And God said, Let there be lights in the firmament of the heaven to give light upon the earth, to divide between day and night, and let them be for signs and for seasons and for days and for years. And let them be for light in the firmament of the heaven, so as to shine upon the earth, and it was so. And God made the two great lights, the greater light for regulating the day and the lesser light for regulating the night, the stars also. And God placed them in the firmament of the heaven, so as to shine upon the earth, and to regulate day and night, and to divide between the light and the darkness. And God saw that it was good. And there was evening and there was morning, the fourth day. And God said, Let the waters bring forth reptiles having life, and winged creatures flying above the earth in the firmament of heaven, and it was so. And God made great whales, and every living reptile, which the waters brought forth according to their kinds, and every creature that flies with wings according to its kind, and God saw that they were good. And God blessed them saying, Increase and multiply and fill the waters in the seas, and let the creatures that fly be multiplied on the earth. And there was evening and there was morning, the fifth day. – Genesis 1: 14-23
In Brothers Karamazov, the boy Smerdyakov mockingly asks the pious Grigoriy how there could have been light on the first day if God did not create the sun until the fourth day. He grows up to be a nihilist who murders his father without remorse.
On the first day, God said, “Let there be light.” God did not need to sun to make the light. His light – both the uncreated light and the created light – illumined all that He made on the First, Second, and Third Days of Creation. He created the sun and moon and stars as servants of the light; they are not light itself. Likewise, God did not need the brain to create mind. Being the Uncreated Mind, He created countless bodiless intelligences, the Angels, before this world came to be. Man’s physical organs of thought – both the brain and the heart – He created as servants of the mind; they are not mind itself.
To make clear that the sun, moon, and stars are not gods, God inspires Moses to state that the Lord made them “…for signs and for seasons, for days and for years.” God made all the vast physical cosmos, whose awesome grandeur and unimaginable dimensions human science has confirmed in our time, to be a calendar for man, a servant of man. For man alone is made in the Image of God. One human heart is potentially greater than the entire physical cosmos, for into the heart of the baptized the Holy Trinity comes to dwell.
All man’s ills – of mind, heart, and body – arise when he worships creatures and not the Creator as the source of his life. All man’s ills – of mind, heart, and body – arise when he forgets the nobility of his divine calling. During Great Lent, we re-learn that God is God, and that we must worship Him alone. We re-learn that He made us in His Image and that we must recover the primordial Likeness. By re-learning our original nobility, we come to lament our present poverty, and we aspire to the Paradise that we lost through sin.
This commentary was taken from The Eternal Sacrifice: The Genesis Readings for Great Lent by Fr. Steven Allen. You can order a copy from Lulu at http://www.lulu.com/spotlight/FrStevenAllen
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I plan to post the daily entries from my book The Eternal Sacrifice each weekday of Great Lent, here at orthodoxtruth.org, as well as to make an audio recording for a new Spreaker podcast, also entitled The Eternal Sacrifice. Order the book at http://www.lulu.com/spotlight/FrStevenAllen and tell others about it!
I
like short lists. When you have a short list, you actually get
things done. This is supremely true in spiritual life, where we tend
to overburden ourselves with impossible goals and end up doing
nothing. “The better is the enemy of the good.”
To
perform all the spiritual exercises of the Orthodox Great Lent is
simply impossible. The Holy Fathers designed it this way, so that
we would fall flat on our faces and realize that we are unspiritual
people, which is the first step on the path to sanity (much less
salvation). But to perform some of the Lenten exercises is
certainly possible and, indeed, obligatory. If you cannot rouse
yourself to do something – anything – beyond your usual
devotions (or lack thereof) during the solemn Paschal Fast, you may
as well stop calling yourself a Christian.
I
offer you this little book as an aid to enjoying one of the treasures
of Great Lent, the passages from the Book of Genesis read every
weekday at Vespers during Lent, from Clean Monday through the eve of
Lazarus Saturday. With few exceptions, most parish churches do not
offer weekday services every day of Lent, though most try at least
to open their doors on Wednesdays and Fridays. And even if one’s
parish church is blessed to perform the daily sacrifice of praise,
very few of her parishioners can simply stroll down the street and
pop in to hear the service at leisure, because of the unChristian –
not to say inhuman – demands of contemporary life. But one can take
a little book to work or school and read a portion of the service for
a few minutes during a break, or keep it by one’s favorite place to
read at home. This is one such little book.
I
call the book The Eternal Sacrifice to highlight one aspect of
the typology of Genesis that speaks directly to the Paschal Mystery,
that is, the types (foreshadowings, prophecies-in-action) of
Our Lord’s supreme priestly Holocaust for us, the bloody Sacrifice of
Himself on the altar of the Cross, which in turn became the basis for
the Church’s daily mystical sacrifice of the Lamb of God forever
slain for us, in the Divine Liturgy. When we participate
attentively at the Divine Liturgy, and, supremely, when we receive
His sacrificed, living, and true Body and Blood in Holy Communion, we
step from this passing world into the eternal moment before the
world, when the Lamb of God was already mystically slain in the Holy
Trinity’s pre-eternal counsel for our salvation; we enter the
in-time yet out-of-time moment of Our Lord’s Passover through death
to life in His death on the Cross and rising from the Tomb; and we
enter the eternal Kingdom, where we shall sit down and feast forever
at the Banquet of the Lamb, and He Who Is, Who Was, and Who Ever
Shall Be will give us Himself without end and without stint, always
more and more, and more wondrously, forever.
So
that you do not have to go back and forth from your Bible to this
volume, I have incorporated the daily selections from Genesis into
the book, followed each day by some pious thoughts which I hope will
help you penetrate the sacred text for spiritual benefit. If only a
few of these words do indeed spur you to greater love for Our Lord in
His Sacrifice for us and thereby increase the grace you receive at
your Paschal communion, please do think of their author on the Bright
Night, and offer a prayer for
your
servant in Christ,
Steven Allen, Priest
First Week of Lent – Monday
(Clean Monday)
In
the beginning God made the heaven and the earth. But the earth was
unsightly and unfurnished, and darkness was over the deep, and the
Spirit of God moved over the water. And God said, Let there be light,
and there was light. And God saw the light that it was good, and God
divided between the light and the darkness. And God called the light
Day, and the darkness he called Night, and there was evening and
there was morning, the first day. And God said, Let there be a
firmament in the midst of the water, and let it be a division between
water and water, and it was so. And God made the firmament, and God
divided between the water which was under the firmament and the water
which was above the firmament. And God called the firmament Heaven,
and God saw that it was good, and there was evening and there was
morning, the second day. And God said, Let the water which is under
the heaven be collected into one place, and let the dry land appear,
and it was so. And the water which was under the heaven was collected
into its places, and the dry land appeared. And God called the dry
land Earth, and the gatherings of the waters he called Seas, and God
saw that it was good. And God said, Let the earth bring forth the
herb of grass bearing seed according to its kind and according to its
likeness, and the fruit-tree bearing fruit whose seed is in it,
according to its kind on the earth, and it was so. And the earth
brought forth the herb of grass bearing seed according to its kind
and according to its likeness, and the fruit tree bearing fruit whose
seed is in it, according to its kind on the earth, and God saw that
it was good. And there was evening and there was morning, the third
day. – Genesis
1: 1-13
As
we begin Great Lent, we begin also to read the Book of Genesis at
Vespers. The first words remind us of the foundation of all
spiritual life, the firm conviction that God is our Creator and that
we are His creatures:
In
the beginning God made the heaven and the earth.
The
infinitely good and wise God, the omnipotent One, brought all things
from nothing into being. This includes you and me.
My
existence is contingent, not necessary. The blink of an eye
separates me in time from the abyss of nothingness from which I came,
and the blink of an eye separates me in time from the hour of my
death. Compared to God, I am nothing.
All
of our problems arise from forgetting this fundamental reality, in
one way or another. If only we were actively mindful of this at
every day and hour, we would always be happy. Our sorrows come from
trying to be God. This is true of each of us personally as
well as the entire human race. When we remember that we are finite,
sinful, and doomed to die, all of life comes into perspective, and we
can attain peace of heart.
May the grace of this Great Lent, which may be our last, bring us to constant remembrance that we are creatures and therefore our Creator should be everything to us.
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Again,
thanks to our donors. May the Lord reward your love with His grace!
To our other listeners: please consider a gift to help me out. If
you have PayPal, you can send a gift to my account at
[email protected]. If you want to receive a receipt for a tax
deduction, contact me at that email, and I can tell you how to donate
to our parish, who in turn will pass the donation on to me and send
you a receipt.
Introduction
In
our most recent series of classes we have, as it were, made out a
case for leaving or remaining out of World Orthodoxy in order not to
be in communion with the heresy of ecumenism, and for belonging to
one of the Orthodox bodies that call themselves the True or Genuine
Orthodox. Those listening may say at this point, “That’s all
well and good, but which
True Orthodox
jurisdiction should I join? There are so many of them, and how do I
discern which is legitimate, or at least has the best argument for
legitimacy?” Today I am not going to tell you which one you
should join. I shall tell you where I am, and I hope to give you
criteria for making your own choice by means of a discussion of
issues that come up when in the midst of making such a momentous
decision.
By
the way, I hope to finish this section of our Survival Course very
soon. If you will recall, after that whole section on the Great
Stereopticon, I planned to talk about what the bad guys were using
the Stereopticon to destroy: Church, Family, and Society. This
section we are concluding, “Faith Comes First,” has been
about the Church, which is the most important thing, without which
the other two things don’t make sense. I think by this point I have
said enough on these questions of ecumenism and “World” or
“official” Orthodoxy vs. “True” Orthodoxy, or at
least enough to give you some tools to deal with these things. In
this class and the next, I would like to address this question of
discerning where to go – or where to stay – in the True Orthodox
world. This question affects those who are thinking of leaving World
Orthodoxy for a True Orthodox jurisdiction, as well as those within
True Orthodoxy who are questioning where they are and are wondering
if they should be somewhere else. This will be our final sub-topic
under “Faith Comes First,” taking up this class and the
next, and then I would like to move on to the current crisis of the
family and society, constructing our Orthodox lens through which to
view these things.
A.
Our Inner Struggle
1. A time of crisis: can produce fear and confusion. You feel
like the ground is moving under your feet. You can be depressed, as
in the early stages of grieving or tempted to unbelief.
2. So we must be convinced that God loves us and desires our
salvation. Life is not a trick question.
3.
Must keep up our spiritual life: prayer, spiritual reading (not
just polemical or apologetic reading), fasting, acts of charity, etc.
4.
Don’t make hasty decisions. Pray, study, seek counsel. Give
your priest, your bishop, and where you are now the benefit of the
doubt and ask them to give you answers, and then ponder those answers
objectively. Don’t stop going to communion or otherwise
participating until you have arrived at a point of moral certainty
and peace of heart.
B.
Full Disclosure
I
am a priest in the Church of the Genuine Orthodox Christians of
Greece, whose synod’s first hierarch is Archbishop Kallinikos of
Athens. The English language website of our synod in Greece can be
found at
https://sites.google.com/view/ecclesia-goc-en/home?authuser=0.
The website of the Metropolis of America, to which my parish
belongs, is at http://hotca.org/
In
the course of our talk today, I am not going to tell you, “You
must join (or stay in) the jurisdiction I belong to.” If you
want to know my opinion of it, all you need to know is that I am in
it and I am not leaving it; in other words my conscience tells me
that this jurisdiction fulfills the criteria I shall discuss below to
the extent that I have a moral certitude that I am in the Church and
that I can function, at least in a quasi-normal fashion, as a priest.
C.
Good Signs, Bad Signs
Choosing
a church is like choosing a spouse – you look for good signs and for
bad signs. The good signs need to outweigh the bad signs in a
critical mass, to the point at which you can say with peace of mind,
“This is the one.” Here is a list, in no particular order,
of questions to ask yourself about a jurisdiction calling itself
“True Orthodox.”
1.
Is it a one-man show? One bishop or one dominant bishop or “elder”
who runs his synod like a personal enterprise. Bad sign. Or is it
historically a collection of bishops with varying personalities,
outlooks, and from different places and with different spiritual
fathers?
2.
Do they spend more time talking about what they are for or what they
are against?
a.
Are they still teaching and living the ABC’s of Orthodoxy? or…
b.
Do they spend all of their time on polemics against others?
c.
Do they speak of their opponents with charity or with malice?
d.
Are they obsessed with getting you to join them? “We are it,
and
if you don’t join us, you are doomed.”
3.
Is it run like a cult? Is there a spectrum of opinion allowed on
secondary issues? Does Fearless Leader use cult methods like
guilt-loading (“You have disappointed me!),
inspiring phone campaigns to harass you, encouraging stool pigeon
behavior in which everyone goes straight to Fearless Leader instead
of resolving problems among themselves, public shaming, and so forth?
4.
Do the bishops and priests act like down to earth people (good
sign), or are they phony baloney fake pious/fake elder types (bad
sign)? Do they have an air of superiority or elitism, whether
spiritual or intellectual? Are you talking to a real person or
someone putting on a front of holiness or learning?
5.
Historically, how many degrees of separation are there between this
TOC hierarchy and the historical institution of their national
Church? Is it a split of a split of a split of a split? The
greater number of degrees a particular group gets from the original
decision to break communion with the ecumenist official church, the
more difficult of proof the claim of the particular group becomes.
6.
In the history of this group, were there one or more incidents in
which a key figure fled his old jurisdiction while under
investigation for moral offenses? Bad sign. Or, on the other hand,
are they free of this, and moreover show a zeal for investigating and
rooting out such problems? Good sign.
7.
Do these bishops and priests show an awareness and zeal for helping
families deal with real life issues, or are they in denial about what
is going on out there and just leading insulated lives? If the
latter, this does not mean that they do not have sacramental validity
or canonicity, but it does mean that they are just leading worldly
lives with a churchy veneer, and they won’t be much interested in
helping you.
8.
On the spectrum of apocalypticism vs. normie-ism, are they too much
one way or the other – so apocalyptic that they are nuts, or so
normie that you might as well have just stayed New Calendar (or
United Methodist, for that matter)? Bad sign. Or are they striving
earnestly to read the signs of the times and respond soberly? Good
sign.
9.
Perhaps the most important sign: Are they striving for unity (good
sign) or are they content with disunity or even aggressively pursuing
disunity (bad sign)? Remember: schism is just as deadly as heresy.
Breaking communion with the great historical church institutions is
an emergency
situation, not
the norm, and sober TOC bishops are aware of this, and they strive to
show forth the unity of the Church with their brother TOCs, eschewing
a schismatic mentality and showing a catholic spirit. And not only do
they strive for unity with their fellow TOCs, are they also are
constantly aware of, praying for, and reaching out to the “World
Orthodox”? Good sign. Or do they just condemn them and are
content with this? Bad sign.
We’ll continue this discussion in Class 52 and wrap up the “Faith Comes First” section.
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This talk was given at a conference for young adults held at St. Irene of Chrysovalantou Church in Rochester Hills, Michigan, on the Feast of the Meeting of the Lord, 2/15 February 2020. You can listen to a recording of this talk at https://www.spreaker.com/user/youngfaithradio/the-call-of-god
Greeting
My
dear brothers and sisters in Christ, it is with profound emotion and
a sense of unworthiness that I greet you on behalf of our parish and
welcome you to our little gathering today. Profound emotion,
because I see before me men and women in the flower of their young
adulthood who desire to follow the Lord Jesus Christ, and therefore
to take up His Cross. A sense of unworthiness, because I know, as
all preachers and teachers should do, that my deeds fall far short of
my words, that my mediocre life does not match my exalted speech.
Yet I must speak, for that is my vocation. God has called me, and I
must obey. This calling, this vocation, this obedience, in the
lives of each one of us, is what I wish to address today.
You
Are Precious in the Eyes of God
Everyone
wants to feel special, that his existence is somehow something
unique, and that his life has a permanent and transcendent meaning
that the world cannot give and cannot take away. We know that the
ancestral sin distorts this intuition into egoism, we know that in
pursuit of his dream of transcendence, man runs after the false
transcendence of gratifying his passions, the false specialness of
selfishness, and yet the intuition itself – that I am unique, that I
am permanent, that I have a transcendent origin, purpose, and destiny
– is true, and the distortion does not invalidate this intuition but
only tragically prevents me from understanding and fulfilling its
true meaning. We Orthodox Christians know the true meaning of this
intuition: That the Holy Trinity created our race to enjoy most
intimate communion with the All-Good God, to be the friends of God,
and to live with Him forever in unspeakable delight, growing in the
knowledge and love of God endlessly, forever. And this not en
masse,
so to speak, not as uniform, identical, merely individuated slices of
a mass of human nature, but with our shared human nature
enhypostasized in the radically unique yet radically related members
of a vast choir of immortal existent beings, a harmonious ensemble
of love enjoying a perfect unity not imposed by a soulless uniformity
but bestowed graciously by Christ, according to Whose Image each
unique person comes into existence by the sovereign will and
foreknowledge of God. This choir, this ensemble, this joyful yet
solemn army of uniquely precious yet intimately united brothers and
sisters – we call the Church. This sovereign will, this
foreknowledge, this predestination, this completely free decision of
God, in all eternity, both to make each one of us according to the
image of His Son, and then to re-make us according to His likeness by
Faith and Baptism, should give to each of us an absolute confidence
and serenity. On the night before He died, Our Lord said to His
disciples, “Peace I leave with you, my peace I give unto you:
not as the world giveth, give I unto you. Let not your heart be
troubled, neither let it be afraid.” (John 14:27)
You
are Called by God
This peace comes with a vocation from Christ, a calling, a unique obedience for each of us, for earlier in His allocution at the Mystical Supper, the Lord said this also: “Let not your heart be troubled: ye believe in God, believe also in Me. In my Father’s house are many mansions: if it were not so, I would have told you. I go to prepare a place for you.” (John 14:1-2). In the heavenly kingdom, then, each one of the saved will enjoy a radically unique relationship with the Lord – his own mansion – while enjoying a radical unity in Christ with all the angels and saints. We can know this only by divine revelation, as a divine mystery, a paradox that is as radically true – and rings radically true in the inner chamber of the heart – as it is logically impossible to comprehend. And we do know this, because we are the Orthodox Christians, those chosen by God to know His inner mysteries, to be His friends.
Each one of you, then, is known intimately – most intimately – and is loved – infinitely – by God. He created you, and He holds you in existence this very moment. And, moreover – wonder of wonders – He became a man and died for you, and he would have died for you if you had been the only sinner in the universe. So you do not belong to yourself: By creation, by purchase, and by adoption, God owns you – you are a slave of God. St. Paul writes to the Corinthians, “What? know ye not that your body is the temple of the Holy Ghost which is in you, which ye have of God, and ye are not your own? For ye are bought with a price: therefore glorify God in your body, and in your spirit, which are God’s.” (I Corinthians 6:20). In the context of the epistle, St. Paul is admonishing the reader to be chaste and avoid sins of the flesh, but we can also apply this to the whole of our lives: We belong to God, He owns us, and He expects something from us, the dedication of our entire body and spirit – that is, our whole selves. We may not, cannot, must not live on autopilot, just going through life aimlessly, from one experience to another, from one relationship to another, as our whim or passions or worldly ambition drive us. We must seek the will of God for our lives and seek to do it, with all of our hearts and souls and minds and bodies.
Discerning
Your Vocation
So here you are, trying to discern: What is God’s will for my life? On the one hand, your call is the same as every Christian’s, and the path is the same. Your call is to live the promise given at Baptism, to renounce Satan and be united to Christ. Your path is the path of the Cross, taking upon yourself whatever sorrows result from obeying God’s commandments, a path full of difficulties here in this life but also many joys in this life, leading ultimately through death to eternal life. The Orthodox dogmas, the Orthodox morals, the Orthodox worship, the Orthodox spirituality, are the same for everyone, and all of the tools we need for prayer, worship, basic rules for living, and so forth, are abundantly available. But because each of us is also unique, and each of us has a unique path laid out for him in the mind and will of God, we are called not only to the general vocation of all Christians, but each of us to his own unique path of life, within the framework either of sanctified celibacy* or holy matrimony and family life.
I believe that, in the words of the first stichiron we will chant at Vespers for Palm Sunday, “The grace of the Holy Spirit has gathered us together.” Our call to be here today, now, in this particular gathering, is for a sacred purpose determined by God, and I venture to think – I humbly propose – that this purpose is to help each other begin a determined program of seeking the path of life for each of us. The first step is prayer, prayer specifically for the Lord to reveal His way, to open the doors we need opened, to send us the spouse or monastic guide – the father or mother in Christ – that He intends for us. Let us ask every day, not only for ourselves, but for one another, that the Lord’s will be revealed to us, and that we will have the wisdom and power to do it. “A brother helped by a brother is a strong city.”
In
this particular task of seeking God’s will, there are particular
prayers that are most appropriate. The most obvious is the Our
Father itself, in which we say daily “Thy will be done.” In
the Garden of Gethsemane, Our Lord Himself said to the Father, “Not
My will but Thine be done.” We could repeat these very words
many times a day mentally, asking God to take away all of our
delusions, ignorance, and self-will, and replace them with His
wisdom, knowledge, and self-sacrifice. We could ask Him to give us
more accurate self-knowledge, ending with the final phrase of the
Kontakion for the Holy Apostles: “O Lord, enable me to see
myself as I really am, Thou
Who alone knowest the secrets of the heart.” As
you begin to understand yourself, you begin to understand other
people, and also the right people become attracted to you and come
into your life. This is a law of human nature.
One
of my favorite books is The
Love of God, the
life of the Elder Gabriel of the Seven Lakes monastery in Russia, who
reposed in 1915 (published by St. Herman Press). In his spiritual
testament to his disciples, he advised them, when seeking
enlightenment from God, to say the 17th Kathisma, Ps. 118. One
prayer program you could undertake for a specific time period, when
seeking earnestly for God to reveal His will for your life, would be
to read all of, or one stasis of Ps. 118 every day for forty days. Or
you could purchase the commentary of St. Theophan the Recluse on Ps.
118 from St. John of Kronstadt Press, and just read a verse of the
psalm every day with the commentary until you are finished. And
with reading, tell the Lord you seek to know and do His holy will.
Closing
I just wanted to make these few prepared remarks before we begin our roundtable discussion, to set the tone for our gathering: We have been called together today by the Holy Spirit, by the wisdom and will of God. Each of us is unique and precious in the eyes of God. Each of us has a path laid out for us by the Lord, which we should seek to discern. We must pray for the Lord to reveal His will, to open the doors we need opened, and to send the right people and perhaps that one, special right person into our lives. We should undertake the task of praying not only for ourselves but for each other, that the Lord’s will be done in our lives this day and always. God loves us, His will is to save us, and He loves the prayer of the contrite and broken heart. Let us approach the Throne of Mercy, which is His Cross, and come to Him in time of need. May His holy will be done in our lives, this day and every day. Amen.
* Note: I like to use the term “celibacy” sometimes instead of “monasticism,” because there is such a thing as a call to live a pious single life – we know so many examples of this throughout the history of the Church and in the recent experience of those alive today: dedicated and pious people who never married yet never received the monastic habit, who dedicated themselves in service to the Church. A recent, celebrated figure that comes to mind, for example, is the writer Alexandros Papadiamantis. In other words, someone is not a failure if he cannot find a spouse or find the right monastery to join. If he seeks the Lord’s will with all his heart and serves the Church, he most certainly is not a failure in the eyes of God. The Church exhorts us to seek matrimony or monasticism because it is so hard to live by oneself in the world without the support and the demands of family – whether the natural family or a monastic family. Therefore the ascetic feat of the pious single person who finds salvation and acquires holiness is, in some ways, even greater than that of the married person or one living in the monastic environment. It is dangerous, however, for most people to remain single – especially men – because everyone needs to sacrifice his egoism in order to be saved, and you have to be very proactive, a very special person with a special grace, to do that outside the structured demands of family or monastery.
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Again,
thanks to our donors. May the Lord reward your love with His grace!
To our other listeners: please consider a gift to help me out. If
you have PayPal, you can send a gift to my account at
[email protected]. If you want to receive a receipt for a tax
deduction, contact me at that email, and I can tell you how to donate
to our parish, who in turn will pass the donation on to me and send
you a receipt.
Introduction
– “Faith Comes First” Section Up to this Point
Let’s
once more recap where we are right now:
Beginning
with Class 41, we have been talking about the apostasy of the
historical Orthodox hierarchies. I called this part of our course
“Faith Comes First,” because the pure confession of the
Orthodox Faith is the prerequisite for belonging to the Church, and
therefore to choose which bishop or hierarchy to which one should
submit oneself, one must start with the question, “Who confesses
the Orthodox faith?” Being in the outward or legal possession
of the title and the temporalities of an ancient institution does not
make one a bishop if one is a heretic. We know this from Holy
Scripture, from all of Church history, from the witness and writings
of the Fathers, from the Church’s canonical tradition, and from
common sense.
In
Classes 41 through 43, we discussed general principles of
ecclesiology and discernment, as well as making a side-trip into the
issues of monarchism and nationalism. In Class 44, we outlined the
history of the involvement of World Orthodoxy in the ecumenical
movement in the 20th century, especially the Ecumenical
Patriarchate. In Classes 45 through 48, we discussed the history of
the Russian Church, ending with the destruction of the Russian Church
Abroad by the Moscow Patriarchate in 2007. In our last session,
Class 49, I offered a summary of the Russian situation, and in this
session, Class 50, I propose to summarize the situation in the rest
of the Orthodox world. Last time, I said that I would use this
class, as well, to make some suggestions and provide some guidelines
for those who are wondering if they are in the right jurisdiction and
are trying to decide where they belong. But that would make this
session too long. We shall try to do that in our next talk.
Today,
then, we are going to talk about the various official or state church
hierarchies – the ones who call themselves “canonical” and
offhandedly label the True Orthodox as “uncanonical” – and
I propose to point out three salient realities: 1. All of these
groups find themselves in various stages of heresy or apostasy. 2.
They justify themselves and condemn us by redefining canonicity. 3.
Most of their faithful are nominal Orthodox who have no interest in
the Faith itself but are at best somewhat loyal to their national
identity, of which Orthodoxy is a part. There is also, however, a
small pious minority who are kept trapped in “officialness”
by the lure of elders, visions, and miracles that supposedly
demonstrate that, despite the obvious heresy of their hierarchy, the
“official” churches are still the real Church.
I.
The Official Hierarchies Are Both Heretical and Apostate
Wait
a second: How can you be both
heretical and apostate?
“Heretical” means that you call yourself a Christian, but
that you deny or distort one or more of the Church’s dogmas.
“Apostate” means that you have left off being a Christian
altogether and have clearly become something else: an atheist, a
Freemason, a Jew or Mohammedan or pagan, something obviously not
Christian. Our situation today, however, though we have a lot of
problems in common with previous generations, has its own peculiar
features (every age has its peculiar features), one of which is that
the official Church leadership is simultaneously both heretical and
apostate:
Heretical:
The official Church
leadership is heretical,
in that they either
publicly teach heresy or, even if they do not teach it, they are in
communion with heresy – that is, the demonic energies that naturally
accompany heresy enter into them when they concelebrate or simply
have mysteriological communion with the public heretics. They also
acquiesce in the heresy by their silence, either by their actual
silence or, worse, by being the phony, controlled opposition who
claim to disagree but ultimately always give in: Qui
tacet consentire videtur – He
that is silent appears to agree. Remember that homologia
– confession of the
Faith – of its nature must include open, public confession of the
Faith, not merely an inward conviction.
Apostate:
The official Church
leadership is apostate
through their open
allegiance to organizations established by Antichrist forces to bring
about the destruction of the Church. This is actually worse than
mere apostasy, because they have not only left the Church, but they
are also working to destroy the Church, while
retaining the visible leadership in the historical Church
institutions.
A.
The World Council of Churches and Like Organizations
By
now, of course, we’ve mentioned the WCC many times.
–
It was set up by the global elite as a key element of One World
Religion and One World Government (recall our reference to Malachi
Martin’s Keys of This
Blood – but that’s just
one source; you don’t even need to dig deep – just read their own
website and you’ll quickly figure out what they are about).
Extremely demonized people set this thing up, keep it going, and fund
it precisely to combat God Himself and spread the kingdom of Satan in
this world.
– Long
ago it went way beyond its supposed mission of uniting Christians and
began to promote unity with non-Christians, and, moreover, to sponsor
pagan, even openly demonic, worship at its meetings, demonic worship
attended by “official” Orthodox bishops, to which they did
not object: totem poles, the sacred fire of shamanism, sacred dance,
etc.
–
Go to the WCC website, click on their membership list at
https://www.oikoumene.org/en/member-churches
and see for yourself if the jurisdiction you belong to belongs to the
WCC or is in communion with bodies that belong to them. Most World
Orthodox in America belong to the Greek Archdiocese under the
Ecumenical Patriarchate, the OCA, the Antiochian Archdiocese, the
Romanian Patriarchate, the Moscow Patriarchate (either straight up MP
or ROCOR-MP – a distinction without a difference), or the Serbian
Patriarchate. All of these hierarchies are organic members (not
merely observers) of the WCC. The Bulgarian Patriarchate and
Georgian Patriarchate do not belong to the WCC, but they are in
communion with those who do – again, a distinction without a
difference.
– The
WCC is just the flagship of a vast network of organizations on the
global and national level to promote One World Religion and One World
Government. Dialogues, conferences, committees – you name it – often
including common prayer, are going on all the time. Back in the
1960’s, this kind of thing was still shocking, and only occurred now
and then. Now it is constant and ongoing, and no one is shocked
anymore. Everyone is inured to it, and if you object, you are called
an extremist or fundamentalist or a terrorist of some kind.
If your jurisdiction belongs to the WCC and like organizations, try asking your priest why. Try asking your bishop why. You will likely get one of several responses:
a.
“These things are not your concern.” (I.e., “Don’t
worry your pretty little head about it”). Such matters are
strictly the province of the hierarchy (and maybe the clergy). Always
remember: When people in power forbid legitimate discussion, that
means they have something to hide and that they don’t have a valid
argument. We are rational sheep in the flock of Christ, not cult
members or robots.
b.
“Vladika (or Despota or Sayedna or His Excellency or whoever)
does not like this, but what can one do?” (I.e., Christian
confession allows a Get Out of Jail Free Card to those who might
suffer or be inconvenienced by confessing. The real moral code of
official Orthodoxy is simply pragmatism).
c.
“Have you been reading Old Calendarist propaganda? Don’t listen
to those uncanonical, wacko, fundamentalist extremists!”
(I.e., they are a bunch of smelly, crazy, uncool losers, and
therefore we are right).
d.
“Don’t worry – it’s bad now, but we’re working on this, and it
will get better.” (I.e. though we’ve been saying this for
decades, and it keeps getting worse, just hang in there – really,
honestly,
we
are
working
on it!”)
e.
“You are not being spiritual. If you had a purified nous
(and
all that sort of thing) you would see
that
there is no problem here.” (Requiring an undefined spiritual
state, which one will never attain, as a prerequisite for being in
the discussion).
f.
“Elder (St., whatever) So and So had a vision and…”
“Newly canonized saint So and So said…” (See the
section on Elderism below).
g. “The
bishop’s heresy or apostasy is a private sin of his; it doesn’t
affect the people who commemorate him and commune with him.”
(I.e, the entire witness of Scripture and Tradition regarding
ecclesiology is false – Orthodoxy is really an Eastern variant of
Protestantism).
The list goes on. Basically, they are all variants of “Shut up.” What you will not hear is a clearly articulated apologia based on Scripture and Tradition, because there is none.
The
W.C.C. is the main organ through which the “official”
bishops serve the cause of Ecumenism with liberal Protestants and
non-Christians. The other two fronts in Ecumenism are the bilateral
activities with the Vatican and with the Monophysites.
B.
Ecumenism with the Vatican
The
supposed Lifting of the Anathemas by Patriarch Athenagoras in
December of 1965, the Balamand Agreement of 1993, and the ongoing
joint prayers with the pope and local Roman Catholic bishops and
clergy can only mean one thing: The position of the “canonical
Orthodox” that Orthodoxy and Roman Catholicism are really the
same religion. This is not only taught at the highest levels, it is
carried out on the local level, when official Orthodox clergy
recognize Roman Catholic sacraments and deny the sacraments of the
True Orthodox. In other words, they have one religion in common with
the RC’s, while the True Orthodox, who actually believe in Orthodoxy
and not papism, have a different
religion from
official Orthodoxy.
The
Ecumenical Patriarchate and the Moscow Patriarchate, the two biggest
power brokers in official Orthodoxy, are both extremely active in
ecumenism with the popes. (For those who cling to the idea that the
MP is not as ecumenist as the EP, here is a link to an article about
recent MP/Vatican ecumenism:
https://nftu.net/amidst-fight-with-phanar-mp-still-goes-full-blast-with-ecumenism-with-vatican/
) This has not changed, but rather has been stable, ongoing, and
intensifying, as the popes get worse and worse, just as membership in
the WCC has not been canceled as liberal Protestantism descends into
overt paganism.
It’s
essential to realize that the post-Vatican II popes do
not believe in Catholicism. They
have created a new religion, or, rather, they have put a Catholic
veneer on the One World Religion which they have in common with the
officially Orthodox ecumenists. The official Orthodox always
dialogue and pray with the worst
of
Catholic and Protestant leaders, the ones who are, like them, working
for the global elite that is setting up the One World Religion and
Government.
Note that Vatican ecumenism, like WCC ecumenism, long ago went beyond the bounds of the project of Christian unity to the promotion of openly satanic worship. Last year, Pope Francis made a big splash by worshipping Pachamama, a fertility goddess of the Latin American tribal religion. But this is nothing new. Here are photographs of the supposedly conservative Pope Benedict presiding over a voodoo ceremony in a famous and revered Catholic church in Assisi. Notice that Patriarch Bartholomew is right next to him: https://www.traditioninaction.org/RevolutionPhotos/A442rcVoodoo.html And, of course, before him, the supposed conservative John Paul II sponsored pagan worship at Assisi, and he went all over the world incorporating pagan elements into Catholic worship at which he presided. There are no words to describe how evil this is. And the official Orthodox bishops, as a body, not only do not object to it, call it out, and denounce it, but remain in their official policy of dialogue and joint worship with the pope.
St. Cosmas Aitolos once said that there have been three great falls in history – the fall of Adam, the fall of Judas, and the fall of the papacy. The popes have not repented of their fall – they are still Judases. And when a supposedly Orthodox bishop kisses his hand and hails him as a brother bishop, he becomes a Judas too.
C.
Ecumenism with the Monophysites
Despite
all their heresy and apostasy, the official Orthodox leadership have
still not brought about complete unity – full formal communion and
organizational identity – with the Roman Catholics and Protestants.
The outward differences in style make complete unity sociologically
difficult – there’s too much of a culture gap. But there is some
low-hanging fruit that all the ecumenist official leadership have
been running after, and that is full communion with the Monophysites.
They look and smell and feel more like us, and so it’s an easier
sell. The Chambesy agreement of 1990 says that the Chalcedonians
and anti-Chalcedonians both really believe the same things about Our
Lord’s Person and Natures, and therefore you don’t have to accept the
Fourth Ecumenical Council in order to be Orthodox. None of the
official hierarchies have rejected this, and, moreover, on the basis
of this understanding, they are either in full communion with the
Monophysites, as is the Antiochian Patriarchate, or simply give
communion to Monophysite laity on a regular basis and make frequent
statements that “we are really the same.” Just last year,
Patriarch Irenej of Serbia was in Syria and stated that the
Monophysites and the Orthodox are the same Church. This is just one
example. It’s so common now, that sacramental unity is a fait
accompli, regardless
of where the individual national churches stand officially on paper.
Really, nothing could be more blatant or easier to understand: If you are in official Orthodoxy, the position of your hierarchy is that it is no longer (or never was?) necessary to accept all Seven Ecumenical Councils to be in the Church. Is this what you believe?
II.
The Re-Definition of Canonicity
Pious
clergy and laity in World Orthodoxy may know about all of the above,
and they worry about it, but they are told that one must stay in
World Orthodoxy, because World Orthodoxy is “canonical” and
the various True Orthodox or Old Calendarist or Catacomb hierarchies
are “uncanonical.” But their definition of “canonical”
is that they are the big guys who have the titles and the property,
not
that
they are the ones who observe the canons. They are recognized by
the world as being the official organization. That’s about it. If
you examine the evidence, you will see that the canons they harp on
are the ones about being submitted to this or that institutional
authority (canons they are always fighting about and breaking
anyway), and the canons they ignore are the one about keeping the
Faith. The canons the Old Calendarists are breaking all the time are
the ones about organization, but the ones they keep are the ones
about not betraying the Faith. Ask yourself which path is the
lesser of two evils. Which party is more canonical?
III. Elderism
The
small minority of pious people in World Orthodoxy have become
enamored of recent elders and supposed saints like the late Fr.
Paisios of Mount Athos, or the recently reposed Fr. Ephraim of
Arizona. The former is the one who invented and popularized the
idea that the bishop’s heresy is purely a personal sin and has no
effect on the clergy or the faithful. The latter is widely known
for constantly having visions on the basis of which he made all the
major decisions for his followers. Now that he’s dead, apparently
the followers are having visions of him, which tell them to stay in
the State Church of Greece or the Ecumenical Patriarchate in order to
be saved. These are not the only ones: There is Porphyrios, too,
for example, and the Russian Fr. Sophrony Zakharov who died in
England. They are all “poster boys” for World Orthodox
“conservatism.”
The basic teaching of this New Elderism is this: Even if the bishop is a heretic, if you have a holy elder, his epitrachelion covers you, and the bishop’s heresy does not affect you. I challenge any of these people to find this teaching in the history of the Church.
A
corollary of this teaching is this: To remain in the Church, you
must commemorate a bishop whom you know is a heretic. I also
challenge anyone to find support for this
in the history of the Church.
Another reality is this: We True Orthodox also have holy elders. They also have worked miracles and demonstrated high levels of spiritual life. In this regard, I would like for everyone to listen to this interview with our Metropolitan Demetrius (GOC-K, in America), regarding the Elder Joseph the Hesychast of Mt. Athos and Elder Ephraim of Arizona, not only because it raises questions about Fr. Ephraim’s statements and the position of the New Calendar elders in general, but also because His Eminence talks about holy people in the Old Calendar Church that perhaps many of our listeners have never heard of. Here is the link to this important interview: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5rDMZyVC2R0
So
they
have “holy elders.” We
have
“holy elders.” But
their elders commmorated heretics, and our elders commemorated
Orthodox bishops. That
is the difference.
Ultimately, what should a World Orthodox lower clergyman or layman do? In 2010 a friend of mine, who at the time was a monk of Holy Trinity Monastery in Jordanville, was wrestling with this question. He wrote a lengthy and detailed essay, which I have published at my blog, here: https://orthodoxtruth.org/uncategorized/monk-theophans-essay-on-ecumenism/ I have published it not necessarily because I agree with the nuances of his opinions on the grace/no grace question, or his evaluation of the various Old Calendar groups, which is a topic for another day. I have published it because 1. It is a great resource to find information on the ecumenist activities of the various “World” jurisdictions (note especially the long, well-documented section on the Monophysites), and 2. it is a model of how a sincere soul still within World Orthodoxy struggles with the questions at hand: “Go or stay? If Go, Where?”
More on those questions in our next class! For now, I would like to conclude with Fr. Theophan’s conclusion, which, you need to recall, he wrote in 2010 when he was in ROCOR-MP, part of World Orthodoxy:
“There
can be no doubt that sooner or later, the true Traditionalists in
World Orthodoxy will be forced
to
part with their ecumenical and sergianist hierarchs and in this way
eventually end up as a small and persecuted group – exactly as the
many True Orthodox Christians are now. That
is why it is so important to acknowledge the path of the spiritually
sober Old Calendar Churches. Because in categorically rejecting their
path we have already now made our choice of accepting the Antichrist.
The very moment we take part in or even just silently accept any of
the falsehood in World Orthodoxy, we immediately lose all
justification for being there. If we therefore continue to show our
acceptance of the apostatizing World Orthodoxy, our voluntary union
with them will unquestionably turn out to be to our very own
condemnation. ”
May the All-Merciful Lord enlighten all of us and bring us all together to His heavenly kingdom!
Posted inUncategorized|Comments Off on Orthodox Survival Course, Class 50: Faith Comes First – The Situation Today, Part II
The author of this 2010 essay was at the time a monk in the ROCOR-MP. I am publishing it chiefly as a resource to provide information about the participation of World Orthodoxy in Ecumenism. The author’s opinions on the nuances of the “grace/no grace” question, and whether or how long one can remain in World Orthodoxy were his own opinions at that time.
LETTER TO THE BISHOPS
The Royal Path
of Christian Love and True Confession.
The Lament from a Monk in ROCOR/MP.
“Blessed is the man that
walketh not in the counsel
of the ungodly.”
“Charity suffereth long, and is kind, charity envieth not;
charity vaunteth not itself, is not puffed up,
doth not behave itself unseemly, seeketh not her own,
is not easily provoked, thinketh no evil; rejoiceth not
in iniquity, but rejoiceth in the truth;
beareth all things, believeth all things, hopeth
all things, endureth all things.”
Contents
Introduction................................3
1) The Heresy of Monophysitism.................4
2) Ecumenism..................................20
3) The Orthodox Inter-Seminary Movement…….32
4) Toward full communion with the OCA………35
5) The Moscow Patriarchate………………..37
6) ROCOR/MP – before and now.................88
7) The upcoming Pan-Orthodox Council……….94
8) Dialogues of “Peace and Unity”…………102
9) A Need for a strong Orthodox Stand……..108
10) Love of this World........................113
11) The Greek Old Calendar Churches –
our former Friends........................117
12) World Orthodoxy – a new “Christianity”....119
13) “Obedience” or Faithfulness to Christ.....121
1
14) God’s Love to His Faithful in both the Old
Calendar Churches and World Orthodoxy….123
15) An ungodly Schism or a God-pleasing
Walling off from falsehood……………128
16) Grace or the right Confession of Faith…133
17) The Old Calendar Movement
and its Struggle…………………….135
18) The Royal Path
of true Love and Confession…………..145
19) The Sober Old Calendar Faithful and true
Traditionalists in World Orthodoxy –
our Unity in Love and Truth…………..150
20) World Orthodoxy or the
Old Calendar Movement………………..153
21) A Word of Ending…………………….156
Appendixes………………………….162
2
Introduction.
This is a quiet, but concerned voice from the Russian Orthodox
Church Abroad under the Moscow Patriarchate addressed to all Orthodox
faithful.
It presents information taken from original and official sources only,
or from other trustworthy sources. Nothing is from hearsay or rumors.
Writing this paper, I refer to the words said in 2001 by our Synod:
“The Synod of Bishops is not at all against the statement of other
views by the faithful children of the Church Abroad, or even suggestions
that it review one or another of the decisions adopted at the most recent
Council…[as long as] the expressions of disagreement [do not] take the
form of an open call to rebellion…and schism.”[1a, p.25, point 5].
This paper is not written with the intention of condemning anyone nor
with the slightest feeling of malice towards my brothers and sisters in Christ.
I have no intention of being sensational, of stirring up emotions or spreading
any lies or false rumors. Nor is it my intention to misuse the material
presented in this paper. But neither can I close my eyes to the facts set forth
in this text. These are facts regarding the general apostasy going on today,
which are presented together with some personal reflections, written I
believe, on the conscience of the Orthodox Church.
In May 2007 the Russian Orthodox Church outside of Russia
(ROCOR) united with the Moscow Patriarchate and World Orthodoxy. A
whole new chapter in its 90 years of true confession began. Three years have
now passed. Is ROCOR/MP still being a true confessor for Christ? The
material here presented may answer that question.
This paper is written not as an attack on the ROCOR/MP or anyone else, but rather as a concerned statement on where it appears that World Orthodoxy is heading – towards complete apostasy. It is my sincere hope that what I present here will not intensify the separations among us, which so many writings have been doing, but on the contrary, will help us to be faithful to the teachings and traditions of the Orthodox Church and unite us in Christ in a truly Orthodox manner
1
The Heresy of Monophysitism.
The Antiochian Orthodox Church
and Union with the Monophysite Churches.
In October 2008, in the main Cathedral of the Antiochian Orthodox
Church in Brazil (Sao-Paulo), a concelebration between hierarchs from both
our Church (ROCOR/MP) and the Antiochian Orthodox Patriarchate took
place [1b]. The celebrants, among others, included His Eminence Hilarion,
First Hierarch of ROCOR/MP and two other ROCOR/MP bishops together
with His Eminence Damascene from the Antiochian Orthodox Patriarchate,
Metropolitan of Sao-Paulo and all Brazil.
The concelebration concerned me since, according to official
documents and other statements the Antiochian Orthodox Church is in full
communion with the Syrian Monophysite Church. One document – The
Antiochian-Syrian Pastoral Agreement of July 22, 1991 – is important in this
regard [2b-1 to 2b-3]. This document was signed by both the Antiochian
Orthodox Patriarchate and the Syrian Oriental Church. Addressing its
faithful, it reads that “All the meetings, the fellowship, the oral and written
declarations meant that we belong to One faith…Every endeavour and
pursuit in the direction of the coming together of the two Churches is based
on the conviction that this orientation is from the Holy Spirit.” [2b-2, parag
3 and 5].
Thus, believing that the two Churches belong to one faith, they finally
blessed this document as ”a concrete expression to the close fellowship
between the two Churches.” [2b-2, parag. 6].
The Agreement thereby states that the two Churches are now allowed
to serve and commune together. 14 points were agreed upon of which I will
quote only one (nr. 11): “If a bishop from one Church and a priest from the
sister Church happen to concelebrate a service, the bishop will preside even
when it is the priest`s parish.”
The Syrian Church belongs to the group of Monophysite Churches, all
of which confess the Monophysite heresy (one nature in Christ). This group
includes six Churches: the Coptic, Ethiopian, Eritrean, Armenian, Syrian,
and the Malankara Syrian Church (India) [2c-a; 2d-1 to 2d-3; 2h].
4
All these Churches are in full communion with each other, are full
members of the World Council of Churches and known under various names
such as the Oriental Churches, or the Non-Chalcedonian Churches [2d-1 to
2d-3]. Even the word Orthodox is officially, but incorrect used, in order to
give them the appearance of Orthodoxy. The right word to use, and which
the Holy Fathers and learned theologians normally used, is simply
Monophysite, or Non-Chalcedonian, because of their belief in the one nature
of Christ and rejection of the Fourth Ecumenical Council in Chalcedon 451.
Those are the terms I will use, unless I quote from a text using another term.
Regarding union with the Monophysites the Athonite fathers said in
1994:”If we understand the [issue] correctly, a union is imminent. A union
that the Patriarch of Antioch has already realized in part.” [7b, parag.3].
Obviously, the Antiochian Church is already in practice engaging in such a union. Another reliable source affirms this. In 2004, an Inter- Orthodox Theological Conference was held in Thessaloniki, Greece. Sixty respected speakers, including Hierarchs from various Orthodox Churches, analyzed every aspect of Ecumenism before a packed audience of the abbots of holy monasteries, clergy, monks, and laity, among whom were many theologians and professors from theological schools. Referring to the above- mentioned Joint Declaration of 1991 between the Syrian Church and the Antiochian Orthodox Church, the conference states: “Among the most grievous errors [is] the sacramental intercommunion with the Monophysites accepted by the Patriarchate of Antioch [1991]…..” [7h,“A.Findings”, pt. 5].
Further, it states that “The issue of sacramental inter-communion of
the Patriarchate of Antioch with the Monophysites [Syrian Jacobites] to be
investigated…” [7h, B. Proposals, pt. 5].
An open letter from a member of the Antiochian Orthodox Church,
addressed to its Patriarch Ignatius IV in the year 2009, directly indicates that
the Antiochian Church also is known to commune non-Orthodox believers
[2i-b] (emphasis mine): “Since the Archdiocese of North America restricts
Sacraments only to Orthodox Christians and the Patriarchate permits
Sacraments for all Christians regardless of their church membership, will
the Patriarchate seek to regularize the Archdiocese of North America by
instructing us to give Sacraments to Non-Orthodox?” [2i-b, point 5].
Another letter, this time from an Antiochian priest in America, tells
us about the communion of Muslims [2i-a, third-last parag.]. Even though
these letters are not official statements, their appearance on the web-site
5
Orthodox Christians for Accountability and their way of sober writing,
justify one’s belief in the truth of these statements, showing that communion
of non-Orthodox, approved directly or indirectly by the Antiochian Synod,
actually is in practice in the Antiochian Church.
Like practically all the Local Churches of World Orthodoxy, the
Antiochian Church is an active member of the WCC, which by the above-
mentioned Conference in Thessaloniki is characterized as a “World Council
of heresies and schisms.” [7h,“A. Findings”, pt. 1, parag. 1].
Besides participating in dialogues with other Monophysite Churches
for a complete union through the Joint Commissions, the Antiochian Church
is also following the New Calendar, a serious innovation which Orthodox
believers have willingly died in order to avoid.
The Anthiochian Orthodox Church and
the Melkite (Roman Catholic) Church.
“The [Roman Catholic] Melkite Holy Synod has stated that, in the
event of a reconciliation between the Orthodox and Catholic churches, the
Melkite Church should be reintegrated into the Orthodox Patriarchate of
Antioch. A bilateral commission for dialogue between the Melkites and
Antiochian Orthodox was established in 1995, and both sides have
expressed the firm intention to heal the schism of 1724” [2c-d].
In 1996, the Melkite Church agreed on further rapprochement with the
Antiochian Church while at the same time affirming its faithfulness to the
Catholic Church. In a press release issued by the Melkite Church, we read
that “Emphasis is placed on church unity [with the Antiochian Orthodox
Church] as it existed in the first millennium when East and West were one.
The document quotes Pope John Paul II in his encyclical Ut Unum Sint –
That All May Be One: The Catholic Church desires nothing less than full
communion between East and West.” [2e, parag. 2].
“The [Melkite] Synod strongly affirms its full communion with the
Apostolic See of Rome and that this communion would not be ruptured.”
[2e, parag.3 and 4].
In 2005 we see an example of how the rapprochement between the
two Churches was progressing, when an inauguration of the Church of Ss.
Peter and Paul was held. On the official web-site of the Antiochian Orthodox
Church we read that “The event took place during the Vesper Prayer
6
presided over by Their Beatitudes Ignatius IV, Orthodox Patriarch of
Antioch and All the East, and Gregorius III, Melkite Catholic Patriarch,
where they prayed together and fulfilled the ceremonial inauguration of the
new Church of St. Peter and St Paul, erected in Dumar Habitat Project…
An enthusiastic crowd attended in which participated religious, political
and diplomatic figures and a large number of clergy from both
communities” [2f, parag. 1].
The Syrian (Oriental) Church and
Union with the Roman Catholic Church.
In July 1984 “The Catholic-Syriac Orthodox Statement” was signed.
Here we read (emphasis mine):
“The confusions and schisms that arose between our churches…
arose only because of differences in terminology and culture…” [2j, pt. 3].
“It is not rare, in fact, for our faithful to find access to a priest of
their own church materially or morally impossible…We therefore authorize
them in such cases to ask for the sacraments of penance, the eucharist…
from lawful priests of either of our two sister churches…While doing this we
do not forget that we must still do all in our power to achieve the full visible
communion between the Catholic Church and Syrian Orthodox Church of
Antioch…”[2j, pt. 9, see also 7g; p.7-8].
In 1994 an“Agreement on Interchurch Marriage” between the
Malankara Syrian (Monophysite) Church and the Roman Catholic Church
was signed [2c-b, “Relationships with the Roman Catholic Church; 2g, last
parag.]. The agreement states that:
“The bride and groom [as well as] the wider family…are allowed to
receive communion together, whether the wedding Eucharist takes place in
a Catholic church or in a Malankara Syrian Orthodox church…The couples
are also allowed to participate jointly in the Eucharistic celebration on
special occasions when this joint celebration is socially required [as well as
the] wider family.” [2g, second-last parag, under“Pastoral Guidelines”].
The Syrian Monophysite Church concelebrates also with the Catholic
and Protestant Churches. An example of this was seen in March 2007, when
Archbishop Mar Athanasius, Patriarchal Vicar of the Syrian Monophysite
Church in Great Britain participated in an ecumenical vespers together with
7
Greek, Catholic and Protestant hierarchs. [5a-1; 5a-2 with photographs]. As
is seen, the concelebration took place at the highest ecclesiastical level.
Thus, according to the official documents, the Antiochian Orthodox
Church is in full communion with the Syriac Monophysite Church and prays
and serves officially with the Catholic (Melkite) Church. The Syriac Oriental
Church on its part is in full communion with the Malankara Syriac Oriental
Church (both having the same Patriarch) which is in partial communion with
the Roman Catholic Church (Interchurch marriage).
The Dialogues between Orthodox
and Monophysite Churches.
In the work toward full communion between the Orthodox and the
Monophysite Churches, Agreed Statements have been worked out by the
Joint Commissions of the World Council of Churches (WCC). The First
(1989) and Second (1990) Agreements led finally to an official Statement in
1993 as a Proposal for lifting the mutual Anathemas between the Orthodox
and the Non-Chalcedonian Churches. According to this Proposal “The
lifting of the anathemas should imply the restoration of full communion
between the two families” [4a, point 3].
The members of the Joint Commissions consist of practically all of
the Orthodox and Monophysite Churches [4b, parag. 3], and the purpose – as
emphasized by Metropolitan Damaskinos of Switzerland (Ecumenical
Patriarchate)“is to restore full ecclesiastical communion between the
Orthodox Church and the Monophysite Churches of Syria, Egypt, Ethiopia,
Armenia and Malabar (India).”[7j, parag.2].
The holy Athonite fathers have therefore been writing apologetic
papers, since, as they state: “The consciousness of the Orthodox Church
recognizes that infallibility and authority in the Holy Spirit is in the
Ecumenical Councils,… [and therefore] the decision of the Joint
Commission concerning the possibility of lifting an anathema placed by an
Ecumenical Council… is an unacceptable decision, alien to the sound mind
of the Church…” [7a, pts. II and III; 7b, pt. 6c].
Even the sober and traditional Fathers in World Orthodoxy now begin
to lose patience. In the Kelliotes Letter from Athonite monks to the sacred
Twenty Athonite Monasteries, 2006 we read: “Besides recognition of the
baptism of the followers of the Pope and of the Lutherans, we also have
participation in the chalice with Monophysites, and in many cases with
8
papists in the Cyclades and in the Diaspora.” (Cyclades is a group of
Greek islands in the South Aegean) [7i, parag. 5, four last lines].
Here is a rather strong statement from people who, we must believe,
would and should know if intercommunion between the Greek Church and
non-Orthodox would already be quite a common practice. And so, these holy
Fathers, together with learned theologians warn us of a false union with the
Monophysites, since their claim to have accepted the same Christological
view as the Orthodox on Christ’s two natures is not sincere. They believe
that the new wording of the Joint Commissions, even though at first sight
Orthodox, perhaps is just disguised Monophysitism [7b, pt. 3, parag. 4, and
pt. 4, parag. 1]. Protopresbyter Theodore Zisis, professor at the University of
Thessaloniki, affirms this quite clearly, saying that (emphasis mine):
” In their texts [of St. Maximos the Confessor, St. John of Damascus
and St. Photios the Great] one sees the same concessions and modifications
on the part of the Non-Chalcedonians as are seen today, but which are
judged by the Fathers to be insincere and a simple camouflage for
Monophysitism, insofar as they do not lead to an explicit confession and
enumeration of the two natures in Christ in the one person after the union,
and consequently do not lead to the recognition of the fourth Ecumenical
Council.” [7c, part two:“2. St.John of Damascus and the Non-
Chalcedonians”, parag. 1, the end].
What the Monophysites themselves say.
The fear of a disguised Monophysitism seems to be justified, when
listening to what the Monophysite Churches themselves have to say on this
topic. Thus, the Coptic Patriarch Shenouda III in 1994, said that “As regards
the Ecumenical Synods, we accept the first three…We deny the Synod of
Chalcedon…I can say completely openly, that all the Oriental Churches
cannot accept the Synod of Chalcedon…” [7b, pt. 8, parag.3].
The Doctrine of the Syrian Church likewise affirms that the
confession of faith by the Monophysites does “not lead to an explicit
confession and enumeration of the two natures of Christ…,” which shows
how far they actually are from recognizing the Orthodox teaching on the two
natures of Christ. In the Doctrine one reads: “The Syrian Church believes in
one composite person of the Lord Jesus, and one composite nature that
consist of two natures: divine and human…In other words, the two natures
are united into one nature with no mixing, no blending…” [2c-c].
It becomes even more evident what they believe, when we read:
9
“Therefore, it is wrong, and a departure from the universal Christian
faith to say that: Christ was crucified in flesh.” It must rather be said: “God
the incarnate the Lord of Glory was crucified; however, we do say “He
suffered and died in flesh”…To this faith adhered the Antiochian Syrians
and the Alexandrian Copts, who rejected the council of Chalcedon…” [2c-
c].
The Syrian Monophysite Patriarch Ignatius Zakka I further claims,
that “There are no insoluble problems of doctrine between us concerning
the Incarnation of our Lord Jesus Christ. We (Oriental Orthodox) affirm
that our Lord Jesus Christ is perfect God and perfect man, and that he is
one Person and one nature. You (Orthodox) also maintain the same faith by
affirming that he is “in two natures.” Whereas we emphasize the union of
natures, you insist on their distinctness.” [4c, p.83-84].
We can conclude, therefore, that the Non-Chalcadonian Churches are
still not willing to accept all of the 7 Ecumenical Councils, with the result,
that the Joint Commissions are now working to find a solution to this
dilemma.
The Monophysites must be baptized into the Church.
In their eagerness for union with the Monophysites the Orthodox
ecumenists forget one basic rule. Should the Monophysites actually come to
an Orthodox belief, then that does not mean that they automatically can be
considered Orthodox Christians. In order to be considered Orthodox, one
must not only accept the Orthodox Faith as handed down to us through the
Seven Ecumenical Councils, but also reject completely one`s former heresy
together with everything else the Orthodox Church has rejected and
anathematized. If these two conditions are not fulfilled, one will not be in the
Church of Christ. A s The Confession of Faith Against Ecumenism (2009)
states:
“The only way that our communion with heretics can be restored is if
they renounce their delusion and repent…”[pt.4, first line].
“We accept everything that [the Synods and the Fathers] accept and
condemn everything that they condemn; “Anyone – says Saint Ignatius of
Antioch – who says contrary to what has been decreed – even if he is
trustworthy, even if he fasts, even if he lives in virginity, even if he performs
signs and prophesies, let him appear to you as a wolf in a sheep’s hide,
aspiring to the corruption of the sheep.” [point 1].
10
As the article Copts and Orthodoxy (SiR) rightly points out, should
the Monophysites actually agree completely to the Orthodox faith, then they
ought to be received back into the Church as non-Orthodox, through either
chrismation or baptism and not just by believing in the Orthodox creed or
through some “official statements” [7d, parag. 1]. The Confession of Faith
(2009) states that “For the incorporation of heretics into the Church,
canonical precision (akriveia) requires that they be accepted through
Baptism.” [pt.4, 1. parag.]. Therefore, until such a thing should occur, that
being an Orthodox baptism, they must be considered heretics and outside of
the Church.
The Consequences of Union with the Monophysites.
His Eminence Photios, Bishop of Triaditza (Old Calendar Church in
Bulgaria) and a learned scholar as well makes it very clear what the actual
consequences will be of a union with the Monophysites. Referring directly
to communion with Monophysite Churches, he says (emphasis mine): “The
consequences of such a false union are all too obvious. All of those who
accept the Declaration, or who enter into communion with clergymen who
have accepted it, can no longer be considered members of the Orthodox
Church.” [7e, parag. 7, line 8].
The Conference of 2004, Thessaloniki, earlier mentioned, states very
clearly and strictly what should be done with clergy who commune with
Monophysite Churches. Referring directly to the intercommunion between
the Patriarchates of Antioch and Alexandria with Monophysites we read the
following: (emphasis mine): “Let the canonical principle be enforced in this
case which says: “he who communes with the excommunicated is likewise
excommunicated.” [7h, B. Proposals, pt. 5, line 3].
Further, the Conference suggests what the faithful should do in regard
to church leaders’ inter-communion with heretics (emphasis mine): “Let it
be made manifest to church leaders everywhere that, in the event that they
continue to participate in, and lend support to, the pan-heresy of Ecumenism
– both inter-christian and inter-religious – the obligatory salvific, canonical
and patristic course for the faithful, clergy and laity, is excommunication: in
other words, ceasing to commemorate bishops, who are co-responsible for,
and co-communicants with, heresy and delusion. This is not a recourse to
schism but rather to a God-pleasing confession, just as the ancient Fathers,
and bishop-confessors in our own day have done…”[pt. 8].
11
These very strong statements question highly, therefore, the validity
of ROCOR/MP’s (and the Moscow Patriarchate`s) communion/communing
with those, who are in full communion with heretics. Since, in doing so, is
ROCOR/MP (and the Moscow Patriarchate) not also “co-responsible for,
and co-communicants with heresy and delusion?”
Why Communion with Heretics is impossible.
In regard to w h y it is impossible to have inter-communion with
heretics, the same answer is in general given by all traditional Orthodox
fathers of today.
Bishop Photios (SiR) says (emphasis mine): “The objections that can
be made with regard to this statement (“Of what importance to me is it if a
Priest or Bishop is an ecumenist?”, “I go to Church simply as an Orthodox
Christian – ecumenism is of no concern to me”) seem to us misplaced, in
this instance. For ecclesiastical communion, sacramental communion, and,
above all, the mystery of Holy Communion presuppose that all who
participate therein have the same ideas, the same faith.”[7e, middle of
parag.7].
The Athonite Fathers Maximos and Basil in their Memorandum
Appeal from 1992, are in total accord with these statements (It should be
noted here, that Fr. Maximos had been living on Mt. Athos for the span of
55 years, when he wrote this Memorandum, which clearly gives much
authority and weight to his words [7f, p.5; introduction, parag. 1] (emphasis
mine): “The commemoration of the presiding Bishop (in this case, on Mt.
Athos, the Patriarch) as well as ecclesiastical communion with him, can –
and indeed ought – to take place only when there is a likeness of (correct)
understanding in the faith between the one who commemorates and the one
who is being commemorated; that is, when the Bishop who is
commemorated does not err “in piety and righteousness” and is not worthy
of being “fenced off” o r “walled off” by the pleroma “in resistance to
innovation” according to the canon law of the Church…(First-and-Second
Synod, Canon 15)”. [7f, p.12, top].
These words Bishop Photius explains further in total accordance with
the traditional Orthodox teaching, saying (emphasis mine):
“It is well known, that the unity of the Orthodox Church is, above all,
unity in the Orthodox faith…The members of this Body are all of those
faithful having the same Orthodox faith in the Holy Trinity…, and who are
baptized with an Orthodox Baptism…” [7e, parag.2].
12
The Bishop concludes, quoting Saint Maximos the Confessor: “Thus,
the proof of Orthodox unity is, above all, “the correct and saving confession
of the faith.” [7e, parag.5].
Only such a unity of faith, adds Fr. Theodore Zisis, is capable of truly
uniting all people and leading them to peace and salvation: “There is good
and bad concord and peace; bad are the concord and peace that overlook
the differences in faith, because only “the unity of faith and the communion
of the Holy Spirit,”, for which the Church prays daily, can establish and
guarantee deep and imperturbable peace, since they are based on spiritual
and sacramental unity.” [7c, parag.3].
Father Steven Allen (The Genuine Greek Orthodox Church (GOC),
Chrysostomos II) summaries what have been said here: “The unity of the
Church is based on our confession of faith and union in the Holy
Mysteries.” [16v, part 1].
For this very reason the Orthodox Church reads the Symbol of Faith at
liturgy right before the Mystery of the consecration is about to take place,
followed by Holy Communion. Similarly, at liturgy, the priest says the
following words:“Having asked for the unity of the faith….” Thus,
emphasizing the necessity of unity in faith, the Orthodox Church does not
allow any priests to participate in or approach this Mystery, if they are not
Orthodox or officially have accepted another faith than the Orthodox.
Archbishop Averky of Jordanville affirms this stand of a clear
Orthodox confession:“We cannot fraternize with the fierce enemies of our
Orthodox Christian faith, as our enemies are doing, since we consider this a
betrayal of Orthodoxy and a crossing over to the side of its enemies…We
can also not partake of the Holy Mysteries of Christ together with the
heretics, who are distorting the dogmas of the Christian Faith, or with the
modernists [Orthodox ecumenists, my note] who are overthrowing the spirit
of our faith and piety handed down to us from our holy Fathers.” [17s, p.
525, parag. 4,].
Further he says (emphasis mine): “It is not we who are breaking off
with the Universal Church, but they who are breaking off relations with us.
The Universal Church consists not only of those living on earth but also of
those Saints who have pleased God and been glorified in Heaven, having
left us to preserve Holy Orthodoxy, unaltered and without deviating from
Her, even if we have to suffer a martyr’s death for that…”
“Because of the continuous relationship with this triumphant Church
in Heaven, our conscience does not allow us to walk on the same path as
those who apostatize from Her…” [17s, p. 525, parag. 5].
13
Because of this clear and true ecclesiastical standpoint, the holy
Fathers of the true Esphigmenou monastery (GOC, Chrysostomos II – not to
confuse with thefalse new Esphigmenou brotherhood, unrighteously
established by the Ecumenical Patriarch, and, sad to say, with the help of
some Athonite Fathers), and other Greek Old Calendar Churches rightly do
not commemorate the heretical Patriarch Bartholomew (as we ourselves also
did not do in the Skete of Holy Prophet Elias, before we were expelled by
the Patriarch and the official Athonite authorities) since he clearly has a faith
different from the Orthodox.
The non-commemorative principle of this standpoint was very clearly
approved of in the Conference of 2004 and is, as mentioned above “…not a
recourse to schism but rather to a God-pleasing confession, just as the
ancient Fathers, and bishop-confessors in our own day have done” [7h,
“B. Proposals”, pt. 8].
And two years later, in 2006, the holy Fathers of Mount Athos
actually agreed to do so. In their so-called Kelliotes Letter, written as a
response to the escalation of the ecumenical endeavors, we thus read:
“We believe that after so many written and oral protests and
objections, back-peddling [i.e., going back on one’s word –trans.], retreats
and compromises, the only thing that will gladden the Orthodox and shame
the kakodox is to cease commemoration of the patriarch and of all the
bishops agreeing with him or remaining in silence.” [7i, third-last parag.].
Unfortunately, the Athonite Fathers, to my knowledge, did not fully
carry out these their own words. But their words clearly speak for them of
what we as Christians ought to do. Therefore, by openly concelebrating with
Orthodox ecumenists, are we not also thereby “agreeing with [them] or
remaining in silence”?
Metropolitan Philaret
on Intercommunion with Monophysites.
To help us understand how important it is to avoid any contact (on an
ecclesiastical level) with the Monophysite Churches (and thus, obviously,
also with those who are in communion with them, as Bishop Photios clearly
says), I have enclosed two letters of our late Metropolitan Philaret (ROCOR)
to Archbishop Averky of Holy Trinity Monastery in Jordanville. The latter
in 1970, by a mistake, which he later regretted, blessed some Coptic
(Monophysite) clergymen to serve in the lower church of St. Job here in our
14
Holy Trinity monastery [6]. The letters clearly show us how far today we
have moved away from the true Orthodox understanding of the dangers of
the Monophysite heresy together with other heresies.
In his letter he ordered the church to be sprinkled with holy water, and
prayers appointed to be read in a church that has been desecrated by heretics
to be read, and that any services in the church immediately had to be
discontinued until the above-mentioned directive had been carried out.
Further he refers to the words of St. John of Shanghai (briefly presented
here): ‘During the Second World War a man from Yugoslavia could not find
any Orthodox church to attend, so for three years, he attended a Coptic
Church. When the man told Vladyka John about this, Vladyka exclaimed
What? You went to a Coptic Church? Intimidated (so he says) by the strict
tone of His Eminence`s voice, the man replied, that he had only attended the
vigils, not the liturgies. But Vladyka John ordered the man immediately to
repent and confess next time, that he had attended a heretical service’.
Seeing such strictness, even when just attending a Monophysite Vigil,
can one then justify serving the very liturgy with clergy who themselves are
in full communion with Monophysites? Again, I do not speak only from a
strict canonical view, but also from a more pastoral and principled point of
view.
The Sigillion of 1583 by the Eastern Patriarchs.
In the Sigillion issued in 1583 by the Eastern Orthodox Patriarchates
of Constantinople, Alexandria and Jerusalem, we read the following:
“Whosoever does not follow the customs of the Church which the
Seven Holy Ecumenical Councils have decreed, and the Holy Pascha and
calendar which they enacted well for us to follow, but wants to follow the
newly-invented Paschalion and the New Calendar of the atheist astronomers
of the Pope; and, opposing them, wishes to overthrow and destroy the
doctrines and customs of the Church which we have inherited from our
Fathers, let any such have the anathema and let him be outside of the
Church and the Assembly of the Faithful.” [16h, p.284, pt. VII].
An Armenian Chrism 2008.
In September 2008 [5e] Patriarch Bartholomew and Metropolitan
Valentine of Orenburg (Moscow Patriarchate) attended the blessing of
Chrism by the Armenian Monophysite Church. Participants from
Monophysite, Catholic and Protestant churches were also present. Later, a
15
memorial service for the victims of the Armenian Genocide was held.
During the service the participants offered joint prayers in their own
languages for the victims. Even though the Orthodox participants did not
directly participate in the service (the blessing of Chrism), they still
attended. Is such participation in accordance with traditional Orthodox
teaching?
The Question arises.
I believe there is enough reason to say, that not only His Eminence
Damascene, Metropolitan of Sao-Paulo, with whom Metropolitan Hilarion
(ROCOR/MP) served, but also the Antiochian Orthodox Church as a whole,
do not have the “correct and saving confession of the faith.” We are not
speaking of a person’s individual communion with heretics, but the official
apostasy of a whole local Orthodox Church. And so, unity of faith between
our hierarchs and His Eminence Damascene can simply not have been
present at the service. This concelebration is therefore to be regretted, and
one can fear that ROCOR/MP slowly begin to fall away from the Apostolic
faith and the Orthodox Church.
From the voice of holy tradition we read: “Once, a monk called
Theophan came to see the great elder Kyriakos. He tells the elder that in his
country he is in contact with Nestorians. The elder says: “It is impossible to
be saved without the right belief, but I have hope that God in His mercy will
reveal the Truth to you.” And indeed the next day the monk sees someone,
strange in appearance, who says to him, ‘come and find out the truth.’ And
taking him he leads him to a gloomy, stinking place emitting flames and
shows him Nestorius and Theodore (of Mopsuestia), Eutyches and
Apollonarius, Evagrius and Didymus, Dioscorus and Severus, Arius and
Origen, and others. And pointing at them he says to the monk, ‘That is the
place prepared for heretics and those who taught falsely about the Mother
of God and those who follow their teachings.”[7j, The Spiritual Meadow of
John Moschus, at the very end: “Once a monk called…”]
As can be seen, the earliest defenders of the Monophysite heresy –
Euthyches, Dioscorus and Severus – all ended up in flames. This little story
must compel any Orthodox believer to reflect deeply about where
ROCOR/MP and World Orthodoxy are heading.
The Greek Orthodox Church of Alexandria
and the Coptic Church.
16
A Pastoral Agreement between the Coptic (Monophysite) Church and
the Greek Orthodox Church of Alexandria was signed in 2001 [3a-1; 3a-2,].
It states, that since both Churches have already accepted the outcome of the
official dialogue on Christology between the Orthodox and the Oriental
Churches including the lifting of anathemas and restoration of full
communion signed in Chambesy 1990 and 1993, it has been agreed to have
mutual recognition of the sacrament of baptism and marriage. Further it
states that “Each of the two Patriarchates shall also accept to perform all of
its other sacraments to that new family of Mixed Christian Marriage.” [3a-
2, third-last parag.].
But, – it reads further, – since up until now we are still waiting for the
responses of the Holy Synods of some other Churches in both families (the
Orthodox and Monophysite Churches), the restoration of a full communion
is not yet reached between the two sides. In this regard, the Conference in
Greece 2004, earlier mentioned, states:“Among the most grievous
errors…..are the partial recognition by the Patriarchate of Alexandria of
the mysteries of the Monophysites and the proposals for a revision of
liturgical texts and determination of a typikon for the concelebration of
Orthodox and Monophysites.” [7h, A.Findings, pt. 5: “The Dialogue…”].
The Coptic Church is also one of the founders of the WWC and a
member of The all African Council of Churches and plays an important role
in the Christian movement in resolving the theological differences with the
Catholic, Eastern Orthodox, Presbyterian, and Evangelical Churches [3b].
The article Union with Monophysites states also that the ecumenical
activity and eagerness for common union among all Christian denominations
is in fact more evident in the Non-Chalcedonian Churches than actually in
World Orthodoxy [7g, parag. 4]. A newsletter has been added with
photographs from a Syrian-Catholic Vespers 2007, with the participation of
the Coptic Metropolitan Seraphim of Great Britain, together with Catholic
and Anglican Bishops. [5a-1; 5a-2].
Dialogues in general between
the Monophysite Churches and the Catholic Church.
The rapprochement between the Monophysite Churches and the
Catholic Church is still being extended. In January, 2009, in Rome (Italy)
the 6th meeting was held of the international Joint Commission for
Theological Dialogue between the Non-Chalcedonian Churches and the
Roman Catholic Church. A statement was signed, expressing the meeting to
17
be “a major breakthrough towards full communion.” [3c]. Further the news
release announces that “The seventh meeting of the commission is scheduled
for Jan. 25-29, 2010, in Antelias, Lebanon, where talks about full
communion are to be continued.”
Orthodox Articles
against Monophysitism and Ecumenism.
I present here a short list of articles and letters dealing with the topic
of uniting with the Monophysite Churches and in general on ecumenism.
They are very sober and give a good understanding of how the union with
these Churches is being prepared without their repentance [7a-7j].
St. John of Damascus and the ‘orthodoxy’ of the non-chaldedonians
(1992) by protopresbyter Theodore Zisis, professor at the University of
Thessaloniki [7c] leaves no room for such a union on the basis of the current
dialogues, if we were to be faithful to Orthodoxy.
Orthodox Unity Today [7e] by His Grace Bishop Photios of the Old-
calendar Church in Bulgaria, gives an excellent review of how World
Orthodoxy actually is betraying not only their own faith but also their fellow
brothers, who are struggling in the various Old Calendar Churches.
From the Holy Fathers of Mount Athos [7a, 7b] we are being
presented two concerned papers, commenting on the Orthodox Church’s
proposed lifting of the anathema against the heretical Monophysite
Churches. They, together with the small, but very enlightening, article Copts
and Orthodoxy [7d] on the same topic, speak for themselves.
Memorandum Appeal [7f] to the Abbots and Superiors of the Twenty
Sacred Monasteries of the Holy Mountain of Athos, by two Athonite fathers
Maximos and Basil, is a protest against the unrighteous expelling of the
fathers of Skete Prophet Elias in 1992, and an appeal to all to take a firm and
valiant stand in favor of the moderate Old-calendar movement and the
traditional teaching against the apostasy of World Orthodoxy.
Conclusions of the Inter-Orthodox Theological Conference 2004,
Thessaloniki, Greece [7h] takes a very traditional and strict stand against
18
ecumenism and recommends the faithful finally step away from the false
Orthodox leaders if they should proceed in their apostasy.
The so-Called Kelliotes Letter to the Sacred Twenty Athonite
Monasteries (2006) [7i] shows how some Athonite Fathers are losing
patience with the ongoing hypocrisy from the Ecumenical Patriarchs and the
silence from those who ought to step forward and expose falsehood. They
therefore recommend cease commemorating their Patriarch.
Union with the monophysites. What comes next?[7g] Layman
Michael Woerl (ROCOR) gives concrete evidence and information and
looks on the more practical consequences of a union, which would be fatal,
since many of the Monophysite Churches are even more ecumenical than we
are and will only drag us further towards apostasy.
Commentary on the Recommendations of the Joint Commission for
Theological Dialogue Between the Orthodox and Oriental Churches [7j] is a
sober and traditional Orthodox critique of the heretical conclusions of this
Commission, taken from the Orthodox Christian Information Center.
Four basic Principles of preparing a Union.
The Athonite Fathers point out two basic principles, when establishing
a union between Orthodox and non-Orthodox Churches [7b, pt. 10a and
10b]:
1) “The recognition of the other heretical Church either as a “Sister”
Church or as an equally honored “family,” while giving up the claim that
the One, Holy and Apostolic Church is only our own Orthodox Church.”
2) “The acceleration for union by going around our differences which
are either silenced or minimalized.”
One could here add two more principles, namely:
3) ’Dialogue of love towards peace among people and nations’.
4) ‘Contacts on a personal level’.
As will be seen these principles characterize precisely some of the
more traditional ways in which unions between Orthodox and non-Orthodox
are being carried out today. These dialogues have the exact same goal – to
19
eventually unite around a common Chalice. Some, as shown above, have
more or less done so, and are paving the way for others. The question
remains: Should ROCOR/MP also give its share in paving that road?
2
Ecumenism
Non-membership of WCC –
no guarantee for traditional Orthodoxy.
It is important to note that even though a Church is not a member of
the WCC, it does not necessarily mean that the ecumenical activity
automatically becomes non-existing. This is clearly seen in the lively
involvement of the Catholic Church in the ecumenical movement. One must
study the real motives behind an eventual parting with this Council, and not
prematurely and perhaps erroneously be led into thinking that just because
one of the Orthodox Churches should decide to leave the WCC it therefore
automatically has become a zealous opponent of the ecumenical movement.
Only a total stop of any ecumenical activity can be considered a sincere and
trustworthy sign toward a traditional Orthodox stand.
The Youth-Fellowship Syndesmos.
The Orthodox youth, world wide, also takes part in the ecumenical
movement. One example of such activity is the organization called
Syndesmos – the World Fellowship of Orthodox Youth. It was founded in
1953 to encourage contacts among Orthodox youth movements in Western
Europe, Greece and the Middle East. Syndesmos is in partnership with the
WCC youth program, and has today grown into a federation of 121 youth
movements and theological schools in 43 different countries around the
world. [9a-1, 9a-2 and 9i].
A concern of Syndesmos has been the deepening and strengthening of
ties between the Orthodox and the Oriental Orthodox (Coptic, Ethiopian,
Armenian, Syrian, and Indian) Churches. Since 1992, Oriental Orthodox
youth movements have joined Syndesmos as federated members, with their
own vice-president [9a-1].
Syndesmos has regularly expressed its strong support for the union
between the Orthodox and Monophysite Churches and recommended in a
statement (1991) ”all Orthodox and Oriental Church youth movements to
20
prepare their members for the imminent communion of our Churches
through information, common activities and close co-operation …like
mutual retreats, exchanges between students and teachers of theology etc.”
[9b, parag. 5, point 1 and 3].
In 2006, at the WCC 9th General Assembly in Brazil, its members
spoke on Church unity, and delivered “a plea of the Orthodox youth to our
pastors for a more consistent action on the issues of Church unity, revival of
conciliarity and convocation of the long awaited pan-orthodox Council…
the continuation of dialogue… and rapprochement of the Eastern and
Oriental Churches.” [9d, third-last parag, 6.- last line].
The approach which they suggest, of joining together, is normal with
most ecumenical unions; close co-operation on a personal level between the
church members by either silencing discussion of differences between their
faiths or minimalizing the differences that exist. Exactly the same
suggestions were made in the Encyclical of 1920 [19e, parag. 8: pts. a-k],
which paved the way for the new calendar in 1924. And it is also what Fr.
Theodore Pulcini, (Antiochian Orthodox Church), suggests in his talk
Practical Steps toward Unity. The suggestions are:
“Encounter weekends,” in which a non-Chalcedonian [Monophysite]
parish would invite a neighboring Chalcedonian [Orthodox] parish, or vice
versa, to spend the weekend” [20a, “Practical Implementation in the
American Setting”, pt. 1].
”Episcopal Collaboration…As soon as Chalcedonians see their
bishops alongside non-Chalcedonian bishops, and vice versa, working for a
common cause, bonds of fraternity will be quick to form.”[pt. 2].
He further suggests what kind of approach seminaries in World
Orthodoxy – among which we now also find Holy Trinity Seminary
(ROCOR/MP) – should take, namely ”To make each other known in our
seminaries and houses of theological study.” [pt. 3, line 7].
Having seen our First Hierarch serving with the Antiochian Orthodox
Church, one can only hope that we some day will not also be seeing our
bishops “alongside non-Chalcedonian bishops,” creating “bonds of
fraternity” among us.
The ecumenical Youth-Event 2001 in Germany.
In 2001, as a direct result of the official dialogues, an encounter
between Orthodox and Oriental youth of Europe took place in Germany.
21
Orthodox and Monophysite bishops, priests, monks and laymen were
participating and the group stayed in a Coptic monastery. In the span of
three days, beside social events, the group attended vespers and liturgy each
day according to different rites – Syrian, Orthodox Byzantine or Coptic [9g-
2, parag. 4 and 8]. Three bishops attended, one each from the Syrian, Coptic
and Orthodox Churches [9g-2, parag.2, first 6 lines].
From the Romanian Orthodox Church attended Metropolitan
Seraphim of Western and Central Europe [9g-2, parag. 2].
This type of meeting of the Orthodox and Monophysite clergy and
faithful in Germany was held for the first time in Europe. It was decided to
have similar events in other European countries, since both the Orthodox
and Oriental Churches have parishes all around Europe [second-last parag.].
The above-mentioned encounter gives a good picture of how
traditionally a rapprochement between Orthodox and non-Orthodox
Churches is being carried out, namely on the personal level, overlooking all
differences in regard to the faith. Through such an interaction in practice,
even the strongest walls are eventually being torn down.
Various Ecumenical Organizations
and Orthodox Participation.
Beside the World Council of Churches (WCC) there exist also
worldwide a multitude of other ecumenical movements. There are ACT,
CCA, CEC, CTBI, NCC, CCT, CMEA, MECC, AACC just to mention
some of the bigger organizations, which you again find associated with
hundreds of other organizations, associations, conferences, bodies, alliances,
committees.
I will here focus a little bit on some of the more unfamiliar
organizations. That will be enough for us, since the very essence of these
organizations is exactly the same as all of the other ecumenical movements,
namely a striving for mutual acceptance among all Christian denominations
regardless of ecclesiastical differences, engineered and powered by forces
out to destroy or at least weaken Orthodoxy and finally pave the way for the
coming Antichrist. That is what the ecumenical movement and one World
Order is about, and that is what the various Orthodox Churches gladly and
perhaps naively participate in.
22
MECC – Middle East Council of Churches.
“MECC is a fellowship of churches relating itself to the main stream
of the modern ecumenical movement, the same which gave birth to the
World Council of Churches and other regional ecumenical councils
throughout the world.” [10b, first parag. and 10e].
Orthodox, Monophysite, Catholic and Protestant Churches participate.
From the Orthodox participates the Churches ofJerusalem, Antioch,
Alexandria and Cyprus [10a].
The four abovementioned principles of ‘family-sister-Churches,’
‘minimalizing the differences,’ ‘dialogue of love towards peace’ and
‘contacts on a personal level’ are strikingly present in all the ecumenical
movements. Thus we read in the MECC-documents:
“The Council chose to organize itself as a family of families – the
Eastern Orthodox, the Oriental Orthodox, the Catholic and Protestant
families.” [10b, parag. 4, 5 and last parag].
“MECC emphasized the necessity to activate the ecumenical
partnership in the theological studies, prayers and services’ dialogue…
towards the unity of the church and its witness in the Middle East and the
World.”
“MECC emphasized the importance of the dialogue, cooperation and
communication with all the Muslims in order to build a more peaceful and
just world” [10c, parag. 4, 5 two last lines].
Naturally people should always strive for peace on earth. Yet, I will
still argue against a peace which would involve a betrayal of the Orthodox
faith. No kind of suffering should allow us to seek ecclesiastical unity with
heretics. The millions of Russian (Catacomb) martyrs sacrificed on the
Soviet altar (sanctioned by the Declaration of 1927 by making them into
“political enemies”) is a strong witness to that. The spiritual fall of
Metropolitan Sergius and the whole episcopate of the later Moscow
Patriarchate, testifies likewise to the fact that betrayal of Orthodoxy for the
sake of worldly “peace” or even administrative church-order is, has, and will
always be a false and evil path, which can never ever be justified.
23
CCT – Christian Churches Together.
C C T – Christian Churches Together – officially established in
America in 2006, stems back to 2001, when its history slowly began [11b,
parag. 2]. The Orthodox Churches represented include theAntiochian
Orthodox Church, the Greek Orthodox Church and the OCA [11a,].
The Monophysite churches are: the Syrian Oriental Church, the
Coptic Church and the Armenian Church, together with the whole span of
various protestant heretical denominations [11a].
The purpose and goal of this ecumenical organization is not only
directed toward helping people in need (which, of course, is good and
necessary), but also toward a mutual acceptance as sister Churches,
regardless of ecclesiastical differences. Their Bylaws together with the
Chicago Statement thus state the following three tasks:
1) to celebrate a common confession of faith in the Triune God.
2) to discern the guidance of the Holy Spirit through prayer and
theological dialogue.
3) Engaging in common prayer. [11b, parag. 6, 11c-1, pt. III and 11d-
1, parag.3].
This organization is thereby clearly not striving for the non-Orthodox
members to join the Orthodox Church, but, on the contrary, to blot out in the
minds of people the fact that the Orthodox Church is in fact the only true
Church of Christ. Their many statements, as for example:
“We long for the broken body of Christ made whole, where unity can
be celebrated in the midst of our diversity” [11d-1), parag. 2; 11e-1, parag.3],
“An awareness of the Holy Spirit`s work among us that will foster…
our brokenness to be healed by God” [11c-1, parag.3],
together with their various meetings and joint prayers clearly testifies
to the fact that this organization is heretical. They combine the social aspect
with the theological, using the first as a framework from which to “have a
common confession of faith” even though it is impossible for Orthodoxy to
have a common confession with heretics [11d-1), parag. 2 and 3].
Phrases like the ‘five Christian families,’ ’guidance of the Holy
Spirit,’ ‘unity, rooted in the Spirit’ etc. are met several times. [11b, parag. 1:
11c-2, parag. 1; 11c-1, pt. III; 11d-1, parag. 3; 11e].
24
The organization refers to its members as ‘Christian families’ of
Churches: thus we see the following five families: Evangelical/Pentecostal
Churches, Historic Protestant Churches, Historic African American
Churches, Orthodox and Roman Catholic Churches. [11c-2, parag. 1].
Contrary to what the Holy Canons of the Orthodox Church teach us,
joint prayers between Orthodox and non-Orthodox clergy are being publicly
performed. In their documents and general information we read:
– “We meet to pray, to listen….” – “This common witness will be visible through engaging in
common prayer” [11d-1, parag. 1 and 3].
Several photographs (on their web-site), testify to this fact. One sees,
for example, Archpriest Leonid Kishkovsky (OCA) praying together with
non-Orthodox. Other Orthodox Clergy are also seen. [11e-3].
NCC – National Council of Churches.
NCC – National Council of Churches is “the leading force for
ecumenical cooperation among Christians in the US. The NCC`s member
faith groups – from a wide spectrum of Protestant, Anglican, Orthodox,
Evangelical, Historic African American and Living Peace churches –
include 45 million persons in more than 100.000 local congregations in
communities across USA” [11f, parag.1].
Their statement of faith, with which the members agree, is as follows:
“These Christian Communions covenant with one another to manifest
ever more fully the unity of the Church.”
“This general statement – the official web-site states – is accepted by
all of the NCC`s member communions”. [11f, beginning]
The members of this ecumenical organization are, among others, the
Greek Orthodox Church, the OCA, the Russian Orthodox Church (MP), the
Serbian Orthodox Church and the Ukrainian Orthodox Church. Four
Monophysite Churches also participate [11g].
It is interesting in this aspect to read what an American Protestant
Professor wrote about this organization in his book “The Unholy Alliance”
(1975), which is a thorough analysis of the NCC from 1908 to the 1975. In
25
the review from the inside cover of the book we read: “The dream of uniting
the Christian churches of America, and eventually the world, has turned into
a nightmare of political intrigue and man-centered religion. The ecumenical
movement in America grew out of 19th century roots and issued forth first in
the Federal Council of Churches (FCC), then in the National Council of
Churches…” [11h].
In characterizing NCC, Dr. Singer writes: “Like that of the Federal
Council, the avowed objective of the National Council was to be the
realization of the kingdom of God on earth through the proclamation of the
social gospel. America must be made truly Christian, by which the
ecumenical leadership meant it must become truly collectivistic and
socialistic… Its message must be the social gospel in word and deed. But
there should be no mention of sin and its punishment or of the redeeming
work of Christ upon the Cross” [11h, p. 180, parag.2 and p. 187, parag. 4].
SCOBA.
SCOBA – Standing Conference of Orthodox Bishops in America is
known for its strong support of the ecumenical movement. The chairman is
His Eminence Demetrios, Primate of the Greek Orthodox Diocese of
America [12c]. The members are all the official Orthodox Churches in
America:
the Greek Orthodox Church,
the Serbian Orthodox Church,
the Romanian Orthodox Church,
the Orthodox Church in America (OCA),
the Moscow Patriarchate,
the Antiochian Orthodox Church,
the American Carpatho Russian Orthodox Church,
the Bulgarian Eastern Orthodox Church,
the Ukrainian Orthodox Church and
the Albanian Orthodox Church. [12c].
The Russian Orthodox Church Abroad is currently not a member.
In their Pastoral Letter from 2000 we are given a good picture of
what this organization represents [12a]. It is obviously written by concerned
Christians who are worried by the general moral decline, etc. But it is also
26
expressing a strong support for the ecumenical movement and thus a strong
deviation from all that ROCOR normally has considered as traditional
Orthodox teaching. As is normal for the ecumenical organizations in their
striving for a unity among Orthodox and non-Orthodox, the Biblical words
that ‘we must love one another’ and ‘that we may all be one; even as You,
Father, are in Me, and I in You..’ are frequently being used or, perhaps more
correctly, misused [12a]. So quite naturally they state that “The Orthodox
participation in the ecumenical movement does not run counter to the nature
and history of the Orthodox Church” [12a, pt. 117, quoting from the Third
Pre-Conciliar Pan-Orthodox Conference].
Further we read, that “Mindful of this formal dialogue between the
two families of Orthodox Churches [Orthodox and Monophysites] SCOBA
has decided to establish a Joint Commission with representatives of the
Oriental Churches in America.” [12a, pt. 121, first line).
SCOBA is also having dialogues with the Catholic Church and
various Protestant Churches. All these dialogues go back to when SCOBA
began in 1960 [12a, pt. 122]. In point 123 (second line) we read something
quite characteristic for all these ecumenical organizations:
“In many places, Orthodox clergy and laypersons have come together
with Roman Catholics and Protestants for theological reflection, Bible
study, social witness and prayer for reconciliation. Such activities have
done much to overcome old misunderstandings and prejudices among
Christians”.
One wonders naturally what kind of “old misunderstandings and
prejudices among Christians” are being spoken about here, other than the
refusal of the non-Orthodox Christian Churches to repent and be united to
the Orthodox Church. One naturally also wonders that Orthodox clergy with
good conscience actually are participating in all of this.
The North American
Orthodox-Catholic Theological Consultation.
SCOBA together with The National Conference of Catholic Bishops
has established the North American Orthodox-Catholic Theological
Consultation. Its purpose is to “examine divisive issues, and to make
recommendations regarding ways to overcome them” [12b, top].
27
This appendix presents a whole list of ecumenical statements and
documents. The goal of the heretical Balamand Document (which will be
discussed later) is in one document (of 1994) said to “’create a serene
atmosphere’ for renewed progress in dialogue ‘toward the reestablishment
of full communion’” (between the Orthodox and Catholic Churches).” [12j,
pt. 10, first line].
In another document of October 2000 we read how the formal lifting
of the 1054 anathemas between the Orthodox and Catholics was received
with joy: “We look back with joy on the dramatic events of the 1960`s that
brought an end to the many centuries of hostility that kept us apart from one
another. The meeting between Ecumenical Patriarch Athenagoras and Pope
Paul VI in Jerusalem in 1964 was followed by the formal lifting of the 1054
anathemas on December 7, 1965. Those excommunications were reversed,
to be replaced by relationships of love – they were “erased from the memory
of the Church” and “consigned to oblivion”…” [12f, parag. 2].
In referring to another document entitled, “Sharing the Ministry of
Reconciliation,” also issued by the North American Orthodox-Catholic
Theological Consultation, we read further:
“We recommend this document warmly to our faithful. We make our
own its evaluation of the Catholic-Orthodox dialogue and the broader
ecumenical movement as rooted in the very actions of God who “desires
everyone to be saved and to come to the knowledge of the truth” [12f, parag.
3: last five lines.].
In conclusion the Document of October 2000 states that“We
encourage our Orthodox and Catholic faithful everywhere to engage one
another in an exchange of views in a spirit of openness and humility so that
the Spirit`s work of reconciliation might continue, for the glory of God.”
[12f, second last parag., last three lines].
The very same Document also states – rather astonishingly from an
Orthodox point of view – that there is an ”urgent need to present the true
nature of ecumenical dialogue, not as a betrayal of anyone`s faith, but as an
effort to understand what we truly have in common at a level deeper than
our divisions and theological formulae.” [12f, parag. 4, last three lines].
Again, one asks the question of what is meant by “a level deeper than
our divisions and theological formulae.”
We may find the answer given in the Agreed SCOBA-Statement The
Filioque: a Church-Dividing Issue?, issued in 2003. The members of
SCOBA (holding various theological degrees) recommend to the members
28
and bishops of their own Churches that “The Orthodox and Catholics [must]
refrain from labeling as heretical the traditions of the other side on the
subject of the procession of the Holy Spirit.” and
“That our Churches commit themselves to a new and earnest
dialogue concerning the origin and person of the Holy Spirit….”
[12g, IV. Recommendations, parag. 2, 1. and 9. line].
In order to support such anti-Orthodox statements, the commission
has introduced a new approach, completely unknown to the Orthodox
Church. The above-mentioned Statement: “The Filioque…” thus states that
“We recommend that all involved in such dialogue expressly recognize the
limitations of our ability to make definitive assertions about the inner life of
God.” [12g, “IV. Recommendations”, parag. 2, line 6].
The Holy Fathers and the Ecumenical Councils have, on the contrary,
on the point of the Filioque question, quite definitively explained to us at
leastoneaspect of the inner life of God, namely that theHoly Spirit
proceeds from the Father and not from the Son (see John 15:26). The
Confession of Faith (2009) clarifies this position saying that “On account of
their [the Catholic`s] blasphemy against the Holy Spirit with their teaching
of the Filioque, they forfeited the presence of the Holy Spirit and therefore
everything of theirs is deprived of Grace [in the Sacraments]. Not one of
their Mysteires (Sacraments) is valid, according to Saint Symeon…” [pt.2,
last parag.].
The Holy Orthodox Church, through the guidance of the Holy Spirit,
has handed this down to us and confirmed it in the sacred Ecumenical
Councils. We do not, therefore, need any further dialogues to explain this
question. The Statement then ends, saying that“We offer these
recommendations in the conviction…that our traditions’ different ways of
understanding the procession of the Holy Spirit need no longer divide us”
[12g, last parag., first line].
Such statements are in complete violation of the traditional view on
the Filoque question given to us by the Holy Fathers of the Orthodox
Church. Nonetheless, the organization in 2006 “joyfully anticipates the
coming visit of Pope Benedikt XVI and his meeting with the Ecumenical
Patriarch Bartholomew… We pray that this meeting will contribute to the
unity of the Churches….” [12h, parag. 10 and last parag.].
29
OTSA – the Orthodox Theological Society in America.
Under the auspices of SCOBA we also see the so called OTSA – the
Orthodox Theological Society in America [12d]. It was founded in 1966 as a
means of bringing together the faculties of Holy Cross Greek Orthodox
School of Theology and St. Vladimir`s Orthodox Theological Seminary
(OCA). The Society welcomes as members not only Orthodox Christians but
also Monophysite believers of higher learning [12i, parag. 2 and 3 ].
In 2001 a rather astonishing, but not surprising Resolution was issued.
OTSA welcomes the Proposal produced by a WCC/MECC Consultation in
1997 “Towards a common Date for Easter” [12l].
“The Orthodox Theological Society in America has considered the
proposal “Towards a Common Date for Easter” produced by a
WCC/MECC consultation at Aleppo, Syria. We endorse this proposal on the
basis that it reflects most faithfully the norms for calculating the date of
Pascha as set out by the Holy Fathers of the First Ecumenical Council”
[12l, top].
This means, that the present Old Calendar date for Easter is to be
replaced with either a fixed or a movable date common to both Orthodox
and non-Orthodox Christian Churches. Such an unheard of proposal breaks
all canonical rules. It stems from an ultra-ecumenical organization with the
purpose of eventually having all the Orthodox Churches joining the Catholic
and Protestant Churches in communion despite the grave differences in faith.
Later I will show in more detail where such a proposal originated.
The Ecumenical Activities –
at the very highest ecclesiastical Level.
Joint prayers between the Greek Orthodox, the Catholic, the
Monophysite and Protestant Churches are taking place on the very highest
and official ecclesiastical level. I present here four such ecumenical events
which took place in 2007 and 2009. It must be noted that all four events are
with four different bishops (including other Greek clergy) each from their
respective dioceses. Thus participated Archbishop Gregorios of Great
Britian in a Vespers with hierarchs and clergy from the Syrian Monophysite,
Coptic, Catholic and Anglican Churches at Westminster Cathedral (Anglican
Church), (England), in March 2007 [5a-1; 5a-2, pp.3,4,5].
30
Metropolitan Methodios of Boston participated in another Vespers at
the St. Spyridon Cathedral in Worcester (USA) March 2009 with hierarchs
and clergy from the Catholic Church [5b].
Metropolitan Isaiah of Denver served Vespers with Bishop Edward
Slattery from the Catholic Church in Holy Family Cathedral, Tulsa,
Oklahoma (USA), January 2009 [5c].
Metropolitan Alexios of Atlanta joined together with hierarchs from
the Catholic Church at the Cathedral of Christ the King, Atlanta (USA) in an
“Evening of Prayer and Unity” service, May 2009 [5d].
Beside these few ecumenical organizations, we also find organizations
covering other places of the world like Christian Conference of Asia (CCA),
Conference of European Churches (CEC), Action by Churches Together,
WCC`s Iraq page, All African Council of Churches (AACC) and others.
Having looked upon today`s ongoing apostasy, of which we ourselves
have now become a part, it is paramount that we take heed to the voice of
the Church. Archbishop Averky of Jordanville says that “In our holy Faith
there is nothing of little significance – everything in it, to the smallest detail,
has its meaning, its significance, its value. For that reason nothing is to be
neglected and we must make concessions and compromises in nothing.
Every concession or compromise in questions of the Faith and Church
decrees leads to a greater and greater shaking of the age-old foundations of
our holy Orthodoxy, to a gradual falling away from it and to the passing
into the camp of the servants of the coming Antichrist.”
“This last we must fear above all in our age filled with evil, deception
and betrayal.” [16n, p.11, parag. 4].
31
3
The Orthodox Inter-Seminary Movement.
Holy Trinity seminary of Jordanville became a member of the pan-
Orthodox OISM – the Orthodox Inter-Seminary Movement in 2007 [8a].
St. Vladimir’s Orthodox Theological Seminary (OCA) and the Holy
Cross Greek Orthodox School of Theology, founders of the ecumenical
society OTSA (which accepts Monophysite believers into its society) are
both members of this organization.
The other members are schools from the Greek Orthodox Metropolis
of Toronto, the American Carpatho-Russian Orthodox Archdiocese, the
Ukrainian Orthodox Church of Canada and also of the United States. All of
the OISM-schools (except Holy Trinity Orthodox Seminary, Jordanville) are
members of the afore-mentioned ecumenical youth organization Syndesmos,
which has as its members Monophysite Theological schools as well [9i].
Since 1967 the St. Vladimir Seminary (OCA) has been affiliated with
the nearby St. Nersess Armenian (Monophysite) Seminary [8b, parag 5]. In
2009 the St. Vladimir Seminary encouraged closer cooperation between the
two Seminaries:
“We must also take our responsibility towards our Oriental Orthodox
brethren seriously. Although communion does not now exist between us, our
kinship is such that our schools are the most natural place for the education
of their future leaders. For decades now, St. Vladimir’s Seminary has had a
close relationship with St. Nersess’ Armenian Seminary…Can we pool our
resources so that we can eventually form, together, a powerhouse of Eastern
and Oriental Orthodox scholars that could provide an unparalleled
educational consortium?” [8c, see A Comprehensive Plan: last parag.].
In yet another news-letter of St. Vladimir’s Seminary we read:
“Possible projects include [also] ways to serve our Oriental
Orthodox brethren in a more intentional fashion, and perhaps even work
towards a doctoral program, so that the Seminaries of St. Vladimir and St.
Tikhon can take responsibility for the education of our future teachers. “The
possibilities that open up when we begin to cooperate,” said Fr. John, “are
truly inspiring and visionary.” [8d, see “A shared broader Vision”].
In October 2009, St. Vladimir’s Seminary also restarted close
relationships with another non-Orthodox Seminary, the Anglican Nashotah
House:
32
“Signing an historic ‘covenant’ between Nashotah House and St.
Vladimir’s Seminary, traditional Anglican leaders and their counterparts in
the Orthodox Church in America (OCA) have pledged themselves to work
towards unity.” [12q].
“Archbishop Robert Duncan [Anglican Church] stated that signing
the inter-seminary covenant, committing Nashotah House and St. Vladimir’s
seminaries to mutual prayer and fellowship, “lays the groundwork of …
“serious dialogue” with the OCA and “the resumption of ecumenical
discussion between two separated parts of the Church.” [12q].
St. Vladimir’s Seminary also participates in the Orthodox-Catholic
Consultation, mentioned above and has members there from its faculty. The
Seminary hosts, together with other faculties, the commissions and lectures
from both organizations [12e, top; 12h, parag. 3, 7 and 8].
It should also be mentioned that several of the current bishops of the
Antiochian Orthodox Church have graduated from St. Vladimir`s [8f] and
the ties between the two Churches are naturally close.
One must likewise keep in mind the fact that the various ecumenical
organizations are outreaching and seminarians participate in their activities.
On January 8-11, 2008, forty-five seminarians (whether they were Orthodox
or non-Orthodox has been difficult to find out) thus participated in the
Second Annual Meeting of CCT [11e-2 for photos and text].
Seeing such ecumenical activity, one can understand what theological
falsehood students are being taught at classes and in general in the OCA.
One small example will be presented here.
Protopresbyter Thomas Hopko, a retired and respected teacher of
Dogmatics at the St. Vladimir’s Seminary is the author of the book The
Winter Pascha.Here he states that the Mother of God, even though
conceiving miraculously from the Holy Spirit, nevertheless gave birth to our
Savior in a manner that all women do. This means, according to Father
Thomas, but completely contrary to traditional Orthodox teaching, that Her
womb was opened and the virginal seal broken. Thus we read (emphasis
mine):
“…Joseph and Mary were considered to be poor, since they did not
offer a lamb, but rather turtle doves…We learn as well that, …Mary did in
fact come for purification as the law required. This means that her womb
was opened and that the Christ Child was born from her in the manner in
which all children are born. In this sense, although the Church insists that
Mary remains forever a virgin, the only miracle in regard to the Lord`s
birth is the virginal conception. There is no teaching of any other sort of a
33
miracle in regard to His birth; certainly no idea that He came forth from
His mother without opening her womb. (pp. 174-5).
Nevertheless ROCOR/MP continues to support further close
relationships with the seminaries of the OCA. At the 15th All-American
Council of the OCA, 2008, a greeting from Metropolitan Hilarion was
presented [12o]: “We look with joy at the positive fruits of our cooperation
that have already appeared: the close collaboration of our Holy Trinity
Orthodox Seminary in Jordanville with both St. Vladimir’s and St. Tikhon’s
Seminaries. There is much more that we can do together, including
developing youth programs, Orthodox educational materials, liturgical
resources, and active missionary work. We ask that the Lord send His
blessings upon this august assembly, the XVth All-American Council, and
pray that this Council will work with one heart and one mind toward the
benefit of the Holy Church of Christ.” [12-o, last parag.].
ROCOR/MP likewise blesses its faithful to enroll at St. Vladimir’s,
and graduates from there are welcomed as teachers in our Seminary (it must
be noted here that this was practiced also before the union in 2007).
Having such contact with ecumenical Orthodox (and Monophysite),
Churches one may fear that we some day will also go into communion and
concelebration with these ecumenical Churches on a more regular basis than
we now see. As a small example, seminarians from the OISM-organizations
were in summer 2009 officially invited to Holy Trinity Monastery and took
part in the yearly two-day OIMS-seminar. They sang with us in the choir
and some OCA seminarians took communion.
One may say this is all exaggerated, but everything has a beginning,
and it is normally on a very personal level. Deviation from the Church of
Christ comes naturally when being brought up in an atmosphere of common
prayers and worship with ecumenical Orthodox Churches. How can we
expect young and naïve seminarians to discern falsehood from the truth,
when they see their very own First Hierarch together with all of our other
hierarchs, joyfully sharing the Holy Chalice with Orthodox Churches which
on their part officially concelebrate with non-Orthodox Churches?
34
4
Toward full communion with the OCA.
In 2009 a commission of ROCOR/MP was established which deals
with the issue of an ecclesiastical union with the OCA [17k]. At the same
time His Eminence Jonah, First Hierarch of the OCA is calling for the unity
of all the Orthodox Churches in America and blesses OCA to participate in
such pan-heretical movements as the WCC, CCT, NCC and SCOBA not to
mention the acceptance of the New Calendar, which – with great sadness –
nobody finds offensive anymore.
As mentioned above, the OCA has recently restarted their relationship
with the Anglican Church of North America. Metropolitan Jonah said in his
talk, that “the goal of the dialogue is absolute unity with one another.”
[12q and 17u (audio recording of the conference): “The Future of
Anglican and Orthodox Relations. Both Deans moderated and the speakers
were Archbishop William Duncan and Metropolitan Jonah.”]
Hearing the talk by His Eminence Jonah, and reading the various
news releases from the conference, there is no apparent sign that the unity
spoken of is a unity in the Orthodox Church.
One must also not forget that OCA up to now has never expressed any
regrets for its acceptance of the Moscow Patriarchate during the time of the
Soviet Union. Archpriest Oleg Kirilov, Rector of Christ the Savior Russian
Orthodox Cathedral in Toronto, Canada (OCA) said in regard to the union
between ROCOR and the Moscow Patriarchate in 2007, “We are fulfilled
with a great joy over this historical event; the same way as our
Autocephalous Orthodox Church in America (former Russian American
Metropolia) has gone more than 35 years ago.” [15, p.8].
That was back in 1970, when the Metropolia (later OCA) went into
full communion with the Moscow Patriarchate, thus trampling on all the
Russian martyrs, in their acknowledgement of and finding support in the
Moscow Patriarchate, which at that time supported not only the Declaration
of 1927 but also ecumenism.
One may also recall the “Reply to the “Sorrowful Epistle” of
Metropolitan Philaret by Fr. Alexander Schmemann,” Dean of St.
Vladimir’s Orthodox Seminary, issued in 1969 [12r]. In his reply he attacked
the ROCOR quite strongly and accused it of being both a schismatic and
uncanonical group. Alexander Schmemann is to this day considered one of
the pillers of the OCA and a leading theologian.
35
Father Seraphim Rose warns us of the anti-Orthodox mentality of the
OCA, saying, “A typical result of the anti-Orthodox mentality which St.
Maximus combated may be seen in the newest attempt of the Russian
Metropolia in America to destroy the confessing stand of the Russian
Church Outside of Russia.”
“A chief obstacle to unity [between ROCOR and the OCA], lies, of
course, in the “autocephaly” the OCA received in 1970 from the Moscow
Patriarchate at the price of acknowledging to the world the complete
“canonicity” and “Orthodoxy” of the Sergianist church organization.”
[12p, p.244, parag. 2].
In various interviews, His Eminence Jonah likewise reminds us of the
fact that the OCA received autocephaly from the Moscow Patriarchate, and
therefore has all rights to exist as a true independent Church.
It is sad to see that the OCA rejects the ideals and morals of what the
Orthodox Church has always considered to be basic Christian confession. So
again, will it be a wise move to seek union with the Orthodox Church of
America?
36
5
The Moscow Patriarchate.
Ecumenical Dialogues.
Regarding union with the Monophysites, Agreements have been
made, of which the most important is: The Second Common Statement and
Proposals to the Churches (1990, Chambesy, Switzerland), which “stated,
that the faith of the two families was essentially identical, while differing
only in notions.” [16a, parag.2].
This statement led eventually to the establishment of a bilateral
dialogue in 1999 with the Oriental Churches [16a, parag. 3].
Earlier that year, Patriarch Alexis II agreed to continue the dialogue
with the Oriental Churches. He stated that in the course of these dialogues it
should be important not to defend agreed documents or formulae, but rather
to find agreement between the two Churches on the questions of faith [16a,
parag. 5 (middle and end]. Then in 2001 Metropolitan Kirill (now Patriarch)
stressed the importance of renewed theological dialogue [16a, parag. 6, 4.
line].
Another small but yet fairly strong indication of the ecumenical path
Patriarch Kirill is taking and the Moscow Patriarchate in general, is seen in
the Patriarch’s recent expression of support for WCC efforts. In his
congratulations to the newly elected general secretary of the WCC (2009) –
Olav Tveit of the Church of Norway – one reads the following:
“Knowing you as an active participant in the dialogue between the
Russian Orthodox Church and the Church of Norway, in which you have
been responsible for foreign relations for the past few years, I hope for
further good relations between us… I wish you God`s help in your new task
of coordinating efforts by various denominations and communities to
achieve mutual understanding and build up cooperation in Christian
preaching to the modern world.”[16j].
The Patriarch also stated his stand for traditional Orthodoxy but still
clearly expressed his warm support for the WCC (emphasis mine):
“Inter-Christian dialogue must be based on loyalty to the traditional
interpretation of Gospel values and ideals…May I assure you of invariable
support by the Russian Orthodox Church for efforts to that end by the World
Council of Churches.” [16j].
37
“Gospel values and Ideas” – a rather vague expression which in fact
says only little about faithfulness to the Orthodox Church. The support is
even stronger expressed by His Eminence Hilarion Alfeyev:
“With all my heart I congratulate you with the new post as general
secretary of the World Council of Churches. May God help you in the
decisions of those tasks, with which your work will be connected to for the
good of the dialogue and interactions of the Christian Churches. May the
all-merciful God send upon you spiritual wisdom and strength in the affairs
of strengthening the Christian testimony of love, peace and solidarity in the
face of the multitude of modern challenges. I sincerely hope for a successful
development of a fruitful collaboration between us.” [16k].
Dialogue with the Roman Catholic Church.
In 2009, His Eminence Hilarion, Archbishop (now Metropolitan) of
Volokolamsk and Head of the Department for External Church Relations of
the Moscow Patriarchate, met Pope Benedict XVI in the Vatican, Italy [16i-
c]. The meeting show that the Moscow Patriarchate and the Catholic Church,
even though slowly, a r e moving toward mutual recognition as Sister-
Churches and union around the Chalice.
The meeting gives two signals. One points in the direction that the
Russian and Roman Catholic Church must come together in the struggle for
Christian moral values, peace, and prosperity on earth. This is stressed as
one of the major reasons for coming together. But, from reading the various
documents and interviews it seems very likely that the actual goal is a
striving for a common recognition as Sister-Churches and a future union
around the chalice. I will let the participants of the meeting explain this
themselves. The information is taken from the web-siteRocorunited
(ROCOR/MP). First Archbishop Hilarion stresses the aspect of Christian
values, even though the ecclesiastical aspect clearly shines through too:
“This meeting, Archbishop Alfeyev acknowledged, would represent a
major step forward in relations between Catholics and Orthodox.”
“Only united will we [Orthodox and Catholics] be able to propose to
the world the spiritual and moral values of the Christian faith; together we
will be able to offer our Christian vision of the family, of procreation, of a
human love made not only for pleasure; to affirm our concept of social
justice, of a more equitable distribution of goods, of a commitment to
safeguarding the environment, for the defense of human life and its dignity,”
said the Orthodox prelate [16i-c].
38
This social and moral aspect functions as a platform for further
relationships on an ecclesiastical level. Cardinal Walter Kasper, president of
the Pontifical Council for Promoting Unity said at the meeting that “We
have spoken of the exchange of priests, of theologians and of all that which
might help to improve relations and also to overcome the prejudices and
resistance that exist in Russia against the Catholic Church and ecumenism;
however, little by little, we can also overcome this.” [16i-c].
From an Orthodox point of view these words cannot be accepted. The
Orthodox Church has for centuries held the Catholic Church to be a heretical
and graceless Church. Similarly, a true Orthodox confession has always
taught ecumenism to be a pan-heresy. So the word “overcome” is here
completely against Orthodox teaching.” Nevertheless Archbishop Hilarion
states almost the same, ”expressing his hope that the relationship between
Catholics and Orthodox develops more intensely and that the problems that
remain between the two traditions be soon overcome.”[16i-c].
The words “two traditions,” used about the Orthodox Church and the
Catholic Church are, from an Orthodox point of view, quite disturbing. One
can justly fear that the “relationship” spoken of here is directed toward an
ecclesiastical union. This becomes more evident when we read further:
“From the beginning, Hilarion expressed his high esteem for Pope
Benedict XVI, who is much appreciated in the Russian Orthodox Church;
later we spoke of our relations, especially the theological dialogue that will
take place in Cyprus in the coming weeks,” the cardinal explained. [16i-c].
“Therefore, said Archbishop Hilarion, the time has come to move
from a failure to meet and competition, to solidarity, mutual respect and
esteem; I would even say, without a doubt, that we must move to mutual
love,” he stressed. “Our Christian preaching can have effect, can be
convincing also in our contemporary world, if we are able to live this
mutual love between us, Christians.” [16i-c].
The Balamand Statement.
The acceptance of the so called “Balamand Statement” of 1993 has
yet not been withdrawn by the Moscow Patriarchate including the other
eight (out of fifteen) Local Orthodox Churches, which – together with the
Catholics – endorsed this document [16g-a, p.28].
The most important aspect of this Agreement is that the sacraments of
both the Orthodox and Catholic Churches are mutually and fully recognized
39
by this Statement. This makes them in reality ‘Sister Churches,’ in spite of
the dogmatic differences that still exist and which do not permit their full
canonical communion [16g-a, p.12 top].
Protopresbyter Theodore Zisis, professor at the University of
Thessaloniki, earlier mentioned, makes the following comment: “This
[Statement] makes the Roman Catholics and the Orthodox Church equal,
insofar as the Balamand Statement considers both possessors of the true
Apostolic Faith, of sacramental grace, and Apostolic succession. Orthodox
theologians are denying that the Orthodox Church is the One, Holy,
Catholic, and Apostolic Church – because the statements made in the
Agreement signify that the Orthodox Church, together with the Roman
Catholic Church, constitute the One Church…” [16h, p. 234, last parag.].
Further Rapprochement with the Catholic Church.
The dialogue with the Roman Catholic Church has lately progressed
towards a more friendly atmosphere, especially after the election of Patriarch
Kirill. The plans for a meeting in the near future, between the Pope of Rome
Benedict XVI and Patriarch Kirill is currently under preparation.
From the above-mentioned September meeting in the Vatican 2009
we read: “Personally, I [Archbishop Hilarion Alfeyev] hope that sooner or
later the meeting that many are awaiting between the Pope and the
Patriarch of Moscow will take place.” [16i-c].
“This meeting, Archbishop Alfeyev acknowledged, would represent a
major step forward in relations between Catholics and Orthodox.”[16i-c].
One can with good reason, fear that a mutual recognition and
communion between the Moscow Patriarchate (together with World
Orthodoxy in general) and the Roman Catholic Church, is the actual goal.
This becomes evident when hearing the Catholic Archbishop of Moscow,
Paolo Pezzi, commenting on such a union. One must keep in mind that the
article is taken from a Catholic source. Nevertheless, it does seem to reflect
the actual state of affairs between the Orthodox and Catholic Church:
Is Catholic-Orthodox Unity in Sight?
The Archbishopi said that the miracle of reunification “is possible,
indeed it has never been so close.”
40
Also on matters of doctrine, the two churches are essentially in
agreement. “There remains the question of papal primacy,” Archbishop
Pezzi acknowledged,… but to me, it doesn’t seem impossible to reach an
agreement.”
Prospects for union with the Orthodox have increased markedly in
recent years with the election of Pope Benedict XVI, whose work as a
theologian is greatly admired in Orthodox circles.”
Relations have also been greatly helped by the election of Patriarch
Kirill I earlier this year as leader of the Russian Orthodox Church, which is
by far the largest of the national churches in the Orthodox Church.”
In this connection one must also mention the North American
Orthodox-Catholic Theological Consultation at Saint Paul’s College,
Washington, DC in October 2009 (sponsored by SCOBA, as earlier
mentioned). (emphasis mine).”Co-chairing the meeting were His
Eminence, Metropolitan Maximos of the Greek Orthodox Diocese of
Pittsburgh, and Roman Catholic Archbishop Gregory Aymond of New
Orleans, who had been with His All Holiness, Ecumenical Patriarch
Bartholomew in New Orleans the day before the Consultation opened.
Consultation members finalized a joint response to the inter-national
dialogue’s 2007 “Ravenna Document.”… The members also examined a
first draft of a proposed agreed statement on conciliarity and authority,
titled “Steps Towards a United Church: A Sketch of an Orthodox-Catholic
Vision for the Future.” Still in its preliminary stages, the text will be
revised and considered again at the next meeting of the dialogue, scheduled
to take place at Holy Cross Greek Orthodox School of Theology, Brookline,
MA, June 1–3, 2010.” [12-n].
The Moscow Patriarchate`s Stand towards Ecumenism.
The Moscow Patriarchate has no intention of leaving the World
Council of Churches. All hopes – if there may have been such – vanish
completely when hearing the position of the Russian Patriarch Kirill. In the
book Patriarch Kirill: his Life and Worldview (2009, Russian edition) we
read that “At this moment Patriarch Kirill believes it is possible not only to
continue our participation in the WCC, but, perhaps, even enforce it. As the
Patriarch says: “The World Council of Churches is a good setting for both
preaching and for defending the values and interests of Orthodoxy” [160-2,
p. 440, parag.2].
41
If the Moscow Patriarchate decides to “isolate itself by withdrawing
from the World Council of Churches” the Patriarch says, this will mean, that
“the Russian Church is indifferent to the destiny of this world, created by
God….” [160-2, p.440-441].
The Inter-Orthodox Theological Conference in 2004, mentioned
above, states on the contrary that: “It is proposed that the remaining
autocephalous churches also withdraw from the World Council of Churches
and bring an end to these kinds of dialogues.” [7h, p.11, “B. Proposals, pt.
1].
This authoritative voice speaks on behalf of all traditional Orthodox
Christians, both in World Orthodoxy and the Old Calendar Churches.
To this voice the Patriarch replies that “It is imperative that we
properly reply to the schismatics and those who mock Orthodoxy, who use
the ecumenical theme as a provocation for schisms and who try to weaken
the influence which the Orthodox Church can have on society.” [160-2,
p.437, parag. 2].
In general, the Patriarch believes that the Moscow Patriarchate has an
obligation to be a witness to Orthodoxy to the world. The WCC and various
other dialogues are instruments by which this can be done. Their
participation, says the Patriarch, has always been faithful to the spirit of
Orthodoxy and has never made any compromises [16o-2, pp.119-140 and
433-445, 437]. Should it happen that the WCC eventually turns into “a
council of impious people,” then the Moscow Patriarchate, says Patriarch
Kirill, will definitely leave [16o-2, p.441, parag. 1].
The Patriarch says that up to this time no one has been given a good
reason for leaving the WCC or abandoning the ecumenical dialogues [16o-2,
p.440, parag. 3]. But is this true? We know that many learned and most
respected theologians and monastics, together with such Saints as St.
Seraphim (Sobolev) and St. Justin (Popovitch), categorically rejected this
involvement. The above-mentioned Conference in 2004 likewise rejected
this participation as does the Confession of Faith Against Ecumenism (2009)
which stated that ”We are now lodged in the “World Council of Churches”
and have essentially betrayed – with our membership alone – our
ecclesiastical self-awareness. We have removed the dogma regarding the
One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church.” [point 6].
One must also not forget the Anathema issued by ROCOR in 1983
against ecumenism. It seems, therefore, that it is not a lack of reasons which
is the point here, but the fact that Patriarch Kirill does not find these reasons
valid in his own eyes. Thus, the criterion for our participation is not based on
the voice of the Church (even though the Patriarch affirms it to be so,
42
pg.437, parag.2), but on the personal opinion of the Patriarch and other
likeminded hierarchs.
Such support for both Orthodoxy and the World Council of Churches
is not reflecting the traditional stand of the Orthodox Church. In fact it only
breaks down the firm foundation of Orthodoxy, with the result that the
faithful get confused and lose zeal for their faith.
The Conference in 2004 states that ”These dialogues wear down and
taint the Orthodox phronema [conscience] through intermingling and
obfuscation [darkening, confusion], and as a result bring harm to the
faithful, since without purity of dogma, even in lesser matters, no one can be
saved.” [7h, p.12, B. Proposals, pt.9].
The Confession of Faith (2009) likewise states that our involvement in
the Ecumenical Movement:
a) “actively impugns our Orthodox-Patristic Tradition and Faith;
b) is sowing doubt in the hearts of their flock and unsettle man,
leading to division and schism, and
c) is luring a portion of the flock into delusion, and thus, to spiritual
disaster.” [point 9]
The words, said by His Eminence Kirill, may seem to express a
sincere and firm wish to be a witness of Orthodoxy to the world, without
compromising the Faith, however, they are not in concord with what we
actually see today – namely a slowly but steady approach towards
ecclesiastical union between Orthodox and non-Orthodox Christians. The
result is that such an approach is slowly breaking down Orthodoxy in the
hearts of the faithful in a most subtle way.
Looking thus at the whole picture, one gets the strong feeling that we
are being slowly deceived.
Some Articles on a laity ROCOR Web-site.
In connection with this process of a fairly slow and cautious but still
steady rapprochement between the Moscow Patriarchate and the Catholic
Church one could mention the Australian Russian Orthodox web-site
“Rocorunited.” On June 30, 2009, one is presented with a Catholic article,
including a large photograph of Pope Benedict XVI. In words of hope and
joy the article speaks about the process towards full communion between the
Orthodox and Catholic Churches. The text also mentions the feast of Ss.
Peter and Paul in Rome (2009) where joint prayers between the delegates
43
from the Ecumenical Patriarchate and the Catholics are being spoken of as a
most natural and joyous event [16i-a].
Another article on this web-site, mentioning the future visit of
Archbishop Hilarion (Alfeyev) to the Vatican, gives a quite similar picture.
The source is again taken from a Catholic web-site” and states that “…this
visit will confirm the ties of friendship between the Catholic Church and the
Russian Orthodox Church, on the solid basis of mutual understanding and
respect, with a view to closer collaboration and to favour the presence of
the Church in the lives of the peoples of Europe and the world”. [16i-b].
Again, the article was presented without any critical comments.
Rather it is the impression that a stand of support is taken. Later,
Rocorunited clearly took the side supporting the dialogue between the
Moscow Patriarchate and the Catholic Church. In presenting the results of
the actual meeting, the editor begins by saying that “Whilst fringe “True
Orthodox” groups take an expectedly paranoid and isolationist stance
towards Catholics, the meeting between Archbishop Hilarion…and the Pope
was a positive step in Orthodox-Catholic dialogue. Indeed, having
diplomatic relations with the Vatican is an important part of a united
Christian front against the decadence of modern society. The fact is that
while we Orthodox will never recognize things like papal primacy, it does
not mean that we cannot maintain good ties with the world’s largest
Christian Church in promoting our common values. Ed.” [16i-c].
One should, of course, always try to maintain a normal and peaceful
relationship with everybody, whenever possible. Nevertheless, can an
Orthodox-Catholic dialogue be a positive step, when we know that such a
dialogue is slowly leading to a union between the two Churches? Can the
Orthodox faithful establish “ a [true] united Christian front,” when the
Orthodox Church has never considered the Roman Catholics to be part of
the one true Apostolic Church, not to say “the world`s largest Christian
Church?” One must not forget that the decadence of modern society is a
direct result of man`s apostasy from the Church of Christ. One can,
therefore, question the importance of having diplomatic relations with a
Church whose apostasy it is that helps increasing this decadence.
It is sad to see that the Old Calendar Movement is characterized as
“fringe groups,” and ridiculed as “True Orthodox” (in parenthesis), as
“paranoid” and an “isolationist stance. Is their fear of having even close
and warm diplomatic relationships with the Catholic Church actually not
44
well justified, especially when seeing in which direction this relationship is
clearly heading?
As a last example one sees on the web-site a small photo gallery
showing His Eminence Patriarch Kirill of Moscow concelebrating with His
Eminence Patriarch Bartholomew in the Phanar (Phanar – an area located in
today`s Istanbul – earlier called Constantinople) [16i-d]. The event is
presented as a joyous one, even though Patriarch Bartholomew is a heretic in
the true sense of the word. From an Orthodox standpoint any close contact
with this Prelate, not to mention concelebration with him, can considered to
be only a very sad event.
Some may argue that it is unavoidable for Patriarch Kirill to serve
with the Patriarch of Constantinople or other compromised hierarchs. Our
concern though, as Orthodox believers, is to be faithful to Christ, and to
show a firm and true stand in Orthodoxy. If we take this stand and avoid
these concelebrations with heretics, then, on the contrary we will strengthen
the Church.
Many Orthodox believers today seem to lack a proper understanding of
what the Roman Catholic Church actually represents and what harm it
actually has caused mankind. The spiritual and cultural damage which the
Roman Catholic Church has caused the Orthodox Church and in general
mankind throughout the last millennium exceeds many, many times that of
the soviet period of only seventy years. The Confession of Faith (2009)
states accordingly that “According to Saint Simeon of Thessaloniki, the
Mystagogue, “Papism” caused more damage to the Church than all the
heresies and schisms combined.” [pt.2, last parag.].
Many countries were enlightened by Orthodoxy long before Russia, but
came under the influence of Rome. These now Catholic or Protestant
countries have lost their Orthodox roots completely, due to Rome’s split
from Eastern Orthodox Christianity. Their spiritual and cultural Orthodox
heritage has been crushed once and for all and is now hardly alive in these
countries. When trying to build up what has been lost, one is forced to start
all over, with no spiritual literature, churches, monasteries, services etc.
But the most tragic part is in fact not the cultural aspect, but the fact
that the people have lost their Orthodox Christian roots completely. While
the soviet citizens, after only seventy years of communism, still feel their
Orthodox roots, these former Orthodox countries do not have one single
drop of Orthodox blood left in their veins. Truly understanding this aspect,
one would be much less eager to unite with such a spiritually destructive
force.
45
One can but fear that the faithful in ROCOR/MP are slowly but surely
changing their course from traditional Orthodoxy towards the spirit of World
Orthodoxy. To base such a fear on just a few articles can seem to be without
any valid ground. It should be noted that the web-site has presented material
critical of ecumenism [17t]. But still I view the above-mentioned four
articles in the light of the general atmosphere of the web-site together with
all of the other material presented in this letter concerning ROCOR/MP.
From a total perspective, I believe the articles are not isolated, accidental,
and insignificant incidents anymore, but are a small part of a slow but
gradual process of apostasy – if not of Faith, then certainly of the true spirit
of Orthodoxy.
Some other sad Events in the Moscow Patriarchate.
The defrocking of His Eminence, Bishop Diomid of Anadyr and
Chukotsky was of a highly questionable character. Not only was it done in a
clearly uncanonical manner, it lacked furthermore a truly valid canonical
ground. The reason for the defrocking was that Bishop Diomid supposedly
was provoking a schism in the Church. But the hierarchs of the Moscow
Patriarchate has themselves been the cause for several schisms in the Church
by accepting both the path laid out by Metropolitan Sergius and ecumenism.
What it really comes down to is that Bishop Diomid valiantly and honestly
spoke up against serious problems in the Moscow Patriarchate. He was
therefore removed. We in ROCOR/MP accepted and voted for his
defrocking, which indicates that we have no serious intentions of standing
up against the false path of the Moscow Patriarchate and World Orthodoxy.
The visit of Patriarch Alexis II to the Roman Catholic Cathedral of
Notre Dame, Paris, could also be mentioned, which was a stumbling block to
many Orthodox faithful [16d, please see videos of the visit too].
The Summit of the religious leaders in 2006 in Moscow can likewise
not be accepted, claiming the gods of the various non-Christian religions to
be the very same God and Creator which the Orthodox Church also worships
[16c, parag. 3, 5, 7, 11].
The Moscow Patriarchate participates in the ecumenical organizations
WCC, NCC, SCOBA, CEC as shown above. A small example is the official
ecumenical prayer service in Zurich (2008) where Orthodox clergy
participated including a Russian Orthodox priest of the Moscow
Patriarchate, blessing the people with holy water [11e-5].
The persecution and harassment of believers both in the Moscow
Patriarchate and in other Orthodox jurisdictions, which cannot accept the
46
current apostasy of the Moscow Patriarchate and World Orthodoxy is also
disturbing to see.
“Christian Values and Ideas.”
Today World Orthodoxy calls all Christians to form a “united Front”
in order to defend “Christian values and ideas” against the decadence of the
world. In order to rightly understand history, one must understand it in the
light of Orthodoxy. World history is a battle between God and the evil
spirits. Man is gradually falling away from God, being slowly but
thoroughly prepared for the coming of Antichrist. For this the evil spirits
need something which, despite all differences, can function as a factor in
uniting all people. This uniting factor is the wish for peace and human
morals. Today we see how both immorality and religious controversies
increase. It will reach a peak, until finally people on earth have had enough.
At that moment Antichrist will come and promise to end all immorality,
wars, hunger, religious disputes etc. with the result that people of all nations
and religions momentarily will respond to his call.
In focusing on “Christian values,” we supposedly fight for Christ and
His Church, but in fact the exact opposite is taking place. We replace
faithfulness to Christ and His Church with “Christian values and ideals”, and
believe that to be the main purpose of our lives as Orthodox Christians.
Thus, the defense of human values and ideas, social work, building of
Churches, monasteries, seminaries, conferences etc. has cunningly replaced
that which is most essential – faithfulness to Christ. In replacing Truth and
faithfulness to Christ with these vague human values, which are found in
most religions, but which never will be able to lead a person to repentance
and deification, we are in fact destroying the Church and leading people
away from salvation. Morals, decent Christian behavior, social work etc. are
only a result and can never be a cause. True defense of Christian values and
ideas must therefore begin with faithfulness to the Church itself and not the
other way around.
The defense of “Christian values,” as they are being presented today,
are therefore only breaking down the firm Orthodox confession, and
functioning as sweet bait for the preparation of all Christians and non-
Christians to eventually unite together around one Chalice and one “Savior.”
47
Our Russian Mother Church.
Some believe the Moscow Patriarchate to be a true and organic part of
our Russian Mother Church, others that it is a graceless and evil
organization. I hold to the view which I understand ROCOR has always
held, that the Moscow Patriarchate stems from a church-organization
(administration) which uncanonically usurped the power of the official
Russian Church. This organization freely united spiritually and practically
with a satanic system and was consequently not considered to be a true part
of the Mother Church, but only its current, false leader.
This chapter will look into ROCOR’s traditional understanding of the
Russian Mother Church. Below are two official statements from ROCOR
concerning the Russian Catacomb Church:
Resolution of the Sobor of Bishops of the Russian Orthodox Church
Outside of Russia (Sept. 1/14, 1971).
“The free part of the Russian Church, which finds itself outside the
boundaries of the USSR, is heart and soul with the confessors of the faith,
whom the anti-religious guidebooks call “True Orthodox Christians,” and
who in common usage are often called “the Catacomb Church” [17j, p.573,
parag. 1, line one]
Decision of Bishops, Ausgust 12/25, 1981.
“As the free part of the Russian Church, we can fully approve only
that part of the Church in Russia which is called the Catacomb Church and
only with her can we have full communion.” [17j, p. 576, parag. 2, line one].
In regard to the Moscow Patriarchate, the position of ROCOR is, of
course, much different. But despite an often severe stand, ROCOR did
consider the Russian Church which the Moscow Patriarchate leads to be part
of the Mother Church. Archbishop Vitaly (Maksimenko) testifies to this,
saying that “Our native Russian Orthodox Church is, to our great sadness,
enslaved by the ungodly communist powers. And the current heads of this
Church [Patriarch Alexy I] serve these powers, not out of fear, but
conscientiously…” [17c, p. 35, Klivlandskii Sobor, point 2).
ROCOR’s understanding of being faithful to their Mother Church
meant that they would never try to become autocephalous and thus cut ties
48
with that historical Russian Church, to which they have always belonged.
That Church was canonically headed by the Locum Tenens Metropolitan
Peter of Krutitsa and not Metropolitan Sergius, whose Synod later cut itself
off from the Mother Church by uniting with a satanic system. From that
moment, this Synod – later to be called the Moscow Patriarchate – could no
longer be considered to be truly (an organic part of) the Russian Church.
This is affirmed by Archbishop Vitaly (Maksimenko): He lays out three
ways which in the 1930`s were being followed in America by the Russian
faithful. One of them was within ROCOR itself (emphasis mine):
“While staying free from the current administration of the Moscow
Patriarchate – but without separating from the Body of the Russian Church
– to suffer with the yoked Mother Church and Her much-suffering People
and preserve in all its fullness and strictness the Holy Orthodox Faith of our
Fathers together with the whole order of the Church, being in union and
subordination to the Council and Synod of the Russian Church Abroad.”
[17c, p. 43, parag. 3].
Here is a clear distinction between the administration of the Moscow
Patriarchate on one hand and the Body of the Russian Church – our yoked
Mother Church – on the other. The Moscow Patriarchate was obviously not
considered by ROCOR to be identical with the Mother Church.
Metropolitan Anastassy pointed likewise to such a position of
ROCOR in regard to the Moscow Patriarchate in a reply to their appeal of
returning to the Russian Mother Church (emphasis mine):
“Only a free and lawful All-Russian Council,…will be able to be an
entirely competent judge between the bishops of the Russian Church abroad
and the current head of the Russian Church.” («Православная жизнь».
1976. No 6). [17l, p.137, parag. 3, line 11].
The saintly Metropolitan Philaret, First Hierarch of ROCOR, confirms
this position (emphasis mine):
“Our responsibility is not only to preserve our faith undamaged while
in exile, but also to observe faithfulness to our persecuted Mother Church,
despite the fact that we are unable to have any relationship with Its current
official leadership, which has chosen the path of mixing light with darkness
and a simultaneous service to both Christ and Belial.” [17n, parag. 1].
In a small pamphlet (Society of St. Tikhon of Zadonsk) named “The
New Martyrs” is a small essay “To the children of the Russian Orthodox
Church abiding in the Homeland and in the Dispersion.” It speaks on behalf
49
of thousands of Orthodox believers in the Soviet Union and shows us their
common understanding towards the Catacomb Church and the Moscow
Patriarchate. The editor of the pamphlet writes (emphasis mine):
“The following essay echoes the unspoken words of thousands of
Orthodox Christians behind the iron Curtain whose voice has been forcibly
silenced. Written by the editor of a new Samizdat [self-made] journal
“Maria,” who was recently expelled to the West, it speaks of the importance
of the Glorification of Russia`s New Martyrs and fully justifies the ROCOR
in taking this action on the behalf of the entire Russian Church.” [16r].
”The entire Russian Church,” without mentioning the Moscow
Patriarchate at all, is clearly understood to be the Russian Catacomb Church,
the ROCOR and that part of the Russian people under the Moscow
Patriarchate which never accepted the spirit of its false leaders, since it is
well-known that the Moscow Patriarchate was strongly opposed to the
canonization of the Royal Martyrs and always claimed that there were no
martyrs in the Soviet Union. Such a position is affirmed further in the essay:
“The Russian Church in the Soviet Union cannot do this [canonize the
Royal Martyrs] at the present time, being robbed of the possibility of
expressing her opinion and acting in accordance with her convictions.”
[16r].
Again, it was not ”in accordance with the convictions” of the
Moscow Patriarchate to canonize the Royal Martyrs. Regarding the
Catacomb Church we see a completely different attitude. (emphasis mine):
“Without breaking away from the Mother-Church, following her life
with a watchful, loving, and devoted gaze, the part abroad rejoices in her
triumphs and mourns her troubles and her trials. She knows and confesses
that the life of the Church in the homeland, from 1917 and to this day, walks
a grievous yet glorious path; the path of martyrdom and confession, of
withdrawal into the catacombs of illegal existence, of war with militant
godlessness and its enslavement of the shepherds of the Church.”[16r].
It is well-known, that it was not the Moscow Patriarchate which
“walked a grievous yet glorious path; the path of withdrawal into the
catacombs of illegal existence….” In contrast to the Moscow Patriarchate,
the Russian Catacomb Church is here directly called our Mother Church.
There is not even the slightest hint of seeing Her as something else.
The pamphlet was a reprint from Orthodox America (1982), a well-
respected Orthodox church-magazine, known to represent the traditional
Orthodox stand of ROCOR.
50
It therefore indeed seems to be that ROCOR clearly distinguished
between the current leadership of the Mother Church and the actual Mother
Church itself and saw them as two wholly different bodies. It would
therefore be completely wrong to consider the Moscow Patriarchate (an
organic part of) our Mother Church, it having been spiritually, consciously
and practically one with a satanic and wholly ungodly organism.
Therefore, I believe ROCOR/MP’s unconditional acceptance of the
church-organization of the Moscow Patriarchate as a legal and truly organic
part of our Mother Church cannot be justified and has only further increased
the divisions and confusion of where the Truth is and is not.
The Declaration of 1927 and its Justification.
The Moscow Patriarchate up to this day still justifies the path, laid out
by Metropolitan Sergius in 1927, despite all talks of the opposite. In
December 2007, only six months after the union between ROCOR and the
Moscow Patriarchate, the late Patriarch Alexis II spoke at the celebration of
the restoration of the Patriarchate in Russia in 1917:
“We believe that the path, outlined by His Eminence Tikon and
continued by his successors in the face of all the difficulties of the political
realities of the 20th century, gave the Russian Church, in contrast to the
alternative “withdrawal into the catacombs,” every opportunity to occupy
Its place in society.”[16e, p.9. left column top].
“It was not an easy choice, facing His Eminence Tikhon and later his
successor Metropolitan Sergius. It was a choice that would decide the very
destiny of the Russian Church: either to go into the catacombs—breaking
with the persecuting authorities—or to stand up against the regnant
atheism, preserving the legitimacy of her hierarchy and dogmatic purity
and, by the very fact of her visible presence, to witness that She is in the
world the very Pillar and Ground of the Truth.” [16e, p.18, right column,
middle].
“Metropolitan Sergius chose the latter in order to preserve the
Church, acting thus according to Christ’s commandment: “Greater love
hath no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his friends.”
[16e, p.18, right column, bottom].
51
“Understanding the true essence of all the processes going on in
Russia in the twenties, Metropolitan Sergius did not give in to the temptation
of apocalyptic moods, so dominant among parts of the Russian clergy and
laity.” [16e, p.18, right column, bottom to p.19, left column, top].
“[Later in history] both Patriarch Aleksy I and Patriarch Pimen
entered the path of serving the Church, which, while still being persecuted
and trampled under foot, nevertheless was preserved by a canonical
unshakeableness and was cleansed from schism and inner quarrels.”
[16e, p.19, middle column, top].
President Putin confirmed yet more the unshakeable truth of the
Declaration of 1927, saying:
“The Patriarchate helped the Russian Orthodox Church together with
the people to endure the cruel trials of the 20th century. It helped to defend
the faith, to unite the faithful, to preserve not only the treasures of the
Church, but also the national treasures, and later, during the revival of
church life, to continue Her tireless service.”[16e,p.16, left column, bott.].
As is seen, the path of Metropolitan Sergius is in reality considered to
be the only God-pleasing path, in complete contrast to the path of the
Catacomb Church and traditional Orthodox teaching.
Similar expressions we see in the book “The Keeper of the House of
God. Patriarch of Moscow and all of Russia Sergius Stragorodsky, 2003.
The book was blessed by the late Patriarch Alexis II, and printed by
Sretensky monastery in Moscow, currently one of the largest publishing
houses of religious books in Russia. In the preface of the book, written (in
Russian) by Patriarch Alexis II, we read that “Among the confessors of
Christ we must definitely mention Saint Tikon and His Holiness Patriarch
Sergius, who both spent time in confinement and suffered heavily from their
persecuters” [16o-1, p. 4, parag. 1].
There is also seen an acceptance of both paths, that of Metropolitan
Sergius and that of the Catacomb Church. Patriarch Kirill expresses such an
approach, saying that “Some clergy felt it was necessary to compromise with
the Soviet powers,…in order to simply be able to have church services so
nobody would have to hide. Others decided to reject such a path and
established the “Catacomb Church,” which was almost wiped out
completely. We have no right to judge any of them. They all suffered from
cruel persecutions.” [160-2, p. 376, parag. 2].
52
From a traditional Orthodox standpoint Metropolitan Sergius cannot
be considered a confessor for Christ and equal to the saints. It is incorrect
and against all traditional Orthodox belief to state that there exist two equal
ways in which one could go in order to confess Christ – the way of
Metropolitan Sergius or of the Catacomb Church. Such a stand is wholly un-
Orthodox and contradicts the traditional understanding of the Orthodox
Church as a Church built on the blood of Christ and His martyrs.
In the next paragraph Patriarch Alexis continues saying t h a t “One
must mention the struggle of the first post-revolution patriarchs in their
preservation and reconstruction of the Church’s unity. The renovation-
church, supported by the godless, together with various uncanonical groups
which did not submit to the new State system, became no less dangerous
than the persecution itself. The firmness in the defense of the canonical
structure resulted in the fact that most of the faithful did not abandon the
Mother Church, while the majority of the schismatics came back to Her.”
[16o-1, p. 4, parag. 2].
From the context it seems clear that it is the ROCOR and the
Catacomb Church in Russia which are being referred to here by the words
“schismatics” and “various uncanonical groups…more dangerous than the
persecution.”
Today, the Moscow Patriarchate still holds to its former position in
regard to Metropolitan Sergius. In 2009 the book Patriarch Kirill: his Life
and Worldview was issued (in Russian) by Metropolitan Hilarion (Alfeyev,
MP) [16o-2]. The book is well written and leaves a very positive and
sympathetic impression of Patriarch Kirill as a person and confessor in his
early childhood. In regard to the Moscow Patriarchate and the path it took, it
is presented as the most wise path in contrast to that of ROCOR. Thus,
discussing briefly and seemingly objectively the path of ROCOR, it still
clearly shines through that ROCOR in fact was the real cause for the schism
which, according to the author, goes back not to 1927 with the acceptance of
the Declaration, but to 1920 when ROCOR initially began its existence,
thereby making the schism into a purely political one with no connection to
a spiritual fall whatsoever. In the book Patriarch Kirill is described as a most
faithful pupil of Metropolitan Nikodim (Rotov), who saw the path of
Metropolitan Sergius as the only true way to save the Church [p.193, parag.
1 and further. See also pp. 183-201] [p. 38, parag. 3].
Patriarch Kirill himself states that even though the acceptance of the
Declaration w a s “not completely in keeping with the standards and
traditions of the Russian Orthodox Church” such a compromise was
nevertheless necessary, since “at that time there was simply no other way in
53
order for the Church to survive…” (“…тогда иного пути для выживания
Церкви и сохранения народа Божия не было.”). Metropolitan Sergius and
others who followed him were, therefore, still true confessors by the fact that
they shepherded the Church during the cruel communist times [p.375]. The
accusing of a betrayal, the Patriarch states, lacks therefore any foundation,
since “All the activities of Metropolitan Sergius were directed toward the
survival of the Church under conditions of revolutionary terror.” (“Вся
деятельность митрополита Сергия имела целью выживание Церкви в
условиях революционного террора.”[160-2, p.375, parag. 3. Patriarch
Kirill: his Life and Worldview”, 2009].
In the book the Moscow Patriarchate is very convincingly viewed –
through the voices of Patriarch Kirill and Metropolitan Hilarion (Alfeyev) –
as the triumphant Mother Church which by the wisdom of its patriarchs has
been led safely through the hard times of communism and now stands in all
its glory. The path of ROCOR is thereby indirectly and quite elegantly swept
off the floor as a path not to be followed, putting the whole of its history of
confession into complete oblivion.
ROCOR’s Separation from Metropolitan Sergius –
political or spiritual?
The reason for ROCOR to break ecclesiastical ties with the Synod of
Metropolitan Sergius lies in the voluntary acceptance of the “Declaration” of
1927 and union with a demonic system – the communist regime – resulting
in the loss of inner freedom. It is, therefore, so much more unfortunate to
see ROCOR/MP now gradually taking another stand, claiming that the
separation was of a political character and not spiritual. In an interview with
Bishop Jerome of Manhattan and New York, His Eminence states the
following (emphasis mine): “It was necessary to unite with the Moscow
Patriarchate, since the reason for this division was historical and not
dogmatical….ROCOR was cut off not because of heresy but because of the
fact that a normal relationship with the Patriarchate was impossible due to
the interference of the Soviet government [17b-1, p.5, parag. 1].
In another interview 2008, Metropolitan Hilarion – First Hierarch of
ROCOR/MP – takes the same position, saying (emphasis mine): “The
reunification of the two parts of the Church is indeed a process of healing
wounds inflicted by the bloody years of the persecution of the Church. This
process has been going on for a long time now in a wide variety of ways, but
54
officially, it surfaces as you see it now. The Russian Orthodox Church in
exile, as she called herself, always considered herself a branch of one trunk,
but political circumstances prevailed, and this was our common pain during
the years of division.” [17b-2, question 4].
In yet another interview, September 2009, the Metropolitan repeats
his position, saying: “I think that in general, there was no rift among
Orthodox people, there was a political rift, but the faith remained one and
the same…I think that the reunification of the Church led to reconciliation.
Political trends are temporary, they quickly evaporate, but the faith remains
forever.” [17b-3, answer 6: “There is no one to sign..”].
According to these statements ROCOR’s separation was:
-“ a political rift…or trend,”
-“historical and not dogmatical,… due to the interference of the
Soviet government.”
-“[It was] inflicted by the bloody years of the persecution of the
Church…[because] political circumstances prevailed….”
As can be seen from these statements, the issue of a spiritual fall is not
even hinted at. The separation is described as something purely external,
where the guilty party is the Soviet government alone and not the Moscow
Patriarchate. Understanding the separation in this way, it was therefore only
natural for ROCOR to seek a reunification as soon as the communist regime
fell. But is such a position true to the position which ROCOR formerly held?
In answering this question, we must go a little bit back in time. Archbishop
Vitaly Maksimenko, former abbot of Holy Trinity Monastery said in this
respect:
“The Moscow Patriarchate wants us to unite with them. What are we,
the faithful, now to do?
It is said that the Moscow Patriarchate has not changed anything,
neither in the dogmas, nor in the services, nor in matters of ritual. But we
will answer: “No!” The Patriarchate has violated an essential dogma
concerning the Church of Christ and rejected her essential purpose – to
serve the rebirth of the people, replacing it with a service contrary to the
nature of the Church, namely, service to the ungodly goals of communism.
This deviation is more bitter than all of the previous heresies of Arianism,
Nestorianism, the iconoclasm, etc. And this is not just a personal sin of this
or that hierarch, but a fundamental sin of the Moscow Patriarchate, a sin
55
that has been confirmed, proclaimed and bound by an oath before the whole
world; it is, so to speak, an apostasy that has been made into dogma.”
[ 1 7 c , The Dogma of Christ`s Church, (Догмат о Церкви
Христовой), p.25, parag. 4].
Father Seraphim Rose confirms these words, and makes it crystal
clear why ROCOR separated from Metropolitan in 1927 (emphasis Fr.
Seraphim): “The Catacomb hierarchs and faithful have not in the least
separated from the Moscow Patriarchate because of the personal sins of its
hierarchs – but rather because of their apostasy from Christ, which does
indeed involve not merely the hierarchs, but also the whole of the Church’s
faithful” [12p, parag. 2].
Archbishop Averky (Taushev) of Jordanville likewise affirms the
spiritual fall of the Moscow Patriarchate, saying that “The destructive
compromise [by the Moscow Patriarchate] with the God-fighting communist
power is much more dangerous and destructive for souls than open bloody
persecutions. “This is the spirit of “Apostasy” in the very midst of the
Orthodox Church, which gave birth to all kinds of divisions and schism,
both in the Homeland and abroad. This is the inner betrayal of Christ,
preserving an external, merely seeming faithfulness to Him”[16n, p.6,
parag.3].
In an Epistle of 1990, ROCOR still confessed the traditional view of
our division in stating that “[Some] obviously have forgotten or do not know
that the schism within the Church of Russia was caused sixty-three years
ago by Metropolitan Sergius and his followers.” [17o, 6th –last parag.].
In yet another Epistle from the same year we read (emphasis mine):
“With all to whom the treasures of Orthodoxy which we have
inherited are dear, we are prepared to elucidate the canonical and dogmatic
problems which have created the rift between the various parts of the
Church of Russia as an integral whole. The objective of such conversations
cannot be to arrive at any compromise between truth and falsehood. The
immovable Cornerstone of our hope is the Lord Jesus Christ Himself. There
cannot be communion between light and darkness.” [16s,second-last parag.].
And as late as 2001 the same position was expressed by the Synod of
ROCOR in an Epistle, addressed to the Moscow Patriarchate:
56
“The division between you and us is dismissed as “political” by
many. However, in the revolutionary events in Russia that are to blame for
the beginning of our division, we see nothing political in the proper sense of
the word. The motivating factors of those bloody events were lies, deception,
apostasy and theomachism. You must agree that this gives us the right to
evaluate the “sovietization” of Russia as a moral and profoundly religious
catastrophe. Metropolitan Sergius’ declaration of 1927 expanded this
catastrophe to the internal life of the Church, laying the foundation for the
phenomenon we call “sergianism.” This “sergianism” was manifested
especially in the cooperation of church hierarchs with the KGB.” [1d].
As is seen, the division was not due to a “political rift,” as
Metropolitan Hilarion (ROCOR/MP) now states, but due to a “canonical
and dogmatical rift,”“aninner betrayal of Christ”and “a profoundly
religious catastrophe,…which Metropolitan Sergius expanded to the
internal life of the Church, a catastrophe considered to be “more bitter than
all of the previous heresies of Arianism, Nestorianism, the iconoclasm, etc.”
This has always been the traditional position of ROCOR.
Two Views.
It is of vital importance for the well-being of the Russian Church to
properly understand this division, mentioned above. Contrary to former
conviction, ROCOR/MP is now characterizing the division as a division
only between two church-organizations (or sister-Churches), caused by
outward political circumstances. But such a position is not the position
ROCOR held in earlier days. Father Seraphim Rose said that “The division
is not merely one between two totally independent church organizations
(though it is that also); more basically it is a division between two entirely
different views of what the Church of Christ is and how it should act in this
sinful world while conducting its children to the banks of the eternal sinless
life in the Kingdom of Heaven.” [17j, p.15, parag. 2].
The present position of ROCOR/MP is therefore questioning that
which the Church has always held to be a cornerstone of the Church – the
path of the martyrs.
“One view, continues Fr. Seraphim Rose, that of the present day
Moscow Patriarchate [year 1982], sees the Church first of all as an
57
organization whose outward form must be preserved at any cost;
disobedience to or separation from this organization is regarded as an act
of “schism” or even “sectarianism.” (one, perhaps, recalls the words of His
Eminence, Archbishop Mark (ROCOR/MP) that ROCOR will end up being
a sect, if we will not unite)…Such apologies, products of the general decline
of Orthodox church consciousness in our times, are themselves symptoms of
the ecclesiastical disease of Sergianism, of the loss of contact with the
spiritual roots of Orthodox Christianity and the replacement of living and
whole Orthodoxy by outward and “canonical” forms.”
“The other view, that of the True-Orthodox or Catacomb Church of
Russia, sees the first responsibility of the Orthodox Church to be
faithfulness to Christ and to the true spirit of Orthodoxy, at whatever
external cost.” [17j, p.15-16].
This second view has always been considered by the Orthodox
Church to be the accepted Path, given us by Christ.
If our separation was indeed only political, then ROCOR and the holy
Catacomb Saints in fact committed a grave sin by breaking ecclesiastical ties
with the Synod of Metropolitan Sergius. If indeed we can be convinced of
the fact that our separation was political and not spiritual, then the path of
Metropolitan Sergius, and not of ROCOR or the martyrs, was indeed the true
one. Then the Moscow Patriarchate has been right all along and rightly
called us schismatics and an uncanonical group. Then the whole essence of
what the Church of Christ is has been changed completely.
The Moscow Patriarchate –
in voluntary spiritual Bondage.
This former position of ROCOR leads us to another important aspect
concerning the spiritual fall of the Moscow Patriarchate.
After the Soviet regime fell in 1990, some slowly began to believe
that we were obliged to unite with the Moscow Patriarchate, since an
external freedom had been established. I believe though, that the Moscow
Patriarchate, in actuality, never became free spiritually. In 1927 it (the
Moscow Patriarchate) freely gave away its inner freedom to a purely
antichristian and God-fighting system and accepted to stay in this bondage
right up to its fall. The freedom was not taken away by force, since,
58
according to the holy Fathers, no evil force whatsoever is able to take away
our freedom unless we ourselves give it away freely. For the whole span of
70 years, they consciously and voluntarily rejected the inner freedom, given
to them by God, to deny the evil communist System and unite spiritually
with the Russian martyrs, the Catacomb Church, and the ROCOR. They
used this freedom to mock and persecute the Catacomb Saints and ROCOR.
The freedom now given to them came about without any act of willpower on
their part and is therefore a counterfeit illusion of a real inner freedom. This
explains why, after almost a quarter of a century, they have still not any
desire to reject either ecumenism or the path of Metropolitan Sergius. It was
this voluntarily spiritual bondage, which caused and causes our separation
from and non-acceptance of the Moscow Patriarchate. In a conversation with
his parishioners, the Russian priest Father Michael Korjagin (ROCOR-A)
emphasizes this point (emphasis mine):
“Not everybody who lived in the Soviet Union submitted spiritually to
the soviet powers. And the other way around, from a purely external
freedom does not necessarily follow a spiritual freedom. This last point is
especially important for us to understand today.” [16m, p. 57, parag.7].
In characterizing what true Orthodoxy is, we read in the Orthodox
Word the following difference between an inner and outward freedom:
“True Orthodoxy is one and the same whether in outward freedom or
outward slavery; it is free internally to preach the unchanging Truths of
Christ’s Church, and the questions before it are one and the same here and
there…” [12p, p.246, parag. 3].
As mentioned earlier, Archbishop Averky likewise characterized the
fall of the Moscow Patriarchate as an “inner betrayal of Christ.” Thus, true
Orthodoxy is characterized by an inner freedom to be faithful to Christ
whether one finds himself in an outward freedom or outward slavery. This
freedom is never given automatically by an outward freedom nor can it
automatically be taken away by an outward loss of freedom. This gift comes
from within and is completely independent of outward conditions.
Therefore, can an Orthodoxy (of the Moscow Patriarchate), which is
dependent solely on an external freedom in order to preach the unchanging
Truths of Christ’s Church, be considered a true Orthodoxy – the Orthodoxy
of Christ?
Why does God so zealously guard our personal freedom, to the point
where He even allows us to lose our very soul for eternity in order not to
violate this personal freedom? This is so, because God wants us to freely
59
accept Him and His Kingdom. That is why we, in our daily Christian life,
are forced to struggle with our various passions and show our own wish to
become free in order to eventually inherit the Kingdom of Heaven. If God
were to free us without our own struggle, then where would our repentance
be, our love for God, our freedom, our crown? Then the Church in vain
praises daily the martyrs who, in the most elevated form ever, manifested
this inner freedom to choose Christ and not Satan. It was (is) therefore only
natural for the Moscow Patriarchate to reject the Russian Martyrs, being in
complete opposition to the spirit of these martyrs.
The primary reason for ROCOR to break ecclesiastical ties with
Metropolitan Sergius was not to betray Christ. It was a matter of both not
betraying Christ and not losing the inner freedom of the Church. Whether or
not it was to the communist system or to any other system was and is wholly
irrelevant. The main concern of ROCOR is to stay away from that which
will be a threat to its inner freedom. The Moscow Patriarchate in freely
remaining in this spiritual bondage, thus represents an equal threat to our
inner freedom as did the soviet power. The end result will be the same – a
loss of inner freedom.
The Path of Christ.
It must be said that the Moscow Patriarchate itself does not see their
compromise as a loss of inner freedom. They claim the freedom they lost
was purely external while inwardly they stayed completely faithful to Christ
and his Church. But (almost all of) the most respected and saintly hierarchs
of the Russian Church both in the Catacombs and ROCOR did not see it in
this way and therefore broke with the Synod of Metropolitan Sergius. They
did so because that is how Christ Himself, together with all His martyrs, has
always taught us to do in such situations. The intentions of Metropolitan
Sergius together with the whole episcopate of the Moscow Patriarchate may
have been most sincere. They may have felt that there was no other way in
order to save the Church, and that they were going through much suffering
from being in complete subordination to the communists, but that still does
not justify the path they decided to take. Because it is not the path of Christ
and his martyrs and will never be. As has been indicated earlier, Christ has
given us only two ways to act when confronted with persecution – either to
run, or when this is not possible, humbly lay down our lives for Him. A third
way, that of joining the persecutors in order to save ourselves or His Church
on earth has never ever existed in the history of the Church. This is easy to
say when living in peace and comfort, but it makes it no less true. Our time
60
here in the West may very well come too – sooner than we perhaps think –
and when it does, we must be ready to confront the persecution as valiantly
and uncompromisingly as did (and do) the True Orthodox Catacomb
Christians. If we allow the path of Metropolitan Sergius to be even an
option, however slight and faint it may be, we will surely take that path in
our weakness.
One must also remember that the Church, during the persecution of
the Christians in the first three centuries, considered those people who – in
order to avoid martyrdom – denied Christ together with those who gave
money to the committee of pagans and took the certificate without denying
Christ, the so called “liveloforoi,” as being apostates and sinners.
What Metropolitan Sergius did was therefore in fact to wholly
undermine that force which is the most important force during persecution –
a wish for martyrdom [16m, p.15]. As Father Michael Polsky says: “That
existence which is wrapped up in false forms or by means of falsehood, is
neither an existence nor life in the Church. It is, on the contrary, death to
the soul, a weakening, paralysis, anguish and prison. It is a burden beyond
one`s strength and a terrible weight on the conscience. There is freedom
only outside this yoke of falsehood, even though that would have to mean a
life of wandering, an absence of an outward legal Church and a life in the
catacombs, together with all deprivations. Here there is freedom, truth and
life with a clear conscience.” [16t, p.VI].
Unfortunately, we now erroneously believe that this purely external
freedom is equal to the precious inner freedom that was preserved by the
Catacomb Church and ROCOR. In doing so, ROCOR/MP has greatly
jeopardized its own spiritual freedom. Therefore, for ROCOR/MP to seek a
purely mechanical union, based on a likewise purely outward freedom
without in the slightest way taking into consideration the actual inner
spiritual state (fall) of the Moscow Patriarchate, seems neither to be justified
nor the correct way to overcome such a division. The correct and canonically
proper way has always been considered by ROCOR to be the All-Russian
Council.
The All-Russian Council.
In order to understand to some extent the traditional position of
ROCOR in earlier days regarding a future All-Russian Council, I will
present a few testimonies from the Synod of ROCOR together with personal
61
testimonies from hierarchs, hieromonks, theologians and laymen on this
subject. As will be seen this Council was expected by both ROCOR and the
Russian Catacomb Church to take place in order to rightly evaluate the past
and create a sound and canonical basis for the unity of the Russian Church.
In dealing with the issues of the Mother Church and the future All-
Russian Council, one has to be cautious. In the history of ROCOR the
picture is not always clear cut. Still I will argue that there existed a certain
position towards these issues which indeed was acknowledged by ROCOR
as being the general, official and most accepted one.
First I will present the position as seen from inside the ROCOR itself
in the last seventy years. I will then briefly show the position of the Russian
Catacomb Church.
Archpriest Lev Lebedev (who died in 1997) sums up the common
hope of all true Russian Orthodox Christians. He said that when the moment
arrives of freedom in Russia, a truly free and not false All-Russian Council
has to be established, consisting of the free part of the Church of Russia,
both in the Diaspora and in Russia, together with those worthy hierarchs of
the Moscow Patriarchate who in spirit firmly reject the path of Metropolitan
Sergius and ecumenism. Both Sergianism and the heresy of ecumenism
would unconditionally have to be anathematized. A new worthy Patriarch
and in general a worthy hierarchy would be elected, who truly would be able
to resurrect the Church in Russia and make it not only one in spirit but also
truly canonical. It must be said that Father Lev was of the opinion that such
a Council would come about only with a new Russian Tsar. [16l, p.31].
O n Orthodox-info, a respected Orthodox web-site, representing a
moderate, sober and traditional Orthodox position we read (emphasis mine):
“Similarly, in 1934 Metropolitan Cyril of Kazan wrote:
” I firmly believe that the Orthodox Episcopate, with brotherly union
and mutual support, will preserve the Russian Church, with God’s help, in
age-old Orthodoxy all the time of the validity of the Patriarchal Testament
(of Patriarch Tikhon), and will conduct it to a lawful Council” (The
Orthodox Word, 1977, no . 75, p. 189) [17q].
The author of the web-site continues:
“In accordance with the famous “Testament” ofMetropolitan
Anastassy, Chief Hierarch of the Russian Church Outside of Russia from
1936 to 1964, a final judgment of the Moscow Patriarchate and the Russian
church situation cannot be made now, but must wait for a free Church
Council, which can obviously be assembled only after the fall of
Communism. The last paragraph of this “Testament” states”:
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“As for the Moscow Patriarchate and her hierarchs, inasmuch as they
are in an intimate, active, and well-wishing union with the Soviet power
which openly confesses its complete godlessness and strives to implant
atheism in the entire Russian people, with them the Church Abroad,
preserving its purity, must not have any communion whatever, whether
canonically, in prayer, or even in ordinary everyday contact, at the same
time giving each of them over to the final judgment of the Sobor (Council) of
the future free Russian Church” (The Orthodox Word, 1970, no. 33-34, p.
239) [17q].
Obviously ROCOR is supposed to seek union after freedom has been
given. But Metropolitan Anastassy adds further that there must first be
established a Council of the future free Russian Church which is supposed to
rightly judge the compromised hierarchs of the Moscow Patriarchate, in
”giving each of them over” to a final judgment of ”a future free Russian
Church.
Metropolitan Anthony Krapovitsky, First Hierarch of The Russian
Church Abroad, was likewise hoping for a future All-Russian Council. In
1934 he wrote the following: “I consider the acts of Metropolitan Sergius
[Stragorodsky] to be criminal acts, which are indictable by a future free All-
Russian Council.” [16m, p.53].
Another important document of October 1941 helps us further to
understand the position of ROCOR regarding the future restoration of a
canonical church administration in Russia. During the Second World War
many saw an opportunity for Russia to be liberated from the Soviet power.
The circumstances around such a future All-Russian church administration
were therefore discussed. In a letter to Archbishop Seraphim (Ljad), October
1941, Metropolitan Anastassy presents his own view together with the view
of the Synod. (16m-2, p.158).
The reconstruction of a Higher Church Administration“was
considered not to be possible until Russia had been completely freed from
the communists and an explanation of what had happened to the Locum
Tenens Metropolitan Kirill of Kazan had been fully made.” [16m, p. 61].
Until such a time would occur it was considered necessary “to gather
in Moscow, as soon as it had been liberated, a council of all those available
bishops from the Russian Church, who had not compromised themselves in
collaborating with Metropolitan Sergius and especially by participation in
his Synod. The council must be under the leadership of the oldest in rank
among the bishops and form a provisional higher church administration,
which subsequently is to summon an All-Russian Council for the restoration
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of the Patriarchate and the judgment of a further organization of the
Russian Church [16m-2, p.158].
This subject was discussed in more detail in another document of
1942, issued by the ROCOR-Synod. In the “Project of the restoration of the
canonical church administration in Russia,” which was proposed to the
German department by the Synod of ROCOR (June 1942) the issue was
discussed in more detail. It states that “Metropolitan Sergius cannot remain
the Head of the Russian Church due to canonical reasons and because of
the unacceptable way of his political actions.”[16m-2, p.159].
Father Michael Korjagin says in this regard – that here two reasons
are given for not being able to accept Metropolitan Sergius as the head of
the Church: canonical and moral-political [16m-1, p.61].
The document continues, stating that “One must note, that according
to the canons of the Orthodox Church a hierarch may be given over to trial
and thus be freed from his post due not only to his heretical error, but also
due to his moral-canonical fault (Canon 81 of the Apostles). In this case the
hierarchs and the faithful saw in the new politics of Metropolitan Sergius a
betrayal of the Orthodox faith in the form of a compromise with the ungodly
ones and the Church’s submission by him.” [16m-2, p.161-162].
Further, in declaring the necessity to summon a Council for the
regulation of church life in Russia, the members of the Synod [of ROCOR]
put the following question: “Who is to be considered a full member of the
Council, and who can summon it?” And they answer: “Based on the
canons, there can be only one answer: only those of the Russian hierarchs,
who have been loyal to Patriarch Tikhon and his lawful successors –
Metropolitan Kirill and Metropolitan Peter – can be members of the
Council. Those hierarchs, who belong to the groups which arose due to the
instigations of the soviet councils and have been condemned by Patriach
Tikhon and Metropolitan Peter, together with the companions-in-arms of
Metropolitan Sergius, cannot be admitted to participate in the First
Constituent Council, since they are indictable by the All-Russian Council.”
[16m-2, p. 163-164].
Commenting on this paragraph, Father Michael Korjagin says that “It
is quite characteristic, that Metropolitan Anastassy and the Synod saw a
future lawful higher administration of the Russian Church free of any
persons, “who have compromised themselves in collaborating with
Metropolitan Sergius and especially by participation in his Synod…”
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“That is why – he continues – Metropolitan Anastassy still more than
ten years later – in accordance with all the confessors of the Russian
Church in the twentieth century – considered the hierarchs of the Moscow
Patriarchate (as mentioned above) subject “to a final judgment of the
Council of the future free Russian Church”
“Those were the real views of Metropolitan and of all the Russian
Church Abroad regarding the canonical problems – problems which we
now [2004] also are confronted with.” [16m-1, p. 62, parag. 4-6].
Father Seraphim Rose also testifies to the fact that an All-Russian
Council had to be convened before a reunification could take place
(emphasis mine): “While considering the clergy and faithful of the Moscow
Patriarchate as participants in apostasy and schism, True-Orthodox
Christians view them with sympathy and love, but also speak the truth about
them and refuse to participate in their deeds or have communion in prayer
and sacraments with them, leaving their judgment to the future All-Russian
council, when and if God should grant that it might be convened. [12p, The
Orthodox Word, p. 240, parag. 4].
I will note here that Father Seraphim Rose frequently referred to the
Russian Catacomb Church and its true spirit of Orthodoxy. There is today in
Russia more than one Synod (Church) under the name Russian Catacomb
Church. Which of these Synods (Churches) are identical to the Russian
Catacomb Church of his time, I will let the reader decide for himself.
In his “Royal Path,” Father Seraphim Rose repeats his view on a
future All-Russian Council (emphasis mine): “One can of course have no
communion with such a body [the Moscow Patriarchate], dominated by
atheists, but precise definitions of its status are best left to a free Russian
church council in the future.” [7m, parag. 14].
Further he specifies what was to be expected from a future All-
Russian Council: ”In previous Councils like this [an All-Russian Council] in
the history of the Church, those most guilty of schism have been punished,
while the innocent followers of schism have been forgiven and restored to
communion with the Church.” [12p, p. 240, parag. 4, last 5 lines].
And in 1971, Father Seraphim Rose, commenting on the writings of
Boris Talantov, affirms this, saying that they (the writings)“will doubtless
be used as testimony at that longed-for Council of the entire free Russian
Church, including the Churches of the Catacombs and of the Diaspora, that
will finally judge the situation created by the Communist Yoke and
Sergianism (emphasis mine) [17q, no.36, p.38].
65
Metropolitan Anastassy also explains in more detail, the character of
such a Council. He states that in order for this Council to be God-pleasing,
the participation of those parts of the Russian Church who had not
compromised themselves with the Soviet system had to participate
(emphasis mine): “Only an All-Russian Council, freely and lawfully
established and completely free in its decisions, with the participation, as
far as possible, of all of the bishops from abroad and especially of those
who in Russia are currently in confinement – to whom we are ready to give
answer for all of our acts during our time abroad – will be an entirely
competent judge between the bishops of the Russian Church Abroad and the
current head of the Russian Church” («Православная Жизнь». 1976. No 6).
[17l, p.137, parag. 3, line 11].
It is obvious that Metropolitan Anastassy considered the free part of
the Russian Church to be the major guarantee for an “entirely competent
judge” at such a Council. This spiritually free part is the Catacomb Church
and ROCOR. It is likewise obvious that by a Council, ROCOR did not have
in mind just any Council, but a Council which would rightly evaluate the
past. Even St. John of Shanghai, who has been quoted so frequently in
defense of a union with the Moscow Patriarchate, confirmed the general
position of ROCOR regarding an All-Russian Council. Thus, at the All-
Diaspora Pastoral Conference of ROCOR, 2003, one of the official
supporters for the union presented a paper in which he states (emphasis
mine) that “St. John assumed that the issue of the separated parts of the
Russian Church can be resolved only at an All-Russian Council.” [7n,
second-last parag.].
This statement is repeated, when the author concludes the position of
St. John, saying that ”The issue of church unity has to be dealt with at an
All-Russia Church Council.” [7n, last parag.].
Professor Ivan Andreev mentions also a future Council, where the
Moscow Patriarchate has to stand trial for its apostasy (emphasis mine): “…
We, the Orthodox Russian people, [do not] predetermine the final trial over
the Soviet church, a trial, which by the “ruling” of the Holy Spirit will be
carried out in its time by the Russian Orthodox Synod.” [17i, p.57, last
parag.].
The understanding of the importance of an All-Russian Council in the
history of ROCOR continues up to our time. This becomes especially
evident in the astounding 1994 Epistle of the Synod of Bishops of the
ROCOR where we read the following (emphasis mine):
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“Knowing that the Russian people can find spiritual support only in
the unadulterated and pure Orthodox Church of the Holy Fathers, we trust
that in fruitful and critical discussion we may make our own contribution
toward the preparatory process for the free All-Russia Council of which we
have spoken in our previous conciliar epistles. Such a council must, in our
opinion, lead to the triumph of pure Orthodoxy and the Truth committed to
us by our fathers over all the dark powers which have been arrayed against
our Church and our much-suffering people in this century. Not with loud
declarations, but with painstaking, patient, and perhaps even lengthy labor,
we must prepare the way for the All-Russia Council, in which only healthy
forces, possessed of the capacity to distinguish truth from falsehood, can
take part. Only then, with God’s help, will it be able to serve as the basis for
the re-establishment in Russia of true Orthodoxy which is confessed by all of
us “with one mouth and with one heart.” [16s].
One notices that the epistle also here stresses the importance of having
only “healthy forces, possessed of the capacity to distinguish truth from
falsehood, to take part.” Among these healthy forces there could be
hierarchs from the Moscow Patriarchate as well. Unfortunately, they are
defrocked.
The Russian Catacomb Church held the same position as ROCOR.
Thus Metropolitan Joseph of Petrograd, Head of the Russian Catacomb
Church, also spoke about a future All-Russian Council as the only
competent judge. On Orthodox-info the author says (emphasis mine):
“The subject of this future free Council is one that has occupied the
thoughts both of the Catacomb Church and the Church Outside of Russia
ever since the Sergian Declaration of 1927. In that year Metropolitan
Joseph of Petrograd, the first real head of the Catacomb Church, wrote:
“In separating from Metropolitan Sergius and his acts, we do not
separate from our lawful Chief Hierarch, Metropolitan Peter, nor from the
Council, which will meet at some time in the future, of those Orthodox
hierarchs who have remained faithful. May this Council, our sole competent
judge, not then hold us guilty for our boldness” (The Orthodox Word, 1971,
no. 36, p. 26). [17q, point 4].
Again, His Eminence, like Metropolitan Anastassy, considers those
Orthodox hierarchs who have remained faithful to be the actual guarantee
for a sole competent judge.
In another document of the Catacomb Church, which circulated in the
Soviet Union in 1971, we hear an anonymous Catacomb believer, most
likely a hierarch, testifying to a future All-Russian Council (emphasis mine):
67
“We believe that if the world does not perish, sooner of later in
liberated Russia there will be a Local Council of our Church, to which the
fruits of their labors and exploits for the long period without a Council (for
one can not call Councils those convocations of Soviet hierarchs which the
Council of Religious Affairs organizes together with the Patriarchate) will
be brought forth by the Moscow Patriarchate and by the persecuted Russian
“Catacomb” Church, to which the authors of this article belong… T o this
future council the “Catacomb” Church will bring the testimony of the purity
of her faith, unstained by any kind of compromises with the enemies of
Christ; for prayer that has been bought is impure prayer.” [17j, p. 540, line
4 from top].
Father Michael Korjagin says that “We are all patiently waiting and
hoping for such a canonical and free All-Russian Council, which will be the
triumph of truth in all of the Russian Church. All the New Martyrs have
been waiting for this Council as well as generations of Catacomb Christians
and the hierarchs of the Russian Church Abroad.” [16m, p.53].
All this testifies to the fact that the issue of an All-Russian Council,
being regularly repeated and affirmed by our Synod together with our most
respected hierarchs, priests, monks and theologians, was indeed the general
accepted position of ROCOR. From these few, but important documents and
testimonies, we are presented with four aspects, which together fully
characterize this Council, namely: its existence, its members, its purpose and
its goal.
The first aspect – its existence – testifies to the fact that an All-
Russian Council indeed was expected by ROCOR and the Catacomb Church
to take place in order to rightly evaluate the whole period from 1927 up to
the fall of the Soviet Union.
The second aspect – its members – testifies to the fact that ROCOR
and the Russian Catacomb Church, and in general the whole (spiritually)
free part of the Russian Church, had to take part in the Council, as a
guarantee for it to be God-pleasing. Only the wholly worthy hierarchs of the
Moscow Patriarchate who had not compromised themselves in collaborating
with the communists, or who have shown sincere repentance of their former
path were to partake in the Council. The Council was to be led by the eldest
in rank among the bishops of the free part of the Russian Church.
Each of the Russian Old Calendar Church’s representatives would
have to participate, in order to truly be able to re-establish the one Russian
Church. Those hierarchs who had compromised themselves in collaborating
with Metropolitan Sergius and especially participating in his Synod were not
68
to be admitted to the Council. In our days it would mean those hierarchs who
wholeheartedly have compromised themselves in collaborating with the
communists and accepted the course of Metropolitan Sergius as a righteous
path.
The third aspect – its purpose – focuses on the main role of the
Council – to rightly evaluate the whole period going all the way back to
1927 or perhaps even to the revolution in 1917 and thus create a sound
foundation for a true reunification. This period includes the acceptance of
the Provisional Government by the Russian Church, and its abandonment of
the Royal Family, together with ecumenism and the voluntary submission by
Metropolitan Sergius to the God-fighting and satanic communist system.
The acts by Metropolitan Sergius and ecumenism were to be condemned. A
new worthy Patriarch among those bishops who had not compromised
themselves was then to be elected. After such a truly free and canonical
election had taken place everything would be ready for the reunification.
The fourth and last aspect – its goal – brings us to the final result –
“the re-establishment in Russia of true Orthodoxy”.
Confronted with the above-mentioned statements, which cover the
whole period from 1927 up to our days, we therefore understand that a
purely external freedom in Russia, even though essential for a union, was
definitely not the only criterion for a reunification. That was just the first
major step toward this union. The second step was no less essential and
perhaps even more crucial – the long-waited All-Russian Council.
But none of this ever happened. Thus, we hear in 2009 the following
statement from an official voice of ROCOR/MP and member of the official
Commission of Dialogue in establishing the reunification with the Moscow
Patriarchate: “The reestablishment of canonical communion between the
Moscow Patriarchate and Church Abroad did not require an All-Russian
Council. It was enough for the Council of Bishops of the Moscow
Patriarchate to inform the Holy Synod that the reunification process of the
two parts of the Russian Church had been completed.” [17p].
And so, all the hierarchs from ROCOR/MP approved this union,
having completely forgotten their very own words: “With this [the
possibility of dialogue due to the collapse of the Soviet system] there can be
no talk of any unification with or submission to the Moscow Patriarchate on
our part; rather, we patiently await the return of the Moscow Patriarchate
to the thousand-year historical path of the Russian Church, from which,
69
unfortunately, it has diverged. [1994 Epistle of the Synod of Bishops of the
ROCOR, 16s].
The hierarchs of the Moscow Patriarchate as well do not show any
desire for a true All-Russian Council. In fact, it seems that they have no
wish at all to reject the false path followed by the Moscow Patriarchate the
last 80 years. Thus, in 2000 ”almost all of the episcopate voted for its
continued participation in ecumenism, despite the fact that the people and
the clergy are opposed to this.” [1c, ROCOR-Epistle of 2001]. In 2008 the
whole of the Moscow Patriarchate and ROCOR/MP unanimously (with the
exception of two or four hierarchs) decided to defrock Bishop Diomid of
Tjukotsky, for the very only reason that he spoke up against ecumenism and
Sergianism. Later in 2009 the majority of the delegates elected as new
Patriarch one of the most compromised hierarchs both in regard to
ecumenism and Sergianism.
It is a serious mistake to think that the All-Russian Council is
something which only the ROCOR and not the faithful in Russia needed in
order to reestablish the one Russian Church. No, all the Russian Faithful,
whether abroad or in Russia are in need of this Council, if we want the
Russian Church to stay on the true Path of Christ.
Some argue that today it is simply not realistic to think that a true All-
Russian Council would ever be able to take place. This is correct. But it is
correct only because the Moscow Patriarchate would never allow such a
Council. Some parts of ROCOR did not mind at all, since they themselves
wanted to unite at any price.
Father Seraphim Rose, in the book, Russia’ s Catacomb Saints,
stresses the importance of following the spirit of the Catacomb Church. In
this, he says, lies the whole future of the Russian Church (emphasis mine):
“The Catacomb Church of Russia is …first of all the standard-bearer
o f faithfulness to Christ, which inspires a different attitude towards the
Church and its organization than now prevails throughout much of the
Orthodox world. This realization will perhaps not dawn until the downfall of
the godless regime; but when it does, the Sergianist church organization
and its whole philosophy of being will crumble to dust. In this light, it is
surely no exaggeration to say that the future of Russia, if it is to be
Orthodox, belongs to the Catacomb Church.” [17j, p.21].
Unfortunately,”the Sergianist church organization and its whole
philosophy of being” did not “crumble to dust.” On the contrary! The spirit
of ROCOR and the Catacomb Church – the guarantee of an “entirely
competent judge,” at a future All-Russian Council has been entirely
70
neglected. No “painstaking, patient, and perhaps even lengthy labor,… for
the All-Russia Council,…which could serve as the basis for the re-
establishment in Russia of true Orthodoxy” has been seen. The Moscow
Patriarchate is currently more influential and powerful than ever, while the
Catacomb Church and other Old Calendar Churches are persecuted. This is
so because we – the Russian people both abroad and in Russia – in our
complete acceptance of the Moscow Patriarchate – have rejected the spirit
of the Catacomb Church – to be faithful to Christ.
In rejecting the All-Russian Council, we have completely failed to
heal the wounds of the Russian Church and only made them bigger.
The Issue of Grace.
With time many people in the Soviet Union willingly or unwillingly
accepted the Moscow Patriarchate as their legal administrative leader.
Formally belonging to the Moscow Patriarchate, but rejecting the falsehood
of Sergianism, there were still people who managed to lead a highly spiritual
and God-pleasing life in the Soviet Union.
Michael Nazarov, a well-known Russian writer, dealing with the issue
of Russia regarding both political and Church matters, affirms this stand. He
believes there is no valid basis for considering the Church in Russia to be
graceless. Through history, he states, dating back to 1927, there have never
been any official statements from ROCOR, categorically considering the
Church under the Moscow Patriarchate to be graceless. This, according to
Michael Nazarov, is seen not only in the words of ROCOR but also in their
acts. Thus, clergy from the Moscow Patriarchate, for example, which later
joined ROCOR, were always received in their rank. Likewise, ROCOR
never, either before or after the Second World War, re-baptized or re-
married faithful from the Moscow Patriarchate [17l, p.134-142].
Professor Ivan Andreev, who was a highly learned scholar and
professor, clarifies this. Before he became a teacher at Holy Trinity
Monastery, Jordanville, he spent five years in the camp of Solovki and was a
member of the Russian Catacomb Church. I will present his words in full,
since they explain the issue of Grace exactly to the point.
“The Grace of the Holy Spirit can emerge everywhere. The children
playing the holy Eucharist – and the Holy Spirit suddenly performed a holy
sacrament. Laughing and mocking at the Christians, one heathen at the
circus parodied the holy sacrament of baptism, and suddenly – the holy
sacrament happened. The Lord can create a miracle also in the Soviet
71
church – and perform there the holy Sacrament of the Eucharist. But just
because of that, we cannot acknowledge either the children`s game, or the
circus, or the Soviet church as being a constant establishment of grace.”
[17i, p.55, parag. 2].
Here the Professor clearly distinguishes between what is a natural
possession of Grace because of faithfulness to Christ, and what in God’s
infinite love for mankind is given only as an extreme exception due to a
clear falling away from the Truth. It will help us to understand further the
complex issue about Grace in a broader sense regarding World Orthodoxy.
“Knowing the essence of the Soviet government (the spirit of
antichrist) – the Professor continues – and the essence of the Soviet church
(collaboration with antichrist), we do not dare refuse to doubt the grace of
that church. And can an Orthodox Christian approach the Holy Chalice
with doubt? But why are we saying “we doubt,” and not saying simply
“no”? Because in deference to the possibility of retaining grace also in the
Soviet churchfor a time – there is one more consideration. This
consideration is being expressed by one of the most remarkable
contemporary Archpastors (see “Letter of a Pastor to a Pastor,” Collection
Troitsa, 1947, Paris).” [17i, p. 55, parag. 3].
Professor Andreev then quotes this Archpastor and the consideration
expressed by him:
“The life of the Church is always a process…when the Church of
Christ detached herself from the church of the Old Testament, it was also a
long drawn out process, having many phases. Ananias and Caiaphas on one
side, the Apostles and their closest followers on the other side, those were
landmarks of two immediately-recognizable opposite camps. But in the
Sanhedrin were Joseph of Arimathea, Nicodemus and Gamaliel, who later
on became martyrs for Christ, and the Apostles themselves were together in
the synagogue everyday (Acts 2:46), and this was a temple led by Ananias
and Caiaphas, and already after Pentecost, that is, when the Apostles were
already filled with the Holy Spirit.”[17i, p. 55, parag. 4].
And the Archpastor then continues, saying that “The question being
decided through these processes stands before each person. “Patriarch”
Alexei I and his closest collaborators clearly decided it for themselves: they
were in full, unequivocally acknowledged unity with the God-fighting
authority and against the martyrs of Christ. But the rest, all those people
filling the churches, are they indeed with the “patriarch” in this question?
No, they do not participate in the council and their actions do not
72
participate in the business of the Patriarchate, that is, in that dark side of
their business, which binds them with the enemies of God and separates
from Christ. And if they do not formally separate themselves from the
patriarch and his clergy, then this is only because of external reasons,
because this business is not yet ripened at this moment, like Apostle John,
the same who later on will call the synagogue which did not acknowledge
Christ – “Satan`s assemblage,” but who originally came to it for prayers
together with Apostle Peter (Acts 3:1).”[17i, p.56, parag. 2].
Professor Andreev then comments on these words of the Archpastor,
saying that “The thoughts expressed here are extremely serious. That the
Church fell away from God and turned into an “assemblage of Satan” is a
process, with this one cannot disagree. However, the Soviet church has
entered the path, which is leading her to this “assemblage – of this there
can be no doubt whatsoever. A church, which is in an “ideal” relation with
a God-fighting government of absolute power, which puts the business of
antichrist as her fundamental mission; a church which disavowed herself
from the “pillar and the affirmation” of the truth of Christ – the confession
of faith and martyrdom and which is calling us to “deeds” of servility for
humanity and the blasphemous church-organized falsehood: a church which
called a leader of worldly antichrist forces, Stalin, “the chosen of the Lord”
– has entered undisputedly the frightful way of collaboration with antichrist,
which will lead her to the transformation from a church of Christ to the
“assemblage of Satan.” [17i, p. 56, last parag.].
“This instills terror in us. And we, the Orthodox Russian people, not
predetermining the final trial over the Soviet church, a trial, which by the
“ruling” of the Holy Spirit will be carried out in its time by the Russian
Orthodox Synod, we must speak out clearly and determinedly: We refuse
any kind of relation, whatever it may be, with the Soviet church, for we
doubt that she has grace” [17i, p.57, last parag.].
I will let another quiet voice of an anonymous Catacomb hierarch
affirm this moderate stand:
“The times have changed. We have no churches in the USSR now,
and can we, who have gone into our solitary cells and find there everything
which the churches gave us, forbid the thousands of believers who do not
have such an opportunity from seeking consolation and spiritual food in the
churches that do exist, and can we condemn them because they go there?
We cannot imitate those ignorant ones who stupidly affirm: “Those are not
churches, they are demons` temples, those who attend them defile
73
themselves and are deprived of saving grace,” and other such foolish
sayings.”
“And so I say to you: If you do not have any other way of taking part
in Divine services and receiving the Mysteries, if you are languishing with
thirst for church unity and prayer, and if attending the churches gives this to
you – then go there without disturbance, and do not fear that this will be a
sin. The Spirit breathes where It will; and in His unutterable mercy the
Lord, even through His most unworthy ministers, even through unbelievers,
does not deprive Christians of His heavenly gifts.” [17j, 521-522].
Father Seraphim Rose expresses the same position, saying: “The
strict rule of the Russian Church Outside of Russia forbidding her members
from receiving Sacraments from clergy of the Moscow Patrirarchate is not
founded on any statement that these Sacraments lack Grace, but rather on
the sacred testament of Metropolitan Anastassy and other great hierarchs of
the Diaspora forbidding any kind of communion with the Patriarchate as
long as its leaders betray the Faith and are in submission to atheists.” [12p,
p.241, parag. 2, line13].
Thus, strictly according to the Orthodox teaching and its spirit we can
rightly fear that the Moscow Patriarchate – as an administrative organization
– might have lost Grace. Nevertheless, God in His infinite mercy may still
allow the faithful to receive Grace in the sacraments.
Father Seraphim Rose likewise took a more moderate stand in regard
to Grace in the Moscow Patriarchate. Both Professor Andreyev and Father
Seraphim Rose express, I believe, the general understanding of how
ROCOR traditionally looked upon the Moscow Patriarchate. But doing so,
they never made the wholly false conclusion that this church-organization is
in reality the actual cause of such an act (of Grace), as though it was a
natural, canonical and God-pleasing (part of the) Mother Church. As we
have just read,”the Spirit breathes where It will; and in His unutterable
mercy the Lord, even through His most unworthy ministers, even through
unbelievers, does not deprive Christians of His heavenly gifts.” Therefore,
the fact that Gracedoes act in the sacraments makes the Moscow
Patriarchate no less worthy of condemnation, and makes it no less important
to struggle against the falsehood it represents, in order to reestablish the
correct canonical and spiritual order of the Church.
It is one thing to be a Soviet citizen and perhaps unwillingly be forced
to accept the Moscow Patriarchate, being, as it was at that time, the only
visible Church and only formally belong to them, as Professor Andreyev
explained it. Another completely different thing is to joyously accept it as
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the legal and God-pleasing heir to the Church of Russia, as our Mother
Church. In doing so we – not to mention the Russian people themselves in
their homeland – have turned all normal understanding of what the Moscow
Patriarchate actually is upside down. Not only are the Russian people lying
to themselves, but we in ROCOR/MP are lying to the Russian people, whom
we initially so dearly wanted to help and be one spirit with. We have helped
to set the future false course for the Russian Church, as long as the Moscow
Patriarchate (and ROCOR/MP) in earnest does not show any desire to get
out of that spiritual bondage, into which it voluntarily has fallen. Only
breaking with this bondage, will it be able to firmly reject Sergianism,
ecumenism, and the Antichrist.
The Tragedy of the ROCOR/MP
and the Moscow Patriarchate.
Here we see the whole tragedy in our union with the Moscow
Patriarchate. Instead of uniting with the spiritually sound Russian Orthodox
believers, we united in spirit with a church-administration which shows all
signs of turning into an “assemblage of Satan,” as Professor Andreev said.
The fall of the Soviet system has thrown a false veil of canonicity and
righteousness over the Moscow Patriarchate, while in actuality it has not
changed at all but perhaps only become worse. In uniting, ROCOR/MP has
accepted the Moscow Patriarchate in the same form in which it was
categorically rejected by the Russian Catacomb Saints and ROCOR in
earlier days. The actual tragedy, therefore, of ROCOR/MP is, first and
foremost, not so much their union with World Orthodoxy, as their moral and
spiritual fall – their acceptance of its spirit.
The following words by Professor Ivan Andreev therefore make clear
sense, stating the official position of ROCOR: “ROCOR is not recognizing –
has never recognized and will never be able to recognize this false Soviet
Church with its false Patriarchs.” [17d, p.30, parag. 2].
This un-recognition is naturally not referring to the Russian faithful,
but specifically to that ruinous state of betrayal which is being spoken of
here. It is this soul-destroying state of the Moscow Patriarchate – here called
the Soviet Church, in order to more precisely characterize its essence –
which ROCOR has never been able to recognize, and which – up to this day
– the Moscow Patriarchate still finds itself in.
It must be stressed that these words from Professor Andreev were
written in a small official booklet consisting of a collection of texts from
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various authors, dedicated to the 50th anniversary of Metropolitan Anastassy
as a bishop and issued by Holy Trinity Monastery, Jordanville in 1956. The
pamphlet must, therefore, be said to reflect the general position of ROCOR
in earlier days.
The tragedy of the Moscow Patriarchate is that it does not want to get
out of that spiritual bondage into which it fell 90 years ago. Their continuous
involvement in ecumenism and the justification of Metropolitan Sergius`s
path together with their persecution of the True Orthodox Christians,
testifies to this fact. Thus, the current path of the Moscow Patriarchate is a
deeply deceptive path. Because, as soon as something similar to the Soviet
system – or even worse – were to happen, for example the coming of
Antichrist, the Moscow Patriarchate as a whole would simply join such a
system, having no inner freedom, desire or Grace to go against it. And we,
its flock, would follow them right into their damnation.
This aspect is pointed out by the True Orthodox Church in Russia
(TOC – Archbishop Tikon) in their Statement of Confession. (emphasis
mine):
“…sergianism is the inner preparedness of the Orthodox Christian
for compromise with antitheism, and in a broader sense, for compromise
with lies, with any evil,..In raising sergianism, that is, compromise with
antitheism, into a norm of ecclesiastical life, the Moscow Patriarchate is
thereby preparing its flock to recognize the power of the Antichrist as a
lawful power, and to accept “the seal on their right hand” (Revel. 13.16).
[16p, parag. 5].
ROCOR, as late as 2001, expressed the same concern (emphasis
mine): “Although the atheistic Soviet regime of the past no longer exists,
and one might assume that Sergianism has likewise passed away together
with its founders, in actual fact this is far from the case. One can often hear
voices within the Moscow Patriarchate defending the Declaration of
Metropolitan Sergius (Stragorodsky), calling it a wise decision, while it was
instead a capitulation to the atheistic regime. It is essential to condemn the
Declaration, so that a precedent will not be set; lest if (God forbid!)
persecutions again arise, it could not be cited as a decision wise in any
degree.” [1c, ROCOR-Epistle, 2001].
It is therefore time for both us in Russia and the Diaspora (and of
World Orthodoxy) to honestly evaluate the path of our church-leaders.
Unfortunately, our worldview and understanding of things is highly formed
by the Moscow Patriarchate itself, which makes us almost incapable of
76
accepting any criticism of them. Such dedication to a church-organization,
showing all signs of apostasy, may end in a very sad way. Innocence and
sincerity is praiseworthy but it must also be mixed with discernment in order
not to lead astray. As Christ Himself says: “Be ye therefore innocent as
doves but wise as serpents”.
Saint John of Shanghai
and the Union with the Moscow Patriarchate.
In the process of uniting with the Moscow Patriarchate Saint John of
Shanghai has been mentioned several times. It is known that Saint John in
1945 issued a decree of commemorating Patriarch Alexis I and for about two
months commemorated His Eminence. This move of St. John has therefore
been taken as a sure approval of the union today with the Moscow
Patriarchate. But can such an approach be justified? Reading carefully the
circumstances in which the decree was given, one is left with the feeling that
it cannot.
The decree was issued at the time of World War Two. All five of the
six bishops of ROCOR in China had accepted the Moscow Patriarchate and
a pressure from them and parts of the Russian colony in Shanghai had been
laid on St. John to do the same thing. Because of the war, all contact with the
Synod of ROCOR had been lost and St. John therefore agreed temporarily to
do so, but demanded to still commemorate Metropolitan Anastassy – First
Hierarch of ROCOR. After about two months he received news that the
Synod of the Russian Church Abroad still existed and he immediately
stopped commemorating the Patriarch
In searching for guidance Father Michael Korjagin stresses the
importance, first and foremost, to follow the guidance given by the Church
in contradiction to the guidance given from individual persons, even Saints.
This has always been the teaching of the Church. Only in the conciliarity of
the Church, he says, will the limitations, which even saints have, be avoided
in defining the Truth [16m, p. 54, third-last parag.].
One can mention several cases were saints in the course of history
have taken a stand contrary to the general position of the Church. One
cannot take such actions and turn them into a general, principled and
approved position of the entire Orthodox Church. Statements and acts in
history are always influenced by the times in which they happened and
under the circumstances in which they were done. They must never be
applied mechanically to our times and circumstances, and they cannot
77
always be turned into a general and approved position of the Church. One
can perhaps illustrate this by the following small example.
If one were to save a man from drowning by jumping out from a
seventy-foot-high cliff into a stormy ocean, does this automatically mean
that to jump out from a high cliff in general is a sound thing to do? I think
we can all agree that it is not. Only in a specific time and under certain
circumstances is it indeed a good and even necessary thing to do. But on
another day, under different circumstances and with other people around
such an act might even be wrong and wholly dangerous. If, for example, the
same person was about to drown on a beautiful sunny day with the sea all
calm and a large rescuing squad around him, would it then be considered a
good idea to jump from that same cliff in order to save the drowning person?
I believe not. Extreme situations demand, as a rule, extreme solutions which
cannot be considered to be the norm in normal circumstances.
Having said this, I believe we can draw a small parallel. In the history
of ROCOR there have indeed been cases where hierarchs have united with
the Moscow Patriarchate. Personally I know only of St. Seraphim (Sobolev)
who in 1946 did so, due to the occupation of Romania by the Soviet Union.
He decided not to leave his flock. The other case is the present one with St.
John. Both decisions were taken under extreme circumstances and required
therefore extreme or untraditional solutions. Now, many years later, a certain
freedom has been established in Russia. Can we therefore now take the
afore-mentioned two cases, which happened under extreme circumstances
and apply them to a situation which is not extreme, but more normal in
regard to the freedom in Russia? I believe not. The current situation which
we are confronted with today – the union with the Moscow Patriarchate –
had therefore to be resolved by a more normal and in generally accepted rule
suitable for normal circumstances. This rule has always been considered by
ROCOR and the Catacomb Church to be the future All-Russian Council.
Furthermore, with what disposition of soul did St. John (and
St.Seraphim Sobolev) actually commemorate the Patriarch? In accepting the
Moscow Patriarchate, there can be no doubt that he did so without
compromising himself. In the book “Man of God: Saint John of San
Francisco,” Father Valery Lukianov, a well-respected Protopresbyter in
ROCOR/MP, writes (emphasis mine):
“It was likewise difficult for Vladika [John of Shanghai] to orient
himself, having no contact with Metropolitan Anastassy, who at that time
was restoring the life of the Church Abroad, which had been thrown into
disarray by the war. Besides which, Vladika had a trusting soul. Although
he was accused of political wavering, in his heart he never betrayed his
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convictions, which he demonstrated not only in bringing repentance before
the Sobor of Bishops, but in taking charge, as spiritual leader, of the exodus
of Russian refugees from China, first to the Philippines and then to
America.” [16q-b), p.46, parag. 2: “During the war,…”]
According to these words, we apparently also see testimonies
revealing to us that St. John later repented of this act to the Synod of
Bishops (commemoration of the Patriarch). According to another testimony,
the document written by St. John and testifying to his repentance later
disappeared [16m, p. 54: see 16q-a), p. 78 for more detail on this event].
In such case he in fact became an enemy of the Moscow Patriarchate,
since he united in an external manner only and not internal. The fact that he
suffered persecution from both his former ROCOR-hierarchs and the soviet
authorities for commemorating Metropolitan Anastassy and refusing to unite
with the Moscow Patriarchate or accept a Soviet passport testifies to this.
In fact, according to an official document, written in 1963 in San
Francisco by chairman G.K.Bologov of the Russian Association of
Emigrants of Shanghai together with other of its members, St. John never
entered into any personal contact with the Moscow Patriarchate and never
submitted to it right up to 1949, when he and 6000 Russian refugees left
China. [17v, p.33-34. Please see the whole article “The truth about Vladyka
John, wonderworker of Shanghai,” p.18-47 (Russian edition), issued by
Protopresbyter Valery Lukianov, which reveals a much more detailed and
quite different story from what officially has been known].
One must also not forget – as mentioned earlier – that in
commemorating the Patriarch, St. John nevertheless did not dismiss the
necessity of a future All-Russian Council, where a final evaluation of the
Moscow Patriarchate had to take place.
So we see there is a very big difference in just saying that St. John
accepted the Moscow Patriarchate and to investigate more closely the
circumstances under which such a statement was given. If one is to draw a
conclusion from the life of an individual person, it is important to base this
conclusion on the general convictions of the given person, accepted
throughout his life, rather than on a separate and isolated instance, accepted
shortly and later rejected. Applying this approach we come to see a different
picture of St. John. Father Michael Korjagin says in this regard:
“Regarding the position of the Moscow Patriarchate, Saint John
writes:
“Being part of the Russian Church, we are not able to have any
relationships with the church authorities, since it is in submission to and
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enslaved by a power wholly hostile to the Church. To be in such submission
and dependence – is a condition spiritually unhealthy. It is unnatural for a
church authority to be in dependence on an authority whose goal it is to
destroy the Church and the very faith in God. Those who find themselves in
such dependence cannot avoid feeling the unhealthiness of such a condition.
Some, whose consciences are alive, are tormented, others, with a burning
conscience, accept such a situation.”
“Let us stop here for a second – continues Father Michael Korjagin –
and ask ourselves the question: what would St. John have said in regard to
our current fellow brothers of dialogue, who after fourteen years of freedom
(2004) are still praising Metropolitan Sergius (Stragorodsky) and who do
not consider the spiritual submission of the church authorities to an ungodly
power to be an “unhealthy and unnatural” situation, but normal and even a
“special wisdom.”?
[16m, p. 57, parag. 1, quoted from the book «СЛОВА иже во
святых отца нашего Иоанна, Архиепископа Шанхайского и Сан-
Франсиского Чудотворца.» p.247. М., 1998, (reprint from «Русский
Пастырь», Сан-Франсиско].
In another place he continues, saying that “One must note that,
contrary to the conviction of some, St. John does mention the Catacomb
Church. When speaking of the general situation in the Soviet Union, St.
John says:
“The times of the catacombs have revived for Russia, which it has not
earlier known, because it has not earlier experienced persecution for the
faith.” [“СЛОВА иже…” p. 212].
“It is here obvious – says Father Michael Korjagin – that St. John
sees the existence of the catacombs as something unavoidable in times of
persecution. It is exactly the persecuted Church St. John confesses his
spiritual unity with.”
Further he quotes St. John of Shanghai, saying that “We remain part
of the Russian Church, which is suffering and persecuted and all covered in
blood…of an innumerable amount… of the new martyrs. We must be
spiritually united with the persecuted, and strengthen them by our prayers.
We kiss their chains and grieve over those who are wavering. We know that
even the confessors of old times sometimes wavered. But we have examples
of steadfastness: Theodore the Studite…Maximus the Confessor…and
Patriarch Ermogen. Let us fear to go astray from the path they went,
because if we find ourselves under the yoke of justifying human weakness,
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then what must we say if we get frightened by just the very threat?” [16m,
p.58] [“СЛОВА иже….” pp. 22-23].
“This – says Father Michael Korjagin – is the genuine spiritual
position of St. John and his testament to us. Grieving over the fainthearted
faithful, and wishing to justify them in all ways, St. John nevertheless
confesses his spiritual unity only with those who have suffered for the truth.
Their chains he kisses. Their testimony he calls sacred. In their footsteps he
is ready to follow, if necessary.”
“Let us hearken to the words of this holy Hierarch. Doing so we will
note that those who so hurriedly are striving for a union today (2004), in
vain are trying to present St. John as like-minded with them. Rather he is
their exposer. In the embrace of Orthodox Tradition and the prophecies of
our Saints, St. John saw the genuine “triumph of the restoration of the
Russian Church” in the restoration of a Russian State headed by the Tsar,
who would be able, as it was in the times of the Ecumenical Councils, to
clean the Church of all wrong thinking and impiety.” [16m, p.60-61].
Almost three years have past since the reunification. Contrary to what
St. John did, the hierarchs of ROCOR/MP did that which St. John and St.
Seraphim (Sobolev) never did – accepting the false spirit and acts of the
Moscow Patriarchate and World Orthodoxy. We did not become their
opponents in our striving for true Orthodoxy, as they did. On the contrary!
The sincere and pure intentions of a saintly hierarch, made under
extreme conditions, have been misused in order to unite with World
Orthodoxy. The statement of St. John has been presented outside its context
while silencing important aspects of what actually took place. As
Protopresbyter Valery Lukianov rightly says:
“Let everyone who reads these testimonies [about St. John during the
Second World War in Shanghai], written not by the skills of intrigues, but
with blood, decide for himself what kind of person our wonderful St. John
was and with what sensitivity and trembling one ought to apply his holy
name.”[17v. p.47].
The Spirit of true Orthodoxy.
Up to now the Moscow Patriarchate has been presented in a rather
negative light. But one can indeed find expressions which definitely show a
much softer attitude towards Metropolitan Sergius and the Moscow
Patriarchate. ROCOR is well-known for speaking often quite diplomatically,
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which some times can give the impression that we actually did recognize the
Moscow Patriarchate itself as our Mother Church and even respected the
“podvig” of Metropolitan Sergius. But in this paper I am trying to
understand the actual and general view that ROCOR held.
My aim is not only to understand the general position of ROCOR as it
was in earlier days, but also to grasp the spirit of true Orthodoxy and how it
teaches us to view everything around us. It is my personal feeling that the
very learned clergy of ROCOR, which supported the union with the Moscow
Patriarchate, have stepped away from this very spirit of true Orthodoxy. By
their eloquence they have been able to confuse the actual picture and in fact
turn all former understanding of right and wrong in ROCOR – and the
Orthodox Church in general – upside down. Many faithful felt strongly the
falsehood by which the process of the union was attained. That feeling has
never left many of us to this day and it grows even stronger with time.
In order to better understand what the lack of the spirit of Orthodoxy
really means, one can look at the following two examples: The acceptance of
the New calendar, and the acceptance of the “Declaration” in 1927 by
Metropolitan Sergius. Neither of these two acts can, strictly speaking, be
said to violate any dogma in regard to the Faith. But they are clearly in
contrast to the spirit of Orthodoxy and violating the moral aspect of
faithfulness to Christ and his Church, together with the dogma of the sacred
unity of the Church and its freedom. Even though they are both said to be
(supposedly) of secondary importance, since neither of them are directed
essentially against the Faith itself, we understand today quite clearly the
dramatic consequences these two acts have played, and are playing, in
destroying the Orthodox Church. It is in this spirit that ecumenism and
modernism have been accepted, and it will be in this very same spirit that the
Antichrist joyously will also be accepted. Such a disposition of man is
exactly what the evil spirits are trying to achieve, since in this way
Orthodoxy will still look authentic on the surface, while inside it will be full
of decay, leading people to complete apostasy without their even realizing it.
This false Orthodoxy is precisely what Father Seraphim Rose spoke about
(emphasis Father Seraphim): “The apostasy – he says – of our times, to a
degree unique in Christian history, is proceeding not primarily by false
teachings or canonical deviations, but rather by a false understanding of
Orthodoxy on the part of those who may even be perfectly Orthodox in their
dogmatic teaching and canonical situation. A correct “Orthodoxy” deprived
of the spirit of true Christianity – this is the meaning of Sergianism, and it
cannot be fought by calling it a “heresy,” which it is not, nor by detailing its
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canonical irregularities, which are only incidental to something much more
important.” [17j, p. 257, parag. 2].
This “correct “Orthodoxy” deprived of the spirit of true Christianity”
is what ROCOR/MP and the Moscow Patriarchate have accepted.
And so, many in ROCOR are still suffering from deep frustration and
confusion. On the altar of obedience they have been asked to accept
falsehood as the criterion for Truth. By falsehood is naturally not meant the
union itself, which we all long for, but the denial of what has always been
the traditional path of the Orthodox Church. All that we have always
believed in and have accepted as a standard of Truth crumbles now under
our feet.
The mind and soul have gone into a fierce battle. On one hand we
hear the arguments, so convincing, and logically we are almost forced to
agree with what is said, but on the other hand the soul is languishing and
cries out that something is completely wrong. That is why one of the main
struggles of ROCOR/MP today is to fight our conscience. Because the mind
and eyes can more easily be controlled than the conscience, since the
conscience is under the direct influence of God Himself and not man. One of
the ways to do so is through our rejection of the Old Calendar Churches and
“obedience,” not to God but to the Church authorities of the apostatizing
World Orthodoxy. The loss of this spirit has now become wide spread in
World Orthodoxy. Father Seraphim Rose mentions this: “The real crisis of
Orthodoxy today lies in the loss of the savor of True Christianity. This
savor has been largely lost not only by the Moscow hierarchs, but by most of
the Russian “dissidents” as well, as likewise by the “Paris” school of
émigré theologians, by the apostate Patriarch of Constantinople and all who
follow him, by new calendarists and renovationists and modernists of every
sort, and by the simple people everywhere who imagine they are Orthodox
because their fathers were or because they belong to a “canonical church
organization [12p, p. 242, last parag].
When Antichrist will appear it will be neither our minds nor our eyes
or ears which will be able to tell us where the truth is, but only our
conscience through an experience of the savor and true spirit of Orthodoxy.
Without this fundamental part of true Orthodoxy, World Orthodoxy –
notwithstanding its “canonicity, correctness and even a strong stand in
“traditional” Orthodoxy – is doomed to accept Antichrist.
Has the Moscow Patriarchate changed?
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It is said that the Moscow Patriarchate has changed. But having read
the above-mentioned words from the late Patriarch Alexis II in 2007 and of
the current Patriarch Kirill, this seems to lack any serious foundation. A
statue of Metropolitan Sergius (Stragorodsky) has been erected in his
hometown. The books The Keeper of the House of God (2003) and
Patriarch Kirill: his Life and Worldview glorify the memory and path of
both Metropolitan Sergius and the whole Moscow Patriachate. The Moscow
Patriarchate (together now with ROCOR/MP) defrocks its own bishops for
raising serious problems and is still participating in the WCC and other
ecumenical organizations. It has tightened its bonds even more with the
current Russian – and some would say – anti-Christian and criminal
government. It was through President Putin – head of FSB (KGB) – and in
cooperation with the Moscow Patriarchate, that the union was established.
They made (and are continuing to make) ROCOR naively believe that
ROCOR was (is) actually held in honor and esteem, while in reality the
Moscow Patriarchate never considered it a union between two equal sister-
Churches, but rather the return of the schismatic Karlovits group to the
Mother Church.
The Moscow Patriarchate (and now ROCOR/MP) – as we see it
today – is not capable at all of showing us the true path to salvation. For this
we need a Russian Church willing to cut ties – once and for all – with the
ideals of Sergianism and ecumenism. Only a strong and pious Tsar, which
we are all praying for, seems to be able to cut through all this falsehood and
create the foundation for a true Russian Orthodox Church, around which we
will all be able to unite. When that happens, will ROCOR/MP, with a clear
conscience, be able to look straight into his eyes?
The Election of a new Russian Patriarch.
At the recent election of the new Patriarch of the Moscow
Patriarchate, one was witness to a most strange event. Thus, one saw how
Metropolitan Kirill was left as almost the only candidate. One of the two
other candidates (Metropolitan Philaret of Minsk) suddenly stepped aside
and suggested the delegates give Metropolitan Kirill his votes. One
seminarian here from Russia and loyal to the Moscow Patriarchate, a pious
young man, was very sad to hear that they were not going to draw lots, and
he was somewhat shocked to hear otherwise. Even such an option was
resolutely rejected by Metropolitan Kirill and thus showed even more the
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fruits of the Moscow Patriarchate. It also showed that the Russian episcopate
is still lying in spiritual bondage, having no power or wish to lead the
Church in Russia onto a salvific path.
Seeing the process of the election, it is therefore hard to have any
hopes for the future and to believe that the Moscow Patriarchate has in fact
changed at all. As said earlier, it seems that it has even become worse.
Notwithstanding all the fine qualities of the newly-elected Patriarch,
what the Russian Church is in need of is not a good administrator and
politician, though he may be even an excellent one, powerful, eloquent and
intelligent, and able to establish an external order and unity, as did
Metropolitan Sergius, but a holy Elder, who will walk the straight,
uncompromising and honest path of the True Orthodox Christians. This did
not happen because both ROCOR/MP and the Moscow Patriarchate – not to
mention the faithful in Russia itself – completely rejected the opportunity to
rightly evaluate the past seventy years of falsehood as has been discussed
earlier, and, once and for all, break the bondage into which we have fallen.
The “Social Concept” of 2000.
Referring to the supposed repentance of the Moscow Patriarchate
outlined in the “Social Concept” of 2000, Father Michael Korjagin says:
“Some will argue that the “Social Concept” of 2000 clearly rejects
sergianism. But this document does not even mention the “Declaration” or
the soviet system. Nothing concrete is mentioned neither about the first nor
the second. There is no condemnation of sergianism as a spiritual
subordination of the hierarchy to this power. There is no repentance for the
lies about the Soviet system or for the Patriarchate`s collaboration with it.
The document is only outlining the general principles of the relationship
between the Church and the State, which are well known to us and which
have been mentioned many times before by the holy Fathers, Byzantine
thinkers and in apostolic writings. It is not possible to “cross out” a
concrete deed and act by general principles. A sin is corrected and
abolished only by the acknowledgement of this same sin, and the confession
of truth which must be diametrically opposite to this sin” [16m, p.9, middle].
The “Social Concept” states only [III, 5] that if the government forces
the faithful to go against Christ and His Church they must reject such a
compromise [16o-2, p.168. parag. 1]. It does not specifically mention the
Declaration and did not categorize it as a completely unacceptable deed, as
85
it should have. Instead it avoids it quite elegantly. The reason why, is that
the path of Metropolitan Sergius simply is not considered by the Moscow
Patriarchate to go against Christ and His Church. In doing so, they
consciously left the doors wide open for a similar acceptance in the future.
One must further keep in mind, as said earlier, that in order to be truly
Orthodox it is not enough to agree to an Orthodox general teaching, while
still clinging to another wholly false teaching. One m u s t still reject
everything which the Church has also rejected throughout its history.
The Consequences of non-Repentance.
Archpriest Lev Lebedev (ROCOR, who died in 1997) said that there
is only one worthy way out of our misfortunes, and that is a sincere
repentance of Sergianism and ecumenism, both of which the Moscow
Patriarchate has taken part in. Thus, he says, it is the Moscow Patriarchate,
which is the real cause of a schism in the one Russian Orthodox Church.
For the time being, he says, it is clear that the Moscow Patriarchate
has no intention of any repentance. If such stubbornness will continue, and
repentance will not be seen, the Moscow Patriarchate will eventually join
those new political forces in its service, which will appear after the fall of
the Soviet System and which will be bearers of the spirit of evil. [16m-1, p.
53 and 16l, p.28]. As we now see, the words of Father Lev have become a
reality. But even more astonishing are the following words of Father Lev:
“One can with a great deal of certainty assume that in the case of a
political change – the fall of the Soviet System – the Moscow Patriarchate
will, in letter only, reject the “Declaration” of Metropolitan Sergius,
putting all the blame on the regime of Stalin. They will perhaps even
canonize the New Martyrs of Russia, including the Royal Family. Perhaps
they will even go so far as to curse the communists, whenever this will be
allowed by the new System. But the Moscow Patriarchate will never reject
the path of ecumenism and the service of the spirit of evil, in whatever
concrete political forms it will take. In order to achieve this a real and
sincere repentance is required” [16m, p.54 and 16l, pp. 28-29].
“All of this – says Father Michael Korjagin – is happening right in
front of our very own eyes. The New Martyrs have been canonized. One
hears critical voices in regard to the “Declaration,” even though with
reservations of justification. We hear the truth concerning the persecution of
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the Church in Russia by the godless authorities. But the Moscow
Patriarchate has evidently no intention of leaving the ecumenical movement,
as well as changing their support for and approval of any political powers
in Russia, whatever they may be. And what is most sad, together with all of
this, we see a complete lack of any intonations of repentance, as though the
whole terrible 20th century was only some “triumphal procession” of the
Moscow Patriarchate to the present “Triumph of Orthodoxy” [16m, p.54].
I n The Orthodox Word we read further that “If normal Orthodox
Church life is not restored to Russia, the Moscow Patriarchate will follow
the path of Roman Catholicism and eventually wither and die in apostasy,
and the innocent people who follow it will find themselves beyond any doubt
outside the Church of Christ. And then it will only be those who are with the
True-Orthodox Christians of Russia who will still be in the Church’s saving
enclosure.” [12p, p. 242, parag. 1, last 6 lines].
We can now see how prophetic the words of Father Lev Lebedev and
Father Seraphim Rose have become. The Moscow Patriarchate, together
with other Orthodox Patriarchates are indeed in the process of uniting with
the Roman Catholic Church. This shows further that even though the
Moscow Patriarchate (together with the ROCOR/MP) may claim that they
have changed and repented, their deeds tell us something else.
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6
ROCOR/MP – before and now.
The Epistle 2001 of the Synod of Bishops of ROCOR.
In 2001, the Synod of Bishops of ROCOR stated in an Epistle that
“During these days of universal apostasy, which, through the pan-heresy of
ecumenism, has even infected most of the Local Orthodox Churches, we
must stand united, that the enemy of our salvation may not use our divisions
to destroy the voice of our confession in the homeland and the diaspora.”
[1a, p.26, left column, last parag, line 5].
Because, says the Epistle: “there can be no outward unity if there is
no unity in the Truth.” [1a, p. 26, left column, parag. 4, line 3].
This Epistle was signed by bishops, all later supporters of joining
World Orthodoxy (with the exception of Metropolitan Vitaly).
Why did ROCOR wish to join these ”Local Orthodox Churches,”
when they had declared them to be infected by apostasy only 6 years earlier?
And why do they now concelebrate with ecumenical Orthodox clergy, who
do not have the same ”unity in the Truth,” as ROCOR/MP claims to have?
And if ROCOR once believed, that ”we must stand united, then why did we,
on one hand, ever split with the traditional Orthodox Old Calendar
Churches, who do have the voice of [a true] confession – as we ourselves
believed them to have, thus breaking down our unity – and instead now
follow ecumenical Orthodox Churches, so the enemy of our salvation now,
on the contrary, joyously uses our divisions to destroy the voice of our
confession in the homeland and the Diaspora?
The stand of Father Seraphim Rose in regard to “World Orthodoxy”
was quite clear and not to be misunderstood (emphasis Fr. Seraphim):
“Just as in the days of St. Maximus the Confessor, let us also “have in
our heart whatever faith we want,” but “be silent about our differences for
the sake of the peace of the Church.”…With what “mercy” and “love” this
offer of “eucharistic communion” is made, in the interest of bringing back
the Russian Church Outside of Russia into communion with “World
Orthodoxy” – that apostate “Orthodoxy” which has lost the savor of
Christianity – and deprive it precisely of solidarity with the True-Orthodox
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Church of Russia.” The devil himself could not have devised a slyer, more
“innocent” temptation, which plays so strongly on the emotions and on
humanitarian motives.” [12p, p.244, parag. 3: “Indeed, such…”].
From this it is clear that having united with World Orthodoxy, we
have done exactly what Fr. Seraphim believed to be a temptation, which
plays so strongly on the emotions,…and which even the devil himself could
not have devised more slyer. The results of this temptation are that we have
deprived ourselves of solidarity with the Old Calendar believers.
The Russian Church Abroad
under His Eminence Metropolitan Agafangel.
Regarding the Russian Orthodox Church outside of Russia under His
Eminence Metropolitan Agafangel, how can one say that they (and other Old
Calendar Churches) are graceless schismatics, just because they are not
following World Orthodoxy? These Old Calendar faithful are in fact trying
to uphold the traditional beliefs of the Orthodox Church. The Orthodox
Church has always said no to the New calendar. It has always taught against
uniting with heretics or even having joint prayers with them. It has always
held to the belief that we should not join the strong of this world in order to
avoid persecution for the sake of Christ. These essential foundations of the
Orthodox Church are being preserved by the True Orthodox Christians,
while World Orthodoxy is now rejecting them.
The defrocking of His Eminence Metropolitan Agafangel.
Our Synod of Bishops decided in September 2009 to defrock His
Eminence Metropolitan Agafangel, First Hierarch of ROCOR(A), since they
believe His Eminence broke without good cause and therefore created “a
rebellion.” The following four points will help determine whether or not the
defrocking can be justified.
1) ROCOR/MP publicly serves with the Antiochian Orthodox Church,
which is officially in complete union with a Monophysite Church and
partially with the Roman Catholic Church. We also officially concelebrate
with the OCA and the Patriarchate of Constantinople which both publicly
preach the heresy of Ecumenism.
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2) We have prematurely – before the All-Russian Council – united
with the Moscow Patriarchate which further publicly serves with all the
ecumenical Orthodox Churches, which officially is a full member of the
WCC and other ecumenical organizations and which, up to this day, has yet
not fully rejected the path of Metropolitan Sergius (Stragorodsky).
3) We publicly renounce our former stand of separation from the
Moscow Patriarchate. We have also completely accepted the Moscow
Patriarchate as the true Mother-Church of Russia.
4) We publicly show our sympathy to Churches which are officially
preaching the heresy of Ecumenism. Similarly we lend our support to and
take part in the false path of World Orthodoxy by our concelebrating with
the aforementioned ecumenical Orthodox Churches, and by our non-
acceptance of the sober Old Calendar Churches with which we once were in
union.
Bishop Nikodim of Dalmatia, in his interpretation of the 15th Canon of
the First and Second Council in Constantinople says (emphasis mine):
“But if any of the bishops, metropolitans or patriarchs begins to
preach any heretical teaching, contrary to the teaching of the Orthodox
Faith, then the rest of the clergy has all right and are even obliged to
separate themselves immediately from these bishops…”.
Thus, Metropolitan Agafangel has followed the Biblical injunction—
We command you in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, that you withdraw
yourselves from all brethren that walk disorderly, and not after the tradition
that you have received from us (II Thes. 3: 6).
It was for this reason thatROCOR/MP decided to defrock
Metropolitan Agafangel. The words of Father Seraphim Rose, in his defense
of the Catacomb Church in Russia, help us to understand whether or not
Metropolitan Agafangel today – and other Old Calendar Synods with him –
has a right to separate himself from an ecclesiastical body which officially
preaches heresy (emphasis mine):
“Today [1974], it is true, the Moscow Patriarchate allows Roman
Catholics to receive its Sacraments and implicitly already teaches the
ecumenist doctrine that these Catholics too are “part of the Church.” But
this fact only shows how far the Moscow Patriarchate has departed from the
universal Orthodox tradition of the Church into an erroneous ecclesiology,
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and how correct the True-Orthodox Church is in refusing to have
communion with an ecclesiastical body which not only allows its policies to
be dictated by atheists, but openly preaches the modern heresies of
ecumenism and chiliasm.” [12p, p. 242, parag. 1].
One should also keep in mind that ROCOR/MP has united not only
with the Moscow Patriarchate but with the whole of World Orthodoxy – a
body which officially is clearly stepping away from the Truth. Officially we
claim ourselves to be against ecumenism and Sergianism. But all of this is
only appearance. Reality shows another, more sinister, picture. There are
many ways in which one can preach heresy, just as there are many ways in
which one can be an accomplice of murder without even raising a hand or
uttering one word. As Professor Ivan Andreyev says: “In order to perform a
betrayal of Christ, one need not declare oneself His enemy; one need not
even slander Him. A kiss is sufficient.” [17j, p.533, second last parag.].
Without making any overstatements, one can firmly testify to the fact
that we, together with the Moscow Patriarchate and World Orthodoxy, are
participating – directly or indirectly – in heresy. It is therefore without any
valid ground for defrocking His Eminence Metropolitan Agafangel. On the
contrary, he rightly decided to avoid any contact with heresy and simply
decided to stay with those Old Calendar Churches with which we were
formerly in union. His purpose with doing so is simply to stay true to the
traditional path of ROCOR, without deviating either to the right or to the
left.
How ROCOR looked upon the Moscow Patriarchate.
In this respect it would be most edifying to listen to the actual
understanding ROCOR had of the Moscow Patriarchate in earlier days. At
the opening of the Synod of Bishops in October 1959, Metropolitan
Anastassy said the following:
“We must follow the example of the Holy Hierarchs of Moscow,
whose Feast we celebrated today. They stand in front of us as Orthodox
zealots, and we are obliged to follow their example, in all ways avoiding the
impiety of those who currently have mounted their throne. O, should they
rise up today, they would not only not recognize their succession, but would
also attack them with threatening words of exposure. With great zeal the
holy Hierarch Philip would flare up against the faint-heartedness of
Church-representatives, who with indifference look at how the innocent
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blood of their flock is shed. They do not only not expose the enemies of the
Church, but even try in all ways to flatter the ungodly Soviet power. The
great pillar Patriarch Germogen, would flare up, seeing how the hierarchs
cunningly keep silent while the ungodly propaganda is unfolding right in
front of them, forgetting that, by their silence, God is betrayed. Let us in all
ways avoid them, but also arm ourselves with apostolic zeal. We must shun
as plague any relations with them. You know that these people with a
burned conscience will never end their battle against us, even though they
constantly change the form of battle. Sometimes they fight us directly,
sometimes they make a turning movement, in order to hide their true
intentions. Sometimes they take on the appearance of an angel of light, in
order to entice, if possible, even the elect. Unfortunately, many do not
understand this and fall into their nets.” [16u, p.1-2].
How would Metropolitan Anastassy, together with the holy Hierarchs
of Moscow, view the reunification with a Patriarchate which still shows no
repentance for its former path? Ironically, it was an immediate successor of
these unrepentant hierarchs whom ROCOR in 2007 accepted as a true and
lawful Patriarch of the Russian Church. It was yet another of their immediate
successors, who led the funeral of the late Metropolitan Laurus a year later
in 2008.
The Anathema against Ecumenism.
I would also like to refer to the well known Anathema against the
heresy of ecumenism, issued in 1983 by ROCOR. In view of what has been
presented in this paper, how are we now to understand the following words:
”…Therefore, to those who knowingly have communion with these
afore-mentioned heretics or who advocate, disseminate, or defend their new
heresy of Ecumenism under the pretext of brotherly love or the supposed
unification of separated Christians, Anathema!” [22].
Having served with various ecumenical Orthodox Churches, it is hard
to now deny that we are communing with heretics, indirectly or perhaps
even directly, and are defending their heresy by knowingly joining them in
communion and cordially fraternizing with them under the pretext of
brotherly love, instead of exposing their heretical acts and views.
One must remember that the Orthodox Church, solemnly and with the
sound of the trumpet, rejects all heresy on the day of Triumph of Orthodoxy.
This is the very day when God Himself makes a clear statement, eliminating
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all heresy, falsehood and everything else which presents a threat to
Orthodoxy.
Almost all of the Churches of World Orthodoxy are gradually
stepping away from the Truth. The Church leaders who are advocating these
ecumenical dialogues and other kinds of falsehood mentioned here, can
therefore justly be called enemies of Christ by leading the Orthodox
believers into complete apostasy. It is due time for all Orthodox Christians to
say stop. It is due time for us to firmly reject all those hierarchs and their
followers who are leading us away from Christ and His Church. Therefore
“let the canonical principle be enforced, which says: he who communes
with the excommunicated is likewise excommunicated – in other words,
ceasing to commemorate bishops, who are co-responsible for, and co-
communicants with, heresy and delusion.” [7h, see p.12].
It is therefore time for all of us – Archimandrites, abbots, hieromonks,
monks, nuns, deacons and all faithful both abroad and in Russia to speak up
and let the church leaders understand that we will not accept their betrayal
of Orthodoxy. Let no one think for one second that this is harmful to the
Church. On the contrary! It will do the Church and ourselves much good as
long as we act with humility, love and sobriety. Let us not allow fear or the
comfort of this world to silence our voice of confession any longer, and
allow it to turn us into pitiful caricatures of followers of Christ.
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7
The upcoming Pan-Orthodox Council.
Having united with World Orthodoxy, ROCOR/MP entered an abyss
of a multitude of interfaith dialogues, eventually turning into a complex
ecumenical web, in which none of us need be entangled. A part of this web
is the upcoming Pan-Orthodox Council. The agenda for the preparatory Pan-
Orthodox Councils has 10 paragraphs [18a]. Issues are raised, which call for
serious concern among the traditional Orthodox faithful. I will focus on a
few of these paragraphs:
Paragraph 5. Establishing a Common Calendar for Feasts.
This paragraph is closely connected with organizations opposed to
Orthodoxy. In 1997 the WCC and MECC held a consultation at Aleppo,
Syria, where they issued a “Proposal toward a Common Date of Easter”
[18b-1, 18b-2]. The consultation was hosted by the Syrian Monophysite
Church and among the participants were also the Ecumenical Patriarchate,
the Moscow Patriarchate, The Antiochian Orthodox Church and the OCA
[18b-1, at the end: Participants] [18b-2, last parag.].
If we now turn to the agenda of the Preparatory Councils, it asks for a
common date for Feasts, which practically speaking is the same as a
common date for Easter. In reading the Proposal, one sees how the
participants are obviously trying to deceive their readers into accepting
something which a traditional Orthodox Christian believer cannot accept.
Here I will briefly sum up the essence of the report without distorting either
the meaning or the spirit of it.
The Proposal says there is a ”growing urgency” to find a common
date in order for all Christian Churches to be able to give a ‘united witness
to the resurrection of Christ’ [18b-1, pts. 1 and 19]. The arguments for a
common date are taken from the Scriptures and focus naturally on the day of
Easter, the resurrection of Christ:
”[The Resurrection] is a victory which marks the beginning of a new
era, [and] is the ultimate expression of the Father`s gift of reconciliation
and unity in Christ through the Spirit…a unity and reconciliation which God
wills for the entire creation.” [18b-1, pt. 5].
What the Proposal here clearly wants to conclude, is that even God
Himself commands both Orthodox and non-Orthodox Christians to establish
a common date for Easter. The argument here for a common date is Christ’s
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Resurrection through which all mankind is reconciled with God. So in order
to make our unity complete in Christ and thus complete the work of God’s
reconciliation, we must – they argue – join around a common date for
Easter. They use the Holy Scripture – as a sure and beloved source for all of
us – for their unholy goal. In order to additionally persuade the faithful that a
common date is sanctioned by God, they also refer to the early Apostolic
Church “which was first and foremost the community of the resurrection…
and which therefore focused on God`s reconciling love” [18b-1, pt. 6, line 4-
5].
Using concepts which are dear to us all, we are eloquently being
persuaded into accepting a clearly unacceptable issue. In order for us to
focus on ”God`s reconciling love,” as did the early Apostolic Church, all
Christians today also have to ”first and foremost [be a] community of the
resurrection,” which – according to the Proposal – will come about only
through the acceptance of a common date of Easter.
They then begin to draw a most strange parallel between their
consultation and the Council of Nicea 325, since this Council (in 325) also
strove for unity among the various local Orthodox Churches in the matter of
a common date of Easter:
”The Council of Nicea`s decisions are expressive of the desire for
unity, and – the report concludes – was aware that disunity in such a central
matter was a cause of scandal.” [18b-1, pt. 10b, first and last line].
Obviously, the Proposal wants to tell its readers that if we were to
reject an ecumenical unity, this would be ”a cause of scandal…in such a
central matter…” Finally the Consultation ends its report hoping, that “the
establishment of a common date of Easter will happen as soon as possible…
as a step towards preparing for a united witness to the death and
resurrection of Jesus Christ.” [18b-1, pt. 16 and pt. 19].
Let me briefly point to some important aspects – from a traditional
and true Orthodox point of view.
First, the acceptance of a new Paschalion has always been rejected
and anathematized by the Orthodox Church, since the purpose of such an
innovation is clearly to “overthrow and destroy the doctrines and customs of
the Church which we have inherited from our Fathers.” [16h, Sigillion of
1583 by the Eastern Patriarchs. See p.15 in this paper].
Secondly, one must keep in mind who actually issued this report. It
was an ultra ecumenical organization, from where only an anti-Orthodox
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position can be expected. It should also be remembered that the heretical
Encyclical of 1920 has this very same proposal for a common date on the
very top of its list [19e, parag. 7, point a]. One should also not forget the
uncanonical Pan-Orthodox Congress in 1923, which actually implemented
the new Gregorian calendar among the Orthodox Churches. [18g-2, parag.
12]. One must also keep in mind who it is who actually is pushing for a Pan-
Orthodox Council – namely the Patriarchs Bartholomew and Kirill, who are
both known to highly support ecumenical dialogues in both their ways.
Thirdly, as their main support for a common date, the Proposal
focuses on the unity of Christians, based on the ‘Father`s gift of
reconciliation” with mankind “and unity in Christ” for a common witness
to the world. Thus referring to true Orthodox-Christian unity in Christ,
commanded by God Himself, they argue for a false unity among Orthodox
and non-Orthodox Churches. In a similar way, they refer to the Nicean
Council in 325, where the problem with a common date also was being
resolved for the sake of unity. However, one cannot compare the unity
among true Orthodox Churches back in 325 with a wholly false unity
between Orthodox and heretical Churches today. If unity of Orthodoxy was
actually what concerned the faithful, then let those who in fact are the cause
of the divisions – namely the New Calendar Orthodox and non-Orthodox
Churches – come back to the Old Church calendar, as was the normal
practice for more than 1500 hundred years.
Fourthly, God Himself has several times blessed specifically the Old
Calendar while paying no attention to the New Calendar. The Holy Fire
appearing every year is just one and an extremely strong example. It never
happens on the Latin Holy Saturday except when that coincides with the
Orthodox Holy Saturday. Another strong and well known example was in
1925 when the Holy Cross in Greece appeared over an Old Calendar Church
– the church of St. John the Theologian in suburban Athens – celebrating the
feast of the Exaltation of the All-Honourable and lifegiving Cross of our
Savior. Also at the Feast of Transfiguration a cloud every year miraculously
appears over the Church on Mount Tabor – on the Old Calendar date.
Fiftly, the Orthodox Julian Calendar is not just a simple formal
calendar which can be replaced mechanically. Through its use over many
centuries it has become sanctified, similar to when a simple piece of wood –
used for an icon – turns into a holy object and even into a wonder-working
icon. Nobody in his right mind would throw a blessed, wonder-working icon
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out for a brand new icon painted on a piece of new wood, even though this
icon would be without cracks and of much higher quality.
Sixthly, the Church Calendar has, in our times of severe apostasy,
become a strong symbol of traditional and true Orthodoxy. It is all too
obvious – and the report does not hide this fact – that the actual reason for a
new calendar, common to both the Orthodox and non-orthodox Christian
Churches, is to create a strong base for a future full communion in one
heretical pan-Christian Church.
It is very sad to see, that the Moscow Patriarchate and other Orthodox
Churches endorse such a betrayal of true Orthodoxy. It is worthy of
mentioning, that this Proposal is being supported by all the ecumenical
minded Orthodox faithful, while rejected by the true Orthodox believers.
To show even more clearly the un-Orthodox approach of this
paragraph and perhaps even the whole agenda, one needs only to glance at
the uncanonical Pan-Orthodox Congress in 1923, mentioned above. Here we
find the exact same three paragraphs as presented in the Preparatory Agenda.
(5, 6 and 7) [18g-2, parag. 12]:
1) of a common date.
2) of impediments to marriage.
3) of the fasts.
Seeing such a connection between the Preparatory Agenda of 2009
and the WCC/MECC Consultation in 1997, together with the uncanonical
Pan-Orthodox Congress in 1923, one naturally begins to fear whether all of
the paragraphs of the Agenda do not also stem from the very same un-
Orthodox forces, which obviously have beset these Orthodox Churches. One
naturally also begins to fear that this Pan-Orthodox Council is perhaps
altogether being established by forces eager to destroy Orthodoxy
completely.
Paragraph 7: The Question of fasting in the contemporary world.
Regarding questions of fasting, all Orthodox Christians, after 2000
years of practicing, already know what the Church says about fasting. We
have always been taught to fast according to the teaching of the Church,
instead of according to the world. That is the teaching of the Orthodox
Church and we are not in need of knowing more than this.
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Paragraph 8: Relationships with the other Christian confessions.
The Orthodox Church has always considered all other Christian
confessions to be heretical. We must love all men – non-Orthodox Christians
as well as non-Christians – and always treat them with equal love and
sincerity, but still, they must be baptized into the Orthodox Church in order
to have any spiritual communion with us.
Paragraph 9: The Ecumenical movement.
Such a paragraph, from a true Orthodox stand, is wholly superfluous.
According to traditional Orthodox teaching, any involvement in the
ecumenical movement is unacceptable. It is deeply heretical and goes
against all that the Orthodox Church stands for.
Having thus all the multitude of ecumenical reports, statements,
documents etc. between the Orthodox and non-Orthodox Churches in mind,
carefully prepared through the last few decades, and now just waiting to be
given the final official approval by World Orthodoxy for full communion,
such a historic Pan-Orthodox Council could certainly come to play an
extremely unpleasant role for the Orthodox Church, and eventually lead it
into complete apostasy and final gracelessness. Such an approval is perhaps
exactly what many are waiting for. The above-mentioned paper, Practical
Steps towards Unity, written by the Antiochian Orthodox priest Fr. Theodore
Pulcini points in this direction. Speaking about a regional union between his
own Church and the Syrian Orthodox Church (as explained in chapter one)
both of which have their Patriarchates located in Syria, he says (emphasis
mine):
”The late Father John Meyendorff [OCA] recognized this sort of
regional union as a means to a broader union between the Eastern and
Oriental Orthodox. He clearly considered formal proclamation at a Great
Council to be the most proper means of achieving union, he admitted that
“the history of the Church has also known precedents for initiatives taken
regionally… [20a, parag. 5].
Having entered into communion with Orthodox Churches, which
officially have accepted heresy, and – what is even worse – slowly are
adopting their way of thinking, one can fear that we soon will have neither
intellectual nor spiritual power to stand up for the Truth. Theoretically,
perhaps, we will not agree to the decisions, and maybe even sign various
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documents defending Orthodoxy, but having become one of them, we lose
both our willpower and discernment, with the consequence that we silently
will accept and agree to whatever is decided.
In 1968, when Patriarch Athenagoras announced a “Great Synod, for
the unity of all Christian churches,” Metropolitan Philaret, First Hierarch of
the Russian Church Outside of Russia, replied with a firm letter of warning:
“Not every convocation of a Council calls forth joy, and not every
Great Council, however many representatives of autocephalous Churches
may have attended it, has been honored by the recognition of the Church…
For this, every new Council must be in full accord with all previous
Ecumenical Councils.” An Ecumenical Council is convened “in order to
condemn and eliminate, in agreement with ancient tradition, innovation in
the form of arbitrary doctrine, which is the fruit of human pride, of
compliance with the mighty of this world, or of accommodation of the
Church to a wide-spread error…” [17r].
Father Seraphim Rose characterizes the true essence of such a
Council, which he calls the “Eighth Ecumenical Council”:
“Probably, indeed, it is already too late to prevent the renovationist
“Eighth Ecumenical Council” and the “ecumenical” Union which lies
beyond it; but perhaps one or more of the Local Churches may yet be
persuaded to step back from this ruinous path which will lead to the final
liquidation (as Orthodox) of those jurisdictions that follow it to the end; and
in any case, individuals and whole communities can certainly be saved from
this path, not to mention those of the heterodox who may still find their way
into the saving enclosure of the true Church of Christ.”[7m, parag.9].
We will be forced to take a stand. Are we with Christ or are we
against Him? If we believe ourselves to be with Him, are we then spiritually
prepared to act according to our beliefs?
What we could and should do.
In connection with the above-mentioned preparatory meetings, we
now have a good opportunity to be true to our promise of supporting the
traditional standpoint of Orthodoxy. It would be highly desired if
ROCOR/MP brought up some of the more grave problems which have been
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lying heavily on World Orthodoxy the last many decades. These problems
are among others:
Ecumenism.
We should make our stand known and firm. Up till now our voice has
been quiet and timid. To point out the more positive, it is definitely a good
sign that we still believe “Ecumenism to be a stumbling block to us and that
we would like World Orthodoxy to rethink their position.” It also gives hope
to see The Confession of Faith Against Ecumenism from the Convention of
Orthodox Clergymen and Monks (2009) being signed by bishops, monastics
and clergy from World Orthodoxy. But can these words be taken seriously if
we nevertheless joyously continue to serve and fraternize with the very same
ecumenical and even heretical Orthodox Churches and scorn the Old
Calendar Churches?
The communion of the Patriarchates of Antioch and Alexandria with
the Monophysites.
Such a union must categorically be rejected as it has always been by
the holy Fathers of the Church.
The acceptance of the New Calendar.
The only true Orthodox Stand is a complete rejection of the New
Calendar and a return to the Old Church Calendar, as it was before 1924. To
accept the New Calendar is to accept schism and heresy.
The acceptance of the Declaration of 1927 and the path of
Metropolitan Sergius.
Up to this time a firm and uncompromising standpoint, neither in
word nor deed, has not yet been displayed by the Moscow Patriarchate.
Father Michael Korjagin points to this fact. He stresses the essential
requirement of unequivocal condemnation and repentance of the historical
act of Sergianism and not just a formal proclamation of some abstract, even
though true, principles between the Church and State as has been seen in the
Social Concept of 2000 [16m, p. 25, parag. 5].
This same essential requirement is seen in the Confessional and
Ecclesiological Foundations of the Russian True Orthodox Church (TOC):
“We affirm that true Orthodoxy in our suffering Fatherland cannot be
regenerated without a consciousness of the sergianist fall and without
repentance for this fall.” [16p].
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The issue of Sergianism, therefore, cannot be swept aside as
something insignificant in the past. This is clearly understood by Father
Michael Korjagin, who states that “sergianism is not only an agreement
with the godless ones, but also a justification of such an agreement.
Sergianism belongs therefore not only to the past, but also to the present,
and not only to Canon Law but also to Dogmatics, as a sin and error
against faith in the Church (the 9. member of the Symbol of Faith). It was
exactly in this form sergianism was anathematized by the Catacomb
Church.” [16m, p. 20, parag.1].
Thus, being faithful to our promises, we now have an opportunity to
raise our voice in the defense of the truth. This is our obligation as
mentioned by Fr. Seraphim Rose:
“Is it not time at last, then, for the True-Orthodox Christians of the
free world to raise their voices in defense of the trampled-down Truth? Is it
only the persecuted Orthodox in Russia who have the courage to speak
boldly against the lies and hypocrisies of the Church leaders and proclaim
their separateness, on grounds of Truth and Orthodox principles, from the
apostate hierarchs? As a matter of Church principle, the question is in
reality the same here as there; the only difference is that in the Soviet Union
the hierarchs participate in apostasy ostensibly under the dictatorship of
atheists, whereas in the free world the hierarchs do the same thing freely.”
[12p, p. 245, parag.2].
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8
Dialogues of Peace and Unity.
It is quite characteristic of the present day ecumenical movement and
political agendas to speak about love and peace. One sees that both
Orthodox and non-Orthodox Christians, together with secular and political
organizations all over the world, are emphasizing this aspect. This is what
pushes for One World Order, for one United Church so there can be ‘a
common witness of God to the whole world in order for peace and love to
prevail among all men.’ As the Encyclical of 1920 says:
“Above all, love should be rekindled among the churches, so that they
should no more consider one another as strangers and foreigners, but as
relatives and… ‘fellow heirs, members of the same body and partakers of
the promise of God in Christ’ (Eph.3.6).” [19e, parag.6].
Archbishop Averky of Holy Trinity Monastery, Jordanville, addressed
our attention to this phenomena already 50 years ago, saying:
“Peace!..peace!..peace!..is heard now from every side” “mutual
disarmament!..peaceful coexistence!..we shall struggle for peace!..
“Can one in general believe that any sort of secure and reliable
peace can be established on earth with the crude flouting of God`s Truth,
with the lies and hypocrisy which are so clearly characteristics of the life of
modern mankind?” [17h, p.11]
Let me illustrate how this aspect is seen both in the secular and
ecclesiastical world.
The World Conference on Dialogue in Madrid 2008.
In 2008 a World Conference on Dialogue was held in Madrid, Spain,
by the Muslim World League. The Conference aimed at promoting dialogue
between the world’s main religions. More than 200 leaders of different
religions, including Islam, Judaism, Christianity, Hinduism, Buddhism, and
Marxism attended the three-day Conference [18c]. Representatives from the
Ecumenical Patriarchate, the Roman Catholic Church, and the Coptic
Church participated. From the Moscow Patriarchate participated Patriarch
Alexis II and Metropolitan Kirill together with other delegates [18e, List of
Invitees of World Conference for Dialogue, no. 7-8 and 128-132].
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The very reason for convening the Conference is the growing
suffering of mankind [18e, parag. 1]. The cure for this suffering is dialogue.
Thus we read in the section ”About the Conference” (emphasis mine):
“The whole world looks forward to the followers and leaders of
religions and cultures to make substantial contribution in the salvation of
mankind from the dangers that surround it and threaten its future…”[18e,
parag 2].
The Madrid Declaration states that “Built on the agreement among
the followers of religions and leading cultures…the value of dialogue is the
best way to achieve…peaceful coexistence among nations” [18d, parag. 7].
These two quotes show us fairly well the essence of this Conference.
One naturally wonders about the words “salvation of mankind.” Likewise
we see how the suffering of mankind is used as a platform for uniting. Thus,
in the section ”About the Conference” we read that “The UN has adopted
2001 as Dialogue Year Among Civilizations…This confirms the fact that the
nations all over the world desire the process of holding and supporting
dialogue as well as rejecting the calls for conflict and clash of
civilizations.” [18e, 6. parag].
And who does not want peace? But as Christians, the peace we seek is
primarily directed towards an inward peace, according to the words of Christ
Himself – the Kingdom of Heaven is within you. Our peace and salvation
does not come from various ecumenical dialogues or political agendas, but
from Christ Himself and our steadfast belief in His Orthodox Church as the
one and only true Church.
The Message of the Primates of the Orthodox Churches 2008.
As said earlier, the ecclesiastical world also constantly stresses this
aspect. In the Message of the Primates of the Orthodox Churches 2008 [18f]
one sees a strong concern for the suffering mankind and how it must be
solved through unity in love. One cannot but notice the utopia described in
this text: “The Orthodox Church…can and must promote to the
contemporary world the teaching not only regarding the restoration in
Christ of the unity of the entire human race, but also regarding the
universality of His work of redemption, through which all the divisions of
the world are overcome and the common nature of all human beings is
affirmed.” [18f, point 2].
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“The divisions among people deprive billions of people of basic
goods and lead to the misery for the human person;…” [18f, point 5, parag.
2].
Therefore the Message, among other recommendations, states also
t h a t “our desire to continue, despite any difficulties, the theological
dialogues with other Christians, as well as the inter-religious dialogues,
especially with Judaism and Islam, given that dialogue constitutes the only
way of solving differences among people, especially today, when every kind
of division, including those in the name of religion, threaten people`s peace
and unity.” [18f, point 13iii].
As we can see, these aspects and solutions are exactly the same as
stressed above in the World Conference of Madrid and the UN adoption of
2001 as a Dialogue Year. One can likewise mention the September meeting,
2009, in the Vatican, earlier referred to, as a characteristic example of the
present atmosphere in World Orthodoxy. Archbishop Hilarion Alfeyev (MP)
said in regard to the rapprochement between the Moscow Patriarchate and
the Catholic Church: “Only united will we be able to propose to the world
the spiritual and moral values of the Christian faith; together we will be
able to offer our Christian vision of the family, of procreation, of a human
love made not only for pleasure; to affirm our concept of social justice, of a
more equitable distribution of goods, of a commitment to safeguarding the
environment, for the defense of human life and its dignity,” said the
Orthodox prelate [16i-c, last two parag].
Homily by Patriarch Kirill 2009.
Similarly, in his Homily on the Sunday of Orthodoxy 2009, Patriarch
Kirill chose as his main theme unity preserved by love versus heresies and
schisms, saying that“Unity is there where there is love and where there is
love is God.”
“We must preserve the unity.. of Universal Orthodoxy from every
heresy and schism…we must preserve the unity of our local Church as the
apple of our eye…” [16f, parag. 10 and second-last parag.].
Of course, it is true, what his Eminence says. The only flaw in all this,
is the fact that His Eminence uses the words love and unity in an Orthodox
context in order to promote, in a more wider and future scope, a unity of
false love, namely a unity of all the apostatizing Orthodox Churches with the
non-Orthodox Churches and thus slowly create in people an urge for such
unity. In this speech, the topic was the unity in World Orthodoxy. This unity
is in fact the unity of sick bodies, which, strangely enough, reject all
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attempts to get healed. The enemy of this unity (and of its healing) is clearly
indicated to be the Old Calendar Movement. Thus, World Orthodoxy is
eloquently associated with the positive words love and unity, while the Old
Calendar Movement indirectly is associated with the strongly negative
words heresy, schism, anger. The well-written homily successfully creates a
hostile atmosphere toward the Old Calendar Movement in general and
characterizes it as evil.
Has ROCOR/MP forgotten with whom we recently were in union?
Have we forgotten that the precise same words were used to characterize
ROCOR up to very recently by the Moscow Patriarchate?
In comparison to these dialogues of “peace and unity” Archbishop
Averky of Jordanville says that “For the true Christian there can be only
one desirable unity – unity in the Truth of Christ – the pure, undistorted,
uncorrupted Truth, without any admixture of diabolic falsehood, not
envenomed by any compromise with it.”
“The “unity” which is now envisaged by the enemies of the pure truth
of Christ is not unity in Christ. It is that unity which the Antichrist, who
wishes to subject all to himself and to found his kingdom on earth, is striving
to create.” [16n, p. 9, parag. 2].
“Peace and Love”
versus Wars.
Along with this message of “peace and unity” we also experience the
constant threat of wars. I believe these two aspects – “peace and unity” and
“wars and rumors of war” – are but two sides of one coin. We see how wars
have taken a worldwide aspect. Antichristian forces are striving for one
world-order, and for that they need to be in control. This they do through
wars. More security and unity is needed. People are naturally slowly getting
exhausted by all these wars. When this exhaustion begins to manifest itself,
the other part conveniently steps in – the constant stressing on “unity and
love,” “peace and dialogue.” These words are being constantly used, in
whatever context it may be, secular or ecclesiastical, ecumenical or
Orthodox. The goal is to have us slowly accept the very concept of unity and
peace. Such a constant focus on this issue, together with our gradual
exhaustion from wars, violence and divisions, slowly break down our
spiritual discernment and willpower and make us feel a longing for peace
and unity. When that has been accomplished, Antichrist is ready to appear
with his “peace”.
105
Archimandrite Lazar Abashidze, a most respected Georgian Orthodox
writer on contemporary Orthodoxy, points out how “peace and unity” are
being used by political and ecclesiastical leaders around the world to
accomplish an ungodly unity, which again will be closely connected with the
coming of the Antichrist. First he characterizes the essence of this very
phenomenon itself, saying that “It is obvious that we are coming closer to a
time of the most subtle, intricate falsehood, when the utmost radical evil is
clothed in the most comely, well-behaved, sweet, cheerful and affable
appearances. The way of thought, character of life, direction of activity,
spirit of religion are already being created today, in correspondence to and
favorably disposed to demonic seduction, preparing the accession to the
throne of Antichrist. Much of what we today joyously are welcoming with
applause or towards which we are smiling with reserve – as will be seen
tomorrow – was likewise a web, a snare, a bait and a subtle insidiousness
from the enemy of mankind” [17g, p.43, middle].
Then straight away follows an example of how“this subtle
insidiousness from the enemy of mankind” in fact manifests itself:
“As an example [of this insidiousness] one sees how much has been
spoken about peace in the whole world, about the unity of people and
nations, about political, economic, cultural and religious concord and
brotherhood of people. Indeed, what can be more desired than peace – when
we are so tired of so much evil, of wars, of quarrels? …Many politicians
and preachers of various religions – knowing this weakness of mankind that
people are getting tired of wars and are hungering for peace – are
speculating in peace and prosperity.”
“Even many Christians today are of the belief, that “peace in the
whole world,” and “friendship and peace among people and our prayers for
“peace for the whole world” and “for the union of all,” – that all this is
actually one and the same hope and one and the same essence of concept.
Many begin to think that the ideals of today’s “progressive world,” its
humane spirit and purposefulness, and the “spiritual” ideals and hopes of
all Christians are two absolutely agreeable currents of the highest human
moral and spiritual activity, and which are getting closer and closer to each
other, and without fail, will unite and meet as brothers of one family.”[17g,
p.43, last parag.].
“But – continues Archimandrite Lazar – “peace” as understood by
the world and “peace” as understood by the Orthodox Church – are
diametrically opposed to each other both in meaning and significance! The
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Lord says: “Peace I leave with you, my peace I give unto you: not as the
world giveth, give I unto you.” (John, 14:27).
As Professor Ivan Andreev says: “On the Day of Judgement the Lord
will ask not only whether we fed the hungry, but mainly in who`s name and
why we did it: for God, for our personal glory or in the interests of
Antichrist?” [17i, p.54, second-last parag.].“For if you, like the
communists, will feed only those hungry who, for a piece of earthly bread
will renounce the Heavenly Bread – then what reward will be yours for that
from the Lord?” [17i, p.54, last parag.].
The true Nature of ecumenical Dialogues.
In our days when the apostatizing World Orthodoxy and the secular
God-fighting societies constantly admonish us to unite and love, one can
fear that the words of warning from the “strange in appearance” to the
deluded monk, earlier mentioned, will eventually be applied to us also:
“I tell you: even though a man be adorned with all the works of
charity, but does not have right belief he will find himself in that [gloomy,
stinking place, emitting flames]” [7j, second-last parag., last two lines].
Avoiding such “peace, love and unity” the Old Calendar Churches are
being regarded as “enemies of the people” and ‘destructors of Church
Unity,’ ‘possessed by demonic fire of pride’ as Patriarch Kirill eloquently
puts it in his above-mentioned Homily, [16f, fourth-last parag., last three
lines].
“The contemporary ‘dialogue of love,’ – says Fr. Maximos in his
Memorandum Appeal – which is carried on under the form of naked
sentimentality, is in reality an unbelieving denial of the saving sanctification
of the Spirit and… ‘love of the truth’ (2 Thessal. 2:10-13). [7f, p.29, parag.
2].
He exposes the true essence of these ‘dialogues of love, saying that
“The essence of love is the Truth. Let us [therefore] not be deceived. There
exist also a ‘dialogue of falsehood’, when those in engaging in dialogue
consciously or unconsciously lie to one another. Such a dialogue is familiar
to the ‘father of lies,’ the Devil…“Thus, there is no ‘dialogue of love’
without the dialogue of truth.” [7f, p.29, parag. 3, line 7].
The essence, therefore, of these dialogues between Orthodox and non-
Orthodox are in fact the absence of repentance and truth and a rejection of
our very salvation. The non-Orthodox are players in the great scheme of
weakening and destroying Orthodoxy. That is actually what is taking place.
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T h a t is the actual reason for the suffering of mankind. And World
Orthodoxy has now become their co-players on the Devil`s playground.
9 A Need for a strong Orthodox Stand.
Metropolitan Philaret valiantly exposed all heretical activities with
authority and to the point, but still with worthiness. We should do the same.
Unfortunately, the exact opposite is happening. With one hand, we reach out
to ecumenical hierarchs, and with the other we gently pull our brothers and
sisters towards ourselves and the ecumenical Churches, not to mention how,
with that very same hand, we crush out our very own fellow-hierarchs for
speaking up against falsehood.
The Visit of Archbishop Demetrios to ROCOR/MP – Synod.
One small but strong example of how vague our standpoint is, we see
in the official visit His Eminence, Archbishop Demetrios, Primate of the
Greek Orthodox Church of America, made to our Synod, 2009 [19a; 19b]. It
was the second meeting, since already in 2008 our First Hierarch had been
received at the Headquarters of the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese [19b].
In the biography of His Eminence, Archbishop Demetrios, one read of
a highly educated man, who clearly has done many good things and not
spared himself in his work [19c]. He has been all over the world and met
various important people. He seems to be a very pleasant man and the
biography gives without doubt a true picture of His Eminence. However, it
also shows us a bishop who is highly supportive of the ecumenical
movement. In 2004, for example, he participated in the historic Ecumenical
service at the Vatican together with Patriarch Bartholomew and Pope John
Paul II, celebrating the Return of the Holy Relics of Saint John Chrysostom
and Saint Gregory the Theologian to the Ecumenical Patriarchate in
Constantinople [19c, p.5]. In 2006 he participated in the historic Papal
Voyage of Pope Benedict XVI to the Ecumenical Patriarchate [19c, p.5].
Archbishop Demetrios and the Encyclical of 1920.
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In a speech in 2005, His Eminence Demetrios highly praises the
Patriarchs Athenagoras and Bartholomew for their ecumenical endeavours
together with the WCC and the lifting of the anathemas between the
Orthodox and Catholic Churches [19d]. He emphasizes this standpoint even
more, referring to the encyclical of 1920, issued by the Ecumenical
Patriarchate and addressed “Unto the Churches of Christ Everywhere,”
saying:”It is an unprecedented encyclical of global scope urging all
Christian churches to take concrete actions to come closer together in their
common faith.”
This prominent encyclical is proudly proclaimed in his speech to be
the beginning of the ecumenical activities. The encyclical states that “Our
own Church holds that rapprochement between the various Christian
Churches and fellowship between them is not excluded by the doctrinal
differences which exist between them” [19e, first two lines].
It was exactly because of this encyclical of 1920 that the Calendar
reform was later introduced and which eventually led to the severe
persecution of the Greek Old Calendar believers. As His Eminence rightly
points out, the ecumenical movement owes its beginning to this Encyclical.
Unfortunately, it also caused most of the Orthodox Churches to fall into
apostasy. Very rightly do the Anthonite fathers Maximos and Basil conclude
in their Memorandum Appeal that “The Patriarchal “Encyclical” of 1920
not only completely fails to echo the “true voice of the Church,” but, on the
contrary, intentionally overlooks its own Orthodox “foundation.” Judged
from an Orthodox canonical standpoint, it deserves the greatest
condemnation… [7f, p.24, parag. 3 and p. 25, parag. 2].
Thus, His Eminence Demetrios is clearly representing a view which
is in complete opposition to what the Orthodox Church traditionally has
been teaching us.
One may believe in the correctness of such a polite and supposedly
moderate approach, shown to His Eminence Demetrios by our Synod, but
the fact is that it is breaking down the firm stand of Orthodoxy. It has
nothing to do with moderation or soberness, but is a deviation from the true
spirit of uncompromised Orthodoxy.
One must also recall the three ecumenical concelebrations, earlier
mentioned, between the Greek Orthodox Church and various Catholic,
Protestant and Monophysite Churches held in America last year (2009) [5b –
5d]. These services could hardly have taken place without the blessing of the
Primate of the Greek Orthodox Church in North America, namely His
Eminence Demetrios, whom we so cordially invited to our Synod.
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Thus, we see a highly esteemed primate who praises the lifting of the
Anathemas, calls the Catholic Church our Sister-Church, glorifies the
encyclical of 1920, recommends all to join Patriarch Bartholemew in his
apostasy, and blesses concelebrations and intercommunion with Non-
Orthodox believers, and still he is received with apparent great honor at our
Synod and led into the Holy of Holies as a true Apostle of Christ, while
those faithful to Orthodoxy, sincerely struggling to avoid all such things, are
considered graceless schismatics by us and persecuted by bishops supported
by His Eminence.
The confusion increases further, whenon October 27, 2009,
Metropolitan Hilarion (ROCOR/MP) participated in an Ecumenical
Luncheon in honor of Patriarch Bartholomew. The reception was hosted by
His Eminence Archbishop Demetrios at the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of
America. [19g].
We must not consider this weak and compromised stand as love for
our neighbour. Let the reader take a look at the photographs presented and
judge for himself, where ROCOR/MP is heading.
ROCOR/MP-Concelebrating with the OCA.
Another example of our weak stand in the defense of Orthodoxy is
well-illustrated by our concelebration with the Orthodox Church of America.
As mentioned earlier, a commission has been established with the purpose of
dealing with the issue of whether or not we should concelebrate with the
OCA [17k]. Even though ROCOR/MP is supposedly not in communion with
the OCA, official concelebrations are nevertheless taking place on the very
highest ecclesiastical level. I will show this with three examples.
According to the official web-site of ROCOR/MP, His Grace Bishop
Jerome of Manhattan participated in the celebration of the enthronement of
Metropolitan Jonah, the newly-elected Head of the OCA (December 2008)
[17e-2b]. Bishop Jerome concelebrated with the new Metropolitan, after
which he read a congratulatory message from the First Hierarch, which
states that “We hope and pray that this, your time of service, will be one of
continuing, increasingly cordial ties between the Orthodox Church in
America, and our Russian Orthodox Church Abroad”. [17e-2b].
It must be noted that Metropolitan Hilarion blessed Bishop Jerome to
participate only in the reception and not to actually concelebrate. One can
question though, whether the Metropolitan was sincerely against the
concelebration when reading not only the above-mentioned congratulatory
110
message but also the following. In August 2009 Metropolitan Hilarion
concelebrated in the St. Seraphim Church in Sea Cliff, NY (ROCOR/MP)
with the Very Rev. Leonid Kishkovsky from the OCA, an official participant
and supporter of the ecumenical movement, as earlier mentioned [17e-2a
and17e-3]. With him co-served three Archpriests, one priest and seven
deacons, all from ROCOR/MP [17e-2d].
Very Rev. Leonid Kishkovsky is director of external affairs of the
Orthodox Church in America, and a moderator of Religions of Peace, the
largest multi-religious coalition of faith organizations working together to
build peace through common action. He has served as moderator of Action
by Churches Together, a Geneva-based ecumenical alliance of Christian
relief organizations. He is also the representative of the OCA in the WCC,
[17e-3]. He is likewise a president in the Steering Committee of the afore-
mentioned ecumenical organization – CCT – Christian Churches Together
and takes part in common prayers with non-Orthodox members of this
organization which has all been shown earlier in this letter [11a, 11e-3].
Then, on November 16, 2009, when the ROCOR-commission was
gathered in Jordanville for further evaluation of our relationship with the
OCA, Metropolitan Hilarion met with Metropolitan Jonah at the
headquarters of the OCA. Having greeted each other they served a funerary
litiya together to commemorate His Holiness Patriarch Pavle of Serbia, who
had died the day before. Present at the service was also Protopriest Leonid
Kishkovsky [17e-2c] (It must be noted, that it is not the funerary litiya itself
which is the object here, but the concelebration of this service).
One may ask, why ROCOR/MP so openly concelebrate with OCA-
clergy when we officially are yet not in full communion with them. Does
ROCOR/MP not take into consideration the ecumenical activity and
liberalism of OCA and their open acknowledgement of the Moscow
Patriarchate from early days and lack of repentance from this? Have we
forgotten the words of Archbishop Averky, earlier mentioned, whose
conscience did not allow him to serve with modernists or those who
apostatize from the Church? (see p.13 in this paper).
It is hard to take ROCOR/MP seriously as strong upholders of the
Truth, when we see our bishops officially disrespecting their very own
commissions and concelebrating with clergy who pride themselves in their
acceptance of the soviet Moscow Patriarchate in the 70-ies and rightly can
be called ecumenists in the every sense of the word.
How the Orthodox Church
111
traditionally looks upon Visits by Heretics.
I will quote from the Conclusion of the Greek Theological
Conference of 2004, showing how the participants looked upon visits of the
Popes, that is of heretics, to Orthodox countries: “Can one imagine one of
the Holy Fathers organizing receptions in order to honor and embrace
Arius, Nestorius, Eutichius, etc? Likewise, let the unacceptable entry in the
Calendar of the Church of Greece be erased which records the visit of the
pope as a great event…” [7h, part two: B.Proposals., point 4, line 2].
With this in mind one could also highly question the forthcoming
meeting of Patriarch Kirill with Pope Benedict XVI. One can illustrate this
even further with one small comparison. Can one imagine the Savior
inviting the Pharisees and Sadducees to His house, receive them with great
honor, present them with precious gifts, praise their good deeds, wish them
the help from Heaven above and then, after they have left, pronounce this
visit all over the world as a most joyous, God-pleasing event? On the
contrary, our Saviour addressed the Pharisees and Sadducees very
differently, as is well known.
A Promise to firmly defend the Truth.
His Eminence Hilarion, First Hierarch of ROCOR/MP, has promised
firmly to defend the Truth and be faithful to Orthodoxy. But can we now,
with a clear conscience, say that that is actually what we are doing? We have
joined the Moscow Patriarchate and after only three years, we begin to see
the fruits more clearly. Receptions, banquets, meetings, symposiums and
official exchanges with World Orthodoxy have become the order of the day.
It is a matter for deep concern to see our obvious change in attitude towards
concelebrations with ecumenical Orthodox Churches [17e-1, 17e-2] together
with the glorification of the Patriarchs Alexis II and Kirill and their ideals.
Unfortunately, the bishops and faithful in ROCOR/MP (and in the
Moscow Patriarchate) do not raise their voice anymore because – and this is
very sad to say – they desire to be accepted by World Orthodoxy and receive
the practical and material support and benefits from such a relationship. One
condition, therefore, is to be strictly followed by ROCOR/MP (and all
bishops and faithful under the Moscow Patriarchate) – and that is to be quiet.
Such a stand is wholly understandable, very practical and safe – but not in
the least Orthodox.
112
Therefore, through the voice of Archbishop Averky of Jordanville, we
need to listen to the holy Fathers of ROCOR, if we shall not completely lose
the savor of Christ: “Now is the time of confession – of standing firm, if
necessary even to death, for our Orthodox Faith, which is being subjected
everywhere to open and concealed attacks and oppression on the part of the
servants of the coming Antichrist.” [16n, p.11, parag.4].
10
Love of this World.
“If any man love the world, the love of the Father is not in him” (1
John 2:15).
Thus says the Apostle and Evangelist John. Love of the world does
not necessarily have to take on the form of pure fleshly desires. It can easily
take more virtuous forms, as for example, the building of churches, printing
of books, conferences, philanthropical undertakings – in general everything
which is connected to church life. One can as easily be attached to these
things as to merely fleshly passions and be ready to compromise with
falsehood in order to preserve them and one’s comfortable position and
career.
Two factors play a central role in man`s life – that of an outward
security and that of a comfortable life. Man`s life and decisions can thereby
be controlled by these two factors – making him into a complete obedient
servant. That is why these two factors have become a main concern in the
world today. This makes people an easy prey in the hands of Antichrist. If
one wishes to break with the powers of falsehood, one is immediately
deprived of either of these factors or even both. If one does not wish to
abandon comfort, one does whatever one is told. This is what we see today
in World Orthodoxy.
”Sergianism, as said earlier, is the inner preparedness of the Orthodox
Christian for compromise with evil, with the aim of preserving an outer
establishment. It is the path of survival, which is in absolute contrast to the
essence of the Church, which is sacrifice unto death. In Sergianism lies a
hidden love for this world which rejects the Cross. It is a worldly
understanding of the Heavenly Kingdom, where man and not Christ is made
into the Savior. Sergianism – as a “God-pleasing Christian way” of survival
– will therefore be accepted by those whose reason, even in the most hidden
forms, is formed by the love of this world. Archbishop Averky emphasizes
the importance of rejecting such love, saying that ”Nothing so contributes to
destructive spiritual blindness as the seduction of earthly goods. “Mankind
113
led by carnal reasoning,” say the Holy Fathers, “not only will not recognize
the Antichrist, not seeing in him its perfidious enemy, but on the contrary it
will recognize him as its benefactor and proclaim him as its god” (Saint
Ignaty Brianchaninov). [16n, p.12, parag. 1].
Of course, nobody will directly say that they love their comfort more
than God, so a justification is needed. This is done by claiming that the
erroneous path of World Orthodoxy is in fact a true path. Thus, love of this
world, being wrapped up in spiritual and ecclesiastical forms, is being turned
into a virtue. Sergianism is therefore much more dangerous than ecumenism
is. It is the root from which everything else grows, while ecumenism is only
the branches or leaves. One can therefore easily reject ecumenism and
nevertheless be part of World Orthodoxy. Traditional Orthodoxy is therefore
not the same as true Orthodoxy. Traditional Orthodoxy – at least on the
surface being traditional – can still be one in spirit with this world, while
true Orthodoxy, by its very essence, cannot. It rejects this spirit completely,
being on the path of the holy martyrs. We see therefore how World
Orthodoxy is represented by two mainstreams – one is purely heretical, the
other is claming its traditional stand in Orthodoxy. But the essence of both
streams is the same – love of this world. They will therefore most likely
accept the Antichrist, while the true Traditionalists of World Orthodoxy
eventually will end up in the Catacombs together with the true Old Calendar
Faithful.
Love of this world is in diametrical opposition to the path of the
Cross, as much as Antichrist is in diametrical opposition to Christ. When
ROCOR/MP says that they are still continuing the same path as before, it
cannot be farther from the truth. ROCOR/MP, therefore, was and is not
interested in an All-Russian Council, as was traditionally awaited, since such
a Council would be in complete opposition to the spirit of ROCOR/MP
today and would only interfere in their path of comfort. That is why the issue
of Sergianism in ROCOR/MP is being erased from our minds, as something
obsolete and of no actuality, while in fact it is more important than ever to
address this issue and once and for all anathematize it.
One may think that I am now advocating that all faithful leave
ROCOR/MP (or the Russian Church under the Moscow Patriarchate) at any
price. This is not so. However, what I a m doing, is to call all of us to
seriously reflect upon the dangerous path we have now entered and our
promises we once made of being faithful to Orthodoxy. I do not see a
ROCOR/MP having wholly accepted ecumenism or Sergianism – yet, but a
ROCOR/MP which is gradually accommodating itself to World Orthodoxy
and its spirit; which rejects its own ideals and now raises its children to go
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against their own conscience and the conscience of the Orthodox Church for
the sake of pleasing the world and its love for the world; which believes it
can be faithful to Christ and at the same time be friends with the apostatizing
World Orthodoxy. That is what I see – a ROCOR which is fallen, and yet
considers this fall to be a glorious victory.
ROCOR/MP (and the Moscow Patriarchate) is in great danger of
completely accepting falsehood and even Antichrist himself, despite the fact,
that it may very well be opposed to it all. But it does it, simply because it has
begun to love the world. That is the ROCOR/MP I see today.
The Substitution of Concepts
and the Justification by worldly Morals.
Love of this world manifests itself in our justification of lies. Man
justifies his deeds either by Christian truths, or by worldly morals. Christian
truths always blame oneself, while worldly morals justify falsehood, using
worldly laws and rational “just” arguments to achieve its goals. Christians,
using worldly morals, will seldom tell you the actual reason for their
behaviors, that they in fact desire to satisfy only their own passions, obtain
money, glory and comfort. They will in stead try to maintain an outward
purity and righteousness. This we see everywhere and in everyone, from the
simple faithful to monastics, priests and bishops. We see an example of such
worldly morals in the defrocking of Bishop Diomid, who was raising
important church-issues, not welcomed by the Moscow Patriarchate. Instead
of applying Christian truths, forcing them to humbly admit that Bishop
Diomid was in fact a threat to their power and comfort of life – or at least
admit that he was indeed right in his defense of Orthodoxy – they turned to
legalistic justification and worldly argumentation in order to fight him,
saying that he was violating the correct procedure when addressing
problems, that he was destroying peace and good order of the Church and
causing division. They even went so far as to enumerate his “many” personal
sins. Exactly what the Pharisees did with Christ.
Another example is the acceptance of the Declaration of 1927. The
worldly logic of preserving an outward church-structure overruled all moral
and Christian truths, wholly forgetting that, what Metropolitan Sergius in
actuality was doing, was to save not the Church of Christ, but merely an
outward lifeless church-organization, at the same time undermining the
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Christian willpower to fight against evil. The true Church of Christ, which
was faithfully following Christian truths, had gone into the Catacombs.
Yet another example is our union with the Moscow Patriarchate.
ROCOR has always been against ecumenism and sergianism, and still we
united in spirit with World Orthodoxy. Naturally, ROCOR does not say that
it has betrayed its holy Fathers. Instead we pointed to the facts that there is
now (supposedly) freedom in Russia, that we must love one another, that
church-history is always full of difficulties, and that we have to help the
Russian people in their struggle after the fall. ROCOR, it was said, has to
survive, in order not to turn into a “sect” and to achieve this, basic Christian
truths were and are elegantly set aside.
The characteristics of worldly morals, is that they are capable of
transgressing Christian virtues and ideals, and at the same time keeping an
appearance of outward righteousness and piety. But ”apearance, says Fr.
Steven Allen (GOC), is the rein of Antichrist, while the rein of Christ is
reality…We should be very cautious about beautiful manufactured realities
and we should look for what is going on behind the screen, what is really
going on, because it involves compromise” [16v, part 3]. These two words –
appearance and reality – are keywords not only in our personal struggle as
Christians, but also in our understanding of the apostasy going on today.
There exists in the world only two kingdoms – that of Christ, which is reality
or Truth and that of Antichrist, which is appearance or falsehood. A third
kingdom does not exist. Everything which is not of the Kingdom of Christ
belongs therefore in actuality to the kingdom of Antichrist – to appearance
and lies.
The substitution of concepts, so similar to real Orthodox concepts, but
in factvoid of the true essence of Orthodoxy, has become common
everywhere. Thus, faithfulness to Christ, as mentioned earlier, is being
substituted by “Christian values,” sacrifice for Christ by survival, obedience
to Christ by obedience to Church Authority, the spirit of Orthodoxy by
rational legalism, the love of God by the love of man, Truth by tolerance
and political correctness, and Orthodoxy by pseudo-Orthodoxy.
It is a clear sign, that we are now coming closer to the time of
Antichrist, when basic Christian truths are being substituted for a purely
outward and cold set of legalistic rules and worldly morals. Such rules and
morals, wrapped up in a veil of outward and good, orderly church life, has
now been accepted by World Orthodoxy, justifying its love of the world.
All these substitutions have but one goal – to destroy the Church of
Christ and prepare for the coming of Antichrist. World Orthodoxy takes part
in this preparation.
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11
The Greek Old Calendar Churches –
our former Friends.
Now, after the union with World Orthodoxy, as with a touch of a
magic wand, ROCOR/MP suddenly proclaims, that grace has left those Old
Calendar Churches with which we were recently in communion. One recalls,
for example, Archbishop Mark’s comments to the Monastery of St. Edward
in England, when they asked for a canonical release. His Eminence could
not accept their wish, since he then would have to “agree to place them
outside the Orthodox Church” and thus leave them in the hands of a Church
– namely the Synod in Resistance, whose sacraments, the German hierarch
stated “are null and void” and “serve for the condemnation rather than the
salvation of those who partake thereof.” [17m, p.9, par.7 and p.10, par. 4].
Another more personal account testifies to the same. One Sunday
when the commemoration books were read at our monastery, I noticed how
bishop Andronik’s name (now under Met. Agafangel, and former Head of
our Mission in Jerusalem for more than a decade), along with other names of
faithful who had followed him, had been crossed out (by some unknown
person). Addressing one of our bishops in the altar, asking if that really was
necessary, he laconically said: “Of course the names must be crossed out –
they are outside the Church.” I left, sad of heart. Interestingly enough and
quite characteristically, the bishop signed the “Confession of Faith against
Ecumenism” (issued 2009 by New Calendar Traditionalists).
In comparison one can present the view toward the True Orthodox
Christians of Greece as it is presented by Fr. Seraphim Rose:
“In Greece the movement of protest, by a similar Orthodox instinct
likewise took the name of “True Orthodox Christians.” From the beginning
in 1924 this movement has been especially strong among the simple monks,
priests and laymen of Greece;…and today it continues its fully independent
life and organization, comprising about one-fourth of all the Orthodox
Christians of Greece, and perhaps one-half or more of all the monks and
nuns. Although popularly known as the “old calendarists,” the True
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Orthodox Christians of Greece stand for a staunch traditionalism in
Orthodox life and thought in general, viewing the calendar question merely
as a first stage and a touchstone of modernism and reformism.”
”Against this loss of the savor of Orthodoxy there has arisen one
great movement of protest in the 20th-century” that of the True-Orthodox
Christianswhether of Russia, Greece, Mount Athos, or the Orthodox
Diaspora. Among these True-Orthodox Christians are to be found the
authentic Orthodox confessors and martyrs of our times.” [12p, p. 242, last
parag.].
Indeed there is a difference in approach. What caused ROCOR to take
such a radical turn in its position towards the True Orthodox Christians in
general? I believe it is because we in ROCOR/MP have lost that very
“instinct” and discernment of true Orthodoxy of which Father Seraphim is
speaking here. The Athonite Fathers tells us what will happen, if we do not
stand up for the Truth (emphasis mine): “Patriarch Bartholomew has
gauged our responses, and because they are half-hearted, and many times
non-existent, he proceeds without hindrance toward union with an
unrepentant pope.” [7i, parag. 6, line 4].
And they – together with many of us in ROCOR/MP in regard to our
spiritual leaders – continue in more strong words, saying that “We have
been scandalized by the silence and inaction of our spiritual leaders on
Mount Athos, and together with us, the entire assembly of monastic-loving
Orthodox Christians, both in Greece and throughout the world.” [7i, parag.
7, line 1].
And having lost all patience they further exclaim very laconically: “It
is no longer time for words, but for actions” [7i, parag.10, line 4].
Why it is time for actions, they answer themselves: “We want to set at
ease our monastic and Orthodox conscience; we want to follow the conduct
of the Holy Martyrs and Confessors” [7i, parag. 10, line 6].
What these actions imply they also answer themselves: “The only
thing that will gladden the Orthodox and shame the kakodox is to cease
commemoration of the patriarch and all of the bishops agreeing with him or
remaining in silence.” [7i, third-last parag., line 2].
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12
World Orthodoxy – a new “Christianity.”
Today another form of Christianity is slowly taking the place of true
Orthodoxy. Archbishop Averky of Jordanville, says that “We must first of
all understand and never forget… that there now also exists pseudo-
Orthodoxy, which we must fear and from which we must flee as from fire.”
[17h, p.5: “On Apostasy”].
This religious substitute, so similar in appearance to true Orthodoxy,
is what Antichrist needs in order for him to successfully conquer the world.
Archmandrite Lazar Abashidze, writes in this respect:
“The devil is in no way an opponent of religion altogether, on the
contrary: he is actually the founder of most of the religions. The devil is
always trying to turn the Orthodox Christians not into unbelief but into a
distorted belief. He needs religion, but only as non-dogmatical and
indistinct as possible, in order for him to draw as many people as possible
towards Antichrist.” [17g, 14, top].
It must be a religion – a Christianity created by the fallen man. That
will be the substitute for true Orthodoxy. Archmandrite Lazar says: “Is it
not evident that it is not the exterior, spoken sermon of the Gospel which the
devil will try to hinder, but the performance of Christ`s Commandments, the
penetration into the real essence of Christianity? That he in all ways will try
to secularize the understanding of the faith of Christ, draw it down to a
worldly level and rationalize it? A secularized Christianity, with two wings
cut off, is in itself not only not fearful for the devil but will even do him a
good turn, since the Antichrist himself will pose as the Messiah,.” [17g, p.
19, parag. 1].
The main difference from true Orthodoxy will thus be love of this
world and the absence of the Cross. It will be a Christianity based on a social
agenda, where its goal is unity of all people in order for the world to live in
peace and happiness. Archmandrite Lazar comments on this, saying:
“Everything which Christ promised to give His followers the Antichrist will
promise too, with the exception that he will abolish the cross: and in this lies
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the whole mystery of his insidious powers, the reason why all nations and
people will be following him.” [17g, p.39, middle].
That is why we will all accept him. The formula for this earthly
Utopia will be the Gospel, but not as it was preached by Christ, but as it was
preached by Satan, when he tempted Him in the desert. Archmandrite Lazar
explains this, saying that ”The devil will promise the Heavenly Kingdom
itself without any hardships at all or struggles of piety. The Antichrist will
promise people heaven on earth, with which knowledge, comfort and
pleasantness of life, art, various inventions and improvements in
materialistic life will easily be combined.” [17g, p. 39].
In order for Antichrist to deceive people, it is therefore important for
him to develop an earthly spirituality. This is so, since he himself will be a
spiritual leader acting as the Messiah, but with a spirituality wholly
grounded on fallen man. Archmandrite Lazar writes: “Even though the
kingdom of the devil will be a kingdom totally of the flesh, it will try to
appear heavenly.. And in this way the Antichrist plans to darken the true
teaching of the Christian faith with a new teaching, a new order – softer,
pleasant and in conformity with the inclinations of the carnal man – and will
try in every way possible to present himself as Christ… from this stems his
power and the danger that he will be able to allure even the very
elect.”[17g, p.39].
ROCOR/MP should therefore with all good reason fear the path of
World Orthodoxy. Archbishop Averky sums up excellently what has been
said: “The fundamental task of the servants of the coming Antichrist is to
destroy the old world with all its former concepts and “prejudices” in order
to build in its place a new world suitable for receiving its approaching “new
owner” who will take the place of Christ for people and give them on earth
that which Christ did not give them…”
“One must be completely blind spiritually, completely alien to true
Christianity not to understand all this.” [17h, p.10].
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13
“Obedience”
or
Faithfulness to Christ.
The issue of a new “Christianity” brings us to another aspect, closely
connected to our times of apostasy, namely the almost blind obedience
which the official Church authorities expect of their faithful – in spite of
their apostasy. Such obedience has become a major factor in creating a
pseudo-Orthodoxy.
Having the authority as Church-leaders, but using it for obtaining
obedience to a path which is against the traditional teaching of the Orthodox
Church, the faithful are slowly losing their ability to think independently and
to trust their own conscience, even when this conscience is in concordance
with the true conscience of the Church. A kind of paralysis occurs among
the faithful, when we no longer dare to follow our own conscience, but begin
to trust wholly the conscience of the “official” church organization. Our
understanding of the “official church organization” as being the true and
infallible Church of Christ, despite the obvious falsehood it preaches, is
slowly being developed in such a direction, that any deviation from it is
equal to war against God and a sure way to lose one`s soul. This false
obedience can go so far as to even persecute the defenders of true Orthodoxy
– all done in the name of Christ. It will eventually also make them accept
Antichrist. Father Seraphim Rose wrote that“some people can find
themselves in a position that may be ‘legally correct’ but is at the same time
profoundly un-Christian – as if the Christian conscience is compelled to
obey any command of the church authorities, as long as these authorities
are properly ‘canonical.’ This blind concept of obedience for its own sake is
one of the chief causes for the success of Sergianism in our century – both
within and outside the Moscow Patriarchate.” [17j, p.258].
Even a traditional stand in World Orthodoxy is far from a guarantee of
not accepting Antichrist. On the contrary, it is well known what the holy
Fathers say about the condition of the official Church in the end-times. The
main goal of Antichrist will primarily not be to have us deny our Orthodox
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faith or even Christ, but first and foremost to acknowledge his authority and
receive his mark. The traditional faithful, whether in World Orthodoxy or in
the Old Calendar Movement will therefore be allowed and even encouraged
to keep their traditional stand – they just have to bow down to the Antichrist.
And that isexactly what the “official church organization” of World
Orthodoxy eventually will do, even though they strongly assure us of the
opposite. That only testifies to their complete blindness to what they are
doing and where they are going. Woe then, to him who has given himself
completely over to such “obedience,” having trampled down not only his
own conscience but especially the conscience of the Church. Will he be able
to withstand not only the pressure laid on him by his authorities and closest
ones, but also from the psychologically strong bond of “obedience” which
has been built up in him for years?
It is exactly such a “salvation” of soul, based solely on “obedience”
and a formal membership in the “official” Church which destroys all true
faith in Christ. It is exactly such conformity that World Orthodoxy is
nurturing. The result is that we – its faithful – turn into nice and obedient but
spiritually dead objects. It is therefore not so much a “traditional” stand that
is the most essential factor in our defense of Orthodoxy and for discerning
between good and evil. Such a stand can be wholly formal and even lead us
away from Christ. As mentioned earlier by Father Seraphim Rose, the
apostasy of our times is characterized by a “correct Orthodoxy” but
“deprived of the spirit of true Christianity.” The loss of this spirit has now
become widespread in World Orthodoxy as Father Seraphim said: “The real
crisis of Orthodoxy today lies in the loss of the savor of True Christianity.
[12p, p. 242, last parag].
What is essential is therefore to acquire this spirit or fragrance of
Orthodoxy. And that is what Father Seraphim Rose first and foremost is
referring to, when he defends the path of the True Orthodox Christians,
being wholly free of any formality. This spirit of Orthodoxy is never bound
to any jurisdictions, “parties” or church-organizations. It is a spirit, which
clearly exposes superficiality and formality, and is able to see right through
the hypocrisy and falsehood whether it is in World Orthodoxy or in any Old
Calendar Church.
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God’s Love to His Faithful
in both the Old Calendar Churches
and World Orthodoxy.
I believe we have now entered a very special unprecedented time in
history. The Orthodox Church has been extremely shattered, as Archbishop
Averky many times said. And yet, World Orthodoxy, I believe, has not yet
lost Grace. But this is so not because World Orthodoxy is actually walking
on the right path, but because God is extremely long-suffering and does not
want anyone to perish. World Orthodoxy must, therefore, understand that
God is not pleased with what He sees.
Today there exist several Churches or Synods in the Old Calendar
Movement, essentially confessing the very same Orthodox faith yet not in
communion. This phenomenon is still, I believe, not completely to be
understood. It is definitely a grave mistake to simply reject them as graceless
schismatics and fallen from the Church. The times are all too complex in
order to make such categorical conclusions. In the Holy Scriptures, though,
we may find some help in explaining this situation.
The Message by God to the Church of Laodicea.
In the message to the Church of Laodicea, representing the very last
of the seven Churches in the Apocalypse, God sternly admonished Her,
saying:
“Because thou art lukewarm, and neither cold nor hot, I will spew
thee out of My mouth”. (Revelation 3:16).
Since World Orthodoxy believes itself to be the one true Apostolic
Church, then we – from our point of view – must consider these words to be
addressed to us. This fact alone should make us reflect – and tremble. We in
World Orthodoxy are therefore neither cold towards the pleasures of this
fallen world, nor are we hot, burning with fervent zeal for Christ until death.
We are lukewarm, trying to please both the world and the Church.
Nevertheless God still considered the Church of Laodicea to be His Church.
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Now Christ Himself has even come right up to the door and knocks
(“Behold, I stand at the door, and knock…” (Rev. 3:20), as though He is
pleading with us to come to our senses. And indeed, so it is! He pleads with
us, saying: “be zealous therefore, and repent.” (Rev. 3:19).
So now, are we in World Orthodoxy actually being zealous and
repenting? It does not look like it. And thus, for the time being, God – as
though only getting ready to ”spew” us out as worthless servants – in His
infinite mercy, still bears with us, hoping for our repentance. But for how
long? Almost a century has gone by since World Orthodoxy embarked on
the path of ecumenism and Sergianism and no repentance is being seen.
Therefore, even though World Orthodoxy in general can still be considered a
part of the Church of Laodicea – the Church of God – She is now standing
on the very threshold of being rejected by God completely – to be spit out.
This seems to explain the confusion many of us have today as to whether or
not to consider World Orthodoxy graceless. We see now – standing on this
very threshold – a whole confusing mixture of signs. Some of them show us
that World Orthodoxy actually seems to have Grace, but others that it
actually cannot and logically should not.
Those faithful in His Church (of Laodicea), who actually are taking
the words of our Savior seriously – be zealous and repent – are in fact the
Churches of the Old Calendar Movement. It is they who have reacted to His
call, for which they are being scorned and persecuted by us, their very own
fellow brothers and sisters. “If any man hear my voice, and open the door, I
will come in to him, and will sup with him and he with Me.” (Rev. 3:20).
The Shipwreck suffered by Apostle Paul.
Another incident which could also throw some light on the extremely
complex situation we see today is the story about the shipwreck in the Acts
of the Apostles. We remember how St. Paul together with more than two
hundred and fifty people suffered a shipwreck, but were eventually all saved
on the small island of Malta (Acts 27:39 -28:1). The Holy Scripture tells us
that, having escaped the ship, which was being destroyed by the waves,
some were saved on boards, others on broken pieces of the ship.
Could it not be that we see an analogy to the many Old Calendar
Churches, so fragile and broken, some big, some tiny, and all dispersed in
the stormy waters of the sinful world and apparently with no resemblance to
the Universal Orthodox Church, speaking of size, wealth and administration,
but not of essence? These broken planks on which the people at sea were
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saved, were also of the exact same material as that of the original ship. The
Old Calendar Churches (in general), therefore, preserving the teaching and
Traditions of the Orthodox Church, likewise have the Grace to save anyone
who clings to them in sincere faith. This is also God’s love for mankind.
The people who were saved on the planks did initially not wish to
leave the ship. They wanted to stay, if possible. But eventually seeing no
hope, they were forced to leave in order to be saved. The ship evidently lost
its ability to save the people on board and was finally completely destroyed
in the sea. We in World Orthodoxy should reflect a little bit on this.
Trying to understand it in this way, I do not, of course, say, that
Christ’s Church has been destroyed, but that God now mysteriously is
saving people in various Old Calendar Churches, and He is doing it in a way
similar to the way the people at sea were saved. They were saved after the
ship – again by God’s allowance – had been shattered into pieces, when the
“master and the owner of the ship…and the more part” (Acts, 27:11)
willingly had disobeyed the true voice of the Church, namely Apostle Paul,
not to leave the safe harbour“ (of a correct and saving confession of faith”)
for the winter. Thus, what was once a whole complete ship (speaking of the
jurisdictional and administrative order of the Church), ended up being
shattered into pieces (jurisdictions), thus saving the passengers by its planks.
I believe, God bears and suffers with all of the Old Calendar
Churches. But still, it can be profitable for them to still keep in mind that
when Apostle Paul suffered shipwreck, not all of the planks served as
lifeboats, but some sank to the bottom of the sea, having served no use at all.
The Church has been shattered greatly in the past century and it is
therefore no wonder that we today see the various Old Calendar Churches
lying around as though an earthquake had taken place. The call to the
Church of Laodicea(showing us that World Orthodoxy can still be
considered to belong to the Church of God) and the stranding of St. Paul on
the island of Malta (pointing to the fact that the Old Calendar Churches are
without doubt also within the Church of Christ) can therefore help us to
better understand that God has not abandoned either the resistant Churches
or World Orthodoxy, until the final and complete apostasy will occur in the
days closer to the time of Antichrist. I sincerely believe it will be of much
more benefit for us and for the well-being of the Orthodox Church in
general, if we would try to look at the Old Calendar Churches from this
aspect. It would perhaps also be beneficial for the Old Calendar Churches
themselves if they would try to understand their own position from the
above-mentioned perspective.
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Who actually is within the Church
from a canonical Point of View.
Besides this rather philosophical approach, there is also the pure
canonical aspect, which we cannot reject. Bishop Photios says, that:
“Orthodox Christians have the right, based on the canons of the
Church, to break ecclesiastical communion with any Bishop who teaches
heresy publicly and openly in the Church and to cease his commemoration
in liturgical services”(canon IV, First and Second Council in
Constantinople).
“If a Bishop or a clergyman of lower rank is faulty in the domain of
the faith, “flee from him and separate yourself from him, whether he be a
man or even an Angel from Heaven,” says St. John Chrysostomos.”
[7e, parag.10: “Orthodox Christians have…,” line 3].
It is well known that ROCOR/MP once was in full communion with
the Genuine Greek Old Calendar Church (GOC), the Catacomb Church of
Russia, and later also the Synod in Resistance together with the Romanian
and Bulgarian Old Calendar Churches.
As Orthodox Christians, we firmly believe, as stated above, that the
Orthodox Church is one and that it consists only of members sharing the
exact same faith. This is and has always been the true teaching of Christ’s
Church. One faith, one Church, one baptism as St. Paul says it. Strictly
speaking, that essentially means that only those who believe and confess this
Apostolic faith are within the Church. Since both ROCOR and the above
mentioned Old Calendar Churches (without mentioning the issue of Grace,
which has absolutely nothing to do with what I am speaking about here)
always believed in the “correct and saving confession of the faith,” then
they agreed to go into communion with each other.
I have a photograph, which shows Archbishop Petros of Astoria
(GOC – Chrysostomos II) in a friendly gathering at the GOC-church –
St.Markella (NY, USA) – together with St. John of Shanghai, and the saintly
ROCOR-bishops Leonty of Chile, Averky (Jordanville), Savva and others.
Another similar photograph shows the same saintly hierarchs gathered
outside the building [21a]. One could also mention a video of Archbishop
Averky of Jordanville and Archbishop Laurus (later Metropolitan of
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ROCOR/MP), serving together with Archbishop Petros of Astoria both at St.
Markella’s and in our very own Holy Trinity monastery [21b].
Thus, ROCOR and the Old Calendar Churches, with which we were
once in union, together confessed the same Apostolic faith and therefore
were within the Church.
Let us now look at World Orthodoxy. As shown above – through
well-documented material I would say – we can say for sure, that in general
World Orthodoxy officially does not confess the same faith as these Old
Calendar Churches or the old ROCOR. For this reason the Old Calendar
Churches have “walled themselves off” from World Orthodoxy. That is
why we now, together with World Orthodoxy, naturally call them, and all
those with whom they are in union, graceless schismatics. Such a stand is
completely natural – from our point of view. In this way ROCOR/MP
testifies to the fact that the Apostolic faith, which these Old Calendar
Churches still confess and which we also once confessed, actually is in
opposition to that “apostolic” faith we now confess. It is therefore the Old
Calendar Churches and not we, who show constancy in the true Orthodox
faith.
So, if we really want to go into the matter of Grace, we see more
clearly now, who it actually is, who is within the Church, and who actually
has Grace, – not only by the mercy of God and through economy – but by
their actual virtue of a “correct and saving confession of faith.”
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An ungodly Schism
or
a God-pleasing Walling-off from Falsehood.
Frequently we hear the Old Calendar Churches being labeled as
graceless schismatics. Such an opinion is now widespread among monastics
as well as laity. It is therefore necessary to touch upon this subject, and show
where the difference between an ungodly “schism,” which will not be
forgiven, and a God-pleasing walling-off from falsehood lies.
Preserving the Unity of Faith.
The Old Calendar believers strive to preserve the unity of Faith and
faithfulness to the Tradition of the Church. The ecumenists, however, on
their part, and those who accepts the path of Metropolitan Sergius
(Stragorodsky) are introducing novelties and heresies into the Church, which
are and always have been foreign to Orthodoxy. The only way unity can be
preserved in the Church is through unity of Faith and Tradition. That has
always been the traditional stand in the Orthodox Church. As the 7th
Ecumenical Council says that “For the unity of the Church we must, as
obedient children, have absolute trust in the apostolic teaching of the Holy
Fathers and the Traditions of the Church” (7l, p. 18, middle).
Regarding the question of breaking the unity of the Church, which is
one of the main accusations, directed against the Old Calendar Churches, it
is important to understand that it is World Orthodoxy which is the actual
violator of this sacred unity by:
– breaking the unity of the Feasts in accepting the New Calendar,
– breaking the unity of the Faith in accepting heresy.
One argument against leaving World Orthodoxy is that the Old
Calendar Churches are isolating themselves. Such argumentation is wholly
missing the point in what it means to wall oneself off from falsehood. The
Encyclical of the Eastern Patriarchs, written to Pope Pius IX in 1848 states
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the following: “All, therefore, innovating, either by heresy or schism, have
voluntarily clothed themselves, according to the Psalm (cix.18), “with a
curse as with a garment,” whether they be Popes, or Patriarchs, or Clergy,
or Laity; nay, if any one, though an angel from heaven, preach any other
Gospel unto you than that ye have received, let him be accursed.” [7k, point
20].
Father Seraphim Rose affirms the principled truth of such a stand.
Referring to the Russian Catacomb Church and their separation from the
Moscow Patriarchate, he says: “True-Orthodox Christians, for the sake of
the purity of Christ`s Church, must remain separate from the schismatic
body and thereby show it the way of return to the True Church of Christ.”
[12p, p. 240, last parag].
For this reason the True Orthodox Christians have decided to protect
themselves, “to wall themselves off” from falsehood and heresy.
Metropolitan Cyprian of Oropos and Fili (Synod in Resistance) says that “In
this way they [the true Orthodox Christians] are not being the cause of
schism in the Church, but, on the contrary, hearken to the voice of the Holy
Fathers and the Holy Canons, which praise those who – because of
dogmatic reasons – disassociate themselves from hierarchs who openly are
preaching falsehood and heresy” [7l, Russian edition p. 23].
“A schism can rightly be called so, when a part of the clergy and laity
ceases to have any communion with their canonical hierarchs “without any
reason” and “in remediable questions” or due to some hierarch’s personal
sins” [7l, p.23].
“The heresy of ecumenism cannot be considered as something
insignificant or “a remediable question,” since it has been absolutely
truthfully determined as “something much worse than all-heresy,” as “a
sickness unto death,” as “a most ominous syncretism,” as “an unheard-
of treason” [7l, pp. 23-24].
The path which World Orthodoxy has entered upon began almost a
century ago. It is a path which officially accepts ecumenism, Sergianism and
worldliness, and cannot and should not be taken as something insignificant.
These issues are all heresies or innovations and give the Old Calendar
Churches a canonical and moral right to “wall themselves off.”
“Therefore, Metropolitan Cyprian continues, the Old Calendar
Faithful are not only not schismatics, but are actually struggling for the
peace and unity of the Church” [7l, p. 24, top].
“In this way, “schism” and “God-pleasing walling-oneself-off from
heresy” are two diametrically opposed phenomena and can in no way or
manner be considered to be the same thing” (p. 24, top).
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“It is therefore in vain that the Orthodox anti-ecumenists are being
condemned for having supposedly left the Church. This walling-oneself-off
from heresy does not mean to leave the Church, but on the contrary to draw
oneself closer to Christ our Savior and to be in security inside the strong
walls of the Orthodox Truth” [p. 35, bottom to 36 top].
Bishop Photios clarifies this aspect further, saying that”The
participation of the Primates and Synods of nearly all of the local Orthodox
Churches in the ecumenical movement has divided the members of these
Churches into those who follow the heresy of ecumenism and the calendar
reform which it produced, and those who have defended the pure and whole
Orthodox faith and the unity of the Orthodox Church in that faith [7e, parag.
5 (line 8)].
The canons together with examples from the saints themselves show
us that separation – done correctly, for the right causes and at the right
moment – is not isolation, but a necessary protection of both oneself and the
true faith in order to stay within the Church. It is a misconception to believe
that to leave World Orthodoxy (as we know it today) – at any moment and in
any circumstances – is wrong altogether. As Protopresbyter (later Bishop)
George Grabbe (ROCOR) said in regard to the betrayal of Orthodoxy: “It is
better for us to be isolated than to allow ourselves to be drawn into a
spiritual quagmire” [16x, p.31]. The Old Calendar Churches are not going
into isolation, but are being isolated, simply because they do not want to
follow our path of apostasy.
The apostasy going on today, has escalated to such a degree, that there
is a canonical and moral justification for leaving. But at the same time there
is also a justification for staying. This point we fail, it seems, to understand.
How contradictory as it may sound, this is the situation we find ourselves in
today.
Accepting the ruinous spirit of World Orthodoxy, we naturally have to
consider all who leave us to have fallen away from the Church and lost
Grace. If one is to accept the falsehood of World Orthodoxy, it simply
cannot be otherwise. Thus – amid falsehood – we manage to keep ourselves
“pure.”
Who is to blame for Schisms?
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We believe that the faithful who have left ROCOR/MP because of the
union with World Orthodoxy, have jumped into the pit of schismatic
gracelessness. But is it actually not ROCOR/MP, who by its broken
promises and rejection of a true Orthodox stand, have stumbled and fell? Is
it not us, who have actually been pushed, or more correctly, have willingly
walked all the way up to the edge and have jumped?
Sadly enough, many of us have become a bit cynical in our view of
World Orthodoxy. So many times have we seen promises being broken,
confirmations of faithfulness trod upon and truth being turned upside down
in the most eloquent and scholastic way. Sad to say, the childlike naivety
and trust most of us had has slowly been replaced with a more real and
cynical understanding of things. Somewhere our hearts have become
hardened a little. When confronted with the reality of falsehood and
hypocrisy, which has threatened to deceive us so many times, our reaction
sometimes becomes somewhat harsh.
Our Betrayal of our Orthodox Brothers and Sisters.
There has been no serious protest from ROCOR/MP against the
general apostasy, neither have we shown any support for the Old Calendar
Churches. On the very contrary, as Bishop Photios sadly points out:
“It is also worthy of note, that the ‘Orthodox’ ecumenists often
shamelessly and in a brutal manner betray their Orthodox brothers, who
have the courage to defend the purity of their faith.” [7e, second-last parag.].
This is correct. The Old Calendar faithful are a small persecuted flock,
who struggle with all the various problems coming from being so small.
They have been abandoned and left to defend themselves not only against
the sin of the world, but even against us – their fellow Christian brothers and
sisters. We ridicule them and justify ourselves with joyous satisfaction,
when seeing them struggle hard with internal problems. One can rightly ask
whether their problems actually are more serious than heresy and apostasy.
Love of this world is the easy path, it demands of us no particular efforts, but
the path of the Cross is the hard path.
We in World Orthodoxy accuse the Old Calendar Movement of
“having no love.” But how do we ourselves show the love of God to our
fellow brothers and sisters? The history of the Old Calendar Movement
shows, sadly enough, that we have been – and are being – quite cruel in our
attitude toward the True Orthodox Christians. It seems to be that our love
stops here. What is left is often a complete lack of understanding of them,
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animosity, and hatred – not much different from what we accuse the True
Orthodox Christians of having.
Father Seraphim Rose testifies to the importance of being in spiritual
union with the true confessors of Orthodoxy:“We Orthodox in the free
world are without any excuse if we fail to show precisely our solidarity with
the Catacomb Church and her fearless confession of God`s Truth and
righteousness. The True-Orthodox Church is the standard of Orthodoxy in
Russia today, and it requires no “imagination” or secret information for us
to know that standard and measure ourselves by it.” [12p, p. 245, parag. 1].
This explains why ROCOR/MP defrocked Metropolitan Agafangel.
The defrocking can only be described as a deeply destructive act, since it
was done deliberately with the purpose of further cutting all ties with the Old
Calendar Churches. As with the Pharisees, who accused our Savior of not
only breaking the Law of Moses and being from “Galilee,” but also
“rebelling” against their church-authority, so also we now discredit the Old
Calendar Churches by focusing on our own outward legalism, while wholly
overlooking the very essence of why the Old Calendar Churches actually are
acting as they do.
Freedom to serve Christ.
World Orthodoxy, in its close bonds (economically, politically etc.)
with the anti-Orthodox institutions and governments of this world, has lost
its possibility to be completely free in its decisions. The loss of this inner
freedom was what ROCOR feared most of all.
“The True Orthodox Church, says Fr. Steven Allen (GOC), is free to
be Christians. We are not given money by, we are not controlled by the new
world order…We are free from the spirit of Antichrist…” [16v, part 3].
Father Steven Allen characterizes the essence of World Orthodoxy
today saying that it is “collaboration with the spirit of this world and the
ruler of this world – which is the devil – and the institutions the devil is
using to prepare the rein of Antichrist.” World Orthodoxy has thus become
– or is becoming – an instrument in the preparation and acceptance of
Antichrist. The Old Calendar Faithful will simply not take part in any of this.
The holy fathers of ROCOR, continues Fr. Steven Allen, said that
“The essential difference between the Catacomb Church and the Moscow
Patriarchate, and ROCOR and the other groups is that we have freedom in
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Christ. Our soul is free to follow our conscience. When one loses his
conscience, he has nothing.” [16v, part 3].
16
Grace or the right Confession of Faith.
One may argue that since I believe Grace to be present in World
Orthodoxy, then there is no justification for people to leave. But that is not
so at all. As Father Seraphim Rose so often stressed, it is paramount to
approach today’s church-issues not only with the mind but also with the
heart. Thus he says:“If there seems to be a “logical contradiction” here (“if
you don’t deny her Mysteries, why don’t you have communion with her?”), it
is a problem only for rationalists; those who approach church questions
with the heart as well as the head have no trouble accepting this position,
which is the testament bequeathed to the Russian Church of the Diaspora by
her wise Chief Hierarch, Metropolitan Anastassy (+1965).”
Another aspect (beside Grace) which has been put forth as a valid
reason for union with the Moscow Patriarchate is the fact that the Russian
people in their homeland are openly and freely expressing their faith. And
truly, it warms the heart to see our brothers and sisters in Christ sincerely
living a conscious Orthodox life. Monasteries, churches, schools etc. are
being built. But does all this have any connection with whether or not we,
including the Russian faithful themselves, ought to accept and unite in spirit
with the Moscow Patriarchate – a church organization which obviously is
confessing falsehood?
During the Soviet period, ROCOR always expressed its spiritual ties
with its suffering brothers and sisters in the homeland. We rejoiced and
lamented with them, but it never became a reason for prematurely uniting
with the Moscow Patriarchate. If one were to take the great number of
Russian believers now openly expressing their sincere and pious faith, as a
valid reason for union, then one could also easily begin to look toward the
equally sincere and pious Monophysite, Catholic, and Protestant believers.
Are we supposed to take manifestations of sincere faith and piety among
people as valid grounds for accepting a church organization which clearly
participates in and accepts falsehood? If we are, then we will very likely
become victims of Antichrist, who will make all efforts to focus only on
external aspects, while neglecting the inner aspects of faithfulness to Christ.
With this I naturally do not deny the sincerity and piety of the Russian
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people. What I mean is that Antichrist will allow each of us to live a
conscious and sincere Christian life. He will ask of us only to acknowledge
him as our leader – should it be even just informally and quite superficially.
We must not make the crucial mistake of believing that it will never be of
any significance to acknowledge a false and truly antichristian church-
administration of the Antichrist if we just personally strive to live a truly
pious Christian life. But this is indeed the mistake we are making. This is
what we are slowly being prepared to believe and do, from 1927, until now.
Therefore, the right question to ask is actually not, whether or not
there is Grace in World Orthodoxy, or whether or not we see manifestations
of sincere piety among the people, but whether or not World Orthodoxy
confesses the right faith and walks on the path of the Cross. And that, we
see, as a whole, it does not.
Another important aspect must also be noted. A tendency has been
seen today to focus on miracles and signs as proof of one`s beliefs. Such a
tendency though, may be deceitful. One must not forget that the power of
Antichrist`s deceit will lie in his “miracles” combined with an extreme
spiritual charismatic power and eloquence. According to human reason, he
will be perfect in all ways. We must therefore not search for the Truth in
something outward, but only on that which is truly authentic Orthodoxy. As
has been said earlier, the Christianity of Antichrist will look exactly the
same as true Orthodoxy, and yet be completely permeated with the spirit of
this world and based wholly on man`s reason. Signs and miracles or any
other outward manifestations, therefore, should not be trusted as guides to
where the truth is and is not.
The faithful, therefore, look to the Scriptures and the holy Fathers as
Christ teaches us. God Himself asks of us to follow His commandments. So
the Old Calendar Churches have chosen to be obedient to that command and
some do it with true soberness and worthiness. These Churches are actually
the ones showing true obedience to Christ, and not we in World Orthodoxy.
The spiritually sober Old Calendar Churches have thus quietly stepped away
– not from the Church – but from falsehood, hoping that their brothers and
sisters in Christ one day will come to understand the false path they have
taken.
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17
The Old Calendar Movement and its Struggle.
The Old Calendar Movement consists of Churches or Synods which
have all separated themselves from World Orthodoxy. Throughout its short
history these Churches have been struggling with internal problems, which
to some extent have overshadowed an otherwise courageous stand. It
becomes further complicated, when some of these Churches lack even a
wholly valid ground for their existence. We have seen examples of spiritual
and administrative instability, questionable divisions, a judgmental attitude
and lack of moderation, together with a focus on that which perhaps is not of
such primary importance in the defense of Orthodoxy. This chapter will look
into some of these sorrowful and difficult issues of the Old Calendar
Movement.
The issue of Grace versus no Grace.
One of these issues, I believe, is the issue of Grace. Thus, the
Sacraments of the New Calendar Churches are considered graceless by
some Old Calendar Churches, based solely on the acceptance of the New
calendar. Even though disagreeing with such a stand, one can easily
understand the reason for it. The Old Calendar, even though not a dogma of
Faith, has always been seen as a strong symbol of faithfulness to Christ.
Hence, with the introduction of the New Calendar in 1924, the issue of
gracelessness was quite naturally raised. Such a stand is therefore wholly
understandable, but still, I believe, not altogether justified.
The position of those who believe that Grace in the Sacraments, for
the time being, is still present, is more, I believe, in concordance with the
reality we actually see today. Because, even though the process of losing
Grace definitely began almost a century ago and is currently speeding up –
due not only to the introduction of the New Calendar but now also to direct
heresy – the very result of this process – the loss of Grace, in view of what
we see today, obviously did not happen instantly among the faithful itself.
The words of Professor Andreev, even though said more than 50 years ago,
still justify, I believe, such a stand. He allows some doubt – either of Grace
or of no Grace. But in allowing Grace to be present, he at the same time
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stressed the importance of distinguishing between a natural flow of Grace –
due to faithfulness to Christ, – and an unnatural flow (so to say), sent by God
in His infinite mercy toward us.
What he tried to explain was that one must never consider a given
Church or church administration, which in actuality has fallen away from the
Truth, to be a natural receiver of Grace, when there actually is no canonical
basis for such a stand. If one begins to do so, one begins also to ascribe
undue holiness to such an administration and to accept whatever it may say,
while considering those who do not agree with it, as being in error. One will
then automatically emulate the deeds and thoughts of it, and slowly but
surely turn into what that Church is. This is what actually has taken place in
our recognition of the Catholic and Monophysite Churches as Grace-filled
Churches. Such a process did also occur when the Moscow Patriarchate
acknowledged the Soviet Union to be God-given. This is exactly what is
now happening to ROCOR/MP, having wholly accepted the Moscow
Patriarchate.
One can indeed understand if somebody would dare doubt Grace to be
present in certain Orthodox Churches today, and it would be much easier to
state that Grace has left World Orthodoxy altogether. There is basis for such
a conclusion, since World Orthodoxy must be viewed as One Church which
has welcomed heresy into its bosom. God is the God of order and not of
confusion, so why would He allow confusion among His faithful, by
suddenly “accepting” that which the canons do not accept as a rule?
Despite all the complete logic of such reasoning, I am nevertheless
inclined to accept the fact that God does allow Grace to act for the time
being. God is the God of order, but first and foremost He is the God of love,
and He does not accept falsehood, but He bears with us in His love and gives
us time for repentance. He warns us, though, that if we will not repent, He
will eventually spit us out – meaning, take His Grace away.
The Church of Christ versus the Church-organization.
One must remember that the Church of Christ and the administrative
organization of the Church here on earth cannot always be considered to be
one in the same. The first has Grace forever, being the Body of Christ, while
the latter can in fact lack this Grace, due to heresy, being merely an
institution. The organizational part of World Orthodoxy today can very
likely lack Grace, due to its path of apostasy, while the troubled faithful, in
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God`s mercy, for the moment nevertheless receive Grace without hindrance.
Steven Allen (GOC) expresses it the following way:These (World
Orthodox) bishops are heretics and thus they are outside the Church. That is
clear. But simultaneously our intuition tells us that not all of their flock are
outside the Church just yet, by some mysterious economy of the merciful
God. So what can we do? Lord have mercy! “
The Confession of Faith (2009) expresses, quite surprisingly, a very
similar thought: “This pan-heresy has been accepted by many Orthodox
patriarchs, archbishops, bishops, clergymen, monks and laity. They teach it,
“bareheaded,” they apply it and impose it in practice, communing with
heretics in every possible manner – with common prayers, with exchanges
of visits, with pastoral collaborations – thus essentially placing themselves
outside the Church. (emphasis mine).
In a footnote the authors then explains this statement in more detail,
saying that “What is not meant here is an institutional departure from the
Church by excommunication or anathema. And this is clear by the use of the
terms “essentially” and “placing themselves.” Rather, what is meant is that
by their actions and their words they have separated themselves in essence
from the Church – from Her Fathers, Her Way and Her Life. They have
essentially removed themselves from the Church by no longer following the
Holy Fathers, no longer expressing the Orthodox Faith.”
What is said here, if understood correctly, is that it is not the local
Church as a whole, but only the heretical bishops and faithful, which the
authors believe have cut themselves off from the Church due to heresy. The
authors apparently make a distinction between the individual heretical
bishops (even though they officially do preach heresy) and the whole local
Church. The bishops, they state, are essentially outside the Church but not
their flock. This is exactly my point. God in His infinite mercy – for the time
being “by some mysterious economy” – still allows the flock to receive
Grace in the Sacraments.
This in fact justifies (and explains) both positions held in the Old
Calendar Churches in regard to Grace, depending on which part you speak
about in World Orthodoxy – the Church-organization or the Orthodox flock.
Now, does this mean that we must be obedient to these bishops in
their heresy? No, of course not.
The Confession`s statement is very important, since it (finally) straight
forwardly explains what is in fact taking place today and how we as faithful
must response to this apostasy. There is absolutely nothing blameworthy of
this, neither is there any fanaticism in such a stand. On the contrary, the
authors deserve all praise for having finally called things by their right name
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and helped to set some firm and necessary guidelines for the faithful to
follow.
What are we the faithful then to do? The Confession does not leave us
without an answer. In the same point 8 we read further:
“Our stance, per the Conciliar canonical decisions and per the
example of the Saints, is obvious. Each one must now assume his
responsibilities.” In the footnote these words are explained by the authors:
“The passage draws on the 15th canon of the 1st -2nd Synod…[a passage
which the Old Calendar Churches have likewise always drawn on]. It leaves
the particular course of action – based on the canons and councils and
fathers – to the discretion of each. The Confession follows suit, clearly
naming the heresy and calling all to appropriate response, but leaving the
particulars to each one`s discretion (“Each one must now assume his
responsibilities”).
Some Old Calendar Churches, though, believe the canon does not
leave it up to only one`s discretion in order to cease commemoration and
even to leave World Orthodoxy, but makes it into an obligation, based on
the commentary of the most respected Nikodim Milash. But this is not my
point here. What is important to notice here, is the fact that the
Traditionalists in World Orthodoxy – if we are to understand the words as
they are being said – actually also justify now a ceasing of commemoration,
if one wishes to do so.
One cannot but sense here how the authors are seriously beginning to
lose patience with their bishops. One could even be inclined to believe that
they are also beginning to slowly but very cautiously open the (hereto
closed) possibility of leaving World Orthodoxy altogether. In any case, it
shows us, that many Traditionalists in World Orthodoxy are getting more
and more impatient with their church-leaders.
A humble Stand.
I believe God bears not only with World Orthodoxy but also with all
the Old Calendar Churches and is merciful to them all. Humbly accepting
this stand the Traditionalists both in World Orthodoxy and the Old Calendar
Movement will be expressing a more sober understanding of their own
imperfection that leaves room to accept mistakes from within and criticism
from without, without immediately judging the other side, defrocking clergy
and hierarchs or creating new divisions. It will keep us on more even ground
and help unite us. If such an approach should be taken, it would also help
unite the Old Calendar Churches among themselves.
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Some people would probably consider this something like the
infamous branch-theory; how can both World Orthodoxy and the Old
Calendar Churches have grace? It seems to lack all logic. But that is exactly
the mistake we make. Orthodoxy can never be put into some logical and
mathematical formula, where one plus one equals two. Such an approach, if
used purely categorically and without looking into the essence and process
of a falling away, may be in danger of not being Orthodox at all. It may
seem strictly canonical, even Orthodox, but perhaps not in the exact spirit of
either these same Canons or of the Church. This refers also to World
Orthodoxy in their approach to the Old Calendar Churches.
World Orthodoxy is in serious danger though, perhaps sooner than
later, of falling off completely like a branch and dying. This process of
eventually losing grace is now speeding up rapidly due to our continuously
unrepentant state and apostasy. So what we today actually are witnessing is a
World Orthodoxy going through the process of further and further withering,
further and further dying from the moment it began its path of ecumenism
and Sergianism. World Orthodoxy is standing on the threshold of being spit
out, to turn into “an assemblage of Satan.”
The Union between the GOC,
the Russian Catacomb Church and ROCOR.
It must also be stressed that such saintly hierarchs as St. John of
Shanghai, the saintly Philaret of New York, Archbishops Leonty, Averky,
Seraphim, Savva and others like Father Seraphim Rose and professor
Andreev, all were in one spirit with the True Orthodox Christians of the Old
Calendar Churches and considered them our Sister-Churches for decades.
Accepting a more moderate approach in regard to the issue of Grace, it is
obvious that they did not consider this issue to be a reason for divisions
among the True Orthodox Christians. Therefore I also see no problem at all
since the path of these Churches clearly has been sanctified by God through
our saintly hierarchs. One has only to read the history of the Old Calendar
Movement in Russia, Greece, Rumania, Bulgaria and other Orthodox
countries to understand how many truly amazing Old Calendar believers
have literally laid down their lives for Christ in order to defend Orthodoxy.
We see that the history of the Old Calendar Movement in Greece and
the Russian Catacomb Church consisted of a cruel persecution from the
Official Churches, Churches with which we now joyously concelebrate.
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Many Traditionalists of the New Calendar Church of Greece in those days
(even up to our day) condemned the stand of their fellow brothers and sisters
in the Old Calendar Church and in this way let, and are still letting, them
down in their struggle.
The Issue of Conciliarity and Stability.
Another issue among the Old Calendar Churches is their lack of
conciliarity. Even though they essentially confess the exact same Orthodox
faith, many of them are not able to unite. One reason for this is their
disagreement on the issue of Grace.
Yet another problem with some Old Calendar faithful is their lack of
stability and basic spiritual discernment. Minor mistakes or issues of
secondary importance become all too quickly valid reasons for divisions –
not only from ROCOR in the past, but also from each other among
themselves – with no fear of breaking the sacred unity of the Church or
Synod to which they belong. Some Churches cannot be said to have even a
canonical or moral justification for their existence.
Some overly zealous believers have a tendency to turn minor issues
among themselves into something essential, on which the whole of
Orthodoxy literally stands and falls, while perhaps these issues do not
deserve such attention. In many cases, these issues could easily be resolved
if only a spirit of moderation and understanding of what truly is important
were present. Father Steven Allen (GOC) rightly points out, that much could
have been avoided if only the Old Calendar Churches would have agreed to
disagree on the two questions of Grace and communion of New
Calendarists.
And yet, Father Seraphim Rose warned us not to dismiss the Old
Calendar Movement as something extreme just because of their internal
problems: “Unfortunately, it sometimes happens, especially in the heat of
controversy, that basically sound Orthodox positions are exaggerated on
one side, and misunderstood on the other, and thus an entirely misleading
impression is created in some minds that the cause of true Orthodoxy today
is a kind of “extremism,” a sort of “right-wing reaction” to the prevailing
“left-wing” course now being followed by the leaders of the “official”
Orthodox Churches. Such a political view of the struggle for true Orthodoxy
today is entirely false” [7m, parag. 10: “It is of…”].
Thus, Father Seraphim Rose, even in his time, testified to the fact that
among the most sober Old Calendar Churches a striving for a more moderate
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stand was increasing: “This struggle [of true Orthodoxy], on the contrary,
has taken the form, among its best representatives today—whether in
Russia, Greece, or the Diaspora—of a return to the patristic path of
moderation, a mean between extremes; this is what the Holy Fathers call the
ROYAL PATH.” [7m, parag. 10].
Father Seraphim Rose speaks here about the Russian Catacomb
Church of his time and the Genuine Orthodox Church of Greece (GOC).
Among their best representatives a return to the patristic path of moderation
was seen (Fr. Seraphim Rose died in 1982).
Along with these Churches we also see other representatives of the
moderate path. Thus four, even though quite small, Old Calendar Churches
have united: the ROCOR under His Eminence, Metropolitan Agafangel, the
Synod in Resistance and the Bulgarian (Bishop Photios) and Romanian
(Bishop Vlasy) Old Calendar Churches. It is interesting to notice that the
unity among these parts of the Old Calendar Movement seems to be stable
and fairly easily attained. Furthermore, following the traditional stand of
ROCOR, they have carefully been avoiding extreme proclamations which
normally only complicate things.
Generally speaking, we see that World Orthodoxy tends to focus more
on merely an outward formal order and unity and less on the inward
faithfulness to Christ, while the Old Calendar Movement is focusing on this
inward disposition of being faithful to Christ, but suffering from a lack in
outward unity.
But this lack of outward unity is explained in the story about the
shipwreck of St. Paul, where the planks and boards where all scattered in the
sea. The situation, in which the Old Calendar Movement find itself today,
can therefore also not be considered a truly normal state of the Church, but –
as we see – under certain conditions it can be a necessity and even God-
pleasing. It is a phenomenon which will become clearer with time. The Old
Calendar Movement is being characterized as a sectarian group which
eventually is bound to die out. Such has, is and will always be the general
stand in World Orthodoxy and is, naturally, not surprising. The reality,
though, is quite different. The Old Calendar Movement, in general, is in fact
very alive spiritually and not dying out at all. But its existence is hidden, and
quiet, living under very humble and difficult circumstances. It is guided by
simple and pious, but not unlearned, faithful, who have as their only goal
faithfulness to Christ – even unto death. “With God`s help, says Fr.Steven
Allen (GOC) we will not compromise the dogma`s of the Church or the
Orthodox life, to serve an anti-Christian philosophy, and anti-Christian
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institutions and take part in the spirit of Antichrist and the preparations for
his coming.” [16v, part 3].
This is the path of the future – the Catacombs. If we, while in World
Orthodoxy, do not acquire this spirit now, we will not be able to acquire it in
the future.
This is said not to justify divisions as a rule. Division in essence is
evil. It can never be accepted as an ideal or virtue. There is no such thing as
a God-pleasing division, there can only be a God-pleasing walling off from
falsehood. Our soul should always be inclined to union, as long as this does
not run counter to the Orthodox Faith and spirit. Sometimes such unity
demands much effort and personal sacrifice, because we fallen human
beings are, as a rule, much too proud to humble ourselves. Unfortunately,
the path of some Old Calendar believers is founded not on this God-pleasing
walling off from falsehood, but simply on pride. Their soul is not inclined to
union, even if the possibility were to occur, but only to separatism. In fact,
this kind of separation from World Orthodoxy (and other Old Calendar
Churches), based on human passions, has only harmed the Church. That is
why the acquiring of the spirit of Orthodoxy is so important – this feeling of
authentic Orthodoxy, based on spiritual discernment. This is not acquired by
the intellect alone or by reading the canons; not even by having a correct
Faith, but only through sincere humility as shown us by Christ Himself.
Canonicity or the Spirit of Orthodoxy.
Observing the history of the Old Calendar Churches, one notices that
many of these Churches cannot be considered to be completely without some
canonical irregularities. World Orthodoxy looks, therefore, categorically at
all Old Calendar Churches as completely uncanonical and graceless groups.
In this way they stress something which, in comparison to faithfulness to
Christ and His Church, is wholly secondary.
There is, in many cases, a reason for the above-mentioned
irregularities. The condition in which we find World Orthodoxy today, is –
due to its apostasy – far from normal. Many of these irregularities (but not
all) must therefore be evaluated in the light of this apostasy, in order to be
understood properly. When done so, we understand that they actually are a
result of this apostasy. Even though these irregularities do exist and perhaps
could have been avoided in some instances, they can nevertheless not be
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considered to be the major problem of today. They are only the result of
something much more serious.
The most serious of all problems today is the betrayal of our Faith and
especially the lack of the spirit of Orthodoxy, whether in World Orthodoxy
or in some Old Calendar Churches. This is so because the apostasy, leading
to the acceptance of Antichrist, will first and foremost be the lack of that
very spirit and not canonicity. That is why the essence of the apostasy of
World Orthodoxy (including some Old Calendar Churches) actually is the
lack of this spirit of Orthodoxy resulting in a focus on the outward
appearance of Orthodoxy supported by its “canonicity” and “legalism” (and
over-intellectualism). Thus, membership in World Orthodoxy, and not
faithfulness to Christ, has slowly become the main criterion for being among
the “chosen people.” The Church-organization has replaced the Church of
Christ. In the exact same spirit, Antichrist will be accepted as the “legal” and
“God-elected” King. This formality and legalism, rooted in the love for this
world, was what Christ so strongly fought against and which eventually
nailed Him to the Cross. The exact same phenomenon can be seen with
some Old Calendar believers as well, in their focus on a mathematically
outward Faith, while being inwardly deprived of its spirit of discernment,
love and humility.
Problems occur, therefore, in cases where the spirit of Orthodoxy is
lacking and not so much because of canonical irregularities. Acknowledging
these problems, one understands that the loss of the savor of Orthodoxy is
far from limited only to World Orthodoxy. This loss is seen in the whole
Christian world due to the general spiritual decline.
Love and spiritual Soberness.
We have also noticed among some of the Old Calendar faithful,
behaviors which are not always Christian. It has been seen to be sectarian,
and a normal relationship can sometimes be quite difficult and unpleasant.
A tendency among some Old Calendar faithful to zealously defend
Orthodoxy, without having acquired even the most basic virtues of humility
and Christian love, discredits what otherwise could be a glorious example to
follow. A tendency has also been seen among some believers – despite their
moderation – of an over-eagerness to constantly pick up on everything
which could compromise the faithful, either in World Orthodoxy or other
Old Calendar Churches, without any proper documentation. Thus slander
and animosity are created. Combined with their divisions and mutual
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accusations, one can understand why the faithful in ROCOR/MP become
cautious when confronted with this. The Old Calendar Churches are
unfortunately now all looked upon as one whole, as a fanatic and schismatic
movement, while the true picture is much more different than that.
The Old Calendar faithful – God`s people.
While it is true that we do see some Old Calendar believers whose
spiritual state is lamentable, one can certainly not conclude from this that
such is the general state of all the Old Calendar Churches. One must
remember that these people once were children of World Orthodoxy, and yet
we did not conclude from this that World Orthodoxy as a whole was or is a
fanatical graceless group. Such people belong to World Orthodoxy as well
as to the Old Calendar Churches. Regarding the majority of faithful in the
Old Calendar Movement – they are sincere, loving and pious people who are
simply trying to stay true to Christ as best they can. “We pray to God, says
Fr. Steven Allen (GOC) that He will give us enough to take care of our
families, to build our churches, to take care of our people, but without
compromising our faith.” [16v, part 4].
These simple words express in general very well the actual picture of
the Old Calendar Movement.
It is important to differentiate between the spiritually sober faithful
and the spiritually unhealthy ones in order to understand properly this
Movement. One must keep in mind that the problems of the Old Calendar
Churches are a result of an extremely difficult struggle. One should therefore
be careful not to confuse these problems with the otherwise sound Orthodox
stand which they have taken against apostasy. It is important to remember
that, despite their courageous stand of confession, these faithful are, as well
as everyone else, also influenced by the general spiritual decline which we
see today.
The Old Calendar Churches are the planks and boards in the sea, all
broken and influenced by the imperfection of human nature, but still serving
their goal as the Body of Christ – to save those who in sincerity cling to
them. Father Steven Allen (GOC) says that the Old Calendar faithful do not
believe themselves to be “something special. ” “We are not the greatest
Orthodox who have ever lived, we are the worst, but we are still in the
Church, we are still Orthodox….We are hanging on to Orthodoxy by our
fingernails, but World Orthodox have let go…” [16v. part 4].
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The Old Calendar Movement is being characterized as a sectarian
group which eventually is bound to die out. Such has, is and will always be
the general stand in World Orthodoxy and is, naturally, not surprising. The
reality, though, is quite different. The Old Calendar Movement, in general, is
in fact very alive spiritually and not dying out at all. But its existence is
hidden, and quiet, living under very humble and difficult circumstances. It is
guided by simple and pious, but not unlearned, faithful, who have as their
only goal faithfulness to Christ – even unto death. “With God`s help, says
Fr.Steven Allen (GOC) we will not compromise the dogma`s of the Church
or the Orthodox life, to serve an anti-Christian philosophy, and anti-
Christian institutions and take part in the spirit of Antichrist and the
preparations for his coming.” [16v, part 3].
This is the path of the future – the Catacombs. If we, while in World
Orthodoxy, do not acquire this spirit now, we will not be able to acquire it in
the future.
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The Royal Path of true Love and Confession.
The traditional faithful in World Orthodoxy have decided to stay
where they are out of fear – as they believe – of breaking the unity of the
Church. Such a feeling of godly fear (of breaking the sacred Church-unity) is
definitely worthy of praise. For the time being these faithful in World
Orthodoxy bear the falsehood with a troubled heart – out of love for God
and His creation. Unfortunately, many Old Calendar faithful fail to
understand such a stand, and consider it a betrayal of Christ. On the other
hand, Traditionalists in World Orthodoxy look with only little favor on the
Old Calendar Churches. That is a grave mistake on their part and does also
not help fight falsehood. We speak about love and yet we reject our very
closest brothers and sisters in Christ, who are confessing Christ.
As has already been shown fairly clearly we Traditionalists in World
Orthodoxy have no justification for condemning the stand of the sober Old
Calendar Churches. On the contrary, it is they who justly can condemn our
deviation from a traditional Orthodox stand. It is we who essentially are the
cause of the many so-called “schisms” and jurisdictional (not to mention
personal) confusion. We must therefore humble ourselves more and change
our attitude towards the sober Old Calendar Churches, when we consider
their stand of “walling themselves off from falsehood” to be misguided and
deluded.
Made in the Image of Christ.
People are made in the image of Christ, Who is love and Truth.
Today, when the love of Christ – so essential for a normal human existence
– slowly is growing cold, people even more begin to feel an urgent personal
need for this love. People just want a normal and loving Christian
relationship with their fellow brothers and sisters. This explains to some
extent why so many sincere ecumenical Christians, whether Orthodox or
non-Orthodox, are emphasizing love so much. In their church and parish life
a sincere care and concern for the individual is often shown. Indeed, without
love and care, expressed directly between people on a daily and personal
basis, nothing will last. It is without this love that families break up, schools
fail, parishes split, and monasteries are abandoned.
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Such emphasis on love is only natural and quite understandable. But
in order for this love to be not only pleasant, but also truly God-pleasing and
salvific, it must be combined with a true confession of Faith. This is a
command from Christ Himself and has always been the teaching of the
Church.
In willingly accepting a teaching contrary to what Christ has handed
down to us in His Church, the non-Orthodox Christians have set themselves
outside the Church of Christ.
They are thus deprived of the Holy Mysteries, without which there is
no life, according to the words of our Savior. Consequently, their love,
which they have, essentially stems from the natural but fallen man, and not
from God. True love for God would never reject His Church.
In rejecting the historical and Apostolic Church, founded by Christ
Himself, they destroy the unity of His Church and the unity of the one Faith.
This has resulted in a multitude of Christian sects and denominations, each
holding to their own teaching and sometimes immoral decisions.
These Churches – emphasizing love on a personal human level – are
capable of satisfying only the basic needs of spirituality and human
fellowship, which we all have, but they will never be able to bring a person
to deification, which is our main goal here on earth. Taking these crumbs for
real bread, they are thus denying themselves the true life. Their reasoning
and logic stem from the fallen man, resulting in the complete rejection of the
One true Apostolic Church – the Body of Christ. That is the core of their
deception. They stubbornly reject that Church which Christ founded 2000
years ago, which was not the Catholic, nor the Protestant Church, but the
Orthodox Church. Thus, left to themselves, without the guidance, reasoning
and Grace of the true Church of Christ, they build their own Christian
Churches, with their own set of moral and dogmatic rules, according to what
their human and fallen reason dictates. Only rarely can they be convinced
that what they believe is their own man-made Christian Church, which has
neither the ability to truly differentiate between good and evil, nor the
salvific Grace in their Sacraments.
As is seen, one extreme cannot be compensated by another extreme.
The only way is the Royal path of both love and true confession. This Royal
Path exists only and exclusively in the One Holy Apostolic Orthodox
Church, founded by Christ Himself. For this reason, Christ said of Himself,
that He is both Love and Truth, thus showing us what we need in order to be
true human beings and receive salvation.
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Main Criterion.
Sincere Christian love and true confession is our very main criterion
for being in the Church of Christ. Because that criterion will tell us that
neither the emphasis on a true faith alone (which leads to Pharisaism) nor on
a personal Christian love (which leads to Protestantism and apostasy) will
each individually represent the fullness of Christ’s Church, but only both of
them together. That, in general, we see today in the spiritually sober Old
Calendar Churches as, for example, the ones with which we were formerly
in union. But I would at the same time argue that we also find this (true Faith
and love) in the truly sincere Traditionalists within World Orthodoxy, who
with a deeply troubled heart are trying to be faithful to Christ. That, I
believe, is – for the time being – the common ground, which the sober and
moderate Traditionalists, both in the Old Calendar Churches and World
Orthodoxy, share. There we should meet and unite for a true witness of
Orthodoxy, despite our jurisdictional separation.
I believe therefore that, for the time being, World Orthodoxy together
with the Old Calendar Churches are all to be considered part of the Church
of Christ – the Church of Laodicea. Who, then, of the faithful, are on the
right path? I believe that for the moment the only answer to this question is:
only those who sincerely walk on the Royal path of Christian love and true
confession of the Orthodox Faith.
The Justification of being in World Orthodoxy.
Some ask the question: how can one walk on the Royal path of true
confession while still being in World Orthodoxy? For them it is like a play
with words or simply a betrayal of Orthodoxy. This is so because they
approach faithfulness to Christ in a much too formal and categorical way. To
be faithful to Christ is – for the time being – not a matter of just belonging to
an Old Calendar Church, but more of acquiring the spirit of Orthodoxy – of
Christ. If a person acquires this spirit he is, without doubt, justified for the
moment, in being in World Orthodoxy. World Orthodoxy, though, is on its
way to completely losing Grace. When it does lose it, there can, of course,
be no justification anymore. The dangerous part, therefore, in being in
World Orthodoxy, is that one perhaps will not see or know when that
moment occurs. In order to be able to see or know that, one must not take
part in any falsehood – whether personally or officially – as we now do.
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Many in ROCOR/MP have chosen to accept their staying in World
Orthodoxy, understanding the falsehood as only a part of their struggle – a
falsehood that eventually will pass. In that case, it is again of utmost
importance that we – all the faithful under the Moscow Patriarchate – reject
this falsehood wholeheartedly, that we are in World Orthodoxy only because
of love for God and His Church, and not because we believe World
Orthodoxy is on the right path, because it is not. And we must not pretend
that it is.
There can be no doubt that sooner or later, the true Traditionalists in
World Orthodoxy will be forced to part with their ecumenical and sergianist
hierarchs and in this way eventually end up as a small and persecuted group
– exactly as the many True Orthodox Christians are now. That is why it is so
important to acknowledge the path of the spiritually sober Old Calendar
Churches. Because in categorically rejecting their path we have already
now made our choice of accepting the Antichrist. The very moment we take
part in or even just silently accept any of the falsehood in World Orthodoxy,
we immediately lose all justification for being there. If we therefore continue
to show our acceptance of the apostatizing World Orthodoxy, our voluntary
union with them will unquestionably turn out to be to our very own
condemnation.
The Justification of being in the Old Calendar Movement.
Likewise, the only thing, I believe, which could rightly justify a
separation from World Orthodoxy is sincere love for God and man. This
love must not be of an abstract character, but be expressed daily in our
personal relationship with both God and our fellow brother. Without that,
one will not benefit from joining an Old Calendar Church, but only harm
himself and the Church of Christ. Without a true love for God and man,
without humility in the true sense of the word, the very existence for the Old
Calendar Movement (and World Orthodoxy) loses all its justification. Zeal
for Orthodoxy is truly praiseworthy, but if it is not tempered with
moderation and spiritual soberness, itwill fall into extremity and
sectarianism. To join the Church of Christ in order to be saved from
falsehood, one must do so with the disposition of love, repentance and
humility, not the opposite.
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Confession without Compassion – Path to Damnation.
In speaking of spiritual soberness I refer not so much to the question
of Grace as to whether or not the faithful are demonstrating sincere love and a
sound, humble Christian behavior and mindset. In my experience with the
GOC in America (Chrysostomos II), for example, I certainly see Christian
love and a sound Christian behavior there from the faithful I have met, from
both hierarchs, clergy and laity. One can also mention, I believe, other Old
Calendar faithful belonging, for example, to the Tikhonites, ROAC and
other Catacomb and Old Calendar Churches, whose piety and right belief
conscientiously have being preserved. One cannot measure the truth of a
path only by its moderation in regard to Grace. The true measurements are
humility together with Christian love and a right belief.
The various Old Calendar (and World Orthodox) faithful who are not
demonstrating sincere love and true humility find themselves in a very
dangerous position, even more dangerous than that of World Orthodoxy.
This is justified by the many “woes” to the Pharisees, who in everything
rightly confessed the Jewish faith, down to the smallest iota, but nevertheless
were called children of Satan. That is something for both World Orthodoxy
and some Old Calendar Churches to reflect upon.
Professor Andreyev therefore says that “an honest, chaste mind, who
does not depend on himself, but feeds on the mind of Christ, and the loving
heart filled with the love of Christ – these are the Orthodox conditions of
sobriety and discernment, helping the believing church-going man to
correctly understand all questions.” [17i, p. 53, last parag.].
“We must start with love and humility, and then go on to the rest”
says Elder Paisios. Without a loving heart and true faith we are all deprived
of salvation. Confessing a true faith but lacking in love and humility we may
technically be in the Church, but we deprive ourselves of salvation. Such
“confession” is as dangerous as heresy. On the other hand, if we show only
“love”, but confess heresy we set ourselves outside the Church. Fr. Steven
Allen (GOC) says that “We must, above all, be living the Orthodox life. In
true Orthodoxy we cannot just say we believe in the dogmas and the canons.
We also have to have the content of Orthodoxy, which is prayer, the
spiritual life. This is very important.” [16v, part4].
True faith and true love come therefore from a sincere repentance,
which is the mother of the two. That is why the very first words of Christ to
the jews was “Repent!”
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The Sober Old Calendar Faithful
and true Traditionalists in World Orthodox
our Unity in Love and Truth.
Four Categories of the Orthodox Faithful.
I would say all the Orthodox faithful could be divided into four
categories or groups today. World Orthodoxy consists of two groups. In the
first group, being the majority of Orthodox believers, we see the ecumenists,
together with those believers who indifferently just follow along the
mainstream World Orthodoxy. The second group consists of the
Traditionalists who are against ecumenism and Sergianism.
The last two groups are represented by the Old Calendar faithful. On
one side we see those faithful who are spiritually sober, on the other the
spiritually unhealthty faithful, bordering on being sectarian in behavior and
mindset. The ecumenists in World Orthodoxy and the spiritually unhealthy
Old Calendar faithful both represent their own extreme stand. They are
characterized by having gone astray from the Royal Path of Orthodoxy –
they have lost the spirit of Orthodoxy. These two paths should be avoided.
The Old Calendar Churches, as for example the Russian Church
Abroad (Metropolitan Agafangel) ,together with the Greek Old Calendar
Church (GOC, Chrysostomos II), the Synod in Resistance, the Bulgarian and
Romanian Old-calendar Churches, represent, I believe an example of the
Royal Path, where both a firm, traditional Orthodox faith and Christian love
is being preserved. (I mention only these, since I – to some extent – know
them personally. Without doubt, there are other sober Old Calendar
Churches).
The Royal Path and our Unity in Spirit.
When Father Seraphim Rose spoke about the Royal Path, he
essentially had in mind the sober uncompromising stand of True Orthodoxy
in Greece, Russia or the ROCOR. For him this was the way of true
confession:“We may say that the “royal path” of true Orthodoxy today is a
mean that lies between the extremes of ecumenism and reformism on the one
side, and a “zeal not according to knowledge” (Rom. 10:2) on the other.
True Orthodoxy does not go “in step with the times” on the one hand, nor
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does it make “strictness” or “correctness” or “canonicity” (good in
themselves) an excuse for pharisaic self-satisfaction, exclusivism, and
distrust, on the other.”… “It is of critical importance, therefore, that this
voice be actually one of true, that is, patristic Orthodoxy. [7m, parag. 10 and
13].
The Royal Path, according to Father Seraphim Rose, is therefore
faithfulness to Christ, but with a loving and humble heart as its foundation.
Such a loving and humble heart always allows a certain room and flexibility
to act, both on a personal and official level, without compromising the faith.
The “zealous path not according to knowledge,” mentioned by Father
Seraphim Rose, is ruled more by the intellect, demanding strict
mathematical order and logic, completely in contradiction to the spirit of
Christ and His Church. The harmfulness of such “zeal” lies, perhaps not so
much in the strictness of viewing things, as when this strictness is combined
with an unloving heart and pride, “pharisaic self-satisfaction, exclusivism,
and distrust.” Strictness, correctness and canonicity are good in themselves,
as Father Seraphim Rose pointed out, but only when applied with a loving
and “contrite,” heart. When done so, the strictness loses its sharp edges,
which hurts so much and only splits into pieces, and instead receives the
ability to unite, soften and heal like the wine and oil, poured on the wounds
of the unfortunate man by the Good Samaritan. In regard to ROCOR/MP,
our strictness has turned into that same “pharisaic self-satisfaction,
exclusivism, and distrust,” when we claim the Old Calendar Churches to be
outside the Church and without Grace, while at the same time clearly
stepping away from Christ ourselves.
The true Traditionalists in World Orthodoxy are in many ways close
to the group of spiritually sober Old Calendar faithful. Their common
ground is a stand on the Royal Path of Orthodoxy – of sincere Christian love
and true confession. Their difference though, lies in the way they have
decided to fight falsehood, either from inside or from outside. The side
effect of each being on the opposite side, despite their common ground, is
that they begin to look upon each other with mutual animosity. But in doing
so, they only further increase that gulf, which already exists between them.
Thus, the rejection of Grace, which both World Orthodoxy and some Old
Calendar Churches each hold on to, seems in fact to be an extreme which
perhaps appeals to the mind and logic, but in actuality has only one purpose
– to further divide the spiritually sober and zealous faithful.
There is in fact no need for disagreement at this moment of history as
long as they both have decided to walk on the Royal Path of faithfulness to
Orthodoxy and a loving heart. If only they could unite in spirit – creating a
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union based on the spirit of Christian love and true confession, completely in
opposition to the ruinous spirit of World Orthodoxy – then there would be a
good balance of stability, moderation, wisdom, love, and godly zeal. This
unity is not to be understood as an administrative unity, which is a whole
issue in itself and quite complex, but simply as a mutual understanding, that
we essentially share the same ideals and admit each other to have Grace.
Father Seraphim Rose himself expressed an understanding of the
traditionalist stand in World Orthodoxy, even though he definitely was on
the side of the Old Calendar Churches. In his “Royal Path” he says:
“Some, seeing the “official” jurisdictions as now irrevocably set on a
course of anti-orthodoxy, are abandoning them as sinking ships and joining
the ranks of the True Orthodox Christians; others, still hoping for the
restoration of an Orthodox course in world Orthodoxy, think it enough for
now to express sympathy for the True Orthodox Christians or to protest
boldly against the “reformist” mentality in the official jurisdictions.”[7m,
parag. 8].
Unfortunately, we in ROCOR/MP do not even “express sympathy for
the True Orthodox Christians or protest boldly against the “reformist”
mentality in the official jurisdictions.”
If we allow such issues to divide us as the issues of Grace, canonical
irregularities, or the very fact that one is either in World Orthodoxy or in an
Old Calendar Church, then I believe we will all be making a serious mistake.
The hater of mankind uses all these issues to divide us and thus further
create disunity and jurisdictional chaos among us. Our mutual rejection and
animosity is thereby destroying the Church and not strengthening it. The true
Traditionalists of both World Orthodoxy and the Old Calendar Churches
should – for the time being – acknowledge the stand each of them has taken,
as long as it is a sincere stand on the Royal path of true Faith and a loving
heart.
“It is a time for weeping, mourning, and repentance, and for not
being so sure of our opinions,says Father Steven Allen (GOC).
Archimandrite Constantine [ROCOR] wrote that many who are far away
(Protestants, Catholics) will unite with us against the Antichrist, and that
many close (the official Orthodox) will unite with Antichrist against us. We
will see amazing and terrible things! When we behold the Face of the Lord,
who shall be able to stand before him ???”
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World Orthodoxy or
the Old Calendar Movement.
The whole issue of what one ought to do and should do – either to
stay in World Orthodoxy or join an Old Calendar Church – is not as simple
as some would make it, because both sides in general have in various ways
compromised themselves and in some aspects lost their credibility.
A wise bishop (GOC) once said to me, that “one can be saved in
World Orthodoxy, but he will not be safe.” The path of the spiritually sober
Old Calendar Churches is the straight path, while the path of World
Orthodoxy has become the path of compromise and inevitably endangers the
possibility of staying faithful to Christ and His Church. Often it does also
not instill credibility to their account as true defenders of Orthodoxy. This is
even more so when the sober part of the Old Calendar Movement is being
discredited by the Traditionalists in World Orthodoxy.
But when that is said, one can in fact apply the exact same words, said
by the wise bishop, to certain less sober Old Calendar Churches. This again,
shows us, that the only true path is the Royal path of both love and true
confession. As Father Seraphim said, the future of Russia depends on
whether or not we are willing to follow the spirit of the Russian Catacomb
Church – faithfulness to Christ. There can be no doubt whatsoever that the
future lies in the Catacombs. Whoever follows the spirit of World
Orthodoxy will not be able to follow that path.
It is quite clear that World Orthodoxy has no intention whatsoever of
changing their course of apostasy. Let us therefore beware of being too
quick to judge our fellow brothers and sisters in the Old Calendar Churches
– if, of course, we have not already chosen the side of World Orthodoxy – of
apostasy.
Faithfulness to Christ.
True faithfulness to Christ is manifested in both a loving heart and
true confession. The foundation of this faithfulness is repentance and a true
disdain for the love of this world.
Our faithfulness to Christ, which we in World Orthodoxy claim we
have today, has slowly shifted direction and is no longer to Christ only, but
also to ourselves. It is the spirit of modern man to please himself. It is an
attempt to combine faithfulness to Christ with the love for this world. Thus,
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we disagree with falsehood but only so far as not to endanger our position of
comfort and friendship with World Orthodoxy. We accept eagerly such a
half-hearted stand because it gives us a two-fold peace: to live righteously
and to live comfortably. Going against falsehood, at least superficially, we
are nevertheless not asked to make any substantial sacrifice. Many stand
bewildered. They look at their fellow brothers in World Orthodoxy sitting in
sack-clothes with ashes on their heads, while simultaneously filling their
stomachs with expensive wines and delicious foods. Such an inner position
of man is exactly what the evil powers have worked for at all times. World
Orthodoxy has thus become the very platform on which Antichrist will come
to power.
To set at Ease our Orthodox Conscience.
Like the troubled Athonite Monks, who only wished to ”set at ease
their monastic and Orthodox conscience and to follow the conduct of the
Holy Martyrs and Confessors,” so also others are beginning to listen to this
inner call, and leave World Orthodoxy. Being in World Orthodoxy is like
constantly inhaling polluted air. Sooner or later one just has to get out. We
must therefore try to understand that there are Faithful who finally cannot
bear this falsehood any longer and God accepts this. He leads these Christian
souls to a place where they can be at peace and not in constant agony over
the fact that they are compelled to participate in falsehood. God does not
want a heart full of agony, but a heart full of joy and faith. The spiritually
sober Old Calendar Churches is a safe haven for such a soul. There it can be
faithful to its conscience and Christ. It is not an easy path, but a path which
shows great faith in Him. It is a path of faithfulness to Christ and His
Church. It is a path where finally one can breathe again, among staunch and
loving faithful, both monastics and laity. To leave World Orthodoxy does
therefore not mean to be guided by rationalism or a cold, unloving heart.
Such a view has been created by World Orthodoxy for its own convenience.
It shows, on the contrary, that one is still alive spiritually. It is out of true
love for God and man that many have left World Orthodoxy, but these
faithful are neither seen nor heard. They are the little flock.
The personal Path.
Some perhaps would argue that the best thing to do is to pay no
attention to the apostasy taking place today and just concentrate on one`s
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inner spiritual life. This is true, but only to a certain point. As Orthodox
Christians the path of our salvation goes through the Church, not through
ourselves as individuals, as in the Protestant Churches. Our faith is indeed
personal, but it becomes truly salvific only when confirmed in the Orthodox
Church. Our path to Heaven, therefore, goes through the Church. When the
Church itself is showing signs of apostasy, our salvation is in danger and one
has to react. But one has to react with spiritual discernment without
endangering one`s or others spiritual life. One must remember that even
though a preservation of the dogmatic teaching of Christ is essential, a
spiritually sober Christian life still needs much more than just a formal
acceptance of this teaching. It needs a loving heart, humility, moderation,
stability, discernment, sober zeal and the like.
There are not two persons who are alike. Some are very sensitive to
falsehood, others feel troubled but bear it, others again do not even pay
attention to it and just concentrate on their personal struggle in Christ; others
again are not even aware of what is going on. So we see how many different
sides of the Christian life there are. Still some people try to confine all of
these various spiritual, emotional, psychological, and practical aspects of
man into a small and limited category of what to do and where to go. And
this we do, even though God accepts each one of these people wherever they
are, whether in World Orthodoxy or in an Old Calendar Church, as long as
they sincerely strive to be faithful to Him and their own conscience, as long
as they personally stay within the limits of the Orthodox Faith and try to live
according to the law of Christian love, as long as they do not make decisions
based on love for this fallen world.
As mentioned earlier, I believe there is still justification in staying in
World Orthodoxy, and there is justification in leaving. It is, therefore, in our
days of confusion and instability still not possible, I believe, to give one
single answer of what to do, which mechanically could be applied to each
and every person. This is so, because World Orthodoxy (at least the sincere
faithful) and the Old Calendar Churches are still, I believe, both within the
Church of Christ. Furthermore, whatever path one has decided to follow,
such a path is often conditioned by extreme personal circumstances. What is
important though, for this personal path to be God-pleasing, is a loving
heart and a personal true confession – a faithfulness to Christ and His
Orthodox Church. This is actually the one single answer of what to do today.
Such a path – accepted in its true form – is bound to unite the true
Traditionalists in both World Orthodoxy and the Old Calendar Churches.
156
21
A word of Ending.
I have pointed out some aspects which I believe we must honestly
take into consideration. It has been done with the purpose of reminding
ourselves of the path handed down to us by the Church – to be faithful to our
Orthodox Faith in a loving but truly uncompromising way. I ask forgiveness,
if I have offended anyone or unintentionally presented anything not
according to the truth.
I believe that the faithful, from the various ecumenical Orthodox and
non-Orthodox Churches in general are loving people and their desire for an
ecumenical union stems often from a sincere heart. But it is a love, founded
on the reasoning of the fallen man. It is therefore bound to go astray, since it
is totally going beyond the boundaries Christ Himself has set, (and is)
extending to ecclesiastically embrace even heretics.
It is my hope, that the reader will understand how erroneous and even
blasphemous the opinion of gracelessness in the Old Calendar Churches is.
In fact, the spiritually sober Old Calendar faithful are faithfully striving to
uphold Orthodoxy in its purity. It is a staunch stand which ROCOR/MP
once praised as heroic but now openly rejects. In doing so, we reject our
very own history and what we once held to be the true path. We thereby lose
all justification for our being in World Orthodoxy. It is therefore not only
important but even necessary for us, if we wish to have any further
justification for our staying in World Orthodoxy, to embrace the spirit of the
Russian Catacomb Saints – of the True Orthodox Christians.
The motive of the true Old Calendar faithful in not following World
Orthodoxy is simple: to be faithful to Christ. They have left World
Orthodoxy out of love for God. They humbly try to honor those Saints
whom they daily commemorate and simply yearn for that Grace which
comes from faithfulness to Christ.
But the Old Calendar faithful are also struggling with their own
problems, problems which sometimes have overshadowed an otherwise
glorious stand of true confession. It shows us that the times in which we live
are indeed the end-times, where a general spiritual decline has become
worldwide, manifested even in those who courageously defend Orthodoxy.
The most serious problem not only in World Orthodoxy but also
among some Old Calendar faithful is the lack of the spirit of Orthodoxy.
When either love or true faith vanishes, then there is no justification for our
very existence, wherever one find himself. Sincere Christian love and a true
157
confession of faith – these are the very basic foundations for walking on the
Royal Path of faithfulness to Christ. World Orthodoxy, therefore, can simply
not lay claim to be a truly God-pleasing path. In fact, not even the Old
Calendar Movement as such can – strictly speaking – do that. Only the stand
on the Royal Path – an uncompromising, but sober zeal together with a
Christian loving heart – can do this.
The Moscow Patriarchate once freely gave away its inner freedom and
fell into a spiritual bondage. This bondage has, until now, never been
broken, and the Moscow Patriarchate has stayed the same, or has perhaps
become even worse, despite an outward appearance of righteousness. It
would therefore be fatal to believe that the outward freedom we now see
today in Russia is a witness to their inner freedom. That is the mistake we
are making. If indeed this bondage has been broken, the results would have
been a wholehearted rejection of both Sergianism and ecumenism. Our
perhaps naïve acceptance of the Moscow Patriarchate, has thus thrown us
into the same inner bondage as they have been in for the last 80 years.
Having looked at various materials, I believe we can say without
exaggeration that ROCOR/MP i s deviating from its former stand of
confession. The tragedy of ROCOR/MP is not so much its union with the
Moscow Patriarchate and World Orthodoxybut its personal fall in
accepting wholeheartedly their path and spirit. ROCOR/MP has not only
compromised itself in the most sad way, but has also deeply disappointed
not only many faithful in ROCOR, but also our sincere and pious brothers
and sisters in Christ inside the Moscow Patriarchate and World Orthodoxy
itself, who expected to see this Champion of Truth courageously expose all
falsehood. The pain of witnessing this fall is even more intensified when one
is asked to accept it as a glorious victory.
The reunification is said to be a healing of wounds. But in order for a
wound to heal properly, the right medicine must be applied. Instead,
ROCOR – together with the majority of faithful in Russia – accepted the
Moscow Patriarchate unconditionally as our Mother Church, and
disregarded completely the necessity of an All-Russian Council, even
though our former stand was in complete opposition to such a move. This
Council is not only a question of our reunification, but goes much further
than that. It is a Council which the whole Russian Church desperately needs
in order to create a firm “basis for the re-establishment in Russia of true
Orthodoxy”. All of us both in ROCOR/MP and in Russia have thus failed –
and keep failing – to rightly evaluate the past 90 years, an evaluation which
would have been able to truly restore the unity and the conscience of the
Russian Church.
158
The essential question with which we are confronted today is the
following: which paths to follow? Is it that of ecumenism and “survival” – of
betrayal – or is it that of the true Orthodox Christians – of faithfulness to
Christ?
Our faithfulness to Christ means that we must condemn apostasy both
in principle and specifically. First we must condemn the acts of apostasy in
principle, mainly ecumenism and Sergianism. This has already been done by
ROCOR and the Russian Catacomb Church. But that is not enough if we
want to remain firm in our Orthodoxy and not get confused by what is
allowed and what is not. We must further apply these principles or
ecclesiastical rules to the various specific acts of apostasy which have
occurred in the last century. If we fail to do so, these acts will never lose
their power but will constantly tempt us to deviate once more from Christ.
We must uncompromisingly and firmly condemn the New Calendar and
apply strong pressure on those who have accepted it, to persuade them to
come back to the former Old Calendar. Likewise the union with the
Monophysites, accepted by the Patriarchates of Alexandria and Antioch,
together with the mutual concelebration and fraternization with the Catholic
Church by the Patriarchate of Constantinople and other Orthodox Churches,
must be strongly condemned. We must further strongly condemn publicly,
once and for all, the act of Metropolitan Sergius (Stragorodsky) in 1927, so
that every faithful person will fully understand how such a stand goes
against the very essence of the Church. This essence is sacrifice for Christ
even unto death and not survival, a wholly new and false concept, which
allows compromise with falsehood in order to preserve an outward structure,
or avoid persecution and death.
Unfortunately, up to now neither Sergianism nor ecumenism has
categorically been rejected. In failing to do so, we ourselves have accepted
falsehood and are now forced to deal with it, willingly or unwillingly. But
we have a free will, given to us by God, to reject evil. For this we need to
take a firm and fearless stand, both in word and deed. Sad to say, we – the
faithful in the Moscow Patriarchate – do not do that, because we have made
a very practical and safe – but completely un-Orthodox – agreement with
World Orthodoxy – to keep quiet. In return we enjoy the comforts of their
company.
The Moscow Patriarchate has not changed its stand, neither in regard
to its acceptance of ecumenism nor in regard to Metropolitan Sergius and the
path he chose. At the same time, we also know how ROCOR in the past
categorically rejected both of these two paths. From this it is obvious that to
accept the Moscow Patriarchate and World Orthodoxy, as we know them
159
today, and at the same time confirm that ROCOR/MP has not changed its
former position of confession, is simply not possible. To do so, will simply
be lying or at best deceiving oneself.
There is only one way to be faithful to Christ – our sincere repentance
and firm rejection of all falsehood. These two criteria are closely connected.
As long as we still accept the path of both Metropolitan Sergius and
ecumenism we have not yet truly repented. Seeing the strong position of the
Moscow Patriarchate, still lying in spiritual bondage, combined with the
weak stand both in the Diaspora and in Russia, the only hope for the Russian
Church seems to be the coming of a new and God-elected Russian Tsar, who
will put a stop to all the falsehood we see today. But are we worthy?
Every Orthodox Christian is obliged to oppose any falsehood which
will separate us from Orthodoxy. We are obliged to speak up and do what is
in our power to defend the Faith. This we can do only if we firmly renounce
the comfort and glory of this world. But our struggle must be done calmly,
with discernment and with extreme humility. Otherwise, the result will be
harmful to the Church, our unity and mutual love.
The apostasy has spread not only to the whole of World Orthodoxy
but even to some Old Calendar Churches. It manifests itself in our betrayal
of both the true Faith and the spirit of Orthodoxy and stems from pride and
the love of this world. The spiritual apostasy, the loss of the spirit of
Orthodoxy, is by far the most refined and dangerous of the two and will be
the main factor in our acceptance of the Antichrist. World Orthodoxy has
entered a path which is leading us to the “assemblage of Satan” – in this
there can be no doubt whatsoever. God, therefore, is about to “spew” World
Orthodoxy out of His mouth due to its continued unrepentant state and
apostasy.
If no signs of a serious change in course will be seen in the near
future, we faithful in World Orthodoxy, will be obliged to follow the way
appointed to us by the True Orthodox Confessors and Martyrs – a stand
which was also approved of by the Inter-Orthodox Theological Conference
in Greece, 2004, as well as the Confession of Faith (2009) – namely to
“cease commemoration of those hierarchs, who are co-responsible for, and
co-communicants with, heresy and delusion.” [7h, B. Proposals, pt 8].
Let it be known, that we traditional faithful in World Orthodoxy will
not follow our church-leaders on their course of apostasy.
Today we see clear signs of the coming of Antichrist. We should not
be carried away by a sectarian approach when confronted with this, but we
160
must also not just close our eyes and pretend nothing is happening. With the
strong emphasis on “peace and ecumenical dialogues,” World Orthodoxy is
paving the way for the acceptance of Antichrist.
The authority of Christ’s Church is slowly but surely being substituted
by the authority of World Orthodoxy – a pseudo Christianity, which is
expecting a blind obedience, despite the path of apostasy it has taken. This
substitution of concepts – concepts so similar to true Orthodox concepts, but
void of the fragrance of Orthodoxy – have now penetrated World
Orthodoxy. It is an Orthodoxy permeated by a secular spirit. It will be that
very “Christianity,” which the Antichrist eventually needs in order to
establish his empire – an Orthodoxy based on proper forms and outward
appearance, supported by its “canonicity” andlegalistic, worldly
justification of falsehood. But inside all will be decay. The conscience of the
faithful, not according to the fallen state, but according to the teaching of the
Orthodox Church, is thereby being destroyed, together with the will power
to act against evil.
A few aspects have been pointed out here which show how
inconsistent and confusing our stand is – in some points even threatening to
set us outside the Orthodox Church. Some will perhaps blame me for
creating an atmosphere of rebellion towards the Moscow Patriarchate and
ROCOR/MP – others of supporting ecumenism and liberalism. It is not my
intention to be rebellious. I am only stressing that our participation in and
acceptance of both ecumenism and Sergianism must come to an end. God
says no to all this through our Saints and that is all we need to know.
The very fact that I am still a faithful member of ROCOR, (as I have
been all my 20 years of Orthodoxy), shows clearly that I am not easily
inclined to make any hasty moves, but on the contrary only wish for the
unity of the Russian Church and of World Orthodoxy in general. The unity,
though, must be faithful to the Truth and not founded on falsehood, love of
this world or of ourselves.
I believe that the only path which can be justified is the Royal path of
a loving Christian heart, together with an uncompromising Orthodox
confession. If these two are not both present, then neither World Orthodoxy
nor the Old Calendar Churches will be of any help in our salvation. If this is
properly understood, then one will see that this is not a compromised and
self-loved justification of both World Orthodoxy and the Old Calendar
Churches, but only the justification for the one single and unconditional
Royal path of the Church of Christ, eventually uniting all true Orthodox
faithful, wherever they may be.
161
Finally, I am not a learned theologian, and perhaps some of my
reflections may not hold up under a thorough theological analysis. My words
are first and foremost a cry from the depth of my soul, and not so much a
theological thesis. I have tried to look on the whole matter from my own
love for God and man – and the love of God towards us. In no way or
manner do I say that these reflections without fail represent the absolute,
inerrant truth. But I can say for certain that they have been written with a
sincere heart, in love for God, His Orthodox Church and my neighbor, and
without the slightest malice towards anyone. Let the reader, therefore, judge
for himself where the truth is and where it is not.
Without the love of God everything crumbles to pieces. The love of
God not only fervently seeks out the Truth and is willing to die for it, it also
seeks out man in his extremely fallen state, despite all rationality.
My forbearance for the apostatizing World Orthodoxy may for some
seem to have gone too far, according to canonical order. Others may
likewise consider my sympathy and love for the Old Calendar Movement to
be without any sober basis. Still, I feel that my forbearance and sympathy,
for the moment is within the limits of God’s love, and faithful to Orthodoxy
without mixing it neither with heresy nor with fanaticism.
It is not only my hope that we all, both abroad and in Russia, will
come back to our former stand of confession, but also that all true
Traditionalists within both World Orthodoxy and the Old Calendar Churches
will be able to unite in spirit despite the path they each have taken. The love
of God has the power to humble us, open doors, which seemingly cannot be
opened, to weaken our hardness and prideful minds and soften our hearts
toward each other. Let us therefore emulate the Samaritan woman, who
opened her heart in humility and abandoned everything – heresy and
comforts of life – in order to be with Christ.
In writing this paper, neither my spiritual father nor my saintly fellow
brothers have had any knowledge of my doing so. Therefore, I solely take all
the responsibility on myself for whatever has been written here.
I ask your holy prayers.
With love in Christ,
Father Theophan, a sinful but Orthodox monk.
Holy Trinity Monastery, Jordanville, NY, USA, 2010.
The Sunday of the Samaritan Woman.
162
APPENDIXES.
Appendix 1
1a) Epistle of the Synod of Bishops of the Russian Orthodox Church, 2001.
Living Orthodoxy, #126, vol.XXI # 6.
1 b ) Concelebration of Metropolitan Hilarian, First-Hierarch of
ROCOR/MP with His Eminence Damascene (Antiochian Orthodox
Patriarchate).
– http://www.synod.com/synod/eng2008/10ensanpaulo.html – See also: «Православная Русь» (Pravoslavnaja Rus`), October
1/14, 2008, pg. 2-6.
1c)Address of the Council of Bishops of the Russian Orthodox Church
Outside of Russia to Its Flock–October, 2001.
http://www.russianorthodoxchurch.ws/english/pages/poslania/addresstopeo
ple.html
1d) The Reply of the Council of Bishops to the Brotherly Epistle of the
Bishops of the Moscow Patriarchate, October 2001
2b-1, 2b-2 and 2b-3: These are referring to the same document, but from
three different sources: the Syrian Monophysite Church, the Antiochian
Orthodox Church, and finally the Joint Commission of Eastern and Oriental
Orthodox Churches.
2b-3)“Statement from the Patriarchate of Antioch, 1991.” Restoring the
Unity in Faith. The Orthodox-Oriental Orthodox Theological Dialogue. The
Joint Commission of Eastern and Oriental Orthodox Churches, 2007. Holy Cross Orthodox Press, 50 Goddard Avenue, Brookline, Massachusetts
02445.
2c) Concerning Relations between the Syriac and Antioch Churches.
From various sources:
a) Wikicipedia, the free Encyclopedia:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Syriac_Orthodox_Church
b (Relationships with the Roman Catholic Church)
http://sor.cua.edu/Ecumenism/index.html (please scroll down to “Relationships
with the Roman Catholic Church”).
c) (The Syrian Orthodox Church of Antioch and all East).
2e) “A Call For Unity – the Melkite Synod.”
http://www.melkite.org/sa3.htm
2f) “03. feb. 2005. A new church is inaugurated”.
http://antiochpat.org/english/news/index.php?
PHPSESSID=93cf204e67f567e2d06b49d4535ddf86#115 (pleaseScroll down to 3.
February 2005).
2 g ) Agreement on Inter-marriage 1994 with the Catholic Church.
http://sor.cua.edu/Ecumenism/19940125SOCRCMarriageAgmt.html
(Syriac Orthodox Church).
2h) :“Relationships with Other Non-Chalcedonian Churches”.
http://sor.cua.edu/Ecumenism/index.html (scroll down to “Relationships with
Other Non-Chalcedonian Churches”).
2i) Two letters from faithful in the Antiochian Orthodox Church.
a) http://www.ocanews.org/ReplytoMorris4.7.09.html
b) http://www.ocanews.org/news/LettertoPatriarch5.1.09.html
2j) “Dialogue and Joint Declarations with the Roman Catholic Church.”
(Syrian Orthodox Resources: http://sor.cua.edu/Ecumenism/RC.html
2k) “Oriental Orthodox-Roman Catholic Theological Consultation”, New
York, June 12, 2000. http://sor.cua.edu/Ecumenism/20000612oorcconsultation.html
Appendix 3
3a-1 and 3a-2: These are referring to the same document, but from two
different sources.
165
3a-1) ”Statement from the Patriarchate of Alexandria, 2001.” Restoring The
Unity In Faith. The Orthodox-Oriental Orthodox Theological Dialogue. The
Joint Commission of Eastern and Oriental Orthodox Churches. 2007.
Holy Cross Orthodox Press. 50 Goddard Avenue, Brookline, Massachusetts
02445.
3a-2)“Coptic-Orthodox Pastoral Agreement 2001.”
http://www.antiochian.net/index.php?
option=com_content&task=view&id=655&Itemid=63
http://antiochian.net. (please click on “Orthodox Church Relations” or just
print out the abovementioned title in search.
3b) The Coptic Church.
3 c )Joint Catholic-Oriental Orthodox Statement, 2009.
http://www.americancatholic.org/news/newsreport.aspx?id=676
Appendix 4
4a)”Proposals for Lifting Anathemas (1993).”
http://www.orthodoxunity.org/state04.php.
4b) Texts of the Agreed Statements of the Joint Commissions.
http://docs.google.com/gview?a=v&q=cache:fUgndDzkH3cJ:stmarkfellowship.org/
%3Faction%3Ddownload%26file_id
%3D67+texts+of+the+agreed+statements+of+the+joint+commission+monachos.net&hl=
en&gl=us
4c)“Restoring the Unity in Faith. The Orthodox-Oriental Orthodox
Theological Dialogue. The Joint Commission of Eastern and Oriental
Orthodox Churches.” 2007.
5d)Greek-Catholic vesper. http://www.georgiabulletin.org/local/2009/05/14/share/ (in case only the home-page
comes up, click archives 2009, then May, then the date 14.)
A l s o p o s t e d o n http://news-nftu.blogspot.com/2009/05/ecumenism-another-big-
ecumenical.html, may 15 2009.
5e) Armenian Chrism with World Orthodoxy.
http://vertograd-eng.blogspot.com/2008/09/hierarchs-of-world-orthodoxy.html or
www.vertograd-eng.blogspot.com. (Click on “Hierarchs of World Orthodoxy
Participated Ecumenical Services in Armenia”.
Appendix 6
Two Letters from Metropolitan Philaret to Vladyka Averky (Taushev).
Appendix 7 (Papers against Monophysitism and ecumenism taken from:
www.orthodoxinfo.com, (except from 7f, 7l and 7n).
167
7a)”Concerning the Dialogue Between the Orthodox and Non-
Chalcedonian Churches” (A Memorandum of the Sacred Community of
Mount Athos).” http://www.orthodoxinfo.com/ecumenism/mono_athos.aspx
7b)”Suggestions of a Committee from the Sacred Community of the Holy
Mountain Athos” (Concerning the Dialogue of the Orthodox with the Non-
Chalcedonians).” http://www.orthodoxinfo.com/ecumenism/mono_athos2.aspx
7c) “St. John of Damascus and the ‘Orthodoxy’ of the Non-Chalcedonians”
(Protopresbyter Theodore Zisis).”
http://www.orthodoxinfo.com/ecumenism/zisis.pdf
7d)”Copts and Orthodoxy (Orthodox Tradition, vol.IX, no.1, pp.8-10).”
http://www.orthodoxinfo.com/ecumenism/copts_orth.aspx
7e)”Orthodox Unity Today” (By the right Reverend Photios, Bishop of
Triaditza).” http://www.orthodoxinfo.com/ecumenism/unity_today.aspx
7f)”Memorandum Appeal”, (By Hieromonk Maximus and Monk Basil)”,
Center for Traditionalist Orthodox Studies, St.Gregory Palamas Monastery,
P.O.Box 398, Etna, Ca 96027.
7g)”Union with the Monophysites: What comes next?”, by Michael Woerl.
http://www.orthodoxinfo.com/ecumenism/unionmon.pdf
7h)”Conclusions of the Inter-Orthodox Theological Conference.
“Ecumenism: Origins Expectations Disenchantment”, september 2004,
Thessaloniki, Greece.
http://www.orthodoxinfo.com/ecumenism/thess_conclusions.aspx
7i)”An Open Letter to the Holy Abbots and the Holy Representatives of the
Sacred Twenty Monasteries in the Holy Community of the Holy Mount
Athos” (The so called Kelliotes Letter to the sacred Twenty Athonite
Monasteries (2006).”
7n) St. John, Wonderworker of Shanghai and San Francisco and His View
of the Russian Church in the 20th Century
http://www.russianorthodoxchurch.ws/01newstucture/pagesen/legacy/stjohnin20thcentur
y.html
Appendix 8
8a) OIMS-meeting at St. Vladimirs.
http://www.antiochian.org/node/18570
8b) St. Nersess Armenian Seminary.
http://www.stnersess.edu/about/history.php
8c) “Teaching for the Future”
http://www.svots.edu/News/Recent/2009-0824-teaching-for-the-future/
8d) “Dean and Chancellor enjoy constructive dialogue with St. Tikhon`s
Orthodox Theological Seminary”:
10e) Annual Report 2007.
http://www.mec-churches.org/general_secretary/reports07/AnnualNarrativeReport07.htm
(look, please, at the very first part: “General Introduction”).
Appendix 11: (CCT and NCC – documents):
(11a-11e: www.christianchurchestogether.org).
11a) Various memberlists. Steering-committee.
http://www.christianchurchestogether.org/members/
11e-1) The current status of CCT.
http://www.christianchurchestogether.org/current/
11e-2) – A Seminarian Steward Program offered for 2009 Annual Meeting
http://www.christianchurchestogether.org/newsletter/pdf/newsletter_vol2no2.pdf
(please scroll down to Seminarian Steward Program Offered for 2009
Annual Meeting).
–Seminarians participating in CCT-activity: (Second Annual Meeting, 8-11
of January, 2008, photos and text).
http://www.christianchurchestogether.org/events/2007/pasadena/photos/photos01.html
11e-3) Photo-gallery of Joint Prayers between Orthodox and non-Orthodox
clergy in CCT:
http://www.christianchurchestogether.org/events/2008/2008am_images.pdf
http://www.christianchurchestogether.org/newsletter/pdf/newsletter_vol3no1b.pdf (pgs.
1 and 4).
11e-4) Video by CCT
(http://www.christianchurchestogether.org/events/2007/pasadena/video/
11e-5) Concelebration in Zurich 2008:
http://www.orthodoxunity.org/
11f) National Counsel of Churches (NCC).
http://www.ncccusa.org/about/about_ncc.htm
11g) Member-list of NCC.
http://www.ncccusa.org/members/index.html
172
1 1 h ) “The Unholy Alliance”, Dr. C. Gregg Singer, Arlington House-
Publishers. New Rochelle, N.Y. 1975: review on inside of frontcover;
pg.180 top; 198 top).
12a) A Pastoral letter 2000.
http://www.scoba.us/assets/files/letter-millenium.pdf
(please scroll down to: (“A Community of Healing and Reconciliation”)
12b) List of various ecumenical SCOBA-Reports.
http://www.scoba.us/resources/orthodox-catholic.html
12c) Hierarchs of the Jurisdictions in SCOBA.
http://www.scoba.us/jurisdictions.html
12d) Commissions and endorsed organizations.
http://www.scoba.us/ministries/commissions.html
12e) Baptism and Sacramental Economy, 1999.
http://www.orthodoxinfo.com/ecumenism/Orth-Cath_Agreed.aspx
12f) Statement on the Catholic-Orthodox Dialogue at the Dawn of a New
Millenium.
http://www.scoba.us/resources/orthodox-catholic-bishops/newmillenium.html
12g) A Statement on the Issue of the Filioque, 2003.
http://www.scoba.us/resources/orthodox-catholic/2003filioque.html
12h) A Statement regarding meeting of Pope Benedikt XVI and Patriarch
Bartholomew, 2006.
http://www.scoba.us/articles/2006-11-01-statement-on-papal-visit-to-patriarchate.html
12i) About the Orthodox Theological Society in America (Frequently asked
questions). http://www.otsamerica.org/about/faq.php
12j) Regarding the Balamand Document, 1994.
http://www.scoba.us/resources/orthodox-catholic/27.html
173
12k) Statement from OTSA on the Relationship of the Orthodox Church to
the WCC, 1998.. http://orthodoxinfo.com/ecumenism/otsa.aspx 12l) Endorsement by OTSA of the ‘Proposal towards a Common Date for
Easter, 2001.
12o) Greetings from His Eminence Metropolitan Hilarion to the XV-th All-
American Council (OCA), August, 2008.
http://www.russianorthodoxchurch.ws/synod/eng2008/11enmhocagreeting.html
1 2 p ) “The Catacomb Tikhonite Church 1974”, The Orthodox Word,
nov./dec. 1974.
http://www.orthodoxinfo.com/ecumenism/cat_1974.aspx
12q) NASHOTAH: Traditional Anglicans Restart Unity Talks With
Orthodox Church. Two Seminaries Sign Historic Covenant in Unity Pledge
http://www.virtueonline.org/portal/modules/news/article.php?storyid=11331
12r) A Reply to the “Sorrowful Epistle” by Fr. Alexander Schmemann.
http://www.orthodoxinfo.com/ecumenism/schmem_azkoul.aspx
16c) Message of the World Summit of Religious Leaders (2006).
http://www.interfax-religion.com/?act=documents&div=78
16d) Patriarch Aleksy in the Notre Dame Cathedral, 2007.
http://www.russiatoday.com/Top_News/2007-10-04/Russian_Ortho…
16e) Journal of the Moscow Patriarchate: “Celebration, dedicated to the 90th
anniversary of the Restoration of the Patriarchate in the Russian Orthodox
Church”). # 12, 2007, pg. 8-21. Translation from «Журнал Московсой
Патриаяхии» # 12, 2007, «Торжества, посвященные 90-летию
восстановления Патриаяшества в Русской Православной Церкви
16f) Homily of Patriarch Kirill on the Sunday of Orthodoxy, 2009.
http://incendiarious.wordpress.com/2009/03/12/homily-of-patriarch-kirill-
on-the-sunday-of-orthodoxy/
or
http://www.incendiarious.wordpress.com Look under 12. of March 2009.
16g) a) “The Balamand Union. A Victory of Vatican Diplomacy.” pg.12.
Center for Traditionalist Orthodox Studies. St. Gregory Palamas Monastery,
Etna, CA 96027.
175
b) “Is Catholic-Orthodox Unity in Sight?”
http://www.ncregister.com/daily/catholic-orthodox_unity_in_sight/#When:15:10:59Z
16h) “The Struggle Against Ecumenism. The History of the True Orthodox
Church of Greece from 1924 to 1994.” The Holy Orthodox Church in North America. Boston, Massachusetts, 1998.
16i) Four articles on Rocorunited-website:
a) “Role of Bishop of Rome – key to Catholic-Orthodox progress”.
16k) “Archbishop Hilarion Alfeyev congratulates new general secretary of
WCC: http://www.mospat.ru/index.php?page=45688
16l) “Why I decided to join the Russian Church Abroad? Archpriest Lev
Lebedev, 1991 (“Почему Я перешел в Зарубежную часть Русской
Православной Церкви? Протоиерей Лев Лебедев, 1991 год.).
16m) 1) A conversation by a Russian Priest with his parish-children about
current issues in church life, fall 2004.
176
“Беседа русского священника со своими прихожанами о текущих
событиях церковной жизни, осень 2004 года.
2) “The Policy of the Third Reich in regard to the Russian Orthodox
Church in the light of materials from archives. (A Collection of Documents).
2003, Moscow. (Russian edition).
«Политика Третьего рейха по отношению к Русской
Православной Церкви в Свете архивных материалов 1935-1945 годов.
(Сборник документов).» М.В.Щкаровский. Издательсво Крутского
Патриаршего Подворя. Общество любителей церковной истории,
Москва 2003.
16n) “On the situation of the Orthodox Christian in the Contemporary
World” by Archbishop Averky of Syracuse. St. John of Kronstadt Press,
Liberty, TN, USA. Second Printing, 1995.
16o) 1) The Keeper of the House of God. Patriarch of Moscow and all of
Russia Sergius Stragorodsky,Sretensky monastery in Moscow, 2003.
(Страж Дома Господня. Патриарх Московский и всея Руси Сергий
Страгородский, 2003 г).
2) Patriarch Kirill: his Life and Worldview, EKSMO, Moscow, 2009,
by Archbishop Hilarion Alfeev (Патриарх Кирилл: жизнь и
миросозерцание, ЭКСМО, 2009. Архиепископ Волоколамский Иларион
(Алфеев).
16p) The Confessional and Ecclesiological Foundations of the Russian True
Orthodox Church.
http://ripc.info/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=64&lang=eng
16q) New Zion In Babylon.
a) – The Orthodox Church in the Twentieth Century, by Vladimir Moss.
b) – “Man of God: Saint John of San Francisco”, Redding, Ca: Nikodemos
Orthodox Publication Society, 2002, p. 46. Memories of Protopriest Valery
Lukianov (ROCOR). Matushka Anastasia Shatilova writes that she saw St.
John’s letter of repentance to the Synod in the Synod archives (Church
News, April, 1998, vol. 10, No 4
(71), p. 6).
177
16r) “The New Martyrs” (St. Tikhon of Zadonsk Society), a small pamphlet
with the essay: “To the Children of the Russian Church abiding in the
Homeland and in the Dispersion”, Reprinted from Orthodox America,
October, 1982.
16s) 1994 Epistle of the Synod of Bishops of the ROCOR.
– Orthodox Life, 1994, vol. 44, # 6, p.7-10.
«Православная Русь» Свято-Трщицкий Монастырь, Джорданвилл,
США, 1959 г., No 21, ст. 1-2.
16v) An interview with Father Steven Allen (GOC, Chrysostomos II), St.
Spyridon Parish, Michigan, USA.
Part 1: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=75AhGD3ft-c&feature=related
Part 2: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l15XYEBMv-s&feature=related
Part 3: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2ydy_78oqFs&feature=related
Part 4: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lr8lNOpcgpM&feature=related
16x) The Dogma of the Church, Holy Trinity Monastery, Jordanville, NY,
USA, by Protopresbyter George Grabbe.
Appendix 17
17a) 1 ) “Православная Рус”, No 1, 1/14 января, 2009. (Pravoslavnaja
Rus`, January 1/14 2009. 2):
2) “Orthodox Life”. No.1, 2009.
17b-1) “A Conversation with bishop Jerome about the unity of the Russian
Church”. «Православная Рус» , No22, 15/28 ноября, 2008. (Pravoslavnaja Rus`,
November 15/28 2008, pg.5).
17b-2) Interview with Metropolitan Hilarion 2008.
178
17b-3) Interview with Metropolitan Hilarion 2009.
http://rocorunity.blogspot.com/2009/09/editors-in-chief-of-magazine-tribune-of.html
17c) «Мотивы моей Жизни»: Архиепископ Виталий Максименко.
(«Motivy moei zhizny”: Archepiskop Vitalii (Maksimenko)). Holy Trinity
Monastery, Jordanville, N.Y
17d) «К Пятидесятилетию служения в архиепископом сане
Первосвятителя Русской Зарубежной Церкви
Высокопреосвященнейшаго Митрополита Анастасия», Сборник.
Типография Преп. Иова Почаевскаго. 1906-1956. Holy Trinity
Monastery, Jordanville. N.Y. (In Honor of the 50th anniversary as bishop of
His Eminence Anastassy, Metropolitan of the Russian Church Abroad –
1906-1956).
A Collection. The Holy Trinity Monastery, Jordanville, N.Y. 1956, pg.30.
17e-1) Concelebrations of ROCOR/MP with the Ecumenical Patriarchate,
Antiochian Orthodox Church and others. 12th of February, 2009 and 8th of
march, 2009.
http://www.diocesedegeneve.net/index.php?
option=com_content&task=view&id=192ltemid=1 and
http://www.diocesedegeneve.net/index.php?
option=com_content&task=view&id=194<emid=1 (the official website of the
diocese of Geneva and West-Europe,ROCOR/MP).
http://www.russianorthodoxchurch.ws/synod/eng2008/2enparis3hierarchs.html
(English text) (official website of ROCOR/MP).
17e-2) Concelebrations with OCA:
a) New York: August 4, 2009
The feast day of St Seraphim celebrated in the Eastern American Diocese
http://www.russianorthodoxchurch.ws/synod/eng2009/8enstseraphimead.html
http://www.eadiocese.org/News/2009/august/seaclif.en.htm
b) Bishop Jerome of Manhattan Participates In the Enthronement of the
Newly-Elected Head of the Orthodox Church in America, December 2008.
179
(Congratulatory message of His Eminence Metropolitan Hilarion to newly-
elected Metropolitan Jonah (OCA)).
http://www.russianorthodoxchurch.ws/synod/eng2008/12enmhlettermj.html
c) New York: November 18, 2009
Metropolitan Hilarion Meets With the Primate of the Orthodox Church in
America. http://www.russianorthodoxchurch.ws/synod/eng2009/11enoca.html
d) A list of clergy who co-served with His Eminence, Metropolitan Hilarion,
First Hierarch of ROCOR/MP, August 1, at St. Seraphims`s Church in Sea
Cliff, NY:
17e-3) Very Rev. Leonid Kishkovsky:
http//www.oca.org/news/1282
17e-4) Metropolitan Philip receives Metropolitan Hilarion at Headquarters
of the Antiochian Orthodox church, 2008. http://www.antiochian.org/node/17848
17f) Visit of His Eminence Mark (Antiochian Orthodox Church) to the Holy
Cross Monastery, West Virginia (ROCOR/MP).
http://www.russianorthodoxchurch.ws/synod/eng2009/5enbpmarktoledo.html
17g) “To the Angel of the church of the Laodiceans,” by Archmandrite
Lazar Abashidze. Russian Edition. 1999). Translation from
«Ангелу Лаодикийской Церкви», Архимандрит Лазарь (Абашидзе).
Издание Сретенского Монастыря. 1999.
17h) “Stand fast in the Truth”, From the teachings of Archbishop Averky,
compiled by Father Demetrios Serfes. 2618 West Bannock Street, Boise,
Idaho 83702. Translated from the Russian, by Rev.Father Seraphim Johnson,
Orthodox Russia, Issue # 7, 1979, pp.5-7, St. Job of Pochaev Press, Holy
Trinity Monastery, Jordanville, New York.
17i) “Is the Grace of God Present in the Soviet Church?”, Professor Ivan M. Andreyev, (translated from the Russian published original
in Jordanville, New York 1948), 2000, Monastery Press, Wildwood, Alberta.
180
1 7 j ) “Russia`s Catacomb Saints, Lives of the New Martyrs by Ivan
Andreyev”. Saint Herman of Alaska Press, Platina, California, 1982.
17k) The Commission on Dialogue with the OCA.
http://www.russianorthodoxchurch.ws/synod/eng2009/8enocacommissionmeeting.html
17l) “The Dialogue between ROCOR and the MP: “Union can only be in
the Truth”, translation from the Russian text: “Диалог РПЦЗ и МП:
“Соединение может быть только в Истине, ” Michael Nazarov,
Moscow, Russkaja Ideja, 2004.
17m) “The Shepherd, February 2007. “Move to Fili”.
http://www.saintedwardbrotherhood.org/0207/shepherd1.html
17n) “Arch-pastoral Epistle from the First Hierarch of the Russian Church
Abroad”,Pravoslavnaja Rus`, # 2, January 15/28, 1966. Holy Trinity
Monastery, Jordanville, New York, 13361, U.S.A.
17o) Epistle of the Bishops of the Russian Orthodox Church Abroad, 1990.
http://74.125.113.132/search?
17v) «Объединение Русской Зарубежной Церкви Московской
Патриархии. Реальность Истинного Единения. Доклады и Обращения
2003-2006. Протопресвитер Валерий Лукианов, 2006 г.
Appendix 18
18a) The Pan-Orthodox Synod.
http://www.asianews.it/index.php?1=en&art=14708
18b-1)WCC/MECC-Consultation 1997: Towards a common Date for
Easter.
http://www.oikoumene.org/en/resources/documents/wcc-commissions/faith-and-order-
commission/i-unity-the-church-and-its-mission/towards-a-common-date-for-
easter/towards-a-common-date-for-easter.html
18b-2) “WWC-press release”: Proposal to Set a Common Date for Easter.
1997”. http://sor.cua.edu/Ecumenism/19970324easterdateproposal.html
18c) MECC participates in World Conference, 2008.
http://www.mec-churches.org/news_brief/news_brief_july08.htm (scroll down to
“MECC participates in World Conference on dialogue Convenes in
Madrid”)
18d) The Madrid Declaration, 2008. http://www.world-dialogue.org Choose the language: “English” Then
“International Conference for Dialogue”. Then “Madrid Declaration”.
182
18e) About the Conference 2008. http://www.world-dialogue.org Choosethelanguage:“English”.Then
“International Conference for Dialogue”, then “About Conference” or
“invitees.” (List of Invitees of World Conference for Dialogue).
18f) Message of the Primates of the Orthodox Churches.
http://www.ec-patr.org/docdisplay.php?lang=en&id=995&tla=en
18g-1 and 2) The 70th Anniversary of the Pan-Orthodox Congress. Bishop
Photius of Triaditsa. http://www.orthodoxinfo.com/ecumenism/photii_1.aspx
Appendix 19
19a) Archbishop Demetrios to ROCOR-Synod 2009 (ROCOR-source).
http://www.russianorthodoxchurch.ws/synod/eng2009/5enarbpdemetrios.html (English
text).
This is exactly my point. God in His infinite mercy – for the time
being “by some mysterious economy” – still allows the flock to receive
Grace in the Sacraments.
One cannot but sense here how the authors are seriously beginning to
lose patience with their bishops. One could even be inclined to believe that
they are also beginning to slowly but very cautiously open the (hereto
closed) possibility of leaving World Orthodoxy altogether. In any case, it
shows us, that many Traditionalists in World Orthodoxy are getting more
184
and more impatient with their church-leaders.
The Old Calendar Movement is being characterized as a sectarian
group which eventually is bound to die out. Such has, is and will always be
the general stand in World Orthodoxy and is, naturally, not surprising. The
reality, though, is quite different. The Old Calendar Movement, in general, is
in fact very alive spiritually and not dying out at all. But its existence is
hidden, and quiet, living under very humble and difficult circumstances. It is
guided by simple and pious, but not unlearned, faithful, who have as their
only goal faithfulness to Christ – even unto death. “With God`s help, says
Fr.Steven Allen (GOC) we will not compromise the dogmas of the Church
or the Orthodox life, to serve an anti-Christian philosophy, and anti-
Christian institutions and take part in the spirit of Antichrist and the
preparations for his coming.” [16v, part 3].
This is the path of the future – the Catacombs. If we, while in World
Orthodoxy, do not acquire this spirit now, we will not be able to acquire it in
the future.
185
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Greetings
on the Feast of the Nativity A.D. 2019! Again, thanks to our donors.
May the Lord reward your love with His grace! To our other
listeners: please consider a gift to help me out. If you have
PayPal, you can send a gift to my account at [email protected].
If you want to receive a receipt for a tax deduction, contact me at
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Introduction
– “Faith Comes First” Section Up to this Point
Beginning
with Class 41, we have been talking about the apostasy of the
historical Orthodox hierarchies. I called this part of our course
“Faith Comes First,” because the pure confession of the
Orthodox Faith is the prerequisite for belonging to the Church, and
therefore to choose which bishop or hierarchy to which one should
submit oneself, one must start with the question, “Who confesses
the Orthodox faith?” Being in the outward or legal possession
of the title and the temporalities of an ancient institution does not
make one a bishop if one is a heretic. We know this from Holy
Scripture, from all of Church history, from the witness and writings
of the Fathers, from the Church’s canonical tradition, and from
common sense.
In
Classes 41 through 43, we discussed general principles of
ecclesiology and discernment, as well as making a side-trip into the
issues of monarchism and nationalism. In Class 44, we outlined the
history of the involvement of World Orthodoxy in the ecumenical
movement in the 20th century, especially the Ecumenical
Patriarchate. In Classes 45 through 48, we discussed the history of
the Russian Church, ending with the destruction of the Russian Church
Abroad by the Moscow Patriarchate in 2007. In this session, Class
49, I hope to summarize the Russian situation, and in the next
session, Class 50, I plan to summarize the situation in the rest of
the Orthodox world, as well as make some suggestions and provide
some guidelines for those who are wondering if they are in the right
jurisdiction and are trying to decide where they belong. I am not
going to tell you what to do, but I hope to give you some tools to do
it.
Before
going on to our summary of the Russian situation, however, I would
like to clarify some of my remarks from our last class and fill in
some gaps. I hope that those listening who are not from the old ROCOR
or HOCNA background will bear with me. I am spending time on this,
not only for the sake of my fellow former ROCOR/HOCNA brethren, but
also because the history involved sheds so much light on our current
situation, for everyone in the Orthodox world, and especially for us
in North America.
A.
Needed Clarifications and Omissions
1.
Strong points of both Greek and Russian Churches.
a. Russians – liturgical order and beauty, humane culture, balance
b. Greeks – fasting, laser focus on dogmatic issues, courage
2.
Balance the Platina vs. Boston picture. Overall attitude: gratitude
a. Platina strong and weak points (strong points previously covered)
i. Soviet “dissident” fascination, lack of clarity on ecclesiology
ii. also had its scandal and its cultism.
iii. romanticism
iv. the Seraphim Rose cottage industry – a species of “elderism”
b. Boston strong points, weak points
i. strong point was its stand against ecumenism
ii. also, English language mission, the Jesus Prayer
iv. also, reintroduced Greek Americans to monasticism
v. clarification of remark about modernism
vi. “the” scandal- another species of “elderism”
3. “Fall of ROCOR” discussion did include the key moments of the 2000 MP Jubilee Council and the 2001 election of Laurus and the letters to the MP and the Serbian Patriarchate, but did not include two key moments: the 1994 HSiR union and the 2006 IVth All-Diaspora Sobor.
a. 1994 HSiR union: faulty ecclesiology becomes official, relationship with GOC (and therefore influence from the GOC) cut off. Engineered by Russian pro-MP bishops for their own purposes, unrelated (or, rather, antithetical) to the Greek Old Calendar cause. In short, the HSiR was used by the pro-MP agents to advance their agenda, not to create True Orthodox unity.
i. To balance the picture: strong points of HSiR – intellectual life, pastoral love, mission to non-Greeks, honesty in pastoral approach to New Calendarists.
b. 2006 IV All-Diaspora Sobor: Not “soborny”, because the outcome was predetermined by the top leadership – the “union” (i.e., capitulation) was simply shoved through, not debated. The previously recognized preconditions – MP’s renunciation of ecumenism and Sergianism, an All-Russian Sobor – totally ignored.
B. The
Situation Today – This Class: Russia. Next Class: Everyone else
1. Russian True Orthodox – Scattered and disunited Catacomb Church groups and ROCOR-derived groups
2. The MP –
a. ecumenism and universalism – Putin’s “traditional values”
b. does not oppose EP on theological grounds, only matters of territory and power
c. Pat. Kyrill world leader in alternative one-world agenda (see recent Baku meeting)
d. MP-Vatican ecumenism;e.g., Havana statement, Fatima
e. synthesis of Soviet apologetic and Orthodoxy
f. arm of neo-Soviet Russian internal and foreign policy
g. a trap for conservatives
h. situation in the trenches
i. some heroic and dedicated clergy
ii. dedicated laypeople
iii. signs of life but paralyzed by falsehood
iv. big picture: secular society in need of true confession, but not as degenerate as the West – source of hope
3. East vs West – False opposition: “Eurasia” vs. “Oceania” (a la Orwell). Two pincers of the kingdom of Antichrist.
a. West – the “Anglo-Zionist” empire of “liberal” (Judaeo- Masonic) nihilism plus radical Sunni Islam
b. East – Putin’s Russia, Red China, Shia Islam
Conclusion:The Lord is our only refuge! “Put not your trust in princes.”
Next class: The situation in the other patriarchates and national churches. Officialism and elderism, the saint factory, signs and wonders. How to choose a True Orthodox jurisdiction.
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17 December OS 2019 – Holy Prophet Daniel, Holy Three Youths Ananias, Azarias, and Misael, St. Dionysios of Zakynthos and Aegina, Holy New Martyr Deacon Avvakum of Serbia
The reading from the Apostolos for December 17th, the feast of the Holy Prophet Daniel and the Three Youths, is the conclusion of the great paean to the saints of the Old Testament from Hebrews 11.
Brethren: All the saints through faith subdued kingdoms, wrought righteousness, obtained promises, stopped the mouths of lions, Quenched the violence of fire, escaped the edge of the sword, out of weakness were made strong, waxed valiant in fight, turned to flight the armies of the aliens. Women received their dead raised to life again: and others were tortured, not accepting deliverance; that they might obtain a better resurrection: And others had trial of cruel mockings and scourgings, yea, moreover of bonds and imprisonment: They were stoned, they were sawn asunder, were tempted, were slain with the sword: they wandered about in sheepskins and goatskins; being destitute, afflicted, tormented; (Of whom the world was not worthy:) they wandered in deserts, and in mountains, and in dens and caves of the earth. And these all, having obtained a good report through faith, received not the promise: God having provided some better thing for us, that they without us should not be made perfect. –Hebrews 11: 33-40
During this last period of the present Fast, which is an extended forefeast of the Feast of the Nativity, the Church holds up to us the example of the Old Testament saints on the two Sundays preceding the Nativity as well as on the Menaion feasts of several Old Testament prophets, most notably today’s saints: Prophet Daniel and the Three Youths Ananias, Azarias, and Misael. As we prepare to welcome the birth of the Christ mystically and liturgically, keeping vigil for His Second Advent at the end of history, it is well to remember those who kept watch for His First Advent at the midpoint of history by their heroic deeds of faith and hope.
When we feel alone in our Faith, we should recall that the Old Testament saints kept their Faith despite being always a tiny remnant of the chronically apostate Old Israel. When we are tempted to give up our Hope in eternal life, we should recall that the Old Testament saints kept up their Hope while knowing that at death, no matter how righteous and faithful they had been in life, they would go down into Hades. When we feel powerless, we should recall that within us lies the infinite power of baptismal grace, while the Old Testament saints had not this help. When we lose historical perspective and feel trapped in our present circumstances, we should recall century by century, event by event, and saint by saint, all the glorious history of the New Testament Church of the past 2,000 years – and then remember that the Old Testament righteous had far fewer examples in their past to encourage them. Yet they persevered, strong in their hope, for they believed that God was faithful to His promise.
God has indeed “…provided some better thing for us…”: salvation by Jesus Christ our Lord, Who raised the souls of the righteous of the Old Testament from Hades on that first Great Saturday and perfected them with us by the grace for which they had longed and in which they had hoped.
A good exercise for today would be to re-read (or read!) the Book of Daniel Make sure to read the Septuagint version, which contains important prophetic and Christological sections cut out by the medieval rabbis whose Masoretic text was unfortunately accepted as normative by the Protestants who gave us most of the existing English translations. If you do not own a translation of the Septuagint (or a King James with “Apocrypha” or a Douay-Rheims translation of the Vulgate), you can read a translation of the Septuagint version of Daniel online at http://ecmarsh.com/lxx/Daniel/index.htm
Wherefore seeing we also are compassed about with so great a cloud of witnesses, let us lay aside every weight, and the sin which doth so easily beset us, and let us run with patience the race that is set before us, Looking unto Jesus the author and finisher of our faith; who for the joy that was set before him endured the cross, despising the shame, and is set down at the right hand of the throne of God. – Hebrews 12:1-2
Amen! Holy Prophet Daniel, Holy Three Youths, and all ye righteous of the Old Testament, pray to God for us!
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14 December OS 2019 – Friday of the Thirteenth Week of St. Luke; Ss. Thyrsos, Levkios, and Kallinikos, Martyrs; Ss. Philemon, Apollonios, Arrianos, and Companions, Martyrs
Today’s Gospel reading in the daily cycle is Mark 9:33-41 –
At that time, Jesus came to Capernaum: and being in the house he asked them, What was it that ye disputed among yourselves by the way? But they held their peace: for by the way they had disputed among themselves, who should be the greatest. And he sat down, and called the twelve, and saith unto them, If any man desire to be first, the same shall be last of all, and servant of all. And he took a child, and set him in the midst of them: and when he had taken him in his arms, he said unto them, Whosoever shall receive one of such children in my name, receiveth me: and whosoever shall receive me, receiveth not me, but him that sent me. And John answered him, saying, Master, we saw one casting out devils in thy name, and he followeth not us: and we forbad him, because he followeth not us. But Jesus said, Forbid him not: for there is no man which shall do a miracle in my name, that can lightly speak evil of me. For he that is not against us is on our part. For whosoever shall give you a cup of water to drink in my name, because ye belong to Christ, verily I say unto you, he shall not lose his reward.
The commentary of St. Theophan the Recluse on this teaching of the Lord, that we should be humble and childlike, provides such good advice for our current situation, that I thought I would reproduce it in full:
The Savior sets forth a child as a model of faith and life. Simplicity of faith gives birth to simplicity of life. From both of these comes an exemplary moral system. If you let philosophizing in, it will produce disorder within, and under the appearance of a better arrangement of things, it will throw one’s entire life into disorder. Philosophizing alway cries, ‘This is not right; that’s not right. Let me arrange everything in a new way; the old is worthless, boring.’ But it has never yet, in any place, arranged anything good; it only throws things into confusion. The mind should obey what is commanded by the Lord. True, the mind is called ‘the king in the head’; however, this king is not given legislative power, only executive power. As soon as it starts making laws, it piles up who-knows-what. Moral, religious, worldly, and political orders are thrown into confusion, and everything turns upside down. It is a great misfortune for society when its mind is given freedom to soar, with not restraint by divine Truth! This is God’s wrath [i.e., it brings upon us God’s wrath]. About this it is said, ‘Hide thyself for a little season, until the anger of the Lord hath passed away (Esaias 26:20).’ During this apex of intellectual willfulness it is best to seek shelter in simplicity of faith. Just as during a storm it is better to sit at home and not step out in arrogance to fight with it, so during a time of stormy trust in one’s own thoughts it is better not to enter into battle with it, or to seize the weapons of philosophizing in order to resist it. Simplicity of faith is stronger than philosophizing; clothe yourself in it, as in armor, and you will keep your balance. – Thoughts for Each Day of the Year, pp. 281-282
Here the saint addresses two arenas of conflict, society and the believer’s inner life. They mirror each other. Just as, when society leaves off trusting in God’s Law and makes new theories, it throws itself into chaos, so also, when the Orthodox believer leaves the narrow path of the Bible and the Fathers, and tries to “figure everything out” with his “brain,” he becomes confused and throws his mind, and therefore his life, into chaos. We learned a long time ago that Holy Tradition does not violate our reason. That should be enough to satisfy us. Nowadays we just need to live and not keep re-inventing the wheel.
Mainstream life today is an insane asylum, and today most Orthodox people mostly act like most everyone else, and because this entails bad habits of mind and action, they are exhausted like everyone else, leading fragmented and distracted lives that do not make sense. It is no wonder that a brutal, crude, and irrational ideology like Islam, and myriad strange cults, now spread like cancer in formerly Christian societies, for, having rejected the Truth, people are desperate for someone to tell them what to do, desperate for something simple – no matter how wrong – to hold onto. In the name of freedom, they have renounced obedience to the lovely simplicity of the Gospel that elevates the mind and frees the will for the good, that governs everything in our inner and outer lives with harmonious order and happiness. So now, terrified by the chaos they have created, they run to enslave themselves to disgusting and demonic revelations that crush the mind and paralyze the will. Orthodox people are not immune.
The simple answer that St. Theophan offers is to “hide a little while,” as the Prophet Esaias cries to us daily in the Fifth Ode of Matins. Let us enclose our minds, with a firm act of will, in the words of Holy Scripture, daily prayer, and the Offices of the Church. First, the emotions are calmed. Then the mind becomes clear. Finally, the mind and heart unite in a whole vision of reality that makes complete sense, though much necessarily remains in mystery, with which we are content. This is a firm basis for daily life.
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