From 1924–1935,
those who did not accept the New Calendar but did not remain in communion with
the Church, calling themselves, as we have heard, G.O.C., were led only by
monks, hieromonks, and a certain number of priests, since at that time no
bishop agreed to the division of the Church and the creation of a schism.
Somewhat later, on
September 30, 1931, the leaders of the G.O.C. from all over Greece (which then
consisted of 245 smaller groups [“branches”]) submitted their memorandum to the
Synod of the Hierarchy of the Church of Greece, to which the Synod responded by
forming a commission on the calendar issue. At the request of the Ecumenical
Patriarchate, it was then decided that this issue would be placed on the agenda
of the Pan-Orthodox Pro-Synod. [12]
The Administrative
Council of the G.O.C. on October 14/27, 1931, sent a confidential written
pledge to Archbishop Chrysostomos of Athens that during the Liturgies,
"our Sacred Community will commemorate the His Beatitude Archbishop of
Athens and the other bishops," and that they would recognize the decisions
of the Synod, except for the calendar, that is, they wished to continue using
the Old Calendar (which the Church of Greece itself would later propose to them
multiple times). When this was made known, the new zealot members of the
Administrative Council (among whom were Hieromonk Matthew Karpathakis and
Hieromonk Akakios Pappas) revoked this act on August 1, 1934, [13] to which the
certain persecution undertaken by the police against the G.O.C. during 1932
undoubtedly contributed.
On August 6, 1934,
the zealot leadership completely rejected the official Church, as well as the
state Assembly, demanded the separation of the Church from the state, and began
to highlight, along with the New Calendar, Ecumenism as a reason for their separation…
[12] Namely, at the Preparatory Commission of the
Orthodox Churches held at the Vatopedi Monastery on Mount Athos from June 8–23,
1930, it was decided that one of the topics to be proposed for the future
Pan-Orthodox Pre-Council would be "the study of the issue of the Calendar
in relation to the decision on the Paschalion of the First Ecumenical
Council and the finding of a way to restore agreement among the Churches on
this issue" (Proceedings of the P. Committee... in I.M. Vatopedi,
Constantinople 1930, p. 145). The representatives of the Serbian Church were
Bishop Nikolaj of Žiča and Bishop Emilijan of Timočka, who at that time
cooperated and concelebrated with all the New Calendar Churches. Saint Bishop
Nikolaj then, along with other hierarchs, spoke about "relations and
union" with the Eastern Churches (Armenian, Coptic, Ethiopian, and
Jacobite), stating that "they are closer to us than other Churches with
which we seek union" (pp. 73–74). This was not "concession to
Judeo-Masonic Ecumenism," as the "zealot" Old Calendarists
think, but rather an advocacy for true Orthodox Ecumenism, that is, the work
for the unity of all Christians in Christ, within the true Catholic-Orthodox
Church. Nikolaj also spoke against Freemasonry at that time (p. 73), and there
was also discussion against Uniatism and the attacks of various sects from the
West. The Athonites warmly welcomed the Commission at that time, and there was
no mention of the Old Calendarists in Greece.
[13] S. Karamitsos-Gamvroulias, Agony..., p.
156; A. Panotis, ONE, vol. 1, pp. 818–819.
Source: ЗАБЛУДЕ РАСКОЛНИКА ТЗВ. “СТАРОКАЛЕНДАРАЦА”
[Errors of the Schismatic So-Called "Old Calendarists], by Bishop
Atanasije [Jevtić] of Zahumlje and Herzegovina (retired), Belgrade, 2004, p.
36.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.