Sunday, March 15, 2026

The Patriarch is NOT our Pope

Archimandrite Auxentios

[Now Bishop of Etna and Portland]



"A definition of Orthodoxy which posits anything but the absolute equality of Bishops, be they Popes, Patriarchs, Archbishops, or whatever, is a definition of precisely what Orthodoxy is not. Where a right-believing Bishop with Apostolic Succession is found, there and there alone is Orthodoxy found." With these blunt words my former mentor, Father Florovsky, distinguished Orthodoxy from papism. So fundamental is this idea to the ecclesiology of our Church that the Oecumenical Patriarch has always been careful to limit the honor due his great See by calling himself the "first among equals." Orthodoxy is decidedly non-papist.

Some time ago, I was speaking to a Uniate convert to Orthodoxy. I commented to him that, while I respected his decision to convert to the Orthodox Church, I had some serious reservations about the abuse of economy by which his reception into the Church was accomplished. Understandably, he had no grasp of the issue which I was addressing, but defended what he mistakenly thought was a challenge to the validity of his conversion by saying, "Well, we are recognized by the Patriarch of Constantinople." I was a bit surprised at this naive response. It highlights what a disservice the modernist Orthodox Churches in this country are doing to converts.

This poor man has, in being misguided about the actual beliefs of the Orthodox Church, come to believe that, in converting to Orthodoxy, he traded a Pope for a Patriarch. As I have noted, this is not the case. The Pope being inerrant with regard to matters of faith, his approval insures one's good standing in the Latin Church. A Patriarch, however, is just a Bishop. If he should err, as he can, he and those who follow him collapse in the Faith. His approval of any act or issue has, as such, no significance whatever outside his fidelity to Holy Tradition. And even then, that approval has no more authoritative weight than the approval of any other, true-believing Orthodox Bishop.

In what is unfortunately an unnecessarily polemical and at times uncharitable little volume, the third chapter of Alexander Kalomiros' Against False Union (tr. George Gabriel; Boston, MA, 1967) constitutes a succinct and brilliant statement with regard to authority in the Orthodox Church: "A local Orthodox church[,] regardless of her size or the number of her faithful[,] is by herself alone, independently of all the others, catholic. ...She has all the grace and truth. ...She is the one flock, and the bishop is her shepherd, the image of Christ, the one Shepherd" (p. 54).

Again, as Father Florovsky emphatically states, the Orthodox Church exists where there is a right- believing Bishop in Apostolic Succession. The criterion of validity in Orthodoxy is focused on that right-believing Bishop, not on a Pope or on some papist notion of Church authority. In fact, defending the validity of one's Orthodoxy by adherence to a Patriarch or some special Church "authority," as opposed to right belief and Holy Tradition, can lead to error.

Many zealots on Mt. Athos, for example, will not commemorate the Patriarch of Constantinople. Because of his uncanonical relations with the Roman Papacy and his unfounded claims to leadership in the Orthodox world, these zealots reckon commemoration a participation in his deviation from the Faith. Even many of those who do commemorate the Patriarch speak of his actions as a great scandal to the Faithful and shun his counsel. Thus, a papist-like fidelity to the present Patriarch of Constantinople risks error.

The papism which has appeared in Orthodoxy since the calendar change in 1924 has misled many converts in the West. This innovation, Kalomiros notes, is expressed in titles such as "Archbishop of All Greece," or "Archbishop of North and South America," or, as it is often said of the Patriarch of Constantinople, "leader of Orthodoxy." "All [of] these are manifestations," he insightfully writes, "of the same worldly spirit, of the same thirst for worldly power, and belong to the same tendencies which characterize the world today.

"...The Orthodox people must become conscious of the fact that they owe no obedience to a bishop, no matter how high a title he holds, when that bishop ceases being Orthodox and openly follows heretics with pretenses of 'unions' on 'equal terms.' On the contrary, they are obliged to depart from him and confess their Faith, because a bishop, even if he be patriarch or pope, ceases from being a bishop the moment he ceases being Orthodox" (p.61).

With all of the recent publicity about the "leader of world Orthodoxy," we would all do well to return to a study of the basic tenets of the Orthodox Faith and heed with great seriousness the errors which are being taught in the name of Orthodoxy! We are not a Patriarchal Church, a Church which has extended the prerogatives of papism beyond Rome to include a multiplicity of papal authorities. The head of the Orthodox Church is Jesus Christ. Through Apostolic Succession, every Orthodox Bishop, together with his flock, constitutes the fullness of the Church, to the extent that he and those with him adhere to the teachings of Christ, the Apostles, Scripture, the Holy Fathers, Holy Tradition, and the Canons of The Church.

Whenever anyone begins to teach, in the name of Orthodoxy, that spiritual authority resides in a Pope or Patriarch, he is initiating a movement that is essentially inimical to our Church's nature—even if he who teaches this is a Patriarch!

 

Source: Orthodox Tradition, Vol. VII (1990), No. 4, p. 4.

A Sermon on Freedom of Conscience

By Archbishop Ambrose (Klyucharev) of Kharkov and Okhtyrka (+1901),

On the Day of the Accession to the Throne of the Most Pious Sovereign Emperor Alexander II Nikolaevich, February 19, 1875, in the Great Dormition Cathedral in Moscow.

 

 

For why is my liberty judged by another man’s conscience?

…for why should my freedom be judged by another’s conscience? (1 Cor. 10:29)

 

One of the most important questions, which according to the needs of our time requires careful clarification, is the question of freedom of conscience.

We know that by the very attempt to begin explaining and resolving this question from the church pulpit, we arouse in many people perplexity and apprehension. Today, in Christian countries, it has become a political question, and therefore many may suppose that we are entering a sphere that does not belong to the word of the Church, or at least that we cannot be impartial in judging it. But in order to remove all misunderstandings, we must say that the question of freedom of conscience is first of all a moral question, just as conscience itself is the principal agent of the moral life. Therefore, even in order to see to what extent and from which sides it may enter the sphere of political questions, and whether any dangers threaten our moral life from its incorrect understanding and from erroneous methods in resolving it—even for this purpose we must return the question to its proper place and examine it in that sphere of concepts in which alone it can be resolved.

Let us say even more: this is precisely our question, belonging to the sphere of church teaching, because the very doctrine of freedom of conscience became known to the world only through divine revelation. The ancient pagan philosophers, with all their efforts, were unable even to conceive of that height of moral perfection where freedom of conscience begins for man; and the philosophers of modern times have only confused this teaching, as they have many other pure Christian concepts, by mixing them with ideas of a philosophical character. Therefore, with the full boldness of a clear consciousness of the truth, we affirm that in resolving the question of freedom of conscience, this highest manifestation of the true freedom of man, the first place must belong to the Orthodox Church. And whoever knows well the Orthodox Church and her spirit will share with us the conviction that she will never place anyone in a false or unclear moral or social position, provided only that we, the preachers of her teaching, faithfully follow her guidance and direction.

The chief difficulty in applying the Christian teaching on freedom of conscience to life today arises from the fact that many address demands to the ecclesiastical and civil authorities for freedom of life on the basis of the inviolability of conscience, proceeding from an incorrect understanding of this teaching. All such demands, despite the diversity of views and conclusions on which they are based, are reduced to one general proposition: “everyone has his own conscience, and therefore in all his actions he should be left to himself, provided that his actions do not violate the personal freedom of others or public order and security.” It is true that conscience is a sacred and inviolable possession of man as a rational and moral being; it is his chief guide in the striving for perfection along the path of truth and righteousness, and to compel people to act against conscience means to deprive them of their inner light and strength, to morally distort and corrupt them. In a general sense, or, as philosophers say, in an abstract and ideal conception of man as he ought to be, this is entirely correct. But we do not arrive at such a conclusion when we carefully observe man in the experience of real life. What could seem better than to allow people to proceed freely along the straight path toward the knowledge of truth, without restraining or hindering the independent development of their diverse intellectual powers and gifts by any external influence? Yet in reality it turns out that the greater part of them must be taught and guided all their lives on the path toward truth; because they themselves do not find this path, and do not even see or recognize it when it is clearly shown to them. What could be better than to give people freedom to exercise their liberty in independent activity according to the laws of divine and human righteousness, without any intervention of external guides, and simply to rejoice at the manifestation in them of the particular perfections of human nature proper to each person? But in reality, it turns out that they sometimes forget and trample upon these laws to such a degree that it becomes necessary to bind them and confine them in prisons. If such is man in relation to the knowledge of truth and to free activity according to the laws of righteousness, can he be otherwise in his conscience, which is the expression of the general inner state and direction of a person and, so to speak, the conclusion drawn from the whole of his activity? Obviously, he cannot.

Let us explain these thoughts in greater detail. What is conscience? It is called the law of God impressed upon the soul of man, the inner witness of our life, the inseparable judge of our thoughts and deeds, and the like. All these expressions, though correct, only comparatively describe the various actions and states of our conscience. In a more precise definition, conscience is the inner feeling of peace and well-being which we experience when we observe the law, and the feeling of sorrow and suffering when we violate it. What law is meant here? That according to which we are created and by which we ought to live, that is, the law of God. This law of life, placed in the nature of every being, everywhere manifests the same effects: when it is observed, order and well-being are spread abroad; when it is violated, disorder and suffering appear. This is, so to speak, the conscience of all nature as a whole and of each creature separately. The difference with respect to various beings is that inanimate nature does not feel the action of this law in itself or upon itself; animals feel it, but do not understand it. Let us consider examples of the violation of the law. A plant does not develop into the form proper to it, but languishes and withers when the conditions necessary for its nourishment and existence are not maintained, yet it does not feel this. An animal in illness feels suffering (as does a man who lives only the life of an animal, for example in infancy or unconsciousness), but it does not understand either the cause of its suffering or the possibility of escape from its distressing condition. But man, when he fully possesses his powers in his inner spiritual life—for example when he loses innocence, violates the laws of honor, justice, or love for his neighbor—both suffers and at the same time understands why he suffers, how he has fallen into this state, what he felt before his fall, and thereby becomes convinced that in order to regain inner peace and contentment with himself he must necessarily emerge from this unnatural condition. It is clear that here the activity of properly human faculties enters in: rational self-judgment and free self-determination. Therefore, human conscience, like everything founded upon gradually rising free self-development, is subject to change; and because man may violate the law and fall into various errors and delusions, conscience is easily disturbed, shaken, darkened, and perverted. No one knows the various diseased states of the human conscience better than the holy Church. From her instruction, more than from any psychological investigations, we know that there is a coarse conscience, insensitive to the inner sufferings of the spirit even when grave crimes are committed; in such a state a person, like one who is dying and does not feel the destruction of his body, does not perceive the nearness of eternal ruin; or like a poor man accustomed to the stifling air of his dwelling, he breathes in his infected moral atmosphere without burden or revulsion. To such people applies the exhortation: “Awake, thou that sleepest, and arise from the dead” (Eph. 5:14). There is also a careless and negligent conscience, when a man, not watching over his thoughts and deeds, passes from small violations of the law to greater ones, and by mixing faults with crimes, ignoring rebukes, gradually becomes more deeply corrupted day by day, and, as Scripture says, “when he has come to the depth of evils, he becomes careless” (Prov. 18:3). There is, according to the Apostle Paul, the seared conscience of hypocrites (1 Tim. 4:2), when through habitual calculations of self-love, ambition, and greed, false teachings and false interpretations take the place of truth in a person’s mind, and the triumph of passion in the corrupted heart replaces the consolations of conscience. There is the conscience of literalists, who are more ready to forgive crimes than deviations from an external rite, as the Apostle Paul indicates when he says: “the letter kills, but the Spirit gives life” (2 Cor. 3:6). There is a deceitful conscience, when a person excuses and justifies his evil deeds with plausible pretexts. For deliverance from this vice the Church teaches even the ministers of the sacraments to pray: “Cleanse, O Lord, my mind and heart from an evil conscience.” There is a fanatical conscience, when a person, through a burning desire to spread the faith or to establish law and order, is ready to act by violent measures, forgetting the personal rights and freedoms of others; this the Apostle calls “zeal not according to knowledge” (Rom. 10:2). There is a servile conscience, when a person, oppressed by the power of sinful habits or passions, suffers inwardly, fears eternal condemnation, seeks a way out of his condition and does not find it. To this moral state applies the word of the Savior: “Whosoever commits sin is the servant of sin” (John 8:34). There is also a fearful conscience, when a person loses the calm and clear disposition of spirit, being troubled by fear of condemnation for the inevitable sins of human weakness. Here we have indicated only the principal forms of diseased states of conscience. In real life these defects of conscience in our souls are so united, intertwined, and assume such diverse shades and degrees of strength that it is impossible either to trace them all or to describe them in detail. Yet even in this general outline each of us, if he carefully examines himself, will find much that applies to himself as well, that constitutes his own inner illness. Reflecting in this way upon people who are morally sick and corrupted—as we all are more or less—what freedom of conscience could we wish for them? Permission to proclaim aloud what they still inwardly feel ashamed of? To expose before everyone what they carefully conceal? To do openly and before all what, because of the remnants of conscience, is still done within four walls and in the darkness of night? Or, on the other hand, should we allow people freedom, to the harm of others, to do what schemers, hypocrites under various names, unrestrained fanatics, shameless debauchees, thieves, and robbers do according to their conscience? But would this not mean to throw wide open the doors to the immeasurable quantity of evil hidden in human hearts, and permit it to burst forth without restraint—to the scandal and corruption of the innocent and inexperienced, to the temptation of the wavering, to the weakening of those who patiently labor in works of goodness and honor? Clearly, this would not be freedom of conscience, but the release of men from the supervision and judgment of conscience, or in other words the trampling down and destruction of conscience itself.

We shall be told: “But who understands freedom of conscience in such a way? This is an obvious absurdity.” We agree. Yet precisely this absurdity, or inner falsehood, concealed by various sophisms, lies within the modern notion of freedom of conscience that we mentioned at the beginning. “Allow everyone to act according to his own conscience, since conscience is sacred and inviolable.” What does this mean? It means: entrust the moral order of society to the personal conscience of each individual—and first of all to our conscience, to the conscience that we, the preachers of new teachings, possess. But we have the right to say to them: first show us what sort of conscience you have, so that we may know whether it can be trusted. There is a universal human conscience, upon which the universal laws of life are established, expressed in the writings, traditions, rules, and customs of entire nations. Does our personal conscience perhaps contain something diseased, distorted, or deformed? There is also a Christian conscience, guided by divine laws. How does your conscience relate to these holy and immutable laws of morality, which the better part of humanity honors, including the Orthodox Church? Does your conscience, in relation to them, perhaps contain something offensive, hostile, or destructive?

It is impossible to discuss matters according to the laws of any religion with the materialists and their followers, when they reject every religion. They can be judged only by the universal human conscience and by historical conscience. From their actions we shall take those which fall under such judgment. When a man who is married seduces an innocent maiden, and, abandoning his wife and children, enters with her into open cohabitation, by what conscience does he do this? When a wife says to her husband: “I love another; release me quietly, give me all or half of the children, and return my dowry or assign me suitable maintenance from your property,” from what conscience does such a proposal arise? When the husband, respecting this supposed sanctity of his wife’s feeling, himself delivers her into the hands of another, rewards her, and even attends the celebration of the new marriage, not hiding it even from his children—by what conscience does he act? Not by a free conscience, but by a conscience stupefied by sensuality, a conscience deaf to every prompting of shame, moral propriety, parental love, and sound reason, according to which even nations scarcely emerging from ignorance place true family happiness and the firm foundations of upbringing and public well-being in monogamy. They say: “We do not restrict the personal freedom of others and do not produce public disorder.” But the whole world knows that for moral freedom temptations and bad examples present greater dangers than external constraint and restraint; that family disorders are the seeds of every kind of social disorder and calamity. It is time, in warning Christian families, to set the seal not only of social condemnation, but also of ecclesiastical condemnation, upon these preachers of debauchery under the name of freedom of conscience.

What, then, does true freedom of conscience consist in? Not in external rights and advantages—social and political—but in the inner liberation of the spirit from all obstacles to the observance of the law that are encountered in the corrupted human nature; and then in the consciousness of righteousness, in the undisturbed feeling of inner peace and well-being, and in the right to relate to the prescriptions of ritual law according to a higher understanding of the laws and purposes of morality.

We have said that the teaching on freedom of conscience is properly a Christian teaching, and therefore its explanation must be sought in the sphere of Christian truths and church institutions. In the Church we know two kinds of laws: moral laws, the establishment of which in the life and activity of the spirit is the goal of all human labors and efforts; and ritual laws, or educational laws, which assist a person in mastering all his moral powers in order to observe the former. The holy Apostle Paul calls the ritual law of the Old Testament, which imposed upon the members of the Old Testament Church strict rules concerning bodily purity, sacrifices, feasts, distinctions of food, a tutor unto Christ (Gal. 3:24), that is, an educator or guide to Christ. The ritual laws of the New Testament Church have the same significance, such as the times of divine services, feasts, fasts, rules concerning preparation for Communion, domestic prayer, and other religious exercises. Their purpose is to accustom Christians, through experience or moral instruction, to the gathering of the mind, the discernment of thoughts and movements of the heart, self-control and patience in the struggle with the passions of the flesh, self-denial in works of charity, and the perception of higher influences from the spiritual world, which awaken in our soul the striving for a higher and eternal life. In these exercises pure conceptions of good and evil, of the duties of man, of true perfection, and of the means of correcting our innate corruption are continually instilled. Here the natural promptings of conscience are clarified, corrected, and strengthened, so that the divine law is both called forth from the soul itself as something innate, and at the same time introduced into us from without as divinely revealed and positive, and from both together there is formed a complete and clear knowledge and awareness of the will of God concerning man. All this is accomplished under the living influence of the pastors and teachers of the Church, where the human conscience is protected by the veil of profound secrecy, where a person is persuaded but not compelled to moral struggles, where external exercises visible from outside pass into inner and invisible labor before the eyes of God, where the morally sick are lovingly reproved and healed, but not insulted or humiliated. But the inner power, essence, and soul of all these laws and exercises are the holy mysteries (sacraments), in which, through the power of the sacrificial Cross of the Redeemer, the grace of God is communicated to the Christian—grace that regenerates our corrupted nature, assists us, cleanses and sanctifies us. For only the blood of Christ, according to the teaching of the Apostle, cleanses our conscience from dead works (Heb. 9:14) and frees us from an evil conscience (Heb. 10:22). “If the Son therefore shall make you free,” says the Lord, “you shall be free indeed.” (John 8:36).

It is evident that these ordinances, which are difficult for beginners, become easier for those who make progress, and almost imperceptible—losing, as it were, their obligatory force—for perfect Christians. For the one to whom it is the same, like the Apostle Paul, to endure hunger or to be filled, to abound or to suffer need (Phil. 4:12), the fasts, which are so burdensome for us, are scarcely noticeable; for the one who prays without ceasing (1 Thess. 5:17), prolonged services are not difficult; for the one who walks in the Spirit (Gal. 5:16), the pleasures of the flesh—delicious foods, costly wines, feasts, spectacles, and the like—are not tempting. In general, whoever has introduced into his nature, as a need and necessity, the fulfillment of the moral law, for him the means that only lead toward this perfection lose their force. “He who has,” says the holy Apostle Paul, “the fruits of the Spirit: love, joy, peace, longsuffering, goodness, mercy, faith, meekness, temperance—against such there is no law” (Gal. 5:23). “The law is not made for a righteous man, but for the lawless” (1 Tim. 1:9). “If you are led by the Spirit, you are not under the law” (Gal. 5:18). See upon what moral height the banner of freedom of conscience is raised! Here a man says: “All things are lawful for me” (1 Cor. 10:23), because he knows that he will not only refrain from doing anything harmful or unlawful, but will not even desire it. He says: “I can do all things through Jesus Christ who strengthens me” (Phil. 4:13), because he feels within himself the abundance of moral strength proven by struggle and replenished by the grace of God. He says: “Why should my liberty be judged by another’s conscience?” (1 Cor. 10:29), because he bears within himself the Spirit of God, which illumines his conscience (Rom. 9:1). What external signs of freedom, what rights, can ecclesiastical authority grant to such people? The Church herself venerates them as her teachers, guides, examples, and luminaries in the ecclesiastical firmament, whatever their rank may be—bishops, humble monks, slaves, or miners. And what rights of freedom of conscience can state authority give them? They desire none, because they already possess everything. They rejoice when the Church of God is not persecuted, but peacefully and freely accomplishes the great work of the salvation of mankind; yet they also endure persecutions with submission to the will of God that permits them, and afterwards exhort all Christians: “Submit yourselves to every human authority (whether of the same faith or of another) for the Lord’s sake” (1 Pet. 2:13); “servants, obey your masters not only for wrath, but also for conscience’ sake” (Rom. 13:5). Toward all authorities they give Christians one general rule, which protects them from every displeasure of authority: “Do you wish not to fear the authority? Do what is good” (Rom. 13:3). Happy is that Christian state in which such free fulfillers and zealots of the law do not become scarce! From them come servants of the fatherland who labor for it their whole life without thought of ranks or rewards; from them come incorruptible judges, truthful and fearless advisers to the sovereign; from them in the armies are formed thunderous legions.

See how, from this height, the false direction of those Christians is clearly illuminated who demand freedom of conscience for themselves while possessing and having established within themselves none of the moral qualities that constitute the essential features of that freedom. The holy Apostles foresaw that in Christian societies there would be abuses of this lofty teaching. The Apostle Peter, defining the relations of the early Christians precisely toward rulers or civil authorities—and indeed toward pagan ones—says to them: “For this is the will of God, that by doing good you may put to silence the ignorance of foolish men: as free, and not using your freedom as a cloak for evil, but as the servants of God” (1 Pet. 2:15–16). The Apostle Paul, on the other hand, warns: “You have been called to freedom, brethren; only do not use your freedom as an occasion for the flesh” (Gal. 5:13). In these two admonitions the two kinds of modern seekers of freedom in the name of conscience are precisely defined. Some demand that in Christian countries all measures of a religious character be removed from state institutions and laws that concern the education and preservation of public morality—such as the obligatory teaching of the Law of God in schools, the protection of Christian marriage, and the observance of church seasons requiring special reverence, and the like—on the grounds that everyone has the right to act according to his own conscience. Such a demand is a covering of evil or ill intent under the name of freedom. How can it harm the freedom of the Christian conscience to provide youth with sound and scientific knowledge of the Christian religion, to protect the purity of family life precisely from those unlawful unions of which we spoke earlier, or to warn the ignorant masses against drunkenness and disorder during sacred church seasons? These are aids, not obstacles, to the attainment of true freedom of conscience. But the seekers of freedom here are not concerned with conscience and its rights, but with the unhindered spread of their false and anti-Christian teachings. It is easy to disobey ecclesiastical authority and convenient to act to the detriment of the Church, but it is difficult to struggle against state authority. Here lies the true reason for their passionate attacks upon the protection of Christian morality provided by state legislation.

Another kind of abuse of the teaching on freedom of conscience, foretold by the Apostles, concerns the ritual or educational ordinances of the Church. Those guilty of this abuse are all those so-called educated people in our society who rise up against the strict regulations of the Orthodox Church. “Leave aside,” they say to us, “all your reminders about evening and morning services, about fasts and preparation for Communion; do not hinder us from attending theatres and concerts on the eve of feast days; we desire that theatres should be open even during the whole Great Lent, that even the number of your feast days should be reduced, because we need working hands for many necessary tasks, and so forth. Why this compulsion?” Here Christian freedom is turned into an occasion for indulging the flesh, and there is evident a complete misunderstanding that precisely in these church rules lies the path to freedom of conscience. The passion for bodily pleasures will always rebel against the rules of the Church, because the flesh submits to the spirit and its higher aspirations only with great difficulty. But the Orthodox Church knows no compulsion. In extreme cases she only renounces her disobedient children and separates them from herself. These lovers of pleasure are free to do what they wish, whatever their conscience permits. Yet it is regrettable that by such looseness toward the statutes of the Church they disturb the uniformity and order so important for the progress of Christian life; the younger generations become morally weakened, the simple people are scandalized, and the conscience of the zealots of Christian morality is troubled. Here lies a great danger of moral corruption—for the formerly unified and morally strong Russian people. True zealots of freedom of conscience do not act in this way: they are always the most strict observers of the Church’s statutes, and they use the right to depart from them, as we have said, only for higher moral purposes. Even in such cases they are careful that their freedom should not harm anyone, so that, as the Apostle Paul says, “their freedom may not become a stumbling block to the weak, lest through their higher knowledge the weak brother perish, for whom Christ died” (1 Cor. 8:9–11). In view of such dangers they say: “I will never eat meat again, lest I cause my brother to stumble” (1 Cor. 8:13).

Thus, freedom of conscience must be sought not in the sphere of earthly rights, but in the sphere of spiritual perfections. It must be expected not from state laws, but from our own moral labors and struggles, and it must be asked not of earthly kings and rulers, but of the Lord God.

In the sense of expanding rational freedom in social life, speak of the freedom of thought, the freedom of speech, the freedom of convictions, the freedom of confessions, but not of freedom of conscience. All these kinds of freedom may only be paths to freedom of conscience, but it itself stands above them. “Where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is freedom” (2 Cor. 3:17). Amen.

 

Russian source: https://azbyka.ru/otechnik/Amvrosij_Klucharev/slovo-o-svobode-sovesti/

Documents on the Invalid Apostolic Succession of the “Genuine Orthodox Church of America”

The Synod of Bishops of the GOCA, presided over by “Archbishop Gregory of Denver,” in 2008:

https://web.archive.org/web/20080704080941/http://www.gocamerica.org/bishops.shtml

“Timeline” of the reception of “His Eminence, Archbishop Ambrose (Moran-Dolgorouky) of New York City and New York State,” previously posted on the official website of the GOCA:

https://drive.google.com/file/d/1kBBxul66723LDAyTwlub3RwPVPP2Uwgb/view?usp=sharing

An independent report from clergy of the “Society of Saint Pius X,” a traditionalist Roman Catholic priestly fraternity, conducted after “Archbishop Ambrose” disassociated from the GOCA and was attempting to reassociate with Latins, demonstrating Ambrose was, in fact, a dubious Uniate, and not Orthodox at all:

https://www.stmaryskssspxmc.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/10/Ambrose-Moran-Findings.pdf

Below: the Uniate bishop Ambrose posing with Josyf Cardinal Slipyj (+1984), primate of the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church. The handwriting at the bottom of the photograph belongs to Ambrose himself.

 

A Foretaste of Pascha: The emblem of Christ’s victory over suffering and death

Archimandrite Placide (Deseille) (+2018)

 

 

On this Sunday, which marks the middle of Great Lent, the midpoint of our journey toward Pascha, the Church invites us to venerate the Precious Cross.

The Cross thus appears within the period of fasting as a foretaste, we may say, of Pascha. For the Cross does not signify only suffering and death, but on the contrary: above all, victory over suffering and death.

A few days ago, I received a letter from someone who informed me that he had moved away from Christianity, because, as he wrote, Christianity constantly speaks about trials, death, and tears, whereas he was seeking something more joyful, more peaceful.

No, it is not Christianity that brought suffering and death into the world; sin did that. Pain and death are consequences of sin, of man’s separation from God, Who is the Source of Life. What Christ brought us is the opposite: the victory over pain and death. Certainly, He did not abolish them immediately; Christ came to conquer them by reversing their meaning. From being signs of man’s separation from God and of men from one another, from a source of opposition and hatred, He made them signs of love toward the Father and toward His brethren.

At that moment, He introduced into suffering and death the seed of the Resurrection, that seed which would destroy them and would cause Eternal Life to triumph definitively.

In this light of the Resurrection, we must contemplate the Mystery of the Cross. The Cross of Christ is no longer merely an instrument of torture, and the great iconographers always tried to make visible—within the very suffering of Christ upon the Cross—the Light of the Resurrection and the Peace, which are already present on the Cross.

Those crosses that we see at the intersections of our roads, which we find in certain regions at the corner of every farm, this Cross is the emblem of Christ’s victory over suffering and death.

But also in our own life, our own painful hardships, our own trials—if we are able to live them within the Light of Christ, then they too become instruments of victory. When we read in the Lives of the Saints the torments they endured, we see how their spirit was not at all gloomy, but on the contrary how they already lived, through their very trial itself, the victory of Christ over death, that triumph which we celebrate on the day of Pascha.

And if, while reading the Lives of certain ascetics, we are astonished and perhaps even frightened by the hardships they imposed upon themselves, we should know that it was not some morbid attraction to suffering that led them, but rather the opposite; through their suffering they perceived precisely the presence of the victorious love of Christ, the love that was destined to triumph over suffering and death. They understood that suffering would allow them to uproot their egoism, that egoism which always focuses on ourselves and whispers to us that we are the center of the world. Suffering would allow them to turn themselves entirely toward God and toward their brethren.

Thus, we must live through our inevitable trials, which we shall certainly encounter in our earthly life. But we must have a living faith in the victory of Christ. We must rely upon this faith, knowing how to transform all our sufferings and trials into instruments of victory, already transfiguring them by this love of Christ, by the victorious power of the Resurrection.

Then we shall truly be Christians, with all the power that the word contains. Then we shall truly be children of the heavenly Father, bearing the image of His Christ, through the power of the Holy Spirit.

To these three divine Persons, the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit, be all glory unto the ages of ages. Amen.

 

Greek source: https://www.imoph.org/pdfs/2026/03/15/20260315aKyr-Stayr.pdf

 

 

On the ROCOR/MP Union: Lessons of the Past and Challenges of the Present

Archpriest Valery Alexeev | June 27 / July 10, 2007

Holy Trinity Russian Orthodox Church, Astoria, New York

 

 

When the negotiations of the ROCOR with the MP began, in certain theological articles that called into question the method of these negotiations, a sinister word appeared, wounding the historical memory: unia. Let us recall that unia means a union in which one side, in its own interests, absorbs the other.

Everyone who is familiar with the history of the unions (we mean the unions that were concluded between a Local Orthodox Church or its region and Roman Catholicism) knows that these unions were accompanied by betrayal of Orthodoxy, violations of dogmatic principles and the holy canons, hostility, hatred, hierarchical arbitrariness, persecutions of the confessors of Orthodoxy, the arbitrariness of “outsiders,” bloodshed, martyrdom: the unions foretold evil!

What then occurred on May 4/17 of the current year [2007], on the feast of the Ascension of the Lord, in the Moscow Cathedral of Christ the Savior? Did all remain in the status of witnesses of Christ, to which the apostolic and evangelical readings of this feast call us, or did some, in the ongoing universal judicial process—for now is the judgment of this world (John 12:31)—withdraw from their testimony?

It is known that the canonical law of the Orthodox Church does not know such a definition of falling away from the Church as unia; [1] the unions arose already after the Ecumenical and Local Councils of the first millennium after Christ, but it does know such a form of preserving ecclesiastical unity as a canonical and Eucharistic rupture, [2] “walling-off,” or “separation.” [3] St. Basil the Great, in his first canonical rule, calls, in agreement with the ancients, three forms of falling away from the purity of Orthodoxy: heresy (false teaching), schism (a division), and parasynagogue (an unlawful assembly). As we see in the recent history of the Universal Church, many Local Churches accept, assimilate, retain, and develop within themselves signs of heresy (the acceptance of new heretical doctrines and theories), schism, or self-willed action (the usurpation of ecclesiastical authority), which can be healed by a Local Council of the Church afflicted by these maladies. Let us note that heretically-minded Churches, or heretical Confessions that have completely fallen away from the Church, always strive to attach to themselves and subject to themselves those Local Churches or ecclesiastical regions that remain in dogmatic and ecclesiological purity, through unions, or unias, the cornerstone of which is always a confessional compromise or economia, [4] which, as we shall see below, ought not to occur.

The Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia, passing through its complex history, is well acquainted with such phenomena as schism (a division) or parasynagogue (an unlawful assembly). Metropolitan Laurus, in his message to the participants of the extraordinary congress of the Sydney and Australian–New Zealand Diocese, wrote: “I would like to remind everyone that at the present moment the discussion is not about ‘joining,’ ‘merging,’ or ‘union’ with the Moscow Patriarchate, but about the reconciliation of the two parts of the Russian Orthodox Church.” If, however, we dare to give an evaluation of the phenomenon and call it—“conciliatory communion passing into unification” of a part of the ROCOR with the MP—the name unia, it is necessary for us to examine its nature in general as a historically anti-ecclesiastical phenomenon and to clarify what actually occurred: reconciliation through Eucharistic communion, unification on the basis of unanimity of mind, or self-liquidation on the basis of unconditional capitulation (let us note that capitulation is surrender into captivity, the surrender of positions, subordination, the renunciation of one’s ideals, an attempt at survival), that is—captivity.

Let us give an example: the Moscow Patriarchate, and almost all the other Local Orthodox Churches, have already reconciled themselves with the Roman Catholic Confession, declared it their Sister Church (“Balamand”), and recognized the Monophysite Confessions as Eastern Orthodox (Chambésy). Orthodox and Catholic bishops, as yet, do not openly receive communion together, although certain cases of joint Eucharistic communion are known; [5] but they already pray together, and Catholic laymen, without converting to Orthodoxy, receive communion in Orthodox churches in Russia.

This, indeed, is reconciliation, with the introduction of gradual Eucharistic communion, but, for now, it is still not full unification, and not a complete unia. Let us note that the ROCOR will now also have to receive Roman Catholics no longer through the sacrament of Baptism and to admit them to Holy Communion. According to the Act that was signed, the ROCOR must present the candidacies of its bishops for approval to the Patriarch; it must receive Holy Myron from him. And it will now also be necessary to concelebrate not only with the Serbs-ecumenists, but also with other ecumenical Churches—the new-calendarists and the new-paschalists… This is not reconciliation, but unia!

But for the moment, let us consider the lessons of the past.

The first historical lesson is the Union of Ferrara-Florence of 1439. It is known that the episcopate, headed by the Patriarch of Constantinople Metrophanes, and afterwards by Patriarch Gregory Mammas, at this council betrayed Orthodoxy and accepted the Roman Catholic dogmas. And only one hierarch—St. Mark of Ephesus, who did not sign the conciliar decrees—remained Orthodox, broke his canonical and Eucharistic relations with the heretically-minded uniates, that is, he acted according to the second half of the 15th canon of the First-Second Council: “and he did not cut off the unity of the Church by a schism, but rather hastened to guard the Church from schism and division.” [6]

Thus, according to dogmatic principles, “Union [of separated Churches, or regions of the Church, Archp. V.A.] is possible only on the basis of one, single dogmatics (…), for dogmatics is the foundation, the skeleton upon which the whole Body of the Church rests. Remove this firm, integral dogmatics, and the Church will cease to be the Church. The presence of two different dogmatic principles within the same Church, or some compromise of two opposing dogmatic principles, is an absurdity which will cost the Church its destruction.” [7]

In this case the Patriarchate of Constantinople entered into a compromise with the Roman Catholics and accepted the Latin doctrines; but let us also remember the following: “In Ferrara, the principal motive of almost all the Greeks was political…” [8] How close this is to our own time!

Let us therefore trace the history of this union. In April 1438 a commission was formed from representatives of the Orthodox and the Roman Catholics, which was entrusted to clarify the points of disagreement, examine them, and indicate the path toward the conclusion of a union. These proceedings did not pass entirely smoothly, and the Orthodox did not agree on questions concerning the Latin dogmas. Concerning the fruitlessness of these disputations, St. Mark of Ephesus wrote: “To say this seemed like singing to deaf ears, or boiling a stone, or sowing upon stone, or writing upon water, or something similar that is said in proverbs regarding the impossible.” [9]

And nevertheless, certain members of the Orthodox delegation spoke in favor of accepting the Latin dogmas, sought a modus unionis, and “began to work out certain formulas by which they might unite with them, representing a certain compromise (…) as though a kind of boot fitting both one foot and the other.” [10] In the end there took place the promulgation—the solemn proclamation—of the union.

St. Mark of Ephesus did not follow this path. He “did not permit any compromise in matters of faith. They cried to Mark: ‘Find for us a way out, an economia.’ Mark replied: ‘Matters of faith do not admit economia. It is the same as saying: cut off your head and go wherever you wish.’ ‘Never, O man, are the things that pertain to the Church resolved through compromises.’” [11]

But the zealots of Orthodoxy gathered around St. Mark… “Yet it was not the mighty of this world who gathered around him. The episcopate, headed by Patriarch Metrophanes and afterwards by Patriarch Gregory Mammas, was in the hands of the Uniates; we do not hear a single name of a bishop among the supporters of St. Mark of Ephesus, not one high-ranking person, whether at the court of the Emperor or of the patriarch. But the army of St. Mark was numerous: it consisted of monks, first of all the monks of Athos; it consisted of presbyters, often rural and unknown, of whom the sources say ‘a certain presbyter’; it consisted of deacons; it consisted of the little ones of this world.” [12]

St. Mark was not broken either by persecutions, nor by imprisonment in the fortress of Mundros, nor by a severe cancerous illness. “Therefore, brethren, flee from them and from communion with them; for they are ‘false apostles, deceitful workers, transforming themselves into the Apostles of Christ. …Beware of evil workers, beware of the mutilation.’” [13]

In a letter to Hieromonk Theophanes he wrote: “Therefore, you also, brethren, flee from communion with those with whom one ought not to have it, and from the commemoration of those whom it is not fitting to commemorate (liturgically)”; [14] (…) “…for this means to mix what cannot be mixed; but they must remain completely separated from us until God grants correction and peace to His Church.” [15]

The Union of Ferrara–Florence did not endure. The Orthodox hierarchy was restored and a First Hierarch of the Church of Constantinople was elected.

More than a hundred years passed, and a new union stirred the life of the Orthodox Church. This union received the name Brest. Like the Florentine union, the Union of Brest had a political background. “Being the most reliable means of assimilation, of the Polonization of the Orthodox population of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, it was intended to strengthen the political foundation of the Union of Lublin” [16]—that is, the political union of 1569 that united Poland and Lithuania into the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth.

The bishops were led to the union not by conviction in the truth—asserts the researcher of this period of Church history—not by ideological or religious motives, but by concern that their cathedras, villages and estates, their places in the senate and the diet, and equality in rights with the Catholic bishops should be preserved for them.

In contrast to the Union of Ferrara–Florence, which was conducted through theological disputations, “the preparation of the Orthodox Church in Poland for union with Rome was carried out in an atmosphere of secrecy, observed both by the bishops and by the government”; [17] “…the question of the union was discussed not at the regular councils of bishops, at which clergy and laity were present, but at secret, ‘pokutnye’ (that is, ‘in corners’) gatherings.” [18]

Even before the council that was to decide the question of the union, Metropolitan Michael (Rogoza) and the bishops of Vladimir, Lutsk, and Pinsk, together with the archimandrite of Kobrin, Jonah (Gogol), signed the pope’s letter, thereby expressing their agreement to accept the union; and in December 1595 the bishops Hypatius (Potsei) and Cyril (Terletsky), at an audience with Pope Clement VIII, completely betrayed Orthodoxy.

In June 1595 the protector of Orthodoxy, Prince Konstantin Ostrozhsky, wrote in his proclamation: “…In the present times, by the evil cunning of the wicked devil, the very chief leaders of our true faith, having been seduced by the glory of this world and darkened by the darkness of sensual pleasure, our supposed shepherds, the metropolitan with the bishops… secretly agreed among themselves, the accursed ones… to tear away the pious Christians of this region without their knowledge and to cast them with themselves into destruction, as their own most secret writings declare. Having learned with certainty about such apostates and manifest betrayers of the Church of Christ, I inform all of you of them, as beloved brethren in Christ, and I desire together with you to stand united against the enemies of our salvation, so that with the help of God and your zealous effort they themselves may fall into the nets which they secretly prepared for us… What benefit can we have from them? Instead of being the light of the world, they have become darkness and a stumbling block for all.” [19]

The Council of Brest, which took place in 1596, became divided. The defenders of Orthodoxy, among whom were representatives of the Patriarchates of Constantinople and Alexandria, resolved: to deprive the apostates of their episcopal cathedras, not to permit the conclusion of the union, and strictly to adhere to the Julian calendar. The apostates from Orthodoxy, for their part, issued an act and a conciliar charter of union (unia) with Rome, and they anathematized the Orthodox clergy.

Now let us summarize. “The union was the work of bishops who acted in separation from the church people, without their free and conciliar agreement and counsel… At the same time, these Uniate bishops considered their submission to Roman authority and jurisdiction to be a ‘union of the Churches,’ while the resistance of the people they regarded as canonical arbitrariness and rebellion… The Orthodox, on the contrary, saw in this disobedience and in this inevitable anti-hierarchical struggle only the fulfillment of their Christian duty, the duty of faithfulness and faith. The struggle against the union was above all a manifestation of the conciliar consciousness of the church people” [20]—that is, reception.

Let us note that the idea of the unification of the two parts of the Russian Orthodox Church, which became separated after certain well-known historical events, as many now say, is entirely natural and corresponds to the evangelical principle: “that they may all be one, as We are” (John 17:11).

Here, first of all, I will express an opinion concerning such a concept or definition as “a part of the Church.” Canonical law does not know such a term or definition. In ecclesiastical relations such a definition has developed as:

1. The Mother Church, or the Kyriarchal Church, in relation to its canonical regions or daughter jurisdictions, that is, Autonomous Churches, to which the Mother Church has granted the rights of autonomy, or the rights of broad autonomy differing little from autocephaly, or autocephaly itself.

2. Two regions (or jurisdictions) of one historically formed Church that are in canonical separation for various reasons, which, with dogmatic unanimity, may unite.

3. The Mother Church, or a church region, and a schismatic society that has fallen away from it, which through repentance may join the Mother Church. But the designation of a canonical jurisdiction as a “part” of the Church is incorrect, for it closely touches upon the ecumenical term “branch,” condemned as a heresy, the so-called “branch theory.” [21] The canonical definition is a church region. [22]

Let us note that the official negotiations between the MP and ROCOR were preceded by numerous visits of the higher hierarchy and clergy of ROCOR to the Fatherland, and from the Fatherland to the Council of Bishops by high officials of the Russian Federation, in which political motives are clearly visible: as in Ferrara, and as in Brest, that is, motives characteristic not of union but of unia. State officials do not have the right to intrude into the sphere of ecclesiastical relations.

By concluding the Union of Ferrara–Florence, Emperor John Palaiologos hoped to save the capital of the empire from the Turks; the hierarchy, which received from the pope a “considerable sum,” [23] and had reached the point where “the monetary factor played no small role in the matter of the Union,” [24] thought to preserve their cathedras—that is, their privileges—while the pope sought to attach Constantinople to Rome, that is, Orthodoxy to papism.

By concluding the Union of Brest, King Sigismund III Vasa strove to bring the Orthodox population of the Ukrainian and Belarusian lands under his authority into obedience to the Roman See, and consequently to his state; while the hierarchy of the Lithuanian Metropolia, having lost its Orthodox principledness, was at that time guided only by “ambition and the thirst for advantage.” [25]

And what political background is present in the case of the Moscow union, which we are now considering? On the one hand, it is the loss of the free voice of the church region in the Russian diaspora; it is the property of ROCOR—churches and monasteries, part of which has already been seized and which will gradually pass into the ownership of state structures existing in the Fatherland; it is the long-desired end of the White Movement and its historical legacy; it is the erosion of Orthodox theology, capable of resisting the heretical ecumenical pseudo-theology. On the side of the hierarchy that concluded the union, it is the mythical fear of finding itself isolated from “world Orthodoxy,” which has already fallen into dogmatic and ecclesiological heresies, although the Lord nevertheless calls: “come out from among them and be separate” (2 Cor. 6:17); it is the attempt, by concluding the union, to affirm its “canonical existence,” as if the bishops of the Church Abroad had doubted their own canonicity—something of which for seventy years they had been accused by patriarchal theologians and hierarchs of the Sergianist tendency, namely of the “Karlovci schism.”

Then the work of the bilateral Commissions began, which were to clarify, as once in Ferrara, the points of disagreement. It cannot be said that the negotiations always proceeded smoothly. Once again, as before, they were “singing to deaf ears,” “boiling stones,” “writing on water,” and “sowing on stones.” But most important was the complete secrecy of the negotiating process, about which the believing people of ROCOR knew nothing, although they had the right to their reception. As once in Brest, the negotiations were conducted “in corners,” without subsequent broad information. It would have been possible, for example, to publish a bulletin in which the process of negotiations, statements, arguments, and remarks, as well as the names of the defenders of the historical principles of ROCOR and their opponents, would be reproduced stenographically and precisely. Such a bulletin could have provided a place for a general church discussion. This did not occur, and the process of negotiations proceeded along the path conceived and planned by the administration of the Moscow Patriarchate: along the path of economia, or compromise. A departure took place from the resolutions of the Pastoral Conference in Nyack, the Fourth All-Diaspora Council in San Francisco, and even the Council of Bishops of ROCOR in 2006. They did not wait for a Local Council of the All-Russian Orthodox Church, and the union was carried out suddenly and hastily, that is, as people used to say, “at Bolshevik tempos.”

The ROCOR Commission did not defend the principle that the election of the Moscow patriarchs during the Soviet God-fighting era took place in violation of canonical rules; that the Patriarch of Moscow is only the First Hierarch of the ROC MP, a church region whose foundation was laid by a non-canonical synod that usurped ecclesiastical authority; that this church region is not the Kyriarchal Mother Church, and that the Patriarch is not the First Hierarch of the entire fullness of Russian Orthodoxy. The commission also did not defend the principle that the Russian Church Abroad is an independent canonical region, or jurisdiction, possessing its own canonical First Hierarch in the rank of Metropolitan, having preserved dogmatic purity and not having come into contact with the ecumenical heresy.

Which church region of the divided Russian Church, then, should nevertheless be considered the Mother Church? We know that the division of the Russian Orthodox Church occurred not because one of its regions remained in the Fatherland conquered by the God-fighters, while part of the hierarchy, on the basis of the holy canons, without abandoning the flock that was leaving the Fatherland, shared exile with it and formed the Refugee Church—the church region abroad, which in history received the name Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia.

The prayerful and Eucharistic separation occurred after, in the church region existing in the Fatherland, governed by the synod of Metropolitan Sergius (Stragorodsky), who had usurped the supreme ecclesiastical administration, there appeared the most grievous violations in the sphere of Orthodox ecclesiology—a symphony in the sphere of church governance between the hierarchy and the structures of the God-fighting state regime; when there occurred the appropriation of primatial authority by Metropolitan Sergius (Stragorodsky) while the confessor–metropolitan, the Locum Tenens Peter, was still alive at that time; when the theory was created of transferring the rights of the Patriarchal Locum Tenens to the Deputy of the Patriarchal Locum Tenens; when there sounded throughout the whole world a false witness, which became a scandal both for many exiles and for the peoples living in free countries—the interview of Metropolitan Sergius (Stragorodsky), and later the publication of the book “The Truth about Religion in the USSR.” It was also when even the exiles themselves were required to show loyalty to the God-fighters and to renounce the struggle against them—the demand to sign declarations of loyalty to the Soviet authority, which served as the cause of a schism in ROCOR; when a systematic alteration of the episcopate of the Russian Orthodox Church began; when the confessors and the new martyrs were betrayed and declared schismatics and “enemies of the people,” counter-revolutionaries—when they were suspended from priestly service and deprived of their episcopal cathedras. These archpastors, pastors, and their flock formed yet another region of the Russian Orthodox Church in the Fatherland—the True Orthodox Church, which withdrew into internal emigration. This church region could rightly have been called the Mother Church. It could, because all its hierarchs accepted a martyr’s end, did not enter into union with the God-fighters, and did not violate the Orthodox confession of faith. The small remnants of its pastors and believers who survived after the shipwreck were reunited with their Sister—the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia, to which there also joined certain pastors of the Moscow Patriarchate who had entered into a canonical rupture with the administration of the MP, according to the second half of the 15th canon of the First–Second Council, and who formed parish communities and then dioceses within the ecclesiastical jurisdiction of ROCOR in the Fatherland, in accordance with the Statute on the Parishes of the Free Russian Church, adopted by the Council of Bishops of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia on May 2/15, 1990. The hierarchy of ROCOR was unable to defend its pastors and flock in the Fatherland who had joined ROCOR and who, in violation of the canons, were subjected to unjust condemnations and prohibitions; they were simply pushed away, with complete trust placed in the accusations of their accusers. Soon we heard the statement of a responsible hierarch of ROCOR that the creation of free parishes in the Fatherland had been a mistake, an absurdity. Could the Holy Spirit, who acts in agreement with the bishops of the Church at the Council of Bishops, have been mistaken? This would already be blasphemy.

The members of the ROCOR Commission, having been enticed by the so-called “Social Concept” of the ROC MP, which supposedly annulled the “Declaration” of Metropolitan Sergius (Stragorodsky), failed to discern that the ROC MP, as before, remains dependent on state structures, which it serves, as Metropolitan Sergius taught, “not out of fear, but out of conscience”; that the MP is a component part of these state structures; that its highest hierarchs, for example in Ukraine, are people’s deputies from political parties. The Russian Orthodox Church is separated from the state only formally, that is, on paper.

The Commission of the Russian Church Abroad and its hierarchs were unable to insist that the MP withdraw from the pan-heresy which it had conciliarily recognized—the ecumenical movement—and humbly implored their opponents to leave it, which, naturally, did not occur. They were unable to insist, and indeed did not insist, that the MP break Eucharistic communion with the new-calendarists, ecumenists, and new-paschalists, with whom it must now enter into Eucharistic communion—for example, with the “Autocephalous Orthodox Church in America” and with the “Finnish Orthodox Church.”

Thus, what occurred was not the reconciliation of equal church regions, but a unia, by the signing of which the church region of the Russian Church in the diaspora, bypassing the All-Russian Local Council, found itself in canonical dependence upon another church region that had refused historical repentance for the sins of Sergianism and ecumenism, and the bringing forth of worthy fruits of repentance for these sins, and which had proclaimed to the whole world that among the three monotheistic religions there exists unity in the veneration of the One God and a common ethic…

The Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia, its faithful pastors and flock, cannot agree with this. Trusting only in God, Who at the time appointed by Him “will grant peace and correction to His Church,” offering up their prayers, patiently and with love addressing those who disagree with them, they will pass along their path by the narrow way, through valleys and sorrows, in brotherly communion with the Orthodox Churches that are of one mind with them, strengthened by the prayers of the New Martyrs and Confessors of Russia, of St. John of Shanghai and San Francisco, and of the great hierarchs of the Russian diaspora, bearing witness to the world of their standing in the Truth. The Venerable Joseph of Volokolamsk reminds us of the words of St. Athanasius the Great, Patriarch of Alexandria: “It is better to gather in a house of prayer without them than, together with them, to be cast into Gehenna of fire with Annas and Caiaphas.” [26]

 

[1] In the notes of Bishop Nikodim Milash to the 13th canon of the Sixth Ecumenical Council, mention is made of Uniate priests whom Pope Benedict XIV permitted to remain married. This relates to the second millennium after Christ.

[2] The authoritative Russian theologian V. V. Bolotov notes that in the third century, between the Roman and the African Churches, as a result of the dispute concerning the baptism of heretics, “a rupture occurred, but not a schism.”

[3] The Canons of the Orthodox Church, Vol. II. 1994, pp. 307–308.

[4] St. John, Archbishop of Shanghai and San Francisco, writes: “The search for compromise will become the characteristic disposition of people. The directness of confession will disappear. People will subtly justify their fall, and gentle evil will support such a general disposition, and in people there will be formed the habit of apostasy and the sweetness of compromise and sin” (See: John, Archbishop of Shanghai and San Francisco, Discourse on the Last Judgment. — In the collection: Archbishop John (Maximovitch). Archpastor. Man of Prayer. Ascetic. San Francisco, 1991, p. 184).

[5] See: Ludmila Perepelkina, “The Abomination of Desolation.” Ecumenism and Church Liberalism. Saint Petersburg, 1998, p. 221.

[6] The Canons of the Orthodox Church, Vol. II. Op. cit., pp. 307–308.

[7] Ambrose (Pogodin), Archimandrite, St. Mark of Ephesus and the Florentine Union. Jordanville, 1963, p. 10.

[8] Ibid., op. cit., p. 17.

[9] Ibid., op. cit., p. 174.

[10] Ambrose (Pogodin), Archimandrite, op. cit., p. 220.

[11] Ibid., op. cit., pp. 226–227.

[12] Ibid., p. 322.

[13] Ibid., p. 338.

[14] Ibid., p. 357.

[15] Ibid., p. 370.

[16] Oksiuk, I. F. Union. A Historical Essay. p. 9.

[17] Oksiuk, I. F. Op. cit., p. 11.

[18] Ibid., p. 12.

[19] Metropolitan Macarius (Bulgakov) of Moscow. History of the Russian Church. Vol. 9. St. Petersburg, 1879, pp. 584–585.

[20] Georges Florovsky, Archpriest. The Ways of Russian Theology. Paris, 1937, p. 38.

[21] In 1983 the Council of Bishops of ROCOR proclaimed: “To those who attack the Church of Christ and teach that She is divided into branches (…) ANATHEMA.” (Orthodox Russia—a church and social publication of ROCOR issued by the Holy Trinity Monastery in Jordanville, USA, 1984, No. 10, p. 3).

[22] The Canons of the Orthodox Church. Vol. I. St. Petersburg, 1911, p. 307.

[23] Ambrose (Pogodin), Archimandrite. Op. cit., p. 33.

[24] Ibid., p. 308.

[25] Koyalovich, M. The Lithuanian Church Union. Vol. I. St. Petersburg, 1859, p. 89.

[26] Ludmila Perepelkina. Op. cit., p. 67.

 

Russian source:

https://sinod.ruschurchabroad.org/070710.htm#%D0%94%D0%9E%D0%9A%D0%9B%D0%90%D0%94_%D0%9F%D0%A0%D0%9E%D0%A2%D0%9E%D0%98%D0%95%D0%A0%D0%95%D0%AF_%D0%92%D0%90%D0%9B%D0%95%D0%A0%D0%98%D0%AF_%D0%90%D0%9B%D0%95%D0%9A%D0%A1%D0%95%D0%95%D0%92%D0%90

Ecumenism and the Decline of Our Faith

The following excerpts are from the book The Light of the World (Crestwood, NY, 1982), authored by the late Serge Verhovskoy, former professor at St. Vladimir's Theological Seminary. They provide critical insight into a process of decline in the faith that few of Professor Verhovskoy's successors understand or care to acknowledge.

 

What are the greatest temptations undermining our faithfulness to Orthodoxy and clearly weakening our society? One is that, unfortunately, many Orthodox have hardly any faith and keep only external, earthly relations with the Church. Much more dangerous, however, is the wave of false theology with which the entire Christian world is being corrupted and which is inevitably penetrating more and more into our Church. Some statements of our hierarchs and theologians no longer sound like statements of witnesses to Orthodoxy. The greatest danger is the almost open rejection of the primary and fundamental value and existential meaning of truth. Truth is considered as of no importance for life. Many think that a minimum of knowledge is sufficient for our activity, and that so- called "good relations" with our fellow men do not require communion in truth and faith, which is rather an obstacle for them. We are told openly that the entire teaching of the Church must be totally reconsidered and adjusted to one goal only, which is the immediate unification of all the Christian denominations into an absolute minimum of faith and in a common activity in this world. And this disdain of truth and the minimization of faith is [sic] directly connected in our time with the conscious acceptance of immorality. Those who do not accept the moral principles of the New Testament will inevitably fall into immorality.

...Some Orthodox are so moved by sheer sentimentality that they are, so to speak, ready to kiss the heterodox and recognize their supposed "Orthodoxy," as if by such spectacular actions and superficial proclamations of unity all Christians, so deeply disunited for centuries, can suddenly become members of one Church! Furthermore, some Orthodox think that if they will establish the best possible relations with Western Christians, diluting the Orthodox faith in the sea of ecumenism, they will be helped by these Western Christians in the extremely difficult situations in which many of our Orthodox Churches now find themselves. This, however, is pure illusion. The West did not save us from the Moslems in the fifteenth century, and it will not save us from any of our present terrible problems. Besides, the very idea of betraying our faith to buy favors from the West is an abomination.

 

Source: Orthodox Tradition, Vol. VIII (1991), No. 2, p. 12.

 

The Patriarch is NOT our Pope

Archimandrite Auxentios [Now Bishop of Etna and Portland] "A definition of Orthodoxy which posits anything but the absolute equal...