Posted on 09/24/2015 6:37:05 PM PDT by NRx
Orthodox Christians often find themselves answering the following question: why is Orthodoxy divided along ethnic lines into different churches?
At least officially, the answer to that question has been quite clear: we are not divided; we are one Church, united in faith and worship, with an administrative structure that organizes itself along local lines, in accordance with the ancient traditions and canon law of the first millennium of Christian history.
In recent years, however, theres been a problem: while the answer given above is true in theory, its often not implemented in practice.
Starting in the late 19th century, and in increasing numbers after the World Wars, millions of Orthodox Christians began to emigrate from their ancestral homelands to Western Europe, the Americas, and Australia. Instead of organizing churches in these new lands in accordance with the canonical and theological principle that there be only one bishop in each locale, a web of overlapping Orthodox jurisdictions developed. As a result, parish churches in some of the larger American cities are under the authority of eight or more different bishops: the Greek parishes under a Greek bishop; the Serbians under a Serb; the Russians under a Russian, etc.
Some were happy with this arrangement, some saw it as a necessary pastoral accommodation to the realities of an unprecedented emigration, and some were dissatisfied for theological and practical reasons. But everyone agreed that the situation was a temporary aberration, a departure from apostolic church order, and at odds with the Orthodox theological tradition.
Starting in the early 60s, as immigrants became more assimilated, a number of prominent bishops and theologians began to speak and write with passion about the need to conform our modern-day polity to our traditional theology. A relatively broad sense of enthusiasm for Pan-Orthodox cooperation and unity emerged. Various institutions and organizations appeared, working across jurisdictional lines on local, regional, national, and even international levels. A series of Pan-Orthodox Conferences took place in Rhodes, where bishops and other official representatives of canonical Orthodox churches from around the world met to discuss common concerns.
By 1968, a plan to hold a Great and Holy Council had emerged, and, by 1976, an agenda of ten items had crystallized, including the question of how to organize the administration of the Church in the diaspora. Meetings and preparations for a worldwide council of bishops continued with relative enthusiasm through the late 80s.
Then, in 1989, the Iron Curtain fell and another massive emigration began. In the last 26 years, millions of Eastern Europeans have left their homelands for economic opportunities elsewhere. From Bulgaria alone a country whose total population is only 7 million an estimated 3 million people have emigrated to Western Europe and beyond. The emigration of Orthodox Christians from their traditional homelands shows little sign of ending soon. In fact, its spreading, as a solid minority of the refugees and migrants who are currently leaving the Middle East are Orthodox.
Despite these demographic shifts and an emerging impasse in the attempt to find a common vision for Orthodox polity, plans to hold a Great and Holy Council never dissipated entirely. Some progress occurred in the early 90s, and, more recently, a flurry of activity has taken place since 2008.
Within the context of these preparatory deliberations, every Orthodox Church around the world formulated an official position on various topics, including the governance of the Church in places like America and Australia.
In the course of these deliberations, a stark theological division has emerged. Years ago, almost everyone agreed that the status quo of overlapping jurisdictions in the diaspora was a clear violation of Orthodox canon law and a departure from the apostolic tradition of church order. In recent years, however, some of the largest Orthodox churches have started to argue that the status quo accords with the Orthodox understanding of the Church. A change of this magnitude has required these Orthodox churches to re-think the way in which they explain the governance of the Church and, in some cases, modify theological principles.
The emerging majority opinion is not merely that administrative division in the diaspora allows for the maintenance of distinctive liturgical, theological, and spiritual traditions (and is therefore a pastoral benefit to the Church), but that the division itself is either (1) not actually a departure from apostolic church order and canon law, or (2) only a violation in a technical sense, and not a serious concern, as various present-day sources of authority (e.g. statutes passed by a national churchs synod of bishops) are of equal or greater authority to the canons promulgated by the Ecumenical Councils of the first millennium of Christian history.
In February 2011, for example, the Holy Synod of the Romanian Orthodox Church promulgated an Appeal to Romanian Dignity, which spoke of a need for ethnic Orthodox solidarity and called on all Orthodox people of Romanian heritage throughout the world to submit to the jurisdictional authority of the Romanian Church. The call to do so, the document stressed, accords with the Romanian Churchs modern-day statutes, which state that it is the Church of the Romanian people and encompasses all Orthodox Christians in Romania and the Romanian Orthodox Christians abroad.
The Romanian Synod promulgated this appeal for specific reasons, but more important than its motive is the documents theological reasoning and its conception of the Church. Two aspects of the appeal merit consideration. First, the guiding principle and most important point of reference in its ecclesiological vision is the present-day definition of the Romanian Church found in official synodal documents. Second, according to this line of thinking, the pastoral ministry and authority of an autocephalous Orthodox church is not limited to a specific place. On the contrary, the church exists to serve a particular people throughout the world.
Since 2011, an increasing number of Orthodox churches have expressed aspects of this same new ecclesiology in a variety of official and unofficial settings. Most significant among these is the Russian Orthodox Church, given its size and importance in inter-Orthodox relations. In December 2013, the Holy Synod of the Patriarchate of Moscow promulgated an official position paper on the issue of primacy in the Universal Church. Several months later, Metropolitan Hilarion (Alfeyev) gave a speech in which he explained the official documents key points and theological rationale. At the time, Orthodox commentators focused on the obvious implications for Catholic-Orthodox dialogue (and rivalries between Moscow and Constantinople). A closer reading of the official position paper and Metropolitan Hilarions explanation also reveals elements of the new ecclesiology.
In his speech, Metropolitan Hilarion explains that one of Moscows core objections to the most recent agreed statement of the Catholic-Orthodox dialogue is that it does not fully correspond to the principles of church order as accepted in the modern-day Orthodox Church, specifically because the contemporary Orthodox Church is structured differently than it was in the first millennium. According to the modern Orthodox conception, within each autocephalous Church there is the canonical territory of the autocephalous Local Church and the Diaspora, where there are parishes and dioceses located in the jurisdiction of the autocephalous Local Churches.
The Metropolitans argument exhibits a familiar pattern. First, the apostolic order of governance called for in the canons was normative for the ancient Church, and still applies today to some degree, but we cannot forget that the Church has changed, growing beyond the conceptions of the first millennium. In fact, the contemporary Orthodox Church is structured differently. Furthermore, the current administrative structure of the Church is not an accident of history that calls for repentance and change, but a reality that informs and inspires theological reflection and teaching. As a result, a truly Orthodox theology of the Church requires a federation of autocephalous Local Churches, whose pastoral authority includes a given territory and the worldwide diaspora of people who emigrate from that territory, as well as those they convert. Thus, the status quo is normative.
Other Orthodox churches have expressed similar conclusions for some of the same reasons. At last weeks meeting of the Assembly of Canonical Orthodox Bishops of the United States of America, the churches of Georgia, Bulgaria, Serbia, Moscow, ROCOR, and Antioch all representing the official position of their Mother Church made it clear that the status quo of overlapping jurisdictions throughout the world should be maintained. Each church has justified its decision in slightly different ways. For Antioch, in particular, its not clear to what degree the announcement represents a temporary tactical move or a long-term transformation. Nevertheless, the real development is not that the majority of Orthodox churches are taking unity of governance in the diaspora off of the table, but rather their justifications for doing so and the degree to which these justifications correspond to the portrayal of Orthodox ecclesiology in a growing number of official documents and synodal decisions.
Many Orthodox people are quite happy that there will be no imminent change in governance, either because they value ethnic solidarity; or fear a reorganization would lead to changes in liturgy and church discipline; or prefer the particular ethos and network of relationships they have developed; or are loathe to cede control over the financial and institutional resources within their own orbits of influence or some combination of all of these reasons, plus others. Yet these are not the reasons one finds in statements from official sources. No doubt, practical and ethnic and spiritual and political motivations lurk behind the scenes, but the official justifications are canonical and theological. And therein lies the problem. Practical or pastoral objections can be temporary, but the justifications we are seeing carry the potential weight of permanence. In stating that there is no canonical or theological reason to seek unity in governance in fact, that unity means preserving the status quo we are beginning to re-define our ecclesiological self-understanding.
Do the ends justify the means? Quite obviously, for some they do. There is a certain comfort in the knowledge that outside of the old country, Orthodoxy is like a Baskin-Robbins: which flavor do you like best? Division allows people to choose the kind of purity they prefer. Yet the (unintended) theological and spiritual implications of the new ecclesiology are profound. Justifying division in the diaspora on canonical and theological grounds introduces a new hermeneutics, which inverts the traditional Orthodox preference for patristic modes of life and prioritizes history over dogmatics. There are pastoral implications as well. Just as form follows function, the governmental structure of the Church influences its sense of calling and purpose. Prescriptively dividing the Church into camps reduces ministry to chaplaincy and mistakes catholicity for preservation. Even if such a Church provides a temporary firewall against the scourges of modernity, it will eventually collapse under the weight of its own inward focus.
Overlapping canonical territories separated on the basis of ethnicity was condemned a heresy called “ethno-phyletism” when the Bulgarians tried to do it within the bounds of the Patriachate of Constantinople, once it had re-expanded to include formerly autocephalous Bulgaria during the Ottoman era, but somehow that’s been forgotten when the same position is taken vis-a-vis churches outside traditionally Orthodox lands.
I understand the basis of the objections — the fear that the restoration of canonical unity will take the form of autonomy under Constantinople, or autocephaly in a form in which the Greek majority runs roughshod over everyone else’s liturgical and ethnic traditions (e.g. no more all-night vigils, everyone must serve only vespers the evening before, and orthros on Sunday morning before Liturgy) — but the objections are wrong-headed.
Worst, I think, are those coming from my own Patriarch. Patriarch +JOHN, like Patriarch +IGNATIUS before him, seems to suffer from the delusion that the interests of his flock in the Middle East are better served by the “influence” of a specifically Antiochian church in America with the U.S. government — a delusion the late Metropolitan +PHILLIP cultivated, as it served his own interests, but which has no basis in fact. I honestly believe that the interests of all the Orthodox churches in the Old Countries would be better served by the United States having a single Orthodox Church that could speak on their behalf.
I was at a local Greek Fest, and the parish had many members who were not Greek. One family we know had concerns about the changes going on, and that they will not be as Greek in the future.
I do remember attempts to make an Orthodox church of America. There was a few small parishes when I lived in Nebraska. What came of that?
I mean a single local Orthodox Church within the bounds of the U.S., the same way there is a single local Orthodox Church in Greece, Russia, Bulgaria, Romania, Serbia, Georgia, Japan,... (okay leaving aside representation churches of other local Orthodox churches in the capital where the country’s chief Orthodox hierarch, be he called “Patriarch”, “Archbishop” or “Catholicos” has his seat), whether it’s autocephalous or autonomous — if it’s the latter, I’d prefer autonomy under Moscow to autonomy under Constantinople.
That’s what the OCA was meant to be, but it isn’t. We still have the Greek Archdiocese, ROCOR, the Antiochian Archdiocese,... (basically colonies of every Old Country autocephalous church except the Patriarchate of Alexandria — yes, there are even Jerusalem Patriarchate parishes, although blessedly no bishops subject to Jerusalem, thanks to the perpetual snit between Greek-dominated Jerusalem and Arab-dominated Antioch).
Personally, I’d like to see everyone become part of the OCA, the Metropolitan step down, and a new election for a chief hierarch (who would almost certainly be one of the current bishops of the Greek Archdiocese — though there’s a slim chance a unified American Holy Synod would give the nod to Bishop +BASIL).
Thank you for the clarification. I agree that the Orthodox Church’s mission and activities in the US would be better served with a single Orthodox Church of America.
I know, but wasn’t there a fight between them and some of the other bishops? I knew a few in Nebraska, and they were (if I remember right) concerned that they would be “forced” into a different bishop.
It was over ten years ago, so I may have this totally wrong.
“I was at a local Greek Fest, and the parish had many members who were not Greek. One family we know had concerns about the changes going on, and that they will not be as Greek in the future.”
Our parish, which was for all intents and purposes 100% Greek when I was a kid, now is “Pan Orthodox”. We have all sorts of Slavs, Arabs, Armenians, Egyptians, Ethiopians and Greeks and many American converts. The important thing is to preserve and inculcate an Orthodox phronema. That comes from Orthodox cultures, not Western ones. For that reason, at least for the foreseeable future we need our connections to the old countries. After a few more generations, that phronema will be well seated in families named “Smith” or “Jones”, but not yet.
Your friends shouldn’t be concerned about not being “as Greek in the future” as they were. Frankly, our parish is a much nicer place than it was in the old days. The “Americans” seem to have taken up the best parts of our Greek heritage and left off the bad stuff. They want to preserve and pass on the good stuff. And in all honesty, all of us love hearing/reciting the Our Father in 7 languages at the liturgy; only in America! As my Papou always said, “God Bless America!”
At the level of the laity and ordinary clergy, there is a worry about suddenly being under the jurisdiction of the local bishop, whom they’ve never met before, simply because the parish is closer to where another jursdiction’s bishop had his seat. This would almost certainly be finessed by allowing parishes to remain under the omophorion of their current bishop, should they chose to, until he retires or reposes, then come under the local bishop at the point when they’d be getting a new bishop anyway — I know that proposal was floated fairly early on (we used to see more of Bishop +BASIL when this was getting started than lately). But I don’t think that’s the source of pushback against canonical unity.
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