Andrey Shishkov
public orthodoxy
The forthcoming Pan-Orthodox council is conceived as a council of
delegations of all universally recognized autocephalous churches, which
are headed by their primates. In reality, the difference between the
Pan-Orthodox council and the synaxis of primates is insignificant.
The
Pan-Orthodox council format assumes that one delegation has one vote and
decisions are made by consensus. The number of votes in the conciliar
decision-making process coincides with the synaxis – fourteen votes.
But is this format enough to identify risks and issues and to find solutions? Is it representative of the Orthodox Church?
I think this issue needs a differentiated approach. The council of
delegations could be acceptable for decision-making, but for issues that
excite deep divisions, this format is not representative enough. The
ongoing discussion on the published drafts of documents shows us a
rather wide range of opinions, not only among common believers, but also
among bishops. Part of the episcopate responds to the documents and to
the council very negatively, and some such bishops are not included in
official delegations. It is not difficult to predict that they will not
change their mind and will escalate their attacks on the council after
it. Some problematic issues (such as ecumenism) are necessary to discuss
in an enlarged format.
Of course, this option assumes that the June conciliar session will
not be the only one. Two of the largest councils of the 20th century –
Vatican II and the Moscow council of 1917-18 – lasted for several years.
The most realistic approach to extend the council’s format is the
participation of all Orthodox bishops. Some primates, as well as a
significant part of a conservative episcopate, clergy and laity, also
support this format of the Pan-Orthodox council.
First of all, the participation of all the bishops as members of
their church communities (dioceses) eliminates the problem of
representativeness. As responsible for the flock entrusted to them, they
cannot ignore the opinions of the faithful of their dioceses.
Implementation of the council in this format would identify and take
into account at least a substantial part of the responses to the
conciliar agenda items. This format also opens the doors of the
pan-Orthodox council to the bishops of the Orthodox Church in America.
Why has such a format not been chosen from the very beginning? Let’s
consider the main concerns about this decision: 1) In practice this
format does not allow reaching consensus. One dissenting bishop among
hundreds can disrupt the decision. 2) Decision-making by a majority of
votes puts in a better position churches with a large number of bishops.
There is a danger that the Russian Church would begin to dictate her
conditions. 3) The voice of small churches – such as the Church of Czech
Republic and Slovakia with only four bishops – would not be heard.
These fears reveal several problems in the logic of the opponents of
this format. Firstly, they imagine the procedure for the organization of
the debate and decision-making at the council rather one-dimensionally.
Either the principle of consensus or the majority of votes is usually
figured as a decision-making mechanism, but there are no proposals that
would allow combining both principles.
No doubt that the principle of consensus would not be adopted for
this format when the entire episcopate participates in the council.
Consensus can only be achieved in a situation with a small enough number
of votes, but it ceases to operate effectively when the number of those
voting comes to more than five hundred. The function of this principle
is to serve as a filter for decision-making.
It is obvious that the format for the participation of the entire
episcopate needs the majority-principle for the decision-making.
However, to take into account the interests of the autocephalous
churches, there should be a mechanism to veto decisions. For example, at
the Moscow council of 1917-18, it was the so-called Bishops’
conference, which included all bishops of the council (only 14% of all
the delegates), who possessed veto power.
In the case of the Pan-Orthodox council, a synaxis of primates could
be a “canonical filter.” This would solve the problem of the possible
dominance of the large churches and infringement of the small ones. An
example of the last meetings (2008, 2014, 2016) showed us that the
primates discuss and solve problems together, so they could evaluate
decisions of the council in view of the Church’s needs and the interests
of their local churches.
Secondly, the above-mentioned concerns reveal a total lack of
confidence, which the opponents of this format demonstrate to the
episcopate. Some assume that opening the council to all the bishops,
would lead to factions based on ethnic or autocephalous (i.e.,
territorial) foundations. Just as likely, bishops would form factions on
the basis of ideology (along the conservatism–liberalism divide),
rather than on the territorial principle. And we can expect that the
Greek, Russian, Georgian, etc., bishops would support each other for
ideological reasons. As the running discussion on the published
conciliar drafts shows, certain ideological concerns (such as opposition
to ecumenism) stretch beyond nationalist identification.
The insufficiency of the format adopted by the forthcoming
Pan-Orthodox council does not mean that the June session cannot receive
the Pan-Orthodox status. As I mentioned above, this issue should be
treated differentially. But I would suggest three procedural forms that
could still be implemented simultaneously in order to allow the
Pan-Orthodox council to have the greatest possible impact:
1) Synaxis of primates – to make decisions on important organizational issues;
2) The meeting of the delegations of autocephalous local churches – to discuss and adopt the church documents and regulations;
3) The meeting of the entire episcopate – to debate and adopt of the church documents that generate discord among the episcopate and the faithful, with the Synaxis of primates possessing a veto.
2) The meeting of the delegations of autocephalous local churches – to discuss and adopt the church documents and regulations;
3) The meeting of the entire episcopate – to debate and adopt of the church documents that generate discord among the episcopate and the faithful, with the Synaxis of primates possessing a veto.
Andrey Shishkov is Director of the Center for studies on
contemporary ecclesiological issues of Eastern Orthodoxy at Ss. Cyril
and Methodius Post-Graduate institute of the Moscow Patriarchate,
Russia.