Elpidophoros Lambriniadis Metropolitan of Bursa-Associate Professor
Presentation at the 8th International Conference of Orthodox Theology
Having already attended so many excellent
presentations from hierarchs and professors, all of them prominent
theologians, who accurately analyzed and presented both the work and the
texts of the Holy and Great Council of the Orthodox Church that
convened on the island of Crete in 2016, I dare to move on to the next
day, already gazing at the next major synodal expression of our Church.
There have already been some references
from other presenters who briefly analyzed the aspects of the Holy and
Great Council, as well as the way the Church could deploy her
significant experience from this major event in the recent history of
the Eastern Orthodox Church.
It is easier now, after the Council
concluded its works two years ago, for someone to interpret the events
that took place before, during, and after it. Indeed, some of the
behaviors, as well as choices, of given Churches are easily interpreted
by anyone as they are better understood through their attitude and their
way of participation or absence.
It is easier for someone now to gain a
better understanding of the reasons why some objections were raised to
certain issues at the last moment. Interestingly though, these issues
had either been agreed upon on a pan-orthodox level decades ago within
the context of preparatory processes, or had constituted common practice
within the Orthodox Church.
If we take a closer look at the development of the agenda we will see that it started formulating at the beginning of the 20th
century up until 2016. While in the beginning the agenda included
crucial issues that preoccupied the Church and the world in general,
regarding theological as well as pastoral care issues, in the process
they were removed one by one until there were only six issues left, on
which the texts of the Holy and Great Council were based.
Let me just remind you some of the aforementioned removed from the agenda issues:
a) The issue of the common calendar.b) Priests’ and deacons’ marriage after ordination.
c) The second marriage of widowed priests.
d) Bishops’ age limit.
e) Outer garments of priests.
f) The establishment of uniformity in the way heterodox converted Christians enter the Orthodox Church.
g) Composition and publication of a common Orthodox Proclamation of Faith.
h) Reallocation of the readings in the Church’s worship.i) The adaptation of church regulations on fasting according to contemporary demands and conditions.
j) Distribution of the Holy Anointing Oil.
k) The preservation of the terms in the founding Tomoi of the local autocephalous and autonomous Churches.
l) The process of canonization in the Orthodox Church.m) Euthanasia.
n) Cremation.
o) Fullest participation of lay people in the Church worship.
p) Autocephaly and the manner of its proclamation.
q) The Diptychs of the Orthodox Church.
Allow me to additionally highlight a few
of the concessions the Ecumenical Patriarchate had to make so as to
ensure the co-operation and agreement of certain Churches in the process
of preparation and assembly of the Holy and Great Council.
a) all the issues that had systematically
been disputed were removed from the agenda. However, those were the
most crucial and fundamental issues, as it can be seen by turning to
those mentioned above.
b) other issues on the agenda, equally
fundamental, had to undergo changes in both their wording and content.
In essence, although they were included, in essence they were enfeebled
and did not fulfill their original purpose of inclusion, for example the
issue of fasting.
c) autonomous Churches were excluded from the pre-conciliar process.
d) the place of assembly had to move from
Constantinople to Crete after demands coming from certain Churches that
did not attend in the end!
e) the dubious in terms of canonicity commitment of decision making on the basis of unanimity.
f) after an expressed demand from a
certain Church, seating in the venue had to be rearranged so that the
Chairman’s seat would not be excessively visible.
g) the Ecumenical Patriarchate postponed
dealing with crucial issues preoccupying the Orthodox Church for decades
so that some local Churches would not be displeased.
Nonetheless, the Council did take place.
Despite all concessions, despite the frequently pressing last minute
interference, despite the unexpected demands.
Some churches did not participate,
withdrawing their commitments literally in the last minute, although
they had participated in every aspect of the preparatory period for the
few remaining texts on the agenda. It is clearly obvious that the
reasons for their non participation were far from being ecclesial,
theological or canonical.
It has been said that they objected to
some of the texts. Objections on specific issues in the conciliar
process had never been a canonically founded reason to abstain from a
Synod –either Ecumenical or local- in the Eastern Orthodox Church
tradition. When the Church synodally convenes, invoking the All Holy and
Initiating Spirit, confers and decides either unanimously or on
majority vote which is eventually accepted by the totality of the
ecclesiastical body. Wasn’t this what actually happened on the island of
Crete? The points of the pre-agreed texts that were changed during the
in Holy Spirit assembly of the fathers of the Holy and Great Council
were not few. Therefore, the objections on the preparatory texts does
not constitute an ecclesial reason of not attending the Council which is
called to take a stand on these texts and officially finalize them.
Thus, the fact that the Churches of Bulgaria and Georgia did not attend
the Council cannot be justified under a canonical perspective but rather
through invocation of extrinsic and secular reasons. Although the
Churches of Greece and Serbia were also reluctant regarding some of the
points of the preparatory texts, they still attended the Council and
according to the ecclesiastical tradition they expressed their views
during there. Many of their suggestions were pan-orthodoxically accepted
and constitute today testimonies to their contribution.
The Church of Antioch had long ago
highlighted the fact that they considered their jurisdictional
differences with the Church of Jerusalem of fundamental importance. They
repeatedly asked the Ecumenical Patriarch to intervene. His All
Holiness took at least two initiatives so as to resolve to issue;
unfortunately, they were not successful, certainly not due to his
actions, but rather due to the intractable stance of the involved parts.
However, Patriarch Bartholomew, could not and was not entitled to
connect the convocation and the carrying out of the Holy and Great
Council –that had been under preparation for decades- with the
development of a bilateral dispute for which the totality of Orthodoxy
is not responsible. From this perspective, I reverently think that the
persistence the ancient Patriarchate of Antioch displayed was untimely.
The resolution of its dispute with the Church of Jerusalem constituted a
participation requirement to a major and historical event in the life
of the Church. I remember that the Ecumenical Patriarch during his last
communication, prior to the Council in May 2016, with the Patriarch of
Antioch highlighted the fact that there was not much time left for a
propitious resolution on the issue of Qatar. He, additionally, committed
to deal with the issue again right after the completion of the Council,
while at the same time he urged him not to avoid participation in this
major event for the Church. The Patriarch of Antioch did not even accept
this commitment that was undertaken by the Ecumenical Patriarch. I am
certain that now, two years after the completion of the Council, the
venerable holy hierarchs of the Throne of Antioch, displaying more
composure and clear way of thinking are in position to re-evaluate their
then fervent decision. However, after Professor Elizabeth Prodromou’s
analysis of the geostrategic balances I cannot resist the temptation of
mentioning as a factor affecting the stance of the Church of Antioch the
tight political, military, financial, and energy embrace between
Damascus and Moscow. The case of the Patriarchate of Antioch may be the
only one of the Churches that did not attend for which we can show
understanding, especially taking into consideration all of the above
mentioned reasons.
The most inexplicable –especially in
ecclesial and canonical terms- case is the non-participation of the
Church of Moscow. It was the last announced abstention. It is all the
more inexplicable –once again in ecclesial terms- since the Church’s
Primate, His Beatitude Patriarch Kirill during the Primates’ Assembly in
Geneva in January 2016 had stated that all the Churches’ participation
is not considered as an essential requirement for the convocation and
the carrying out of the Holy and Great Council. So, since there is no
ecclesial and canonical explanation, it is only necessary for a
researcher to resort to seeking secular and extrinsic to the holy canons
reasons for this participation cancellation. These reasons may not be
canonical, they are, nonetheless, expected and easily explained.
Therefore, it was obvious that the process was used by some Churches so as to:
- attenuate and weaken the content of the agenda,
- obstruct, at the last minute, the convocation of the Council, and
- damage the authority of the decisions.
However, the authority of a Council is
assessed neither by its thematic range, nor by the number of
participants and participating Churches. Rather, the assessment derives
from the Holy Spirit’s presence and breath, as well as the fidelity to
the fathers’ faith, to the holy canons, and to the sacred Church
tradition.
All of the above were an assessment of
the course towards the Holy and Great Council. They were mentioned so as
to help us plan and organize the next one, aiming to avoid the mistakes
that have already been made and to, possibly, improve the methods that
were followed during its preparation period and its actual carrying out.
But, allow me some further clarifications that might be missing out on.
The Council, any Council is called by the
Chairman at a time, place and with an agenda that he deems as
appropriate. This act, as it is well knows, dates back to the era of
Saint Photios and onwards, since the Patriarch of Constantinople holding
the honorary primacy was assigned the organization of this major
synodal expression, without any secular help.
Nonetheless, the Ecumenical Patriarchate never acted in this manner.
Characterized by the healthy spirit of
orthodox synodality, while at the same time taking into consideration
the fact that for a very long time any form of synodal experience was
absent on a pan-orthodox level, the Ecumenical Patriarchate inaugurated
the preparatory process in close co-operation with the other sister
Orthodox Churches.
While in this process it shared not only
the thematic range of the Council, but also its preparation. It accepted
its ages-long prerogatives, ones that were bestowed upon the Throne of
Constantinople by the decisions of the Ecumenical Synods and were
applied through the canonical practice and order of the Orthodox Church,
as being points of discussion in the agenda.
One such example is the manner of
granting Autocephaly. The same Churches that were granted Autocephaly,
some of which also acquired their Patriarchal merit from the Ecumenical
Patriarchate, those were the ones that misinterpreted this issue on the
agenda, and considered that they had the right to question both a
practice and an order to which they essentially owed their canonical
status and their ecclesiastical existence. That is, they considered that
discussion of certain issues was a chance to challenge, or even to
relativize, the Ecumenical Patriarchate’s prerogatives through claiming a
role and some form of participation in these for other Primates as
well. Thus, we reached a point when a Primates’ co-decision to grant
Autocephaly was under discussion. As a result, the Ecumenical
Patriarchate withdrew this issue from the agenda and continued following
the observed holy tradition. The purpose of Ecumenical Synods is not to
negotiate on the grounds of canonical order ambition, but to list,
ratify and preserve the already observed and established canonical
order. This is the mentality that appears in all the decisions of
Ecumenical Synods. Especially when it comes to the canonical
prerogatives of Constantinople, these cannot become the subject of
negotiation or exchange. If they are to be discussed, this only happens
according to the synodal tradition of the Church and having as a sole
purpose the display of respect and an invitation to further observe
ancient practice and order.
Another example is the issue of the
Diptychs. During the preparatory discussions it was noticed that some
Churches’ criteria were neither ecclesial nor canonical, but rather they
were dictated by extrinsic to the tradition of the Church
feasibilities. This was they reason why the issues was withdrawn from
the agenda.
Please allow me at this point, a logical,
in my humble opinion question: Why does it take such a long and
thorough preparation for the convocation of a council, even of such
importance? Why should everything be pre-arranged so well in advance?
Why do the texts need to be fully pre-agreed upon? Why do the issues
need to be predetermined? Doesn’t the Council convene in Holy Spirit?
Don’t we believe that where two or three come together in the name of
the Lord, He is there with them? Have we lost the trust in the
enlightenment of the Holy Spirit? The Council is where decisions are
made in Holy Spirit; it is not a place for a unanimous validation of
prepared texts and decisions.
These questions have no easy answer. Just
allow me to express some of my thoughts, that might shed a dim light or
become the reason for a constructive dialogue. The era when the
systematic preparation for the Holy and Great Council began is
considered as the period of the western effect in the way conferences,
symposia, and international colloquia are convened. This way always
includes a thorough preparation and composition of texts, encyclicals,
or messages that are to be validated. All these are extrinsic features
to the synodal tradition of the East, and furthermore, they are not
attested in the history of the Ecumenical Synods. The culminating point
of this western effect and culture –if I may use this expression- in the
carrying out of various meetings is the composition of a Regulation for
the assembly of Pre-Conciliar Pan-Orthodox Summits, even a regulation
for the Holy and Great Council which is also completely extrinsic to our
tradition. However, all these new elements can be explained within the
context of our time’s mentality, the long standing absence of synodal
experience on a pan-orthodox level, the absence of trust among the
Churches, and can also be imputed to similar reasons.
Nonetheless, in the future we need to
further highlight the character of the synodal processes and put less
emphasis on the institutional and scrupulous aspect, while at the same
time we give more room and putting more faith in the Holy Spirit.
Concluding at this point the analysis of
the Holy and Great Council’s preparation experience, I dare to move to
some suggestions for the next pan-orthodox synodal expression of the
Church, based on everything that has been mentioned so far.
I would like to begin with the name. The
Church did not dare to name the Council of Crete as Ecumenical. Not
because it was not in essence Ecumenical, but because a) there were
restrictions set on the decided terminology during the preparatory
period, and b) because there had been a long time span since the last
Ecumenical Synods and, therefore, some hesitation for such a bold
decision was evident.
However, in the future Council we have to
convene bearing in mind that we will be the Ecumenical Synod of the
One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church. And that would be the case
despite the views expressed by few theologians, even prominent ones,
that after the schism with the Church of Rome no Ecumenical Synod can
ever exist. The Church has always had to deal with schisms, however,
they never affected her ecclesiological and synodal self understanding,
nor did they diminish her ecumenical character.
Similarly, though, the necessity arises
for the next Ecumenical, as it will be named, Synod to recognize and
list as ecumenical not only the Synod of Constantinople in the era of
Photios (879/880), but also the one In Defense of the Holy Hesychasts in
1341 (in which the proceedings of the Synods in 1347 and 1351 will be
annexed to those of 1341), since their decisions have ecumenically been
recorded and established in Church life on a pan-orthodox level.
The person who convenes the Synod cannot
be other than the Patriarch of Constantinople, who bears the
responsibility of the primate in the Church. This primate has been
established not only through the decisions of Ecumenical Synods, but
also through the age long tradition, practice and order of the Church,
as they have been preserved unaltered and with no exceptions until
today. Indeed, since it has been proven that invoking non secular
reasons for convening the Synod away from the seat of the Primate does
not facilitate its carrying out or the participation of God’s Holy
Churches, this Synod should take place in Constantinople.
The Patriarch of Constantinople will
convene the local Churches without exempting the autonomous ones, as it
was deemed as feasible, therefore, he had to do in the past. During the
Synod the Churches can vote, but the canonical tradition of decisions
taken on majority votes should be applied, the minority votes should
comply without having the right to deny to sign the decisions, let alone
the right to deny to enforce them. Besides, isn’t that what happens
during synods of local Churches? Not one member of the minority can
question the authority of the synodally taken decision. Whoever follows
such a course of action usually claim exceptional historical events and
similar examples of denial. However, it is known that this denial hides
other views, feasibilities, and agendas.
The pursuit of coordinating and
pre-agreeing among the Orthodox Churches does not give the right to
procrastinate or try to void the actualization of the Synod itself. The
Chairman’s and Primate’s of Orthodoxy good will to ensure the largest
possible consent with the aim of preserving unity, should not become
object of exploitation with the aim of promoting extrinsic
feasibilities.
And that is because we have the
experience of the Holy and Great Council’s preparation and we often see
that this process held hostage the whole Church so that solutions could
be imposed or bilateral disputes to be resolved.
Discussing issues already resolved
through decisions of Ecumenical Synods, such as order and canonical
geographical boundaries of Churches, by no means could lead to their
questioning or abolishment. As was the case with every Ecumenical Synod,
that should also be in the future one. We have to repeat the decisions
and the testimony of the Holy Fathers, so that continuity and
consistency in orthodox tradition and theology will be manifested.
Nonetheless, since we cannot overlook to the arising issues, we have to:
Regulate through pan-orthodox decisions
the cases in which there are disputed territorial jurisdictions among
Churches, such as the areas of Qatar and Bessarabia. This disputes have
arose due to either states’ border modifications or to an alteration of
the geographical areas’ names over the years.
Admit that the given temporary solution
to the issue of orthodox diaspora in essence is nothing more than an
admittance of a) our incapacity to accept ecclesial criteria
implementation (28th canon of the Fourth Ecumenical Council), and b) our submission to secular feasibilities.
Proceed to an assessment of the official
Theological Dialogues of the Orthodox Church with other Churches up
until today, so that we can give proper directives, take appropriate
decisions and assume their responsibility on this synodal level.
Re-assess the use of the term “heretic”
and distinguish it from that of heterodox Christian or of the same faith
schismatic. That will help us gain a better understanding not only the
letter but also the spirit of the holy canons and the Church’s practice.
For that, we should assume an official
pan-orthodox stance for the issue of women’s ordination and clarify our
views on the tradition of their ordination as deacons.
Finally, something that has been in
abeyance and should be regulated through an Ecumenical Synod’s decision
is the validation of the Autocephalous Churches’ Status that they were
granted through canonical acts of the Principally Seated Church of
Constantinople. It is known that all jurisdictional regulations of the
ancient Patriarchates and the Church of Cyprus were actualized through
decisions of Ecumenical Synods and they cannot be questioned or altered.
These regulations are still pending for the cases of Churches such as
Russia, Serbia, Romania, Bulgaria, Georgia, Greece, Poland, Albania,
Czech Lands and Slovakia.
Concluding my presentation I wish to
praise the proposal of His Beatitude Patriarch of Romania Daniel for the
need of frequent or regular convocation of such nature or extent Synods
of the Orthodox Church. There is indeed a great need for our Church to
deal with crucial issues that trouble our flock and pose great
challenges to our theology, the interpretation of our faith, while at
the same time we articulate ecclesial and synodal discourse on, for
example, issues of bioethical dilemmas. Even though there is no
testimony in the Church’s tradition of convening such regular synod, and
such a practice entails the danger of turning them into some sort of
routine, still, the Synaxis of the Primates of the Orthodox Churches
–which His All Holiness Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew following
divine inspiration successfully devised and implemented- could form a
new mode of a pan-orthodox synodal expression.
Even though political and other
feasibilities, secularization, and human weaknesses caused the delay of
the Holy and Great Synod for many decades, even if unorthodox planning
and obstacles rendered its realization something like a Gordian Knot,
the Lord showed mercy to His Church by sending the ecclesiastical
Alexander the Great, who by using the spear of his spirit did not just
unfasten the knot but cut off through the complications and opened the
way not only for this Council but also for the future of the
pan-orthodox synodal tradition.
Thank you for your patience.