Monday, May 18, 2026

Schema-Bishop Peter (Ladygin): An Unshakable Pillar of the Catacomb Church

by S. V. Shumilo and V. V. Shumilo

 

 

The editorial board of Church News continues to acquaint readers with the life and struggles of outstanding ascetics and confessors of the Catacomb Church. Today we offer the opportunity to touch upon pages from the autobiographical memoirs of the Hieroconfessor Schema-Bishop Peter (Ladygin, +1957), the last canonical bishop of the TOC and, in fact, its First Hierarch until the end of the 1950s. Vladika Peter dictated these memoirs to his spiritual children in portions, when he was already half-blind. Their various parts, under conditions of strict secrecy, were written down from Vladika Peter’s dictation by different people and at different times. Some parts of these manuscripts, alas, have already been lost forever. But even what has survived is a priceless source, opening up the blank pages of the life of this outstanding Orthodox Hierarch-Confessor of the persecuted Catacomb True Orthodox Church.

Hieroconfessor Schema-Bishop Peter was born in the village of Bolshoy Seleg, Krasnogorsky District, not far from the city of Glazov (Udmurtia), on December 1 (Old Style), 1866. He was baptized as Potapy Trofimovich Ladygin. In his youth, during his service in the imperial army in the city of Kiev, he became the spiritual child of Elder Jonah (in schema Peter), who in turn had been the spiritual child and obedient disciple of St. Seraphim of Sarov. When P. Ladygin, upon completing his military service, asked Elder Jonah for a blessing to enter the Kiev Caves Lavra, Fr. Jonah, instead of Kiev, sent him in obedience to Jerusalem and to Athos (Greece), where in 1880 he was tonsured a monk with the name Pitirim. From 1889 he was a hieromonk. From 1910 he was the superior of the St. Andrew’s metochion of the Athonite monasteries in Odessa.

As early as 1901, the future Hierarch Peter was shown, in a subtle dream, his own future and that of the Russian Church. This is how the Confessor recalled it:

“At the Athonite metochion in Saint Petersburg, in the month of May, 1901, I saw a dream:

Two men of extraordinary beauty came to the metochion. And they said:

‘Get ready, come with us.’

I asked:

‘Where?’

They replied:

‘The Queen has appointed you to steer a ship; you must go out to sea.’

I said that I had never been a sailor and could not steer; I would sink the ship and drown myself. They said:

‘We cannot leave you, since the Queen has sent us; you must go.’

I went. We came to the Winter Palace. At the landing-stage on the Neva River there stood a beautiful sailing vessel, and we boarded this vessel. And suddenly the Queen, the Mother of God, came out and said to me:

‘You must bring this ship to the other side of the ocean. And all these people whom I entrust to you.’

I began to weep. I fell at the feet of the Mother of God and said:

‘I cannot.’

She said: ‘Do not fear; I Myself will be here with you,’ and immediately said to me:

‘Give the command for the vessel to go out to sea.’

And at once we sailed away from the shore, and the vessel quickly went along the Neva River. We came out into the sea. And a terrible storm arose on the sea. Our vessel was moving swiftly, and the storm had no effect on it. In the sea we encountered two enormous ships, and on them a multitude of people, full vessels, and these ships were being tossed with all their might by the waves in different directions. Terrible waves were coming from every side. You think, now they will plunge them into the abyss of the sea. We quickly passed by them; they remained in the midst of the sea, and soon after this we arrived at the shore. On the shore there was such beauty that it is impossible to describe: various trees, fruits. We all climbed out of the ship onto the shore, and the Mother of God said to me:

‘And now we have crossed the terrible abyss.’

With that I woke up. I told Father Hieroschemamonk Ambrose about this. He said to me:

‘Write all this down, and for the time being say nothing to anyone. In a grievous hour the Mother of God will entrust you with governing Her flock.’”

This prophetic vision came to pass in the years of the godless persecutions, when after the 1950s Vladika Peter (Ladygin) remained the only canonical bishop of the True Orthodox Church of Russia and its de facto First Hierarch.

In 1918, Archimandrite Pitirim (Ladygin) took part in the enthronement of St. Patriarch Tikhon. With the blessing and by special commission of the Patriarch, in 1918 he traveled to Constantinople for an audience with the Ecumenical Patriarch, during which he delivered St. Tikhon’s Epistle concerning the restoration of the patriarchate in the Russian Church. Having received in Constantinople the reply epistle of the Ecumenical Patriarch, he delivered it personally to Patriarch Tikhon.

In 1923, the Holy St. Andrew Athonite metochion in Odessa was closed, and Fr. Pitirim was arrested by the Bolsheviks. After spending some time in prison, Father Pitirim and the brethren of the monastery were forced to move to the farmstead of Yeremeyevka, where they cultivated the land, engaging in agricultural work. Soon Fr. Pitirim was again arrested and sent by prisoner convoy into exile in the Ufa region. On the way he stopped in Moscow, where he managed to see St. Patriarch Tikhon and other Orthodox hierarchs. As Schema-Bishop Peter later recalled: “I visited St. Patriarch Tikhon; he asked me, under holy obedience, to become Bishop of Yeram, but I was very weak, and I asked His Holiness to allow me to stay in my homeland and recover my health; but I was detained there, and His Holiness departed to the Lord in March 1925.” While already in exile, in the Ufa region, he founded a secret skete in the forest. For his steadfastness in true Orthodoxy, his loyalty, and his invaluable assistance to the Patriarch and the Russian Church, His Holiness Patriarch Tikhon nevertheless issued a decree elevating him to the episcopal rank, sending it by letter to Archbishop Andrei (Prince Ukhtomsky) of Ufa, and in the Urals the exiled Fr. Pitirim became a bishop. By the will of St. Tikhon and at the insistence of the church people, on June 8, 1925, he was consecrated Bishop of Nizhny Novgorod (the Ufa district) and Urzhum by Archbishop Andrei (Prince Ukhtomsky) of Ufa and Bishop Leo (Cherepanov) of Nizhny Tagil. This took place secretly, at Tedzhen Station (Tajikistan), the place of exile of Vladika Pitirim. But already in 1926 Vladika Pitirim was under investigation in the case of the Ufa clergy. On April 21, 1927, he was tonsured into the schema with the name Peter. He did not recognize the apostate Declaration of Metropolitan Sergius (Stragorodsky) and his uncanonical Synod.

For his faithfulness to True Orthodoxy and his refusal to recognize the Soviet church, he was repeatedly subjected to arrests, imprisonments, and threats of execution. In December 1928, he was again arrested in connection with the case of the “branch of the TOC.” He was sentenced to three years in a corrective labor camp. From 1931 to 1933 he was imprisoned. After his release, from 1934 to 1937 he hid in Glazov. From 1937 to 1940 he lived illegally in Kaluga, and from 1940 to 1945 in Beloretsk (Bashkiria). In 1945 he was arrested in Ufa. For belonging to the TOC, he was sentenced to five years’ exile in Central Asia. There he escaped and hid in the mountains. From 1949 to 1951 he hid in Belarus and in the Kuban.

Hieroconfessor Schema-Bishop Peter (Ladygin) remained to the end of his days a faithful hierarch of the persecuted Catacomb Church. Vladika Peter united various groups of catacomb believers on the territory of the USSR, for whom he ordained many clergy in secret. This outstanding hierarch of the Catacomb Church ended his much-suffering life in complete isolation and under covert KGB surveillance, as a very old man, and moreover blind, at the age of 91 — on February 6 (Old Style), 1957 (according to other information, June 2, 1957), in the city of Glazov (Udmurtia). He was buried in the city cemetery. On the grave there was left only a brief inscription: “Here rests the servant of God Peter.” The catacomb believers who care for the grave of Hieroconfessor Peter testify to cases of healing from illnesses after prayers at the grave of the Schema-Bishop.

 

Translated from the original Russian.

Why do we turn to the saints if God hears us directly?

Mykyta Rakytnianskyi | May 13, 2026

 

 

Prayer to the saints is a plea for a hand in the darkness, when we ourselves can no longer rise toward God.

To many, it seems that Heaven is arranged like a government office. God cannot be reached directly, so one has to file a petition with the relevant ministry – to St. Nicholas for travel matters, to St. Tatiana for student concerns, to Blessed Matrona or the Great Martyr Panteleimon for health.

If God is all-powerful and hears every word, why do we need intermediaries, long lists of names, troparia, akathists? Why not simply tell God everything without witnesses? The answer to this question is not found in canons; it lies in the realm of our spiritual life.

God is not a president

The habit of projecting earthly bureaucracy onto Heaven is remarkably stubborn. The state has taught us: you cannot get through to the head of state; first comes the office, then the clerk, then the deputy minister, while the president himself is far away and unreachable. And so a person leaves the passport office and enters a church – and inside, the same mechanism is already at work. “I will never get through to God; He is too busy. I’ll pray to St. Nicholas – he handles these matters.”

But God is not busy with detached management of galaxies.

Any clerk at a district clinic is obliged to accept our paperwork – while God attends to each of us continuously, with a fullness of attention that not even any mother possesses.

He has no queue and no office hours. His door is always open. So why, then, do we need the saints?

The lesson of Cana of Galilee

The answer comes in the scene of a village wedding in Cana of Galilee. A poor family. In the middle of the feast, the hosts run out of wine, and a simple human shame appears: there is nothing left to pour for the guests. And then the Mother of God says to Her Son: “They have no wine” (John 2:3).

What follows is strange. Christ replies: “My hour has not yet come” (John 2:4). In other words, this miracle was not part of His messianic plans. And yet He performs it. Why? Because His Mother asked Him.

Not because God did not know – He knows all things. But because the love of a righteous heart for people caught in embarrassment, according to the experience of the Church, is able to enter into God’s plans and draw a miracle after it.

God responds to the compassion of the Mother of God and does what, it seems, He had not intended to do.

This is the simple key. It matters to God that love should flow between people. And He is ready to work miracles in response to that current of love.

The faith of friends

The house in Capernaum where Christ was teaching was packed full – there was no way in, neither through the door nor through a window. Four men brought their paralyzed friend on a stretcher and saw that they could not enter. Then they did something astonishing: they climbed onto the roof, tore it open, and lowered the stretcher right down before the Teacher.

“And when Jesus saw their faith, He said to the paralytic, ‘Son, your sins are forgiven you’” (Mark 2:5). Not “seeing his faith.” Seeing their faith – the faith of the four men who carried their friend in their arms and tore open someone else’s roof.

The paralyzed man could not believe – most likely, he lay there in despair. His friends believed. And Christ healed him because they did not give up.

The saints are those very friends who hold our stretcher when we ourselves lie paralyzed.

We have no strength to rise toward God; perhaps we do not even have faith. But they believe for us. And their faith often has greater weight precisely when we are powerless.

The antimension and relics

In the first centuries, Christians hid in the catacombs of Rome. They celebrated the Liturgy underground, in corridors where niches had been carved into the walls for the bodies of murdered martyrs. And here is the astonishing thing: the first Christians consciously chose the stone tomb of a martyr for the Eucharist. They served on it, turning the burial slab into an altar.

The first Christians did this because they believed that the martyr beneath the altar was there beside them and shared in the Table. The wall between the world of the living and the world of the departed, which seems impenetrable to us, was for them as permeable as vapor.

This tradition is alive today. Every Orthodox antimension – the rectangular cloth on which the Liturgy is celebrated – contains a sewn-in particle of a martyr’s relics. Without it, the Eucharist cannot be served.

In every church where a service is taking place, beside the Holy Table lies a tiny fragment of bone from a person who gave his life for Christ. It is there as a sign of the holy martyr’s presence at that service and of his spiritual communion with us.

This is called koinonia – communion, fellowship, participation. It is the word the New Testament uses to describe the Church as a living organism with one circulatory system. And in that system there is no boundary between the living and the departed.

The icon as a window into Heaven

In the iconographic tradition, saints are always depicted facing forward or slightly turned – so that their eyes can meet the eyes of the one praying. Demons, executioners, and Judas are painted in profile, with only one eye and half the face visible. The refusal to look into the eyes in iconography is a refusal of communion. The saint is always turned toward us. An icon is, from the beginning, made as a window for a two-way conversation.

As St. Silouan the Athonite said, in Heaven everything lives and moves by the Holy Spirit. But on earth, too, there is that same Holy Spirit: He lives in our Church, in the Sacraments, in Scripture, in the souls of believers. The Holy Spirit unites everyone – and therefore the saints are close to us. According to the elder’s testimony, when we pray to them, they hear our prayers in the Holy Spirit, and our souls feel that they are praying for us.

This is the experience of St. Silouan, who spent years praying at night in his Athonite cell. And it is the experience of anyone who, even once, has asked with childlike simplicity a departed, God-loving grandmother: “Grandma, pray for us” – and then received in response an inexplicable warmth in the heart, as though one had spoken with a beloved person face to face.

A hand in the darkness

Psychologists observe that modern people have thousands of “friends” on social media, instant access to any corner of the world – and yet an unprecedented loneliness. When things become truly frightening, it turns out there is no one to call.

Christianity insists: the closest, most empathetic, and most unfailing friends are those who died centuries ago. They prove more real and nearer than the contacts in a smartphone, and they have no connection problems.

When you are sitting in a cold basement during an air raid alert, there are things others do for us: air defense protects the sky, rescuers are ready to go out at any moment, neighbors are anxious nearby. But in those moments, you need something else as well: for someone on the bench simply to take your hand. Simply to place a warm palm over yours, giving you hope.

When we pray to the saints, we ask for the support of family. God is already with us. But God has made us, together with the saints, one great family. And in a family, when one person is suffering, the others come near, place a hand on the shoulder, and stand beside them. Silently. Simply so that we know: we are not orphans.

 

Source:

https://spzh.eu/en/chelovek-i-cerkovy/93096-why-do-we-turn-to-the-saints-if-god-hears-us-directly

Elder Porphyrios on the Heterodox


 

“I was told that your Elder [St. Justin Popović] was a zealous man, a fighter, with a fiery nature. He gave his all for Christ. He was fearless towards everyone and towards the Communists also. Some of his spiritual children and admirers strive to emulate him in confrontations there [in Serbia]. They voice their opinions with very caustic words. But I would like to say the following.  He was a holy man, and as such, could act that way. But not the others, who albeit zealous, are inclined to confront their opposition and say “Let them cut off my head – I will remain steadfast and will not budge.”  It is easy to say “let them cut off my head” – it is a good thing – but that is not how Christ’s labours should be undertaken.  Fr. Justin was something else. He had that Outspokenness; he could say things like that, but I don’t think that you should. I would advise you, Fr. Irinej [Bulović], to follow a somewhat different course. For Christ’s work to be achieved, so that even atheists, communists and others may be saved, you should not be confrontational with them. Do not stand up to them and do not provoke them.”

Well, you can imagine at my age at the time, and with my youthful euphoria, how those words sounded to me!  You see, we had that simple, black-and-white image of the prevailing situation: there are persecutors here – persecutors of the Church – and we are here to defend Her is what we believed. And now, all of a sudden, the Elder was reminding us that Christ also wants the salvation of those persecutors and enemies, as much as He wants ours and the others.

“Don’t say too many things”, he continued to advise me. “Don’t infuriate them, don’t make them your enemies, because that way, they will isolate you and you will not be able to do anything thereafter. Many will come there; they will create various problems for you, and they will say all sorts of things to you.  Do not reciprocate, do not try to defend yourself and give explanations about our faith. For as long as they are attacking you, you should remain silent and pray.  Pray secretly. Even if someone spits on the icon of Christ in front of you, you should remain silent.  Do not defend Christ. Christ does not need you to defend Him.  What do you think about all this?  Does Christ want atheists and communists to be saved also, or not?”

“Of course He does, Elder” I replied.

“Well, that is what Christ wants: for those who also deny Him to become acquainted with Him, so that they too might be saved.”

(…)

That atheist who spat on Christ’s image, may very well think to himself on his way home: “Imagine, I said all those things to that priest; I even spat on something so sacred to him, and yet, he never said a word; he never retaliated, even though he could have.” And it is not improbable that he might come and find you, and say:  “I need you, for my soul”.  That way, it is quite possible that you might win him for Christ, and that is far more important than displaying heroism and outspokenness.  You should work secretly, noiselessly, and not become involved in politics.  Preach Christ. Speak only about Him.  That is the only way you will be of benefit to others – by saving people; even when you find yourself in the company of Christians who might be talking about different matters and expressing their own opinions, which you may not agree with or have another position, another opinion – and it may well be a better one. You should not seek to voice your opinion however. You can give your opinion, humbly, without imposing it on others, but only when asked for it. That is how people are best benefited. They will then say: “Did you notice how well he spoke? And if we hadn’t asked him, he would have kept silent.”

(…)

“Over there”, he said, “you also have heterodox and other religions. You must behave to everyone with subtlety, with love. Do not offend anyone. You must perceive and address all of them as brethren – even those who belong to other religions.  We are all children of the same Father.  Do not comment on the beliefs of those who belong to other religions.”

 

- Elder Porphyrios Kafsokalyvitis, How Should We Behave Towards Atheists or Heterodox?, The Sacred Monastery of Chrysopigi, Chania, Crete, 2008, pages 286-287 & 297.

 

 

Translation (slightly corrected): http://www.oodegr.com/english/psyxotherap/behaviour2atheists.htm

The Romanian Patriarchate actively collaborates with the WCC for the promotion of the heretical theory of the “visible unity of the Church.”

Hieromonk Lavrentie | May 18, 2026

 

 

The most important media channels of the Patriarchate reported on the visit of the “Faith and Order” Commission to Romania, to Sibiu and Bucharest, for the promotion and implementation of the ecumenist program among us. Thus, both the Basilica agency

(see: https://basilica.ro/ips-nifon-palatul-patriarhiei-vizita-delegatiei-comisiei-credinta-si-constitutie-cmb/)

and Ziarul Lumina,

(see https://ziarullumina.ro/actualitate-religioasa/stiri/delegatie-a-consiliului-mondial-al-bisericilor-in-vizita-la-patriarhia-romana-206150.html)

as well as the Trinitas media trust,

(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MhwKDxBz_tU)

presented in laudatory terms the itinerary of the aforementioned WCC commission.

The Heresy of the Incomplete Church

Unfortunately, the poisoned apple is explicitly displayed by Metropolitan Nifon in the words: “The ecumenical movement has the purpose of promoting dialogue among the various churches that make up the World Council of Churches in various fields, all of which must lead to the realization of the visible unity of the Church of Christ the Savior. Orthodoxy strongly affirms its values.” As though the Church had lost her unity and were fragmented into several divided parts. In other words, all the heresies and sects of today are viewed as members of the Church of Christ in a rift which we are called to overcome, that is, to absorb it and to pursue a dissipated, illusory unity.

This conception is in flagrant contradiction with the Orthodox Creed in “one, holy, catholic, and apostolic” Church, identified only with the Orthodox Church. The right-glorifying faith is holy and unshaken, preserved pure from heresies within Orthodoxy. The amalgam of a confused religion in which the truth is possessed by the various confessions in a syncretistic manner, in an undifferentiated fusion, is an attack against the revealed and clear truth, and a renunciation of the revelation of the Lord and of the Gospel.

But statements of this sort by Metropolitan Nifon are already no longer anything new after the one at Busan in 2013, for which there was not even a retraction. We must beware of this leaven of teaching, even if it is officially promoted and encouraged as the abomination of desolation in the holy place.

This branch theory, which asserts in various ways that the Church of Christ is divided within itself into several factions, contradicts true ecclesiastical history, namely, that the heretics and the heresies promoted by them were excluded from the bosom of the Church through official anathematization within the Ecumenical Councils, or the Local Councils in the first centuries. They did not remain in her after excommunication, but are entirely broken off.

Dialogue with them makes sense even without initially requiring them to recognize us as the only authentic Church, because we cannot impose the right teaching on someone from the beginning, but only later through convincing arguments. However, it is absurd for us ourselves to deny from the outset the fact that we are the Church of Christ fully, unitedly, and exclusively, and to conduct a dialogue from this already apostate position.

The Trojan Horse of the WCC: The Influencing of Orthodoxy by Heretics

Metropolitan Job of the Ecumenical Patriarchate emphasized the important role played by the Patriarchal Encyclical of 1920 in laying the foundations for the later World Council of Churches (1948). Moreover, Metropolitan Germanos composed that text at the time under the influence of Swedish religious and political leaders who had laid the foundations of the first ecumenist associations in 1910.

Unfortunately, even some Saints were initially drawn into these dialogues and searches for unity, such as Nikolai Velimirovich, who sent a written paper to the Lausanne Conference in 1927 without being present,

(see https://www.livingorthodoxtradition.org/sacraments)

and, later, Dumitru Stăniloae or Fr. Georges Florovsky. Nevertheless, the subject of the ecumenical movement was clarified by many other contemporary Holy Fathers, such as Paisios the Athonite, Justin Popović, Seraphim Rose, John Maximovitch, and even by those whom I named previously and who dissociated themselves from it.

The appearance of dialogue can, and indeed sometimes does, deceive even those who are experienced, as can be seen. But precisely for this reason, the subject of ecumenism must be treated and resolved in an Orthodox manner, without compromises, in the spirit of the right faith, not of Christian and even religious syncretism. And the harmfulness of this so-called dialogue consists in the fact that it begins from false premises, namely from the renunciation of declaring ourselves to be the only Church of Christ in the midst of wolves, that is, of the so-called heretical “Churches.” This departure means that it is no longer a matter of dialogue, but of negotiating the faith, or rather of outright selling it and betraying it.

For a sound approach to the subject of ecumenism, I recall the Romanian Orthodox position, and not only that, when the question of dialogue and union with heretics was first raised in 1902: The Response of the Local Orthodox Churches to the Encyclical of the Ecumenical Patriarchate.

(see https://theodosie.ro/2022/05/16/enciclica-patriarhala-din-1902-zorii-ecumenismului-in-ortodoxie-raspunsul-bisericilor-ortodoxe-de-atunci-inclusiv-al-celei-romane/)

[Romanian response to the Encyclical of 1902, translated from the above Romanian link: The Church is obliged to guard the truth of the faith, but also all the secondary teachings. She also guides those who have gone astray to return to the true path. Their return is proof that the Church grows and is strengthened only on the foundation that has been laid, which is Christ. “Therefore, where the true Shepherd is, there also is and will be His flock; and where the Head is, there, and not elsewhere, will the body also be.” Those who did not listen to the Shepherd’s voice in order to remain in His flock have lost the right judgment of the gentle Master and have a share in many misfortunes; but the Church calls them back, since she is the guardian of the true teaching. The history up to the division between the Church of the East and that of the West, provoked by the latter, is known. Likewise, the phases through which the “Roman Catholic Church” passed are also known, until the Protestants split off and each laid another foundation for himself, different from the Orthodox one. Since then, each of these has sought to dominate the Church of the Lord, the Orthodox Church. Consequently, we cannot overlook even a single syllable of the teaching of the faith, nor do we have any point of meeting with them. “The path of the Holy Orthodox Church is very smooth and without any obstruction. There is no need for anyone to make it cleaner than it is.” If anyone wishes to come onto this path, we show it to them, but “we do not accept proposals as regards the manner of entry, because it is the sincere faith” received from the Lord Jesus through His disciples and dogmatized in the seven Councils. If the heterodox set conditions as to how they are to be received, then we must defend our faith, knowing that the Lord is powerful to bring others into the kingdom in place of the sons unworthy of the table of the heavenly Bridegroom, and then to open their minds and hearts as well, so that they may be received with humility into the flock of the Shepherd.

The Old Catholics cannot be received through concessions, but through repentance. After their separation from the Church of Rome, they introduced unacceptable reforms, such as the abolition of confession and of the fasts. They also made all sorts of agreements with the Anglicans at Bonn in 1874 and 1875, and at Lucerne in 1892, and they negotiate the faith. Orthodoxy recognizes no changeable confession apart from the one that contains her dogmatic and moral truth.

The calendar should remain unchanged, because it is impossible for the canonical ordinances not to be affected. If God wills something else, He will enlighten us through the Holy Spirit as to what we should desire and what we should do.]

Those who believe that there is no real danger threatening us from the side of the heresies should also look at these official receptions of the members of the WCC and at the un-Orthodox theological framework in which they are carried out.

 

Romanian source:

https://theodosie.ro/2026/05/18/patriarhia-romana-colaboreaza-activ-cu-cmb-pentru-promovarea-scopului-eretic-al-unitatii-vazute-a-bisericii-vizite-oficiale/

 

 

 

Sunday, May 17, 2026

The Light of Orthodoxy and the Darkness of Ecumenism

Nineteenth Gathering for Orthodox Awareness [1]

Sunday of Orthodoxy

Bishop Klemes of Gardikion | February 20 / March 4, 2012

[Now Metropolitan of Larissa and Platamon]

 



Right Reverend Holy Hierarchs;

Reverend Fathers and Mothers;

Beloved brothers and sisters in Christ:

 

I

“There is no communion between light and darkness”

With the blessing of our ailing Metropolitan and Father Cyprian, and at the behest of our Standing Holy Synod, I enter with devout fear into the light of pristine Orthodoxy on the day of its splendid triumph over heresies. The Light of Orthodoxy is none other than the Light of Christ, which—as we exclaim at the Divine Liturgy of the Presanc­tified Gifts—“shineth upon all”! In the Hymns of Light (Φωταγωγικά) we seek Divine illumination from the Source of Light: “As Thou art the Light, O Christ, illumine me in Thee, by the intercessions of the Theotokos, and save me.” [2]

“God is light, and in Him is no darkness at all.” [3] This is Divine Light, true and uncreated, joyous Light, Grace and Truth, which came and manifested itself in Christ, in order to clothe us in the pri­mal raiment of incorruptibility. It is the Light of the Transfiguration, the Resurrection, and Pentecost, the eschatological Light of Life that knows no evening. Communion with the Divine Light presupposes that our eyes are open to faith and virtue. The soul of a man should not be apportioned or divided between Truth and error, between virtue and sin. At a moral level, we cannot perform at the same time deeds of light and deeds of darkness, nor can we serve “two masters.” [4] Conversely, at the level of faith, it is not possible for us to become “unequally yoked,” [5] that is, to form close bonds with heretics—at an ecclesiastical level, of course, not at a social level. Dialogue in good faith is not forbidden, but confusion and admixture are to be reject­ed.

“What communion hath light with darkness?” [6] asks the Holy Apostle Paul. And Theodore the Studite, the Holy Confessor of the Light of Truth, responds decisively: “There is no communion be­tween light and darkness”! [7]

It is in Holy Orthodoxy that the “marvellous” light of God [8] re­sides and is poured forth and diffused, and those who are truly bap­tized and illumined in an Orthodox manner become “the light of the world” [9] and “sons of light,” [10] and walk in truth and love “as chil­dren of light.” [11] And when these same people fall, or when they call others into “the inheritance of the saints in light,” [12] they realize that there is no other path [forward] than repentance. “For repentance,” says St. Symeon, the New Theologian of the Divine Light, “is a door that leads out of darkness and into the light. Therefore, he who has not entered into the light has not properly passed through the door of repentance; for, if he had passed through it, he would have come into the light.” [13]

Faithful and prudent servants of Christ keep the flame of the Grace of Christ alight in their souls, in love and thanksgiving, and await the Bridegroom of the Church with vigilance and attention. This immaterial and Divine Fire enlightens souls, but it also tests them. It is truly “the power of resurrection and the effectual working of immortality,” according to St. Macarios of Egypt, [14] but it is also “the banishment of demons and the destruction of sin.” Those who are illumined in Orthodox fashion it attracts, warms, and strength­ens, whereas those impenitently held captive in the “darkening” [15] of sin, error, and heresy it repudiates, puts to shame, and dismisses.

On the night of Holy Pascha, in our compunctiously darkened Churches, shortly before the proclamation of the Resurrectional ac­clamation, “Christ is Risen; Indeed, He is Risen!” the serving Priest comes out of the Altar with his lit torch, in order to impart the Di­vine Light, chanting majestically and joyously: “Come, receive the Light, from the unwaning light and glorify Christ, Who is risen from the dead!” An inexpressible joy and emotion then permeates the en­tire being of the worshippers of Christ’s glorious Resurrection. And, as we all know, every year the Conqueror of death and the Destroy­er of Hades, our Lord and God, works the most radiant miracle of the manifestation of the Holy Fire as early as noon on Great Satur­day, at the All-Holy Sepulchre in the Church of the Resurrection in the Holy City of Jerusalem. All who have been present at this sacred rite know from experience the indescribable culmination of their prayerful anticipation, as well as the fulfillment of this Divine Mys­tery, which astounds and wondrously transforms the participant. It has always constituted not only the triumph of the Resurrection of our Lord, but also the boast of the Orthodox and the glory of our Faith against unbelievers, those of other religions, and the hetero­dox. The Lord gives the Holy Light to the Orthodox, because they alone uphold and behold, liturgically and spiritually, the True Light, and not to the misbelievers, who have distorted the Truth of the re­vealed Faith that has been handed down to us and who are trapped on gloomy paths that lead nowhere.

It appears, however, that the heretical Latins have not taken this into serious consideration, though they have learned from events not to tempt the Lord! We pray sincerely that the ecumenists of our day might learn and understand this, so as to emerge from their befud­dlement and return in repentance to the Divine Light of the Truth, in order that we might verily celebrate a new Victory of Orthodoxy!

II

The Holy Light did not appear when the Latins controlled the Holy Sepulchre

We find ourselves in June of 1099, when some thousands of the Pope’s Crusaders, during their First Crusade for the liberation, as they alleged, of the Holy Places from the Muslim infidels, arrived outside the walls of Jerusalem. After a siege of forty days, on July 15, they entered the Holy City and indulged in savage slaughter of the Muslims. As for the Jews, they burned them alive in their syna­gogue. [16] After three days of appalling bloodshed, in which the blood reached as far as the bridles of their horses, the Crusaders remem­bered to go to the Church of the Resurrection—oh, the tragic iro­ny!—to thank the Lord of love and charity for their success! So great was the benightedness and such was the blindness of those men, who, although they bore on their persons the emblem of the Cross, put everyone to the ruthless terror of the sword. In reality, however, they were “enemies of the Cross,” [17] crude and idolatrous lackeys of a heretical man, the haughty Pope of Rome, who had deviated from Orthodoxy and who desired to set his throne “above the stars.” [18]

These new and cruel conquerors had not, in essence, come to lib­erate the Holy Places and to entrust them to the true and untram­melled worship of God; they had invaded Jerusalem in order to impose their heresy, hateful to God, upon the Holy Land. Thus, al­though the canonical Patriarch of Jerusalem, Symeon II, who was in exile in Cyprus, [19] was still alive, they proceeded wholly uncanonical­ly and unlawfully to the election and installation of a Latin pseudo-patriarch of Jerusalem, Arnulf of Chocques, something which truly caused a shock (!), since this polemarch of the Crusader army was not even a subdeacon and led such a prodigal life that vulgar songs were sung about him!

A public outcry forced the administration of the then newly es­tablished Latin Kingdom to replace Arnulf with the Papal legate, Archbishop Daimbert of Pisa, who had arrived in December of 1099. He arrived in the Holy Land with a fleet of one hundred and twen­ty ships, having previously passed through the Ionian Islands and wrought dreadful acts of pillage. Daimbert, who had in reality been elected Archbishop by simony and had even received confirmation from the Pope of Rome, [20] immediately imposed restrictions on the Orthodox guardians of the Holy Shrines. [21]

Thus it was that, on Great Saturday of 1100, Daimbert was the first Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem to preside over the traditional cer­emony of the Holy Light. However, for the first time in history the Holy Light did not appear, despite the fact that the ceremony went on for many hours. The Latin clergy then urged the Crusaders to re­pent and confess their misdeeds. It was finally after nightfall, as one historian relates, that the Holy Light appeared. The following year, 1101, the Holy Light did not appear at all as long as the Latins were present. [22]

But before we see what happened in 1101, we wish to empha­size that the failure of the Holy Light to appear on Great Saturday in 1100 was not due simply to the moral unworthiness of the Crusaders, or at least was not due solely and primarily to this. For the appear­ance of the Holy Light—as is the case, moreover, with every Mys­tery and rite—does not depend on the moral quality and worthiness or unworthiness of the celebrant. The Mystery is celebrated objec­tively, whereas the subjectively unworthy celebrant is chastised. The non-appearance of the Light was due first and foremost to the falling away of the Papists from the right Faith. The fact that the Holy Light appeared only at night, and absent any specific account of a liturgi­cal context for its appearance, demonstrates the Divine condescen­sion of the Thrice-Radiant Godhead in assurance of the light-bear­ing Resurrection, and not in validation and confirmation of the faith of the Latin conquerors. The problem was not rectified by the con­fession of the sinful Crusaders but by the repentance of the hereti­cal Latins, or at least by their departure from the site where the mir­acle occurred.

On Great Saturday of 1101, therefore, as seven non-Orthodox chroniclers (four French, one German, one English, and one Ar­menian) unerringly describe it for us, [23] the Latin Patriarch Daim­bert, with an innumerable crowd, again presided over the ceremony for the appearance and distribution of the Holy Light at the All-Ho­ly Sepulchre. However, the hour of its manifestation passed by and the blessing of Heaven did not descend. The Latins redoubled their prayers, night fell, and yet the Holy Light failed to materialize, and thus their souls were overcome by the darkness of despair. The All-Holy Sepulchre was locked, and the following day, the morning of Pascha, after Daimbert had gone to the All-Holy Sepulchre and as­certained that the Holy Light had not appeared, he addressed the de­spairing people, in the presence of the envoy of the Roman Curia, Cardinal Maurice of Porto. In his speech, he attempted to console his flock with the artless excuse that they should not be distressed over the non-fulfillment of the miracle, but should, on the contrary, re­joice: for the miracle occurred when the Holy City was in the hands of the infidels, whereas, now that it was in the hands of the Chris­tians, it was no longer needed! [24] Daimbert then headed a procession of Latins to the shrine of the Dome of the Rock, on the site of the former Temple of Solomon, which the Crusaders had turned into a Christian Church.

At that time, before the locked Edicule (Κουβούκλιον) of the All-Holy Sepulchre, the keys of which Daimbert alone possessed, the Greek and Syrian Orthodox began to process around it with ar­dent prayers, accompanied by dirges and lamentations. While this was going on, one of the Syrians observed through an aperture that a vigil lamp had been miraculously lit inside the All-Holy Sepul­chre, and the lamentation was then transformed into cries of joy and thanksgiving. They immediately hastened to notify the Latin Patri­arch to come and open the All-Holy Sepulchre for the distribution of the Holy Light. In the meantime, however, all present with awe and astonishment saw the vigil lamps that hung outside the Sepul­chre lighting spontaneously and miraculously, one after the other in succession! Sixteen lamps were lit, or fifty, according to some, or all of them, according to others. [25]

This Divine event filled the Orthodox with joy and enthusiasm and put to shame the misbelievers, who came and endeavored to show their satisfaction, even though the downfall of their prestige and the ignominy of their corrupt régime were obvious and indis­putable to all.

For this reason, several months later the Latin authorities dis­missed and banished Daimbert, as the supposed cause of the fias­co, and installed Evremar in his place. But the most important point was that the Latins seriously took “into consideration the lesson” [26] of what had happened and, unable to endure any new public disgrace, handed the keys of the All-Holy Sepulchre over to the Greek Ortho­dox, decreeing that the Abbot of the Lavra of St. Sabbas the Sancti­fied preside over the rite of the Holy Fire each year. The Abbot at that time was the Locum Tenens of the exiled canonical Orthodox Patri­arch of Jerusalem.

III

The Anti-Papist Tradition in the Holy Land

About six years later, in 1107, the Russian Abbot Daniel, who was present at the ceremony of the Holy Light, confirmed that, when the Holy Light made its majestic appearance, it miraculously lighted the lamps of the Orthodox Greeks and Russians, which were on the tombstone of the All-Holy Sepulchre, but not those of the Latins, which were hanging above or outside it! [27]

The Papists, unable to endure the shame of God’s turning away from them, instead of coming “to themselves” [28] and repenting, so as not to walk “in darkness” but to have “the light of life,” [29] became so hardened and benighted that, through a bull issued by Pope Grego­ry IX in 1238, they disavowed the validity of the miracle of the Holy Light and strictly forbade their flock to participate in or attend the ceremony! [30]

A little earlier, however, that same Pope did something equally dreadful and blasphemous. Emperor Frederick II of Germany, who had led the Fifth Crusade, succeeded, through a treaty concluded in 1229 with Sultan al-Kāmil of Egypt, in gaining suzerainty over Je­rusalem, where he crowned himself and then returned to his own country. However, Pope Gregory IX, who was a mortal enemy of Frederick, was so enraged by this act that he unleashed the terrible punishment of interdict against the Holy City of Jerusalem and against the All-Holy Sepulchre! “Thus, Papal arrogance reached even as far as excommunicating the Holy Sepulchre,” [31] notes one Church historian in amazement.

As one might have expected, there was a resplendent tradition of anti-Latinism in the Holy Land in the ensuing centuries, and all the more because the aggressiveness and rapacity of the Papists was al­ways demonstrable and baleful.

Thus, in the period after the false union of Lyon in 1274, the confessional stand of the illustrious Patriarch Gregory I is worthy of especial mention. In 1281, the Patriarch of the Holy City issued a refutation, composed in his name by the distinguished Ortho­dox theologian George Moschabar, entitled: “Refutatory Chapters Against the Doctrines and Writings of Bekkos.” Therein “the spuri­ous and corrupt doctrines and writings of the present-day heretics [Latins and the Latin-minded]” are refuted, “lest the souls of those who are more naïve be deceived through such distorted doctrines and writings and be seduced into impiety.” [32] Just one year later, in 1282, the Latin-minded Emperor Michael VIII Palaiologos died, the heretical Patriarch John Bekkos was deposed, and the false union was condemned.

Also noteworthy is the dissolution of the Latin Patriarchate of Je­rusalem, which the Crusaders had established—with Papal approval, of course. When the Saracens recaptured the Holy Places, in May of 1291 they entered Acre (Ptolemaïs) in Palestine, and the few Crusad­ers who remained there with the Latin Patriarch Nicholas set out on the sea in a skiff in order to save themselves. However, the skiff cap­sized owing to the haste of its eminent passengers, and the Latin Pa­triarch drowned together with the rest. [33]

The Crusades began, supposedly, with a good purpose, but one which was accomplished in barbarous manner, and thus they turned out to be a veritable scourge for the East and proved “most detri­mental” to the Orthodox Church and people. The warfare waged by the Crusaders, as the great Patriarch Dositheos of Jerusalem ob­serves, “was called ‘sacred’ in the way that leprosy is called the ‘sa­cred disease.’” [34] It is certain that, had the Crusaders prevailed, Or­thodoxy would have disappeared in the cradle of Christianity.

During those terrible years, the Church of Jerusalem remained in the vanguard of the struggle for Orthodoxy. Thus, a Synod in Jeru­salem in 1443, in the presence of Patriarchs Joachim of the Holy City, Philotheos of Alexandria, and Dorotheos II of Antioch, condemned the treacherous unionist Council of Ferrara-Florence (1438-1439), at which, as we well know, St. Mark Evgenikos of Ephesus, the “Atlas of Orthodoxy,” worthily represented the three aforementioned East­ern Thrones. The Synod of Jerusalem denounced the proceedings at Ferrara-Florence as “abominable,” because its decisions were in favor of Papism: that is, the addition to the Symbol of Faith (the Filioque clause), the use of unleavened bread in the Eucharist, the commemo­ration of the Pope, and all of the other violations of the Canons. Like­wise, the Synod of Jerusalem turned against the “vile metropolises” and “loathsome episcopacies” promoted and imposed by the Lat­in-minded Patriarch Metrophanes II of Constantinople for the error, corruption, and scandals that they spread. The verdict against those “corruptors” was that they be “suspended and disbarred” (ἀργοὶ καὶ ἀνίεροι) from every sacerdotal function and ecclesiastical standing “until the true Faith be examined in common and universally”; in the event that they were defiant, the Synod judged that they be “excom­municated, sundered, and estranged from the Holy Trinity.” [35]

Another miracle involving the repudiation of heretics occurred in 1579, when the Armenians bribed the Ottomans to ensure that it was they who would bring forth the Holy Light. The banished Or­thodox had assembled outside, in the courtyard of the Church of the Resurrection before the Holy Portal. Even as the Armenians were processing inside the Church in order to attain their desire, the Or­thodox, with the then Patriarch Sophronios iv, were weeping and praying for consolation from on high. At that moment a loud noise was heard, there was a violent gust of wind, and the middle column of the left doorpost of the Holy Portal was split, and from it the Holy Light issued forth for the Orthodox—a miracle which is attested to this day! [36]

In this brief treatment of the Confession of the Faith, it would be an omission for us not to mention the illustrious and heroic Pa­triarch Dositheos of Jerusalem (1669-1707), who “on account of his theological activity was described as the ‘teacher and wise leader of the whole body of the Orthodox,’ surpassing all of his contemporar­ies in the breadth of his learning, his boundless zeal for Orthodoxy, and his fervent faith in God. He had in his hands, so to speak, the di­rection of the life of the entire Orthodox Church,” since, inter alia, he tirelessly “warred against Latin and Protestant influence and strove to preserve the integrity of Orthodoxy.” [37]

When, for example, in 1689 the Ottoman Empire was compelled, for political reasons, under pressure from Austria and France, to cede a significant number of the Shrines in the All-Holy Church of the Resurrection in Jerusalem, and also in Bethlehem, to the Lat­ins, the latter committed acts of vandalism and sacrilege and perse­cuted the Orthodox; in particular, in order to intimidate the Ortho­dox, they disseminated the rumor that Patriarch Dositheos, who was at that time in Constantinople, had been hanged. When he heard of all these tragic events, the holy Dositheos hastened first of all to deny the malicious rumor concerning his alleged hanging and se­verely censured the ridiculous notion of the Latins that they had ac­quired the Shrines by reason of the correctness of their faith. The holy Confessor Dositheos affirmed that the Latins had always been “schismatics and chief among the heretics” and openly and fearlessly proclaimed: “As for the Latins, we hold, as did our fathers, that in every time, in every person, and in every place they are heretics and outcasts from the Holy Orthodox Church. The Latins are deranged in supposing that they are Orthodox because they have seized some walls.” [38]

Also worthy of note is the fact that Patriarch Parthenios of Je­rusalem took part, in 1755, in a Synod in Constantinople compris­ing the Orthodox Patriarchs of Constantinople, Alexandria, and Jerusalem (the Patriarch of Antioch was away in Russia on a fund-raising mission), which decided that the Latins and the other here­tics should be baptized in a canonical and Orthodox manner when coming to Orthodoxy, being viewed, according to exactitude (κατ᾿ ἀκρίβειαν), as “unhallowed and unbaptized.” [39]

The same Patriarch Parthenios also took part in repulsing the Uniatism that had at that period been propagated in Syria, “aiding Patriarch Sylvester of Antioch and condemning the Papist ‘antipatri­archs’ of Antioch.” [40]

Our discussion of the Resurrectional Holy Light of the All-Holy Sepulchre and of the confutation of the Papists, who in their hereti­cal madness reached the unbelievably blasphemous point of denying the miracle itself, brings us directly to the connection between this issue and deviation of the Latins from the Festal Calendar. Their al­ienation from the Illuminating and Life-Creating Holy Spirit, from the Body of the Church, and also from the Life-Giving and All-Holy Sepulchre of our Lord, led them to a new method of calculating the Feast of Pascha, supposedly for the sake of achieving astronomical accuracy, through the innovation of their notorious calendar reform in 1582, under Pope Gregory XIII. In this way, of their own accord they became visibly estranged from the Feast of Pascha with regard to the Festal Calendar, since they could no longer celebrate togeth­er with the Orthodox on the actual day of Pascha. Thus, they exiled themselves to a “far country,” sitting in the shadow of death, not al­lowing the Light of the Resurrection to approach them or the Risen Christ to shine upon them with the radiance of His Divine Glory, [41] that they might awake from the sleep of heresy and apostasy. How­ever, repentance and resurrection from the dead are required for the heroic and salvific act of arising, in order that there might be “joy” [42] in Heaven and on earth. Persistence in heresy is a sin: “He who is un­repentant sins, since he does not repent.” [43]

IV

Falling away from the Truth means falling away from Grace

The Holy Light, which appears miraculously at the All-Holy Sep­ulchre and lights the vigil lamps and the candles, being diffused throughout that sacred place at noon on Great Saturday every year, undoubtedly has its provenance in the Uncreated Grace and Energy of God. However, since it is a perceptible and created product of Grace, we cannot call it Uncreated, even though it is accompanied by miraculous spiritual phenomena (it does not burn during the initial moments, does not start any fire, and brings about changes in peo­ple’s souls, etc.). For the Uncreated Light is not something percepti­ble or circumscribed, but is noetic and beyond comprehension; it is beginningless, changeless, and endless; it illumines the mind of man by the power of the Holy Spirit, [44] and consequently transcends the senses and the intellect. “It is immaterial and is not apprehended by the senses.” [45]

If, however, the Latins were not, and are not, vouchsafed the mir­acle of the created Holy Light of the All-Holy Sepulchre, all the more are they, and do they remain, of their own will without a share in the Uncreated Light of Grace. For their philosophical scholasticism is incompatible with any acknowledgment that the Divine Energies of the Trihypostatic Godhead are Uncreated, and in essence they reject the possibility of conscious communion with God. [46] For this reason they have formed different conceptions of man’s ultimate destiny and of his blessedness, salvation, and deification. If man does not truly commune with the eternal and supratemporal Light of God, which shone at the Divine Transfiguration and was given in the form of fiery tongues at Pentecost, then he remains truly unredeemed with­in a created and closed this-worldly reality; or he thinks, erroneous­ly, that he can see, albeit in the future, the absolutely inaccessible and imparticipable Essence of God! These errors and false teachings con­stitute blasphemies, and heresies have a direct impact on salvation. Falling away from the right Faith of the Church and the distortion of revealed Truth lead to a falling away from the Church and from sanctifying Divine Grace. [47] Papism became a dead body, and the pure in heart among the Orthodox recognized experientially that in its churches “there was no descent of the fire of the Holy Spirit; that is to say, that in the Latin Church the bread was not transformed into the Body of Christ nor the wine into [the] Blood” of Christ. [48]

In a more practical vein, let us mention two relevant and almost contemporary examples, which demonstrate the spiritual deadness of the Latins.

At the beginning of the twentieth century, it so happened that in a Greek Orthodox monastery on an island in the Cyclades the Or­thodox Metropolitan of the island was present together with the Ro­man Catholic bishop of that region. While they were sitting on a bal­cony in the monastery, they saw one of the brothers carrying a sack of manure on his shoulders for the monastery garden. When the Catholic bishop learned that the one carrying the sack was a Hier­omonk of the monastery, he expressed his disgust and perplexity as to how it was possible, after such filthy work, for this Hieromonk to celebrate the Divine Mysteries. Although the Orthodox Hierarch as­sured him that this work did not cause the Hieromonk any defile­ment of soul or body, the Latin prelate persisted in his objections. The Orthodox Hierarch then asked the Latin prelate if he would be willing to test which man was well-pleasing in the sight of God: the Orthodox Hieromonk who engaged in arduous and grimy toil or the well-dressed Papist bishop. The latter agreed to this, and the Hi­erarch proposed that he summon the Hieromonk and, after he had washed himself well, that he celebrate the Small Blessing of the Wa­ters. The Latin bishop would then also perform a Blessing of the Wa­ters, and the water blessed by each man would be kept in sealed con­tainers. After the passage of a year, they would be unsealed, so that it might be evident which quantity of water was blessed and there­fore acceptable before God. And indeed, after the respective Bless­ings of the Waters had been performed, the flasks were placed, well-sealed, in a special box. After a year had elapsed, in the presence of the Orthodox Metropolitan, the Abbot and the Brothers of the mon­astery, and also of the Roman Catholic bishop and his retinue, the flasks were unsealed and opened, and all beheld quite clearly that the water blessed by the Orthodox Hieromonk was very limpid and fra­grant, whereas that blessed by the Latin bishop was turbid, murky, and smelled like stagnant water! [49]

In another instance, a Priest explained, inter alia, to a young man who had gone to venerate the Relics of St. Gerasimos on Kephallenia and had seen awesome miracles wrought through demoniacs, which revealed the hidden sins of other pilgrims, that demoniacs cannot reveal anything to one who has repented of his sins and confessed them sincerely. In that case, they are “blocked.” However, in one case—the Priest continued—he had got to know two Italian Roman Catholics who admitted that a demoniac on Zakynthos revealed to them all that they had confessed to their own Catholic priest. And this was because they were in essence unconfessed. The demoniac was a Greek and did not know Italian, and yet he revealed to the Ital­ians in flawless Italian sins which they had supposedly confessed. [50]

In our estimation, these true testimonies corroborate the age-old view of the Orthodox that the Latins have fallen away from the Grace of God and that they are not, and do not constitute, the Church of God.

When, for example, in the twelfth century Patriarch Mark of Al­exandria asked the eminent canonist Theodore Balsamon, the Patri­arch of Antioch, whether an Orthodox clergyman could “without peril impart the Divine Gifts to them,” that is, to heretics, Balsamon responded in the negative. With specific regard to the Latins who, as prisoners of the Saracens, presented themselves in Orthodox Churches asking to commune, Balsamon affirmed that the Western Church had been in schism for many years from spiritual commun­ion with the assembly of the four remaining Orthodox Patriarchs. Rome “was separated from the Catholic Church with respect to cus­toms and dogmas and was estranged from the Orthodox,” and for this reason the Pope had been struck off the Diptychs, such that “the race of Latins ought not be sanctified at the hands of Priests through the Divine and Immaculate Mysteries, unless they agreed before­hand to abjure Latin doctrines and customs, they have been instruct­ed in accordance with the Canons, and they have been assimilated to the Orthodox.” [51]

The Holy Archpriest John of Kronstadt in Russia wrote the fol­lowing at the beginning of the twentieth century, expressing the Or­thodox spiritual assessment of Papism:

The communion of the Western Church with the Heavenly Church is meagre and lukewarm, and is devoid of life. The Orthodox Church is quite different: here, the communion is living, wise, full, sincere, and reverent. There, the Pope is everything, everyone honors him and not the Saints. The Saints of the East and the West are devalued; they are hidden, they have fallen into oblivion; never are their Relics ever displayed to the faithful, but far more often for tourists.... There, the Pope determines the fate of the earthly and the heavenly Church and arbitrarily administers the ‘surplus’ of the works and graces of the Saints, sending people to Purgatory and freeing them therefrom by his own decision, and issuing indulgences. Laughable as these things are, they really would be laughable if they were not so harm­ful and distressing. And how is it that the Popes themselves, the car­dinals, and others do not see this?... The faith of Catholics is superfi­cial. There, everything is for sale and everything can be bought; there, the Pope possesses all authority and the salvation of Catholics is in his hands. This is why Catholics today do not have real, recogniza­ble Saints; they have only ‘contrived’ saints, those whom the arbitrar­iness of the Pope has made saints, whereas the Orthodox Church is like the Garden of Eden, filled with Saints. [52]

Another revered clergyman, a professor of Orthodox dogmatic theology, avers that “Catholicism has not fully preserved either Ap­ostolicity or life in Christ and holiness.... Catholic theology regards Grace as created, and thus it is not an Energy that flows from Christ” and that “in Catholicism only to an insignificant degree is the power of Divine Grace received.” [53]

In view of these considerations, one might ask what it was that impelled the Orthodox ecumenists to enter into contact with heterodoxy, not in order to lead it to repentance and conversion, but in order to confer on it distinctions and merits which it does not have, which do not belong it, and which it could not even conceive or desire! We know that the ecumenists have a ready answer: They are impelled by love, for the union of Christians. However, if love is separated from Truth—and we will show in what follows that this happens, and has prevailed from the outset, in contemporary ec­umenism—then we are face to face with an error and a distortion which have spread to a perilous degree among both the leaders and the largely indifferent flock of the lukewarm faithful who constitute the overwhelming majority of so-called Christians today. This is why the false shepherds no longer have any inhibitions; for they are not afraid, as they were at one time, [54] that the true Flock, the Guardian of Orthodoxy, will rise up against them!

V

An upsurge in ecumenism

Unorthodox views concerning the boundaries of the Church of Christ have been articulated in Orthodox intellectual circles, es­pecially from the beginning of the past (twentieth) century. Perhaps it was on account of the diversity concerning the reception of the heterodox exhibited by the local Orthodox Churches, which applied oikonomia in particular circumstances, that many of the Orthodox came up with the erroneous idea that, even though the heterodox had in the past been declared heretics with regard to the Apostolic Faith and Apostolic Tradition by Holy Synods, whether OEcumenical or Panorthodox, nonetheless since the heterodox demonstrably pre­serve “Apostolic succession,” that is, unbroken continuity vis-à-vis their episcopal consecrations, they possess true and valid Myster­ies. Among the Orthodox ecumenists, some restrict the existence of Mysteries to Roman Catholics, others include every heterodox community that has maintained or formed an episcopate, and fi­nally others extend sacramental validity to every Christian gather­ing, even to those who believe in a purely subjective way. The first group—at least in part—is of the opinion that the time has not yet come for communion with the Latins, though solely for “discipli­nary” reasons; the second group is ready for communion with any heterodox community that maintains a hierarchy and simply awaits ecclesiastical approval for this; the final group is impatient for com­munion with all Christians! [55]

The ecumenist notion that ecclesiality and Mysteries exist in het­erodox communities of every description, both older and more re­cent, is based on the heretical Encyclical “To the Churches of Christ Everywhere” issued by the Church of Constantinople in 1920. This Encyclical, as is well known, was the primary catalyst and the mov­ing force for the institutionalization of ecumenism by way of the World Council of Churches and, in general, for the participation of the Orthodox in various expressions and manifestations of ecumen­ism.

We will mention, here, by way of example, the meeting between Patriarch Athenagoras of Constantinople— this year being the forti­eth anniversary of his repose (July 7, 1972 [n.s.])—and Pope Paul VI in Jerusalem, in 1964. That meeting in the Holy City, where—as we have ascertained from all that has been set forth—God expressed His aversion towards the heretical Latins, initiated the unfolding of a depressing series of events, with the lifting of the Anathemas in 1965 and the first steps down the slippery slope of ecumenism, especially regarding relations with the Latins.

For its part, Rome, through the Second Vatican Council, launched its “assault of love,” namely, Rome-centered ecumenism, for the purpose of achieving a new Uniate-style union with the Or­thodox. The Papists decided on the meeting in Jerusalem in 1964 following the persistent entreaty and efforts of the Melkite Patri­arch Maximos IV. [56] Prior to the meeting with Patriarch Athenagoras, Pope Paul VI had met with “the Catholic [i.e., Uniate] patriarchs and hierarchs of the Eastern [Uniate] Churches, to whom he delivered a momentous address, calling upon them to remain faithful to their ancient traditions and liturgical typika, by which the entire Church of Christ was made radiant.” [57] “Under such conditions did the Vat­ican inaugurate the Dialogue of Love in Jerusalem”! [58] The meeting with the Patriarch of Constantinople was conducted in a ecumenist framework, in which the bases and principles for what followed were established. Speaking in Bethlehem just two days after the meeting with Athenagoras, Pope Paul vi, sincere in his attitude, called upon the “separated brethren,” that is, the Orthodox, to return to the Ro­man Catholic flock! [59] The Pope presented himself as the “proprietor and interpreter of the patrimony of Christ,” emphasizing his prima­cy and infallibility over and above union. [60]

In spite of this, those of an ecumenist bent characterize this meeting as an “historic” event, [61] whereas many of the “official” Or­thodox rose up at that time and vigorously expressed their opposi­tion to it. A “Proclamation” by Athonite Abbots and Fathers of that time, for example, denounces pro-unionism, declares its adherence to Tradition, and rejects any union of the ecumenist stripe. Moreo­ver, it calls all heretics who so desire to repentance and to return to Orthodoxy and contains a clear threat: “We appeal to our OEcumen­ical Patriarch to desist from pursuing his pro-unionist activities, for if he persists, we will disavow him also.” [62]

Orthodox sensibilities functioned for some time, and, as we know, there were even Hierarchs, aside from the Abbots and monks, who broke off commemoration of the Patriarch for a certain period of time, only to return to “obedience,” since they thought, strangely enough, that after Athenagoras a new wind of Orthodoxy was ablow in Constantinople and in the local Churches in general, even though the heresy of ecumenism had waxed bold!

Patriarch Athenagoras preferred the “currency of love,” despite the reactions, and not that of Truth and stated that the purpose of dialogues and relations with the heterodox, and especially with the Roman Catholics, was “to prepare our peoples psychologically to un­derstand that there is one Church and one religion.” [63]

It is no surprise that in 1993 we ended up at Balamand, Leba­non, under Patriarch Bartholomew, the faithful lackey of Athena­goras, who proclaimed officially in the context of the Orthodox-Ro­man Catholic Dialogue that both Churches are recognized as “Sister Churches” in the full sense of the term; it was, rather, to be expected. Papists and Orthodox ecumenists recognize that “profession of ap­ostolic faith, participation in the same sacraments, above all the one priesthood...the apostolic succession of bishops—cannot be consid­ered the exclusive property of one of our Churches. In this context, is evident that all rebaptism is excluded.” [64]

Likewise, a condemnation of “the proselytism of Christians of other Christian traditions” was issued in the context of the World Council of Churches, [65] while the Patriarchate of Constantinople signed at the Phanar in September 2004, together with the Evangel­ical Church in Germany, a rejection of “rebaptism,” since the bap­tisms of both Churches are equated and recognized. [66]

All of the goings-on in contemporary ecumenism, a few of which we shall mention, demonstrate that, in essence, the distinction be­tween Orthodoxy and heresy and the boundaries between truth and falsehood, between light and darkness, have been effaced. Its real aim is not the attainment of union, still less the putative conversion of those in error to Orthodoxy, as Patriarch Bartholomew some­times hypocritically maintains before “conservative” audiences, since the ecumenists believe that union between them already exists, that “the parties engaged in dialogue are Sister Churches and that they ex­press this unity of theirs through sundry ecumenical displays.” [67]

Just this past January (2012) there was an upsurge of ecumenical activities, particularly in the context of the Week of Prayer for Chris­tian Unity.

An ecumenical ceremony to welcome the New Year was held in a Roman Catholic church in Cologne, Germany, with, of course, the participation of Orthodox ecumenists. It had for its motto: “TO­GETHER. Witnessing to Christ.” [68]

In Dubrovnik, Croatia, Bishop Grigorije of Herzegovina (Patri­archate of Serbia), a spiritual son of Bishop Atanasije (Jevtić), took part, on January 17, in an ecumenical ceremony in a Roman Catholic church, together with the local Catholic bishop and his clergy, and, among other things, he asked forgiveness for the horrors of the re­cent war.

In Syros (an island in the Cyclades), the Roman Catholic bish­op Frangiskos Papamanoles delivered an address in the Metropoli­tan Cathedral to Dorotheos, the local Bishop of the New Calendar Church of Greece, on the occasion of the tenth anniversary of his Episcopate on January 19, emphasizing, inter alia, the following:

The people of Syros have welcomed you united, without any divid­ing lines between them, united in the love of Christ, united in the joy that the bells of our Churches, Orthodox and Catholic, rang out to the heavens in a common melody, announcing your arrival.... Be­loved Brother, ...we can work together, or rather, we can increase our coöperation in harmony, love, and peace, with mutual respect, not only for our persons, but also for our Churches, as our yardstick. We bear responsibility for the present and for the future of our Church­es. We can contribute to the speedier arrival of the blessed day when we share the common Cup.

In Thessalonike, on Saturday, January 21, an ecumenical evening of common prayer was held in the Roman Catholic Church of the Immaculate Conception of the Theotokos. Roman Catholics, Ortho­dox, Armenians, Anglicans, and Evangelicals took part in this event. The keynote speaker was the Assistant Professor of New Testament at the Theological School of the University of Thessalonike, Charalam­bos Atmatzides, who made the following revealing statements about the meeting on a television channel:

It is a custom observed almost every year by all of the Christians and all of the Christian communities of Thessalonike. All Christians who have a common credo in Jesus Christ, that is, we Orthodox, Roman Catholics, Armenians, and Evangelicals, gather together to pray to­gether and offer entreaties to God.... The purpose of this joint prayer is for us to remember our roots and our common religious lineage, which used to unite all of us a very long time ago, although after a period of time it divided us for reasons which, in our view, are not so justified. This endeavor, however, is based, is founded on the com­mon will of the leaders of the Orthodox Church, namely, our OEcu­menical Patriarchate, of the Pope of Rome, and also of the episcopal Evangelical Churches and of the Armenians, as a joint effort to find common points of contact and communication.

Ecumenical ceremonies, joint prayers, and activities took place between January 19 and 25 in Rome (under the leadership of the Pope), in Budapest, in Brussels, in the Holy Land, in Moscow and Novosibirsk, in Bucharest and other cities in Romania, and in many other parts of the world, in a climate and a spirit of syncretism and relativism.

In Trier, Germany, an “International Ecumenical Forum” com­menced on January 30 with joint prayer and speeches about the “seamless Robe of Christ.” Roman Catholics, Evangelicals, the World Council of Churches, the Metropolis of Germany (OEcumenical Pa­triarchate), Methodists, et al. were all represented among those tak­ing part in this forum, in the context of which, interestingly enough, “the participants were symbolically weaving the Robe of Christ”!

While we are on the subject of such ecumenical lunacy, it is worth emphasizing the new “tradition” that the Patriarchate of Constan­tinople is establishing. It now enthrones its new Metropolitans, in foreign countries in which a large Cathedral of its own jurisdiction may not be available, in Roman Catholic churches. This occurred re­cently both at the enthronement in Budapest of the new Exarch of Hungary and Central Europe, Metropolitan Arsenios, and at the en­thronement in Singapore of Metropolitan Constantine of Singapore, at which Hierarchs of the New Calendar Church of Greece were pre­sent.

We should also advert to the ecumenist dimension of the chari­table ministry of the Apostole society of the New Calendar Archdi­ocese of Athens. Apostole recently began to coöperate officially, for the successful accomplishment of its goals, with both Anglicans and Roman Catholics, and in particular with their counterpart organiza­tion, Caritas.

VI

The responsibility of the Orthodox

In the face of this distressing and discouraging reality, which is un­folding in the context of eschatological “apostasy,” [69] for the pur­pose of bringing about a world religion and the coming of the man of sin, that is, the Antichrist, for the final tribulation of humanity, we cannot but express our grief and sorrow, not so much over the terri­ble economic crisis and social degradation of our homeland—which is also extremely disquieting—as over the downfall of Orthodox Churches and the continuing captivity of souls, on account of those who champion the heresy of ecumenism, as St. Basil the Great wrote in connection with the events of his era: “For we are lamenting not the demolition of earthly buildings, but the overthrow of Churches; what we behold is not bodily enslavement, but a captivity of souls that is effected daily by the champions of heresy.” [70]

In our opinion, our prime concern today is that we preserve at all costs our Orthodox identity, which is being grievously assaulted amid the tempest of confusion that surrounds us, and that we cor­respondingly heighten the awareness in every way of as many of our brothers and sisters as possible, so that they might act in a correct and God-pleasing manner.

For those enmeshed in reprehensible communion with our ec­umenist brethren there is always the possibility of shaking off this “yoke” through Orthodox confession and walling-off and through incorporation into the realm of Truth, far removed from the dark­ness and falsehood of error. Few of them, however, do we see being drawn by the Light of Truth; few walk in the Truth, far away from the wickedness of sin and apostasy. A variety of erroneous assess­ments or misguided commitments and dependences, it seems, dark­en their souls and drive salutary reproofs away from their conscienc­es. And not only this, but they also muster artful excuses in sins, so as to appease their consciences and lull themselves into a Uniate-style communion with ecumenists. The harsh words of our Lord Je­sus Christ befit those in our day who defend innovation and insult the Truth and correct confession: “Woe unto you, scribes and Phari­sees, hypocrites! for ye shut up the Kingdom of Heaven against men: for ye neither go in yourselves, neither suffer ye them that are enter­ing to go in.” [71]

St. Basil the Great, for example, believed—as did all of the Holy Fathers—that the issue of communion with heretics is of direct so­teriological significance, and for this reason he prayed that he not fall away from communion with that segment of the Church which abides on the basis of “sound and undistorted doctrine,” [72] since communion in Orthodoxy places one with the “lot” of the righteous; conversely, communion with those who distort the Orthodox con­fession of faith either as a whole or in part places such communi­cants outside the communion of the Church. [73] For this reason, St. Basil the Great, even as a Deacon, “walled himself off” in 361 from Bishop Dianios of Cæsarea, who had ordained him, because, out of weakness of character, he had signed the un-Orthodox confession of faith of the semi-Arian Synod of Constantinople (360). [74]

The hopeful thing is that a few sensitive and elect servants of God, disregarding insidious threats, marginalization, and the bootless “as­surances” of this world, are being drawn to the Light of Truth, wall­ing themselves off, in accordance with the example of the Fathers and with Synodal and canonical injunctions, from the so-called offi­cial Churches, thereby eschewing communion with the heresy of ec­umenism.

Some, like our spiritual ancestors in the Faith, did this much longer ago, on account of the ecumenist imposition of the calendar innovation (1924–). Others, like our spiritual progenitors in the Lord, did this later, by reason of the increasingly audacious ventures and excesses of the ecumenists. Others are doing so today, while quite a few are vacillant about this salvific course of action, remaining in reprehensible communion with the ecumenists. At any rate, the up­surge in anti-ecumenism, which perturbs the heresiarchs of ecumen­ism and their sundry apologists or colleagues, is a comforting fact and one which confirms that the struggles and even the ordeals of many decades have not been in vain.

May the Lord of the Church strengthen the plenitude who con­fess the Faith, to the end that Divine Truth might prevail!

May we be numbered with the faithful and wise servants of God in the Kingdom of the Light of Divine Love, if nothing else for the sake of our patient endurance and our good intention for the wel­fare of the Church. May the majestic vision of the Divine Kingdom, which the Holy Evangelist John the Theologian describes for us in the Apocalypse, console us in whatever sacrifices we make for Faith and virtue: “And there shall be no night there; and they [the saved] need no candle, neither light of the sun; for the Lord God giveth them light: and they shall reign for ever and ever.” [75] Amen!

 

NOTES

1. A presentation on the occasion of the celebration of the Sunday of Orthodoxy, 2012, by the Holy Synod in Resistance at the Holy Convent of St. Paraskeve, Archarnai, Attica. The text here is published in its entirety, expanded and with footnotes.

2. Great Horologion, Service of Orthros, Hymn of Light in the Plagal of the Fourth Tone.

3. i St. John 1:5.

4. St. Matthew 6:24.

5. ii Corinthians 6:14.

6. ii Corinthians 6:14.

7. “Epistles,” Bk. ii.197, Patrologia Græca, Vol. xcix, col. 1597b.

8. ii St. Peter 2:9.

9. St. Matthew 5:14.

10. St. Luke 16:8; St. John 12:36.

11. Ephesians 5:8; i Thessalonians 5:5.

12. Colossians 1:12.

13. “Catechesis xxviii,” §7, in Symeon le Nouveau Théologien, Catéchèses 23-34 (Paris: Les Éditions du Cerf, 1965), p. 138.

14. “Spiritual Homily xxv,” §10, Patrologia Græca, Vol. xxxiv, col. 673d.

15. Niketas Stethatos, “Concerning the Heavenly and Ecclesiastical Hierarchy,” §30, in Μυστικὰ Συγγράμματα (Mystical Writings), ed. Panagiotes Chrestou (Thessalonike: 1957), p. 75.

16. Chrysostomos Papadopoulos, Archbishop of Athens and All Greece, Ἱστορία τῆς Ἐκκλησίας Ἱεροσολύμων (History of the Church of Jerusalem) (Thessalonike: Ekdoseis P. Pournara, 2010), pp. 415-416. See also the lengthy and analytical presentation, fully doc­umented, in the excellent study by Charis K. Skarlakides, Ἅγιον Φῶς – Τὸ Θαῦμα τοῦ Μεγάλου Σαββάτου στὸν Τάφο τοῦ Χριστοῦ – Σαράντα Δύο Ἱστορικὲς Μαρτυρίες (9ος-16ο αἰ.) (The Holy Light: The Miracle of Great Saturday at the Sepulchre of Christ: Forty-Two Historical Testimonies [9th-16th Centuries]) (n.p.: Ekdoseis “Elaia,” 2010), pp. 107-110.

17. Cf. Philippians 3:18.

18. St. Nicodemos the Hagiorite, Ἀκολουθία τοῦ Ἁγίου Πατρὸς ἡμῶν Μάρκου Εὐγενικοῦ Ἀρχιεπισκόπου Ἐφέσου (Service of Our Holy Father Mark Evgenikos, Archbishop of Ephe­sus), third Sticheron at the Praises (Thessalonike: Ekdoseis “Orthodoxos Kypsele,” 2010), p. 34.

19. Various Western historians assert, without any evidence, that Patriarch Symeon ii re­posed in 1099, shortly before the Crusaders captured Jerusalem (see Steven Runciman, The Eastern Schism [Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1955], p. 87), in order to justify the election of a Latin pseudo-Patriarch, but this is completely untrue (see the well-documented rebuttal in Papadopoulos, Ἱστορία τῆς Ἐκκλησίας Ἱεροσολύμων, pp. 417-418). In fact, Patriarch Syme­on died only in 1106. The aforementioned work by the renowned Byzantinist Steven Runci­man, apart from some erroneous comments and appraisals regarding the Latin Patriarchate of Jerusalem, is an insightful and interesting presentation of the relations between East and West, as these developed during the period of the Crusades.

20. Papadopoulos, Ἱστορία τῆς Ἐκκλησίας Ἱεροσολύμων, p. 418.

21. Runciman, The Eastern Schism, pp. 87-88.

22. Skarlakides, Ἅγιον Φῶς, pp. 111-112.

23. For an extended discussion of the testimonies and the seven chroniclers, see Skarlakides, Ἅγιον Φῶς, pp. 112-150.

24. Ibid., pp. 129-130.

25. Ibid., pp. 131-132; Papadopoulos, Ἱστορία τῆς Ἐκκλησίας Ἱεροσολύμων, pp. 426-427; Ioan­na Tsekoura, Τὸ Ἅγιον Φῶς στὰ Ἱεροσόλυμα (The Holy Light in Jerusalem) (Lamia: 1987), pp. 85-86.

26. Skarlakides, Ἅγιον Φῶς, p. 152; cf. Steven Runciman, A History of the Crusades (Cam­bridge: Cambridge University Press, 1952), Vol. ii, p. 85.

27. Skarlakides, Ἅγιον Φῶς, p. 155; Papadopoulos, Ἱστορία τῆς Ἐκκλησίας Ἱεροσολύμων, pp. 428-429.

28. Cf. St. Luke 15:17.

29. St. John 8:12.

30. Skarlakides, Ἅγιον Φῶς, p. 203.

31. Papadopoulos, Ἱστορία τῆς Ἐκκλησίας Ἱεροσολύμων, p. 456.

32. Ibid., pp. 452-453. George Moschabar, a staunch opponent of Church union, flourished in the second half of the thirteenth century. In addition to the refutation of Bekkos cited in the body of this lecture, he wrote a “Dialogue with a Dominican on the Procession of the Holy Spirit.” An extract from the former was printed by Andronikos Demetrakopoulos in his Ὀρθόδοξος Ἑλλάς (Orthodox Greece) (Leipzig: Typois Metzger kai Wittig, 1872), pp. 60-62. The latter, unfortunately, remains unpublished—trans.

33. Ibid., p. 458.

34. Dositheos, Patriarch of Jerusalem, Δωδεκάβιβλος (Bucharest: 1715), p. 788.

35. Papadopoulos, Ἱστορία τῆς Ἐκκλησίας Ἱεροσολύμων, pp. 483-485. The Synod in question, we might add, characterized Patriarch Metrophanes, in a play on words, as “Μητροφόνος” (“Mother-slayer”), on ground that he had uncanonically seized the throne of Constantino­ple! See Meletios, Metropolitan of Athens, Ἐκκλησιαστικὴ Ἱστορία (Church History) (Vien­na: Jozef Baumeister, 1784), Vol. iii, p. 300—trans.

36. Andreas Papamoyses Zakos, Μέγας Ὁδηγὸς τῶν ἐν τῇ Ἁγίᾳ Γῇ Σεβασμίων Προσκυνημάτων τοῦ Χριστιανισμοῦ (Great Guide to the Venerable Christian Shrines in the Holy Land) (Cyprus: Astromerites, 1970), p. 283; Archimandrite Panteleimon D. Poulos, Εὐλαβικὸ Προσκύνημα στὴν Ἁγία Γῆ καὶ τὸ Θεοβάδιστο Ὄρος Σινᾶ (A Pious Pilgrimage to the Holy Land and Mount Sinai, Where God Walked) (Athens: 2008), p. 34; Tsekoura, Τὸ Ἅγιον Φῶς στὰ Ἱεροσόλυμα, pp. 86-87.

37. Papadopoulos, Ἱστορία τῆς Ἐκκλησίας Ἱεροσολύμων, pp. 598-599.

38. Ibid., pp. 628-630.

39. For the text of this decree (Ὅρος), see Sacrorum Conciliorum Nova et Amplissima Collectio, ed. J.-B. Martin and L. Petit, Vol. xxxviii (Paris: Expensis Huberti Welter, 1907), cols. 617c-621a. For an English translation, see I Confess One Baptism..., by Protopresbyter George Metallinos, trans. Priestmonk Seraphim (Holy Mountain: St. Paul’s Monastery, 1994), pp. 133-136—trans.

40. Papadopoulos, Ἱστορία τῆς Ἐκκλησίας Ἱεροσολύμων, p. 695.

41. Cf. Ephesians 5:14.

42. St. Luke 15:7, 10.

43. St. Symeon the New Theologian, “Catechesis xxviii,” §7, p. 138.

44. Metropolitan Hierotheos of Navpaktos and Hagios Blasios, “Τὸ ἅγιον Φῶς καὶ ἡ μητέρα τῶν Ἐκκλησιῶν” (The Holy Light and the Mother of the Churches), Ἐκκλησιαστικὴ Παρέμβαση, No. 63 (April 2001). Regarding the non-perceptible nature of Uncreated Light, see Iakovos Potamianos, Tὸ Φῶς στὴ Βυζαντινὴ Ἐκκλησία (Light in the Byzantine Church) (Thessalonike: University Studio Press, 2000), pp. 62, 70.

• According to the great theologian of the Uncreated Light, St. Gregory Palamas, all such things that occur in the ontological realm are not products of nature, nor do they arise from some deficiency, but on account of their superiority; they are all spiritual, but not uncreat­ed: “Therefore, the Resurrection of the Lord is spiritual, as the Golden-mouthed Father says, but resurrection is not uncreated, nor is the very act of resurrecting; for it is the resurrec­tion of a fallen creature, which is the same as to say a recreation and a refashioning. Such are the new creation, the new man, and the new and pure heart.... [Everything] that is inef­fably accomplished by God is spiritual, but not everything [that He brings about] is uncre­ated.” Spiritual things are expressed “perceptibly” and are subject to the “perceptual facul­ty,” which is unable to apprehend not only things that transcend the mind, but even things that transcend the senses, that is, noetic realities. “Uncreated things are beyond the mind, and those who are united to these things are united to a higher power which surpasses the nature of the mind, according to the great Dionysios” (Fifth Refutatory Discourse Against Akindynos, ch. 23, §§87, 88, 89, in Γρηγορίου τοῦ Παλαμᾶ Ἅπαντα τὰ Ἔργα, Vol. vi, Ἕλληνες Πατέρες τῆς Ἐκκλησίας [Thessalonike: Paterikai Ekdoseis “Gregorios ho Palamas,” 1987], pp. 252, 254, 256). See also St. Dionysios the Areopagite, On the Divine Names, ch. vii.1, Patro­logia Græca, Vol. iii, col. 865c—trans.

45. Vladimir Lossky, The Mystical Theology of the Eastern Church (Crestwood, NY: St. Vladimir’s Seminary Press, 1976), p. 221.

46. See, for example, Archimandrite George Kapsanes, “Ὀρθόδοξος Παράδοσις καὶ Παπισμός” (Orthodox Tradition and Papism), Ὀρθόδοξος Τύπος, No. 332 (November 10, 1978).

47. For an analysis of what it means to fall away from the Body of the Church, see “On the Status of Uncondemned Heretics,” http://hsir.org/p/th.

48. “The Orthodox Views of His Grace, Bishop Daniel of Budapest,” Orthodox Tradition, Vol. xv, Nos. 2-3 (1998), p. 13.

49. Archimandrite Gabriel Dionysiates, Ἁγιορειτικὴ Μαρτυρία (The Witness of the Holy Mountain) (Thessalonike: Ekdoseis “Orthodoxos Kypsele,” n.d.), pp. 185-186.

50. See the article “Ἅγιος Γεράσιμος καὶ Δαιμονισμένοι” (St. Gerasimos of Kephallenia and Demoniacs”) on the website “Ὀρθόδοξος Κόσμος” (accessed April 5, 2008). This text is also available elsewhere on the Internet.

51. “Canonical Questions from Patriarch Mark of Alexandria and Responses Thereto by Pa­triarch Theodore Balsamon of Antioch,” Nos. 14-15, Patrologia Græca, Vol. cxxxviii, cols. 965c-968b.

52. Νουθεσίες Ἁγιοπνευματικὲς καὶ Παρακλητικὸς Κανών (Spiritual Counsels and Canon of Supplication) (Thessalonike: Ekdoseis “Orthodoxos Kypsele,” 2008), pp. 157-158.

53. Views expressed by Protopresbyter Dumitru Staniloae (†1993) in Hieromonk Ioanichie Balan, Πνευματικοὶ Διάλογοι μὲ Ρουμάνοuς Πατέρες (Spiritual Dialogues with Romanian Fathers) (Thessalonike: Ekdoseis “Orthodoxos Kypsele,” 1986), pp. 205, 206, 208.

54. The following historical incident is very telling: When the Synod under Patriarch Germa­nos ii of Constantinople (1222-1240) wanted to appear compliant for the time being and to permit the Hierarchy and clergy in Cyprus, who were under the harsh yoke of the Latins, to conform “by oikonomia” to the terms put forward by the Papists, yielding to the demands [of the Latins] for submission in order to serve the faithful and to avert impending calam­ities, they provoked a great uproar: “As soon as they learned that such a decision had been taken, enraged crowds of clergy, monks, and faithful rushed into the chamber in which the Synod was in session. After declaring to the members of the Synod that they regarded this submission as a veritable denial of the ancestral Faith, they demanded that the Patriarch al­ter the Synodal resolution, which is in fact what happened” (Archimandrite Hieronymos I. Kotsones, Ἡ Κανονικὴ Ἄποψις περὶ τῆς Διακοινωνίας μετὰ τῶν Ἑτεροδόξων (Intercom­munio) [Intercommunion with the Heterodox from the Canonical Standpoint] [Athens: Ekdoseis “He Damaskos,” 1957], p. 75).

55. See the discussion in the article from some fifty years ago by the Serbian theologian Fa­ther Danilo Krstić, later Bishop of Budapest (†2002), “The Divine Fire and Man-made Stream,” in The Faithful Steward, No. 14 (2003), p. 8. In this interesting text, the author makes mention also of the “strictly Traditionalist” Orthodox, who equate the “boundaries” of the Church with the charismatic boundaries of the Divine Eucharist. There is no Divine Eucharist outside the Orthodox Catholic Church. The Traditionalists maintain two differ­ent practices in receiving the heterodox. The strictest, following St. Cyprian of Carthage, baptize converts (it is primarily the Greeks, including those on the Holy Mountain, who do this), whereas others are content to anoint them with Holy Chrism, reckoning that in this way their baptism outside the Church becomes valid and efficacious (this is done chiefly by the Slavs).

• For an historical perspective on the difference in practice in dealing with the recep­tion of the heterodox on the part of the Patriarchate of Constantinople and of the Church of Russia, see Kotsones, Ἡ Κανονικὴ Ἄποψις περὶ τῆς Διακοινωνίας μετὰ τῶν Ἑτεροδόξων, pp. 121-122.

• For statements and activities of the ringleaders among the Orthodox ecumenists, who laid the foundations for the further development of such heretical ecumenist “theologies” as “Baptismal theology” and the “theology of the Broad Church,” see “Ecumenism as an Ec­clesiological Heresy,” http://hsir.org/p/rd.

56. Archimandrite Spyridon Bilales, Ὀρθοδοξία καὶ Παπισμός (Orthodoxy and Papism) (Ath­ens: Ekdoseis “Orthodoxou Typou,” 1969), Vol. ii, p. 343.

57. Ibid., p. 344.

58. Ibid.

59. Ibid., p. 345.

60. Ibid., p. 346.

61. See the article “Ἀθηναγόρας Α´, Οἰκουμενικὸς Πατριάρχης” (Athenagoras I, OEcumeni­cal Patriarch), in Μεγάλη Ὀρθόδοξη Χριστιανικὴ Ἐγκυκλοπαιδεία (Great Orthodox Chris­tian Encyclopedia) (Athens: Strategikes Ekdoseis, [2010]), Vol. i, p. 388.

62. Archimandrite Gabriel, Ἁγιορειτικὴ Μαρτυρία, p. 161.

63. “Patriarch Athenagoras of Constantinople (1886-1972): His Statements, Messages, and Ac­tivities,” Orthodox Tradition, Vol. xviii, No. 1 (2001), p. 10.

64. “The Balamand Statement,” §13, Eastern Churches Journal, Vol. i, No. 1 (Winter 1993-1994), p. 19. We have corrected the wording of the final sentence on the basis of the French original of the Balamand Statement

(see http://www.prounione.urbe.it/dia-int/o-rc/doc/i_o-rc_07_balamand_fr.html).

65. E.g., “Within the ecumenical movement and the World Council of Churches the concern for common witness and the unity of the churches has always been a priority, and prose­lytism has been recognized as a scandal and counterwitness”; “[One] of the characteristics which clearly distinguish[es] proselytism from authentic Christian witness [is] [p]resenting one’s church or confession as ‘the true church’ and its teachings as ‘the right faith’ and the only way to salvation, rejecting baptism in other churches as invalid and persuading peo­ple to be rebaptized”; “Proselytism is a perversion of authentic Christian witness and thus a counterwitness. It does not build up but destroys. It brings about tensions, scandal and di­vision, and is thus a destabilizing factor for the witness of the church of Christ in the world. It is always a wounding of koinonia, creating not fellowship but antagonistic parties,” (“To­wards Common Witness: A Call to Adopt Responsible Relationships in Mission and to Re­nounce Proselytism,”

http://www.oikoumene.org/en/resources/documents/wcc-commis­sions/mission-and-evangelism/towards-common-witness.html)

66. “Although ecclesiastical communion does not yet exist between our Churches [Orthodox and Protestant], we each regard the other’s members as baptized, and in the case of a change in confession, we refuse to undertake a new baptism. The participants in the dialogue sa­lute the efforts of the Churches in Germany (Arbeitsgemeinschaft Christlicher Kirchen) to reach agreement regarding a mutual recognition of baptism” (Joint Communiqué, Phanar, 2004),” in “Participation in the ‘World Council of Churches’ as an Ecclesiological Heresy: ‘Invisible Unity’ and ‘Baptismal Theology,’” http://hsir.org/p/ac.

67. Archimandrite Cyprian and Hieromonk Klemes Hagiokyprianitai, Οἰκουμενικὴ Κίνησις καὶ Ὀρθόδοξος Ἀντι-οικουμενισμός – ῾Η κρίσιμος ἀντιπαράθεσις ἑνὸς αἰῶνος (The Ecumen­ical Movement and Orthodox Anti-Ecumenism: The Crucial Confrontation of a Century) (Vol. vii in Συμβολὴ στὴν Ἀντι-οικουμενιστικὴ Θεολογία; Athens: Ekdoseis Hieras Synodou ton Enistamenon, 2001), p. 53.

68. See the presentations of this and the other ecumenical events mentioned subsequently, together with audio-visual material, according to the date of their posting, at the extremely informative website “Aktines” (http://aktines.blogspot.com).

69. ii Thessalonians 2:3.

70. “Epistle lxx,” Patrologia Græca, Vol. xxxii, col. 436b.

71. St. Matthew 23:14.

72. “Epistle ccli,” §4, Patrologia Græca, Vol. xxxii, col. 940a.

73. See “St. Basil and Resistance: Communion with Heretical Bishops is Inadmissible,” http://hsir.org/p/2a.

74. Ibid. (See St. Basil, “Epistle li,” Patrologia Græca, Vol. xxxii, cols. 388c-392a.)

75. Revelation 22:5.

 

Schema-Bishop Peter (Ladygin): An Unshakable Pillar of the Catacomb Church

by S. V. Shumilo and V. V. Shumilo     The editorial board of Church News continues to acquaint readers with the life and struggles...