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"Today the concept of truth is viewed with suspicion, because truth is identified with violence. Over history there have, unfortunately, been episodes when people sought to defend the truth with violence. But they are two contrasting realities. Truth cannot be imposed with means other than itself! Truth can only come with its own light. Yet, we need truth. ... Without truth we are blind in the world, we have no path to follow. The great gift of Christ was that He enabled us to see the face of God".Pope Benedict xvi, February 24th, 2012

The Church is ecumenical, catholic, God-human, ageless, and it is therefore a blasphemy—an unpardonable blasphemy against Christ and against the Holy Ghost—to turn the Church into a national institution, to narrow her down to petty, transient, time-bound aspirations and ways of doing things. Her purpose is beyond nationality, ecumenical, all-embracing: to unite all men in Christ, all without exception to nation or race or social strata. - St Justin Popovitch

Tuesday, 5 July 2016

MOUNT ATHOS AND THE CATHOLIC CHURCH

Benedictine Hagiorites
August 20, 2009 by Irenaeus

The Benedictine Monastery of St Mary on Mount Athos

Dom Leo Bonsall
monk of Belmont

Eastern Churches Review 2:3 (1969), pp. 262-7 (footnotes omitted)

BENEDICTINE contacts with the Church of the East have been many and varied, but the foundation of the abbey of St Mary on Mount Athos and its continuing existence during a period when official relations between Rome and Constantinople were at a very low ebb is perhaps the outstanding example of monastic co-operation transcending the estrangement of East and West. The full history of the monastery has never been written, for much of it is shrouded in mystery. There are very few documents and the dating of some of these is difficult; all that visibly remains of the buildings is a tower and a few walls on the eastern side of the Athonite peninsula. It is hardly surprising that one of the first Benedictine foundations in the East should have been made by monks from the maritime city republic of Amalfi: Amalfitan merchant ships were trading throughout the area, and monks from that city continued their founding work with the monastery of St Mary the Latin in Jerusalem, and another monastery in Constantinople itself.


The first mention of the followers of St Benedict coming to the Holy Mountain is contained in the lives of the Georgian saints John and Euthymius who founded, round aboout 980, the lavra of Iviron (that is, Iberon, the monastery of the Iberians or Georgians). The following account is given in a Greek akolouthia from Athos:

Before the foundation of the lavra of Iviron, the monk Beneventus, the brother of an Italian prince, arrived on Athos with six of his disciples, wanting to live there. He became an intimate friend of John and his son Euthymius and all three decided to leave the lavra of Saint Athanasius, where they lived, and found an independent lavra. The [Amalfitans] returned home to obtain the things needed for the construction of a new monastery. Being held up, however, on their journey, they found when they returned that the lavra of Iviron had been established and was being governed by Euthymius, to the displeasure of his father, John. Then Beneventus bought a piece of land and built a new monastery which had many monks, the greater part coming from Amalfi; in fact the monastery took the name of the Amalfitans, and was consecrated to the memory of the Most Holy Mother of God.

The official life of the two Georgian saints was originally written by another monk of Iviron, George the Hagiorite, about 1045, or thirty years after the death of Euthymius. The Bollandist Paul Peeters, SJ, published in 1922 a definitive Latin translation of this work, in which there is a passage telling how the founders of Iviron reacted to the arrival of the Latin monks:

Further, while Father John was alive, a certain monk arrived from the land of the Romans, a man famous for his virtue, to whose worth the lands of both the Romans and the Greeks bore witness, the brother of the duke of Benevento, of a most noble family. This man arrived with six disciples on this Holy Mountain in order to pray. When our fathers saw that he was outstanding in the gifts of grace they received him as a friend and one of themselves. They treated him with the greatest kindness and invited him to make his home among them, saying ‘Both you and we are alike pilgrims’. They persuaded him with great difficulty, for he desired to live in a separate monastery . . . . And so he built a pleasant monastery in which he gathered many brothers. With the help of our fathers the whole work was completed . . . and to this day there exists on the Holy Mountain this monastery of the Romans, who live a regular and edifying life [probe ac rite] according to the Rule of Holy Benedict whose life is described in the Book of Dialogues.

One of the great figures on Athos at this period was St Athanasius: monks flocked to hear and speak with him from all over the world and the Benedictine founders were no exception. Athanasius’ biographer tells how the western monks brought the saint a jar of caviar, which, of course, the saint did not eat, though he accepted it so as not to offend them. It is very interesting to note the friendship of the Benedictines with St Athanasius, for one finds in the rules of his followers many signs of the influence of the Rule of St Benedict.

Modern commentators are unanimous that the account of the arrival of the western monks given by George the Hagiorite is to be preferred to the first one cited above. Peeters holds that it is to be regarded as a document ‘of great importance not only for the religious history of Athos, but also for the political and religious history of the period.’ So the arrival of the Latin monks has to be placed not only during the lifetime of St John but also during that of St Athanasius. St John and St Euthymius arrived on Athos about the year 970 and began building Iviron about 980, so the foundation of St Mary’s took place some time between 980 and 1000. A. Pertusi narrows this down further to 985-90, and quotes a document of the Great Lavra dated 984, signed by two of the Latin monks, John and Arsenius.

The monastery of Iviron was famous for its learning, and the extant works of the Latin monks lead us to believe that they were of comparable intellectual standing. This could explain the continuing friendship between the two monasteries. As examples of literary activity in the Amalfitan monastery, we have Latin versions of several hagiographical works, certainly including the ‘Account of the miracle of St Michael in Chonae’ translated by one Leo, who calls himself a monk of the Latin monastery on Athos; other similar manuscripts may well be from the same source, and it has been suggested that the transmission to the West of the legend of Barlaam and Joasaph links Iveron and the Amalfitan monastery.

The Benedictine historians of the 11th century do not mention the Amalfitan foundation: in fact, they rather confuse matters. The chronicler of Monte Cassino, Leo of Ostia, tells of the election of Manso, twenty-eighth abbot of Monte Cassino, in 986: ‘He became abbot through the influence of the princes of his family and not through the vote of the monks.’ He goes on to tell bow after Manso had taken up his office several of the best monks decided that they could not live under him and left the monastery; among them was one Joannes Beneventanus who went to the East, to Jerusalem, Sinai, and then to Mount Athos. Leo is quoted in the Dialogues of Pope Victor III:

. . . He went to Jerusalem, and then spent six years on Mount Sinai in the service of God. Then he went to Greece, where he remained some time on the mountain which is called the Holy Mountain (in monte qui Hagionoros dicitur).

However, Leo says that John was a hermit on Athos, and far from founding and ruling a monastery on his own, it seems that John was under an abbot on the Holy Mountain and that it was due to this man’s advice that he returned to Monte Cassino:

Not long afterwards the most holy Father Benedict appeared in a vision to that same John, giving him the pastoral staff which he was holding in his hand, and advising him to return as quickly as possible to Monte Cassino. At the first light of dawn he explained religiously to the abbot of the monastery the vision which he had seen. The abbot, being a man of foresight and discretion, seeing the will of God in this vision, looked at him and said: ‘Brother John, return with all speed to your monastery, lest you seem disobedient to the great father who has appeared to you in a vision. It seems to me that almighty God has decided to place you over his flock, and has chosen you, in his mercy, to watch over his sheep.’ In obedience, therefore, to this vision and advice he returned across the sea, with Christ as his guide, and returned to his monastery. He was made prior by the most holy John (who was then abbot, but through infirmity was unable to bear such a great burden). Not long afterwards, by the counsel and choice of the brethren, he was appointed abbot by the same venerable father.

So John of Benevento, though certainly on Athos during the period, would seem not to be the founder of St Mary’s.

There was on Athos at the same time a Georgian hermit called Gabriel, from whose life a little more information can be gained about the early Latin monks:

The venerable priest Gabriel had a great spiritual love for the holy old man, the great Leo the Roman, who, each time he came to visit our fathers, used to take a cell next to that of Gabriel and there spend the day.

From the eastern sources, therefore, the founder of the monastery was Leo the Roman, a brother of the duke of Benevento. There is, it must be noted, no other record of the duke of Benevento of the period, Pandulf II, having a brother called Leo who was a monk. The John of Benevento, it would seem, was a monk of Monte Cassino who came to the Holy Mountain at the same period, between 993 and 996-7, for spiritual advice (possibly from the abbot of St Mary’s) and then returned to Monte Cassino to become abbot.

This is the only information available on the founding of the monastery. It used to be thought, for example by Dom Rousseau, that much more information was probably to be found in the archives the Great Lavra. Pertusi, however, assures us that the documents published by himself, P. Lemerle, and A. Guillou are all that the Great Lavra possesses on St Mary’s.

The first documentary evidence we have of St Mary’s is the signature in Latin of John of Amalfi, presumably the successor of Leo, on a document dated 991. Perhaps it was still this same John who signed documents in 1012, 1016, and May 1017. As stated above, it was about 1045 that the Georgian monk George described the western monks as living ‘probe ac rite’ according to the Rule of St Benedict. At the same period a minute of imperial civil service notes and approves the decision of the Grand Council of Mount Athos to allow the monks of St Mary’s to possess a boat, not for any commercial usage but for the needs of the monastery.

In 1081, Benedict, abbot of the imperial monastery of the Amalfitans, signs a document, and the emperor of the period, Alexius I, confirms to the convent of the Amalfitans certain lands which are described in great detail. The words ‘imperial monastery’ should be noted; they indicate a very flourishing period for the Benedictines, as they now have the same title as the Great Lavra, Iviron and Vatopedi, the three most ancient lavras on the Holy Mountain. In 1083 another act of the Athonite Council, about the reconstruction of the monastery of Xenophon, has the signature of the monk Demetrios, abbot of the Amalfitan monastery. It is remarkable that, contemporary with the increasing tension typified by the quarrel between Cerularius and Rome, the Benedictines of Athos were not only living their lives peacefully, but taking a full part in the government of the Holy Mountain and enjoying imperial patronage.

Another collection of acts, of the council dated 1097, bears the signature of Vitus, abbot of the Amalfitan monastery. There is a further reference to the monastery in acts dated 1169, on the acquisition of the monastery of St Pantileimon of Thessalonika by the monastery of Rossikon on Athos. This carries among others the signature in Latin of the abbot of St Mary of the Amalfitans.

Agostino Pertusi published in 1958 three new documents on the Amalfitan monastery, [24] preserved in the Great Lavra of St Athanasius. It is very difficult to date the documents, but after extensive researches Pertusi formed the opinion that they date from about the year 1287. Their authenticity has been confirmed since his first publication. They tell of the donation of the monastery of the Amalfitans to the Great Lavra and the confirmation of that transfer by the patriarch and the emperor. At the time that the donation was made the convent was very poor, the house was in ruins, and the remaining monks had no one capable of taking responsibility for its upkeep. A lot of factors may have contributed to this sad situation: the source of vocations much have been drying up, the republic of Amalfi declined politically after 1137, religious tensions and conflicts between East and West were becoming more and more intense, and Andronicus II pursued an anti-Roman policy.

It is interesting to speculate what happened to the survivors, if there were any, at the time of donation. We do not know. The local tradition says that they all left, taking with them their belongings, but this tradition seems dubious in the light of the documents of donation. It seems more probable that they did not leave but were absorbed in the Great Lavra. So ended Benedictine life on Athos, after lasting about three hundred years.


As Dom Rousseau pointed out, the monks of the Holy Mountain have good reason since the demise of St Mary’s to be suspicious of the West: for example, the foundation of Propaganda, in 1636, of a school on Athos to educate the monks, and the attempts of the Jesuits in the 17th century to found a mission there to convert them! Other similar activities have not helped the relations between western and eastern monasticism. Consideration was given by the West to refounding a Benedictine monastery on Athos, but this idea was so displeasing to the monks of the Holy Mountain that in 1924 they incorporated a clause into the constitution by which they are governed, forbidding such a foundation. How different from the arrival of the Amalfitans, when the Athonites not only gave them one of the most beautiful sites on the mountain, but helped them to build their monastery! But now that the ecumenical patriarch himself, on whom the Holy Mountain directly depends, has done so much to change the old atmosphere of suspicion, may it be no longer a vain hope that co-operation between East and West might again become a reality here, in one of the most holy places in the world?


The Official Statement from Mt. Athos on the Pope's Visit to the Phanar (2006)
Karyae, 30 December 2006.

The recent visit of Pope Benedict XVI to the Ecumenical Patriarchate on the occasion of the feast-day of Saint Andrew (30th November 2006) and thereafter the visit by His Beatitude the Archbishop of Athens Christodoulos (14th December 2006) gave rise to a multitude of impressions, evaluations and reactions. We shall bypass those things that the secular Press had evaluated as positive or negative, to focus on those things that pertain to our salvation, for the sake of which we abandoned the world to live in the barrenness of the Holy Mountain.

As Monks of the Holy Mountain, we respect the Ecumenical Patriarchate, under whose jurisdiction we fall. We honor and venerate the Most Holy Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew and we rejoice in all that he has achieved and so diligently labored for, in his love of God, for the Church. We particularly commemorate the stolid and untiring defence of the Ecumenical Patriarchate, amid the many unfavorable conditions that exist, as well as the impoverished local Orthodox Churches and the care that is taken to project the message of the Orthodox Church throughout the world. Furthermore, we the Monks of the Holy Mountain honor the Most Holy Church of Greece, from which most of us originate, and we respect His Beatitude the Primate.

However, the events that took place during the recent visits of the Pope to Fanarion and of His Beatitude the Archbishop to the Vatican brought immense sorrow to our hearts.

We desire and we struggle all of our life to safeguard the trust of the Holy Fathers, which was bequeathed to us by the holy Founders of our sacred Monasteries and the blessed reposed fathers before us. We strive to the best of our ability to live the sacrament of the Church and the unblemished Orthodox Faith, according to what we are daily taught by the divine Services, the sacred readings, and the teachings in general of the Holy Fathers which are set out in their writings and in the decisions of the Ecumenical Synods. We guard our dogmatic awareness “like the pupil of our eye”, and we reinforce it, by applying ourselves to God-pleasing labours and the meticulous study of the achievements of the holy Confessor Fathers when they confronted the miscellaneous heresies, and especially of our father among the saints, Gregory of Palamas, the Holy Martyrs of the Holy Mountain and the Holy Martyr Kosmas the First, whose sacred relics we venerate with every honor and whose sacred memory we incessantly celebrate. We are afraid to remain silent, whenever issues arise that pertain to the trust that our Fathers left us. Our responsibility, towards the most venerable fathers and brothers of the overall brotherhood of the Holy Mountain and towards the pious faithful of the Church who regard Athonite Monasticism as their non-negotiable guardian of sacred Tradition, weighs heavily upon our conscience.

The visits of the Pope at Fanarion and the Archbishop’s visit at the Vatican may have secured certain benefits of a secular nature, however, during those visits, various other events took place which were not according to the customs of Orthodox Ecclesiology, or commitments were made that would neither benefit the Orthodox Church, nor any other heterodox Christians.

First of all, the Pope was received as though he were a canonical (proper) bishop of Rome. During the service, the Pope wore an omophoron; he was addressed by the Ecumenical Patriarch with the greeting “blessed is the one who comes in the name of the Lord” as though it were Christ the Lord; he blessed the congregation and he was commemorated as “most holy” and “His Beatitude the Bishop of Rome”. Furthermore, all of the Pope’s officiating clergy wore an omophoron during the Orthodox Divine Liturgy; also, the reciting of the Lord’s Prayer, his liturgical embrace with the Patriarch, were displays of something more than common prayer. And all of this, when the papist institution has not budged at all from its heretical teachings and its policy; on the contrary, the Pope is in fact visibly promoting and trying to reinforce Unia along with the Papist dogmas on primacy and infallibility, and is going even further, with inter-faith common prayers and the pan-religious hegemony of the Pope of Rome that is discerned therein.

As for the reception of the Pope in Fanarion, we are especially grieved by the fact that all of the Media kept repeating the same, incorrect information, that the psalms that were (unduly) sung at the time had been composed by Monks of the Holy Mountain. We take this opportunity to responsibly inform all pious Christians that their composer was not, and could never be, a monk of the Holy Mountain.

Then there is the matter of the attempt by His Beatitude the Archbishop of Athens to commence relations with the Vatican on social, cultural and bio-ethical issues, as well as the objective to mutually defend the Christian roots of Europe (positions which are also found in the Common Declaration of the Pope and the Patriarch in Fanarion), both of which may seem innocuous or even positive, given that their aim is to cultivate peaceful human relations. Nevertheless, it is important that all these do not give the impression that the West and Orthodoxy continue to have the same bases, or lead one into forgetting the distance that separates the Orthodox Tradition from that which is usually presented as the “European spirit”. (Western) Europe is burdened with a series of anti-Christian institutions and acts, such as the Crusades, the “Holy” Inquisition, slave trading and colonization. It is burdened with the tragic division which took on the form of the schism of Protestantism; the devastating world wars, also the man-centered humanism and its atheist view. All of these are the consequence of Rome’s theological deviations from Orthodoxy. One after the other, the Papist and the Protestant heresies gradually removed the humble Christ of Orthodoxy and in His place, they enthroned haughty Man. The holy bishop Nicholas of Ochrid and Zitsa wrote the following from Dahau: «What, then, is Europe? The Pope and Luther.... This is what Europe is, at its core, ontologically and historically». The blessed Elder Justin Popovitch supplements the above: «The 2nd Vatican Synod comprises the rebirth of every kind of European humanism.... because the Synod persistently adhered to the dogma on the Pope’s infallibility» and he surmises: «Undoubtedly, the authorities and the powers of (western) European culture and civilization are Christ-expellers». This is why it is so important to project the humble morality of Orthodoxy and to support the truly Christian roots of the united Europe; the roots that Europe had during the first Christian centuries, during the time of the catacombs and of the seven holy Ecumenical Synods. It is advisable for Orthodoxy to not tax itself with foreign sins, and furthermore, the impression should not be given to those who became de-Christianized in reaction to the sidetracking of Western-style Christianity, that Orthodoxy is related to it, thus ceasing to testify that it is the only authentic Faith in Christ, and the only hope of the peoples of Europe.

The Roman Catholics’ inability to disentangle themselves from the decisions of their pursuant (and according to them, Ecumenical) Synods, which had legitimized the Filioque, the Primacy, the Infallibility, the secular authority of the Roman Pontiff, ‘created Grace’, the immaculate conception of the Holy Mother, Unia. Despite all these, we Orthodox continue the so-called traditional exchanges of visits, bestowing honors befitting an Orthodox Bishop on the Pope and totally disregarding a series of Sacred Canons which forbid common prayers, while the theological dialogue repeatedly flounders, and, after being dredged from the depths, it again sinks down.

All indications lead to the conclusion that the Vatican is not orienting itself to discard its heretical teachings, but only to “reinterpret” them—in other words, to veil them.

Roman Catholic ecclesiology varies, from one circular to the other; from the so-called “open” ecclesiology of the Encyclical «Ut Unum Sint», to the ecclesiological exclusivity of the Encyclical «Dominus Jesus». It should be noted that both of the aforementioned views are contrary to Orthodox Ecclesiology. The self-awareness of the holy Orthodox Church as the only One, Holy, Catholic (=overall) and Apostolic Church does not allow for the recognition of other, heterodox churches and confessions as “sister churches”. “Sister Churches” are only the local Orthodox Churches of the same faith. No other homonymous reference to “sister churches” other than the Orthodox one is theologically permissible.

The “Filioque” is promoted by the roman catholic side as yet another legal expression of the teaching regarding the procession of the Holy Spirit, and theologically equivalent to the Orthodox teaching that procession is “only from the Father”—a view that is unfortunately supported by some of our own theologians.

Besides, the Pontiff is maintaining the Primacy as an inalienable privilege, as one can tell from the recent erasure of the title “Patriarch of the West” by the current Pope Benedict XVI; also from his reference to the worldwide mission of the Apostle Peter and his successors during his homily in the Patriarchal Temple, as well as from his also recent speech, which included the following: «...within the society, with the Successors of the Apostles, whose visible unity is guaranteed by the Successor of the Apostle Peter, the Ukrainian Catholic Community managed to preserve the Sacred Tradition alive, in its integrity» (Catholic Newspaper, No.3046/18-4-2006).

Unia is being reinforced and reassured in many and various ways, despite the proclamations by the Pope to the contrary. This dishonest stance is witnessed, apart from other instances, by the provocative intervention of the previous Pope, John-Paul II, which led the Orthodox-roman catholic dialogue in Baltimore into a disaster, as well as by the letter sent by the current Pope to the Cardinal Ljubomir Husar, the Uniate Archbishop of Ukraine. In this letter dated 22/2/2006, the following is emphatically stressed: «It is imperative to secure the presence of the two great carriers of the only Tradition (the Latin and the Eastern).... The mission that the Greek Catholic Church has undertaken, being in full communion with the Successor of the Apostle Peter, is two-fold: on one side, it must visibly preserve the eastern Tradition inside the Catholic Church; on the other, it must favour the merging of the two traditions, testifying that they not only can coordinate between themselves, but that they also constitute a profound union amid their variety».

Seen in this light, polite exchanges such as the visits of the Pope to Fanarion and the Archbishop of Athens to the Vatican, without the prerequisite of a unity in the Faith, may on the one hand create false impressions of unity and thus turn away the heterodox who could have looked towards Orthodoxy as being the true Church, and on the other hand, blunt the dogmatic sensor of many Orthodox. Even more, they may push some of the faithful and pious Orthodox, who are deeply concerned over what is taking place inopportunely and against the Sacred Canons, to detach themselves from the corpus of the Church and create new schisms.

Thus, out of love for our Orthodoxy, but with pain as regards the unity of the Church, and with a view to preserve the Orthodox Faith free of all innovations, we proclaim in every direction that which was proclaimed by the Extraordinary, Double, Holy Assembly of our Sacred Community of the Holy Mountain on the 9th / 22nd of April 1980:

«We believe that our Holy Orthodox Church is the One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church of Christ, having the fullness of Grace and the Truth, and for this reason, an uninterrupted Apostolic Succession. On the contrary, the “churches” and the “confessions” of the West, having distorted the faith of the Gospel, the Apostles and the Fathers on many points, are deprived of the hallowing Grace, the true Sacraments and the Apostolic Succession...

Dialogues with the heterodox—if they are intended to inform them about the Orthodox Faith so that when they become receptive of divine enlightenment and their eyes are opened they might return to the Orthodox Faith—are not condemned.

In no way should a theological dialogue be accompanied by common prayers, participation in liturgical assemblies and worship by either side and any other activities that might give the impression that our Orthodox Church acknowledges the Roman Catholics as a complete Church and the Pope as a canonical (proper) Bishop of Rome. Such acts mislead the Orthodox as well as the Roman Catholic faithful, who are given a false impression of what Orthodoxy thinks of them....

With the Grace of God, the Holy Mountain remains faithful—as do the Orthodox people of the Lord—to the Faith of the Holy Apostles and the Holy Fathers, and also out of love for the heterodox, who are essentially helped, when the Orthodox with their steadfast Orthodox stance point out the extent of their spiritual ailment and the way they can be cured.

The failed attempts for union during the past teach us that for a permanent union, according to the will of God, within the Truth of the Church, the prerequisite is a different kind of preparation and course, than those which were followed in the past and appear to be followed to this day.».

By all of the Representatives and Superiors of the common Assembly of the twenty Sacred Monasteries of the Holy Mountain Athos.


Promulgated by Monk Prodromos Gregoriates - Secretariat of the Sacred Community. The Greek text can be found at www.agioros.com. Translation by: A. N.

Benedictine Monks on Athos in the XXth century
Written by Fr Antoine LAMBRECHTS (Chevetogne, Belgium)

When the Benedictine monks left the Holy Mountain definitely towards the end of the XIIIth century, it was the beginning of long period of silence. For many centuries, regular contacts between western Latin monks and their eastern orthodox brothers of the Byzantine world were broken off. The new western religious orders – the Franciscans and the Dominicans, later the Jesuits – became often to be seen by the Orthodox as invaders and missionaries of another world. The few Cistercian monasteries in the Crusade kingdoms lived their own life and seem to have had little exchange with the orthodox world. 

This tragic church-political and cultural separation of Eastern and Western monasticism did not mean, however, that orthodox and catholic monks totally forgot about one another. The Rule of Saint Benedict constantly reminded its monks that monastic life had its roots in the East: the authority of Saint Basil the Great, Cassian, the Sayings of the Fathers were to be their constant reference. On the other hand, saint Benedict, whose Life by Saint Gregory the Great had been translated very early into Greek (and other eastern languages), was venerated in the orthodox world. A Greek liturgical service had been composed for him in the IXth century. Parts of his Rule were quoted by Saint Athanasius the Athonite himself in his Diatyposis and appeared sometimes in other athonite manuscripts. In his “Triads in Defence of the Hesychasts”, saint Gregory Palamas refers to saint Benedict as “one of the most holy saints, who contemplated the whole universe as resumed in one ray of the intelligible sun”, i.e. as an ancestor and an example of the hesychast tradition he defends. 

Nevertheless, an estrangement between East and West, and especially between the Holy Mountain and traditional Benedictine monasticism in the West was growing. Characteristically, no one of the very learned Benedictines of the Maurist Congregation, who rediscovered and critically edited Latin and Greek Church Fathers in the XVIIth century, nor the very erudite Benedictine Father Jean-Baptiste François Pitra (1812-1889, monk of the Abbey of Solesmes, and later cardinal) visited Mount Athos in search for manuscripts, although the latter went therefore to Russia and found former Athos manuscripts in the National Library of Paris and in Rome. The psychological barrier was simply too high and the concrete monastic way of life of their orthodox contemporaries wasn’t apparently of no great interest to them. 

This widespread attitude would change, however, towards the end of the XIXth century. Among the many reasons, too complex to be analysed here, one, at least, of particular interest should be mentioned. In 1894, Pope Leo XIII published the encyclical “Orientalium dignitas”, on the dignity of the Churches of the East. Although it was written in the first place to encourage the Eastern Catholic Churches to remain faithful to their ancient liturgical and canonical traditions, and to oppose therefore “latinization”, it made Catholics in general aware of the richness and dignity of the eastern, apostolic tradition. At the same time, Pope Leo XIII asked the Benedictines explicitly to study the eastern monastic traditions of the “undivided Church” and he entrusted the old “Greek College” in Rome (founded in 1573) to the Benedictine Order. 

After centuries of interruption, Latin Benedictine monks set out again for Mount Athos, not to stay there now, or to found a monastery there, but as simple pilgrims, to learn about monastic life in the Orthodox Church, about liturgy and prayer. The first to do so, in 1905, were two young monks of the Belgian Benedictine monastery of Maredsous, Father Placide de Meester (a liturgist and orientalist) and Father Hugo Gaïsser, a musicologist who specialised in Greek psaltic chant. They left a detailed account of their trip, published in 1908. Although their ecclesiological view is still very “roman” and “unionist”, their aim is not scholarship in the first place, but humble learning of monastic life. They compare everything with their own Latin tradition and conclude that the Rule of Saint Benedict can be better understood on Mount Athos, because – as they said – “there, it has its natural setting”. Although in their interpretation they often “reduce” athonite monastic life to what they know in the West, their attitude is a sympathetic one, and they are really edified by athonite hospitality, asceticism, liturgical life, devotion and profound faith. At the end, they remain very aware, however, that “a lot needs to be done for a better understanding”. 

With this aim in mind, “to learn from the East” (and in particular from the Orthodox) for a better understanding, a special international Benedictine monastery was founded in 1925 by Dom Lambert Beauduin, known today as the Monastery of Chevetogne. From the very outset, this community, to which I belong, celebrates all the monastic services simultaneously in two different churches: a Latin one for the traditional Benedictine services, and a Byzantine one for the services in Church Slavonic or Greek, according to the orthodox liturgical calendar and Typikon[1]. The first (all Latin) fathers of the community, who came from other Benedictine monasteries in the 1920ies and 1930ies, had to learn everything: the Greek and Slavonic language, the music, the liturgy, and the orthodox way of life (or “ethos”). A privileged place to do that was, of course, Mount Athos. 

And indeed, after a first failed attempt to send monks to the Petchory Lavra in Pskov (at that time in Estonia), one of the founding members of the community, Fr Theodore Belpaire, a former astrophysicist and mathematician, could stay for several months in the Russian skite of Saint-Andrew, where the higoumenos Metrophan accepted him as a member of the community: he could stay and sing in the choir, work in the garden and the library, and he was given an orthodox riasa and skoufia. Father Theodore wrote about his stay on Mount Athos interesting and detailed letters to his community which were published in our journal Irénikon in 1929. Attentive reading of these letters reveal, that life on the Holy Mountain for him was not an “easy school”. Those fathers of the community, however, who knew him as an abbot in his later years, all testify to his humility, his profound life of prayer, his personal asceticism and poverty, and his attachment to the orthodox spiritual tradition. 

Several other fathers of our community did similar stays on the Holy Mountain. Others visited Athos regularly and made many friends in different Greek and Russian Monasteries. Unfortunately, not all of them left written accounts on their stay or pilgrimage; some of them did, but they were not published. One thing is sure: all of them were deeply impressed by the experience, and many of them for the rest of their life[2]. Some of the younger brothers are sometimes surprised to see, that we still use beautiful handwritten scores in the choir, written on Mount Athos, or use liturgical books dedicated to the monastery by athonite monks. Among our fathers, one should perhaps be mentioned here in particular, Father Ireneus Doens [Дунс]. Of Dutch origin, he was fluently in Greek, Russian and Rumanian and counted many friends in Greece and on the Holy Mountain. From the 1950ies till the end of the 1970ies he wrote a detailed chronicle on Greek orthodox and athonite monastic life in our journal Irénikon, based on first hand information, Greek, Russian, Rumanian and Athonite periodicals, as well as on the many books he collected. These are now a precious and unique part of our monastic library. In 1963, at the occasion of the Millennium Celebrations of the Holy Mountain – this year exactly 50 years ago – he published an important, almost exhaustive bibliography of about 3000 titles on Mount Athos. He was also personally invited by the ecumenical patriarch Athenagoras to take part, as an observer and guest, in these celebrations on the Holy Mountain itself, in June 1963. In the years just before and during the Millennium, the journal Irénikon gave a detailed account of the preparations and the celebrations itself, not concealing thereby the many critical voices of athonite monks. On the initiative of another monk of our community, Father Olivier Rousseau, the Monastery of Chevetogne organised in September of the Millennium year, in Venice, an important international conference on the history and the spiritual legacy of the Holy Mountain. The Acts of that Conference were published by the Monastery in two volumes, under the title “Le Millénaire du Mont Athos 963-1963, Etudes et Mélanges”, containing contributions of the best specialists at that time in East and West. Unfortunately out of print now for many years, it can today only be obtained on demand in an electronic version. 

Of course, many other monks of the Benedictine tradition visited Mount Athos in the XXth century. Many of them were patristic scholars like Chrysosto­mos Baur (Beuron), Emmanuel Amand de Mendietta (Maredsous), Julien Leroy (En Calcat), Jean Gribomont (Clervaux, Luxembourg). Others, and among them also some Cistercian and Trappist monks, went exclusively for spiritual reasons, to exchange on a common experience of prayer and asceticism with such famous spiritual Fathers as Geronta Ephrem of Katounakia, Theoklitos of Dionysiou, Basil of Stavronikita and the hermit Païssios. Father André Louf (Mont des Cats) and Father Basil Pennington (Spencer Monastery, Massachusetts) left beautiful testimonies of such encounters. If at first the atmosphere was sometimes tense and the conversation moved off difficultly, a simple, humble and essential question like “Father, how do You pray?” or “what would You advise me?” suddenly could change everything. In such moments, centuries of church-political and theological dispute seemed to disappear where Byzantine en Latin Hesychasts discovered each other as peacemakers. I think it would be a good thing to collect, translate and publish these testimonies of spiritual encounter for a better understanding of Eastern and Western monks in the future.  

Fr Antoine Lambrechts

[1] Sometimes erroneously mistaken for “Uniates” or “Eastern Catholics”, we are in fact the opposite: being mostly of Latin origin, we make a step towards the Orthodox, to learn from them, not from the Orthodox Church away. The main justification of the Eastern tradition in our Monastery is, in fact, not an ecclesiological one (we do not belong to any “Eastern Catholic” Church), but simply our love, as Catholics, of the Orthodox Church.

[2] One of them, Father David (Dimitri) Balfour, the secretary of the founder Lambert Beauduin, a very gifted person, converted to Orthodoxy under the influence and guidance of saint Silouane and Father Sophrony (Sakharov). 



Sunday, 3 July 2016

THE HOLY AND GREAT COUNCIL: AN ASSESSMENT & SUBSEQUENT COMMENTARIES


Commonweal / www.commonwealmagazine.org / June 30, 2016
 this is being published thanks to Jim Forest
Only the Next Step: Assessing the Pan-Orthodox Council

By Jerry Ryan


From the outside, it would seem that the “Great and Holy” Pan-Orthodox Council, which began on June 19 and ended without much fanfare on June 26, was a painful and humiliating fiasco. Four of the fourteen churches that were to participate in this historic council withdrew at the last minute, claiming, among other things, that the approved working documents required more reflection and discussion: More time was needed, they said. This excuse did not seem very convincing. After all, the council was first proposed in 1909; it was convoked by Patriarch Athenagoras fifty years ago; multiple preparatory sessions had taken place; an agenda had been approved, a date fixed. In short, there had been plenty of time. Because of the last-minute cancellations, an event intended to be—among other things—an edifying display of Orthodox unity instead provided an instructive reminder of the many tensions threatening the Orthodox communion.

These tensions are partly theological. Antoine Arjakovsky, a French Orthodox theologian-historian, distinguishes three predominant mentalities within Orthodoxy. First there are the “zealots”—traditionalists who focus on the past and the preservation of the integrity of the faith. Then there are the “proselytes,” who encourage dialogue with other Christians and nonbelievers in an effort to get them all to convert to the one true Orthodox Church. Finally, there are the “spirituals,” whose vision goes beyond confessional boundaries and emphasizes the charity that should unite us all in Christ. Ideally, these tendencies (which also exist, mutatis mutandis, within Catholicism) should complement one another. In reality, they often end up in conflict. The zealots fear that a pan-Orthodox council will only provoke more schisms and weaken the already tenuous union of Orthodoxy, while the spirituals envisage a post-confessional Christianity. Proselytes fall anywhere between these two extremes. The working documents for the pan-Orthodox council issued by the preparatory commissions reflect compromises that left the more extreme tendencies frustrated. These documents play it safe for the sake of the greatest possible inclusiveness; they are certainly not “prophetic.” The Moscow patriarchate had agreed to participate on the condition that all the council’s decisions be made by “consensus”—that is, unanimously—which meant that a single bishop could derail the whole project. This had the predictable effect of knocking anything controversial off the agenda.

Besides the theological disagreements, there is also a more worldly clash of interests, a clash that can remind one of the debate among the twelve apostles about which of them was the greatest. There is, first of all, the rivalry between Constantinople and Moscow. With the fall of the Western Roman Empire, Constantinople—“the new Rome”—became the new center of what remained of the Empire in the East; its patriarch was recognized as having special privileges and responsibilities for the unity of the church throughout Asia Minor. After the Ottoman Empire conquered Constantinople in 1453, it set up “millets” (or “nations”) where the different minority groups within the realm would be free to follow their own laws and traditions. The Patriarch of Constantinople, known as the Ecumenical Patriarch, was the official head of the Christian millet. All of this came to an end when the Ottoman Empire was dismantled after World War I. Suddenly the Patriarchate of Constantinople lost political support for its preeminence among the Eastern Churches. The Russian Church, the largest in the Orthodox world with its 75 million adherents, began to see itself as the “Third Rome.” Later, the collapse of the Soviet Union led to the resurgence of “Holy Russia” and the renewal of religious liberties in other countries of Eastern Europe. But with this heartening rediscovery of the ancient faith has come the reemergence of “Holy Russia’s” dark side: a narrow conservatism, national and ethnic chauvinism, an exaggerated “symphony” with the State, which offers temporal prestige and certain practical privileges but also creates dependence. The Russian Orthodox Church began to act as though it possessed prerogatives hitherto reserved to Constantinople. (For example, it unilaterally granted autocephaly to the Orthodox Church of America without consulting the other patriarchates.) Moscow originally requested that the site of the Pan-Orthodox Council be transferred from Istanbul to Crete, and so it was. Then, just a few days before the council was to begin, Moscow demanded that it be postponed in order to allow further study of the preparatory documents. Patriarch Bartholomew of Constantinople refused this last request. He affirmed that the council would take place as scheduled and that the decisions it made would be binding on all the Orthodox churches, whether they were present at the council or not.

As for the council’s agenda and modus operandi, the hardliners seemed to get their way in the preparatory sessions: only the bishops would participate in the working sessions of the council; theologians, lay people, and outside “observers” would be allowed to assist only at the opening and closing sessions; the Orthodox churches of the “Diaspora” would be represented only through their “mother churches,” which meant the Orthodox Church in America as well as many Orthodox Churches in Western Europe would be excluded.

ALL THIS IS A LONG WAY from the heady optimism following Vatican II, at which observers from the Russian Orthodox Church assisted in the debates and helped define positions, while Pope Paul VI and Patriarch Athenagoras of Constantinople exchanged the kiss of peace and lifted the reciprocal anathemas. It was even proposed that they concelebrate a liturgy, and a secret Catholic-Orthodox commission formed to study the possibility found no theological impediments. The hard part was avoiding the suggestion that one side had yielded to the other. It would be better, some thought, if Paul VI first went to Istanbul or Crete to concelebrate in the Byzantine rite. This would be followed by a concelebration in the Latin rite in Rome. Alas, when the work of this commission was leaked, it provoked violent reactions in Greece and on Mount Athos. Because neither Paul VI nor Athenagoras wanted to provoke another schism, they agreed that a consensus within Orthodoxy was necessary before they could move forward. This was part of the impetus for the Pan-Orthodox Council, which was supposed to do for Orthodoxy something like what Vatican II did for Catholicism. But this was back in the 1960s, when there seemed to be an irresistible trend toward Christian unity. That trend has been resisted all too well.

Nevertheless, there is still reason to hopeful. The various difficulties that have beset the Pan-Orthodox Council should be viewed in the light of Orthodox ecclesiology and its distinctive conception of authority and conciliarity. For Orthodoxy, all authority belongs to Jesus Christ and finds its expression in the church as a whole. It is not vested in a person or an institution. The church is essentially a mystery, reflecting the mysteries of the Trinity and the Incarnation, with all their apparent contradiction and ultimate unity. This explains the Orthodox willingness to tolerate certain apparent contradictions within the church. Whereas in Western theology reason seeks to understand the faith, Eastern theology prefers to think of faith as illuminating reason. This distinction is subtle but far-reaching. There is also a distinction between Rome’s approach to authority and that of the Eastern Churches, which hold that all controversies should be resolved by conciliar consensus rather than the imposition of a majority over a minority. Here, too, there is a sort of blind confidence that the Holy Spirit will somehow work things out…eventually.

The Orthodox model of conciliarity also emphasizes the importance of “reception.” For the decisions of a council to be truly binding, they must be accepted by the whole church—a process that can take centuries. There is, the Orthodox believe, a certain instinct within the people of God that will recognize the truth after the faithful have explored the practical implications of conciliar decrees. A council, then, is just the beginning of a long process of clarification, rather than the end of one.

From this perspective, the Pan-Orthodox Council looks less like a failure and more like the next painful step in a very long journey. Intentionally and unintentionally, it has exposed the serious problems now facing the Orthodox Church. The solutions will require dialogue, patience, humility, time, and, above all, charity. This seems to be how Bartholomew views the council, which is perhaps why he was willing to carry through with it even after the Russian Church pulled out. It could be that he regards the council in Crete as only the first in a series of councils seeking consensus. In any case, he must have expected there to be a few unexpected problems, as there always are. If there were no problems, there would be no need for councils.

About the Author: Jerry Ryan joined the Little Brothers of Jesus in 1959. He lived and worked with them for more than two decades in Europe and South America. He and his family now live in Massachusetts.


Metropolitan Athanasius of Limassol has officially confirmed that during the time of the meeting on Crete he did not sign the document adopted by it: “Relations of the Orthodox Church with the Rest of the Christian World.” It was precisely this document that caused the most acute controversy both before and during the Council.

“As there arose a misunderstanding in informing believing Christians that I didn’t sign the document ‘Relations of the Orthodox Church with the Rest of the Christian World’ of the Holy and Great Council,” writes Vladyka Athanasius, “I wish to notify all those interested, that my conscience would not allow me to sign. I didn’t sign because I don’t agree with the text of the document in its finalized form.”

Metropolitan Athanasius also published the text of his address to the Holy and Great Council concerning the document, which is available on the Greek portal Romfea.

Translated by Jesse Dominick

Pravoslavie.ru


02 / 07 / 2016

STATEMENT OF THE SECRETARIAT OF THE HOLY SYNOD OF ANTIOCH, BALAMAND, 27 JUNE 2016
The Council of Crete is a Pre-Synodical Conference





Source: Antiochian Patriarchate (Facebook)

July 1, 2016


    
At the end of the seventh extraordinary session which begun on May 25th 2016, the Holy Synod of Antioch convened on June 27, 2016 in Balamand. The Synod was presided by His Beatitude Patriarch John X, with the participation of the Bishops of the Holy See of Antioch,

The fathers congratulated their children on the occasion of the feast of Saints Peter and Paul, the holy, glorious and all-praised leaders of the Apostles, and the founders of the Holy See of Antioch. This See is where the disciples were called Christians first, and where its children continue to witness for the Risen Christ, especially in our beloved Antioch, and in Syria the martyr, in Lebanon the sufferer, in Iraq the injured, and in all the Gulf countries and the Archdioceses abroad, in the Americas, Australia and Europe. The fathers recalled their brother Metropolitan Paul (Yazigi), the Archbishop of Aleppo who has been kidnapped for more than three years, amidst willful blindness by all. His Eminence Metropolitan Paul, along with his brother Metropolitan Youhanna (Ibrahim), and all those kidnapped constantly remain present in the prayers and supplications of the faithful and in the daily Church testimony. The fathers lift up their prayers for the repose of the souls of all those martyred because of being called Christian, and ask their prayers before the Divine Throne, that God may strengthen His Church and give His children the power and wisdom to faithfully witness, here and now, Christ Risen from the dead.

The fathers discussed the issue of the Great Orthodox Council, which the Orthodox Church has prepared to convene for more than fifty years. The Antiochian Church had asked to delay the convocation of this Council, in order to strengthen the Pan-Orthodox unity, secure Orthodox unanimity on the debatable issues of its agenda, and that the ecclesiological conditions open up for the participation of all the Orthodox Autocephalous Churches.
Whereas the Antiochian request to delay the Council, along with the requests of the Russian, Bulgarian, and Georgian Churches, were not accepted, and whereas it was originally intended for the Council to be a pan Orthodox Council, but was convened in the absence of four Autocephalous Churches representing more than half of the Orthodox faithful in the world,

Whereas the call to this meeting has ignored the necessity of establishing Orthodox conciliarity on the basis of total Eucharistic communion among the Churches, which is the basis for the formation of this conciliarity, especially by ignoring to seek a solution to the Jerusalemite aggression on the canonical jurisdiction of the See of Antioch before the convocation of the Council, through a decision made by the Ecumenical Patriarchate to delay the negotiation till after the Council,

Whereas the statements and declarations issued by the participants unjustly blamed the absent Churches, and did not blame the side that was leading the preparatory stage,

And after looking into the statements of the ambiance, statements, and positions made in the meeting at the island of Crete, and all the fallacies that circulated recently, the fathers made the following observations:

First: The fathers affirm that the common Orthodox work is based on the participation and unanimity of all the Orthodox Autocephalous Churches. They like to remind that this principle is not a new Antiochian position, but is a fixed Orthodox principle established by the Ecumenical Patriarch Athenagoras of Thrice Blessed memory upon launching the preparatory work for the Council. He was followed by his successor Patriarch Dimitrios of Thrice Blessed memory in whose era the regulations for the preparatory pre-conciliar meetings were formulated. The articles of these regulations clearly show that the call for any conciliar work, even if it was on the level of a preparatory meeting, is done by the Ecumenical Patriarch, after the approval of all the Churches’ Primates, and that all decisions are taken unanimously, by all Autocephalous Churches before they are submitted to the Great Council.

Second: The fathers recalled that His Holiness the Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew had emphasized as well this principle during the pre-conciliar preparatory meetings. Particularly, he decided to suspend the works of the preparatory committee in 1999, because of the withdrawal of one church from the above-mentioned meeting. This issue resulted in putting off the preparatory works for the Great Council for a period of ten years. The fathers wondered about how could it be that one church’s absence led to the suspension of the preparatory work of the Council, while some consider that it is permissible for the “Great Council” to convene and meet in the absence of four autocephalous Orthodox Churches!

Third: The fathers noted that the principle of unanimity was reaffirmed upon the re-launching of the preparatory works of the Council in 2009. During the fourth preparatory conference held in 2009, the Antiochian delegation advisor Mr. Albert Laham of blessed memory emphasized the necessity of this principle in the process of decision taking, reminding that if there is no unanimity on one subject, this subject is deferred to the preparatory committee for further study, as the Rules of Procedure of Pan-Orthodox Pre-Council Conferences state. At that time, this proposal was welcomed by all participating Churches, including the conference chairman. This proposal had led to taking a decision about the issue of the Diaspora and the Episcopal Assemblies.

Fourth: The fathers reiterate that the Antiochian position calling for building up accord through assuring the unanimity of all Autocephalous Orthodox Churches on the subjects of the agenda had as a purpose to strengthen Orthodox unity in the preparatory phase, according to the Orthodox tradition. The Church of Antioch did not expect that this stable principle, which She just reminded of, would become a controversial issue, and this stable principle be defied by those who originally established it and defended it as a guarantee to Orthodox unity. This unity cannot be achieved if any of the Churches is excluded from the decision making process, or if Her proposals are ignored. Here, we would like to mention the fact that the Synaxis of the Churches’ Primates held in January 2014 has affirmed this principle when it decided to have all decisions worked during the Council and the preparatory period to be taken by consensus. The fathers ask how can this consensus be achieved with the refusal of the Antiochian Church to the decisions of the aforementioned synaxis (2014) and the Chambésy Synaxis (2016)? How could this consensus be achieved in Crete in the absence of four Orthodox Churches?

Fifth: The fathers reaffirm that the Antiochian position requesting the postponement of the Great Council's convocation in case of the absence of unanimity on its subjects was not a new position. The Antiochian Church has clearly expressed about her position throughout all preparatory phases of the Council during the last two years. This position was in accordance with the role of Antioch had, always refusing to ignore any Autocephalous Church in the common Orthodox work. Therefore, all that was published in the media about the implicit acceptance of the Antiochian Church to participate in the Council was incorrect, and all the analysis about the political dimensions of the absence of Antioch from the Crete meeting remains as a totally false political analysis. The acceptance of Antioch by economia to participate in the preparatory works does not mean concession on Her part about the aforementioned positions. Rather, Her participation was an effort to remove all obstacles which was, and still is, preventing the convocation of the Council.

Sixth: The fathers are surprised by the positions of some Churches which have recently called to bypass the principle of unanimity, or interpreting this principle in a different manner than what state the Rules of Procedure of Pan-Orthodox Pre-Council Conferences, adopted in 1986, signed by all representatives, and used accordingly even during the fifth preparatory conference held in October 2015. They are also surprised by all the positions that were recently declaring that the convocation of the Council on the specified date is more important than the conciliarity of the Church and Her unity. In this regard, the Church of Antioch would like to thank all the Churches that endorsed her rightful position, especially the Churches of Russia, Georgia, Bulgaria, and Serbia.

Seventh: The fathers would like to remind their brethren meeting in Crete of Article 17 of the Rules of Procedure of Pan-Orthodox Pre-Council Conferences adopted in 1986 which considers that, “In case one specific subject, discussed during the conference, is not accepted unanimously, the decision about it is abandoned and it is deferred to the Secretariat of the pre-conciliar preparatory meeting for further study and preparation according to the process known on the Pan-Orthodox level.” Also, the content of the fourth article of the same Rules of Procedure states that: “It is not allowed to remove or add any subject on this list of subjects which were prepared and agreed upon on the Pan-Orthodox level, at least till after its study ends. After that the Great and Holy Council convenes.” The fathers wonder how could the call to convene the Great Council be issued before completing the preparatory work on the subjects of the Agenda: two Churches have reservations about the document “Marriage and its Impediments”, and the Antiochian Church’s refusal to remove three main subjects from the Agenda (Church Calendar, Diptychs, and Autocephaly and its Proclamation).

Eighth: The fathers emphasize that facing the known reality lived by the Orthodox world as a result of the meeting in Crete, the unanimity of the Orthodox Churches remains the golden foundation to assure the unity of the Orthodox world. The fathers consider that this foundation is, and will remain, the solid basis upon which the repercussions of the meeting in Crete could be overcome.

Ninth: As for some of the voices that have considered the meeting in Crete an Ecumenical Council held according to the principals of an Ecumenical Council’s convocation, the fathers would like to remind those brethren that from the beginning of the twentieth century, the Orthodox Churches had decided to substitute the call to an Ecumenical Council with the call to a Pan-Orthodox Council. The latter’s agenda and work regulations were established by the meeting held in Rhodes in 1961. The preparatory work has continued for almost five and a half decades. The Churches agreed, because of the extraordinary character of this Pan-Orthodox Council, that not all bishops in the Orthodox world be present in it, as the Orthodox tradition requires, and that all its decisions be taken by the consensus of all the Autocephalous Churches on the basis of one vote for each Autocephalous Church. This process refutes any claim to consider the meeting in Crete an Ecumenical Council upon which the regulations of the Ecumenical Council apply. It also obliges its participants to respect the appropriate Rules of Procedure, in case they sought to consider it a Pan-Orthodox Council. This issue was not realized for the abovementioned reasons.

Thus, the fathers of the Holy Synod of Antioch noted that the meeting in Crete does not even have the required conditions to convene the pre-conciliar conference for the Great Council, this according to the Rules of Procedure of Pan-Orthodox Pre-Council Conferences, adopted in 1986, and which is still valid to date. These Rules of Procedure state that the convocation of this conference requires the approval of the Primates of all the local Orthodox Churches (Article Two), and that decision taking during it is done by the unanimity of all the Orthodox Autocephalous Churches (Article Sixteen), and these conditions were not available in the meeting in Crete.

The fathers of the Holy Synod unanimously decided the following:

1. Consider the meeting in Crete as a preliminary meeting towards the Pan-Orthodox Council, thus to consider its documents not final, but still open to discussion and amendment upon the convocation of the Great Panorthodox Council in the presence and participation of all the Autocephalous Orthodox Churches.

2. Refuse assigning a conciliar character to any Orthodox meeting that does not involve all the Orthodox Autocephalous Churches, and to underline that the principle of unanimity remains the essential foundation for the common Orthodox relationships. Thus, the Church of Antioch refuses that the meeting in Crete be called a “Great Orthodox Council” or a “Great Holy Council.”

3. Affirm that whatever was issued in the meeting in Crete, of decisions and other things, is non-binding, by any means, to the Patriarchate of Antioch and all the East.

4. Commission the “Committee for the Follow-Up on the Council’s Issues” to study the results and consequences of the meeting in Crete and offer a detailed report to the Holy Synod of Antioch in its next meeting.

5. Send a letter about the decision of the Holy Synod of Antioch to all the Autocephalous Orthodox Churches, as well as to the civil and religious authorities abroad.

6. Call upon the faithful to accompany the fathers of the Holy Synod of Antioch by praying for the preservation and the total manifestation of the unity of the Orthodox Christian witness in today’s world.

NB: The original Arabic text is the only binding text in case of any misinterpretation


Antiochian Patriarchate (Facebook)




Thanks to Pravoslavie/English



THE LATEST!!!
UNION OF ORTHODOX CLERGY AND MONKS OF GREECE: CRETE COUNCIL NOT A REAL COUNCIL
July 1, 2016
pravoslavie/english
   
Agionoros.ru has published the main provisions of an open letter signed by the well-known Greek pastors, monastics, and theologians.

The authoritative Greek public organization “Union of Orthodox Clergy and Monks,” has commented on the results of the Crete Council. Agionoros.ru has published the main provisions of an open letter signed by the well-known Greek pastors, monastics, and theologians.

In the letter is noted in particular that the Holy and Great Council which took place on Crete in reality was “neither a council, nor great, nor holy.” It “is not a continuation of the Orthodox Councils, but presents itself as a deviation from the longstanding conciliar practices and as an unprecedented canonical innovation.”

“The Council was not holy, because some of the documents approved by it contradict the decisions of the Holy Apostles and Holy Fathers made in the Holy Spirit, especially in relation to heretics. The Holy Spirit cannot contradict Himself: they condemned heresies and anathematized heretics at the truly holy Councils, but at the Crete “Council” they confessed them as churches… The Crete Council does not fight against heresies, but accords them the status of ecclesiality.”

According to the members of the Union of Orthodox Clergy and Monks, the Council was small and not great, as not all Orthodox bishops took part in it, which means “the fullness of the Church was not represented.” The Crete Council practically turned into a “small meeting of primates.”

The refusal of four Local Churches to participate diminishes the scale of the Council. Thus, the Council forfeited “its pan-Orthodox character,” and moreover “the authority of its decisions was diminished.”

The Union of Orthodox Clergy and Monks have criticized the primate of the Greek Church, Archbishop Ieronymos, who broke their obligations, not defending until the end the amendments proposed by the Holy Synod of the Greek Church (in particular, the proposal to replace “Christian Churches” with “Christian communities” in the text “Relations of the Orthodox Church with the Rest of the Christian World”).

“The Union of Orthodox Clergy and Monks” applauds the bishops who refused to place their signature on some of the Council documents: “They are the disciples of the confessors and Holy Fathers and are the hope for revising the decisions of the Crete Council in the future.”

Amongst those who signed the open letter are Elder Evstratios of the Great Lavra on Mt. Athos, the igumens of several Greek monasteries, and the well-known theologians Fr. George Metallinos, Fr. Theodore Zisis, and Dr. Demetrios Tselengides.

Translated by Jesse Dominick

Pravoslavie.ru


03 / 07 / 2016

Saturday, 2 July 2016

MODERN LITURGICAL DENIAL AND UNBIBLICAL ANTHROPOLOGY by T.J. Humphrey



  TJ Humphrey TJ HUMPHREY
I have been reading a lot about St. Benedict these days.  I’ve been curious about him for a while now, but I am now finding the need to immerse myself in his ways and his teachings.  For one, my family and I are coming into the Anglican fold and, in the process of seeking ordination, I am going to begin studying this fall at Nashotah House Seminary.  One of the incentives for reading St. Benedict is that my Anglican friends have the tendency to define their tradition as “essentially Benedictinism.”  On top of this I am learning that life on Nashotah’s campus is quite heavily ascetical in accordance with St. Benedict’s Rule.  So, as I mentioned, I am seeking to immerse myself in the life and thought of St Benedict in order to fully embrace that which I am stepping into.

In studying Benedict’s Rule, I am finding that he has a very strong emphasis on the notion of balance within the ascetical life.  The monks are to spend part of the day in prayer, part of the day in study, and part of the day in manual labor.  The logic behind this seems simple enough.  The human person isn’t just a mind, or a heart, or a body.  The human person is a multi-faceted being.  We learn from the Greatest Commandment that we are to love the Lord our God with “all of our heart, with all of our mind, with all of our soul and with all of our strength.”  There has been a lot of debate about how all of these components break down exactly and over what it is that actually constitutes the heart, the mind, the strength and the soul.  This doesn’t concern me here, though.  What matters to me here is the notion that the human person is holistic in nature and we are to love God with every facet of our multi-faceted being.  In other words, we are to love God with the totality of our being, giving Him all that we are.

St. Benedict seems to get this.  It is all over his Rule.  We are to direct all of the parts and pieces of who we are to God in loving affection and humble service.  Thus, we find different aspects of the human person being ministered to within the paradigm that he sets forth.  The human body, her physicality, is ministered to and redirected through manual labor.  The mind, her intellect, is ministered to and redirected through hours of diligent study.  The soul, however you wish to define it, is ministered to and redirected through praying the offices and private prayer.  In effect, St. Benedict’s way seeks to engage and transform the fullness of the human person for those who follow the path he has laid out.   

Then, a thought dawned on me whenever I got part of the way through the Rule: “Ancient and Medieval Christians got this…why don’t we?”  They understood that the human person is not just a mind or a heart or a soul and they sought to live accordingly.  Yet, modern Christian discipleship doesn’t seem to take this into account whatsoever.  For example, people join Bible study groups so that they can be “discipled,” not understanding that the form of discipleship they are pursuing is extremely fragmented.  The pursuit of intellectual sanctification is not the equivalent of forming the whole person because one is more than just a mind.  Of course, forming the mind is a great and necessary thing but not to the detriment of the rest of one’s person.  

Also, in terms of contemporary worship trends and innovations…God help us.  We seriously need to ask ourselves whether or not we are allowing the whole human person to be engaged through what we are doing on Sunday mornings.  This is where the endeavor to be non-liturgical or even anti-liturgical has shot modern Christian culture right in the foot.  Many church goers and church leaders have revolted against the traditional liturgies simply because they view them as being too repetitive, boring or archaic.  As a result, the richness of ancient liturgical life is traded out for bland fragmented substitutes.

The ancient liturgies (Eastern and Western Rite), however, truly engage the whole person.  In Anglican worship, for example, my body is engaged as I smell the incense, as I remain standing after the confession and as I kneel before the altar.  My heart is engaged by the beauty of the liturgy, the intentional aesthetic of the worship space and by the music and rhythmic flow of each litany.  My mind is challenged by the homily, the repetition in the litanies and by the Biblical content of what I am praying.

I once attended an Eastern Orthodox monastery out in the New Mexican desert.  They had worship services twice a day.  After the end of an evening service, which was around two and a half hours long, I quickly realized just how little I was accustomed to actually worshiping the Lord with the whole of my being.  The services there were long (morning services were three and a half hours long) and you stand for the whole duration.  On top of that, the first service of the day began at 4am.  This dynamic alone made it a physically demanding experience.  The services were also repetitive in such a richly beautiful way that I can still hear the monks voices singing “Lord, have mercy” in my mind to this day.  The repetition, however, challenged me.  Where I am somewhat accustomed to constant innovation in worship and the feeling that I need to be entertained by what is happening, I found that it took real effort to focus my mind upon the prayers and to give my heart to the words I was repetitiously petitioning before the Lord.  

At the end of my time there I felt a lot like one does after they haven’t worked out in far too long.  It is that feeling where muscles hurt in your body that you didn’t even know that you had.  You certainly feel it the next day (or week) but you also know that the activity pushed you in ways that you haven’t been pushed in a long time or ever before.  While I was exhausted by the end of my time at the monastery, it was also one of the most truly formative experiences of my entire life.

Monks get the notion of the total human person.  The Church Fathers got this.  I don’t believe that wider Christian culture gets this today, however.  Rather than seeking to engage the total humanness of our parishioners, the liturgies that we contrive only minister to people fragmentally.  Thus, an unbiblical notion of the human person is promoted (certainly inadvertently in many cases).  

For example, it is claimed by many people that the Reformed churches have a tendency to promote a notion of the human person as nothing much more than an intellectual creature.  Oftentimes, little concern is given for the aesthetics of the worship space because little is done to engage the heart or grip the imagination through the actual decor of the space.  For many Reformed people I know, worship doesn’t have to be beautiful or necessarily pleasing.  It just has to get the job done.  It is not seen as anything more than an appetizer to the main entree, which is the sermon.  Furthermore, the liturgy often has to be narrated and expounded upon in these circles while it is being participated in.  Thus, the priority is not given to the flow of prayer but to the intellectual understanding of what people are doing while they are doing it.

Other worship movements, particularly in churches that are akin to the evangelical mega-church/seeker sensitive movements, seem to solely focus on the heart and emotions.  In terms of the mind, it seems rare to find any doctrinal content that is being promoted which is worth truly pondering.  It’s all about Christian feel-good-ism.  These churches also engage the body but in the most negative and counter-productive ways possible.  Rather than challenging our physicality, the motto is, “come in, grab a Latte, sit down, make yourself at home, and just relax.”  There is no concept of standing before the throne of God, or participating in the heavenly worship, or engaging in the eschatological mystery of the Eucharist.  There is no physical posture which accompanies the confession of sin (if there is a time of confession at all).

Others may be a bit less generous than me here, but I am not at all saying that God cannot and does not work through worship environments such as these.  I have been running in Reformed circles for nearly a decade now.  I know God is at work because I have seen His power displayed in these circles.  I am saying, however, that it is quite difficult for those who are participating in these types of worship environments to respond to God with the entirety of their being simply because they are not being challenged to do so on Sunday mornings.  In fact, they are not given the invitation to actually do so in practice on Sunday mornings.      

The truth of the matter is that, while many churches may profess their belief in the Greatest Commandment that our Lord Jesus gives, they tend not to live out the reality of this belief in practice in corporate worship.  Too many people are participants (or spectators) in churches which utterly fail to minister to the whole human person liturgically.  Instead, these churches prop up unbiblical notions of what it means to be an image-bearer of God in practice whenever they solely minister to people as thinking things or feeling things…etc.

In the Incarnation, Christ took on not just our intellect, or just our emotions, or just our physicality.  He took on the fullness of our humanness.  He became unequivocally anthropos.  Yet, the shape of many of the services within Christendom (especially in Protestantism) would lead the curious bystander to believe otherwise.  The outsider looking in would not gather that God is concerned with the fullness of the human experience, but that He is only concerned with us simply thinking the right things, or just feeling the right things, or just doing the right things.  The God he would perceive as being present within the assembly would not be the God who took on flesh and fully became one of us.  Rather, the perception would be that this God is just the God of the mind, or just the God of the heart, or just the God of the soul…etc.  The truth of the matter is that while what we profess during these services may be fully orthodox, the shape of the worship experience itself may be fully heretical.  St. Gregory Nazianzen once wrote, “For that which He has not assumed He has not healed.1”  That which is not taken on by Christ is not healed by Him.  While we may profess the Incarnation of Christ and believe in this truth intellectually, the structures behind our modern worship innovations testify to the contrary.  They say, “there are parts of the human reality which have not been assumed by Christ and are not being healed by Him.”     

There are many today who are being drawn back to the ancient liturgical traditions.  I have heard a variety of reasons for this: the beauty, the history, the Biblical depth, the Trinitarian focus, the flow, or simply because liturgical worship is in the Bible (yes, even in the New Testament).  All of these aspects are certainly true for me as well.  What drew me in initially, however, was the very thing that I have been writing about.  I sensed that God was both challenging and strengthening the different aspects of my being in ways that I had not experienced elsewhere.  There were weaker aspects of me that were all of the sudden being engaged and exercised.


 In the not too distant future, I shall be writing about the ecumenical vision of Pope Francis, a position that has spiritual implications for Catholics as well as those outside the Catholic communion.  On the one hand, it is as traditionally Catholic as anyone would wish and, on the other hand, centres its faith on Christ, the Good Shepherd, who is willing to leave the ninety nine sheep and go after the one that is lost.  This means that Christ is willing to cross any barrier to reach anyone, wherever he may be.  It is clear, as Pope Benedict said, that God's grace works in ecclesial communities, to such an extent that the martyrs of Burundi were equally martyrs even though they were both Catholics and Anglicans.  This leads us to accept the Orthodox difference between acribia and economia, between the order established by Christ that forms the basis of Canon Law, and economia that recognises Christ's activity beyond the frontiers established by Christ himself.   This allows us to continue to have a pastoral care for second, adulterous marriages which happen to be functioning as as real marriages where the Christian life is growing, rather than diminishing, and to work alongside colleagues in the ministry whose ordination is outside the apostolic succession.  It allows us to accept and preach the will of God as has been passed down to us, while acknowledging and collaborating with Christ's activity within people who live outside the rules.  It allows us to collaborate closely with our Anglican brothers in the ministry, but ordain them anew if they join the Church and want to become Catholic priests.  In this spirit, I present to you this post from Anglicanism.

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