Thursday, June 4, 2026

The Interruption of Commemoration, the Only Effective Measure Against Heresy: Canonical Considerations

Theologian Mihai-Silviu Chirilă

 

 

Separation from the Heretic in Holy Scripture

Separation from the heretical man is commanded by Holy Scripture, through the words of the Holy Apostle Paul and of the Holy Apostle and Evangelist John. The Holy Apostle Paul counsels Titus: “A man that is a heretic, after the first and second admonition, reject. Knowing that he that is such is subverted and has fallen into sin, being self-condemned” (Tit. 3:10–11).

In the Epistle to the Romans, the Holy Apostle Paul warns: “And I beseech you, brethren, to mark those who cause divisions and offenses contrary to the teaching which you have received. Depart from them” (Rom. 16:17).

In the Epistle to the Galatians, the Holy Apostle Paul says: “But even if we, or an angel from heaven, should preach to you another Gospel than that which we preached to you, let him be anathema! As we have said before, so now I say again: If anyone preaches to you anything other than what you have received, let him be anathema!” (Galatians 1:8–9).

For his part, the Holy Apostle and Evangelist John teaches: “If anyone comes to you and does not bring this teaching, do not receive him into the house and do not say to him: Welcome! For he who says to him: Welcome! becomes a partaker in his evil deeds” (2 John 1:10–11).

Canonical Grounds for the Interruption of Commemoration

The commemoration of the hierarch at services has two meanings: it shows the priest’s submission to the respective hierarch, and the fact that the priest preaches the teachings taught by the hierarch whom he commemorates. For this reason, the cessation of the commemoration of the hierarch for any reason other than his heresy is considered schism and is sanctioned by the deposition of the respective priest. Under the conditions in which the hierarch openly preaches a heresy, the continuation of his commemoration means that the commemorating priest is a partaker in the heresy which the bishop publicly preaches, and at the judgment of Christ he will have the same fate as the heretical bishop with whom he remains in communion.

There are two holy canons which provide that, in the case in which the local hierarch is manifestly teaching a heresy, the priest has the right to fence himself off from this heresy through the interruption of the commemoration of the hierarch at the holy services: Apostolic Canon 31 and Canon 15 of the First-Second Council of Constantinople.

Apostolic Canon 31: “If any presbyter, despising his bishop, shall make a separate assembly and establish another altar, knowing no fault against the bishop in piety and in righteousness, let him be deposed as a lover of rule; likewise also the other clerics who shall join themselves to him, for they are tyrants and usurpers. And let the laymen be excommunicated. But let this be done after the first, and second, and third entreaty of the bishop,” [1] refers to the condemnation of the priest who would separate from his bishop for any reason other than heresy, as results from its interpretation in the Pedalion: “any presbyter who would despise his bishop and, without knowing that he errs manifestly either in piety or in righteousness, that is, without knowing him to be manifestly either a heretic or unjust.” [2] The interpretation introduces the conjunction “or,” showing that, in order for the commemoration of the bishop to be stopped, it is not necessary for both conditions to be met, namely that he be both a heretic and unjust; it is sufficient that one of the two conditions be fulfilled.

When the priest interrupts commemoration on the grounds of the hierarch’s partaking in heresy, the interpretation of Apostolic Canon 31 says that he cannot be subjected to any sanction: “and as many as separate from their bishop before a synodal investigation because he preaches in the hearing of all some evil opinion and heresy, such persons not only are not subject to the examination mentioned above, but are also deemed worthy of the fitting honor of the right-believing, according to Canon 15 of the First-Second Council.” [3] The interpretation introduces the condition mentioned by Canon 15 of the First-Second Council, of separation from the heretical bishop before a synodal investigation, but speaks of the bishop’s preaching of some heresy in general, without retaining the specification from Canon 15 of the First-Second Council that the heresy be condemned by the Holy Councils or by the Holy Fathers.

The same understanding of the canon is also held by the professor of Canon Law Ioan N. Floca, whose manual of Canon Law is normative for contemporary Romanian theological schools, in his work The Canons of the Orthodox Church, Notes and Commentaries: “It is considered that the accomplices of schismatic clerics also fall under the same penalty, of course if these do not separate from their bishop for well-founded reasons, such as the bishop’s deviation from the right faith and from conduct according to justice. From the text of the canon, it results that in such cases the clerics are free to separate from their bishop, that is, to leave his obedience.” [4]

Canon 15 of the First-Second Council has two parts: the first, which speaks about the obligation of commemorating the hierarchical superior and about the relationship between the metropolitan and the patriarch from this point of view, being a continuation of Canons 13 and 14, in which the relationship between priest and bishop, respectively between bishop and metropolitan, is regulated from the perspective of their commemoration at services; the second part of the canon, formulated thus: “for those who separate themselves from communion with their president on account of some heresy of his condemned by the Holy Councils or by the Holy Fathers, that is, from him who publicly preaches the heresy and teaches it with uncovered head, such persons not only are not subject to canonical censures, walling themselves off from communion with the named bishop before a synodal investigation, but they shall also be deemed worthy of the honor due to the right-believing. For they have not condemned bishops, but false bishops and false teachers. And they have not broken the unity of the Church by schism, but have hastened to deliver the Church from schisms and divisions,” permits the priest to cease commemorating his hierarch in the situation in which the latter should publicly preach a heresy.

The second part of the canon introduces the exception of the situation of heresy to Canons 13, 14, and the first part of Canon 15, because these canons refer to the situation in which the priest, bishop, or metropolitan interrupts commemoration “on the pretext of some accusation,” that is, for any other deed which the non-commemorated hierarch may have committed (the interpretation of the canon also gives us two examples of such deeds: fornications or sacrilege), [5] with the exception of heresy, for which the canon permits, in the second part, that the priest, bishop, or metropolitan separate from their president before the synodal investigation. The fact that the priest also has the right to do this results from the formulation “those who separate themselves from communion with their president,” which includes priests as well, and from the connection which the interpretation of Apostolic Canon 31 makes (which speaks strictly about the interruption of the commemoration of the hierarch by the priest) with the second part of Canon 15 of the First-Second Council.

Commenting on Canon 15 of the First-Second Council, Professor Ioan Floca states that: “taking into account the provisions of Canons 13 and 15, it is mentioned that these provide only for the situation when those concerned cause schism against their superior by invoking certain offenses committed by him, but unproven. In the case in which the superior publicly preaches in church some heretical teaching, then the respective persons [the priests – author’s note] have the right and the duty to separate immediately from that superior. In this case, not only will they not be sanctioned, but they will be praised, because they have lawfully condemned the guilty one and have not rebelled against him.” [6]

Father Ioan Floca’s commentary introduces several very important elements in the understanding of this canon:

• It does not strictly condition the public preaching of a heresy condemned by the Holy Councils or the Holy Fathers, it being understood that it is a matter of heresy in general, which is condemned both by councils and by the Fathers, by the fact that it is contrary to their teaching, not only of a certain heresy already condemned by them.

• The interruption of commemoration is perceived as a right and as an obligation of the priest.

• The interruption of commemoration must be done immediately once knowledge has been taken of the existence of a heresy in the bishop’s preaching.

• The priest who interrupted commemoration lawfully condemned the guilty one and did not rebel against him.

The duty of interrupting commemoration by the priest derives first of all from his status as shepherd of the flock of Christ. In this capacity, he has the obligation to obey Christ, the word of His Gospel, the teachings of the Holy Fathers and of the Holy Canons, as he promises in the Confession which he makes at ordination, when he says: “Throughout my whole life I will be guided by the teachings of the Holy Gospel, of the Holy Apostles, by the Holy Canons and the teachings of the Holy Fathers of the Orthodox Church.” [7] Submission and fidelity toward the bishop, as even the confession at ordination conceives them, invoked insistently in the consistories which judge the confessing priests, are assumed for the situation in which the bishop, for his part, fulfills the promise given at his own ordination as hierarch, to keep all the holy dogmatic and canonical teachings of the Church, the teachings of the Holy Fathers, and the Holy Orthodox Tradition. At the moment when the bishop is no longer guided by these, the priest must remain obedient to Christ and to His Church, as Father Iustin Pârvu also remarked: “Our hierarchs, when they are invested in the episcopacy, take an oath that they oblige themselves to preserve the right faith and the seven Ecumenical Councils. If they violate the oath, then they are no longer bishops, they no longer submit to their superiors, their shepherds. If they do not submit to their superiors, that is, to the Holy Fathers, how can they demand obedience from us? We do not listen to thieves, but to the voice of the Church, which speaks through the Holy Fathers, not through minds intoxicated by the gilded miters on their heads.” [8]

Remaining obedient to Christ and to the Church, to the Holy Apostles, the Holy Fathers, and the Holy Ecumenical Councils, the priest cannot be charged with the dogmatic offense of failing to observe the Confession of ecclesial fidelity (art. 14 RACDIJBOR [“Regulation of the Canonical Disciplinary Authorities and of the Courts of Judgment of the Romanian Orthodox Church”]), or with the administrative disciplinary offenses of disobedience toward ecclesiastical authority (art. 34 RACDIJBOR), or public contradiction of the official position of the Church (art. 39 RACDIJBOR), on the basis of which confessing priests have already been uncanonically deposed.

The fact that the two canons, Apostolic Canon 31 and Canon 15 of the First-Second Council, do not have an imperative provision by which the priest is simply compelled to interrupt commemoration does not mean that they are optional, but that they involve the living priestly conscience of the servant of the altar, called to take the measure which is required and which is permitted to him by the respective canons. The obligatory character is also given by the grave consequences entailed by remaining in communion with heretics, emphasized by other canons of the Holy Church.

In favor of the obligatory character of this canon there also pleads the second thesis of Canon 3 of the Third Ecumenical Council, which commands priests not to remain in communion and obedience toward the heretics condemned at that council: “In general, we command that those clerics who think alike (teach in agreement) with the Orthodox and Ecumenical Council should in no way and by no means be subject to the bishops who have split off or to those who separate themselves (from the Church).” [9] The canon refers to remaining in communion with Nestorius after his condemnation as a heretic by the Ecumenical Council, rehabilitating those who had the courage and the Orthodox priestly conscience to confront the same Nestorius before he was condemned. From this it results that disobedience toward a heretical bishop not yet condemned by an Ecumenical Council is at least a moral imperative, if not a judicial one.

The provisions of the holy canons are obligatory for Orthodox faithful, whether laymen or clerics, even if, taking into account different contexts and realities, their formulation is not always imperative. Regardless of whether or not we accept the obligatory character of Canon 15 of the First-Second Council, the important aspect in the act of stopping commemoration is that this canon permits the priest who wishes to separate himself from the heresy preached by his bishop to do so.

Closely connected with the moral obligation to separate from the bishop who preaches heresies is also the immediate character of the interruption of commemoration. The priest who determines that his bishop is a heretic has to choose between remaining in communion with that bishop and following the exhortation of Saint John Chrysostom, who says: “If your bishop is a heretic, flee, flee, flee as from fire and from a serpent,” and that of Saint Ignatius the God-bearer: “If your bishop should teach anything outside the given order, even if he lives in purity, or performs signs, or prophesies, let him be to you as a wolf in sheep’s clothing, for he works the destruction of souls.” [10]

The eparchial consistories which judge the confessing priests in our Church commit a deliberate confusion between the lawful condemnation of the false bishop for heresy and the introduction of a judicial action against the bishop. In order to maintain this confusion and to try to establish the claim that the priest is not permitted to bring an accusation against his bishop, the consistorial judges invoke the provisions of Canon 6 of the Second Ecumenical Council, which “regulates the manner in which an accusation or judicial action may be introduced against bishops.” [11]

The interruption of commemoration because of the bishop’s partaking in a heretical teaching is not a judicial action against the bishop, nor an act of defaming him by accusing him unjustly, but a measure of non-participation in the heresy in which he becomes a partaker. Apostolic Canon 31 makes a distinction between defaming the bishop, in situations in which he is accused of unproven deeds, and the interruption of commemoration in a situation of partaking in heresy, concerning which it gives one to understand that it does not constitute defamation of the hierarch. In turn, Canon 6 of the Second Ecumenical Council shows us a procedure different from that of the procedure of the interruption of commemoration, precisely because it regulates different situations: ecclesiastical legal action against the bishop is made through a petition in which the bishop is accused of civil or ecclesiastical offenses, whereas the procedure of interrupting commemoration condemns the one who preaches the heresy by the simple disclosure of this heresy and by the positioning of the priest on the side of Orthodoxy, without asking an ecclesiastical tribunal for any kind of reparation for the priest who interrupts commemoration or for any condemnation of the bishop for this, leaving to the local or Ecumenical Council the judgment of the bishop for the respective heresy. For this reason, the accusation brought against the priests that they have substituted themselves for the council in judging the bishop is without substance.

The Interruption of Commemoration for the Bishop’s Heresy Is Not Schism

Through the cessation of commemoration of the heretical bishop or of one who is a partaker in heresy, no schism is produced, nor does there occur the priest’s fall from the state of grace or the invalidity of the Holy Liturgy and of the mysteries performed by him. If this were so, then the Holy Fathers would not have permitted, through the two canons, the practice of ceasing the commemoration of the hierarch by the priest who wishes to fence himself off from the heresy preached by him.

The grace of the priesthood is given by Christ through the performance of the Holy Mystery of Ordination by the bishop, who is the performer of the mystery, and not the source of grace. In the case in which the priest interrupts the commemoration of the hierarch for any reason other than heresy, then he makes himself guilty of schism, according to Apostolic Canon 31 and Canon 13 of the First-Second Council of Constantinople, and for this reason he may bear the penalty of deposition, by which the right to serve the things of the Priesthood is taken away from him. Since the commemoration of the hierarch’s name being stopped for the reason of heresy is not schism, as Canon 15 of the First-Second Council of Constantinople clearly shows, but a defense of the Church from heresy and schism, the work of the grace of the Priesthood cannot be lost by the one who has walled himself off from the heresy preached by the hierarch, and the Mysteries performed by this priest are entirely valid, as Canon 3 of the Third Ecumenical Council also shows, even under the conditions in which a deposition has officially been pronounced against the priest. Moreover, those who stop commemorating a heretical bishop “are not subject to the censure of those above, but are also deemed worthy of the fitting honor of the right-believing, according to Canon 15 of the First-Second Council.” [12]

The central place of the bishop in the Church is recorded both by Orthodox doctrine and by the practice of the holy canons. There is, however, a condition of this important role of the hierarch: the preaching of the truth of the faith and the preservation of the right faith. The operation of the Holy Mysteries in the Church is carried out in full communion with the confession of the true faith, the Mysteries in themselves not being salvific without the right faith. At the moment when the bishop no longer preaches the truth of the faith, he becomes, as Canon 15 of the First-Second Council says, a “false bishop and false teacher,” and no obedience is owed to him anymore as long as he persists in heresy.

The Conditions of the Interruption of Commemoration

The argument is erroneous that if the heretical bishop, not yet judged by a council and not condemned, performs a deposition of an Orthodox priest who has stopped commemorating him because of the heresy which the bishop preaches, the deposition could be valid, because the bishop still has grace, by virtue of the fact that he has not yet been subjected to judgment and condemnation. Even if, until his deposition from rank by a council, the heretical bishop still has sanctifying grace, deposition is not a Holy Mystery, so as to have a connection with the grace of the performer, but a disciplinary measure, which has to do exclusively with the guilt of the one against whom the measure is taken. In the case of deposition for stopping the commemoration of a heretical bishop, the guilt of the priest cannot be invoked, because his gesture is covered by the provisions of Apostolic Canon 31 and Canon 15 of the First-Second Council. What must be established is whether the conditions were respected of the bishop’s preaching the heresy publicly and in church with uncovered head. For this reason, the Third Ecumenical Council recognized the priesthoods performed by Nestorius, in which sanctifying grace was working, although he was a heretic, because he had not yet been deposed from rank by a council, but it annulled all the depositions performed by him, because those deposed were innocent and, instead of being deposed, should have been honored as defenders of the Church.

The first condition which must be fulfilled is that the bishop preach a heresy. The textbook dogmatic definition of heresy is that it represents an opinion or a doctrine contrary to divine Revelation. Therefore, the stopping of commemoration can be done from the moment when the bishop preaches a doctrine contrary to the teaching of the Church, which She has held always, by all, and everywhere. This interpretation excludes the idea that commemoration can be interrupted only when one reaches the “common chalice,” because intercommunion is the final stage of the fall into heresy, the moment at which the interruption of commemoration would already be late. The “common chalice” is nothing but an effect of heresy, whereas the cause is the wrong doctrine accepted by the heretical bishop, who must be a watchman of the Orthodoxy of thought and of the preaching of the Word of God.

Canon 15 of the First-Second Council imposes, as a condition of the canonicity of the cessation of commemoration, that the bishop preach “some heresy condemned by the Holy Councils or by the Holy Fathers.” [13] There is the restrictive interpretation, which some priests schooled in theological argumentation use as an excuse for not interrupting commemoration, and which the decision of the Holy Synod of December 16, 2016, also tried to establish, in which much was made of the fact that Ecumenism has not yet been condemned by a canonical Orthodox council or by canons issued by a Holy Father: namely, that the stopping of commemoration can be done only if the bishop preaches a heresy which has already been condemned by the Holy Councils of the Church or by the Holy Fathers. This interpretation is contradicted, however, by the provision of Canon 3 of the Third Ecumenical Council, which invalidated all the depositions performed by Nestorius against some priests who refused to follow him in his heresy while he was patriarch. At the moment when he performed the respective depositions, Nestorius and his heresy had not yet been condemned by an Ecumenical Council, the condemnation taking place at the Third Council, which also annulled the respective depositions.

The correct understanding of the relationship between the heresy preached by the bishop and its condemnation by canonical legislation and patristic thought was also held by saints such as Saint Maximus the Confessor, whose struggle against Monothelitism took place before the official condemnation of this heresy; Saint Gregory Palamas, who interrupted the commemoration of the hierarch John Kalekas because of his Latin-mindedness, before the latter’s condemnation; or, closer to our own days, Saint Paisios the Athonite, who interrupted commemoration because of the heretical statements and deeds of the Ecumenical Patriarch of his epoch.

Therefore, in order for the priest to stop commemoration, it is sufficient that the heresy which the bishop preaches be condemned by the Holy Canons or the Holy Fathers in the sense that it is contrary to all that these and the mind of the Church in general have established up to now. The use of the conjunction “or” in the expression “the Holy Councils or the Holy Fathers” also leads us to this conclusion, showing that it is not necessary for there to be a definitive synodal decision condemning the heresy which a bishop preaches, in order for his priests to interrupt commemoration, but it is sufficient that this heresy be condemned by the thought of the Holy Fathers, and not necessarily by the canons of the Holy Fathers. If the stopping of commemoration operated only for heresies of the past, it could no longer be a method of defending the Church against the heresies of the present.

Another condition for the interruption of commemoration is the preaching of the heresy with uncovered head, that is, publicly and without any kind of restriction. Participation in a council with a purportedly pan-Orthodox character and the signing of the heretical documents issued by it, or their tacit acceptance, fulfill the condition of preaching the heresy publicly. The transmission of messages of peace and calm in church, by which the hierarchs assure the faithful that the officialization of Ecumenism at the pan-Orthodox level has produced no change at the level of Orthodox ecclesiology and that Orthodoxy is safe, or the condemnation of those who fight against the Council of Crete as schismatics, who, as the Paschal Pastoral Letter sent to all the churches in the Archdiocese of Iași expressed it, “on unfounded grounds accuse the Council of Crete of doctrinal errors,” [14] fully satisfies the condition of preaching the heresy with uncovered head in church.

Relating ourselves to the situation created by the pseudo-synod of Crete, it can be said that both conditions required by Canon 15 of the First-Second Council are met, since the bishops who participated in this council signed documents of a heretical character, which they presented to the whole world as being Orthodox, and these documents contain heretical ideas condemned both by the Ecumenical Councils of old (the idea that heresies are “churches,” that the unity of the Church has been lost, that there exist full Churches and incomplete churches, the idea of religious cooperation between Orthodox and heretics, etc.), and by some local councils of our epoch (the ROCOR Council, the Council of the Georgian Church), or by the thought of the Holy Fathers of the twentieth century (Saint Justin Popović, Saint Nikolai Velimirović, Saint John Maximovitch, Saint Paisios the Athonite, Saint John Jacob of Neamț, Saint Seraphim Sobolev).

The Interruption of Commemoration by the Holy Fathers

There are Holy Fathers who interrupted the commemoration of heretical hierarchs or participation in the services where heretical bishops were commemorated. Among these, the best-known examples are those of Saint John Damascene, Saint Maximus the Confessor, Saint Theodore the Studite, the Athonite Fathers from the time of John Vekkos, the Latin-minded patriarch, Saint Gregory Palamas, Venerable Joseph Bryennios, and Saint Mark Eugenikos. [15]

When he was imprisoned for his opposition to Monothelitism and to the hierarchs who shared the Monothelite heresy, Saint Maximus the Confessor said: “Even if the whole Universe should be in communion with the Patriarch, I will not be in communion with him. As I know that the Holy Spirit, through the Apostle Paul, says that the angels themselves will be anathema if they should preach otherwise, bringing something new into the faith (Galatians 1:8).” [16]

The Holy Mountain of Athos has a tradition of the practice of interrupting the commemoration of the heretical hierarch. In the thirteenth century, the Athonite monasteries interrupted the commemoration of the heretical bishop John Vekkos and endured his armed persecution, giving a number of martyrs on that occasion.

Saint Gregory Palamas interrupted the commemoration of the hierarch John Kalekas while he was a hieromonk on the Holy Mountain, and Kalekas had not been condemned by a Council. The patriarch issued an anathema against the saint, but the saint continued to serve, not taking into account the anathema of the heretical patriarch.

Likewise, the Holy Mountain of Athos practiced the interruption of commemoration at the moment when Ecumenical Patriarch Athenagoras lifted, by his own authority, the anathemas against the papists in 1965. In 1971, Venerable Paisios the Athonite sent a letter by which he announced the cessation of the commemoration of the Ecumenical Patriarch by Stavronikita Monastery: “In particular, in our monastery, not looking to the reaction of all the monasteries on Athos, the name of the Patriarch was commemorated for the sake of ecclesiastical unity. However, after the Patriarch’s declaration that the Filioque and the primacy of the pope of Rome are only simple traditions, we interrupted his commemoration, feeling that the cup of our patience had been filled and that it was no longer possible to wait. Such declarations represent not only the overthrow of the God-given and life-giving tradition of our Holy Church — but also a mockery of the much-suffering world of the West… In this way, following the Patriarch in his ecumenist acrobatics not only comes into contradiction with Orthodox piety, but in general is also unserious.” [17]

Ecclesiastical Communion

The interruption of the commemoration of the hierarch by the priest has a correspondence among the faithful through the interruption of ecclesiastical communion with the priests who commemorate at the services the hierarchs who are partakers in heresy. The purpose of interrupting the commemoration of the hierarch is to sound an alarm that a heresy is being preached in the Church, and this can only happen at the moment when the faithful people join the priests who interrupt commemoration and no longer frequent the churches where the hierarch is commemorated.

The interruption of commemoration before the synodal investigation of the bishop who is a partaker in heresy is done because in the churches where his name is commemorated there exists heresy, not because grace would no longer exist. The people who separate from the priest commemorating the hierarch who is a partaker in heresy do not do so because valid Holy Mysteries would no longer be performed in that one’s church, but because their partaking of those Holy Mysteries would be unto condemnation, since they know that they receive them from the hand of a priest who is a partaker in heresy.

The patristic argumentation for following the non-commemorating priests and for the interruption of ecclesiastical communion with those who commemorate hierarchs who are partakers in heresy is based on the exhortations of the Holy Fathers, addressed to the faithful, not to be in communion with them. The clearest of these is that of Saint Germanos II, Patriarch of Constantinople (1222–1240): “I adjure all laymen, all of you who are true sons of the Orthodox Catholic Church, to depart as quickly as possible from the priests who have submitted to the Latins, and neither gather with them in church, nor receive any blessing from their hands. It is better for you to pray to God in your houses alone than to gather in church together with those who have a Latin mind. Otherwise, you will suffer the same condemnation as they.” [18] The same counsel is also given by Saint Theodore the Studite to Naukratios, as we shall see in what follows.

The Limits of Economy

Speaking about the application of economy, Saint Theodore the Studite explains that there is “permanent economy,” and gives the example of Saint Athanasios, who used for the faithful in Italy the term “person” instead of “hypostasis,” and “economy for a time,” which he defines thus: “these things are done for a time, having nothing worthy of blame, nor are they in any way outside the law, but they lower the bar and do not belong to excessive exactness. This is economy ‘for a time.’” [19] This definition of Saint Theodore is an answer to Naukratios’s question “why the divine Cyril used economy so as not to separate from those in the East, who commemorated Theodore of Mopsuestia in the diptychs, he being a heretic, if these held the most right and most important dogmas of the right faith?” [20] Saint Theodore’s answer was: “therefore, he endured the slowness of the Easterners, rather than, by their not accepting the one who was truly a heretic, that they accept an inclination toward what is heretical.” [21] And the argumentation of this temporary economy is based on the fact that “once the faith is preached in an Orthodox manner, by this they anathematized even the one commemorated by them. For everyone who is Orthodox in all things potentially [en dunamei] anathematizes every heretic, even if not also by word.” [22]

The application of this temporary economy at the level of relations between bishoprics, metropolitanates, and patriarchates is completed by the answer to another question of Naukratios: “If the bishop was not present at the adulterous council and calls it a false assembly, but commemorates his metropolitan who was present at that council, should we receive communion from a priest of that Orthodox bishop?” The answer is: “For economy, we should [receive communion], provided only that he [the priest] does not liturgize together with the heretics. For there is nothing wrong, since he commemorates the Orthodox bishop, even if that one, out of fear, commemorates his heretical metropolitan.” [23] The answer continues: “If the priest of such a bishop is called to a vigil, we should go, and the church given to him should be accepted, and it should be permitted for him [the priest] to come to liturgize in it or to commemorate some dead person, Orthodox of course, and he is forgiven, and nothing prevents the [priest] who received [the church from that bishop] from liturgizing in it.” [24]

The temporary economy which is applied to the bishop with Orthodox faith is not also applied to the priest with Orthodox faith who commemorates the heretical bishop, because this one, through commemoration, confesses the faith of his bishop: “But if the priest commemorates some heretical bishop, even if the priest has a blessed way of life, even if he is Orthodox, we must depart from divine communion; but when it is a matter of the common table—since only there [at the liturgy] does he commemorate [the heretical bishop] out of fear—he [that priest] could be accepted to bless and to chant with us, but only if he has not served, nor has knowingly had partaking either with a heretic, or with his bishop, or with any other such person.” [25]

This limit of economy is imposed in the relationship between priests and between priests and the faithful in an answer to another question addressed by Naukratios. The question was connected with the Orthodox priest who commemorates the heretical bishop out of fear of persecution, and the answer was: “If he does not liturgize together with a heretic and does not commune with such persons, such a one must be received when it is a matter of eating together and psalmody and the blessing of food, and this by economy, but not for divine communion. And, as long as the heresy lasts, investigation is absolutely necessary; and as for the claim that the confession would suffice for those received, I know only that this is clearly a great deceit… Only in the time when heresy is not unleashed, and only in connection with those who are not clearly condemned, are we taught by the Fathers not to investigate. But such a priest, who is not mixed up with and does not have partaking with heretics, is rarely found now.” [26]

The Bishop Is Not Permitted to Judge His Own Cause

The last aspect which we analyze in this report concerns the grave canonical contradictions which appear at the moment when the ruling hierarchs who are partakers in heresy ignore Apostolic Canon 31, Canon 15 of the First-Second Council, and Canon 3 of the Third Council, and decide to send the confessing priests to trial. Because in the Regulation of the Canonical Disciplinary Authorities and of the Courts of Judgment of the Romanian Orthodox Church (RACDIJBOR) there is no procedure for judging the priest who interrupts the commemoration of his bishop because of the latter’s participation in heresy, since for this interruption of commemoration there should be no procedure, as it is not a disciplinary offense of any kind, the consistories send the priests to trial according to the procedures provided for ordinary offenses.

The first incompatibility which arises in this situation is the violation by the bishops who send the confessing priests to trial of Canon 118, 112 in the Pedalion: “It has pleased that a bishop should not judge his own judgment,” whose interpretation is: “This canon ordains that a bishop may not judge either another bishop who would have some case with him, nor the presbyter who would have some case with him. Nor any other cleric, according to Canon 9 of the Fourth Council. Nor can a single bishop depose either a presbyter accused by another, or a deacon, according to Canon 12 of this Council. See also Apostolic Canon 74.” This canon is a transposition into ecclesiastical life of the principle of Roman law nemo in rem suam auctor esse potest, “no one can judge his own cause.” [27]

From this incompatibility others derive: the consistories are incompatible, because they are appointed by the hierarch and judge in his name; the priests cannot benefit from ecclesiastical lawyers, because these too are employees of the same bishop; the appeal cannot be made to six bishops, plus the suffragan, as Canon 12 of Carthage requires, because the metropolitan consistories and the national ecclesiastical consistory are not composed of bishops; and the bishops who give synodal approvals for appeals are in the same state of incompatibility, being partakers in the same heresy, in some cases themselves pronouncing such uncanonical depositions, and in some situations the hierarchs who approve the appeal are the same ones who pronounced the deposition in the lower court.

All these grave incompatibilities, which, on the one hand, violate the fundamental canonical principle of respecting the canonical provisions of the Orthodox Church, recorded in art. 3, letter g), and, on the other hand, the principle of discovering the truth and guaranteeing the right to defense, provided by art. 3, letter i) RACDIJBOR, make these depositions uncanonical and invalid also from the point of view of the judicial regulations.

They were brought to the knowledge of the Holy Synod in the lawsuits initiated against Fathers Pamvo Jugănaru and Ioan Ungureanu, it being expected that the highest ecclesiastical authority of the Romanian Orthodox Church would give the correct solution for emerging from this grave canonical-juridical impasse.

 

NOTES

1. Pedalion, The Rudder of the Orthodox Church, “Credinţa Strămoşească” Publishing House, 2007, p. 68.

2. Ibid.

3. Ibid., p. 70.

4 Ioan N. Floca, The Canons of the Orthodox Church. Notes and Commentaries, third improved edition, edition edited by Dr. Sorin Joantă, no publisher, Sibiu, 2005, p. 26.

5. Pedalion, cited ed., p. 362.

6. Ioan Floca, op. cit., p. 347.

7. http://patriarhia.ro/images/pdf/HotarariSinodale/2010/Anexa_1.pdf.

8. Father Iustin Pârvu, The Church and the New Heresies, no publisher, no place, no year, p. 27.

9. Ioan Floca, p. 79.

10. http://lumea-ortodoxa.ro/scrisoarea-marelui-staret-sava-cel-batran-aghioritul-catre-unii-care-l-acuzau-ca-intrerupand-pomenirea-intrat-schisma-cu-biserica/.

11. Ibid., p. 75.

12. Pedalion, p. 70.

13. Pedalion, cited ed., p. 363.

14. http://ortodoxinfo.ro/2017/04/14/ips-teofan-le-spune-de-sfintele-pasti-credinciosilor-moldavi-ca-minciuno-sinodul-din-creta-nu-avut-nicio-eroare-doctrinara/.

15. http://www.aparatorul.md/recomandam-muntele-athos-partea-practica-a-aplicarii-canonului-15-de-la-sinodul-i-ii-constantinopol-861/.

16. http://www.aparatorul.md/fragmente-din-procesul-intentat-de-patriarhia-constantinopolului-sfantului-maxim-marturisitorul-pentru-ca-a-rupt-comuniunea-cu-ea-2/.

17. http://lumea-ortodoxa.ro/ati-stiut-ca-sf-paisie-aghioritul-nu-pomenit-patriarhul-decursul-cativa-ani/.
18. Joseph Bryennios, The Works Found, vol. II Ρ-Θ. 140, 620A, Thessaloniki, 1990.

19. Saint Theodore the Studite, Letter 40, To His Son Naukratios, in the volume The Right Faith in the Writings of the Holy Fathers, vol. 1, Sofia Publishing House, Bucharest, 2016, p. 28.

20. Ibid.

21. Ibid.

22. Ibid.

23. Ibid., p. 30.

24. Ibid.

25. Ibid., pp. 30–31.

26. Idem, Letter 40, To His Son Naukratios, p. 44.

27. http://ortodoxinfo.ro/2017/04/21/parintele-pamvo-cere-sfantului-sinod-aplicarea-canonului-care-prevede-ca-episcopul-nu-poate-judeca-chestiuni-care-il-privesc/.

 

Romanian source:

https://ortodoxiadreaptacredinta.wordpress.com/2017/06/19/teolog-mihai-silviu-chirila-intreruperea-pomenirii-singura-masura-eficienta-contra-ereziei-consideratii-de-ordin-canonic/

 

Brief Chronology of Ecumenism

Presented by Hieromonk Spiridon Hieromonk Roșu at the Synaxis of Anti-Ecumenist Orthodox Christians in Botoșani, 18 June 2017

Translated from the original Romanian.

 

 

1. General considerations concerning the origins of Ecumenism

The origins of present-day Ecumenism can be found in the middle of the nineteenth century in England and America, when the first initiatives began to appear for uniting the different Christian confessions, wrongly self-styled “churches.” Thus, a series of alliances or federations of an interconfessional character were founded, which proposed common prayers and philanthropic actions. In 1844, in London, the YMCA (Young Men’s Christian Association) was founded, which in a short time spread throughout the whole world, having in 1952 four million members organized in ten thousand branches.

In 1894 a branch for women of the Young Men’s Christian Association was organized: YWCA, the Young Women’s Christian Association. In 1895 the Universal Federation of Christian Student Associations came into being. Archimandrite Haralambos D. Vasilopoulos, in his book Ecumenism Unmasked, makes an analysis of the activity of the two organizations, YMCA and YWCA, emphasizing the fact that they had no clearly established doctrine, but rather an unclear ideology, based on “a humanistic theory of the world, in which reference is made neither to ancestral sin nor to the salvation of the soul.” They cultivated “a turning of man toward the body, reaching even a cult rendered to the body” under the mask of promoting health. The kind of education promoted “favors a lax attitude toward sin and a mocking of the dogmatic truth of the Christian Church. It accepts philanthropy as a distribution of material goods, but not in the name of Christ and His Church,” so that many generations of young people grew up in a false Christianity. Moreover, as is mentioned in an American publication from 1971, within some branches of the YWCA in America and Canada the legalization of marijuana consumption, of abortions, and of the fact that the Name Jesus Christ should no longer be mentioned anywhere was promoted.

The term “ecumenism” comes from the Greek oikoumene, which has the sense of dwelling, inhabiting. Ecumeni means “populated, inhabited earth, the oikoumene.” In antiquity, the Church of Christ called by oikoumene the earth and its inhabitants (Matthew 24:14; Luke 21:25; Revelation 3:10, 12:9). The adjective ecumenical means “universal, that is, concerning the whole earth and its population.” The modern term “ecumenism” was invented and used for the first time by the Methodist pastor John Mott (1865–1955), at the World Missionary Conference, held in Edinburgh, Scotland, in 1910, within which the foundations of the Ecumenist Movement were laid. It should be emphasized that, for the naming of this Movement, the Western Latin term universalism was not used, but the Greek word oecumenicos (whence also ecumenism), which is taken from Orthodox language and thought but to which another meaning is attributed. The purpose is to mask the hidden intentions of the Movement through the use of this term of Orthodox origin, and it aims at the possible identification of the Ecumenical Councils with the World Council of “Churches,” which might proclaim itself in the future as an “Ecumenical Council.”

2. Forms of organization of Ecumenism

In the year 1948 the “World Council of Churches” (WCC) was constituted. Within this body all member religious organizations are accepted under the designation of “church,” regardless of their doctrine, which creates great confusion from the beginning and unjustifiably suggests the idea of a religious uniformity. Its first general assembly, which took place in Amsterdam, brought together the representatives of 147 so-called churches, among whom were also several representatives (on their own initiative) of some Orthodox Churches: the Patriarchate of Constantinople, the Church of Cyprus, the Church of Greece. At the same time the first general secretary of the Council was elected, the Dutch pastor Wilhem Adolf Visser’t Hooft.

The hierarchs of the Romanian Orthodox Church joined the “WCC” in the year 1961, participating from then on in all its general assemblies, without a prior catechization of the priests and faithful people and without there being a public debate on this theme. In the year 2015, the “WCC” numbered over 345 so-called member churches, from 110 countries and territories of the world.

3. The ideology of the Ecumenist Movement

The ideology behind the Ecumenist Movement is the heresy which maintains that the Church of Christ does not exist at present and that no one is in possession of the fullness of the Truth, and that the Church will be constituted in the future through the efforts to unify the so-called churches within the Ecumenist Movement. According to ecumenist thinking, none of the churches is the true Church of Christ; but in this case, neither will this true Church be formed from the combination of all these churches. And if all the Christian churches must relate to one another in order to complete one another mutually, the inevitable consequence follows that they must also unite with the other non-Christian religious organizations, so that Christian Ecumenism will end in a universal syncretistic religion.

The theoretical foundations of Ecumenism are:

• The theory of the lost unity of the Church, which promotes the heresy, according to the principle of inclusivity, that all mankind would be incorporated into an “invisible unity” of the Church through the common faith in the Holy Trinity and in Jesus Christ as Lord and Savior, with a “visible unity” also to be accomplished within the “World Council of Churches” through the union of the confessions, unity in the diversity of dogmas and traditions. But Orthodox teaching says that the Unity of the Church can never be lost, because Christ, as Head of the Church, is not separated from His Body; but, on the other hand, isolated persons or groups of persons can separate themselves from the Body of the Church through the acceptance of heresies or schisms. But this affects neither the unity, nor the uniqueness, nor the integrity of the Church. The theory of the lost unity of the Church violates the patristic teaching which affirms that heretics are not and cannot be called Christians, because through the sin of heresy they have separated themselves from God.

• The theory of the “branches,” which has its roots in Protestantism and maintains the heresy that the different “confessions,” recognized as “churches,” are branches of the “invisible Church,” and that all these would constitute the true Church, as though Christ, the Head of the Church, could have several bodies;

• The theory of the existence of grace outside the One Church constitutes the heresy by which certain mysteries, or waves of grace, are admitted also to the heterodox outside the Church in their “mysteries.” But heresy contains within itself blasphemy against the Holy Spirit, and in this case heresy and Grace cannot coexist in one place. In connection with this theory, other theories have also been developed, as for example:

1. The ecumenist baptismal theory. Through this, the validity of the baptism of the heterodox outside the Church is accepted, as well as the fact that the performance of baptism by heretics, invoking the three Trinitarian Persons, makes the one baptized a member of the True Church of Christ, regardless of the dogmas which he believes. The Canons of the Church sanction by deposition the priest who does not distinguish between the Orthodox Holy Mysteries and the so-called mysteries of the heretics.

2. The theory of apostolic succession outside the Church, which maintains that, through the simple external act of the laying on of hands by clerics upon candidates for ordination, the recognition of a valid priesthood for the heterodox is permitted.

All these theories have led to the unacceptable practices, condemned by the Holy Canons and the Holy Fathers, of common prayers at first, but later also of common services of different rites or Mysteries, going as far as common communion!

• The theory of “dogmatic minimalism” is centered on the heresy according to which dogmas are divided into principal and secondary dogmas, and union among the different confessions requires only agreement concerning the principal dogmas, a concept designated as the minimal faith, that is, faith in the Holy Trinity and in Jesus Christ as God Incarnate and Savior, overlooking all the other Dogmas of the Church, called secondary. In the document of the WCC assembly at Lima in 1982, only three mysteries are recognized and accepted: baptism, the Eucharist, and ministry, clerical service, while the other four Holy Mysteries, chrismation, marriage, confession, and Holy Unction, are despised and annulled, falling under the anathema of the decisions of the Seventh Ecumenical Council.

Besides the doctrinal heretical theories above, there are also some erroneous strategies of a practical order:

• The theory of the “dialogue of love,” promoted in the Assemblies of the World Council of Churches in the form of an ambiguous and duplicitous language, with the aim of equalizing all religions which, the ecumenists say, would have as their common denominator the “Holy Spirit.” Through this, the intention is to pass over in silence the evangelical Truth, the deviations from the faith of the heretics, with the motivation of not offending their conscience. In the name of a false love, but one which is a deception, the negotiation of the truths of the faith is carried out, forcibly and abusively interpreting the principle of economy, which is known not to be applicable in dogmatic matters.

• The theory of social activism has disastrous consequences within ecclesiastical life, in the erosion of the Orthodox dogmatic conscience; through this, in the name of certain moral values or values of another kind, generally accepted, a rapprochement is desired among the members of the different confessions, especially on the basis of practical activities, with social implications, always carried out by a mixed interconfessional group: cultural activities, musical events, excursions, vacation camps, study scholarships and exchanges of experience, activities concerning the protection of the environment, pro-life movements, charitable associations, groups and non-governmental organizations directed against the moral depravity of society, and especially “peace” groups, etc. Where there are disagreements concerning the general principles of teaching, dogmas, there can be no agreements concerning the practical activities of the respective principles.

4. Deviations from Orthodox ecclesiology. A brief history of Ecumenism

The grave errors from the Orthodox teaching of the faith can be discerned by following the development of ecumenist actions over time.

1879 — The decision of the Synod of the Ecumenical Patriarchate, by which it is permitted that, in the absence of Armenian priests and for reasons of economy, the Armenian-Gregorian faithful be administered by Orthodox priests the Orthodox Holy Mysteries of Baptism and Marriage, and, when near the common end, also Holy Communion; but note, the faithful remaining thereafter members of the so-called Armenian-Gregorian church.

1902 — The synodal encyclical of Patriarch Joachim III of Constantinople raises for the first time the question of union with the other “churches,” requesting the opinion of the other local Orthodox Churches, a request to which many Churches respond favorably.

1920 — The Encyclical of the Ecumenical Patriarchate to the “venerable Christian churches everywhere,” starting from the idea that “dogmatic differences cannot constitute an insurmountable obstacle on the path of collaboration with a view to union,” urges them to consider one another not as being “foreign and in dissension, but related and of the same family in Christ, and of the same body, and fellow-heirs of God’s promise in Christ.” In addition, the encyclical suggests the formation of a “community of churches” after the model of the League of Nations, which includes a well-defined program for reaching union, a program consisting of dialogues and theological conferences, regular contacts through correspondence, the closest possible relations among the representatives of the Churches, as also among the theological schools, and the education of the faithful of all confessions in an ecumenist spirit. But the ecumenists succeeded in putting these desiderata into practice only in 2016 within the so-called holy and great council in Crete.

1922, Jan. 24 — Meletios IV is enthroned as Patriarch of Constantinople, although one month earlier he had been canonically sanctioned and deposed from the rank of Archbishop of Athens, for “uncanonical conduct and mixing with heretics” in their “churches.”

1922. Meletios IV, as Ecumenical Patriarch, recognizes the validity of Anglican ordinations.

1923, June. Ecumenical Patriarch Meletios IV convenes the “Pan-Orthodox Conference” in Constantinople with the objective of changing the calendar and modernizing the Church, deciding on the shortening of the fasts, the non-obligatory character of clerical vestments, the possibility of marriage for the clergy after ordination and for bishops, etc. This was contested shortly afterward by Patriarchs Damian of Jerusalem, Gregory IV of Antioch, Photios of Alexandria, Dimitrije of Serbia, and St. Tikhon of Moscow. The true motivation for the change of the ecclesiastical calendar was not caused by astronomical questions, but by the desire to make the Orthodox liturgical calendar uniform with the Western calendar, with a view to facilitating the union of the Orthodox Church with the other so-called churches.

1925, London. Still more characteristic is the decision of the representatives of the Orthodox Churches present at the commemoration of the First Ecumenical Council, which took place in London in 1925. On this occasion, headed by Patriarch Photios of Alexandria, they participated in liturgical attire, reciting the Creed and other prayers, in a service officiated by the Anglican hierarchy. At the same time, in discussions with the Anglicans, they accepted that, under the pretext of reasons of economy, Orthodox clerics and Anglican clerics should mutually officiate for their faithful the Holy Mysteries of Baptism and Marriage, as well as funerals.

1927 — On the basis of the erroneous interpretation of the principle of “economy,” the Patriarch of Serbia, Dimitrije, communed six Anglicans at the Holy Liturgy without their having Orthodox baptism. Although, exactly as in the case of intercommunion at the level of rites, and in the case of intercommunion at the level of the Holy Mysteries, the theologians, hierarchs, and synods of some Orthodox Churches had declared, as a matter of principle, that intercommunion must not be admitted except on the basis of unity of faith. This means that the heretic publicly renounces the heresies of the past and solemnly confesses publicly that he accepts the entire Orthodox teaching. It is precisely this Orthodox principle that is violated through the activities of Ecumenism. The Romanian Orthodox Church decides, regarding relations with the Anglicans, the validity of the mysteries and intercommunion with them, through the application, in a new spirit, of the traditional Orthodox economy.

1935, July. Patriarch Meletios Metaxakis goes mad, and after six days of torments and profound remorse, dies in Zürich, Switzerland, saying: “Woe is me, I have divided the Church, I have destroyed Orthodoxy!”

1948 — Athenagoras, former Archbishop of North and South America, becomes Patriarch of Constantinople after Patriarch Maximos is declared “mentally unfit” and forced to retire. Athenagoras declared: “We err and sin if we think that the Orthodox faith came from heaven and that the other dogmas, religions, are unworthy.”

1948, Moscow. The Moscow Patriarchate convened, in July 1948, the conference of the autocephalous Orthodox Churches with the aim of officially rejecting the invitation to participate in the General Assembly of August 1948 in Amsterdam, when the Ecumenical Council was also founded. Within the consultation, the lectures of Archbishop Saint Luke of Crimea, as well as of Bishop Saint Seraphim Sobolev, stood out; the latter characterized Ecumenism as a heresy against the dogma concerning the One, Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic Church, as we confess in the Symbol of Faith. The holy hierarch Seraphim, examining successively these four attributes of the Church, showed how they are distorted by Ecumenism with the aim of laying the foundations of a new “ecumenical church,” where all the heretics will be gathered together with the false Orthodox Christians: “The Orthodox ecumenists falsify Tradition and the Scriptures, so that the ninth article of the Symbol of Faith can no longer be recognized. Consequently, there results a mixture of truth with falsehood, of Orthodoxy with heresies, which leads the Orthodox ecumenists to an extreme distortion of the true notion of the Church, and especially because they, being members of the Orthodox Church, are at the same time also members of the ‘ecumenical church,’ more precisely, of a kind of universal community with innumerable heretical ramifications. They ought to have kept forever the words of Christ: ‘And if he will not hear the Church either, let him be to thee as a heathen and a publican.’” (Matt. 18:17)

In spite of these valuable individual testimonies, the definitive resolution of the 1948 conference on the question of Ecumenism lacked a firm and principled Orthodox response, and a circumstantial solution was preferred, allowing the possibility of recognizing Ecumenism under other circumstances to be glimpsed.

1948, Amsterdam. The so-called “World Council of Churches” (“WCC”) comes into being, initially comprising 147 “churches.” From that date already, the Orthodox Churches of Constantinople, Cyprus, and Greece become full members.

1950, Toronto. With Orthodox participation, the document called “The Church, the Churches, and the World Council of Churches” was drawn up, which contains many heretical teachings in relation to the Orthodox ecclesiological dogma.

1954, Evanston. The Second General Assembly of the “WCC.” The Orthodox delegates openly stated that the decisions of the assembly had deviated so far from our teaching on the Church that they could no longer be accepted, and other things besides. Instead, they expressed the doctrine of the Orthodox Church in separate statements, showing clearly that Orthodox ecclesiology differs essentially and very greatly from Protestant ecclesiology, and that it is impossible to write a common statement.

1961 — Under pressure from the communist political factor, hierarchs occupying the highest levels of leadership of the local Orthodox Churches in the socialist bloc joined the “World Council of Churches” without prior catechization and without consultation with the priests and the Orthodox laity. Also from this date, bilateral theological dialogues were opened with the Roman-Catholic papists, with the Monophysites, and others, but the results and the evaluation of the consequences of the agreements signed were neither publicized nor explained to the priests and faithful. The false ecumenist dialogues with the other heretical confessions strengthen the erroneous teaching that Orthodoxy and the other pseudo-churches and confessions are equal paths leading to salvation.

1961, New Delhi. The Fourth General Assembly of the “WCC.” Beginning from this date, the Orthodox delegates ceased making separate declarations in relation to the official declarations of the “WCC,” although the ecumenist ecclesiological teaching had not achieved even the slightest rapprochement with Orthodox teaching. In other words, the Orthodox delegates appropriated the official ecclesiological doctrine of Ecumenism.

1961, 1963, Rhodes. The inauguration of the Pre-Synodal Pan-Orthodox Conferences. The Pan-Orthodox Conference recommends the intensification of the activity of all “churches” in the Ecumenical Movement, which “sets itself the restoration of the visible unity of the Church according to the principle of unity in diversity and in communion,” the aim of Ecumenism being the rediscovery of a “Eucharistic basis” of visible unity.

1964, Jan. 6. Ecumenical Patriarch Athenagoras and Pope Paul VI meet in Jerusalem and pray together in the Holy Sepulchre. At the entrance, a fire breaks out, causing a power outage throughout the entire church.

1964, Aarhus. The Orthodox Church begins the unofficial bilateral dialogue with the Anti-Chalcedonians at the initiative, under the supervision, and with the financial support of the “WCC.” The common statement of Aarhus stipulates, among other things: “We recognize one another in the same Orthodox faith of the Church. Fifteen centuries of history have not separated us from the faith of our fathers.” These shocking affirmations try to induce in us the idea that the Monophysite heretics had never been condemned at an Ecumenical or local Council.

1965, Dec. 7. Ecumenical Patriarch Athenagoras and Pope Paul VI, simultaneously, “lift the Anathema of 1054.” The Anathema was given against the papal heresies in order to protect the Orthodox from teachings which do not lead to salvation, but to perdition. Through the “lifting” of the anathema, Athenagoras proclaims that the Pope and those who follow him were unjustly anathematized, that the Church erred when it maintained that the papal teachings are false, and that, in truth, the Latin papacy is part of Orthodoxy. “The removal of the mutual excommunications restores canonical relations between Old Rome and New Rome. This restoration is a canonical necessity…,” it is said in a declaration of the Patriarchate; but the essential point is omitted: that the papist heretics did not provide proof of their renunciation of the heretical teachings which led to the separation in the past, but in time also added other errors which make them altogether foreign to the Orthodox Church. From this moment, several monasteries and sketes on Mount Athos ceased commemorating Patriarch Athenagoras at the holy Services and the Holy Mysteries.

1967, Nov. Against the background of extensive protest movements motivated patristically and canonically, the majority of the monks of Mount Athos strongly opposed the “lifting of the anathema of 1054.”

1968 — In the Christmas Pastoral Letter, Ecumenical Patriarch Athenagoras affirms that “the people of Christ,” the Roman Catholics and the Orthodox, will unite without the help of hierarchs or theologians. He also declares that he has introduced the name of Pope Paul VI into the diptychs of the Ecumenical Patriarchate. The diptychs are the list of Orthodox bishops commemorated during the Divine Liturgy.

1971, Feb. The Pope and Ecumenical Patriarch Athenagoras exchange letters of mutual recognition of their “churches.” Patriarch Athenagoras publicly announces that he gives Holy Communion to Roman Catholics and Protestants.

1972, July. Ecumenical Patriarch Athenagoras dies and is buried; a funeral with the coffin closed, an unusual fact for an Orthodox bishop. He is succeeded by Dimitrios, who promises to continue the “ecumenical policy” of his predecessor.

At the same time, the Holy Community of the Holy Mountain issues an encyclical for the resumption of the liturgical commemoration of the Ecumenical Patriarch, because “a new climate has been established.” Nevertheless, in September, there were still seven Holy Monasteries of Mount Athos which still did not commemorate the Patriarch liturgically: Esphigmenou, Karakallou, Simonopetra, St. Paul, Xenophontos, Gregoriou, and Kastamonitou.

1974, March. Ecumenical Patriarch Demetrios imposes sanctions upon 13 priests and monks for liturgical non-commemoration, among whom were: Archimandrite Athanasios, abbot at Esphigmenou; Archimandrite Evdokimos, abbot at Xenophontos; Archimandrite Dionysios of Gregoriou; and Archimandrite Andreas of St. Paul.

1975, Crete. Within the “Faith and Order” Commission of the “WCC,” the so-called Orthodox theological consultation takes place, whose report stipulates: “As regards the problem of general Christian union, it was noted at the consultation that the Orthodox Church does not demand that the other Christians convert to Orthodoxy by entering into the Orthodox Church, but appeals that all churches and traditions deepen as much as possible the fullness of the apostolic faith.”

1975The Thyateira Confession of the Greek Metropolitan Athenagoras Kokkinakis of Thyateira and Great Britain declares that the episcopate and priesthood of the Anglicans, Copts, Armenians, Roman Catholics, and Orthodox are all valid; consequently, the mysteries of the Anglicans and Roman Catholics are those of the One, Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic Church. It is also affirmed that “the idea that Masonry is a religion is an erroneous one.”

1975, Nairobi, Kenya. The Fifth General Assembly of the “WCC,” with the theme “Local Churches and the Universal Church,” emphasizes that the aim of cooperation on the ecumenical level is directed, first of all, toward the progressive integration of the Christian confessions into the ecumenical consensus of the Church of all times and everywhere.

1980, June, Atlanta, Georgia, U.S.A. Archbishop Iakovos, of the Greek Archdiocese of North and South America, serves an unprecedented ecumenical service together with Catholics, Protestants, Baptists, Lutherans, Presbyterians, United Methodists, and even with representatives of the Jewish religion.

1982, Lima. The BEM document of Lima, which recognizes the mysteries of the Protestants: baptism, the Eucharist, ministry (the priesthood). But by rejecting four Holy Mysteries, chrismation, confession, marriage, and Unction, the first three Mysteries are also inevitably annulled, being distorted in a heretical sense.

1983, July-Aug. The Synod of Bishops of the Russian Church Abroad, at an assembly in Vancouver, Canada, declares: “Those who attack the Church of Christ by teaching that Christ's Church is divided into so-called ‘branches’ which differ in doctrine and way of life, or that the Church does not exist visibly, but will be formed in the future when all ‘branches’ or sects or denominations, and even religions will be united into one body; and who do not distinguish the priesthood and mysteries of the Church from those of the heretics, but say that the baptism and eucharist of heretics is effectual for salvation; therefore, to those who knowingly have communion with these aforementioned heretics or who advocate, disseminate, or defend their new heresy of Ecumenism under the pretext of brotherly love or the supposed unification of separated Christians, Anathema!” A clear exposition is lacking of the ecumenist heresiarchs who ought to be subjected to the anathema.

1987, November. Ecumenical Patriarch Demetrios and his clergy concelebrate at a Roman-Catholic mass together with Pope John Paul II, in Rome. The Patriarch, however, does not receive the Roman-Catholic host.

1989, October. Patriarch Parthenios of Alexandria declares again that “Muhammad is an apostle of God… a man of God, who worked for the Kingdom of God,” and that “when I speak against Islam or Buddhism, I do not find myself in agreement with God.” Here the heretical teaching is affirmed that Christians and Mohammedans worship the same God.

1989, Texas. The “WCC” Conference reinforces the character and finality of the Ecumenical Movement: “The Ecumenical Movement has a comprehensive and indivisible character. There is one single Ecumenical Movement, open to all Churches, so that no Church can claim to be considered the center of this movement, which is greater than any Church taken individually and which includes all Churches.”

1990 and 1993, Chambésy. Acceptance of the Monophysite heresy

After the so-called historic meeting at the Monastery of Anba Bishoy in Egypt, between June 20–24, 1989, where the First Common Declaration on Christology was adopted by the Mixed Commission for Theological Dialogue between the Orthodox Church and the “Oriental Orthodox Churches,” and the ecumenist Orthodox renounced the designation “non-Chalcedonian Churches,” it being replaced with “Oriental Orthodox Churches,” in 1990 at Chambésy the following steps were taken toward the recognition of the Severian heresy, according to which there is a mingling of the divine and human natures into a “composite nature” in the person of the Savior after the Incarnation. In the Common Declaration it is shown that both families, the Orthodox and the non-Chalcedonians, agree “that the natures, with their own energies and wills, are united hypostatically and naturally, unconfusedly, unchangeably, indivisibly, and inseparably, and that they are distinguished only in thought.” In the Second Declaration of Chambésy (1990), it was recommended to the Orthodox Churches that there was a need to lift the anathemas and condemnations pronounced against all the Monophysite Councils and heresiarchs whom the Holy Fathers anathematized beginning with the Fourth Ecumenical Council of Chalcedon.

The ecumenist dialogue between the Orthodox and the Monophysites has as its aim mutual ecclesiastical recognition and common communion as outward signs of communion, without the Monophysites renouncing their heresies.

1991, Canberra, Australia. The Seventh General Assembly of the “WCC” in Canberra, with the theme: “Come, Holy Spirit, renew the whole creation,” reinforces the ecumenist vision concerning a new work of the Holy Spirit in our age and proclaims the same false spirit of peace: “The Churches today are called to confess their faith anew, and to repent for the moments when Christians remained silent in the face of injustice or threats to peace,” certifying the reality that the orientation of the ecumenist assemblies is largely toward the social and political problems of the world, without having any mandate in this regard.

1993, June 17–24, Balamand, Lebanon. The officialization of the theory of “branches” through the introduction of the term “sister churches.” Within this theological agreement between the ecumenist Orthodox and the papists, it was accepted that the papist heresy is a sister church with valid mysteries and apostolic succession. It is also acknowledged in the respective document that the Universal Church, which we believe and confess to be the Orthodox Church, would be incomplete without communion with the so-called Roman-Catholic church, making, in a cunning and inappropriate manner, the analogy with the human body, which is not complete except by having both lungs, that is, the two churches in the ecumenist vision. The Athonite Fathers, authors of the Letter of the Holy Community against the Balamand agreement and the heresy of “sister churches,” showed that “the present Roman church is the church of innovationism and of the falsification of the writings of the Fathers of the Church and of the deformation of the Holy Scriptures and of the decisions of the Holy Councils. Grave theological differences, such as the Filioque, papal primacy and infallibility, created grace, etc., receive amnesty, and a union without any agreement in dogma is fabricated.”

1995, February, Patmos. Unfortunately, the meeting at Patmos constituted one of the few critical stances concerning the ecumenist dialogue, because then the position of the Orthodox patriarchs was more radical, contesting the admission of homosexuality and lesbianism as normal sexual orientations, to be tolerated by all Christians. As a result of the position of the Orthodox Church expressed at Patmos, the Patriarchates of Georgia and Bulgaria withdrew from the “WCC” in 1997 and 1998 respectively.

1995, June 29. Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew visits the Pope in Rome and “concelebrates a historic liturgy in Saint Peter’s Basilica.” Lightning strikes the dome during the service. Nevertheless, the Patriarch does not receive the host blessed by the Pope.

1998, April 9. The Holy Synod of the Bulgarian Church decides to withdraw from the Ecumenical Movement.

1998, Aug.–Sept., Harare, Zimbabwe. At the last General Assembly of the “WCC” of the previous century, with the theme: “Turn to God. Rejoice in Hope,” a “Policy Statement of the Council for the Future” is accepted, and another step is taken toward promoting Orthodox-Protestant dialogue through the creation of a special mixed commission.

1998, August 30, Bucharest. The 12th interreligious prayer meeting of the Sant’Egidio Community takes place, held under the name “Peace Is the Name of God,” in which many Romanian Orthodox hierarchs participated. In general, the presence of Orthodox hierarchs at the meetings of the Sant’Egidio Community, from the very beginning, has been a constant.

1998, October 8. The Holy Synod of the Church of Georgia condemns the Chambésy Agreements, Balamand, the Antiochian agreement, the use by the Orthodox Church of Finland of the Paschalion according to the new style, the theory of branches, and common prayers with the heterodox, and withdraws from the Ecumenical Movement.

1998, November 30, Phanar. In Patriarch Bartholomew’s address to the papal delegation, it is declared: “Those of our ancestors, from whom we inherited this division, were the unfortunate victims of the serpent, who is the origin of all evil; they are now in the hands of God, the Righteous Judge… And these men, being the cause of the schism, are now in the hands of God, the Righteous Judge.” The Ecumenical Patriarch rebels against and repudiates the righteous struggle waged by the Holy Fathers in defense of Orthodoxy.

2002, January, Assisi. The Pope calls all the religions of the world to Assisi in order to pray for the peace of mankind and for union. Representatives of all Orthodox jurisdictions participate, together with Protestants, Jews, Hindus, Buddhists, Muslims, Taoists, Shintoists, and African shamans. During the meeting, two ecumenical liturgies take place: one for all religions and one for all Christian denominations. The first includes common prayers, the invocation of all deities, and different rituals meant to show unity, while the latter depicts Christian unity through communion from a common chalice. Here the objective of Ecumenism appears clearly: the harmonization and unification of Christianity with all pagan religions.

2002 — The regulation concerning “confessional” and “interconfessional” common prayer at the meetings of the “World Council of Churches” is approved by the representatives of the Ecumenical Patriarchate!

2006, February, Porto Alegre, Brazil. The ecumenist Orthodox agree at the Tenth General Assembly of the “WCC” that “each church is catholic and not only in part; it is catholic, yet not in its fullness, and it fulfills its catholicity whenever it is in communion with the other churches.” (“The Ecclesiology Text,” paragraph 6) Likewise, in the same text, the quality of Church was recognized for all the Protestant heretical “churches” of the World Council of Churches, and it was accepted that the multitude of their cacodoxies and errors are “different ways of expressing the same faith” and “a diversity of charisms of the Holy Spirit”!

2006, November 30. Pope Benedict XVI visits Constantinople and participates in the liturgy served by Patriarch Bartholomew, sitting on an episcopal throne, dressed in liturgical vestments; he participates actively in the Divine Liturgy in the patriarchal church and is honored as though he were an Orthodox bishop.

2007, October 8–15, Ravenna, Italy. “The references of the Ravenna Document to the apostolic faith, to the Mysteries of initiation, to the Priesthood, to the Eucharist, and to apostolic succession are made with such naturalness regarding the Roman-Catholic Church that one could believe that the Roman-Catholic Church is Orthodox in all these points. From the Ravenna Document there emerges the tendency to confront the question of papal primacy as a normalization of papal privileges and not as a profoundly theological problem which refers to the very mystery of Christ.” Archim. George Kapsanis, Abbot of the Monastery of Gregoriou on the Holy Mountain Athos.

2008, January 6. Bishop Sofronie of Oradea, of the Romanian Patriarchate, concelebrates the service of the Great Blessing of the Waters together with the Uniate, Greek-Catholic, bishop of the city.

2008, May 25. In an unprecedented gesture, one which shocked the entire Orthodox world, Metropolitan Nicolae Corneanu of Banat, of the Romanian Patriarchate, communes publicly in a Uniate church in Timișoara, together with a Uniate bishop, a Roman-Catholic bishop, and the Papal Nuncio. Following Orthodox reactions, after a month and a half the Synod of the Romanian Church issued a decision by which any member of the Orthodox Church, cleric or layman, is forbidden to commune or to concelebrate mysteries or rites with heterodox clerics, with the threat of deposition or excommunication in the case of disobedience; but it avoids showing that the involvement of the Romanian Orthodox Church in the Ecumenist Movement is the true cause of the deviations of some Orthodox hierarchs toward heresy, and at the same time it avoided applying a canonical sanction upon the Metropolitan of Banat.

2013, Busan, South Korea. At the Tenth General Assembly of the “WCC,” His Eminence Nifon of Târgoviște, the representative of the Romanian Orthodox Church, declares: “The unity of the Church has been lost, and in its present form, since it is divided, the Church is deficient from the point of view of the Holy Mysteries. All people are brothers in Christ, Christian Holy Baptism constituting only a higher, mystical stage within the spiritual kinship existing among them.” No hierarch in the Synod of the Romanian Orthodox Church perceived the gravity of the statements and asked for explanations, and still less for canonical sanctions, as would have been proper.

2014, May, Jerusalem. The meeting between Pope Francis and Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew. In the common declaration signed by the two, it was affirmed: “Our fraternal meeting today is a new and necessary stage on the path of unity toward which only the Holy Spirit can lead us, that of communion in a legitimate diversity. […] Although conscious that unity is manifested in the love of God and in love of neighbor, we await with eagerness that day when, finally, we shall share together the Eucharistic Supper.” Once again, the reconciliation between the Orthodox Church and the papal heresy without any repentance on the part of the latter is shown in a grave and unacceptable manner.

2014, September, Seoul, South Korea. The Peace Summit organized by the World Alliance of Religions and by the organization “Heavenly Culture, World Peace, Restoration of Light.” The representatives of the principal religions of the world signed, within a festive ceremony, the agreement for the unity of religions, “which constitutes an innovative promise of religions to unite unconditionally and without discrimination in order to obtain true peace.” The agreement has the following content: “We commit ourselves before God, before all the people of the world, and before the advocates of peace, to become one under God through the unity of religions.” Practically, this agreement is a very important step toward the future union in apostasy of all religions into a global religion, which will also have a single leader, as the apocalyptic prophecies show.

2015, September 10, Phanar. In his speech, Patriarch Bartholomew affirms the fact that opposition to the plans of the Ecumenical Patriarchate for “ecumenical unity” is diabolical. In fact, any opposition is diabolical, the Patriarch affirms, and truly defamatory, which corresponds exactly to the opinion of papism, the “sister church” of Phanar. From this it is seen that the most fervent supporters of Ecumenism are in fact the most embittered persecutors of the Orthodox.

2015, September 25, New York. During the Pope’s visit to the September 11 memorial, an interreligious service takes place, in which the Orthodox Archbishop of America also participates.

2016, February 2–3. Within the proceedings of the Sobor of the Russian Orthodox Church, the members of the Hierarchical Synod showed that, in its present form, the draft documents of the Holy and Great Council do not violate the purity of the Orthodox faith and do not deviate from the canonical tradition of the Church. This is a new victory of the ecumenist heretics over the Orthodox mind of the pleroma of the Russian Orthodox Church.

2016, February 12, Havana, Cuba. The common declaration of Pope Francis and Patriarch Kirill of Moscow, from which we select:

“With joy we have met as brothers in the Christian faith.” (1)

“In spite of this common Tradition of the first ten centuries, Catholics and Orthodox, for almost a thousand years, have been deprived of communion in the Eucharist. We are separated by the wounds caused by conflicts of a distant or recent past, by the divergences, inherited from our forefathers, in the understanding and explanation of our faith in God, One in three Persons, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.” (5)

“Conscious of the permanence of numerous obstacles, we desire that our meeting contribute to the restoration of this unity willed by God, for which Christ prayed.” (6)

“We believe that these martyrs of our time, who belong to different Churches but are united through a common suffering, represent a pledge of the unity of Christians.” (12)

Through this common declaration, the aim is the acceptance by the Orthodox of reconciliation with the papists without requiring any kind of repentance from them. At the same time, the false idea was expressed that if all martyrs belonging to the different “churches” suffered persecution for religious reasons, this means that all struggled for and confessed the same truth. This is a dishonoring of the Holy Confessors of Orthodoxy and a cunning diversion of the meaning of their struggle and sacrifice.

2016, April, Lesbos. The common declaration of Pope Francis and Archbishop Ieronymos of Athens affirms, among other things: “For our part, obeying the will of our Lord Jesus Christ, we have firmly and wholeheartedly decided that we will intensify efforts to promote full unity among all Christians.”

2016, June 16–27, Kolymbari, Crete, Greece. The holding of the “Holy and Great Council.” Through the documents signed and approved by the representatives of ten local Churches, mixed marriages between Orthodox and heterodox were admitted, in violation of the Holy Canons of the Church; and on this same occasion the historical designation of “churches” for the heterodox was accepted, although this had been condemned hundreds of years earlier at the Orthodox Council of Jerusalem of March 16, 1672, when the Confession of Faith of Ecumenical Patriarch Cyril Lucaris was anathematized because of Calvinist-Reformed influences. The pseudo-council of Crete imposes the heresy of Ecumenism as the official doctrine of the Church and constitutes the crowning of more than 100 years of efforts concerning the participation of Orthodox representatives in the Ecumenist Movement.

2016, September 15–21, Chieti, Italy. Within the meeting of the mixed commission of dialogue between the ecumenist Orthodox and the papists, papal primacy is recognized by the Orthodox representatives. Representatives of the Bulgarian Church were absent from the meeting.

2016, September, Jerusalem. The Mekudeshet Festival, a Hebrew term referring to marriage, (consecration), gathers together “the three great monotheistic religions,” Christianity, represented by the papists, Judaism, and Mohammedanism, under a new form of interreligious and spiritual meeting: “Amen — A House of Prayer for All Believers,” a meeting within which the three faiths are called to dialogue, study, sing, and pray together in a single temporary house of worship. The organization of the festival is carried out by a group in Israel which calls itself “The Borders Dissolvers,” active in different cultural fields with the aim of changing the reality on the ground. Thus, some titles on the internet speak about the dissolving of borders and the worshiping together of the same god. Once again, the aim of Ecumenism is shown: the syncretistic union of Christianity with non-Christian religions.

2017, May. Patriarch Kirill of Moscow and All Russia affirms: “I know that here there are both Christians and Muslims; each addresses one and the same Creator God, and behold, in response to this, we receive real divine help.” Here appears the heretical idea according to which Muslims worship the same God as Christians.

2017, April, Geneva. Patriarch Bartholomew openly acknowledges what the aim of the “council” in Crete was: “Ultimately, Orthodox participation in the efforts for reconciliation and unity of Christians within what is called the ‘Ecumenical Movement,’ which until now has been based on decisions taken either individually by the Autocephalous Churches or within the Pan-Orthodox Conferences, had to be ratified synodally, which is the authentic method for formulating a uniform position of the Orthodox Church. We Orthodox, that is, the ecumenists and those in communion with them are meant, are firmly convinced that the Ecumenical Movement and the World Council of Churches have as their aim and reason for existence the fulfillment of the Lord’s final prayer, ‘that they all may be one’ (John 17:21) …” Through this the aim is to erase the differences between Orthodoxy and heresy, and then the union of all in apostasy.

2017, April 28, Cairo. The ecumenist prayer in which Pope Francis, the Ecumenical Patriarch, the Patriarch of Alexandria, and the primates of the Monophysites participate.

We must make the clarification that not all the events of the Ecumenist Movement have been included in the preceding chronological enumeration, but only those which we considered the most important.

Conclusions

From what has been presented above, it is clearly seen that all ecumenist endeavors seek to convince mankind that, at first, all the pseudo-churches and so-called Christian confessions, and afterward all religions, are different paths, yet equal in value, which lead toward salvation. But from this there emerges the fearful blasphemy and heresy that the Savior ought not to have become incarnate, that it was not necessary for Him to sacrifice Himself on the Cross, and that He did not have to establish one single Church with one unique Apostolic Tradition, for whose Truth all the ranks of Saints have struggled and sacrificed themselves for 2,000 years until today. The ecumenist heretics offer the deceitful solution of creating a global religious structure in which all people may live in peace, harmony, and earthly happiness, regardless of what faith they have, pursuing only the fulfillment of certain humanist ideals, but which have no connection with the teaching and life of the True Church.

We, the priests here and the Christian-Orthodox people whom we represent, and who have ceased commemorating the hierarchs who signed the documents from Crete and the other hierarchs who tacitly support those documents, confess that we will never accept the heresy of Ecumenism, being conscious that only in this way will we remain steadfast in the Church of Christ, that is, in the Truth.

 

- Hieromonk Ioan Chițu in collaboration with Hieromonk Spiridon Roșu.

The Interruption of Commemoration, the Only Effective Measure Against Heresy: Canonical Considerations

Theologian Mihai-Silviu Chirilă     Separation from the Heretic in Holy Scripture Separation from the heretical man is commanded b...