(as delivered by His Grace Bishop Apostolos of Medeia)
October 17, 2019Your Eminence, Metropolitan Antony,
Your Eminence, Archbishop Daniel,
Most reverend Hierarchs, Beloved brothers and sisters,
I greet you in the name of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ, who is
and ever shall be among us. In spirit and prayer, I am also with you as
you assemble for your 22nd Regular Sobor at the Metropolia
Center. While I am regretfully unable to be with you in person, I have
asked His Grace Bishop Apostolos of Medeia to attend and present my
heartfelt message and sincere greetings.
The theme of this year’s Sobor – “Lord, I love the Beauty of
Your House and the Place where Your Glory dwells” (Ps. 26:8) – is unique and timely.
It is unique insofar as it highlights the importance of personal
presence and particular place in the context of a boundless and eternal
God. For us as Orthodox Christians, as we pray the words of this psalm,
we acknowledge and affirm our presence in the context of liturgy, where
we stand physically in communion with one another and spiritually in
communion with God and the Saints. In this respect, we find ourselves in
the beauty of heaven on earth and in the temple of divine glory.
In other words, the theme of your Sobor confirms the necessity of being
together – united as human beings in a specific place – in order to
participate in the union and communion of the Body of Christ. Such unity
is impossible and inaccessible when we are not gathered together in one
and the same place. This is why we are assembled this evening. And this
is why we concelebrate the Divine Liturgy as Orthodox Christians under
the spiritual care of the Mother Church of Constantinople. We are called
to love one another so that with one mind we may confess: Father, Son,
and Holy Spirit, Trinity consubstantial and undivided.
However, as I have already mentioned, the theme of your
Sobor is not only unique; it is also very timely. For, even as we
celebrate together in this joyful banquet, what is foremost in our minds
is the precious unity that we share as Orthodox Christians here in the
United States of America. In this regard, we are obliged to call to mind
the growth and development of the Assembly of Canonical Orthodox
Bishops, which was founded ten years ago at the recommendation of His
All-Holiness our Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew and with the
endorsement of the Primates of all Autocephalous Orthodox Churches.
Your Metropolitan Antony and Archbishop Daniel have proved vital
members of the Assembly of Canonical Orthodox Bishops of the United
States of America since its establishment. The Assembly has truly great
potential, but it needs our ongoing support and nurturing in order to
realize this potential. And I am not referring to material or financial
support, which is obviously critical to the implementation and success
of any vision. I am talking about the need for all of us Orthodox
Christians – and for all of our Orthodox Churches and jurisdictions here
in the United States of America – to be and to work together. I am
speaking of the responsibility to persist in our efforts for greater
unity, despite any and all external temptations or challenges. We cannot
allow what is happening elsewhere to distract us from what is in our
hands.
This is precisely why your Sobor’s theme is opportune. For if we
truly “love the beauty of the Lord’s house” and if we genuinely desire
to be in the same “place where His glory dwells,” then we cannot permit
politics and nationalism – what our Church has historically and
repeatedly condemned as “ethnophyletism” to separate us from one another
and ultimately from the love of Christ. Instead, we must instead be
like Jacob, who “woke up from his sleep and said: ‘Surely the Lord is in
this place – and I did not know it! … How wonderful and beautiful is
this place! For it is none other than the house of God and the gate of
heaven.’” (Genesis 28:16-17).
Dear friends, the unity of the Orthodox Church is in our hands. What
will we do about it? The unity of the Orthodox Church here in the United
States is in your hands. What will you do about it? Because if we
respond to our call and mandate to work for greater unity, if we realize
our duty and obligation to present a united witness to the world around
us, then we shall truly experience the beauty and glory of God in our
midst and in all places of His dominion.
May God bless all of you in your deliberations. And may God bless you and your families all the days of your life.