Catholics may be tempted to see June's "Holy and Great Council" of the Orthodox churches as having nothing to do with them, but that’s a serious mistake. Catholics have an investment in whether the Orthodox get their act together for theological, pastoral, and political reasons.
In one week, Christian history is supposed to be made on the island
of Crete when the leaders of all the world’s independent Orthodox
Churches are to begin meeting in a “Holy and Great Council” for the
first time in a millennium.
“Supposed to” being the key phrase, in light of the latest hints of potential disaster.
- One of those 14 independent (the technical term is “autocephalous”) churches, in Bulgaria, has announced it’s not coming.
- Another, the Patriarchate of Antioch, has threatened to boycott.
- The Serbian Orthodox Church says it wants the gathering to be a “consultation,” not a council.
- The Russian Orthodox Church is holding an emergency meeting of its Holy Synod on Monday, which may be a prelude to Moscow seeking to throw its weight around vis-à-vis the official convener in the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople.
In other words, on the eve of what one leading Orthodox cleric loosely has termed their “Vatican II,” it looks like the whole thing might unravel.
In all honesty, that shouldn’t be surprising. There’s a reason the
Orthodox churches haven’t gotten together since the split between East
and West in 1054, which is that they often don’t work and play well with
each other. Each church guards its prerogatives jealously, and
traditionally there’s been considerable suspicion about the others.
The idea that such a council would come off without a hitch was
always a fantasy, and the only startling part is that it’s taken this
long for the crisis to erupt.
Despite it all, Constantinople has issued an appeal to all Orthodox
leaders to come, and a “messaging committee” for the council began its
work last Thursday, describing its mission as affirming “collective
roots despite a rocky history, which stretches across hundreds of years
and unimaginably diverse cultures.”
Catholics tempted to see the ferment as evidence of Orthodox
immaturity would do well to recall our own checkered history of bishops
storming out of councils in a snit. Before the final vote on the dogma
of papal infallibility at Vatican I in the 19th century, for instance,
55 opposition bishops signed a protest to the pope, Pius IX, and then
packed their bags and left Rome.
(One of the few who stuck around actually to vote “no” was an
American, Edward Fitzgerald of Little Rock, who thought declaring the
pope infallible would make it harder to convert Protestants. Given that
Arkansas today remains almost 80 percent Protestant and just 7 percent
Catholic, one understands the concern, though whether that’s the fault
of an 1870 dogma is obviously debatable.)
Right now, it appears impossible to forecast what might happen in Crete.
At one end of the spectrum, the whole thing could stall amid internal
wrangling, documents could be shelved, decisions could be delayed, and
the council could be styled a massive flop.
On the other end, consensus could emerge miraculously around some
long-disputed points, Orthodox across the world might sing hosannas, and
those bishops who refused to show up may kick themselves for having
missed it.
Many Catholics may be tempted to see the council as having nothing to
do with them, but that’s a serious mistake. Catholics have an
investment in whether the Orthodox get their act together, for three
core reasons.
First is a theological consideration. Catholics and Orthodox are not
united ecclesiastically, but we’re all baptized Christians, so we’re all
part of the Body of Christ.
St. Paul told the Corinthians, “If one part [of the body] suffers,
all the parts suffer with it; if one part is honored, all the parts
share its joy.” Either that’s just pious rhetoric or not, and the extent
to which other Christians care about one of the most important events
in Orthodoxy in the last 1,000 years seems a good test of which it is.
Second, a top priority of the Catholic Church for the last 50 years
has been ecumenism, meaning the press for greater Christian unity. Aside
from the Gospel imperative “that all may be one,” the commitment is
also a practical recognition that it’s tough to preach unity to the
world as long as Christians are divided among themselves.
Catholicism’s outreach tends to begin with the Orthodox, because the
rupture between East and West is the primordial Christian schism, and
also because Catholics have more in common ecclesiastically and
sacramentally with the Orthodox than many other Christian denominations.
One chronic headache, however, is that there’s no one who can really
speak for the entire Orthodox tradition, and the various Orthodox
churches aren’t on the same page. The Patriarchate of Constantinople,
the traditional “first among equals,” is generally quite open
ecumenically, but the same can’t always be said of Greece, for instance,
or the Russians.
The more the Orthodox are unified, the easier ecumenical dialogue will become.
Third there’s a political motive. The Vatican styles itself as a
voice of conscience in global affairs, and it’s come to understand that
it’s easier to move the ball if it can speak on behalf of a broad
Christian and religious coalition.
Forging those partnerships with Orthodox churches, however, sometimes
is complicated by their strongly nationalistic streak. Try persuading
the Patriarchate of Moscow to be critical of Russian policy in Ukraine,
for instance, and you’ll get the point.
The more the Orthodox come to see each other, rather than their
national governments, as their primary interlocutors, the easier it may
be to build a common Christian front. One clear example today of where
the churches are already cooperating, but where they could be doing far
more, is the defense of persecuted Christians, whose suffering has been
described by Francis as an “ecumenism of blood.”
In other words, in June it’s gut-check time for both Orthodox and Catholics.
For the Orthodox, it’s whether they can snatch conciliar victory from what feels, at the moment, perilously like defeat.
For Catholics, it’s whether we can look past our own internal dramas
for a moment to see the fairly large stake we’ve got in somebody else’s.
We can’t dictate the results, but we can at least acknowledge they
matter.