The Synod of Kolymvari, Crete of 2016 and the Unrest of Some âWorld Orthodoxâ
In this informative critique of the so-called âGreatâ and âHolyâ Council that was held in Kolymvari of Crete in the year 2016, I will attempt to explain why this council caused unrest even though nothing really novel for the âWorld Orthodoxâ was discussed in this meeting. We will analyze this Synod starting from its supposed goals, the idiosyncratic reaction of the conservative âWorld Orthodoxâ to this Synod, and the futile interim of those who remain in âWorld Orthodoxyâ. Â And finally, we will demonstrate how this council gives victory to the sagacious stand of the True Orthodox.
The so-called Pan-Orthodox Great and Holy Council was a Council of bishops of the âWorld Orthodoxâ that took place on June 17 to June 26 on the Greek Island of Crete. Â Unexpectedly, only 10 of the 14 Autonomous Orthodox Churches took part in this Council. Â Only days before this council was convened, the Patriarchates of Moscow, Antioch, Bulgaria, and Georgia cancelled out on their attendance to the Council.
In the initial planning of the Council, various names for this council were used. Â It was being discussed as an âEcumenical Councilâ and as a âPan-Orthodox Councilâ. Â The title that was finally chosen, that of âThe Great and Holy Councilâ was first used by the Greek American Dr Elizabeth H. Prodromou at a conference in the state of Illinois of the USA in the year 2007.
Dr Prodromou stated that âthere must take place a council of Orthodox that will understand, will compromise and will actively take part in the reality of worldwide religious diversityâ. Â Dr Prodromou is a professor of conflict resolution and served as a diplomatic appointment Vice Chair and Commissioner on the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom (2004-2012), and she was a member of the U.S. Secretary of Stateâs Religion & Foreign Policy Working Group (2011-2015) and an advisor to the Patriarchate of Constantinople.
The initial goals of this Council set by the Preconciliar Conferences were listed as these;
⢠The Orthodox Diaspora.
⢠The way in which autocephaly is granted.
⢠The way in which autonomy is granted to semi-independent churches within autocephalous churches.
⢠The Church calendar. The Council will have to promote a common practice.
⢠Canonical impediments to marriage, especially in the case of inter-Christian marriages.
⢠Fasting. Should the rules of fasting on Wednesdays and Fridays be changed?
⢠Relationships with the non-Orthodox denominations, such as the Roman Catholic Church, and the Anglican Communion.
⢠The ecumenical movement.
⢠The contribution of Orthodoxy to affirming peace, fraternity, and freedom.
The topics of the diptychs, the Church calendar and the ecumenical movement were quickly abandoned from their agenda. The matters of the calendar and the ecumenical movement really do justify a council but this council didnât want to resolve any such issues. Â The matter of âchanging the fastsâ would be reinterpreted and the fasts will simply be spoken about in a meaningless and vague document.
Eight documents were actually produced by the Council and six topics were supposedly dealt with by the Council. The documents were the following;
⢠Encyclical of the Holy and Great Council of the Orthodox Church
⢠Message of the Holy and Great Council of the Orthodox Church
⢠The Importance of Fasting and Its Observance Today
⢠Relations of the Orthodox Church with the Rest of the Christian World
⢠Autonomy and the Means by Which it is Proclaimed
⢠The Orthodox Diaspora
⢠The Sacrament of Marriage and its Impediments
⢠The Mission of the Orthodox Church in Todayâs World
The documents called Autonomy and the Means by Which it is Proclaimed, The Orthodox Diaspora, The Sacrament of Marriage and its Impediments, and The Mission of the Orthodox Church in Todayâs World basically tell us nothing and offer no solutions to present problems. Â As all of the documents of the Council, they are, however, filled with quotes of scriptures and Fathers of the Church without purposing to walk the route of the Fathers.
The document entitled The âMessage of the Holy and Great Council of the Orthodox Churchâ and the âEncyclical of the Holy and Great Council of the Orthodox Churchâ are both flowery documents with a New Age message of worldly peace and worldly love which basically ignores the truth which can only be one and is absolute. In the document âEncyclical of the Holy and Great Council of the Orthodox Churchâ we can find the pet subject of the so-called âGreen Patriarchâ, which is ecology, being spoke of for a good part of the document. Â We also again note here a sly use of words meant to deceive even zealous Orthodox. Â These words, however, are misleading because as we will see, in general, this Council wasnât made out in the interest of the purity of the Orthodox Faith.
The document entitled âThe Mission of the Orthodox Church in Todayâs Worldâ is simply a social justice gospel. Â The Orthodox Diaspora document speaks about committees to deal with pan-Orthodox subjects, making, of course, the representative of the Ecumenical Patriarchate the chairman ex officio. Â In its article 6 #2, It states that these aforementioned assemblies will, âexamine and determine the canonical status of local communities in the region that have no reference to the most holy autocephalous Orthodox Churchesâ.
The document entitled  âThe Importance of Fasting and Its Observance Todayâ starts out by making things relevant by stating that âIn ecclesiastical practice that has existed for centuries, there has always been diversity with regard not only to the length of the fast before Easter, but also the number and content of other periods of fasting which became customary under the influence of various factors, primarily, of the liturgical and monastic traditions, with a view to proper preparation for the great feasts.â  What the document doesnât clearly state is that the tradition of the Orthodox Church long ago regulated these fasting norms and rules.  The document mentions the fasts of Great Lent, Wednesdays, and Fridays, as well as the fasts of the Nativity, the Holy Apostles (even though the New Calendarists donât have this fast every year), and the Dormition of the Theotokos.  This document speaks about âoikonomiaâ of the Church but fails to stress that âoikonomiaâ cannot be generalized, but rather it is used individually,  in such a way that the rule or âakriveiaâ is not changed or discarded but rather allowing for certain persons to follow less strictly the rule.
The âRelations of the Orthodox Church with the Rest of the Christian Worldâ is a deceiving document.  The first statement in this document says, âThe Orthodox Church, as the One, Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic Church,âŚoccupies a central place in the matter of the promotion of Christian unity in the world today.â What is this Christian Unity?  Does it mean unity with heterodox?  Certainly, it does.  But the Church isnât meant to âpromote Christian unityâ but only to call back those who have fallen into heresy.
The document continues to proclaim the same thing using word games. Â It says, âThe responsibility of the Orthodox Church for unity as well as her ecumenical mission were articulated by the Ecumenical Councilsâ. Â Here they leave the matter of âecumenicalâ as in âecumenical movementâ to be interpreted, by those who wish, Â as meaning âall of the worldâ as it is also used in the words âEcumenical Councilâ. Â When they speak of ecumenical together with the word âunityâ and especially âChristian unityâ we can understand that they are speaking about the ecumenical movement.
The document then becomes more clear when it says the âOrthodoxâ Church âhas played a leading role in the contemporary search for ways and means to restore the unity of those who believe in Christ, and she has participated in the Ecumenical Movement from its outset, and has contributed to its formation and further development. Moreover, the Orthodox Church, thanks to the ecumenical and loving spirit which distinguishes her, praying as divinely commanded that all men may be saved and come to the knowledge of the truth (1 Tim 2:4), has always worked for the restoration of Christian unity. Hence, Orthodox participation in the movement to restore unity with other Christians in the One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church is in no way foreign to the nature and history of the Orthodox Church, but rather represents a consistent expression of the apostolic faith and tradition in a new historical circumstances.â Â This statement is full of deceit. Â Yes, the Church wants âall men to be saved and come to knowledge of the Truthâ, Â but this is not accomplished by some movement to restore unity, but rather by the heretics returning to the true faith. Â Participation in any such a movement for Christian unity which includes bargaining over decided matters of the faith or prayer with heretics are most certainly âforeign to the nature and history of the Churchâ Â The Church has always believed in One Church, with one dogma and with very certain boundaries as we shall discuss later.
It continues on in article 5. to say that âThe contemporary bilateral theological dialogues of the Orthodox Church and her participation in the Ecumenical Movement rest on this self-consciousness of Orthodoxy and her ecumenical spirit, with the aim of seeking the unity of all Christians on the basis of the truth of the faith and tradition of the ancient Church of the Seven Ecumenical Councils.â The term âbilateral theological dialoguesâ leads us to believe that the Orthodox arenât meant to bring the heretics back to the truth, but rather we can equally discuss Orthodoxy and heresy as both having their good points. Â âHer participation in the Ecumenical Movementâ, so clearly pronounced here, is not based on the âtruth of the faithâ as stated here, but in defiance of the Holy Canons which prohibit prayer with heretics.
In article 6 we read the Orthodox Church â was favourably and positively disposed, both for theological and pastoral reasons, towards theological dialogue with other Christians on a bilateral and multilateral level, and towards more general participation in the Ecumenical Movement of recent times, in the conviction that through dialogue she gives a dynamic witness to the fullness of truth in Christ and to her spiritual treasures to those who are outside her, with the objective aim of smoothing the path leading to unityâ. Â The World Orthodox have hurled themselves into the Ecumenical Movement since the Encyclical of the Patriarchate of Constantinople of 1920 and what were the fruits of that? Â The heretics became worse heretics and the Orthodox became Pan-Heretics by joining in prayer with all the other heretics. Â The Holy Apostle St. Paul advises us that we reject a heretical man after the first and second admonition (Epistle to Titus 3:10).
In article 11 of this document we read, âIn the event that it is impossible to overcome a specific theological difference, the theological dialogue may continue, recording the disagreement identified and bringing it to the attention of all the local Orthodox Churches for their consideration on what ought to be done henceforth.â Â So this means that even if the so-called Orthodox disagree in dogma with the heretics, the dialogue can continue with a simple recording of the disagreement and a question as what to do next. Â Yes, what could be done next?
Article 15. says âUpon the successful conclusion of the work of any theological dialogue, the pan-Orthodox decision about the restoration of ecclesiastical communion must, however, rest on the unanimity of all the local Orthodox Churches.â Â Â So the prerequisite for restoration of ecclesiastical communion isnât clearly stated as âheretics leaving their heresyâ Â but rather as the successful conclusion of the work of any theological dialogue. Â Why would a dialogue take place in the first place if we know the articles of our Faith? Â And then if a dialogue was âsuccessfulâ, in their view, then all the local âOrthodoxâ Churches can decide on the restoration of ecclesiastical communion.
Article number 19. of this document states that âThe Orthodox Churches that are members of the WCC (World Council of Churches) âŚ.have the deep conviction that the ecclesiological presuppositions of the 1950 Toronto Statement, On the Church, the Churches and the World Council of Churches, are of paramount importance for Orthodox participation in the Council.â  This article picks and chooses some points from this Toronto Statement of 1950 but leaves out many shocking allegations of this Toronto Statement.  Let us quote just five of them now.
1. âIt is not for nothing that the churches themselves have refrained from giving detailed and precise definitions of the nature of the Church.â The World Orthodox it seems do NOT have a detailed and precise definition of the nature of the Church in order to agree with the Toronto Statement.
2. âThe World Council cannot and should not be based on any one particular conception of the Church.â Â The World Council of Churches isnât based on any one particular conception of the Church, hence the branch theory is taught saying that the âWorld Orthodoxâ together with all the heretical bodies make up the âChurchâ.
3. âThe member churches of the World Council believe on the basis of the New Testament that the Church of Christ is one.â But obviously, this is not the one that we mean when we Orthodox profess âOne, Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic Churchâ. Â The World Council of Churches here proclaims that all the various heresies and the âWorld Orthodoxâ make up one church which does not have or need to have dogmatic unity.
4. âThe member churches recognize that the membership of the Church of Christ is more inclusive than the membership of their own church bodyâŚ.â âThey recognize that there are church members âextra murosâ (meaning outside the walls or beyond boundaries), that these belong âaliquo modoâ to the Church, or even that there is an âecclesia extra ecclesiamâ (a Church outside of the Church).  This recognition finds expression in the fact that with very few exceptions the Christian churches accept the baptism administered by other churches as valid.â Here again, a âChurchâ without boundaries is proclaimed being made up of members of heretical bodies.
5. âThe underlying assumption of the ecumenical movement is that each church has a positive task to fulfil in this realm. That task is to seek fellowship with all those who, while not members of the same visible body, belong together as members of the mystical body. And the ecumenical movement is the place where this search and discovery take place.â Â The World Orthodox as members of the World Council of Churches believe that they are discovering a âmystical bodyâ that includes members of various visible bodies of heretics.
Getting back to the document called âRelations of the Orthodox Church with the Rest of the âChristianâ World, article 20 of this document states, âThe prospects for conducting theological dialogues between the Orthodox Church and the rest of the Christian world are always determined on the basis of the canonical principles of Orthodox ecclesiology and the canonical criteria of the already established Church Tradition and in parenthesis they make the note (Canon 7 of the Second Ecumenical Council and Canon 95 of the Quinisext Ecumenical Council). Â However, if we read Canon 7 of the Second Ecumenical Council and the Canon 95 of the Quinisext Council we see that they both are almost identical and neither one has anything to do with theological dialogues with heretics, but rather clearly speak about those who return to Orthodoxy from heresy and it says, âThose who from heresy turn to orthodoxy, and to the portion of those who are being saved, we receive according to the following method and custom: Arians, and Macedonians, and Sabbatians, and Novatians, who call themselves Cathari or Aristori, and Quarto-decimans or Tetradites, and Apollinarians, we receive, upon their giving a written renunciation [of their errors] and anathematise every heresy which is not in accordance with the Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic Church of God. Thereupon, they are first sealed or anointed with the holy oil upon the forehead, eyes, nostrils, mouth, and ears; and when we seal them, we say, âThe Seal of the gift of the Holy Ghost.â But Eunomians, who are baptized with only one immersion, and Montanists, who are here called Phrygians, and Sabellians, who teach the identity of Father and Son, and do sundry other mischievous things, and [the partisans of] all other heresies-for there are many such here, particularly among those who come from the country of the Galatians: â all these, when they desire to turn to orthodoxy, we receive as heathen. On the first day we make them Christians; on the second, catechumens; on the third, we exorcise them by breathing thrice in their face and ears; and thus we instruct them and oblige them to spend some time in the Church, and to hear the Scriptures, and then we baptize them.â Â The quoting of Holy Canons here is totally misleading and is actually incriminating the authors of the âHoly and Great Council of 2016â
Article 22. of this document states, âThe Orthodox Church considers all efforts to break the unity of the Church, undertaken by individuals or groups under the pretext of maintaining or allegedly defending true Orthodoxy, as being worthy of condemnation. As evidenced throughout the life of the Orthodox Church, the preservation of the true Orthodox faith is ensured only through the conciliar system, which has always represented the highest authority in the Church on matters of faith and canonical decrees.â Â This statement has three traps. Â One is that it seems the voice of the people of the Church wasnât considered in times of dogmatical upheaval, which is a blatant lie. Â Two, it seems to deny the fact that there did exist âRobberâ Synods or synods that were later proven to have not been just. And three, it is for only those who believe, and are willing to continue to believe, that the hierarchs who gathered in Kolyvari, Crete were Orthodox hierarchs.
Article 23 of this document calls on Christians âto eschew every act of proselytismâ. Â Thus they are calling their own faithful also to not try to bring people to the light of Orthodoxy.
One can only fear Article 24 of this document! Â It states that âThe Orthodox Church is aware that the movement to restore Christian unity is taking on new forms in order to respond to new circumstances and to address the new challenges of todayâs world.â Â The mere thought of these undefined ânew formsâ is certainly disturbing to say the least!
Now that we have examined the documents of the âHoly and Great Councilâ, why donât we examine the purpose of the council and move on to why this Council brought upheaval to the âWorld Orthodoxâ.
What were the purpose and goals of this âHoly and Great Councilâ and why was it called? Â In the history of the Church, Councils were called when some heresy was trying to contaminate the Faith of the Orthodox. Â The Council would then decide, condemn the heresy or heresies, and the heretics would be cut off from the body of the Church. Â At this council, the heretics were called as âobserversâ to the Council. Â There was no mention of the word âhereticâ or âheresyâ in any of the documents. Â Bartholomew referred to the heretics that were present as observers as âWorkers of the Vineyard of the Lordâ. Â Can anyone imagine, letâs say, Arius being praised by the Holy Orthodox Fathers as âa worker in the Vineyard of the Lordâ?! Â God forbid!
Important issues that they had originally planned to discuss, (like the calendar of the Orthodox Church issue) were âswept under the tableâ.
âArchbishopâ Anastasios of Albania described what this Council would be in an interview before the Council even began when he said, âThis Council is something totally new and unprecedented that is coming to help Orthodoxy enter the New Ageâ. Â He probably said here more than he really meant to say. Â They are happy to put aside the way of the Holy Fathers and now they handle matters of the Church in a ânew and unprecedentedâ way that brings those who follow it into the âNew Ageâ.
The first work of any Council was always to confirm the last Councils that took place before it and the decisions and canons. Â For example, the Synod of St. Photius the Great (879-880) is the one which named the Council before it as the 7th Ecumenical Council. Â Councils were not pre-called Ecumenical Councils but were given the title by a following council. Â Could this Council of Crete reaffirm the decisions of the Council of St. Patriarch Photios of 879-880 (which condemned the Filioque) or of the Palamite Councils of 1341-1351? Â It wouldnât because both of these Councils were anti-papal in nature. Â This Council of 2016 began with Matins and the Divine Liturgy at the Church of St. Minas in Herakleion, Crete at which Papists, Protestants, and Monophysites officially prayed with the World Orthodox in direct violation of the Holy Canons.
Letâs examine one of the most interesting matter when we speak about the âHoly and Great Council of 2016â. Â I have been amazed by the fact that so many âWorld Orthodoxâ reacted negatively to this Council. Â The âWorld Orthodoxâ have been vividly involved in the Ecumenical movement for almost one hundred years. Â So much so that ecumenism has become a part of the âWorld Orthodoxâsâ dogma. Â Observing them, we understand our Lordâs question, in an often mistranslated verse of the Gospel According to Luke, which should correctly read, âHowever when the Son of Man comes, will He find THE Â Faith on the Earth?â (Luke 18:8).
This Council said nothing more heretical than that which has been preached continuously for almost the last century by the World Orthodox ecumenists. Â Why then was there such a big reaction against the Council by members of World Orthodoxy?
I think I can sum up easily why some of the conservative âWorld Orthodoxâ reacted to the Council of Crete in such a dramatic way. Â They declared it to be a heretical council but the heresy of Ecumenism is something they should be long accustomed to in their âchurchâ.
At the ending speech of this Council of 2016 âPatriarchâ Bartholomew stated that he was walking the âroad of the Encyclical of 1920â. Â This infamous encyclical of the Patriarchate of Constantinople of 1920 is the one that proclaimed that the Churchâs calendar must be changed in order to celebrate feasts with the heretical bodies of the West. Â It wasnât a concern to them that the Orthodox would no longer all celebrate the feasts and have the fasts together. Â As long as they could celebrate together with the Pope of Rome. Â It is to this that the True Orthodox of Greece and elsewhere reacted when they understood why the Churchâs calendar was being changed. Â They rightly said that the Patriarchate was trying to âLatinizeâ them and that those who retained the unblemished Faith of the Fathers were the continuation of the Church and in order to distinguish themselves from those who didnât believe Orthodoxy but proclaimed to be Orthodox, they added the word Genuine or True.
Christ warns us to âFear not the small flock; for it is your Fatherâs good pleasure to give you the kingdomâ.
During almost a hundred years of the witness of the True Orthodox concerning the heresy of our time which is Ecumenism, most World Orthodox have simply stood where they were. Â Many âWorld Orthodoxâ proclaimed Ecumenism as a heresy and a pan-heresy but strangely enough, they refused to say that those (like their hierarchs) who believe and promulgate this heresy are heretics. Â They refused to lift their heads that they had buried in the sand to look upon an organization and understand that the Patriarchates had kept the outer look of Orthodoxy and many of the edifices of Orthodoxy but had shed Orthodox belief. Â What the Patriarchates had done was a new and sly form of Uniatism. Â They had tried to replace the Church with a counterfeit Church. Â Isnât that, however, what every heresy attempts to do? Â To replace the Church with a false âChurchâ that even proclaims it is the One, Holy, Catholic, Apostolic, and Orthodox Church? Â The Apostle Paul writes to Timothy in his epistle that âEvil men and impostors will proceed from bad to worse, deceiving and being deceivedâ (2 Timothy 3:13)
St. John Chrysostom states that âAs with royal coinage, if someone cuts out a small character, they make the whole coin counterfeit, so it is with healthy faith: if but the smallest part from the principle is overturned, the whole is tainted for the worse.â (PG 61:622)
Just as Sergei Stragorodsky had tried to replace the Church of Russia with his âChurchâ of the Soviets, in the same way, and at the same time the ecumenists were trying to replace the Church of Christ with an impostor âChurchâ.
The New Hieromartyr Hilarion (Troitsky) speaks even of our own times when he wrote the following in his letter that has the title of On the Execution of a Monstrous Plan- Combining Christ with Belial,
âPerhaps we will soon find ourselves a small island in an ocean of wickedness⌠The Renovationists could suddenly emerge as the ruling âchurch partyâ in Russia, and such a party would have very few opponents if the overt Renovationists and the covert traitors come to terms with each other and together cloak themselves in the guise of canonicity.  One cannot rely on official pastors (bishops and priests), nor can one formally apply the canons to solve the issues presented in church life, nor in general can one limit themselves to a legalistic approach to the matter, but instead it is necessary to have a spiritual feeling that will show Christâs path among the many available paths that have been trampled by wild animals in sheepâs clothing. Life has posited questions that can only be resolved correctly, ecclesiastically correctly, by stepping beyond custom, form, rule, and being guided by senses trained in discerning good and evil (Hebrews 5:14). Otherwise, it is easy to defile the sanctity of oneâs soul and begin burning oneâs conscience (1 Timothy 4:2) through accommodation, according to the rules, with the falsehoods and filth that the bishops themselves have brought into the Churchâs enclosure. On a âlegalâ basis, one can even accept the AntichristâŚâ
We see in the Book of Revelation, that in the Church of Sardis only âa few peopleâ âdid not defile their garments,â but that the glorious Church in Philadelphia, ânot having much power,â had retained the word of the Lord and did not deny Christâs name (Revelation 3: 4,8). Â But this message is difficult for those who have always belong to state and official-seeming âchurchesâ.
Bishop Hilarion then quotes St. Theophan the Recluse,
âThe Gospel will be known to everyone,â says Bishop Theophan about the times preceding the appearance of the Antichrist, âbut one part will not believe the Gospel, another greater part will be heretical, will not follow Godâs teachings, but will build a faith of its own invention although based on the words of Scripture. Of these invented faiths there will be manyâŚThere are already many of them but there will be even more. Every kingdom will have its own faith confession, then every district with its own confession, then every city, and in the end, perhaps, every head will keep its own confession. Wherever people create their own faith and do not accept Godâs teachings, there can be no other way. And all of these confessions will appropriate to themselves the name of Christians.â This is on the one hand.
On the other hand, according to Bishop Theophan, âthere will be a part that will maintain the true faith as it was imparted by the Holy Apostles. Of these, a not insignificant part will only be faithful in name, but in their hearts will not have the attitude that is required by faith, as they too love the present. Although the Christian name will be heard everywhere, and everywhere churches and church rites will be seen, all of this is a facade as inside it is outright apostasy. The Antichrist will spring from this ground and will grow in the same spirit of outward appearance. Later, having given himself to Satan, he will explicitly leave the faith andâŚthose not maintaining the truth of Christianity, he will carry away to a clear retreat from Christ the Lord.â
Maybe these âWorld Orthodoxâ were frightened by the prophetical words of the teacher, and towards the end of his life monk, Kosmas Flamiatos.  Flamiatos was born in Kefallonia, Greece in 1786 and died in 1852.  Kosmas refused honors and a chair at the Ionian Academy.  In his work âAn Orthodox and Important Voiceâ (Athens 1849) he tells us that âFor the abolition of our feast and festival days, besides Sundays, they have contrived and are working on many other scandals.  First they are implementing various methods to introduce the New Calendar of the West into the Orthodox Nations through the law⌠Through this innovation, they hope to confuse and overturn our feast days and bring in also many modernisms.â Truly this is a fantastic insight into the calendar change which would only take place 75 years after this book was published, but that isnât the most fantastic point in this literary work.  Kosmas Flamiatos goes on to say that that a seminary was founded in Halki of Constantinople with the very purpose of adulterating, according to the spirit of corruption and delusion, all the upcoming Patriarchs, and hierarchy in general, of the East, âthat they might one day legislate the abrogation of Orthodoxy through an Ecumenical Council!â
Are the world Orthodox fearing this abrogation of Orthodoxy through an âEcumenical Councilâ of the already heretical World Orthodox? Â Many of the conservatives of âWorld Orthodoxyâ refused to see that their so-called âchurchâ had already fallen into heresy. Â They refused to see the writing on the wall which was so clear!
I gave this critique the title, âMene, Tekel, Peresâ. Â We find these words in Chapter 5 of the Book of Daniel of the Old Testament. Â When the Babylonian King Belshazzar gave a feast and used the vessels of the Temple for his carousing, he saw a hand write these very words on the wall which mean âweighed, found defective, and dividedâ. Â I believe the conservative âWorld Orthodoxâ saw the writing on the wall. Â The so-called Orthodoxy of the âWorld Orthodoxâ has once again been shown to be defective and their kingdom is once again being divided. Â These objectors to the Council of Crete claim to fear to make a schism on the one hand and on the other hand, they profess that their hierarchs are all members of an establishment that confesses the pan-heresy of Ecumenism.
So great an uproar has since occurred, that one year after this âGreat Councilâ, Â the Community of Mount Athos (composed of Athonite monks who commemorate Bartholomew) came out and tried to pacify the fears of the âWorld Orthodoxâ with a foolish document called, âA Message from Mount Athos Concerning the Great and Holy Council in Creteâ and dated June 30, 2017.
This message at its beginnings says, âThere is no need for perturbation since the Resurrected Lord is with us!â Â Is the Resurrected Lord with them? Â In this way of thinking, there would have been no need for all the struggles for the Faith during all the centuries. Â The Holy Fathers did not remain oblivious to matters of the Faith. Â Instead, they fought great battles for the purity of the Faith. Â They didnât sit back and say that all is fine because the Resurrected Lord was with them. Â He certainly was with them, and the Resurrected Lord was the One who gave them the power to be on guard for a deviation of the Faith. Â The Apostle Peter exhorts us to, âBe alert and of sober mind. Your enemy the devil prowls around like a roaring lion looking for someone to devourâ (1 Peter 5:8) and the Lord Himself has called us to âBe always on the watch, and pray that you may be able to escape all that is about to happen, and that you may be able to stand before the Son of Manâ (Luke 21:36).
This document goes on to say that the âChurch is always a pillar and the consolidation of the Truth as St. John Chrysostom says âThe Church is tossed in the sea, but is not drownedâ â. Â We agree here that the Church is a pillar of the truth, but that only convinces us more that the ecumenists are not the Church. These Athonites call for the people to âremain in the Church which heals that which is ill and completes the inadequateâ. Â They try to make the simpler people believe that the Church is certainly wherever the Fanar of Constantinople is! Â But didnât again each heresy throughout history appear as THE Church?
The document is ridiculous when it professes that âWe belong to the Church, the Body of Christ. Â This Body has so much health that it can anticipate and assimilate those elements that it receives and discards those which it finds as foreign.â Â I truly feel sorry for those Athonites who can call the âchurchâ of the ecumenists a body with so much health. Â Unfortunately, their church follows those foreign elements rather than discarding them.
The World Orthodox who are now conscious of the evil of ecumenism, have begun âwalling themselves offâ from their bishops awaiting some Ecumenical Council to condemn ecumenism and the ecumenists as heretics. Â Is it sober for them to wait for such an Ecumenical Council?
Christ tells us that the Church shall not be prevailed by the gates of Hell (Matthew 16:18). Â St. Gregory Palamas so aptly points out that, âThose who are of the Truth are of Christâs Church and those who are not of the Truth are not of Christâs Church.â Â The beginning of the 20th century was marked by an attempt to destroy the Orthodox Church. Â Communism started this attempt in some parts of the Orthodox world and ecumenism in other places.
The movement of the conservative âWorld Orthodoxâ to wall themselves off has no real meaning today. Â They are walling themselves off from a supposed âChurchâ that has long ago fallen into heresy. Â And since it has fallen into heresy then it isnât the Church against which the gates of Hell shall not prevail. Â St. Ignatius of Antioch tells us that wherever the bishop is (and we can only believe of course that he means the right-believing bishop), there also is the Church. Â St. Maximos the Confessor during his times considered the Pope of Rome, who was very far away, Â to be his bishop for the simple reason that he knew only of the Pope of Rome as a bishop who hadnât fallen into the heresy of Monothelitism. This displays to us that we should be under the omophorion of a bishop who rightly divides the word of truth. Â The days of the Byzantine Empire are gone. Â Who are we expecting to call a truly Orthodox Council? Â All Ecumenical Councils were called by the Emperor who called both disagreeing factions. Â Will the ecumenists gather a council to condemn themselves? Â The only councils we can await from the âWorld Orthodoxâ are those like the one of Crete and like the one that Kosmas Flamiatos described which will try to abolish Orthodoxy.
In a similar way, Metropolitan Joseph of Petrograd wrote, âThose who defend Sergei Stragorodsky say that the canons allow separation from a bishop only for heresy judged by a Sobor,  It can be replied that the actions of Metropolitan Sergei have led to just that state if one has in view such clear destruction of the freedom and dignity of the One, Holy, Conciliar, and Apostolic ChurchâŚbut beyond this, there is much that the  canons cannot foresee, and can one dispute the fact that it is worse and more dangerous than any heresy when a knife is plunged into the very heart of the Church â Her freedom and dignity?  Which is worse, heresy or murder?  (Actos of Metropolitan Sergei, unpublished typescript (1930?) p. 120).
This is also clear in the missive of the Most Holy Patriarch Tikhon regarding the Living Church when he wrote,  âWith all this, they, the modernists, had separated themselves from the unity of the body of the Ecumenical Church, and they have deprived themselves of the grace of God which abides only in the Church of Christ⌠And all functions and mysteries which are performed by those bishops and priests who have fallen away from the Church are without grace and the faithful who participate with them in prayer and in mysteries not only do not receive any sanctification, but subject themselves to condemnation for participating in their sin (p. 291).â
The same can be said about ecumenism which dissolved the belief the Holy Church has always had, that heretics were outside of Her realms.
It is quite interesting that supposedly True Orthodox clergymen like Bishop Stefan of Trenton and certain priests of Omsk fail to agree with the collection of ancient and modern Holy Fathers when they insist that there exists sanctifying Grace outside of the boundaries of the Church and even more so they claim that it exists among those groups who have clearly embraced a horrible heresy or more correctly heresies.
Bishop Stefan of Trenton in his sermon on the Sunday of Orthodoxy of 2017 stated that âWe cannot repudiate the presence of grace among heretics.â Â How far is this comment from the quote of St. Philaret Metropolitan of New York who stated, âThe ecumenists and other heretics âhave betrayed Christ, and their âchurchâ is no longer a bearer of graceâ.
But do we really need any new Ecumenical Council to condemn the heresy of Ecumenism? Â We say that with the 7 Ecumenical Councils the Faith of the Orthodox has been sealed. Â In other words, all of the major questions of the Faith have been examined and any new heresy that appears can be judged by what has already been decided at these Councils.
In 1848, Patriarch Anthimos of Constantinople called a patriarchal synod which was attended by four Patriarchs; Patriarch Anthimos of Constantinople, Patriarch Ierotheos of Alexandria, Patriarch Methodios of Antioch, and Patriarch Kyrillos of Jerusalem. Â Twelve other bishops were also in attendance at this synod. Â The Encyclical which was issued by this Synod says,
âWe keep the guileless confessions that we have received from the great men, turning away from every innovation as a dictation of the devil. Â The one who accepts an innovation accounts the professed Orthodox Faith as being deficient. Â However, this faultless Faith has already been sealed, and it can accept neither lessening nor additions nor deterioration, and the one who should dare, to do this or advise this or even think of this, has already denied the Faith of Christ and has already wilfully come under the eternal anathema by blaspheming the Holy Spirit, by saying that the Scriptures and Ecumenical Councils didnât tell us the entirety of the Faith.
All those who attempt to innovate, Â through heresy or schism, have willingly dressed themselves in a curse like a garment, even if they be Popes or Patriarchs, or clergymen, or laity, or even an angel from heaven; Anathema!â
The signatures of the patriarchs and bishops follow.
And what will those who simply âwall themselves offâ from their âWorld Orthodoxâ bishops eventually do? Â Most of Mount Athos had stopped commemorating âPatriarchâ Athenagoras but returned to commemorate the next âpatriarchâ who was Dimitrios. Â Had Dimitrios returned to Orthodoxy? Â Did he correct any of the heresies of his predecessor? Â No, he preached the same beliefs as Athenagoras but was simply less popular and less heard. Â Let us not forget that cardinals were there at his enthronement as is typical for the fallen Ecumenical Patriarchate. Â The simple truth is that if you fail to accept that these hierarchs donât comprise the Orthodox Church, then you will find yourself again with them.
The conservative walled off âOrthodoxâ will either have to join the Church which has become in the eyes of the world small and insignificant and endure with those who bore the heat of the day and receive also the dinar or they will remain outside and their oil will finish as it did with the unwise virgins of the Gospel parable. Â Origen speaks of the general belief of his time when he says,
ââIf someone from this people wants to be saved, let him come into this house so that he may be able to attain his salvation. . . . Let no one, then, be persuaded otherwise, nor let anyone deceive himself: Outside of this house, that is, outside of the Church, no one is saved; for, if anyone should go out of it, he is guilty of his own deathâ (Homilies on Joshua 3:5 [A.D. 250]). â
This is the reason why both catacomb believers and the True Orthodox from their early days rejected the impostor churches. Â Bishop Hilarion, formerly of Smolensk, was a most irreconcilable enemy of the declaration of Metropolitan Sergei of 1927. Â He denied the sacraments performed by Sergianists and baptized infants that had been baptized by Sergianists and married those already married in the âSoviet Churchâ (Protopresbyter M. Polsky, New Martyrs of Russia).
Archbishop Theodore Posdeev would not recognize in the Moscow Patriarchate validity of mysteries that were performed in its churches and until his very death (circa 1950) he would send the Holy Gifts to his spiritual children. (From an article The Life of Hieromartyr Theodore Posdeev).
Supposed True Orthodox clergy who recognize the heretics as having valid mysteries should realize that THEY are the innovators and that they reject the beliefs that the True Orthodox have believed.
It is interesting to note that this theory of being âwalled offâ was made famous by Metropolitan Cyprian (Koutsoubas) of Fyli, Greece.  He spread widely his idea that the âWorld Orthodoxâ were the Church and he and his âresistorsâ remained in this âChurchâ that preached heresies, but objected to the heresies.  He did join the Genuine Orthodox Church of Greece and was ordained a bishop by True Orthodox, but soon he proclaimed himself and those with him to be an independent synod not belonging to the Church of the True Orthodox, but rather as a resisting portion of a branch-theory church that was made up  also of those who professed the heresy of Ecumenism.  This âChurchâ that he envisioned didnât even have dogmatic unity!
Thus all of these âwalling off-ersâ, fall under the anathema of St. Philaret of New York who says, Â âThose who attack the Church of Christ by teaching that Christâs Church is divided into so-called âbranchesâ which differ in doctrine and way of life, or that the Church does not exist visibly, but will be formed in the future when all âbranchesâ or sects or denominations, and even religions will be united into one body; and who do not distinguish the priesthood and mysteries of the Church from those of the heretics, but say that the baptism and eucharist of heretics is effectual for salvation; therefore, to those who knowingly have communion with these aforementioned heretics or who advocate, disseminate, or defend their new heresy of Ecumenism under the pretext of brotherly love or the supposed unification of separated Christians, Anathema!â
All heresies have the same starting point and the pan-heresy of Ecumenism is no exception. Â All heresies and especially the heresy of Ecumenism is as St. Irenaeus of Lyons says, something that âthe Prophets did not declare, the Lord did not teach and the Apostles did not transmitâ (Refutation of False Knowledge 8:1)
The âchurchâ of the ecumenists is certainly a body run by heretics. Â A âchurchâ with heretical bishops at its head is certainly not the Church at all.
St. Cyprian of Carthage says,
âWhoever is separated from the Church and is joined to an adulteress is separated from the promises of the Church, nor will he that forsakes the Church of Christ attain to the rewards of Christ. He is an alien, a worldling, and an enemy. He cannot have God for his Father who has not the Church for his motherâ (The Unity of the Universal Church [A.D. 251]).
The Apostle Peter tells us, âIn the ark of Noah a few, that is, eight souls, were saved by water. Similarly, baptism will in like manner save youâ [1 Peter 3:20-21].
It should not be surprising to us that those who have abandoned the Church dogmatically are going from âbad to worseâ. Â Again St. Cyprian of Carthage tells us that âOutside the Church, there is no Holy Spirit, sound faith moreover cannot existâ (Treatise on Rebaptism 10 [A.D. 256]).
In the works of Jerome we read,
âHeretics bring sentence upon themselves since they, by their own choice, withdraw from the Church, a withdrawal which, since they are aware of it, constitutes damnation. Between heresy and schism, there is this difference: that heresy involves perverse doctrine, while schism separates one from the Church on account of disagreement with the bishop. Nevertheless, there is no schism which does not trump up a heresy to justify its departure from the Churchâ (Commentary on Titus 3:10â11 [A.D. 386]). Â So it is with those who formerly belonged to our Church.
The âGreat and Holy Council of 2016â of the World Orthodox was simply another act of a body that has given itself totally into the hands of the heresy of Ecumenism and the new age. Â It caused unrest amongst its own because many of them saw the âwriting on the wallâ. Â There will be no âGreat Councilâ among the World Orthodox that will condemn heresies because they are already a heretical body. Â Those among them have seen that their organization has been âweighed, found defective,â and now it is being divided. Â Their kingdom is already lost and even if they are many, those anti-ecumenists within this kingdom must realise that it is time to hear the words of the Book of Revelation in which the Lord exhorts to ââCome out of her, my people, so that you will not share in her sins, so that you will not receive any of her plagues;â (Revelation 18:4)
We, the True Orthodoxy, see the futility of those who attempt to remain in their belief that the church of the Ecumenists is the Orthodox Church. Â We remain steadfast in the beliefs of the Fathers and Confessors of the Church and together with Joseph Bryennios we exclaim, âWe shall not deny thee, beloved Orthodoxy, nor will we be false to thee, belief of our fathers. We were born into thee, we will live in thee, and in thee, we shall fall asleep. And if the times call for it, we are willing many times to die for thee.â