Tuesday, June 2, 2026

Orthodoxy and the Unia

In the Persons of the Venerable Job, Abbot of Pochaev, & the Uniate “Saint” Josaphat Kuntsevich, as Representatives of their Churches, Compatriots & Contemporaries

 

“Show me your faith from your works” (Jas. 2: 18)

 

 

It is well known that comparisons have been made between the Unia and Orthodoxy from the most varied standpoints, and, as is fitting, never favorably for the Unia. But as far as we know, no one has yet tried to place the Unia, if one may thus express oneself, face to face with Orthodoxy in the form and activity of the highest representatives of both the Orthodox Church and the Unia, such as may, without doubt, be considered saints acknowledged in one Church or the other by their followers.

The celebration of the return of the Lavra of Pochaev from the Unia to Orthodoxy, with all of its age-old shrines, consisting, as is well known, of the healing foot print of the Theotokos, the miraculous Pochaev Icon of the Mother of God, and the incorrupt relics of the Venerable Job, Abbot and wonder-worker of Pochaev, as well as its inclusion in the family of the lavras of Russia, provides us with a basis and reason for bringing this attempt, as far as we are able, to fulfillment, taking for comparison the life and blessed struggles of Job of Pochaev and the life and activity of the Uniate saint Josaphat Kuntsevich.

We consider ourselves as having all the more right to do this in that the Venerable Job and
Josaphat Kuntsevich were, first of all, contemporaries. The former, who was born about 1551, reposed in the hundredth year of his life, 1651. The latter was slain by the inhabitants of Polotsk at the age of forty-three, in 1623; consequently he was born and died within the lifetime of the venerable one. And both lived and were active in Western Russia during the period of the Latino-Uniate domination in Lithuania and Volyn, so that, in speaking of one, one cannot, out of historical necessity, be silent about the other. Secondly, Job and Josaphat were compatriots, both as to place of birth and to the place of their ministry. Josaphat was born in Vladimir of Volyn in 1580, and spent the early years of his youth there, while the Venerable Job was made abbot of the Holy Cross Monastery in Dubno, near Vladimir, in the same province of Volyn’, to which he had been transferred from the Ugornitsky Monastery in Galicia, at the request of Prince Constantine Ostrozhsky (ca. 1582). Furthermore, Saint Job’s place of birth in the Pokutskaya region of Galicia is not less akin to Volyn’ than the city of Vladimir Josaphat’s birthplace. This is the very same province which, at the first partition of Poland in 1773, passed to Austria, and comprises at the present time the Kolomysky District between the River Dniester and the Moldau. There one finds to this day the ruins of the ancient Ugornitsky Monastery of the Holy Transfiguration, now in the village of Ugerniki, in which the venerable one received monasticism at the age of twelve, and where later he was raised to the rank of hieromonk and received the schema. Who is unaware that Galicia and Volyn’ were from ancient times one, both as to nationality and religion? This was even more so during St. Job’s lifetime, when Volyn’ and Galicia were under the sole domination of the Polish realm, and especially when the venerable one lived and was active in the Monastery of Pochaev, from which, from the heights of Pochaev, Galicia even now opens up, as we have already said, even to the simple, untrained eye.

But what is most important of all for us, the Venerable Job and Josaphat Kuntsevich, being contemporaries and compatriots, are each considered a saint in his own church, in consequence of which they give us a fuller basis for comparing them one to the other, the moreso also in that their posthumous fate and very glorification in many respects resemble each other, although not with the same results. When the Uniates occupied the Monastery of Pochaev, they also took possession of the incorrupt remains of the Venerable Job. Yet even with all their zeal for Latinism and their hatred for Orthodoxy, the Basilians of Pochaev did not dare to terminate completely all veneration for the memory of the favorite of God, and even, as we have seen, desired that he be canonized by the Pope of Rome. Now, the Orthodox have committed to the ground for all time what the Uniates considered to be the relics of Josaphat, or to put it more correctly, the Latins and Jesuits foisted the appellation of relics upon them, and according to the measure of the spread of Orthodoxy and Orthodox ideals in the Kholmsk region and Galicia, the very memory of Josaphat is being erased and is threatened with being covered with the gloom of utter oblivion in the near future.

Where lies the reason for so remarkable a phenomenon? Why is the memory of the one exalted so mightily, while the glory and greatness of the other decreases? Hear what history replies to this.

I

The Outward Life of the Venerable Job as Compared to the Life & Activity of Josaphat

 

“Wherefore, ye shall know them by their fruits” (Mt. 7: 20)

 

The Latino-Uniates usually begin by extolling their Josaphat for his intense zeal for the Unia. And we know that this zeal was actually the predominant trait in the life and activity of this persecutor of the Orthodox Church. But who will not say that this zeal was zeal not according to knowledge? The contemporaries of Josaphat themselves acknowledged this — and in whatever edition we read the famous and remarkable letter of Chancellor Leo Sapieha of Lithuania to Josaphat, either in the edition of Bantysh-Kamenski, or in the other, so-called genuine edition published recently by the Uniates themselves — we must agree with their own testimony, that Josaphat “filled to overflowing the courts of the land, magistrates, tribunals, town halls and episcopal chanceries with intrigues, lawsuits, and denunciations [of the Orthodox]”, that he “did violence to men’s conscience... locked up Orthodox churches so that the people perished for lack of divine services, the Christian rites and sacraments, as though they were unbelievers. “Christ the Lord did not seal up, did not deny access to churches as Your Puissance is doing” writes Leo Sapieha in his so-called genuine letter to Josaphat. “The Jews and Tartars are permitted,” he continues, “to have their own synagogues and mosques, but you are sealing up Christian churches”, etc. In the same letter, Sapieha points out to Josaphat the threatening mood of the Orthodox people and Cossacks, which, as acknowledged by Josaphat himself in his letter to Sapieha, was putting his life in danger because of his fanatical struggles against Orthodoxy, and which, as Sapieha rightly notes, “has rendered the Unia itself harmful for the state and dangerous to the existence and unity of Poland....” But for Kuntsevich, the interests of the state did not exist before religious interests. Because of his beloved Unia, he did not even care about his own safety and recklessly walked into obvious danger. In Vitebsk, whose inhabitants were more committed to Orthodoxy than others, he refused to permit the unfortunate people to serve even in huts and cabins, or to bury the dead with the holy mysteries; and he incited the populace against him to such an extent that at the first opportunity a street mob attacked him, beat him to death with clubs and, having severed his head with an axe, cast his body into the river.

Such a terrible, pitiless fanatic the infallible papacy first beatified, and then canonized (1867), designating him the “Patron of Russia & Poland”. And this is not the first time the papacy has done such a thing. They canonized the fanatical founder of the Society of Jesus, Ignatius Loyola (a Spaniard, and the terrible deviser of the cruel Inquisition), Peter Arbues, and others, because the Roman Church does not require God-pleasing struggles of Christian love and piety as the basis for canonization, but brilliant, even if bloody, struggles which advance the spread of papal domination and rule, ad majorem Dei gloriam… After this, the memory of a similar type of saint, at the first convenient opportunity, topples with a loud noise, as in our own eyes the memory of Josaphat has perished in Lithuania and Volyn’, and as it is now quite apparently perishing in the Kholmsk region and in Galicia.

Not such are the true servants of God, the genuine champions of the Holy Orthodox Faith. The Venerable Job also loved his native Church with the fullness of his heart, and with all the powers of his spirit and life strove to contend for its glory, purity and dissemination. But he loved it as befits a true follower of Christ, with a love united with unshakable steadfastness, Christian tolerance, and goodly condescension toward the erring, and with that real evangelical zeal which is ready to lay down its life for the conversion of unbelievers, but without doing violence to their conscience, in the spirit of persuasion, and not oppression and force. Thus did our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ and His apostles themselves act; thus did all the holy fathers of the ancient Church act: “You do not find among them,” Sapieha justly writes to Josaphat concerning St. John Chrysostom, “either complaints, or protests, or court cases, or legal accusations, or subpoenas… or persecution, expulsions and executions of pious priests, but find only what serves to increase [the real] glory of God, the edification of men’s souls and the moving of enraged tyrants to mercy…” This is how the Venerable Job of Pochaev, the blessed favorite of God, acted.

His primary concern after acceding to the duty of Abbot of the Dubensk Monastery, as we have seen, was to raise the level of moral life among the brethren under his care. This was the foremost, vital power, which in those times elevated Orthodoxy over other religions and gave it significance and an invincible might. One of our native historians correctly writes of St. Job of Pochaev: “Only when viewed superficially does it seem that the power of the Russian spirit and the essence of the Russian character were embodied all the more by men who built cities, worked the fields and routed the assaults of the enemy. The Orthodox Church was the soul of all these activities and the regulator of human passions, and men like Job of Pochaev preserved the Church from utter collapse. These humble men of silence, these men of ceaseless prayer, these mediators between our remote forebears and even more remote posterity, were the centers of the nation’s life, toward whom souls beset by the fears or temptations of life came from great distances, and from whom words of encouragement and edification were directed throughout the land of Russia...” This is the striking dichotomy between Job and Josaphat, of which, concerning the latter, Sapieha himself writes in his letter to him: “I know what sort of priests you are ordaining, i.e., such as are more capable of destroying than building up the Church of Christ. From everywhere we hear the complaint that the priests we have are not worthy, but rather are blind. Our ignorant priests are leading the people to destruction….” What is also astonishing is that, this being the case, the Unia was, so to speak, dying at its very root, while Orthodoxy has hitherto stood steadfast and unshaken. “May God grant,” we say with the words of this same Sapieha, “that we always have more worthy representatives among us”!!!

Another, no less essential concern of the Venerable Job which is known to us, was the distribution of church books, which during those unfortunate times, as we know, comprised the sole rampart of Orthodoxy against the Latino-Uniate pretenses of papism. In this regard, the Latino-Uniates can also show us that Josaphat for his part also “was concerned with the elevation of education among the clergy subject to him, especially with the translation of Latin theological books into the Russian language…”, and he even, they say, published “a short catechism which, on his instructions, was read weekly in the churches.” Yet it is remarkable that even such an admirer of Josaphat as the author of The History of the Union of the Russian Church with the Church of Rome, while mentioning Josaphat’s translation of “theological books”, does not indicate even one which was actually translated by him, even among the series of those Latino-Uniate books which were full of historical lies and fanatical attacks on Orthodoxy, with which the anti-Orthodox literature of the Western church abounds. But concerning Josaphat’s notorious catechesis, the same author remarks in a footnote that only “certain portions of this catechesis have been preserved to our times”, and what is even more curious, “they can be found only in the appendix to the Italian biography of Josaphat, Vita di s. Giosafat (Rome, 1867), authored by the Roman Catholic priest Contieri.” By way of contrast, in the Lavra of Pochaev itself, as we already know, there is preserved a book written in the Venerable Job’s own handwriting, comprising an anthology of various patristic teachings and other articles of a historical and dogmatic nature, which the saint himself used when delivering instruction to the brethren and the people in church, and which was especially directed toward the defense of Orthodoxy.

We are not speaking of how elevating for the Orthodox was the holy personality of the saint when we recall that one of the greatest contributions made by Prince Constantine K. Ostrozhsky — the publication of the first Bible in Church Slavonic — was made at a time when the blessed favorite of God was residing in the Dubensk Monastery, in consequence of which, as we have already said, the Venerable Job not only approved and blessed this printing of the famous Ostrozhsky Bible in 1580-81, but was responsible for the very idea for this publication, its implementation and completion. Thus, we consider ourselves all the more justified in thinking that in those times the best among the princes and noblemen, both in the East and in the West of Russia, would never have dared to do anything without the advice and participation of their spiritual fathers. And the Venerable Job was just such a father for Prince Constantine Ostrozhsky all throughout the former’s tenure as abbot of the Dubensk Monastery, until the very death of the God-loving prince.

One can only imagine how Josaphat treated the Ostrozhsky Bible, even though he was born only a year before its publication. He doubtless knew of its origin in the later years of his life if, as is beyond doubt, he was thoroughly imbued with all the ideals of the Latin church, which at that time set as one of its basic laws the prohibition of the reading of the Bible by the people, the better to keep their adherents in the darkness of ignorance and error.

Saint Job’s transfer to Pochaev and his appointment as abbot of the Holy Mountain of Pochaev provided him with new means for acting to benefit Orthodoxy. Thus, he built on Mount Pochaev a beautiful new church, and in such a way that the healing footprint of the Mother of God, which for centuries had stood under the open sky, was situated directly beneath its dome. Here, according to ancient Orthodox custom, the wonder-working Pochaev Icon of the Mother of God was placed over the royal doors, so that the new church became, as it were, the center of all the holy shrines of Pochaev, all the more precious for Russian Orthodox sensibilities, so that, throughout the Venerable Job’s sojourn on Mount Pochaev, they could breathe and find consolation only in the gracious aid sent down from on high through the wondrous footprint and the holy icon of the Mother of God, amid the storm of adversities raised against Orthodoxy by papism and its henchmen such as Josaphat.

It is remarkable that the very glorification of the wonder-working Icon of the Mother of God in the Monastery of Pochaev, beginning, as is well known, in 1595, coincides with the beginning of the Union of Brest (1596) and the subsequent persecutions raised against the Orthodox Church by Josaphat himself, so that one would have to be very inattentive to the judgments of God not to see in this coincidence the activity of the right hand of God which, at the same time as the bitter persecutions by the Unia, prepared gracious consolation for the Orthodox in the miraculous Icon of the All-pure Virgin, who in this manner chose Mount Pochaev as her headquarters for the defense of the Orthodox people, their encouragement and deliverance.

Summoned from the Ugornitsky Monastery to the Dubensky Monastery for the sake of Orthodoxy which, as we have already said, was supported primarily by the pious life of monks, the Venerable Job was prepared to use every favorable opportunity to spread Orthodox monasteries throughout Western Russia. And history bears witness that, thanks to his influence as a spiritual father, the famous noblewoman Irene Yarmolinskaya, as we know, in 1646 founded a rich monastery by a special bequest, and had it dedicated to Saint John the Almsgiver. The monastery was situated on her estate, called Zagaitsy, in Volyn’, and the venerable one personally signed her bequest as her spiritual father, and thus for all time confirmed his direct participation in the establishment of this monastery to the glory of the Holy Orthodox Church. There is a tradition that the first monks to inhabit the Zagaitsky Monastery were sent by the Venerable Job, at Yarmolinskaya’s request, from the Monastery of Pochaev.

One cannot, of course, deny that Josaphat, for his part, also drew several prominent Russian noblemen into his Unia, such as, for example, Theodore Skumin Tyshkevich, his son Janus, Jan Meleshko, Soltan, and others, as a result of which the Orthodox justly called him a “soul-stealer”. Yet by doing so Josaphat deprived his clients of what is most dear to man — their native Orthodox Faith; and we doubt greatly that by so doing he brought holy peace to the souls of the apostates. The following passages from the letter of Sapieha to Josaphat have quite a different meaning: “Show us, Your Grace, whom you have acquired, whom you have brought in with your severity, your sealings and closures [of churches].... You have transformed them [Josaphat’s followers] from sheep into goats, have imperiled the state, and have possibly brought all of us Catholics to destruction. Instead of joy over celebrated Unia has caused us only vexations, disturbances and discord; it has become so loathsome to us that we might wish that we could be left without it, so much disturbance, bitterness and care we endure thanks to it. This is the fruit of your famous Unia. To tell the truth, it has acquired fame only for the troubles and dissensions it has produced among the people and the whole border area....”

Simultaneously with his concerns for the good external order of Mount Pochaev, which had an immediate influence on the increase in the monastic population within the walls of the monastery, the Venerable Job did not forget in Pochaev his beloved work of disseminating essential books for the benefit of Orthodoxy, which, as we have seen, he intentionally printed in his Pochaev Printery, such as the famous “Mirror of Theology” by Tranquilion. He himself travelled to Kiev for a council of the fathers (1628) for the defense of Orthodoxy; etc.

It is understandable in and of itself that for Orthodoxy such feats could not pass without leaving a trace. And we know that they indubitably saved the Church of Russia, and thus preserved for all time that unshakable ground upon which Orthodoxy is built even now, even where, as for example in the Kholm region, the enemies of the Orthodox Church were fully justified in considering that it was apparently perishing utterly. It is also to no one other than the Venerable Job and that high moral law of life, the foundation of which was laid by the blessed favorite of God in his monastery, that the Monastery of Pochaev is indebted for the fact that, of all the monasteries of Western Russia, it was the last converted to the Unia (after 1721). Prior to that time, the monks of Pochaev, faithful to the testament of their God-bearing father and teacher, for almost a century after the appearance of the Unia remained unshaken in Orthodoxy, despite the most desperate efforts and dangerous ploys used by its enemies to draw the Monastery of Pochaev into the Unia.

Thanks to this, as we already know, of all the Uniate monasteries of Western Russia in the 18th and 19th centuries, only in the Monastery of Pochaev were the liturgical rites observed in a manner close to the typicons of the ancient Orthodox Church, which is why the other Basilians called divine services as performed at Pochaev schismatic. Furthermore, actual proof of this even in our times is the fact that, with the exception of the liturgicons and books of needs, the liturgical books printed at the former Pochaev Basilian Printery contain only insignificant differences from the corresponding Orthodox books, such as, for example, the horologion, octoechos, menaion, etc. Thus, the very enemies of Orthodoxy were unable utterly to eradicate what was sown through the prayer and labors of the venerable one.

It is interesting that the labors of the Venerable Job on Mount Pochaev to confirm and defend Orthodoxy (1604-1651) coincide exactly with the time when, in Eastern Russia, the Holy Trinity-St. Sergius Lavra, inspired by the spirit of its great founder, which was ever present in it, was saving Orthodoxy and the Russian land from the selfsame enemies and the henchmen of the Unia with whom the Venerable Job was doing battle as abbot of Pochaev. And if it is impossible to doubt that the Venerable Job had the most circumstantial information concerning all that was happening at that time in Muscovy during the Time of Troubles (1608-1612), of the pretenders and the interregnum, one must agree that, as a true son of the Orthodox Church, with all the powers of his soul he sympathized with all that was then being done by and from the Lavra of St. Sergius, and if not in deed, then by his powerful prayer and the good desires of his heart he aided that upon which the power and greatness of the Russian nation is now unshakably established, and with this, of course, all the Russian provinces, which comprise a single, indivisible whole under the scepter of the sovereign of all Russia.

II

The Inner Spiritual Life and Struggles of Saint Job & of Josaphat & Their Glorifications

 

And if a man also strive for masteries, yet is he not crowned, except he strive lawfully (II Tim. 2: 5)

 

Behold the pellucid, starry night of southern Russia. Elevated hundreds of feet above the surrounding level plain, the Holy Mountain of Pochaev rests in the twilight, covered from top to bottom with age-old beeches, hornbeams and broad-leafed walnut trees. When they have finished their private rule of prayer, the monks of Pochaev have long since extinguished the fires in their little cells. Only the newly constructed Church of the Holy Trinity, white as snow, and containing the healing footprint and the miraculous icon of the Mother of God under its domes, stands welcoming on the very peak of the crag, as if watching over those who pray in it. And below, in the middle of the southern face of the mountain, on a nearly level space between the Holy Trinity Cathedral and the mountain’s foundations, Pochaev’s ancient wooden Church of the Dormition of the Mother of God is sheltered, and across from it, directly in the crag, like a dark precipice yawns the deep cave well known to the hermits of Pochaev from time immemorial as the best refuge for feats of prayer and contemplation, far from the tumult and threefold waves of worldly vanity.

But behold! the holy gates of the monastery are silently opening, and from them two men are issuing forth one after the other: the first, an elder bent beneath the weight of years, but obviously hale and hearty, vested in the full monastic schema, with an abbatial staff in his hand, on which he leans, guiding his steps. The second is a young, modest monk in the usual monastic garb. Both of them are evidently going toward the Church of the Dormition; but while the young one pauses at the vestibule of the church, the elder moves with measured step toward the cave, and there is slowly swallowed up by its sepulchral gloom.

These were the Venerable Job and his closest, most beloved disciple, Hieromonk Dositheus of the Monastery of Pochaev. The favorite of God descended into the cave, extending his hands before him, his head bent low, because the rocks hanging down above his back prevent him from standing upright. Then, having grasped with his hand a rock which stands like a column on the left-hand side within the cave, the venerable one stood erect in the cave, having thus wormed his way between rocks for a distance of about twelve feet. Here his blessed feet paused first on a little space about 28 inches square, at the head of which, if one turns to face the north, opens an empty space about 28 inches high, but irregular in shape. Despite the impenetrable darkness of the cave, the Venerable Job knows the lay of the cave perfectly well. This is why, extending his left hand and leaning it against the aforementioned column, and simultaneously bowing his head because further on there is a dome in the rock like a baldachino, Job set his foot as upon a step, and moving forward, set foot in the largest northern recess in the cave. Here the favorite of God had many years before placed an excellent copy of the miraculous Pochaev Icon on a shelf in the stone, and now, without seeing it with his bodily eyes, but directing the gaze of his soul upon it, he falls prostrate and begins to pray, as is his custom, profoundly, sincerely and with a pure heart. If we ourselves had the ability to watch the holy favorite of God while he was praying, we might see his threadbare schema part to reveal the coarse hairshirt he wore against his body, covered with blood from the cruel sores caused by the saint’s wearing iron chains against his flesh; we might see his feet, swollen from long standing, until his flesh has fallen away from his bones in pieces, to which, as Dositheus writes, “his precious incorrupt relics, which lie in his shrine, bear witness to this day.” Suddenly, an extraordinary, unearthly light illumines the cave, and for the course of more than two hours issues forth from its depths and is reflected upon the church which stands opposite, to the great terror and astonishment of Dositheus who, seeing all of this, could only fall to the ground, “overcome by such a strange sight”.

“And if this cave of stone had a mouth,” we repeat the words of Dositheus, “it might inform us how sometimes, at times after three days, at times after an entire week, he who had enclosed himself alone within it and was nurtured only with tears shed from a pure heart, prayed for the good estate of the world which lies in darkness.”

This is genuine Christian prayer, in nowise comparable to prayers which Josaphat might have uttered “while flogging himself until he drew blood”, as his panegyrists boast of him. Firstly, as true believers, we cannot fail to regard with prejudice the beating with which in general the Latino-Uniate ascetics love to accompany their feats of prayer. One may only consider prayer genuine which is made from the depth of one’s soul, without any external diversion. From this such holy favorites of God as the Venerable Job also strove primarily to choose for their prayer solitary places which present no diversions for weak human nature. And the Savior Himself among His most important instructions concerning prayer commands each of us: “But thou, when thou prayest, enter into thy room, and when thou hast shut thy door, pray to thy Father, Who is in secret; and thy Father, Who seeth in secret, shall reward thee openly” (Mt. 6: 6). What sort of concentration has one who prays when, pouring forth his feelings before the Lord, he is at the same time trying to inflict wounds upon himself with an instrument of well-known type? On the contrary, torture of this sort will certainly distract one’s thoughts from the Lord, and hence will render the prayer itself shallow and imperfect. One likewise cannot but agree that the so-called flagellation practiced by the ascetics of the Western Church, as admitted by the best of them, in many instances produces in its practitioners, instead of the mortification of the flesh, a certain type of pleasure, a sort of languor, which prompts one to resort to flagellation not as to a salvific means of repentance, but more readily as a well-known way of inducing a pleasure which is evidently totally contrary to the spirit of true Christian compunction and repentance.

Secondly, listen to what Josaphat prays for while subjecting his body to flagellation: “While whipping himself,” writes one of his biographers, “he cried out: O Lord, uproot the schism and grant the Unia a crown!” And he did not forget this prayer even when he had become a bishop. This is a real Latino-Jesuit prayer, alien to any spirit of love and Christian condescension, a prayer all the more sinful and contrary to God in that Josaphat himself, even though he was a Latin of the Eastern Rite, had to learn to pray with the mouth of the Holy Orthodox Church: “For the peace of the whole world, the good estate of the holy Churches of God, and the union of all...” But he obviously read more of the missals of the Latins than Orthodox service books, and hence, from the foremost of them became imbued with the spirit of the Roman prayer: “May the Lord bring peace, preserve, unify and render honorable the Catholic Church, and with the pope make her the governor of the whole world [regere toto orbe terrarum]...”, etc. With what immense magnitude does the meek prayer of the Venerable Job breathe in comparison to all of this, for he did not even pray for the prosperity of the Orthodox Church, but only “for the good estate of the world which lieth in evil...”

To the extent that the supplication of the Venerable Job is integral, holy and unselfish, his entire moral life in general is truly noble and full of divine wisdom. In this respect, one cannot but agree with Mr. Kulish, that “the real sphere of the blessed favorite of God was not administrative, not practical, but spiritual and ideal,” and although by dint of necessity he “did not avoid anything: he entered into contact with the families of the nobility when the needs of Orthodoxy or the interests of the monastery required this, and even appeared in court as a plaintiff when the heterodox Firlej had confiscated the monastery’s property,” yet he was primarily “great in his divine contemplation, and influenced men’s minds by the holiness of his own life.” This was the way Job was when he entered upon the monastic struggle at the age of ten, and this was how he remained until the end of his life.

He always “comported himself as if he were the least in the midst of elders, as the most sinful in the midst of righteous men. Even when he happened to be a witness to such a sin as thievery, he felt only sympathy for the sinner. He helped him hide his shame before men, and only meekly reminded him of the account which each of us must render before God...”

It is not surprising that after all of this “everyone feared [St. Job] as one who could penetrate the hidden secrets of the soul of his neighbor, and they loved him as an all-forgiving brother,” since “in his loving and meek soul, without doubt, the thought was always and everywhere present of Him Who came, not to be served, but to serve others...”

In view of such circumstances it would be a direct, even unforgivable audacity to compare the blessed Job with Josaphat. Here we see the integral, noble nature in which every step, every movement of the soul, every activity keeps itself on the path of duty and righteousness, humility and brotherly love, from the age of reason to the grave. On the other hand, though Josaphat did possess certain virtues, which we will not try to reject, they were all inundated by his crude fanaticism, which lay precisely in the fact that he dichotomizes the human soul and, what is even more terrible, makes it evil, cruel and inhuman in the name of the most holy principles of faith and religion, of which, unfortunately, he has an erroneous understanding.

Hence it is not surprising that the end of the one and the other were quite different. The Uniate Josaphat was murdered in the flower of his youth by a rebellious mob, while the Venerable Job reposed peacefully at one hundred years of age on October 28th, 1651, having earlier foretold his own end and served the divine liturgy on that very day, and been sincerely mourned by his orphaned brethren and all who knew and honored him.

True, there were tears shed over the corpse of Josaphat, but they were tears of suffering and bitter curses on the part of his unfortunate victims, who filled the prisons and were beheaded in the hundreds because of the murder of the fanatic.

Nevertheless, there may be perplexities now with regard to the question of the blessed glorification of the Venerable Job and the papal coronation of Josaphat. “Vengeance is Mine; I will repay, saith the Lord” (rom. 12: 19). “Though the righteous be prevented with death, yet shall he be in rest; for the memorial thereof is immortal, because it is known with God, and with men” (Wis. 4: 7, 1). And one must possess very sick, weak eyes not to see the actions of the inscrutable judgments of the providence of God in the posthumous fate of the Venerable Job and of Josaphat.

Of the canonization of Josaphat by the Latino-Uniate Church, the Uniates themselves relate that “At the request of the king and the Russian bishops, Uniates and Latins, after examining all the witnesses to the life, apostolic labors and miracles [sic!] of Saint Josaphat, Pope Urban VIII beatified him in 1643, and Pius IX numbered him among the holy servants of God in 1867, declaring him patron of Russia and Poland.

“The body of Josaphat,” according to the words of the same writer, “rested in Polotsk where he had been taken after his murder until 1705. In that year, when Emperor Peter I threatened to have the corpse cremated, the Basilians of Polotsk had it removed from that city and entrusted it to Prince Carl Radziwill, Chancellor and Hetman of Lithuania, for safekeeping. The hetman transported it in his wagon-train throughout the remainder of the war, and when peace was declared, enshrined it in Byaly, at his estate on the Podlyasa. The Basilians expected that the remains would be restored to them, but Prince Radziwill would not permit them to be returned. Ultimately, he reached an agreement with them that they would be permitted to remove a single rib from the body, but that the rest of the body was to remain at Byaly, where they would be allowed to build a church and monastery of their rule. Relatives of Princes Chartorzhky and Sapieha protested against this. But the Radziwills, despite this, remained in possession of the relics. Not long afterward, however, Moscow removed them from the church in which they lay on an altar and, according to some accounts, took them away to an unknown place, or, according to others, ordered them buried in the crypt of the church, to conceal from the eyes of the faithful this most zealous and courageous defender of the Unia, which [Moscow] is striving to annihilate with all its powers.”

If one limits oneself only to these testimonies concerning the posthumous fate of Josaphat, it is impossible not to see from them that it is men and men only who play an exclusive rôle in the case of his so-called glorification… While of what is most essential in the case of the glorification of true favorites of God — the direct will of God for this, as well as of the miracles which comprise the most substantive proof of the holiness of a blessed person — we either hear nothing, or hear only in passing. And there are indubitable bases for thinking that there has never been any such higher, heavenly volition, or any miracles wrought by Josaphat. “True,” we say in the words of the closest experts in Russian history, Kulchinski, Josaphat’s biographer, and following him other Basilian writers, point to several miracles allegedly performed by Josaphat after his death, yet not one of them is confirmed by any reliable testimony, and they speak of them without adducing any proof, in the hope that a printed lie will receive the authority of the truth among the ignorant. The accounts of several miracles are so badly composed that they cannot withstand refutation. They say, for example, that the body of Josaphat, which was cast into the Dvina at Vitebsk, floated on its own to Polotsk against the current of the river, or that when a certain gentlewoman, who was returning from Polotsk to Ushach, prayed to Josaphat, her mare, which had died on the road, was returned to life.

But from the commission’s report on Josaphat’s murder, it is known that his body was cast into the Dvina, was removed three days later, formally identified and examined in the castle, and then dispatched by horse, along the course of the Dvina, to Polotsk, for burial. This shows what sort of credence one can place in Kulchinski and other zealots of the Unia like him! And if after the murder of Josaphat his body had performed anything in the least resembling a miracle, the examiners, the royal commissioners, as well as zealous Catholics, would not have failed to declare this in the aforementioned decree, where they enumerate all the minute details relating to the murder of Josaphat, praise his false piety, supposed virtues and even the fact that he wore a hairshirt.

Moreover, if such miracles had been manifested after the death of Josaphat, Pope Urban VIII himself would have mentioned them in his bulla of beatification, yet there is not the slightest hint of such miracles in it. We note also that, apart from Kulchinski and other Uniate and Latin writers who set down accounts of the miracles of Josaphat almost two hundred years after his death, no popular tradition concerning them has been preserved, nor so much as a single written contemporary act (with the exception of the resurrection of the horse), nor any other historical proof at all. Consequently, all the legends of the Uniates and Roman Catholics concerning the supposed miracles of Josaphat are pure fabrications, the product of the fantasies of the Basilian monks who wished to assure the ignorant mob that the Unia had its own saints, and among them a wonder-worker.

With this purely pragmatic goal, the popes performed the beatification, and later the canonization of Josaphat “for the exaltation of the Unia”; and “the politics of the Polish government, the personal interests of the Uniate clergy, and the ignorance of the people recognized him as a saint and began to venerate and bless him as a genuine holy man.” What is surprising is that, in the fullness of time, the Lord finally raised up the zeal of the divinely chosen Russian people to put an end to the superstition, by burying the embalmed remains of Josaphat in the ground, and thus, by His inscrutable judgments, by the hands of His elect He destroyed and annihilated what was, in and of itself, the creation of the sinful hands of man.

We see exactly the opposite in the history of the glorification of the Venerable Job of Pochaev. The relics of the venerable one were uncovered not by human calculation or at men’s request, but by direct inspiration from on high. Afterwards, a multitude of miracles were wrought through the relics of the favorite of God, which were so completely different from the “miracles” of Josaphat, that they not only took place, but have not ceased to take place even now, and each of them is fully documented as an indubitable fact, often borne witness to not only by the testimony of eye-witnesses, but also by the judicial authorities, popular tradition, etc. Furthermore, in the history of the glorification of the holy favorites of God in general, one sees everywhere the undoubted fact that the saints themselves carefully maintain the honor of their own blessed remains, and often reveal various miracles and signs in order to save them from disgrace. We read the same thing in the history of the posthumous miracles and signs of the Venerable Job.

Thus, as we know, it was in 1711, when a certain Wladislaw Kaminski from Bratslava, who was in Pochaev, mockingly expressed his doubt concerning the incorruption of the relics of the venerable one, that Job himself appeared to him in a dream, threatening him with his staff if he “dared to speak blasphemously of the saints of God...” It is even more remarkable that a similar miraculous sign was again manifested by the relics of Saint Job in 1737, when the Uniates had already seized control of the Lavra of Pochaev, in the person of a certain Lady Pontowski, her little son, and others.

The question thus arises as to whether we see anything similar in the embalmed remains of Josaphat. If he were a genuine saint, could he really have failed to stand up for himself when “schismatic Moscow” buried his body in the earth and thus forever deprived him of his former honor and veneration? But such is precisely the fate of all unrighteousness, that it is never in a position to stand up for itself openly and with honor. On the contrary, holy Truth triumphs even where, apparently, one might expect its most complete destruction and disgrace.

This is what happened also with the incorrupt remains of the Venerable Job. We already know that no sooner did the Uniates take possession of the Lavra of Pochaev (1721), than they immediately denied access to the relics of the venerable one and placed them behind a grill, terminating, for the time being, all contact with them. Yet this was only in the beginning. The Uniates had not managed to establish their control over Mount Pochaev when the Venerable Job again began to work various signs and wonders, which are of even greater interest to us in that they were recorded not by the Orthodox, but by the Uniates themselves. Consequently, although the Basilians of Pochaev, as we have seen, enclosed the relics of the venerable Job behind a grill and glass, despite all of this they could not but accord him special respect. And we know that they, for example, indubitably recognized the incorruption of his holy relics and even wrote openly of it in their own books.

Furthermore, the Uniates never referred to Job as other than blogoslaviony, the blessed, which, derived from the Latin word beatus, indicates in general a man of God who undoubtedly has been glorified from on high. There are also indubitable indications that the Basilians of Pochaev possessed an icon of Saint Job, which they venerated, and as we have said, they even secretly celebrated services of supplication [molebny] before his relics, set up candles before them, etc. We are not speaking only of the high respect for the Venerable Job which began among the Basilians of Pochaev, but that of the rest of the Uniates, by the end of the 18th century, especially during the time of the famous benefactor of the Lavra of Pochaev, Count Nicholas Potocki, the starosta of Kanev, so that in 1767 the Basilians even raised the question of the canonization of Saint Job with the pope, hoping to having him proclaimed a saint of their own Latino-Uniate church.

But the true servants of God, who are glorified by the Lord Himself, do not need to have their holiness confirmed by heterodox authorities. Despite the Basilians’ unwavering confidence that the canonization of Saint Job would take place, it was not, as it happened, forthcoming, because the pope, as we know, found the favorite of God to be too Orthodox and decided not to introduce a “blatant schismatic” into the Roman martyrologies, despite the significant amount of money donated for this purpose by Potocki.

Now it is doubtless the turn of the successors of the former Uniates who have returned to Orthodoxy within the boundaries of the Kingdom of Poland, and those of like mind with them who are striving toward Orthodoxy in Carpatho-Russia and Galicia. They are all the more obliged by a fitting reverence for the memory of the Venerable Job, since he is their close compatriot and one of the foremost representatives of the Russian nation in the history and life of southwestern Rus’, to such an extent that the very enemies of Orthodoxy could not refuse him respect, even though this respect did not result in the desired canonization of the saint.

In one passage in the Uniate service to the Venerable Job there is a remarkable Theotokion: “O Theotokos, who by thy birthgiving saved the three youths in the Babylonian furnace, by the supplications of thy three favorites — our fathers Basil the Great, the blessed Josaphat, and Job — save us also from misfortunes.” Thus, at that time the Uniates placed the venerable Job on the same level as Josaphat. Now, when the place of Josaphat has been abolished, obviously Job alone remains for all the former Uniates, and we cannot say anything better to them in this instance than the words from the same Uniate service: “Come, ye councils of those who love the feasts of the Church! Assemble, ye choirs of the faithful! Make haste, ye people from the ends of Russia and Poland, and let us enter into the temple of the Lord, the house of the Mother of God. Let us draw forth water from the well-spring of healings, and let us worship in the place where the feet of the Virgin stood. And together let us all say to her: Show forth thine ancient mercies; defend thy holy place with companies of angels, accepting as a mediator for us before thee thy blessed favorite [Job] Zhelezo; for he ever prayeth to the Lord in behalf of our souls.”

And that the Orthodox inhabitants of the Diocese of Kholm & Warsaw might know that the veneration of Saint Job is for them not only a moral duty but also a legal obligation, we consider it necessary to reproduce here, in conclusion, the following decree which, without doubt, remains in force to the present time. One ought to remember only that this decree was written at a time when the Orthodox inhabitants of the Kingdom of Poland were in hierarchal dependence upon the Archbishop of Volyn’.

“In the magazine of the Volyn’ Spiritual Consistory, 19th June 1833.

Heard: The proposal of His Grace Innocent, delivered to this Consistory on the 17th instant, of the following content: From the tradition preserved among the people of this area and from written information it is well known that among the ancient leaders of the Orthodox Monastery of Pochaev the venerable father Job Zhelezo, Abbot of Pochaev, was glorified by the particular struggles of a strict monastic life. His mortal remains were committed to the earth in 1651, only fifty years before the seizure of the Monastery of Pochaev by the Uniates, and eight years afterwards, on the 28th August 1659, after the the venerable one had appeared several times briefly to the Orthodox Metropolitan of Kiev, Dionysius Balaban, as he slept, [the relics] were uncovered by this same metropolitan in a complete intact state, and over the intervening 182 years, in witness of the special grace imparted to him by the Lord God, they are preserved in one of the monastery churches here [at Pochaev]. And it is no less also well known that this precious surety of the ancient Orthodoxy of this region, remaining for more than a century in the hands of those not of like mind with us, did not have in their eyes, as a constant, dire denouncer of their apostasy from the Faith of our forefathers, the value which their pious diligence customarily accorded objects venerated by them as holy.

“’Now, when merciful Providence has permitted, in the days of the blessed reign of our most devout monarch, Nicholas I, who tirelessly concerns himself with the dissemination and confirmation of true piety in our homeland, this Orthodox monastery, which is again returned to the bosom of our Church, to the joy and spiritual consolation of the Orthodox, the grateful memory of the ever-memorable planter of our ancient piety in this region, and his manifest, glorious sanctity, impose upon us the sacred duty of nurturing within the pious people reverent recollections of the exalted virtues of this righteous man. To this end, with the permission of the supreme government, henceforth, every year on the 28th August, the uncovering of the relics of the venerable one will be solemnly celebrated in this monastery.’

“The Consistory, in order to bring this to general attention throughout this diocese, through the announcement by sacred ministers to their parishioners on Sundays and feastdays in their churches, is immediately circulating a fitting proclamation. We have ordered: On obtaining the signature of His Grace on the indicated proposal, for fitting implementation, to send decrees from the Consistory to the ecclesiastical administrations, monasteries, and also the deans of the Kingdom of Poland and the District of Kremenets, and to inform the spiritual council of the Lavra of Pochaev.”

 

Translated from the Russian by the Reader Isaac E. Lambertsen, from Orthodoxy in the West of Russia, in Its Foremost Representatives, or the Patristic of Volynia & Pochaev, by Archpriest Andrew Khoinatsky (Moscow: D. I. Presnov Press, 1888), pp. 293-312.

Source: Living Orthodoxy, Vol. XVIII, No. 4, July-August 1997, pp. 11-21.

The Relationship Between the Living and the Deceased (Part 2)


 

As we observed, when a man dies, the properties of the soul which are not connected with bodily functions and life in the perceptible world remain and retain their capacity to be exercised. Conversely, the reposed can no longer do anything spiritually that would contribute to or exclude his salvation, [1] nor can he sin, [2] nor, of course, can he do anything for the healing of his passions and the forgiveness of his sins, which accompanied him at his death and continue to exist even after the event that has occurred. After death, as many Fathers affirm, repentance is impossible. [3] The reposed who did not repent at the moment when he ought to have done so resembles, as to his condition, the foolish Virgins, who, when the Bridegroom arrives, no longer have oil in their lamps nor any means by which to obtain it (Matt. 25:1–13). [4]

Indeed, from the hour of death, only the prayers of the living and the supplications to God can accomplish something for the reposed, so that the soul may become worthy to pass into a better condition. For this reason, the prayers of the living on behalf of the reposed are of great importance and constitute a great responsibility for the living with regard to the condition and the final lot of the reposed.

Saint John Chrysostomos invokes, on this subject, the solidarity that unites all the members of the one body of Christ, as well as the fact that, according to the words of the Apostle Paul, within the bosom of this body certain members who are stronger can and ought to hasten to the aid of the weak (1 Cor. 12:12–26). They have the ability to entreat God, Who bestowed these graces upon them, to grant them also to those for whom the stronger and the saints pray through their intercession.

“For God is accustomed to grant benefits to some for the sake of others. And Paul shows this when he says: ‘So that the grace given to us may become an occasion for many to give thanks to God for us’ (cf. 2 Cor. 1:11). Let us therefore not grow weary of helping those who have departed from life and of offering prayers for them. For this reason, we pray with boldness for the whole inhabited world and commemorate them together with the martyrs, together with the confessors, together with the priests. For we are all one body, even if some members are more glorious than others. And it is possible to secure forgiveness for them from every side, through the prayers, through the offerings made for them, and through their communion with those who are commemorated together with them.” [5]

The prayers and other “supplications” of the living on behalf of the reposed certainly cannot be imposed against their will. Respect for the freedom of each person is an invaluable principle for Orthodox theology and anthropology, since it is emphasized that God does not wish to impose upon man anything that is contrary to his will. In this spirit, the reposed can benefit from the supplications of the living or, more precisely, from the grace that God grants in response to these supplications, only to the extent that such a thing does not oppose their will or their deeper desires. This framework is analyzed by Dionysios the Areopagite, when he explains the nature of the priest’s prayers on behalf of the reposed during the funeral service:

“Then the divine hierarch approaches and performs a sacred prayer for the reposed. This prayer entreats the divine goodness to forgive all the things in which the reposed sinned through human weakness and to number him in the light and in the land of the living, in the bosoms of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, in the place where every pain, sorrow, and sighing have fled away. But someone might wonder why the hierarch entreats the divine goodness to grant the reposed forgiveness of his sins and to bestow upon him the luminous and Godlike state of the saints. For, if each one is to receive from divine justice the recompense of the deeds he did in this life, whether good or evil, and since the reposed has now completed his actions on earth, how is it possible, through a priestly prayer, for him to pass into a different state from that which he deserves?  I, however, following the divine Scriptures, know that each one will indeed receive the corresponding recompense. For the Lord says that ‘he shut against him,’ and also that each one will receive the things he did through the body, whether good or evil. But that the prayers of the righteous, during the present life and much more not after death, act only on behalf of those who are worthy of such sacred prayers, this is taught to us by the true traditions of the divine Scriptures.

Was Saul benefited by Samuel? Did the prayer of the prophet benefit the people of the Hebrews when they were unworthy? Just as, if someone seeks to partake of the light of the sun while he himself is destroying his sight, he cannot enjoy the gift of light which the sun offers to healthy eyes, so also he who seeks the prayers of the saints without being suitably prepared nourishes vain and unprofitable hopes, since through his indifference to the divine gifts and the good commandments he removes himself from the natural energy of grace.

I say, therefore, according to the divine Scriptures, that the prayers of the saints are entirely beneficial in this life in the following way: if someone desires the sacred gifts of God and has a suitable spiritual disposition to receive them, while at the same time recognizing his own weakness, and approaches some holy man and asks him to become a fellow-worker and supporter in his supplications, then he will certainly be benefited with this supreme benefit. For he will obtain the things he asks, since the divine goodness accepts both his own humble self-knowledge and his reverence toward the saints, as well as his praiseworthy desire for the sacred requests and his Godlike disposition. As for the aforementioned prayer which the hierarch addresses for the reposed, it is necessary to set forth the tradition which we received from our God-taught teachers. The divine hierarch is, as the Scriptures say, an interpreter and revealer of the divine ordinances; for he is ‘an angel of the Lord Almighty.’ He has therefore been taught by the God-given words that to those who lived in holiness the most radiant and divine life is justly rendered, according to the just measures of the divine judgment, while the man-loving goodness of God overlooks the stains that came from human weakness. For, as Scripture says, no one is completely clean from every defilement. The hierarch, therefore, knows that these things have been promised by the true divine words. For this reason, he prays that they may be fulfilled and that these sacred recompenses and rewards may be given to those who lived in holiness.” [6]

 

1. See THEOPHYLACT OF BULGARIA, “Commentary on the Gospel According to Luke,” XXII, 13, PG 123, 880.

2. See JOHN CHRYSOSTOMOS, “On the First Epistle to the Corinthians,” XLI, 5.

3. See THEOPHYLACT OF BULGARIA, “Commentary on the Gospel According to Luke,” XXII, 13, PG 123, 880. Confession of Faith of Peter Mogila, corrected by MELETIOS SYRIGOS (1643), Part I, questions LXIV–LXV; MELETIOS SYRIGOS, Against the Calvinist Chapters and Questions of Kyrillos Loukaris, p. 141 ff.; JOHN OF KRONSTADT, My Life in Christ, Bellefontaine 1979, p. 55.

4. JOHN CHRYSOSTOMOS, “On the Gospel According to Matthew,” LXXVIII, 1.

5. JOHN CHRYSOSTOMOS, “On the First Epistle to the Corinthians,” XLI, 5, PG 61, 361.

6. “Ecclesiastical Hierarchy,” III, 4, PG 3, 560–561.

 

Greek source: https://entoytwnika1.blogspot.com/2026/05/2.html

 

Monday, June 1, 2026

The Holy Spirit unites, not divides

The New Divisive Action of Patriarch Bartholomew

Protopresbyter Theodoros Zisis | June 1, 2026

 

 

1. The New Tower of Babel: Globalization and Ecumenism

The great feast of Pentecost gave us the prompting for the writing of the present text, during which the God-moved writers of the exquisite hymns present the salvific dimensions of the descent of the Holy Spirit “in the form of fiery tongues upon the holy disciples and apostles” and of His permanent presence and energy thereafter in the life of the Church. One important dimension of the energy and action of the Holy Spirit is the unity of all those people who become members of the Church through Holy Baptism and are incorporated into the one and unique body of the Church, which has Christ as its head. It has been written that Christ is the head of the Church, while the Holy Spirit is the soul of the Church, which gives life to the body and connects, unites, the members with the head and with one another. [1]

The Church and the Holy Spirit are connected ontologically; there is no Church where the Holy Spirit does not act. As Saint John Chrysostom emphatically stresses: “If the Spirit were not present, the Church would not have been established; but if the Church is established, it is evident that the Spirit is present.” [2] The same God-bearing Father teaches that there is nothing in the life of the Church, nothing of all that relates to our salvation, which does not come from the Holy Spirit:  “…For tell me, what among the things that constitute our salvation has not been dispensed to us through the Spirit? Through Him we are delivered from slavery, we are called to freedom, we are led up to adoption as sons, and, so to speak, we are refashioned from above; we lay aside the heavy and foul-smelling burden of sins; through the Holy Spirit we see choirs of priests, we have orders of teachers; from this source also come gifts of revelations and charismas of healings, and all the rest, whatever is wont to adorn the Church of God, has its supply from here.” [3]

This view of Chrysostom, that all things in the Church are supplied by the Holy Spirit, constitutes a common place of Orthodox teaching. Basil the Great, for example, frequently enumerating the gifts and energies of the Holy Spirit, chiefly in his work On the Holy Spirit, says that “there is altogether no gift that reaches creation without the Holy Spirit.” [4] This is also repeated by the much-beloved hymn of Pentecost among the Orthodox: “The Holy Spirit supplies all things; He pours forth prophecies, perfects priests, taught wisdom to the unlettered, showed forth fishermen as theologians, He holds together the whole institution of the Church.”

Very quickly, the divided and fragmented idolatrous world, with the spreading of the Church throughout the whole world, found in the salvific preaching of Christ a great unifying factor, which, in a unique and unrepeatable way in history, united all people into one new, Christian ecumene; especially from the time when Constantine the Great, moved by God, discerned that the only spiritual power that could achieve unity in the multicultural and multireligious — interreligious — vast Roman Empire was Christianity. The Pax Romana, with political and military, and even economic, measures, was not able to unify the world as the Pax Christiana subsequently succeeded in doing, unwaveringly for one millennium and, in the second millennium, amid divisions, not by wars and violence, but by the preaching of peace, concord, love, humility, and reconciliation.

This fragmentation and multiculturality of the old world, which led to rivalries, wars, and violence, those who preach the alleged New Age and the New Order of things are attempting to bring back today tyrannically and in secret, with boasts about technological and electronic achievements, by which, as was also shown in the crisis of the Coronavirus infection, they are attempting to manipulate the world against Christ, against the Church, to deprive it of peace, rest, defense against evil and sin, fearlessness before death, and to render people timid and frightened beings, obedient to their destructive commands and directives. It is a new insolence against almighty God, which, unfortunately, the unworthy, servile, and sold-out ecclesiastical leadership not only did not oppose, but also joined in committing the same insolence by agreeing and cooperating.

It is a new Tower of Babel, the Tower of Globalization and Ecumenism, which for a century they have been raising with insolence and audacity, attempting, while boasting of the capabilities of science, to place Christ and His Church on the margins, and to inaugurate the “New Age” of the tyranny and terrorism of the Antichrist.

Certain hymns of Pentecost lead, in a God-inspired way, to these thoughts, allowing us to understand that God can easily stop any blasphemous insolence and audacity and restore unity in Christ and knowledge of God, since from the day of Pentecost the All-Holy Spirit acts and works within the Church, uniting people with the Holy Head, Christ, and with one another.

The kontakion of the feast, which always seeks to summarize the spiritual message of the celebrated event or Saint, says: “When the Most High came down and confused the tongues, He divided the nations; when He distributed the tongues of fire, He called all to unity, and with one accord we glorify the All-Holy Spirit.” …

Along the same line, the doxastikon of Vespers also says: “The tongues were once confused because of the daring of the tower-building; but now the tongues have been made wise, because of the glory of the knowledge of God. There God condemned the impious by their fault; here Christ enlightened the fishermen by the Spirit. Then speechlessness was brought about, for punishment; now concord is inaugurated, for the salvation of our souls.” … [5]

2. “It seemed good to the Holy Spirit and to us”

Indeed, from the day of Pentecost a wondrous unity and concord was inaugurated within the Church, because of the continual presence and energy of the Holy Spirit. The kontakion’s phrase “He called all to unity,” which we quoted, became and continues to become a reality.

Of course, from the time of the Apostles until today, disruptive and divisive phenomena have not been absent from the history of the Church; these are usually caused by Luciferian egoism and pride, which also became the cause of the Devil’s losing his unity with God, being darkened, and then trying to darken others also, as the chief instigator and accomplice of divisions and schisms.

There exists in the life of the Church through the ages a wondrous unity and concord, whose agent and creator is the illuminating and unifying presence of the Holy Spirit. Decisions are not monarchical and tyrannical, but synodal and collective, always being taken in the Holy Spirit. And when it sometimes happens that human designs and antichristian powers hinder the illuminating and unifying presence of the Holy Spirit in synodal assemblies and processes, then the Holy Spirit withdraws from those synods and enlightens individual hierarchs, clergy, monks, and laypeople to restore true synodality, so that the Holy Spirit may return and act in a unifying manner.

The Apostolic Council of Jerusalem (49 A.D.) became the model of all subsequent councils, because it expressed the faith of the whole Church and not of certain persons or groups. The Acts of the Apostles, narrating the matters of the Council, write that “Then it seemed good to the apostles and the presbyters, together with the whole Church.” [6] And at the end of the decisions which resolved the differences and divisions, the chief and decisive factor of unity and concord, the Holy Spirit, is placed: “For it seemed good to the Holy Spirit and to us.” [7] Indeed, this phrase has accompanied all the decisions of councils ever since, although sometimes it is pretended and false, because even heretical and schismatic councils seek to present their decisions as having been taken in the Holy Spirit.

3. The excommunication of heretics and schismatics does not harm the unity of the Church

The Holy Spirit-inspired function of this synodal system was kept unswervingly by the Holy Fathers; for this reason, even until today the Church is One and undivided, identified with the Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church of the Orthodox, and united in faith, worship, and administration.

The excommunication of heretics and schismatics from the body of the Church does not impair unity, but strengthens it and safeguards it, as is proven in practice by all the synodal decisions against heresies and schisms, and as the 15th Canon of the First-Second Council of St. Photios the Great (861 A.D.) states with emphasis. This canon, defending the clergy who cease the commemoration of the name of a heretical or heresy-professing bishop, declares that these clergy not only must not be condemned, but, on the contrary, must be praised and honored. For they did not turn against true and genuine bishops, but against false bishops and false teachers. And they did not cut the unity of the Church by schism, but were zealous to deliver the Church from schisms and divisions: “Such persons are not only not subject to canonical penalty for walling themselves off from communion with the one called bishop before a synodal determination, but they shall also be deemed worthy of the honor due to the Orthodox. For they condemned not bishops, but false bishops and false teachers; and they did not cut the union of the Church by schism, but were zealous to deliver the Church from schisms and divisions.”

During the first millennium, the unity of the Church was threatened by great heresies and schisms, but through the oversight of the Holy Spirit the wounds and injuries were limited to the minimum. Even when heresies sometimes dominated the administration of the Church for long periods of time, they were not able to capture the whole, the fullness of the faithful of the Church, where, as in a great and genuine council, the Holy Spirit was acting and preserving unity. For those of us who occupy ourselves with and research ecclesiastical texts, the agreement that exists among the Holy Fathers of all eras causes wonder; this is due to the fact that the same Holy Spirit guides and illumines them, and of course it is not possible for the Holy Spirit to contradict Himself with different instructions in each era.

This agreement of the Fathers and this unity is also due to the fact that the later Fathers follow the earlier ones as instruments of the Holy Spirit, and do not nullify or question their decisions. The phrase “following the divine Fathers,” together with “it seemed good to the Holy Spirit,” are the fixed lines of the synodal and patristic course, whose basic characteristic is the condemnation and severance of heresies and schisms, so that the unity of the Church may be preserved unharmed.

4. Papism, and now the Ecumenism of Bartholomew, of those before him and those with him, dangerously strike at the unity of the Church

The second Christian millennium began with the formalization of the secession of Papism from the One, Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic Church in 1054 A.D. It was indeed an insolence against God and His Church, especially against the Holy Spirit, through the heresies of the filioque and of the denial of the uncreated Grace of the Holy Spirit.

The ecclesiology of the Vatican abolishes the synodal system and the phrase “it seemed good to the Holy Spirit and to us.” The pope is placed above the council, and everything is decided “as it seemed good to the pope.” As we had written earlier, the Papists believe that the successor of Christ after His Ascension into the heavens is not the Holy Spirit, as Saint Gregory the Theologian writes, [8] but Peter, and the pope as Peter’s successor. The Ecclesiology of Papism moves and develops along the line Christ – Peter – pope, while Orthodox Ecclesiology follows the line Christ – Holy Spirit – Apostles, that is, council. [9] According to the apt observation of the Russian theologian Paul Evdokimov, “while Orthodoxy is lived as a continuing Pentecost, drawing from this the principle of a collective, synodal authority, in the West Rome is affirmed as a continuing Peter, the sole ruler and representative of all the powers of Christ.” [10]

The consequence of this unspiritual course of Papism was that, under the guidance not of the Holy Spirit but of the pope, dozens of heresies and delusions were adopted, the chief of which was that of the First Vatican Council of 1870, concerning the doctrine that the pope does not merely have the primacy of authority over the whole church, but is also infallible.

Indeed, with regard to the timeliness of our own days concerning the mystery of the Divine Eucharist, and evidently under the influence of notions similar to those of today, as well as for the exaltation of the clergy over the people, they deprived the laity of communion of the blood of Christ under the natural element of wine, and they distribute only the body under the strange form of the unleavened host, thus avoiding the use of the holy Lavida, the little spoon of the unbelievers and blasphemers of the most holy and greatest mystery of the Divine Eucharist.

This first attempt at building a Tower of Babel, with the pope exalted above the stars to the heights of divinity, according to the example of Lucifer, did not take long to bring about the confusion of theological tongues within the bosom of Papism, through the various heresies of Protestantism. Unity was lost not only in relation to the One, Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic Church, since there was agreement neither in faith, nor in worship, nor in administration, but also within the bosom of Papism, with Protestantism intensifying and increasing the confusion in theological language. The West, without the active presence and action of the Holy Spirit, became dechristianized and secularized.

Unfortunately, the Orthodox Church too is now following this path, with the Ecumenical Patriarchate taking the lead from the beginning of the 20th century. In another study of ours we analyzed, on the basis of texts and sources, this abandonment of the holy spiritual and patristic line which was faithfully maintained up to and including the 19th century, [11] but was then abandoned by those regarded as great figures of patriarchs in ecumenistic circles, yet in truth incorporated into the plans of the “New Age” and the “New Order” of things, such as Patriarchs Joachim III, Meletios Metaxakis, Athenagoras, and the present Patriarch Bartholomew.

The changes in the faith of the One, Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic Church were not enough for us: the recognition of heresies as churches and the ratification of our participation in the “World Council of Churches,” that is, of heresies, by the pseudo-council of Kolymbari in Crete (2016), as well as the abandonment of the synodal manner of convocation and functioning of the “Council.”

The intended change in the administration of the Church was not enough for us: the imitation of the papal primacy of authority by the Ecumenical Patriarch and the newly developed heretical ecclesiology concerning the “first without equals” (primus sine paribus), which was applied through the divisive intrusion into the boundaries of another ecclesiastical jurisdiction during the recognition of the schismatics of Ukraine.

So many heretical deviations of Patriarch Bartholomew were not enough for us, since he no longer takes into account either “it seemed good to the Holy Spirit” or “following the divine Fathers,” but he too, like the pope, is building within the space of Orthodoxy a new Tower of Babel, which, however, will soon collapse, because confusion and disagreement have already begun in the language of theologians and clergy.

He had to dare to strike even at unity in Divine Worship, agreeing with the planners throughout the world of the closing of churches and of fear regarding communion of the body and blood of Christ. The slips of the hierarchs of the Ecumenical Throne throughout the world, concerning the abandonment of the traditional manner of distributing the Divine Eucharist with the Holy Lavida, in America, Australia, Great Britain, Holland, Germany, Belgium, and elsewhere, are scandalous. Mask-wearing priests masquerade and debase the Great Mystery, being masqueraders themselves and not ministers of the Priesthood. And instead of rebuking them and censuring them synodally, he covers them, transforming a pastoral issue that until now did not exist into a great problem requiring pan-Orthodox treatment. We create a problem and then seek to solve it in an un-Orthodox and anti-traditional manner, even with the hypocritical and reassuring declaration “that we in no way intend to depart from what has been handed down to all of us by our blessed Fathers.” These things are written by Patriarch Bartholomew in a patriarchal letter which he sent on June 1 to the primates of the autocephalous churches, concluding with the following: “In view of the conditions being formed, we desire to hear Your fraternal reasoning and thoughts, so that together we may proceed to the pastoral treatment of the challenges to the established manner of distributing Divine Communion.”

The reasoning of the patriarchal letter is ecclesiologically worse even than the slips of the hierarchs of the Throne and of others who debase the mystery of the Divine Eucharist, because, as was rightly written, “it raises an issue out of nothing. It raises a question that does not exist, precisely in order to give it existence. To elevate it into a field of reflection!!!” [12] If the declaration that we are not going to change what the Holy Fathers handed down to us is indeed valid, and one of these things is the distribution of Divine Communion with the Holy Lavida, this alone was sufficient to bring the hierarchs of the diaspora into line, but also to send a message to the other churches to conform at last to an Orthodox position of the Ecumenical Patriarchate.

In any case, the synodal decisions of the Church of Greece and also of the Church of Crete pleasantly surprised us. The first decided, during the session of June 3, and indeed after it had taken cognizance of the Letter of the Ecumenical Patriarch, that “the procedure for distributing Divine Communion to the faithful remains as it is and as it has been handed down to us by the Holy Fathers and by our Holy Tradition.” The second “unanimously announces, and in every direction, that the All-Holy Mystery of the Divine Eucharist is non-negotiable, and ecclesiastical experience bears witness that the established manner of distributing the All-Holy Body and the Precious Blood of our Christ to the faithful is not a cause of illness; for this reason, it is not subject to any discussion or dialogue.” [13]

The concern, however, remains, because both at the pseudo-council of Kolymbari and in the Ukrainian matter we had synodal Orthodox decisions, which were finally abandoned so that most might align themselves with the un-Orthodox positions of the Ecumenical Patriarchate, which under its present leadership does not seek to support and express the Orthodox Tradition, nor to function synodally and patristically in the Holy Spirit. It adopts and supports innovations and delusions and proceeds to actions that destroy the unity of the Church, as happened with the calendar reform of 1924, with our participation in the “World Council of Churches,” with the pseudo-council of Crete, with the Ukrainian pseudo-autocephaly, and now with the manner of changing the distribution of Divine Communion.

In any case, instead of helping toward the prevalence of a unified theological line and a unified theological language, expressing the agreement of the Fathers (consensus Patrum), by its post-patristic — anti-patristic — line it causes confusion and divisions which will inevitably provoke the intervention of God, so that the building within Orthodoxy of the new Tower of Babel of Ecumenism and Globalization may be stopped, and the unity and concord of the Holy Spirit, of the Apostolic and Patristic Tradition, may return; so that Orthodoxy may again put on the tunic of Truth, as we chant in the kontakion of the Sunday of the Holy Fathers before Holy Pentecost: “The preaching of the Apostles and the doctrines of the Fathers confirmed one faith for the Church; and she, wearing the tunic of truth, woven from theology from above, rightly divides and glorifies the great mystery of piety.”

 

NOTES

1. See Protopresbyter Theodoros Zisis, Following the Divine Fathers: Principles and Criteria of Patristic Theology, Thessaloniki 1997, p. 157.

2. On Holy Pentecost 1, 4, PG 50, 459.

3. Ibid. 2, 1, PG 50, 463.

4. On the Holy Spirit 24, PG 32, 172B.

5. The relevant Old Testament account of the Tower of Babel is found in the book of Genesis 11, 1–9.

6. Acts 15, 22.

7. Ibid. 15, 28.

8. Oration 31, 29, Fifth Theological Oration, On the Holy Spirit, EPE 4, 244: “Christ is born, He precedes; He is baptized, He bears witness; He is tempted, He leads up; He works miracles, He bears witness together; He ascends, He succeeds.”

9. Protopresbyter Theodoros Zisis, Following the Divine Fathers, p. 180.

10. Paul Evdokimov, Orthodoxy, Vasilis Rigopoulos Publications, Thessaloniki 1972, p. 41.

11. See the study “From Orthodoxy to Ecumenism: The Great Overturning of the 20th Century,” in our book Holy and Great Council: Should We Hope or Be Concerned?, “To Palimpsiston” Publications, Thessaloniki 2016, pp. 15–48.

12. Sofia Tsekou, I discern a staged scene… or rather, backstage activity, AKTINES website, June 2, 2020.

13. See the website Romfea.gr, 27.5.2020.

 

Greek source: https://katanixi.gr/p-theodoros-zisis-to-agio-pneyma-enonei/

The Relationship Between the Living and the Deceased (Part 1)


 

The Church has always felt the need for prayer for the reposed. According to John Chrysostomos, this is a custom of the Church, which was established by the Apostles themselves. He even considers that the Apostles did not leave the custom and the law in vain, including in the holy and fearful Mysteries of the Church the commemoration of the reposed. Undoubtedly, they did this because they knew what the benefit and the significant good is that results for the dead. In the work “On Those Who Have Fallen Asleep in Faith,” which is attributed to John of Damascus, this position is confirmed. In the Second Epistle to Timothy, we see the Apostle Paul himself praying for his deceased disciple Onesiphoros (2 Tim. 1:18).

The “supplications” on behalf of the dead take, according to tradition, three basic forms: prayer (liturgical or individual), the offering of the Eucharist, and almsgiving. The Fathers insist on the usefulness of the supplications on behalf of the reposed. John Chrysostomos writes on this: “The offerings on behalf of the dead are not made without reason, the entreaties are not made without reason, nor the almsgivings without reason; the Holy Spirit ordained all these things, because He wants us to benefit from one another.” [1] Mark Eugenikos makes the same observation and considers that this is verified by the fact that it is an ancient and universal tradition: “That the liturgies, prayers, and almsgivings that are done on their behalf benefit those who have reposed in faith is testified also by this very custom of the Church, which prevailed from of old, as well as by many and various words of teachers, both Latin and Greek, which were spoken and written at different times and places.” [2]

The Fathers and the theologians consider that, of all the “supplications” for the dead, the most important is that which takes place during the Divine Liturgy. [3] Gregory the Great, more than anyone else, confirms this theory, basing himself on various incidents of visions and revelations. During the celebration of the Divine Eucharist, the priest prays that the sins of the commemorated reposed may be purified through the blood of Jesus Christ, while at the same time immersing in the Holy Chalice particles of the bread which he had previously cut in their name.

On the other hand, the reposed who are in Hades can receive, to the extent possible, a relief and alleviation of their punishments. [4] This is also confirmed by a very ancient work that enjoyed authority, in which a revelation made to Saint Makarios is cited: “Whenever you feel compunction for those who are being punished, and wherever you pray for them, they are relieved a little.” [5]

John Chrysostomos repeatedly develops the issue in question. Many passages of his works refer specifically to the relief that the prayers of the living offer to the souls of the reposed who are being tormented:

“As far as possible, let us not mourn only with tears, but with prayers, supplications, almsgivings, and offerings. For these were not instituted without reason, nor do we vainly make commemoration of the reposed during the divine mystagogy and approach on their behalf, entreating the Lamb who is before us, Him who took away the sin of the world, but so that some consolation may result from these things for them. Nor does the one standing at the altar, when the dread Mysteries are celebrated, cry out without purpose: ‘For all those who have reposed in Christ and for those who perform the commemorations on their behalf.’ For, if the commemorations were not made for their sake, these things would not be said either. For our things are not a theatrical performance — may it not be; these things are done by the ordinance of the Holy Spirit. Let us therefore help them and perform commemoration on their behalf. For, if the sacrifice of the father cleansed the children of Job, why do you doubt that when we offer on behalf of the reposed, some consolation results for them?” [6]

And elsewhere he writes: “Let us therefore weep for them and help them as much as we can; let us devise some help for them, small indeed, but able to help. How and in what way? Let us ourselves pray and entreat others also to make prayers on their behalf, and let us continually give alms to the poor on their account.” [7]

John Chrysostomos considers that prayers for reposed sinners are not sufficient by themselves:

“Let us give alms; and even if he is unworthy, God will have compassion. The more sins he has committed, the more he needs almsgiving. Let us not concern ourselves with tombs, nor with adornments of the dead. Place widows beside him; this is the greatest ‘funeral tribute.’ Mention his name, call everyone to make supplications and entreaties on his behalf; this will move God to compassion. And even if not directly through him, still through another he becomes a cause of almsgiving. And this is a doctrine of God’s love for mankind. Widows standing around and weeping can snatch someone not only from the present death, but also from the future one. Indeed, many have benefited from almsgivings done by others for them; and if not fully, at least they found some consolation.” [8]

 

1. “Homilies on the Acts of the Apostles,” XXI, 5. PG 60, 170. On the Epistle to the Philippians, III, 4.

2. “Refutation of the Latin Chapters Concerning Purgatorial Fire,” PO 15, p. 40.

3. See JOHN CHRYSOSTOMOS, “Homilies on the First Epistle to the Corinthians,” XLI, 5; GREGORY THE GREAT, “Dialogues,” IV, 57–60; LEONTIOS OF NEAPOLIS, “Life of John of Cyprus,” 24; SYMEON METAPHRASTES, “Life of Saint Theodosios the Cenobiarch,” 17, PG 114, 484–485.

4. Apart from the patristic passages, see, among the Orthodox theologians, METROPHANES KRITOPOULOS, “Confession of Faith,” in E. J. Kimmel-Weissenborn, Monumenta fidei Ecclesiae orientalis, vol. 2, Jena 1851, pp. 194–195; BISHOP SYLVESTER, Essay of Orthodox Theology, vol. 5, Kiev 1897,

5. Sayings, Makarios 38. We cite an excerpt in chapter 8, note 35.

6. “On the First Epistle to the Corinthians,” 41, 4–5. PG 61, 361.

7. “On the Epistle to the Philippians, Homily III,” 4. PG 62, 204. 58

8. 58. “On the Acts of the Apostles, XXI,” 4. PG 60, 169. 59.

 

Greek source: https://entoytwnika1.blogspot.com/2026/05/1.html


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