The meeting between Patriarch Bartholomew and Pope Benedict of Rome
by Protopresbyter
Theodore Zissis,
Professor at the
School of Theology, University of Thessaloniki
Source: Orthodoxos Typos, No.
1670 (December 22, 2006), pp. 1 and 7.
1. The sorrow and bitterness
of the Orthodox
Filled with bitterness and
distress, the pious pleroma of the Church of Christ observed everything
that took place during the meeting between Patriarch Bartholomew and Pope
Benedict in Constantinople.
Among the many telephone calls,
expressive of this sorrow, which were received by the author, from many
jurisdictions and Dioceses and from the Holy Mountain, two made a special
impression on him:
A pious confessor in
Thessaloniki, with a vast number of spiritual children, said that he cannot
find peace and is sorrowful unto death, because our mother, Orthodoxy, has been
violated and dishonored.
A married Priest with many sons
and daughters, belonging to the Metropolis of Dimitrias, who has resolved to
cease commemorating his Bishop who is in agreement with all of these things,
told me, in response to my discreet reminder of the probable persecutions and
penalties he would face:
“I prefer to
cultivate my field as a simple farmer while preserving my Faith, rather than
contribute towards its destruction and go to eternal damnation with the
Patriarch and his Bishops.”
I do not know if this simple and
unlettered Priest has read the writings of the Holy Fathers; what he said,
however, expresses the ageless conscience of the Church concerning the attitude
that all of the Faithful—including laypeople—must have towards Bishops and
Priests who do not correctly teach the word of the truth, but rather confirm
heresy and error.
A multitude of pertinent
Patristic citations are now contained in our book, Bad Obedience and Holy
Disobedience. We would simply remind all, here, by way of illustration, of
the view of St. Athanasios the Great, this great struggler on behalf of
Orthodoxy in the face of the heresy of Arianism.
He writes that, in the event that
a Bishop or Priest—the eyes of the Church—conducts himself badly and
scandalizes the people, he must be expelled, even at the risk of the Faithful
being left without a Shepherd. It is preferable that services be held in the
Churches without Bishops and Priests, rather than the Faithful being thrown
together with the Bishop and Priests into eternal damnation, where the Jews
during the time of Christ went, together with the High Priests Annas and
Caiaphas:
“For it is
profitable that you assemble without them in the Church rather than be thrown
together with them into the hell fire, as with Annas and Caiaphas. [1]
This is how the Athonite
Hieromonk Gabriel has acted in our own days; with a succinct and bold Declaration
and Confession, he ceased commemorating the Oecumenical Patriarch
Bartholomew after his joint prayers and Joint Communiqué with the former
Pope, which took place over two years ago during the Patronal Feast of
Rome, on 29 June 2004, and also during the inauguration ceremony of an Orthodox
Church on 1 July of the same year.
Henceforth, he writes, lest my
silence be construed as agreement with all that is going on, I will not
participate in services that commemorate the name of the Oecumenical Patriarch,
but will remain instead in my cell,
“doing my
regular and appointed monastic service alone, as a sign of protest, until the
Sacred Community of the Holy Mountain takes a clear and definite position on
the events that took place on the above-mentioned dates.” [2]
2. The narcotic of
ecumenism and syncretism in increased doses
There are many such vigilant and
sensitive consciences of Orthodox Christians, whose voices and positions do not
reach the hearing and sight of the majority of the Faithful who are, for the
most part, indifferent.
On the contrary, attracting
notice and being extolled are all those clergymen and theologians who praise
and worship the beast of the Apocalypse: the religious syncretism of the
Antichrist, the equation of all religions and confessions, the multicultural
and multi-faith model of the so-called New Age, which is bringing the
world back to the darkness and immorality of the pre-Christian era, which had
grown old and corrupt in the passions of vice.
According to the measure that
Christ is driven out and the world is de-Christianized—and especially the
Western, “civilized” world, with Papism and Protestantism bearing the
responsibility—, the resulting void is being filled according to the same
measure by the Devil.
The truth of God, the true theognosia
of the Gospel, is being exchanged with the lie of the new idolatry of
multiculturalism and syncretism, with a consequent slackening of the keeping of
the commandments and the people arriving at a “reprobate mind,” “being
filled with all unrighteousness,” even to the point of perpetrating the
abhorrent impurity of the sin of Sodom, homosexuality, which is commended and
practiced even by Priests, exactly as the Apostle Paul portrays the
pre-Christian era in the first chapter of his Epistle to the Romans, to which
era the syncretistic and inter-faith advocates want us to return, as to a
putative New Age.
As many meetings as may take
place between the Pope and Orthodox Patriarchs, the only way towards the
re-evangelization of Christians is the way of return in repentance: the
imitation of the Apostle Peter in the tears that he shed for denying Christ;
[and the repentance] of the Pope, now, for the denial (rejection) of Orthodoxy
of the common Fathers and Saints of the first millennium.
If [the Pope] continues
egotistically to insist on the putative supremacy of Peter and on the keys
to the Kingdom, as he has these days in Constantinople, and on worldly
pretensions and primacy, then the words “shepherd my sheep” [3] do not
apply to him, but rather “Get thee behind me, Satan, for thy thoughts are
not of the things that be of God, but those that be of men.” [4]
Within this climate, then, of the
so-called New Age, which is being molded by Papist and Protestant
ecumenism, having the one world religion of the Antichrist as its vision,
Christ and His Church are not proclaimed to be the Unique Light, the Sole Way
of salvation, and this, unfortunately, with the coöperation and consent of
the majority of Orthodox Patriarchs, Archbishops, and Bishops.
We contradict, in practice, what
we sing at the end of every Divine Liturgy; namely, that “we have seen the
true light, we have received the heavenly glory; we have found the true Faith,
in worshipping the indivisible Trinity.”
Unfortunately, the light given
by the Patriarchal Divine Liturgy at the Phanar, with the liturgical
participation of the Pope, was not the true Light, the true Faith, but the
darkness and error of the heresies of the Filioque, the supremacy of
the Pope, unleavened bread, Purgatorial fire, created Grace, the degradation of
all of the Mysteries, and the worldly Church of the Vatican, which has
succumbed to the temptations of the Devil [5] for the acquisition of wealth and
power, in order to become a worldly state and, essentially, to cease having any
tie to Christ and Christianity, according to Dostoyevsky.
And this darkness has spread all
the way to the places where Orthodox missionaries are working, who ask
themselves how they can now persuade people to become Orthodox and not Roman
Catholic, or how to help many who have become Roman Catholic to come to Orthodoxy—and
they are quite numerous in the missionary field—, when the image has spread to
the whole world of the joint prayers and the frequent concelebrations of two
Primates, the Pope and the Patriarch, who exchange the kiss of peace and bless
the people together.
We, too, are asking ourselves,
together with the Apostle Paul and the Forty-seventh Apostolic Canon, which
prohibits us from recognizing the Baptism and the Divine Liturgy of heretics
(things that have, unfortunately, once again been recognized by the Oecumenical
Patriarchate and other Orthodox Churches, which are tacitly permitting even the
common cup):
“For what
communion hath light with darkness? And what concord hath Christ with Belial?
Or what part hath he that believeth with an infidel?” [6]
How will we dare, in a few days,
to address the begotten Christ and chant that “Thy Nativity, O Christ our
God, hath shined the light of knowledge upon the world,” and that we follow
the Magi in worshipping Him “as the Sun of Righteousness,” and find
salvation believing in the “One, Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic Church”
of the Symbol of Faith, i.e., in the Orthodox Church? How many Churches are
there, and how many creeds, and how many Baptisms? One or many? If there is not
but one, Orthodoxy, then is the Apostle Paul mistaken when he says “One
Lord, one Faith, one Baptism”? [7]
These questions, however, are not
causing people to stop and think; even the very meaning of heresy is not being
made clear. People have ceased to distinguish between right and wrong, truth
and error.
The narcotic of ecumenism—this
new religion of the Antichrist, this panheresy, according to Elder Justin
(Popovitch)—, having been administered for decades in small doses,
covered in Orthodox-like wrappings such as the Unia, with misinterpreted
passages from the Holy Scriptures and the Fathers of the Church, has drugged
the consciences of the majority, and indeed of many clergymen and theologians.
The so-called Dialogue of Love
has created an unreal, false atmosphere of peace and unity, in which the
masses, unsuspectingly and freely partaking of the pills of ecumenist heroin
from the media, are blissfully content.
The doses are increasingly
heavier. From simple coöperation in practical and social matters and from
declarations by Orthodox representatives, at ecumenical conventions, that the
Orthodox Church is the true Church, we have now arrived at the utter demolition
of the Sacred Canons, with by-now undisguised and obvious joint prayers before
the eyes of Angels and men, and at the parodying of the dread Mystery of the
Divine Eucharist, this Mystery of absolute unity in truth, with the liturgical
exchanges of the kiss of peace with heretics, the supplications for them by the
Deacons, and the Polychronia by the chanters.
3. The steps of Athenagoras are
not the steps of the Apostles and the Fathers
Can anyone imagine St. Athanasios
the Great having Arios sit on a throne opposite him, as they pray together and
exchange the kiss of peace at the exclamation “let us love one another,” and
the choir of chanters praying for the “length of days” of Arios, that he might
continue his heretical and ruinous work?
Is there any relation between the
Icon, which presents St. Nicholas slapping the Arian, and the image of the
Patriarch exchanging the kiss of peace with the multifariously heretical Pope
and considering his presence a blessing?
Who is right: St. Kosmas of
Aitolia, who cursed the Pope, or the Patriarch, who praises him and embraces
him as a brother?
[Who is right,] the monks of the
Palestinian desert, with St. Sabbas…as their leader, who kept the Church
undefiled from the heresy of Monothelitism, or the wretched and unfortunate
monk of Mount Athos who composed hymns and Troparia in honor of the
visit of the heretical Pope to the Phanar? Do these Athonites have anything in
common with the Holy Athonites who were martyred for their opposition to the
pro-Papism of Patriarch John Bekkos?
It is certain that St. Euphemia,
whose Relics lie in the Patriarchal Church of St. George, and who “greatly
gladdened the Orthodox and covered with shame the heretical” Monophysites,
is not gladdened, but grieved by all of these things, and is retracting her
Grace.
The same is true for Sts. Gregory
the Theologian and John Chrysostomos, whose Relics the Patriarch and the Pope
venerated; they were not gladdened, but grieved.
Apostolic succession is
not a mere temporal succession to the throne, but it is also a succession in
terms of manners and teaching: “as a sharer of the ways [of the Apostles]
and a successor to the throne.” It is broken when the continuity of the
Truth, the Orthodox Faith, is broken.
The only truth in the Patriarch’s
addresses and speeches is that he is following in the footsteps of his
predecessors, Athenagoras and Demetrios. The history of the Church, however,
does not begin with Athenagoras, but has behind it a two-thousand-year struggle
against non-Christians and non-Orthodox, and a nearly 1,200-year history of
Patriarchs, Confessors, Bishops, Priests, monastics, and laypeople, who
struggled against Papism, from St. Photios the Great to our day.
And we Orthodox unerringly follow
the Saints and Fathers who have been recognized by the eternal conscience of
the Church, and not the contemporary Latin-minded Patriarchs, Archbishops, and
Bishops, who are leaning towards heresy.
The steps of Athenagoras
and Demetrios are not the steps of the Apostles and Fathers.
4. The barrier of
Orthodoxy is being torn down. We must have no communion with, nor commemorate,
the Bishops
These things are written in full
awareness of the truly historic nature of the times in which we are living,
with regard to the negative activities and ceremonies so destructive to
Orthodoxy, and in full awareness of the responsibilities and consequences
of our position.
We prefer to be persecuted and
defamed rather than to remain silent and more mute than fish before the manifest
degradation of the Orthodox Faith. We prefer to be with the Saints, rather
than to enjoy the friendship and sympathy of the pro-Papists and Latin-minded.
We are awaiting and praying that
the array of Orthodox be consolidated with Bishops, as also with Priest and
monastics who are still quailing and vacillating.
The truth, in any case, is not
related to numbers and amounts. Large numbers have often given strength to
falsehood and error.
We would stress that the
televised images of the meetings between the Patriarch and the Pope, with their
exchanges of the kiss of peace and the chanting of the Polychronion
during Liturgies, have awakened the consciences of many, who are discovering
that the integrity of the Faith is now in jeopardy and that the Bishops
commemorated at Divine Liturgies, as guarantors of unity in the Faith, are
not teaching aright the word of the Truth, are not in fellowship with the
Saints who came before them, but that, in essence, we must have no communion
with them, as they are in communion with the excommunicate.
All of those who keep silent
when the Faith is in jeopardy bear great responsibility.
St. Gregory Palamas, when
criticized by his fellow monastics for leaving his Athonite hesychasterion,
prayer, and nepsis, and going to Thessaloniki to undertake the struggle
against the Papist Barlaam and those of like mind with him, characterized it as
“impious piety” to forbear from presenting the dogmatic teaching of
the Church and checking heresy and error, as the Holy Fathers did for even the
slightest of cacodoxies.
Genuine piety is to follow not
those who are tearing down the barriers, so that the heretics may enter
in, but rather the God-bearing Fathers.
If one neglects and
undervalues the teaching of even one Father, he weakens the barrier at
that point, and the whole multitude of wrongly-believing heretics enters
therein.
One grieves and is profoundly cut
to the heart when reflecting on the utterance of the Patriarch, who considers
the Holy Fathers who struggled against the Pope as being victims of the Devil
and deserving the forgiveness and mercy of God. [8]
But if St. Photios the Great, St.
Gregory Palamas, St. Mark of Ephesus, St. Kosmas of Aitolia, St. Nicodemos the
Hagiorite, and so many other fighters against the heresy of Papism were
instruments and victims of the Devil, we must strike them off the lists of
Saints, dispense with their Feast Days and services, and instead of calling
upon their intercessions and help, we must perform memorial services for them,
that God might forgive them.
St. Gregory Palamas, at any rate,
says:
“Thus, such
is genuine piety: not to call into question the God-bearing Fathers. For the
theologies of the aforementioned Saints are expressions and yardsticks of true
piety, as each of these makes up, in a manner, the barrier and enclosure of
piety; and if one removes one of them, the malevolence of the heretics will
greatly swarm in.” [9]
He is, to be sure, characterizing
all of those who keep silent and do not struggle against heresies as belonging
to a third type of atheism, while in the first two types he classifies
unbelievers and heretics. [10]
This assessment is justifiable
when one considers the axiomatic saying, that silence signifies consent.
5. Contempt for the Sacred Canons.
“He who is guilty may not declare another to be guilty”
We will not expand on this
further at this point.
We had decided that, in view of
the Nativity, we would suspend our struggles and wait; but things are rushing
forward: piety is being demolished, the meaning of the Divine Incarnation is
being negated, and the work of salvation is being obstructed.
The Nativity without the true
Christ, without true Faith, is meaningless. It has degenerated into a worldly
celebration of a material banquet and bodily pleasures.
In a few days, the scene will be
repeated in Rome with the visit of Archbishop Christodoulos.
In the next issue of Orthodoxos
Typos, we will present a moving miracle by the Patron Saint of Corfu, St.
Spyridon, whose Feast Day is being celebrated these days, in which he expelled
and removed the Pope from the Church dedicated to the Saint and, consequently,
from the Orthodox Church. We will also present St. Athanasios of Paros’s
commentary on this miracle.
Following that, with God’s help
and by the intercessions of those Saints who struggled against the Pope and who
were Confessors and Martyrs, we will comment, in a theological and
ecclesiological way, on all of the things that took place at the Phanar, as we “follow
the Holy Fathers” and not “the footsteps” of [Patriarch] Athenagoras and
his predecessor, Meletios Metaxakes.
We will demonstrate that, apart
from the already-habitual joint prayers, Liturgies are also being concelebrated
and there is participation in the common cup at “ecumenical”
Liturgies. [11] This is simply concealed; it is not officially revealed,
because the ecumenist heroin has not yet drugged everyone’s conscience:
there are still a few “fanatics” who refuse to take part in the drugging
and are reacting in opposition.
It is incomprehensible that we
should pursue unity with heretics, while breaking away from our Orthodox
brethren; that we should embrace the former, while excommunicating and
penalizing the latter.
We remain united with the eternal
Church of the Saints, with the One, Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic Church, being
her nurslings and children. We accept all of her doctrines, all of her Sacred
Canons, all of her Oecumenical and Local Synods, and we reject and disavow all
heresies, new and old, and among them the numerous ones of Papism and
Protestantism.
All those who justify these
heresies as [supposedly being mere] theologoumena, all those who
recognize [as valid] the Sacraments and Grace of the so-called Sister Churches,
all those who have diminished and degraded the Church by counting it among the
heresies, the so-called Churches—these people are rending and dividing the
Orthodox Faithful and are subject to the pertinent penances laid down by the
Sacred Canons, which have not grown old, nor have they been abolished, but are
still in force, and will always be in force.
The [true] New Age, the New
Creation, began by means of the Incarnation, the Nativity of Christ, and is
continued by means of the Apostles and the Fathers. It is not being started now
by the [ecumenist] Patriarchs and Archbishops, who make a distinction between
the times and divide the Church, in order to avoid the consequences of
continuity and identity.
Let all those who dare to use
certain [Sacred] Canons at will and in their own interest as cannon against
the strugglers and Confessors of Orthodoxy first of all consider the fact that
they, themselves, are clearly and obviously guilty, by all that they publicly
say and do, of a multitude of transgressions of the Canons; and that, apart
from the fact that “he who is guilty may not declare another to be guilty,” they
are in danger, in the event that they make unjust decisions, of suffering the
same lot either in this life or after death.
We cite just a few examples of
[Sacred] Canons that have been torn to shreds by the transgressors:
“Let a
Bishop, Presbyter, or Deacon, who has merely prayed with heretics be
excommunicated; but if he has permitted them to perform any clerical function,
let him be deposed.” [12]
“We enjoin
that a Bishop or Presbyter who accepts the Baptism or offering of heretics be
deposed. For what concord hath Christ with Belial? Or what part hath he that
believeth with an unbeliever?” [13]
“On not
allowing heretics to enter the House of God, so long as they remain in heresy.”
[14]
“One should
not receive blessings from heretics, which are absurdities [ἀλογίαι], and not
blessings [εὐλογίαι]” [15]
“That one
must not pray with heretics or schismatics.” [16]
“We embrace
and espouse the Divine Canons and hold firm to their command, in full and
unshaken, as set forth by the all-glorious Apostles, these trumpets of the
Spirit, by the six Holy Oecumenical and Local Synods that have convened to
pronounce such commands, and by our Holy Fathers. For all having been illumined
by one and the same Spirit, prescribe that which is of benefit. And those who
they place under anathema, we also anathematize; and those whom them depose, we
also depose; and those whom they excommunicate, we also excommunicate; and
those whom they give over to punishment, we also do the same.” [17]
NOTES
1. See BEΠEƩ 3, 199.
2. For the full text of the Statement and Confession, see
the periodicals Agios Agathangelos Esphigmenites, Vol. 204
(July-August 2004), p. 25, and Theodromia, No. 8 (2006), pp.
237-388.
3. St. John 21:16.
4. St. Matthew 16:23.
5. St. Matthew 4:1-11.
6. II Corinthians 6:14. Forty-sixth Apostolic Canon: “Let
a Bishop, Presbyter, or Deacon, who has merely prayed with heretics be
excommunicated; but if he has permitted them to perform any clerical function,
let him be deposed.”
7. Ephesians 4:5.
8. See the periodical Ecclesiastike Aletheia,
Athens (16 February 1998):
“It is essential that we repent for the past. We should not
waste time discussing who is to blame. Our forefathers, who bequeathed the
split to us, were hapless victims of the arch-evil snake and are already in the
hands of God, the Just Judge. We beseech God’s mercy on their behalf, but we
ought, before God, to redress their errors.”
This frightful statement provoked a justifiable written
reaction by the Holy Mountain. The Patriarch’s explanations and interpretations
are not in the least convincing. He should have recognized his error and and
asked forgiveness from the Saints and the Orthodox pleroma.
9. St. Gregory Palamas, “To the most pious among
monks, Dionysios,” 5, in P. Chrestos, Gregory Palamas, Works, (Thessaloniki
1966), Vol. II, p. 486.
10. Idem, p. 482. The two other types of atheism are
unbelief and heresy, as it is expounded in the work in question.
11. The description, by Professor K. Bei (now a
clergyman belonging to the Metropolis of Nikopolis and Preveza), of an
“ecumenical” Liturgy in Syros is quite shocking. With joy and pride, he
describes this expression of the dissolution of the Sacred Canons and of the
Tradition of the Fathers.
See A. Sakarellos, “The New Age,” in Orthodoxos Typos,
issue 1667 (1 December 2006), p.3:
“When it came time to recite the Creed, the Catholic Bishop
invited all of the faithful, regardless of denomination, to recite it according
to the original typikon of the Nicean Synod, without the Filioque. And
when it came time for Holy Communion, he dipped the Host into the chalice with
the wine, such that, in accordance with the saying of the great Athenagoras, we
would all be able to commune from the same chalice. And we communed. Catholics,
Orthodox, and Protestants. From the common cup of the common faith. Without
boundaries and without intolerant prejudices.”
We do not doubt the Professor’s legal knowledge, though we
would expect greater sensitivity to the Canons of the Church, the violation of
which he is proud. His ignorance, at any rate, of basic liturgical terms, which
are learnt by first-year students at the School of Theology, as may be gathered
from this quotation alone, goes to show that he should not be so confident of
the theological positions that he expresses (e.g. the typikon of the
Synod in Nicea, and others.)
12. Forty-fifth Apostolic Canon
13. Forty-sixth Apostolic Canon
14. Sixth Canon of the Synod of Laodicæa
15. Thirty-second Canon of the Synod of Laodicæa
16. Thirty-third Canon of the Synod of Laodicæa
17. First Canon of the Seventh Oecumenical Synod in
Nicea.
Translated by the Center for Traditionalist Orthodox Studies,
Etna, CA.
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