Theodoros Kalmoukos,Τhe Νational Ηerald
Russian
President Vladimir Putin bows in front of an icon of Virgin Mary as he
visits the church of the Protaton, dedicated to the Dormition of the
Virgin, in Karyes, the administrative center of the all-male Orthodox
monastic community of Mount Athos, northern Greece, Saturday, May 28,
2016. Russian President Vladimir Putin has arrived at the northern Greek
peninsula of Mount Athos, on a visit to the autonomous Orthodox
Christian monastic community. (Alexandros Avramidis/Pool Photo via AP)
Analysis
The Holy and Great Council (HGC) of the Orthodox Church, which was
held in Crete in June, left its mark on Church history. It was an event
of great ecclesiastical importance and perpetuated a vision that has
existed for many decades. The key consideration is that it managed to
gather the local Orthodox Churches, even with four abstentions –
specifically, the Patriarchates of Antioch, Bulgaria, Georgia and
Moscow.
Orthodox Church unity became an ontological reality and was evident
during the concelebrations of the ten Primates and their delegations of
bishops, priests, and laity. They joined together and coexisted as
brothers, and the Eucharistic Synaxis was officiated by Ecumenical
Patriarch Bartholomew, who was given the privilege to preside over the
Council.
Undoubtedly, the HGC’s “sore spot” were the four absentees, and it
was mostly a disgrace for the Churches they represent, because they have
inadvertently been considered a caste division of the Body of Christ,
i.e., the Church. The excuses they invoked were borderline frivolous and
were a source of amusement for serious and objective observers and
analysts.
Of course, the HGC proceeded without them, who ultimately proved to
be “insignificant” compared to the major salvaging event of the Church
and deigned to be isolated and excluded from the “whole” of the Body of
Christ.
Meanwhile, systematic and desperate attempts by the mainstream media
were made to mislead and degrade the HGC; the press almost completely
ignored the HGC as if they had been given a general guideline, and the
smaller and uninfluential media outlets confined themselves to mindless
defamation.
The fact that a group of students from the Holy Cross theological
school in Boston, who voluntarily helped in the orderliness and
proceedings of the Synod, were deemed “American policemen” or “CIA
agents” is indicative of the climate that was cultivated, while the
targeting was not so subtle.
Of course, the level of ecclesiastical reporting in Greece as well as
the rest of the Balkans, has not been brought to our knowledge.
Then there was this small caste of dissenters, comprised of three or
four Metropolitans, a few head priests, and laity, who shamelessly and
relentlessly condemned and rejected the Council before it even convened.
Absurd behavior.
On the other hand, the Greek government’s attitude could be
characterized as questionable and even suspect from the beginning. On
May 28, two weeks before the Council convened, the Tsipras
Administration grandly welcomed Russian President Vladimir Putin and his
entourage, as well as Patriarch Krill of Moscow, who by strange
coincidence chose to visit Greece and Mount Athos just a few days before
the HGC began.
The reception of Kirill was highly honorable, and the manner in which
Putin was greeted bordered on profane, since the Athonites sat him onto
the Archiepiscopal Throne. He was accompanied by undesirable
colleagues, such as Vladislav Surkov, against whom the United States and
the European Union have imposed sanctions for his role in the Russian
invasion in the Crimea and the Ukraine.
Surkov visited Mount Athos although the Greek government was fully
aware that it violated agreements with the European Union. An extensive
article featured in Time magazine on September 2 made some interesting
revelations regarding his visit.
For an event of the HGC’s calibre, neither Prime Minister Tsipras,
nor religious affairs Minister Nikos Filis appeared even for a few
minutes to obligingly and kindly welcome the Primates of the local
Orthodox Churches and their delegations. The downgraded representation
of the government was assigned to the Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs
Ioannis Amanatidis. The latter had even propagated that Minister of
State Nikos Pappas would attend the closing Synodal Divine Liturgy in
Kissamos, but he ultimately did not appear.
There is widespread feeling that the Tsipras government was under
great pressure from Putin to “bury” the HGC, which in turn, as is
evident by the developments, threw a black veil on the publicity of the
HGC even by the state-owned and state-run channel ERT.
Of course, Greek President Prokopis Pavlopoulos was present at the
Divine Liturgy of the Sunday of the Pentecost in Heraklion, after which
he hosted a luncheon in honor of Bartholomew and the other Primates.
THN was informed that that the head of Pavlopoulos’ press office did
not show up, but instead another officer had the president’s speech on a
piece of paper and refused to release it to the HGC’s press office.
In addition, the Greek president had requested the presence of the
Evzones of the Presidential Guard, as is done in other events and
specifically in the Greek Independence Parade in New York, but the
request was completely ignored.
Meanwhile, two weeks before the HGC convened, the effort and
targeting of the Moscow Patriarchate to completely scuttle the Council
was clearly revealed when under various pretexts it called for its
postponement for a later date, although it had agreed and had signed the
Pre-Conciliar documents. Furthermore, HGC’s venue, which was initially
set and decided upon unanimously, was changed from Constantinople to
Crete for the sake of Kirill, who declared that he was unable to travel
to Constantinople due to the tense relations between Turkey and Russia
at the time, in response to the Turkey’s downing of a Russian fighter
plane.
Moscow dragged along the Patriarchates of Antioch, Bulgaria, and Georgia, although there is “historical hatred” with the latter.
Its aim was to postpone the Holy Council, which would enable the
Moscow Patriarchate to “comanage” and share the responsibility for this
leading position of Orthodoxy, which is a historical and canonical
ecclesiological privilege of the Ecumenical Patriarchate.
It would not be surprising if it transpires that this
ecclesiastical-political game aims to radically change the existing
institutional framework and the scheme of the Orthodox Church, given the
Moscow Patriarchate’s thirst for power. And through this state of
“civil war,” the faithful, and mainly the young people, are seeking to
discern Christ.