Saturday, January 24, 2026

Fr. Chrysanthos of Spinalonga, who communed lepers and consumed the Holy Communion

Sarantos Filippopoulos | July 27, 2024

 

 

We have referred many times through features on our website to the so-called unsung heroes—those who never saw the spotlight of publicity, who never appeared in newspaper headlines or news reports, likely because they didn’t fit the profile that the media constructs for the public.

And yet, these everyday heroes—simple people with whom we can identify and whom we can admire for their actions—are the ones who truly deserve to be honored, and whose work ought to be made known. This task is taken up by other ordinary people, the people themselves, who pass on their heroic deeds by word of mouth, hoping they will not be forgotten and will remain shining examples for all of us.

Our Association strives to highlight such stories, and today we present to you Hieromonk Chrysanthos, the priest of the lepers, who remained faithfully by their side not merely until the very end, but even long after!

Hieromonk Chrysanthos Koutsoulogiannakis lived on Spinalonga and served the lepers.

For ten whole years, the priest of Spinalonga communed the lepers and then consumed (drank) the remaining Holy Communion without contracting leprosy!

One of the historical details we learn about the “island of the living dead” is that the Hansen’s disease patients who lived on Spinalonga were angry with God, because their illness was a great and unbearable trial.

A priest from Ierapetra once dared to visit them and serve the Divine Liturgy in the church of Saint Panteleimon, which existed and was decaying on the island, together with its new inhabitants. They say that at the first Liturgy not a single soul attended.

The lepers listened stubbornly to the chanting from their cells—sometimes they drowned it out with their groans, other times with their curses. But the priest returned. At this second visit, one of the patients boldly stepped to the threshold of the church.

— “Father, I’ll stay for your Liturgy, but on one condition. At the end, you will commune me. And if your God is truly all-powerful, then afterward you will consume the remainder, and you won’t be afraid of my leprosy.”

The priest nodded in assent. The word spread through the nearby cells, and several began to gather at the side of the church, where there was a small breach in the wall, allowing a limited view of the sanctuary. The Hansen’s disease patients waited at the end of the Liturgy and saw the priest tearful and kneeling at the Holy Prothesis, consuming the remaining Gifts.

A month passed. The Hansen’s patients waited for him. They believed that this time he would come back as a patient, not as a priest. But the priest returned healthy and rosy-cheeked, and began once again, with renewed spirit, to ring the bell of the old chapel.

The miracle of Spinalonga that happened again and again

From that point on, and for at least ten years, Spinalonga had its priest. The Hansen’s disease patients rebuilt the church with their own hands, and at the same time, they rebuilt their faith. They communed regularly and always secretly watched their priest at the moment of the consumption, to be assured that the “miracle of Spinalonga” was happening again and again.

In 1957, with the discovery of antibiotics and the healing of the lepers, the leprosarium was closed and the island became deserted. Only the priest remained on the island until 1962, to commemorate the lepers for up to five years after their death. Behold, then, a modern silent hero, who was honored by no one for his work!

 

Greek source: https://www.ionikienotita.gr/?p=48337

 

Papa-Chrysanthos of Spinalonga (+1972): A “God-sent” “Saint” on the Island of the Damned

Kostas Pappas

 

spinaloga-1

 

Spinalonga is a small island near Elounda in eastern Crete.

It is known as “the island of the living dead,” since lepers from Crete and the rest of Greece were isolated there until 1957.

Even mentioning its name was taboo for many years, as it had become identified with the pain and misery of the Hansen’s disease sufferers who lived there.

This dramatic chapter of the island’s history begins in 1903, when the Leper Colony was established on Spinalonga to isolate those suffering from Hansen’s disease from the healthy population.

In antiquity, the name of the island was Kalydon, and it was renamed Spinalonga during the period of Venetian rule, a name derived from spina lunga, which means “long thorn.”

Because leprosy was considered an incurable disease at the time and people were unaware that the vast majority of individuals possess natural immunity to it, the stigma extended to the entire family of the patient, which was thus driven into social isolation. There was no state care, and lepers survived solely on public charity.

In 1913, with the union of Crete with Greece, lepers from all over the country began to be transferred there, and gradually Spinalonga was designated as the International Leper Colony of Europe.

At the entrance of the leper colony, a chilling inscription had been placed with the message: “He who enters must abandon all hope…”

The patients on Spinalonga were entitled to a small monthly allowance, which often did not cover their food or medication.

A significant change came in the 1930s, when Epameinondas Remoundakis, a third-year law student, was transferred to the island after falling ill.

The young Epameinondas fought for the improvement of living conditions for the island's inhabitants.

Through his initiatives, he brought lime for the disinfection of the houses and managed to install a generator so that there would be electricity.

He organized a cleaning service for the exterior and communal spaces, and thanks to his efforts, the island acquired a theater, cinema, cafés, and a barbershop, while loudspeakers were installed in the streets playing classical music.

Trades began to be practiced, a rudimentary form of commerce emerged, and a school was also established, with a leper serving as the teacher.

During the Occupation, Spinalonga was one of the very few places in Greece where neither the Italians nor the Germans set foot.

Due to fear of contagion from leprosy and the revulsion caused by the sight of the lepers, very few ever went to the island, and only to deliver food and other essential items.

Into this atmosphere of isolation and fear toward the lepers came a man of God, Hieromonk Chrysanthos Koutsoulogiannakis, who overturned everything! He was the priest who changed the lives of the people of Spinalonga and taught them experiential love.

Indeed, he was truly “God-sent” for the inhabitants, as he was assigned there as parish priest on his own initiative.

“Orthodox Truth” contacted Mr. Dimitris Papadakis, former high school principal and president of the Literary Association of Heraklion, Crete, who knew Fr. Chrysanthos and conveyed to us the greatness of the priest’s soul, as reflected in his conversations with him, as well as in the testimony of a former Hansen’s patient at the Leprosarium of Spinalonga, which proves that through his love, Papa-Chrysanthos transformed the “long thorn” (spina lunga) into a blossom of ministry and offering.

“Thrown away like manure into a stinking dung-pit”

“In 1947, the chaplain of the lepers of Spinalonga, Meletios Vourgouris, received a two-month leave from the Bishop of Petra, Dionysios Maragoudakis, from July 20 to September 20, in order to travel to the Holy Land. At the end of his leave, he did not return to his post. The Bishop was unable to find a priest to replace him,” states Mr. Papadakis.

Themos Kornaros, in his book Spinalonga (1936), writes: “Those who had worked all their lives without ever getting enough bread now find themselves, in their illness, thrown away like manure into a stinking dung-pit called Spinalonga.” The fear of the disease spreading was great; people believed it was transmitted even through breathing. The journalist Angelos Sgouros illustrates this fear in an article from August 1929 in the newspaper Empros. He writes characteristically: “Everyone who heard that I was going to Spinalonga called me crazy. Many, upon my return to Athens, looked at me with horror as a carrier of leprosy. The appearance of the lepers—with their bodies covered in rashes and ulcers, fingers severed, faces with eroded cheeks, eyes sunken into their sockets or bulging, lips torn or rotted, eyebrows, eyelashes, and teeth fallen out—provoked repulsion.”

"At that time, the hieromonk of the Monastery of Phaneromeni in Ierapetra, Chrysanthos Katsoulogiannakis, expressed his desire to his Bishop, Philotheos Mazokopakis, to fill the vacancy. Thus, in 1947, he was appointed chaplain of the lepers of Spinalonga," emphasizes Mr. Papadakis, and adds: "Hieromonk Timotheos Perakis, later Abbot of the Monastery of Phaneromeni, told me: 'The monks of the monastery admired Chrysanthos for his decision—a decision of self-denial—to go to Spinalonga as the replacement of Hieromonk Meletios. On the day of his departure, we celebrated the Divine Liturgy. We bid him farewell with great emotion and pride, because a hieromonk of our monastery would be serving as chaplain in Spinalonga.'"

“He had an ascetic appearance, with a faded cassock and monastic cap”

Mr. Papadakis also did not fail to mention the moving acquaintance he had with Father Chrysanthos, stressing: “I had the good fortune to meet Hieromonk Chrysanthos on the fifteenth of August, 1967, at the Monastery of Toplou, where, at the invitation of my beloved and respected Abbot, Archimandrite Philotheos Spanoudakis, I stayed for a week. He was short in stature, had an ascetic appearance, with a white beard. The years weighed heavily on his shoulders. His cassock and monastic cap were faded,” while he retrieves from memory images and events:

“One morning I was with Father Chrysanthos in the small courtyard outside the katholikon. Then an elderly man appeared. As soon as he saw Father Chrysanthos, he exclaimed with surprise and joy: ‘Father Chrysanthos…’ And at that moment, two arms opened for an embrace. In the humble cell of Fr. Chrysanthos, I had the opportunity to meet the visitor and to prompt him to speak to me about his experiences with the priest on the island: ‘I was a leper,’ he said. ‘I lived in Spinalonga for many years. The disease had deformed us. The fear of contagion made all healthy people not dare to come near us. The doctor, the nurses, the other public servants, and the women who washed our clothes left the island shortly before sunset and went by motorboat to Plaka, which was to the west and opposite Spinalonga. They needed to spend a few hours away from the “island of the living dead,” as journalists from Athenian newspapers called Spinalonga at the time.

We all felt the need for a priest. Only he could comfort us with the word of God, support us spiritually. But a priest came to our island from Elounda only twice a month.

He would come on Saturday evening, perform vespers, and leave. He would come again the next day, perform the Divine Liturgy, and leave. He would come on other occasions too—but then it was from dire necessity, to bury our dead!

One day a few of us were sitting in the courtyard of our coffeehouse, which was near the gate.

Then, farther off, a priest appeared. We all understood he had come to the island to serve. As soon as he saw us, he approached. He greeted us warmly.

We all stood and greeted him with a slight bow. But none of us extended a hand to shake his. A leper must not shake hands.

That is, so as not to transmit his cursed disease. But then he shook hands with all of us! He told us simply that he would stay with us to help us fulfill our Christian duties. Our emotion was great.’”

“We all communed and
then we saw him
consume what remained!
We wept like children.”

The account of Fr. Chrysanthos’ second day on the island is as follows: “The next day we went to the Church of Saint Panteleimon. All of us—men, women, and children—attended the Divine Liturgy with compunction, which he celebrated with Doric simplicity and immeasurable piety. That Sunday we did not receive Communion. We hadn’t been informed in time about the Divine Liturgy and had not fasted. At the end of the Liturgy, we received the antidoron from his hand. And as we took the antidoron, we all kissed his hand! It was something he himself desired. As he gave the antidoron, he brought his hand close to our mouths. Tears welled up in all our eyes from emotion. Before he came, we used to take the antidoron from a basket woven of reeds, which the sexton would place on the candle stand. The following Sunday, nearly all of us went to church. The church was packed, as was its courtyard. That day we all received Communion. At the end of the Divine Liturgy we saw our priest consume what remained in the Holy Chalice from our Communion! We all opened our eyes in astonishment. We thought we were dreaming. Thick, burning tears burst from our eyes. The previous priest—surely by divine economy—used to pour what remained from our Communion into the sacrarium. Hieromonk Chrysanthos stayed with us day and night. And he remained with us for ten years! During those years he showed love to all of us. He would visit us in our homes. He guided us all. With the little money he had, he helped the poor. And he did this while keeping the commandment: let not your left hand know what your right hand is doing. I am grateful, as are all the sick of Spinalonga, to Father Chrysanthos for...” — but he could not finish his sentence. He broke into silent weeping.”

“Father Chrysanthos,” continues Mr. Papadakis, “with his gaze fixed on the ground as he listened to the descriptions of the former Hansen’s disease patient, said with inner grandeur: ‘I believe that what I did is not so remarkable. It is what any minister of the Most High, any Christian, would have done. I helped, as much as I could, our fellow human beings to bear the cross of their Golgotha. Besides, the disease is not transmitted through Holy Communion, through the body and blood of Christ.’”

He stayed to tend the graves!

With emotion, Fr. Chrysanthos spoke to Mr. Papadakis about his decision to remain on the island when everyone else had left: “The leper colony of Spinalonga closed. It was July 1957. Everyone left the island; I alone remained.”

I asked him why, and he replied: “I had to tend the graves of the Hansen’s disease patients. I also had to, standing before their graves, chant the Trisagion for the repose of their souls. I left the island in 1959. My health had deteriorated. That’s when I left the island. My bishop placed me in this monastery.”

The writer Nikos Stratakis visited Spinalonga at the time when Father Chrysanthos was living there alone. In a text of his from 1959, he refers to Fr. Chrysanthos, writing:

"Today the island of pain is deserted. Nothing disturbs its silence... As we walked along the cobbled road, a filthy and ragged man, with an ascetic and Byzantine emaciation, in front of the church, is drawing water from the cistern and watering two stunted little trees. This monk is the last remnant of the solitary life of the rock. He clung to it like a barnacle, just as his soul clung to his ascetic flesh."

 

Greek source:

https://www.romfea.gr/prosopa/1721-enas-theostaltos-agios-sto-nisi-ton-kataramenon

Sermon of Disobedience in Times of Profanation of the Orthodox Faith

Nektarios Dapergolas, Doctor of Byzantine History

July 26, 2020

 

ODYSSEY TV: GOD and LORD! Forgive us! PROHIBITING RIBBONS ...

 

We are living in dreadful times of apostasy from God — an apostasy that, unfortunately, has extended even to a great part of the clergy — and also in times when striking signs from above are being manifested (indicatively, I recall the fire at Panagia Varnakova, but of course also the ongoing escalation of Turkish provocations), which we see moving neither our people nor our ecclesiastical leaders.

At the very least, not in a way that would direct them toward the right path: that of repentance and conversion. On the contrary, we see on the part of the latter (i.e., the ecclesiastical leaders) a continued tactic of self-justification on the one hand, and on the other, an attack against those who refuse to yield to the wretched post-patristic fable of blind and unconditional obedience–submission of the Christ-named flock to guides who may now very well be “fools and blind,” and thus spiritually ruinous. And we are not speaking merely of mockery, intimidation, and other verbal assaults, but also of threats and even actual persecutions against monks, priests, and laypeople (e.g., chanters) who “dared” to criticize bishops for their stance on major issues of the faith, such as Ecumenism, communion with heretics and schismatics (cf. the Ukrainian pseudo-church), and the neo-Barlaamite blasphemy we have been experiencing over the past three months with the churches being locked (and then sterilized), along with the abominable things we are seeing concerning Holy Communion in Orthodox churches abroad (which, as I have explained in a recent article, we are very likely to see soon in our own country). However much the clerics in delusion (and their murky-minded lay fellow travelers) may say, the bishops possess not the slightest infallibility, nor can obedience to them be unconditional; moreover, the defense of the faith against unsound bishops is not only permitted, but is the duty of all.

Groundless, then, is the accusation from the outset concerning an uncanonical reaction against bishops, to whom we are supposedly obliged to show complete obedience. We even heard from the mouths of some Greek metropolitans the astonishing claim that it constitutes a pan-heresy not to obey one’s bishop (!!!). I simply remind that our ecclesiastical administrative system is indeed episcopal, but not… a junta-like monarchy, no matter how many metropolitans perceive and implement it as such (especially in recent times, during which—with the grave personal and theological co-responsibility of the Metropolitan of Nafpaktos—a distorted ecclesiology has unfortunately developed, to the detriment of conciliarity and in favor of views increasingly reminiscent of papal infallibility). However, it is abundantly clear that a patriarch or a bishop is not entitled to do whatever he wishes, and that his being reproved by any clergyman—ranging from simple protest to cessation of commemoration—especially for very specific actions in which heterodoxy and heresy are demonstrably present, is not only not uncanonical, but is also a moral obligation and a practice grounded in the Holy Canons.

Completely unfounded, therefore, are the claims regarding obedience supposedly owed in any case. We must even say that the reproof of bishops is not only a right but also an obligation—not only of the clergy but also of us, the laity. This is a duty solidly established in multiple ways: from the Apostle Paul himself (who explicitly instructs in the Epistle to the Galatians, addressing the simple flock, that if anyone should come in the future—even an angel from heaven—and preach anything new to them, “let him be anathema”) to St. Athanasius the Great and other great Fathers. Indicatively, I will remind that St. John Chrysostom and St. Nicephorus the Confessor both state explicitly that even if only a few individuals preserve the Orthodox Faith intact, they alone constitute the Church of Christ—without specifying whether they be clergy or laity. I will also recall the famous phrase of St. Justin Popović, who said that when the Church forbids a simple grandmother from reproving her bishop, that will mark the end of the Church. And let me also remind of the foresight of St. John Maximovitch, who said that in the difficult years to come, heresy will have spread so extensively that the faithful will no longer be able to find a priest to protect them from delusion, and so their guide will be the writings of the Holy Fathers, and each believer will henceforth be responsible for the entirety of the Church’s faithful. After all this, how is it possible that some people demand we obey without protest hierarchs who are manifestly in error—who, instead of rightly dividing the word of truth, scandalize the people by speaking words of heterodoxy and falsehood?

Therefore, in this way, the accusation is naturally overturned—that we should not publicly criticize our hierarchs because this supposedly shows a lack of respect and allegedly scandalizes many people. First of all, let us clarify that we are not speaking here of judgment and irreverent condemnation, but of reproof concerning delusion and heresy. On this point, we have every right—indeed, an obligation—as is once again made clear by St. John Chrysostom, as well as other great Fathers of our Church (in a forthcoming article we shall have the opportunity to say more, based on their very words). Beyond that, the notion that it is the reprover of the scandal-causer who causes scandal, and not the scandal-causer himself, cannot withstand even the slightest scrutiny. On the contrary, the public exposure of the heretical monstrosities that are increasingly issuing from the mouths of high-ranking clergy, as well as their public refutation, constitute a duty and responsibility for those who possess some theological knowledge, in regard to those more ignorant—so that the latter may be edified in the truth and not led astray.

As for the matter of supposed lack of respect, the truth is that we certainly do respect their clerical rank—and indeed, quite evidently far more than they themselves do. Beyond that, however, how long can one remain silent in the face of clergymen who for decades oscillate between impious modernism (discarding clerical attire, liturgical translations, etc.) and the most profane blasphemy (common prayers and all sorts of contacts and intermingling with condemned heretics, as well as with those of other religions), provoking with continuous New Age-style statements and actions? And how long can one stay silent regarding the unspeakable things we have been witnessing especially in recent months, with the Ukrainian pseudo-autocephaly, with the concelebrations of many of our hierarchs with schismatics, defrocked and unordained pseudo-clergy, and also with the ongoing blasphemy and offense against God on account of the so-called pandemic? We are certainly obliged to pray that God may enlighten them and grant them repentance and return—but as long as this does not happen, and the scandal they cause continues to escalate, it is obvious that we are also obliged to react. After all, “those who are not angered by what they ought to be, are thought to be fools.”

And of course, we have absolutely no intention of becoming judges and moralists of all things (for we sometimes hear that accusation too, when we censure the words and actions of ecumenist hierarchs—even the acta of horrific pseudo-synods like that of Crete). But naturally, this accusation also proceeds from malice and is entirely hypocritical. First of all, the role of the moralist inherently contains conceit and arrogance. Yet arrogance characterizes those babbling theologians of “love” (the ones of “post-patristicism” and modernist revisionism), that is, those who dogmatize new signs (and… monsters), essentially considering themselves superior to the Holy Fathers, to the Sacred Canons, and to Holy Tradition. We, on the contrary, remain faithful to those things (refusing to change even a single iota), a stance which is by definition humble. We may have (and indeed we do have) a thousand and one faults as human beings, but this particular stance is humble. Furthermore, we are by no means “judging everyone.” We are simply presenting our position on glaring facts of profane distortion of our faith by specific individuals who are distorting it. If for some people these facts are not glaring, the problem lies exclusively in their own eyes. Not in ours.

As for certain other favorite “arguments” of some adherents of blind obedience (as well as of some supposedly conciliatory and neutral types)—namely, that we must not react because by raising our voices we “advertise” the issue, or that we should only pray and God will provide a solution and reveal the truth—these are also clearly unfounded. Because, of course, with regard to the matter of prayer, it is indeed paramount, and no one disputes its importance. But God has also given us a mind to understand, eyes to see, and a mouth to speak. And here the Gospel saying applies: “These ought ye to have done, and not to leave the other undone.” If we do not speak and do not react at the time when our faith is being persecuted, we will be without excuse before Him. Such passive and disengaged stances, therefore, cannot belong to any true Orthodox Christian, especially in today’s critical times. The Fathers themselves are clear and categorical on this point (as was already mentioned, we will examine this in more detail in a forthcoming article). As for the claim that if you don’t talk about something, you don’t advertise it and it thus becomes... insignificant, this is simply a cloak for cowardice. With that kind of “logic,” we would never speak out about anything—whether about the political degradation of the country, or the dechristianization of our homeland, or the dehellenization of education, or the scourge of illegal immigration, or anything else. On the contrary, we are obliged to respond to all these things—and all the more so, of course, when it comes to the paramount issue of our faith and the rabid attempt to corrupt it from the forges of the pan-heresy of Ecumenism. Or perhaps all these “moderates” no longer even consider it a pan-heresy (or not even a heresy at all)?

Let us therefore reverse the situation, let us cease maintaining a defensive stance in the face of their audacity, and let us pose to them the above question directly. The time has come when we will all be called to take a stand—enough already with half-words spoken in the shadows. Here there is a vast abscess, spreading and devouring our very flesh. In the face of this, no one has the right any longer to remain silent…

 

Greek source: https://aktines.blogspot.com/2020/07/blog-post_553.html

Friday, January 23, 2026

The ever-memorable Father Theodoretos (Mavros) on defilement from communion with heresy


 

However, there comes the tragic moment — as is our era — when the majority of priests commune with heresy (i.e., Ecumenism) and support the heresy. All those priests who do so knowingly (for there may be some completely unlearned little priest, like Papa-Planas, who didn’t even know who the Prime Minister of Greece was, who may not have heard anything about heresy), but all those who are aware of the heresy — what happens then? A dramatic event takes place. Neither do they receive the Body and Blood of Christ unto illumination, but unto condemnation. And those who knowingly follow (pay attention: those knowingly — which means, “I know what Bartholomew is doing, what the Archbishop is doing, I know what all of them are doing, and yet I still follow the priest; I don’t care about anything”) — they too suffer the same as the priest, that is, it is as though they are both partaking in the Mystery of the Eucharist unworthily, and thus they do not receive Grace, but punishment; illumination does not come, but rather darkening.

People, however, unfortunately view things in a very material way, and while for the body we can go to London and New York, and even sell our properties, we are not as concerned about the blasphemies uttered by the bishop, the archbishop, and the priests who follow him... This is the tragedy of our age. And so, we have unbaptized children (for when I immerse you only up to the knees, what kind of baptism is that…), darkened priests, darkened bishops, and a flock that does not know its right hand from its left... We shall all give account before God “on that Day,” for we are rational sheep — and especially the shepherds — and we must know where we are going, and what we are seeking. And if we do not fulfill our duties, which are to know the Gospel, and to know what the Fathers say, to read at least a little from the lives of the saints to see — as with the saints of our times — one being burned, another having his legs slowly cut off. Why did they do all this? To escape sin, to confess the faith, and to gain the Kingdom.

We, then, do not want to be troubled at all. And from this very point one may understand what a lofty ministry is served by the sacred struggle of the Old (calendar), which possesses a pure altar. There is nothing more honorable and more blessed in our times than an altar that does not commune with heresy. All the other altars are defiled, and you go to find Light, but find condemnation instead. And let them call us schismatics, heretics... It is just as the proverb says: “The harlot is the first to shout at the chaste woman, ‘you are a harlot,’ so that the chaste woman cannot turn and say the same back to her.” The Fathers and the Gerontikon say these things. Therefore, let us glorify God, firstly because through the sacrifices and the sweat of the fathers, we now have three hundred, five hundred pure altars in Greece with the Old Calendar, where the faithful, those who desire, can find salvation and purity. As for the others, the indifferent ones, God will judge them according to their circumstances and their knowledge, and so on. Let us glorify God for this, but let us also have vigilance — that we too must be watchful, to know whom we follow, what we confess. Otherwise, we too shall be in danger at any moment, as the Lord says, in the final years, in the last days in which we now live and walk — when He comes, shall He find faith on the earth? This is what He emphasized most. “When the Son of Man comes upon the earth, shall He find the faith?” — this faith which He granted from Golgotha, along with our salvation. Therefore, that is the thing in danger. And whoever preserves the faith and also has works, then he has within himself hope and boldness, that he shall behold the face of God and also enjoy the Kingdom of Heaven. Amen.

 

Greek source: https://krufo-sxoleio.blogspot.com/2017/05/blog-post_2.html

 

Libelous Writings at the Suggestion of the Adversary

George D. Dimakopoulos | August 20, 2019

 

The religious frenzy and ecclesiological paroxysm
—at the suggestion of the primordial evil serpent—
offend, reproach, and even scorn the departed,
so that the one whose mind is unhinged may "self-justify" through the "blow"
that will be provoked by his insatiable, gluttonous aversion.

 

On a certain blog-wander-log, belonging to one of known diagnosis, of mild to even advanced ideologically obsessive monomania, we also read the apophatic substantiation of the writer concerning the repose of our ever-memorable spiritual father, Metropolitan Cyprian of Oropos and Fili. This individual—like other loiterers and immoderate wanderers of Synods, blogs, but above all, of ideas and opinions—pronounced, the wretched man, concerning the appearance of the countenance of our reposed father during the funeral service, which took place on June 2, 2013, at the katholikon of the Holy Monastery of Saints Cyprian and Justina in Fili, Attica.

 

 

 

Similarly indecent and improper, "epic" libelous writings we had read from time to time also from those afflicted by the deadly virus of "Matthewism"—Matthewite "automatists" or even lost nullifiers of sacraments—where the immeasurable rationalization of everything has imposed upon them a personal theology, a personality-driven ecclesiology, and an individual theocratic medievalism.

Now to the point. Our spiritual father—as early as 2007—had suffered multiple strokes due to chronic diabetes, which had afflicted him since his youth, and, as a result, he remained bedridden in his cell until the year 2013, when he departed in the Lord. As time passed, both the upper and lower jaw became completely inactive. The doctors at Hygeia Hospital, who cared for him without charge, determined the usual outcome often accompanying a stroke, specifically an ischemic episode: namely, impairment of the face, resulting in the involuntary drooping of the corner of the mouth.

 

 

He remained in this condition for at least five to six years. He was nourished only through a feeding tube that contained blended food, prepared by his tireless and round-the-clock personal nurse and current abbot of the Monastery, Fr. Theodosius. He fully retained his mental capacity, communicating through his eyes or the squeezing of his hand. All of us—his dozens of spiritual children who regularly visited him in his cell—can testify not only to his mental clarity but also to miracles that occurred within that small space!

Fr. Theodosius—at an unsuspecting moment—spoke to us generally about the grace of God that accompanied to the very end the relentless struggle of our spiritual father, noting as well an event of astonishing magnitude that occurred throughout all those years of Job-like patience demonstrated by our Most Reverend father. Due to the ischemic stroke, the patient's tongue was entirely inactive, without even sensation. Yet, despite this, the following astonishing thing would occur: if one or two drops of water were to fall on the tongue, the ailing Metropolitan would not perceive it, nor was he able to move it.

 

 

However, whenever the fathers placed a little Holy Communion on his tongue with the holy spoon, he would suddenly curve his tongue and consume it, even though just moments before his tongue had been completely inactive! This miracle continued up until his repose. The fathers—especially Fr. Theodosius—were often witnesses of miracles that occurred in the Most Reverend Fr. Cyprian, about which they never spoke. They await only God to reveal, through signs, His grace of the Holy Spirit upon His servant. When the moment came for his departure from the vanity of this temporary world into the eternal Kingdom of our God, the fathers deliberated on what to do with his mouth, which of course had been inactive for years and therefore remained open.

There was the easy option of entrusting the matter to a funeral home, which—as is done with all the departed—applies glue to the lips so that no fluids may later emerge from them. This is a practice known to all. However, the fathers preferred to leave him as he was, not resorting to any usual practice to close the jaws. And so it was done. The funeral service was held publicly in the large katholikon of the Monastery, and thousands of faithful visited during the three-day public veneration prior to the burial, while hundreds of our brethren from all over Greece came to say their final farewell to a universally acknowledged holy, spiritual, and merciful ecclesiastical figure.

 

 

From that point on, certain untheological, semi-educated, but above all, malicious corrupters—led by an ideologically fixated, "Matthewite" pseudo-bishop from America, a representative of a fictitious ROCOR with a flock of fifty people—reviled and blasphemed the person of the departed, insinuating that his expression resembled fear and terror "before the dread judgment seat of Christ"... These are, of course, the tragic results—marked by uncontrollable, “medieval” verbosity—of the “Matthewite” mindset, which over the years has become synonymous with spiritual authoritarianism, ecclesiological obsession, veiled ecclesiological arrogance; in short, what is rightly called the “heresy of Matthewism.”

To this group naturally belong Matthewite, egotistical, and spiritually fragmented ecclesiological “caricatures,” who change Synods like they change their shoes, and ecclesiological identities like their shirts. Alongside them are other epic “water-carriers,” who find no spiritual rest—how could they?—anywhere, simply because the little devil of ingrained conceit, spiritual sloth, and prayerful aversion lives and reigns within them.

 

 

In conclusion—and let him who understands, understand: the correctness of faith is "revealed" only through tireless, prayerful, merciful, and sacramental struggle, to “receivers” who, with humility and above all good will, are ready to receive it. It is not pronounced through online all-nighters in front of a screen, nor through “confessional” vigils before a black keyboard. It does not deviate, does not transgress, and does not replace the Fathers, the spiritual guides, the Synod. Otherwise, the dissenting protesters, who with such shameless ease and at the slightest pretext have debased even the use of the 15th canon of the First-Second Council, may henceforth cry out the slogan: “Cleomeneses of the world, unite”!...

 

Greek source: https://353agios.blogspot.com/2019/08/blog-post_90.html

1974 Letter on the Liturgical Communion between ROCOR and the G.O.C., both Florinite and Matthewite

From the original Russian:

Chancellery
of the Hierarchical Synod
of the Russian Orthodox Church
Outside of Russia

10/23 December 1974

No. 3/50/1037

75 East 93rd Street,
New York, N.Y. 10028
Phone: LEhigh 4-1601

Dear servant of God Dimitrios,

In response to your letter, with the blessing of His Eminence Metropolitan Philaret, I inform you that Archbishop Akakios, the successor to the former Bishop of Florina, was ordained to the episcopate by the bishops of our Church Abroad. His successor, Archbishop Auxentios, and his Synod have often approached us and continue to do so on various issues.

In 1971, representatives of another group—the Matthewites—appealed to our Synod, who petitioned for the clarification [i.e., regularization] of their ordinations, which was granted by our Synod. The Synod made this decision, thinking this would enable the unification of both groups. At the present time, we concelebrate with the clergy of both groups.

May God protect you!

With love in the Lord,

Bishop Laurus [of Manhattan, Secretary of the ROCOR Synod of Bishops]

 

 

Letter of Protopresbyter George Metallinos to the Zealot Athonite Fr. Theodoretos (Mavros)


 

Cologne, November 16, 1973 (N.S.)

My beloved brother in the Lord, Fr. Theodoretos,

May the Lord strengthen you in your struggles and always reveal you as a Confessor of His Truth.

I received your letter today and I thank you for your brotherly words and your prayers. I write you only a few lines, to provide you with the assurance that both the presbytera and I listen with great emotion to the things concerning your struggle — of those zealous monks — which bring to mind glorious days of the Church and the struggles of her holy monks, who, being strangers to every compromise and servility, fought on the frontlines for the One Truth, our Holy Orthodox Faith. Sacred emotion overtook us upon reading your letter, seeing our fellow student and longtime friend Ioannis rise to a patristic height and be transformed into a champion of Orthodoxy, which is indeed being assailed from every side, and especially by her own bishops. Remain there, our beloved and revered Father and brother. Remain there, struggling on high. We are at your side. Already we are in the same camp, for it is not the battlefield, but the struggle that places someone in a particular camp. And here, fighting, we find ourselves in the same camp as you. Believe me, brother! We shall not remain here much longer; they will not allow us to. But we shall remain, as long as we are able. The adversary must suffer damage here as well. And war is needed in his own camp. Seeing you and those heroic brothers of his not bow the knee to your insolent persecutors, we cry out with tears: Yes, “the soldiers fitting for God will never be lacking in the Church...” Never, never. Neither the Studites, nor the Damaskinoi, nor the Palamites, nor the Nikodemoses ever vanished. They live, because Christ lives. They live in your persons, honorable fighters of the right faith!

I have nothing else, beloved brother and father, to offer to your struggle except my support. You are struggling. It is not a vain matter. Here, God deemed me worthy to witness the betrayal being committed against Orthodoxy. Bishops and clergy with complete unbelief, with scandalous lives, trample everything underfoot like swine trampling pearls. And they seek to compel you to retreat! May it never be, O Lord! The seat of your persecutors reeks with the suffocating stench of the filth of unbelief, indifference, and immorality. You understand what I mean. Other opponents of yours ally themselves with the satanic powers of the world and see them as powers of Christ, blessing abominable crimes. No, do not retreat. I have written to “Typos” and the others, and I have told them my opinion. Nothing has changed in the Phanar. It is a diversionary tactic, and blessed is he who will not be led astray... Remain steadfast. May the Lord bless you, the worthy fighters of His Faith. The presbytera, through me, sends her respects. My lowliness prays to the Lord to strengthen you. May Jesus Christ bless and empower you.

Filled with emotion, because I regard the appearance of the Exarchate as the beginning of significant struggles which will crown your faith, but will also lead many to a terrible and eternal fall, I embrace you and kiss your hands with tears, because I rejoice and feel proud that my old friend and now brother in the Lord is found at the front line of the Orthodox fighters. Pray, my brother and my father, that my lowliness may also, according to my strength, be an imitator of your struggle.

With much love in the Lord,

† Presbyter George Metallinos

P.S. Here the Protestants, who essentially rule together with the Papists and direct the Phanar, have become alarmed because there are zealots on the Holy Mountain. Professor Schneemelcher of Bonn (a Protestant), for example, called me the day before yesterday after the lecture into his office, and for an hour we discussed matters concerning the Mountain. Supposedly because he was going to give a lecture. What he really wanted, however, was to find out how steadfast those young men are. In fact, he asked me whether you are “Zoe-types,” influenced by the pietistic mentality of the ZOE movement. I tried, however, to give him a correct image of you (and he said that he expected that from me, because the others here… may God forgive them), and to assure him that the Mountain will not fall, nor the Orthodoxy of the zealous monks… He was, of course, not enthused… Therefore, do not lower the banner. I beg you on my knees. Do not give joy to the Devil. Do not let heresy triumph. Orthodoxy, and we her lowly and unworthy soldiers in the world, beseech you to continue fighting with all your strength. We pray that the Lord may grant you the necessary patience and strength. Remember me and my family in your prayers, brother.

 

Greek source: https://krufo-sxoleio.blogspot.com/2017/03/blog-post_17.html

The Stance of the Laity Toward Heresy-Professing Bishops According to Academic Theology

Monk Seraphim (Zisis)

 

 

The recent developments in the Church throughout the world, due to the heretical Council of Kolymbari—which consolidated the dogmas of the pan-heresy of Ecumenism—once again bring to the forefront the issue of the participation of lay Christians in the defense of sound ecclesiastical dogmas. The subject is, of course, vast, and a full treatment requires deep knowledge of Ecclesiology, the History of Dogmas, Church History in general, as well as Patristic Theology. Here, we attempt a first simple approach.

Many of the sinning Bishops, as well as those who “not only do the same, but also take pleasure in those who do them,” [1] are inevitably compelled to resort to the (undoubtedly uniquely significant) authority of the episcopal office in order to justify the unjustifiable. Some even hint at a kind of “infallibility” for themselves and the Synods they convene. Here one could remind that in Papism too, the originating cause of many particular heresies and other calamities was the dogma of the Pope’s infallibility: who can adequately resist the heretical views of a religious planetary leader who, for centuries, has been clothed in worldly power and a... “divine” aura of “infallible” inspirations (he who once, before his fall, was the Orthodox Patriarch of Italian Rome)?

In the very Council of Kolymbari, this unhealthy “episcopocentrism”—which aims to deprive ordinary believers, lay Christians, of the right to judge matters related to Orthodoxy—found its expression in paragraph §22 of the 6th Text, entitled “The Relations of the Orthodox Church with the Rest of the Christian World”. There it is written that:

“...the preservation of the genuine Orthodox faith is ensured only through the synodal system, which has always constituted in the Church the supreme authority in matters of faith and canonical order (canon 6 of the Second Ecumenical Council).” [2]

As is evident from the testimony of His Eminence Metropolitan Hierotheos of Nafpaktos, the Church of Greece attempted to mitigate this “episcopal monism” (the attribution of ecclesiological weight exclusively to the Bishops), by removing the word “only” from the above phrase, and by adding Canons 14 and 15 of the First-Second Council (861), which define the conditions under which the faithful may react against their Bishops. However, this proposal was unfortunately rejected. [3]

To show how even in this matter the Council of Kolymbari fell not only away from the timeless consensus of the Holy Fathers, but also from the more recent Orthodox ecclesiological position within the Ecumenical Movement, let us recall that thirty-six years ago (1981), in the dialogue with the Old Catholics (who had broken away from Rome in the 1870s–1880s because they rejected the infallibility and the other aspects of papal monarchy), different ecclesiological principles had been affirmed. In the joint text of the Orthodox and Old Catholics of 1981, it was declared that the supreme authority in the Church is the Ecumenical Council (and not vaguely the “Synodal System”), and with the safeguard that the decision of a General Council must agree with the phronema of the whole Church in order for it to be characterized as Ecumenical. [4] Now, at Kolymbari, these prerequisites were deliberately removed, to the glory of our own Eastern “monarchs” and leaders of Ecumenism, so that the reaction of the ecclesiastical body might be silenced, and the decisions of the “high-standing [and supposedly infallible]” might suffice.

The writer does not expect that this article will persuade any of the specific heretical-leaning Bishops to heed the voice of their rightfully reacting Flock; for, unfortunately, “if they hear not Moses and the Prophets” (nor the divinely inspired Canons and Holy Fathers...), “neither will they be persuaded though one rise from the dead.” [5]

We therefore present, for the sake of the faithful, the observations of earlier academic scholars concerning the right and the obligation of ordinary believers to struggle for the preservation of the Orthodox Faith—even against Patriarchs and Synods. We do not address the subject comprehensively, as it has been sufficiently treated in other studies, [6] but restrict ourselves to university theology and historiography, in order to expose—on the basis of modern academic texts alone—the indifference, ignorance, or cunning of the heretical-leaning in their attempted distortion of our ecclesiastical phronema and cohesive Orthodox Ecclesiology.

We pray that those Bishops who consented—through their vote or even through their words—in various ways to the heresies of Kolymbari may sincerely repent. Even Saint Juvenal, Archbishop of Jerusalem, sided with the Eutychian Monophysites against Orthodoxy and Saint Flavian of Constantinople—who was later martyred—at the Robber Council of Ephesus (the so-called “Second in Ephesus”) in 449. Yet at the Ecumenical Council of Chalcedon in 451, two years later, he stood with the Orthodox—and ultimately became a saint.

Protopresbyter Professor Georges Florovsky (1893–1979)

The Russian-born Protopresbyter and Professor (at the theological schools of St. Sergius in Paris, St. Vladimir’s, Holy Cross, and at the universities of Harvard and Princeton in the USA), [7] Fr. Georges Florovsky, was one of the theologians whose teaching marked the 20th century and the future of Orthodox Theology—especially its return to the phronema of the Holy Fathers. [8] A teacher of Protopresbyter (and later also Professor) Fr. John Romanides, Fr. Georges Florovsky was, nevertheless, at one point in his early theological journey, swayed and became a serious proponent of a “broad” (“inclusive”) ecclesiology. [9] Some ecclesiological passages from his book “Bible, Church, Tradition” are particularly significant for our subject and are quoted here at length:

“The entire body of the Church has the right to verify, and indeed the right—or rather the duty—to affirm. In precisely this sense, the Patriarchs of the East wrote in their well-known Encyclical Letter of 1848 that ‘the people themselves were the defenders of the Faith.’ Even earlier, Metropolitan Philaret said the same thing in his Catechism [...].” [10]

“The conviction of the Orthodox Church that the ‘guardian’ of Tradition and of piety is ‘the whole people,’ that is, the Body of Christ, in no way diminishes or restricts the right of teaching that was granted to the Hierarchy [...] The hierarchs received the right to teach not from the faithful people, but from the Great High Priest, Jesus Christ, through the mystery of ordination. But this teaching finds its boundaries in the expression of the whole Church. The Church is called to bear witness to this experience, which constitutes an inexhaustible experience and spiritual vision. The bishop of the Church (episcopus in ecclesia) must be a teacher. Only the bishop has received full authority and commission to speak in the name of his flock. The flock receives the right to speak through the bishop. But for the bishop to do this, he must encompass within himself the Church; he must manifest its experience and faith. He must speak not from himself, but in the name of the Church, ex consensu ecclesiae. This is in full opposition to the formula of the Vatican: ex sese, non autem ex consensu ecclesiae.” [11]

“The bishop does not derive his full right to teach from his flock, but from Christ, through apostolic succession. Yet he has been given full authority to bear witness to the catholic experience of the body of the Church. The bishop is limited by this experience, and therefore in matters of faith the people must judge concerning his teaching. The duty of obedience ceases when the bishop deviates from the catholic rule, and the people have the right to accuse him—and even to depose him.” [12]

From the important position of the ever-memorable Professor Fr. Georges Florovsky—although we have cited it only in part—we note the following points:

1) The Bishop alone has the full right of teaching in the Church;

2) This right is not received from the people, but from Christ through sacred Ordination and apostolic succession (avoiding populism or the “socialization” of the Church);

3) The Bishop does not speak from himself, but on behalf of his Church; he teaches as the mouth of the timeless experience and Faith of his flock;

4) Consequently, the Bishop’s teaching is limited by the boundaries of the Church’s experience, by the “catholic rule”, because the people also have the right to express their unaltered Faith and experience through the voice of the Bishop;

5) The people, having the right to express themselves through the Bishop, also bear the synodally affirmed duty to confirm or reject what the Bishop teaches, as guardians of the Faith;

Finally,

6) when the Bishop deviates from ecclesiastical truth, the people have the right to disobey their Bishop, as well as to censure and depose him (“let even the king hear these things,” we might add!). [13]

The Byzantinist Sir Steven Runciman (1903–2000)

The eminent historian and Professor (and knighted as “Sir” in 1958) Steven Runciman is one of the most distinguished historians of “Byzantine” History—of our Romiosyne. In Greece, he became particularly beloved thanks to his well-known prediction that the 21st century would be the century of Orthodoxy. [14] Moreover, his love for our homeland was expressed on many occasions and in various ways. Sir Steven Runciman was essentially “the man who largely succeeded in freeing the image of Byzantium from the stigma that saw it as a period of decline, corruption, and intrigue [...] and Greece, in turn, acknowledges his contribution in promoting a positive image of a period in Greek history that many had overlooked.” [15]

In his work The Byzantine Theocracy, Runciman notes the following interesting points:

“The Emperor, by the very nature of his position, was obliged to be in some way a remote figure. The Representative of God had to know his place—a most honored one. [...] The same applied to the Patriarch: although he did not enjoy precisely the same mystical prestige, he was to conduct himself as a person worthy of reverence. Respect for the divine authority of the Emperor or the Patriarch did not prevent the Byzantines from rising in revolt against a man whom they deemed unworthy of such a position. But their revolution was directed against a human being—not against the sacredness of the role. In reality, they were revolting in order to preserve the authenticity of the role itself.” [16]

This testimony of Sir Steven Runciman confirms that “the Byzantines” (or rather, more properly, “the Romioi”):

1) rendered respect to the episcopal (as well as the imperial) institution because it possessed sacred authority and constituted divine power;

2) this sacred authority of the two institutions—of the Kingdom and the Priesthood—obliged the persons who held those offices to conduct themselves accordingly;

3) it was precisely this respect of the people for the two sacred institutions that also led the people to rise up and overthrow individuals (Emperor and Patriarch) who were unworthy of the holiness of the offices they served.

Professor Panagiotis Trembelas (1886–1977)

Professor Panagiotis Trembelas, one of the founding and leading figures of the theological brotherhoods “Zoe” (1907) and “The Savior” (1960), was undoubtedly an extraordinary figure in modern Greek theology—a distinguished and tireless exegete, dogmatic theologian, liturgist, apologist, and preacher. Widely known also among the faithful of the Church for the breadth and high quality of his writings, which address a wide range of practical needs of the flock and the demands of catechists and theologians, he likewise contributed to academic theology in the fields he served. [17]

The teaching of Professor Trembelas today is undervalued by the post-patristic theological establishment—not essentially because of Trembelas’ indirect questioning of certain elements of hesychastic and Palamite patristic theology (a significant, [18] though not decisive, error of his), [19] but because his systematic exposition of the dogmas of the Faith, as well as his apologetic writings against various heretical movements and subversive trends of modernism, serve as a silent obstacle to the effort of innovative heretical ecumenists and neo-leftist theologians to promote their own “synthesis”—a “soup” of dogmatic relativism and generalized theological fluidity. Thus, Trembelas is accused of being a “scholastic,” simply because he did not “philosophize” with a libertine intellect, unbound by dogmas and sacred traditions, in the manner of a few of his contemporaries and many of his successors (such as, we might say, the formidable but also “heretical” mind, the late Professor Nikos Matsoukas).

Even Fr. John Romanides himself—whose theology became a contested point of reference, yet also a pivotal turning point (or return) to the only truly ecclesiastical theology, the neptic and hesychastic tradition—writes about Panagiotis Trembelas, and despite his theological disputes with the elder Professor, he states: “Equally necessary is the study of the Dogmatics of the eminent Dogmatic Theologian and Professor of the University of Athens, the ever-memorable Panagiotis Trembelas, who also followed the path of returning modern Orthodox theology to the Patristic Tradition.” For this reason, Trembelas’s exegetical writings, too, can be used: “as a bridge to the interpretive monuments of the Fathers.” [20] It is clear that the ever-memorable Professor and leader of the “Soter” Brotherhood belongs among those who struggled on behalf of the Patristic Tradition [21].

We now cite (in modern Greek rendering) an ecclesiological passage from his Dogmatics, directly relevant to our topic:

“The authority of such popular recognition is fully explained when one considers that the pronouncements and formulations of the Holy Synods concerning Christian truth, as we have said, are made in accordance with the written and unwritten Apostolic Tradition, which does not constitute some dead and theoretical knowledge, but a living phronema of the entire Body of the Church—one which is testified to and constituted by the living faith of all Her members. The treasure of the faith, that is, which is contained in the Holy Scripture and in Apostolic Tradition in general, must be the possession of every Christian and lived out in his life. Therefore, the pronouncements of the Holy Synods, which pertain to this treasure and are made due to the contesting of life-giving truth by heretics—and which contestations are followed with unflagging interest by the living members of the Church—cannot possibly be met with indifference by the faithful, as long as they are not [spiritually] dead. Thus, the judgment of the ecclesiastical pleroma concerning synodal pronouncements appears spontaneous—at times even unrestrained—but simultaneously expresses the catholic phronema of the Church, which indeed has never ceased to be testified to and proclaimed by Her.” [22]

The conclusions of the professor are condensed in the following points:

1) The treasure of the Church’s Faith is not a dead letter of intellectual theory and knowledge, but a lived experience and phronema of all the members of the Church;

2) As a result, the contesting of the truth by heretics gives rise to holy Synods and is rightly followed with interest by the spiritually living (and not the dead) members of the Church;

3) The spontaneous (and potentially forceful) resistance of the ecclesiastical pleroma to synodal decisions also constitutes a manifestation of the Church’s enduring phronema—which is being wounded by heresy.

Professor Konstantinos Mouratidis (1918–2001)

Professor of Canon Law and Pastoral Theology at the Theological Faculty of Athens (from 1962), Konstantinos Mouratidis also served as President of the Panhellenic Union of Theologians (PETh) for 25 years and was the founder of its journal Koinonia. According to contemporary testimonies, he was: “a theologian with Patristic and ecclesiastical phronema and ethos […] Peaceful and a peacemaker, but also a confessor, struggler, and militant whenever the Faith was in danger.” [23] A wise and broadly learned scholar, “a defender of what is just, lawful, and fitting, he was not afraid to break with friends and collaborators, even with those holding high offices. For him, truth and justice stood above all human friendships and relationships.” [24] The ever-memorable Professor reposed on the ill-fated day of the Pope’s arrival and official institutional reception (as a bishop) in Athens—May 4, 2001. The following excerpts (in modern Greek rendering) from his important work on the essence and polity of the Church according to St. John Chrysostom are highly indicative:

“St. John Chrysostom considers the laity to be precious and indispensable collaborators of the clergy for the dissemination of the evangelical truth […] The neglect of this duty constitutes a most grievous sin, which is why Chrysostom regards as an enemy of the Church the one who neglects the duty of enlightening his fellow brethren, especially those who have been led astray by heretics.” [25]

“St. John Chrysostom not only taught that the active participation of all the faithful in the shaping of ecclesiastical life is necessary and imperative, but he was also the magnificent leader who inspired multitudes of believers and transformed them into valuable supporters and warriors of the good fight. In the laity, Chrysostom did not see adversaries who ought to be kept away from the organizational mechanism of the Church, but sought, with superhuman efforts, to achieve their active participation in it.” [26]

And after referring to the support shown by the pious citizens of Constantinople toward St. Chrysostom during the persecutions he endured from the powerful, Professor Mouratidis adds the inductive conclusion:

“From the importance of the above passage, it is made abundantly clear that the laity have been called not only to be concerned with the affairs of the Church, but also to contribute to the governance of the Church in accordance with the Canons. It is especially noteworthy that in critical moments for the life of the Church, when unworthy clergy were overturning the Laws of the Church—which they had been precisely called to protect and enforce—the laity were always those who saved the ship of the Church when it was in danger. The shining example of the Church of Constantinople during the time of Chrysostom is undoubtedly one of the most characteristic cases in ecclesiastical history. It is therefore not surprising that the great Chrysostom, addressing his marvelous flock, proclaimed: ‘I will put nothing into practice without you.’” [27]

The analysis of the Professor is perfectly clear; I do not think there is any need to schematize his positions.

Professor Vlasios Phidas (1936–)

Professor of the Faculty of Theology at the National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, Mr. Vlasios Phidas, Emeritus since 2003, is undoubtedly one of the most distinguished scholars of Greek Theology—especially of Ecclesiastical History—and one of the earlier defenders of the canonical rights and institutions of Greek-speaking Orthodoxy. [28] Unfortunately, those of us who came to know and esteem him through his—mostly—remarkably valuable and richly written works (or even personally, as did the writer), cannot avoid the sorrowful comparison with his more recent ecclesiological positions, such as, for example, his positive evaluation of the Synod of Kolymbari, [29] as well as his general contribution to pan-heresy Ecumenism. Because of these things, the “ecclesiastical technocrat” has come into direct conflict with what he himself wrote as a church scholar. From his concise work Byzantium, we shall draw what pertains to our subject.

Writing about the relationship between the two sovereign “God-given authorities” of Romiosyne, namely the Priesthood and the Empire, as well as the relationship of the people with them, Professor Phidas observes that, while the people were not involved in the appointment (the election) of the bearers of the Empire and the Priesthood—that is, of the Emperors and the Patriarchs—nevertheless they retained the right of subsequent judgment of these persons:

“Certainly, however, immediately after the enthronement of the ‘chosen of God’ to either of the two God-given authorities in the empire, the people were automatically transformed into autonomous judges of the bearers of the two authorities, because their exercise had been entrusted to them by God for the service of the people; therefore the people exercised their sovereign rights primarily in judging the bearers of the two authorities and not in their appointment, which—both in political theory and in the political theology of the Church—was connected to the activation of the divine will in the life of the empire.’” [30]

And elsewhere he writes that the people:

“...usually showed greater sensitivity to the spontaneous anguish of the monks than to the calculated reasonings of the learned hierarchs or officials of the empire.” [31]

From this position of Professor Phidas, we retain four observations regarding history:

1) The practice of the non-participation of the people in the appointment of Patriarchs and Emperors did not entail that the people could not also judge them as possibly unworthy bearers of God-given authorities;

2) This sovereign right of the people stemmed from the fact that both the Priesthood and the Empire exist in order to serve the people;

3) Consequently, the people automatically and autonomously judged the bearers of the two authorities, Emperors and High Priests; and

4) The faithful people placed their trust in the disinterestedness of the Monks and not in the diplomatic reasoning of the “learned” Hierarchs or the secular officials. [32]

Epilogue

With the foregoing presentation of the views of distinguished scholars of the past regarding the reaction of the pious Orthodox people to potential theological lapses of their Shepherds, we believe that the historically substantiated practice of lay confessional reaction in the face of an emerging heresy is rendered clear. Its correctness is moreover testified to in the patristic writings (especially those of a historical nature), as well as in the holy Canons of the Church. This clear practice, as summarized in the above opinions of university professors, could be condensed as follows:

a) Preeminent teachers of the Church are the Bishops, who received this right of teaching from Christ.

b) The teaching of the Bishops is limited to expressing the experience of the entire Church, namely the written and unwritten Apostolic Tradition, which is a living mindset and not a dead intellectual letter; episcopal teaching constitutes a ministry to the people.

c) Right-believing Bishops are not in opposition to, but in cooperation with the laity, whom they strive to activate in a missionary way.

d) The faithful laity, who are rightfully expressed through their Bishop, have the right—or rather the duty—to observe and judge episcopal teaching. Many times, the simple laity discern in unworthy Clergy erroneous priorities, compromises, opportunistic motives, and contrived reasoning.

e) The observation by the laity of the progression of heresies and the autonomous confirmation or rejection of episcopal teaching is a sign of life within the ecclesiastical body and an exercise of its sovereign rights; the opposite is a sign of lifelessness.

f) The people have the right to disobey a deviating Bishop, even to the point of his deposition.

g) This revolt against the deviating Bishop stems from reverence and not from disrespect toward the holiness of the God-given episcopal authority, which the heretical Bishop unworthily represents; this revolt constitutes a manifestation of the offended timeless ecclesiastical mindset.

h) The neglect by the laity to guard their fellow faithful of the Church against sacred-canonical violations and especially heresies renders such negligent laypeople enemies of the Church.

i) Ecclesiastical history bears witness that many times the afflicted ecclesiastical Faith and sacred-canonical order were preserved by laypeople who opposed unworthy Clergy.

The opinions we have cited do not exhaust the full range of theological and ecclesiastical trends within recent academic theology; nevertheless, the harmony that distinguishes them is admirable. They are thus greatly reinforced through comparison and combination, thereby also proving the following:

The reaction of the Orthodox people against the ecclesiastical leadership when the Tradition of the Church—especially the dogmas—is violated, does not constitute an expression of pietistic populism or marginal zealotism, but rather of pure and God-loving ecclesiological right-mindedness and ecclesiastical health.

No more fitting place could be found here for a relevant saying of the blessed Cypriot ecclesiastical historian Fr. Pavlos Englezakis, referring to the Church of Cyprus at the threshold of the 19th and 20th centuries:

“That the Church was not what the refined sophists of that time or of today would have wanted it to be is not necessarily or always to its detriment. The Church, in its internal polity, was conservative because it was the Church of the people, and therefore of the peasants […] To the extent that Jesus identified Himself with the least of this world, the true history of the Church is not the history of the great and the powerful, but of the weak and the small. The theological-historical reflection […] is not concerned with what the great ones of the world did—even if they are called archbishops—nor with what the respectable middle class did, but it examines who, like God, were poor according to the system, that is, outside of it, without value, useless, and therefore available, and what the disciples of Jesus did for them. For he is saved who, in the faces of these poor ones, sees Jesus and serves Him. This is, according to the twenty-fifth chapter of the Gospel of Matthew, the essential criterion of the true history of the Church.” [33]

May our ecclesiastical leaders reflect upon the weight of the scandalization of the Faithful caused by the alteration of the ecclesiological dogma at Kolymbari and act in repentance accordingly!

 

Endnotes

1. Romans 1:3

2. https://www.holycouncil.org/-/rest-of-christian-world

3. Metropolitan of Nafpaktos and Agios Vlasios Hierotheos, “The decisions of the Hierarchy of the Church of Greece regarding the Holy and Great Council and their outcome,” Theodromia 18 (2016) 426–428, 433. See the same text also here:

https://www.scribd.com/document/325254627/ΝΑΥΠΑΚΤΟΥ-ΑΠΟΦΑΣΕΙΣ-Ι-Σ-Ι-ΓΙΑ-ΑΜΣΟΕ-ΚΑΙ-ΚΑΤΑΛΗΞΗ-ΙΣΤΟΛΟΓΙΟ-ΑΚΤΙΝΕΣ#from_embed, as well as here:

http://www.parembasis.gr/index.php/el/mitropolitis-3/ni-various-articles/4618-2016-09-25

4. This refers to the second text of the 4th Session of the Joint Theological Commission at Zagorsk, Moscow (15–22 September 1981), under the title The Infallibility of the Church. See Episkepis 259 (1981) 12: “The supreme organ of the Church for the infallible proclamation of its faith is only the Ecumenical Council [...] This, pronouncing under the oversight of the Holy Spirit, possesses its infallibility by virtue of its agreement with the entire Catholic Church. Without such agreement, no assembly is an Ecumenical Council.” (Quoted from Gr. Liantas, Pan-Orthodox Ministry of the Ecumenical Patriarchate and of the Church of Greece and the contribution of the two Churches in the bilateral theological dialogues with the Roman Catholic Church and the Old Catholic Church, ed. Kornilia Sfakianaki, Thessaloniki 2005, p. 106f.).

5. Luke 16:31

6. Holy Monastery of Pantokratoros, Melissochori, “Are the laity allowed to involve themselves in matters of faith?”, Theodromia 12:3 (July–September 2010) 368–380. See also: http://www.impantokratoros.gr/769A2154.el.aspx

7. M. Baker – N. Asproulis, “Fr. Georges Florovsky (1893–1979): A brief biographical and bibliographical note,” Theologia 81, vol. 4 (2010) 7–19.

8. G. Bempis, “Florovsky, Georges,” Religious and Ethical Encyclopedia 11 (1967) col. 1184:
“Here he became the outspoken herald of the return to the Fathers and to the ‘sacred Hellenism’ and, clinging firmly to the Greek patristic Tradition, he inevitably clashed with the also famous Russian thinker and sophiologist Sergius Bulgakov.”

9. A critique of some early ecclesiological ecumenist views of Fr. Florovsky was also made by His Grace Bishop Athanasios (Jevtić), former Bishop of Zahumlje and Herzegovina—himself now also among the champions of Serbian ecumenism—in an article on Fr. Florovsky’s ecclesiology. See: Bishop Athanasios Jevtić, “Fr. Georges Florovsky on the boundaries of the Church,” Theologia 81, vol. 4 (2010) 137–158.

10. Protopresbyter Professor G. Florovsky, Holy Scripture, Church, Tradition, trans. Dem. Tsamis, Works of Georges Florovsky vol. 1, ed. P. Pournaras, Thessaloniki 1976, p. 73f.

11. Protopresbyter Professor G. Florovsky, ibid., p. 74ff.

12. Protopresbyter Professor G. Florovsky, ibid., p. 75.

13. St. Gregory the Theologian, Funeral Oration (43) for St. Basil the Great 50, PG 36, 561A: “To these things he hurled insults, threatened, do whatever you wish, enjoy your authority. Let even the king hear these things, for as for us, you shall neither win us over nor persuade us to join in impiety, even if you threaten more harshly.”

14. “The final interview of the great Byzantinist Sir Steven Runciman,” http://i-m-patron.gr/i-m-patron-old.gr/keimena/runciman.html (from the journal Pemptousia 4 [Dec. 2000–Mar. 2001]): “Sometimes—what can I say—I feel very disappointed by the other Churches of the West. However, I am glad at the thought that in the next 100 years Orthodoxy will be the only historic Church that will still exist. The Anglican Church is in very bad shape. The Roman Catholic Church is continually losing ground. But fortunately, there is the Orthodox Church. I am greatly impressed by the increasing number of those who are embracing Orthodoxy, especially in Britain. I believe that it offers the genuine spirituality which the other churches can no longer transmit. All these things lead me to the conclusion that Orthodoxy will endure, in contrast to the others.”

15. “Steven Runciman, Historian (1903–2000). The man who changed the Western world’s perception of Byzantium,” Orthodoxos Typos 1472 (20 Sept. 2002) 2 (republication from To Vima, 8.9.2002).

16. Steven Runciman, The Byzantine Theocracy, trans. Iosif Roilidis, Domos Publications, Athens 2005, p. 111ff.

17. For a brief memorial biography and profile of this great theologian, see P. N. Trembelas (1886–1977), Faint Profile (offprint from the book Selection of Greek Orthodox Hymnography), ed. “Ho Sōtēr,” Athens 1988.

18. See “The condemnation of the late Panagiotis Trembelas by Mount Athos,” Orthodox Martyria 42 (Winter 1994) 78–87. The said Athonite critique was published around the mid-1970s. The problematic positions of Professor the late P. Trembelas had been included in his book Mysticism – Apophaticism – Cataphatic Theology. Twenty years later, the unacceptable anti-patristic views of the considered anti-Western and supposedly patristically-oriented Professor of Panteion Christos Yannaras were also condemned by Mount Athos. See: “Refutation of the erroneous views of Mr. Christos Yannaras concerning our Father among the Saints Nicodemus the Hagiorite,” Orthodox Martyria 40 (Spring–Summer 1993) 1–10.

19. On this subject see characteristically: Manual: Correspondence between Fr. J.S. Romanides and Prof. P.N. Trembelas, ed. Fr. G. Metallinos, Harmos Publications, Athens 2009. See specifically also the view of His Eminence Metropolitan of Nafpaktos Hierotheos (Introduction, ibid., p. 16): “Panagiotis Trembelas grew up in this scholastic climate and made a great effort and notable struggle to move toward patristic theology. This was a difficult task in his time […] He was a dynamic personality who brought about the major shift in Greece toward the Fathers of the Church.”

20. Protopresbyter Professor John Romanides, Dogmatic and Symbolic Theology of the Orthodox Catholic Church, vol. I, ed. P. Pournaras, Thessaloniki 19994, p. 6ff.

21. Protopresbyter Professor Th. Zisis, “Genesis and development of patristic-opposing post-patristicism,” Patristic Theology and Post-Patristic Heresy, publ. Holy Metropolis of Piraeus, Piraeus 2012, p. 266.

22. P.N. Trembelas, Dogmatics of the Orthodox Catholic Church, vol. II, publ. “Ho Sōtēr,” Athens 1979, p. 408: “This power of lay recognition is fully explained when it is considered that the determinations and formulations of the holy Synods concerning Christian truth are made, as we have said, according to the written and unwritten apostolic tradition, which does not constitute some dead theory and knowledge, but a living mindset of the whole body of the Church, testified and composed by the living faith of all its living members. That is, the treasure of the faith contained in Holy Scripture and generally in apostolic tradition ought to be the possession of every Christian and to be lived in his life. Hence, the determinations of the holy Synods related to this treasure, made from disputes by heretics concerning the life-giving truth, being followed with unceasing interest by the living members of the Church, cannot meet with indifference among the faithful, so long as these are not dead. Thus, the judgment of the ecclesiastical body concerning synodal determinations appears spontaneous, and at times unrestrainable, yet it also reveals the catholic mindset of the Church, which has never ceased to be testified and proclaimed by it.”

23. Archim. G. Kapsanis, “Memorial for the blessed Professor,” Koinōnia 44, 2 (Apr.–June 2001) 121.

24. M. Orphanos, “Funeral oration for Professor Konstantinos Dor. Mouratidis,” Koinōnia, ibid., 118ff.

25. K. Mouratidis, The essence and polity of the Church according to the teaching of John Chrysostom (dissertation), Athens 1958, p. 212: “… the participation of the laity in the shaping of ecclesiastical life, under the implied conditions—on the one hand of respect for the competency and rights of the hierarchy, which is the primary bearer of ecclesiastical ministries, on the other hand of the auxiliary character of the participation of the laity […] The holy Chrysostom regards the laity as precious and necessary collaborators of the clergy for the dissemination of evangelical truth […] Neglect of this duty constitutes a most grievous sin, and thus Chrysostom considers the one neglecting the duty of enlightening other brethren, especially those led astray by heretics, as an enemy of the Church.”

26. K. Mouratidis, ibid., p. 216: “The holy Chrysostom not only taught as necessary and imperative the active participation of all the faithful in the shaping of ecclesiastical life, but he also was the superb leader who inspired the multitudes of the faithful and transformed them into precious supporters and combatants of the good campaign. Chrysostom did not view the laity as opponents who ought to be kept distant from the organizational mechanism of the Church, but through superhuman efforts sought to achieve their active participation in it.”

27. K. Mouratidis, ibid., p. 219: “From the importance of the above passage it becomes abundantly clear that the laity are called not only to care about Church matters, but also to contribute to the governance of the Church in accordance with the canons. It is characteristic that in critical moments for the life of the Church, when unworthy clerics overturned the laws of the Church—which they were precisely called to protect and apply—it was the laity who saved the endangered ship of the Church. The shining example of the Church of Constantinople during Chrysostom’s time constitutes undoubtedly one of the most characteristic related cases in Church history. It is therefore not strange that the great Chrysostom, addressing his excellent flock, declared: ‘without you I will do nothing.’”

28. See the article: “Vlasios Phidas” https://www.wikipedia.gr/wiki/Βλάσιος_Φειδάς

29. See the article by D. Anagnostis, “Mr. Vl. Phidas confesses and reveals about the Kolymbari (Crete) gathering,” http://aktines.blogspot.gr/2016/12/blog-post_999.html (from Orthodoxos Typos 2146 [30 Dec 2016] 1.4).

30. See Phidas, Byzantium (Life–Institutions–Society–Church–Education–Art), Athens 1990, p. 154.

31. Ibid., p. 317.

32. Which Professor Phidas calls “logic of compromises or of opportunistic expediencies of political leadership or ecclesiastical hierarchy” (ibid., p. 317).

33. Benedict Englezakis (Archimandrite Paul), “The Church of Cyprus from 1878 to 1955,” in Twenty Studies on the Church of Cyprus (4th to 20th centuries), publ. A.G. Leventis Foundation – MIET, Athens 1996, pp. 616–617.

 

Greek source: https://salpismazois.blogspot.com/2017/09/blog-post_84.html

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