Sunday, April 26, 2026

Ecumenical Patriarch Meletios (Metaxakis): Freemason, Innovator, and Ecumenist

 

 

In a previous issue of Όρθόόοξος Ένστασις και Μαρτυρία, [1] we reprinted an important article, in which the blessed Confessor-Hierarch Chrysostomos (Kavourides), former Metropolitan of Florina, observes that, “the inspirers and pioneers” of the reform of the Church Calendar, Patriarch Meletios (Metaxakis) of Constantinople (1871-1935) and Archbishop Chrysostomos (Papadopoulos) of Athens, “these two Luthers of the Orthodox Church,” “being devoid, unfortunately, of a deeply Orthodox spirit, knowingly or unknowingly became tools of foreign aspirations and designs, the aim of which was to sunder the unity of the Orthodox Churches." [2] Additionally, there are, in the same article and in the commentary on the text, detailed references to the self-proclaimed “Pan-Orthodox Congress" of 1923, in Constantinople (May 10-June 8), and the issues pertaining thereto. [3]

Now, certain of the Faithful may have considered these characterizations harsh and excessive. Hence, the following questions arise, which require a clear and properly documented response, lest we give the impression of being artful slanderers:

• Was Patriarch Meletios (Metaxakis) a tool “of foreign aspirations and designs"?

• Was the calendar change carried out in good faith, and was it unrelated to the spirit of innovation and ecumenism that motivated Patriarch Meletios?

• Was Patriarch Meletios a great precursor of ecumenism, which is both destructive to, and deadly for, the Church?

Unfortunately, the historical evidence is conclusive and overwhelming, since it gives affirmative answers to these three inexorable questions. For the present, we will cite three witnesses only, in due course returning to them; and in the future, God willing, we will also publish a feature article on Archbishop Chrysostomos of Athens.

***

I. Patriarch Meletios Metaxakis [4] as a tool of “foreign aspirations and designs.” In 1967, the editorial committee of the Τεκτονικόν Λελτίον [The Masonic Bulletin] assigned the Freemason Alexander J. Zervoudakis the task of compiling a study “that would sketch the life of yet another brilliant star, which shines upon and illumines the firmament of the ‘Greek Orthodox Church.'" [5] Zervoudakis in fact compiled an extremely detailed biography of Patriarch Meletios, which is very noteworthy from an historical point of view and which runs to twenty-five pages. The small section that we have reproduced certainly speaks for itself and requires no commentary from us. Still, it is worth observing at the outset that what Zervoudakis writes is beyond contestation—and this for a number of reasons, but most importantly because he had personal knowledge of Meletios Metaxakis in his capacity as a Mason. Zervoudakis met Meletios in Constantinople, during the tragic days of 1922, as a member of a three-man commission, and conversed with him. “As I departed," Zervoudakis notes, “I greeted him as one Mason greets another Mason. He smiled and said to me: I see that you understand me.’ This recollection inspired me to accept and carry out the request of the editorial committee of the Bulletin, by publishing a portrait of our brother" (see note 5). He concludes his article, many pages long, as follows:

With the spiritual virtues with which Meletios was endowed, with his sound grasp of logic, and with his independent mind, free from pettiness, it is not surprising that he was ready to receive the light of Freemasonry.

The first time that he passed through Constantinople (1906), he became acquainted with the Masons. He met with them, impressing them with his critical and straightforward spirit and with his knowledge and opinions on various encyclopedic, general, ecclesiastical, and religious issues. They were interested in learning what kind of man he was and what he had done up to that point. What they learned prompted them to propose to him, in an adroit manner, during his second stay in Constantinople, the idea of becoming a Mason. It appears that, in this circumstance, the Masons, members of the Greek Political Association of Constantinople, with which Meletios was consulting at the time about the burning question of the Arab-speaking Orthodox (1908), acted in precisely such a way that the intrepid and inquisitive spirit of Meletios— who had hitherto heard much about the Masons in Cyprus and elsewhere—prompted him to ask his colleagues, whom he respected, to give him information about Freemasonry, and, after he had listened to them, to decide, with his well-known impetuosity and resolve, to follow the example of many English and other foreign bishops and seek to learn about, and be initiated into, the mysteries hidden within Freemasonry.

These Masons then brought him to the 'Harmony' Lodge, No. 44,6 in Constantinople, which had gathered in its ranks the cream of Greek society in that city—all the best that the Greek population in Constantinople had at its disposal in terms of literature, science, and power—and which, in one way or another, by virtue of its members, who belonged to every social organization, ethnic or otherwise, exerted a substantial influence on Greek life. They asked the then-Grand Master of Greece for permission to initiate Meletios, and when this was granted, he received the light of Freemasonry, at the beginning of 1909. He remained in Constantinople for one more year and fervently studied Masonic teaching, which allowed him to give all of his deeds and words a truly Masonic stamp, as we saw in our brief account of his activity. In every instance, righteousness and the true Masonic virtues, one might say, naturally and spontaneously guided hint in what he should say and how he should act. A clear sign of the influence that Freemasonry has on the formation of a man's character is when he is spiritually prepared to accept its teachings, when, that is, he is a born Mason—as Meletios was.

After his initiation, Brother Meletios kept up his Masonic activities wherever he went during his tumultuous life, as circumstances and surroundings permitted it. [7]

When I, the author, had the honor of seeing the light of Freemasonry in my turn at the aforementioned 'Harmony' Lodge, I remember with what pride and joy all of the brothers spoke about Meletios' initiation, when he was elected into our lodge. And I shall always remember the explanation that my esteemed Brother, Demetrios Xanthos, gave when I asked why it was necessary for us brothers to keep this initiation a secret; he guided me to a correct understanding of this and to a furthering of my true inner initiation.

Few are those who, like Brother Meletios, accept Freemasonry and make it the experience of their life. It was a genuine loss for us that he was so quickly called from the Grand Harmony Masonic Lodge into eternal repose, before completing the tasks with which he crowned his passing from our world. [8]

II. Patriarch Meletios Metaxakis as an innovator and modernist. In 1929, Metropolitan Irenaeus of Cassandreia submitted a very important Memorandum to the “Holy Synod of the Hierarchy of Greece, convened on 14 June 1929," [9] which, among many other topics, deals with Meletios Metaxakis in astonishingly severe terms. What the ever- memorable Metropolitan Irenaeus says is indisputable, since it is corroborated by a host of other testimonies. Paragraphs four and five of this historic Memorandum serve as a veritable catapult against the truly “pernicious Patriarch Meletios Metaxakis." Let us, then, examine some extracts from the Memorandum by this Hierarch, which are indeed revealing.

The spirit of innovationism and rebellion against the good and sound canonical order of the Eastern Orthodox Church was incarnate in the person of the pernicious Patriarch Meletios Metaxakis, who, adopting ideas that are preached sporadically, according to the whim of each individual, in periodicals and the daily press and are given wide diffusion, opportunely and inopportunely, satisfying the sinful wishes and self-serving desires of heterodox churches and secret societies, [10] to which, blinded by vainglory and sacrificing everything for the enhancement of his own ego, he owed his successive accession to the highest positions in the local Orthodox Churches, [11] convened a Pan-Orthodox Congress—unusual nomenclature in ecclesiastical parlance—which was, in truth, an anti-Orthodox one, in May of 1923 in Constantinople, at which...he replaced the ecclesiastical Julian Calendar with the Gregorian, in spite of every prohibition relating to this; and he decided to replace the eternal Paschalion, which was drawn up for the Orthodox Church by a decision of the First Ecumenical Synod, entrusting the creation of an astronomically more perfect one to the observatories of Bucharest, Belgrade, and Athens; he allowed Priests to cut their hair and to replace their venerable clerical attire with that of Anglican pastors; in violation of the Canons, he introduced the marriage [after ordination— Trans.] and second marriage of clergymen; and he entrusted the determination of the days of fasting and the manner of their observance to the judgment of the local Churches, thereby destroying the uniformity and order that have prevailed in the local autocephalous Orthodox Churches of the East. [12]

Acting in this way, he opened wide the gates to every innovation, abolishing the distinctive ethos of the Eastern Orthodox Church, according to which she preserves, genuinely and without innovation, everything that she has received from the Lord, the Apostles, the Fathers, and the Ecumenical and local Synods....

What right did this outsider [13] have to convene a Pan-Orthodox Congress without consulting the local Metropolitans of the Ecumenical Throne? And according to what law or Canon did the leader of a single local Church decide to annul a decree made by all of the Patriarchs of the East—indeed, by those Patriarchs who were so distinguished in the history of the Church after the fall of Constantinople, to wit, Jeremiah II of Constantinople, Meletios (Pegas) of Alexandria, Joachim of Antioch, and Sophronios of Jerusalem—on the question of the calendar and the Paschalion? [14] Is it permitted, in civil matters, for a lower court to reverse the decision of a higher court? Does a court of the first instance, for example, have the right to overturn the decision of a court of appeal? Neither the rulers nor the people have any respect for Bishops who show disrespect for the established order of their own Church. The people have contempt and disdain for Priests of the Most High who try to make themselves popular and who, through various innovations, divert the Church from the sacred and holy royal path, which the Godly-Minded Fathers and the Divinely-Assembled Synods have marked out for her.

The innovations of Meletios Metaxakis have not only alienated from the sacred Churches those faithful children of Orthodoxy who believe correctly and with simple hearts, and who do not reckon the established order of the Church to be susceptible to additions or innovations, bringing about the depopulation of such Churches in rural areas..., but have also divided into three groups the ancient autocephalous Eastern Orthodox daughter Churches, who were formerly renowned for their enviable sisterly love, concord, unity of faith, and simultaneous worship and praise of God, Who is holy; into two groups, with regard to the calendar; and into a third, with regard to the Paschalion. [15]

And we have become witnesses of a grievous event: the fact that the Romanian Orthodox Church celebrated Holy Pascha this year five Sundays earlier than the rest of the Orthodox Churches, [16] in flagrant violation of, and contempt for, the decisions and wishes of the First Ecumenical Synod....

It is a known fact that the Romanian Church paid for this violation of unity in the celebration of the light-bearing Resurrection of the Lord with the secession of the Orthodox of Bessarabia and other Romanian Orthodox, about eight million people in all, who celebrated the Holy Pascha along with those who observe the ancient order of the Eastern Orthodox Church.

No one wishes to be a prophet of doom, but....

III. Patriarch Meletios Metaxakis as a great precursor of the ecumenists. As is well known, at the fourth session (May 21) of the self- proclaimed “Pan-Orthodox Congress" (so proclaimed at the third session, May 18), which met in 1923 (May 10-June 8) in Constantinople, Patriarch Meletios Metaxakis introduced to the Congress a “wise hierarch of the Anglican Church, His Grace, Charles Gore, the former Bishop of Oxford’’; subsequently, at the fifth session (May 23), “His Grace, Bishop Gore, the former Bishop of Oxford, approached, accompanied by his companion, the Rev. Mr. Buxton, and occupied a seat to the right of the Patriarch." Next, there was a very illuminating discussion between the Patriarch and Bishop Gore regarding the calendar question, the joint celebration of feasts, the movement for union, and the conditions for union, etc. [17]

Now, the Anglican Bishop Gore was not in Constantinople by chance. The fact that he delivered two documents to Meletios Metaxakis is proof of some “groundwork," since “the one bears the signatures of five thousand Anglican priests, who state that they find no difficulty in full union," while “the second document is a proposal concerning the terms of union; it represents the ideas of the en tire Anglican Church, because there is a spirit of good will throughout" (see note 17).

These events took place on Wednesday (May 23). But something occurred the previous Saturday (May 19) which in no way falls short of the carryings-on of the ecumenists today. Let us allow the journal of the Ecumenical Patriarchate to speak for itself:

+++

Anglican Hierarch in Constantinople

Last Saturday, His Grace, Charles Gore, the former Bishop of Oxford and President of the Permanent Committee for Inter-Church Relations of the Archdiocese of Canterbury, arrived in Constantinople.

His Grace is making a tour of the different centers of the Church in the East, in order to study the ecclesiastical issues that concern them. He first visited Prague, then Bucharest, and, after that, Belgrade and Sofia, and is leaving for Athens today. On the same day that he arrived, he went to the Patriarchate shortly before Vespers, accompanied by the Anglican priest in Constantinople, the Rev. Mr. Borrow, and the Rev. Mr. Buxton, his companion throughout the trip and the secretary of the committee over which he presides.

His All-Holiness received the distinguished hierarch, who visited him in his office wearing his Episcopal robes. Shortly thereafter, as the bells rang for Vespers, His Grace went on ahead and occupied a seat in the Church with his retinue, opposite the Patriarch's throne. After a short while, the Patriarch entered in the customary manner, and Vespers for the Feast of the Holy Fathers of the Synod in Nicaea was celebrated, with His All-Holiness and the synodal Hierarchs presiding together. After the dismissal, His All-Holiness addressed the Anglican hierarch from his throne, expressing his joy over the latter's presence and praying for the success of his continuing journey. His Grace, the former Bishop of Oxford, said in reply that he felt particular emotion over being at the center of Orthodoxy, and he concluded by praying for the union of the Churches. After taking from the hands of the Great Archdeacon the blessing Cross that was offered to him, he blessed the congregation with it, as the choirs chanted “Εις πολλά ετη, Αέσποτα" [“Many years, Master"].

After Vespers, His All-Holiness introduced the members of the Holy Synod to the honored visitor in the Patriarchal reception hall. On the following day, His All-Holiness paid a return visit to His Grace in the Hotel Tokatlian, where he was staying, and discussed different ecclesiastical matters with him for some time. When he learned about the Pan-Orthodox Congress, His Grace expressed a desire to go to one of its sessions and address the representatives of the Orthodox Churches. He did, indeed, attend the Wednesday session, and remained at the meeting for about half an hour; after the exchange of addresses, which were delivered in a spirit of complete cordiality and firm hopes for the sure progress of the God-pleasing work of union between the Churches, Orthodox and Anglican, through the prevalence on both sides of a yearning for union, there was a dialogue about the goal and proceedings of the Congress.

His Grace was escorted with honor as he departed from the Patriarchate. [18]

***

In view of the evidence set forth above, and in a compelling way at that, we think that the Confessor-Hierarch Chrysostomos (Kavourides), former Metropolitan of Florina, was absolutely right to characterize the inspirers and pioneers of innovation of the New Calendar as he did in the prologue of the aforementioned article. [19]

 

NOTES

1. See Όρθόόοξος ’Ένστασις καί Μαρτυρία, Vol. II, No. 17 (October-December 1989), pp. 67-78.

2. This article was a section of a marvellous work by the Confessor-Hierarch entitled, To Εκκλησιαστικόν Ήμερολόγιον ώς κριτήριον τής Όρθοόοξίας [The Church Calendar as a Criterion of Orthodoxy], consisting of eighty-seven densely- written pages and completed on July 1/14, 1935, at the Holy Monastery of St. Dionysios, in Olympos, to which he had been exiled.

3. There were references to the Congress in footnotes 5 (p. 68), 6 (pp. 69-70, in detail), 7 (p. 70), 8 (p. 70), 14 (p. 73), 15 (p. 73), and 17 (p. 74) of the article in question (also see footnotes 1 and 2 in the present article).

4. Meletios Metaxakis (1871-1935). From the village of Parsas, Lasitheon, Crete, he was meddlesome, a troublemaker, a great innovator, and beyond doubt a Freemason. He served as Metropolitan of Kition, in Cyprus (1910-1918), Metropolitan of Athens (1918-1920), Patriarch of Constantinople (1921-1923), and Patriarch of Alexandria (1926-1935). In 1908, together with the then-Archimandrite Chrysostomos (Papadopoulos), he was expelled from the Holy Land by Patriarch Damianos of Jerusalem for activity against [the Brotherhood of] the Holy Sepulchre. Metropolitan Methodios (Kontostanos) of Kerkyra (1942-1967) wrote about him: “But Meletios Metaxakis, this outcast from the Holy Land, from Kition, from Athens, from Constantinople, and subsequently from Alexandria, an unstable, restless, power-hungry spirit, an evil demon, did not balk at attempting to impose himself on the Patriarchate of Jerusalem, even all the way from Alexandria" (see Dionysios M. Batistatos [ed.]. Πρακτικά και Αποφάσεις τον εν Κωνσταντινονπόλει Πανορθοδόξου Συνεδρίου, 10.5-8.6.1923 [Proceedings and Decisions of the Pan-Orthodox Congress in Constantinople, 10 May-8 June 1923] [Athens: 1982], pp. iv and v. See also Monk Paul of Cyprus, Νεοημερολογιτισμός-Οίκουμενισμός [New Calendarism and Ecumenism] [Athens: 1982], pp. 48-59).

5. See Alexander J. Zervoudakis, «Διάσημοι. Τεκτ.: Μελέτιος Μεταξάκης» [“Famous Freemasons: Meletios Metaxakis"], Τεκτονικόν Αέλτιον: ’Όργανον τής Μεγάλης Στόας τής Ελλάδος [The Masonic Bulletin: Journal of the Grand Lodge of Greece], Vol. XVII, No. 71 (January-February 1967), p. 25.

6. “Permission for his initiation was requested (No. 130, 12 March 1910), Marios Polatos says in Διακόσια Χρόνια Ελληνικού Τεκτονισμού [Two Hundred Years of Greek Freemasonry] (Athens: 1962), p. 373, which is a mistake, according to what the author has since ascertained," ibid., p. 49, n. 83.

7. “In this regard, the esteemed Brother Evangelos Asteris, a 33rd degree Mason, the Worshipful Master of the ‘Zeno’ and ‘Hermes’ Lodges in the jurisdiction of Egypt, related to me that Archimandrite Brother Nicanor Kanellopoulos, Worshipful Master of the ‘Beicha’ Lodge, told him that Patriarch Meletios of Alexandria was present with him at two or three functions of the ‘Alexander the Great’ Lodge, No. 35, in Alexandria, in 1930 or 1931. The same information was given to the Worshipful Master of the ‘Society of Friends’ Lodge, the esteemed Brother Panagiotis G. Kretikos, uncle of the ever-memorable Brother Emmanuel P. Ladikos, a 33rd degree Mason in Egypt, who, off the record, recounted to Brother Kretikos that ‘they had notified Patriarch Meletios, when he was preparing to leave Athens for Alexandria, that all of the Freemasons in Egypt would organize a general Masonic reception for him. Meletios then sent them a telegram, asking them to refrain from this undertaking, in order to avoid creating problems from the side of those opposed to Freemasonry,”’ ibid., p. 50, n. 84.

8. Ibid., pp. 49-50 (emphasis ours).

9. Metropolitan Irenaeus of Cassandreia, Υπόμνημα εις τήν Ίεράν Σύνοδον τής Ιεραρχίας τής Ελλάδος, σνγκλειθεϊσαν τή 14.6.1929 [Memorandum to the Holy Synod of the Hierarchy of Greece, convened on 14 June 1929] (Athens: 1929) (40 pages).

10. Freemasonry constitutes a “secret society." Secret societies are “associations and orders that keep then purposes and customs secret" (Μεγάλη Ελληνική Εγκυκλοπαίδεια, Vol. XVII, p. 903).

11. Regarding his election to successive Sees, see the summary in A.D. Delembasis. Πάσχα Κυρίου (Athens: 1985): pp. 648-649 (as Metropolitan of Athens), and pp. 660-664 (as Patriarch of Constantinople).

12. See the “Resolutions of the Pan-Orthodox Congress" in Batistatou, Πρακτικά και Αποφάσεις, pp. 211-222. Resolutions: 1. Concerning the correction of the Julian Calendar and the determination of the date of Pascha “on the basis of astronomical calculations." 2. Concerning conditions for participation [by the Orthodox Church] in consultations regarding the creation of a more perfect calendar that would be acceptable to all Christians and concerning the reduction of the number of days in the week and a fixed date for the celebration of Pascha. 3. Concerning the marriage of Priests and Deacons after Ordination. 4. Concerning the second marriage of widowed Priests and Deacons. 5. Concerning various matters: the age at which clergy should be Ordained; the allocation of funds to pastors; the cutting of hair and the outer clothing of clergy; the keeping of monastic vows; impediments to marriage; the celebration on weekends of Saints’ Feasts that fall in the middle of the week; the fasts. 6. Concerning the celebration of the sixteen-hundredth anniversary of the First Ecumenical Synod at Nicaea and the convocation of a Pan-Orthodox Synod. And 7. Concerning sympathy for Patriarch Tikhon of Russia, who was in prison. These innovations of Meletios Metaxakis were not received in silence. Even the Masons write of this: “But he met with strong resistance when he wanted to implement certain American methods in Constantinople, as well as his innovative ideas regarding the Calendar and the Paschalion, the marriage of clergy, and other ideas that he promoted at the Pan-Orthodox Congress, which created problems and an outcry ” (see Zervoudakis, «Μελέτιος Μεταξάκης,» p. 43 [emphasis ours]). Archbishop Chrysostomos (Papadopoulos) of Athens also does not conceal the reaction that resulted: “Unfortunately, the Eastern Patriarchs who refused to take part in the Congress rejected all of its resolutions in toto from the very outset. If the Congress had restricted itself only to the issue of the calendar, perhaps it would not have encountered the kind of reaction that it did" (see Archbishop Chrysostomos of Athens, Ή Αιόρθωσις τον Ίονλιανον Ημερολογίου εν τη Εκκλησία τής Ελλάδος [The Revision of the Julian Calendar in the Church of Greece] [Athens: 1933], pp. 31-32 [emphasis ours]). Specifically, with regard to the “Congress’s" resolution on the calendar, “it was rejected by almost all of the Orthodox world" (see [Metropolitan] Geimanos of Sardis and Pisideia, «Τό Ημερολογιακόν Ζήτημα» [“The Calendar Question"], ’Ορθοδοξία, No. 3 (30 June 1926), pp. 59-70; see also Delembasis, Πάσχα Κυρίου, pp. 671 -674). Very telling are the words of Patriarch Photios of Alexandria, who, writing to Archbishop Chrysostomos of Athens (Protocol No. 2664, 1/14 August 1923), speaks “about all of the other issues, both the decrees that are being hurled from Constantinople with a zeal not according to knowledge, to the detriment of the whole Church, and the machinations and threats that are being made, with the rapacious ferocity of our eternal enemies, against the most holy Mother of the Churches..." (see Archimandrite Theokletos A. Strangas, Εκκλησίας Ελλάδος ’Ιστορία [History of the Church of Greece], Vol. II [Athens: 1970], pp. 1161-1162 [emphasis ours]).

13. The Greek word that we have rendered as “outsider" is έπηλυς, -υδος (έπί+ήλυθ<ήλυθον<ήλθον). (The literal meaning of this word is “one who has come to a country from elsewhere," an “alien," or a “foreigner," as opposed to a “native." The point that Metropolitan Irenaeus seems to be making is that Patriarch Meletios, as a modernist and ecumenist, was really a stranger to the traditions and mores of the Orthodox Church—Trans.)

14. See Athanasios Comnenos Ypsilantis, Τα μετά την Άλωσιν [The Aftermath of the Fall of Constantinople] (Constantinople: 1870), pp. Ill, 113, and 114; Patriarch Dositheos of Jerusalem, Τόμος Αγάπης κατά Λατίνων [Tomos Agapes Against the Latins] (Iasi: 1689)], pp. 538-540; idem. Περί των εν 7εροσολνμοις Πατριαρχευσάντων-Αωόεκάβιβλος [Twelve Books Concerning the Patriarchs of Jerusalem], Book X, Chapter 8, §6 (Bucharest: 1715), p. 1167 ([Thessaloniki: B. Regopoulos, 1983], p. 57); Meletios of Athens, Εκκλησιαστική ’Ιστορία [Church History], Vol. Ill (Vienna: 1784), pp. 402, 408; Philaret (Bapheides), Metropolitan of Didymoteichos, Εκκλησιαστική ’Ιστορία [Church History], Vol. Ill, Part 1 (Constantinople: 1912), pp. 124-125; C.N. Sathas, Βιογραφικόν σχεδίασμα περί του Πατριάρχον Ίερεμίου Β' [A Biographical Sketch of Patriarch Jeremiah IT] (Athens: 1870), pp. 91-92; Archimandrite Gerasimos Karavangelis, Επιστημονική διατριβή περί τής εορτής του Πάσχα [A Scientific Treatise Concerning the Feast of Pascha] (Constantinople: 1894), pp. 121-122; Nicholas Voulgaris, «Ή μεταρρΰθμισις τοϋ Ίουλιανοϋ Ημερολογίου» [“The Reform of the Julian Calendar”], a three-part article in the Trieste newspaper, Νέα Ήμερα, Vol. XXII, Nos. 1120-1122 (1896); J.N. Kaimiris, «Ιερεμίας Β' Πατριάρχης Κωνσταντινουπόλεως» [“Jeremiah II, Patriarch of Constantinople’’], in the Θρησκευτική καί Ηθική Εγκυκλοπαίδεια, Vol. VI (Athens: 1966], col. 781.

15. “The previous unity and cooperation were sundered and shattered as a result of evil, or rather, sinful, actions...; the change [of the calendar] was not accomplished after study and preparation, but primarily under the influence of outside factors.... Between those who follow the Old Calendar and those who follow the New, there is a permanent difference of thirteen days with regard to the celebration of all of the so-called fixed Feasts, without exception. This is an unprecedented situation in the annals of the Church, because in spite of the diversity of calendars in the early centuries and the unsettled state of the festal calendar, there was never any difference in time between celebrations of one and the same event (e.g., the repose of a Saint), as happens today. The discord becomes more pronounced on the great Feasts of the Nativity, Theophany, and the Dormition of the Theotokos. Some are fasting, while others are celebrating. This discord leads to the question: Who is celebrating—we or the Church? The answer ‘we’ destroys the sanctity of the Feasts, making them an individual affair for each person. The answer ‘the Church’ postulates one celebration, for the Church is one.... The sole exception is the Orthodox Archdiocese of Finland, which, with the consent of the Ecumenical Patriarchate, always celebrates Pascha with the Catholics and Lutherans in Finland, according to the Gregorian Calendar" (See The Church of Greece, To Ημερολογιακόν Ζήτημα: Είαήγησις τής Εκκλησίας τής Ελλάδος προς τήν Πανορθόδοξον Μεγάλην Σύνοδον [The Calendar Question: A Proposal by the Church of Greece to the Great Pan-Orthodox Synod] [Athens: 1971], pp. 5, 8, 10-11.)

16. “In October of 1924, the New (or Gregorian) Calendar was uncanonically introduced into the Romanian Church by her ‘Primate,’ Metropolitan Miron Cristea (1886-1939), a former Uniate hierarch in Transylvania, very well-educated and energetic, in the mold of Meletios (Metaxakis), and was received by all with virtually no reaction. Only the Skete of Procov, under the leadership of its Abbot, Hieromonk (later Metropolitan) Glicherie, refused to recognize the calendar change. The Romanian Patriarchate, both in 1926 and in 1929, celebrated Pascha with the Latins, constituting an infringement of the Orthodox tradition of centuries. The common celebration of Pascha with the Latins was sinful, because this was intentional on the part of Patriarch Miron Cristea; he fully implemented the New (or Gregorian) Calendar even when it came to the reckoning of Pascha, ignoring the other local Orthodox Churches, which—even after the calendar change—‘(with the exception of Finland) celebrate Pascha according to the decree of the Synod in Nicaea, calculating its date on the basis of the Julian Calendar and accepting March 21, for the sake of convention, as the vernal equinox.’ Moreover, the action of Patriarch Miron was wholly ill-advised, because he failed to take into account the bitter experience of the Romanian people, who, on the one hand, had been so beleaguered by Uniate propaganda, and, on the other hand, had a former Uniate for then Patriarch. From a pastoral point of view, this was a totally reckless act! Indeed, on the second occasion that this was done. Patriarch Miron Cristea, having the undivided support of the Uniate (Greek-Catholic) Prime Minister, Julius Maniu, and several others among the clergy, compelled all of the Romanian Metropolises to proceed with the common celebration of Pascha with the Papists, a fact which evoked great commotion in the ranks of the Romanian Church. Metropolitan Gurias of Bessarabia (a region of Romania between the Rivers Prut and Dniester, north of the Black Sea, 44,420 sq. km. in area, now annexed to the Soviet Union [at the time of writing, in 1981—Trans.]) openly criticized Miron and, ignoring the Patriarchal decree, ordered his churches to celebrate with the other autocephalous Orthodox Churches. Patriarch Miron’s action also scandalized these other Orthodox Churches, many of which reacted in protest. As well, the White Russian clergy of Bucharest (also known as the Russian Church Abroad, under the Karlovtsy Synod) took a particularly strong position during those trying days, ignoring the Patriarchal order and celebrating Pascha according to the traditional canonical decrees. Even in the Parliament there were stormy discussions regarding this issue, and both the Patriarch and the Prime Minister were harshly censured by Representatives Trifu (Nationalist Party) and N. Lupu (Agrarian Party). The uncanonical and un-Orthodox celebration of Pascha with the Latins deeply scandalized the pious Romanians, many of whom returned to the Old Calendar. Among them were three Hieromonks, as well as two Romanian Hieromonks who had returned to Romania from the Holy Mountain. Hieromonk Glicherie, who had taken a leading position in the Old Calendar movement from the beginning, began to build churches in the vicinity of the Neamts Monastery. The first was established in the village of Vanatori. By 1936 he had built about forty large churches, the majority of them in Moldavia" (Metropolitan Cyprian of Oropos and Fill, Ή μαρτυρική Εκκλησία των Γ.Ο.Χ. Ρουμανίας [The Martyric Old Calendar Orthodox Church of Romania] [Fill, Attica: 1981], pp. 11-13). [The foregoing translation, by Archimandrite (now Archbishop) Chrysostomos, to which we have made some slight modifications, originally appeared in The Orthodox Word, Vol. XVIII, No. 1 [102] [January-February 1982], pp. 6-7—Trans.]

17. See Batistatou, Πρακτικά και Αποφάσεις, pp. 66, 84-88 (emphasis ours).

18. See the periodical Εκκλησιαστική Αλήθεια, published in Constantinople, No. 19 (26 May 1923), pp. 166-167 (emphasis ours). It should, of course, be noted that the ecumenist activities of Meletios Metaxakis had begun much earlier. Concerning these activities, see Delembasis, Πάσχα Κυρίου, pp. 625, 661. “At that time, he (Meletios Metaxakis) was in America, where he engaged in schismatic activities and communed uncanonically with heretical Protestants there. On December 17, 1921, ‘vested, he took part in a service in an Anglican church, knelt in prayer with the Anglicans before the holy table, which he venerated, gave a seimon, and blessed those present in the church’ of the heretics" (Strangas, Εκκλησίας Ελλάδος Ιστορία, Vol. II, p. 1118).

19. The judgments of other writers regarding Patriarch Meletios Metaxakis are also of interest, since they reveal what kind of man he was: The aforementioned Freemason, Alexander J. Zervoudakis, wrote this about the “pernicious Patriarch": "The struggle that he had in overcoming the reactions that he constantly encountered in his endeavor to impose radical, but beneficial, changes suddenly brought about an unexpected collapse," that is, his death on July 27-28, 1935 («Μελέτιος Μεταξάκης,» p. 48 [emphasis ours]). Metropolitan Nicholas of Nubia, Meletios Metaxakis’ successor in Alexandria, said about him: ''Optimism frequently impelled him to undertake bold and hazardous schemes, from which he had to be forcibly restrained by the Holy Synod" (ibid, [emphasis ours]). The Athenian periodical Ζωή wrote, among other things, on the occasion of the death of Meletios Metaxakis: “He made himself a singular figure in the Church, in which his political persona was absorbed in and subjugated to his ecclesiastical one. Frustrated by conservatism, he manifested liberal tendencies, which oftentimes proved uncontrollable, although—to use his own phrase—‘many hitches forced him to moderate’ these tendencies. Nevertheless, he had no trouble in adapting, or at least attempting to adapt, the Church and ecclesiastical affairs to expediency, regarding even the institutions of the Church as easily adaptable to expediency and the demands of the age. ...He turned his passion, whenever he had no other arena for his laborious efforts, to the institutions of the Church, seeking to provide an outlet for his restless initiatives through changes in the external life of the Church, before beginning the necessary work for its internal renewal" (Ζωή, No. 1195 [10 August 1935] [emphasis ours]).

 

Greek source: Όρθόόοξος ’Ένστασις και Μαρτυρία, Vol. II, Nos. 18-21 (January-December 1990), pp. 148-160.

English source: Orthodox Tradition, Vol. XVII (2000), Nos. 2-3, pp. 2-11.

The Optimism of Orthodoxy

by Dr. Alexander Kalomiros




“Don’t be pessimistic,” say the false shepherds. “Orthodoxy is known by its optimism. God won’t abandon His Church, and ‘the gates of Hades shall not prevail against it.’” Truly, Orthodoxy is optimistic, but only regarding things that pertain to God and come from Him. God is omnipotent love itself. He shall never abandon us. Rather, the fear is that we could abandon Him. The pessimism of those who do not willfully shut their eyes to reality is confirmed by man’s retreat from his Creator. Nothing shall ever happen to the Church of Christ, even if it is left with only two or three people on earth. It is not the Church that is in danger. We are in danger. The question is how many of us finally shall remain in the eternal and immortal Church of Christ which, like Him, is synonymous with the Truth.

Earthly prospects were never optimistic. Christians never expected the conditions of life to improve, spiritually or materially, in this decaying world. The course of history near the end times has been described in the darkest colors, as much by the Lord as by His disciples. Christians always foretold and anticipated the advance of sin and corruption, which shall reach their peak in the days just before the glorious Second Coming of Christ. The millenialists’ optimistic expectations of a thousand-year earthly kingdom in this world of corruptibility were condemned by the Church as soon as they first appeared in the early Christian centuries. It is not possible for the kingdom of God (where every true Christian lives in the depths of his heart as a betrothal of the Spirit) to prevail and shine forth in its glory on this corruptible earth. “New wine is not put into old wineskins.” “We look for new heavens and a new earth, wherein dwelleth righteousness” (2 Pet. 3:13). Without the resurrection of the dead and the renewal of all things which the Lord will bring with His Second Coming, it is not possible for us to speak of optimistic outlooks. Quite the contrary. “When the Son of Man cometh, shall He find the faith upon the earth?” (Lk. 18:8).

A Substitute for Paradise

The expectation of an earthly paradise is characteristic of religious and even political sentiments, which essentially become confused with each other. We Christians “have no abiding city here, but we seek the coming one” (Heb. 13:14). But the devil doesn’t want us to work for the future city but to be content with this corruptible earth as if we are to stay on it forever. This is the world we try to improve, as much as possible to make more lasting and comfortable. He fools us with the deception that a Paradise is possible without the resurrection and renewal of all things, without incorruptibility; in other words, without the risen Christ. We tried to replace the Paradise we lost with civilization. We departed from God and His creation and worshipped the works of our own hands to the point of being enslaved by them and allowing them to destroy us. The whole of men’s activity, the blood and sweat they spill have but one purpose: to make life more accommodating in our dark and gloomy prison. They didn’t believe in Christ because He offered heavenly, not earthly riches, and even asked them to deny themselves earthly and tangible riches in order to attain heavenly and intangible ones. But those who believed also expect that Christ will give them earthly riches in exchange for their faith and obedience. They expect Him to make everything easy in their lives. They want the law of God to be followed by everyone so an earthly happiness will cover the world. They seek a substitute for the kingdom of God and not the kingdom itself. Each substitution makes man lose the ability to live the real thing itself. When the devil tempted Christ in the wilderness, it was exactly this earthly happiness he asked Him to give to men, because it would have meant their eternal death. They use Christianity as a means to a better world and deceive themselves that they are Christians.

The Need for Tyranny

“What is truth?” The tired, agnostic question of Pontius Pilate is repeated by spiritual and political tyrants in every age. “Intangible truth doesn’t concern us,” they say. “What’s important is a solid administrative structure. What you say about internal unity which the truth supposedly brings, wherever it may be, we regard with ‘tolerance.’ We care about outward, tangible unity which all can see. They respect and fear it but it can’t exist without discipline and enforcement. The free and willing obedience of love you speak of is comical, and it’s for comical people. We want effectiveness. We’re not working for the soul of this or that person, but for the masses, for the whole world. We don’t tolerate schisms. You say the sheep must separate from the wolves. And we answer that the sheep need, if not the wolves, then at least sheepdogs and shepherds who herd them to slaughter and eat them. No, sirs, if the truth exists, it must always be mixed with untruth to render it harmless. The plain truth is a very dangerous thing. And these are not the times for dangers; the age of valor is past. We are pacifists! Down with war! Leave us in peace and let us live our little lives on this earth as comfortably as we can. Please, no naive zealotry.”

When Christ is present, no one perceives a need for administrative unity. Love for Christ is true unity. “That they may be one as We are one.” It is when we leave Christ that we feel the intense need for a monolithic structure and even for tyranny, e.g., the Papacy. In Orthodoxy there was never a monolithic structure; there were only paternal and familial relations. The Great Hierarch and King of Kings was not of this corruptible world even though He is omnipresent. The kingdom of God “is not of this world” even though all those who live in the kingdom began to taste of it in this world. This world belongs to the leader of this world, the devil. He is the first tyrant, the leader of all the tyrants of the earth, political and religious.

Only Christ binds people together, because only He binds them ontologically with God in His own Person. But Christ doesn’t force people to accept Him. When He is not present, the need for external continuity raises its head automatically, likewise the need for compulsory discipline and political or spiritual tyranny—democratic or oligarchic, it makes no difference. The granting of a monarch to ancient Israel was a concession that God made to a stiff-necked and unbelieving nation that wanted a visible and tangible king and wouldn’t let Christ dwell in its heart. He gave them a king so the devil wouldn’t give them his own; but He did so because of their hardness of heart and their little faith.

The same is true of the New Israel, us Christians. Even if by divine economy there’s some margin for state rule, there’s no margin for spiritual and ecclesiastical tyranny, because it undermines Christ and intrudes on territories that are His alone in the kingdom of heaven. The Papacy and other ecclesiastical tyrannies cast out Christ from the lives of the people and took over in His place. They “sentenced” Him to remain in heaven and to leave us alone here on earth. Ecumenism is characterized by its indifference to the truth (Christ) and its great concern for a monolithic continuity and structure they call “the unity of the churches,” a unity in the midst of doctrinal confusion and vagueness, a unity with global visions and religio-political dimensions.

The universal state is being built before our eyes. It will unite all religions and nations under its absolute power. Its underpinnings are essentially complete. It will be a state in the absolute sense because subjugation to it will not only be outward and material but, above all, spiritual. The world awaits it with nostalgia and yearning as the only hope of the millenialist dreams of all the ages for an earthly “paradise” in the midst of death and corruption.

Electronic Rule

The present-day computerized state is incomparably more effective than any tyrant mankind has known up to now. Its strength lies in its ability to know each citizen in depth and to seize hold of him from within, not only externally, as it always was until yesterday. And, as powerful nations unite, coordinating and multiplying their strength, their ability to impose their rule increases vertically. The super-effective means governments have today for exercising their authority over people were never even dreamed of by tyrants of the past. Beneath an innocent veneer of democracy, citizens are bound with fine and invisible yet superstrong threads. We are in the age of electronic brains and electronic information and mass communication. Very few understand this kind of tyranny because man’s subservience to contemporary government is mainly ideological. A centuries-long cultivation of thought has prepared man and made him desire such a subjugation. The state which is coming will be the realization of universal human desires. We expect from the state today what the pagans asked of their gods. We want it to be our wet nurse, protector, and god. We ask it to provide our food, clothing, housing, recreation, education, and health. And the state slyly accepts the invitation and fosters our expectations. It asks us to give only one thing in return: the freedom of our mind and heart.

We give our birthright for a bowl of lentil soup. We gave the state the right to come into our homes and our family relationships, to influence our thought, and to mold our children. We gave it our acceptance and the right to know whatever it needs to alienate us from one another. It channels our disputes into false quarrels so it can maintain the impression that we are free and able to express our views on such supposedly major conflicts as marxism and capitalism, the two facets in our times of the ancient worship of Mammon. Everything has become uniform today—people’s mentality, their lives, appearance, habits, desires, and expectations. That uniformity, which even extends to a common worldwide language, is the backbone of our subjugation to a single universal state mechanism which encloses us like a net. And like fish we don’t see it. In subtle psychological ways, they guide us to want, to agree, and to believe what we must do, what we must accept one way or another. The striped uniforms we’ll all be wearing on the global prison ship are already sewn. The changing of mankind into herds and masses has essentially been achieved. The “mystery of iniquity” has arrived at its final phase because people have “received not the love of the truth, that they might be saved” (2 Thess. 2:7, 10).

 

Source: The Ark, Number 13, July 1988, Ridgewood, NJ: George S. Gabriel. pp. 1-4.

“I give you a new commandment...”

John Kalomiros


The fall of the nature of man into decay and death resulted in disunity in creation. This is the bitter poison of the primordial serpent. The Incarnation of God in the Person of Christ healed this discord with a unifying power. Christ resurrected our nature by sowing upon it the power of the Holy Spirit and His binding force that abolishes all divisions. Christ Himself gave us an example of sacrifice, love, and unity of things formerly estranged, without terms or boundaries. He gave us the example as the man who had asked nothing for Himself.

The new commandment of Christ is “love one another,” but this is not a moral commandment. The Lord did not urge us merely to use our natural powers to do our best in a world where strife and fragmented natures rule. He endowed us with the living power of the Holy Spirit so we may tread upon snakes and scorpions, i.e., the works of division, and build bridges of unity.

This capability of ours, in the language of the Church, is called “person” and “image of God.” It refers the potential of human existence to come face to face with the Other in a spirit of unity without the afterthoughts of fallen nature. It is a renunciation of power for the sake of relationship. It is what gives us the strength to cast aside our need to be competitive, to conquer, to dominate another, and to be assertive at the expense of another.

This power enables us to cease looking with distrust at another's love and searching for its ulterior motives. And through this power, we cease holding back love for others and trying to determine if their reasons for loving us are satisfactory. This is the mystery of relationships in which one ceases to seek his own self-interests, for real love is offered without reasons. (And this is the stumbling block that Christ poses for us if we have not experienced the mystery of the human person.)

Even in that condition, we are able to change our mind and our way of living. And then we can abandon anything that offers us self-justification or exalts our personal aggrandizement to the detriment of others. Gladly putting ourselves in the other person’s position, we agree to look at things from his vantage. We set aside our apprehensions that compel us to be suspicious and skeptical about feelings of others.

We need to show trust without reservations and to dismiss the cunning attitude that yields only a little ground to the other person while we secretly hope to bring him around to our way. Our way, however, is not better than his. There is no “better” and no “worse.” There is only a deeper condition where people suffer and clash with one another and have no way out except to give one another a helping hand and to accept the weaknesses of others, and not with skittishness but with love, exactly as Christ did for us. Others do not need us to critique them, something we are usually inclined to think and do. No one can be changed only by logical criticism and reasoned arguments, for the problems do not arise from a faulty solution to an equation. Rather, the problems are fissures deeply carved in a man’s soul. It is these wounds that estrange us from one another and cause our hardness and behavior, and our self-justification. This is how the lines of division become etched in our souls and divide people, leading us to classify people as either smart or stupid, handsome or ugly, educated or uneducated, correct or wrong, possessing truth or falsehood. Such disparities, of course, are based on individual cultivation or natural endowments. But what we need to do is to remove from inside of us the moralistic frame of reference that fortifies these differences that are usually external phenomena without absolute impact on human value.

Fallen men ascribe a certain validity to these characterizations, imbuing them with power that sustains the hardened core of their individualism. In other words, they use these characterizations to form a hardened ego, the individualistic “I,” instead of the interpersonal “I” who is always defined by an ongoing dialogue with another who is equal but different.

What transforms the human soul, then, is love and the receiving of love from another, and the filling of the fissures of the soul with the knowledge that another has looked beyond the fissures and disparities and has seen the beauty of our soul, and has loved it. This is how the wounds of the soul are healed and they cease to hurt. To do anything else is only to chafe one another’s wounds. But what we do not always understand is that a wound or fissure is neither entirely yours nor entirely mine. Half the fissure is mine and the other half is yours. This is because the fissure is the line between us, even if the line was drawn by the other. Whether I want it or not, half of it is always mine. Then I always bear half the responsibility for its healing. And when I poke at it, I make the wound deeper, not only for the other soul but for myself also.

We often say that the Holy Spirit heals the soul. Indeed, it is the Holy Spirit Who imparts the cohesive energy that closes these wounds and fissures. This is why we call Him the Comforter and Spirit of Truth. What we usually forget to say, however, is that the Holy Spirit does not work in a magical way in our souls. We need to call upon Him, but it needs to be with an inner energy from our heart and mind; we cannot expect mechanistic recitations of words to be magically effectual. The magical perception of special, effectual words is the work of the self-seeking individual, who invokes the operation of special powers either for himself or for someone else. The powers that act within us then bring only division. We need to change our manner of supplication from a self-serving prayer to an inner energy of the synaxis, the gathering of souls in the same place. Someone must take the first step by acting in a unifying way to break the vacuum and open paths of communication and to offer his outstretched friendly hand to the other. There is no room here for prerequisites and grudges but only for self-denial and the end of intransigence and of minds that are closed. Whatever contributes to the bonding of souls is meaningful, and whatever impedes it must be cast aside. In this kind of effort, the Holy Spirit is indeed present and working. This kind of effort is the only truly Christian prayer and invocation of the Holy Spirit and not some self-serving vanities. The only reason the Holy Spirit does not visit us is that we do not invoke Him in that manner.

How do we differ from pagans when we pray to God only with our lips in order to support our selfish purposes, our own reasoning, or our own opinion of what is good and what is evil? Are there certain special words that enchant God and automatically activate divine compliance for us? This is the reason why Apostle Paul insists so much on the criterion of love. Love is not simply an emotional posture that inflates our souls with nice feelings for the other person. It might be this also, but, at the same time, love presupposes the whole internal journey to self-denial that emerges from the self. Then a man ceases to focus on protecting his own feelings from injury, and he freely embraces the other person, not because the other person is attractive or smart or educated but because this is what his soul wills. This is the freedom of man: to act in this free manner against the bondage of our passions. Moreover, this is why it is said that Christ loved us. It does not mean that we deserved His love but that He loved us freely, taking on Himself the wounds of each one of us. When it is said that He healed our nature, it means that He gave man the energy of the Holy Spirit and the capacity for love and sacrifice, which He was first to manifest for us. This is what is called the renewal of creation, and it became a reality in His divine Incarnation and Resurrection. It is we who fail to exploit this potential because we resort to nurturing our ego and shielding it in thick armor. And then we fail to become “all things to all men,” even to the few people who are close to us. We always keep grudges. We always look at others critically. We excuse ourselves by saying that our harshness springs from love while it is nothing but a hardness full of criticism and faultfinding. So, it is not the Holy Spirit that is present in our relations with others but a spirit of division even if we invoke the help of God.

When we hear that God is love and that He teaches us a loving way of life, it refers to a theological image that each of us needs to lower to our own levels and capabilities and to regard its realization as an obligation. This is our first obligation as Christians and the first witness we must convey before people: to love one another, to love with genuine love and without doubts, without fears, without always worrying about the consequences for us. Once we begin our journey from this point, the Holy Spirit will come, and we will not have to declare our witness for Christ, for He will witness for Himself.

What is a saint? A saint is not simply a man who has a good, private relationship with God. A relationship with God works only in the context as described above. The saint is the one who intercedes in the bringing down the Holy Spirit and gathers souls together without calling attention to his own presence but yields the room for Christ to be present. The saint manages to be invisible, transparent, and he retires into the background. His presence spreads the rays of the Spirit everywhere, and people feel the listing of the Spirit, but he remains unseen. The only people who clash with such a person are those who place obstacles before others in order to bolster their own tyrannical ego.

 

Source: Επίγνωση, Issue 87/2003. Translated by Dr. George S. Gabriel.

New Heretical Dogmatic and Canonical Alteration of Orthodox Ecclesiology at the Phanar

April 26, 2026

 

 

 

The presence of the Coptic Patriarch Theodore II at the Divine Liturgy at the Phanar, his placement on an honorary throne, and his liturgical participation through the kiss of peace and the blessing constitute yet another profound ecclesiological deviation, because we have here a denial of the Fourth Ecumenical Council of Chalcedon, 451 A.D.

The Copts, as Anti-Chalcedonians, persist in a Christology which the Orthodox Church condemned 1,500 years ago.

The rendering of honors “during the Liturgy” to a primate who does not fully accept the two natures of Christ, without confusion, without change, without division, without separation, constitutes an adulteration of dogma and the preaching of heresy “bareheaded”, that is, publicly.

The participation of the Coptic Patriarch in the liturgical body of the Eucharist—even without the common Chalice—flagrantly violates the Holy Canons, namely Apostolic Canons 45 and 64, and Canon 33 of Laodicea. The Canons explicitly forbid common prayer with the heterodox, since prayer is the supreme expression of common faith. The exchange of the liturgical kiss and the joint blessing of the people are perceived by the fullness of the Church as an indirect recognition of mysteries and priesthood in a community that stands outside the One, Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic Church.

The stance of the Phanar is grounded in the decisions of the Council of Crete of 2016, which constituted the “legislative” foundation for contemporary ecumenism. The recognition of the “historical name” of the heterodox as “Churches” by the Council of Crete is now being used as a tool for the deconstruction of Orthodox exclusivity.

The “spirit of Crete” advances an ecclesiology of expanding boundaries, wherein the diplomacy and geopolitical power of the Ecumenical Throne are placed above the synodal consciousness of Orthodoxy, which, in its majority, did not accept the decisions of Crete.

Thus, it demonstrates that this approach serves a “Christianity of public relations.” In order for the Phanar to present itself as a global pole of unity, it sacrifices canonical exactitude. This strategy leads to syncretism, where love is severed from Truth. Yet, according to Saint Maximus the Confessor, love without the right faith is an “anthropocentric falsehood.”

 

Greek source: https://apotixisi.blogspot.com/2026/04/blog-post_292.html

Why did Christ allow Himself to be crucified?

 Pavlos Klimatsakis, Doctor of Philosophy | April 26, 2026

 

 

Christ did not “undergo” the Cross, but, on the contrary, permitted it voluntarily, at every step of His Passion. Neither God the Father, nor the devil, nor any necessity compelled Him. The God-man Himself said “Yes” to the crucifixion and the Passion. This voluntary sacrifice is the center of the Orthodox understanding of the Cross, which Saint Maximus the Confessor analyzes with respect to its ontological and ethical depth.

1. The Cross as the Culmination of the Incarnation

For Saint Maximus, the Incarnation and the Cross are not two separate events. They are one and the same mystery of the economy, which is ultimately led to its fulfillment in Christ’s Ascension. The Word of God became man, not only in order to teach or to work miracles, but in order to heal the whole of human nature and its deepest wound, death, which entered the world through sin. Christ had to reach the ultimate point of the postlapsarian human condition, so that He might take upon Himself the entire tragedy of fallen humanity. Saint Maximus says that the Word “always and in all things” wills to accomplish the mystery of His embodiment. The Cross is the most radical embodiment: God descended not only as far as the manger, but as far as the Cross and death.

2. The Voluntary Humility of Christ as the Healing of the Human Will

Christ, like every man, had and has a full human will, but one that is absolutely pure, that is, without any inclination toward sin. In the garden of Gethsemane, where Christ says: “Father, if it is possible, let this cup pass from Me; nevertheless, not as I will, but as Thou wilt,” through obedience to the will of the Father, Christ heals the human will, showing that true freedom is not to do whatever we want, but freely to conform our will to the will of the Father. Through His voluntary obedience unto death, and indeed the most dishonorable death, Christ nails self-love to the Cross: that radical egoism of ours which is the source of all the passions. He does not conquer death by violence, but by humility. Death, which was the weapon of the devil, becomes the weapon of Christ: “trampling down death by death.”

3. The Cross as Cosmic Recapitulation

The Cross is not simply a sacrifice for humanity, but is at the same time a cosmic event; it is the culmination of the divine plan for the whole of creation. Saint Maximus describes five great ontological divisions that exist in creation and which man cannot transcend without divine grace:

1. Uncreated – Created

2. Intelligible – Sensible

3. Heaven – Earth

4. Paradise – Inhabited World

5. Male – Female, in man

In his primordial state, man was created as a “natural bond” and mediator, with the purpose of uniting all these extremes and leading them back to God. But he failed. Christ, as the new Adam and the God-man, takes up this cosmic work and brings it to completion through the Cross, the Tomb, the Resurrection, and the Ascension, by which He ultimately leads human nature before the Father, uniting the uncreated with the created.

Saint Maximus emphasizes that Christ “makes the natures new.” The Cross thus becomes the central event on the basis of which the whole of creation is reunited. For this reason Saint Maximus says that “he who knows the mystery of the Cross and the tomb also knows the principles of beings.” The Cross reveals the deeper divine purposes behind every creature. It is not an “unfortunate episode” in history and in the divine economy, but the culmination of the divine plan for the salvation of man. In this way, cosmic recapitulation is shown to be the ontological union of things divided, accomplished within the one hypostasis of the Word.

Saint John Damascene on the Condescension of the Word

Saint John Damascene, in An Exact Exposition of the Orthodox Faith, emphasizes that the kenosis of the Word and His humility are an act of the second hypostasis of the Holy Trinity. The Word assumes the whole of human nature, with all its natural properties, including death, without losing anything of His divinity.

On the basis of the concept of the communication of properties, according to which human nature receives the divine properties, such as incorruption and omnipotence, and the divine nature receives the human things, such as hunger, thirst, and death, within the unity of the one hypostasis, Damascene explains that the Cross is not an act of the man Jesus alone, but an act of the God-man. He also emphasizes that this humility is indeed complete, but without confusion or alteration of the natures. Christ truly dies as man, but His death is life-giving, because it is the death of God.

5. Daily Crucifixion with Christ

Christ permitted His Cross not only as a historical event of salvation, but also as a way of life for every believer. Saint Maximus points out: “Either we are crucified together with Him, or we crucify Him.” There is no neutral stance. Every day, with every decision of ours, we are either with Him on the Cross, or on the side of those who crucify Him through our indifference, sin, and pride. Crucifixion with Christ is neither theoretical nor limited to Great Week. It is a daily spiritual struggle that unfolds in three interconnected stages, according to the mystical interpretation of Saint Maximus:

First, we put the passions to death. The passions — self-love, anger, pleasure, envy, vainglory — are the “nails” that keep Christ crucified within us. We do not destroy them, but transform them. Desire becomes longing for God, anger becomes zeal against the devil, sorrow is changed into compunction and repentance. This is the “inactivity” of the passions taught by Saint Maximus: we nail them to the Cross, so that their movements contrary to nature may be rendered inactive.

Second, we bury the thoughts. Thoughts are the roots and seeds of the passions. Saint Maximus emphasizes that we must “bury” them immediately, without dialogue, without analysis, without feeding them. Burial is an act of silence and of guarding the nous. When a thought is “crucified” and “buried,” then space is freed within us for the presence of Christ.

Third, we raise the Word within us. When we have put the passions to death and buried the thoughts, then Christ rises within our heart as a living presence. This is not an emotional experience, but a real participation in the Resurrection already from this life. The Grace of Baptism, which may have been buried beneath the passions, is rekindled, and man begins to live according to the saying of Paul: “It is no longer I who live, but Christ lives in me” (Gal. 2:20).

Saint Maximus warns that without this participation, even the deepest theology becomes “demonic.” The demons know the doctrines perfectly, but they have no repentance, they have no cross, they have no love. For this reason, one can speak correctly about the Cross and yet live far from it. True knowledge of the Cross is the fruit of daily crucifixion with Christ, not mere intellectual understanding.

This daily crucifixion with Christ is accomplished chiefly within the Church: through prayer, humble confession, self-restraint, obedience, almsgiving, and above all through participation in the Mysteries. Every Divine Liturgy is an extension of the Cross and the Resurrection. Every time we receive Communion, we receive within ourselves the Crucified and Risen Christ, who continues to call us near to Him.

Thus, the Cross which Christ permitted becomes for us a path of life and a gate of theosis. It is not only the means of our salvation, but also the way in which we are called to live every day, until we reach the fullness of resurrectional joy.

6. Conclusion

Christ permitted them to crucify Him because only in this way could the mystery of His love and of the divine economy be completed. He was not obligated. He did it because He is love, and love reaches to the uttermost point. By His Cross, Christ abolishes death through death, heals human nature, restores creation to its original harmony, and opens the path of theosis for every man who wishes to follow Him.

The saints of the Church show us that the Cross is not only a historical event, but also a mode of existence for the whole of creation and for each one of us. The more we are crucified together with Christ daily, the more we are raised together with Him. And only in this way do we understand why He permitted them to crucify Him: so that He might give us the possibility of becoming crucified together with Him and glorified together with Him, in the eternal life of the Holy Trinity.

 

Greek source:

https://orthodoxostypos.gr/%ce%b4%ce%b9%ce%b1%cf%84%ce%af-%e1%bd%81-%cf%87%cf%81%ce%b9%cf%83%cf%84%e1%bd%b8%cf%82-%e1%bc%90%cf%80%ce%ad%cf%84%cf%81%ce%b5%cf%88%ce%b5-%ce%bd%e1%bd%b0-%cf%84%e1%bd%b8%ce%bd-%cf%83%cf%84%ce%b1/

Submission to the Hierarchy Presumes their Fidelity to Orthodoxy

A Brief Response to the Unlearned Fr. Cherubim Tsinoglou

April 26, 2026

 

 

Fr. Cherubim Tsinoglou [an archimandrite in the Official Church’s Metropolis of Thessaloniki], acting without prudence, falls into the very grave delusion of an anti-patristic identification of the Church with her administrative structure and with mechanical submission to the hierarchy.

[See (in Greek): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ESm9BluAAQw]

In Orthodox ecclesiology, the bishop does not possess an authority of his own above the Faith, but stands “in the type and place of Christ” strictly and only insofar as he rightly teaches the word of truth. His authority springs from his identification with the Tradition of the Saints; when this identification is severed by heresy, his canonical authority becomes spiritually dead and inactive.

When a bishop is swept away into heresy—whether Ecumenism or some other false belief—he automatically ceases to be a guarantor of unity and is transformed, according to the Fathers, into a “grievous wolf” who threatens the flock of Christ. The unity of the Church is not organizational or bureaucratic, but unity “within the Truth.” Therefore, in such a critical deviation, the blind and undiscerning obedience preached by Fr. Cherubim is not a Christian virtue or humility, but criminal complicity in the betrayal of the Faith and participation in the alteration of the Gospel.

Fr. Cherubim’s insistence on imposing submission even in the face of the pan-heresy of Ecumenism shows a “darkened mind” that has lost the spiritual senses of discernment. This is a grave spiritual illness befitting the “Christian by imagination”; that is, one who rests content in forms and legal structures, while the essence of the Faith is emptied out. Fr. Cherubim’s “obedience” is thus transformed into an idol that sacrifices the Truth on the altar of administrative order, ignoring that the Church survives in history not through compromised administrations, but through the confessors who refused to have communion with error.

Fr. Cherubim’s position nullifies the conciliar and democratic spirit of Orthodoxy, turning the bishop into an “infallible” ruler of the papal type. Truth, however, precedes the bishop. When the bishop betrays the Truth, the faithful people and the clergy have a duty, according to Saint John Chrysostom, not to follow “evil guides” into the precipice of perdition.

Fr. Cherubim errs gravely and canonically when he characterizes walling off as “schism.” The 15th Canon of the First-Second Council (861 AD) remains unshaken: those who cease commemorating a bishop who publicly preaches a condemned heresy not only do not divide the Church, but preserve her from schism. The word “to wall oneself off” means that the faithful person raises a wall against the pseudo-bishop, and not against the Body of Christ. Fr. Cherubim’s attempt to present confession as “rebellion” constitutes a distortion of the Canons for the purpose of protecting a hierarchical pyramid reminiscent of “Orthodox Papism.”

If the logic of the “infallible” administration advanced by Fr. Cherubim were valid, then Saints Maximus the Confessor and Mark of Ephesus would have had to submit to the heretical synods and to the patriarchs of their time. Yet the history of the Church was written by those who “disobeyed” the bureaucracy of administration in order to remain faithful to Tradition. In Orthodoxy, the final guardian of the Faith is the people of God, and the theory that the bishop is above all judgment even when he alters Dogma constitutes an ecclesiological heresy that nullifies the conciliar polity.

Fr. Cherubim’s stance is not merely an erroneous assessment, but a conscious submission to the demands of the times and to worldly interests that want a Church subordinated to diplomacy. When bishops stray from the path of the Fathers and lead the flock to the precipice of Ecumenism—which nullifies the uniqueness of Salvation in Christ—or to the alteration of the sacramental life, walling off ceases to be a simple canonical possibility. It becomes the only path of salvation, because communion with a heresy-professing bishop defiles the faithful, according to the teaching of Saint Theodore the Studite: “communion with heretics leads to common perdition.”

The theology used by Fr. Cherubim proves to be not only shallow, but also extremely dangerous for the salvation of souls. Instead of exercising the prophetic rebuke owed by every priest against “wolf-shepherds” who destroy Dogma, he chooses to attack with fury those who, at great personal cost, wage the battle for the safeguarding of Right Belief. This inversion of values—where the confessor is baptized “schismatic” and the heresy-professing one “canonical”—constitutes the complete distortion of the Orthodox ethos.

Furthermore, Fr. Cherubim’s denial of the right of walling off makes him a theological advocate of error. If we accept, as Saint Justin Popović rightly discerned, that Ecumenism is the “pan-heresy” that gathers together all the errors of the West, then whoever preaches submission to bearers of this heresy becomes a participant in the same impious deed. The history of the Church is inexorable: Truth is neither divided nor negotiated for the sake of a false “unity” under the omophorion of a heretic. Fr. Cherubim’s attempt to impose communion with heresy as a prerequisite for belonging to the Church constitutes the very definition of ecclesiological alteration. Walling off is the “living wall” that the Church raises in order to remain unharmed by the virus of apostasy. Whoever mocks this wall, in reality, desires the conquest of Orthodoxy by the spirit of this world.

Silence in the face of heresy is not an “ecclesiastical mindset,” but spiritual suicide. May God preserve us from teachers who use the cassock to baptize darkness as light and betrayal as obedience.

 

Greek source: https://apotixisi.blogspot.com/2026/04/blog-post_925.html

 

Saturday, April 25, 2026

Fr. Basile Sakkas: Do We Have the Same God as Non-Christians?


 

On Thursday, April 2, 1970, a great religious event took place in Geneva. Within the framework of the proceedings of the Second Conference of the “Association of United Religions,” the representatives of ten major religions had been invited to gather in the Cathedral of Saint Peter. This “common prayer” was based on the following motive: “The faithful of all these religions had been invited to coexist in the worship of the same God!” Let us see whether this claim is valid in the light of Holy Scripture.

In order to explain the matter better, we will limit ourselves to the religions that have historically followed one another in this order: Judaism, Christianity, Islam. These three religions, in fact, lay claim to a common origin: as worshippers of the God of Abraham. Thus, it is a very widespread opinion that, since we all claim to be descendants of Abraham, the Jews and Muslims according to the flesh and Christians spiritually, we all have as our God the God of Abraham, and all three of us worship, each in his own way, of course, the same God. And this same God constitutes, in some way, the point of unity and “mutual understanding,” and this invites us into a “brotherly relationship,” as the Chief Rabbi Dr. Safran emphasized, paraphrasing the Psalm: “Oh, how good it is to see brothers sitting together…”

From this perspective, it is evident that Jesus Christ, God and man, the eternal Son and co-unoriginate with the Father, His Incarnation, His Cross, His glorious Resurrection, and His Second and dread Coming become secondary details that cannot prevent us from “fraternizing” with those who regard Him as “a mere prophet,” according to the Qur’an, or as “the son of a prostitute,” according to certain Talmudic traditions! Thus we would be placing Jesus of Nazareth and Muhammad on the same level. I do not know what Christian worthy of the name could accept this in his conscience.

One might say that in these three religions, if we set aside the past, one can agree that Jesus Christ is an extraordinary creature and that He was sent by God. But for us Christians, if Jesus Christ is not God, we cannot regard Him either as a “prophet” or as a “messenger of God,” but only as a great deceiver beyond compare, since He proclaimed that He was the “Son of God,” thus making Himself equal to God (Mark 14:61–62). According to this ecumenistic solution on a supra-confessional level, the Trinitarian God of the Christians would be the same as the monotheism of Judaism, of Islam, of the ancient heretic Sabellius, of the modern anti-Trinitarians, and of various sects of the “Illuminati” type. There would not be Three Persons in One Godhead, but one Person, unchangeable for some, or one who successfully changes “masks” (Father – Son – Holy Spirit) for others! And yet someone could pretend that this was “the same God.”

Here is something that someone might naively propose: “Nevertheless, there is one common point for the three religions: all three confess God as Father!” But according to the holy Orthodox faith, this is absurd. We always confess: “Glory to the Holy, Consubstantial, Life-giving, and Indivisible Trinity.” How can we separate the Father from the Son when Jesus Christ assures us that “I and the Father are one”? (John 10:30) And the holy Apostle and Evangelist John the Theologian, the Apostle of love, clearly confirms: “Whoever denies the Son does not have the Father either” (1 John 2:23).

But even if all three of us call God Father: whose Father is He really? For the Jews and the Muslims He is the Father of men on the level of creation; whereas for us Christians He is, first of all, “before the foundation of the world” (John 17:24), “the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ” (Eph. 1:3), and through Christ He is our Father “by adoption” (Eph. 1:4–5) on the level of redemption. What similarity, then, is there between Divine Fatherhood in Christianity and in the other religions?

Others may say: “But Abraham worshipped the true God; and the Jews through Isaac and the Muslims through Hagar are the descendants of this genuine worshipper of God.” Here one must clarify many things: Abraham did not at all worship God in the form of the impersonal monotheism in which the others worshipped Him, but in the form of the Holy Trinity. We read in Holy Scripture: “And the Lord appeared to him by the oak of Mamre… and he bowed himself to the ground” (Gen. 18:1–2). In what form did Abraham worship God? In an impersonal form, or in the form of the Divine Triune Unity?

We Orthodox Christians honor this manifestation of the Holy Trinity in the Old Testament on the day of Pentecost, when we adorn our churches with branches symbolizing the ancient oaks, and when we honor in their midst the icon of the Three Angels, as our Father Abraham honored it! Descent from Abraham according to the flesh is useless to us if we are not reborn in the water of Baptism, in the faith of Abraham. And the faith of Abraham was faith in Jesus Christ, as the Lord Himself has said: “Your father Abraham rejoiced to see My day” (John 8:56). Such also was the faith of the prophet-king David, who heard the Heavenly Father say to His Consubstantial Son: “The Lord said to my Lord” (Ps. 109:1; Acts 2:34). Such also was the faith of the “three children in the furnace,” when they were saved by the “Son of God” (Dan. 3:25); such also was the faith of the holy Prophet Daniel, who saw the vision of the two natures of Jesus Christ in the mystery of the Incarnation, when the Son of Man came to the Ancient of Days (Dan. 7:13). Therefore the Lord, addressing the biologically indisputable descendants of Abraham, said: “If you were Abraham’s children, you would do the works of Abraham” (John 8:39), and these works are “to believe in Him Whom God has sent” (John 6:29).

Who, then, are the descendants of Abraham? The sons of Isaac according to the flesh, or the sons of Hagar the Egyptian? Are Isaac or Ishmael the descendants of Abraham? What does Holy Scripture teach through the mouth of the divine Apostle? “In the case of Abraham, the promises were made to him and to his seed. It does not say, ‘and to seeds,’ as though referring to many, but to one: ‘and to your seed,’ who is Christ” (Gal. 3:29). It is there, in Jesus Christ, that Abraham became the father of many nations (Gen. 17:5; Rom. 4:17). After such promises and such assurances, what meaning does bodily descent from Abraham have?

According to Holy Scripture, Isaac is regarded as the seed or descendant, but only as a type of Jesus Christ. In contrast to Ishmael, the son of Hagar (Gen. 16:1), Isaac was born in the miraculous “freedom” of a barren mother, in old age and contrary to the laws of nature, like our Savior, who was born of a Virgin. He went up the hill of Moriah as Jesus went up Golgotha, carrying on his shoulders the wood of the sacrifice. An angel saved Isaac from death, just as an angel rolled away the stone of the tomb to show us that the tomb was empty, that the Risen One was no longer there. At the hour of prayer, Isaac met Rebecca in the field and led her into the tent of his mother Sarah, just as Jesus will meet His Church in the clouds in order to bring her into the heavenly tabernacles, the New Jerusalem, the long-desired homeland.

No! We do not have the same God as the non-Christians! The absolutely essential thing, the sine qua non, for knowing the Father is the Son: “He who has seen Me has seen the Father; no one comes to the Father except through Me” (John 14:6, 9). Our God is an incarnate God, whom “we have seen with our eyes and have touched with our hands” (1 John 1:1). The immaterial One became material for our salvation, as Saint John of Damascus says, and He has been revealed to us. But when was He revealed to today’s Jews and Muslims, so that we should suppose that they know God? If they have a full understanding of God apart from Jesus Christ, then Christ was incarnate, died, and rose in vain!

According to the words of Christ, they have not yet come fully to the Father. They have some idea of God, but this idea does not include the full revelation of God given to man through Jesus Christ. For us Christians, God is inconceivable, incomprehensible, indescribable, and immaterial, as Basil the Great says. For our salvation He became, insofar as we are united to Him, conceivable, describable, and material, by revelation in the mystery of the Incarnation of His Son. To Him be glory unto the ages of ages. Amen. And for this reason, Saint Cyprian of Carthage says that whoever does not have the Church as Mother does not have God as Father!

May God preserve us from apostasy and from the coming of the Antichrist, whose preliminary signs are multiplying day by day. May He protect us from the great tribulation, which not even the elect will be able to endure without the grace of Him who will shorten those days. And may He protect us by keeping us in the “little flock,” the “remnant according to the election of grace,” so that, like Abraham, we may be able to rejoice in the light of His countenance, through the intercessions of the Most Holy Theotokos and Ever-Virgin Mary, of all the inhabitants of heaven, of the clouds of martyrs, prophets, hierarchs, evangelists, and confessors who remained faithful unto death, who shed their blood for Christ, who begot us through the Gospel of Jesus Christ in the waters of Baptism.

We are their children—certainly weak, sinful, and unworthy; but we shall not stretch out our hands toward a strange god! Amen.

 

Source: La Foi Transmise, April 5, 1970.

 

 

 

Ecumenical Patriarch Meletios (Metaxakis): Freemason, Innovator, and Ecumenist

    In a previous issue of Όρθόόοξος Ένστασις και Μαρτυρία, [1] we reprinted an important article, in which the blessed Confessor-Hiera...