GREAT COUNCIL Of the Orthodox Church
Archimandrite
Justin Popovic
Not long ago in Chambesy, near Geneva, the "First Pre-Conciliar Conference" took place (November 21-28, 1976). After reading and studying the acts and resolutions of this conference, published by the "Secretariat for the Preparation of the Holy and Great Council of the Orthodox Church" in Geneva, I feel in my conscience the urgent, evangelical necessity, as a member of the Holy and Catholic Orthodox Church, even though its humblest servant, to turn to Your Grace and, through you, to the Holy Council of Bishops of the Serbian Church, with this exposition that must express my grievous considerations for the future council. I beg Your Grace and the Most Reverend Bishops to hear me with evangelical zeal and to listen to this cry of an Orthodox conscience, which, thanks be to God, is neither alone nor isolated in the Orthodox world whenever there is mention of that council. 1. From the minutes
and resolutions of the "First Pre-Conciliar Conference," which,
for some unknown reason, was held in Geneva, where it is difficult to
find even a few hundred Orthodox faithful, it is clear that this conference
prepared and ordained a new catalogue of topics for the future "Great
Council" of the Orthodox Church. This was not one of those "Pan-Orthodox 2. The questions
of the preparation and celebration of a new ecumenical council of the
Orthodox Church is neither new nor recent in this century of the history
of the Church. The matter was already proposed during the lifetime of
that hapless Patriarch of Constantinople, Meletios Metaxakis - the celebrated
and presumptuous modernist, reformer, and author of schisms within After the Second World War came the turn of Patriarch Athenagoras of Constantinople with his Pan-Orthodox Conferences on Rhodes (again, exclusively in the territory of the Patriarchate of Constantinople). The first of them, in 1961, called for the preparation of a Pan-Orthodox Council on condition that a pro-synod be summoned, and it confirmed a catalogue of topics which had already been prepared by the Patriarchate of Constantinople: eight full chapters with nearly forty primary topics and twice again as many paragraphs and subparagraphs. After the Rhodes
Conferences II and III (1963 and 1964), in 1966 the Belgrade Conference
was held. At first this was called the Fourth Pan-Orthodox Conference
(Glasnik of the Serbian Orthodox Church, No. 10, 1966 and documents
in Greek published under this title), but later it was reduced by the
Patriarchate of Constantinople to the grade of an inter-Orthodox Commission,
so that the succeeding conference, held in Constantinopolitan "territory"
(the Orthodox Centre of the Ecumenical This First Pre-Conciliar
Conference was held only in November of 1976, again, of course, on Constantinopolitan
"territory" at the above-named centre in Chambesy, near Geneva.
As is clear from the acts and resolutions, only now just published,
and which I have carefully studied, this conference re-examined the
catalogue of Rhodes to such an extent that the delegations participating
in the work of the various committees unanimously chose only ten topics
for the council (only three of the original six were included in the
list!), while about thirty topics, not unanimously chosen, were set
aside for "particular study in the individual Churches" in
the form of "problematics of the Orthodox Church" (a concept
entirely alien to Orthodoxy). In the future these topics could become
the subject of "Orthodox examinations" and perhaps be included
in the catalogue. As already stated, this conference altered the process
and methodology of elaborating the topics and the preparatory work of
the council which, I repeat, according to the organizers from both Constantinople
and other places, should take place "as soon as possible."
From all this, it is clear to every Orthodox Christian that the First
Pre-Conciliar Conference has not come up with anything substantially
new, but continues rather to lead Orthodox souls as well as the consciences
of many into ever new labyrinths constituted by personal ambitions.
This is the reason why, it would seem, the ecumenical council has been
in preparation since 3. All the contemporary
"problematics" concerning the topics of the future council,
the uncertainty and mutability of their invention, their determination,
their artificial "cataloguing," as well as all the new changes
and "revisions", demonstrate to every true Orthodox conscience
one thing only: that at the present time there are no serious or pressing
problems that would justify Historical reality
is perfectly clear: the holy Councils of the Holy Fathers, summoned
by God, always, always had before them one, or at the most two or three
questions set before them by the extreme gravity of great heresies and
schisms that distorted the Orthodox Faith, tore asunder the Church and
seriously placed in danger the salvation of human souls, the salvation
of the This is the truly
Orthodox, apostolic and patristic theme, the immortal theme of the Church
of the God-Man, for all times, past, present and future. This alone
can be the subject of any future possible ecumenical council of the
Orthodox Church, and not some scholastic-protestant catalogue of topics
having no essential relation to the spiritual life and experience of
apostolic 4. From the acts
of the last Pre-Conciliar Conference in Geneva, as in similar situations
previously, it is clear that the ecclesiastical delegations of Constantinople
and Moscow differ little from one another with respect to the problems
and themes set forth as the subject of work for the future council.
They have the same topics, almost the same language, the same mentality, Moreover, is it
correct, is it Orthodox to have such representations of the Orthodox
Churches at various pan Orthodox gatherings on Rhodes or in Geneva?
The representatives of Constantinople who began this system of representation
of Orthodox Churches at the councils and those who accept this principle
which, according to their theory, is in accord with the "system
of autocephalous and autonomous" local Churches - they have forgotten
that such a principle in fact contradicts the conciliar tradition of
Orthodoxy. Unfortunately this principle of representation was accepted
quickly and by all the other Orthodox: sometimes silently, sometimes
with voted protests, but forgetting that the Orthodox Church, in its
nature and its dogmatically unchanging constitution is episcopal and
centred in the bishops. For the bishop and the faithful gathered around
him are the expression and manifestation of the Church as the Body of
Christ, especially in the Holy Liturgy: the Church is If this is so, then
how can there be represented according to the delegation principle,
that is by the same number of delegates, for example, the Czech and
Romanian Churches? Or to an even greater extent, the Patriarchates of
Russia and Constantinople? What groups of faithful do the first bishops
represent and what the second? Recently the Patriarchate of Constantinople
has produced a multitude of bishops and metropolitans, almost all of
them titular and fictitious. Is it possible that this is a preparatory
measure to guarantee at the future "Ecumenical Council" by
their multitude of titles the majority of votes for the neo-papal ambitions
of the Patriarchate of Constantinople? On the other hand, the Churches
apostolically zealous in missionary work, such as the American Metropolia,
the Russian Church Abroad, the Japanese Church and others are not allowed
a single Where in all this is the Catholic principle of Orthodoxy? What sort of ecumenical council of the Orthodox Church of Christ will this be? Already at the Geneva Conference, Ignatios, Metropolitan of Laodicea and representative of the Patriarchate of Antioch, sadly affirmed: "I sense uneasiness, for harm is being done the conciliar experience which is the foundation of the Orthodox Church." 5. Nevertheless, Constantinople and some others cannot wait to summon the "council." It is primarily in accordance with their wishes and insistence that the First Pre Conciliar Conference in Geneva decided that "the council should be summoned as soon as possible," that this council must be "of short duration," and that it should "take for consideration a small number of topics." And the ten chosen topics are cited. The first four topics are: the diaspora; the question of ecclesiastical autocephaly and the conditions for its proclamation; autonomy and its proclamation; the diptychs - that is, the order of precedence among the Orthodox Churches. Evangelical objectivity obliges one to note that the conduct of the presiding chairman at the Pre-Conciliar Conference Conference, Metropolitan Meliton, was despotic and unbefitting a council. This is clear from every page of the published acts of the conference. There it is clearly and plainly stated that, "This Holy and Great Council of the Orthodox Church which is being prepared must not be regarded as unique, excluding the further summoning of other Holy and Great Councils" ("Acts," pp. 18, 20, 50, 55, 60). In view of all this, an evangelically sensitive conscience cannot help but ask the burning question: what is the real end of a council summoned in such haste and in such a highhanded manner? Most Reverend Bishops,
I cannot free myself from the impression and conviction that all this
points to the secret desire of certain known persons of the Patriarchate
of Constantinople: that the first in honour of Orthodox Patriarchates
force its ideas and procedures on all the Autocephalous Orthodox Churches,
and in general upon the Orthodox world and the Orthodox I bow in reverence
before the age-old achievements of the Great Church of Constantinople,
and before her present cross which is neither small nor easy, which,
according to the nature of things, is the cross of the entire Church
- for, as the Apostle says, "When one member suffers, the whole
body suffers." Moreover, I acknowledge the canonical rank and first
place in honour of Constantinople among the local Orthodox Churches,
which are equal in honour and rights. But it would not be in keeping
with the Gospel if Constantinople, on account of the difficulties in
which she now finds herself, were allowed to bring The fate of the
Church neither is nor can be any longer in the hands of the Byzantine
emperor or any other sovereign. It is not the control of a patriarch
or any of the mighty of this world, not even in that of the "Pentarchy"
or of the "autocephalies" (understood in the narrow sense).
By the power of God the Church has grown up into a multitude of local
Churches with millions of faithful, many of whom in our days have sealed
their apostolic succession and faithfulness to the Lamb with their blood.
And new local Churches appear to be rising on the horizon, such as the
Japanese, the African and the American, and 6. Most Venerable
Fathers! All the Orthodox behold and realise how important, how significant
today is the question of the Orthodox diaspora both for the Orthodox
Church in general and for all the Orthodox Churches individually. Can
this question be decided, as Constantinople or Moscow desires, without
referring to, without the participation of the Orthodox faithful, The question of
the diaspora is, then, both grievous and extremely important in contemporary
Orthodoxy. However, do the conditions at present exist that would guarantee
its solution in council as correct, Orthodox, and according to the teaching
of the Holy Fathers? Is it possible, indeed, for there to be a free
and real representation of all the Orthodox Churches at an ecumenical
council without outside influence disturbing them? Are the representatives
of many, especially of the Churches under militantly atheistic regimes,
really able to express and defend Orthodox principles? Can a Church
that denies her own martyrs be an authentic confessor of the Cross of
Golgotha, or a bearer of the spirit and conciliar consciousness of the
Church of Christ? Before a council takes place, let us ask ourselves
whether it will be possible for the consciences of millions of new martyrs,
made white by the blood of the Lamb, to speak out in it. The experience
of history teaches that whenever the Church is crucified, each of her
members is called upon to suffer for her Truth, and not to debate artificial
problems or to look for false answers to real questions - "fishing
in muddied waters" in order to satisfy personal ambitions. Shall
we not remember that so long as the persecutions of the Church endured,
no ecumenical councils were convened - which does not mean that the
Church We may leave aside the question of how moral or even normal it may be that at a time in which the Lord Jesus Christ and faith in Him are crucified in more terrible fashion than ever before, His followers should be deciding who will be first among them. At a time in which Satan is seeking not only the body but the very soul of man and the world, when mankind is threatened with self-destruction, is it moral and normal that the disciples of Christ should be occupied with the same questions (and in the same way) as the contemporary anti-Christian ideologies - ideologies that sell the Bread of Life for a mess of pottage? Keeping all this in mind and painfully aware of the situation of the contemporary Orthodox Church and of the world in general - which has not substantially changed since my last appeal to the Holy Council of Bishops (May, 1971) my conscience once more obliges me to turn with insistence and beseeching to the Holy Council of Bishops of the martyred Serbian Church: let our Serbian Church abstain from participating in the preparations for the "ecumenical council," indeed from participating in the council itself. For should this council, God forbid, actually come to pass, only one kind of result can be expected from it: schisms, heresies and the loss of many souls. Considering the question from the point of view of the apostolic and patristic and historical experience of the Church, such a council, instead of healing, will but open up new wounds in the body of the Church and inflict upon her new problems and new misfortunes. I recommend myself
to the holy and apostolic prayers of the Fathers of the Holy Council
of Bishops of the Serbian Orthodox
(Spiritual father of the monastery of Chelie)
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