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Pemptousia
ΕΛΛΗΝΙΚΑ: Ορθοδοξία: Η ελπίδα των λαών της Ευρώπης
Our awareness of ourselves as Orthodox Christians does not permit us to overlook the fact that Orthodoxy and Western Christianity cannot share a single ‘Christian identity’. On the contrary, it compels us to stress the fact that Orthodoxy is Europe’s long-forgotten original Christian faith, which at some point should once again serve as the basis of its Christian identity.
By Archimandrite George († 2014, June 8), Abbot of the Holy Monastery of St. Gregorios, Mount Athos
The United Europe of the twenty-first century is striving to find its identity. The question of ‘European identity’ did not use to be a serious concern since it was originally shaped only by economic and political factors. However, from the moment that cultural and particularly religious factors had to be taken into account in the attempt to define it, there have been serious debates, sharp disagreements and bitter disputes over the question of whether the ‘European Constitution’ should make any reference to Europe’s Christian identity.
But what does the ‘Christian identity
of Europe’ mean to our Orthodox peoples? How Christian is the
‘Christian identity of Europe’?
All those well-meaning individuals
who are striving to strengthen the concept of Europe’s Christian
identity usually speak of it as if it were an historical fact or a code
of Christian principles and values that the Christian peoples of Europe
can jointly adhere to through the aid of ecumenical contacts and
inter-Christian dialogues. The Christians of Europe want to see the
concept enshrined in Europe’s institutional framework because they are
afraid that their continent’s religious identity might be weakened and
its Christian character adulterated as a result of population changes
(migration etc.), or that Christian ‘inter-church’ organisations might
be excluded from the European centres of decision-making. Following the
same logic, even the proposals of official Orthodox representatives
focus on strengthening an institutional Christian presence in Europe.
The Orthodox Church
Living as I do in the environment of
Mount Athos and the spiritual climate that it creates, I can see that
our Orthodox heritage should not be measured by the standards of this
world. In recent years I have witnessed the piety and deep faith of the
pilgrims visiting Athos, many of whom come at the cost of great effort
and expense from the Balkan countries and from Russia.
In the minds of all these pious
Orthodox Christians and of all those they represent back in their home
countries, Orthodoxy does not usually mean the same thing as it does to
those who view it or regard it with ideological or sociological criteria
– those people who usually see anti-Western ‘Orthodox crescents’ here
in the Orthodox East similar to those in the Moslem world, or regard
Orthodoxy as a nationalistic force in the peoples that embrace it. No
matter how much we Orthodox create such impressions as a result of our
personal failings or collective errors, we deeply believe that Orthodoxy
is something much more substantial, sublime and imperishable: it is the
priceless gift of the Holy Triune God to the world, the ‘faith
entrusted once for all to the saints’ (Jude 3), which our Orthodox
Church preserves in its fullness, free of heretical distortions, and
which we have conserved through difficult times in order not to lose our
hope of eternal life.
We Orthodox peoples have been deemed
worthy by God in His mercy to bear the seal of Orthodox Holy Baptism, to
partake in the Orthodox Holy Eucharist, to follow humbly the doctrinal
teachings of the seven Ecumenical Councils as the only way to salvation,
and to keep ‘the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace’ (Ephesians
4: 3). We do indeed bear the legacy of the Orthodox Faith ‘in jars of
clay’ (II Corinthians 4: 7), yet by the grace of God this represents the
reason for ‘the hope that is in us’ (I Peter 3: 5).
Our Orthodox Church is not merely an
ark of our national historical heritage. It is first and foremost the
One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church.
So as not to lose the hope of their
eternal salvation in Christ the Orthodox peoples of the Balkans
preserved their Orthodox faith through the sacrifices of thousands of
neo-martyrs, who withstood both conversion to Islam and conversion to
the Uniate Church.1 For this reason, the recent resurgence of
the Uniates that has occurred since the collapse of the atheist
regimes, together with the active proselytising of neo-Protestant
denominations among Orthodox populations, represent serious challenges
to the Orthodox. And as such they should be faced because once again
they jeopardise the salvation of simple souls ‘for whom Christ died’
(cf. Romans 14: 15).
In the traditionally Roman Catholic
and Protestant societies of the West, moreover, where Orthodox parishes
exist and operate, the Orthodox presence should be a humble witness to
authentic Christianity, which these societies have been deprived of for
centuries due to the papal and Protestant deviations from the Apostolic
Faith. Each time that the nostalgic search for the pure, unadulterated
form of the Christian faith culminates in the return of heterodox
Christians to the embrace of the One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic
Church, the Orthodox Church, the missionary character of the Church is
expressed. In returning to the Orthodox Church, Christians of other
denominations do not abandon one church in order to embrace another, as
many mistakenly believe. In reality they leave an anthropocentric form
of church and rediscover the one and only Church of Christ, they become
members of the Body of Christ and are put back on the road to
deification.
Theology and ‘theology’…
Unfortunately, ecumenism, that
syncretistic philosophy expressed by institutional organs of the
so-called Ecumenical Movement and representatives of papocentric
ecumenism, is heading in the opposite direction. As they ignore Orthodox
ecclesiology and follow the Protestant ‘Branch Theory’ or the recent
Rome-centred theory of ‘sister churches’, they believe that the Truth of
the Apostolic Faith, or part of it, is preserved in all Christian
churches and denominations. This is why they direct their efforts
towards achieving a visible unity amongst Christians, regardless of the
deeper unity of the Faith.
In this sense ecumenist ‘theology’
equates Orthodox Baptism (threefold immersion) with the Roman Catholic
rite of aspersion, regards the Filioque heresy as doctrinally equal to
the Orthodox teaching on the procession of the Holy Spirit only from the
Father, interprets the Pope of Rome’s primacy of authority as a primacy
of service, and views as a theologoumenon (theological opinion) the Orthodox teaching on the distinction between God’s essence and energies and God’s uncreated grace.
This is a superficial ecumenism,
about which the late departed Father Dumitru Staniloae aptly wrote:
‘Every now and then, out of the great desire for unity, a facile
enthusiasm emerges, which believes that reality can be relatively easily
transformed and reshaped by strength of feeling. A diplomatic and
conciliatory mentality also emerges, which believes that doctrinal
positions or other more general problems that keep the churches apart
can be reconciled through mutual concessions. These two ways of dealing
with – or ignoring – reality display a certain elasticity in, or
tendency to relativise, the value they attribute to some of the
churches’ articles of faith. This tendency to relativise perhaps
reflects the very low importance that certain Christian groups – either
in part or in whole – attach to these articles of faith. Out of
enthusiasm or their diplomatic mentality, they propose deals or
compromises on these articles of faith precisely because they have
nothing to lose with what they are proposing. These compromises,
however, represent a great danger to churches in which the relevant
articles are of utmost importance. To these churches, proposals
regarding deals and compromises of this kind amount to undisguised
attacks’.2
At the same time, the Protestant
denominations, which have gone so far as to deny certain fundamental
doctrines of the Faith (the historicity of the Resurrection, the
perpetual virginity of the Mother of God, etc.) and to accept practices
that are counter to the spirit of the Gospels (marriage between
homosexuals), are accorded equal status on the panels of the World
Council of Churches with the most-holy local Orthodox Churches. The
theory of the ‘demythologisation’, ‘theology’ or ‘death’ of God, the
ordination of women priests, and the celebration of homosexual marriages
by priests certainly do not form part of our Christian identity.
Protestantism is experiencing a profound crisis of faith. In his book Dancing Alone: The Quest for Orthodox Faith in the Age of False Religion (Regina
Orthodox Press, Salisburg, USA), Frank Schaeffer, the well-known
American Protestant who became Orthodox after a long and arduous
personal quest, provides a lot of interesting information showing how
far Protestantism has fallen away from the Truth of the One, Holy,
Catholic and Apostolic Church.
Inter-religious syncretism
A logical extension and inevitable
consequence of inter-Christian syncretism is inter-religious syncretism,
which recognises the possibility of salvation for anyone belonging to
one of the monotheistic religions. An Orthodox bishop has written that:
‘at bottom, both churches and temples (mosques) aim to enable man to
achieve the same spiritual self-fulfilment’.3 Inter-religious syncretism does not even hesitate to recognise paths to salvation in all of the world’s religions.4
A few years ago a professor at Athens
University wrote that he could light a candle before an icon of the
Virgin Mary just as easily as he could light one before a statue of a
Hindu goddess.
Orthodox bishops, clergy and
theologians have, unfortunately, been influenced by the syncretistic
mentality. Through their theological views, which worldly rulers and
intellectuals usually listen to and recognise as Orthodox, they help
this mentality, which is initially a matter of purely personal opinion,
to become an official ‘line’ with specific goals and objectives. From
this point of view, love, without reference to doctrinal truth, becomes
the main criterion of Christian unity, while insistence on traditional
Orthodox theological positions is denounced as bigotry and
fundamentalism.
As for how the ecumenist mentality
can construct a superficially Christian identity for Europe, the
‘commitments’ made by the representatives of the Christian churches who
signed the Ecumenical Charter on 22 April 2001 are characteristic.5
The true identity
Yet this ‘Christian’ European
identity is a far cry from the true Christian identity of the peoples of
Europe. It cannot be too highly stressed that we do Europe a grave
injustice when we ascribe an identity to her that is not truly but only
superficially Christian. A morbid, adulterated form of Christianity is
not the Christianity of the catacombs in Rome, of St. Irenaeus, Bishop
of Lyons, of the Orthodox monks of Scotland and Ireland, or of
Christendom as a whole in the first millennium. An adulterated form of
Christianity cannot protect Europe’s societies from an invasion of
non-Christian ideas and morals.
It is already a well-known fact that
many Europeans have grown tired of sterile rationalism and long for a
lost mysticism, and this is why they are embracing Islam, Buddhism or
Hinduism, turning to esoteric religions or seeking metaphysical
experiences in New Age movements. In Italy alone there are about 500
mosques in operation, while in France 5% of the population is Moslem.
The Orthodox Church holds the Truth.
It has Christ at its centre. Everything in it is theanthropic because
everything that is offered up to the Lord, the Theanthropos, is filled
with the uncreated Grace of the Holy Spirit. This is why it can provide
comfort and relief to those souls who earnestly seek release from the
suffocating grip of rationalism, scientism, materialism, idealism and
technocracy. This is why Orthodoxy should not be dragged into the
syncretistic melting-pot, and why the hope of the whole world should not
be lost!
As Orthodox pastors and Orthodox
believers we have a duty to preserve the sacred legacy of our Orthodox
faith. St. Paul exhorts both the elders at Ephesus and our own Church
leaders today to ‘keep watch over yourselves and all the flock of which
the Holy Spirit has made you overseers. Be shepherds of the church of
God, which he bought with his own blood’ (Acts 20: 28). And to the
faithful in Thessalonica and the Church as a whole he said: ‘…stand firm
and hold to the teachings we passed on to you’ (II Thessalonians 2:
15).
A healthy ecumenism
In the sphere of faith the ‘Old
Continent’ has gone astray. The New Age is now openly threatening to
de-Christianise European society. There is nothing strange about this.
Europe has turned its back on Christ, and at some point banished Him, as
Dostoevsky aptly observes in ‘The Grand Inquisitor’6, and the holy Bishop Nicholas of Ochrid and Zitsa also notes.7
The Orthodox Church must reveal its
gift and mission; it must proclaim to the peoples of Europe that, if
there is something that can save Europe at this critical phase of its
history, it is Orthodoxy. Let us ourselves not deprive our Orthodox
Church of the opportunity to give this message of salvation to the
peoples of Europe by placing the Orthodox Faith on the same par as
heresy in the confused perspective and vague vision of syncretistic
ecumenism. We can contribute to a healthy, entirely Orthodox form of
ecumenism by revealing the mystery of the Theanthropos and His Church to
Christians of other denominations and by proclaiming with the late
Elder Justin Popovitch, confessor of the Faith:
‘The way out from all the impasses –
of humanism, ecumenism and papism – is the historical figure of the
Theanthropos, Our Lord Jesus Christ, and His historic theanthropic
creation, the Church, of which He is the eternal head, while the Church
is His eternal Body. The Apostolic, Catholic and Orthodox Faith of the
Seven Ecumenical Councils, the Holy Church Fathers and Holy Tradition is
the remedy that can restore to new life the member of any heresy,
whatever its name. In the final analysis, all heresies are created by
man and “after the manner of man”; each of them puts man in the place of
the Theanthropos, or replaces the Theanthropos with man, and in so
doing denies and rejects the Church… The only way to salvation from this
predicament is the Apostolic and Theanthropic Faith, that is to say, a
complete return to the theanthropic way of the Holy Apostles and the
Holy Church Fathers. This means a return to their immaculate Orthodox
faith and to Christ the Theanthropos, to their blessed theanthropic life
in the Church through the power of the Holy Spirit, to their freedom in
Christ… Otherwise, without the way of the Holy Apostles and the Holy
Church Fathers, without following the course charted by them to serve
the one true God in all worlds, without worshipping the one true and
immortal God, Christ the Theanthropos and Saviour, man is bound to
flounder in the dead sea of civilised European idolatry and, instead of
the True and Living God, he is bound to worship the false gods of this
age, in which there is no salvation, no resurrection and no means of
deification for the sad creature called man.’8
REFERENCES
- Archimandrite George Kapsanis, Abbot of Gregoriou Monastery on Mount Athos, ‘I Ecclesiologiki Autosyneidesia ton Orthodoxon apo tis Aloseos mechri ton archon tou 20ou aionos’ (The Ecclesiological Self-Awareness of the Orthodox from the Fall up until the Early 20th Century), in the collective volume EIKOSIPENTAETIRIKON (A Tribute to Metropolitan Dionysios of Neapolis and Stavroupolis), Thessaloniki, 1999, p. 124. See also Atanasije Jevtic, Bishop of Banat (retired Bishop of Zahumlje and Herzegovina), ‘I Ounia enantion tis Servikis Orthodoxias’ (The Uniate Church against Serbian Orthodoxy) in the collective volume I OUNIA CHTHES KAI SIMERA (The Uniate Church Yesterday and Today), Armos Pubs., Athens 1992. On the activity of the Uniate Church in Transylvania see 30 Vioi Roumanon Agion (The Lives of 30 Romanian Saints), Orthodoxos Kypseli, Thessaloniki, 1992, p. 123.
- Dumitru Staniloae, Gia enan Orthodoxo Oikoumenismo (Towards an Orthodox Ecumenism), Athos Pubs., Piraeus, 1976, pp. 19-20.
- Orthodoxia kai Islam (Orthodoxy and Islam), Holy Monastery of Gregoriou, 1997, p. 16.
- Ibid., pp. 9-11.
- See the journal Apostolos Varnavas, Nicosia, Cyprus, no. 10, 2001, pp. 411-23.
- F. Dostoevsky, The Brothers Karamazov.
- Archimandrite Justin Popovitch, Orthodoxos Ekklisia kai Oikoumenismos (The Orthodox Church and Ecumenism), Orthodoxos Kypseli, Thessaloniki 1974, p. 238 and pp. 251-52.
- Loc. cit.
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