Hieromonk Lavrentie | November 28, 2025
(Translated from the original
Romanian)
The letter of Pope Leo In
unitate fidei stood out especially by the fact that it cited the
Nicene-Constantinopolitan Creed without the addition of the Filioque.
But more interesting to me seemed the perspective it offers on the envisaged
union of the “Churches.” There had also been indications in this regard in a
document from last year concerning the way in which the primacy of the Bishop
of Rome will be reconciled with synodality for a future church union.
Renunciation of the Filioque?
Perhaps the most generous gesture
by which the current Pope shows his availability for sincere union with the
“other Christians” is the apparent renunciation of the addition Filioque
from the Creed. In the letter from recent days, translated also into Romanian
in Catholic [i.e., Papist] language for those who cannot consult it in the languages
officially offered by the Vatican, the article about the Holy Spirit from the
Symbol of Faith is cited without the addition Filioque. In this way, the
authentic synodal variant of 381 is officially acknowledged, but with an
observation added in a footnote.
Catholic diplomacy offers the
view about the addition Filioque in one sentence: “The declaration ‘and proceeds
from the Son (Filioque)’ is not found in the text from Constantinople;
it was introduced into the Latin Creed by Pope Benedict VIII in 1014 and is the
subject of Orthodox–Catholic dialogue.” From this clarification it follows that
the Pope has not renounced the Filioque, even if he takes a step back.
Nothing is said about whether the insertion of 1014 is correct and justified,
but it is left in official debate with the Orthodox. In other words, a revision
is possible if a future agreement is reached, but for the moment things remain
unchanged. For this reason, we are interested in what a possible union of the
Orthodox and the Catholics will look like.
Indications about the future
ecumenist union
Although the current Pope was
persuaded with difficulty to come to Nicaea for the commemoration of the First
Ecumenical Council, it seems that in the end he does not strike a discordant
note with regard to the ecumenist tradition already inscribed in the papist
attitude toward the rest of the Christian world. At first, he refused to follow
the program made by the late Pope Francis to visit Istanbul in the first part
of the year 2025, but in the end, he accepted to come at the end of the year.
And his coming this weekend is
prefaced by a positioning from which there emerges the availability and effort
to reach a Christian unity on the basis of the Nicene-Constantinopolitan Creed
and the “one” baptism. Thus, the Pope declares that the ecumenical movement has
brought Catholics to the current state of “recognizing the members of the other
Churches and ecclesiastical communities as our brothers and sisters in Jesus
Christ.” For the moment, “what unites us is much greater than what separates
us” (§12).
Thus the Pope declares that, at
the official level, there exists a mutual recognition of communion among the
“Churches,” but not full and not visible.
In what way will the visible and
formal union look, according to the Pope? It will be achieved through an
inclusive ecumenism, which is to accept both some and others.
The ecumenism described by the
Pope “must leave behind the theological controversies, which have lost their raison
d’être, and develop a common understanding and even a common prayer to the
Holy Spirit in order to gather us together into one faith and one love.”
More precisely, again according
to the letter, it is not about “an ecumenism that seeks to return to the state
before the divisions, nor about a mutual recognition of the present status quo
of the diversity of Churches and ecclesial communities. Rather, it is an
ecumenism that looks toward the future, that seeks reconciliation through
dialogue as we share the gifts and the spiritual heritage.”
I think that this perspective is
difficult to contemplate by any logical and normal thinking. In what way can a
union be achieved that is neither a return to the state before the ruptures,
nor a remaining in the present division, and yet it be an authentic
reconciliation and translated into visible frameworks? In plain Romanian, it
seems to be about reconciling both the goat and the cabbage, that is, a
camel-ostrich [i.e., an unnatural hybrid], something truly authentic. [Written in
sarcasm – trans.]
The ecumenist union on the
topic of papal primacy
In order to form a somewhat
clearer picture of what the Pope wants to convey, it is useful to bring into
discussion an official document from one year ago of the papal administration
about primacy and synodality in the perspective of a future ecclesial union.
Although a rather bulky material, rendered into a brochure of about 150 pages,
a few statements and ideas can be extracted in order to summarize the general
message.
By taking over and assuming the
idea from a joint document of Pope John Paul II and [Pope] Shenouda III
(Coptic), we learn that “in a reconciled Christianity, such a communion
presupposes the fact that the relationship of the Bishop of Rome with the
Eastern Churches and their bishops […] will have to be substantially different
from the relationship now accepted within the Latin Church and that the
Churches will continue to have the right and the power to govern themselves
according to their own traditions and customs” (p. 111), that is, the Orthodox
will relate to the Pope as they do today, without changing anything (p. 86).
The reconciliation between the
present primacy and synodal administration will somehow be defined as follows:
“The Bishop of Rome acts simultaneously as bishop of a local diocese, as
primate of the Western or Latin Church, and as servant of unity at the universal
level” (p. 97). That is, what for Catholics will be a primacy will for the rest
be something general and vague.
In concrete terms, Catholics are
willing to leave papal primacy as it was defined at the First Vatican Council
(where infallibility was introduced in 1870), but they will take into account
that it must be understood and explained in context. That is, it will be given
another meaning. Taking into account the fact that at the time of the
convocation of the First Vatican Council, there were certain pressures that
determined the accentuation of a centralizing perspective, now it must and can
be revised, reinterpreted by them, because now the climate is different.
In summary, in the future Church
united through ecumenist efforts, the current confessions and beliefs will be
viewed as compatible traditions and brought together into one great Church,
called “of Christ.” There will be ecclesiastical communion, but each in his own
language and in perfect harmony with one another.
Union in dogmatic chaos
without betrayals of faith
From what has been set forth very
succinctly above, it follows that the unity that will be reached will not be
attained through the power of the Holy Spirit of truth, but in a spirit of
pietistic and senseless love, in which each will remain faithful to his own
traditions, but will simultaneously be in communion and will accept/embrace
heterodox beliefs. Such a situation I cannot imagine except through the
renunciation of dogmatic akrivia, or rather even through the abandonment
of ordinary sound thinking. More important will be merry union than rigorous
truth. The Church will be viewed as an earthly institution meant to lead to the
fulfillment of Christ’s commandments, but without seriousness, in cruel
delusion similar to the charismatic movement and cut off from its purpose in
eternity. Those lacking uprightness will fit into it without difficulty, but
those accustomed to the true faith will not be able to accept it.
As we already see now, there are [supposedly]
no betrayals of faith, even though they are clear. Ignorance will be stronger
than vigilance.
Practically, we will not be able
to find what to reproach to the future ecumenist union at the formal level,
because the (Orthodox) faith will not be betrayed, but there will be such an
amalgam that it will be hard to understand anything even logically. In other
words, it will be a fair of dogmas in which even the Filioque will be
preserved and rejected at the same time.
I further specify that this
perspective offered by Pope Leo is in perfect consensus with the agreements
signed so far by the Orthodox and the Catholics at Ravenna (2007), Chieti (2016),
and Alexandria (2023). Therefore, it concerns us directly not only because the
Pope will meet with the Ecumenical Patriarch in the coming days, but because
this is the course of things. For this reason, an analysis in the future of the
bilateral discussions mentioned above will be necessary for the benefit of
those who are interested.
As an additional note, it is
interesting that the portal Basilica informs us that the
Orthodox–Lutheran dialogue is continuing and is focused precisely on
synodality–primacy, a subject common with the Catholics. This indicates a joint
effort to bring everyone to a common denominator simultaneously, even if the
themes are not specific to the confessions in question.
Of course, the tempering of the
ecumenist momentum after the pressures exerted following the Council of Crete
was only temporary, and we are witnessing a revival of the efforts toward union
even on the part of the Romanian hierarchy, without embarrassment.