Public Orthodoxy
by Rev. Dr. Radu Bordeianu, Will Cohen, Rev. Dr. Nicholas Denysenko, Brandon Gallaher, Rev. Dr. D. Oliver Herbel, and Kerry San Chirico
Among the issues to be heard by the Orthodox Churches at the June
2016 Great and Holy Council in Crete is the situation of the Orthodox
diaspora.
The Council will be working with the document on the diaspora
promulgated by the fourth pre-conciliar gathering in Chambésy in June
2009. This document called for a swift canonical resolution to the
current organization of the Church in the regions of the diaspora so it
accords with Orthodox canon law and ecclesiological principles. The 2009
pre-conciliar gathering implemented a temporary solution by creating
episcopal assemblies (2a) in regions of the diaspora to promote common
action and witness to the unity of Orthodoxy without depriving the
member bishops of their “administrative competencies and canonical
character” (5). It is not immediately clear whether the June 2016
council will propose a permanent canonical solution or bless the
continued work of the regional episcopal assemblies. In order to arrive
at the canonical and ecclesiological ideal envisioned by the bishops in
2009, several issues and potential actions should be considered.
The first matter is the one of nomenclature. The notion of an
Orthodox diaspora is questionable. Some Orthodox faithful retain strong
connections to their native countries and Churches, but large numbers of
the Orthodox faithful in these regions are either converts or are far
removed from the identities of their immigrant forefathers. Inscribing a
uniform diasporic identity upon all Orthodox of these regions may be
convenient for summarizing their relationships with mother Churches, but
it is problematic when one considers the reality of evolution in
identity. The identities of many constituencies of these Churches are in
a complex process of evolution. Many immigrants established deep roots
in their new homes as citizens of their new countries who had arrived
with a commitment to settling permanently and did not seek to return to
their ancestral homelands. An honest assessment of diasporic Church life
will also demonstrate development in congruence with local culture.
The reality of organic ecclesial development in regions outside the
territories of the mother churches poses two immediate implications for
the deliberations of the June 2016 council. First, there is a need to
address the assumption of a kind of ecclesial “satellite” status of the
Churches in the so-called diasporic regions. If these Churches have
experienced organic internal development since their original
establishment, one can surmise that their conformance to the liturgical
traditions of their respective mother Churches has also changed. The
second implication is a product of the first: if one accepts the thesis
that the regional Churches continue to adapt and grow organically, then
continued acceptance of interim canonical remedies for their
organization compromises mission. In other words, the perception
of diaspora Churches as satellite entities which depend on the mother
Churches results in the absence of an anchor in mission, since the
regional Churches must continue to propagate the mission of the mother
Churches without reference to the conditions of local culture.
Furthermore, a continuation of reliance on the mission of the
mother Churches contributes to the hegemony of ethnic identity outside
the context of the mother Church and therefore opens the door to
ethnophyletism within Orthodoxy.
The 2009 pre-conciliar decision to organize the regional Churches
into episcopal assemblies was designed to propel movement towards the
emergence of permanent regional structures. Practically speaking, the
regional assemblies call for the bishops to meet and work together,
which requires them to rehearse the processes of formulating unified
responses to local issues. This kind of local collaboration is an
important aspect of being a local, canonical Church. Individual bishops
are not free to act in ways that would compromise collaborative
measures, and perhaps this was a healthy suggestion to promote
synodality and cross-ecclesial accountability among the bishops (compare
2c with 5). Such efforts fall short of achieving the ideal, though,
since the work of the episcopal assemblies lacks authority on account of
the provisional status of the regional structures caused by the
continued dependence of individual bishops on their mother Churches (5
and 6).
Here are five suggestions presented to the June 2016 council
for the Orthodox Churches of the diaspora to take the next logical step
towards the establishment of canonical structures. First,
we encourage the bishops to consider discarding the word “diaspora” in
describing Orthodoxy in these regions. Removing “diaspora” from the
description of these Churches simultaneously honors their ongoing
formation of identity and provides the space to end their dependence on
mother Churches. Second, we hope the bishops will
encourage the regional Churches to articulate their own specific
missions which meet the demands and realities of their local contexts.
While the mission of a regional Church should continue to attend to the
pastoral needs of new immigrants, who remain connected to their mother
countries and Churches, the freedom to formulate a mission which does
not impose the cultural context of a mother Church on an Orthodox
minority could contribute to the catalyzing of an emerging local Church
appropriate for its region. Third, the mother Churches
should allow for increased participation of the smaller regional
structures in the life of global Orthodoxy. The regional Churches cannot
rely solely on the deliberations of mother Churches external to their
local contexts on pastoral and canonical matters. The particular
evolution of Church life in these regions demands their participation in
constructing their own futures. Fourth, we urge the
Council to consider the potential benefits of reciprocity. Orthodox
Churches who are minorities in these regions might contribute
perspectives to the mother Churches in unexpected ways. Last,
the Ecumenical Patriarch himself should oversee the process of
transforming the current diasporic structures into united and canonical
local Churches. The Ecumenical Patriarch’s exercise of primacy has the
capacity to ensure participation and reciprocity to integrate the
regional Churches into global Orthodoxy more fully.
The forthcoming Great and Holy Council of the Orthodox Church has an
opportunity to definitively address the situation of the Orthodox
diaspora. By enabling and encouraging the Orthodox bishops and faithful
of these regions to articulate and fulfill their own missions while
continuing to minister to immigrants, the Council can enrich global
Orthodoxy’s unified witness, diminishing ethnophyletism and encouraging
the renewal of mission.
This essay was sponsored by the Orthodox Theological Society in
America’s Special Project on the Great and Holy Council and published by
the Orthodox Christian Studies Center of Fordham University.Radu Bordeianu is Associate Professor of Theology at Duquesne University; Will Cohen is Associate Professor of Theology and Religious Studies at the University of Scranton; Nicholas Denysenko is Associate Professor of Theological Studies and Director of the Huffington Ecumenical Institute at Loyola Marymount University; Brandon Gallaher is Lecturer of Systematic and Comparative Theology at the University of Exeter; D. Oliver Herbel is a chaplain in the North Dakota Air National Guard and pastor of Holy Resurrection Orthodox Church in Fargo, ND; Kerry San Chirico is Assistant Professor of Interfaith and Interreligious Studies at Villanova University.
Read more essays for the Orthodox Theological Society in America’s Special Project on the Great and Holy Council at publicorthodoxy.org.