Thursday, January 29, 2026

The “Council” of Crete: The Illegitimate Fruit of Extramarital Relations

Protopresbyter Theodoros Zisis

Emeritus Professor of the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki

 

 

1. Constantinople abandons the Orthodox Tradition and recognizes ecclesiality in heretics.

The synodal institution never ceased to function in the life of the Church. Even after the seven councils considered by all to be ecumenical, with the last being the Seventh of Nicaea (787), and after those subsequently considered by many as the Eighth and Ninth — that is, the one under St. Photius in 879 and the one under St. Gregory Palamas in 1341/1351 — many councils convened with broader or narrower composition and with significant synodal work. Even during the Turkish occupation and throughout the 19th century, numerous councils — often with the participation of the Patriarchs of Alexandria, Antioch, and Jerusalem, as well as hierarchs from these ancient patriarchates — addressed the emerging issues in the life of the Church, especially the proselytism of Orthodox faithful by Papist and Protestant missionaries. Nevertheless, the Great Church of Constantinople, under conditions of bondage and captivity, did not cease to organize with due sacred dignity the affairs of its administration and worship. Except for Holy and Great Russia, nearly all Orthodox countries were under the Ottoman yoke.

The decline of the Ottomans and the formation of new states, with the granting of autocephaly to the local Churches, reduced the flock of the Church of Constantinople and limited its jurisdiction; nevertheless, they gave new momentum to the new Orthodox states to freely organize the affairs of ecclesiastical life and to glorify the Orthodox faith and life. The rivalries and ethnophyletism among them, which at times even reached the point of armed conflict, hindered the expression of the unity of the autocephalous Churches and gave the image of a divided Church, although there was nothing separating them in dogma, worship, or administration. The stabilization of the political situation after the Balkan Wars and the First World War did not last long, for it was followed by the October Revolution of 1917 in Russia, which subjected the largest and strongest Orthodox country and its Church to a harsh anti-Christian persecution, captive under the communist dictatorship and savagery— a condition which soon extended also to the other Balkan countries, except Greece. Then came the Asia Minor Catastrophe of 1922, with the millions of Greek refugees who abandoned their ancestral homes and stripped of its flock the already weakened — due to the autocephalies — “Church of the Poor of Christ,” which now became even poorer.

In the West, which did not experience Islamic tyranny and dictatorship, Papism, full of pride and self-confidence, convened in 1870 the First Vatican Council as an Ecumenical one, and dogmatized the primacy and infallibility of the pope, while the Protestants, divided and fragmented, organized from the end of the 19th century the Ecumenical Movement, which led to their external at least unity in the so-called "World Council of Churches." In the midst of these global and inter-Christian developments, we Orthodox also wished to be present, so that we would supposedly not be isolated and weakened, but that the entire Christian world, united and strong, might confront the dual threat of atheistic Communism and aggressive Islam. Thus, we abandoned the traditional stance of considering the Westerners as heretics, but also as politically and culturally more dangerous than Islam, and began to flirt with the West through the famous ecumenical encyclical of 1920, which the Ecumenical Patriarchate sent “To all the Churches of Christ everywhere,” naming for the first time in a synodal document the heretical Papists and Protestants as "churches." [1]

Nearly one hundred years have passed since then, and this anti-traditional and ecclesiologically unacceptable deviation of the Church of Constantinople — to transform heresies into “churches,” to grant, through a synodal document, ecclesiality to heretics — is now acquiring pan-Orthodox synodal ratification through the “Council” of Crete, with the problematic document “The Relations of the Orthodox Church with the Rest of the Christian World”, which divides and fractures the Church. Now captive to the Ecumenism of the West, the Church of Constantinople seeks to drag along and persuade the other Orthodox local Churches, as the primatial and Mother Church of the more recent autocephalous Churches, that times have changed, that the Patristic Tradition and the Holy Canons — which forbid communion and joint prayer with heretics — must be changed, adapted to the supposedly new needs of the times, whose heralds have but one aim: to cause divisions and schisms in the Body of the Church by denying the exclusivity of salvation in Christ and the ecclesiastical exclusivity of the Orthodox Church as the one, holy, catholic, and apostolic Church — indeed enemies of Christ and of salvation through Him.

2. Meletios Metaxakis, Athenagoras, Bartholomew — the three torchbearers of Ecumenism

Already in 1924, the Calendar Reform, with the Masonic Patriarch Meletios Metaxakis as its chief instigator, imposed in a coup-like manner without a pan-Orthodox decision, wounded and continues to severely wound to this day the festal unity of the Orthodox. [2] Furthermore, the  discussion that began from that time regarding the convocation of an Ecumenical Council — with ecumenistic themes as its core agenda, set by this innovating patriarch — unfortunately laid the groundwork and foundations not for a truly Orthodox Council, but for a pseudo-council of ecumenistic specifications, the primary aim of which was not the resolution of urgent and burning issues, but the legitimization of heresies as churches. It is characteristic that, although many topics were added and removed from the list of issues — some of them indeed critical, such as the Calendar, the granting of autocephaly, and others — the only one that remained constant and which no one dared to touch was the subject “The Relations of the Orthodox Church with the Rest of the Christian World,” that is, “The Relations of the Church with the Heresies and Schisms.” Since these relations are defined and unchangeable according to the Holy Scriptures and the Fathers, there is now an attempt to alter them and to cause new schisms and divisions.

The Metaxakis period did not have a good continuation, both due to reactions within the body of the hierarchy in Constantinople and due to the reluctance of the other autocephalous Churches to follow the innovations of Constantinople, as was evident from their reply letters to the patriarchal and synodal encyclicals of Patriarch Joachim III in 1902 and 1904, which sought to probe their intentions. The torch of Ecumenism was passed from Metaxakis to Patriarch Athenagoras, who ascended the patriarchal throne in 1948 after the forceful removal of his predecessor Maximos V — a man trusted by the Americans and known secret societies, of which he himself was a member. I will not proceed with further analysis, for these matters are known to most. What is worth noting is that the unity of the Christian world was pursued by the planners at the expense of the dignity and honor of the One, Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic Church — the Orthodox Church — with Athenagoras as chief architect, through two ecclesiologically unacceptable moves:

1. That all the autocephalous Orthodox Churches gradually become members of the pan-heresy of the Protestant “World Council of Churches” (what kind of “Churches”?), with Constantinople leading the way;

2. And that an approach be initiated with the Papists, who, under the influence of the same circles, had begun to abandon their strict ecclesiological exclusivism and to recognize some elements of ecclesiality in Christians outside the papal fold.

It is particularly characteristic — and has been noted by many — that at the very time when the Second Vatican Council (1962–1965) was being prepared and convened, Athenagoras, in line with a similar ecclesiological orientation, was convening the three “Pan-Orthodox Conferences” in Rhodes (1961, 1963, 1964) and the fourth in Chambésy, Geneva (1968). These conferences set forth the first list of topics for the forthcoming Holy and Great Council and led to the “Inter-Orthodox Preparatory Committees” and “Preconciliar Conferences” from 1971 until the convocation of the “Council” of Crete in June 2016. For fifty-five (55) years after the “First Pan-Orthodox Conference” of Rhodes (1961), forty-five (45) years after the “First Inter-Orthodox Preparatory Committee” in Geneva (1971), and forty (40) years after the “First Preconciliar Pan-Orthodox Conference” in Geneva (1976), the much-lauded and long-awaited “Holy and Great Council” of the Orthodox Church was being prepared, cooked, and sifted. And what was the result? The pseudo-council of Crete in June 2016.

Never in the history of the Church was so much time needed to prepare a council, because councils always addressed burning and urgent matters, which did not allow for chronological delays and extensions, but demanded immediate resolution. To what, then, is this delay and inability attributed — this failure to convene a great council of ecumenical standards, one that might rival and stand worthily opposite the Second Vatican Council, which was prepared swiftly, included the participation of 2,500 bishops (as opposed to the 150 of our “great” one in Crete), lasted not a single week but two years, and produced theological documents with which theological research — even Orthodox — is still engaged to this day, and which generally captured worldwide attention for a long period, whereas ours vanished and disappeared while its own brief, several-day life was still ongoing? Why such haste and urgency to close the topics quickly, to not allow sufficient time for discussion, to not permit the participation of all bishops, to deny all a vote, to not have the discussions open not only to journalists, but also to the clergy and the laity, and to have the surrounding area guarded by police forces? Why are we afraid of the body of the Church if our decisions are pleasing to God, evangelical, and patristic?

3. Why did the pre-conciliar process last so long?

The answer is not difficult. From the outset, the aims of the “Council” were not in line with the Orthodox synodal tradition, which fundamentally presupposes that every council follows and respects the decisions of the preceding councils, “following the Holy Fathers”; that it condemns the joint prayers which they forbade, and the heresies which they condemned, as if all councils were sessions of one and the same council. It combats and anathematizes new heresies that have appeared and are troubling the body of the Church, addresses pastoral and administrative problems, and in general ensures that the evangelical and Patristic Tradition is unwaveringly upheld. The Council of Crete did none of these things — on the contrary, it did precisely the opposite. Not only did it fail to reiterate the condemnation of heresies already condemned by previous councils, such as Monophysitism, Papism, and Protestantism, but instead, it named them churches. Instead of condemning the new pan-heresy of Ecumenism, it officially introduced it into the Church by praising the unacceptable documents of the Theological Dialogues and our humiliating participation in the so-called “World Council of Churches” — that is, the Protestant “World Council of Heresies.” It avoided condemning joint prayers with heretics, which have now become the trend and the norm; on the contrary, it ratified them through the joint prayer of heterodox observers during the various services. It did not address — on the contrary, it removed from the agenda — the burning and urgent issue of the Calendar, it did not resolve the issue of the Diaspora nor that of autocephaly, and simply thought it could cover all these gaps with vague theological proclamations in the message and the encyclical it issued.

The Orthodox and traditional approach to all these matters was not desirable to the planners of the “Council.” At every stage of the lengthy preparation, the vigilant conscience of the body of the Church raised objections. Respected Elders and contemporary Saints of the Church, as well as combative bishops of the Church, the entirety of the Holy Mountain, the once-traditional Church of Greece, many professors of the Theological Schools, Christian brotherhoods and associations, and a multitude of faithful opposed the convocation of the Council, [3] because they knew its un-Orthodox aims. We did not have here the infallible and first pope to do as he pleases, as he did with the Second Vatican Council, which — it should be noted — despite its modernizing and Protestantizing decisions, did not touch at all the essential ecclesiological dogmas of Papism. Thus, the cooks of Ecumenism delayed, sifted, and cooked, until the conditions became more favorable for the convocation of their ecumenistic “Council.” This is the reason for the prolonged preparation and the anti-traditional delay. Their ecumenistic “Council” was not coming together — the one that would interrupt the continuity of the Synodal Patristic Tradition.

The sudden hastening of the convocation of the “Council” by the third great torchbearer of Ecumenism, Patriarch Bartholomew — following Meletios Metaxakis and Athenagoras — is due to the assessment that the climate is now favorable. The Church of Greece, which had been traditional and conservative until the time of the late Archbishop Seraphim, has changed course and direction toward Ecumenism; within the Holy Mountain, ecumenist cells have been implanted that divide it and hinder it from expressing itself traditionally; the Theological Schools, with an overwhelming majority of professors, have adopted the ecumenist pseudo-vision, as seen in their support for the establishment of a Department of Islamic Studies, in the transformation of the Orthodox religious education course into a general study of religions, and in a multitude of publications and events. The theologians of “Kairos” and “Post-Patristic Theology” of Volos are being covered and supported by patriarchal, archiepiscopal, and episcopal blessings, while they are tearing up the foundations of Orthodoxy and transforming the salvific “kairos” of the New Testament into a time of ruin, adaptation, and innovation. The ecclesiastical leadership of Great Russia gladly sails in the murky waters of ecumenist deviation, even though it could, by responding to the anti-ecumenist, anti-papal, and anti-Western sentiments of the Russian people, overturn the destructive course. And our own pious Greek people, stunned by the memoranda, taxation, unemployment, and the sudden collapse of their life plans and goals, stand in lines at banks, tax offices, and soup kitchens, trying to secure their daily bread, to survive — and, apart from a few, are indifferent to ecclesiastical and spiritual matters.

4. The “Council” of Crete is not a product of Orthodoxy.

So there it is: the opportune moment, the favorable climate that the mechanisms of the New Age of Ecumenism and Pan-Religion were waiting for, in order to bring to an end the sifting and the cooking that had lasted for nearly a century, and to hastily convene the pseudo-council of Crete. They are deceived, however, if they think that, just as they deceived many ecclesiastical leaders and many bishops — fortunately there are also those who were not deceived — they will also deceive the vigilant conscience of the body of the Church, that they will ultimately deceive God, the Founder and Head of the Church, Christ Jesus, and the Holy Spirit, who leads the Church into all truth and drives away the spirits of delusion and heresies. The “Council” of Crete, as a fruit and offspring of alien spirits, will be rejected and will be erased from the records of ecclesiastical history as an illegitimate offspring of evil and sinful labor pains, of the eros and love of certain primates for the heresies of Papism and Ecumenism. There it was conceived and there it was born; it is not a child and offspring of the Orthodox Church. To Crete it was simply brought to us for recognition, but its DNA is not compatible with the biological characteristics of the Fathers of Orthodoxy. Did Saint Paisios not warn us about the amorous preferences of Athenagoras? It fits perfectly in context: “The Patriarch Athenagoras, as it appears, loved another woman, a modern one, who is called the Papal Church, because our Orthodox Mother does not impress him at all, since she is very modest.” [4]

 

NOTES

1. For this entire shift in Constantinople, see more in Protopresbyter Theodoros Zisis, “From Orthodoxy to Ecumenism: The Great Overturning of the 20th Century”, in our recent book: Holy and Great Council: Should We Hope or Be Troubled?, Thessaloniki 2016, “To Palimpseston” Publications, pp. 15–48.

2. For the calendar reform and, more generally, the ecumenistic role of Patriarch Meletios Metaxakis, see more in our study “Old and New Calendar. Why Did the Holy and Great Council Withdraw the Burning Issue?” Theodromia 18 (2016) 264–291, and in the aforementioned book in footnote 1, pp. 179–216, where many negative assessments are cited concerning the recently much-praised meddlesome and innovating patriarch.

3. For all these sound reactions, see the special double issue of Theodromia, January–June 2016.

4. From a letter that Saint Paisios sent to the late Elder Charalambos Vasilopoulos for publication in the Orthodox Press, dated January 23, 1968. For the full text of the letter, see Theodromia 12 (2010) 420–423. For the negative stance of Saint Paisios toward Ecumenism, which is usually silenced, see the tribute issue to him in Theodromia, April–June 2015.

 

Greek source: https://www.theodromia.gr/2D1316FB.el.aspx

On Hieromonk Tarasy Kurgansky’s Refutation of the Sevenfold Number of the Mysteries of the Orthodox Church

Finally, one cannot pass over in silence Fr. Tarasy’s views on the number of the Mysteries of the Orthodox Church.

[See: https://www.pravmir.com/the-false-teaching-about-the-seven-sacraments/]

He overturns the teaching concerning the seven Mysteries for the reason that it is allegedly, by its origin, a [Roman] Catholic teaching. “The striving for completeness and definiteness,” says Fr. Tarasy, “forced Western theologians to treat the external Christian sacred rites with unequal attention, to select from them the most important ones and to single them out from the series of the others on the basis of their special importance.” [842] According to Fr. Tarasy, this Catholic and scholastic teaching about the seven Mysteries was transferred by the Kiev theologians into the Russian Church in the 17th century. Moreover, the Russian people accepted this teaching without protest, thanks to their simplicity of heart. [843]

With regard to this view of Fr. Tarasy, we must first of all say that the Orthodox Church contains within itself the teaching concerning the seven Mysteries not for the reason indicated by him, but because this teaching has as its foundation Divine Revelation and the patristic writings. Long before the appearance of Catholicism, the Holy Church possessed a great multitude of testimonies of Holy Scripture and the holy Fathers, by virtue of which it established from the very apostolic times precisely seven, neither more nor fewer, Mysteries for the communication through them of the salvific grace of the Holy Spirit to the faithful. We will not set forth the incontrovertible truth of the sevenfold number of the Mysteries and adduce testimonies of Holy Scripture and the holy Fathers to prove the existence of seven Mysteries in the Church from the very apostolic times. All this has already been done excellently, clarified in detail, and set forth in the dogmatic systems of Archbishop Philaret, [844] Metropolitan Makary, [845] and Bishop Silvester. [846]

In the given dogmatic works, on the basis of God-revealed and patristic testimonies, it is indicated that the seven Mysteries were founded by the Apostles. In these testimonies we even have an indication that the founder of these Mysteries was the Lord Himself—either through the imparting of Divine teaching, which became the basis for the introduction into ecclesiastical life by the Apostles of chrismation, [847] repentance, [848] and marriage; [849] or through the granting to them of a direct command concerning the establishment of the Mysteries of baptism [850] and communion; [851] or, finally, through the command in general to observe all that He had commanded them. [852] To the fulfillment of this general Divine command one must undoubtedly ascribe the establishment by the Apostles of the Mysteries of priesthood and anointing with oil, although with regard to the latter there is even a direct fore-indication in the words of the Savior. [853]

In general, much of what was done by Christ did not enter into the Gospel, as the Evangelist John notes. [854] But everything that the Apostles performed proceeded from their Divine Teacher. All the more must this be said with regard to their God-revealed testimonies in general and, in particular, with regard to the establishment by God of the Mysteries of anointing with oil and priesthood, as well as of the other five Mysteries.

In the Dogmatic Theology of M. Makary, we even find a clarification of the question of why there exist in the Church precisely seven Mysteries, and neither more nor fewer. According to our renowned dogmatist, the reason for this is hidden in the will of the Founder of the Mysteries, the Lord Jesus Christ. “We can only,” says M. Makary, “following others, find here a correspondence with the seven gifts of the Holy Spirit (Isa. 11:2–3), communicated to the faithful through the seven Mysteries of the Church; with the seven loaves that miraculously fed whole thousands of people (Matt. 15:36–38); with the seven golden lampstands, in the midst of which the seer of mysteries was deemed worthy to behold the Son of Man (Rev. 1:12–13); with the seven stars which the Lord Jesus then held in His right hand (Rev. 1:16); with the seven seals by which the book seen thereafter by the Prophet in the right hand of God was sealed (Rev. 5:1); with the seven trumpets which, upon the opening of the mysterious book, were given to the seven angels standing before God (Rev. 8:1–2), and so forth.” [855]

In addition to what has been said by M. Makary in clarifying the question of why seven Mysteries have been established in the Church, one should recall the words of the Optina elder, great in grace-filled gifts, hieroschemamonk Fr. Ambrose, spoken by him in the explanation of a certain wondrous dream concerning the final destinies of the world. From this explanation it is evident that the number seven has great significance in ecclesiastical enumeration. It denotes fullness and perfection. Therefore, Fr. Ambrose, illumined by the Holy Spirit, in his explanation of this significant dream, says: “The Orthodox Church is maintained and guided by the rules of the seven Ecumenical Councils. There are seven Mysteries and seven gifts of the Holy Spirit in our Church. The Revelation of God was manifested to the seven Churches of Asia. The book of the destinies of God, seen in the Revelation by John the Theologian, is sealed with seven seals. There are seven bowls of the wrath of God poured out upon the impious. All this sevenfold enumeration pertains to the present age and with its end must also come to an end. The age to come, however, in the Church is designated by the eighth number. The sixth psalm has the following superscription: A Psalm of David unto the end, in songs concerning the eighth—according to the interpretation, concerning the eighth day, that is, concerning the universal day of the resurrection and the coming fearful judgment of God... The week of Antipascha, or of St. Thomas, in the Triodion of Flowers is called the week of the eighth, that is, of the eternal and unending day, which will no longer be interrupted by the darkness of night.” [856]

Thus, bearing in mind the significance which M. Makary and the elder Fr. Ambrose ascribe to the number seven, we may say that the Holy Church established seven Mysteries because in precisely this number they embrace the entire fullness of our Christian life and correspond to all its needs.

It is also necessary to note that Fr. Tarasy overturns the teaching concerning the sevenfold number of the Mysteries not only because it is allegedly established by Catholics and scholastics. As we have seen, he also rises up against this number on account of what he considers an inadmissible singling out of seven Mysteries as the most important from among all other sacred rites, which Fr. Tarasy also calls Mysteries. He declares that Mysteries should be called not only those known to us as seven in number, but also the events in the life of the Lord, Christian doctrine, the feasts of the Nativity and Baptism, and tonsure into monasticism. [857] Having in view the assertion in the catechism of Lavrenty Zizany that the Mysteries are only seven, Fr. Tarasy writes that this number “was indicated by the scholastics arbitrarily and artificially; that discussions about the greater or lesser necessity for salvation of one or another Mystery are senseless, since salvation is accomplished not by separate sacred rites, even the most important ones, but by union with the whole of ecclesiastical life, in which there is nothing of little importance; that certain sacred rites, for example, the great blessing of water, tonsure into monasticism, and the burial service for the departed, have a power and significance no less than the majority of the Mysteries.” [858]

Of course, the word Mystery is used not only with reference to the seven Mysteries, but also in a broader sense. One may call a Mystery even tonsure into monasticism, which, as the lives of St. Anthony the Great and the venerable John and Simeon the Fool-for-Christ testify, [859] may even be called a second baptism, since through tonsure the Lord forgives all sins committed from birth. One may also call a Mystery every rite and prayer in the Church, since here our faith in God’s help is expressed, which is communicated to us by God invisibly and mystically. But in the proper sense, only seven are recognized by the Church as Mysteries. Thus believes the Holy Church, which in its full entirety contains within itself grace and truth. And thus we, her members, must believe in humility, so as not to fall, through divergence from the Church, into pride, not to depart from her and not to perish forever. Therefore, it is not we who fall into senselessness by recognizing only seven Mysteries and thereby singling them out as the most necessary for salvation in comparison with other sacred rites. In this preference for the seven Mysteries we manifest only our faith in the infallibility of the Church’s teaching concerning the God-revealed origin of the seven Mysteries, whereas Fr. Tarasy undermines this faith. It is clear from this who falls into senselessness: those who recognize the seven Mysteries on the basis of God-revealed and patristic teaching, or Fr. Tarasy, who overturns the sevenfold number of the Mysteries contrary to the teaching of Holy Scripture and the holy Fathers of the Church, and thus diminishes the salvific significance of these Mysteries?!

Fr. Tarasy lowers these Mysteries still further and even completely devalues them by his assertion that salvation is accomplished not by separate sacred rites, even the most important ones—by which he understands the principal Mysteries—but by union with the whole of ecclesiastical life.

Here a genuinely sectarian view of salvation is expressed. Together with the Holy Church we confess that salvation is accomplished by the inner, regenerating grace of the Holy Spirit, which is granted to us in the Mysteries of baptism and chrismation. Together with the Holy Church we testify that this grace is unfolded within us with the cooperation of our free will, that is, through our striving always to be in union with Christ and the Orthodox Church by means of the fulfillment of the Divine commandments and our zealous participation in the prayers, divine services, and Mysteries of the Church. The realization of this union is impossible without the regenerating grace of the Holy Spirit. This grace-filled union of ours with the Holy Church is precisely ecclesiastical life, by virtue of which our salvation is accomplished. Thus, the principal power and foundation in this union, or in our salvation, is the inner, regenerating grace of the Holy Spirit.

One may ask: how, then, can our salvation be accomplished, and what will our union with ecclesiastical life represent, if it proceeds without the Mysteries, that is, without grace, and especially without the grace of holy baptism, chrismation, repentance, and communion? To say that “salvation is accomplished not by separate sacred rites, even the most important of them, but by our union with the whole of ecclesiastical life” means not to have an Orthodox understanding of salvation, not to know the essence of Christianity, which consists in our reception and the unfolding within us of the grace of holy baptism and chrismation—what was the purpose of the sufferings and death of Christ, [860] and what, according to the teaching of St. Symeon the New Theologian and St. Seraphim of Sarov, is also the purpose of our entire Christian life.

Therefore, the view of Fr. Tarasy on the sevenfold number of our Mysteries and on the accomplishment of salvation apart from these Mysteries with their inner, regenerating grace must be acknowledged as heretical and absurd.

 

NOTES

842. “A Turning Point in Ancient Russian Theology,” pp. 175–176.

843. Ibid., pp. 176–177.

844. Archbishop Philaret. Dogmatic Theology, part 2, pp. 201–354. Chernigov, 1864.

845. Metropolitan Makarii. Dogmatic Theology, vol. 2, pp. 313–518. St. Petersburg, 1883.

846. Bishop Silvester. Dogmatic Theology, vol. 4, pp. 353–583; vol. 5, pp. 1–63. Kiev, 1897.

847. John 7:37–39.

848. John 20:21–23.

849. Matthew 19:3–12.

850. Matthew 28:19.

851. Matthew 26:26–28.

852. Matthew 28:20.

853. Matthew 10:1, 8; cf. Mark 6:13.

854. John 20:30; 21:25.

855 M. Makarii. Dogmatic Theology, part 2, p. 512.

856. Archimandrite Agapit. “The Life of the Optina Elder Hieroschemamonk Ambrose.” Appendix 6–11. Moscow, 1900; cf.: the works of St. Gregory the Theologian, vol. 1, pp. 576–578.

857. “A Turning Point in Ancient Russian Theology,” p. 179.

858. Ibid., p. 181.

859. Chetii-Minei, January 17 and July 23.

860. John 16:7.

 

Russian source: Искажение православной истины в русской богословской мысли [The Distortion of Orthodox Truth in Russian Theological Thought], by Archbishop Seraphim (Sobolev), Sofia, 1943.

 

 

Online source:

https://azbyka.ru/otechnik/Serafim_Sobolev/iskazhenie-pravoslavnoj-istiny-v-russkoj-bogoslovskoj-mysli/6_7

A New Saint of the Buinsk Diocese of ROCOR-A: Venerable Matthew of Yaransk

On 28 January 2026, in accordance with the decision of the Council of Bishops, the glorification of Venerable Matthew of Yaransk in the rank of locally venerated saints took place in the Buinsk Diocese of ROCOR-A. The rite of glorification was presided over by the Ruling Hierarch of the Buinsk Diocese, Archbishop John, and Bishop Philaret of Vologda and Veliky Ustyug.


Russian source:

http://internetsobor.org/index.php/novosti/rptsz/rptsz-novyj-svyatoj-buinskoj-eparkhii

 

 

The Memory of the Venerable Hieromonk and Confessor Matthew of Yaransk

Born into a cobbler’s family in Viatka (Kirov), Saint Matthew became the spiritual son of a monk of strict asceticism called Stephen and, under his influence, embraced the monastic life in the Monastery of St Alexander Nevsky in Viatka. From 1899 onwards, he lived in the Prorochisky Monastery in Yaransk, in the same region, where he was steward and the spiritual father of the monks. Living in God-pleasing ascesis, he received the gifts of insight and healing, placing them at the service of the people, who were undergoing great trials. In 1921, the monastery was closed and destroyed by the Bolsheviks. Father Matthew then settled in Ershovo, where he continued to practise his ministry of spiritual fatherhood, supporting Bishop Nectarius and his clergy in their resistance to the machinations of the ‘Living Church’. He fell asleep in peace on 14/27 May 1927, and his grave in Yaransk became a place of pilgrimage. It is an abundant source of all manner of healings to this day.

- The Synaxarion of Hieromonk Makarios of Simonos Petra, Vol. 5 (May-June), May 14, p. 58.

 

Wednesday, January 28, 2026

Questions and Answers Concerning the End Times and the Antichrist


 

Fr. Theodoulos: Would you like to ask a question about some topic, would you like us to talk about something?

About the one whom we are now expecting, in the immediate future, to come. What is going to happen, how will things be, with the [Greek] identity cards, with the wars, with the infamous law?

Fr. Theodoulos: I usually, publicly, do not want to touch upon or deal with these topics. Not because I do not know or cannot express my opinion, but because usually, on these matters, disagreements arise and there will be tensions afterward. For some have their own beliefs, mindsets, and usually on this subject there are disagreements and misunderstandings. I consider it proper to speak about beneficial things, catechetical, that give joy and courage to continue our struggle, rather than to deal with topics which more often create anxiety and concern, and at times we even hear anger and rage.

Since God is absolute and the Holy Fathers speak to us about the last times that are to come, and we must truly be prepared above all, for what reason should they not be discussed, that we might discern things—why should there be tensions? It says that in order to be saved you must do this and that—God is absolute. There is no going down or up, neither right nor left.

Fr. Theodoulos: Yes, listen. Even in the time when the Apostle Paul was living, it was considered the era of the Antichrist. The Apostle Paul himself says it: “For the mystery is already at work.” The Apostle Paul sent a letter to the Thessalonians because, in those days, in Thessalonica, it was being preached that those were the years of the Antichrist, and that we must flee to the mountains, and that we must take measures and resist the state, and become united to confront the Antichrist and the era of the Antichrist, and to be saved, for otherwise we would be damned. The Apostle Paul sent them a letter and calmed them down. He explained to them how wrong it is to think this way—to suppose that it is the time of the Antichrist. This kind of thing has happened in every age, in every century—not once, but hundreds of times people throughout the ages have claimed regarding this or that issue that now is the forerunning era or the era of the Antichrist. That we must resist, that we must, that we must, that we must. But all these things are not from the Saints, but mainly from people who misinterpret the Apocalypse.

Well then, my personal opinion, as I have understood the Holy Fathers and Holy Scripture—of course, everyone has the right to disagree and to believe their own things—I am simply casting some seeds. If you consider them rotten, do not keep them. Throw them away, leave them. I am just expressing my opinion; each person clings to what he loves. What matters most, however, is that when we discuss certain topics, we should do so as calmly, kindly, and lovingly as possible. Because if I am mistaken, and you are supposedly the one who knows what is right, you will explain to me in a good way that I am mistaken. But regarding these topics, whenever I have engaged with some people, most raise their voices, get angry, pass judgment—“that one is deluded,” “you are this,” and so on… In the end, we reach the point of saying, “What you’re saying is not Orthodox,” or “Scripture says otherwise,” or “that elder says something else,” or “what you’re saying is heretical”—and this then causes us to lose our composure, to lack the love we should have. In order for us to speak with love, we must cultivate love—take heed: love for enemies. We do not even love our friends, we do not love our relatives—will we reach the point of loving our enemies? Because you might say, “Father, enemies?” But when we argue and quarrel, we become enemies. Therefore, if there is something to discuss, we must see that if our brother is speaking wrongly, we should pray that God enlighten him to understand the truth—not tell him he is deluded, that he’s doing this or that. We as Orthodox Christians must love everyone—even Muslims, and heretics, and Catholics—we must love all people; we simply refrain from sharing their beliefs. We never say that we should hate anyone or insult them; we should not slander or curse anyone. We must love people, and hate their heresy—even more so within us Orthodox—because that is what has caused the Churches to be divided: because we disagree and say “No, you are deluded,” and “No, you’re the good one,” or “I am the saint.” So, my opinion is: whoever wants to understand the truth about these eschatological matters should not concern themselves with the internet—just my opinion. On the internet there is both truth and falsehood—it’s like a garbage dump, and you're searching in a garbage dump to find something to eat. You might indeed find something edible among the garbage, but it is contaminated by the trash. The source for understanding the truth about eschatological matters—when the Antichrist will come, what the Antichrist is, what harms us and what benefits us—the source is found in Holy Scripture and in the Patristic writings. If each person counted the time they’ve spent on the internet—how many hours and days they’ve occupied themselves reading things—and if they had dedicated even a tenth of that time, not the whole, just a tenth, to reading the New Testament and the Holy Fathers, they would have been far more illumined.

As for the issue with the coronaviruses, with the vaccines, I never once dealt with the internet to find out through the internet whether the vaccine harms or whether the coronavirus is of the Antichrist. Now you’ll say, “those things have passed,” but they are still brought up. Or, in any case, the identity cards in Greece—whether they are of the Antichrist, whether it’s the 666—am I going to sit now and search the internet to have the internet tell me whether it is true? I will go on the internet to find a piece of information, if I want to learn something about a historical event—and even then, some say it one way, others say it another. But the truth is found in Holy Scripture and in the Holy Fathers—how the Holy Fathers interpret Holy Scripture, not through the internet. Whoever wants, let him do so; that is my opinion. We try to concern ourselves with the Holy Fathers, and most importantly, to be in confession, in Holy Communion, so that God may enlighten us. If I am arguing with my brother, if I do not confess, if I do not commune—then even if I don’t take the identity card and I don’t take the vaccine—will I be saved? The more important thing is that I be reconciled with my brother, that I confess, that I partake of Holy Communion, that I study the Holy Fathers—and then God will enlighten me whether I should do it or whether I should not take it. I am not saying to take them. I am saying: how can we arrive at the point of understanding whether we should? I leave every person to judge and to decide for himself and for his family, because we should not interfere and try to persuade one another about what to do, what to take, what not to take, etc.

And when brothers ask, “Father, should we take the identity card or not?”

Fr. Theodoulos – Forgive me for what I will say, but the question is a bit ill‑intentioned. Why? If I say, “Brothers, take the identity card,” it will be: “What did you say? To take the identity card? And what are you saying?!” If the brother who asks already has his own opinion, he’s not really asking because he wants to learn—“Ah, I see! Now I’ve learned whether I should take it or not.” Everyone already has his own opinion within himself. One will say, “I shouldn’t take it.” Another will say, “I should take it”—but even so, he will still ask! As if we’re asking the question just so others can hear it. You know, it’s like: “Let me ask so that the others will learn what’s right—whether we should take it or not—or to see what Father believes, what his stance is.” I’m not addressing anyone personally—maybe now two of you children have just asked the question—I’m speaking generally. Generally and vaguely. We are all brothers, and I’m simply stating my personal opinion. Since each one has his own view and each one is responsible for himself and for his family, let each person do what he believes is right. But if we do want to learn, I suggest we avoid the internet and turn to Holy Scripture and the Holy Fathers. Let us pray for God to enlighten us through the Holy Fathers. To learn the truth, and at the same time to be within the Mysteries of the Church—in Confession and Holy Communion. And then to love one another. Christ said to love everyone, even our enemies. To love as much as we can and to help. And if I want to help someone, to bring him back from his delusion, let me pray for him. That is, if someone thinks that what I am saying now is wrong and that I am deluded, let him pray for me, that God may enlighten me. Since no one is convinced by words anymore. We’re all smart, we’re all first, we’re all second. We all know everything. We don’t accept advice, or correction, nothing. We all know it all. But since we already know it, there’s no need to talk about these things. Let us pray for that person. And when we want even our brothers and our relatives, let us pray for them. Someone comes and says, “Father, I feel sorry—I have my brother, I have my sister. He’s there, or he’s changed faith, or he’s changed Church, or this or that.” Yes—and if you keep talking to him and bothering him, will you convince him? Pray for him. Fine, let’s offer prayers for the other, but first for ourselves—that we might be enlightened—and then that we might enlighten our friends and our relatives.

On one point, if you’ll allow me, I would like to disagree. Of course, we must pray for others—especially for ourselves—that is a matter of self-worth, self-respect. First, to love yourself. If you don’t love yourself, you cannot love your neighbor—it is impossible. Secondly, regarding what you said about the identity card and the vaccine. You all know that we are living in times that are anti-Christian, that Christ is being persecuted, that those who rule over us—that is, those behind the scenes—are satanists. These people believe in the devil, in “the one outside.” Those who produced the vaccine did it for population reduction. They didn’t do it because they love you—they didn’t just meet you yesterday. They don’t love anyone. They have sold their souls for certain interests in this world. Secondly, the matter of the electronic identity is the same—it is also anti-Christian. They have abolished everything. They recently voted in favor of homosexuality—allowing two fathers to take a child—and they say, “It’s better for us to take the child because it’s in an orphanage, and those who left it didn’t love it, and we will love it.” Well, no!

Fr. Theodoulos: I disagree with those things. Of course, brother. With all of them. I would just like to add to that, and I believe it is good to say such things so that people may be awakened. My opinion—if you did not understand it—is something I’ll explain more clearly. I did not say that only prayer and study, and then we’ll tell you—of course, we must also move our hands. I don’t think—if some of you did not understand me—that we should just sit with folded hands. I never said such a thing. Of course, we must also move our hands. But what is more important is prayer, study, the Mysteries of the Church. But as for this subject: if today we are governed by Antichrists once, in earlier times we were governed ten times, a hundred times by Antichrists. Let’s go back again to the time of the Apostle Paul.

When the Apostle Paul was living, the emperor of the Roman Empire was Nero. Nero was the first emperor who demanded to be worshipped as a god. He wasn’t simply an idolater, but what—take note—not only did he mint coins in his own name, but he also required that everyone be registered in his empire as his subjects, as subjects of the god Nero. Today, no prime minister has told us, “Let me give you coins of my own, let me give you documents stating that you are my subjects and that I am God.” That era was far worse. And we will also look at other periods as we go along. So, when Nero proclaimed this—that from now on he was to be worshipped as a god—then again the Christians rose up and said, “Here is the Antichrist!” A greater Antichrist than Nero has never appeared to this day, because he demanded worship. The Roman state always required people to be registered. But when the registration was under Nero’s rule, that was the peak of it all. Now, look what’s happening today: we’re being given new identity cards—who knows what they might contain, whether they have 666, whether they have a chip, or whether they don’t—and everything seems to lead us there, everything to the Antichrist, etc. But even back then, the documents served to prove who was a Roman citizen. Not just anyone could say, “Ah, I’m fine, I’m a Roman citizen,” or “I’m not.” There were documents back then too, in which everyone was registered in the Roman state. And yet, in that Roman Empire, which was vast at the time, there were thousands and millions of Christians—all of whom were registered in the Roman state in order to have the rights of the state. The Apostles existed at that time. If it were wrong, then the Apostles themselves would have said, “Do not be registered in the Roman state.” First of all, the Apostle Paul would have said such a thing. But he didn’t. Do you know what the Apostle Paul did say? “Make prayers for kings and all who are in authority.” That is, at that time, he asked the Christians to pray for Nero. It’s like saying to us today to pray for our leaders. Now, pardon me, but what Christian today prays for Mitsotakis in Greece? Since most curse him and revile him. And then they say not to take the identity cards that Mitsotakis will give us. What are you saying, poor fellow! If you are a Christian and want to go against the Antichrist, you will begin first with prayer. Pray for Mitsotakis. If all Christians prayed for Mitsotakis, God would not allow him to give us the identity cards. Listen to something.

So then, I said that many times there were governments that were antichristian and worse than today’s. Some governments were during the Turkish occupation. Do you know what that means? If you haven’t read and understood how Christians lived under the rule of the Sultans during the time of Turkish rule… I’ll give one example. Saint Cosmas of Aetolia, every time he went to preach, would go and make a prostration and receive the blessing, the permission, from the local Pasha. That is, in order to receive permission to speak publicly, he would go and bow down, venerate him, and say, “My much-honored Pasha, if you will and if you give permission…” In those years of Turkish rule, the Christians were so oppressed that they had someone over them who ruled and who had the religion of the Antichrist—because the Antichrist was also Mohammed. When Mohammed arose—and every Mohammed, and each who ruled in that manner—they were all in a place of the Antichrist.

Regarding the Antichrist, as you mentioned—how will we recognize that he is the specific Antichrist? By his deeds, by his confession? How will we understand that he is the Antichrist?

Fr. Theodoulos: Very good question, and how easily it is answered. So then, today the Prophet Elias and the Prophet Enoch are alive. They have not died. We all know this. The two prophets live—for what reason? To come at the time of the Antichrist. Now pay attention. If, at this moment, the Antichrist were alive on earth, it would be utterly impossible for the Prophet Elias and the Prophet Enoch not to come and tell us. For this very reason they are alive and exist. That is, the Prophet Elias—or rather, the two prophets—are not tinkering with pots and pans. They are not just sitting around waiting: “Ah, humanity is being destroyed, people are perishing, and we just sit here and wait.” Of course not. Listen. If it were the time of the Antichrist—if the Antichrist had come, and if the identity card and the vaccine were a denial, if they contained the 666 and the mark and a denial of Christ—the two prophets would 100% come to warn us. Because otherwise, if they didn’t do that, their existence would be in vain. Since neither the Prophet Elias nor the Prophet Enoch comes to tell us, “Don’t take the identity cards because they contain 666,” then they don’t contain 666! Would they let us take them while the 666 is present, and they just sit there and wait and wait?

There are testimonies, though, that Elias has appeared.

Fr. Theodoulos: Now listen, it’s one thing for him to perform a miracle somewhere, to appear and help—that, yes—but for him to come out publicly for all people to see him, to appear openly and say, “People, Christians, take your precautions, it is the Antichrist, this belongs to the Antichrist”—they would tell us. From the moment the prophets are not coming, then it is not something involving 666 and the Antichrist. For those who wish to understand. As for the rest, my brothers, you have the right to...

Will we recognize them when they come?

Fr. Theodoulos: Of course. Pay attention. If a certain Christian has no relationship with the Church, with Orthodoxy, with the Mysteries—in short, he is only baptized because he happened to be born that way, and he lives a prodigal life, for example, with women and drugs—whether the Prophet Elias comes or not, for him it’s all the same. This also happened in Hades when Christ descended. When Christ entered Hades—how brightly does the sun shine? Christ shone a hundred times more brightly in Hades—He gave light. But who recognized Christ? All those who had the senses of a sound spiritual state. The others hid themselves, turned away, didn’t want to see Christ and the light. The faithful, who were awaiting Christ, longed for Him—and when they saw His light, they recognized Him. We Christians who are in the Church and in the Mysteries of the Church—of course, when the Prophet Elias and the Prophet Enoch come, of course we will recognize them as if the sun itself had descended to the earth.

Will this Synod tell us that these two are the prophets?

Fr. Theodoulos: The Synod doesn’t need to say it. It’s like me telling you: if the sun falls upon the earth, do we need the neighbor to tell us?

When the Antichrist comes, will the Church exist?

Fr. Theodoulos: It will exist, and then it will flee into the wilderness. As soon as the Antichrist appears, the Church flees into the wilderness. The Church of Christ will exist, does exist, and will continue to exist.

It will always exist, yes. We say: when the Antichrist comes one day, will the Church exist then?

Fr. Theodoulos: The Church will exist in the wilderness.

Will the Church, at that time in the wilderness, preach to the world that this is the Antichrist?

Fr. Theodoulos: Yes, yes, yes. It will preach it.

But Scripture says, “Take heed, lest he deceive, if possible, even the elect.”

Fr. Theodoulos: Now listen to this. So then, it says, “if possible,” “if possible to deceive even the elect.” The “if” and the “possible” are conditional. The “possible,” which means could be, is conditional, not active. So, this means that those years will be so very difficult and the man will use such cunning, that with this evil he will do, he could deceive even the elect. Could, but he will not deceive the elect. No elect one will be deceived. Some, of course, will be deceived. What do the Saints tell us—all the Saints of all the ages? When the Antichrist comes, those who will follow him and those who will be deceived by him are precisely those who—even if the Antichrist were never to come—would be damned. Why? What do the Saints say? He will reign among those who are perishing. That is, he will reign only over those destined for perdition. No elect person will be deceived—but if possible, even the elect could be deceived—but the Antichrist will reign only over the lost, those appointed for destruction. Only those—listen—who, even if the Antichrist never came, would be damned nonetheless. And on the other hand, even if not one, but fifty Antichrists were to come, not a single elect person would be deceived—not a single faithful one. But the faithful of those times—in those years—will receive strength only, only, only from the Mysteries of the Church. Whoever is far from the Mysteries, even if he puts up the greatest fight, will be lost, will despair, will give in, will deny. All those today who shout, “I won’t take the identity card,” “I won’t do this,” and shout and shout—because they do not have the virtue of love to the degree that is needed—because the same person shouting about the identity card, if his neighbor gives him a temptation, he wants to hang him! So that person—let’s say—if he is tortured, if they put him through torment, he may endure at first, but then he will cower or the grace of God will abandon him and he will deny, because he won’t be able to endure to the end. Do you know how many martyrs—or rather, how many people during times of torture—succumbed and denied, even though at first they endured and acted like confessors? Why? Simply because they lacked love and humility. It is not enough to shout “Orthodoxy or death” and to confess. If I do not help my neighbor, then even if I shout “Orthodoxy or death” from morning till night, it benefits me nothing. I must have both faith and works. And I must be certain that when I am within the Mysteries and in the Church, God will enlighten me, will help me to resist this Antichrist, whoever he may be. But if I am not within the works of love, if I am not within the Church and the Mysteries of the Church, no matter how much I think I am a watchman, a guard waiting for the Antichrist to come so I can face him—poor fellow, without even realizing it, you will deny.

 

Greek transcription source: https://entoytwnika1.blogspot.com/2026/01/blog-post_28.html

Tuesday, January 27, 2026

The Contribution of the Zealot Athonites to the Holy Struggle of the G.O.C.

Bishop Photios of Marathon | September 3, 2009

 

 

INTRODUCTION

The Holy Synod of the Church of the Genuine Orthodox Christians, by its decision No. 5.S. BS of 12/25 May 2006, dedicated the year 2007 to the Zealot Athonites and their contribution to the Holy Struggle of the G.O.C. on the occasion of the completion of 80 years since the first organized mission of Athonite Hieromonks by the Holy Association of Zealot Fathers to Greece.

In this tribute, we initially refer to the very significant contribution of the Zealot Athonites during the period 1924-1935. Subsequently, we address their contribution from 1935 until 1972. Finally, we present the current contribution of the Zealot Athonites, particularly that of the Holy Monastery of Esphigmenou.

The information for the composition of this was mainly drawn from the historical "Ta Patria" of the late Metropolitan of Pentapolis, Kalliopios, as well as from other sources, and we must admit that the task was not easy due to conflicting information in certain cases. Therefore, if the description at any point is not accurate, we ask for the readers' understanding. If they happen to have knowledge of the precise details of the situation, we kindly ask them not to hesitate to point it out to us by letter. Any additions will be taken into consideration upon the publication of the tribute in the Voice of Orthodoxy.

We must also point out that the nominal references to the Zealot Fathers are illustrative and that we will limit ourselves to those who have fallen asleep, and not to those who are still living and active.

THE CONTRIBUTION OF THE ZEALOT ATHONITE FATHERS TO THE HOLY STRUGGLE OF THE G.O.C.

A. PERIOD 1924-1935

When the new calendar was forcibly imposed on the Church of Greece in 1924 by Archbishop Chrysostomos Papadopoulos, a significant portion of the faithful did not accept it. Not out of stubbornness or "narrow-mindedness," nor, of course, due to some backward perception, as we are accused by the defenders of the innovation. But because they immediately discerned that behind this uncanonical act lay the promotion of the Latinization of Orthodoxy.

Immediately, the pious who opposed the change organized themselves. Just two weeks after the calendar reform, many of them gathered in the hall of the Commercial Employees of Athens and founded the "Society of the Orthodox." Two years later, it was renamed the "Greek Religious Community of the Genuine Orthodox Christians." Since then, those who struggle for the traditional piety have borne the name G.O.C. They began to conduct liturgies and church services in private chapels, with their own priests.

The first heroic clergy of the G.O.C. were very few. The married priests were: Ioannis Floros (the celebrant during the vigil of the Exaltation of the Holy Cross in 1925, during which the third appearance of the Holy Cross took place), and Spyridon Oikonomou, Vasileios Sakellaropoulos, Sotirios Souchleris, Georgios Mavridis, Andreas, Parthenios (both from Drama, surnames unknown), and Stergios (from Nikiti).

Additionally, during the first years following the calendar change, the liturgical needs of the G.O.C. were served by the Hieromonks: Anthimos Vagianos (on Chios) and Arsenios Sakellarios (in Phthiotis). The latter was an Athonite who, with a dismissal letter from the Monastery of Simonopetra, had been in the region of Phthiotis since 1907. He was there during the calendar change, which he did not accept, and thus became the first Athonite to join the Holy Clergy of the G.O.C. (It is worth noting about him that the gendarmes tied him behind their pack animal and dragged him on foot, publicly humiliating him through the villages of the area until they reached the police station, where they defrocked and shaved him!).

Certainly, these very few priests were unable to meet the liturgical needs of tens of thousands of faithful, especially as the resistance against the calendar innovation was growing.

This gap was called to be filled by the Zealot Athonite Fathers.

The Zealot Athonites had already founded (in 1926) the "Holy Association of Zealot Monks" on Mount Athos, whose charter was signed by 450 Hieromonks and Monks, opposing the innovation. This Holy Association was dissolved by law by the authorities the following year, but it continued to operate informally, coordinating the efforts of the Athonite Zealots with the Hellenic Religious Community of the G.O.C. The zealous and learned Monk Arsenios Kotteas greatly contributed to the founding of this holy association.

In 1926, the Athonite Hieromonks Gedeon Papanikolaou and Matthaios Karpathakis (later Bishop of Vresthena) left Mount Athos and settled in Attica, serving the G.O.C.

The following year, nineteen Zealot Monks (from the Monasteries of Vatopedi and Koutloumousiou) were expelled from Mount Athos by the police. Some were released across Greece, while others were confined to monasteries (in Mytilene and Serres).

In the same year, Elder Ieronymos Geroantonakis founded a monastery on Mount Parnitha. Likewise, Matthaios Karpathakis founded one in Keratea.

Around the end of 1927 (on Christmas Eve), following the encouragement of Monk Arsenios Kotteas, the first four-member mission of Hieromonks from Mount Athos arrived in Athens to support the Holy Struggle. It consisted of the Zealot Hieromonks: Parthenios Skourlis (later Bishop of the Cyclades), Eugenios Lemonis, Gerasimos Dionysiatis, and Artemios Nodarakis. In 1929, following the example of the previous group, the Hieromonks Akakios Pappas (later Archbishop of the G.O.C.), Hilarion Ouzounopoulos, Antonios Koutsonikolas, Artemios Xoungos (of Xenophontos Monastery), and Monk Nektarios Katsaros also joined.

In 1929, the married priest Nikolaos Anagnostou was added to the Holy Clergy of the G.O.C.

Thanks to the activity of the aforementioned Hieromonks (primarily) and their collaboration with the Governing Council of the Community of the G.O.C., within two years, 245 branches of the Community were established throughout Greece. Despite the persecutions and hardships, the branches of the G.O.C. multiplied even further, and by the beginning of 1934, they numbered 800 across the Greek Territory.

In the same year, in a record of the Religious Community of the G.O.C., primarily signed by the aforementioned Zealot Athonites, the G.O.C. renounced the official Church and stated that:

a) The Parliament has no right to legislate for the Church; therefore, a separation of Church and State must take place.

b) The introduction of the new calendar was done for ecumenical [ecumenist] reasons.

c) The practice of joint prayer with the heterodox is condemned, and

d) The election of bishops for the G.O.C. is requested.

(To satisfy the last request, they addressed Metropolitan Anthony of Kiev, the primate of the Russian Orthodox Church Abroad, but without success).

From the above, the foresight of the G.O.C. is demonstrated, as they were the first to point out the danger of Ecumenism and joint prayers, and they indicated the only patristic way of responding: the cessation of ecclesiastical communion.

B. PERIOD 1935-1971

In 1935, three hierarchs of the Church of Greece decided to cease ecclesiastical communion and subsequently assumed the leadership of the holy struggle of the G.O.C. They proceeded with the consecration of bishops and formally established the Holy Synod of the Church of the G.O.C., with Germanos of Demetrias as its president. This event gave new momentum to the G.O.C., who were no longer merely a Religious Community but now represented the continuation of the One, Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic Church in Greece.

The leadership of the struggle was assumed by the hierarchs, who cooperated with the Athonite fathers, both those active in Greece and the Zealots remaining on Mount Athos. The Zealot cells of Mount Athos became the primary refuge for those G.O.C. faithful who sought the monastic life, and from then on, the G.O.C. hierarchs ordained the clergy of the Zealot Athonites, establishing a relationship of fraternal cooperation that continues to this day.

Athonite Hieromonks were elevated to the episcopal rank, such as Matthaios Karpathakis of Vresthena (who, unfortunately, caused the Matthewite schism), Akakios Pappas of Talantion, Parthenios Skourlis of the Cyclades, Paisios Finokaliotakis of Aegina, Petros Astyfides of Astoria, and Gabriel Kalamisakis of the Cyclades.

Athonite Monk Antonios Moustakas was one of the key figures in the Holy Struggle of the G.O.C., serving as a collaborator (from 1941 to 1955) of former Metropolitan of Florina Chrysostomos, the successor of Germanos of Demetrias in leading the G.O.C.

Athonite Hieromonks occasionally joined the ranks of the Holy Clergy of the G.O.C., including: Chrysanthos Vrettaros, Meletios Ioannidis, Azarias Patsoudis, Longinos Hatzistefanou, Panteleimon Tsaloupis, Ephraim Karagiannidis, Gabriel Stamatellatos, Chrysostomos Theodoropoulos, Hilarion Vasiloglou, Gabriel Liveris, Anempodistos Botsis, Eumenios Tsimisiris, Gerasimos Skourtaniotis, Seraphim Papadimitriou, Ioannis Manidakis, Nikodimos Patris, Gerasimos Rogalis, Antonios Chalkias, Vikentios Ladas, Eugenios Klavdianos, Anthimos Proestos, Monk Chrysanthos Skourtaniotis, and others who fought the good fight of faith both inside and outside of Mount Athos. Many other commemorated Athonites, seeing the piety of the G.O.C. and the Zealot Fathers, were also favorably inclined towards them. They facilitated the enrollment of zealots in the Monasteries' registries, despite contrary directives from the Patriarchate of Constantinople, and many Athonite monasteries took G.O.C. monasteries and churches under their protection, shielding them under the status of dependencies to avoid demolition or sealing. Athonite Monk Gordios Karagiannis founded the Monastery of Axion Estin in Varibobi, and Ioasaf Bellas founded the Monastery of the Nativity of the Theotokos in Thrakomakedones, Attica. The latter, a master craftsman in ecclesiastical silver and goldsmithing, adorned many churches and monasteries in our homeland with his masterpieces.

The blind Monk Dositheos Paraskevaidis, an excellent musician and cantor, is the one who improved the system of Byzantine notation for the blind. He also began his first steps as a Zealot Monk on Mount Athos.

Almost all male members of the Church of the G.O.C. considered it their duty to visit—if possible—annually the Zealot cells of Mount Athos in order to receive spiritual strength.

Zealot fathers, such as the renowned Avvakoum the Barefoot, Achilleios of Agiannana, the monks Charalambos and Ephraim Tambakides, and the Hieromonks Matthaios Raptis, along with other champions of virtue "about whom time would fail us to recount," taught through their words and—most importantly—by their example to the visitors on Mount Athos.

The faithful of our Church learned to pray with the prayer rope, to conduct family services using the prayer book, and to frequently attend vigils and other church services—practices foreign to the New Calendarists, who were increasingly distancing themselves from Orthodox Tradition. This is largely due to the positive influence of the Zealot Athonite fathers.

C. PERIOD 1972 - PRESENT

The positive contribution of the Zealot Fathers to the Holy Struggle of the G.O.C. continued unabated during the last decades up to the present. We will only mention, as examples, the contributions of the late Hieromonks Georgios Georgiou (the well-known Father George of Provata), Athanasios Katsounotos, Euthymios Katsampasakis, Monk Paisios Palaskas, Hieromonk Bartholomew (in Rodopoli, Attica), and many others.

However, during the same period, significant changes occurred on Mount Athos.

First, organized brotherhoods from Greece began to flock to and settle on Mount Athos. The new Athonite monks were imbued with a more worldly mindset than their predecessors. Then, European money began to flow abundantly into Athos. As a result, the "commemorating" Athonites distanced themselves even further from the Zealots and the G.O.C.

However, in 1972, another significant development took place on Mount Athos. The ecumenist initiatives of Patriarch Athenagoras had caused a great wave of reactions. Many monasteries of Mount Athos then ceased the commemoration of the Patriarch. They reinstated it, however, after the repose of Athenagoras, despite his successor, Demetrios, declaring during his enthronement that he would continue the same policies. Except for the Holy Monastery of Esphigmenou. This monastery continued to refuse to commemorate the Patriarch's name and maintained communion with the Zealot Athonites and the G.O.C. This was followed by trials, condemnations, expulsions, sieges of the Monastery, and other persecutions, all of which failed.

Over time, the Holy Monastery of Esphigmenou developed into the largest monastic center on Mount Athos, with more than 100 monks, most of whom were young. Despite the financial warfare against it, this monastery became internationally known for its hospitality and the uncompromising character of its monks.

At a time when European gold weakened the Orthodox sensibilities of the commemorating monks, and the ecumenist fervor of the Ecumenical Patriarch had reached its zenith, the Holy Monastery of Esphigmenou, now the center of the Zealot Fathers of Mount Athos, became the living reproach to the commemorating Athonites. Like a burning coal, it sears their consciences, constantly reminding them of the duty they fail to fulfill.

For this reason, they are eager to eliminate every source of zealotry on Mount Athos, starting with the venerable Holy Monastery of Esphigmenou.

The Patriarchate of Constantinople and the "Holy Community" of Mount Athos, in cooperation with the political authorities of our homeland, are working together to carry out their unlawful plans. Once again, Annas, Caiaphas, and Pilate are collaborating to execute their crime.

CONCLUSION

At the beginning of the past century, immediately after the calendar innovation, fewer than twenty Athonite fathers, leaving Mount Athos, managed within a few years to greatly expand the movement in favor of the traditional practices of the G.O.C., leading to the establishment of 800 "branches," that is, communities of devout Orthodox Christians, throughout the country.

Let today's persecutors of the Zealots carefully consider the consequences of fulfilling their intentions. More than 150 Zealot Hieromonks and Monks will flood the Greek Territory, who, with the halo of a confessor, will preach against the Established Church. The Church of the G.O.C. will be enriched. Large gaps in parish ministry will be filled, and new monasteries will be founded. The exiled Athonites will become a magnet for many devout New Calendarists, who will join the ranks of the G.O.C.

Furthermore, once Mr. Bartholomew is freed from the resistance of the Zealots, he will rush with unrestrained zeal to implement his ecumenist plans. This will drive a large portion of the conservative New Calendarists to join the Genuine Orthodox Church.

Mount Athos will lose its living conscience. The monks will be reduced to mere caretakers of historical monuments. Their voice on matters of faith will no longer be taken into consideration.

Mount Athos will deteriorate from a place of asceticism and sanctification into a picturesque tourist destination, much like Meteora.

As Genuine Orthodox Christians, we desire that Mount Athos remain a place of sanctification and asceticism, and not meet the inglorious fate of other monastic centers of Orthodoxy. However, if this should happen, let those who pursue it know that the Church of the G.O.C. will benefit.

Eternal be the memory of the ever-memorable, departed Zealot Athonite Fathers, and for the living, may the Lord be their helper. Amen.

 

Greek source:

https://sites.google.com/site/bishopphotios/%CE%B1%CF%81%CF%87%CE%B9%CE%BA%CE%AE-%CF%83%CE%B5%CE%BB%CE%AF%CE%B4%CE%B1/%CF%80%CF%81%CF%8C%CE%BB%CE%BF%CE%B3%CE%BF%CE%B9/%CE%B7-%CF%83%CF%85%CE%BC%CE%B2%CE%BF%CE%BB%CE%AE-%CF%84%CF%89%CE%BD-%CE%B6%CE%B7%CE%BB%CF%89%CF%84%CF%8E%CE%BD-%CE%B1%CE%B3%CE%B9%CE%BF%CF%81%CE%B5%CE%B9%CF%84%CF%8E%CE%BD-%CE%B5%CE%B9%CF%82-%CF%84%CE%BF%CE%BD-%CE%B9%CE%B5%CF%81%CF%8C%CE%BD-%CE%B1%CE%B3%CF%8E%CE%BD%CE%B1-%CF%84%CF%89%CE%BD-%CE%B3-%CE%BF-%CF%87

The Inspirers and Pioneers of the Innovation: “These two Luthers of the Orthodox Church” [1]

By St. Chrysostomos the New, Confessor and Hierarch († 1955)

 

The issue of the Ecclesiastical Calendar has deeper causes and motives.

The inspirers and pioneers of this matter, such as Patriarch Meletios of Alexandria [2] and Archbishop Chrysostomos of Athens, [3] lacking, unfortunately, a deep Orthodox spirit, became—knowingly or unknowingly—tools of foreign desires and aims, through which the unity of the Orthodox Churches and the Greek ideology’s bond with Orthodoxy are sought to be broken.

 

 

These two Leaders of the Orthodox Churches of the Patriarchate of Alexandria and of Greece, vying for the glory of being seen as reformist and modernized clerics, [4] lightly raised the banner of Ecclesiastical reforms, beginning with the alteration of the Ecclesiastical Calendar, which constitutes one of the unifying links of the Orthodox Churches and the compass of Divine worship and the works of the Patristic Faith and piety.

 

 

***

The idea of introducing the Gregorian calendar also into the Orthodox Church, as supposedly more perfect, was discussed some years ago even at the Ecclesiastical Congress, [5] which was convened in Constantinople by the then Ecumenical Patriarch Meletios, and which was wrongly called pan-Orthodox, [6] since only three autocephalous Orthodox Churches were represented therein—namely, those of Greece, Serbia, and Romania, the latter two even being represented not by clergy, but by lay delegates. [7]

At this Congress, in which the other Orthodox Churches—and in particular the three Eastern Patriarchates, namely those of Alexandria, Antioch, and Jerusalem [8]—shone by their absence, the introduction of the Gregorian calendar into Orthodox divine worship was initially approved in a wholly unstudied manner.

I say unstudied, because had they properly studied the issue, they would have seen that it had been condemned as un-Orthodox by Pan-Orthodox Synods convened in Constantinople in the years 1583, 1587, and 1593, [9] under Ecumenical Patriarch Jeremias II, [10] who characterized it—as we stated in our preface—as an innovation of Elder Rome, as a worldwide scandal, and as an arbitrary trampling of the Divine and Sacred Canons. [11]

Also, had they properly studied this ecclesiastical matter, they would have seen that the Gregorian calendar had also been condemned by all the Synods of the Orthodox Churches when the matter was reopened, and by Ecumenical Patriarch Joachim III, [12] whose responses to the Ecumenical Patriarchate we presented in our printed “Protest” to the Orthodox Churches. [13]

If, we say, the delegates of that Congress had studied all these things, they would not have dared to unilaterally make a contrary decision regarding the Ecclesiastical Calendar.

***

What renders the convocation of this Ecclesiastical Congress suspect is the fact that two clergymen of a heterodox church [14] also sat therein, and—as we have extrajudicial information—so too its un-Orthodox and Protestant-scented decision: that the acceptance of the Gregorian calendar by some Churches should not be considered by the others, who remain steadfast in the Patristic Julian Calendar, as a cause of Schism. [15]

Now, we have stated that this principle is un-Orthodox and Protestant, because in granting freedom to the individual Orthodox Churches to regulate matters of general Ecclesiastical nature and significance according to what seems good to them, it fosters the fragmentation of the Orthodox Churches and the division of Christians. [16]

For how, indeed, can the unity of the Orthodox Churches be preserved in this particular case, when some of them celebrate the feast of the Nativity and of Theophany at a time when others are still traversing the period of repentance and the forty-day fast, through which they prepare for the celebration of these great feasts?

Moreover, how can this Ecclesiastical innovation not constitute a cause of Schism, since it in fact severs the innovating Churches from the others and causes them to celebrate and to fast not together with the Orthodox Churches, but with the heterodox and heretical Western Churches? [17]

Precisely in order to avoid the fragmentation of the unity of the Orthodox Churches, the Holy and God-bearing Fathers, just as they prescribed by the Divine and Sacred Canons [18] the regulations concerning feasts and fasts to be held in reverence by all the Churches, so also they ordained by Canons [19] that the same order should prevail concerning the timing of the feasts and fasts for all the Churches—under threat, indeed, of the deposition of the clergy and the excommunication and anathematization of the laity.

And these things the Fathers of the Church established, in accordance with the command of the heavenly Teacher, who prayed to His heavenly Father for the unity of His disciples, [20] and with the exhortation of the Apostle Paul, who commands the following: “Fulfill ye my joy, that ye be likeminded, having the same love, being of one accord, of one mind,” [21] “endeavouring to keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace.” [22]

***

Is it then possible to suppose that the then Ecumenical Patriarch Meletios and Archbishop Chrysostomos of Athens were ignorant of these Divine and Sacred Canons, which, under penalty of deposition, excommunication, and anathema, establish the simultaneous celebration of the feasts and the simultaneous observance of the fasts by all the Orthodox Churches, for the sake of the unity of the Christian spirit and the bond of peace among the faithful?

Behold where lies the foreign Achilles' heel of Patriarch Meletios and Archbishop Chrysostomos: introducing a Protestant principle into the Orthodox Church, they lead Her onto the path of Protestantism, which grants full freedom to its adherents not only in the outward ordinances of worship, but also in the very faith and understanding of the Dogmas, having no Ecclesiastical Criterion for their interpretation. [23]

Such indeed did Patriarch Meletios Metaxakis and Archbishop Chrysostomos Papadopoulos dare to do—these two Luthers [24] of the Orthodox Church—who, under the pretext of modernization, did not hesitate nor shrink [25] from trampling upon decisions of Pan-Orthodox Synods and Apostolic and Synodal Canons, in order to draw near to the churches of the West through the calendar innovation, [26] thereby dividing Orthodoxy and annulling the centuries-old practice of the One, Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic Church.

In the face of their arbitrariness, we three Hierarchs rose up—namely, Germanos of Demetrias, [27] the undersigned Chrysostomos, formerly of Florina, [28] and Chrysostomos of Zakynthos [29]—being filled with a deep ecclesiastical spirit and perceiving the unbreakable bond between Orthodoxy and the Greek Church, we boldly and magnanimously raised—not the banner of rebellion against Orthodoxy and of the division of Christians, as they did—but the glorious and honored standard of the union of divided Orthodoxy and the restoration of peace to the Church on the foundation of the venerable Traditions and the Divine and Sacred Canons. [30]

In the face of their arbitrariness, we three Hierarchs stood upright—namely, Germanos of Demetrias, [27] the undersigned, Chrysostomos formerly of Florina, [28] and Chrysostomos of Zakynthos [29]—being filled with a deep ecclesiastical spirit and perceiving the unbreakable bond between Orthodoxy and the Greek Church, we boldly and magnanimously raised—not the banner of rebellion against Orthodoxy and the division of Christians, as they did—but the glorious and honored standard of the union of divided Orthodoxy and of the restoration of peace to the Church upon the foundation of the venerable Traditions and the Divine and Sacred Canons. [30]

Wherefore, through our renunciatory document [31] addressed to the Governing Synod, we called upon it to return to the ground of Orthodoxy by restoring the Orthodox Festal Calendar in Divine Worship.

 

NOTES

1. This text is a portion of the admirable work of the late Metropolitan Chrysostomos Kavourides, formerly of Florina (†1955), titled The Ecclesiastical Calendar as a Criterion of Orthodoxy.

This treatise of 87 densely printed pages was completed on 1/14 July 1935 by the Confessor Hierarch at the Holy Monastery of Saint Dionysios of Olympus, where he had been exiled by the innovators for his joining the Uninnovated Plērōma of the Patristic Ecclesiastical Calendar.

This enlightened and highly revealing work constitutes, according to the Martyred Hierarch, an “Apology,” in which “the deeper motives of this ecclesiastical issue” are investigated, and it is shown “what meaning and significance it holds for the entire Orthodox Church and how much harm it has caused the Orthodox Church” (p. 14).

The excerpted text is found on pages 14–17 of the first edition of the book, and the… comments, explanations, and general editorial work are ours.

2. Meletios Metaxakis (1871–1935). From the village of Parsas, Lasithi, Crete. A meddlesome, turbulent, great innovator and indisputably a Freemason, he served as Metropolitan of Kition in Cyprus (1910–1918), of Athens (1918–1920), of Constantinople (1921–1923), and of Alexandria (1926–1935). In the year 1908, he was expelled from the Holy Places by Patriarch Damianos of Jerusalem, together with Archimandrite Chrysostomos Papadopoulos, for anti-Hagiotaphite activity.

Methodios Kontostanos, Metropolitan of Corfu (1942–1967), had written of him:

“But the fugitive from the Holy Places, Meletios Metaxakis, formerly of Kition, of Athens, of Constantinople, and then of Alexandria—a restless and unsteady spirit of ambition, an evil genius—even from Alexandria did not shrink from attempting to impose himself as Patriarch of Jerusalem.”

(See: Dionysios M. Batistatos – Reprint, Editing, Introduction: Acts and Decisions of the Pan-Orthodox Congress in Constantinople, 10 May – 5 June 1923, pp. δ΄ and ε΄, Athens 1982. See also: Monk Pavlos of Cyprus, New Calendarism–Ecumenism, pp. 48–59, Athens 1982).

3. Chrysostomos Papadopoulos (1868–1938). From Madytos of Eastern Thrace. Professor at the University of Athens (1914–1923), having previously served as Director of the School of the Holy Cross in Jerusalem, as well as of the Rizareios School in Athens. A friend and collaborator of Meletios Metaxakis, he actively participated from the outset in the so-called Ecumenical Movement.

(See: Monk Pavlos of Cyprus, op. cit., pp. 59–63. See also at the conclusion of footnote no. 17 of the present article.)

4. The following statements by the same Hierarch-author in another part of his revealing treatise are quite interesting and illuminating:

“Indeed, had Patriarch Meletios and Archbishop Chrysostomos of Athens, while touring America to spread their modernist principles among the Orthodox populations, not been photographed in lay attire, Kemal’s Turkey would not have dared to abolish the modest and honored cassock of the clergy and replace it with the lay ‘rétincôte’ in which Meletios and Chrysostomos appear in the said photograph.”

(See The Ecclesiastical Calendar as a Criterion of Orthodoxy, p. 57. “Rétincôte” (riding coat): a garment, jacket, or overcoat for horseback riding.)

5. This concerns the self-proclaimed (Third Session, 18 May 1923) “Pan-Orthodox Congress,” which convened in the year 1923 (10 May – 8 June); see Dionysios M. Batistatos, op. cit.

For a good and concise critical position regarding the “Pan-Orthodox Congress,” see Grigorios Efstratiades, The Real Truth about the Ecclesiastical Calendar, pp. 5–10, Athens 1929.

6. Even the innovating New Calendar Church of Greece, in its “Report” to the Pan-Orthodox Great Council, acknowledges that:

“Although a discussion on the possibility of a change had previously taken place, and many Orthodox Churches had reached conclusions and decisions—of doubtful authority—unfortunately, however, the change was not made with study and preparation, but under the influence mainly of external factors”;

and “we characterized these conferences as of doubtful authority:

a) due to the percentage of participation by the Orthodox Churches—usually only two or three participated!

b) due to the status and competency of the representatives who took part in them (senators, astronomy professors, etc.),

c) due to the ease of their decisions (breaking the continuity of the week, acceptance of a fixed Sunday in April for the common celebration of Pascha, etc.).”

(See: Church of Greece, The Calendar Issue, pp. 7–8, Athens 1971, our underlining.)

Paradoxically, Professor Antonios Papadopoulos writes: “For the first time in our century, the Orthodox Churches gathered in Constantinople and the First Pan-Orthodox Congress was held.”

(See: Ant. Papadopoulos, Witness and Ministry of Orthodoxy Today, Ecumenical Studies I, p. 27, Thessaloniki 1983.)

We refer Professor Papadopoulos and all who are interested in the historical truth to the very enlightening—indeed, literally devastating as regards the un-Orthodox character of it—report and critique of the so-called self-proclaimed “Pan-Orthodox Congress”: in Monk Pavlos of Cyprus, op. cit., pp. 68–82.

We also refer to Aristotelis D. Delēmbasis, The Pascha of the Lord, pp. 667–674, Athens 1985, where it is written by way of conclusion: “Thus, the implementation of the festal innovation of the ‘Congress’ was not only not Pan-Orthodox, but was in fact opposed almost at a Pan-Orthodox level.”

We further refer to Metropolitan Irenaios of Kassandreia (†1945), Memorandum to the Holy Synod of the Hierarchy of Greece, convened on 14 June 1929..., pp. 19–21, § D, and subsequently §§ E–F.

A particularly devastating testimony regarding the non-existent authority of the so-called Pan-Orthodox Congress of 1923 is preserved in the Acts of the 17th Session of the Hierarchy of the Church of Greece (1 October 1937), where Metropolitan Irenaios of Kassandreia, in defense of the Patristic Ecclesiastical Calendar, is recorded as saying, among other things, that at the “Inter-Orthodox Synod” on the Holy Mountain (1930), the representative of the Serbian Church, Bishop Nicholas of Ohrid, “only then consented for the delegation of the Church of Serbia to sit in the Synod, when it was declared that the Inter-Orthodox Synod of the Holy Mountain had no relation whatsoever to the Pan-Orthodox Congress of Constantinople, which had made a definitive pronouncement concerning the correction of the calendar. Otherwise, the Serbs would have condemned the Ecumenical Patriarchate.”

(See Archimandrite Theokletos Strangas, E.E.I., vol. 3, p. 2.140. The “Inter-Orthodox Synod” refers to the well-known “Inter-Orthodox Preparatory Commission,” which was held on the Holy Mountain, at the Holy Monastery of Vatopedi, 8–23 June 1930, for the preparation of the convocation of a Pan-Orthodox Pre-Synod on the Holy Mountain on 19 June 1932, the Sunday of Pentecost. See also Ioannis N. Karmiris, D.S.M., vol. B, 2nd ed., pp. 979–980.)

This testimony is indeed devastating, for Bishop Nicholas of Ohrid (†1956), from Žiča, was distinguished for his high sanctity, learning, and social activity, and he undoubtedly expressed the Orthodox imperative.

(See: Archimandrite Elias Mastroyannopoulos, Theological Presentations, pp. 68–72, Athens 1986. Nicholas of Ohrid was proclaimed a Saint by the Serbian Church in 2003; see periodical Saint Cyprian, no. 314 / May–June 2003, pp. 227–229.)

The Confessor Hierarch, formerly of Florina, Chrysostomos, referring to this event on the Holy Mountain, preserves the very enlightening testimony that: “The representatives of the Orthodox Churches of Serbia and Poland, firmly adhering to the Patristic Ecclesiastical Calendar, regarding as essentially schismatic the representatives of the Churches that had innovated in the matter of the calendar, refrained, under the strict understanding of their Orthodox identity, from praying together with schismatics; and under the pretext of the language barrier, requested from the Holy Monastery of Vatopedi the Chapel of Paramythia for their private prayer!”

(See the booklet: Of Their Eminences the Metropolitans of the Autocephalous Orthodox Church of Greece—Germanos of Demetrias, Chrysostomos formerly of Florina, and Chrysostomos of Zakynthos, CLARIFICATION concerning the Issue of the Ecclesiastical Calendar, p. 6, Athens 1935).

7. Precisely, the composition of the “Committee of the Orthodox Churches” was as follows:

a) Representatives of the Church of Constantinople: Metropolitan Callinicus of Cyzicus and Professor of Theology at Halki, Mr. Vasileios Antoniades.

b) Church of Russia: The hierarchs residing in Constantinople—Archbishop Anastasius of Kishinev and Khotin (Gribanovsky, belonging to the Synod of Karlovci of the Russian émigré Church and later becoming its second Metropolitan, 1934–1964, successor to Anthony Khrapovitsky of Kiev, †1936), and Archbishop Alexander of the Aleutian Islands and North America (Nemorovsky, later Archbishop of Brussels and Belgium, 1936–1960).
(These participated “at the spontaneous invitation of the Church of Constantinople,” i.e., “not directly,” and therefore were not in essence official representatives of Russia.)

c) Church of Serbia: Metropolitan Gabriel of Montenegro and the Littoral (later Patriarch of Serbia, †1952), and Professor of Mathematics and Engineering in Belgrade, Dr. Milutin Milankovitch.

d) Church of Cyprus: Metropolitan Vasileios of Nicaea (later Ecumenical Patriarch, 1925–1929).

e) Church of Greece: Metropolitan Iakovos of Dyrrachium (Nikolaou, of Dyrrachium from 1911, later of Mytilene, 1925–1958).

f) Church of Romania: Archimandrite Iuliu Scriban and Senator Mr. Petru Drăghici.

(See Dionysios M. Batistatos, op. cit., pp. 11–12.)

8. At that time, the Patriarch of Alexandria was the renowned Photius (Peroglou, 1835–1925); of Antioch, Gregory IV (Haddad, 1906–1928: “After prolonged vacillation, in his final days he introduced the new calendar,” see Theological Encyclopedia of the Church [Θ.Η.Ε.], vol. 4, col. 751).

Damianos of Jerusalem (1897–1931) sent a telegram to the “Pan-Orthodox Congress” in which he declared: “...the replacement of the Calendar-Festal Calendar of the Church is in no way beneficial nor will it be accepted by our Patriarchate, inasmuch as it places us in a highly disadvantageous position in the Holy Shrines in relation to the Latins.”

(See Dionysios M. Batistatos, op. cit., p. 69.)

As for the absent schismatic Church of Bulgaria, a “lesson” on “ecclesiastical communion and unity above nationalism, supra-national,” was delivered to the delegates during the Fifth Session (23 May 1923) of the “Pan-Orthodox Congress” by “the wise hierarch of the Anglican Church, the bishop formerly of Oxford, the Most Reverend Gore”—according to Patriarch Meletios!...

(See Dionysios M. Batistatos, op. cit., pp. 66, 86, our emphasis.)

9. See Athanasios Komninos Hypsilantis, After the Fall, pp. 111, 113, 114, Constantinople 1870;
Dositheos of Jerusalem, Dodekabiblos, Book XI, Chapter VIII, p. 57, B. Rigopoulos, Thessaloniki 1983; Meletios of Athens, Ecclesiastical History, vol. III, pp. 402, 408, Vienna 1784; Philaretos Vafeidis of Didymoteicho, Ecclesiastical History, vol. III, Part I, pp. 124–125, Constantinople 1912; K.N. Sathas, Biographical Sketch of Patriarch Jeremias II, pp. 91–92, Athens 1870.

10. Jeremias II Tranos, Patriarch of Constantinople (1536–1595). He was born in Anchialos. One of the greatest Ecumenical Patriarchs after the Fall. Under him, the Russian Patriarchate was established (1589, 1593). He is considered as one who “most excellently represented the Orthodox Catholic Church before the heterodox,” and is especially known for his most important dogmatic correspondence with the Lutheran theologians of Württemberg at the University of Tübingen.

During his patriarchate, he rejected the Gregorian calendar, “repeatedly condemning the Gregorian reform, particularly through the synodical encyclical of 28 November 1583 together with Patriarch Sylvester (of Alexandria), and another addressed to Konstantinos Ostrogski, by his letter of February 1583 to the Doge of Venice, Nikolaos Daponte, by his letter to the Protestants in Tübingen from September 1589 from Moldovlachia, by another to the Metropolitan of Philadelphia in Venice, Gabriel Seviros, from 7 July 1590, as well as by the decision of the Synod convened in Constantinople in 1593.”

(See Ioannis Karmiris, Theological Encyclopedic Dictionary, vol. 6, col. 781).

11. At that time, the Archimandrite Chrysostomos Papadopoulos, judging favorably the Letter of Jeremias II of Constantinople to the Doge of Venice, Mr. Nikolaos Daponte, writes the following: “This letter of the Patriarch excellently characterizes the position which the Orthodox Church immediately assumed regarding the Gregorian modification of the calendar. It is regarded by her as one of the many innovations of elder Rome, a ‘global scandal,’ and an arbitrary trampling of ecclesiastical traditions.”

(See Archimandrite Chrysostomos Papadopoulos, The Gregorian Calendar in the East, in Ecclesiastical Herald, no. 145/31.3.1918, p. 135. For the Letter of Patriarch Jeremias II to the Doge, see in K. N. Sathas, op. cit., pp. 26–28).

12. Joachim III of Demitrias. He was born in Constantinople in the year 1834. The greatest of the Ecumenical Patriarchs after the Fall. He served as Patriarch first from 1878–1884, and again from 1901–1912. His Encyclicals of the years 1902 and 1904 constitute clear examples of ecumenistic influence for the first time in such an official manner and are forerunners of the 1920 Encyclical.

(See Very Reverend Protopresbyter Georgios Tsetsis, The Contribution of the Ecumenical Patriarchate to the Founding of the World Council of Churches, pp. 31 ff., 51, Katerini 1988).

13. The Confessor Hierarch refers to the following 32-page booklet: By the Most Reverend Metropolitans of the Autocephalous Orthodox Church of Greece, Germanos of Demetrias, the former Chrysostomos of Florina, and Chrysostomos of Zakynthos, A PROTEST to the Orthodox Churches regarding the unilateral and uncanonical introduction of the new calendar, Athens 1935.

On pages 10–13, there are excerpts from the responses of the Orthodox Churches of Jerusalem, Romania, Serbia, Montenegro, and Russia.

Strangely, the reference to the response of the Church of Greece is omitted, which, with Theocletos of Athens as President of the Holy Synod, wrote that the calendar “maintained for centuries in our Orthodox Church” participates in “religious and theological importance only to the extent that the Church’s festal calendar is connected with it,” and accepts the “reform of the calendar” “if all the local Orthodox Churches of the East are persuaded,” and “without disturbing the religious consciences of the simpler [faithful],” and “in mutual agreement with one another.”

(See the complete Responses of the above-mentioned Churches in Antonios Papadopoulos, Texts on Inter-Orthodox and Inter-Christian Relations, Oikoumenika II, pp. 17–74. The material from the Church of Greece is on p. 43).

See also portions of all the responses and the related critique in Gregorios Eustratiades, The Real Truth Concerning the Ecclesiastical Calendar, pp. 132–138, Athens 1929, where it is mentioned that the following Churches did not respond to the Patriarchal Encyclical of 1920:

“1) Alexandria, because at that time Patriarch Photios had no correspondence with Patriarch Joachim due to personal reasons;

2) Antioch, because relations were then severed (1897–1907, intervention of the Russian government, the ‘Arab question,’ effort to Arabize the Patriarchates of Antioch, Jerusalem, and Alexandria [note by the editor]);

3) Cyprus, because it lacked a President; and

4) Karlovci, because the Encyclical had not been sent to it.”

The Church of Bulgaria, we remind, had been declared and condemned as schismatic since 1872 (with this lifted in 1945).

Worthy of mention is the following opinion of Manouel Gedeon concerning the response of the Church of Greece: “The Church of Greece apparently did not understand why or what it was being asked, and uttered certain incoherent statements, whereas it should have said: either ‘I condemn the so-called Julian [calendar],’ or ‘I accept the Gregorian,’ or ‘I construct a new one.’”

(See: The Blessed Meletios Pegas, Patriarch of Alexandria, Letter to Silvester, Patriarch, Concerning the Paschalion, edition of Hieromonk Savvas, Prologue, p. 15, Athens 1924).

14. In the Fourth Session (21 May 1923), Patriarch Mr. Meletios proposed the presentation before the Congress of the Anglican bishop Gore, but ultimately, in the Fifth Session (23 May 1923): “His Eminence Bishop—former of Oxford—Mr. Gore enters, accompanied also by the accompanying priest Baxton, and takes a seat to the right of the Patriarch.” Subsequently, a very illuminating dialogue took place between the Patriarch and Gore, concerning the calendar, the joint celebration, the movement for union, the conditions of union, etc.

(See: Dionysios M. Batistatos, op. cit., pp. 66, 84–88).

15. Such a decision was indeed taken, unquestionably unorthodox, proposed in fact by Patriarch Mr. Meletios, with the support also of the Committee on the dogmatic-canonical aspect of the matter under Professor Mr. V. Antoniadis.

(See: Dionysios M. Batistatos, op. cit., p. 24, §7, and pp. 68–69).

Perhaps for this reason, Mr. Chrysostomos Papadopoulos of Athens was emboldened one year later and proceeded unilaterally with the change of the calendar, his prior hesitations having been dispelled—despite what he had upheld as Archimandrite in the well-known “Report” of the five-member “Committee on the Reform of the Calendar” of January 1923 to the Government: “None of these (the Orthodox Churches) is able to separate itself from the others and accept a new calendar without becoming schismatic in relation to the others.”

(See the “Report” in Government Gazette of the Kingdom of Greece, First Issue, No. 24/25.1.1923, § 8).

16. “For thus indeed is the Ecclesiastical law divinely commanded from above: that matters doubtful and contentious within the Church of God are to be resolved and determined by Ecumenical Synods, in agreement and with the judgment of the bishops who shine forth upon the Apostolic Thrones.” (St. Nikephoros of Constantinople, PG vol. 100, col. 597C).

The “First” of a Holy Synod is obliged “to do nothing without the unanimous opinion and consent of the whole body of bishops or of the Synod around him, or, in the case of the Ecumenical Patriarch and concerning general ecclesiastical matters, only after consultation and agreement with the primates of the Autocephalous Churches or by decision of Pan-Orthodox Conferences and Synods.”

(See Ioannis N. Karmiris, Orthodox Ecclesiology, p. 527, Athens 1973).

17. “Many Orthodox Churches did not accept the change of the ecclesiastical calendar (see Θ.Η.Ε., vol. 6, col. 49). In this way, Orthodoxy was divided. Anglicanism succeeded in dividing Orthodoxy twice: first, on the matter of the recognition of Anglican ordinations, and second—more evidently—on the calendar issue. The Ecumenism that makes much ado about ‘unity’ is, in fact, destroying even the existing unity of the Orthodox for the sake of union with the heterodox.”

(See Aristotelēs D. Delēmbasis, The Heresy of Ecumenism, p. 237, Athens 1972).

“This joint celebrating and joint fasting of the Orthodox together with the heterodox and the heretics of the West—despite the explicit holy-canonical prohibitions (see Canons 10, 45, and 65 of the Holy Apostles; 6, 9, 32, 33, 34, and 37 of Laodicea; 9 of Timothy of Alexandria)—was the aim of the so-called Ecumenical Movement from the very beginning.”

This was advocated in the unorthodox Patriarchal Encyclical of 1920: “By the adoption of a unified calendar for the simultaneous celebration of the great Christian feasts by all the Churches” (referring to both Orthodox and heterodox).

This was also declared by Meletios Metaxakis in his enthronement speech as Patriarch of Constantinople in 1922: “Let me place myself in the service of the Church from her first Throne, for the cultivation—as far as possible—of closer relations of friendship with all non-Orthodox Christian Churches of the East and West; and for the promotion of the work of union with those among them who...”

This was also proclaimed by Chrysostomos Papadopoulos of Athens at his enthronement: “For such cooperation and solidarity, the difficult—unfortunately—dogmatic union is not a necessary prerequisite, for the union of Christian love is sufficient…”

This was the aim of the "Pan-Orthodox Congress" of Constantinople in 1923:

“to serve, in this regard (a common calendar), pan-Christian unity,”

“the drawing together of the two Christian worlds of East and West in the common celebration of the great Christian feasts,”

“this point will concern us as members of the pan-Christian brotherhood,”

and the Anglican bishop Gore declared at the fifth session: “The second step will be taken by the calendar question, which will bring us to the common celebration of the feasts,” because “for us in the West, it would be a great spiritual joy to be in a position to celebrate together the great Christian feasts of the Nativity, the Resurrection, and Pentecost.”

(See: Ioannis Karmiris, D.S.M., vol. II, pp. 957–960; Vasileios Th. Stavridis, The Ecumenical Patriarchs, 1860–present, vol. I, pp. 467–478, Thessaloniki 1977; Monk Pavlos of Cyprus, loc. cit., pp. 53 and 60; Dionysios M. Batistatos, loc. cit., pp. 6, 57, 72, 87, 86, etc.)

Noteworthy: In the funeral oration on the death of Chrysostomos Papadopoulos, delivered by Chrysostomos of Zakynthos, the late hierarch was praised as: “having worked beyond human strength” for the forthcoming union “of all Christian Churches, for which” “he exerted so many efforts.”

(See: Archimandrite Theokletos A. Strangas, E.E.I., vol. III, p. 2160. In a footnote, the author notes: “That is, after Meletios, he too was a pro-ecumenist, and even pro-unionist.”)

18. See Holy Apostolic Canon 63; 52, 56, 79 of the Holy Sixth Ecumenical Council; 19, 20 of the Holy Local Council in Gangra; 37, 51 of the Holy Local Council in Laodicea.

(Note by us: The sacred author refers only to these Holy Canons.)

19. See Holy Canon 56 of the Holy Sixth Ecumenical Council; 19 of the Holy Local Council in Gangra:

"...that the Church of God throughout the whole world should perform the fasts in the same manner and order..." (Canon 56).

"If anyone... abolishes the traditional fasts which are observed in common and kept by the Church... let him be anathema" (Canon 19).

20. “(I ask)... for those who will believe in Me through their (the Apostles') word, that they all may be one, just as You, Father, are in Me and I in You, that they also may be one in Us, so that the world may believe that You sent Me.”
(John 17:20–21)

21. Philippians 2:2.

22. Ephesians 4:3.

23. "Protestantism, having limited the subjective appropriation of salvation solely to faith, having denied the Holy Tradition, and having inscribed only Holy Scripture and faith upon its banner (sola scriptura – sola fide), and on the other hand having disputed the authority of the historic Church and nearly rejected it along with every ecclesiastical authority—such as Holy Tradition, the Ecumenical Council, or the Pope—reserving only Holy Scripture, was consequently and fatally swept into unrestrained individualism and subjectivism, and went astray in many respects concerning the definition of dogmatic teaching, worship, and the ecclesiastical administration of the Protestants, thus becoming distanced not only from the Roman Catholic Church, but also from the Orthodox Catholic Church."

(See Ioannis N. Karmiris, Martin Luther, in Theological Encyclopedia, vol. 8, col. 363.)

24. Martin Luther (1483–1546). German Professor of Theology, from Eisleben in Saxony. Leader of the Reformation (October 31, 1517, Wittenberg, 95 Theses). He was excommunicated by the Pope (1521). The result of the struggles for the predominance of the Reformation in Central and Western Europe was the Protest—Protestantism (1529, Protestation Record, Speyer, Bavaria, Diet).

25. Ἀπορριγῶ (-έω): I am wholly seized by shuddering; I shiver, tremble, am terrified, afraid, hesitant, I dread to do something.

26. See footnote no. 17.

27. Metropolitan of Demetrias Germanos (Mavrommatis). From Psara. He served as Metropolitan of Demetrias from 14 July 1907. He was endowed with exceptional administrative gifts, rare spiritual strength, and virtues. In the year 1935, he was exiled to the Holy Monastery of Chozoviotissa in Amorgos. He fell asleep in the Lord on 20 March 1944.

28. Metropolitan Chrysostomos (formerly) of Florina (Kavouridis). From Madytos in Eastern Thrace (13 November 1870). A great ecclesiastical and national figure. He studied at the Theological School of Halki. An exceptionally eloquent orator and prolific author. He successively served as Metropolitan of Imbros, Pelagonia (Monastir), and Florina. He opposed the election of Meletios Metaxakis as Ecumenical Patriarch and was therefore persecuted. He undertook the pastoral care of those adhering to the Patristic Calendar (1935). He was exiled twice by the innovators. He fell asleep in the Lord in 1955.

29. Metropolitan of Zakynthos Chrysostomos (Dimitriou). From Piraeus (25 March 1890). A man of vast learning, multilingual, extremely prolific writer, and most knowledgeable in musicology. He served as Metropolitan of Zakynthos from 1934 and, by transfer, of Trifylia and Olympia from 1957. He reposed on 22 October 1958. In the year 1935, having joined the Patristic Calendar, he was exiled to the Holy Monastery of Rombos in Aetolia-Acarnania, where he remained for a short period; having repented, however, he returned to the innovation.

(See former Metropolitan of Lemnos Vasileios, Concise Episcopal History of the Church of Greece from 1833 to the Present, vol. B, pp. 195–196, 177–178, Athens 1953).

30. From this God-pleasing vision “of the union of fragmented Orthodoxy and the pacification of the Church” the sacred struggle of the Confessor Hierarch was inspired, and he frequently expressed this sincere longing.

Later, the blessed Leader would write: “Therefore, we have from the Canons the full right to temporarily, and prior to a Synodal decision, interrupt ecclesiastical communion with the Hierarchy and to temporarily form our own religious Community, until the valid and final resolution of the calendar issue by a pan-Orthodox Council”; and elsewhere: “We entered the struggle under the banner of the restoration of the Patristic Calendar in the Church, setting as our primary aim not the perpetuation and eternalization of the ecclesiastical division, but the peace of the Church and the union of Christians in the celebration of the feasts.”

(See former Metropolitan of Florina Chrysostomos, Refutation of the Calendar Treatise of His Eminence Metropolitan Dorotheos Kottaras..., p. 18, December 1947).

See also the admirable and deeply theological Encyclical of 18 January 1945 entitled: “Clarification of the Pastoral Encyclical of His Eminence, former Metropolitan of Florina Chrysostomos,” a separate booklet of 15 pages. Likewise, the epilogue of the letter of the Confessor Hierarch to Bishop Germanos Varykopoulos of the Cyclades (9 November 1937), in: Ilias Angelopoulos – Dionysios Batistatos, Former Metropolitan of Florina Chrysostomos Kavourides – Fighter for Orthodoxy and the Nation, pp. 83–84, Athens 1981.

Even in the Holy Seventh Ecumenical Council, it is repeatedly stated that it was convened “for the union and concord of the Church,” and: “that we might transform the disagreement of those who are separated into agreement,” and: “that, casting off the division of the Churches, we might draw the separated ones toward union.”

Finally, St. Tarasios himself, in his Apologetic to the People..., before his consecration, declared: “I see and behold the Church of our God, founded upon the rock, Christ, now torn apart and divided…”

(See Mansi, vol. II, pp. 758b, 881b, 880a, 724a).

31. The “Renunciatory Document” addressed “to the Governing Synod” of the “Church of Greece,” bearing the title “Protest and Declaration,” was delivered on May 14/27, 1935 by a Court Bailiff, while the Holy Synod of the innovators was occupied with resolving the issue that had arisen concerning the three Confessor Hierarchs—of Demetrias, of Florina, and of Zakynthos.

(See the “Renunciatory Document” in the present work of former Metropolitan of Florina Chrysostomos, pp. 11–13. See also Archimandrite Theocletos A. Strangas, E.E.I., vol. III, pp. 2036–2037).

 

Greek source: ᾿Ορθόδοξος ῎Ενστασις καὶ Μαρτυρία, no. 17 / October–December 1989, pp. 67–78.

Online: https://www.imoph.org/Theology_el/3a4008Empneustai.pdf

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