Orthodoxy: Hope, for the peoples of Europe
Archimandrite Georgios Kapsanis, Abbott of the Sacred Monastery of Saint Gregory of the Holy Mountain
The 21st
century’s European Union is in search of its identity. The “European
identity” was not considered to be an object for serious concern, given
that it was shaped solely by economic and political factors. But since
cultural and especially religious factors had to also be taken into
account during its search, serious discussions, intense disagreements
and acute altercations unfolded around whether the “European
Constitution” should or should not make any reference to Europe’s
Christian identity.
But
what does “Europe’s Christian identity” signify, for our Orthodox
peoples? Just how Christian exactly is Europe’s “Christian identity”?
Those
who struggle with the best of intentions to reinforce Europe’s
Christian identity usually speak of it as if it were a historical given
or a codex of Christian principles and values, on which the Christian
peoples can converge, with the help of ecumenical contacts and
inter-Christian dialogues. The Christians of Europe seek to secure it
institutionally, because they are afraid of a possible discoloration of
their continent, the altering of its distinctively Christian features
because of changes in their populations (immigration etc.) or of the
exclusion of Christian “inter-ecclesiastic” organizations from the
decision-making centres in Europe. By following the same logic, the
official Orthodox delegates’ proposals are likewise focused on the
reinforcement of an institutional Christian presence in Europe.
The
aim of this essay is to point out that the Orthodox self-awareness does
not allow us to sidestep the fact that Orthodoxy cannot comprise a
uniform “Christian identity” along with Western Christianity; on the
contrary, it obliges us to stress that Orthodoxy is Europe’s primary,
forsaken Faith, which must –eventually- comprise its Christian identity
once again.
* * *
Having
lived in the environment of the Holy Mountain and in the spiritual
ambiance created by it, we are aware that our Orthodox heritage should
not be measured with the measures of this world. In recent years we have
been witnessing the piety and the deep faith of the Holy Mountain’s
pilgrims, many of whom have gone to great lengths and at a great cost to
come here from the Balkan countries with the same religion and from
Russia.
In
the conscience of all these pious Orthodox, but also of those whom they
represent in their country, Orthodoxy does not have the meaning that is
ascribed to it by those who regard it or confront it with ideological
or sociological criteria; that is, by those who usually see anti-Western
“Orthodox” arcs parallel to Muslim ones in our East, or regard
Orthodoxy as a nationalist power of the nations that espouse it. As
much as we Orthodox may have given such impressions because of our
personal imperfections or collective slips, we still have the deeply
rooted conviction in our conscience that Orthodoxy is something far more
substantial, divine and indestructible: it is the priceless gift to the
world by the holy, Triune God – the “faith, once delivered to the
saints” (Jud.3) – which our Orthodox Church has preserved intact,
without any heretical counterfeiting, and has safeguarded with many
sacrifices during difficult times, lest we lose the hope of eternal
life.
We
Orthodox peoples have been blessed by our holy God to bear the seal of
the Orthodox holy Baptism, to partake of the holy Orthodox Eucharist, to
follow with humility the dogmatic teaching of the holy, seven
Ecumenical Councils as the sole path towards salvation, and to uphold
“the unity of spirit in the union of peace” (Ephes.4:3). We do,
admittedly, carry the trust of the Orthodox Faith “in earthen vessels”
(2 Cor.4:7), nevertheless, this – by the Grace of God – constitutes the
reason for “the hope that is in us” (1 Pet.3:15).
Our
Orthodox Church is not simply the ark of our national, historical
heritage. It first and foremost is the One, Holy, Catholic (universal)
and Apostolic Church. Not wanting to lose the hope of in-Christ
salvation, the Orthodox peoples of the Balkans had preserved their
Orthodox faith through all the difficult times, with the sacrifice of
thousands of neo-martyrs who not only resisted islamification, but also
to the forced acceptance of Unia (1). That is why the recent,
post-collapse of atheist regimes resurgence of Unia, as well as the
activity of neo-Protestant Confessions among Orthodox populations,
constitute serious challenges for the Orthodox - and should be treated
as such, because once again, they have been jeopardizing the salvation
of simple souls, “for whom Christ died” (Rom.14:15).
Besides,
in the Western societies – the traditionally roman catholic and
protestant ones – wherever active Orthodox parishes exist, the Orthodox
presence needs to be a modest testimony as to what authentic
Christianity is, given that those societies were deprived of it for
entire centuries on account of the papist and protestant deviations from
the Apostolic Faith. Each time that a nostalgic search for the
unadulterated Christian Faith culminates in the return of heterodox
Christians to the bosom of the One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church –
the Orthodox Church – the true missionary nature of the Church becomes
manifest. On returning to the Orthodox Church, the heterodox are not
merely abandoning one church in order to espouse another, as is wrongly
perceived. In reality they leave behind an anthropocentric, ecclesiastic
formation and they rediscover the one and only Church of Christ; they
become members of the Body of Christ and they re-orientate themselves
towards the course of deification.
Unfortunately,
syncretistic Ecumenism has been following the opposite direction, as
expressed by the institutional instruments of the so-called Ecumenical
Movement as well as by the vehicles of Papal-centered Ecumenism. By
disregarding Orthodox Ecclesiology and pursuing the Protestant “branch
theory” or the more recent, Rome-centered, “sister churches” theory,
they maintain that the Truth of the Apostolic Faith – or parts thereof –
is preserved in all of the Christian churches and confessions. That is
why they have been directing their endeavours towards the realization
of a visible unity of Christians, in disregard to the deeper unity in
the Faith.
In
this sense, ecumenistic “theology” has equated the Orthodox Baptism
(with triple immersion) to the Roman Catholic sprinkling; it regards the
“Filioque” heresy dogmatically equal to the Orthodox teaching on the
procession of the Holy Spirit from only the Father; it misinterprets the
Pope of Rome’s primacy of authority as a primacy of ministry; it labels
the Orthodox teaching that distinguishes between the essence and the
energy in God and the teaching on Uncreated Grace e.a. as topics that
are subject to theological examination.
This
is nothing more than a flippant ecumenism, about which the
ever-memorable Fr. Dimitri Stanisloae had written so accurately: “Out of
the great desire for unity, an unconstrained enthusiasm is created
every now and then, which believes that with its emotional fervour it
can liquidate reality and reshape it without any difficulty. Also
created is a diplomatic, conciliatory mentality which believes it can
reconcile dogmatic positions or more general situations that keep the
churches divided, by means of mutual submissions. These two methods, by
which reality is confronted (or ignored), reveal a certain pliancy or a
relativizing of the worth attributed to certain articles of the
churches’ faiths. This relativizing may quite possibly be reflecting
the very low importance that certain Christian groups –either in total
or in certain of their circles– ascribe to those articles of faith.
Out of enthusiasm or a diplomatic mentality, they propose exchanges and
compromises to those articles, precisely because they have nothing to
lose with what they are proposing. However, those compromises present a
huge danger for the Churches whose corresponding articles carry an
importance of the first degree. For those Churches, all such proposals
of exchange and compromise are comparable to undisguised attacks.” (2)
Parallel
to the above, the protestant Confessions - which have gone as far as
denying fundamental Dogmas of the Faith (the historical evidence of the
Resurrection, the ever-virginal state of the Holy Mother e.a.), and the
acceptance of anti-evangelical mores (homosexual marriage etc.) – are
being equated with the most holy Local Orthodox Churches on the panels
of the World Council of Churches. The theory of “demystification”, the
“theology” on “the death of God”, the ordination of women to hieratic
ranks, the church ceremony for homosexual marriages, undoubtedly do not
constitute elements of our Christian identity.
Protestantism
has arrived at a very deep crisis of faith. In his book (“Dancing Alone
- The Quest for Orthodox Faith in the Age of False Religion”, Regina
Orthodox Press, Salisburg), Frank Schaeffer, the eponymic American
Protestant who, after many years and tenacious personal research became
Orthodox, provides a great deal of interesting information which reveals
Protestantism’s falling away from the Truth of the One, Holy, Catholic
and Apostolic Church.
The
extension and inevitable consequence of inter-christian syncretism is
inter-faith syncretism, which recognizes the potential for salvation to
those who belong to any one of the monotheistic religions. An Orthodox
bishop wrote that “deep down, a church and a mosque… aim for the same
spiritual awarding of mankind” (3). Inter-faith syncretism does not
hesitate to even acknowledge salvific paths in all the religions of the
world. (4) A few years ago, an Athens University Professor wrote that
he can light a candle before the Icon of the Holy Mother, and just as
readily before a statue of one of the Hinduist goddesses….
Orthodox
bishops, clergy and theologians have unfortunately been influenced by
this syncretistic mentality. With their theological views, which
secularized leaders and intellectuals usually hear and acknowledge as
Orthodox views, they are contributing towards this mentality’s
overstepping of the narrow boundaries of personal viewpoints and
becoming a “guideline” with targets and aspirations. In a prospect such
as this, love – which has no reference to the dogmatic truth– is being
established as a criterion for the union between Christians, while
steadfast adherence to the traditional Orthodox theological positions
is condemned as religious intolerance and fundamentalism, With regard
to how the ecumenistic mentality is constructing the model of a
superficially christian identity of Europe, characteristic are the
“commitments” of the delegates of the christian churches, who had signed
the Ecumenical Charter on the 22nd of April in 2001. (5)
This
“christian” identity of Europe is however a far cry from the true
Christian identity of the European peoples. It must be noted with every
kind of emphasis, that Europe is being wronged, when we ascribe an
identity to it which is not truly Christian, but only externally so. A
morbid, adulterated Christianity is not the Christianity of the
catacombs of Rome, of Saint Ireneos of Lugdunum (modern Lyon, France),
the Orthodox monks of Scotland and Ireland and generally the
Christianity of the first millennium. An adulterated Christianity
cannot protect Europe from the onslaught of non-christian beliefs and
morals in its societies.
It
is already a known fact that many Europeans have become weary of dry
rationalism; they long for a forsaken mysticism, which is why they are
embracing the Muslim faith, Buddhism or Hinduism; why they surrender to
esoteric pursuits or seek metaphysical experiences in New Age
movements. It has been reported that in Italy alone, there are about
500 functioning Muslim mosques; while in France, 5 percent of the
populace are Muslims.
The
Orthodox Church possesses the Truth. She has Christ at Her core.
Everything in Her is God-human, because everything being offered to the
God-man Lord is blessed by the Uncreated Grace of the Holy Spirit. That
is the reason She is able to repose the well-meaning souls that seek
their release from the asphyxiating grip of rationalism, of scientism,
of materialism, of idealism, of technocracy. That is why Orthodoxy must
not be dragged into the melting-pot of syncretism; why the hope of the
entire world must not be lost.
As
Orthodox shepherds and as Orthodox faithful, we have a duty to
safeguard the sacred trust of our Orthodox Faith. The Apostle of
Nations, Paul, tells the presbyters of Ephesus and the shepherds of the
Church to this day: “Take care of yourselves and all the flock, in which
the Holy Spirit has placed you as overseers to shepherd the Church of
God, which He made His, through His own Blood”. (Acts 20:28) And the
same one, when addressing the faithful people of Thessaloniki and the
entire Church: “Therefore, brethren, stand fast and hold the traditions
which you were taught…” (2 Thess.2:15)
In
the sector of Faith the Old Continent has failed. The New Age is now
openly threatening the European societies with de-Christianization. This
is not strange. Europe turned its back on Christ and it had persecuted
Him in the past, as astutely observed by Dostoevsky in his “Grand
Inquisitor” (6) and by the Bishop of Zitsa, Saint Nicholas (7).
The
Orthodox Church has an obligation to reveal Her charisma and Her
mission, proclaim to the peoples of Europe that if there is something
that can save Europe at this critical juncture of its history, it is
Orthodoxy. Let us not deprive the Orthodox Church ourselves of the
opportunity to share this salvific message to the peoples of Europe, by
equating the Orthodox Faith with heresy, within syncretistic Ecumenism’s
hazy perspective and ambiguous vision.
We
can help to contribute towards a healthy, absolutely Orthodox
Ecumenism, revealing to the heterodox Christians the Mystery of the
God-Man and His Church, and proclaiming along with the blessed
confessor, Elder Justin Popovitch “The exit from all the impasses
–humanitarian, ecumenistic, papist– is the historical God-human, the
Lord Jesus Christ and His God-human edifice – the Church – whose eternal
Head He is, and Whose eternal Body She is.
The
holy Apostolic, Patristic, Traditional, Conciliar, Catholic (universal)
Orthodox Faith is the medicine that resurrects from all the heresies,
whatever their names are. After all, every heresy is by man and
“according to man”; each and every one of them places man in the
God-man’s place and substitutes the God-man through man. In this
manner, it denies and rejects the Church… The only salvation from this
is the apostolic, God-human faith – that is, the full return to the
God-human path of the holy Apostles and the holy Fathers. And this means
a return to their immaculate, Orthodox faith and to the God-man Christ,
and to the Grace-filled life of those in the Church through the Holy
Spirit, and to their in-Christ freedom.
Differently,
without the apostolic and Patristic path, without the apostolic and
Patristic follow-up behind the only true God in all the world, and the
worship of the only true and Ever-living God – the God-man and Saviour
Christ – it is certain that mankind will be engulfed by the dead sea of a
European, civilized idolatry, and instead of the Living and True God,
it will be worshipping the false idols of this era, in which there is no
salvation, no resurrection, and no deification for the sad being called
“man” (8).
FOOTNOTES:
(1) Archimandrite George Kapsanis, Abbott of the Sacred Monastery of Saint Gregory of the Holy Mountain : “THE ECCLESIOLOGICAL SELF-AWARENESS OF THE ORTHODOX, FROM THE CAPTURE UP TO THE BEGINNING OF THE 20th CENTURY” in the collective tome “EIKOSIPENTAETIRION” (“25YEAR COLLECTION” – a dedication to Metropolitan Dionysios of Neopolis and Stavroupolis), Thessaloniki, 1999, p.124.
See
also “UNIA AGAINST THE SERBIAN CHURCH” by Athanasius Yevtich, (retired
Bishop of of Zahumlje-Herzegovina) in the collective tome “UNIA
YESTERDAY AND TODAY”, Armos Publications, Athens 1992.
On
the activity of Unia in Transylvania, see «30 BIOS OF RUMANIAN SAINTS»,
Orthodox Kypseli Publications, Thessaloniki 1992, p. 123.
(2) Dimitru Staniloae, «FOR AN ORTHODOX ECUMENISM», Athos Publications, Piraeus, 1976, pp. 19-20.
(3) «ORTHODOXY AND ISLAM», A publication of the Sacred Monastery of Saint Gregory, 1997, p.16.
(2) Dimitru Staniloae, «FOR AN ORTHODOX ECUMENISM», Athos Publications, Piraeus, 1976, pp. 19-20.
(3) «ORTHODOXY AND ISLAM», A publication of the Sacred Monastery of Saint Gregory, 1997, p.16.
(4) As above, pp. 9-11.
(5) See «Apostle Barnabas» magazine, Nicosia, Cyprus, Issue No.10/2001, pp. 411-423.
(6) «BROTHERS KARAMAZOV», F. Dostoevsky, Govosti Publications, Athensι, pp. 99-121.
(7) “ORTHODOX CHURCH AND ECUMENISM” by Archimandrite Justin Popovitch, Orthodox Kypseli Publications, Thessaloniki, 1974, p. 238 and 251-252.
(8) As above, pp. 256-257.
Holy Mountain, 24th March 2006.
(5) See «Apostle Barnabas» magazine, Nicosia, Cyprus, Issue No.10/2001, pp. 411-423.
(6) «BROTHERS KARAMAZOV», F. Dostoevsky, Govosti Publications, Athensι, pp. 99-121.
(7) “ORTHODOX CHURCH AND ECUMENISM” by Archimandrite Justin Popovitch, Orthodox Kypseli Publications, Thessaloniki, 1974, p. 238 and 251-252.
(8) As above, pp. 256-257.
Holy Mountain, 24th March 2006.
Translated by impantokratoros.gr
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