Dr. Adam A. J. DeVille,
There are stylistic and substantial
differences between the upcoming Great and Holy Council of Orthodoxy and
the Second Vatican Council, but also three important similarities.
After much anticipation, the Great and Holy Council (GHC) of Orthodoxy
is finally set to begin in mid-June on the island of Crete.
After decades of discussion and preparation, including much recent commentary on the draft documents that were published—commentary to which I have myself contributed in official Orthodox venues—the leaders of the Eastern Orthodox churches from around the world will gather to deliberate on some issues unique to them, and on other issues that are very familiar to Catholics.
After decades of discussion and preparation, including much recent commentary on the draft documents that were published—commentary to which I have myself contributed in official Orthodox venues—the leaders of the Eastern Orthodox churches from around the world will gather to deliberate on some issues unique to them, and on other issues that are very familiar to Catholics.
How are Catholics to view this upcoming GHC? Naturally for most
Catholics the analogue closest to hand is Vatican II. And in certain
respects this GHC will be similar to Vatican II—a gathering of bishops,
with theological advisors, trying to grapple with both old and new
challenges to the Christian life today.
But in other crucial respects the GHC will be both different in itself,
and very likely be very different in its aftermath also. (Let me go on
record as hoping that its aftermath is indeed very different
from what happened in the Catholic Church after 1965!) A great deal of
the difference stems, of course, from the fact that there is no
centralized papal authority in Orthodoxy, a fact that I discussed in
detail in my 2011 book Orthodoxy and the Roman Papacy.
Stylistic Differences
Other differences are merely superficial, such as size (Orthodoxy’s
GHC will be much smaller than Vatican II because Orthodoxy is much
smaller—approximately 250 million faithful compared to well over 1
billion Catholics); or length: Vatican II met in four sessions,
running to many weeks, over four years whereas the GHC is only meeting
from June 16-27, 2016. Whether future meetings can be expected after
this one remains to be seen, and will very likely depend on how
acrimonious this first meeting is.
Preparation has also differed: Vatican II was a surprise
council, announced in January 1959, and convened in October 1962.
Orthodoxy’s GHC is no surprise at all, having been talked about in some
form for nearly a century now since a partial, informal gathering was
held in Constantinople in 1923. More proximate preparation began in
1961, but more serious and more immediate preparation was not begun
until 1976, the first (of several) pre-conciliar pan-Orthodox
consultations over the last forty years to work out an initial agenda.
Substantial Differences
The ten-point agenda from
1976 has continued to guide discussions to the present day. More than
half the agenda items had no corresponding Catholic counterpart a decade
earlier at Vatican II. Only the final three treat issues that Vatican
II also addressed, and with similar difficulties and controversy as we
now find in Orthodox discussions.
A Catholic looking at this Orthodox agenda (and doing so, I stress, without the slightest bit
of triumphalism for the modern papacy is, as we have been learning
recently, a double-edged sword) could easily see that the first four
items are all questions of leadership that could not really arise in the
Catholic Church under the modern centralized papacy: Thus the questions
of the Orthodox diaspora, of autocephaly and its manner of proclamation, of autonomy and its manner of proclamation, and of the diptychs were never on the agenda of Vatican II.
Diaspora: Most Orthodox churches began, and maintain roots in,
some “homeland” or other—Greece, Russia, Ukraine, Romania, etc.—but
have, thanks to modern immigration, existed in Western Europe, North
America, and Australasia for over a century in some cases. How should a
Greek parish in Manhattan, say, or a Russian parish in Palermo, or a
Ukrainian one in Montreal relate to both its surrounding culture and to
its homeland? What language should liturgy be in—Greek or English,
Russian or Italian, Ukrainian or French? Should these “diasporic”
parishes be more self-governing, or continue to report to bishops back
home? Catholic ecclesiology, with a much stronger “universalist” and
trans-national thrust, scarcely regards such questions as worth asking. A
parish founded by, say, Irish Catholics in Boston reports to the
archbishop of Boston, not to some bishop in Ireland.
Autocephaly and Autonomy: Following on from the above, when an
entire diocesan, regional, and national structure gets set up in a new
country, does it continue to report to the old country and be
accountable to bishops and synods there, or can it be granted total
independence (autocephaly) or partial independence (autonomy) in its new
place? The dispute here is whether the “mother-church” grants such
independence or whether doing so is a prerogative that belongs
exclusively to the Ecumenical Patriarch. Again, Catholic ecclesiology
and canon law don’t even consider these as live issues for Catholics
because the pope himself (Sovereign Pontiff indeed!) is the only truly
“independent” authority in the Church: “the first see is judged by
nobody,” as canon 1404 of the Latin code bluntly puts it.
Diptychs: The diptychs are merely prayers in the liturgy which
commemorate by name the bishop with whom one is in communion, and the
bishops in communion with him. (Latin Catholics also do this during the
eucharistic prayer, when the celebrant prays for “Francis our pope and
Kevin our bishop.”) The usual practice is to name these bishops by the
seniority of their see, starting with the ancient patriarchates (Rome,
Alexandria, Antioch, Constantinople, Jerusalem), but there are several
problems here for the Orthodox: does the lack of full communion with
Rome justify moving Constantinople into the first place, and perhaps
granting additional authority to it? And what about patriarchates
created in the second millennium—Moscow, Bucharest, Sofia, and others?
Finally, if one church’s autocephaly is not recognized by others, how,
if at all, should one pray for them?
If the foregoing four issues were not on the agenda of Vatican II,
thanks largely to a different Catholic ecclesiology and the role of the
modern centralized papacy in dealing (often unilaterally) with many
structural issues, then the next three items on the GHC agenda were not
discussed at Vatican II either, though for different reasons.
First, the matter of a common calendar has almost never been a
serious issue in Catholic circles since the sixteenth century. The only
treatment of this issue at Vatican II comes in its ecumenical debates,
when it briefly called for Christians to work towards one common
celebration of Easter (Orientalium Ecclesiarum no. 20). But
Orthodox attempts to adopt a common calendar since 1923 have led to
schisms in places such as Greece and Romania, which remain unhealed
today. (As I argued last summer,
calendar questions are absurdly vexed because they have nothing to do
with science, logic, or reason. They are, rather, emotionally fraught
issues of identity.)
Second, the question of adaptation of church regulations on fasting was
not on the agenda of Vatican II because, once more, the papacy
unilaterally imposed changes on the entire Latin Church, beginning with
Pope Pius XII’s relaxation of the ante-eucharistic fast from midnight to
three hours, and then down to one hour under Pope Paul VI. Lenten
fasting regulations were similarly changed by papal fiat.
Finally, marriage questions (including contraception) were largely
thought too delicate for debate at Vatican II, and so were debated
later, and are debated still as we have recently seen with the
publication of Amoris Laetitia. Catholic debates have been
enormously messy and controverted, and there is little reason to think
it will not be similarly messy at the GHC and for some time afterwards.
Here the Franciscan papacy has proven to be of no advantage at all,
denying Catholics any excuse for smugly assuming they can come up with a
more coherent or consistent answer than one finds in Orthodoxy’s more
decentralized approach.
Similarities
Only when we get to the last three items on the GHC’s agenda do we find
startlingly similar issues following a remarkably similar trajectory as
at Vatican II. The final three issues on the agenda of the GHC were, in
fact, on Vatican II’s agenda also:
One should expect no controversy with the last item on the GHC’s
agenda—who isn’t in favor of peace and justice?—but the first two have
long engendered a furious reaction from some Orthodox, very much like
the reaction of some Catholics at and since Vatican II. For the
fundamental problem that VII and the GHC have to grapple with is the
same: “soteriological exclusivism” (as the Polish theologian Waclaw
Hryniewicz called it), that is, both the Catholic Church and the
Orthodox Church believe themselves quite simply to be the one, holy, catholic, and apostolic church proclaimed in the Nicene Creed.
The problem here is that if I think my church the only true church, to
the exclusion of all others, then what do I make of those others who
claim to follow Christ outside my church—German Lutherans, say, or
Brazilian Pentecostals? Both Catholicism and Orthodoxy have answered
this question in one of three ways. The first, more “traditional” answer
in both Catholicism until Vatican II and parts of Orthodoxy still today
is the same: such “Christians” are not really Christians at all and
their rites and sacraments are utterly null and void. (In this view the
pope isn’t a bishop for he isn’t even a Christian, having never been
baptized!) The only solution is for these wayward, unbaptized pagans to
“return” to “holy mother Church” and become Christians for the first
time. This remains a minority view in Orthodoxy, but a vocal one.
An even smaller minority within Orthodoxy (as within Catholicism) takes a
relativist approach: anybody who feels himself a Christian and tries to
follow Christ is fine. The solution to division is either to just
accept it, even perhaps to rejoice in it (“let a thousand flowers
bloom!”); or at best to think that we can find unity by setting aside
whatever divides us and just focusing on what we have in common. This
position has virtually no traction (and certainly no official sanction)
within Catholicism or Orthodoxy, but it has proven, for the latter, a
useful straw dog to denounce any and all discussions with Catholics and
Protestants as being guilty of the “pan-heresy of ecumenism.”
The final approach to this, which may well be the one adopted by
Orthodoxy, was the ingenious (inspired?) solution adopted by Vatican II
in what I would regard as the most important passage of the entire
council:
This is the one Church of Christ which in the Creed is professed as one,
holy, catholic and apostolic, which our Saviour, after His
Resurrection, commissioned Peter to shepherd, and him and the other
apostles to extend and direct with authority, which He erected for all
ages as “the pillar and mainstay of the truth.” This Church constituted
and organized in the world as a society, subsists in the Catholic Church,
which is governed by the successor of Peter and by the Bishops in
communion with him, although many elements of sanctification and of
truth are found outside of its visible structure. These elements, as
gifts belonging to the Church of Christ, are forces impelling toward
catholic unity (Lumen Gentium no.8).
At one stroke, the fathers of Vatican II cut the knot and freed
Catholics to maintain their self-understanding while expanding it to see
how God was working in the lives of non-Catholics, compelling them and
us towards the fullness of catholic unity.
Will Orthodoxy’s GHC take a similar approach? It is hard to tell just
now, given how controversial such notions remain. The more likely course
seems to be the cautious one: they will avoid taking a stand on this,
perhaps waiting for a more opportune time. After all, not having had a
pan-Orthodox council of this sort since 787, what’s the sudden rush now?
My hope, for what it’s worth, is that this first meeting will soon give
rise to further sessions of the GHC where these and other issues can be
slowly worked through. Given Orthodoxy’s fissiparous nature, any haste
now will be fatal, leading to fresh schisms. Let us as Catholics pray
fervently that the Spirit of truth will serenely guide the fathers on
Crete, allowing them in God’s good time to say “It seems good to the
Holy Spirit and to us….”