"Balamand Explained": First Betrayal, Now Deception
by Bishop Auxentios of Photiki
A very important document ("The Orthodox and Roman
Catholic Churches: Taking Steps to Overcome Division; Controversy Over the
Balamand Report"*) was posted on the "Internet" in 1996,
purporting to clarify various controversies related to the "Balamand
Statement," a now infamous agreement reached between Orthodox and Roman
Catholic representatives at an ecumenical gathering in Balamand, Lebanon, in
1992, declaring the Orthodox Church and the Vatican "Sister Churches"
and leaving "to the mercy of God," to quote the text of the agreement
itself, "whatever may have been the past": a virtual abandonment of
the Orthodox Church's historical claims to ecclesiastical primacy and of past
Patristic and Synodal defenses of the doctrinal purity of our Faith. No single
individual is credited with authorship of this "Internet" commentary
on that agreement; rather, we are told that the text was prepared by the
"Orthodox members of the official North American Orthodox/Roman Catholic
Consultation."
At first view, despite its brevity, the document seems
candid and even thorough in its efforts to dispel the acknowledged concerns of
the Faithful about the venturous accords contained in the Balamand agreement
and the rather precipitous language in which they are couched. It discusses the
history and purpose of the ongoing joint consultations between Orthodox and
Roman Catholics, the problems presented by the Uniate Churches and their impact
on the dialogue, and the "method of dialogue," that is, the functions
of the various consultations and what their products—e.g., the Balamand
Statement—are intended to accomplish. Against this background, the document
goes on to discuss the particulars of the "Balamand Statement"
itself, answering some ten questions about its meaning and consequences, and
concludes with a positive appraisal: "The Balamand Document is a step in
the right direction."
The Lie. But is the analysis of the Balamand controversy contained
in this document—which manifestly reflects the thinking of
"professionals" in Orthodox ecumenism—in reality a fair and truthful
one? A careful examination of what is and what is not said in this
"explanation" suggests that it is not. Aside from its poor
composition and awkward language—characteristic features of the gibberish and
"double-talk" that typically flow forth in ecumenical
pronouncements—, the document is in fact a lie: a deceptive attempt to present
the betrayal of Balamand as something which it is not.
What does the document say to convince us that the
fraudulent accords settled upon at Balamand constitute a "step in the
right direction"? We are told that the real advances resulting from the
agreement are twofold. First, when the Balamand proposals are fully
implemented, this will entail the repudiation by Rome of the Unia, long a
violent source of provocation to Orthodox communities, as a vehicle for the
re-unification of the two Churches. This, the authors of the document state,
constitutes a reversal of Rome's traditional position regarding the Unia; so,
it is presented as a victory of sorts for the Orthodox.
Second, as the Balamand delegates themselves unabashedly
inform us, since Vatican II, their "thinking about the nature of the
Church has changed significantly." We are boldly informed in the present
document, therefore, that the dialogues have embraced more ancient, and
therefore more Orthodox, formulae for dealing with the schism between Orthodoxy
and Rome. Again, in the curious, questionably literate, and unquestionably
bizarre "double-talk" of ecumenism, the authors of the "Internet"
document contend that,
“...from understanding the Church as
a juridical (legal) body, the emphasis has come to [sic] understanding the Church on the basis of the reality of
communion. Communion is the relationship between Christ and the members of His
body, the Church, and the relationship between the members of the Church, that
comes from being members of the Body of Christ. In theological language this
re-emphasis of the ancient Christian tradition about the nature of the Church
is called 'communion ecclesiology.'”
A similar instance of "renewed thinking," we learn
from the "Internet" "explanation" of the Balamand
agreement, is the adoption by both parties at the meeting in Lebanon, Orthodox
and Roman Catholic alike, of the term "Sister Churches" in references
to one another. The employment of this "venerable term," we are told,
"has helped to place relations between our churches on a new footing"
and has been judged appropriate—once more in the strange language of
"ecumeni-talk"—because of the "shared thousand year experienced
reality together." Citing the Balamand statement itself, the document
asserts that Orthodox and Roman Catholics have found new respect for each
church's pastoral ministries: "Bishops and priests have the duty before
God to respect the authority which the Holy Spirit has given to the bishops and
priests of the other church."
Now that the Orthodox Church and Rome have put behind them
the inflammatory issue of Uniatism and have established one another's
legitimacy and essential equality at the bargaining table, the
"Internet" document concludes, they can cooperate in a "'serene
atmosphere' for renewed progress in dialogue 'toward the reestablishment of
full communion.'" Such are the wonderful fruits of Balamand.
Now, the Truth. When Orthodox
Tradition and our jurisdiction's Greek-language periodicals first decried
the Balamand agreement as a betrayal of Orthodoxy, several years ago, Patriarch
Bartholomew of Constantinople and one of his Bishops in America, Maximos of
Pittsburgh, reacted to our comments with harsh condemnations, declaring them
the meanderings of fanatics and hard-headed theological cretins. Nonetheless,
despite their condemnatory pronouncements and the subsequent justifications of
the Balamand accords by other Orthodox ecumenists in commentaries like the
"Internet" document in question, what happened in Lebanon can be
called nothing but a betrayal of the Orthodox Faith. At that unfortunate
meeting, no less than half a dozen Orthodox Hierarchs, who at their
consecrations gave solemn oaths to uphold and defend the Orthodox Faith against
every heresy and innovation, legitimated Rome and all of her errors and
heretical doctrines. With a deft wave of the hand, Patristic and Synodal
condemnations of Rome's heresies spanning ten centuries, not to mention the
Orthodox Church's repeated rejections of the validity of her priesthood and the
efficacy of her sacraments, were summarily set aside. To add insult to this
injury, the same exoneration silently bestowed on Rome was extended to the
Uniate Churches, the tragic bastard children born of Rome's subterfuge against
the Orthodox. A sorry betrayal, indeed!
Significantly, in keeping with the fraud that it obviously
perpetrates, in the "Internet" "explanation" of the
Balamand agreement, the victory of the Uniate Churches in exacting what is
actually recognition from the Orthodox ecumenists is presented as a
"victory" for Orthodoxy itself. The supposed limitation on the future
function of the Unia is in reality nothing more than a bone thrown out to the
"East." Apparently offered by the Balamand consultants to satisfy some
assumed hunger, among the Orthodox, for revenge against the Uniate menace (with
its history of violence against both the consciences and the very persons of
our Faithful), this bone is meant to divert the watchful gaze of the Faithful
away from continued developments on the ecumenical scene and from the danger
that they pose for True Orthodox Christians. The authors of the
"explanation" are not, to be sure, ignorant of the threat posed to
them by the legitimate "watchdog role" of the Faithful, and, indeed,
of proper Orthodox polity. Thus, they acknowledge the fact that ecumenical
agreements cannot be unilaterally ratified by "professional"
ecumenists, but must have the seal of approval of the whole Church. In theory,
then, they operate on a very sound "method of dialogue." To quote the
"Internet" document:
“...Statements like the Balamand Statement are understood to
be reports on how members of the dialogue or Consultation are developing their
understanding of the problems they are addressing. Their reports are referred
to the heads of their Churches and to the clergy and people for their
consideration and reflection. It is expected that there will be thoughtful
reflection, response, and examination before any official decisions can be or
should be made.”
The Uniate ruse, which renders, by way of an overt
fabrication, the Balamand betrayal a "victory" for Orthodox, may have
succeeded in deflecting the attention of some Faithful away from the dark
underbelly of political ecumenism. But nothing can hide the fact that the very
"method of dialogue" theoretically put forth by the Orthodox
ecumenists is in fact a lie. Not only do the accords decided upon at Balamand,
by taking as an operating principle the "ecclesial reality" of an
institution (Roman Catholicism) separated from the Church of Christ, ignore the
legacy of the Orthodox Patristic and Conciliar witness regarding Roman
Catholicism, but they do so without the approval of the Orthodox people. When
were the Faithful informed of the new understanding agreed upon at Balamand?
Where is the thoughtful reflection of the People of God? Those few of us who
have, indeed, spoken out against the Balamand betrayal have been dismissed as
virtual morons and branded as schismatics. In practice, then, professional Orthodox
ecumenists and the higher Church administrations that they serve have
discounted the "thoughtful reflection" of the Faithful about
Balamand, have no interest in their "response," and decry any
attempts by the People of God to "examine" matters "before any
official decisions" are made. Our ecumenical "professionals"
make their decisions, pronounce them to the Faithful, and then disregard and
revile those who oppose such decisions. These delegates have proved themselves
untrustworthy and deceptive in their failure to report truthfully to the people
whom they serve—albeit in a self-appointed capacity—and whom they are bound by
Holy Tradition to consult and to hear.
The Sorry Truth about Ecumenism. The real issues that should be set
forth by Orthodox delegates at consultations with Roman Catholics are the
dogmatic aberrations that have removed Papism from any organic communion with
the Apostolic Church of Christ. But in keeping with the protocols of ecumenical
dialogue, such an approach is taboo. These issues, then, were never raised at
Balamand; nor have they been raised in this follow-up document. The few
Orthodox ecumenists zealous to offer, not a stone, but bread to the unfortunate
heterodox—the late Protopresbyter Georges Florovsky was such an ecumenist—long
ago discovered the belligerence and obstinacy of the heterodox delegates to
ecumenical gatherings and disavowed ecumenism as a path to Christian unity. But
the emasculated Orthodox representatives who remain in the ecumenical movement
have, since then, compromised on point after point of the Faith and have even,
on occasion, openly repudiated the traditional teachings and practices of the
Church. Now they are babbling about "communion theology" and
"sister Churches," ideas which apply solely to Churches united in the
same Faith and by a common mysteriological life: that is, to the local Orthodox
Churches and their mutual relations. Heterodox groups have no place in these
formulae. The "Internet" document which we have considered is a sad
and flagrant continuation of the cowardly deception that professional Orthodox
ecumenists—minority that they are—have undertaken to perpetuate in the name of
the pleroma of the Church. The authors of this document, representing as they
do the "official" Orthodoxy of worldly, neo-papal
"Patriarchalism" (another innovation meant to replace the criterion
of "right belief" with the prerogatives of administrative and
political power), if they truly believe what they write, should have the
integrity to admit that their defense of Balamand embodies a conscious
rejection of the Orthodox Patristic consensus. Moreover, if they truly care for
their charges, they must clearly explain why they have chosen not to follow the
Church Fathers on these issues. It would behoove them, too, to explain to the
Orthodox people their new "method of theology," telling us how they
gained these insights and wherein we might gain them, too. But accountability
and openness do not seem to be the operative principles here. God alone knows
what reasoning has brought the Orthodox ecumenists to where they are. But we
True Orthodox certainly know where such reasoning has and will lead them. The
truth seems to be that, despite their crafty skills in
"ecumeni-talk," our "professional" Orthodox ecumenists have
not thought things through. Though they brazenly and confidently disregard the
Fathers and Saints of the Church—whose witness, to their own peril, they have
chosen to set aside—, one suspects that they are not so sure about how to
handle their contemporaries, the loyal Faithful, who, by God-given right,
oppose the audacity of ecumenism. Let us pray, then, that God will enlighten
any well-intentioned people naively caught up in the glamor of the ecumenical
movement and return them to their senses: for the Orthodox, that they might
beware the lie being fed them; and for the heterodox, that God might inspire in
them a spirit of humility and repentance, the only sure vein to the bosom of
the Church.
* https://web.archive.org/web/19970102140158/http://www.goarch.org/worldnews/balamond_explained
Source: Orthodox
Tradition, Vol. XIV (1997), Nos. 2 & 3, pp. 39-42
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