A SHORT SUMMARY AND REVIEW
By Archbishop
Chrysostomos [of Etna]
Text under review:
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1mIWBJXTNkbbBGING2B2dzsQAZ5mGFh30/view?usp=sharing
It was through the good
offices and kind invitation of His Eminence, Metropolitan Kallistos of Diokleia
(a Hierarch of the Exarchate of the Oecumenical Patriarchate in Great Britain),
and with a travel grant and fellowship from the Marsden Foundation, that in
1985 I was able to spend the Michaelmas term at Pembroke College, Oxford
University, as a visiting scholar. In spite of some unpleasant experiences and
instances of outright prejudice that I have experienced as an Old Calendarist
in other academic institutions, at Oxford I was shown nothing but the utmost
respect and kindness and was given by Metropolitan Kallistos (who, now retired,
was then Spalding Lecturer in Eastern Orthodox Studies at Pembroke), every
opportunity to participate in the scholarly life of the Orthodox community
there.
It was thus with great pleasure
that I recently encountered an essay by His Eminence, entitled “Old
Calendarists,” in the collection Minorities in Greece: Aspects of a Plural
Society (London: Hurst & Company, 2002), by Professor Richard Clogg,
the well-known historian and Fellow of St. Antony’s College, Oxford. Though I
am somewhat surprised that this excellent article has not been more widely
distributed and cited since its publication, its evenhanded and dispassionate
quality and tone were not at all unexpected, given my aforementioned
considerate and cordial reception at Oxford. This does not mean, however, that
other treatments of the Old Calendarists—few that such treatments are—have in
general displayed any such charity, which observation all the more commends
Metropolitan Kallistos’ estimable study.
Interestingly enough, His
Eminence begins his essay with a quote from the fourteenth-century Byzantine
Emperor of the Palaeologue dynasty, Andronikos II, who warned against division
in the Church by any attempt to reform the calendar, and especially so among
the “ignorant” (or “unlearned”). Indeed, when the calendar reform was
introduced into the Orthodox Church of Greece in 1924, “under heavy pressure”
from the revolutionary government then in power (p. 2), it produced an adverse
reaction. This was, of course, not just among the “unlearned,” who at times
were simply reacting against change rather than the practical
consequences of the calendar reform, but among those for whom, as His
Eminence very fairly writes, the reform was
very far from
being merely a dispute about thirteen days [the difference between the
Gregorian and Church Calendar dates—A.C.]. For the Orthodox Church there is an
essential interconnection between theology and liturgical symbolism; any
distortion in the Church’s worship will therefore have direct consequences upon
the way in which the Orthodox Faith is understood and lived (p. 3).
He further observes that for the Palaioemerologitai
(Old Calendarists), the reform of the Church Calendar represents not only
an assault against the internal and external unity of the Church, but since the
Church Calendar is for them “the touchstone of loyalty to the Orthodox faith in
its true and full integrity” (ibid.), a violation of the Church’s
primacy. The reform, as part of the ecumenical rapprochement between Eastern
and Western Christianity ushered in by the famous encyclical of the
Patriarchate in Constantinople in 1920, made reference to the adoption of a
common festal calendar by all Christians and thus, they feel, equated Orthodoxy
with heterodoxy. Quoting Professor Dimitri Kitsikis of the University of
Ottawa, who sees this connection between the calendar reform and ecumenism as
“the essence of the conflict” (ibid.), His Eminence goes on to quote
Metropolitan Cyprian of Oropos and Phyle, who says that the calendar issue is,
for the Old Calendarists, “first and foremost bound up with the struggle
against the heresy of ecumenism” (ibid.)—i.e., an assault against the
primacy of Orthodoxy as the Old Calendarists envision it.
Metropolitan Kallistos then
summarizes the history of attempts to reform the Julian Calendar, pointing out
that it was used by the Nicaean Fathers “presumably because it was the calendar
followed by the civil authorities,” whereas the Old Calendarists believe that
it has assumed a “religious significance that it did not originally possess”
(p. 4). Of course, the genius of the Church Calendar (which is a solar-lunar
hybrid), and not simply the Julian Calendar, is the focus of more learned Old
Calendarists. However, the Julian Calendar was used by the Nicaean Fathers to
calculate the Spring equinox, and His Eminence is perfectly correct in pointing
out that the Julian reckoning of that event has drifted from the date of the
true equinox. This fact was not lost on the Byzantines, even if the Emperor and
some Church authorities hesitated to effect a correction of the error, for fear
of accusations of innovation or of misunderstanding among believers.
When Pope Gregory XIII authorized
a reform of the calendar in 1582, there were efforts to introduce it to the
Orthodox East. Metropolitan Kallistos notes that, nonetheless, not only was the
Pope unsuccessful in his “approaches to Patriarch Ieremias II (Tranos) of Constantinople,”
but “[s]ynods held in Constantinople in 1583, 1587, and 1593 [the documentation
from which, incidentally, some scholars consider problematic— A.C.] rejected
the Gregorian Calendar” (p. 6). The Patriarch, in rejecting the calendar
reform, objected not on scientific grounds, but because a) he considered the
reform a violation of the Nicaean formula for the date of Pascha (Easter); b)
because “he saw the new Papal Calendar as a means of infiltration and
proselytism” by Rome; and c) because he regarded the “continuity of Tradition”
to be more important than “astronomical exactitude” (ibid.). The views
of the Patriarch were much like those held by Old Calendarists today and, as
His Eminence says, remained very much the essence of opposition to changes in
the Orthodox festal calendar until 1920. As late as 1904 the Oecumenical
Patriarch had characterized any move to change the Church Calendar as
“premature,” likewise reaffirming the ecclesiastical primacy of Orthodoxy in no
uncertain terms (ibid.).
In 1920, with many of the
countries in which Orthodoxy was the dominant or official state religion having
adopted the Gregorian Calendar for secular use, the Oecumenical Patriarchate
issued its aforementioned encyclical. The encyclical (actually issued by the locum
tenens of the Patriarchate) made mention, as I noted earlier, of a
universal calendar for celebrating the great Christian Feasts and called for
ecumenical cooperation among all churches. Metropolitan Kallistos discusses
with objectivity and accuracy the events that unfolded with these new realities
in Constantinople, including the conference “convened” there “in haste” in
1923, “at a time of grave political insecurity” for the Patriarchate (ibid.).
It was at this conference that the calendar reform was enacted. With
refreshing honesty, His Eminence states that the “Revised Julian Calendar” that
it adopted was, in effect, the Gregorian Calendar, but fearing anti-Roman
feelings among some Orthodox, the participants in the congress were assiduous
to avoid charges that they had “adopted the ‘Papal’ Gregorian Calendar” (ibid.).
His Eminence also quite
delicately but very aptly recounts the role of Oecumenical Patriarch Meletios
IV (Metaxakis) in the calendar reform and the conference of 1923. “Meletios was
himself (to put it mildly) problematic,” as he remarks, and Meletios’
controversial person and the other egregious innovations proposed did nothing
to lessen public reaction to the “gravely unrepresentative character” of the
conference—which, styled as “‘Panorthodox,’ was in fact nothing of the kind”
(p. 8). All of the deficits of the conference and of the calendar reform, which
was not adopted by the majority of the Orthodox world, eventually led to a
compromise, proposed by Archbishop Chrysostomos of Athens. This settlement left
in place the Nicaean formula for calculating the Paschal Feast, with the
remainder of the year determined by the Gregorian Calendar. This, as
Metropolitan Kallistos avers, truncates or sometimes obliterates “the fast preceding
the Feast of the Apostles Peter and Paul” (p. 10).
He goes on to assert that it was
“the unrepresentative character” of this ill-conceived conference and the
“mixed reactions to its decisions in the Orthodox world” that “paved the way
for the future calendar schism in Greece” (ibid.). The New Calendarist
historians of the Old Calendar movement have consistently played down the
initial reaction to the calendar reform in Greece. Eyewitnesses (including a
number of relatives on the Greek side of my family) portray a far different
reality. In any case, by 1933 the Church of Greece, as Metropolitan Kallistos
writes, had begun to admit that the Old Calendarist resistance was a “‘sizeable
minority,’ which constituted ‘a threat to national unity.’” By 1934, the Hierarchy
“used yet more alarmist language,” conceding that the Old Calendarist
resistance “posed an immediate danger of schism and division, not only within
the Church but within the nation” (ibid.). It is a truism that the powers
that be write the prevailing history of events, and even the most seemingly
objective histories of the Greek Old Calendar movement by those outside of it
tell the story of the first years of the movement as prevailing accounts would
have it. (This is not to say, of course, that the histories of the movement
offered by the Old Calendarists were always accurate either.) Metropolitan
Kallistos, therefore, is to be commended for admitting that, taking into
account the difficulty of defining just what an Old Calendarist was, the
movement “may have well exceeded a million” in the 1930s—though what I consider
objective sources at the time reported that a much larger portion of the
population of Greece opposed the calendar reform.
I will not examine in great
detail His Eminence’s commentary on the Old Calendar movement between the time
of the calendar reform and 1935, when three Bishops of the State Church assumed
its leadership. This history is well known to our readers, and if I have
carefully attended to the period before the calendar change, it is simply
because it is not as well known and because Metropolitan Kallistos covers it so
skillfully. This is not to say that he does not show the same aptitude in
discussing the first years of the Greek Old Calendar movement. Fie impartially
discusses both the “martyrology” of the Old Calendarists under the boot of
persecution by the police authorities (and I might add, sadly with the
collaboration of ecclesiastical dignitaries in some instances), as well as the
excesses of the extremist Old Calendarists, such as one fanatic’s attempt to
cut off the beard of the Archbishop of Athens in 1927, slightly injuring the
Prelate in the process. Here, as elsewhere, Metropolitan Kallistos is very
even-handed in his writing.
I would, however, like to make
mention of his reference to the theory that the three State Church Bishops
(Germanos of Demetrias, Chrysostomos, former Metropolitan of Phlorina, and
Chrysostomos of Zakynthos) who agreed to direct the Old Calendar movement in
1935 did so partly for political reasons. “If we read between the lines of the
proclamations which the three issued at this time,” His Eminence asserts, “it
was clearly not their intention to assume leadership of a separate Old
Calendarist movement” (p. 12). To be sure, one need not read between any lines.
Metropolitan Chrysostomos of Phlorina and Metropolitan Chrysostomos of
Zakynthos spoke openly about the temporary or provisional nature of the Old
Calendar movement. Along with Metropolitan Germanos, they expressed their
desire to return the Church of Greece to the traditional festal calendar and
restore a more traditional ecclesiastical life. That some have tried, as
Metropolitan Kallistos comments, to see the Old Calendar movement as a struggle
between Royalists and Venizelists and the movement as a sort of “coup
d’eglise” (ibid.) is at best speculation. Moreover, if one examines the
arguments put forth by those who hold to this view, they have no evidence and
no historical data to support it. The return of these three Bishops to the Old
Calendar movement in the midst of yet one more change of governments among many
in the Greek political life of the time was probably nothing more than
coincidence or a strategic move by the Bishops to act at a propitious time. In
any event, the diversity of political views among the Old Calendarists at the
time, easily established by examining the debates that it sparked, speaks
against some political conspiracy.
The divisions which followed the
1935 emergence of the Old Calendar movement as an organized body in
ecclesiastical resistance are very sensitively, intelligently, and accurately
covered in Metropolitan Kallistos’ essay. He rightly points out that the question
of the presence or absence of Grace in the Mysteries (sacraments) of the New
Calendarist Churches lies at the very heart of the first schism in 1937.
Metropolitan Chrysostomos of Phlorina maintained that Grace was present (though
at one point he wavered in his firmness in expressing this view, in an effort
to restore unity to the movement), while the extremist position that the New
Calendarist Mysteries were invalid was inexorably preached by Bishop Matthew of
Vresthene (one of the four Bishops Consecrated in 1935 by the three New
Calendarist Bishops who decided to serve the movement), as it is by his
followers today. The position of Metropolitan Chrysostomos has been supported
to varying degrees, though inconsistently, by his successors, who trace their
Episcopacy, after his death, to the Russian Orthodox Church Abroad. Without
entering into the endless vagaries of the various factions that have appeared
among these successors in the last five decades (and wisely so), His Eminence
remarks that
[a]mong the
existing Old Calendarist jurisdictions, the one which continues most directly
the tradition of Metropolitan Chrysostomos of Fiorina is the group headed by
Metropolitan Kyprianos of Oropos, with its centre at the Monastery of Fill [the
Holy Monastery of Sts. Cyprian and Justina—A.C.] in Attica. Its dependency in
North America, under Archbishop Chrysostomos of Etna, issues theological
publications of solid value. The Fill group, which is affiliated with the
ROCOR,* consistently refuses to condemn the sacraments of the New Calendarists
as invalid. By contrast, most if not all of the other Old Calendarists... now
adhere to the ‘Matthewite’ [referring to Bishop Matthew of Vresthene (vide
supra) — A.C.] standpoint, condemning the sacraments of the ‘mainstream’
Orthodox Churches as invalid and devoid of sanctifying Grace. Thus, the
‘Matthewite’ position, which initially was upheld by no more than a small
minority of Palaioemerologitai, has gradually become the majority view
(p. 17).
* [This was
true until 2007, when the ROCOR, or the Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia,
was reconciled with the Moscow Patriarchate and union between the two Synods
was sadly severed—A.C.]
For the foregoing paragraph and
quotation, I may be chastised by some for self-advocacy. I would simply respond
by pointing out that I am a very outspoken critic of extremist Old Calendarism,
which in my opinion risks sectarianism in many of its manifestations, and, like
Metropolitan Kallistos, I believe that the actual division within the
Old Calendar movement is precisely as he describes it. That I belong to the one
party and not to the other is a simple fact. As for his appraisal of the
theological studies that we produce and publish in the American Exarchate of
our Church (at the Center for Traditionalist Orthodox Studies), I play only a
minor role in these activities and am aided by some wonderful scholars and
co-workers, some of them, in fact, not affiliated with our jurisdiction or with
the Old Calendar movement. I am gratified, on my colleagues’ behalf, for
Metropolitan Kallistos’ kind comments, and I would like to believe that they
commend, as they should, our moderate ecclesiology and our attempts to avoid
the inflexible and intolerant views of those who make of resistance and
traditionalism an impediment to dialogue and intelligent discourse of an honest
and candid but civilized and Christian sort.
Happily, Metropolitan Kallistos
tackles, in his essay, the question of the Old Calendarist population
statistics in Greece. He remarks that many Old Calendarist groups have claimed
as many as a million followers (and several outlandish sources even more, I
would add). While in the 1930s the State Church of Greece certainly had every
reason to understate the number of Old Calendarists (and did, in my opinion),
the present-day population of Old Calendarists in Greece is not even close to
one million. At the same time, the statistics cited by Metropolitan Kallistos
(57,229 by a government-sponsored census and 30,110 according to the State
Church) are also inaccurate, as His Eminence also opines. In his own words, “I
would accept as not unreasonable the estimate given in the Fili/Etna
publication, The Old Calendar Orthodox Church of Greece: ‘they still
number in the hundreds of thousands’” (p. 18). I would qualify our estimate by
noting that it does not take into account the constant and rapid decline in the
population of Old Calendarists in Greece in very recent years, on account of an
observable trend towards extremism and a decidedly sectarian mentality in some
circles. Moreover, this dated estimate included Old Calendarists in the
diaspora. As for monastics, His Eminence reckons that, while the State Church
absurdly numbers Old Calendarist monastics at about 146 monks and 1,152
nuns—compared to 180 and 324, respectively, by the government census—“[p]erhaps
today (not counting Mt. Athos)” the Old Calendarists “have a total of about
2,000-2,500 monks and nuns, which is roughly equivalent to the number of
monastics in the State Church” (ibid.).
I commend His Eminence for
discussing the matter of population statistics, since it is a subject which
perfectly well illustrates the fact that so little accurate data exist about
the Old Calendar movement. Much of what one reads is motivated by political and
ecclesiastical rivalries and published with no scholarly peer review of any
kind. As an example of what one encounters, in 1980, during Communist times, I
visited our Sister Old Calendarist Church in Romania. On my return to the U.S.,
I complained to the Romanian Embassy in Washington, D.C., about certain
violations of the human rights of our brethren there. I was flatly told that
Old Calendarists did not exist in Romania. When I protested that our Church was
in communion with them and that I had been there and seen them, I was told that
they were probably pari of an anti-Communist charade to discredit the country
(a kind of anti-Communist Potemkin village, I guess). The Old Calendarists in
Romania, who then numbered over a million, are, while far fewer today, still
reticent, after years of harsh maltreatment, to identify themselves even in a
census by their own Church. Though more than a half million of them did so a
decade or so ago, their situation is instructive.
This same reticence obtains among
some Greek Old Calendarists, who are quite reluctant to identify themselves as
belonging to a movement which has been persecuted, which is often viciously
ridiculed, and which has been shamed in the press for certain public scandals
(real and untrue), by factionalization, and by sectarian radicalization in some
sectors that reflects negatively on the whole body of Old Calendarists. The
many “histories” of the movement by sundry factions of the less moderate Old
Calendarists, filled with outrageous accounts presented as objective history,
also speak to the general problem of accurate portrayals of the Old Calendar
movement. This problem is complicated, too, by polemics and propaganda from
some segments of the official Church of Greece, which has—with some admirable
and important exceptions—not always dealt in an upright manner with the Old
Calendarists. As well, for years Old Calendarists were not allowed to study in
theological schools in Greece. Though this is no longer true, the lack of
formal theological education made it difficult for the Old Calendarists, even
when possessed of an intuitive understanding of their place in the history of
the Church, to articulate their views in an apologetic way. This external
impediment to theological education is why, as Metropolitan Kallistos writes,
the Old Calendarist movement has never had “a seminary for the training of its
clergy” (ibid.), though in actual practice Priests were schooled (and
some exceptionally well) in monasteries. (Thus our Synod has two training
schools for clergy, one at the St. Gregory Palamas Monastery in Etna,
California, and the other at the Holy Monastery of Sts. Cyprian and Justina, in
Phyle, Greece). While many of our clergy for years did not have university
degrees in theology, some studied in other fields (from law to medicine to
philosophy) and, as I have said, in monastic communities.
At the end of his essay,
Metropolitan Kallistos points out that the Old Calendarists maintain certain
objects of liturgical and personal piety (the traditional garb, uncut beards,
and uncut hair of the clergy, Churches without pews, oil lamps, beeswax
candles, etc.), which some Orthodox wrongly dismiss as the mere “externals” of
the Church or, as he asserts, as “cultural” phenomena. “Let us not be too
quick” in doing so, he brilliantly and eloquently retorts, since “[i]n the
traditional Orthodox world view outward actions and gestures possess an inner
and symbolical nature, and every liturgical action finds its place within an
all-embracing whole in which nothing is purely incidental” (p. 19). He goes on,
then, to pose some very perspicacious and challenging questions about what
future the Old Calendarists have—and especially in view of their
fragmentation—in modern times and in a country like Greece, now facing the
modernizing (and unifying) effects of membership in the European Union. In
response to these questions, he notes an increasing trend towards conservatism
in the Orthodox world, and especially after the fall of Communism and the
increased presence of the influence of the huge Orthodox Church of Russia,
which follows the Old Calendar in its worship. This trend, he suggests, signals
that the Old Calendarists may yet have a renewed role to play in the Church (p.
20). If so, the way will have been in some ways paved by the kind of objective
consideration given to us and our witness by distinguished voices such as those
of Metropolitan Kallistos, whose sympathetic and amiable words may help to
moderate the more extreme among us and to reinforce the more moderate among us
in taking heard in our hope for eventual unity in Holy Tradition.
Source: Orthodox Tradition, Vol. XXVII (2010), No. 2,
pp. 3-10.
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