Wednesday, April 22, 2026

A Warning about ROCOR’s Western Rite Experiment

An excerpt from “ROCOR's Anglican Scandal Continues - and it gets worse (Part 2),” by Simon Dennerly, posted on VirtueOnline.org, “The Voice for Global Orthodox Anglicanism,” on March 28, 2019.

 

 

ROCOR's WR Expansion

The secret behind ROCOR's WRV new expansion is taking Anglican clergy, mainly from the Continuum [i.e., a general term for breakaway groups from the Anglican and Episcopalian churches in response to the modernism in their respective churches since the 1970s], giving them quick ordinations and getting them involved in church planting. From [Fr. Mark] Rowe's account of applying for ROCOR "We then made our applications to the ROCOR Western Rite Vicariate, which were accepted and blessed by Metropolitan Hilarion, and ordination dates were set for the three of us to be received and ordained to the sacred priesthood." I spoke with one Continuing Anglican priest who wanted to leave his church but did not know were he would go, five weeks later he was ordained for ROCOR's WRV and starting a mission parish.

A Facebook post for ROCOR WRV's Holy Cross Parish from 02/010/2018:

"NEW WESTERN RITE ORTHODOX MISSION-PLANTS

Fr Mark Rowe, Vicar General of the Western Rite Communities of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia, has just announced that there are now ROCOR Western Rite Missions in formation in the following cities:

CHATTANOOGA, TN
ATLANTA, GA
SAN FRANCISIO, CA
ORLANDO FL

If any of our readers are near these cities and are interested in joining a forming Western Rite mission church please contact FR. Mark Rowe by email at: (address removed-ed)

The ROCOR Western Rite Communities continue to grow and the Western Church continues to be rebuilt, Church history is being written. You can be the first of tomorrow (Western Orthodox) rather than the last of yesterday (Anglican or Roman traditionalists). We love being Orthodox. You will too. Come and see!"

The main issue with this is although the Continuum was formed by and still contains many good clergy who left the Anglican Communion out of conscience, it has a well deserved reputation of having attracted or ordained clergy who are charlatans, and those who 'turn their coats often'- and now Archpriest Mark Rowe, a former Continuum priest who turned coat many a time is recruiting from them. Have you been expelled from a seminary on sex abuse and drug allegations? Not a problem! Or was that a case of "don't ask, don't tell"? Compared with the Catholic Church's Personal Ordinariates which requires a background check and psychological test before even being accepted into a two year priest formation period, while embedded in an Ordinariate community to meet the requirements to be ordained.

Last year in the Global Western Rite Orthodoxy Facebook page a ROCOR WR priest, Fr Michael Wood made the following claims against the first Vicar General of ROCOR's WRV, Bishop Jerome Shaw in a discussion whether there would be a WRO bishop (screen shot seen by editor of Virtue Online):

"Michael Wood: Mark Atkins We had one, he messed up in a big way and got forcible retired.

Michael John: Michael Wood: (emoji -- sad)

Dane Garrett: Michael Wood People were ever looking for an excuse to oust him.

Jim Polyzoidis: Mark Atkins it's called Western-phobia

Michael Wood: Dane Garrett No actually they weren't. He forged documents the synod found out about it and forgery of ordination certificate is a hanging offence no matter who does it."

This would seemingly explain the 2013 decree of the extraordinary Synod which effectively sort to shut down the WRV as it stood down the heads of the WRV, "To halt the ordination of new clergymen for parishes adhering to the Western Rite." And the examination of those who had been ordained WRV clergy, and transition Western Rite parishes into the 'mainstream liturgical practice' of ROCOR i.e. the Eastern Rite. This would suggest ROCOR's WRV has had major issues with integrity, and who they ordain, from the beginning.

Where some believe WRO is Eastern Orthodoxy with a Western mask, ROCOR's version could be described as the worst of the Anglican Continuum with an Orthodox mask. ROCOR has not shown the virtuous behaviour of the "One True Church" they claim to be a part of; indeed they are acting like the non-virtuous women with a thing for bad boys. My deep concern is someone, indeed many someones, will get seriously hurt by ROCOR's lack of standards - but at this stage anyone who gets involved with their Western Rite Vicariate will only have themselves to blame.

 

Source:

https://web.archive.org/web/20190716143613/https://www.virtueonline.org/rocors-anglican-scandal-continues-and-it-gets-worse-part-2

“Give Unto Me of Thy Virtues”: A Poem by St. Nektarios of Pentapolis to the Theotokos


 

Give Unto Me of Thy Virtues

 

All-Blessed Lady, Most Pure Virgin, all-wondrous Paradise, fair garden,

I beseech Thee, All-Immaculate One, to grace my mind, direct my thoughts, enlighten my soul.

Render me, O Maiden, pure, gentle, seemly, brave, serene and comely, upright, holy, divine, tolerant, long-suffering, a vessel of virtues, blameless, beyond reproach, a repository of things excellent.

Give unto me wisdom, prudence and ingenuousness, circumspection and simplicity and lowliness of mind. Give unto me sobriety, an enlightened outlook, a luminous intellect, an intemerate spirit.

Banish from me haughtiness, arrogance, conceit, boastfulness, and presumption, offense, disdain, high-mindedness, a loquacitous tongue, tendentiousness.

Fearful instability, needless wordage, multifarious wickedness, and indecent speech.

Grant unto me, All-Immaculate One, moral courage, boldness, steadfastness, give me perseverance.

Give unto me self-abnegation, non-avariciousness, wise zeal and the forgetfulness of wrongs.

Give to me integrity, nobility of heart, an upright and peaceful spirit, and a spirit of truth.

Put to flight, All-Immaculate One, passions of the heart, every form, O Pure One, of moral pusillanimity. Shameless unmanliness, impudence, cowardice, dreadful faint-heartedness, and despair.

Take from me, O Maiden, anger and all idleness, despondency, wrath, as well as indolence.

Envy, spite, hatred, malice, ire, vengeance, and the remembrance of wrongs.

Trivial disputation, garrulity, awful bloviation, and foul-mouthedness.

Give unto me, O Virgin, tenderness of heart.

Give me increased awareness and scrupulosity.

Give unto me, O Virgin, the joy of the Holy Spirit.

Give me peace of soul, the peace of the Lord.

Give me love, eros divine and intemerate, abundant, fervent, chaste, and sanctified.

Give me vivid faith, active, ardent, pure, and sacred, hope unshakeable, sure and holy.

Take from me, O Virgin, the yoke of sin, negligence, drunkenness, uncharitableness, evil desires, shameful debauchery, lewd laughter and every evil act.

Grant unto me prudence, O Maiden, give me over to self-control, fasting, attentiveness, vigilance, and perfect obedience. Give me heedfulness in all things, keen discretion, decorous silence, and holy patience.

Grant me, O Lady, diligence in my work, and also zeal in achieving the exercise of the virtues.

My soul, my heart, and my mind, All-Holy One, keep in holiness, preserving them in chastity.

 

Source: Orthodox Tradition, Vol. XXX (2013), No. 1, pp. 3-4.

The Old Calendar Struggle: A Yearning for Love Without Compromise

By Archbishop [Metropolitan] Chrysostomos of Etna (+2019)

This article is a slightly revised version of an essay that appeared in Orthodox Tradition in 1984. We have asked His Eminence’s permission to reprint it here, since, though dated, it nonetheless expresses thoughts that we find as germane, edifying, and beneficial to our readers today as when he originally composed it—the Editors.

 

 

In several past issues of Orthodox Tradition, I attempted to present a fair and objective profile of the Old Calendarist movement in Greece: its excesses and its triumphs; its strengths and its weaknesses; and its struggle to remain a firm witness to all of the traditions of the Church at a time when even the most basic of traditions are being cast aside by many of the national Churches, their Exarchates in diaspora, and, alas, some of the ancient Patriarchates. In my attempts, I have tried to follow a path of moderation, certainly acknowledging the faults and flaws which exist in our traditionalist circles and, at the same time, pointing out that the Church is still one and that many so-called “modernist” Orthodox do, indeed, truly strive for sincere spiritual ends.

My attempts at moderation have been variously successful. A moderate stand is a difficult one, since it slices through the very substance of the extremes that lie on both sides of it. Thus, on the one hand, a very distinguished modernist Orthodox scholar, whom I greatly respect, recently told me that some of my writings are wounding in their insensitivity to the spirituality of others. I have taken his comments to heart and I will carefully search for such instances and avoid possibly wounding rhetoric in the future. On the other hand, another very close friend and spiritual advisor has warned me that my comments in Orthodox Tradition on the Old Calendarists are so conciliatory, at times, that an uncareful reader might think that, in explaining why I am an Old Calendarist, I do not really show sufficient dedication to the movement. I believe, therefore, that I should clarify a few basic points.

I am seriously disquieted by those traditionalists who believe that they alone constitute the Orthodox Church and who dismiss all New Calendarists and “modernists” as un-Orthodox. Such attitudes are crudely fundamentalistic and border on divisive thinking, taking, as they do, the apocalyptic signs of our times so literally as to violate the unity of the Church. Such attitudes, it seems to me, ignore some basic realities. There are New Calendar Churches, such as the Church of Greece, which still produce Saints. My own spiritual Father, Metropolitan Cyprian, is the spiritual son of the blessed Archimandrite Philotheos (Zervakos)—himself the spiritual son of St. Nectarios of Aegina—who remained in the State Church of Greece up to his death (though he followed the Church Calendar in his last days [1]), working for the return of that body to the Church’s proper Festal Calendar and Patristic tradition. And while the Prelates of many New Calendar Churches, in their wild ecumenist excesses, have come close to denying the nature of the Church Herself, other Hierarchs—and a great number of the faithful—remain loyal to the Truth passed down to them by the Fathers. Given this, who would possibly want to alienate our "modernist" brothers with strong rhetoric? Who could possibly desire to believe that Orthodoxy has been reduced to a handful of people who have independently decided that they constitute the “only Church under the sun,” to quote one such group?

At the same time, however, I deplore what has been done to Holy Tradition in the name of modernism, thinking that some abstract essence of Orthodoxy transcends Holy Tradition. A fierce and vulgar disdain for the ethnic heritages of Orthodoxy is also growing among converts in some ‘‘modernist” jurisdictions, such that the daily, tangible ways in which the Church's Truth has reached the faithful for decades—traditional Priestly dress, standing in Church, fasting, respect for the vision of Divine Order in the Orthodox monarchies of the past, modesty in dress, certain modes of behavior—are dismissed as "mere externals." Traditionalist Orthodox are characterized as ‘‘simpletons” preoccupied with ‘‘bells and smells,” and all of this by people who have sadly never really immersed themselves in the Orthodox ‘‘way of life”—orthopraxis and the observance of the Faith—which, as they fail to realize, cannot really be separated from the essence of Orthodoxy: the correct ‘‘way of belief” and the ‘‘true way of worshiping God.”

In the name of missionary expedience and apocalyptic necessity, the vast majority of Orthodox in America—the majority of ‘‘modernists,” that is—are failing to build Orthodox cultures in the New World and, more importantly, failing miserably in rearing children, the future of the Church, in a genuine, traditional, and healthy Orthodoxy. At times embarrassed by the Church’s divergence from the ways of a corrupt world, we have begun to accommodate that which transcends the world, that which is not of the world, to the caprice of our modern age! The humble monastic Bishop is being replaced by the worldly ‘‘corporate man,” too often influenced by the powerful and wealthy and too engaged in the "business" of the Church to fast, to follow the monastic restrictions against eating meat, to dress in traditional garb, to eschew personal possessions, or to refrain from courting “world Orthodoxy.” Moreover, the heresy of the “branch theory” of the Church is preached from the most famous Orthodox pulpits, undermining the indispensability and primacy of our traditions. Our faithful, Shepherds, and children are alienated from Orthodoxy in practice, embracing the Faith only in name.

Our Churches, in the agnostic atmosphere of the New World, have given up the mystical, quiet, and dark atmosphere of Holy Tradition, so conducive to prayer, for the brightly-lit din of the secular theatre. Personal taste, rather than obedience to Holy Tradition, has entered into the Church. Indeed, our holy task as Orthodox Christians—to lift ourselves up, and in this life, to participation in the Divine, to become “sons of God” within the Son of God, has been replaced by the boisterous claims of the “born again,” the “saved,” and the “elect,” many of our Churches being filled with the hyperbole of “televangelical” religion at the cost of the subtle, quiet, and pious holiness which has transformed our forefathers for ages. Soothing “evangelical” Protestant piety, spiced with some Roman Catholic features—a package that admittedly sells well—has replaced the strong wine and the caustic salt of curative Orthodoxy, which demands much of the body and soul.

If I am distressed by fanatic traditionalists, this is not on the basis of personalities; it is simply because I fear both for the souls of those who fall to extremism and for the souls of those who are misled or, as is often the case, put off by their unwise overzealousness. I am concerned with the misrepresentation of the Church to which unwise zeal ineluctably leads. By the same token, if I regret the vagaries of the “modernists,” it is not because of the actions of any single individual, but on account of my dismay at the way in which, little by little, modernist renovationists are removing pieces of the composite mosaic which is the Church. One may argue that the abandonment of one tradition may not mar the face of the Church. I reject this argument, since there is certainly no doubt that every new innovation—every abandonment of traditions dating, in many instances, to Apostolic times—represents a move toward the greater disfigurement of the image of salvation. While certain people and personalities may be tied to certain processes, and thus must be mentioned and cited, it is the process, which has actually made them its victim, which I ultimately deplore and fear.

Keeping firmly in mind all that I have said, any fair person will realize why I am an Old Calendarist and why I am staunch in that stand. I do not concelebrate with New Calendarists or participate in those activities wherein they err by departing from Orthodox traditions. I do not encourage them in their errant views of Holy Tradition; nor am I so spiritually remiss as to fail to point out their mistakes and wrong beliefs. I candidly remind them of the evil consequences of their infractions, as evidenced by the fact that many Old Calendarist zealots in Greece, Romania, and elsewhere have suffered persecution—and even death—at the hands of their brother Orthodox. This must not be forgotten. I remind them that not a few self-serving “modernists,” fearing our true witness to the Faith, have been less than honest and upstanding in speaking of legitimate and moderate Old Calendarists. They have, by virtue of their self-proclaimed “officialdom,” at times stated that we Old Calendarists are self-ordained, have no Bishops, and are illiterate fanatics. This travesty must of necessity be addressed.

But all of these reminders I offer with Christian love. If I truly believe that the destructive forces of modernism, ecumenism, and compromise lead to a disfigurement of the image of the Church, and that strong attempts to preserve Tradition in the most minute detail constitute a means by which I can keep the image of the Church pure, then I must speak, and again out of love, in an uncompromising and uncompromised way to my brothers. I must wall myself off and detach myself from their error, doing all that is necessary not to be touched myself by what assails and ails them. It was in this spirit, fearing the deviant course of the State Church of Greece, that Archimandrite Philotheos (vide supra) blessed Metropolitan Cyprian, then a much-respected clergyman and spiritual Father in the New Calendar Church, to seek refuge from its innovationist and ecumenist excesses by joining the Old Calendar Orthodox Church of Greece, then, save for the ultra-conservative Matthewite faction, united in one jurisdiction. [2] In that same spirit, seeking to protect ourselves from error, we are not judging our brothers in our actions, but are consciously essaying to preserve a standard to which they might return— an action with ample parallels in Church history.

Let me reiterate my earlier words. If I seem to speak harshly about modernist deviations from the Faith, thus somehow giving the impression that my chastisement is one of individuals, rather than of processes and movements, I apologize. If I have perhaps sounded too compromising in speaking against modernist deviations, for fear of hurting individuals, for this, too, I apologize. I would simply ask my readers to understand these faults, understand them as unintentional transgressions, and realize that they do not represent my true goal: i.e., the goal of standing apart from error and, while condemning the error, neither condemning those who fall prey to it nor judging their place within the Church, which is not mine to do. Let me also affirm that, if I am at times seemingly intractable in upholding a standard to which all will eventually be called, when the wicked are separated from the righteous, I have no doubt that the errant who ultimately return to Orthodoxy in its fullness will enjoy greater honor than those of us who have been merely called to preserve it. Theirs is the greater virtue, not ours.

 

1. See Constantine Cavarnos, Blessed Elder Philotheos Zervakos (Belmont, MA: Institute for Byzantine and Modem Greek Studies, 1993), pp. 69-75.

2. See: http://hsir.org/p/wd6

 

Source: Orthodox Tradition, Vol. XXIX (2012), Vol. 2, pp. 3-6.

Book Review: “Jesus in the Talmud”


 

Peter Schäfer, Jesus in the Talmud. Princeton and Oxford: Princeton University Press, 2007. Pp. 201 + Index.

This book, sent to me by a reader of Orthodox Tradition, was difficult to review. The work of a notable Jewish scholar at Princeton, it is a comprehensive and well-documented study of Christ as He appears in the Talmud, the principal sourcebook of Rabbinical Judaism. While the scholarship was impeccable and a pleasure to read, the unavoidable citations from Talmudic references to Christ, some noxiously anti-Christian, were as personally odious to me as are the contemptible anti-Semitic ideas that abound in the historical witness and the contemporary media—indeed, from the popular press to the Internet—and in widely distributed hate literature of extremist Christian and Islamic provenance.

Revolting though some of the more offensive Talmudic references to Christ may be, the book affords one a framework in which better to understand these portrayals of Christ. Professor Shafer first establishes that references to Christ in the Talmud (and especially in the Babylonian Talmud) are sparse: “a proverbial drop in the yam ha-talmud (‘the ocean of the Talmud’).” Nonetheless, he asserts, they play a vital role in the confrontation of Rabbinical Judaism with Christianity itself. He also acknowledges that the polemical medieval treatise, Toledot Yeshu, or “History of Jesus,” which provoked anti-Jewish Christian sentiments in Spain, especially, may reflect more of the thinking of the Rabbis of late antiquity than has heretofore been admitted.

In essence, in a piece of scholarship that must be read carefully to be appreciated (and this book is accessible to anyone, and not just specialists), the author contrasts the Greek New Testament—in which he confesses to having significant (and undoubtedly less traditional) advice from Princeton’s New Testamental experts, Professors John Gager and Elaine Pagels—with the Talmud (again, drawing heavily on the Babylonian Talmud, which was compiled from earlier oral sources around 500 A.D.), using that term very loosely to encompass the foundational sources of Rabbinical Judaism in general.

In this contrast, he argues not for the usual polemical disconnect between the New Testamental account of Jesus (and Mary and His family) and occasional, largely adventitious Rabbinical references to Christ, but for a deliberate and polemical parodying of the Gospel narrative by Rabbinical scholars, in late antiquity, who had reasonable familiarity with the New Testament and its content (though somewhat differently in Babylonia than in the Palestine). The Talmudic picture of the New Testament narrative, and thus the life of Christ and His family, Professor Shafer argues, was designed to counter, answer, and address, in a carefully crafted literary response, the New Testamental witness.

I will illustrate this approach by recounting the Talmudic version of the Crucifixion of Christ, to which the reader who sent me this book for review quite appropriately directed my attention. The primary source for the author’s discussion of the death of Christ is the Bavli (i.e., the Babylonian Talmud). As he points out, the event is discussed in the context of Halakha, or Jewish law. Christ is described as an individual close to the Roman government (a collaborator), a sorcerer, and a blasphemer who claimed to be the Son of God, thus enticing others into idolatry. On this account, He was subject to stoning and hanging (i.e., the displaying of the corpse by tying it to a tree). According to this narrative, Christ was put to death in conformity with the dictates of Jewish law.

Professor Shafer notes that the Talmudic interpreters were certainly aware that Christ was put to death by Roman soldiers by crucifixion and that He was not stoned and hanged. But they held to their narrative, since it underscored, by contrast to Pilate’s depiction of Him as a pretender to political kingship or sovereignty over the Jews, Christ’s crime of blasphemy (in claiming to be the Son of God) and sorcery (claiming power to destroy the Temple). As a blasphemer and heretic, Christ was treated according to Halakha, a rather direct literary challenge to the New Testamental narrative of His betrayal by His own people.

Does this notion of a Talmudic counter-narrative actually hold water? Indeed, it does. The uncensored manuscripts of the Bavli in fact repeat elements from the Gospel narratives: They say that Christ was hanged on the eve of the Jewish Passover; His corpse was not allowed to hang overnight (before the Sabbath); and He was “close” to the Roman rulers. This latter charge, an obvious attempt to respond to the Gospel accounts of Pilate’s efforts to save Jesus the innocent victim from execution, attests most clearly to Rabbinical familiarity with New Testamental texts and Christian accounts that, according to prevailing scholarship, were supposedly hardly given notice in Rabbinical Judaism.

The importance of Professor’s Shafer’s insights, which are perfectly illustrated by his discussion of the Crucifixion story—one morsel of the rich feast of examples of deliberate parallelism that he cites throughout his book—is that they suggest, if I may take his position a bit beyond what he asserts, that the Talmudic treatments of Jesus are not nasty anti-Christian screeds, but attempts to contradict the New Testamental depiction of the person of Christ in a direct defense of Judaism. They are not simply apologetic in nature, but didactic and interpretive.

In much the same way, many of the early Patristic responses to Judaism, and especially in confronting the Judaizers, were also not a manifestation of raw anti-Semitic rancor, but a conscious attempt to discredit and dismiss the opposing messages of Judaism, to the end of protecting the new practices of the Christian Church. One might, of course, argue that polemical self-protection is also a form of bigotry. If I do not wholly dismiss that thought, I nevertheless consider purposive polemics a matter of thought more than emotion, and thus more likely to succumb to reasonable discourse and yield to mutual understanding.

- Archbishop Chrysostomos [of Etna]

 

Source: Orthodox Tradition, Vol. XXVIII (2011), No. 1, pp. 25-27.

 

PDF of Jesus in the Talmud:

https://drive.google.com/file/d/1MS9X4i0OkT9WGAHFIRwPDzTuISgPofK8/view?usp=sharing

 

 

Tuesday, April 21, 2026

The Root of the Division of Those in Resistance

Monk Damianos Agiovasileiatis

 

 

We promised that we would return to examine more thoroughly the great issue that did not allow the resisters of 1924 to produce the expected ecclesiological fruits they had promised. The issue is the invalidation of the Holy Mysteries of the prevailing New Calendar Church.

To be clearer, since many readers are unfamiliar with the Canon Law of the Orthodox Eastern Church, it is well first to analyze, within a general framework (as far as space here permits), the two principal ecclesiological deviations usually found among the fullness of the Church and, not surprisingly, chiefly among the highest clergy of the Orthodox Church.

A. The lapse of Orthodox Christians into heresy.

B. Communion of Orthodox Christians with heresy.

Thus, we shall have the opportunity to examine in what way the members of the Church exist within her from an ecclesiological, soteriological, and consequently ontological point of view, when they walk “in piety and righteousness,” and also in what way they exist within her when they deviate into canonical-dogmatic transgressions.

A. We note that the analysis concerns those baptized members of the Church who fall into some heresy, whether one condemned in the past by the Church or a newly arisen one. The lapse of these members renders them accountable before the Canon Law of the Church and liable before its competent synodal body. Consequently, until they are tried, they are regarded as unjudged heretics. And naturally, being unjudged, they too are considered members of the Church. Let us see more closely, however, how this is so.

Some say that the lapse of a believer into a heresy previously condemned by the Church completely alienates him from the Church, and they ask: what purpose is served by the condemnation of an already condemned heresy? By means of this heresy, the Orthodox person who falls away is not unjudged but is considered a judged heretic, and for this reason he goes out voluntarily and automatically (!) from the Church.

To begin with, we answer that indeed an already judged heresy, as a heretical confession (for example, Monophysitism), does not need to be tried again, nor is there any reason for this. Likewise, if a member breaks communion with the Orthodox Church and joins the Monophysite confession, he departs from it of his own accord, and truly any possible deposition or excommunication (according to his rank) by the Church has no meaning and no effect for him, except only a “declaratory character.” (Ecclesiastical Law, A. Christofilopoulou, p. 274.)

But when the judged heresy as a teaching is publicly preached to the fullness of the Church by some member who belongs to the Orthodox Church, then, according to Canon Law (and logic), it is necessary to reaffirm the anathema of the heresy and for the fallen cleric to be deposed, or, if he is a layman, to be excommunicated. The reaffirmed anathematization of the heretical teaching and the deposition or excommunication are carried out by the local Church to which the member belongs. In the case, however, where the entire hierarchy of a local Church falls away, then the heresy and the fallen hierarchy are judged by a greater synod.

That a new condemnation is required is evident from a simple reading of the Acts of the councils of the Church. But Canon 15 of the First-Second Council also points this out: “...for those who, on account of some heresy condemned by the holy Councils or Fathers, separate themselves from communion with their president, that is, when he is publicly preaching the heresy... such men, walling themselves off before synodal adjudication... shall be deemed worthy of the fitting honor.” Clearly the canon speaks of synodal adjudication when the heresy is already judged (condemned); of course, synodal adjudication is required all the more when it has not been judged. Besides, the reason why the Orthodox faithful wall themselves off is the practical denunciation of the heresy and of the heretic by name, so that the convocation of this new synod of bishops may be achieved more quickly, and it is self-evident that the president accused “on account of heresy,” if he remains unrepentant, is deposed by it.

Therefore, even though the accused bishop has fallen into an already judged heresy, so long as he remains under trial before the new synod, he cannot be regarded as a judged heretic but as an unjudged one. And being unjudged, he is considered by the synod as a member of the Church.

But those who “search the Scriptures” solely in order to find support for their erroneous theory (and of course, according to the letter, they find whatever they want) say that, according to the Acts of the Seventh Ecumenical Council, “heresy separates every man from the Church.” (Acts of the Councils, S. Milias, vol. 3, p. 733.) Truly, at this point there is a glaring antinomy, though only an apparent one, which we shall immediately clarify. That is, let us see in what sense the unjudged heretic subsists as a member of the Church in relation to the Orthodox believer.

The presence of a member in the Church has a twofold standing. It is first and foremost a spiritual relationship with the invisible Head of the Church. Through this relationship the sanctification of the believer comes about by participation in the holy Mysteries, since the Lord Himself blesses, performs, sanctifies, offers, and is offered, especially in the pre-eminent mystery of the Divine Eucharist. A natural and immediate consequence of this spiritual relationship, therefore, is the possibility of that member’s salvation. Secondly, it is an “ecclesiastical” relationship, [1] which consists in his entry through baptism as a member of the Church. Although it precedes the spiritual relationship and is an indispensable prerequisite for attaining it, we mention it as secondary because, surely, without the spiritual relationship, the “ecclesiastical” one by itself provides no soteriological benefit to the member, except only when the baptized member dies in infancy or suffers from mental illness. Therefore, it is possible for the “ecclesiastical” relationship to exist while the spiritual one has been severed. Cases in which this may occur are: when a member falls into heresy, whether judged or not judged; when a member communes with a heretic while knowing his heresy; and when a member falls into a mortal sin and does not repent.

From the above twofold relationship, it follows that:

– The members who exist spiritually and “ecclesiastically” within the Church constitute the healthy part of her body, that is, the Church as the Body of Christ.

– Members can sever their spiritual relationship with the Church voluntarily, and only voluntarily. In that case they are considered spiritually dead [2] members, and of course they exist only “ecclesiastically” within the Church.

– The “ecclesiastical” relationship of spiritually dead members is severed by the anathema of complete excommunication by a synod of the Church, or voluntarily by their joining heretical confessions, for example Roman Catholicism, or another religion.

In conclusion, then, up to this point one thing is certain: that the president accused “on account of heresy,” through his false doctrine, has lost the grace of the All-Holy Spirit and consequently has fallen from the highest state of being, if indeed he possessed it to begin with. Whether, however, he thereby departs entirely from the Orthodox Catholic Church or does not depart, this does not depend directly on the fact that he himself personally, by his anti-Orthodox confession, has lost the grace of God. Likewise, in the case of the faithful who are unrepentant sinners, it does not depend on a non-Christian mode of life. Many take this as the cause of the now definitive departure of this heretical president from the Church, even grounding their opinion, so as to have some sort of “canonical” support, on the supposedly self-acting (!) penal force of the sacred canons. In essence they return again to the position we mentioned earlier concerning one who has fallen into an already judged heresy, regarding which there already exists a condemning Oros or Canon, and for this reason, they say, he is considered judged. For this reason, they ask whether it is ever possible in the Orthodox Church for heretics, especially clerics, to coexist together with the Orthodox faithful. Although the reference to the twofold relationship of the members is sufficient to dissolve this present “contradictory” coexistence, we shall nevertheless proceed, in answering the question, to a further clarification of the matter.

The question is, at the very least, naive, if it does not express a settled conviction, for the reason that it prejudges the unjudged heretics. We answer that, unless they make the distinction between unjudged and judged heretics, the “veil will never be taken away from their heart” so that they may understand the truth of the matter. By maintaining this error, we “abolish” the judicial authority of the Church’s Synodality. [3] This judicial authority consists in the authentic and definitive determination of a false teaching as heretical, in its anathematization, and in the personal and nominal condemnation of the bearers and leaders of the heretical teaching. But when someone looks only to the results of principles (causes), without paying attention to the causes of those results, or worse, obstinately denies them — that is, the reasons why the results differ — it naturally follows that he falls into an inability to understand the matter, a matter so serious from the standpoint of ecclesiological concern and responsibility, and thus is needlessly thrown into confusion.

The truth is that unjudged and judged heretics do indeed share the common name derived from whatever heresy they may hold, but in essence they differ with respect to the act of judgment. Yet by considering them only under the appellation of “heretic,” without this distinction, they turn homonyms into synonyms, [4] and thus, by identifying things that are not identical, they fall into absurdities, are led astray into unsound ecclesiology, and do not escape even blasphemy. This blasphemy, as we shall see in another section, lies in the fact that unjudged heretics, insofar as they are clerics, are “active” members of the Church and perform valid mysteries through which the Holy Spirit works the salvation of many faithful who repent but are ignorant of the heretical teachings of those clerics.

This distinction between unjudged and judged heretics is illustrated by the wise Saint Nicodemus with a very simple example. Referring to priests under accusation (unjudged) and subject to the penalty of deposition by a synod, he says: “if the synod does not actually carry out the deposition of the priests... these priests are not in act deposed. They are, however, liable — here to deposition... and there to divine judgment. Just as when a king orders his servant to beat another man who had offended him, if the servant who was commanded does not carry out the king’s order, the one who offended the king remains unbeaten, yet is still liable to the beating.” (Pedalion, footnote 2 on Apostolic Canon 3.)

So it is clear that “heresy separates every man from the Church” primarily with respect to man’s spiritual relationship to the invisible Head of the Church. This spiritual relationship certainly constitutes the very quintessence of the presence of the members within the Church. And when it is severed, whether they are unjudged or judged heretics, they become identified [5] in that they are indeed considered outside the saving mission of the Church. From this point of view, the “ecclesiastical” relationship of a member to the Church is utterly secondary and brings him no benefit toward salvation, except only that he is given the possibility of participating in the institutional, liturgical, and administrative framework of the Church. In a second sense, however, “heresy separates from the Church” the accused (unjudged) heretic with respect to his “ecclesiastical” relationship to the Church through baptism, not automatically, but at a later time through synodal condemnation.

In the same way, we may say, for example, that such-and-such a canon deposes such-and-such a cleric, meaning of course not the self-acting deposition of the cleric by the canon itself (that is absurd), but the application by a synod of the canon’s command to depose him. Or, in another and clearer way, we may say that the law of the state imprisons the thief or the murderer, again meaning not the automatic imprisonment of the lawbreaker by the law itself, but the application of the law by the appointed public organs of the state to the thief or the murderer. And again, the exceedingly ingenious Saint Nicodemus, in order to show the necessity of a synodal decision for the deposition of a fallen cleric, leaving no room for any other interpretation, also specifies the time for the convocation of the new synod, saying: “The Canons command the synod of the living Bishops to depose priests, or to excommunicate, or to anathematize laymen who transgress the canons.” (Footnote 2 on Apostolic Canon 3.)

Certainly, the Church as the Body of Christ and a spiritual kingdom is the place where those “who worship God in spirit and in truth” are the ones who constitute the healthy part of the Church. We cannot, however, deny the reality that within the Church there are also members who are spiritually diseased or dead. All Orthodox Christians are called to attain holiness. “Be ye perfect,” says Scripture, “even as your heavenly Father is perfect.” Yet this obligation, by reason of that specific command, certainly does not place outside the Church those members who have not yet attained perfection. The Church has never legislated any such thing. If what we have said up to this point applies to spiritually dead members, it applies all the more to those who are diseased.

In the final analysis, there are spiritually dead members, but also diseased members, who are deprived either of the high state of being, or of the right faith, or of both; even those whose activity is judged dangerous to the other members of the Church, until they are expelled from the Church by its competent synodal body, remain, by leniency, even if abusively, as members of the Church. The word abusively refers rather to the negligence in convening the new synod of the living Orthodox bishops, whose specific and imperative judicial authority, when it is not undertaken, burdens them with very grave responsibilities.

There are, however, also other reasons that hinder the formation of the synod; therefore, those members who are accountable and for various reasons evade trial by a synod in the present life are unavoidably referred to the divine judgment, just as are those from among the multitude of the faithful who remain in communion with heretics while knowing their heresy.

 

Notes

1. The term “ecclesiastical” relationship, although it does not appear in patristic literature, at least in connection with our subject matter, is a self-evident and indisputable reality. In contemporary ecclesiastical literature it is also expressed as an institutional relationship.

2. Perhaps in these cases the spiritual severance may not be complete and absolute, insofar as this also depends on the degree of the members’ lapse, on the disposition and inclination of their soul toward the knowledge of the truth, on the loving-kindness of God working secretly in their hearts, and on other such things which take place invisibly. Concerning this, Saint Theodore the Studite agrees admirably, saying: “for one must not make a definitive pronouncement; because one differs from another both in person and in knowledge, and in zeal, and in age.” For this reason, for an easier understanding of the matter, we assume that these members transgress some Oros or dogmatic canon with full conviction.

3. By the term “Synodality” we always mean the convocation of bishops in an ecumenical (pan-Orthodox) or local synod, chiefly for the condemnation of some heretical teaching and of the heretics.

4. The use of the logical terms of dialectic in the polemical writings of the great Fathers of the Church against heretics was customary and necessary. Saint Gregory Palamas used this particular method against Barlaam.

“Synonyms are those whose name is common and whose definition of essence according to the name is the same... Homonyms are those whose name alone is common, but whose definition of essence according to the name is different.” (Epitome of Logic, Nikephoros Blemmydes, P.G. vol. 165, pp. 737, 740.)

5. Here, the identification refers to the soteriological context. However, the non-identification remains with regard to the synodal judgment.

 

Greek source: https://krufo-sxoleio.blogspot.com/2016/06/blog-post_27.html

 

Women and Chanting

Protopresbyter Dimitrios Athanasiou | April 21, 2026

 

 

Introductory remarks

Following the contemporary discussion surrounding the participation of women at the sacred analogion, one observes that it is often conducted in terms of an unjustified exclusion. This approach tends to overlook the historical and essential role of woman in worship; from the Deaconesses of the early Christian Church to the great hymnographers, such as Saint Kassiani, the female presence has always been an organic and inseparable part of ecclesiastical life.

It is necessary to proceed to a clear theological distinction: the Apostle Paul defines ecclesiastical order by restricting the teaching and public preaching of women within the assembly. In no case does he forbid psalmody. Hymnography constitutes the common prayer and confession of faith of the whole body of the faithful. When we expend ourselves on universal prohibitions, we risk losing the essence of the soteriological message: that Christ abolished every ontological division.

“There is neither male nor female; for you are all one in Christ Jesus” (Gal. 3:28).

Support for women’s participation in the chanters’ stand is not identical with a demand for entry into the special priesthood. It concerns participation in the general priesthood of the faithful and in the “sacrifice of praise” owed by every baptized soul.

Since Ecclesiastical Music is preeminently the music of worship and not a means of display, the criteria for participation ought to be:

1. Piety and reverence.

2. The ability to offer service to the Body of Christ.

3. A humble mind and spiritual formation.

If we wish to speak of strict observance of order, one reminder is necessary: according to the canons, male chanters ought to be tonsured Readers. In current ecclesiastical practice, however, strictness is often applied selectively to sex rather than to the essential canonical prerequisite.

In the face of a conservative “hyper-Orthodox” position that establishes a new legalism, the Church sets forth the spirit of love and equality. Any attempt to marginalize woman in worship is judged foreign to the ethos of the God-Man, Who made His Church an embrace spacious enough for every person who desires to hymn Him with purity and reverence.

Next, we shall present the main points of Ms. E. Spyrakou’s research entitled: “The Female Presence in the Art of Chanting: The Case of the Urban Churches of the Byzantine Empire.” Evangelia (Eugenia) Spyrakou, a member of the Special Educational Personnel of the Department of Music Science and Art at the University of Macedonia, was the first to analyze systematically the function of the Byzantine choirs, demonstrating that the woman chanter constituted an institutional and organic member of the liturgical system.

Those interested can find the entire study online.

The main points of the study follow, organized for easier understanding:

The Institutional Organization of Women Chanters

Historical research shows that the female chanting presence in Byzantium was not a random phenomenon, but a strictly organized activity. The women who staffed the analogia were divided into specific ranks, each with its own role, social position, and liturgical responsibility.

1. The Asketriai and the Asketeria

The category of the Asketriai is the most frequent reference in the sources and forms the basis of female hymnody. These were semi-monastic sisterhoods that did not live in isolated cenobitic communities, but in special buildings (“asketeria”) located within the precincts of the great churches. They constituted the most numerous body of the women’s choirs. Their presence beside the churches allowed them to participate daily in the liturgical cycle of the secular parishes, bridging monasticism and parish life.

2. The Deaconesses as Leading Figures

Beyond their administrative, charitable, and auxiliary duties (such as the baptism of women), the Deaconesses held a pivotal role in psalmody.

The study documents that they functioned as the heads of the women’s choirs. They were responsible for coordinating the Asketriai, ensuring the harmonious execution of the hymns and the observance of the typikon, a fact that gave them particular standing within the ecclesiastical body.

3. The Graptai and Professional Chanting

A particularly interesting category brought to light by the Typikon of the Monastery of the Pantokrator (12th century) is the Graptai. The term indicates that they were officially enrolled in the registers of the lower clergy. They were salaried employees of the Church, which demonstrates the professional character of the female art of chanting. They participated in specialized services, such as the Office of Intercession, and their position was regarded as equal to that of the deaconesses.

4. The Myrrhbearers of Jerusalem

In the Typikon of Jerusalem, we encounter the order of the Myrrhbearers, a term rich in symbolism that refers to the first women witnesses of the Resurrection. Their activity was centered on the All-Holy Tomb. Their participation in the chanting of that sacred place highlighted the connection of the female voice with the joyful proclamation of the Resurrection, strengthening the theological dimension of their role.

5. The Example of Hagia Sophia and the Monastery of the Pantokrator

Hagia Sophia in Constantinople constituted the model of this organization:

The Legislation of Justinian: It provided for 100 “adousai” (singing women) incorporated into the clergy. They were divided into two groups (“asketeria”) that alternated weekly. They lived in special “skenomata” (dwellings) around the perimeter of the church. This organization made possible a continuous female chanting presence in the daily services, highlighting the grandeur and rich vocal character of the capital.

The development of the institution reaches the 12th century with the order of the Graptai. In the Foundational Typikon of the Monastery of the Pantokrator (1136), four women chanters are explicitly mentioned as holding an official place among the Monastery’s personnel. The designation “Graptai” indicates their formal registration in the payroll records. It is noteworthy that their position was considered equivalent to that of the Deaconesses, a fact that bestowed upon the women chanters particular spiritual and social standing.

6. Liturgical Role and Antiphonal Singing

The women did not chant in isolation, but formed part of a broader choral system: they chanted antiphonally (alternately) with the male chanters, the Readers, or the male Ascetics. They participated especially in the Amomos (Psalm 118), in troparia of Orthros, and in funeral services. They were usually positioned in the women’s gallery, in the narthex, or at specific places to the left of the Holy Altar (for example, near the Prothesis).

7. The “Polyphony” of the Byzantine Choir

One of E. Spyrakou’s most interesting findings concerns the sound color of the period. The Byzantine choir was not only male, but a composite of:

1. Male voices (Chanters).

2. High female frequencies (Asketriai, Deaconesses).

3. High eunuch frequencies (very widespread in Byzantium).

4. Children’s voices (Orphans, Canonarchs).

The female voice accounted for approximately one third of the total vocal volume, creating a rich timbral effect that symbolized the unity of creation (“one voice from different tongues”).

8. Historical Development and Confusion of Terms

With the passage of the centuries (especially after the 12th century), the institution of the Deaconesses declined. This led to a confusion of terms, in which the Asketriai were often improperly called “deaconesses,” while gradually the female chanting presence became restricted chiefly to women’s monasteries, losing its institutional role in the great urban churches.

The study’s answer

The study documents that women chanted systematically and for pay in the secular churches of the Byzantine Empire, though not in the same way that they chant today. Their participation was integrated into a structured choral system with specific conditions and ranks. The study demonstrates that the female chanting presence in secular churches was institutionalized and normatively regulated in the Byzantine Empire. As for the present day, the study does not give a direct answer, but it does historically establish that the Church had recognized and systematically incorporated the female voice into worship — in contrast to current practice, where female participation in the art of chanting in secular churches has to a great extent disappeared.

 

Greek source: https://fdathanasiou-parakatathiki.blogspot.com/2026/04/blog-post_8.html

Monday, April 20, 2026

The Holy Mountain and its Stance Toward the Calendar Innovation

Greek source: Το Άγιον Όρος και η Διαχρονική του Στάση Έναντι των Αιρέσεων [The Holy Mountain and its Historical Stance Toward Heresies], Hieromonk Chariton the Athonite, Holy Kellion of the Ascension, Mount Athos, 2017, pp. 210-225.

 

 

1. Meletios Metaxakis (1922–1923), and the innovation of the change of the Calendar

The case of this patriarch is a historically difficult phenomenon to interpret. He was a hierarch of four thrones (of Kition-Larnaca, Archbishop of Athens, Patriarch of Constantinople, Patriarch of Alexandria, and very nearly also of Jerusalem). He was a most daring innovator and a Mason, according to the archives of Freemasonry.

He became Patriarch of Constantinople solely and exclusively for the change of the calendar, with the fraternal-Masonic support of Eleftherios Venizelos. In 1923 he hastened to convene, not a Pan-Orthodox Synod, but a crude ten-member “Congress” with only seven Bishops and three clerical representatives! The first and principal subject of the Congress was the change of the Calendar and of the Paschalion, as being “possible.” However, this was not carried out, because of the explicit negative declaration of the Patriarchate of Jerusalem, and also of the representative of the Church of Greece. Nevertheless, in the end only the Metropolises of the Ecumenical Throne, the Church of Greece, and the Church of Cyprus accepted the change of the Calendar, the latter of which he had prepared for, as Metropolitan of Larnaca. The rest initially remained with the Julian Calendar, but later some of them adopted the New one. As long as Photius was Patriarch of Alexandria, the Patriarchate of Alexandria did not accept the calendar change. After his death, Meletios Metaxakis hurried and took his seat on the Alexandrian throne, and immediately at once the Patriarchate of Alexandria also proceeded to the innovation of the change of the calendar. [2]

The Church of Greece proceeded to the calendar change on December 27, 1923. At the Fourth Session of the First Assembly of the Hierarchy, under the pressure of the politicians of the revolutionary government of Stylianos Gonatas, and despite the reservations of several members of the hierarchy, it accepted the change. The decision of the hierarchy, under the direction of the Archbishop of Athens, Chrysostomos Papadopoulos, moved on the following level: only the festal calendar of the fixed feasts would be adjusted to the new dates of the corrected calendar, but not the Paschalion, which included the cycle of the movable feasts (dependent on Pascha). As the date of implementation, with the approval of the Ecumenical Patriarch, March 10, 1924, was appointed.

2. The innovation of the change of the Calendar on Mount Athos

The decision for the change of the calendar, which was taken in Constantinople and with the agreement of the representatives of the Church of Greece, was officially made known also to the Holy Mountain by an Encyclical of the Ecumenical Patriarch to the Holy Community on February 27, 1927 (after three years!).

The Encyclical requested from the Athonites:

“...Inevitably, from the 10th of the coming month of March, the festal calendar of the Orthodox Church also, insofar as concerns the fixed feasts, must be adjusted to the civil calendar; only the Paschalion, for the present, is to remain as it is, until its final settlement also thereafter by the Universal Church.” [3]

It is worthy of wonder how the Patriarchate addresses a monastic center of more than a thousand years, such as the Holy Mountain, without any sense of respect for its age-old tradition, without even calling the Athonites to a hearing and dialogue (since it loves dialogues so very much). On such a very serious matter of ecclesiastical tradition, how does the Patriarchate decide all by itself? And indeed, in the absence of three Patriarchates, and it orders “inevitably” the change of the calendar, as though someone were merely going to change an old garment that had torn for a new one!

The Holy Community, taking into account the negative opinion that was taking shape among the people and the monks, convened a Double Assembly of the Abbots and the Representatives of the Holy Monasteries. Of the 20 Holy Monasteries, 15 declared against it, four did not arrive at any decision. Only the Holy Monastery of Vatopedi complied and accepted the calendar innovation, until 1981–82. The Holy Community finally decided that “it would accept [the revised Calendar] only after a decision of an Ecumenical Council.”

Striking a balance between not departing from the traditional ecclesiastical calendar, yet also not disturbing its relations with the Mother Church, it arrived, in 1927, at the official decision:

“To preserve the Julian calendar then in use and not to adopt the new one, yet without breaking communion with the Churches that had adopted it, since this change affected neither the dogmas nor the tradition of Orthodoxy.” [4]

Thus, the Monasteries of the Holy Mountain “remained devoted to the observance of the Old Calendar, ‘since an Ecumenical Council had not yet been convened,’ but they did not cease to communicate with those who had embraced the New Calendar and to commemorate the august name of the Ecumenical Patriarch.” Despite the efforts of the Holy Community to find a “golden mean” and a balance in the face of the innovation decided upon by the Patriarchate, the Holy Mountain, through the wavering line it chose, already enters as an institutional authority into a new page of its sacred history.

The purpose of the present study is not, of course, the theological and ecclesiological analysis of this great issue; that should already have been done by the esteemed hierarchs and shepherds and by those of Orthodox theology who are established in the practice of virtue and in contemplation. The fact, however, is one: that on the Holy Mountain this innovation became the cause for it to mourn and still to mourn, because a spiritual civil strife entered into its very bowels.

At that time, the holy Elders of the Holy Mountain thought about and viewed these matters very differently from us contemporary monks. Then, the whole of the Holy Mountain, like one body and one soul, resisted this innovation of the change.

“The struggles of the Hesychasts, the Anti-Unionists, the Kollyvades, with as pioneers a multitude of named and unnamed Athonite saints, who were tormented, driven out, imprisoned, and martyred for the defense of the unadulterated faith and the traditions of the fathers, inspired the spirit of these men... Most of the 5,000–6,000 monks at that time, desiring their salvation, naturally became concerned, but also sought to take a correct stand in the face of the sudden challenge. If one takes into account that the Athonites regard themselves as guardians of Orthodoxy, with a blood-soaked history in the struggles for the right faith, which is renewed in their wakeful conscience by the daily Synaxaria, one will easily understand their militant psychology.” [5]

We mention one example among many from the old Athonite fathers who resisted the calendar innovation. One such bright star was also Elder Avvakoum the barefooted, of Lavra. When the Patriarchate tried to impose this innovation, then at the Monastery of the Great Lavra 27 hieromonks and monks reacted, among whom were the physician Elder Athanasios Kampanau and Elder Avvakoum, who was distinguished both for his love toward all, and especially for his ministry in the monastery’s hospital and old-age home:

“At the beginning of 1927, the Monastery of Lavra wanted to put an end to the continuing division of the brotherhood. To achieve this, it invited in writing the civil Governor to preside over the session of its Council of Elders, at which the matter of the zealot fathers was to be examined yet again. At the proposal of the zealot physician Fr. Athanasios (Kampanau), Fr. Avvakoum was chosen as the representative of the zealots of the Monastery. On the appointed day and hour, he appeared in the monastery’s synodal hall, where the Elders were present together with the Governor. To the Governor’s question:”

“Why, Father, did you break away from the brotherhood and bring disorder into the Monastery, and why do you not pray together with the brother fathers?” Fr. Avvakoum answered with meekness and humility:

“Sir Governor, have you studied the Holy Canons of the Pedalion?”

“What does the Pedalion say, Father?” the Governor replied.

“Since you are ignorant of its contents, first read it, and then come to judge us.”

This answer was judged by the Council of Elders as contempt for the Authority, and he was exiled to the Holy Monastery of Xeropotamou. Thus, poor Avvakoum was removed from his monastic repentance for the third time! About two months later, because the Monastery of his exile was celebrating its feast (March 9), the civil Governor was also invited to attend the vigil, and immediately after the vigil he departed in haste by mule for Karyes. Then Fr. Avvakoum found the opportunity, taking hold of the animal’s bridle and walking beside it, to explain in his gifted manner why the Fathers of the Holy Mountain had reacted to the calendar innovation and what the texts of the Church say about this just reaction of theirs. His simplicity, his great knowledge of Holy Scripture, and the childlike and enthusiastic manner of his speech immediately convinced the Governor that this was a pure-minded idealist and virtuous man. As soon as he reached Karyes, he at once requested that his exile be revoked. Thus, after a few days, the Great Lavra received him once again into her embrace.”

When once Fr. Ephraim, little Ephraim, the ecclesiarch of Lavra, asked him why he had become a zealot—(that is, why he did not commemorate the Patriarch?)—he answered him:

“Because God will demand an account from me. He will say to me: Avvakoum, you knew the law of the Church; how did you trample upon it?” [6]

Today’s monks avoid learning the law of the Church, the Holy Canons, which forbid us to commemorate a heretical Patriarch, so that, as they suppose, they may keep their conscience at peace and put forward excuses in sins, thus believing that they will deceive the judgment of God.

In the end, Elder Avvakoum was compelled, because of internal pressures from the Monastery, to take refuge in the desert of Vigla, where with crowbar and sledgehammer he built from nothing the kellion of St. Phanourios. There he reached his end, fell asleep, and was buried. Yet later a hieromonk from Lavra made an exhumation and took his relics, which he scattered in the monastery’s ossuary, so that the “deluded” zealots might not find them and make him a saint!!! To such a point reaches the fanaticism of the ecumenists-modernists, and then they accuse the zealots of being fanatics. May God someday grant them repentance, that they may come to their senses…

As for Elder Avvakoum, the barefoot child of the Panagia, he has no need of canonizations. Those who knew him know the virtue of the man.

“He knows things that usually only University Professors know. He can make every wise man ashamed. He is poor, yet he possesses more than all the wise and intellectual men of the world. He is truly enlightened.” (N. Louvaris, Academician), and “Divine grace! Such boundless memory I have neither heard of, nor shall I hear again.” (I. Karmiris, Academician). Elder Avvakoum had the gift of knowing Holy Scripture and many of the Holy Fathers by heart; he had boundless memory, like St. Nikodemos the Hagiorite.

Here we see how, on the one hand, the lack of timely information from the Patriarchate to the Holy Mountain and the Holy Community concerning the reasons why this innovation was being made, and on the other hand the refined sensitivity of the Athonites in matters of faith and tradition, as well as the genuineness of their ascetical and neptic life, the straightforwardness of their character—which are a daily lived reality for monks—but above all, the unloving, demanding, and psychologically insensitive manner of the Patriarch-Patriarchate in imposing the change of the Calendar, all these gave the Athonites of that time the sense that this was indeed an innovation, which was being imposed in a tyrannical manner. An innovation which harmed not only Sacred Tradition, but also, indirectly and secretly yet clearly, was the beginning of the future assault upon the dogmatic consciousness of the Orthodox faith, as is unfortunately proved today by the heretical openings of Ecumenism.

After the passage of 90 years since then, the issue of the calendar no longer seriously concerns the body of the Athonites and [most] Christians. They believe that all this is not worth discussing, that the change of the calendar was a simple change of 13 days, a “jump of 13 days,” as some used to say. But this is not how things stand, as emerges from the study of the historical facts, which we briefly mentioned above. Those daring men behind the calendar change were also seeking the change of the Paschalion. This did not happen then, because “...to innovate concerning this... was for the present premature”; the time had not yet come for union to be accomplished through the simultaneous celebration of the great feasts by all the Churches.

The ecumenists may not yet have succeeded in changing the Paschalion, but through the “first step” of Ecumenism they did succeed in bringing about the festal division of the Church and the division of the monastic commonwealth of the Holy Mountain.

We saw what the Athonites thought at that time, being informed moreover that Patriarch Basil III (1925–1929) was also a member of occult organizations (he was initiated into Freemasonry in a lodge of Constantinople). [7]

As a Mason, Patriarch Basil had many reformist tendencies regarding the clergy and negative dispositions toward Monasticism. Thus many monks, from the Sketes, the Kellia, and the hermitages, began at first to keep their distance, while others broke ecclesiastical communion with the Monasteries. The beginning was made with the Holy Monastery of Vatopedi, which was the only Monastery on the Holy Mountain that followed the new calendar until 1981–82. This stance of the Monastery of Vatopedi became the cause of its coming into conflict with the so-called “Zealots,” who broke ecclesiastical communion with it. Indeed, when in 1926 the former abbot Adrianos of Vatopedi served as Protepistatis, many zealots avoided receiving documents of the Holy Community that had been issued upon their own request, so as not to “make a metanoia” to him. [8]

At that time, the Athonites organized themselves and in 1926 established the “Sacred Association of Fathers,” with a constitution and with the title The Anchor of Orthodoxy, and with the signatures of more than 300 hieromonks and monks, most of whom were from the Sketes and Kellia.

The Patriarchate, perceiving the magnitude of the problem that had arisen, reacted by sending a letter to the Holy Community, demanding and seeking from the Athonite monks “the due reverence and obedience to the decision of the Church.” It further expressed its displeasure “at the ventured contrary stance of kelliotes and ascetics, indeed in contrast to their own ruling Monasteries,” and recommended to the Holy Community, with “motherly love,” of course..., “that all the force of your holiness be exercised against every refractory one who has not yet conformed to the decision of the Church, which must inevitably be carried out by all without exception.” [9]

Under these conditions and the threats of the Patriarchate, the situation was worsening. A significant number of hieromonks and monks ceased commemorating Patriarch Basil III. Thus, after so many centuries, the Holy Mountain, on account of the calendar innovation—which became the first step of the pan-heresy of Ecumenism—made a cessation of commemoration, as had also happened formerly against the unionist efforts of the Latin-minded, and as the Holy Canons of the Church prescribe in time of heresy.

The Holy Community, while at first maintaining a relaxed and discreet stance, because the whole Holy Mountain—monastics and kelliotes alike—was opposed to the calendar innovation, nevertheless, being pressured by the Patriarchate, began thereafter to change its stance. By its Encyclical to the 20 Holy Monasteries on May 3, 1926, the Holy Community condemned the cessation of commemoration as an omission contrary “to the most ancient sacred institutions and the age-old spiritual ordinances...”. They regarded the interruption of commemoration as disobedience, because at that time the pan-heresy of ecumenism had not yet appeared clearly, as it has today. This decision remained unenforced, because the police refused their assistance.

Meanwhile, the monks were protesting more and more, and a great multitude of ascetics and hermits had gathered in Karyes—men of prayer and ascetic struggle—in order to demonstrate their opposition to the decisions of the Holy Community. Among these ascetics were many whom today we honor for their sanctity, such as Elder Joseph the Hesychast, the spiritual forefather of several Abbots and Monasteries today, and others.

In the same Encyclical, the Holy Community repudiated the book of the monk Arsenios Kotteas, which bore the title Center of Our Holy Eastern Church, the Trumpet of the Hesychast Athonite Monks. The book in question had been circulating since 1925 and had until then been freely distributed in all the Monasteries. At that point, it ordered its burning and condemned the author himself as a liar and deceiver of the people.

The developments of 1926 showed that the phenomenon had taken on large proportions and that the movement of “Zealotism,” as it had begun to be called, was threatening the unity and very existence of the Holy Mountain.

The Association of the Athonites, which appears as organized with many members and also with a dynamic and militant mobilization, sent, on July 2, 1928, a letter of protest to the Holy Community, in which it set forth its positions with patristic and canonical arguments and submitted a series of requests-conditions:

a) Restoration of the old calendar in the Holy Monastery of Vatopedi,

b) Cessation of the commemoration of the Ecumenical Patriarch (for the reasons we mentioned),

c) Recall of the nineteen exiled monks,

d) A change in the stance of the Holy Community on the matter of the new calendar and its public denunciation by it.

It is noteworthy that of the 19 signatures on the text, 12 are from Monastery monks. This shows that the monks in the Monasteries were also protesting vigorously. [10]

It is very important for the historical researcher to examine for what reason the Holy Community began to change its stance toward the majority of the Athonites, who were opposed to the calendar innovation. As the excellent historical researcher Demetrios Mouzakis observes: “The fact that the majority of the members who joined this movement consisted of dependent kelliotes-ascetics  raises questions and concerns... The question should be raised whether the issue of the Zealots constitutes yet another manifestation of reaction on the part of the dependents, and perhaps of the lower monastic orders, against the centralization and the administrative arbitrariness of the 20 Monasteries and their higher administrative rank. It is also noteworthy that at the time when the Kelliote Brotherhood was declining, another movement of dependents appeared on the scene, perhaps with a different occasion, but probably with the same motives. That is, the impression was widespread among the simple monks, and especially among the dependents, that the general polity and actions of the monastic elite were far removed from the monastic ideal and the genuine mission of Athonite Monasticism.” [11] Their stance, however, was chiefly for reasons of faith.

Moreover, even the very designation “dependency” which the Monasteries use with respect to the kelliotes, is disparaging and shows conceit, because the Kellia, the hermitages, and the ancient small monasteries are chronologically earlier than the monasteries. The kellia began to come under the Monasteries from 1600 onward, for purely financial reasons; until then they were under the Protos of the Holy Mountain, who today functions simply as an ancient institution. When St. Athanasios the Athonite came to Athos, he found the institution of the Protos and the Sacred Assembly of the Elders in Karyes, and the scattered small monasteries and kellia, and afterwards he built the Lavra, which is the first great coenobitic Monastery. St. Athanasios himself was not only a great coenobiarch; he was also a great hesychast cave-dweller, living even in a cave, and he never despised the kelliotes, as happens today. This contemptuous attitude of the Monasteries toward the Kelliotes-Ascetics shows an arrogance, as though they were second-class monks. This, of course, does not honor the Monasteries; on the contrary, humility is a virtue for the kelliotes, since the Lord Himself was despised by the religious leadership of His time. The Holy Monasteries ought to be like loving mothers toward the kelliotes and their fellow monks, and not behave as those possessing authority, but rather as those rendering service. Besides, we know that most of the saints of the Holy Mountain and the founders of the Monasteries were kelliotes. Could it be that the cause for the change in the stance of the Monasteries was not so much their fear lest the kelliotes acquire more rights (!), but rather the protest itself against the calendar innovation, which, under pressure from the Patriarchate, the Holy Community regarded and accused of being an unbridled zealotry “not according to knowledge”?

Nor is it correct that the adoption of the Gregorian-Papal calendar was something indifferent and did not touch the Holy Canons and the Tradition of the Church, as is believed even to this day. Already from 1752, under Jeremiah the Great, until 1895, through thirteen Pan-Orthodox and Local Synods, the Orthodox Church rejected and condemned the Gregorian-Papal calendar, as was shown and mentioned above. To what, then, “most ancient sacred institutions and age-old spiritual ordinances...,” does the cessation of commemoration of an innovating-heretical patriarch stand opposed?

 

NOTES

2. See Fr. Nikodemos Bilalis, op. cit., pp. 43, 44.

3. See Demetrios Mouzakis, Mount Athos during the Interwar Period, publ. N. Sakkoulas, Athens–Komotini, 2008, p. 348, and Archive of the Ecumenical Patriarchate, cod. A/93, pp. 692–3.

4. See Dem. Mouzakis, op. cit., pp. 348, 349, 350.

5. See Monk Theoklitos of Dionysiou, Introductory Remarks on the Old Calendarist Schism, ed. 1979, pp. 3, 4.

6. Theodoretos [Mavros] the Hagiorite, Avvakoum the Barefooted, ed. 2002, p. 30.

7. See Michael Physentzides, Prominent and Famous Greek Freemasons, vol. I, Vogiatzis edition, p. 149.

8. See op. cit., p. 349, note.

9. See Dem. Mouzakis, op. cit., pp. 352, 353.

10. See D. Mouzakis, op. cit., pp. 355, 356, Archive of the Holy Monastery of Koutloumousiou.

11. See op. cit., pp. 53, 54.

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