(Deciphering the Synod of Crete)
The Relationship
of the Synod of Crete to the Texts of the WCC
Protopresbyter
Dimitrios Athanasiou | May 22, 2026
Necessary elements.
Two years after the formation of
the WCC in Amsterdam, the Central Committee convened in Toronto, Canada (July
8–15, 1950), in order to answer a critical question: What exactly is the WCC
ecclesiologically? The Council’s critics accused it of seeking to become a
“super-Church” that would replace the local Churches. The Orthodox Church,
which had already joined the Council, faced internal pressures to clarify its
relationship with an organization that included heterodox communities.
* * *
NOTE:
The delegations of the Church of
Greece and of the Ecumenical Patriarchate that participated in the Central
Committee of the WCC in Toronto and contributed to the formation and acceptance
of the statement consisted of leading theological and ecclesiastical figures of
the time.
Ecumenical Patriarchate
The Ecumenical Patriarchate was
represented by hierarchs and professors who laid the foundations for the later
Orthodox presence in the Council:
• Metropolitan
Germanos (Strinopoulos) of Thyateira: He was one of the most central
figures of the Ecumenical Movement and one of the Presidents of the WCC.
• Metropolitan
Chrysostomos (Konstantinidis) of Ephesus: At that time a young theologian
(later Metropolitan of Myra and then of Ephesus), who played a decisive role in
the drafting of the text.
• Professor
Amilkas Alivizatos: Although a professor at the University of Athens, he
also participated actively in the work of the patriarchal delegation because of
his international prestige in Canon Law.
Church of Greece
The Church of Greece was
represented mainly by distinguished professors of the Theological School of the
University of Athens, who had been appointed as official delegates:
• Professor
Amilkas Alivizatos: Professor of Canon Law and Pastoral Theology, one of
the leading Greek theologians, with an enormous contribution during the first
decades of the WCC.
• Professor
Ioannis Karmiris: Professor of Dogmatics, who closely monitored the
theological texts in order to ensure that the Statement would make clear that
the WCC is not a “super-Church” (something that was ultimately incorporated
into the final text).
• Professor
Vasileios Ioannidis: Professor of New Testament Interpretation, with a
systematic presence in the international theological fora of the time.
* * *
Basic Principles
of the TORONTO STATEMENT
The Toronto Statement, entitled
“The Church, the Churches and the World Council of Churches,” began with five
decisive negations that defined what the WCC is not:
First, “the WCC is not and
must never become a super-Church.” This declaration excluded any possibility
that the Council would acquire ecclesiastical authority over its members. The
WCC is not a Church, but an instrument of the Churches.
Second, its purpose is not
to negotiate unions between Churches — something that belongs exclusively to
the Churches themselves — but to bring the Churches into living contact and to
promote the study and discussion of issues of ecclesiastical unity.
Third, the WCC “cannot and
should not be based on any one particular conception of the Church.” It does
not prejudge the ecclesiological problem. This meant that membership in the
Council did not require any Church to accept the ecclesiology of another.
Fourth, membership does
not imply that a Church treats its own conception of the Church as merely
relative.
Fifth, membership does not
imply acceptance of any particular teaching concerning the nature of
ecclesiastical unity.
The Toronto Statement (1950) was
an attempt by the World Council of Churches to find a way for the Orthodox
Church to participate together with Protestants and other Christians, without
having to say that these are “Churches” in the full sense of the term. This
“solution” created an organization called a “Council of Churches” but which
does not know what “Church” means. As though we were to create a “Council of
Doctors” in which those who have read medical books but are not doctors also
participate — and then say, “there is no need for us to regard one another as
doctors in the full sense.”
For the Orthodox Church this
means: We participate in an organization where the word “Church” loses its
meaning. We accept that unity can exist without communion in the truth. Our
faith that the Orthodox Church is the One, Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic Church
is transformed from dogmatic certainty into a “personal conviction that we
respect”
The Synod of Crete
and the TORONTO STATEMENT
In the official text of the Synod
entitled: “Relations of the Orthodox Church with the Rest of the Christian
World,” paragraph 19 states the following:
“The Orthodox
member Churches consider as an indispensable condition of their participation
in the WCC the fundamental provision of its Constitution, according to which
its members may only be those who believe in our Lord Jesus Christ as God and
Savior, according to the Scriptures, and confess the Triune God, Father, Son,
and Holy Spirit, according to the Nicene-Constantinopolitan Creed.
“It is their
deep conviction that the ecclesiological presuppositions of the Toronto
Statement (1950), ‘The Church, the Churches and the World Council of Churches,’
are of capital importance for Orthodox participation in the Council.”
With this reference, the Synod of
Crete essentially defends the participation of the Orthodox in the WCC, using
the Toronto Statement as a “shield.”
Therefore, the Synod of Crete
invoked Toronto in order to emphasize that the Orthodox Church participates in
inter-Christian dialogue without making concessions in her faith that
she constitutes the “One, Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic Church.”
Why did it provoke reactions?
Despite the above clarification,
the explicit reference to the Toronto Statement provoked intense theological
discussions and reactions, both before and during the Synod. Indeed, certain
Local Churches, such as those of Russia, Bulgaria, Georgia, and Antioch,
ultimately did not attend the Synod.
The critics of the reference
argued that:
• The indirect
or direct acceptance of WCC texts introduces a “new ecclesiology.”
• The use of the
term “Churches” for the heterodox communities, even within the framework of
Toronto, weakens Orthodox exclusivity.
By contrast, the supporters of
the Synod emphasized that the reference was necessary in order to make clear
that Orthodoxy does not isolate herself, but converses with the rest of the
world under very specific, strict, and already agreed-upon terms.
Popular Critique
of the TORONTO Statement
The greatest and deepest trap of
the Toronto Statement lies in the ecclesiological relativization of the
Truth through diplomatic language.
If we had to isolate it in one
phrase, the trap is this: The Statement allowed the members of the WCC to
coexist, recognizing in one another the right to call themselves “Church,”
without requiring common agreement on what the word “Church” actually means.
This central trap is analyzed on
three specific levels, which explain why many Orthodox theologians speak of
“theological anesthesia”:
A. The text says that no member
is obliged to recognize the other members as “Churches in the true and full
sense.” While this sounds like protection for Orthodoxy, so that it would not
recognize the Protestants as a true Church, in reality it creates a space in
which the very reality of the Church is degraded. If you sit at the same
table of an organization called a “Council of Churches,” but accept that those
next to you may not even be a Church, or that they may regard you simply as a
“part” of the Church, then you accept the use of the word “Church” as a mere sociological
title and not as the unique, salvific ark.
B. In Orthodox theology, the
Truth is absolute, historically revealed, and experienced as pleroma. Toronto
created a pluralistic model in which all views are equal. When the Orthodox
Church bears her witness that “I am the One, Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic
Church,” within the environment of Toronto this statement is not treated as
objective truth, but as the “idiosyncrasy” or “subjective conviction” of the
Orthodox. Thus, dogmatic certainty is downgraded into a “religious opinion”
among dozens of others.
C. The greatest trap is that
Toronto legitimized division by presenting it as something almost
normal. By promising a “safe space” where no one would pressure anyone to
change faith, the WCC removed the motive for the true purpose of dialogue:
return to the common, undivided faith of the first centuries. When everyone is
“safe” and no one is reproved for his heresies or theological deviations,
dialogue ceases to seek the Truth and is transformed into a perpetual
diplomatic forum (an ecclesiological agnosticism), where peaceful
coexistence became more important than dogmatic exactness.
The trap of Toronto was that it
gave Orthodoxy a “certificate” that her faith is not endangered within the
Council, but the price of this certificate was the acceptance of an environment
where the very concept of the one and only Truth had already been set aside.
A Fantastical Story
In order to understand the
magnitude of the trap, let us look at a fictional story concerning an
inheritance.
There is a genuine, true will
that a father (Christ) left to his children. This will says who inherits the
house. You (Orthodoxy) hold in your hands the authentic document, sealed and
signed.
Suddenly, ten other people appear
(the heterodox/heresies). Each one is holding a photocopy: one has erased a few
lines. Another has added his own words. A third has completely changed the
meaning.
You all gather together in an
office (the WCC) to resolve the matter. But because everyone is shouting, the
lawyer of the office brings you a paper to sign (the Toronto Statement)
which says: “Sign here so that we may have peace and quiet. This paper says
that you are not obliged to admit that their papers are true. You may believe
that only yours is genuine.”
You sign, sit in your chair, and
calm down. Where is the enormous trap?
The trap is that, with this
paper, you accepted 3 things without realizing it:
1. By sitting in the same office
and signing common papers, you accept that the falsified wills of the others
have the right to be examined alongside yours. The authenticity of your own
paper loses its force, since it is treated as “one of many versions.”
2. Inside this office, if you
stand up and say: “This is the only true document; yours are forged,” the
lawyer and the others will say to you: “How rude you are! Here we agreed to
respect one another’s opinion. Keep your opinion to yourself and do not offend
us.” Thus, the truth is downgraded into simple stubbornness.
3. Your purpose when you went
there was to show them the genuine document, so that they would understand
their error and be saved. With Toronto, however, everyone became comfortable.
The others feel secure with their forged papers, since no one reproves them,
and you feel secure with your own. The search for the one truth stopped, and
you simply drink coffee together.
The trap of Toronto was that it
exchanged Truth for Politeness. It allowed you to say that you are
right, provided that you do not disturb those who are wrong.
Epilogue
The acceptance of the
presuppositions of the “Toronto Statement (1950)” in the text on relations with
the rest of the Christian world (para. 19) constitutes a direct insult to the
timeless Patristic Tradition.
By adopting Toronto, the Synod
accepted the position that there are “elements of the true Church” outside the
boundaries of Orthodoxy. For Orthodox dogmatics, this constitutes an absurdity:
the Church is One and Indivisible; she is not divided into pieces and
scattered. Heresy is not the Church, and the attribution of this term to
heterodox communities constitutes dogmatic capitulation and the introduction of
a double language.
At the same time, the text
indirectly legitimizes the Western “Branch Theory” and the ecclesiology of
deficient Churches. Instead of presenting Orthodoxy as the unique and complete
ark of salvation, the Protestant conception was accepted that the Church of
Christ is an invisible space and that the individual confessions merely possess
parts of the truth that must be reunited.
The excuse that Toronto prevents
the World Council of Churches (WCC) from becoming a “super-Church” is refuted
by practice. The WCC functions as such, equating the mysteries and promoting
the slide from dogmatic uniqueness into syncretistic inclusivity. Instead of
dialogue aiming at the return of those in delusion to the Truth, Crete clothed
the logic of simple coexistence with synodal authority, blunting the dogmatic
senses.
The Synod of Crete failed in the
most basic work of a true Synod: to delimit Truth from Delusion. In trying to
reconcile the irreconcilable, it did not solve the problem of relations with
the heterodox, but transferred the crisis and division into the interior of
Orthodoxy itself.
DETAILED PRESENTATION:
https://www.imoph.org/pdfs/2019/02/06/20190206aDilosiToronto.pdf
[English translation: https://orthodoxmiscellany.blogspot.com/2026/06/on-10th-anniversary-of-crete-toronto.html]
Bibliography
Orthodox Critiques and Analyses
Saint Philaret (Metropolitan of Eastern America and New York)
• St. Philaret of New York, Epistle
on the Participation of the Orthodox Church in the World Council of Churches
(1960s–1970s). Texts and homilies of Saint Philaret that questioned the
compatibility of Orthodox ecclesiology with the Toronto Statement. Available in
collections such as:
- The Orthodox Church and the
Ecumenical Movement: Collected Works. Edition of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia
(ROCOR).
Christodoulos Paraskevaidis (Later Archbishop of Athens)
• Paraskevaidis, Christodoulos, The
Orthodox Church and Ecumenism. Athens, 1970s–1990s. Important analyses
concerning the ecclesiological ambiguity of the WCC.
Metropolitan Hierotheos (Vlachos) of Nafpaktos
• Vlachos, Hierotheos, Church and
Ecclesiology. Athens: Apostoliki Diakonia, 1992.
• Vlachos, Hierotheos, Orthodox
Theology and Ecumenism. Nafpaktos: Holy Metropolis of Nafpaktos, 1998.
Archimandrite George Kapsanis
• Kapsanis, George, Orthodox
Theology and Heresy. Edition of the Holy Monastery of Gregoriou, Mount
Athos, 1990s. Critical analysis of ecclesiological compromises.
Protopresbyter Georges Florovsky
• Florovsky, Georges, The Collected
Works, volume 14: Ecumenism I: A Doctrinal Approach. Vaduz:
Büchervertriebsanstalt, 1989.
• Florovsky, Georges, The Collected
Works, volume 15: Ecumenism II: A Historical Approach. Vaduz, 1989.
Florovsky, although he participated in the early stages of
the ecumenical movement, developed a critique of the “ecclesiological absence”
of the ecumenical discussions.
Metropolitan John (Zizioulas) of Pergamon
• Zizioulas, John D., Eucharist,
Bishop, Church: The Unity of the Church in the Divine Eucharist and the Bishop
during the First Three Centuries. Brookline, MA: Holy Cross Orthodox Press,
2001.
Although Zizioulas participated positively in Ecumenism, his
ecclesiology offers criteria for the evaluation of the Toronto Statement.
Critical Analyses by Orthodox
Theologians
Archimandrite Epiphanios Theodoropoulos
• Theodoropoulos, Epiphanios, Ecumenism
and Orthodoxy. Athens, 1970s–1980s. Strict critique of the ecclesiology of
the WCC.
Monk Sarantis Sarantos
• Sarantos, Sarantis, The Mystery
of the Church and Ecumenism. Edition of the Holy Monastery of Parakletos,
1990s.
Protopresbyter Theodore Zisis
• Zisis, Theodore, Ecumenism and the Orthodox Church.
Thessaloniki: Orthodoxos Kypseli, 1990s–2000s. Extensive critical analysis.
Synod of Crete (2016)
Official
Texts
• Holy and Great Synod of the
Orthodox Church, Encyclical and Messages. Crete, 2016. Especially the text
Relations of the Orthodox Church with the Rest of the Christian World.
Critiques of the Synod
• Nikolaos Loudovikos, The Synod of
Crete: A Theological Evaluation. Athens, 2016–2017.
• Protopresbyter Petros Cheilas (and
others), Critical Analyses of the Synod of Crete. Various editions, 2016–2018.
Greek Publications and Periodicals
• Theologia (journal of the Church of Greece).
Many articles on Ecumenism and the Toronto Statement, 1950–2020.
• Parataxis (journal of the Holy Monastery of
Parakletos). Critical analyses.
• Orthodoxos Typos, Ecclesiastikos Agon
(newspapers). Frequent critical analyses of ecumenical developments.
Greek source:
https://fdathanasiou-parakatathiki.blogspot.com/2026/05/1950.html
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