
characterizes mostly (although not only) Churches of the former Soviet
Union, has the “potential to advance a new religious Cold War by
supporting the ideological rhetoric of an Orthodox civilization in
opposition to the secular West.” See Lucian Leustean, “A New Religious
‘Cold War’?” in
http://www.gmfus.org/blog/2015/06/03/new-religious-“cold-war.” December
27, 2015.
[64] Adapted from the title of a book by Néstor García Canclini, Hybrid Cultures: Strategies for Entering and Leaving Modernity (Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press, 2005).
[65] Schmemann, Journals, 183.
[66] Stylianos Harkianakis, The Infallibility of the Church in Orthodox Theology, Philip Kariatlis, trans. (Adelaide and Sydney: ATF Press and St Andrew’s Press, 2008), 129.
[67] St John Chrysostom, On Psalm 149, PG 55.493.
[68] St John Chrysostom, Homily IV on Acts 2, in Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, First Series,
vol. 11, Philip Schaff, ed. (Buffalo, NY: Christian Literature
Publishing, 1889). Revised and edited for New Advent by Kevin Knight.
<http://www.newadvent.org/fathers/210104.htm>. November 26, 2015.
[69] Schmemann, Journals, 232 and 152. Emphasis mine.