TABLE OF CONTENTS
1.
INTRODUCTION
In the centuries following the
separation of the Eastern and
Western Churches, generally dated at
1054, Eastern Orthodox Churchmen
were of the opinion that the true
Catholic Church of Christ was
represented only by the Eastern
Church. And since there were no
Western churches using “Western”
rites left in communion with the
Eastern Church it was natural for
the idea to emerge that Orthodoxy
was synonymous with the Eastern or
Byzantine Rite. The thousand-year
usage of Western rites and
ceremonies, with the customs
pertaining thereto, which existed
alongside the Eastern rites - when the
two Churches were one - was almost
forgotten. At any rate, Western
usages were considered in a
suspicious light because they were
practiced, from the Orthodox
Catholic viewpoint, by schismatics
and heretics who had deserted the
communion of the Church Catholic.
In the middle of the nineteenth
century a sensation was caused in
the Orthodox Church circles by the
conversion of Dr. Joseph J. Overbeck,
a most remarkable but, today,
comparatively unknown figure. Unlike
previous converts to Orthodoxy,
Overbeck did not wish to abandon his
Western heritage and ethos and
simply become an Eastern Orthodox
Catholic. He desired to see the
re-establishment of a Western
Catholic Church in communion with
the Church of the East. He wanted
this projected Western Church to be
at one with the Orthodox Church
doctrinally but to re-possess its
ancient heritage of Western rites
and customs.
Gathering about him a small group of
other like-minded Orthodox converts
in England, Overbeck devised a
scheme to follow in order to bring
his ideas into being. Overbeck
sometimes referred to his projected
Church as the Western “Uniate”
Church, i.e., a Church in union with
the Eastern Church. He used the word
"Uniate" in a sort of reverse order
from the way it had originally been
utilized, i.e., as a designation for
those former members of the Eastern
Orthodox Church who had united with
Rome, retaining the Eastern rites
and disciplines but adopting Roman
Catholic doctrine.
By “Uniate” Overbeck meant Western
Catholic Christians who preserved
the Western rites but adopted the
Eastern discipline (Church
constitution, canon laws, etc.) as
well as the Orthodox creed. This
“Uniate” Western Church was to be
called the Western Orthodox Catholic
Church. Overbeck and his ideas
were a bit premature and probably
too radical for some Eastern
Churchmen to accept in the
nineteenth century. He was not
successful in his attempts to
restore the Western Church in
communion with Orthodoxy. It was
only in the 1920’s (in Poland) and
1930’s (in France) that Western
Orthodox parishes were established
along lines similar to those
Overbeck proposed.
The purpose of this study will be to
examine Dr. Overbeck’s scheme and
describe his efforts to implement
it. An attempt will be made to
uncover the reasons for Overbeck’s
failure. Heretofore the subject has
not received any extensive
treatment. The present study, thus,
is the first analysis of source
materials concerned with Overbeck
and his scheme. As such, obviously
it will have its shortcomings. The
study is based primarily on
Overbeck’s own writings as found,
for the most part, in The Orthodox
Catholic Review, the journal he
founded and edited. Some use also
was made of materials in Russian
ecclesiastical journals and other
Russian sources found in the
libraries of Columbia and Harvard
University as well as at the New
York Public Library.
2. OVERBECK’S BACKGROUND AND
CONVERSION TO ORTHODOXY
Little is known of Dr. Overbeck’s
background and early life. It has
been possible, however, to ascertain
certain details of his earlier years
by means of incidental information
gleaned from his writings. A German
by nationality, Dr. Joseph J.
Overbeck (1821-1905) received an
education preparing him for a career
in the Church. He held a doctorate
in philosophy as well as in
theology. Ordained a Roman Catholic
priest, he was not an Ultramontane
but considered himself a member of
the liberal school of thought. For a
time he was pastor of a church in
Westphalia, a province of Prussia.
He was also Privat-dozent in the
Theological Faculty at the
University of Bonn. Here, from 1854
to 1857, he “interpreted” the
writings of the Eastern Fathers, Ss.
Basil the Great and John Chrysostom.
In 1852 he visited Rome for the
first time but was not particularly
impressed by what he saw. At Bonn he
was associated with many of the
future leaders of the Old Catholic
movement.
Becoming disenchanted with Roman
Catholicism, Dr. Overbeck left the
Roman Communion, became a Lutheran
and married. It is not certain
whether or not he functioned as a
Lutheran pastor but he once assisted
at a High Lutheran Mass in the
Berlin Dorotheenstädtische church.
In the early 1860’s Overbeck
emigrated to England where he made
his home until his death more than a
half-century later. Between 1863 and
1877 Dr. Overbeck was professor in
German at the Staff College of the
Royal Military Academy in Woolwich.
His daily contacts with members of
the Church of England led him to a
study of Anglican theology but he
never became an Anglican.1
Becoming dissatisfied with
Protestantism, Overbeck began to
study Orthodoxy:
When I was still living in
Oxford, about seven years ago, a
closer study of the history of
the Eastern Church established
in me the conviction that the
Orthodox Church was the only one
that could claim to be the
ancient Catholic and Apostolic
Church of our Creed, and that
all the other Churches of
Christendom were schismatically
and heretically cut off from the
Catholic and Orthodox Church.2
In another place Overbeck said
that he and a few friends
gathered in an English country
place to discuss the problems of
Church unity and there it was
decided that Orthodoxy was the
Church established by Christ.
It was here that Overbeck’s
scheme for the restoration of
Western Orthodoxy was born.3
Even before his formal reception
into the Orthodox Church, Overbeck
published his first book dealing
with Orthodoxy and the Western
Confessions.4
This work,
which examined Papalism and
Protestantism from the Orthodox
viewpoint, was immediately
translated into Russian. It made a
sensation in Russia and appeared in
several periodicals in serial form
and was published in book form as
well, under the title Light from the
East. After the publication of
his book, Overbeck approached
Archpriest Eugene Ivanovich Popoff
(1813-75), the Chaplain of the
Russian Imperial Embassy in London.
Popoff, an important figure in the
Orthodox Church in Western Europe,
had received his Magister Theologiae
from the St. Petersburg Spiritual
Academy in 1835. He had been
Chaplain to the Russian Embassy at
Copenhagen and at the beginning of
1842 was appointed to the Embassy
church at London. Here he spent
thirty-three years until his death.
Popoff was the Holy Synod’s chief
supplier of information concerning
religious activities in England.
Through Fr. Popoff many converts
found their way into the Orthodox
Church. At one time he refused the
Bishopric of San Francisco.
Dr. Overbeck revealed to Popoff his
intention of petitioning the Holy
Governing Synod at St. Petersburg to
receive him into the Orthodox Church
and allow him to work for the
establishment of an Orthodox
Catholic Western Church. He also
intended to ask for permission to
exercise his sacred orders even
though he had married after
ordination. Fr. Popoff informed
Count Dmitry Andreevich Tolstoy
(1823-89), Chief Procurator of the
Holy Synod from 1865 to April 1880,
of Overbeck’s plans and asked
instructions of the Synod. At the
same time he forwarded the first
chapters of Overbeck’s recently
published book in Russian
translation.5
Tolstoy thought it premature to
burden the Synod with Popoff’s
inquiry and sought instead the
counsel of Metropolitan Philaret (Drozdov)
of Moscow in a letter dated 17 July
1865. He wanted such directions from
Philaret as “would in no wise
violate the sacred bases of our
Church nor, at the same time,
repulse from us this outstanding
foreign theologian, openly
acknowledging the truth of our
confession of faith, but held back
by the delusion implanted within him
concerning the exterior
manifestation of it by the rites.”
Until hearing from Philaret, Tolstoy
advised Popoff to refrain from
taking any official steps in the
matter.
Philaret answered Tolstoy, on 24
July 1865, that Overbeck’s request
to be received into communion
without being bound to conform to
Eastern customs was stated in such
an indefinite manner that it gave no
basis on which to give a definite
reply. It would not be especially
dangerous, however, to answer in the
affirmative. As for allowing
Overbeck to exercise his orders,
this was another matter. This could
not be permitted on the basis of the
twenty-sixth Apostolic canon and the
sixth canon of the Sixth Ecumenical
Council which forbade clerics to
marry after ordination. These canons
were more especially applicable to
Overbeck’s case since he had
received his orders in the Roman
Church where permanent celibacy was
a condition of ordination. Generally
speaking, the violation of the
condition impaired the rights
acquired under the condition.
Furthermore, by showing leniency to
one individual, the Orthodox people
as well as other Orthodox Churches
could be scandalized. Philaret did
not take Overbeck’s writings into
account in his consideration of the
matter since he had not seen them.
Naturally (wrote Philaret) it would
be comforting to receive a
theologian into communion with the
Orthodox Church who, by the power of
dispassionate research and
resolution, wrested himself of the
artificially woven meshes; and it
shall be sad if he, having
approached her very doors, shall not
enter in. Philaret was pleased to
hear that there were those in the
West who desired to know Orthodoxy,
who respected it and wanted to be in
communion with it. Nevertheless he
concluded his message to Tolstoy by
stating that Fr. Popoff ought to
forewarn Overbeck that his petition
to the Synod could have no promise
of success under the conditions he
proposed. At the same time, however,
Philaret added that Fr. Popoff ought
to explain the reasons to Overbeck
as he (Philaret) outlined them.6
Shortly after this the historian,
Andrew Nicholaevich Murav’ev
(1806-74), a friend of Metropolitan
Philaret and for a time an official
in the office of the
Chief-Procurator, read Overbeck’s
book, Light from the East, and was
prompted to correspond with him. In
one of his letters to Murav’ev,
Overbeck put the question: “Can the
Eastern Church permit the marriage
of a Latin priest after his
conversion to Orthodoxy, since the
rule allows such a marriage only
before ordination?”
Murav’ev forwarded this question to
Metropolitan Philaret. The latter
answered with a long opinion which
Murav’ev passed on to Overbeck
through Fr. Popoff. Later Murav’ev
learned that Overbeck was especially
concerned with the problem since he
himself had desired to be received
into the Orthodox Church as a
priest.7 In this his second
judgment on the same matter the
usually over-cautious Philaret
seemed prepared to allow Roman
Catholic priests to be received
after marriage provided that they
were never elevated to any higher
degree of priesthood. But the
question, he said, had to be decided
by the Russian Church in council and
agreed to by the other Eastern
Churches. Moreover, extreme care had
to be exercised. It was not
desirable to disturb the harmony of
the entire Church by relaxing the
rules for a few persons. 8
Philaret apparently had in mind the
possible conversion of numbers of
Roman priests. At any rate, by this
time the question was merely an
academic one since Overbeck had
already been received into the
Church.
There probably were few
ecclesiastical decisions of any
moment made without Philaret’s
knowledge and advice during his
tenure as Metropolitan of Moscow.
His opinions on various questions
have been collected and issued in
many volumes. Probably the Orthodox
churchman of the largest stature in
the nineteenth century, Metropolitan
Philaret Drozdov (1782-1867) was the
occupant of the cathedra of Moscow
from 1821 until his death. He was
metropolitan from 1826. Thought be
some the greatest theologian of the
Russian Church in modern times, he
was a kind of unofficial Patriarch
of the Russian Church in the last
century.
In the summer or autumn of 1865
Overbeck and his family were
received into the Orthodox Church by
Archpriest E. I. Popoff in London.
Although received as a mere layman,
Overbeck was far from discouraged.
He considered himself not an
ordinary convert but one with the
calling to restore to communion with
the Eastern Church the ancient
Church of the West which had been in
schism and heresy over 800 years.
Fr.Popoff “gladly acceded” and
“heartily co-operated” with
Overbeck’s scheme. Previous to this
Popoff had not been overly
enthusiastic about the possibilities
of Anglican Book of Common Prayer
rites in the Orthodox Church,9 but
now he had an active interest in
Overbeck’s endeavors and apparently
helped promote the scheme. Many
years later, in an obituary notice
of Overbeck by “N.O.” (Olga Novikoff?),
the electrifying effect of his first
books describing the great role
predestined by Divine Providence for
Orthodoxy to play in the West is
mentioned.10
Popoff, too, may have been affected
by Overbeck’s writings. As far as
Anglicanism was concerned, however,
Fr. Popoff had studied it carefully
and saw no possibility of any
intercommunion with it. In his
opinion the Church of England, in
the circumstances in which it found
itself, was powerless as a whole
entity, as a Church, not only to
accomplish but even to begin the
work of correcting itself of its
errors.
11 From his
study of ecclesiastical history
Overbeck was convinced that, from
the origin of Christianity, the
Catholic Church had consisted of a
Western and Eastern Church united by
one faith and one “Church
Constitution” until the schism of
1054, when the Western Church
separated from the true Catholic
Church as a result of heretical
innovations. Since 1054 Catholic
truth was to be found only in the
Eastern Church. The only means for
regenerating the ante-schismatic
Catholic Church of the West lay in
the remnant of ancient Catholicity,
the Eastern Church. The Orthodox
Catholic Western Church had to be
resuscitated, but it was “suicidal”
to think that the West could be
Orientalized, i.e., that Western
people could become Eastern in their
customs, traditions, and rites, in
the process of returning to the
ancient Catholic faith and doctrine.
The Church of Ss. Cyprian, Ambrose,
Augustine, Jerome, Leo, Gregory the
Great, and others, which was
conceived by God’s providence, must
be restored. In order to revive the
Western Church it was necessary to
have recourse to one of the
autocephalous Eastern Churches in
order (1) to be admitted into the
Catholic Church; (2) to be
reconciled and absolved of the sin
of schism, and (3) to obtain help in
the labor of restoration. Dr.
Overbeck felt that the Eastern
Church could not demand uniformity
of custom, could not oblige Western
people to adopt the Eastern rite
together with Orthodoxy. The Eastern
rite was designated by Divine
Providence for the Eastern mind,
which by nature differed from the
Western mind. The Eastern rites
could be studied by Western people
and even acclaimed by them as
masterpieces, but they still would
remain foreign. Such forms of prayer
and such ritual and ceremony could
never have originated with Western
people. What was congenial about the
Eastern mode of worship was its
spirit and the Orthodox truth
emanating therefrom, but its
exterior manifestation, “the turgid
expressions, the endless repetitions
are foreign to us and leave us
cold.” And Eastern people, he
thought, had similar feelings in
regard to Western rites. The Liturgy
as celebrated by St. Leo and St.
Gregory the Great could claim
exactly the same rights as that of
St.Basil and St. Chrysostom.12
The restoration of the Western
Church, in Overbeck’s mind, would
benefit the Eastern Church as well,
for a “new current of life will flow
to her heart.” Eastern and Western
minds would meet on common Orthodox
grounds instead of on heretical
soil. There would be no more
one-sidedness. New paths would be
found to an invigorated spiritual
life. A copious exchange of talents
and ideas would cause a stirring up
of life such as it was in the
Patristic age. The wall separating
East and West would crumble and the
two drawn into close relationships.13
3.
OVERBECK AND HIS ATTITUDE TOWARD
ROME
Overbeck saw no possibility at all
of unity with the Roman Church with
its heretical dogmas of Papal
supremacy and infallibility. The
only way to reunion of East and West
was by circumventing the Vatican
through the founding of a Western
Uniate Church in communion with the
Eastern Church. The Roman Catholics
are schismatics, cut off from the
living and mystical body of the
Orthodox Catholic Church. They stand
without the communion of Saints.
Their sacraments, though valid, are
illegitimately and illicitly
administered, so that both the
minister and the receiver are
sinning by administering or
receiving a sacrament. The offering
of the Eucharistic Sacrifice by
schismatic hand is a grievous crime,
like the crucifixion of Christ by
the Jews. The Pope, his bishops,
priests, and deacons, have no
rights, no jurisdiction whatsoever.14
Large numbers of the Roman
Catholics, however, were blameless
because of their personal ignorance
of the facts of schism and heresy.
And there were many Roman Catholics
who desired to be real Catholics so
that it was a “holy duty incumbent
on the Orthodox Church to gather the
true Western Orthodox Catholic
Church from among the Romans.”15
The Roman Catholics must, he said,
secede individually to Orthodoxy.
Eventually Overbeck foresaw a
Western Church composed of national
Churches like the autocephalous
Churches of the East: an Anglican
Orthodox Church, as well as Italian,
Gallican, Germanic, and Bohemian
Churches. Each nation would
possess its own Orthodox Catholic
Church with its own national customs
and usages but adhering to a common
doctrine and the same canon law. All
this could come to pass from the
humblest beginnings.
A small mustard-seed must be planted
in the West; the edifice of the
Western Orthodox Church must begin
with a few stones. And one may be
certain that the Vatican shall
become desolate and exist only as an
eloquent monument of man’s
presumption.16
Overbeck set out a program of
twenty-three points which Roman
Catholics would have to accept when
they became Orthodox: (1) the denial
of Papal novelties; (2) the denial
of the doctrine of indulgences; (3)
the rejection of enforced celibacy;
(4) an intermediate state after
death to be recognized but Purgatory
rejected; (5) icons to be used in
place of statues; (6) Baptism by
triple immersion; (7) Chrismation by
a priest to follow Baptism; (8)
laity to communicate under both
kinds; (9) the Sacrament to be
celebrated with leavened bread; (10)
only the Benedictine monastic order
to be recognized since it existed
previous to the schism; (11) no
Roman Catholic saints canonized
after 1054 to be recognized; (12)
independent National Churches in
communion with the universal
Patriarchs to have the full right of
existence; (13) Divine service to be
in the vernacular; (14) an Epiclesis
is to be added to the Roman Mass
from the Mosarabic ritual; (15) the
Roman doctrine of the Filioque is to
be rejected; (16) infants and
children to be communicated; (17)
the Sacrament of Unction was not to
be kept until death; (18) it would
be best to reserve the matter of
Confession to married clergy; (19)
the Immaculate Conception could not
be accepted as dogma; (20) “We
reject all use of force and
therefore corporeal punishment in
matters or exercises which are
purely spiritual”; (21) “We
recognize the Orthodox Catholic
Church as the sole and exclusive
institution founded by Christ
Himself from the salvation of the
world”; (22) mixed marriages
disapproved of and children of such
marriages to be reared Orthodox;
(23) “Our Church must abstain
strictly from any interference in
politics and must submit herself to
any government instituted of God,
remembering Christ’s words: ‘My
kingdom is not of this world.’”17
Among other changes which would be
required of Roman Catholics when
they became Orthodox Catholics would
be to make the Sign of the Cross as
in the Eastern Church. The latter
way, he said, was the ancient way
and it had been changed by Rome.
Overbeck pointed out that Pope
Innocent III, writing 1198, spoke of
the present Orthodox manner of
making the Sign of the Cross as the
correct way.18
4.
OVERBECK AND HIS VIEW OF THE
CHURCH OF ENGLAND
Overbeck saw no possibility of unity
with the Church of England. Such a
union was impossible because the
Orthodox Church required, as
conditio sine qua non, entire
agreement with the Orthodox faith
from any body seeking unity with
her. The Established Church not only
did not profess the Orthodox faith,
it authoritatively tolerated “all
shades of belief from a mitigated
Unitarianism to a slightly disguised
Roman Cath0licism.” Such a medley of
creeds within the English Church
generated indifference in doctrinal
matters even among those of the
greatest Catholics zeal. In
Overbeck’s opinion the English
Church was ruled by a Protestant
subjectivism which affected even the
Anglo-Catholics. In endeavoring to
nourish themselves with better
doctrinal food than their Bishops
could give them, the latter tried to
reconstruct Catholic antiquity
privately without the guidance of
authority and their efforts were
simply the work of subjectivism.
Dr. Overbeck felt, however, that
there was a class of Anglican High
Churchmen, the younger
AngloCatholics or Ritualists, whose
zeal for unity, if directed
properly, could result in unity with
the Orthodox Church. This group
must, however, (1) formally separate
and cease communion with heretics;
(2) entirely abandon any idea of
union with Rome since it had lost
its claim to Catholicity; (3) accept
fully and without reservation all
the dogmas and canons of the
Orthodox Church; and (4) apply to
the Orthodox Church in order to be
reconciled and received into the
Church. If the Catholic-minded High
Churchman followed these steps, the
Orthodox Church would give them
Bishops to form a Holy Synod of the
Orthodox Anglican Church in
communion with the Ecumenical
Patriarchs and the whole Church. The
new Orthodox Catholics would retain
a Western Liturgy (“not that of the
Prayer Book, but the revised Roman
or Sarum Mass”), and “Canonical
hours, rites, ceremonies,
vestments.” The Orthodox Anglicans
should expect to be deprived of
their livings and have their
churches confiscated by the
Establishment. They would have to
depend on their parishioners for
their livings. The Dissenters did
it; Overbeck was confident that the
Anglo-Catholics who were not in the
Establishment because of the “loaves
and fishes” could do as well.19
Unlike the Roman Church, Overbeck
said that Orthodoxy did not ask for
a secession from the English Church
“but only for a return to the old
English ante-schismatic Church – to
the Church of St. Alban, the
Venerable Bede, St. Edmund…” That
the contemporary Church of England
was not identical with or a lawful
continuation of the Old Church could
be seen from the fact that Baptismal
Regeneration could be denied and
denounced, the “Real Absence” taught
in regard to the Eucharist, and Holy
Orders considered not as a Sacrament
conferring supernatural grace but,
as Dr. Frederick Temple (1821-1902),
the Bishop of Exeter put it, “simply
a human matter of expedience.”20
Overbeck believed that the “Church
of England had made herself
essentially Protestant at the
Reformation, that she could not
‘unprotestantise’ herself. Moreover,
there was no synodal authority which
could speak for her in regard to
Reunion, her Episcopate being only
on paper and her real authority
being the Privy Council and the
Court of Arches.”21
Overbeck ridiculed the Anglican
Branch Theory of the Church and had
little enthusiasm for “Anglican
Intercommunionists.” He was not even
certain if the Establishment could
even be called a Church. He often
stated that he would much rather
have dealt with Roman Catholics or
Dissenters “than with variformed
Anglicans playing in all colours of
the rainbow.” With Roman Catholics
one dealt with fixed tenets and knew
where one stood, whereas with
Anglicans “many a doctrine is simply
a fata morgana, a delusive mirage,
which vanishes as soon as you catch
at it.” He found, however, that
there were among the Anglicans those
who agreed with his views simply
because the “elasticity and
indefiniteness of their faith” was
abhorrent to them and they aspired
after a firm dogmatic basis.22
There was a real body of friends of
the Orthodox Church among the
Anglicans but these were not to be
found in the Eastern Church
Association or among holders of the
Branch Theory. However, these
“Philorthodox” were the only
individuals and Overbeck did not
expect any large gains from the High
Church. Despite his aversion
for the Established Church, Overbeck
wanted to do it a service in his own
way. He said that an Orthodox
Western Catholic Church ought to be
welcomed by the Establishment
because it would remove some of the
hypocrisy hovering over it. Those
who were merely nominal members of
the Establishment would quit it for
the Orthodox Church. Moreover, a
Western Catholic Church would
prevent the continual strengthening
of the Roman Church in England by
ex-Anglicans. Would it not be better
if those who were leaving the
Establishment in “crowds” for
“Popery and Jesuitism” entered the
Orthodox Church with her entirely
different attitude towards the
state? Nine out of ten converts to
Rome would prefer the Roman Church
without the Pope and Ultramontanism,
yet they would rather accept Rome
and all its trappings rather than
become members of an Eastern Church.23
5. OVERBECK’S PETITION TO THE
RUSSIAN SYNOD
After his reception into the
Orthodox Church, Overbeck
immediately set to work convincing
his friends of the feasibility of
his scheme for the restoration of
the Western Orthodox Church. Soon
there were those who shared his
views. Douglas, the translator and
editor of Papadopoulos’ book on
Anglican Orders, who generally was
critical of Overbeck’s work,
admitted “that they and the few
members of their group who are still
with us are to be recognized as of
the highest character and of
considerable ability.”24
To give his ideas a wider range
Overbeck began to publish The
Orthodox Catholic Review in 1867.
Since Overbeck had in mind not
simply to get Westerners to join the
Eastern Church but to revive the
entire Western Catholic Church, he
felt it necessary to make a formal
appeal to some part of the Orthodox
Church. He decided to deal with the
Russian Church because she was more
familiar with Western Christendom.
Russian contained millions of Roman
Catholic and Protestant subjects and
the Russian Church was more aware of
the state of religious affairs of
such Western-oriented people. The
churchmen of Greece and
Constantinople, on the other hand,
he felt had more than once
compromised themselves and their
Churches in dealings with the
English Church. Russians would not
be so apt to be led astray.
Moreover, Russia was a connecting
link between East and West. The
Russian Church was not only more
cautious but she also was “active
and stirring” while her sister
Churches were engaged in other,
internal, matters.
Overbeck was somewhat uneasy about
the political tensions of the time.
Since mid-century the British had
developed a vigorous Russophobia.
This may have stemmed from the
Russian suppression of the Hungarian
Revolt of 1848 and the Crimean War.
Overbeck feared the labeling of his
work a “Russian Propaganda” by some
“enraged Anglican Intercommunionist.”
A writer in the Union Review, in
March 1867, did insinuate that
Overbeck had political aims.
Overbeck carefully avoided the
political arena and it was only
after the Russo-Turkish War
(1877-78) that any mention of the
political situation entered his
magazine. During that war he
abstained from discussing the
Eastern Question or the war itself
except that he hoped the peace
negotiations following the war would
improve the Ecumenical Patriarch’s
degraded position within the Ottoman
Empire. His sympathies in the
Eastern Question were, however,
obviously with the Russians.25
He was a friend of Madame Olga
Novikoff, the interpreter of Russian
policies to the British, and,
starting in 1878, his journal
carried reviews of several of her
books which attempted to explain
Russia and her interests in the
legacy of the “Sick Man of Europe.”
Overbeck pointed out to those who
might be worried, that his petition
to the Russian Holy Synod (drawn up
in March, 1867) had no allusion to
politics and he stressed that
signers would certainly not be
examined on their political creed.
He was, nevertheless, apprehensive
that the political situation had
affected his petition numerically.
He was quick to point out that
whenever the restored Western Church
was in possession of a hierarchy of
three bishops, she would be entitled
to attain full national
independence. She then would stand
in the same relationship to the
Russian Church as any other
autocephalous Church. Of course the
Russian Church would never be
forgotten for her services, but this
spirit of gratitude had no bearing
on politics.26
The petition to the Russian Synod
was circulated not only in English
but also in German, French, and
Latin, and was printed in Greek and
Russian as well. Overbeck hoped for
a “respectable number” of Western
Christians to sign the petition.
This was for two reasons: (1) the
group would represent a strong
nucleus of the new Western Church, a
nucleus capable of attracting more
Anglicans, Romans, and Dissenters
once the movement was afoot; (2) a
larger group could not be so easily
ignored by the Orthodox Church,
forcing her to deal with the
petitioners.27
Not unconnected with Overbeck’s
scheme was the appearance in the
Church News of 10 April 1867, the
organ of advanced High Churchmen, of
proposals by someone signing himself
“Orthodoxus,” advocating the
founding of a Uniate autocephalous
English Church in communion with the
Orthodox Church. This Church would
use the ancient (pre-Reformation)
Anglican ritual, the validity or
lawfulness of which the Orthodox
Church did not question. These
proposals did not originate with
Overbeck who wrote in a later issue
of the same paper that his petition
with a similar intent had been
circulating some three or four
weeks. “Orthodoxus” carried on a
dispute, in which Overbeck also
joined, with E.S. Ff(oulkes) in the
columns of the same paper.28
Ffoulkes was a convert to the Roman
Church from Anglicanism to which he
eventually returned. Overbeck’s
petition also appeared in an
anonymous pamphlet issued by “a
clergyman lately seceded from the
Anglican Church” who had joined
Overbeck’s movement. The author
appealed to his former brethren to
quit the Establishment and sign the
petition to the Russian Church. He
declared the Church of England
heretical, a “state-ridden and
Protestantised Church,” “depraved in
Faith and in Worship by a heretical
State.” After enumerating the
Establishment’s defects, he said
that the only thing to do with the
Church of England was to leave it
and join the Orthodox Church.29
By September 1869, after securing
122 signatures to the petition,
Overbeck decided to present it to
the Holy Governing Synod at St.
Petersburg. Despite the languages in
which it had appeared, the petition
circulated primarily in Great
Britain. Besides Anglicans, some
Roman Catholics had signed it. Upon
reception of the petition, the
Metropolitan of St. Petersburg,
Isidore Nikol’skij (1799-1802),
immediately formed a commission to
study the question. The Synodal
Commission was presided over by the
Metropolitan himself. Overbeck was
appointed a member by personal
letter of the Metropolitan. Among
the other members were Archpriest
Eugene I. Popoff, Professor J. T.
Osinin, and Archpriest Joseph
Vasil’evich Vasil’ev. Fr. Vasil’ev
was a graduate of the St. Petersburg
Spiritual Academy where his
Magister’s dissertation had been “On
the Primacy of the Pope.” Because of
his knowledge of Roman Catholic
doctrine he had been sent to Paris
as rector of the Russian church
there. In 1867, with the creation of
an Educational Committee at the Holy
Synod, he was appointed first chair.
At Christmas of 1869, Overbeck and
Popoff were summoned to the Russian
capital to participate in the
consultations of the Synodal
Commission. The result of the
meetings was such that the petition
received the entire approval of the
Holy Synod, which “expressed its
willingness to further our plan by
all the weight of its authority.”
Overbeck was given a warm welcome by
the hierarchs of the Synod and they
assured him of their avid interest
in the success of his scheme.
After the Synod approved the
principle of Western Orthodoxy it
set to work on details. Overbeck was
requested to present his revision of
the Roman Mass for its approbation.
About nine months later Overbeck
forwarded his revision of the Mass
to the Holy Synod and at Christmas
of 1870 he was called again to St.
Petersburg to discuss the liturgical
draft in committee. After several
sittings the Commission fixed the
final text of the Mass and it was
approved subsequently by the Synod.
The Latin text was to be considered
the authentic basis for all
translations. The Latin text of the
“Liturgia Missae
Orthodoxo-Catholicae Occidentalis,”
was published in the Orthodox
Catholic Review together with an
English translation.30
The authorship of this pamphlet is
wrongly ascribed to Overbeck by the
Dictionary of Anonymous and
Pseudonymous English Literature
(London, 1928), IV, p. 416. It
probably was written by A.V.
Richardson who also was “Orthodoxus,”
about which see below, pp. 66-69.
The text of this pamphlet first
appeared as an article in the OCR,
II, No. 1-12 (January-December,
1868), 149-157. In order to
facilitate approval of his plan
Overbeck had not waited to present
the Holy Synod with a draft of
extended portions of the Western
ritual and offices. He was of the
opinion that no time ought to be
lost setting the movement afoot. It
would take too long to settle all
the details. “For the beginning we
need only one thing, viz., the
recognition of the Western liturgy.”
He proposed that the Western Church
use the Western Mass and temporarily
follow the Eastern forms for the
administration of the Sacraments and
lesser offices, until the Western
forms were revised.
As for the Western Mass, Overbeck
had studied the Missale Romanum and
produced from it a Mass which he
felt answered Orthodoxy’s desiderata
without being arbitrary. He proposed
to adhere closely to the Ordo Missae
except for the following main
divergences: (1) The kneeling down,
worshipping, and elevation of the
elements after the words of
institution have been recited, is to
be abolished. The Eastern Church
generally believes that the
consecration and transubstantiation
of the elements only takes place at
the Invocation (epiclesis) of the
Holy Ghost. The before-mentioned
Elevation was introduced after the
great schism, about the twelfth
century, to fix and symbolize the
Roman opinion. (2) The form of the
Invocation of the Holy Ghost, “Supra
quae propitio,” etc., being rather
mutilated in the Roman canon, we
substitute the unexceptionally full
form of the Mozarabic Missal (Dom.
V. in Quadrag.). (3) We advise the
use of leavened bread, for a
practical reason. As the Orthodox
Western Church advocates the
Communion under both kinds, and the
preservation of the consecrated wine
for a length of time is difficult,
the Eastern use of saturating the
consecrated bread with the
consecrated wine and then drying it,
is highly expedient and commendable.
Wafer-bread is hardly fit for this
process… (4) The addition of
Filioque is to be removed from the
Creed.31
This was written before the Western
Mass was actually approved. In the
final redaction the prayer “Supra
quae propitio” was left in while the
Epiclesis was interpolated into the
prayer following: “Supplices te
rogamus.” Previous to this, in his
Die orthodoxe katholische Anchauung
(Halle, 1865), Overbeck had felt
that the medieval Roman Catholic
theory of the consecration taking
place at the Words of Insititution
was valid, though he said that there
were signs of a former Invocation in
the Roman Mass, while such traces
were quite clear in the Mozarabic
Mass.32
Overbeck’s view on azyme bread
(wafer bread), went through a period
of change. In 1865, in the same
place of the work just cited, he
felt that the Western use of azymes
had just as long an Apostolic
tradition as the East had for
leavened bread. In 1867, however, he
recommended leavened bread for
practical reasons but said that
there could be no real objection to
“wafer-bread,” since it was used in
the West before the Schism. He did
not mention that the use of azymes
was a bone of contention between the
Churches at the time of the Schism.
Later, however, Overbeck came to
feel that leavened bread ought to be
used as a matter of principle.33
Although the Russian Holy Synod
seemed wholeheartedly to have
approved Overbeck’s scheme, it was
for some reason hesitant to give the
“go ahead” signal on its own
authority. This is all the more
strange when it is considered that
the years (1869-70), when the Synod
was discussing Overbeck’s plan, were
of tremendous moment in the history
of Western Christianity. These were
the years of the preparation for and
the convening of the Vatican Council
which declared Papal Infallibility,
as well as the years in which the
Old Catholic revolt against Rome
began. One would have expected the
Russian Synod immediately to have
set Overbeck’s plan into motion and
to have made every effort to
capitalize on the West’s unrest.
Some writers are of the opinion that
the Synod postponed any action while
awaiting to see what direction the
Old Catholic movement would take.34
Also the Russian Synod apparently
was reluctant to proceed on its own
in such an undertaking as the
restoration of Western Orthodoxy
without the approval and concurrence
of the Eastern Patriarchs. Overbeck
explained the hesitance by asserting
that “the Russian Church alone had
no power to decide finally in a
matter affecting the whole Orthodox
Church. Thus the matter was
transferred to Constantinople.”35
Perhaps Overbeck’s scheme was
conceived on too grandiose a scale.
He continually emphasized that he
was not interested in acquiring a
few converts for the Orthodox Church
but in restoring a whole Church. If
he had spoken of establishing
Western Rite parishes within the
jurisdiction of the Russian Church
the Synod would perhaps not have
been so hesitant and not have
disturbed the Greeks with the
question. The matter would have then
been of concern only to the Russian
Church and would not have required
the approval of other autocephalous
Churches. At any rate the Russian
Synod submitted the approved Mass to
the Ecumenical Patriarch at
Constantinople “for final sanction”
and the steps necessary to get the
approval of the other Orthodox
Churches were undertaken.36
6. OVERBECK AND THE OLD CATHOLIC
MOVEMENT
The Old Catholic movement, beginning
after the Vatican Council of 1870,
arose from the refusal to accept the
new dogma of the Infallibility and
universal ordinary jurisdiction of
the Pope of Rome as defined by that
Council. The movement was confined
chiefly to the Germanic countries.
In a short time the Old Catholics
joined with the Church of Utrecht
(Holland) which had seceded from
Rome in 1724.
37
This revolt against Rome stirred the
imaginations of many Orthodox
churchmen who saw in it the way for
the reunion of at least part of the
Western Church with the East.
Overbeck, too, was taken by the
vision of the great things promised
by the Old Catholic revolt. He
followed the movement with paramount
interest. He knew most of the Old
Catholic leaders personally from his
school and university days and some
of them, like Dr. J.F. Ritter von
Schulte, were former colleagues of
his at the University of Bonn. He
considered them as men of high
character and scholarship, unlike
the usual Roman “mercenaries” who
“march with that cadaverous
obedience enacted in the rules of
Loyola’s order.” When the
first Old Catholic congress was
announced for September 1871,
Overbeck sensed its importance in
the matter of Christian unity and he
discussed it with his Orthodox
Russian friends. They, too, saw the
importance of the congress and hoped
that Orthodox-Old Catholic unity
would be considered there.
Overbeck communicated with J.J.I.
von Döllinger (1799-1890), one of
the chief leaders in the movement,
who answered that the question of
unity would certainly be treated and
invited Overbeck and his friends to
attend. He hoped, at the same time,
that “Russia would take steps, or
give utterances expressing the wish
and hope of a Union.”
38
The Russian Church had high hopes
for the outcome of relations with
the Old Catholics. Professor John
Terent’evich Osinin (1835-1887) was
sent to Munich as a representative
and observer. Osinin, a member of
the Synodal Commission established
after Overbeck’s petition was
received at St. Petersburg, was
particularly equipped to deal with
Western Churchmen. Born in
Copenhagen of a Danish mother (his
father has been attached to the
Russian church there as a Reader),
he had studied in Germany and had
finished the St. Petersburg
Spiritual Academy where his
Magister’s dissertation was on “The
new Roman Dogma of the Conception of
the All-holy Virgin Mary.” He held
the cathedra of comparitive theology
at the Academy and an instructorship
in German which he spoke fluently.
He was married to the daughter of
Fr. E. I. Popoff. When
Overbeck arrived in Munich for the
congress he visited the various Old
Catholic leaders to feel out their
attitude towards unity with the
Orthodox Church. He found that
Döllinger’s prejudices against the
Russian Church had abated somewhat
since the publication of his book
Kirche und Kirchen.39
Overbeck discussed with Döllinger
the prevalent fear that Old
Catholicism might degenerate into
another Protestant sect but was
assured that any tendency towards
Protestantism would speedily be
checked. Overbeck’s meeting with two
professors of the University of
Munich, Dr. Johannes Huber and Dr.
Johann Friedrich, convinced him that
both these men favored unity with
the Eastern Church. At the
congress itself, presided over by
Schulte while Döllinger preferred to
remain in the background, Dr. Huber,
in Overbeck’s view, prefaced the
discussion about unity with the
Orthodox Church rather
unsatisfactorily. In view of this,
Professor Friedrich Michelis of
Braunsburg, an acquaintance of
Overbeck for over twenty years,
spoke very warmly on behalf of
unity.
In his speech Dr. Michelis mentioned
the Synodal Commission’s activity in
the work of restoration of the
Western Orthodox Church and its
revision of the Roman Mass.40
At the time of the Munich Congress
the Old Catholics were in an
anomalous position. They still
adhered to the Tridentine faith and
wished to remain in communion with
the Ultramontanes who, on the other
hand, had expelled them from the
Roman Church and considered them as
Neo-Protestants. Overbeck could not
perceive how the Old Catholics could
unite with the Orthodox Church and
still have communion with the
heretical Roman Church. At this
stage Döllinger still resisted any
changes which would lead to the
formation of a separate
ecclesiastical body. Overbeck, on
the other hand, hoped that the Old
Catholics would soon organize their
own Church and declare Rome
heretical, since it was impossible
to hope for the Vatican to turn the
pages of its history backwards. The
Old Catholics should not fear that
they might sink to the level of a
small sect for if they united with
the Eastern Church they would
acquire many millions of
co-religionists. By such a union the
Old Catholics would gain power to
resist Rome and even to cause it to
retreat. One of the paragraphs of
the Munich Program stated that the
congress looked forward to unity
with the Greek and Russian Church
since the reasons causing the
separation of East and West were
“insufficient” and there were no
irreconcilable differences between
the two. At the conclusion of the
Munich Congress Overbeck had hopes
that something would be
accomplished.41
Dr. Overbeck’s article in the
Orthodox Catholic Review on the
Munich Congress, which has been
cited here, was commented on in the
Old Catholic newspaper Rheinischer
Merkur (later changed to Deutscher
Merkur) by one of its correspondents
who disapproved of its tenor. The
statements in Overbeck’s article to
which the writer objected most were
those stating that the Old Catholics
had to adopt the whole of the
Orthodox faith before there could be
any unity, for only Orthodoxy had
preserved the purity of the
Apostolic tradition. The writer said
that in such categorical statements
there was left no room for exchange
of ideas or mutual agreement.
Doctrinally the West would be
converted to the East. The
correspondent felt that what was
needed was the dispassionate
discussion of the differences in
doctrine in order to arrive at a
mutual understanding. Otherwise,
another Florentine Union would
result.
Overbeck answered this in a letter
to the Rheinischer Merkur in which
he said the Eastern Church regarded
the Old Catholics with hope and
trust, and desired speedy and
complete communion with them in
order to re-establish Catholic unity
between the East and West and thus
battle the Ultramontane Roman
Catholics with a common force. The
Orthodox Church did not require
blind submission from the Old
Catholics but rather wanted a mutual
agreement, though not an elastic
one. Orthodoxy had preserved the
true faith and if it could be shown
that she was not the true bearer of
the Apostolic tradition she would
stand corrected. He called upon the
newspaper to become the organ
wherein questions separating the two
Churches could be aired. He hoped
that at least one step could be
taken in the proper direction before
the Cologne Congress was convened.42
By the time the second Old Catholic
Congress was held at Cologne in
September 1872, Old Catholicism had
developed somewhat and exhibited new
features. It had advanced to the
stage of an independent Church
organization and new parishes were
being formed. In June of the
following year Joseph Hubert
Reinkens (1821-96) was elected the
first Old Catholic bishop. He was
consecrated at Rotterdam, Holland by
the Dutch Bishop of Deventer,
Hermann Heykamp, on 11 August 1873.
Dr. Overbeck had little to say about
the Cologne Congress and only
mentioned it in connection with a
review of a book43
by Abbé Eugène-Philibert Michaud
(1839-1918) several years later.
Overbeck said that he heard Dr.
Michaud’s address at the Cologne
Congress and admired his efforts to
bring about unity between the Old
Catholics and the Orthodox Church.44
Michaud, a Roman Catholic priest
from Paris, had joined the Old
Catholic movement. At Cologne he
proposed that the congress proclaim
its recognition of the Seven
Ecumenical Councils and declare that
the later Western Councils,
including Trent, were not
ecumenical. Such a move was not yet
acceptable, however, and a committee
was appointed to examine the
question of the Western councils.
Michaud had apparently taken a
position quite near the Orthodox one
and it was expected that he would join the Church. Overbeck
spoke of him as “not yet a formal
member of the Orthodox Church.”45
Michaud, however, remained an Old
Catholic and was later appointed to
the Old Catholic Theological Faculty
of the University of Berne. Michaud
met the Russian General Alexander
Kireeff (1833-1910), an Orthodox
layman greatly interested in
questions of Church unity, at the
Cologne Congress and these two
carried on a correspondence for many
years.46
7.
BONN REUNION CONFERENCES
In September of 1874 the first of
two reunion conferences was held at
Bonn, Germany. These were not
ordinary gatherings of Old Catholics
called to solve local and internal
problems and to which a few guests
were invited. The Bonn Conferences
were called to promote unity among
the Churches preserving the historic
Christian faith and order. These
conferences were sponsored by the
Old Catholics and were under the
presidency of Dr. Döllinger. It was
the first time in the modern era
that representatives of East and
West gathered to study the
differences keeping them apart.
These conferences were intended to
pave the way for unity between the
Orthodox Church and the Old
Catholics. They were not, however,
official meetings of these Churches
but the private discussions of
theologians representing these
Churches. Invitations were sent to
the Anglicans, while other
Protestants also were represented.
The invitations sent out to
theologians states, in part, the
basis of the conferences as follows:
It is proposed to take, as the basis
and standard of limitation of the
endeavors of the conferences, the
confessions, teaching, and
institutions recognized as essential
by both the Eastern and the Western
communions before the Great Schism.47
Among the Orthodox participants was
Professor Zekos D. Rhosse, a
theologian from Athens who knew of
Overbeck’s scheme. In his book On
the Unity of all Religions and
Churches (Athens, 1868) he spoke
hopefully of the results of
Overbeck’s petition. Of the
Russians, present was Archpriest
John Leont’evich Janyshev
(1826-1900), Rector of the St.
Petersburg Spiritual Academy from
1866 to 1883 and professor of
theology. Janyshev was later
elevated to the dignity of
Protopresbyter and was confessor to
the Tsar. Alexander Kireeff
represented the Society of Friends
of Spiritual Enlightenment and Dr.
Overbeck also was present.
As for the Anglican representation,
Overbeck and the Orthodox generally,
were disturbed that they were there
at all and that so much time was
spent discussing the problems
between them and the Old Catholics.
Moreover, it was felt by the
Orthodox that a true representation
of the Established Church was not
present – only the minority which
was sympathetic to Döllinger’s
scheme. Corporate reunion with the
whole English Church was out of the
question. It was only after the
disestablishment of the High Church
portion capable of union that
anything of the sort was possible.
The remainder of the Establishment
was heretical. “Is it not absurd to
think a Church unitable, in which
the ministers are permitted by
authority to teach heresies?”48
Overbeck thought it a “pity” that
the Bonn Conference, “which seems to
have been got up chiefly for the
benefit of Anglicans,” lost much
time for nothing. If the same amount
of time had been spent in
discussions with the Orthodox that
had been wasted on the Anglicans,
the conference would have been more
profitable. Döllinger had not
adhered to his original program in
which he had stated that the basis
of discussions would be the faith of
undivided Christendom (pre-1054).
Overbeck doubted if even a single
Anglican present accepted that
basis: “The highest bidder among the
Anglicans did not offer more than
six Oecumenical Councils.”
In Overbeck’s opinion the question
as to whether the Seven Ecumenical
Councils were accepted by those
present ought to have been proposed.
Otherwise discussion was futile.
Certainly the Anglicans would have
been disappointed by such
requirements but at least they would
have then realised that their
standard of faith was insufficient
and that they were “unfit to be
partners in a Catholic Union
movement.” Overbeck, as well as the
other Orthodox, felt that the Old
Catholics and Orthodox ought to have
united first and when this was
accomplished to have addressed
themselves to the “Anglicans and
other Protestants” with proposals of
unity. There was hardly anything
separating the Old Catholics and the
Orthodox. Aside from some minor
problems, only the Filioque question
required settling.49
Kireeff, too, was of the opinion
that Old Catholic associations with
the Anglicans would only make
Protestants of the Old Catholics.
50
And even among the Anglicans there
were those who agreed with Overbeck.
The Church Review (5 December 1874)
published a letter from “Apuc,”
i.e., a member of the Association
for the Promotion of the Unity of
Christendom, who agreed that the
Establishment was not unitable. The
writer expected that the Ritualists
would soon be expelled from the
Establishment unless they denied
their faith in act (ritual) and in
deed (doctrine). “Apuc” looked
forward to this almost joyfully for
then the High Church party would be
free to unite with the Eastern
Church.51
Overbeck had placed all his hopes on
the Orthodox – Old Catholic meetings
and he looked for a speedy agreement
between the two. His transactions
for the restoration of the Western
Orthodox Church had bogged down in
the Levant. In the meanwhile he felt
that the Old Catholics were
undertaking the same task. As long
as the Old Catholics remained on the
basis of the faith of undivided
Christendom he felt dutybound to
co-operate with them. If, however,
he found them deviating from this
path, he would resume negotiations
with the Church authorities in the
East – negotiations which had not
entirely ceased. If Döllinger
continued to cling to his
Anglican-inspired idea of corporate
reunion the deathblow would be dealt
to any possible union between the
Old Catholics and the Orthodox.
Unity between these two with the
inclusion of the Anglicans was an
impossibility. The work ought to
have been confined to what was
practicable and possible.52
The second Reunion Conference was
held at Bonn in August 1875. The
first conference having aroused
considerable interest, formal
invitations to the second conference
were dispensed with and all
theologians interested in the
conference were to be considered as
invited. Quite a large number of
Orthodox theologians attended, among
them Archbishop Alexander Lycurgus,
who died soon after (17 October
1875). Professor Osinin was
there along with the Russians who
had been present at the first
conference, as was Dr.Overbeck.
Other Orthodox notables present were
Professor Nicholas M. Damala
(1842-92) of the University of Athens, and Professor Nicholas
Milash, later to become Bishop
Nicodemus (1845-1915), the famous
Serbian canonist. Overbeck
corresponded with both these men.
The Anglicans also came in greater
force. At the conference the
discussions, for the most part,
centered about the Filioque
question.53
Döllinger again presided and guided
the conference almost
single-handedly. In evaluating both
conferences, Overbeck felt that
Döllinger had followed no plan in
the selection of topics for
discussion, and these seemed rather
to have been chosen at random.
Although Döllinger was a great
historian he was not a dogmatic
theologian. Overbeck, as well as the
other Orthodox, wanted the central
dogma of the Church settled first.
It was no use, they thought, to
agree to various propositions and
individual dogmas while ignoring the
basic dogma of the “Catholic Church
and its authority.” The Old
Catholics apparently had no
clear-cut doctrine of the Church and
did not even believe that the One
Church existed in reality. Though
Christ had founded one Church it had
long ceased to exist exclusively in
one body. Such ideas were somewhat
akin to the Anglican Branch Theory
in that the Old Catholics held that
the Churches in existence were only
portions of what was once One and
Universal.54
Overbeck thought that Döllinger’s
Anglican-type conception of the
Church may have obtained from the
early anomalous position of the Old
Catholics in relation to Rome: the
Old Catholics had declared the Roman
Church heretical and yet partook of
its sacraments and wished to
continue intercommunion with it.
Such unnatural bonds, however, were
soon sundered by Rome.
According to Overbeck, Döllinger was
an advocate of corporate reunion
with the Anglicans, which involved
the supposition that the Established
Church of England was a true branch
of the Catholic Church. In reality,
Anglicanism was a house of heresies
and had forfeited its claims to
Catholicity. The Orthodox Church, on
the other hand, insisted as a
fundamental principle that all her
dogmas must be Catholic, pure and
unaltered, with no taint of heresy.
It was impossible to unite with any
body that taught heresies. Since the
Orthodox Church was the Church of
Undivided Christendom, guided by the
Holy Spirit, she could make no
compromise in faith. In union
questions those who united had to
accept all the dogmas as they were.
There could be no adulteration in
order to allow corporate reunion of
bodies believing less than the
Catholic norm. Only on such
conditions was unity possible. With
such a viewpoint it is difficult to
see how Overbeck justified his
presence at the second conference at
all since the invitations clearly
stated that its aim was to establish
a vague sort of “intercommunion and
a confederation of Churches.” This
was not to amount to “amalgamation”
and was not to be a detriment to
peculiarities in doctrinal beliefs
of the Churches involved.
55
According to Overbeck, Döllinger’s
invitation to the first conference
was acceptable to the Orthodox
because it declared the dogmas of
Undivided Christendom as the basis
for discussion. Such a period in
Church history would therefore
include the Seven Ecumenical
Councils since they were all held
before the schism – even at the
earliest dating of the schism in the
ninth century. No one should have
participated in the conference who
did not accept the Seven Councils.
To his astonishment, however, the
Anglicans, who did not accept the
basis of the conference, were not
only admitted as observers but as
participators. “Thus the only safe
principle of Union is sacrificed to
Anglican propensities.” Archpriest
Janyshev also felt that the task
would have been much simpler had the
original program been adhered to.56
Overbeck did not have much to say at
the second Bonn Conference but what
he did say caused a storm of
indignation among the Anglicans.
During the seventh session in which
four articles were being discussed
for acceptance, Dr. Overbeck
proposed that the first article
state the number of councils
accepted as ecumenical. Many
Anglicans, he said, would not agree
with the Orthodox on the number. He
mentioned that a certain Anglican
cleric who had gone “over to the
Orthodox Church” (James Chrystal)
later found that he could not accept
the Seventh Council as ecumenical.57
His mere allusion
to the number of Councils touched a
tender spot with the Anglicans and
caused an uproar. An anonymous
writer in the Saturday Review (21
August 1875) attacked Overbeck for
mentioning the Councils and said
that “the first note of discord was
introduced into the Conference by
him…” and that only Döllinger’s tact
and the “conciliatory temper of the
Orientals” prevented a rupture. Dr.
Overbeck was accused of having the
“ingrained bitterness of his Ultra-montane
training” and of devoting his
energies to the vilification of
former communions he had abandoned
(including Anglican).58
The discussions
between the Orthodox and the Old
Catholics ceased with the conclusion
of the second Bonn Conference. They
were not to be resumed until much
later. No further such conferences
were held although some had,
apparently, been planned and
Döllinger had intended to continue
in the same vein. The Anglicans
blamed the discontinuance of the
conference chiefly on “the
machinations of Dr. Overbeck.”59
Döllinger, too, explained their
discontinuance by Overbeck’s
agitation against union between the
Old Catholics and the Orthodox. In
letters to the committee of the
Anglo-Continental Society, Döllinger
mentioned, among other things, that
the unsuccessful Bonn unity attempts
were a result of Overbeck’s hostile
agitation as well as the
dissatisfaction of the Tractarian
Dr. E.B. Pusey, who objected to the
Anglicans giving into the Orthodox
on the Filioque question.
60
Dobronvanov wrote,
in his history of the Old Catholic
Movement, that the unsuccessful
attempts at unity resulted from the
sympathy of the Old Catholic toward
the Anglicans expressed at the
conference. This sympathy brought in
a disparity in principle between the
Old Catholics and the Orthodox and
with it unity became impossible.61
Some Anglicans
found other reasons for the
discontinuance of the conference.
Moss thought the hostile relations
between Russia and Britain before
and during the Russo-Turkish War
made it difficult to have
theologians of those countries to
meet together. After the war
interest in such meetings waned and
the Old Catholics were concerned
with other, internal matters.
62
Mayrick, of the
Anglo-Continental Society, wrote
that no further conferences were
held as a result of Döllinger’s
death (he died in 1890, however),
and because the Old Catholics
entered into closer relations with
the Dutch Church with “consequent
alienation from the Anglican
Churches…”63 Meyrick spoke highly of the learning
of the Russians present at Bonn and
said, with some surprise, that they
were even able to argue with the
great Döllinger! Meyrick did not
think quite so highly of Orthodox
converts. In the Anglo-Continental
Society’s Foreign Church Chronicle
and Review (Nos.4, 8, 1878) Meyrick
attacked Dr. Overbeck and Guettee,
as well as Michaud with his Orthodox
inclinations. Overbeck was singled
out for abuse because of his
writings but his arguments were not
refuted.64
Overbeck’s position on future
conferences was that they could
continue if Döllinger changed the
direction in which he was headed,
for the Anglicans were not unitable
as they then were. His opinion was
that if Döllinger continued to deal
with them the sooner the Orthodox
withdrew the better.
65
In the next few
months Overbeck came to the
conclusion that he was wasting his
time if he awaited anything concrete
from the Old Catholic movement. In
his book Die Bonner Unions-Konferenzen
(Halle, 1876), he stated that in
1870 “union” was closed than in
1876, and that by 1880 it probably
would be even further removed.
Things had gone as he had foreseen:
Old Catholicism was getting rapidly
to be like Anglicanism. Before the
Bonn Conference he had written to
Bishop Reinkens asking that the
Anglicans be excluded
“provisionally,” but this was
something Reinkens refused to do.
Overbeck stated that he knew from
seventeen years’ daily contact with
Anglicans and from his study of
Anglican theology the “dangerous
latitudinarian character of
Anglicanism.” When at Munich and
even more so at Cologne “aspects
discrepant” from his were observed,
Overbeck still did not lose hope and
thought that the Old Catholics would
overcome these wrong views and in
the end agree with his ideas of
Church unity. But he saw these
views, through association with
Anglicans, condensing and assuming
definite form, and he came to
realize that the Old Catholics were
pursuing ends leading away from
Orthodoxy and not toward her. Even
at this stage Overbeck felt
sympathetic to that small portion
within Old Catholicism which
“represents the positive current.”66
Generally speaking, Overbeck’s
evaluation of Old Catholicism’s
progress was sad indeed. The
movement had not had the success
expected of it. He saw the reasons
for this in the lax views of the Old
Catholics. Such latitude scared off
further conversions of Roman
Catholics, who were wary of leaving
their Church to join one of such
“loose tenets, a body with so little
ascetic fervour, with so little zeal
for propagating what it considers to
be the truth among dissenters, a
body denouncing Monasticism and
asceticism, abolishing Church
Commandments, promising liturgical
changes of momentous importance.”
Roman Catholics would think twice
before jumping from bad to worse.
Had the Old Catholics remained on
Catholic ground there was no doubt
but that they would have gained
considerable converts. Instead of
this, some of the best Old Catholic
leaders left them and returned to
Rome. Overbeck decried Old Catholic
laxity about Confession, fasting,
the permission for priests to marry
after ordination and as many times
as desired in succession; to marry
widows and non-Catholics, and to
allow priest’s children to be
brought up as Protestants. There was
nothing to prevent an Old Catholic
from marrying a Jewess as an
Anglican cleric had recently done.
Overbeck was afraid the Old
Catholics would become a kind of
Broad Church.67
As far as Overbeck’s scheme for the
restoration of Western Orthodoxy was
concerned, the Old Catholics took no
official note of it at the Bonn
Conference, while the Deutscher
Merkur repeatedly denounced his
scheme as unseasonable.68
At the second Bonn Conference Bishop
Reinkens spoke very plainly when he
said: “Let me remind Professor
Overbeck that not one of us thinks
for a moment of going over to the
Eastern Church.”69
By the Autumn of 1876 Overbeck’s
interlude with the Old Catholics had
ended.
8. OVERBECK’S SCHEME AND THE PHANAR
Since Overbeck’s hopes of seeing the
Old Catholics accomplish his work of
restoring the Orthodox Church of the
West were dashed, he again resumed
his negotiations with Orthodox
authorities. After the approval of
his plan in St. Petersburg, the
Russian Synod had solicited the
sanction of the Eastern Patriarchs.
Somewhere the matter had bogged
down. With the frequent changes of
Patriarchs at Constantinople and the
disturbed situation of the Balkans,
the transactions were continually
interrupted and protracted. The
Church leaders at Constantinople
were busy with the Romanian
declaration of ecclesiastical
independence in 1864 which was not
solved until 1885. They were
occupied with the Bulgarian Question
and the problem of the Bulgarian
schism (1870-72), and then the
Russo-Turkish War commenced
(1877-78). In the latter part of
1876 Overbeck addressed “An Appeal
to the Patriarchs and Holy Synods of
the Orthodox Catholic Church”70
asking them to “acknowledge our
Western Orthodox Catholic Church,
and to resuscitate her by
sanctioning our Western liturgy.” He
pointed out that his group had not
formed any “separatist conventicle”
but had attended services at the
Russian or Greek church. While
waiting patiently for eight years
for the scheme to be realized, some
of the petitioners had died, others
left the country, some, who had
tired of waiting, joined the Roman
Church, while still others returned
to the Anglican communion. However,
a “small band” had remained loyal to
Orthodoxy and how renewed its
request for the restoration of the
Western Church. They had no doubt
that the hierarchs would “understand
and fulfill their sacred duty,
regardless of human considerations
and infernal intrigues.”71
Overbeck’s allusion to “intrigues”
no doubt referred to the protests of
Anglican ecclesiastics to the Levant
against Orthodox proselytism in
Great Britain, as a result of which
the Constantinopolitan Patriarch
issued a prohibition against such
proselytism. The Anglican protests,
which seemed to have stemmed from
the activities of S. G. Hatherly, of
whom see below, greatly rankled
Overbeck. He was irritated by the
fact that the Orthodox Greek
authorities accepted complaints from
the heterodox against their own
sons. Nevertheless, he wrote to the
Patriarchs that he was not to be
deterred “by the asseveration of
Heterodox Bishops that they enjoy
your favour, and would know how to
thwart our scheme.” He agreed with
the Patriarch in “repudiating a
certain kind of Proselytism” which
used dishonorable methods to attract
converts. But, he said, no Orthodox
person in England ever thought of
such a thing. In prohibiting
proselytism the Patriarch of
Constantinople had taken measures
“against an imaginary foe.” Overbeck
suggested that the Orthodox
authorities seek information from
Orthodox persons in England and not
listen to Anglicans who regard
everything from a heterodox
viewpoint. The faithful sons of the
Church deserved more confidence,
whatever their humble position, than
high-placed Anglicans.
72
Regardless of any
Patriarchal prohibition to
proselytize, Overbeck not only felt
under no obligation to cease his
efforts at converting the heterodox
but insisted on the “right of
religious controversy” as well.
73
Without religious controversy those
without the Church could never find
their way to her. The prohibition to
proselytize could not possibly mean
to forbid “converting a man to the
Orthodox faith” for it would be a
crime to keep even one soul out of
Christ’s only true Church.
Proselytism in its bad connotation
could only be applied to “dirty
Jesuitical jobbery.” There was no
Orthodox Patriarch who could make
him stop converting Anglican
heretics to Orthodoxy. Overbeck
wondered about the Greek outlook on
Orthodoxy’s mission in the world. He
knew the Greeks were proud of their
Church as a national institution but
was not so sure that they realized
that the Orthodox Catholic Church
was destined by Christ to embrace
all of mankind. He wondered if the
Greeks were anxious to propagate the
faith and was thankful for the
Russian branch of Orthodoxy which
had never ceased missionary work.
The Russian Church kept Orthodoxy
from becoming a “tribal Church” like
Judaism. He called upon the Orthodox
to do their duty and assist in
spreading the faith.74
Despite his impassioned plea for the
right to proselytize, Overbeck
stated elsewhere that the Orthodox
in England had instinctively
refrained from proselytizing because
there was nothing to offer converts
but membership in a Russian or Greek
national church where services were
in a foreign tongue and according to
the Eastern Rite which was foreign
to the Western mind.
75
After addressing the Eastern
Patriarchs in 1876, Overbeck again
waited for a reply. Meanwhile he
rapidly concluded that the
realization of the scheme was vital
especially for the children of the
petitioners, who were growing up
without hearing “the Word of God
preached” and attended services
performed in a foreign language. He
was apprehensive lest they turn from
religion entirely for private
devotions at home could not replace
the “power of effective Church
life.” With no action from the
Levant for three years, Overbeck
decided personally to take the
matter in hand. I went to
Constantinople in August 1879, to
stir up the sympathies of the Church
authorities. His Holiness the
present Patriarch, Joakim III,
received me like a father, and
invited me to be his guest during my
stay in the capital. Thus I had
daily occasion to converse with His
Holiness, to explain our wants and
wishes, and to enlist his lively
interest in our behalf. He promised
me (what since has been done) that
our request should be discussed by
the Holy Synod. He authorized me to
preach in private to the Western
Orthodox… In his last letter to me
the Patriarch asks me to inform: 1.
When a sufficient number of Westerns
have expressed their wish to have
their Old Western Church restored;
2. To show the means of supporting
priest and Church; 3. To submit the
Western Ritual to be used for
approbation.76
Patriarch Joachim,
as well as the bishops of the
Russian Synod, seemed to have
approached the matter more
realistically than Overbeck himself.
While the latter spoke of reviving
the whole ancient Catholic Church of
the West, they spoke of establishing
a parish. When the Russian Synod
received the petition it authorized
the celebration of the Eastern
Liturgy in English at the Russian
Embassy church in London until a
large enough community of English
converts warranted the establishment
of Western rites.
77
The Russian Synod
had previously revised and approved
an English translation of the
Liturgy made by S.G. Hatherly and
published in 1865.78
However, the
Liturgy was only occasionally
celebrated in English in the first
half of the 1870’s at the London
Embassy church,79
which seems to
indicate that after the death of Fr.
E.I. Popoff in 1875 the priests
attached to the Embassy church did
not have his zeal for assisting the
English Orthodox in their spiritual
life. Overbeck’s allusion to the
lack of sermons seems to indicate
that little was done to help them
achieve a better understanding of
their newly-acquired faith. Hatherly,
interestingly enough, admitted that
he was not particularly pleased with
his own translation of the Liturgy
and preferred to use another version
when he had the occasion to “make”
the Liturgy.80
After Overbeck’s return from the
East he opened a small oratory in
his own London home where he
preached to his little group of
followers on Sunday afternoons. He
later published two volumes of
Addresses to the Western Orthodox.
81
In 1876 when Overbeck appealed to
the Eastern Patriarchs he had
reached rather a low ebb in his
hopes for the approval of his scheme
and he no longer sought to collect
signatures to a petition, for he had
learned from sad experience that to
collect signatures on the basis of
vague hopes was not justified. After
his return from Constantinople his
hopes were again revived and he
called upon all who were interested
to come forth and show that they
desired the restoration of Western
Orthodoxy. The Greek hesitance in
granting approval before this he
explained by the “newness and
importance” of the question and
because the Greeks may have feared
taking the wrong step and
compromising themselves.82
At the Phanar a
committee was appointed to examine
Overbeck’s scheme. In 1882 it gave a
favourable report, whereupon the
Patriarch approved the project
provisionally upon condition that
the other Churches concur. There
was, apparently, a protest from the
Synod of the Church of Greece and
the Patriarchate subsequently
dropped the whole matter. It has
been said that the Russian Synod
also dropped the idea in 1884,83
following the
advice of Archpriest Eugene
Konstantinovich Smirnov (1845-1923)
who had succeeded Fr. Popoff at the
Russian Imperial Embassy church in
London. Douglas gave the impression,
on the other hand, that the scheme
was not abandoned by the Russians
until much later and that Fr.
Smirnov continued to support it
until a few years before his death.
Overbeck, writing in 1885, still
hoped “that our Western Orthodox
Church will soon be an accomplished
fact.”84
In discussing the religious life of
his group in 1885, Overbeck
indicated that they attend the
Orthodox church but that they were
“badly situated in having only once
a week a Liturgy and no religious
instruction besides.” He felt it his
duty to supply this deficiency by
instructing the youth in the faith.
He was fearful lest their religious
life slowly disappear and cease
altogether, leaving only an “empty
shadow of mechanical formalism” with
the danger of forgetting the
doctrine and precepts of the Church.
To combat this danger he devoted a
short time each Sunday afternoon to
religious instruction.85
9.
REASONS FOR THE FAILURE OF THE
SCHEME
The final reason for the Greek
refusal to approve Overbeck’s scheme
is not clear. Douglas and Archbishop
Chrysostom Papadopoulos (1868-1938)
were of the opinion that it was
because the Greek Church did not
desire to “sanction the setting up
of a proselytizing Orthodox Church
in England.”
86
But the problem hardly seems this
simple. If this were the case why
was Overbeck received so hospitably
in Constantinople, authorized to
preach, and his scheme approved by
the Patriarchal committee and the
Patriarchate itself? That the
Greeks were not averse to
proselytizing among Anglicans is
shown by the reception and even
ordination of two Anglicans just as
Overbeck was putting his scheme into
motion. The first of these, James
Chrystal (1832-1908), was a priest
of the Protestant Episcopal Church
who, on the eve of Theophany, 5
January 1869 (O.S.), was received
into the Orthodox Church at the
Cathedral of Hermopolis through
(re-) Baptism and Chrismation.
Archbishop Alexander Lycurgos of
Syra and Tinos, who received him,
soon after ordained him to the
priesthood and in a short time
Chrystal was made an Archimandrite
and a “Great Catechist” of the
Patriarchate of Constantinople.87
In 1870 Archbishop Lycurgos visited
England to consecrate a Greek church
in Liverpool and his ordination of
Chrystal was well known there. He
was nevertheless wined and dined by
the Anglicans and behaved in such an
intimate manner with them that
Overbeck and his friends were
somewhat distressed. Some of the
latter felt that the English Church
could not possibly be schismatic and
heretical if Lycurgos was so
friendly with its leaders and
visited its churches. On the other
hand, in a long discussion with
Overbeck, Lycurgos “praised our
Petition as unexceptionably
Orthodox.”88
As a result of the
Archbishop’s seeming inconsistency,
some of Overbeck’s petitioners
withdrew their names. A
correspondent of the Berlin
newspaper National-Zeitung, writing
11 April 1870, reported speeches
given at a banquet in honor of
Lycurgos. Among other things, A.P.
Stanley (1815-81), the Broad Church
Dean of Westminster Abbey, spoke of
the need for Anglican-Orthodox
recognition and of mutually
refraining from recruiting
proselytes from each other. The
Bishop of London, John Jackson,
speaking after Stanley, decried the
type of unity proposed by Overbeck.89
No matter how
Lycurgos behaved overtly, he still
was able to praise Overbeck’s work
in private. The same could be true
of the hierarchs in the East.90
Another figure prominent in Orthodox
circles in Great Britain was Stephen
Georgeson Hatherly (1827-1905). An
Anglican layman, he was received
into Orthodoxy in London in 1856 by
(re-) Baptism. In 1871 he was
ordained to the priesthood at
Constantinople by Metropolitan Basil
of Anchialos. The Archbishop of
Canterbury, Archibald Campbell Tait
(1811-82) is said to have denounced
his missionary zeal to the
Constantinopolitan Patriarch who
prohibited him “to proselytize a
single member of the Anglican
Church.”91
Despite the
prohibition, however, in a letter
from Patriarch Joachim II to
Metropolitan Basil written in 1874,
the Patriarch showed his pleasure at
Hatherly’s work and bestowed his
blessing upon him.92
The following year
Hatherly was honored by elevation to
the dignity of Archpriest. Thus,
despite prohibitions to the
contrary, Hatherly, whose very
raison d’être was to proselytize
Anglicans, was honored and blessed
by the highest prelates of the
Church. Hatherly, who worked for
similar goals as Overbeck but using
different means, was not a
collaborator of Overbeck and is said
to have had a controversy with him.
Hatherly was not interested in
Western Orthodoxy and simply desired
Eastern services in English with a
native clergy. It had not been
possible to uncover any definite
evidence of contention between
Hatherly and Overbeck, and
Hatherly’s name never once figured
in any of the literature issued by
Overbeck available to this writer.
Only once, at the very beginning of
his work, did Overbeck allude to a
“few single voices” in Britain who
advocated privately that converts
simply join the Eastern Church,
adopting her Church formularies in
an English translation. He conceded
that this would be the simplest way
of establishing an Orthodox Church
in England but insisted it would not
be the right or most profitable way.93
The reasons for the Greek refusal to
approve Overbeck’s scheme still are
not clarified. To say that Overbeck
had opponents in Britain would be an
understatement at the least. His
work was resented by various
high-placed members of the
Establishment, but more particularly
by those in favor of intercommunion
with the Orthodox Church. Dr.
Frazier, Chairman of the
Intercommunion Committee of the
Convocation of Canterbury, condemned
Overbeck’s scheme as “a schismatic
proceeding, and a mere copying of
the uncatholic and uncanonical
aggression of the Church of Rome.”94
Overbeck was accused of trying to
establish a “new Church” in order to
proselytize “within the jurisdiction
of the Anglican Episcopate.” Dr. E.B.
Pusey (1800-82), the well-known
Tractarian leader, took notice of
Overbeck and called him “the blind
leader of the blind.”95
The intercommunionist Bishop Henry
Cotterill of Edinburgh, writing in
the Autumn of 1872 to Madame Olga
Novikoff, described Overbeck as
having a “cast-iron Christianity”
and of being “a very low type
indeed.” Madame Novikoff, who moved
in such circles as that of the
British statesman W.E. Gladstone,
was a friend of Overbeck. She
corresponded with him for thirty
years or more, and was greatly
interested in his scheme. She
defended him before his foes. In
Bishop Cotterill’s opinion, Overbeck
“had brought over to the Orthodox
Church the intolerance of the Roman
Communion” and was a bête noire to
the majority of Anglicans. “The
self-complacent Pharisaism of the
man would be amusing if it were not
sad to think that an un-Christian
spirit like this animates so many.”96
Since Overbeck was so intensely
disliked, it is not difficult to
imagine that some concrete action in
the form of protests to Orthodox
authorities was taken by his
Anglican enemies.
Overbeck was not one to be
frightened by his adversaries. To
those Anglicans who misrepresented
his scheme as a concentrated attack
upon the Established Church and an
attempt to establish another English
Church alongside the Establishment,
he answered that he doubted whether
the Establishment could even be
termed a Church. Moreover, his aim
was much broader: to restore the
entire Orthodox Catholic Church
throughout the West. To those who
denounced his work as an attempt to
add to the number of schismatic
churches, he said that the Anglicans
who closed their eyes on their own
schism had always admitted that the
Orthodox Church was not schismatical.
How, then, could he and his friends
who were in communion with the
Orthodox Church possibly be
schismatics?97
Overbeck seemed almost pleased with
the fact that his group was attacked
by those in high places: “We are
reviled and insulted; and even in
the meetings of Heterodox Bishops
voices are heard against the
establishment of our ‘schismatic’
(!!!) Church.” Despite the numerical
insignificance of his group, the
Anglicans busied themselves with
them as it they were a great army.
Did the English Church feel itself
so weak that it feared a handful of
people who had neither riches nor
influence?98
Despite the antagonism of Anglican
bishops and higher churchmen towards
Overbeck and his scheme, there were,
indubitably, those Anglicans who
were interested in it. T.W. Mossman,
who, along with F.G. Lee and J.T.
Seccombe, is reputed to have had a
hand in the founding of The Order of
Corporate Reunion in the 1870’s in
order to provide the Church of
England with a valid episcopate,
wrote in 1877 to Lee evincing
interest in Overbeck’s work. He
asked to be “put… into communication
with the promoters of the
Autocephalous English Church in
communion with the Churches of the
East.” He inquired: “Is not Mr. John
Baxter of Dorlaston, and a Mr.
Hathaway [sic!] of Wolverhampton, or
somewhere in that neighborhood,
among them?” Mossman was of the
opinion that if “an orthodox and
Catholic chair” were to established
in some city it would signal “the
beginning of a second Pentecost” in
England and he said he would feel
“very much disposed” to join such a
movement if it were to begin in the
neighborhood of Lincoln.99
Despite the fact
that Overbeck stressed that his
scheme was more comprehensive, the
Anglicans considered it as aimed
directly at them and at the winning
of the Anglo-Saxon world to his
Western Orthodox Church by
individual conversion. This was
distasteful to them for more than
one reason. Those among the
Anglicans who believed in the
Branch-Theory of the Church, i.e.,
that the Church Catholic was made up
of three separate branches: Greek,
Roman, and Anglo-Catholic, desired
intercommunion, a sort of mutual
recognition and fellowship, between
the “branches” of the Church. The
intercommunionists stressed the need
for a study of each other’s position
with an aim toward closer
friendship. This would result
eventually in the recognition of
Anglican Orders on the part of the
East and the right of individuals to
communicate in each other’s
churches. The intercommunionists
were not particularly interested in
doctrinal unity but only desired
recognition of the status quo.
Feeling that the Church of England
was the branch of the Catholic
Church in those parts,
Anglo-Catholics were resentful of
the mere presence of any other
branch of the Catholic Church in
England working, without leave,
within the jurisdiction of the
Anglican episcopate. And for such
another branch boldly to receive
converts from the Anglican branch
was most unbearable because such
actions proved that the Church of
England’s claims to catholicity were
not recognized. The Anglicans felt
that most Orthodox theologians were
ignorant of true Anglicanism, and
the presence “on the spot” of such
men as Overbeck, with his warped
opinion of Anglicanism, only
“reinforced their Orthodox
authorities prejudices…”
Instead of the day for eventual
intercommunion between the Eastern
Church and the Church of England
drawing closer, Overbeck and his
friends exerted every effort “to
prevent anything which might bring
the two churches nearer…”100
Once the Archbishop of Canterbury
protested to the Phanar against Fr.
Hatherly’s activities, there is no
reason to doubt that the Anglican
authorities would exert pressure on
the Greeks because of Overbeck’s
scheme, especially since the latter
was potentially much more
threatening to them. The English
were not backward about making their
opinions known in the Middle East,
and British policies played a larger
role in the destinies of the dying
Ottoman Empire. Overbeck stated that
there was a period when “Anglican
influence was paramount (not to say,
omnipotent) at Constantinople.”101
In 1840 the Sultan deposed Patriarch
Gregory VI upon directions of the
English ambassador Lord Stratford de
Redcliffe. As for the protest from
the Synod of the Church of Greece
(independent of Constantinople since
1833) which, it is asserted, halted
Overbeck’s scheme at the Phanar –
this, too, could very well have been
British-inspired. It has been said
that when one collates the
“pronouncements issued by Greek
ecclesiastics with the political
events and pressures which
paralleled their appearance, one
soon discovers an obvious relation
between their interpretation of
Orthodox Canon law and faith and the
political tensions to which they
were subjected.”102
In the days Overbeck was seeking
approval of his plan at
Constantinople, Greece was almost
completely under the thumb of
England. King George I received his
Greek throne in 1863 by nomination
and approval of the British
Government, just as had King Otho
before him. Greece also was heavily
in debt to Great Britain which took
advantage of the situation by
interfering in the internal affairs
of that country. It is, therefore,
not inconceivable that Queen
Victoria, the “legal head of the
protestant religion established by
law in England,” upon the advice of
one of her political appointees,
e.g., the Archbishop of Canterbury,
exerted pressure upon the Greek
Synod through the Greek Government
to block Overbeck’s scheme already
approved at Constantinople. The
British may well have been
apprehensive of Overbeck’s scheme
which, if successful, could have
wreaked havoc with the
Establishment. The time was
particularly ripe for such a
movement as Overbeck’s.
There was much unrest within the
ranks of the Ritualists. This was
the period in which British secular
and ecclesiastical leaders were
doing their utmost to stifle the
Anglo-Catholic movement within the
Church of England. The oppression of
Ritualists reached its highest point
in the Public Worship Regulation Act
of 1874 (drafted by the same
Archbishop Tait who had protested
Hatherly) which was passed to
suppress the growth of ritualism in
the Established Church. In the
period from 1877 to 1882 several
leading High Churchmen were
prosecuted and even imprisoned for
their ritual practices. Some
Ritualists expected momentarily to
be expelled from the Establishment.
There was a continuous flow of
converts to Rome and each blow
against the High Churchmen or their
Catholic principles gave the
Romeward flow more impetus.
Overbeck’s proposed non-Roman
Catholic Church which, conceivably,
might have not only diverted this
stream into Orthodoxy but taken with
it a greater number hesitant to go
Romeward, was a potential danger to
the Establishment. Dr. Overbeck’s
scheme could have hastened the
crumbling of the Establishment and
caused all sorts of problems for
both Church and State. There were
undoubtedly some Anglican churchmen,
even of the Ritualist camp, who did
not wish the Establishment to fall
simply because of the “loaves and
the fishes,” i.e., because many
livings were involved. It is,
therefore, not unreasonable to see
the possibility of British pressure
on the Patriarchate and Greek Synod.
J.A. Douglas, translator of
Archbishop Chrysostom Papadopoulos’
book on Anglican Orders, in a long
four-page footnote devoted to
Overbeck’s scheme which exhibited
something of the intercommunionist
animosity described above,
interestingly enough did not even
mention the Greeks in connection
with the failure of the scheme. In
his view Overbeck’s failure was
bound to Russian foreign policy.
Great Britain had been the chief
obstacle in the fulfillment of
Russian aspirations in the Balkans
and the Levant. If matters had stood
differently Constantinople would be
within grasp of the Russian Empire.
The men most active in the Oxford
Movement in the 1870’s and 1880’s
had yearnings for union with the
Orthodox Church. Such a frame of
mind made them ripe for propaganda
about Turkish oppression of
Christian subjects. Under
Gladstone’s leadership the High
Churchmen waged a campaign which in
the 1870’s brought a drastic change
in English foreign policy. The
Russian Government was, therefore,
quite interested in the
ecclesiastical affairs of Britain.
Few Russian officials were willing
to risk Anglo-Catholic sympathy for
an improbably and perhaps only
visionary conversion of any large
number of Anglicans to Orthodoxy. It
was the Tsarist statesman,
therefore, who saw to it that the
setting up of a Western Orthodox
Church in England was thwarted.103
“N.O.”, probably the inverted
initials of Olga Novikoff, also
blamed Russia for the failure of
Overbeck’s scheme, but not because
of any deliberate planning by
Russian policy makers. The reason
was simple inertia. Just as in state
politics the Russians were
unprepared for questions of the day
to come, so in religious policies
the Russians did not know how to
make the best use of opportunities
falling into their laps. All of
Overbeck’s energies were wasted and
not put to use in that most
brilliant period of his activity,
the first two-thirds of the 1870’s.
The viewpoint, thus, is the opposite
of that expressed by Douglas. The
Russians allowed Overbeck’s scheme
to go by default, to fail because of
the lack of a definite policy. As
far as the Greeks were concerned,
they simply were not enough
interested in the affair to try it
out.104
Whatever the
reasons for Overbeck’s failure, his
work and writings, at the very
least, awoke some Orthodox churchmen
to a realization that their Church
had a mission outside of its Eastern
confines. Russian scholars were
stimulated to study more carefully
the Western traditions, and numerous
monographs of Western liturgical
usages appeared. The Old Catholic
and Anglican theological positions
were scrutinized closely by
theologians. Through Overbeck
several capable people were led into
the Orthodox Church while many
others learned of her existence and
her theological position through his
writings. Several important Orthodox
theological works found their way
into English by way of his journal.
Dr. G. Florovsky said of Overbeck’s
scheme: There was an obvious utopian
element in the scheme, and it failed
to attract any appreciable number of
adherents. And yet it was not just a
fantastic dream. The question raised
by Overbeck was pertinent, even if
his own answer to it was confusedly
conceived. And probably the vision
of Overbeck was greater than his
personal interpretation.105
Overbeck’s lack of success with his
scheme was, ironically, reflected in
his own home. “N.O.,” who has
been cited before, asserted that
even Overbeck’s family did not
become Orthodox. It is known,
however, that they did become
Orthodox, that his whole family was
received into the Church by Fr.
Popoff. Overbeck’s fears concerning
the loss of the faith by the English
Orthodox, and particularly the
youth, because of the lack of
instruction and regular Church life,
could well have been based upon
observations within his own home.
His family had so strayed from the
faith that it was thought not even
Orthodox! Dr. Overbeck’s death, on 3
November 1905 at the age of
eighty-four, was barely noticed.
There was only a small item in The
London Daily News to the effect that
he was an extraordinary linguist,
who knew more than two dozen
languages and spoke fluently in
fourteen of them. He was buried by
clergy of the Russian Embassy church
on 7 November.106
10.
OVERBECK’S COLLABORATORS
A.V. Richardson - Among the
men who collaborated with Overbeck
in his scheme for the resuscitation
of the Western Orthodox Church was
Athanasius V. Richardson. Richardson
was an Anglican priest, probably of
the Episcopal Church of Scotland,
who was united to the Orthodox
through Chrismation by Archpriest
D.Vasil’ev in Nice, France, in 1861.
At the time of his reception into
the Church he requested ordination.
After “receiving valid orders from
an Eastern bishop” he wanted to
celebrate Orthodox services in Great
Britain in the English language for
persons ready “openly to accept and
confess the Orthodox faith.” Due to
a serious illness Richardson was
prevented from carrying out his
intention.107
Somewhat of a controversy arose over
Richardson’s reception and request
for ordination. Fr. E.I.Popoff of
London wrote to the Russian Synod in
St. Petersburg saying that the Greek
priest in London insisted that
Richardson had to be (re-) Baptized.
Hatherly also wrote to the Russian
Synod in 1862, and said the Synod
ought to require Baptism by
immersion of all converts who were
candidates for the priesthood.
Hatherly, at the same time a lay
member of the Greek church in
Liverpool, and himself having been
(re-) Baptized by the Greeks,
considered Richardson’s reception by
the Sacrament of Chrismation
insufficient to ordain him.
Metropolitan Philaret Drozdov of
Moscow, however, disagreed with this
view and stated that it was
perfectly canonical to ordain
Richardson without (re-) Baptism.
The controversy caused Alexis
Petrovich Akhmatov (1818-70), then
Chief-Procurator of the Synod
(1862-64), to write to Philaret that
the differences between the Greek
and Russian Churches in the matter
of the reception of converts was
serious and ought to be resolved.
Such differences might be a cause
for scandal and could shake any
prospective convert’s faith in the
Church.108
Concerning Richardson’s possible
ordination, Philaret wrote on 28
February to the Chief-Procurator: If
he had asked to recognize him as a
priest, this would have been a
difficult question… The solution of
it should weigh upon another
consideration: Did the Anglican
Church preserve the succession of
episcopal ordination
uninterruptedly? This is subject to
doubt. However, he asked a new
ordination. Against this I can
visualize no difficulties on the
part of the Church canons…109
In another place Metropolitan
Philaret reiterated his opinion that
Richardson could be ordained. He
never was because it was felt that
it would cause offense in the
Orthodox world of London.110
Richardson apparently soon joined
ranks with Overbeck and probably was
one of the original petitioners. He
made some contributions to The
Orthodox Catholic Review, starting
in 1868, in the form of several
short stories based on themes from
early Church history. He also
versified several prayers and hymns
from the Greek. Richardson most
likely was the “clergyman lately
seceded from the Anglican Church”
who anonymously authored the
pamphlet The Present Crisis.111
The author of The Present Crisis
wrote a series of letters to the
Scottish newspaper, The Dundee
Advertiser, starting with 22 July
1868. The occasion of the conversion
of a Mr. Humphrey to the Roman
Church furnished the reason for the
first letter but in others the
writer discussed the Anglican
dilemma in terms similar to
Overbeck’s. The writer, who signed
himself “Orthodox,” stated that he
had been an Anglican priest ten
years, but had seceded to Orthodoxy
and was hoping for the Western
Orthodox Church soon to be refounded.
He called upon the Scottish
Anglicans to become Orthodox and to
sign Overbeck’s petition. He said
prospective converts ought to apply
to him or the priest of the Russian
Church in London for admittance into
Orthodoxy. “Orthodox” probably was a
former member of the Scottish
Episcopal diocese of Brechin. In The
Present Crisis he gives his address
as Craigie, Perth. In the same issue
of The Orthodox Catholic Review in
which “The Present Crisis” first
appeared, the first paraphrase of a
Greek hymn by “A.R.,” i.e.
Athanasius Richardson, also was
printed. There seems little doubt
but that “A.R.” and “Orthodox” were
one and the same.112
Another book, The Canonical Hours,
from Ancient Sources (2nd ed.,
London, 1868), “By a Catholic
Priest,” was probably also the work
of Richardson. Overbeck stated that
when the book was first written the
author had been an Anglican but that
he had since left and joined the
Orthodox Church. Overbeck hoped that
a third edition might appear but
with the changes necessary to make
of it an Orthodox production. Among
the changes he suggested were the
elimination of post-1054 Saints
together with the Apostles and
Athanasian Creeds which are not used
in the Orthodox Church. The book
could very well have been
Richardson’s
113 because
of his interest in liturgical
matters as seen from his
translations of liturgical hymns and
offices.114
J.T. Seccombe - Another
interesting collaborator of Overbeck
was Dr. John Thomas Seccombe
(1835-1895) of Terrington Lodge,
near King’s Lynn in Norfolk County.
He was the eldest son of Sir Thomas
Lawrence Seccombe, G.C.I.E., K.C.S.I.,
who, for many years had been
financial secretary and later
Assistant Under Secretary of State
for India. J.T. Seccombe received
the M.D. degree at the University of
St. Andrews (Scotland) in 1856 and
began his medical practice at
Terrington in 1862. He became a
member of the Royal College of
Surgeons in 1858 and a Licentiate of
the Society of Apothecaries of
London the following year. He also
studied at the University College,
London. Seccombe had many
out-of-the-way interests and an
extensive and minute knowledge of
many subjects. A Fellow of the Royal
Astronomical Society, he constructed
a powerful telescope with an
eight-inch Newtonian reflector in
his garden. He was esteemed as an
authority on change-ringing and had
some repute as a local antiquary,
having written a paper on the
beautifully decorated St. Clement’s
church of Terrington for the Norfolk
and Norwich Archaeological Society.
Seccombe was an ardent admirer of
Pasteur. After visiting the
Institute at Paris in 1863, he
lectured on the newest theories on
inoculation. He was medical officer
of the fourth and fifth districts of
the Wisbech Union and surgeon of the
Lynn district of the Great Northern
Railway. He belonged to a whole
range of different societies and
acted as a Justice of the Peace for
the county of Norfolk from 1866
until his death, 27 January 1895,
from heart disease.115
In addition to his
many other interests, Seccombe was
interested in church history,
patristic writings, and liturgiology.
He had evidently shown inclinations
towards the religious life early in
his career and had once been a
novice in the Cistercian Abbey of
Mount St. Bernard.116
At any rate his interest in
religious matters remained with him
the remainder of his life. “With
keen scientific interests he was
also an ardent theologian, and this
somewhat unusual juxtaposition of
tastes was thoroughly characteristic
of a remarkably versatile mind.”117
Seccombe’s religious propensities
led him to become associated with
the episcopus vagans Julius (or
Jules) Ferrete who came to England
in the Summer of 1866, claiming to
have been consecrated Bishop of Iona
by a Jacobite Syrian bishop.118
Seccombe is said to have joined
Ferrete and to have been consecrated
a bishop by him soon after his
arrival in Britain. Ferrete
attempted to found some sort of
Eastern Church in England and in
September 1866 he published The
Eastern Liturgy adapted for Use in
the West (London). Ferrete
also offered to confer Holy Orders
upon Anglicans and others who
desired them. In 1874 he left
England for Switzerland and Seccombe
severed his relations with him.
Brandreth states that by 1877
Seccombe was again an Anglican.119
Another ecclesiastical venture in
which Seccombe was involved was The
Order of Corporate Reunion which he
is said to have founded together
with F.G. Lee and T.W. Mossman.
Brandreth gave the founding
date as 1877, while others date the
founding of the Order in 1874. The
Order of Corporate Reunion was
established ostensibly in order to
provide the Church of England with
Orders which Rome would be obliged
to recognize as valid. According to
Brandreth, Seccombe and his two
associates received some sort of
episcopal orders by the Summer of
1877, though Seccombe may have
received his consecration earlier
from Ferrete. Since the activities
of the Order were shrouded in the
deepest secrecy, the information
available is scanty and conjectural.
At any rate Seccombe apparently
never exercised his episcopal orders
and soon left the movement.120
F.E. Langhelt, in A Chapter of
Secret History, stated that the
Order was founded in 1874.
121
According to Brandreth, Seccombe
soon dropped his ties with the Order
even though he had been the prime
mover in its founding. Whatever
Seccombe’s connections were with the
Order and with Lee and Mossman,
whether he was consecrated after the
Order was established or sooner at
the hands of Ferrete, in the early
part of 1875 he had apparently
joined the Orthodox Church and
became associated with Overbeck. It
seems likely, however, that Seccombe
left the Orthodox Church in 1877 and
established the Order with Lee and
Mossman that Summer, for Seccombe’s
name does not figure in Overbeck’s
Review after the January-September,
1877 issue. This is all the more
strange when one considers that
Seccombe’s articles and translations
appeared rather frequently beginning
with 1875. The first of Seccombe’s
articles appeared in the first issue
of The Orthodox Catholic Review for
1875, and was signed with the
initials “Dr. J.S.”122
He wrote in a manner which
presupposed that he was not only a
member of the Orthodox Church but
that he had devoted some time to the
study of her tenets. Among other
things, he stated that “the Orthodox
Church is the only institution on
earth which satisfies the reason on
religious matters” and that she
“alone affords a solution to those
momentous questions which the
existing religious systems of the
West are unable to grapple with.” He
invited all his readers to a study
of Orthodoxy. The next issue of the
Review contained his “Articles of
Catholic and Orthodox Belief.”123
The same issue (pp. 90-92) contained
his “An urgent appeal to
Anglo-Catholics” in which he urged
them to leave the Church of England
and become Orthodox. In this
appeal, Seccombe enumerated the
various defects of the
Establishment: (1) it was in
complete subjection to the secular
power; (2) there was absent within
it any authoritative standard of
doctrine; (3) its administration of
the Sacraments were defective and
mutilated; and (4) there was
enforced communion in it with
heretics. Seccombe was of the
opinion that such defects were
fundamental and “absolutely
inconsistent with Catholicity.” As
far as Anglican Orders were
concerned, he said that the validity
of these orders were not recognized
by any other Church. “As for the
truth of this matter [valid orders],
it is needless for me to express my
own thoughts, which, after all, can
be mere private and individual
opinion, of no value or importance.”
He was of the opinion that the
question of Anglican Orders was a
small matter and that if everything
else were put right it “would amount
to a ritual defect which could
easily be remedied, provided it were
met and considered in a right
spirit.” If the defects he numbered
were remedied all hindrances to
union with Orthodoxy would be
restored as an independent National
Church in communion with the
Orthodox Church. Such a body would
be welcomed into the “Confederation
of independent but United Churches
which is the legitimate
representative of the Undivided
Catholic Church, and which glories
in the title of Orthodox.” As for
other writings, Seccombe published a
booklet in answer to three
well-known essays by the
philosophical radical John Stuart
Mill.124
Seccombe’s book dealt primarily with
an examination and refutation of
Mill’s essay on Theism. He also
executed the translation from the
Greek of “An Accurate Exposition of
the Orthodox Faith,” by St. John
Damascene. There had been a renewed
interest in this eighth century
Eastern Church Father since the Bonn
Conferences where his writings were
quoted from, especially in
connection with the Filioque
discussions. Seccombe’s translation
began to appear in The Orthodox
Catholic Review starting with the
January-June, 1876 issue. He
dedicated his translation, by
permission, to Patriarch Hierotheus
of Antioch (1851-85). Appearing in
the same issue of the Review was
Seccombe’s composition of the
“Office of the Holy Great Martyr
Alban, Protomartyr of Britain.” This
office was modeled on ancient
patterns in the Menaeon and
exhibited considerable knowledge of
Byzantine hymnological techniques.
At some later time Seccombe
published his translation or
composition of The Great Catechism
of the Holy, Catholic, Apostolic,
and Orthodox Church. This work
received the approval of the Holy
Synod of the Church of Greece as
well as of the Patriarch of Antioch.
Most of Seccombe’s articles were
signed by initials: Dr. J.S.;
J.S.M.D.; or J.T.S., M.D.,
however, he signed this translation
of the Damascene’s work as John T.
Seccombe, M.D., F.R.A.S.
G.V. Shann - A collaborator
of Overbeck who distinguished
himself by his numerous translations
of Orthodox services into English
was George V. Shann. He was not a
“schooled theologian, but a simple
Orthodox layman, whose professional
duties lie in a different
direction.”125
Shann, a convert himself, was
instrumental in bringing other
“truth-seeking souls” into the
Church. Some of his fellow
Englishmen thought him an “alien”
for his profession of Orthodoxy. He
called upon his friends to be
missionaries and he hoped for large
gains in England. For the small
group of English Orthodox in
Kidderminster (Worcestershire),
where the famous seventeenth century
Puritan Richard Baxter had preached,
Shann opened an Orthodox Oratory in
a room at No. 9 Church Street,
formerly used as a solicitor’s
office. This was opened for Orthodox
prayers on Sunday, 6 February 1876,
and was still being used at
Christmas 1879.
126
The small
congregation of ten adults and three
children gathered every Saturday
evening and Sunday morning, and the
eves of Great Feasts, for such
devotions as laymen could recite
and, no doubt, using translations
made by Shann himself. In one of his
“Addresses to the Western Orthodox,”
Overbeck said he was thinking of his
“dear friends” from Kidderminster
praying in their Oratory. They, too,
were apparently hoping for the
success of the Western Orthodox
scheme.127
Although Shann may
have been interested in Overbeck’s
Western Orthodox scheme, he found it
expedient, at the same time, not to
neglect Eastern liturgical usages.
In his leisure time he learned Greek
and Slavonic in order to read the
Church offices in the original
tongues and to translate them for
his English coreligionists. Shann’s
metrical as well as prose
translations of Greek liturgical
offices began to appear in
Overbeck’s Review in 1875 and it may
be presumed that he became Orthodox
around that time. His translations
continued to appear regularly from
that time until the second from the
last issue: Vol. XI (Part II, 1888).
Besides his own work, Shann edited
and supplemented several
translations made from the Slavonic
by Fr.Basil Popoff. Shann had some
contact with S.G. Hatherly and
furnished the latter with some
translations for his Office
for the Lord’s Day.128
Later, Hatherly
rather sharply criticized Shann’s
Euchology.
129 Besides
the mass of translations which
appeared in The Orthodox Catholic
Review over a period of years, Shann
also published a laymen’s prayer
book,130
a volume containing
the Sacraments and other offices,131
and other works.132
E. Harrison - Eugene Harrison
was apparently a late-comer into
Overbeck’s fold. With an M.A. from
Oxford University, Harrison knew
Russian and translated from it an
“Exposition of the Divine Liturgy of
St. John Chrysostom.”133.Nothing
more is known of Harrison except
that almost a quarter of a century
later his name appeared as
translator from Russian of a
statement which spoke out against
the possibility of any kind of union
between the Established Church and
the Orthodox Church.
134.
J.N.W.B. Robertson - One who
was associated with Overbeck toward
the end of his career was J.N.W.B.
Robertson, who assisted in editing a
new edition in English of Peter
Moghila’s Confession. This took up
the entire last issue of The
Orthodox Catholic Review (Vol. XII).
The Orthodox Confession of the
Eastern Church was again reprinted
later (London, 1898). It is
interesting to note that many of the
converts to the Orthodox Church in
the nineteenth century were
interested in liturgiology.135
Robertson was no exception. He, too,
published several translations from
the Greek, particularly of the
Liturgies.
136
Other Associates of Overbeck
- Another of Overbeck’s followers
was one who preferred to hide behind
the anonymity of his initials: “R.H.H.”
He translated several portions of
Overbeck’s book Der einzige sichere
Ausweg and wrote “The new ‘ism’ in
the Established Church,”
137
in which he discussed a certain
Anglican cleric who preached “Irvingism”
to the consternation of his flock.
R.H.H. told the Anglican laity that
the only recourse they had was to
seek refuge in the Catholic Orthodox
Church. The writer predicted that
conditions as they then were in the
Church could not last for long, for
the “Ceremonial Protestants,” i.e.,
the Ritualists, would be forced to
join Papal Rome or “unite themselves
with Christ’s Holy Orthodox Catholic
Church.”
Another Englishman who was a member
of the “Greek Orthodox Church” was
Theodore F. Shann. Probably
related to G.V. Shann, his address
“On Transubstantiation” delivered at
a meeting in Wolverhampton in
November 1875 was reproduced in The
Orthodox Catholic Review.138
He also translated from the French,
“The Russian and Greek Churches: The
Manner of their Reception of
Converts,” which was written by A.N.
Mouravieff (Murav’ev). The latter
stressed that the difference in the
practice of the two Churches was
simply a matter of rite rather than
dogma.139
Another convert mentioned by
Overbeck, but one who probably was
not associated with him, was a Mr. Matthias Jenkyns, “whose
zeal for the Church of his adoption,
and for Orthodox studies generally,
is well known to us.”
140
Jenkyns wrote the introduction to a
book of Greek Lays, Idylls, Legends,
etc., translated by E.M. Edmonds.
11.
OVERBECK’S WRITINGS
The Orthodox Catholic Review, edited
by Dr. Overbeck, was the first
English language periodical
published in the interests of the
Orthodox Church,141
and in the nineteenth century there
was only one other Orthodox journal
issued in Western Europe before it.
142
Overbeck explained the purpose of
his journal in the first issue:
There is no English
Periodical consecrated to the
defense and the furtherance of
Catholic Orthodoxy; and since
even the smallest sects possess
their organ or organs to
propagate their tenets, the
oldest and most respectable
Catholic Church must suffer
herself to be abused and
vilified by grossest ignorance
and shameful malevolence.Seventy
millions of Orthodox Christians
are spoken of as the crème of
Superstition, as the blindfolded
tools of Priestcraft, - in
short, as all but Pagans bearing
the Christian name. It is high
time that in the nineteenth
century, which boasts of its
deep learning, its impartial
judgment, and its true
Christianity, these clouds of
wrong notions should be
dispelled… Our Review intends
setting forth the Truth of
Catholic Orthodoxy as opposed to
Popery and Protestantism,
clearing its way through the
heap of rubbish stored up by
both parties for centuries past.
It intends paving the way to the
Restoration of the Western
Orthodox Catholic Church, and
thereby promoting the great end
of the Union of Christendom. It
intends showing the inner life
of Orthodoxy, and the progress
and learning within its body.143
From the first appearance of the
Review Overbeck propagated his views
on the restoration of the Western
Orthodox Church and it was soon the
Anglican journals took note of his
work “sneeringly and flippantly,
sometimes maliciously, but always
betraying their utter ignorance of
the matter.”144
According to
Overbeck the leading English Church
papers showed the greatest lack of
charity and ignorance. Some of the
attacks against him were libelous
but Overbeck chose to ignore them
rather than prosecute by law.
Overbeck disregarded most of the
personal attacks upon himself and
upon the OCR, but not so attacks
upon Orthodoxy as a whole. When The
Spectator in its issues of 6, 13,
and 20 July 1867 attacked the
Russian clergy in reference to his
writings, Overbeck wrote three
letters in refutation. The first was
accepted and published, the second
was refused, while he did not bother
to submit the third. All three were
printed in the OCR, making a strong
defense for the Orthodox Church.145
“N.O.” wrote that when the OCR first
appeared it made a strong impression
in England. His accusatory articles
against the pretensions of
Ultramontanism and against the
Latitudinarianism of the Anglicans
revealed his strict philosophical,
unmercifully critical mind in all
its might, but his very
implacability and sharpness
immediately repulsed from his
journal possible readers for whom
the publication was intended.146
The journal
appeared more or less on schedule
the first few years and was entirely
edited by Dr. Overbeck. Throughout
its life-span (the last issue
appeared in 1891) of rather sporadic
appearance, especially toward the
end, the OCR contained a mass of
interesting material. Besides its
articles of a polemical nature, it
published accounts of the affairs of
the Orthodox Church, stressed the
Russian Church’s missionary work,
gave much matter concerning the
question of “reunion,” and as has
been seen, afforded a space for the
publication of writings of other
Orthodox writers. The Review was
important also for its publication
of many valuable translations of
Orthodox theological and liturgical
documents – the latter primarily for
the benefit and edification of the
English Orthodox. Some of the
translations which appeared have
already been mentioned.
Among these was Overbeck’s
translation of Nicholas M. Damala’s
book: On the Relation of the
Anglican Church to the Orthodox, an
analysis of the doctrinal content of
the Thirty-nine Articles. The last
issue of the OCR was a re-issue of
Peter Moghila’s Catechism which had
originally been translated into
English by the Orthodox convert
Philip Lodvel and published in 1772.
Almost the entire burden of the
issuance of the magazine rested on
Overbeck’s shoulders and his other
avocations detracted from the time
involved in putting a journal to
press. This, and perhaps the lack of
funds as well, explained the
sporadic appearance of the OCR.
Through his Review Overbeck had some
contacts with Fr. Nicholas Bjerring
(1831-1900). A convert from the
Roman Church and rector of the first
Orthodox church in New York City, in
1875 Bjerring sent Overbeck some
books he had published in
translation and he asked Overbeck to
reprint his translation of the
office for the reception of converts
in the OCR. Although published in
1872, only a few copies of it
remained in print.147
Overbeck also reprinted two other of
Bjerring’s translations in later
issues. When Bjerring’s Oriental
Church Magazine appeared, Overbeck
found it “colorless, entertaining,
strictly abstaining from unsettling
Romans, Anglicans, and other
Protestants, by telling them that
they are wrong, that they must leave
their errors and turn to the
Orthodox truth.” He urged Bjerring
not to listen to Protestant counsels
but to take a stand against
heterodoxy, in which case he would
support him.148
It should be noted that Bjerring
eventually returned to the Roman
Church by way of Presbyterianism.149
Another Orthodox journalist with
whom Overbeck had contacts was
Fr. Vladimir Réné François Guettée
(1816-92). A former Jesuit, Guettée
joined the Russian Orthodox Church
in 1861 and became an indefatigable
exponent of Orthodoxy. Together with
Fr. J.V. Vasil’ev he engaged in
polemics against the Roman
Catholics. Overbeck corresponded
with Guettée and thought highly of
him, though he disagreed with the
latter’s making a distinction
between Anglicans and Protestants in
his Exposition de la Doctrine de
l’Église Catholique Orthodoxe
(Paris, 1866).
150
An extract from this book appeared
in the OCR.151
Aside from occasional letters to
various periodicals, Overbeck
confined his writing, for the most
part, to his own OCR and his books.
Shortly after the Bonn Conferences
his friends convinced him to write
an article for general Protestant
consumption and place it in a
magazine read by them. The general
Protestant public of the Low Church
or Dissenting stamp had little
notion of the Old Catholic movement
and no knowledge of his scheme. His
article on “The Reunion Scheme of
the Bonn Conferences” appeared in
The Inquirer, a weekly with
extensive circulation in America as
well as England, in its 25 May and I
June 1878 issues. Endeavoring to
procure copies of this magazine a
few weeks after publication,
Overbeck found that exactly these
two issues were out of print. He
then reproduced the essay in the
OCR, changing the original title.152
The article explained the failure of
the Bonn Conferences from the
Orthodox point of view, discussed
the impossibility of union,
especially with Anglicans, and aired
his scheme for the restoration of
the ancient Western Church.
Overbeck was an erudite person, a
product of German scholarship, and
possessed a doctorate in philosophy
and divinity. He knew Latin, German,
French, Italian, and English, as
well as Greek, Armenian, Syriac, and
Hebrew, and, as has been seen above,
many other languages besides. He
said in one place that he studied
Eastern languages with H. Peterman
the German Orientalist.
153
Among his scholarly
works was an edition of St. Ephraim
the Syrian for the Oxford University
Press.
154 Aside from
an occasional philological excursus,
Overbeck seems to have utilized his
knowledge of Eastern languages very
little, and translated only several
short passages from Syriac and
Armenian in the OCR.155
He was forced to
leave scholarly work to others
because the leisure hours left from
his other avocations were so few
that he could barely “cast a
transitory glance” into the books he
loved.
156 His
knowledge of Eastern languages led
him to an interest in the ancient
separated Churches of the East. In
1852 and 1853 he visited the
Mechitarist settlements in San
Lazaro, near Venice, and elsewhere
and found these Armenian Uniates to
be primarily Armenians and only
secondarily Romans. A study of the
theology of the Armenian Gregorians
convinced him that they were
orthodox in doctrine and he hoped
they would enter into formal
communion with the Orthodox Church.
In his opinion the Patriarchal See
of Antioch should have been ceded to
the Armenian Catholicos as proposed
by the Byzantine Emperor Manuel in
1179.157
Overbeck’s writings dealing with the
establishment of the Western
Orthodox Catholic Church were, in
the main, propagandistic and
polemistic and, after the appearance
of the first books in Russia, he
acquired the reputation of a
publicist rather than a serious
scholar.
158 Some
thought that his writing exhibited
the influence of his earlier Latin
training and that he sometimes used
theological expressions and thoughts
which were not altogether accurate
or acceptable from the Orthodox
point of view.
159 Most of
Overbeck’s books were in German and
English, but the majority of them
appeared in Russian translation, in
separate editions or serially in
Kristianskoe Chtenie (Christian
Reading) and in Chtenija Obshchestva
Ljubitelej Dukhovnago
Prosveshchenija (Readings of the
Society of Friends of Spiritual
Enlightenment).160
His first book
dealing with Orthodoxy and the
Western confessions, Die orthodoxe
katholische Anschauung (Halle, a/S.,
1865), created a sensation in Russia
where it appeared serially in the
journals Pravoslavnoe Obozrenie
(Orthodox Review) and Dukhovnaja
Beseda (Spiritual Conversation), as
well as the newspaper Syn Otechestvo
(Son of the Fatherland) in 1865. It
had two different Russian
translators and appeared in two book
editions. His book Die
providentielle Stellung des
Orthodoxen Russland (Halle a/S.,
1869) also had two different
translators: Fr. Eugene E. Popoff
and Archpriest Vladimir Ladinskyj of
Weimar. At least one of his books
appeared in Russian in serial form
some months before it was published
in German in book form: Die
Rechtgläubige Kirche (Halle a/S.,
1869). In this case, as in most of
the others, Overbeck’s translator
was Fr. E.I. Popoff.
Overbeck’s first English book was
Catholic Orthodoxy and
Anglo-Catholicism (London, 1866).
This work, which stunned the
Anglican world, stated his case
against the possibility of
intercommunion between the Orthodox
Church and the Church of England.
His scheme for the restoration of
the ancient ante-schismatic Catholic
Church was first put forth in
English in this book. With “No
Popery! No Protestantism!” his
slogan, he delved into an exposition
of the errors of Protestantism and
Roman Catholicism in comparison with
the doctrines of the Orthodox
Church. At the conclusion of the
book his “Outlines of the
Constitution of the Orthodox
Catholic Church of the West”
appeared.161
Overbeck’s last book of a
polemical-apologetic nature was A
Plain View of the Claims of the
Orthodox Catholic Church (London,
1881). This first appeared in the
OCR, 162 as was
the case with most of his other,
shorter, works in English. The
following year it appeared in
Khristianskoe Chtenie in Russian,
and in Alytheia, the official organ
of the Patriarchate of
Constantinople, in Greek
translation. This book, perhaps
exhibiting Overbeck’s erudition at
its best, devoted considerable space
to a refutation of Roman Catholic
novelties, changes, and abuses in
ecclesiastical discipline and the
sacraments, basing its arguments on
original sources.
12.
APPENDIX A
OUTLINES OF THE CONSTITUTION OF
THE ORTHODOX CATHOLIC CHURCH OF THE
WEST
163
I. The Orthodox Catholic Church of
the West being essentially the same
as that of the East, both must
profess the same Faith. Our Creed is
therefore to be found in Peter
Moghila’s “Orthodox Confession of
Faith of the Catholic and Apostolic
Church,” or in the Larger Catechism
of the Russian Church (translated by
Mr. Blackmore).
II. The East and the West must
likewise have the same fundamental
Church-Constitution. Therefore the
Western Church accepts the Holy
Canons of the seven oecumenical
councils. For further information
see “Die orthod. kath. Anschauung,”
p. 115-126; and “Po voprossu o
soyedinenii tserkvey” (On the
Question of the Reuinion of
Churches), St. Petersburg, 1866, p.
8 seq. The Russian author comprises
my overtures in 16 items. It
would be a vain attempt to establish
the Orthodox Church of the West,
Proprio Marte, as an autokephalous
Church. This would but be one more
Schism. The first requisite of
Western Orthodoxy is a correct
course in founding its Church. Those
who agree with the principles laid
down in this book (the shortest
expression of which is contained in
the two points just exhibited)
should commune with each other, and
thus form a body of petitioners who
would address themselves to “the
most Holy Governing Synod” of the
Russian Church in order to be, on
the said basis, admitted into the
Communion with that branch of the
Orthodox Church, since that branch
is nearer and more congenial to the
West than any other branch of the
Eastern Church. Up to our formal
reception into the Orthodox Church
no administration of sacraments
could take place, but we were only
to join for private devotions, like
catechumens, and in case of urgency,
to apply to an Eastern Orthodox
priest. As it will take a long time
to settle all minor details of the
question, our reception may not be
deferred to such a moment, and it
cannot be deferred by the
Authorities of the Orthodox Church,
if we pledge ourselves not to retain
or introduce anything Western which
the Holy Governing Synod does not
approve of. Thus the first
thing of the Synod would be to
license a Western priest validly
ordained and conforming to Orthodoxy
1. to celebrate the Liturgy as found
in the Missale Romanum (without the
Elevation after the words of the
Institution), of course the Masses
of modern saints excluded; 2. to
confess the faithful; to administer
the Holy Communion under both kinds;
to baptize by trine immersion; to
solemnize the sacrament of
matrimony; and to dispense the
sacrament of the Unction of the sick
(not to be limited to the hopeless
state of the dying). For the
celebration of the Liturgy the Synod
would supply an Antiminsion. The
Liturgy and the other services would
be held in the vernacular tongue,
but the official language used in
documents, Councils of the Western
Church, &c., would remain the Latin.
The sacerdotal garments (now partly
curtailed and disfigured) to be
restored to their primitive Western
shape and simplicity. No
opera-music, but the dignified
Gregorian chant. Only icons to be
used in Church. The Horae canonicae
to be purified from Romish stain;
and to be said in full length by the
Regular Clergy (Monks), but “ritu
paschali” by the Secular clergy. The
indispensible arrangements and
regulations to be made by the
Russian Church before founding the
Orthodox Western Church, can
therefore be greatly simplified by
the clause “salve Sanctae Synodi
approbatione,” binding the Westerns
in their proceedings.
13.
APPENDIX B
PETITION TO THE MOST HOLY
GOVERNING SYNOD OF THE RUSSIAN
SYNOD164
The undersigned most humbly beg
to lay before the Holy Governing
Synod the following urgent
request and petition: –
Having come to the firm
conviction that the pure faith
and legitimate Church
constitution have only been
preserved by the Eastern branch
of the Catholic Church, while
the Western branch, yielding to
doctrinal innovations and
anti-canonical abuses, has
fallen into heresy and schism,
we feel the necessity of suing
for communion with the Eastern
Church which had continued
undefiled and truly Catholic
from the beginning. We receive
all the dogmas and holy canons
taught and prescribed by the
seven Oecumenical Synods, as the
Eastern Church receives them,
rejecting at the same time not
only the doctrine of Papal
supremacy, but also all the
Papal changes in the Catholic
faith and Church constitution
contrary to the continuity and
perpetuity of Catholic
Orthodoxy. However, though
the actual Western Church is not
the genuine Catholic Church, but
is disfigured by fatal
innovations and gross abuses,
there was a time when the East
and West, both Orthodox alike in
faith and Church constitution,
constituted the great Catholic
Church, and recognized each
other as the two living branches
of the one tree of life.
Both Churches professed the same
faith and Church constitution.
This was the divine bond of
unity. But both Churches,
equally, watched jealously their
peculiarities as traditions from
time immemorial, i.e.,
introduced by the Apostolic
founders of their Churches. How
intense and legitimate this
jealously was, we see e.q. from
the Paschal questions, which
kept the Church for a time in a
state of great excitement, but
did not break the bond of unity.
Thus, unity not being
uniformity, we appeal to the
holy Eastern Church to admit us
into Church communion without
demanding our conformation to
the Eastern Rite, but rather to
assist us to build again the
Orthodox Western Church, to give
us priests who will celebrate
the Western liturgy and
administer the sacraments
according to the Western Rite.
If the Holy Governing Synod
accedes to our request, we will
hasten to lay before them our
venerable Western liturgy, and
the other Church formularies,
for examination and approbation.
We are Westerns, and must remain
Westerns; yes, God’s Providence
framed the true Western Church
(which the Holy Governing Synod
is called upon to restore by
brotherly assistance and
co-operation) on the Western
mind, and by so doing showed
that it is not desirable to be
transplanted into a
heterogeneous soil. We belong to
the Church of Ss. Cyprian,
Ambrose, Augustine, Jerome, Leo,
Gregory the Great, and are as
proud of them as our Eastern
sister is proud of and faithful
to Ss. Athanasius, the Cyrils,
Basil, Chrysostom, the Gregories,
etc. We recognize the excellence
of the Eastern liturgies and
other Church formularies, as we
appreciate the excellence of our
own, well knowing that each is
the best in its own sphere. We
do not wish to intrude our
liturgy, formularies, and rite
on the sister Church of the
East, – it would be strange to
their character and frame of
mind, because it has not grown
up in the soil of their Church.
The same we ask in return from
our beloved sister Church. If we
are bidden simply to join the
Eastern Church and renounce our
Western claims, we must plead an
inalienable right to remain
Westerns, we must plead the duty
or rather the honour of the
Eastern Church in reinstating
her legitimate sister Church in
all her rights forfeited since
more than eight centuries by the
Papal aggression. The momentous
question raised by the present
Petition is not the gain of a
few members of the Eastern
Church, but the re-establishment
of the Western Orthodox Catholic
Church. This Church must grow
from small beginnings, from
single individuals. But as soon
as the establishment of our
Western Orthodox Church, by
authority of the Eastern Church,
is accomplished, a considerable
number of Roman Catholics,
presently dissatisfied, and
groaning under the Papal yoke,
but not knowing whither to turn,
will undoubtedly flock to their
own regenerated Church. The
reunion of the East and the
West, comprising the whole of
both Churches, is an absolute
impossibility, since the Western
Church adopted as a binding
dogma the Pope’s supremacy and
divine vicarship of Christ,
which the Eastern Church justly
condemns as a heresy. Thus
all the attempts at reunion
originating from the Roman
Church were sure to fail; for if
she gave up her dogma of the
Pope’s supremacy, she would
proclaim her apostasy from the
infallible Church, - her heresy,
in short, her non-existence as a
Catholic Church. There is,
consequently, no other way how
to attain the most desirable end
of reunion that to drive a wedge
into the Roman Church by the
establishment of a Western
Uniate Church which is in
communion with the Eastern
Church. Our Saviour, praying for
the unity of His Church, prays
also for us who wish sincerely
to be admitted into the Holy
Catholic Church. Yet not only
we, but numbers of
Catholic-minded Westerns, who do
not know our proceedings,
virtually beseech the Holy
Governing Synod to fulfill their
wish and see the Western Church
once more restored to truth,
holiness, and Catholic
Orthodoxy.
Amen.
Reading, 24/12 March, 1867.
[N.B. Persons willing to sign the
above Petition may apply at the
Publishing Office of the “Orthodox
Catholic Review” (60, Paternoster
Row), where their names will be
received. Persons not residing in
town, or absent from town, may
address themselves to the Editor of
the “Orthodox Catholic Review,” who
will have their names inserted, and
their letters appended to
authenticate the signature. The
signers are requested to add their
professions and addresses.]
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1905.
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N.O. [Olga Novikoff?].
“Korrespondentsia iz Londona (†Protoierej
Stefan Gaferii i Iosif Overbek),”
(“Correspondence from London
[†Archpriest Stephen Hatherly
and Joseph Overbeck]”),
Tserkovnyj Vestnik, XXXI, No. 50
(15 December 1905), cols
1585-1587. Obituary.
-
Stead, W.T. (ed.). The M.P. for
Russia: Reminiscences and
Correspondence of Madame Olga
Novikoff. Vol. I. London, 1909.
II. SECONDARY SOURCES
A. Monographs
-
Brandreth, Henry R.T. Dr. Lee of
Lambeth: A Chapter in
Parenthesis in the History of
the Oxford Movement. London,
1951.
-
Brandreth, Henry R.T.. Episcopi
Vagantes and the Anglican
Church. London, 1947.
-
Brandreth, Henry R.T.. The
Oecumenical Ideals of the Oxford
Movement. London, 1947.
-
Moss, C.B. The Old Catholic
Movement: Its Origins and
History. London, 1948.
-
Papadopoulos, Chrysostom. The
Validity of Anglican
Ordinations. Translated and
prefaced by J.A. Douglas.
London, [1931].
B. Articles
-
Dobronravov, V. “Desjat’ let iz
istorii Starokatolicheskago
dvizhhenija (1871-1881),” (“Ten
years of the History of the Old
Catholic Movement [1871-1881]”),
Khristianskoe Chtenie, 1890, II,
No. 9-10 (September-October),
257-317; No. 11-12
(November-December), 545-92.
-
Florovsky, Georges. “Orthodox
Ecumenism in the Nineteenth
Century,” St. Vladimir’s
Seminary Quarterly, IV, No. 3-4
(Spring-Summer, 1956), 2-53.
-
Hatherly, S.G. “Translated Greek
Office-Books,” The Scottish
Review, XIX (January, 1892),
133-40.
-
Johnson, Kyrill A.W. “The
Prestige of the Oecumenical
Patriarchate,” The Orthodox
American, [No. 35], (October
1944-February 1945), 9-13.48
III. REFERENCE WORKS
-
Johnson, Kyrill A.W. “The
Prestige of the Oecumenical
Patriarchate,” The Orthodox
American, [No. 35], (October
1944-February 1945), 9-13.
-
Brandreth, Henry R.T.
Unity and Reunion: A
Bibliography. London, 1945.
-
Brokgauz, F.A., and Efron,
I.A. (eds.) Ensiklopedicheskij
Slovar’ (Encyclopedic
Dictionary), 82 vols. St.
Petersburg, 1890-1904.
-
Kennedy, James; Smith,
W.A., and Johnson, A.F.
Dictionary of Anonymous and
Pseudonymous English Literature.
London, 1926, 1928. I, IV.
-
The London Medical
Directory for 1891.
-
Russian Imperial
Historical Society.
Russkij Biograficheskij Slovar’
(Russian Biographical
Dictionary). 25 vols. St.
Petersburg, 1896-1918.
IV. PERIODICALS
-
British Medical Journal. London,
1895.
-
The Church Weekly. New York,
1870.
-
Khristianskoe Chtenie (Christian
Reading). St. Petersburg,
1865-1897.
-
Litovskija Eparkhial’nyja
Vedomosti (Lituanian Eparchal
News). Vilno, 1870.
-
The Orthodox Catholic Review.
London, 1867-1891.
-
Pravoslavnoe Obozrenie (Orthodox
Review). Moscow, 1870.
-
Trudy Kievskoj Dukhovnoj
Akademii (Works of the Kiev
Spiritual Academy). Kiev,
1869-70.
15.
FOOTNOTES
1. J.A. Douglas in a footnote
in Chrysostom Papadopoulos, The
Validity of Anglican Ordinations
(London, [1931]), p. 32n, states
that Overbeck “acceded to the Church
of England.” This is asserted by
other Anglicans as well; Cf. J.O.
Johnston, Life and Letters of Henry
Parry Liddon (London, 1904), p. 190.
Overbeck, however, made it quite
clear that he was never a member of
the Establishment.
2. The Orthodox Catholic
Review, III, No. 1-6 (January-June,
1871), 45. Hereafter this will be
cited as OCR. Since the complete
file of this journal is used as a
source, titles of articles will not,
with some exceptions, be cited.
3. OCR, VII (Part I, 1878),
29.
4. Die orthodoxe katholische
Anschauung, etc. (Halle a/S.,
1865).4 5
5. Sobranio mnenii i otzyvov
Filareta, mitropolita moskovskago i
kolomenskago, po uchebnym i
tserkovno-gosudarstvennym voprosam,
ed. Archbishop Savva, Tome V, Part
II (Moscow, 1888), 711-713.
6. Ibid.6 7
7. Pisma mitropolita
moskovskago Filareta k A.N.M…1832-1867
(Kiev, 1869), p. 641.
8. Ibid., p. 644. This opinion
was dated 3 July 1866.
9. “Letters of Archpriest E. I.
Popoff on Religious Movements in
England,” Khristianskoe Chtenie,
LXXXIV, Tome CCXVII, Part II (May
1904), 744-47.
10. N.O., “Korrespondentsia iz
Londona (= Protoierej Stefan Gaferli
1 Iosif Overbek),” Tserkovnyj
Vestnik, XXXI, No. 50 (15 December
1905, col. 1585).
11.“Materials on the Question of the
Anglican Church (From the Notes and
Letters of Archpriests J. V.
Vasil’ev and E. Popoff),”
Khristianskoe Chtenie, LXXVII, Tome
CCIV, Part I (July, 1897), 56.6 7
12. OCR, III, No. 1-6 (January-June,
1871), 45-6; V, No. 4
(October-December, 1876), 279.
13. OCR, V, No. 4 (October-December,
1876), 288.8 9
14. OCR, I, No. 10-12
(October-December, 1867), 233.
15. Ibid., I, No. 2-5
(February-May, 1867), 104.
16. Trudy Kievskoj Akademii, 1869
(February), p. 295.
17. From the Russian translation (by
E. I. Popoff) of Die Rechtgläbige
Katholische Kirche in Khristianskoe
Chtenie, 1868, II, 821-23. As
concerns the reference in point ten
above, Overbeck elsewhere spoke
highly of the Benedictine Order for
it encouraged the progress of
learning and civilization in a
spirit of true evangelical freedom (Svet
s Vostoka [Vilno, 1868], p. 163). On
the other hand he often spoke most
disparagingly of the Jesuits.
18. OCR, IX (Part I, 1880), 42;
IX (Part II, 1881), 189. For other
changes Cf. Appendix A.10 11
19. OCR, III, No. 1-6 (January-June,
1871), 8-14.
20. Quoted by J.J. Overbeck, The
True Old English Church (London,
[1880]), p. 3.
21. Papadopoulos, The Validity of
Anglican Ordinations, p. 33n.10 11
22. OCR, V, No. 4
(October-December, 1876), 279.
23. Ibid., 286.12 13
24.Papadopoulos, The Validity of
Anglican Ordinations, p. 35n.
25.OCR, VI (January-September,
1877), 144.
26.Ibid., III, No. 1-6
(January-June, 1871), 47-48.12 13
27.The True Old English Church, pp.
10-11. See Appendix B for the text
of the Petition.
28.OCR, I, No. 2-5 (February-May,
1867), 54-7.
29.The Present Crisis: An Appeal to
Ritualists and all those who are
sincerely searching for the truth,
the way, and the
life (London, 1869), pp. 10.
30. III, No. 1-6 (January-June,
1871), 49-72. This also appeared in
a separate edition.
31.OCR, I, No. 6-9 (June-September,
1867), 196. Punctuation,
capitalization, etc., are Overbeck’s.
32.The Russian edition Svet s
Vostoka (Vilno, 1868), p. 155.
33.OCR, IX (Part II, 1881), 190.14
15
34. Georges Florovsky,
“Orthodox Ecumenism in the
Nineteenth Century,” St. Vladimir’s
Seminary Quarterly, IV,
No. 3-4 (Spring-Summer, 1956), 32.
35. The True Old English
Church, p. 13.
36. OCR, V, No. 4
(October-December, 1876), 282.16 17
37. For full particulars on the Old
Catholic movement see: C.B. Moss,
The Old Catholic Movement: Its
Origins and
History (London, 1948).
38. Dr. J.J. Overbeck, “The
Old-Catholic Movement and the Munich
Congress,” OCR, III, No. 1-6
(January-June, 1871), 119-122.
39. Overbeck had examined and
refuted Döllinger’s charges against
the Russian Church in his Die
orthodoxe katholische Anschauung,
pp. 89-95.16 17
40. OCR, III, No. 1-6
(January-June, 1871), 122-125.
41. Ibid., 127-29. After the
congress Overbeck published his Die
Wiedervereinigung der Morgen und
Abendlandischen Kirche (Halle, 1872)
which was concerned with the
possibilities opened by the
congress.
42. Rheinischer Merkur, No.
No. 24, 26, 1872. Quoted in
Khristianskoe Chtenie, 1872, III,
172-77.18 19
43. Discussion sur les Sept Conciles
OEcumeniques, etudies au point de
vue traditionnel et liberal (Berne,
1878). Michaud dedicated this work
to the “venerable Church of the
East.”
44. OCR, VII (Part II, 1878), 151.
45. Ibid.
46. J.H. Morgan, “Early Orthodox –
Old Catholic Relations: General
Kireeff and Professor Michaud,” The
Church Quarterly Review, CLII,
(April-June, 1951), 1-10.18 19
47. Moss, The Old Catholic Movement,
p. 260.
48.OCR, IV, No. 1 (January-March,
1875), 13.20 21
49. Ibid., 14-15.
50. Morgan, “Early Orthodox – Old
Catholic Relations,” p. 8.
51. “Apuc’s” letter was reproduced
in the OCR, IV, No. 1
(January-March, 1875), 15.
52. Ibid., 20.
53. Discussed quite fully in
Overbeck’s “The Bonn Conferences,
and the Filioque Question,” OCR, IV,
No. 4 (October-December, 1875),
217-64. This was reprinted
separately.
54. Dr. J.J. Overbeck, “Orthodoxy,
Old Catholicism, and Anglicanism,”
OCR, VII (Part 1, 1878), 35, where
he quoted from the Deutscher Merkur,
No.29, 1878, p. 240.
55. Rev. J.J. Overbeck, “The Bonn
Conferences: Impressions produced by
their transactions,” OCR, IV, No. 3
(July-September, 1875), 146-7,
150-1, 162. This was reprinted in
separate form. Note that for a
period of several years Overbeck
styled himself “Reverend.” Cf.
[Francis Henry] Reusch, Report of
the Proceedings at the Reunion
Conference held at Bonn between the
10th and 16th of August, 1875
(London, 1876), pp. liii-liv.
56. OCR, Ibid., 152-56, 162.
57. Reusch, Report, pp. 92-93.
58. Quoted in OCR, IV, No. 3
(July-September, 1875), 170-1; Cf.
Johnston, Henry Parry Liddon, p.
190. As shown above (p. 4), Overbeck
was never an Ultramontane nor an
Anglican!
59. Moss, Old Catholic Movement, p.
270; Cf. Papadopoulos, Validity of
Anglican Ordinations, p. 35n.
60. V. Dobronravov, “Desjat’ let iz
istorii Starokatolicheskago
dvizhenija (1871-1881),”
Khristianskor Chtenie, II, No. 9-10
(September-October, 1890), 278-79.
61. Ibid.
62. Moss, Old Catholic Movement,
Ibid.
63. Frederick Meyrick, Memories of
Life at Oxford (London, 1905), p.
264.
64. Mentioned in OCR, VII (Part II,
1878), 153.
65. OCR, IV, No. 3 (July-September,
1875), 182.22 23
66. OCR, V, No. 4 (October-December,
1876), 276, 278, 283.
67. OCR, VII (Part I, 1878), 33-35;
Cf. Moss, Old Catholic Movement, p.
256.
68. OCR, Ibid., 31.
69. Reusch, Report, p. 93.24 25
70. This was appended to Die Bonner
Unions-Conferenzen (Halle, 1876),
the last two chapters of which
appeared in
English in the OCR, V, No. 4
(October-December, 1876), 276-288.
71. Ibid., 283-84.
72. Ibid., 284, 284-85n. Overbeck
developed his viewpoint further in
his article “On Religious
Toleration: Conversion versus
Proselytism,” OCR, X (1883),
1-36.
73. “Religious Controversy: Its use
and abuse,” OCR, VII (Part I, 1878),
72-96.24 25
74. Ibid., 77-80, 83, 85.
75. OCR, IX (Part I, 1880), 9.
76. The True Old English Church, p.
14.
77. The Present Crisis, p. 9n.
78. The Divine Liturgies of our Holy
Father, John the Golden-mouthed (S.
Chrysostom), and Basil the Great.
From the
Greek and Russian (London, 1865).
79. N.O., “Korrespondentsia iz
Londona,” Ibid., cols. 1586-87.26 27
80. S.G. Hatherly, “Translated Greek
Office-Books,” The Scottish Review,
XIX (January, 1892), 137.
81. (London, 1880, 1881).
82. OCR, V. No. 4 (October-December,
1876), 287; Ibid., IX (Part I,
1880), 13-14.
83. Georges Florovsky, “Orthodox
Ecumenism,” Ibid.
84. Papadopoulos, Validity of
Anglican Ordinations, p. 35n; OCR,
XI (Part I, 1885), 58.
85. “Addresses to the Young,” OCR,
XI (Part I, 1885), 58-59.26 27
86. Papadopoulos, Validity of
Anglican Ordinations, p. 34n.
87. The Church Weekly, I (1870),
158, 163. The erratic Chrystal soon
repudiated his ties with the
Orthodox Church and,
upon his return to America, formed
his own Baptist-type sect.
88. OCR, III, No. 1-6 (January-June,
1871), 48. Italics are Overbeck’s.
89. Reported in Litovakija
Eparkhial’nyja Vedomosti, VIII, No.
7 (15 April 1870), 258.
90.For a description of Lycurgos’
visit to England see: G. Williams, A
Collection of Documents relating
chiefly to the Visit of Alexander,
Archbishop of Syros and Tinos, to
England in 1870 (London, 1876). For
two letters relative to the dealings
of Chrystal with Archbishop Lycurgos
see The Record, 21 February 1870.
91. Florovsky, “Orthodox Ecumenism,”
33.
92.S.G. Hatherly (trans.), The
Office for the Lord’s Day (London,
[1880]), pp. vii-viii.28 29
93. OCR, I, No. 6-9
(June-September, 1867), 194.
94. Florovsky, “Orthodox
Ecumenism,” Ibid.
95. In his preface to F.G. Lee
(ed.), Essays on the Re-union of
Christendom (London, 1867); Cf. OCR,
Ibid., 143-44.
96. W.T. Stead (ed.), The M.P.
for Russia: Reminiscences and
Correspondence of Madame Olga
Novikoff (London,
1909), Vol. I, p. 144.
97. OCR, III, No. 1-6
(January-June, 1871), 47.28 29
98. OCR, V, No. 4
(October-December, 1876), 285.
Italics are Overbeck’s.
99. Henry R.T. Brandreth, Dr.
Lee of Lambeth: A Chapter in
Parenthesis in the History of the
Oxford Movement (London, 1951), pp.
119-20. The Hathaway mentioned is
without a doubt Hatherly, while the
John Baxter is probably John Allen
Baxter, an English Orthodox who died
3 May 1879 at the age of 27 at
Ludlow. He was the first of
Overbeck’s followers to die (without
last rites). Overbeck said of Baxter
that he was not learned. Overbeck
felt the difficulty of inviting
friends to join his group for he
could not promise them the
consolation of priestly
ministrations in their last hours
(OCR, VIII (1879), 209-210). As for
T.W. Mossman, Overbeck reviewed his
book A History of the Catholic
Church of Jesus Christ from the
Death of St. John to the Middle of
the Second Century (London, 1873) in
the OCR, VII (Part II, 1878), 170-8,
where he mentioned that Mossman was
said to have been one of three
bishops of The Order of Corporate
Reunion, the principles of which he
found to be inconsistent with sound
logic. He made no allusion to
Seccombe. Overbeck was surprised to
find Mossman a Presbyterian in his
views on the Apostolic ministry and
latitudinarian in many of his
theological views. There is no
evidence that Mossman ever contacted
Overbeck.
100. Douglas in a footnote in
Papadopoulos, The Validity of
Anglican Ordinations, p. 3n.30 31
101. OCR, VII (Part I, 1878), 77.
102. Kyrill A.W. Johnson, “The
Prestige of the Oecumenical
Patriarchate,” The Orthodox
American, [No. 35], October
1944-February 1945, p. 9.30 31
103. Papadopoulos, Validity of
Anglican Ordinations, pp. 33-34n.
104. “Korrespondentsia iz Londona,”
cols., 1585-86.
105. Florovsky, “Orthodox
Ecumenism,” 32-33.
106. “Korrespondentsia iz Londona,”
cols., 1587-87.32 33
107. Khristianskoe Chtenie, 1867, I,
287.
108. Pisma dukhovnykh i svetskikh
lits k mitropolitu moskovskomu
Filaretu (s 1812 po 1867), Issued
with
biographical and explanatory notes
by A.N. L’vov (St. Petersburg,
1900), pp. 581-82.
109. Pisma Filareta, mitropolita
moskovskago i kolomenskago k
vysochajahim osobam i rasnym drugim
litsam,
Collected and issued by Savva,
Archbishop of Tver and Kashin (Tver,
1888), II, pp. 109-110.
110. Sobranie mnenii i otzyvov
Filareta, mitropolita moskovskago i
kolomenskago, po uchebnym i
tserkovno-gosudarstvennym voprosam,
ed. Archbishop Savva (Moscow, 1887),
Tome V, Part I, pp. 277-85.
111. See above, pp. 21-22 and
footnote #29.
112. OCR, II, No. 1-12
(January-February, 1868), 158-71,
262.
113. Ibid., 271; The Dictionary of
Anonymous and Pseudonymous English
Literature (London, 1926), I, p.
276, however, ascribed The Canonical
Hours to James F.B. Gordon, D.D.
114. The Office of the Churching of
Women, according to the ritual of
the Orthodox Eastern Church,
Translated from the Greek
Euchologion by the Rev. Athanasius
Richardson (London, 1875).
115. British Medical Journal, I (16
February 1895), 400 (Obituary); The
London Medical Directory for 1891.34
35
116. Brandreth, Dr. Lee of Lambeth,
p. 120. In Brandreth’s opinion
Seccombe “was of an excitable temper
and took an
unusual interest in religious
controversy.” (Ibid.)
117. British Medical Journal,
Ibid.
118. On the colorful Ferrete, see:
Henry R.T. Brandreth, Episcopi
Vagantes and the Anglican Church
(London, [1947]),
Chapter v; Cf. “Julius soi-disant
Bishop of Iona,” OCR, I, No. 1
(January, 1867). 5-9.
119. Dr. Lee of Lambeth, Ibid.
120. Henry R.T. Brandreth, The
Oecumenical Ideals of the Oxford
Movement (London, 1947), pp. 69-70;
Episcopi
Vagantes, pp. 64-65. In the latter
work Brandreth said, in one place,
that Seccombe participated in a
consecration with Lee in 1879 (p.
50), but in another place (p.65) he
said it was Mossman instead.
121. Cited in Brandreth, The
Oecumenical Ideals, p. 69n.
122. “Neologism and Orthodoxy,” OCR,
IV, No. 1 (January-March, 1875),
21-34.
123. IV, No. 2 (April-June, 1875),
84-90. This was later re-printed in
pamphlet form and was still
advertised for sale in 1895 in
Stephen G. Hatherly (ed.), Office of
the Credence and the Divine Liturgy
of our Father among the Saints, John
Chrysostom, Archbishop of
Constantinople (London, [1895]), p.
ii., along with Seccombe’s The Great
Catechism (see below).
124. Science, Theism and Revelation
considered in relation to Mr. Mill’s
Essay on Nature, Religion and
Atheism (London, 1875), pp. 80. A
review of this from The Lynn
Advertiser, and Norfolk and
Cambridgeshire Herald (23 October
1875) was reprinted in the OCR, V,
No. 3 (July-September, 1876),
195-200.
125. OCR, VII (Part II, 1878), 159;
Cf. G.V. Shann, “Why I am an
Orthodox,” Ibid., IX (Part II,
1881), 260-274.
126. “Extracts from an Address
delivered by Mr. G.V. Shann, at a
meeting held in the Orthodox
Oratory, Kidderminster, September
11/23, 1876,” OCR, VIII (1879), 36,
38-9.
127. OCR, IX (Part I, 1880), 81.
128. See p. viii of the preface of
Hatherly’s book.
129. “Translated Greek
Office-Books,” 139-40.
130. Euchology: A Manual of Prayers
of the Holy Orthodox Church
(Kidderminster, 1891), pp. xxi+524.
131. Book of Needs of the Holy
Orthodox Church with an Appendix
containing Offices for the Laying on
of Hands (London, 1894), pp.
xxxix/260/28. This was translated
from a Slavonic Trebnik of 1882 and
a Chinovnik of 1890.
132. Synopsis: Part I. The All-Night
Vigil, and First, Third, and Sixth
Hour Offices (n.p., [1878?]).36 37
133. OCR, X (1883), 84-122.
134. Laicus Orthodoxus, “Remarks on
a proposed concordat between the
Anglo-American and the Orthodox
Church,” Russian Orthodox American
Messenger, November & December
supplement, 1907, pp. 287-294.
Translated by E. Harrison.
135. The divine and sacred Liturgies
of our fathers among the Saints John
Chrysostom and Basil the Great,
Edited, with an English translation,
by J.N.W.B. Robertson (London,
1886), pp. 223. This contained both
Greek and English texts. The book
was re-issued in enlarged form a few
years later: The Divine Liturgies…
with that of the Presanctified
preceded by the Hesperinos and the
Orthros, Edited with the Greek text
by J.N.W.B. Robertson (London,
1894).
136. “Translated Greek
Office-Books,” 137.
137. OCR, IV, No. 2 (April-June,
1875), 137-40.
138. IV, No. 4 (October-December,
1875), 276-87.
139.This was translated from
Murav’ev’s, Question Religeuse
d’Orient et d’Occident (St.
Petersburg, 1858), and appeared in
the OCR, V (1876), 209-16, 271-75.
140. OCR, XI (Part I, 1885), 104.38
39
141. The second such periodical
was The Oriental Church Magazine
edited in New York City from 1878 to
1881 by the Rev. Nicholas Bjerring.
142. This was L’Union Chretiénne,
a weekly founded in Paris in 1859 by
Fr. Joseph V. Vasil’ev and published
with the aid of Abbé Guettée and S.P.
Sushkov. In 1868 Fr. Guettée became
the editor and published the journal
until his death in 1892.
143. OCR, I, No. 1 (January,
1867), 1-2. Italics are Overbeck’s.
144. OCR, III, No. 1-6
(January-June, 1871), 46.
145. OCR, I, No. 6-9
(June-September, 1867), 149-61.
146. “Korrespondentsia iz Londona,”
col. 1586.
147. OCR, IV, No. 2 (April-June,
1875), 98-109, 140-41.
148. OCR, VII (Part II, 1878),
154-55.
149. For some of Bjerring’s
career see, D.F. Abramtsov, “Father
Nicholas Bjerring: His Work in
Orthodoxy,” The Russian Orthodox
Journal, XIX, No. 12 (April, 1946),
5-6, 19.
150. This was translated into
other languages including Russian
(St. Petersburg, 1869) and English
(New York, 1867).
151.“Upon what is Your Faith
Grounded?” OCR, IX (Part I, 1880),
90-96. In the book this is called
“Rule of Faith.” For biographical
details on Guettée see his Souvenirs
d’un pretre romaine devenu orthodoxe
(Paris, 1889).
152. “Orthodoxy, Old Catholicism,
and Anglicanism,” OCR, VII (Part I,
1878), 17-37.
153. OCR, II, No. 1-12
(January-December, 1886), 148.
154. S. Ephraemi Syri, Rabulae
Episcopi Edesseni, Balaei,
aliorumque opera selecta e codicibus
Syriacis MSS. In Musaeo Brittanico
et Bibliotheca Bodleiana asservatis
primus edidit Dr. J.J. Overbeck (Oxoni:
e Typographeo Clarendoniano, 1865).
155. II, No. 1-12 (January-December,
1868), 139-48.
156. OCR, VII (Part II, 1878), 169.
157. “A Parallel between the
Armenian, Syrian, Coptic, and
Abyssinian Churches,” OCR, XI (Part
I, 1885), 86-87.
158. Kristianskoe Chtenie, 1867, I,
288.
159. Pravoslavnoe Obozrenie, 1870,
II, 397.
160. See bibliographical notice in
Brokgauz and Efron,
Entsikloepedicheskij Slovar’ (St.
Petersburg, 1897), Tome XXI, p. 655.
161. See Appendix A.
162. IX (Part II, 1881), 123-260.
163. J.J. Overbeck, Catholic
Orthodoxy and Anglo-Catholicism: A
Word about Intercommunion between
the English
and Orthodox Churches (London,
1866), pp. 198-200. Italics and
other peculiarities are Overbeck’s.
164. OCR, I, No. 6-9
(June-September, 1867), 192-193.44
45
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