Ecumenical Patriarchate Press Office
Evagelos Sotiropoulos,
“But let your ‘Yes’ be ‘Yes,’ and your ‘No,’ ‘No’” records Matthew the Apostle and Evangelist (5:37).
Five short months ago a Synaxis of Primates
of the Orthodox Autocephalous Churches took place in Chambésy, Geneva.
At that time, all autocephalous churches agreed to convene the Holy and
Great Council.
They said
‘Yes.’ They said ‘Yes’ to unity. They said ‘Yes’ to conciliarity. But
the ‘Yes’ of all has unfortunately become the ‘No’ of some.
Now, the Holy
and Great Council - which begins this week on the island of Crete in
Greece - is being held hostage by whimsical arbitrariness.
Beginning with Bulgaria earlier this month, a number of local churches began reversing course, letting their ‘Yes’ become ‘No.’
As one church
mused about not participating, another would say the same thing,
creating a negative narrative about the Holy and Great Council. The
timing and message alignment mimicked the exquisite choreography of a
St. Petersburg ballet performance.
Under demanding
circumstances - and despite continued criticism - the Ecumenical
Patriarchate and His All-Holiness Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew
calibrated a careful response.
In short,
Constantinople called for previous agreements and procedures - note
agreement, not imposition - to be respected and followed. The Ecumenical
Patriarchate, which has responsibilities unlike no other local church,
focused its efforts to safeguard the unity of Orthodoxy, especially with
the world watching.
The Holy and
Great Council will proceed as normal; whether it is actually ‘Holy’ and
‘Great’ will be determined only after the Council - not necessarily by
who is present but by what is decided.
It is not
enough for Councils to follow formal regularity; moreover, participation
by all autocephalous churches does not make them automatically valid.
One of the
shortcomings of the entire pre-conciliar process was the rigid
requirement for unanimous consent from all local churches thus giving
each of the fourteen Primates a veto over pan-Orthodox decisions - which
is inconsistent with the tradition and spirit of Orthodoxy.
“Indeed, those Councils which were actually recognized as “Ecumenical,” in the sense of their binding and infallible authority, were recognized, immediately or after a delay, not because of their formal canonical competence, but because of their charismatic character: under the guidance of the Holy Spirit they have witnessed to the Truth, in conformity with the Scripture as handed down in Apostolic Tradition.” -Georges Florovsky
Orthodoxy’s Opportunity: Creative Destruction
There are six agenda items
to be discussed in Crete, each having its own supporting document
adopted with unanimous approval (with the exception of the document
dealing with marriage).
Setting aside
some serious theological concerns that have arisen, the documents
themselves are rather unexciting, dare I say uninspiring. This should
not come as a major surprise.
Most of them
have been developed over decades, by a relatively small group of church
representatives, each, presumably, with their own contributions, with
compromises made along the way in order to reach consensus.
In their
current form, some of the documents - even those pre-approved - will not
receive unanimous support. A number of local Synods have formally
suggested changes even before the Council begins.
The texts, therefore, will have to be updated; and, contrary to some who suggest otherwise, the Council’s Organization and Working Procedure - despite being rather rigid - do allow for “Modifications of Texts” under Article 11.
Enter “Creative
Destruction,” an idea popularized by Joseph Schumpeter in the
mid-twentieth century. An economic theory originally developed for
industry, its premise is simple: destroying an old structure to create a
new one.
Applied to the
Holy and Great Council, the proposal for creative destruction is to
amend (read: strikethrough) the pre-conciliar documents (they can be
used as reference and/or building block language, where appropriate).
The creative
part will come in Crete, where the assembled bishops would discuss and
draft one inspiring, authentically Orthodox, spiritually relevant
document that will truly make a mark in an increasingly fragmented,
distracted, and dangerous world.
A rejoinder to
this proposal is how could 300 or so individuals, including about 200
bishops (depending on how many actually attend), develop such a document
in one short week?
It would be a formidable task indeed, and not without its challenges; but, there are two points worth mentioning.
First, Council
participants will have the world watching them and, most acutely,
missing Orthodox sister churches. They will not be isolated, working
with no specific deadline. Instead, bishops will have to collaborate
with no time to dawdle.
Second, and
most importantly, participants will be under the guidance of the Holy
Spirit. Instead of only making minor, albeit important, changes and
having the hierarchs then rubber-stamp the existing texts, let them,
together with their chosen consultants, be inspired and guided by God
the Holy Spirit to develop a document worthy of the One, Holy, Catholic,
and Apostolic Church which alone possesses the fullness of truth.
Church leaders
should set the prepared texts aside and use their freedom to draw
attention to and stress the uniqueness of Orthodoxy, its
freedom-granting ascetical and spiritual life, in addition to resolving
matters of Church administration.
The Holy and
Great Council of the Orthodox Church is decades in the making, and
without precedent for centuries: therefore, Church leaders should not be
held captive by discord and dissension but instead put their trust in
God to guide them to develop a document that seems good to the Holy Spirit (cf. Acts 15:28), is a witness to the Truth and is received by the Body of Christ, that is, the entire Church.
If this
happens, history will not remember the naysayers, and the Church will,
with time, receive into its conscience the decisions taken in Crete.
Despite the participatory withdrawal by some, the Holy and Great Council
still offers Orthodoxy with a historic opportunity.