Friday, February 27, 2026

The three great calamities in Orthodoxy during the five-year period 1919–1924

Monk Vlasios the Athonite

Greek source: Ὀρθόδοξος Τύπος, no. 2200/February 16, 2018.

Metropolis of Oropos and Phyle note: We publish this present “difficult” article simply and only because, in general lines, it confesses great truths. Otherwise, it contains certain positions and evaluations with which we disagree.

 

 

A diabolical envy and a tempting hand fell upon the Orthodox Church during those wretched years of the trials of the race of the Greek Orthodox Christians (1919–1924).

The national calamities were not enough: the many losses in living manpower of the Greek Army during the Balkan Wars (1912–1913) against the Turks and the Bulgarians, the persecutions and massacres of the Greeks of Asia Minor in the cities of Phocaea, Krini, Aïdinion, and others (1914), the massacres of the Pontians (1920–22), and in general the Asia Minor Catastrophe (1922); there came to be added also, in the life of the Greek Orthodox Christians who survived the national tragedies and calamities, the division which arose, through the betrayals of Ecclesiastical Leaders, in the religious-spiritual sphere.

For the first time, the Orthodox Ecumenical Patriarchate officially entered into Ecumenism in January 1920 with that famous Encyclical, entitled: “Unto the Churches of Christ Everywhere,” after the same Patriarchate had first received, in the year 1919, the Delegation of the two Protestant churches (Heretical Communities), namely the Anglican of England and the Episcopalian of America, through which it accepted their proposal that representatives of the Orthodox Church be sent to the preparatory “Conference of the Faith and Order Movement,” which subsequently convened in Geneva from August 12-20, 1920.

***

The arch-ecumenists, who succeeded in casting the Orthodox into their nets, did not conceal from the beginning their aims and their plans.

One of them, very active, the Archbishop of Uppsala, Nathan Söderblom, wrote in 1919, saying among many things:

“The League of Nations must become a religion. Regardless of Confession, Christianity ought to be united in a community of prayers, teaching, sermons, tendencies… and this union must be manifested in an organization which shall constitute a common mouthpiece of Christianity. What I seek is a kind of ecumenical Council, an ecumenical ecclesiastical Committee, representing the whole of Christianity and so organized as to speak in the name of Christianity.”

The leaders of the Ecumenical Movement—chiefly the Anglicans—both revealed and concealed their purposes and objectives, in order to attract the Orthodox into their “System” and into their Conferences.

We have the following example. While at first they spoke about a “Conference – Faith and Order Movement,” later, in an address, the rector of the University of Oxford, Mr. Charles Gore, sent and appointed by the “Archbishop” of Canterbury, Randall [Davidson], stated in his proclamation on 16 April 1923 in Zurich the following:

“The Conference on Life and Work, without entering into questions of Faith and Order, aims to unite the various churches in common beneficial work…”

Unfortunately, in this “Common Beneficial Work” (which later developed, in 1948, into the “World Council of Churches”), the Orthodox also were caught and are dragged along until today, at times accepting whatever sacred and profane thing the directing Masonic Mind serves.

For it is known to many that the Head of the Anglican Church, formally, institutionally, and honorifically, is the reigning Queen of England, who at the same time again honorifically and institutionally is also the Head of Freemasonry in England.

It is this Freemasonry which corrupted the Anglican Church and ordered the ordinations of women as “bishops and priestesses,” and the “marriage” of homosexuals and lesbians in the churches, and also the “marriage” of dogs and animals, since they believe in reincarnation and transmigration of souls.

***

A. This is the first great evil in the Orthodox Church: the issuing of the heretical Encyclical of the Ecumenical Patriarchate, through which, for the first time, it recognized the heretical offshoots of the West as Churches, with the following eleven articles:

1. The acceptance of a unified calendar for the simultaneous celebration of the great feasts by all the Churches.

2. The exchange of fraternal letters.

3. Friendly communication between their representatives.

4. Communication between the Theological Schools and exchange of their writings and journals.

5. The exchange of students.

6. The convocation of pan-Christian conferences (the later establishment of the World Council of Churches).

7. The dispassionate and more historical examination of the dogmatic differences.

8. Mutual respect of morals and customs.

9. Mutual concession of churches and cemeteries.

10. The regulation of mixed marriages, a matter which the robber Council of Crete (2016) discussed and established to be left to the judgment of each Metropolitan.

11. Mutual support for the strengthening of religious faith, philanthropy, missionary work, and other such matters.

It is worthy of wonder how the highest clergy of the Ecumenical Patriarchate did not discern the hidden traps of entanglement and destruction of Orthodoxy set by its enemies, the Heretics.

But the wonder is resolved by the knowledge of the historical circumstance, that at precisely that time, the Greek Army was in Asia Minor and in Eastern Thrace, and for the sake of the National Interest these betrayals of the Faith were committed, in order that we might have the favor of the Great Powers.

For this reason, the Lord God was angered, and instead of national prosperity, there came a national catastrophe (1922).

All these articles, all eleven of them, entangled, confused, and merged the Orthodox with the heretical communities of Europe and America and compelled them to accept even the customs of the Heretics.

Except for the Churches of Bulgaria and Georgia, the other Orthodox Churches are being drawn into Ecumenism.

***

B. The second great calamity in the Orthodox Church was the recognition of the validity of the mysteries of the Anglican “Church,” which took place in 1922 under the Ecumenical Patriarch Meletios II Metaxakis, as well as the recognition of their ordinations, something which caused great enthusiasm among the Protestants.

However, the subsequent attack of Kemal Atatürk and the Asia Minor Catastrophe which followed, as well as the expulsion of Metaxakis by Kemal in 1923, gave rise to the causes for the non-implementation by the Orthodox of this recognition.

***

C. The third and greatest evil and calamity in the Orthodox Church (on the basis of the implementation of that Encyclical), which divided and greatly afflicted it, was the senseless and arbitrary change of the Calendar, which was decided in 1923 under Meletios Metaxakis and was carried out in March 1924 by his successor, since Metaxakis had been driven from the Ecumenical Throne by Kemal Atatürk.

***

Unfortunately today, most of the Hierarchs, instead of seeing what the roots of the evil are and removing them, wage war against, depose, and excommunicate the anti-ecumenist strugglers, in order to please those who have secularized the Church.

 

Greek online source:

https://www.imoph.org/pdfs/2018/05/15/20180515a-3-deina-Orthodoxias-1919-1924.pdf

 

 

Elder Daniel of Katounakia (1846–1929): A timeless “Voice from Mount Athos” against Ecumenism

By Nikos Sakalakis, Mathematician

Source: Θεοδρομία, No. 1 / January-March 2023, pp. 84-91.

 

 

Part I

Undoubtedly, the Teachings—Admonitions of Elder Daniel constitute a spiritual Eden, within which the inner man fully perceives the connection between Asceticism and Confession in their Orthodox dimensions. He represented the profound anti-heretical and Ascetic–Confessional expression of the Athonite monastic commonwealth.

More than ninety-three (93) years have passed since his death.

Let us recall the Scriptural word: “The Spirit of God is in thee, and watchfulness and understanding and abundant wisdom were found in thee” (Dan. 5:14).

It is true that the most ascetical Fathers, these frontier-guards and sentinels of the Orthodox spirit, are those who have articulated—raised to a high (hierarchical) position—the cycle: Asceticism–Confession, Confession–Asceticism.

These Fathers, such as Fr. Daniel of Katounakia, because they were always in continual mystical converse with the Holy Triune God, therefore confessed the Orthodox Faith with firmness, which (today) many toxic ecumenical texts of the pseudo-synod of Crete, as well as texts and statements of Patriarchs, bishops, monks, and theologians, distort.

Among the writings (studies–articles) of Elder Daniel, his work stands out as prophetic–confessional, bearing the title: “A Voice from Mount Athos concerning the forthcoming Ecumenical Council” (Katounakia, Holy Mountain, May 6/19, 1925).

Concerning the theological–conceptual structure of this study, the Brotherhood of the Danielaioi wrote (1977):

“Among His polemical works, first place is held by the work now being published in print for the second time, ‘A Voice from Mount Athos concerning the forthcoming Ecumenical Council.’ We say that it surpasses and excels the other works, because each one of those refutes only a single heresy, whereas this one repels all of them together and indicates the unerring path, by which whoever walks shall arrive at the Kingdom of Heaven.”

For the simplification of the linguistic difficulty of the text [in Greek], we clarify:

“Among his militant studies, first in rank is his work ‘A Voice from Mount Athos concerning the forthcoming Ecumenical Council,’ which is being reprinted for a second time. We say that it supplementarily completes the previous ones and surpasses them, because each one of the earlier studies examines and corrects only a single heresy, whereas the present study repels all heresies collectively, thus showing the unerring path, which, when followed, leads the faithful to the Kingdom of Heaven…”

***

At the time of Elder Daniel, the Ecumenical Patriarchate had announced an outline of a (forthcoming) Ecumenical Council with subjects including: “the revision of the entire body of Ecclesiastical legislation and its adaptation to the present condition of the Church, which would also bring forward the union of the individual Churches on arising ecclesiastical matters, as well as the ways of their manifestation, and the determination of the Paschalion on the basis of already accomplished relevant scientific studies.”

Likewise, a program for the revision of many sacred rites had also been announced by the Patriarchate, such as: “Concerning Transubstantiation; concerning Liturgical and Ecclesiastical books; concerning the Typikon of ceremonies and sacred services; concerning the time of worship, the Sunday rest and other feasts; concerning fasting (its kinds and duration); concerning sacred vessels and vestments; concerning Iconography and Music; concerning the marriage of clergy; concerning the attire of the Sacred Clergy within and outside the Church; concerning Monks and Holy Monasteries; and every other ecclesiastical or theological matter, and finally concerning the determination of the Paschalion and the Calendar.”

Elder Daniel was among the first, chronologically at the beginning of the twentieth century, to perceive the depth of the change in attitude of the ruling Church (the Patriarchate of Constantinople) toward the heresies. He understood, at an early stage, the directions of Ecumenist thought, after a life lived as a true Orthodox ascetic. Finally, he clearly discerned the vision of Ecumenism for its synodal institutionalization.

Elder Daniel responded through his work “Concerning the Forthcoming Ecumenical Council” to those matters which the Patriarchate of Constantinople had gathered together and decisively defined as the agenda of the future council.

His confessional–theological thought is structured (as a response) in the following sections, which constitute his treatise:

A) WHAT IS THE PURPOSE OF THE CONVOCATION OF THE COUNCIL

In the course of developing unity, he writes:

“This Holy Council will not judge and censure the heterodox, but, as it is said, it will place upon the bench the First Ecumenical Council itself, as well as the others, and through revision and judgment will alter many things for the attainment of the broad and spacious way…” (p. 17).

1st Comment: Indeed, the decisions of Crete are being realized daily in successive stages, in accordance with the prophetic observations of Fr. Daniel concerning the ecclesiological content and foundation of the “New Council.”

B) THE ECONOMY OF THE COUNCIL AND THE POSSIBILITY OF ITS ACCEPTANCE

Among other things, Fr. Daniel emphasizes:

“Since the change of the Calendar brought about a great scandal and created schism among the Christ-named fullness, what then will happen when it is heard that the said Holy Council will advance such opinions, which only the carnal-minded men and those holding the views of Luther privately think and embrace?” (p. 19).

2nd Comment: Indeed, the ecclesiology of the pseudo-council of Crete constitutes a reorganization and adaptation of the content of the consciousness of the “carnal-minded men and those holding the views of Luther,” as Fr. Daniel aptly foretold.

C) THE TEACHING CONCERNING TRANSUBSTANTIATION

Here Fr. Daniel clarifies that “the precious Gifts are sanctified after the prayer of the invocation of the Holy Spirit through the blessing of the priest, as is also testified by the ancient Typika of Rome and of Gaul themselves…”

He also emphasizes: “The Papal Church, among other (many) innovations, introduced also the arbitrary sanctification of the precious Gifts as occurring with the proclamation of the Lord’s words, which is contrary to the Apostolic and Ecclesiastical Tradition” (pp. 21–22).

D) THE REVISION OF THE LITURGICAL TYPIKON

With absolute definiteness, the Elder emphasizes:

“The liturgical aspect of our Church, as well as the Typikon, which its pious fullness has followed from the most ancient times, was not established by random or ordinary men, but by Holy men recognized for extensive learning and supreme holiness, and it was confirmed through sacred Revelations by the Holy Seven Ecumenical Councils and Local Councils, possessing authority from the Holy Spirit, Who is incapable of error” (pp. 22–23).

3rd Comment: In the study of Elder Daniel (the holy father), the spirit of Orthodoxy in relation to the Revisionism of Ecumenism is correctly interpreted.

***

God willing, our reference to the remaining sections will follow in the next article. Today, amid the inactivity of many and the lack of resistance on the part of the Holy Mountain, the teaching of the holy Elder Daniel constitutes a lesson in Orthodoxy.

 

Part II

It was the 8th of September 1929 when Heaven received the holy soul of Elder Daniel of Katounakia

In a letter of condolences from the Sacred Skete of Kavsokalyvia, we read:

“…He ought to have lived still longer… The blessed one was the cauterizing fire of every innovator and a great pillar of the Athonite Commonwealth, having watered through his writings every Orthodox soul and every wavering heart.”

In our previous article (Part I), we focused our attention, as a fundamental reference, on certain sections of his prophetic work “A Voice from the Holy Mountain concerning the forthcoming Ecumenical Council.”

Glorifying God, we marvel at Elder Daniel for the prophetic and panoramic discernment with which he perceived the intentions of the future (for him) “council” in Crete, which “council,” as forthcoming, had simply been announced through thematic indications in a “Patriarchal Proclamation,” without a specified place of convocation.

We continue with a (summary) presentation of the remaining sections of his treatise “Concerning the Forthcoming Ecumenical Council.”

E) FASTING

“All matters concerning the time of worship, the observance of Sunday rest and of other days, and those concerning fasting and its duration, which are being proposed for revision and reform, aim—as circumstances loudly proclaim—on the one hand, that we should follow the broad and anti-Gospel path, contrary to the command of the Holy Gospel, for the sake of the negligent and worldly-minded men, and on the other hand, that we should brighten the expectations and hopes of those inclined toward heresy, so that they may boast that we are drawing near to them” (p. 23).

Thereafter, he refers to the roots of Fasting, which flourished in the life of the Church.

The Holy Father emphasizes:

a) “That Fasting was legislated by God and constitutes the principal means through which prayer is accomplished and the temperate and virginal life is practiced has been demonstrated by the very facts themselves, through the manifestation of so many Holy Men, both from the Old and from the New Testament” (p. 24).

b) “The proposed revision will bring not correction, but the overthrow of Apostolic and Synodal ordinances” (p. 25).

c) “If fasts, prayers, vigils, and the appointed services of the Church and the other sacred rites were merely simple forms and insignificant regulations, and not constituent elements of the narrow and afflicted path, why did the entire choir of the Holy Fathers of the Church embrace precisely these things and preserve them unto the end?” (p. 27).

F) THE MONASTIC ORDER

Today, within the faithful there exists disappointment and skepticism concerning the overall passive stagnation of the Monks in the face of the Pan-heresy of Ecumenism. Let us not forget that, in the spiritual ferment introduced by heretics throughout history, the Monks arose as peaks of resistance against heresies, with sacrifices and persecutions. For this reason, Elder Daniel presents Monasticism as a comparative examination of their life and of its form.

He emphasizes the following:

a) “The saving activity of the Monastic order, being founded (= supported) upon the basis of the Sacred Canons and institutions of the Church, brought forth countless holy and God-illumined (= deified) men, who through their supernatural struggles and God-pleasing ascetic labors raised a trophy not only against the passions and sin, but also against so many heresies, and became manifold benefactors both to the Church, through their immortal writings, and to the entire Christ-named fullness, which does not admit of even the slightest revision” (p. 29).

G) THE ATTIRE OF THE CLERGY

A manifestation of the destructive mania of ecumenist revisionism was also seen in the proposals of the Patriarchal reformers concerning a change in the attire of the Holy Clergy — that is, that priests should abandon the established traditional form.

Elder Daniel wrote:

“Concerning the attire of the Clergy both within and outside the Church, which is likewise being put forward for revision, this aims at nothing else than that our venerable and Sacred Clergy, in imitation of the Europeans, should cast off the reverent cassock and put on tight garments. Why? Because thus the European scholars desire it” (p. 32).

1st Comment: In a Memorandum of his (1970), Fr. Philotheos Zervakos, in Chapter III, entitled: “The removal of the mournful and honored cassock, hair, and beard renders the clergy effeminate and unworthy of the Priesthood,” wrote, among other things:

“The former Metropolitan of Kition Meletios Metaxakis (Archbishop of Athens) convened a Priestly conference… almost all the priests of Athens came forward willingly… What did he advise them? Hear and shudder and weep. In Europe all the clergy are shaved, cropped, and without cassocks, and we also must imitate them, lest we appear outdated and uncivilized. Then almost all the Priests, with one voice, with courage and boldness, said to him: ‘We, Your Beatitude, are Greek Orthodox; we shall never become heretics, Protestants, or Papists’” (p. 36).

Η) THE CORRECTION OF THE CALENDAR

The holy Father perceived in good time that the calendar–festal reform and Ecumenism became connected and identified with one another.

He wrote, concerning this:

a) “Perhaps the Anglicans, who desire their union with us, accepted all the other matters and sought information also concerning the Calendar, as to which is the more correct?” (p. 35).

b) “The God-bearing Fathers, all inspired by the Holy Spirit, knowingly set aside the question of correcting the Equinox as harmless, in order to preserve the essence, and so as not to come into conflict with the Ordinances of the Holy Apostles. And thus, they established for us the Paschalion, which our Orthodox Church continues to preserve… Therefore, this proposal concerning Revision signifies nothing other than the overturning of the decision of the First Holy Council.” (p. 35).

I) EPILOGUE:

“But nevertheless, with great humility and reverence, we submit those judgments which are set forth by the divine Fathers of the Church themselves, and what will occur in the event of the convocation of such a Holy Council…” (p. 37).

2nd Comment: Those of us today who stand “opposed” to the ecumenist bishops do not do so out of “personal opinion or egotistical inclination,” as Elder Daniel also emphasizes. We stand opposed to the heresy and not to the persons themselves. We seek to highlight the Orthodox confessional principles which confer upon those who are truly Orthodox their distinctive unity.

3rd Comment: The study of Elder Daniel’s treatise abolishes (for those of good disposition) the wavering between Orthodoxy and Ecumenism, establishing them firmly upon the solid foundation of Orthodoxy.

 

Online Greek sources:

Part 1 -- https://www.imoph.org/pdfs/2023/07/31/20230731aGeron-Danihl-Katounakiotis-A.pdf

Part 2 -- https://www.imoph.org/pdfs/2023/08/21/20230821bGeron-Danihl-Katounakiotis-B.pdf

Thursday, February 26, 2026

When the Guardians Betray

Elder Savvas Lavriotis

Greek source: Orthodoxos Typos, issue no. 2237/November 30, 2018, pp. 1 and 5.

Shared by the G.O.C. Metropolis of Oropos and Phyle: https://www.imoph.org/pdfs/2019/05/15/20190515aFylakesProdidoun.pdf

 

 

“Why hast Thou led us astray, O Lord, from Thy way?
Thou hast hardened our hearts, that we should not fear Thee?”

(Isaiah 63:17)

“…the shepherds acted impiously toward Me, and the prophets prophesied by Baal and went after that which is profitless.”
(Jeremiah 2:8)

 

The word of the Lord is light and a lamp in our life. The Readings of the Services, the Troparia, and the Synaxaria are part of the daily life of the monk. The above prophetic passages are read at Vespers of the Feast of the Holy Great-Martyr Demetrios the Myrrh-streamer.

In our time we live, hear, and see unbelievable things. One such unbelievable, and yet true, event is also the following fact.

We read in Orthodoxos Typos (October 26, 2018, issue no. 2232), that the Metropolitans Paul of Drama and Barnabas of Neapolis, together with the Abbot of the Holy Monastery of Dionysiou of the Holy Mountain, Peter, went on the 14th of October to a Muslim (Mohammedan) cemetery, where they offered joint prayer with an Imam for a relative of a prominent businessman (a Turk).

It also publishes a photograph in which, with hands raised, they pray for the repose of the Turk. The photograph is taken from a video which has circulated and which anyone may see, and which speaks for itself.

What, then, is happening? Have Bishops and Athonite Abbots abandoned the Gospel and taken up the Qur’an, abandoned Christianity and joined Mohammedanism? Have they, in short, changed religion?

We do not wish to believe such a thing. Might all this reveal the mystery of lawlessness, something which for years has been at work through the pan-heresy of Ecumenism, and which will be the final temptation of the Church?

Already a month has passed, and we expected that the institutional Holy Mountain, the Holy Community, would have taken action regarding so serious a matter. If the old Athonite Fathers were living today, they would be weeping, as did the prophets of the Old Testament:

“…the shepherds acted impiously toward Me, and the prophets prophesied by Baal and went after that which is profitless” (Jeremiah 2:8).

So many Abbots, so many Hieromonks, Spiritual Fathers, and Monks in Monasteries, Kellia, and Sketes—do they no longer concern themselves with matters of the Faith?

The Masonic funds from Europe, with which the Monasteries “beautify” the Holy Mountain with luxury and extravagance, in order to make it more attractive and touristic, scandalizing the people who live in poverty and hunger—are these more beloved, God-pleasing, and traditional?

Do financial matters perhaps have greater value for our salvation?

But how can we remain silent in the face of such impiety! Even the stones will rise up against us.

As the least, simple, and insignificant Athonite Monks, therefore, for reasons purely of conscience and Orthodox Confession, just as we have already ecclesiologically separated our position with regard to the heretical decisions of the pseudo-synod of Kolymbari in Crete—during which the Papists, the Monophysites, and the multitude of Protestants were synodically recognized as Churches, something which is contrary to our Orthodox Faith and which we have analyzed in a patristic and theological manner in the published text Confession of Faith—so also, with the same sense of responsibility, we denounce the present event before the institutional authority of our Sacred Place.

The Athonite Abbot in question cannot be justified on the grounds of ignorance of the Orthodox Faith and the Sacred Canons: He went to a purely religious place, to a Mohammedan cemetery, and offered joint prayer with an Imam, praying for repose—not merely of a heretic, but even of one of another religion; this is unheard of. It is at the same time noteworthy, and very painful, that for the first time in history Athonites dare to participate in joint prayers and even proceed from inter-Christian Ecumenism to interreligious Ecumenism, since, recently, there have also been joint prayers by other Athonite Monks with heretical Papists inside churches, such as at the Phanar, in Smyrna, and elsewhere; and all these, among other things, boast that they are also descendants of great Neptic Elders…

For all these things, we would like to set forth—not our own personal judgments—but, as we always do, to present the Teaching of the Holy Fathers of the Church.

Let us first see what is said to us concerning the religion of Mohammed and the Mohammedans, with whom the Abbot in question and the Bishops so readily offered joint prayer.

Saint Gregory Palamas, the Athonite, one of the greatest Fathers and Theologians of the Church, when in 1354 he was traveling by sea toward Constantinople in order to mediate so that peace might be achieved in the civil conflict between the imperial court and [John VI] Kantakouzenos, was captured prisoner by the Turks, who had already occupied all of Asia Minor, on account of the apostasy from the Faith and the sins of the people and the rulers.

While being a prisoner, he was summoned three times to dialogue with the Emir of the Achaemenid Turks (certainly not like the dialogues conducted by today’s Ecumenists), as well as with the Chiones, that is, Islamized Christians; then, at the risk of his life, he confessed with boldness:

a) That there is one true God, the Holy Triune God — the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit.

b) That Jesus Christ is not a simple prophet, but the Son and Word of God, He who was foretold through all the Prophets.

c) That the Cross of Christ is the trophy and the banner of Christ (and he did not supposedly remove it so as not to offend the Mohammedan invaders brought into our homeland, as today’s Ecumenist Archbishops and others do).

And d) to the question of Tasimanes (a ruler), “Why do you not accept our prophet and do not believe in his book, which descended from heaven?” Saint Gregory Palamas replied with courage, bringing testimonies even from the Qur’an itself, saying:

“That Christ is testified to by Moses and by all the Prophets, and He alone is said throughout the ages to be the Son and Word of God, and He alone was born of a Virgin Mother. He alone ascended into the heavens and remains immortal, and in Him alone we hope that He will come to judge the living and the dead. All these things are also confessed by you Turks; for this reason, we believe in Christ and in His Gospel. But Muhammad we do not find to be testified to by the prophets, nor has he accomplished anything wondrous and noteworthy that leads to faith; therefore, we do not believe in him nor in the book (the Qur’an) which he delivered.” (See Philotheos Kokkinos, Life of Saint Gregory Palamas, E.P.E., vol. 70, pp. 345–373).

And succinctly he would say:

“Of all the barbarians, the most barbarous is this impious, God-hated, and utterly defiled race, who believe in a mere and mortal man — this Muhammad” (…). 

All these things are sufficiently capable of showing us how the Fathers of the Church spoke and confessed their Faith before those of other religions and heretics.

Let us also consider another Athonite Saint, the great Teacher of the Church and of enslaved Romiosyne, Saint Nikodemos, who, living under the slavery of the Turkish rule, not only did not practice diplomacy or politics with those of another religion, but on the contrary, through his Spirit-inspired writings, and by preparing many New Martyrs for Martyrdom, became the anointer of the New Martyrs and handed down to us their moving Martyrologies, as he recorded them in the New Martyrologion, writing:

“…many of these New Martyrs, having shown mercy toward the perdition of those of another faith, went for this very reason to martyrdom and proclaimed to them the truth, teaching them to abandon the darkness in which they are found and to hasten toward the light of the piety and faith of Christ, lest they be condemned in the unquenchable fire of hell” (Discourse on the New Martyrs).

We see with what boldness he writes concerning the uniqueness of the Christian Faith and of Orthodoxy, and how he reproves those of another religion, so that Christians might preserve their Faith.

But Saint Kosmas the Aetolian also, himself an Athonite, with great missionary zeal, traveled apostolically throughout all Romiosyne, over mountains and seas, and through many villages, some of which had changed their faith and others their language after unbearable pressures; he, by his evangelical and apostolic preaching, brought them back to the Patristic Faith, and in the end he himself was martyred by the Turko-Albanians.

And, as Saint Nikodemos the Athonite also writes most poetically in the hymnographic Service:

“The New Martyrs, having destroyed the ancient delusion, exalted the faith of the Orthodox and struggled steadfastly…” (Apolytikion of the New Martyrs).

“Proclaiming the glory of the Trinity, you fill the hearts of Christians with joy, and you leave the tribe of Hagar in shame, O renowned New Martyrs, the glory of the Orthodox…” (Apolytikion of the New Martyrs).

All these,

“the steadfast in soul, having been armored by the power of Christ, entered into the arena of contest, triumphing over the impiety of the Hagarenes, and proclaiming with boldness the faith of Christ” (Oikos of the New Martyrs).

Whoever, therefore, studies both the hymnographic Service and the sublime festal Encomiastic Homily of the Saint will taste something of that crucified sweetness of the love of Christ which set the souls of the New Martyrs aflame. He will perceive what the divine love of the Martyrs means, and what relation this can possibly have to the tasteless and flaccid ecumenical talk of “love” of our present-day “shepherds.”

After all these things, as well as many others which one could cite, it is now entirely clear and brighter than the sun that what is being carried out today is not at all accidental. We are now living through a complete, methodical, and deliberate apostasy from the Patristic Orthodox Faith, which is being engineered, indeed as principal agents, by the shepherds themselves—patriarchs, bishops, abbots, priests, and theologians; these too are among the signs of the times.

Patriarch Bartholomew himself, let us not forget, distributes Qur’ans, takes part in Ramadan meals, offers joint prayers with all religions, and clearly proclaims:

“We religious leaders must bring to the forefront the spiritual principles of Ecumenism, of brotherhood and of peace; but in order to achieve this, we must be united in the spirit of the one God — Roman Catholics and Orthodox, Protestants and Jews, Muslims and Hindus, Buddhists” (Episkepsis, no. 494, p. 23, Geneva 1994).

His name is commemorated seven times a day on the Holy Mountain, “as one rightly dividing the word of the truth—Orthodoxy”…

These are the false shepherds about whom, for 2,000 years, Scripture, the Apostles, and the Holy Fathers have warned us.

“But there were also false prophets among the people, even as there shall be false teachers among you, who shall secretly bring in destructive heresies, even denying the Master who bought them, bringing upon themselves swift destruction” (2 Peter 2:1).

The great problem, however, is no longer them, for they have already followed the path of destruction and no longer worship Christ. The great problem is us—what are we doing in the face of all these things? This is the question and the necessity which should very seriously concern us. “He who has done and taught these things, he shall be called great.”

The diagnosis of an illness is of no benefit if we do not proceed also to its treatment; otherwise, we are merely playing games.

That which today, for most clergy, monks, and laypeople, remains incomprehensible is the matter of communion with heretics.

The term ecclesiastical communion, in the theological language of the Fathers, is weighty and possesses soteriological significance. Concerning the matter of communion, the Lord Himself speaks to us and commands us to flee far from the false shepherds—the wolf-shepherds:

“…the hireling, and not being a shepherd, whose own the sheep are not, sees the wolf coming and abandons the sheep and flees, and the wolf snatches them. The hireling flees because he is a hireling and does not care for the sheep” (John 10:12–13).

Moreover, when the Lord lived upon the earth, did He have any relationship, any spiritual communion, with the religious authority of Judaism—the Scribes, the Pharisees, and the Sadducees of His time?

And the Lord continues:

“…but you do not believe, for you are not of My sheep (not all sheep belong to Christ), as I said to you; My sheep hear My voice, and I know them” (John 10:26).

The sheep of Christ know His voice and have the command to follow only the true shepherds and not the false shepherds or wolf-shepherds.

And He continues:

“Take heed and beware of the leaven of the Pharisees and Sadducees… of their teaching” (Matthew 16:6–12).

Communion with heretics operates like leaven, which permeates the whole lump, whether for good or for evil.

And the Apostle says:

“O Timothy, guard the deposit, turning away (fleeing far away, a cessation of communion) from profane empty utterances and contradictions of the falsely so-called knowledge (Ecumenism), which some, professing, have concerning the faith suffered shipwreck (have been led to destruction)” (1 Timothy 6:20).

This teaching is expressed succinctly also by the great Father of the Church, Photios:

“The error of shepherds is the shipwreck of those in communion with them.” (P.G. 102, 698)

The Orthodox dogmatic teaching of the Church has been confirmed in many ways and by many means through the Ecumenical Councils. The Sacred Canons of the Church are of obligatory acceptance by the members of the Church, just as are the Commandments. There are no optional canons (that is, if one wishes he applies a canon, and if he wishes he does not apply it), just as there are no optional commandments.

Concerning joint prayers, the Sacred Canons prescribe, for example, the 45th Canon of the Holy Apostles:

“If any Clergyman or layman enters into a synagogue of Jews or of heretics to pray, let him be deposed and excommunicated.”

And commenting on this, Zonaras says:

“The Canon considers it a great sin… for what agreement has Christ with Belial? Or what portion has a believer with an unbeliever, according to the great Apostle?” (Pedalion, p. 84).

For about fifty years now, anyone examining the course of the so-called Theological Dialogues will ascertain that actions and choices were followed which had been prearranged within predetermined frameworks in which they were required to operate, and these frameworks were none other than the decisions of the Second Vatican Council (1962–65). All these things are expressed chiefly through joint prayers and bring about the greatest alteration in the Orthodox mindset of the people.

After all these things, the following questions arise:

a) What will be the stance of the Brotherhood itself of the Holy Monastery of Dionysiou? For in the person of the Abbot the entire Brotherhood is in communion, which means that whatever the Abbot does is in agreement also with the whole Brotherhood; for this reason, in all the documents of the Monastery they are signed “together with the brethren with me in Christ”. They commemorate his name daily in the Divine Liturgies, receive his blessing, commune from his hands, and concelebrate with him.

All these are not mere formalities; they are matters of essence, because they presuppose identity of Faith—that is, the Brotherhood holds the same Faith as the Abbot, and likewise the Abbot as the Brotherhood.

Patristic theology defines that “he who is in communion with one excommunicated is himself also excommunicated” (Theodore Balsamon); that is, those who commune with heretics become defiled, through their communion with heretics, by the very heresy itself.

The 2nd Canon of the Council of Antioch states: “He who communes with those who are excommunicated, let him also be excommunicated”, because

“from of old the Orthodox Church of God has accepted that the commemoration of the name of the bishop at the holy altar constitutes full communion with him” (Athonite Fathers, Letter to Michael VIII Palaiologos).

Likewise, a serious problem also arises for lay brethren who will be received as guests, since they too will face the problem of defilement.

b) The other Abbots and the rest of the fellow Athonite Monks in Christ who will visit the Monastery—by maintaining ecclesiastical communion with them, they too will indirectly be accepting his joint prayer.

And in general, what stance will the Athonites take? Will they continue to tolerate this ecumenical course of the Monastery, which many other Monasteries also follow?

c) Based on the above, the question posed to the Holy Community is what it intends to do.

What is fitting according to the sacred institutions of our Sacred Place is to convene an extraordinary Assembly for the swift resolution of the matter, which is already being widely discussed both within and outside the Holy Mountain.

We remind that formerly the same Holy Community wrote:

“The Holy Mountain has always preserved the self-awareness that it remains, by the Grace of Christ, a faithful guardian of the holy Orthodox Faith, which the God-proclaiming Apostles delivered to the Church and which our God-bearing Fathers, through the holy Ecumenical Councils, preserved unaltered throughout the ages” (Memorandum of the Holy Mountain, Orthodoxos Typos, no. 1801, October 9, 2009).

The Holy Mountain, apart from Venerable Saints and Ascetics, has also brought forth a multitude of Hieromartyrs and New Martyrs. The defense of the Orthodox Faith unto death always accompanied their ascetical and neptic struggles, since “a life is of no benefit when doctrines are corrupted” (Saint John Chrysostom).

We pray that our Sacred Place, the Garden of the Panagia, which is so greatly honored by the whole world, may preserve the Orthodox Faith as the apple of its eye, if we wish to have the blessing, the grace, and the protection of the Lady Theotokos—Who, we recall, in the time of the persecution by the unionist and Latin-minded Patriarch Bekkos against the Athonites, who had ceased commemorating him, spoke those fearful words:

“The enemies of me and of my Son are coming.”

Therefore, as Athonites, the feasts and celebrations in honor of Saint Kosmas the First and the Hieromartyrs under Bekkos are of no benefit to us if we do not also imitate them in the Confession of Orthodoxy. The time, therefore, is a time for Confession.

One of the contemporary virtuous Elders, Elder Savvas Kapsaliotis, a man who harmoniously united Asceticism with Confession, used to say characteristically and succinctly:

“I have spent six decades in the Schema; I wish to be in agreement with the Holy Hieromartyr Kosmas the First, because there are two paths. One leads to the excommunicated and disgraced ones of the Lavra, and the other to the martyr’s crown of Saint Kosmas the First.”

We pray for good illumination and repentance for all of us.

A good Confession, so that we may also have a good defense. Amen.

Athonite Fathers

 

 

Additional Greek source:

https://www.agioritespateres.com/otan-oi-fylakes-prodidoun/


Orthodox Clergy, Theologians Issue Statement on Finding Common Date of Pascha (without Unanimity)

Signed by 10 individuals, the statement calls for calendar reform and decisions made by individual autocephalous churches rather than a pan-Orthodox consensus while raising pastoral concerns for diaspora in the West.

Aaron Hickman

 

 

FEB. 26, 2026 — A group of Orthodox clergy and theologians led by Fr. John Chryssavgis — a clergyman of the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America and advisor to the Ecumenical Patriarchate — has issued a statement [see below] urging renewed efforts toward a common date for Easter between Orthodox and Western Christians. Meeting in January 2025 at Holy Cross School of Theology, they reflected on the 1700th anniversary of the Council of Nicaea and argued that the Orthodox Church’s continued use of the Julian calendar results in an increasingly inaccurate calculation of Pascha, diverging from Nicaea’s original norms.

Citing pastoral, educational, and ecumenical concerns, the statement says that the Orthodox Church’s "current method of calculating the date of Pascha is no longer consistently faithful to the Nicaean norms. Continuing to apply this method will over time result in Orthodox Easter falling much later in the solar year. Renewed efforts are vital for the Orthodox Churches to calculate more accurately the date of Easter so that the Orthodox paschalion adheres to the Nicaean formula that the Orthodox Church professes as normative. Failure to do so will over time result in Western and Eastern Christians never celebrating Easter together."

The statement identified inter-Orthodox divisions, lack of education on the calendar issue, and hierarchical inertia as what the signees see as major obstacles to reform. It also emphasized the pastoral consequences of separate Easter celebrations, particularly in North America, where mixed marriages between Orthodox and other Christians are common.

Rather than calling for immediate pan-Orthodox action, the signatories proposed local and educational initiatives within individual jurisdictions, encouraging clergy and hierarchs to foster open discussion and provide information about the history and calculation of Pascha. They framed the pursuit of a common Easter date as a pastoral responsibility and a tangible step toward honoring the spirit of Nicaea while strengthening Christian unity.

"Much misinformation begs to be addressed, in particular why the celebration of Pascha must follow the Jewish Passover, why the Julian Calendar is incorrect for identifying the spring equinox, whether the Orthodox Church has always observed a common date, and whether our identity as Orthodox requires us always to be different or separate from all other Christian confessions," the statement reads.

Those who signed the statement are:

  • Rev. Dr. John Chryssavgis, Professor of Theology, Holy Cross School of Theology; Exec. Director, Huffington Ecumenical Institute at HCHC (HEI)
  • Rev. Robert M. Arida, Dean Emeritus of Holy Trinity Cathedral (Boston, MA), Advisory Board Member (HEI))
  • Rev. Dr. Radu Bordeianu, Professor of Theology and Director of Graduate Studies, Duquesne University
  • Dr. George Demacopoulos, Fr. John Meyendorff & Patterson Family Chair of Orthodox Christian Studies, Fordham University
  • Rev. Dr. John H. Erickson, Gramowich Professor Emeritus and former Dean, St. Vladimir’s Orthodox Theological Seminary.
  • Dr. John Fotopoulos, Chair and Associate Professor, Department of Religious Studies and Theology, Saint Mary’s College (Notre Dame, IN)
  • Rev. Dr. Philip Halikias, HCHC Administrator and Adjunct Professor of Ecumenical Relations and Advisory Board Member (HEI)
  • Rev. John Maheras, Ecumenical Officer for the Metropolis of Boston (ret.) 
  • Rev. Dr. Harry Pappas, Presiding Priest at Archangels Greek Orthodox Church (Stamford, CT) and Executive Board Member (HEI)
  • Rev. Dr. Anthony Roeber, Professor of Church History, St. Vladimir’s Orthodox Theological Seminary

Previously, the UOJ reported that Patr. Bartholomew and Pope Leo prayed together and signed a joint declaration at the Phanar.

 

Source:

https://uoj.news/news/86556-orthodox-clergy-theologians-issue-statement-on-finding-common-date-of-pascha

 

***

Toward a common date of Easter

Fr. John Chryssavgis | February 25, 2026

 

Just two months ago, at the end of November, global news organizations paid attention — like Christians from various traditions — as His Holiness Pope Leo and His All-Holiness Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew met in Türkiye to mark the 1700th anniversary of the First Council of Nicaea. Although commentators predictably focused on the recitation of the Nicaean-Constantinopolitan Creed by both hierarchs as historically significant, at the level of everyday Christian life, another issue is actually of more importance and has been discussed by leaders of the two churches. 

Indeed, the First Ecumenical Council held in Nicaea in 325AD laid down the objective and the method for determining the celebration of the Resurrection of Christ for all Christians. To this end, a group of theologians met in Boston at the invitation of the Huffington Ecumenical Institute at Holy Cross School of Theology with a view to looking beyond the recitation of the Creed and drawing the attention of both Orthodox and Catholic Christians to the issue of the calendar and the most accurate evidence we have of how, when, and why Pascha, or the celebration of Easter should occur. 

The statement they adopted, that follows here, begins by noting that the Council of Nicaea decreed that Pascha is to be celebrated universally on the first Sunday following the first spring (vernal) full moon. But as everyone knows, Christians of the Western tradition and those of the Orthodox East only occasionally celebrate on the same Sunday. The Statement, intended as an educational tool, attempts to provide a concise account of why the calendar issue has not been resolved, proposing concrete steps that can be taken, especially here in North America, to move toward a resolution. It is a subject of growing interest not only among so-called ecumenical marriages and families, but also for those committed to the genuine mind of the patristic tradition. We hope that readers across all levels — clergy and parishioners, as well as seminarians and faithful — will study and reflect on this statement. 

A Statement by Orthodox Clergy and Theologians 

On January 24, 2025, at the initiative and invitation of the Huffington Ecumenical Institute at HCHC, a group of Orthodox Christian theologians from across the United States met at Holy Cross Orthodox School of Theology for a colloquium to discuss various issues related to a common date for the celebration of Easter. The statement builds on the occasion last year marking the 1700th anniversary of the First Ecumenical Council of Nicaea that laid down the objective and method for determining the celebration of the Feast of the Resurrection. 

Celebrating Pascha Today 

That first Ecumenical Council of Nicaea decreed that Easter is to be celebrated universally on the first Sunday following the first spring (vernal) full moon. The coincidence of these historic celebrations provided a unique platform to reflect on our often-fractious past and a rare invitation to explore a number of related issues. 

It would be tempting, albeit illusory, to compare the challenges facing Orthodox and Roman Catholic churches at the beginning of the twenty-first century with those facing the Council of Nicaea in the early fourth century. Scholars across religious traditions and academic disciplines have offered a deeper understanding and appreciation of the rich diversity that characterized pre-Nicaean Christianity, including on the question of the celebration of Easter.  

An Ecumenical Council 

Theologians have alerted us to an unintended consequence of the Council of Nicaea’s efforts to establish unity in its commemoration. The council was ecumenical in two senses. On the one hand, from an historical perspective, Nicaea was an imperial council, summoned by the emperor for the sake of advancing the empire’s unity. On the other hand, from a theological perspective, the Church received the council as charismatically expressing its mind under the inspiration and guidance of the Holy Spirit, destined to advance the Church’s mission in the broader world. 

Through the centuries, whether in the East or West, the relationship between civil and ecclesiastical authority was collaborative and symbiotic, although not uncomplicated or undisputed. Today, we live in a post-Constantinian era, even if some remain beguiled by nostalgia for imperial structures that once sheltered us, but which invariably also stifled our capacity for adaptation. Today, we are invited to imagine a post-imperial church, not as a grandiose monolith, but as intimate and interactive as an extended household. 

Ecumenical Impetus 

The ecumenical movement of the twentieth century encouraged Orthodox involvement in efforts to search for a common date for Pascha. The 1997 Aleppo Statement was arguably the most noteworthy and groundbreaking such achievement. In the twenty-first century, with the global expansion of Christianity, Orthodox Christians are invited to explore not only the ecumenical significance of a search for a common celebration of Easter, but also its interfaith implications and consequences. Moreover, it is time to consider our relationship with fellow Christians in the developing countries of sub-Saharan Africa, southeast Asia, and elsewhere in what used to be called the Third World. 

In their encounter with people of different religions and cultures, Orthodox Christians in Western nations have become more tolerant and respectful. In these encounters, they have also learned to avoid communicating with an air of superiority or colonialism. However, given this ecumenical and interfaith impetus, why has the search for a common celebration of Easter not yielded fruit? 

        1. First, inter-Orthodox discord has proved a major factor, and this division has become increasingly conspicuous in the wake of the invasion of Ukraine. 

        2. Second, the absence of education on the subject is lamentable. Here it should be added that education involves not just a final product but also an ongoing process. It is through mutual engagement that we ultimately learn and grow. Only by engaging in dialogue with the broader society and culture do we come to appreciate the principles of adaptation. 

        3. Third, as Orthodox Christians, we are accustomed to a top-down approach to authority in the Church, although this approach is far less effective than in the Constantinian age. While, over the centuries, the institutions of imperial Christianity became more embedded in and wedded to authority, wealth, and dominance, the Church’s lived history and theology were nourished by the faithful worship and witness of ordinary Christians. Therefore, amore communal, local approach would be more constructive and productive in considering such issues related to calendar. 

We must be be [sic] more demanding of ourselves in our commitment as disciples of Christ. Ecclesial unity requires more than simply synchronous liturgical observance. It involves sustained humility and charity. It manifests as constant openness to and encounter with others, sharing in their joys and sorrows, on a mutual basis. Only in this way can we fittingly celebrate together the paschal victory of the incarnate, crucified, and risen Word of God.  

Nicaean Norms 

In an effort to promote Christian unity and avoid unreliable calculations of the spring full moon, the First Ecumenical Council at Nicaea in AD 325 issued a normative formula for the calculation of Pascha on the basis of scientific learning of the time. The council determined that Easter should occur on the first Sunday after the first full moon occurring on or after the spring equinox. This Nicaean norm for the calculation resolved that Easter would be closely associated but not dependent upon the Jewish Passover that depends upon where in the world one sights the spring full moon (i.e., 14th of Nisan). By resolving that the Christian celebration of Easter would occur annually on the first Sunday after the first full moon on or after the spring equinox, Nicaea ensured that Easter would only take place once each solar year. Today, Orthodox, Catholics, and most Christians accept these Nicaean norms for the calculation of the date of Easter. 

However, divergences in the date of the celebration of Easter continue to occur because the Orthodox Church’s calculation of Easter uses the increasingly inaccurate Julian Calendar (currently 13 days behind the Gregorian Calendar) and a “fixed” Julian Calendar date of March 21 (Gregorian Calendar, April 3) as the spring equinox, when in fact the actual spring equinox occurs between thirteen to fifteen days earlier. The Orthodox Church also uses a mathematically calculated approximation for the first full moon of spring based on the nineteen-year Metonic lunar cycle. 

Inasmuch as the Orthodox method of implementing the Nicaean formula will become increasingly inaccurate, Orthodox Easter will increasingly be celebrated out of step with the expected Nicaean norms. For example, the West will celebrate Easter on March 28th in 2027 (on the Gregorian Calendar), a date which is consistent with the Nicaean formula; by contrast, most Orthodox will celebrate Easter May 2nd, a date which is actually the second Sunday after the second full moon after the spring equinox. 

The Orthodox Church’s current method of calculating the date of Pascha is no longer consistently faithful to the Nicaean norms. Continuing to apply this method will over time result in Orthodox Easter falling much later in the solar year. Renewed efforts are vital for the Orthodox Churches to calculate more accurately the date of Easter so that the Orthodox paschalion adheres to the Nicaean formula that the Orthodox Church professes as normative. Failure to do so will over time result in Western and Eastern Christians never celebrating Easter together.  

Ecumenical and Pastoral Implications 

Unifying the body of Christ temporally can also contribute to alleviating some of the burdens within the family (i.e., the home church). 

To give one example: the majority of Greek Orthodox in North America marry Catholic and Protestant partners outside the church. Neither the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese nor any other Orthodox body can ignore this issue or expect it not to impact the spiritual lives of our faithful. Any fragmentation of the family is unacceptable, and conversion to one or the other communion, even when it occurs, cannot account for the extended family of the non-Orthodox spouse. Embracing humility and raising awareness are the most fruitful ways of moving beyond ignorance, or indifference, ignorance, and condescensionon [sic] issues related to calendar questions and the calculation of Easter. This is especially pertinent in the case of “ecumenical families,” where children cannot commune or celebrate with both parents.  

What has been done to address this issue as it affects homes and families? In its efforts to demonstrate pastoral care for spouses and children of “ecumenical families,” in 2024 the North American Orthodox Catholic Dialogue issued a statement, entitled “The Pastoral Care of Mixed Marriages: Neither Yours nor Mine, but Ours,” which was endorsed by the Assembly of Canonical Orthodox Bishops in the United States of America and the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops. Two of the recommendations are: 

        1. That both churches exercise joint responsibility for the pastoral care of spouses and children in a spirit of love and mutual respect.

        2. That the spouses maintain mutual recognition of their shared life in Christ and support of one another on the way towards salvation as a foundation of their marital unity. 

In light of and in addition to these recommendations, clergy are responsible for ensuring that couples receive the necessary pastoral support for navigating the challenging landscape of marriage and family. The support of priest and community will prove immensely helpful in healing family conflict. 

A positive step in this direction would be an acknowledgement of the pastoral and ecumenical dimensions in securing a common date for the celebration of Easter. This would in turn restore faith in parishioners struggling to live Christian marriages and nurture Christian families within a secular society in a more visible way that signals our common desire to advance Christian unity by coming together on the most important Christian feast of the year. 

A Local Approach 

 Orthodox Christians in what some persist in calling the “diaspora” feel the pain of celebrating Pascha separately from Catholic and Protestant Christians more acutely than Orthodox living in countries where the Eastern Orthodox comprise the majority of the population. However, this reality has the potential to be a blessing in disguise as an appeal of those jurisdictions to their Mother Churches to show pastoral care for all the faithful living in North America regardless of “jurisdiction.” 

In supporting Orthodox Christians of its jurisdiction in North America to celebrate Pascha according to the rules established at the Council of Nicaea and accurate astronomical realities, the Ecumenical Patriarchate, for example, would not require the consent or corroboration of other autocephalous churches. The dilemma of what to do with the calendar is and never has been doctrinal, but purely pastoral, even in the effort to honor the norms laid down by Nicaea, although it is clear that the Julian Calendar fails to meet the criteria of Nicaea. 

The latest attempt to address this issue was at the Holy and Great Council of Crete (2016), which unfortunately removed from its agenda the item regarding calendar, given the inability of the entire Orthodox world to address this issue with any reasonable consensus, let alone unanimity. In this context, the autocephalous churches that do not participate in pan-Orthodox gatherings find themselves in a position that is less relevant in attempting to prevent other autocephalous churches from acting out of pastoral concern for their faithful in the West. This is an internal, local issue—pertaining to each autocephalous church—and not a matter for pan-Orthodox agreement. 

Moreover, there are historical precedents that dispel exaggerated fears promulgated in certain circles. For example, with the blessing of the Ecumenical Patriarchate, the Church of Finland celebrates Pascha according to the rule of the First Ecumenical Council by using the Gregorian Calendar.  

Certain ertain [sic] jurisdictions in the United States, such as the Carpatho–Russian diocese in the United States and the Ukrainian Orthodox Church in the USA (both under the Ecumenical Patriarchate), have allowed their parishes to choose between the two calendars on fixed feasts. 

Despite the above-mentioned exceptions, Orthodox unity has not been ruptured. Even where there has been a diverse pastoral reality at the parish level, this has not been perceived as a threat to the unity of the diocese. Indeed, for over a century, the Orthodox have not regarded the existence of two distinct and separate calendars (Julian and Gregorian) as threats to its unity.  

Educational Perspectives  

Orthodox Christians aware of the current rumors about a common date for Easter labor under a disadvantage. For many reasons, myths, misunderstandings, and fears continue to obscure the existing basis for discussing a common date. 

The Aleppo Agreement—produced nearly thirty years ago by an international group of Orthodox, Catholic and Protestant participants—remains the best approach for discussing the inconsistencies of the calendar and the calculation of Easter. In addition, the Standing Conference of Orthodox Bishops in America (SCOBA), the predecessor of the current Assembly of Orthodox Bishops, asked the Orthodox Theological Society in America (OTSA) to assess the Agreement and submit its recommendation to the hierarchs. Furthermore, OTSA endorsed the Agreement, urging the bishops to launch a program for educating clergy, monastics, and laity about what a “common date” of Easter would entail for Orthodox Christians. 

Unfortunately, no such education was ever undertaken. Yet, a “common date” of Easter is more important now than a generation earlier, especially in North America. Marriages between Eastern Orthodox and Oriental Orthodox, Catholics, Protestants, and non-Christians continue to increase in number and frequency. Expecting families to negotiate two observances of Lent, Christmas, Pascha, and other markers of the Christian life does not support or strengthen marriage, which is already in decline as an institution. For pastoral reasons, we urge the hierarchs of the Assembly of Bishops (potentially with the concurrence of the Oriental Orthodox hierarchs) to foster discussion of issues related to the celebration and date of Easter, both among themselves and within their jurisdictions, in order to clarify misconceptions and preconceptions. 

Much misinformation begs to be addressed, in particular why the celebration of Pascha must follow the Jewish Passover, why the Julian Calendar is incorrect for identifying the spring equinox, whether the Orthodox Church has always observed a common date, and whether our identity as Orthodox requires us always to be different or separate from all other Christian confessions. 

Given the exceptionally high number of “ecumenical marriages” in the United States, as well as the overwhelmingly interfaith context within which Orthodox Christians live and work each day, parish clergy are in a position to seize the moment and share with baptized members and catechumens the fruits of significant resources and ecumenical dialogues that explain the origin, diversity, and development of the central Feast of Pascha. 

Educational resources would include the decisions of local and universal councils as well as contemporary documents, including the Pan-Orthodox Council of 1923, the Pre-Conciliar Conferences of Chambésy from 1971, the Aleppo Agreement of 1997, the North American Orthodox–Roman Catholic Agreed Statement of 2023, and the Inter-Orthodox Statement of 2024 in Egypt.  

Honoring Nicaea 

This statement seeks to encourage open and frank discussion—uninhibited by fear and prejudice—about the lamentable lack of unity among Christians in celebrating the most important feast of the Resurrection of Christ together. If the question has not been resolved through official hierarchy or theological dialogue, this does not mean it does not deserve to remain at the forefront of our commitment and conversation. If the question of a joint celebration of Easter is not on the agenda for Autocephalous Orthodox or Mother Churches, where Orthodox Christianity is either a greater majority or a comfortable presence in the wider population, this does not mean it cannot be considered for the benefit of minority Orthodox Churches in the so-called Diaspora. If we are still far from achieving theological or sacramental unity with our Roman Catholic and Protestant brothers and sisters on the level of doctrine and the eucharist, this does not mean we cannot pursue greater cooperation and cohesion as fellow Christians by sharing the celebration of major feast days, especially Easter.  

Pursuing a common celebration of Easter constitutes a tangible way of honoring educating God’s people, raising awareness on issues related to a common date of Easter and providing care to married couples and families who deal with the practical consequences of celebrating the most important feast of the year on different days. 

Parish clergy will naturally seek the blessing of their diocesan hierarch in order to enter into a process that is best done in collaboration with other Orthodox clergy in their geographic area, beginning with their own jurisdiction but also reaching out to include others. The educational process should begin with consent from the parish council and broaden to ministry leadership before being incorporated into sermons, bible studies, catechism classes, or special events. Such occasions could involve visiting clergy and theologians on the topic for the sake of inspiring congregations and communities, and the equally important task of providing the proper education on this issue in Orthodox seminaries, centers, and schools. 

The ultimate goal would echo what existed in the earliest centuries—namely, diversity in unity—since no parish should in any way be coerced. However, the effort to educate and celebrate a common date of Easter is an essential pastoral task and ecumenical mandate that can enable Orthodox Christians to realize deeper unity while in fact moving closer to Nicaean norms. Striving to celebrate a common date of Easter each year is no small matter. Families, parishes, and communities experience the pain of our different calendars and calculations in tangible ways. Efforts of the Eastern and Western churches to achieve an annual common celebration of Easter should be reignited at every level, allowing the light of Christ’s resurrection to shine each year evermore brightly in our hearts and in our world.   

*   *   *

Rev. Dr. John Chryssavgis, Professor of Theology, Holy Cross School of Theology; Exec. Director, Huffington Ecumenical Institute at HCHC (HEI)

Rev. Robert M. Arida, Dean Emeritus of Holy Trinity Cathedral (Boston, MA), Advisory Board Member (HEI))

Rev. Dr. Radu Bordeianu, Professor of Theology and Director of Graduate Studies, Duquesne University 

Dr. George Demacopoulos, Fr. John Meyendorff & Patterson Family Chair of Orthodox Christian Studies, Fordham University

Rev. Dr. John H. Erickson, Gramowich Professor Emeritus and former Dean, St. Vladimir’s Orthodox Theological Seminary.

Dr. John Fotopoulos, Chair and Associate Professor, Department of Religious Studies and Theology, Saint Mary’s College (Notre Dame, IN) 

Rev. Dr. Philip Halikias, HCHC Administrator and Adjunct Professor of Ecumenical Relations and Advisory Board Member (HEI) 

Rev. John Maheras, Ecumenical Officer for the Metropolis of Boston (ret.)  

Rev. Dr. Harry Pappas, Presiding Priest at Archangels Greek Orthodox Church (Stamford, CT) and Executive Board Member (HEI)

Rev. Dr. Anthony Roeber, Professor of Church History, St. Vladimir’s Orthodox Theological Seminary 

 

Source: https://orthodoxobserver.org/toward-a-common-date-of-easter/

 

 

The three great calamities in Orthodoxy during the five-year period 1919–1924

Monk Vlasios the Athonite Greek source: Ὀρθόδοξος Τύπος , no. 2200/February 16, 2018. Metropolis of Oropos and Phyle note: We publish t...