Saturday, May 23, 2026

The Spirit of Consumerism in the World and in the Church

Priest Tarasy Borozenets | April 24, 2026

 

 

Before speaking about the sinfulness of consumerism, it is important to understand: consumption in itself is not evil. Consumption is a natural element of our human life. Man is a dependent and needy being, and therefore it is natural for him to take and consume, especially in childhood. But as he grows older, man increasingly begins to give to others—to create, to help, to care. A mature person is a responsible, creative person, loving God and his neighbors, guided by the apostolic commandment: “It is more blessed to give than to receive” (Acts 20:35).

Evil lies not in consumption itself, but in its immoderation and perversion, in its absolutization. The more perfected a person is, the higher his psychological and spiritual aspirations are, the less egoistic consumption there is in him and the more constructive activity and creativity. The absolutization of consumption leads to degradation and infantilization, whereas the primacy of self-giving fosters personal growth, the strength of the family, and the vigor of society.

Consumerism in the Gospel

When the Lord went forth to preach, performed His miracles, and, most importantly, the miracles of the conversion and healing of human souls, leading them to repentance, humility, and love, He thereby satisfied all the pressing needs of people—both spiritual and bodily. His mercies were so full and manifest that hope arose among the people: now there is no need to do anything; simply be with Christ, and He will do everything and grant prosperity to all.

Therefore the people surrounding Him listened, but did not hear His warnings that He, and they after Him, would have to suffer, be killed, and rise again. Their consumerist consciousness simply could not contain this. Then, as today, people do not want this from God—not effort, responsibility, or ascetic struggle. They want “to have everything, and to have nothing happen to them for it.” They want to make use of things, to consume, and not to suffer and give of themselves. Let us recall the words of the Lord: “Truly, truly, I say to you: you seek Me, not because you saw the signs, but because you ate of the loaves and were filled” (John 6:26). Here is the root of the problem: we seek not Christ, but services; not the Savior, but a free benefactor.

Two Principles of the Consumerist Consciousness

The consumerist attitude persists as long as there remains in a person even some measure of pride and egoism. Behind a consumerist attitude toward God, one’s neighbor, and the world there always stands egocentrism—the placing of oneself at the center of the universe, where even God is turned into a means of serving my Ego.

In the consumerist consciousness, man is a consumer, a client who is always right; God is a provider of services, obliged to do things as I want; the Church is a firm that provides these services; faith, the Mysteries, and prayers are instruments. Here two principles are at work: the first is “I want,” and the second is “Everyone owes me.”

Consumer Society as a Breeding Ground

Today’s capitalist society is rightly called a consumer society. The economy, art, education, upbringing, and culture are arranged so that people are constantly consuming something: goods and services, information, impressions—and so that they see in this the meaning of their life. Here everyone lives exclusively for himself, for the satisfaction of his own needs. Man becomes a buyer, and the world a vast supermarket. The Apostle John the Theologian warned:

“For all that is in the world—the lust of the flesh, the lust of the eyes, and the pride of life—is not of the Father, but is of this world” (1 John 2:16).

Consumer society is the triumph of this “pride of life,” realized through the “lust of the flesh” and the “lust of the eyes.” The chief sin here is not murder or theft, but insufficient consumption.

The Spirit of Consumerism in the Church

It may seem that such consumerism concerns only society outside the Church, this world. Alas, it has also penetrated and metastasized in the consciousness and life of believers. We come to the Church from the consumerist world and do not automatically leave its cultural and value cocoon, even by confessing and receiving Communion. Often we bring into the church the same spirit of consumption, only redirecting it from things to holy things. People begin to treat God, faith, and the Church as services. They seek a faith “suited to themselves,” according to their own tastes, so that it will be convenient and comfortable. They choose a church as they would a store: where the “service” is more pleasant, the priest kinder, the choir more beautiful, the candles cheaper, the sermons shorter. Even the saints are chosen according to the principle of “who gives me what”: one for a headache, another for passing an exam. This is no longer faith, but religious consumption. The Lord says: “You cannot serve God and mammon” (Matt. 6:24). But modern man is sincerely convinced that one can: let God be on the list of service providers alongside the bank, the hairdresser, and the internet provider.

Most often people come to the Church not because life is going well, but out of need. They are not seeking dogmas, but a solution: how to save a dying husband, pull a son out of the captivity of drugs, preserve a family, or at least obtain a roof over their head. A person comes in order to receive: health, safety, well-being, the resolution of an unbearable problem. And the Lord does not slam the door shut before such a “petitioner.” He receives him, knowing the true price of this impulse—fear, pain, or calculation.

Why does God receive consumers? Because this is how the path of churching begins. As the holy fathers write, the soul passes through three stages: that of the slave, the hireling, and the son.

The stage of the slave: a person does not yet love God, but fears hell. He keeps the commandments because he has been terrified by the description of fiery Gehenna. This is faith expressing a religious instinct of self-preservation.

The stage of the hireling: a person already hopes for a reward. He fasts in order to obtain the Kingdom of Heaven, and prays for God’s gifts both in this life and in the life to come. This is a transaction: “I give You a candle; You give me a successful operation.”

The stage of the son: perfection, when a person serves God and his neighbor simply out of love, having forgotten about punishment and recompense.

In the first two stages, the Christian remains a consumer. He struggles ascetically not for Christ’s sake, but in order to avoid pain (the slave) or to receive dividends (the hireling). Of such an attitude people say: “Not for Jesus’ sake, but for a piece of bread.”

But here is the paradox of holiness: the Lord accepts even such distorted service. As a mother nurses an infant who is not yet capable of loving her, but is capable only of tasting milk (consuming), so also God nourishes the soul with grace through fear and the hope of reward. Gradually, by His Providence, He raises a person from the egoistic “give me” to the filial “I thank Thee.” The problem of contemporary church life is that many become complacent and remain stuck in the first two stages, unwilling to pass on to the third—to love wholly and truly.

The Choice: Consumption or Service

Today every Christian is faced with a clear choice: egoistic consumption or sacrificial service. Hardened consumers regard even one another as commodities. They relate to other people exclusively as means for satisfying their own needs. Another person has no intrinsic value; he is valuable only insofar as he can be useful, pleasant, or profitable. In this way people unwittingly reduce themselves to the level of commodities that have a monetary price. “How much are you worth?” is the chief question of the consumerist world. A person believes that his dignity is measured by salary, brands, and status. In this world everything is sold and bought: the body, talents, time, conscience, love, friendship, even a place in Paradise, as it seems to those who order forty-day commemorations without repentance. But Christ reminds us: “For what is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul?” (Matt. 16:26). The soul has no price, for it is the image of God. He who looks upon his neighbor as a commodity first of all devalues himself, for according to the word of the Lord: “With what measure ye mete, it shall be measured to you again” (Matt. 7:2).

Two Types of Consumerism

The most terrible thing is that this sore also afflicts fully churched Christians. In the depths of our soul, we often relate to Christ as a source of well-being. As long as everything is going well—health, prosperity, peace in the family—we willingly go to church, pray, and receive Communion. But as soon as misfortune occurs, a person falls into despondency, abandons prayer, stops going to church, and murmurs: “Why? I served Thee so much!” This is pure consumerism: I give God my religiosity, and He is obliged to give me a comfortable life. The Lord warned:

“But that which fell upon the rock are those who, when they hear the word, receive it with joy; but these have no root, who for a while believe, and in time of temptation fall away” (Luke 8:13).

Churching without the root of humility and readiness to bear the cross inevitably turns into a transaction.

Paradoxically, worldly people manifest consumerism in precisely the opposite way. As long as everything is going well for them—health, money, success—they do not even want to think about church, regarding faith as the lot of the weak. But as soon as misfortune comes—illness, collapse, the death of loved ones—they “remember” God and run to church to light a candle, order a forty-day commemoration, confess, and receive Communion, treating God as a crisis manager. Folk wisdom has accurately observed: “Until the thunder strikes, the peasant will not cross himself.”

In both the first and the second case, there is one and the same consumerist consciousness: God is needed not as Father and Lord, but as a fire brigade or service personnel. The only difference is that the “churched” person has become accustomed to “service” in good times, while the unchurched person seeks it only in bad times. But both do not want one thing: to be with God always—in joy and in sorrow, in health and in sickness, in abundance and in poverty, serving Him not for something, but out of humble, grateful love for His own sake.

A False Picture of the World and Right Dispositions

Consumerism today poisons and perverts not only church life, but all spheres of society: education, upbringing, science, and art—leading them to vulgarization and degradation. People imagine the world as a supermarket of goods and services. But this is an entirely false picture.

At the foundation of life we should place dispositions opposite to pride and consumerism: “I owe others,” “No one owes me anything,” “One must give more and take less,” “Do not demand and do not take things for granted, but ask and give thanks for everything as for an undeserved gift.” This is what the Liturgy teaches us as a common work, and the Eucharist as thanksgiving. The Lord Himself is the highest example: He “came not to be ministered unto, but to minister, and to give His life as a ransom for many” (Matt. 20:28).

From Passivity to Synergy and the Cross

Consumerism presupposes passivity, work directed toward receiving rather than giving. The opposite disposition—constructive activity—calls for active cooperation with God, for synergy with His grace. As Scripture says: “Faith without works is dead” (James 2:20). Folk wisdom echoes this: “Water does not flow under a lying stone.” Without our will and active participation, God cannot save us. The path of the Christian is hard labor. Its heaviness lies in the efforts to overcome the spirit of pride and consumerism, in uprooting them from the soul and heart.

After conversion, He at first pours out His mercy superabundantly, plainly showing His care and openly demonstrating His presence. It may seem to the newly converted person that it will always be this way. But then the Lord “withdraws” and “releases” the person onto a free path, urging him toward independent cooperation and the bearing of his own cross. He does this so that the person will not become a spiritual consumer, will not become rooted in laziness and pride, but will become a co-worker and a cross-bearer, a builder of his own salvation and of the salvation of his neighbors. It is said: “The Kingdom of Heaven is taken by force, and those who use force seize it” (Matt. 11:12). Christ Himself calls: “If anyone wishes to come after Me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross, and follow Me” (Mark 8:34). True Christian life consists in self-denying service to God and one’s neighbors, and not in demanding that one be served.

 

Russian source: https://pravoslavie.ru/177118.html

Greek translation: https://entoytwnika1.blogspot.com/2026/05/blog-post_23.html


 

On the Christian Spiritual Struggle

St. Vasily of Kanev, Confessor (+1933)

Homily on Friday of the Second Week of Great Lent, February 20, 1904

 

 

Watch and pray, that ye enter not into temptation: the spirit indeed is willing, but the flesh is weak.

Matt. 26:41; Mark 14:38

 

This is why constant spiritual watchfulness, spiritual sobriety, and continual attentive concern for oneself, for one’s inner life, are necessary: our spirit is willing, but the flesh is weak. As is evident from the Gospels, the spirit of Christ’s disciples was willing; they were always ready for the greatest sorrows, privations, sufferings, even for death itself for the sake of their Beloved Teacher. Nothing, according to their words, could ever separate them from the Lord.

When once Christ the Savior asked two of His closest apostles whether they could drink the cup which He had to accept—the cup of sufferings, of the most shameful Cross, the cup of the greatest torments and reproaches—they boldly and fearlessly answered: “We are able” (Matt. 20:22). There was not the slightest shadow of doubt in their words, not the slightest wavering in this holy resolve to follow the Lord everywhere and to endure all things for His sake.

On another occasion, when Christ the Savior spoke prophetically: All ye shall be offended because of Me this night: for it is written, I will smite the shepherd, and the sheep of the flock shall be scattered abroad, the Apostle Peter answers: Though all men shall be offended because of Thee, yet will I never be offended (Matt. 26:31, 33). What “willingness” of spirit, what holy zeal, what unconditional devotion to Him for Whose sake everything had been left behind—both house, and brothers, and sisters! (Matt. 19:27). The same holy Apostle Peter expresses his boundless love for the Lord still more strongly and decisively: Though I should die with Thee, yet will I not deny Thee (Matt. 26:35). The same thing is repeated also by the other disciples of the Lord (Matt. 26:35).

But what do we see afterward?… The spirit indeed is willing, but the flesh is weak (Matt. 26:41; Mark 14:38). The most zealous confessor of faith in Christ, the Apostle Peter, denies his Beloved Teacher “for fear of the Jews,” and earnestly swears that he does not know this Man (Matt. 26:69 ff.); when the Lord is taken into custody, all the disciples leave Him in fear and flee (Matt. 26:56 and parallel passages).

And in the Garden of Gethsemane, on that great night, in those hours of prayer concerning the cup, the chosen and closest Apostles of Christ cannot “watch” with their Lord even one hour, and give themselves over to sleep at the very time when the soul of their Teacher is sorrowful even unto death, when, in His heavy ascetic struggle of prayer, bloody sweat appears upon His face, when He grieves and is deeply distressed, and an angel of the Lord strengthens Him (Matt. 26:37; Luke 22:42–44).

Such, in general, is the property of our nature: our spirit is willing, but the flesh is weak. Our spirit is a divine principle; it is a flame from the divine flame; it is from heaven, and therefore, naturally, turns toward heaven as to its true fatherland, where it can find complete repose for itself. It thirsts for righteousness, strives toward truth, inclines toward eternal and unchanging beauty; it seeks the things above, and delights only in the law of God (Rom. 7:22).

But, O wretched man that I am: who shall deliver me from the body of this death? (Rom. 7:24)… The flesh, or carnality, fastens us to what is earthly, external, and sensual; it weakens or even entirely suppresses the Godlike impulses of our spirit. With my mind, says the holy Apostle, I serve the law of God; but with the flesh the law of sin (Rom. 7:25). For the flesh lusteth against the spirit, and the spirit against the flesh (Gal. 5:17).

Let us look attentively into our inner, spiritual life, and we shall clearly see this constant, tormenting discord within us between the eternal and the temporal, the heavenly and the earthly, the spiritual and the carnal.

We are often inspired by the most exalted, noble, and pure desires and aspirations. To live according to God, to do everything from the soul, to accomplish everything according to conscience, according to a sense of duty—this is what stands before us as something absolutely necessary on our part, something without which our very life is unthinkable and will lose its true meaning. Truth, honesty, complete disinterestedness, unceasing labor for the good of others—this is what inspires us.

We are ready to come forward as self-sacrificing fighters for every trampled justice, to stand firmly in defense of the offended and oppressed person. The highest ideals of goodness shine before us as a bright guiding star… What, we think, is our self-loving person, our petty worldly interests, our empty ambition?… All this must be offered as a sacrifice to our neighbor; one must think less of oneself and more of others; for in love is the fullness of life, in love man is perfected. Forgive, endure, love, struggle, suffer—be ready to embrace all in your arms: this is true life.

And deeds—we think—how many deeds there are in every field, deeds of the most fruitful and life-giving kind, where it is necessary to apply one’s strength self-sacrificially; for the harvest in every field is plentiful, but the laborers are few. And how, we wonder, do people live without being conscious of all this—without being conscious of that which gives life its true value? No, we sincerely repeat: “Though all should deny Him, we will not deny Him.”

But all these noble thoughts and desires of ours grow pale and, with the passage of time, evaporate like smoke. We hear the reproachful words of the Lord: Simon, sleepest thou? couldest thou not watch one hour? (Mark 14:37). Where is our former spiritual watchfulness, where is the lofty exaltation and exertion of our spiritual powers? Where are the former youthful, holy ideals that inspired us?… Where?… “Simon! Sleepest thou?”…

Having entered into life, for the Lord’s sake, for the fulfillment of His holy will, we often cannot watch with Him even one hour. Where are our former holy aspirations and impulses?… Mammon has stifled them, as thorns choke the growing grain of the earth (Matt. 13:7). And we become slaves of petty worldly care and vanity, which make us base and cowardly; slaves of our self-love—this most powerful master, with its whole crowd of various servants in the form of diverse sensual impulses and passions.

Yes, our spirit is willing, but the flesh is weak. Let us look attentively into our spiritual life. What do we see? Like the publican of the Gospel, we cry out: “God, be merciful to me a sinner,” and with the Pharisee of the Gospel we think: I am not as other men are (Luke 18:11). With the thief we cry: “Remember me, O Lord,” and with the unbelieving Gadarenes we do not wish to receive the Lord Who comes to us.

From the depth of our soul we cry: “Open unto me the doors of repentance, O Giver of Life,” and again we remain in our former impenitence, again we return to our habitual sins. We weep and fall down, and pray together with Mary Magdalene, but we do not do the deeds of this holy woman… O wretched man that I am: who shall deliver me from the body of this death? (Rom. 7:24).

From this the necessity of constant spiritual watchfulness, of spiritual sobriety, is clearly revealed; the latter is accomplished only with the help of the all-powerful grace of God, which heals our infirmities, and not by our own weak powers. Be strong in the Lord and in the power of His might (Eph. 6:10)—in hope in the Lord, in trust in His almighty power (Eph. 3:20).

Christianity requires from all of us a moral struggle, an unceasing spiritual warfare. It does not call everyone into deserts and monasteries, but it commands everyone to subject his flesh to the spirit. There are different forms of Christian asceticism, but in essence the life of a Christian is ascetic discipline: a constant active striving to give triumph to the spiritual principle over the carnal, to make the body a worthy instrument of the spirit, and, through the development of the spirit, already here, insofar as this is possible, to transform the natural body into a spiritual body (1 Cor. 15:44 ff.).

“The foundations of life in the deserts… are identical with the general Christian foundations of life: there the evangelical universal human ideal was given and developed, or more precisely, clarified… The Church considers the ascetic element in Christianity to be a common component of the life of the Christian, and recognizes ascetic labor as obligatory not only for the hermit or the monk, but also for everyone who wishes to live in Christ and according to Christ, both in the world, and in the family, and in society.”

How mistaken, therefore, are those who at the present time so zealously defend the “flesh,” the natural human element taken in itself, resolutely affirming that this human element contains in itself no unconditional impurity, and that it must be received by Christianity and united with it, for the path to the supernatural, to the Christian, lies for us only from this natural, human element taken in itself.

He who knows the Scripture and who looks attentively into his inner spiritual life knows well that this human, natural element in us is darkened, infected, sinful; in it there is no unity and harmony, but a constant discord is observed between the spirit and the flesh. Here are the works of the flesh: adultery, fornication, uncleanness, lasciviousness, idolatry, sorcery, enmity, quarrels, envy, anger, strife, dissensions, temptations, heresies, hatred, murders, drunkenness, disorderly conduct, and the like (Gal. 5:19–21). And here are the works of the spirit: love, joy, peace, longsuffering, goodness, mercy, faith, meekness, temperance (Gal. 5:22–23).

Therefore, Christianity cannot receive the human element in its immediate naturalness, but must transform it, spiritualize it. That which is born of the flesh is flesh (John 3:6); it always bears upon itself the stamp of sensuality, carnality, sinfulness. Christ the Savior assumed our flesh, apart from sin, and therefore the God-manhood of Christ the Savior by no means speaks of the existence in us of “holy flesh.”

And what, one may ask, is the point of this praise of the natural human element taken in itself, this proud self-complacency over the purity of human nature, when Christianity also does not deny in us the beginnings of good, though darkened, and does not suppress the better aspects of the human, but only cleanses the latter from every kind of tare that has grown upon it? Is it good for a sick man, who can become healthy with proper medical help, to keep insisting that he is perfectly healthy and requires no physician? Is it good for a man who does not know, but who can possess knowledge, to keep saying that he knows much and has no need of the help of education? Does this not mean leading us into obvious deception, weakening in us the spiritual energy we need? And this is precisely how these defenders of “holy flesh” act.

Many console themselves with the thought that the time for struggle, for spiritual sobriety, for attentive self-observation, is still ahead, and that for now it is better simply to live—to take from life everything it gives, to experience every kind of amusement and sensual pleasure.

Oh, this is a dangerous path in life!… One must fight the enemy when he is still only approaching us, when he is plotting against us and devising his cunning snares against us. But when the enemy has surrounded us on every side and taken away from us all our best possession, then the struggle against him is difficult, and often completely impossible.

How many precious lives perish precisely because the first temptations, the first assaults of the enemy, were not repelled; and, gradually submitting more and more to his destructive influence, they were finally captured alive in the nets of the devil. Do we not see a handsome, healthy young man, raised in a truly Christian family, who, failing to repel the first unhealthy pleasures of his youth, perished prematurely in the storm of passions burning him up? Do we not see a girl pure as an angel of heaven, who did not understand the first impulses of her loving heart and likewise perished prematurely?…

And this unfortunate man, exhausted, broken, barely dragging his feet, having almost lost human appearance!… Who is he? He has been ruined by those same passions which, like a serpent, crept up to him and gradually sucked out of him all that was best… We regret the life we have lived, we scourge and curse ourselves, but it is already too late: the enemy has taken possession of us.

Spiritual struggle, spiritual watchfulness, and sobriety are always necessary. In this spiritual warfare the Christian is not left to his own infirm powers, but divine weapons are given to him, capable of destroying every stronghold of the enemy (2 Cor. 10:4).

“Take,” the holy Apostle teaches us, “the whole armor of God, that ye may be able to withstand in the evil day, and having overcome all, to stand. Stand therefore, having your loins girded about with truth, and having put on the breastplate of righteousness, and having shod your feet with the readiness to preach the gospel of peace; and above all, take the shield of faith, wherewith ye shall be able to quench all the fiery darts of the wicked one; and take the helmet of salvation, and the spiritual sword, which is the word of God” (Eph. 6:13–17).

The most important Christian weapon in spiritual warfare is faith, which serves for the Christian warrior as a great shield, protecting him from the strongest assaults of the enemy. From faith comes truth, girding the loins of the Christian’s thought, directing his thoughts upward and not allowing them to be scattered in worldly vanity; from faith comes righteousness, or a virtuous life, protecting the Christian warrior like a breastplate from the evil that clings to him. Faith also gives birth to self-sacrificing readiness for the struggle with the enemy, in the name of the Gospel of God, which has brought us peace. Faith provides the spiritual helmet, which is salvation or redemption, granted to us in Christ; from faith and according to faith comes the speech of God, or the evangelical word, sharper than any two-edged sword.

We hear the reproachful words of the Lord: Simon, sleepest thou? (Mark 14:37). Could ye not watch with Me one hour? (Matt. 26:40). But we also hear other words: Lord, teach us to pray (Luke 11:1); Increase our faith! (Luke 17:5). Under the action of living faith and pure, strong prayer, “we shall overcome all things by the power of Him Who loved us”; then nothing “shall be able to separate us from the love of God which is in Christ Jesus our Lord” (Rom. 8:38–39). Then no struggle will be fearful to us; the Lord will send us the boldness of Peter and John (Acts 4:13).

Watch and pray, that ye enter not into temptation: the spirit indeed is willing, but the flesh is weak (Matt. 26:41). Stand, says the holy Apostle, praying always with all prayer and supplication in the Spirit (Eph. 6:18). If ever, then especially now, spiritual watchfulness and sobriety are needful for us, because the struggle with the external enemy can be successful only when the inner struggle is being waged victoriously by us—the inner purification of ourselves.

Thanks be to God, our spirit is willing! We have risen up, as one man, against the pagan enemy who tramples upon every Christian relation. What unity, indeed, has been manifested among us!… What a lofty elevation of spirit!… What fervent prayers!… What boundless readiness to offer everything in sacrifice to the Tsar and the fatherland!… It is impossible to hear without true heartfelt compunction how many deprive themselves at times even of the most necessary things, only so as to bring their own modest contribution to the great Russian cause, to the defense of the glory and honor of Holy Rus’.

In the name of the Gospel of peace, let us boldly, in hope of God’s help, wage the struggle against the enemy who has violated our blessed peace. We have many ill-wishers who look with envy upon our strength and might, our external and internal growth, but the Lord will deliver us from them all. Great are the prayers of our Russian hierarchs, and great is the spirit of our people in the hour of grievous trials.

Thanks be to God, our spirit is willing! May the infirmity of our flesh, then, not weaken it! “Watch and pray!” Amen.

 

Russian source: Труды Киевской духовной академии, 1904, No. 1, pp. 359–368.

The Flawed Arguments of the Ecumenist Sympathizers

That is, Answers to what the Ecumenist sympathizers say, spread, and write against today’s Confessors, clergy and laity, of the Orthodox Faith.

By Hieromonk Chrysanthos the Athonite

Kapsala, Mount Athos

[Published in 1995 and republished in 2016, but very relevant today and currently being serialized in Greek on the website of the G.O.C. Metropolis of Larissa and Platamon. – Tr. note.]

 



Prologue

The devil, the hater of good, beloved brethren in Christ, this implacable enemy of the human race, after he fell through his pride and was separated from God, always strives in various ways, moved by envy, to distance man also. Especially in our age he has marshaled all his powers, and is perhaps making the final assault against the human race, and more particularly against our Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church. Perhaps what is referred to in the sacred Apocalypse—“Woe to the earth and the sea, for the devil has come down to you, having great wrath, knowing that he has but a short time” (Rev. 12:12)—is being fulfilled now.

Through great technological progress and material prosperity, he has achieved man’s apostasy from God and is leading him to destruction. Unprecedented apostasy! People have reached the point of going about naked in the streets and considering this degradation of theirs to be progress! They commit with shamelessness every kind of licentiousness and sin, and consider this to be freedom, or a manifestation of complete love, as the Neo-Orthodox would say!

But where he is wreaking great havoc is in the realm of our Church. Through various dark organizations, new heresies, new religions, and delusions, he is trying to dissolve her. “In the latter times some shall depart from the faith,” the Apostle Paul wrote, “giving heed to deceiving spirits and doctrines of demons” (1 Tim. 4:1).

One such heresy, or rather new religion, is accursed Ecumenism, the religion of the “New Age,” or the Age of Aquarius, as naïve astrologers call it. The followers of this new religion, unfortunately, are people who are found in the higher and highest ranks of the Ecclesiastical Hierarchy, with the result that they lead many clergy and laity astray into their delusion.

Resistance against this great and destructive spiritual disease is minimal. There are, of course, many who write, preach, and protest against Ecumenism, but they do not take practical measures, such as the cessation of commemoration and communion, as our holy Fathers teach. Moreover, they also turn against those who, following the example and teaching of our saints, sever every Ecclesiastical communion with declared Ecumenists.

We call these people Ecumenist sympathizers, and the few who preserve the Ecclesiastical Tradition and teaching, Confessors. And this honorable designation is by no means exaggerated, when one considers the great psychological and social pressure which they undergo.

In the present study we shall try to answer briefly all that the Ecumenist sympathizers say, write, and spread against today’s Confessors of our Orthodox Faith.

PART ONE

General Remarks Concerning Ecumenists and Ecumenist Sympathizers

Saint Basil, that great Father and teacher of our Church, addressing, together with other Orthodox bishops of his time, the most venerable brethren and concelebrating bishops in Italy and Gaul, and referring to the sorrowful condition then prevailing in the churches of the East because of the Arian heresy, wrote, among other things:

“For us, in addition to the open war of the heretics, there has also arisen the war from those who seem to be Orthodox, which has brought the Churches down to the utmost weakness.”

(St. Basil the Great, Letter 92)

The same thing, unfortunately, is happening today as well, as though history were repeating itself. Together with the war of the Ecumenists, we are also facing the war of the Ecumenist sympathizers, who with hypocritical plausibility adulterate the word of God and cause great harm to His Church.

These people, clergy and laity, while through spoken and written word they align themselves against Ecumenism, in practice take no measures against it. Their whole resistance stops at some personal or collective protest, and nothing more. As for the cessation of commemoration and Ecclesiastical communion with those who are now declared Ecumenists, there is not even to be any mention of it; they consider it a delusion! And if some are found who, following the example of our holy Fathers and obeying the Ecclesiastical ordinances, sever communion with and commemoration of the heretics, they become their immediate target.

They try by every means to slander these present-day Confessors of the Orthodox Faith as deluded and schismatic, as fanatics and ignorant people, as lacking love and ecclesiastical education, as insignificant and troublemakers, as insubordinate and proud, as distorters of the truth, and so forth. At the same time, they present their own stance as correct and appropriate.

And since they do not have canonical and Patristic testimonies, or examples from the practice of our Church, they resort to sophistical theories and arguments, which, to put it very mildly, could be called naïve thoughts and unsound arguments, in order in this way to cover up their anti-traditional stance toward the new religion of our days, which is called Ecumenism.

We, by the grace of God and through the prayers of our holy Fathers, shall answer all these sophistical objections and arguments of the Ecumenist sympathizers, after first setting forth several excerpts from what various noteworthy men have written concerning what Ecumenism is and what it seeks.

“Ecumenism is the heresy of heresies, because until now each heresy in the history of the Church has tried to put itself in the place of the true Church, whereas the Ecumenical movement, having united all the heresies, summons all of them together to honor themselves as the One, True Church! Here ancient Arianism, Monophysitism, Pelagianism, Iconoclasm, and simply every possible superstition of the contemporary heresies, under entirely different names, have been united and are preparing to attack the Church. This phenomenon is undoubtedly of an apocalyptic character… Ecumenism, attempting to destroy the boundaries of the Church of Christ, itself has no boundaries. Already there is discussion not only of union with all Christians, even with the Jews, but also that everyone living upon the earth is a member of the church. In the W.C.C., as if by sleight of hand, all the blasphemies, delusions, and contradictions of the entire spiritual history of the human race have been linked and united, from Cain and Ham to Judas the betrayer, Karl Marx, the corrupter Freud, and in general all the lesser and greater contemporary blasphemers…”

(Metropolitan Vitaly, of the Russian Church Abroad in the Diaspora, Orthodox Press, February 10–May 20, 1970)

“Ecumenism is obviously not merely an innovation, but is a hodgepodge of all innovations; it is an attempt to tear down the entire divine edifice called the Orthodox Christian Church, and to erect in its place the new tower of Babel. Ecumenism shelters absolutely every kind of heresy, even the Protestants, who preach the theology of the ‘death of God.’”

(Professor Constantine Cavarnos, Orthodox Press, June 10, 1970)

“Ecumenism, the greatest heresy of the twentieth century, preaching dogmatic and religious syncretism and tending toward a kind of pan-religion through the equating of Christian confessions and religions, constitutes the most deadly threat to Orthodoxy…”

(Archimandrite Spyridon Bilalis, Orthodoxy and Papism, vol. I, p. 377, Athens 1969)

“From the above it becomes clear that Ecumenism-syncretism is not simply a heresy, but a pan-heresy, because in essence it leads to the denial of Christianity as the unique and exclusive absolute truth by revelation, and to its reduction to one religion among many, or to the most spiritual and most important, but not the only one. Ecumenism, therefore syncretism, is the greatest threat against the Orthodox Catholic Church, because through it not merely one dogma or one fundamental truth is struck, but the entire dogmatic and canonical order of the Holy Church of Christ as a whole.”

(Professor of the Theological School of Athens, Mr. Constantine Mouratides, Orthodox Press, May 20, 1970)

“Ecumenism, a Masonic construct, seeks to level all religions, to knead them in the same kneading-trough, in order gradually to prepare the dough of religious indifference—a precursor symptom of the Antichrist.”

(By an Orthodox Christian from the former Iron Curtain, Orthodox Press, June 1966)

And for us, Ecumenism is a kind of new religion, a Pan-religion, we would say, which, by uniting all the existing religions of the world, will become the religion of the “New Age” or of the “Age of Aquarius,” as the foolish astrologers call it. That is, of the age when—according to them, of course—our True God will cease to be worshipped, and instead of Him the Devil will be worshipped! This is Ecumenism, and this is the purpose served by all its followers, clergy and laity.

In order that it not be thought that we are wronging them, we shall set forth two or three statements of prominent Ecumenists:

“We are deceived and we sin if we think that the Orthodox Faith came down from heaven and that the other dogmas are unworthy. Three hundred million people chose Mohammedanism in order to reach their God, and other hundreds of millions are Protestants, Catholics, Buddhists. The purpose of every religion is to improve man.”

(Patriarch Athenagoras, Orthodox Press, Dec. 1968)

“The Ecumenical movement, we believe, although of Christian origin, ought to become a movement of all religions toward one another, so that dialogue may take place, if it is in fact true that all religions serve God and man.”

(Archbishop Iakovos of America, Orthodox Press, Aug.–Sept. 1968)

“And Mohammed too is an apostle who led many to the Kingdom of Heaven.”

(Patriarch Parthenios of Alexandria)

Let us now also look at a prayer of the Ecumenists:

“O God, Father, Thou canst make all things new. We entrust ourselves to Thee; help us to live for others, because Thy love also extends to all men; to search for the truth which we have not known.”

(Orthodox Press, Feb. 10–May 20, 1970)

Let these dark men, then, search for the truth which they have not known; let them search in the dark chambers of the Masonic lodges to find it. For us, “the Way, and the Truth, and the Life” (John 14:6) is our Lord Jesus Christ, our True God.

The sorrowful thing in this case is that these people have occupied the higher and highest positions in the Church of Christ, with the result that they lead many Orthodox Christians into the religion of the “New Age,” Ecumenism. It is from these people that the Ecumenist sympathizers do not wish to separate, because they believe that by doing such a thing they separate themselves from the Church of Christ!!! And they hinder in every way the separation of every well-intentioned person who perceives the spiritual danger brought about by Ecumenism.

Our Lord, reproving the Pharisees and scribes of His time, said: “Woe unto you lawyers, for ye have taken away the key of knowledge: ye entered not in yourselves, and them that were entering in ye hindered” (Luke 11:52); that is, “Woe unto you, because you took away from men the key of knowledge; that is, you darkened their mind with your false teachings and took from them the means by which they would have known the truth and advanced along the road of salvation. Thus, you yourselves did not enter into the Kingdom of Christ, and those who wished to enter you hindered” (interpreted by Ioannis Th. Kolitsaras).

It would be good for the Ecumenist sympathizers to take heed, lest, by hindering pious Christians from severing every communion with the Ecumenists, they inherit the woe of our Lord…

Let us now answer their objections, not, of course, with sophistical arguments of our own, but with Patristic testimonies and canonical proofs.

OBJECTION I

It is not permitted, they say, to cease commemorating one’s own Patriarch, Archbishop, Metropolitan, or Bishop before he has been condemned by the whole body of the bishops of the Church.

Although they refuted this argument by their own practice in 1972, when both certain bishops of Northern Greece and almost the entire body of the Athonites ceased commemorating Patriarch Athenagoras, let us nevertheless also see what the sacred Canons, the holy Fathers, and the practice of our Church say.

There are two sacred Canons, the 31st Apostolic Canon and the 15th Canon of the First-Second Council, which permit lower clergy to cease commemoration of, and communion with, their superiors when these openly preach some heresy and false doctrine. Of course, these two sacred Canons, and several others, such as the 18th Canon of the Fourth Ecumenical Council, the 13th and 14th Canons of the First-Second Council, and so forth, have as their central purpose the prevention of lower clergy from severing relations with their superiors; and only as an insertion, one might say, do they grant this right, namely, the cessation of communion.

One might ask why, on so serious a matter, no special Canons were issued. The answer is very simple. Such a thing was not needed, because from the first Christian centuries the severing of every spiritual relationship with anyone who preached heresy was taken for granted.

Saint Mark of Ephesus, that great champion of Orthodoxy, in a wonderful passage, says concerning this:

“All the teachers of the Church, all the Councils, and all the divine Scriptures exhort us to flee those of other mind and to separate ourselves from communion with them.”

Yes, this is the general mind of our Church, and for this reason, we repeat, the sacred Canons did not deal with it more specifically.

We shall now set forth these two sacred Canons which we mentioned, and their interpretation by Saint Nikodemos.

Canon 31 of the Holy Apostles:

“If any presbyter, despising his own bishop, should gather separately and set up another altar, having condemned the Bishop in nothing concerning piety and justice, let him be deposed as one who loves authority. For he is a tyrant. Likewise also the rest, and as many as join themselves to him; and let the laity be excommunicated. But let these things be done after a first, second, and third exhortation by the Bishop.”

Interpretation: “Any presbyter who should despise his own bishop and, without knowing him to be manifestly in error either in piety or in justice—that is to say, without knowing him to be manifestly either a heretic or unjust—should gather the Christians privately, and, having built another church, should serve liturgy in it separately, without the permission and consent of his bishop, let such a one be deposed as a lover of authority, because, as a tyrant, by force and tyranny, he seeks to usurp the authority belonging to his Bishop. But let any other clergy who agree with him in such apostasy likewise be deposed; and let any laity be excommunicated. These things, however, are to be done after the Bishop has urged, with gentleness and meekness, three times, those who have separated from him to desist from such a movement, and they persist in their obstinacy.”

Here ends the interpretation of the present Apostolic Canon; but Saint Nikodemos thought it good to add something from the 15th Canon of the First-Second Council, which we also set forth:

“But as for those who separate from their Bishop before a synodal examination because he publicly preaches some false doctrine and heresy, such persons are not only not subject to the above-mentioned penalties, but are also deemed worthy of the honor befitting the Orthodox, according to the 15th Canon of the First-Second Council.”

What one would observe concerning this sacred Canon of the holy Apostles is that it permits presbyters to sever communion from their Bishop not only on account of false doctrine and heresy, but even if he is unjust.

Canon 15 of the First-Second Council

Since the present Canon is rather long, we shall set forth only its second part.

“...For those who, on account of some heresy condemned by the holy Councils or Fathers, separate themselves from communion with their president, when, that is, he publicly preaches the heresy and teaches it bareheaded in church, such persons, walling themselves off from communion with the one called Bishop before a synodal verdict, are not only not subject to canonical penalty, but shall also be deemed worthy of the honor befitting the Orthodox. For they have condemned not Bishops, but false bishops and false teachers; and they have not sundered the unity of the Church by schism, but have been zealous to deliver the Church from schisms and divisions.”

Interpretation: “...But if the aforementioned presidents are heretics, and preach their heresy openly, and for this reason those subject to them separate themselves, even before a synodal judgment concerning this heresy has yet taken place, these who separate are not only not condemned on account of the separation, but are even worthy of the honor due to them as Orthodox, because they did not cause a schism in the Church by this separation, but rather freed the Church from the schism and heresy of these false bishops.”

We deem it appropriate to mention here what the well-known Serbian canonist Bishop [St. Nikodim] Milaš emphasizes, in a special study of the above Canon and on this point:

“If a Bishop or Metropolitan or Patriarch should begin to proclaim publicly in church some heretical teaching contrary to Orthodoxy, then those subject to him possess both the right and the duty to withdraw immediately from them; wherefore they shall not only be subjected to no canonical penalty, but shall even be praised, since by this they have not condemned and risen up against lawful Bishops, but against false bishops and false teachers; nor have they thereby created a schism in the Church, but on the contrary, they have delivered the Church, insofar as they were able, from schism and division.”

(Pravila Pravoslavne Crkve s Tumačenjima, II, Novi Sad, 1896, 290, 291).

With the above interpretation of these two sacred Canons, which express the established Ecclesiastical Tradition and practice of our Church, our holy Fathers also agree completely.

Saint Athanasios the Great writes concerning this:

“Every man, having received discernment from God, shall be punished if he follows an ignorant shepherd and accepts a false opinion as true.”

(B.E.P.E.S. 33, 214)

And in another place, he writes:

“If the Bishop or the presbyter, who are the eyes of the Church, conduct themselves wickedly and scandalize the people, they must be cast out. For it is better to gather without them in a house of prayer, than with them to be cast, as with Annas and Caiaphas, into the fire of gehenna.”

(B.E.P.E.S. 33, 199)

Saint John Chrysostom, referring to the well-known passage from the Epistle to the Hebrews of the Apostle Paul, “Obey them that have the rule over you, and submit yourselves,” writes:

“How then does Paul say, ‘Obey them that have the rule over you, and submit yourselves’? Having said above, ‘considering the outcome of their manner of life,’ then he said, ‘Obey them that have the rule over you, and submit yourselves.’ What then, he says, when he is wicked, are we not even then to obey? Wicked, how do you mean? If it is in regard to the Faith, flee and avoid him, not only if he is a man, but even if he is an angel coming down from heaven.”

(PG 34, 231A)

Saint Theodore the Studite, in his letter to the Patriarch of Jerusalem, writes:

“Some have made complete shipwreck concerning the Faith; others, even if they were not drowned in their thoughts, nevertheless perish together through communion with the heresy.”

(PG 99, 1164)

And in another place:

“Not even if someone should provide all the money in the world, yet be in communion with heresy, does he become a friend of God, but an enemy.”

(PG 99, 1205A)

And St. Photios the Great clearly commands:

“Is the shepherd a heretic? He is a wolf. One must flee from him and leap away, and not be deceived or approach him, even if he seems to fawn gently. Flee his communion and communion with him as the venom of a serpent.”

Saint Mark of Ephesus says the same things:

“Flee also, brethren, communion with those who are not in communion, and the commemoration of those who are not to be commemorated.”

(PG 160, 1097D–1100A)

In another place he says concerning the Latin-minded of his time:

“I was confined by the Emperor. But the word of God and the power of truth are not bound; rather, it runs and prospers all the more, and most of the brethren, taking courage from my exile, strike with reproofs those criminals and transgressors of the right Faith and of the Patristic ordinances, and drive them away from every side as refuse, neither enduring to concelebrate with them nor commemorating them at all as Christians.”

And now let us also see what stance the confessing clergy and laity maintained toward those who preached heresy without yet having been condemned by an episcopal council.

Our Orthodox Church had received by Tradition the naming of our Panagia as Theotokos. This Tradition was set aside by Nestorius, who, coming from Antioch, became Patriarch of Constantinople in the year 428. He was a disciple of Theodore of Mopsuestia and, unfortunately, also received his heretical opinions concerning the Christological dogma: two natures, two persons.

Having become Patriarch, he began little by little, through his representatives—clerics from Antioch who had been brought with him—to call our Panagia “Mother of Man” or “Mother of Christ.” This teaching, as was to be expected, brought great disturbance and confusion upon the clergy and people of Constantinople. Many severed ecclesiastical communion with him, as well as his commemoration, following the Tradition of our Church. Nestorius, exercising his Patriarchal authority, deposed and excommunicated them as schismatics.

Perhaps someone might claim that these people were fanatical zealots, lacking ecclesiological knowledge, and many other things which today’s Ecumenist sympathizers also say against us.

But the great Cyril, Patriarch of Alexandria, who also served as President of the Third Ecumenical Council, comes forward—and concerning him we do not believe anyone would dare even to imagine that he did not know ecclesiology—and writes to the portion of the clergy and people of Constantinople which had repudiated Nestorius as soon as it became aware of his false doctrine:

“Rekindling this within yourselves, neither communing with the aforementioned Nestorius, nor paying heed to him as a teacher, if he remains a wolf instead of a shepherd…

And as for those of the clergy or laity who have been separated or deposed by him for the sake of the right Faith, we are in communion with them; we do not ratify his unjust sentence, but rather praise those who have suffered, and say this to them: If ye are reproached in the Lord, blessed are ye, for the Spirit of the power and of God resteth upon you…”

(Mansi, IV, 1096)

One of those who ceased commemorating and communing with Nestorius as soon as he began to proclaim his heresy was our venerable Father Hypatios, who is commemorated on June 17. His life relates:

“When the venerable one learned of the heretical opinions of Nestorius, he immediately erased his name from the diptychs, so that he would not be commemorated in the Liturgies. The most devout Bishop Eulalios said to Hypatios: ‘Why did you erase his name before seeing what would happen?’ The venerable one answered: ‘Since I have learned that he speaks wickedly about my Lord, I cease communion with him and do not even mention his name; he is no longer a bishop.’ Then Eulalios said to him in anger: ‘Go and correct what you have done, for I can also punish you.’ And Hypatios replied: ‘Do whatever you wish, for I have decided to suffer everything, and with this decision I did this.’”

Equal to our ancient confessing Fathers was also Saint Mark of Ephesus, Bishop of Ephesus. After his refusal in Florence to sign the union, the saint returned to the Imperial City and in no way accepted ecclesiastical communion with the Latin-minded Patriarch and his followers. His watchword was: “There is no concession in matters of the Faith.” Behold what he himself says concerning this stance of his:

“I do not wish, nor do I accept communion with him or with those with him, absolutely, in no way… just as I do not accept the union that has taken place, nor the Latin dogmas which he and those with him accepted… For I am precisely convinced that the more I separate myself from him and from such men, the nearer I draw to God and to all the faithful and holy Fathers; and just as I separate myself from these, so I am united to the truth and to the holy Fathers, the theologians of the Church.”

The holy Father was pressured in various ways, as were other Orthodox hierarchs and priests, to accept the commemoration of the Patriarch. Let us follow a brief dialogue between him and the Patriarchal attendants, who, with “words of flattery,” were trying to trip up the athletes.

Representatives: “Nor do we say that what took place in Florence was done well… nevertheless, for the sake of economy and the welfare of the Homeland… accept the commemoration… which is a mere word…”

But those with Saint Mark answered:

“No! For the matter of commemoration is very great and not small, because those who are commemorated in the churches are those who are Orthodox and in communion with the same Church. But those who are not in communion are not commemorated; nor does any of the clergy have permission to pray in the churches for those who are not in communion. How, then, shall we commemorate him, being Latin-minded?…”

(Dositheos, Dodekabiblos, p. 907)

From all that we have set forth up to now—the sacred Canons, the teachings and examples of saints—one single conclusion is drawn: that it is worthy of praise for every faithful cleric, monastic, and layperson to sever ecclesiastical communion with, and the commemoration of, his bishop when he publicly preaches some heresy or some kind of new religion, as unfortunately happens today; and not to wait, as the Ecumenist sympathizers maintain, for his condemnation “by the whole body of the bishops of the Church.”

Perhaps someone may wonder: if this is how matters stand, what meaning do councils have in the Church? We answer: As faithful children of our Church, by all that we have written we in no way intend to call into question her synodal institution. Our purpose was to demonstrate the right and, at the same time, the duty of clergy and laity to cease the commemoration of, and communion with, Bishops or Metropolitans or Patriarchs who publicly preach teaching opposed to Orthodoxy; and not, we repeat, to call the synodal institution into question. May it not be so.

To lower clergy and laity, only this right is granted, and nothing more. It remains for the episcopal body, assembled in Council, to take the appropriate measures against the one who speaks perverse things. That is, to summon him to give an account, to admonish him, to grant him time for repentance, to suspend him, to depose him, and to anathematize him, if he does not repent and does not renounce his deluded opinions. At the same time, it must also inform the whole fullness of the Church to avoid him as a “heathen and a publican,” according to the Lord’s commandment, as a bearer of a deadly spiritual infectious disease. All these things are the competencies of episcopal councils, and not of lower clergy and laity.

The sorrowful thing in the present case is that in earlier times, as soon as someone made his heretical opinions public, other Bishops, Metropolitans, and Patriarchs immediately protested. They would write letters to him in which they pointed out his delusions and called him to repentance; they enlightened the faithful and exhorted them to distance themselves from him. Then they would convene local councils in which they condemned the heresy being preached, and at the same time they would act so that a Great or Ecumenical Council might be convened to take up the matter.

In our days, unfortunately, nothing of the sort is happening! Everyone is asleep! More than seventy years have passed since the Ecumenist encyclical of the Patriarchate of Constantinople, which also marked the beginning of the religion of the “New Age” of Ecumenism; so many betrayals against our Faith have taken place, and none of the Patriarchs or Archbishops has taken those practical measures against this new religion, with the result that its bearers have occupied all the key positions in the Church and are corrupting everyone.

Now who is to call whom to account? Who is to judge whom? “They have all turned aside; together they have become corrupt,” one might say. And if some bishop dares even to stammer something against this great betrayal, he is characterized as ultra-Orthodox, provincial, and so forth.

An exception in our days has been the Synod of Bishops of the Russian Church Abroad, which, after first repeatedly protesting strongly against the treacherous course of the leaders of Orthodoxy and not being heeded, severed relations with all the “Orthodox” Churches, and at the same time also issued the following Synodal Anathema against Ecumenism:

“To those who attack the Church of Christ and teach that the Church of Christ is divided into so-called ‘branches,’ which differ from one another in doctrine and manner of life, or that the Church does not visibly exist, but will be formed in the future, when all the ‘branches’ or sections or confessions, or even religions, shall be united into one body; and who do not distinguish the priesthood and the mysteries of the Church from the priesthood and mysteries of the heretics, but say that the baptism and eucharist of the heretics are sufficient for salvation; likewise, to those who knowingly have communion with the aforementioned heretics, or who advocate, spread, or defend their newly-appeared heresy of Ecumenism under the pretext of brotherly love or the supposed union of separated Christians: ANATHEMA!”

These Russian Bishops, having refused to cooperate with the atheistic Communist regime of that time, left the Soviet Union together with thousands of people for the free countries of the West, and established the Russian Church Abroad. Thus, it seems, God ordered matters so that this Orthodox Synod might exist for the support of Orthodox Christians everywhere, and might transmit the Priesthood also to other local Churches which wished to struggle against the heresy.

OBJECTION II

The Ecumenist sympathizers say: The struggle against Ecumenism must be waged from within, and not outside the Church, that is, by severing communion with and commemoration of the Ecumenist Bishops.

The tragic error of all these people who say these things is that they believe that whoever severs communion with, and commemoration of, a bishop who preaches heretically places himself outside the Church of Christ. No, beloved! The one who places himself outside our Church is he who publicly preaches new religions and heresies, and those who follow him—not he who remains within her Ecclesiastical Tradition and teaching.

It must be understood by all of us that the Church of Christ is absolutely identified with the Truth; and those who remain in the Revealed Truth, “once delivered unto the saints,” according to the Apostle Jude, are those who also remain within the Church. Saint Gregory Palamas writes concerning this:

“Those who are of the Church of Christ are of the Truth; and those who are not of the Truth are not of the Church of Christ either.”

Saint Maximos the Confessor said the same thing when he was asked to which church he belonged. Let us see what he himself wrote in a letter to his disciple Anastasios:

“Yesterday… the patriarch addressed me, saying: ‘Of which church are you? Of Byzantium? Of Rome? Of Antioch? Of Alexandria? Of Jerusalem? Behold, all of them, together with the provinces under them, have been united. If, therefore, you are of the Catholic Church, be united, lest, by taking a strange path in life, you suffer what you do not expect.’

To them I said: ‘The God of all declared the Catholic Church to be the right and saving confession of faith in Him, blessing Peter for having rightly confessed Him.’

‘Therefore listen,’ they said. ‘It has seemed good to the master and to the Patriarch, through the Pope of Rome’s representative, that you, if you do not obey, be anathematized, and that the death prescribed by them be brought upon you.’

And the saint replied: ‘May what has been ordained by God before all ages come to its end in me, bringing Him the glory known before all ages…’”

(PG 132AC)

The Apostle of the Gentiles, Paul, in his wondrous address at Miletus, speaking to the presbyters of the church of Ephesus, said among other things:

“And from among your own selves shall men arise, speaking perverse things, to draw away disciples after them.” (Acts 20:30)

That is, from among you yourselves men shall arise who will teach perverse and false teachings, in order to draw the disciples away from the right road of salvation and lead them over to their own side as their own followers (interpretation by Ioannis Th. Kolitsaras).

Here we observe that the pastors themselves will teach perverse things and will separate the disciples. If, according to the Ecumenist sympathizers, these presbyters, although they distort the Truth of the Church, will remain within her, then from where will they separate these disciples? From the Church? But they themselves would also be within her! From the Truth? Is there Truth outside the Church, and Church outside the Truth? Certainly not!

For the Apostle of the Gentiles, Paul, and for us, from the moment these presbyters began to speak perverse things, they would cease to belong to the Church; and it would follow that they would separate their disciples from her in order to make them their own followers. This is the actual truth; and let these people cease speaking about “inside” and “outside” the Church.

OBJECTION III

The Ecumenist sympathizers say: We may have different views from our bishops, even on matters of Faith, but it is not permitted to cease commemorating them, because otherwise the mysteries remain invalid, that is, without sanctifying grace.

These people brandish this argument as a scarecrow in order to make simple and well-intentioned clergy and laity afraid, when they wish to distance themselves from the Ecumenists. But where, beloved, in the Holy Scripture and Tradition of our Church, are these things which you say to be found?

We have learned from Saint Mark of Ephesus, who expresses the general spirit of our Church, that:

“All the teachers of the Church, all the Councils, and all the divine Scriptures exhort us to flee those of other mind and to separate ourselves from communion with them.”

When the faithful clergy and people of Constantinople severed every ecclesiastical communion with, and the commemoration of, the heretical Patriarch Nestorius before a synodal condemnation, were their mysteries invalid? And how, then, does Saint Cyril, Patriarch of Alexandria, praise them and receive them into full communion, as we saw above?

Were the mysteries of Saint Mark of Ephesus invalid, since he did not accept communion with, and commemoration of, the Latin-minded Patriarch of his time? Many Athonite Monasteries, Sketes, and Hesychasteria, during the period 1971–1972, had ceased commemorating the great Ecumenist Patriarch Athenagoras; were their mysteries then invalid? Quite the contrary!

For today’s Confessors, the question of validity arises concerning the mysteries of those who commemorate the heretics, and not of those who sever every spiritual relationship with them.

OBJECTION IV

Some Spiritual Fathers and Elders who are Ecumenist sympathizers, proposing what they consider a middle solution on the matter of commemoration, say: Let us commemorate our bishop or the Patriarch aloud, but secretly, at the Proskomide, let us not commemorate him; during the Turkish occupation they commemorated the Sultan and even chanted his Polychronion.

A marvelous way of confession!!! A marvelous middle solution! If the holy Martyrs and Confessors of our Faith had discovered it, they would have avoided tortures, imprisonments, exiles, and death!

Beloved, do not mock yourselves and those who listen to you. Do not “play with things not to be played with.” Either you believe that the Patriarch is a heretic and must not commemorate him, or that he is not, and you are obliged to commemorate him canonically. The rest is from the evil one. Do not try, in an indirect way, supposedly both to make a confession and to avoid the consequences of confession: “Be not deceived; God is not mocked.”

As for the fact that during the Turkish occupation they commemorated the Sultan and chanted his Polychronion, this has no relation whatsoever to the commemoration of the Patriarch. For the Sultan was a political ruler, having no spiritual relationship whatsoever with the Church of Christ and the faithful; whereas the Patriarch, if he is Orthodox, is the spiritual father of the faithful and representative of the Church.

If, of course, those who say these things regard him as a Sultan, let them commemorate him and chant his Polychronion, in the manner and in the place of the Ecclesiastical service in which the Sultan was commemorated during the Turkish occupation!

OBJECTION V

Some other, more naïve Ecumenist sympathizers, wishing to present themselves as an example of ecclesiastical good order, say: We, in our Hesychasterion, do not commemorate the Patriarch; but when we are in a church where he is commemorated, we say inwardly: “Remember, O Lord, every Orthodox bishop rightly dividing the word of Thy truth.”

Those who say these things resemble the previous ones, who propose some middle solution. What we said concerning them applies also to these.

It is possible that those who say such things are resorting to the old Jesuit method of reservatio mentalis, that is, mental reservation. Naïve arguments, which serve to deceive themselves and those who pay attention to them. Unfortunately, this is where those end up who do not wish to see the actual truth and follow it.

The great Confessor Theodore the Studite called such people “nighttime pious men, unable to speak openly in the light.” (Letter 31, PG 99, 1009)

OBJECTION VI

We must not, they say, call the Ecumenists heretics, but rather heresy-sympathizers; and they say that they do not believe the things they do, but are making various political maneuvers which serve the interests of the Church and the Nation.

The Ecumenists, beloved, are not merely heretics or heresy-sympathizers, but people of another religion. They are, as we have mentioned, co-founders of the religion of the “New Age,” through which the devil is worshipped. They are bearers of this fearful spiritual disease, and in some cases, in their manifestations, they surpass even the Protestants themselves. These unfortunate people themselves, after all, boast that they are founding members of the W.C.C.

The charter of the Ecumenical movement is the 1920 encyclical of the Patriarchate of Constantinople, whose ecclesiological basis is the Protestant false doctrine of the “branch theory,” which means that all Christian “churches” possess partial truth, and only if all are united together can they possess the truth.

From the year 1971 onward, those of other religions also entered into the “branch theory,” as supposedly possessing venerable spiritual traditions, and common prayers, dialogues, and collaborations began. Papism follows the same pan-religious course, which, although it is not a member of the W.C.C., cooperates closely and organizes pan-religious meetings of the Assisi type—seven so far since 1981—with the participation, of course, always of the “Orthodox Ecumenists.”

As for the claim that all these things they do are political expediencies and that they do not believe them, we do not agree. First of all, what relation can the shepherds of our Church have with political expediencies? And secondly, how far, finally, can these go? When did our Church ever become involved with politics and come out the winner?

For us, the Ecumenists are conscious members of the new religion and are trying by every means to spread it and impose it. They themselves do not hide it; wherever they are found, they proclaim it by their words and by their deeds. They do indeed serve political expediencies, but not for the good of our Church; rather, for the swifter domination of the Antichrist. They are corrupted individuals who consciously act for the destruction of the Church of Christ!

Therefore, all these things which the Ecumenist sympathizers say are “excuses in sins”!

OBJECTION VII

Another argument which the Ecumenist sympathizers put forward is the multitude of people who follow their own line, saying: “So many Hierarchs, so many Priests, so many Monks and laypeople, educated and uneducated, do not sever spiritual communion with the Ecumenists; have all these been deluded, and only you few are with the truth?”

The sophism is old, refuted and laid bare by almost all our holy Fathers and by Holy Scripture. The misfortune for those who say all these things is that the truth does not always go together with the many, but often with the few. Our Lord Himself said: “For wide is the gate, and broad is the way, that leadeth to destruction, and many there be who go in through it. For narrow is the gate, and straitened is the way, that leadeth unto life, and few there be that find it” (Matt. 7:13–14). And in another place: “For many are called, but few are chosen.”

Our holy Fathers answered as follows when the heretics put forward as an argument the multitude that followed them:

“Do you strengthen falsehood by numbers? You have shown the increase of the evil; for the more there are in evil, the greater is the calamity.”

“For me, the venerable multitude is not that which rejoices in innovation, but that which preserves the paternal inheritance.”

(St. Theodore the Studite, PG 99, Letter 45)

In another place he says:

“Let us not set up a stumbling block for the Church of God, which exists even when defined by three Orthodox, according to the saints.”

(St. Theodore the Studite, PG 99, 1049B)

Saint Nikephoros the Confessor wrote:

“Even if very few remain in Orthodoxy and piety, these are the Church, and the authority and guardianship of the ecclesiastical ordinances rests in them.”

Professor G. Florovsky wrote:

“Very often the measure of truth is the witness of the minority; it is possible for the small flock to be the Catholic Church. It is possible for the heretics to spread everywhere and for the Church to end up on the margins of history, or to withdraw into the desert. This has happened repeatedly in history, and it is very possible that it will happen again.”

Therefore, the many do not constitute the Church of Christ, but those who preserve the right and saving confession of the Faith, however few they may be.

OBJECTION VIII

Saint Theodore the Studite, they say, ceased commemorating and communing with the Patriarch and the Emperor because the woman whom the Emperor took as wife, after the dismissal of his first lawful wife, was his cousin, and he regarded it as a personal insult; otherwise, he would not have done it.

A sorrowful state of affairs! This is how far the Ecumenist sympathizers have gone: to doubt the pure and selfless motives of our holy Fathers. This, of course, happens because they are reproved by the life and stance of our saints for what they themselves do today. Saint Maximos the Confessor and Saint Theodore the Studite in particular are very disagreeable to them, and they try by every means to diminish them.

Saint Theodore the Studite, beloved, this great Confessor and teacher of our Church, the faithful keeper of all the Patristic traditions, did nothing while being overcome by human weaknesses. Study carefully his various letters and apologies, and you will see how he fully justifies his stance against the Emperor and the Patriarch on account of this unlawful marriage.

His biographer, Michael the Monk, writes concerning this:

“Having therefore discerned these unlawful things… he was grieved, he was distressed within himself, he lamented the destruction of all together, both of those then living and of those after them; for he rightly feared lest the irrational conduct of the ruler, being accepted as law by the senseless, should transmit to later generations an incurable rule of action. For this reason, then, he did not keep silent so as not to rebuke the calamity, but severed himself, together with his own Father, from communion with them.”

(PG 99, 253A).

In simple words, the saint feared lest this lawlessness of the Emperor should become an evil example for others as well. For this reason, he did not remain silent, but reproved both the Patriarch, who did not punish the Priest who performed this unlawful marriage, and the Emperor, severing every communion with them.

Such were our saints: in deed and word they denounced every lawlessness, and did not remain merely at simple protests, as today’s Ecumenist sympathizers do.

In the general decline in which we find ourselves today, it seems inconceivable to us that, over an unlawful marriage, the saint reached the point of severing every ecclesiastical communion with the Patriarch and Emperor. Where are those who claim that a council must first be held to judge someone acting unlawfully, and only afterwards may we cease commemoration and communion?

Of course, what the saint did had consequences: imprisonments, tortures, and exiles, which we, unfortunately, today are not disposed to undergo; for this reason, we “keep quiet”!!! Let us at least keep quiet, then, and not slander our saints.

OBJECTION IX

The Ecumenist sympathizers ask and say: “Are we like Saint Maximos the Confessor, or Saint Theodore the Studite, and the other saints, so as to do what they did?”

Yes, beloved, we contemptible ones are not like our saints, and we have never claimed any such thing; but should we not obey them? Whom, after all, shall we obey? The Ecumenists, who try by every means to persuade us that Orthodoxy is one among many religions, whose purpose is the improvement of man? Or our saints, who tell us to flee far away from heretics?

We, though the least of all, have made our choice: obedience to our holy Fathers and absolute respect for our Ecclesiastical Tradition, and not to today’s men who distort the truth.

Saint Maximos the Confessor writes concerning this case:

“But no one ought to adulterate the word of God on account of his own negligence; rather, he must confess his own weakness, but not conceal the truth of God, lest, together with the transgression of the commandments, we also become liable for the misinterpretation of the word of God.”

And Saint Theodore the Studite says:

“Not only if someone is preeminent in rank and knowledge is he obliged to contend by speaking and teaching the word of Orthodoxy, but even if he holds the rank of a disciple, he is bound to speak openly and to declare the truth freely.”

(PG 99, 1120G)

Just as we generally make an effort to keep the commandments of our Lord and do not say, “Who are we to do what He commands us?” so also, and much more indeed in matters of our Faith, we must obey our saints and imitate them as far as possible.

OBJECTION X

The Ecumenist sympathizers say: “The Patriarch, whatever he may say and do, does not cease to be a symbol of the unity of the Church; for this reason, we must not separate ourselves from him, but only protest.”

These too are deceptive arguments, offspring of their diseased mind. Beloved, every Bishop or Patriarch is a symbol of the unity of the Church of God when he remains a faithful keeper of the Apostolic Traditions and dogmas, and rightly divides the word of the Church. Otherwise, he becomes a symbol of division and schisms!

The Papists too have the Pope as a symbol of unity of their pseudo-church, but all heretics and people of other religions have some “Patriarch” as a symbol of unity. What comes of this? Absolutely nothing!

As for the claim that we must not separate ourselves, but only protest, we repeat that without the practical reaction of ceasing commemoration and communion, nothing is accomplished. Just as “faith without works is dead,” according to the Apostle James (James 2:17), so also protests without practical measures are dead.

How many protests have been made up to now, and what has been the result? “They do not even break a sweat,” as the popular expression says. The Ecumenists consciously proceed, with plan and coordination, in their destructive work, which is the dissolution of the Church of Christ and the creation of the “church” of the Antichrist.

Do not you also, O Ecumenist sympathizers, cooperate by your stance in its creation?

OBJECTION XI

Those who sever communion with, and commemoration of, every Bishop and Patriarch, they say, are uneducated, deprived of ecclesiological formation, and fanatics.

It may be, beloved, that we who have severed every ecclesiastical communion with the Ecumenists are, most of us, uneducated and ignorant; but we are not traitors to our Orthodox Faith. We remain faithful to all that we received from our holy Fathers, and we do not follow the strange shepherd, because we do not know the voice of the stranger, as our Lord also says. We do not know his voice; it is foreign to us.

Nor does one need much worldly education in order to see and understand what the Ecumenists are and where they are leading those who follow them. Assisi, Canberra, Uppsala, Rome, Geneva, Lebanon, and other cities in which their conferences took place, as well as their works and declarations, bear witness to their aims and intentions.

We are not fanatics; indeed, we would say that we are very lukewarm. Where among us are the struggles of our holy Fathers on behalf of the common deposit and inheritance of our Orthodox Faith? We are simply trying to show a small obedience to the Apostolic injunctions: “Now we command you, brethren,” writes the Apostle Paul, “in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, that ye withdraw yourselves from every brother who walketh disorderly, and not according to the tradition which they received from us” (2 Thess. 3:6).

And the Evangelist John the Theologian says these things: “If anyone cometh unto you and bringeth not this doctrine,” that is, does not teach the Orthodox Faith, “receive him not into your house, neither bid him greeting; for he that biddeth him greeting partaketh in his evil deeds” (2 John 10–11).

We do nothing more than avoid all those who walk disorderly.

And let the Ecumenist sympathizers not forget this either: that the preaching of the Gospel too was accepted, for the most part, by simple and uneducated people, and only very few of the wise according to this world accepted it. Behold what the Apostle Paul writes:

“Ye see your calling, brethren, that not many wise according to the flesh, not many mighty, not many noble are called; but God hath chosen the foolish things of the world, that He might put to shame the wise; and God hath chosen the weak things of the world, that He might put to shame the strong; and the lowborn things of the world, and the things which are despised, hath God chosen, and the things which are not, that He might bring to nought the things that are, so that no flesh should boast before God” (1 Cor. 1:26–29).

As for ecclesiastical formation, we have as much as we need. We know how to respect, love, and obey our spiritual shepherds and teachers when they preserve the Faith once delivered to the saints; and we know when we must separate ourselves from them with a grieving heart, when they, setting aside the revealed Truth of our Faith, “speak perverse things,” according to the Apostle.

Ah, then we do not follow them, because we do not wish to become their followers and fellow-travelers toward eternal perdition. We remain within our Church, as faithful members, which, as “the pillar and ground of the truth,” provides us with all the means for our salvation.

OBJECTION XII

Many Ecumenist sympathizers say that “we must not examine Hierarchs, teachers, Elders, and Spiritual Fathers concerning what they tell us, but only obey everyone with simplicity,” putting forward that Apostolic saying: “Obey them that have the rule over you, and submit yourselves.”

Unfortunately, this argument calms many clergy, monastics, and laypeople who are sensitive in matters of our Faith, with the thought that, by obeying their spiritual fathers, they are not responsible for today’s betrayal.

Great indeed and wondrous is the virtue of obedience, which is the practical application of humility, provided, of course, that it is done with knowledge and discernment, toward Hierarchs, Elders, and Spiritual Fathers who know, respect, and preserve the whole Ecclesiastical Tradition and teaching of our Church. Otherwise, obedience has no meaning. Elders and Spiritual Fathers, disciples and spiritual children, are proceeding to perdition! “Can the blind lead the blind? Shall they not both fall into the ditch?” says our Lord (Luke 6:39).

But let us see what our holy Fathers wrote and handed down to us. We cite passages of Saints Basil, Chrysostom, and Meletios the Confessor, translated by Saint Nikodemos.

Basil the Great:

“The preacher of the word, whether he is a teacher or a Hierarch, must, with much reflection and much testing, and with a purpose pleasing to God, speak every word and do every work; and, accordingly, he must also be tested concerning his word or deed by those subject to him.”

And again:

“The hearers, as many as are instructed in the Scriptures, must test with sound judgment what the Teachers say; and whatever is in agreement with the Scriptures, they must accept, but whatever is not in agreement, they must reject; and those who persist in such teachings, they must turn away from all the more.”

And again:

“Every word and every deed must be confirmed by the testimony of the God-inspired Scripture, so that the good may be assured, and the wicked may be put to shame.”

(Christian Morality)

Saint John Chrysostom, interpreting the Apostolic saying, “Obey them that have the rule over you, and submit yourselves,” writes concerning this:

“Anarchy is indeed an evil everywhere, and the cause of many calamities and the beginning of disorder and confusion; but the disobedience of those under authority is no less an evil. But perhaps someone will say to us that there is also a third evil, when the ruler is evil. And I know that this is not a small evil, but is much worse than having no rulers at all; for it is better for someone not to be ruled by anyone than to be ruled by an evil ruler. For he who has no ruler over his head is sometimes saved and sometimes is in danger; but he who has an evil superior will certainly be in danger, falling into pits and precipices.

How, then, does Paul say, ‘Obey them that have the rule over you, and submit yourselves’? The reason Paul said this is the following. Since he had already said above these praises concerning the rulers, namely: seeing the good results of the virtuous life and conduct of these rulers, imitate them in the Faith; after this, once he had established that they were upright in all things, then he said: obey your rulers and superiors, and submit yourselves to them.

But you answer me: if he is evil and we do not obey, what are we to do? In what respect do you say that your superior is evil? If he is erring concerning the Faith, flee and avoid him, not only if he is a man, but even if he is an angel from heaven. But if he is erring in his conduct and deeds, do not meddle… For from their conduct and morals no one is harmed, since they are evident to all, and because neither he nor the teacher, however wicked and sinful he may be, can ever teach people to do evil. But the Faith and whatever evil doctrines he has are neither evident to all, nor will he cease teaching them. Therefore also the commandment which the Lord gave, namely, ‘Judge not, that ye be not judged,’ refers to life and not to the doctrines of the Faith.”

(Homily 34)

And the great Meletios the Confessor says concerning this:

“Do not obey either monks or priests in those things in which they counsel you wrongly. And why do I say monks and priests? Do not obey even bishops when they counsel you to do and say and think things that are not profitable for your soul.”

These things, and many others, our holy Fathers say concerning obedience. Let us also strive to obey them, if we wish to have a share with them.

OBJECTION XIII

We, the Ecumenist sympathizers continue to say, follow the great Elders of our age, who did not sever spiritual relations with the Ecumenists, but worked within the Church and were filled with grace by our Lord, so that various miracles were performed through them.

For us, beloved, the criterion of every person’s sanctity is an upright life, accompanied, however, by the right Faith. However many miracles someone may perform, when the above prerequisite is not present, we cannot accept him as a model for our imitation.

“If we wish,” writes Saint John Chrysostom, “to be delivered from gehenna and to attain the Kingdom, we must adorn ourselves with the right doctrines and with care for our life.” (Homily 13 on Genesis)

And our Lord says in the holy Gospel:

“Many will say to Me in that day: Lord, Lord, have we not prophesied in Thy name? And in Thy name cast out demons? And in Thy name done many mighty works? And then I will confess unto them: I never knew you. Depart from Me, ye that work iniquity.”

(Matt. 7:22–23)

From these words of our Lord we see that there will be people who, in His Name, will perform various miracles, but will be workers of iniquity!

Saint Ignatius the God-bearer, wishing to safeguard the faithful of his time from false teachers, wrote:

“Everyone who speaks contrary to what has been ordained, even if he fasts, even if he preserves virginity, even if he prophesies, even if he performs signs, let him appear to you as a wolf in sheep’s clothing, working the destruction of the sheep.”

Even after death, it is possible for miracles to occur at the tombs of sinful people, either because of the faith of those who approach, or even by demonic activity, for the deception of the faithful. Saint Meletios the Confessor writes concerning this in verse:

“And again, another woman, having departed from life in dissoluteness,
had her tomb as the source of wonders and signs;
and this was a craft of Satan, in order to establish as a law,
deceiving the simpler people, that fornication does no harm…

Nor, I think, are you ignorant of that monk either,
who fell asleep in passion and beside a nun,
with whom he was then being corrupted,
and, being handed over to the tomb,
as she later reported to the Patriarch,
performed strange signs after death,
showing his tomb to be the source of wonders and signs.”

Why God permits miracles often to be performed by heretics and sinful people, even after death, is unclear to us. We must not be led astray by such phenomena without first examining very carefully the life and teaching of these people. The Antichrist will perform wonders and signs and will try to deceive even the elect.

Concerning the reputed “great Elders” of our age, we can say, without wronging them at all, that they did not take, and do not take, a clear and categorical position against the Ecumenical movement. Of course, one cannot accuse them of being Ecumenists, but one can readily accuse them of being Ecumenist sympathizers. They often spoke and speak against Ecumenism, but in practice they did and do nothing. Many times, indeed, when they met high-ranking Ecumenists, they made prostrations to the ground, asking for their blessing.

In ecclesiological matters they too had, and have, the entirely erroneous view that everyone should remain within the Church of the Ecumenists. The only mitigating factor which one might perhaps accept for them is that, being much occupied with the improvement of their personal life, and with the many people who came to them, they did not have, and do not have, time to concern themselves personally and seriously with the great betrayal of the Church which is taking place in our days. Our Lord also judges ignorance with condescension.

Let us imitate their good works, but reject their stance toward Ecumenism, as being inconsistent with the whole Ecclesiastical Tradition. In this way we too do not run the risk of being lost by following the heretics, and we do not further burden their position by adopting some of their errors.

As is known, some saints of our Church were mistaken on certain matters and said something different from what our Church professes. Yet no sensible person ever thought to support these positions and say that such-and-such a saint said this, and so forth. All people, even the wisest and holiest, often make mistakes. The charism of truth belongs only to an Ecumenical Council that speaks in the Holy Spirit.

OBJECTION XIV

Many clergy and lay Ecumenist sympathizers, having no Patristic testimonies with which to support their stance, resort to personal “assurances,” saying: We prayed and were not assured that we must sever communion with, and commemoration of, the Ecumenists.

This too is another naïve argument—as though our Faith were only now revealed and we needed a special assurance concerning what we must do when it is betrayed. And if we, who have severed every spiritual relationship with the Ecumenists, should say that after prayer we received assurance that what we are doing is right and pleasing to our Lord, what would they have to say? Why should their assurance be true and not ours? What is the criterion of such assurances? Do they not realize that personal assurance is something subjective and cannot stand as an argument? Why do they invoke it?

In studying the proceedings of the Ecumenical Councils, we did not find any of the holy Fathers who spoke there invoking his own assurance and saying that, according to my assurance, this matter which we are discussing is thus and so. No one said anything of the kind; rather, all of them invoked Scriptural and Patristic testimonies in order to prove the truth.

Woe to us if our Church, in matters of Faith, were founded upon the personal assurances of this or that believer. Let us study Holy Scripture, the sacred Canons, and the writings of our holy Fathers, and from there we shall learn what our stance must be toward heretics and people of other religions.

OBJECTION XV

The Ecumenist sympathizers discourage their disciples and spiritual children from reading the sacred Pedalion, saying that this book is only for Bishops and Spiritual Fathers, and not for monastics and laypeople. Unfortunately, these people emphasize this to excess, with the result that they deprive many people of knowledge of the sacred Canons of our Church.

The answer as to whether all Christians without exception, clergy and laity, should read the sacred Pedalion or not is given to us by Saint Nikodemos the Athonite himself, who wrote this book with much labor. Let us hear him:

“Turn back, therefore, O Jacob, and take hold of it.” Turn back, Patriarchs, Hierarchs, Priests, clergy and monastics, and all the rest, Spiritual Fathers and brethren in Christ, and take hold of this Book with both your hands. “Walk toward the brightness of its light, that ye may be illumined with the illumination of eternal knowledge”… Let the following words of Baruch also be added: “Blessed are we, O Israel, for the things pleasing to God are known to us.” Blessed are you, Christian brethren, because through this book you have been deemed worthy to know the Patristic and Synodal commandments pleasing to God…

Receive, therefore, with uplifted hands this most beneficial and greatly profitable Book, this writing necessary immediately after the Holy Scriptures; receive it, all ye Churches of Christ. O ignorant and infant people, who formerly sat in the darkness of ignorance of the sacred Canons, behold this great light of knowledge and be illumined…”

(Prologue of the Sacred Pedalion)

And the blessed-memory Patriarch of Constantinople Neophytos VII, with a view to the common benefit of all faithful Christians, approved and recommended this excellent book with his patriarchal signature.

We see, therefore, that both the author of the sacred Pedalion and Patriarch Neophytos VII, who approved it synodally, had one and only one purpose: that the sacred Canons should become known to simple Christians, clergy and laity.

Why, then, do the Ecumenist sympathizers not permit their spiritual children to study this sacred Book, when they ought to require them to do so? For just as we must study our Holy Scripture “day and night,” so also must we study the sacred Canons of the Church, which are her genuine Holy Tradition.

Why, then, do they wish to keep those subject to them in the darkness of ignorance? For us there is one answer: so that they may not rebuke them when they transgress them. A Spiritual Father who tries as much as possible to keep the sacred Canons certainly has no reason to hinder someone who wishes to read them.

We believe that today, when there is such great spiritual decline, it is necessary and imperative that the sacred Pedalion of our Church also be read daily.

OBJECTION XVI

The Patriarchate, the Ecumenist sympathizers maintain, is today in a very difficult position; for this reason, we must not speak against it and cut ourselves off from it. “A bruised reed shall He not break, and smoking flax shall He not quench,” says Scripture.

So, then, the Ecumenist sympathizers have also found a Scriptural passage with which to support their delusion! But let us examine whether this passage has any relation to what they wish to support.

This passage is from the Prophet Isaiah (42:3), and refers to our Lord Jesus Christ. The Evangelist Matthew cited it (Matt. 12:16–20) after describing many miracles of our Lord:

“And great multitudes followed Him,” writes the Evangelist, “and He healed them all, and charged them that they should not make Him known, that it might be fulfilled which was spoken by Isaiah the prophet, saying: Behold My servant, whom I have chosen; My beloved, in whom My soul is well pleased. I will put My Spirit upon Him, and He shall announce judgment to the nations. He shall not strive, nor cry aloud, neither shall anyone hear His voice in the streets. A bruised reed shall He not break, and smoking flax shall He not quench, until He bring forth judgment unto victory; and in His name shall the nations hope.”

That is, in brief, the Prophet says that Christ will not only refrain from discouraging people broken by the bitterness of life and the weight of sin, who are in danger of losing every hope of their salvation, but will encourage them to receive the law and salvation which He gives them, and they shall come forth victorious.

We see, therefore, that both the Prophet Isaiah and the Evangelist Matthew invoked this passage in order to show us how “meek and humble in heart” and condescending our Lord Jesus Christ was—and is—toward people suffering from various bodily illnesses, and not toward those who distort the Orthodox Faith, this Truth of the Gospel!

This meek and sweet Jesus of ours, when He spoke concerning the Mystery of the Divine Eucharist, and some, reacting against His words, departed, saying, “This is a hard saying; who can hear it?” made no concession. And taking occasion from their departure, He said to the Twelve Disciples: “Will ye also go away?” (John 6:67).

In another case our Lord used a scourge, “and drove them all out of the temple, and poured out the changers’ money, and overthrew the tables” (John 2:15).

The holy Apostles and all our Fathers maintained the same stance toward heretics. You must understand, beloved, that one thing is the personal weaknesses and passions of each person, toward which we must show condescension and understanding, and another thing is heretical teaching. Toward heretics there can be no leniency, so long as they remain in their delusion.

“A heretical man after the first and second admonition reject,” the Apostle Paul commands his disciple, the Apostle Titus (3:10). And the disciple of love, John the Theologian, writes in his Second Catholic Epistle: “If anyone cometh unto you and bringeth not this doctrine,” that is, the right teaching, “receive him not into your house, neither bid him greeting.”

Our holy Fathers, through the Ecumenical Councils, anathematized all heretics. They do not even permit heretics to enter the church of the Orthodox if they persist in their heresy (Canon 6 of Laodicea).

Let us also maintain this stance, if we wish to be children of the Orthodox Church and of our saints.

OBJECTION XVII

All these people, say the Ecumenist sympathizers, who have ceased commemorating and communing with the Ecumenists, are troublemakers, lacking love and humility.

These and even more things these people say in order to defame those who bear the Cross of Confession. And what else can they say? Since they do not have Scriptural and Patristic testimonies with which to support their position, they resort to insults and slanders. Of course, this is nothing new. All heretics, by similar methods, tried to strike at the Orthodox. Many times, when they had the means, they also used violence. And today too, when there is assistance from state authority, this happens. An example is the brutal manner in which they expelled the monks there from the Skete of the Prophet Elias on Mount Athos, on May 6, 1992.

They accuse us, then, of lacking love, of being proud and troublemakers. Yes, beloved, we do not deny that we fall very far short, and that we have not reached the measure of these great virtues; but by the grace of God, considering our own wretchedness, we strive first to love our Creator and Maker, and then all men as images of God. For we know very well that without humility and love we cannot have any relationship with our Lord.

Who does not know the Apostle Paul’s magnificent hymn to love (1 Cor. 13:1–13), as well as what the disciple of love, John the Theologian, wrote concerning it, and indeed all our saints? Or who does not know what has been written concerning the humility that exalts, which, according to our holy Fathers, is the throne of love and of all the other virtues?

In the present case, however, things change. These same saints of ours, who so greatly extolled love, humility, and stillness, taught us “to flee heretics as one flees from a serpent.” They also used very severe language against them, calling them robbers, deceitful men, crafty men, raging and frenzied men, poisonous serpents, accursed and abominable men, dogs, grievous wolves, shameless men, antichrists, and so forth.

They also taught us not to obey them: “When we are ordered by someone to do anything contrary to the commandment of Christ, corrupting or defiling it, then it is time to say, ‘We must obey God rather than men’” (Basil the Great, Ascetic Discourse I, Patristic Publications “Gregory Palamas,” Thessaloniki 1973, vol. 8, p. 125).

They further taught us not to remain silent and still when the Faith is in danger: “It is a commandment of the Lord not to be silent at a time when the Faith is in danger” (St. Theodore the Studite, PG 99, 1321), because, according to the same saint, “it is the work of a monk not to tolerate even the least innovation in the Gospel.”

Saint Gregory the Theologian wrote concerning the monks of his time:

“They cannot bear to be moderate in this: to betray God through silence; rather, in this they are exceedingly warlike and hard to withstand, for such is the warmth of zeal…”

And Saint Nikodemos the Athonite says:

“If, however, the matter and issue concerns the Faith and the traditions of our Church, then even the most peaceful and quiet person must fight on their behalf.”

(Unseen Warfare, Part II, ch. 19, note 1)

There are so many Scriptural and Patristic testimonies stating that we must not obey those who command us to do something contrary to the commandment of God, and that we must not remain silent and still when the Faith is in danger, that an entire volume would be needed to set them all forth.

Therefore, he who ceases the commemoration of, and communion with, a Bishop, Metropolitan, or Patriarch who preaches heresy or false doctrine, and who with divine zeal undertakes the defense of Orthodoxy, is not lacking in love and humility, nor in a hesychastic and peaceful disposition. All our saints from ages past did this, and whoever wishes to be called an Orthodox Christian must do this.

Pious Christians, clergy and laity, know when they must love and when they must “hate,” according to the Psalm: “I have hated the congregation of evildoers, and with the ungodly will I not sit” (Ps. 25:5), and “Have I not hated them, O Lord, that hate Thee? With perfect hatred I hated them, and they became enemies to me” (Ps. 138:21). They know when to humble themselves and when to boast according to the Apostle: “Let him who boasteth boast in the Lord.” And they know when to obey and when to disobey.

“Beware of false prophets,” says our Lord. They know that first of all, and above all, they must love God and obey Him, keeping His divine commandments, thus showing true love toward Him: “If ye love Me, keep My commandments” (John 14:15).

They know, while keeping the commandment of our Lord, to love their neighbors as themselves and to help them in deed when they are in need, regardless of race, nationality, color, and religion, while at the same time striving, with the help of God and by their Christian example, to make them know our Lord Jesus Christ, the only true God, and His Orthodox Church.

They know also, again while keeping the divine commandments, to respect and honor civil rulers, obeying the laws of the state which are not contrary to the commandments of God, as well as all the spiritual fathers and shepherds of our Church, when they too remain faithful to the Truth handed down.

They know how to distinguish good from evil, light from darkness, truth from falsehood, Orthodoxy from heresy, deception, and delusion, true shepherds and teachers from those who speak perverse things. They know how to distinguish the personal and human weaknesses of their spiritual Fathers, and they do not separate from them on account of these, as they do on account of their heretical opinions and delusions, from which, necessarily and with pain of soul, they sever every ecclesiastical communion, protecting themselves and the whole Church from the destruction of heresies and schisms.

Therefore, they are not lacking in love and humility, as they are accused, but they love people and humbly pray that all may come to know the true God, because love does not desire anyone to be condemned eternally.

“The greatest of all virtues is discernment,” our holy Fathers said. This great virtue of discernment, which is a gift of the All-Holy Spirit, is acquired by all pious Christians, clergy and laity, who truly love God and with a humble heart accept all His divine commandments without examination and criticism, as well as all that our holy Church has handed down to us, she who is “the pillar and ground of the truth.” By our own will and mindset, it is never possible to acquire this great virtue.

EPILOGUE

By the grace of God, we have tried to answer several objections of the Ecumenist sympathizers against today’s Confessors of the Orthodox Faith. This was not done from any disposition toward contentiousness, nor in order to enlighten those who say these things, for they more or less know the truth; but for those who, although they have within themselves some zeal for matters of our Faith, are carried away by these naïve arguments and remain within this spiritual destruction of Ecumenism.

What is being done by the Ecumenist sympathizers is sorrowful: they try by every means to prevent every well-intentioned person from coming out from among them and joining the Orthodox Church of Truth. They do not permit them to read various anti-Ecumenist periodicals or to converse with today’s Confessors, lest they learn of the achievements and wretched deeds of the Ecumenists and react.

They desire at all costs to keep those who follow them in the darkness of ignorance, and to direct them as they wish. This is also the basic reason why they put forward and spread so many incoherent falsehoods and naïve arguments.

Thus the question that naturally arises is also explained: Is it possible that these people, many of whom have worldly education and a reputation as great Elders, say such things? And yet it is possible! Since there is an ulterior purpose, anything becomes possible…

But, O you Ecumenists and Ecumenist sympathizers, whatever you may do, whatever you may write, whatever you may say, you will never be able to destroy the work of God, which is His Church. So many bloodthirsty emperors and tyrants have passed by, who fought against her in every way, but they were not able to make her disappear. So many heretics have passed by, who with frenzy tried to distort the revealed Truth of the Gospel, but they did not succeed; these gates of Hades shall not prevail against her.

The same will happen with you. Do not labor in vain, therefore, for “it is hard to kick against the goads.” There will always be the “true worshippers,” who “in holiness and righteousness,” and “in spirit and truth” (John 4:23–24), will worship God.

The only thing that remains for you is to return with humility to the saving Truth of the Church, from which, unfortunately, you have gone out.

Amen.


Greek source: https://orthodox-voice.blogspot.com/2013/03/blog-post_373.html


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