The move toward apostasy among many Orthodox in our day grows out of an incorrect understanding of the Church. Political ecumenism itself, the clearest expression of this misunderstanding, rests on the ignorance of our modernist theologians of the nature of the Church. This ignorance is not an academic one alone—an ignorance of the Fathers; it is also the result of a decline in spirituality. For to understand the Church, one must first understand the spiritual life which the Church serves.
Many of today's modernists have
covered over their ignorance of Orthodox ecclesiology by the creation of an
"official" Orthodoxy. The idea of an official Orthodoxy is especially
popular in America, where Greek Catholics returning to Orthodoxy have brought
with them a neo-Papal view of the Church, which they adopted from the Latins.
Many of the Protestant fundamentalists who have joined the modernist Antiochian
Church also seek a definition of the Church which rests on
"officialdom," partly in reaction to their correct misgivings about
the self-styled church organization which they created in the name of
Orthodoxy, the so-called Evangelical Orthodox Church.
In reality, officialdom has no
place in Christianity or Orthodoxy. The Church of Christ did not become valid
because it was recognized by the Roman Empire. Nor is an Orthodox Christian
authentic because he belongs to a "Patriarch." We are not a Church
built on political principles or on papal assumptions. Officialdom in Orthodoxy
is based on Apostolic Succession and on an adherence to Holy Tradition. It is a
spiritual and charismatic thing, since Apostolic Succession and Holy Tradition
describe the passing on of charismatic and spiritual power from Christ to the
Apostles to the Church's Hierarchs. Officialdom is not simply a statement of an
historical and legal dimension.
In America, where adherence to
Holy Tradition is practically non-existent and where spiritual maturity is
indeed lacking, there is a frantic attempt by modernists to be official. Thus
the old Metropolia, now the Orthodox Church in America, rushed off to the
communist-dominated Patriarchate of Russia several decades ago to remove from
itself the accusation of being uncanonical. The Evangelical Orthodox Church, a
purely bogus Protestant sect, likewise entered into the Antiochian Church
several years ago, also hoping to make itself an official Orthodox Church.
In the case of the old
Metropolia, it was before these moves an Orthodox Church, and its clergy were
clearly in Apostolic Succession. It had a number of traditional communities,
spiritual leaders with solid experience, and a tie to authentic Church tradition.
When it joined Moscow, somehow thinking it was then official, the Church was
besieged by modernism. The calendar was changed. Innovation became the order of
the day. A Church which I can remember as having old Priests who honored their
cassocks and who took seriously their roles as imitators of the Patriarchs
suddenly became a Church with clergy who can hardly be distinguished in
appearance, and often in belief, from Roman Catholic clergy. This Church gained
so-called officialdom at the cost of much of its Orthodoxy.
The Evangelical Orthodox Church
was accepted by the Antiochian Archdiocese—an excessively modernist
jurisdiction—by every innovation, even reaching to the irregular ordination of
the EOC clergy. Its Faithful are largely uncatechized. Many of the clergy and
Faithful have had no exposure to Orthodox traditions and have been taught to
revile them as "ethnic" or "foreign." In the name of
officialdom, the body of Orthodoxy has absorbed a foreign element which still
accepts and teaches ideas which are wholly inconsistent with the experience of
the Church. Officialdom has created a kind of Protestant Orthodoxy. And the sad
victims of this false creation are the sincere EOC clergy and Faithful.
The official Churches here in
America use their officialdom to try to silence us traditionalists, who stand
in protest to the innovation, apostasy, and political ecumenism which assault
the Orthodox Church. In a country where an "official" religion is
non-existent, they even use the media to attack us True Orthodox as "not
part of an official Patriarchate" or "separated from the official
Church."
Let us examine this phenomenon
for what it is. Recently I read a publication by "Orthodox People
Together," a group which promotes unity among Orthodox. This is an
admirable thing. But the publication reads like a Bible tract from a
fundamentalist Church. It is filled with talk about pastors, ministry, social
concerns, and the like, but is rather short on references to traditional
monasticism, fasting, the ascetic traditions of the Church,
self-transformation, and the like. An editorial letter about the female
diaconate, in fact, makes a strong and very important plea for the restoration
of this vital service for women in the Church. But in so doing, it suggests
that a liturgical role for the female deacon is not an important issue, as long
as hospital calls and service to the Faithful are made her official duties. Can
we imagine an Orthodoxy in which service to the Church relegates the liturgical
life to a secondary position and social service to a primary one?
There are modernist monasteries
in this country where monastic traditions are almost wholly unknown—though
made-up practices are touted as "ancient" and "Athonite."
Indeed, one monastery in the OCA is so marked by innovation that it even mocks
many traditional Orthodox practices. While True Orthodox monastics spend their
days in services, refrain from ever eating meat, have no personal money or bank
accounts, practice strict obedience, and pray for the world, many of the
modernists seek to create the kind of social monasticism in Orthodoxy which has
destroyed this institution in the Latin Church. One wonders how official this
modernist monasticism is.
As Old Calendarist resisters, we
are constantly assaulted as "uncanonical" and unofficial by the
errant Mother Church of Greece and the Patriarchate of Constantinople and its
Exarchates in the diaspora. Shaved Bishops, dressed like Roman Catholic
clerics, sitting down to meals of steak and wine on fast days, turn to us and
accuse us of being uncanonical. Embracing the heterodox with ecumenical love
and violating the Church's canons by praying and even communing with them, they
turn to us and spit, calling us people without love.
Indeed, can these people be
canonical just because the Greek State recognizes them? Or because the White
House door is open to the representatives of the Greek Archdiocese in North and
South America? Certainly not. Officialdom comes from a spiritual commitment to
the Church. And in this sense, it is we True Orthodox who are the official
believers. Were this not so, moreover, who would cover the sins of these New
Calendarists and modernists? Who would provide them refuge when they come to
their senses and seek Christianity, and not the world? Who would add to their
rightful claims to Apostolic Succession the complement which accrues to that
state: spiritual achievement?
The goal of Orthodoxy is not
unity in officialdom or recognition by the power of this world. It is the union
of man with God. And where this is the one goal of Christians, they are by
nature united. They come together in their strict adherence to the path towards
salvation which has been set before us by Holy Tradition. They need no worldly
gimmicks such as tracts, organizations, and public recognition to know who they
are. They are known by their deeds. And they need no redefinitions of their
Faith or of spiritual life, since they maintain communion with the myriad of
Saints who have walked the tried and true path of Holy Tradition to sanctity.
The official Orthodox whom we see
in this country look like the heterodox and are fast coming to believe what the
heterodox believe. They are becoming part of a world religion which will one
day demand that they reject True Orthodoxy. We traditionalists have tasted of
the first step towards that rejection in the unbelievable hatred that these
preachers of ecumenical love have for us. Their own actions are a sign to us.
True Orthodoxy is official. It is
official because it contains spiritual authenticity. All one need do is walk in
our Churches, visit our monasteries, or live with our people to know that,
despite our imperfections, the spirit of authenticity rests with us. All one
need do is visit the Churches and monasteries of the modernists—the few that
have any monasteries— and see the compromise, violations and ignorance of
tradition, innovation, and priorities of the social Gospel to know their
spiritual state. The lack of authenticity bursts forth clearly, cutting through
even the sincerity that underlies some of this ignorance of and deviation from
Orthodox practice.
Once one of our monks, a convert,
recited from memory Small Compline in Greek. A visiting modernist monk, who had
earlier expressed his admiration for us traditionalists but his misgivings
about our separation from the official Church, was then asked to say the
service in English. He was silent. He did not know the service. Nor could he
properly bless a meal. Nor did he know the proper way to fast. Nor did he know
any of the many unwritten practices of monastic tradition. I always remember
this young man when I think of officialdom and wonder if he knew how loudly his
silence spoke.
Source: Orthodox Tradition, Vol. VIII (1991), No. 2,
p. 7.