We have seen
certain peculiarities in Western thought, which, as we
stressed, give priority to History on the one hand and to
the essence – to objective reality – on the other. The basis
of Ecclesiology is History, the Incarnation, and generally
speaking, the objective reality that the event of Christ
brought to History. This visualizing and approach is what
comprised the basis in Western theology, leading to a
confrontation between Roman Catholics and Protestants that
reached the point of contesting about the essence of the
Church.
A characteristic position of the Roman
Catholics has always been that the Church is a kind of
extension of the Incarnation. And there are many Orthodox
who also say this; i.e., that the Church is Christ
perpetuated throughout the ages. This is a position that was
formulated by Bossuet in his famous sermons and was repeated
by many Orthodox preachers.
Of course from one point of view, it is
correct to say that the Church is the body of the living
Christ perpetuated throughout the ages, but it is not only this, for us Orthodox. In other words, for us,
the basis is not the historical continuation
of the Incarnation. This would be the Roman Catholic
position. The Protestants, reacting against this position,
maintained that there is no continuity to the event of
Christ in History. Protestantism maintains the discontinuity
of History, and that what makes the Church genuine is the
fidelity of a community towards the word of God, especially
as expressed in the Holy Bible. This fidelity, therefore, is
the essence of the Church. For the Roman Catholics, I will
repeat, the essence of the Church is not the fidelity of a
certain community at a certain point in History, but that
incessant historical continuity. For us, neither the one nor
the other view is correct or adequate, as a basis for
Ecclesiology.
According
to the Orthodox view, there is, of course, a historical
continuity in the Church and therefore we do not agree with
the Protestants who insist that Apostolic succession and all
the other things that we Orthodox maintain are of no
significance. At any rate, we mostly support the
eschatological aspect of the Church; i.e., that the essence
of the Church is the portrayal of eschatological events. And
this portrayal of eschatological events can be seen mainly
during the Divine Eucharist. For the Orthodox, Christology –
that historical continuity, or even the Westerner’
discontinuity – does not comprise the basis of Ecclesiology.
For us, the basis of Ecclesiology is the proper combination
of historical continuity with a portrayal of the events to
come. Our gaze is turned towards the forthcoming events,
rather than the past. Roman Catholics and Protestants are
faced towards the past: the Roman Catholics on the one hand
stress the historical continuity and the institution that it
is perpetuating, while Protestants, with their fixation on
the word of the Holy Bible are enacting a return to the
past, which is where they have situated the essence of the
Church. Quite often, we Orthodox become lost in this
labyrinth and some of us seek Orthodox Ecclesiology in the
Roman Catholic model, thus overstressing the historical
element. Then there are others, who tend to stress what we
call the “charismatic nature” of the Church, without –of
course- the Protestant form of fidelity towards the word of
God and the Holy Bible, but definitely with certain criteria
that do not contain that portrayal of the eschatological
community. In the Orthodox theological tradition, the Church
is the eschatological community, within Time. This of course
does not refute historical continuity, but it combines it
with events, with each instance that the Church congregates
for the same reason – mainly to perform the divine
Eucharist. That, therefore, is where we Orthodox locate the
essence of the Church. This is attributed to the fact that
we place a special significance – which neither the Roman
Catholics nor the Protestants place – on the role of the
Holy Spirit in Ecclesiology. How and why is this observed?
The role of
the Holy Spirit is acknowledged by the Westerners also, but
only as a secondary one in Ecclesiology. The basis, the
foundation of Western Ecclesiology is Christology. What is
of importance for the Roman Catholics on the one hand is
that Christ was the founder of the Church and that the
Church is the body –or rather, the community- that Christ
established and that is perpetuated through certain
institutions, so that the Church can survive in History,
whereas for Protestantism, what is of importance is –as we
already mentioned- the word of God, which again is a
Christological historical reality. Thus, both views are
based on Christology, following which, the Holy Spirit comes
along to help us and inspire us, to animate the Church,
according to what Roman Catholics have asserted. This is
something like a soul entering a pre-existing body. The body
is Christologically constructed, with Christological
material. The Spirit enters into that institution and
animates it, gives it life. But the Spirit Himself does not
provide the structure of the Church; observe this detail:
the Spirit does not provide the structure; the Spirit merely
provides the soul; it merely inspires the Church. And this
of course is extremely close to the Protestant position,
where there is no interest in the institution of the Church
– the establishment – but only in the comprehending of the
word of God. And there too, the Holy Spirit plays the role
of an inspirer, who assists every person individually and
the community overall to comprehend the word of God. In
other words, the Spirit is a factor that is always secondary
to the first, founding and institutional factor who is
Christ, whether by founding the Church according to the
Roman Catholics, or by providing the word, which the Spirit
renders palpable every time and inspires the people,
according to the Protestants.
For the
Orthodox, it is the Spirit Who forms the Church. It is
characteristic, what is mentioned about the Holy Spirit, in
one of the Vespers hymns of the Pentecost: “…Who composes
the entire institution….”. The Holy Spirit composes the
institution of the Church. The institution of the Church is
not simply something that Christ founded within History.
These details may appear insignificant, however, they are
determining factors. For us, the Church is perpetuated in
History and has continuity, thanks to its perpetual renewal
by the Spirit. Every time that the Church congregates, it
becomes the Church anew. The Spirit therefore makes the
Church, constructs the Church, by providing precisely those
basic structures, the basic functions of the Church, such as
the laity (through Baptism and Chrismation) and the clergy
(through Ordination, and in fact through a Bishop’s
Ordination, which in itself is a Pentecost, where the Holy
Spirit founds a Church. Thus, for the Orthodox viewpoint, in every place and at every specific time, the Spirit
re-composes and renovates the Church – founds the Church;
and by re-composing the Church in this manner, creates the
Church’s historical continuity. In other words, the Holy
Spirit does not come and act within a pre-existing
ecclesiastic structure. This is the way things are for the
Roman Catholics: Christ founded a Church. He placed its fate
and its perpetuation in the hands of certain Apostles,
mainly Peter. And by giving Peter the privilege of heading
the church, He must have therefore given it to the pope as
well, as the historical successor of Peter. These were all
supposedly given by Christ, and are not events linked to the
Spirit; the institution of the Church is constructed
Christologically, and the Spirit merely enters it to animate
it, so that it won’t be a soul-less structure. I repeat, for
the Protestants, this edifice is of no importance; that is
why they even doubt whether Christ founded the Church at
all. Many Protestants maintained that Christ did not found
the Church, but that the only thing Christ did was to leave
His word and of course His Cross, and everything that He
underwent and taught. That is supposedly their basis of the
Church. Thus, by remaining faithful to these things as
individuals, or as communities, the Church is supposedly
formed. Then the Spirit supposedly comes along, to help us
remain faithful to these things.
I will reiterate, that for Orthodoxy, the
issue is neither an institution that has previously been
formed and in which the Spirit enters a posteriori, in order
to animate it, nor is it an institution that doesn’t exist
as an Institution; it is -every time- a local and a temporal
composition by the Spirit of that image of eschatological
events. How will the Church be in the future? How will the
world be in the future? The Church is what recapitulates
the world, and it is only inside the Church that the world
survives. The essence, therefore, of the Church is, for us,
precisely the work of the Holy Spirit, Who enacts the work
of Christ, by rendering the body of Christ ever-present and
active, at a specific time and a specific place: right now,
right here. For the Westerner, therefore, the local Church
is secondary, by comparison to the worldwide Church; whereas
for an Orthodox, the local Church is of primary importance.
We do not have one universal Church; we have many local
Churches, which all coincide at the same point and they all
represent faithful images of the eschatological community.
Subsequently, we see an orientation towards the past by the
Westerners and an orientation towards the future by us
Orthodox, but without abolishing the historical continuity
that is realized through the future. By enacting images of
the End Times every time we congregate in Church, especially
during the Eucharist, we are revealing that which the body
of Christ (of the risen Christ of course, which is
eschatological anyway) perpetuates; but perpetuates through
those events that pertain to the congregations of local
Churches, which the Spirit constructs and composes each
time.
The consequences
of this fact go into great depth. First of all, for the
Westerner, Ecclesiology always contains the seed of
opposition between institution and charisma. What do we mean
by this? Well, when a Roman Catholic says that the Church
is, in its essence, the institution that Christ created, he
is imposing an institution above Man’s freedom and the
Spirit’s freedom. The Protestant also, when insisting that
what counts is one’s fidelity towards the word of God and
the Holy Bible, is imposing the authority of the holy Bible
over Man’s freedom. And so, the West perpetually has the
problem of the institution and of the imposition that this
entails for Man’s freedom. In the East, in Orthodoxy, when
saying that the Church is that congregation which is created
by the Spirit as a portrayal of eschatological events, every
time, in every place and whenever the divine Eucharist is
performed, no such problem arises, because the Church is
formed by the freely willed congregating of the faithful. We
say, “I’m going to Church”. The structure, the institution
of the Church is not something that is imposed by someone;
we ourselves compose it, together with the Spirit. The
Holy Spirit is the One Who gathers us all into the Church.
When gathering us, one could say that the Spirit is making
us founding members of the Church, because the Church to us
is not an institution that has come into existence just like
that, on its own. In this way, we never have (or ever had)
the problem of “clericalism” or “secularism” as did the
West. Why? Because clericalism presupposes the perception
that the institution of the Church, its basic structure and
its officiators, the clergy, have their hypostasis
independently of the event of the congregating of the
faithful.
This leads
us to the opportune topic of the role of the laity in the
Church. For the Orthodox, the people comprising the laity
are the ones who are a necessary prerequisite for the clergy
to exist, to officiate. When we say officiate, it is not to
simply perform the divine Eucharist, but to act, to be
effective. The activity, therefore, of the clergy; their
charismatic action and their authority at the same time, presuppose the laity as the framework in which the
gathering of the faithful takes place. That is why we
Orthodox cannot be led into that which the Roman Catholics
were led: to personal liturgies by the clergy. Based on the
logic of Roman Catholic theology, which several Orthodox
also apply, the clergyman (given that he personally
possesses – institutionally – certain energies such as the
performance of the divine Eucharist, with his ordination)
should be able to transform the bread and wine into Body and
Blood of Christ, by blessing and performing the divine
Eucharist on his own. Why not? Roman Catholics do it.
Naturally, it is not a matter of democracy in Orthodoxy,
that clergymen cannot perform the divine Eucharist without
the presence of a layperson. It is precisely because the
overall perception of the Church is such that it presupposes
a congregation in order to exist: the congregating of all
the basic functions and structures. Consequently, the
laity’s “Amen”, the laity’s response “and to your spirit
also”, all of these responses reveal that in Orthodoxy it
has never been possible for the perception to infiltrate
that the clergy can act sacerdotally, based on the rights
that were given during his ordination. The fact that it is
not possible for an Orthodox clergyman to officiate on his
own is apparent from the fact that a dialectic form exists
within the basic structure of the divine Eucharist. I have
often told those Orthodox clergymen who (are unfortunately
many) also perform personal liturgies: “Well, what happens
when you reach the part where you say “Peace to all”? Who
responds with “and to your spirit also”? They reply: “I say
it myself”. Now that is a ridiculous, comical thing. You
can’t respond to yourself with the words “and to your
spirit”! On the other hand, you can’t remove the response
“and to your spirit also” – you simply can’t. You can’t
remove the “Amen” either. The “Amen” is also a prerogative
of the layperson. And to many clergymen who get carried away
and say: “The blessing of the Lord, ….. now and for ever and
ever, amen”, I say to them that the “Amen” is the
prerogative of the laity. What business do you the priest,
have, to say the “Amen”? It has been the privilege since
very ancient times – as early as New Testament times – of
the laity. The “Amen” of God’s people - which goes as far
back as the Old Testament - is the confirmation and the
consent of God’s people towards whatever the clergyman does.
All of these signify that, without the
communion of the Holy Spirit Who will gather everyone
together for the same reason, the Church cannot function as
an institution and it is for this reason, that it is not
proper to say that the Church is the clergy, the hierarchy
etc. This is why we never encountered the problem of
clericalism, whereas in the West, this problem had flared
up. So, you can now understand why Western theology reached
the point of clericalism. I shall repeat the basic point: By
giving priority to Christology and History, priority was
given to the institution per se; and the institution
contained certain forms of functions which they had
initially attributed to the person of Christ. The Roman
Catholics on one hand, through the institution of the
Apostles etc., excessively stressed the divine Eucharist and
generally all the privileges that Christ had given to the
Apostles and Peter especially. Protestants on the other hand
leaned more towards the word – towards what Christ had said,
and whatever was authentically delivered to us in the New
Testament through the Apostles, which is why they always see
the clergymen who preach (because preaching is fundamental
for Protestantism) as persons with authority, regardless of
the congregation of the people, of the community. The
congregating of the community does not play an essential
role; the community gathers, only to listen to the preacher
who will relay the word of God with his sermon and the
reading of the Scriptures. But for us, all these things are
dependent on the congregation. It is a basic requirement for
the Orthodox. If one doesn’t live in the West, it is
difficult to understand how easily one can become
westernized, in the belief that he is Orthodox. For us, the
key is that the Spirit acts in a founding manner; in other
words, the Spirit constructs the Church, through the
congregation, through communion. There are other
consequences here; much deeper ones. For us Orthodox even
that very word of God originates from - and passes through –
eschatology and the communion of the Holy Spirit; through
the community that the Holy Spirit creates, and then it
becomes authentic.
And now we
come to a crucial issue, which is the authority of the Holy
Bible. For Western theology, it is one of the more opportune
problems, but it is an equally basic one for us. For the
Roman Catholics, the Holy Bible is interpreted authentically
by the officiators, who are the “magisterium” as they call
it, apparently because they received the power and the right
from Christ Himself to represent Him as successors of the
Apostles. Thus, for the Roman Catholics, the word of God can
be interpreted authentically by a clergyman, mainly a
bishop, and finally the pope – always as a person, and under
any circumstances whatsoever. For the Protestant, the
principle that applies is that the word of God is
interpreted authentically through the word of God again,
which means: Protestants interpret the Scripture through the
Scripture, and it is a matter of proper scientific research.
This is why in Protestantism, in order to become a minister
(which essentially means a preacher, so that you can expound
the word of God) you must have a university education; in
other words, you will need a University diploma to explain
the Scriptures, with the Scriptures. You can in fact do this
from your office, your place of education, and even in your
circle of teaching, if you teach. Teachers, therefore (the
“doctors” of the Church) are, for Protestantism, the
instruments by which the authority of the Bible is
explained.
Notice what
kind of problems this presented with regard to the authority
of the Holy Bible in the West, which is one of the problems
that hound it persistently nowadays. As regards the Roman
Catholic position, it was natural for the question to be
raised as to why a bishop should be regarded as infallible,
or, why an entire synod of bishops should be considered
infallible, or why the pope should be infallible. And that
is where they truly stumble; that is where they cannot
provide satisfactory answers, especially nowadays. As for
Protestantism, another problem had arisen, which today
preoccupies everyone in the West. How can the Bible be
interpreted by the Bible and by scientific analysis, when we
know that the Bible was also subject to certain historical
and cultural influences, which do not continue to apply
forever? This is why Protestants today are forced to look
for the canon within the canon, given that the canon for the
Holy Bible is not enough for them. In other words, they seek
a “smaller” canon, within the canon of the Holy Bible. They
seek the criteria on the basis of which they can locate
whether something in the Holy Bible is truly authentic, and
with which we can discern whether something today is not
authentic and necessary.
For example, the Apostle Paul says that
even our nature teaches us that if a man leaves his hair
long, it is ugly and unnatural. Or, he says that the world
consists only of sky, earth and the underworld etc.. All
these are obviously cultural elements that prevailed during
the Apostle’s era. Of course there are also those among the
Protestants who are known as fundamentalists, who maintain
that every single letter of the Bible must be observed
meticulously. If the Bible says so, then that’s how it must
be, no questions asked, we simply cannot doubt it. We must
therefore all be shaven, with our hair cut. Based on this
logic, our own, conservative monks should be considered the
first to have transgressed Paul’s words! What I am trying to
say with this admittedly striking example is that we have
been compelled to not adhere to Paul’s words verbatim,
because otherwise, we would have been forced to do other
things likewise, and not what we are now doing. Examples
such as this are very many. When the Bible is interpreted by
the Bible, the way that it is done by Protestants nowadays,
numerous things are discovered, which are purely cultural
and historical in nature and no longer apply today.
Consequently, this leads them to a crisis as regards the
authority of the Bible. What is characteristic today, is
that those who do not accept the authority of the Scripture,
are the spiritual descendents of those who had proclaimed
“Sola Scriptura” (=only the Scripture,
nothing else). Thus they
reached the point of no longer trusting
the Holy Bible. Hermeneutics has developed to such a degree
in the West, that the Bible itself is also subjected to
interpretation on the basis of the newer factors of each
historical era.
All of the above have as their starting
point the fact that Western man – Roman Catholic or
Protestant – places the essence of the Church and the
essence of the truth in decrees or moulds that were shaped
in the past. A norm is defined and imposed in the past, and
we now struggle to adhere to it faithfully. This is a purely
Western outlook. It is on the surface of this perception
that all the problems regarding the authority of bishop, of
synods, of the pope, of the hermeneutics of the Bible and
the suchlike are located. But behind all these is a
latent disposition for subjugation to a specific,
pre-defined canonistic decree. This problem was never
raised in Orthodoxy. The Scriptures are interpreted within
the Church, within the congregating of the Church. But
beware of the confusion that we too have undergone in these
matters, on account of Western influences. When,
of late,
we observe an increase in the
number of those who read the Gospel in a narrative or
emotional style instead of the traditional chanting of the
Gospel, one can only wonder if these people have any
awareness whatsoever of this peculiarity of Orthodoxy. The
reason they read in their own way is, of course, to make the
text palpable; otherwise, they are under the impression that
the meaning is lost and what counts is the meaning. In
other words, it is like an educational book, which I read
and memories are brought to mind of the past; for example, I
read as though Christ Himself is delivering his Sermon on
the Mount. In that way, I am made aware of the events the
way they took place – the way they were shaped in the past.
This is most clearly a Western mentality. For the Orthodox
Tradition, what counts is not just the narration of how
things happened; it is the way things will happen,
and will be. The word of God must always have that
eschatological angle, which is why -according to the
Orthodox view – the word of God comes to us from the future
and not from the past. It is a
different thing for us to sit down here and study the Holy
Bible; or even in those so-called Bible circles, which are a
purely Protestant imitation, where they sit down and study
the Holy Bible. What can the Holy Bible tell you, outside
the congregation of the Church? It will tell you other
things; that is, whatever it says to a Protestant. It is
within the framework of worship – and especially of the
divine Eucharist – that we find the reason for which we
chant the readings, melodiously. Not so much the readings of
Vespers – it is not imperative for them to be chanted. But
the Gospel and the Apostle during the Liturgy must be
chanted.
The Chrysostom says somewhere:
«we open up a
syllable»,
because “syllabizing” is a
conceptualizing (Greek, syllabi = conception, arresting) by
the Nous; it signifies that which the mind conceives/grasps
noetically. And we help the mind to grasp the meaning. But
the word of God can never be conceived/grasped. It is far
greater than us. It is the word of God that conceives/grasps
us. The Chrysostom says it beautifully, that through
chanting, the word of God is “opened up”; the syllable is
opened up and it incorporates us, as opposed to us
“conquering” it.
This conquering tendency of knowledge
that we apply to things is the same one that we apply every
time we abolish chanting and strive to make the Scriptural
readings comprehensible. Even the word itself is
interesting.
We want the people to
co-(ap-)prehend!
To apprehend the readings! Can
one truly apprehend the word of God, or comprehend it? Of
course one may wonder:
What sort of mysterious and chaotic
perception is this? Many Westerners are moved by the
Orthodox when they attend their Liturgy and everything there
is chanted, and they usually say “at least you Orthodox have
a mystery”. It is not about that secret and exotic mystery
which lacks any importance. It is a method of knowledge that
is based on the communion of persons, and not just the
workings of the mind. That is why for the Orthodox, the Holy
Bible cannot speak to us in the same manner when we read it
at home, as compared to when it is read and heard in Church.
That is why the greatest destroyer of the word of God in
Church is the preacher, who can appear at the most
inappropriate moment, during the hour of the Koenonikon
(Holy Communion), thus overthrowing the entire structure of
the Liturgy. What is the purpose of the sermon at that
point? The sermon should follow immediately after the
reading of the Gospel. Then we move away from mere words
and are led elsewhere. For these issues, it is not necessary
for one to have a profound knowledge of History, in order to
realize that they are newly introduced and that they are of
Western origin. And even from a purely historical aspect,
one can see that these are erroneous customs. But right now,
we are chiefly concerned with the theology of the matter.
Theologically, therefore, all these attempts to apprehend
and to comprehend the word of God are most definitely a
Western phenomenon. If we haven’t already corrupted the
common laity with our conscientious theology - and for as
long as they have remained uninfluenced - they normally see
the Scriptural readings as a part of the whole event. And
the Gospel for the Orthodox is never just a book that you
open and read. It is almost a person.
You kneel before it.
And when the “entrance” of the
Gospel takes place in Church, where the people make the sign
of the Cross and kiss it, this is what it signifies.
In order therefore to
not ruin the character of the word of
God, the sermon must definitely (a) be delivered at the
correct moment, immediately after reading the Gospel; (b)
focus as much as possible on the Gospel text that was
recited and (c) be of a liturgical character and reference.
The sermon is a liturgical event, and not something that can
take place in any kind of hall (whereas many other sermons
could take place in a hall). By presupposing all the above,
one can see where they lead, and how the Westernizing of
Orthodoxy is nowadays being fulfilled. And yet, those in
Orthodoxy who cry out against the West have not pointed out
these problems; obviously, other things preoccupy them and
they have thus allowed the Liturgy to be distorted - which
(for us) however, is the only thing that keeps us genuine.
For us, the word of God is an event that comes to us from
the End Times; it is a sacramental presence – a Eucharist
event. It is the word-Logos, the way that we personally meet
with Him during the Eucharist – and we meet with Him in
full, by communing with the Body and the Blood of Christ.
This is a “fullness”:
the logos of God is the communion with the Body and the
Blood of Christ. It is there that one finds and places the
readings. And this is why they have always had the form of a
melodic recital. The authority of the Holy Bible therefore
does not lie in who will explain it to us – whether that
person is well versed, or if that person possesses certain
privileges (from a hierocratic institutional aspect) to
explain it. This is why for us, even the synods of our
bishops are somehow a part of that circuit called “the
communion of the Holy Spirit” and authority finally emerges
from that overall event of the Spirit circulating among all
the members of the Church; For us, it is understood (unlike
the Roman Catholics) that a decision or an interpretation by
bishops can prove to be mistaken, just as it is understood
(and contrary to Protestant perception) that a scientific
interpretation is of no significance and no importance.
Nowadays, acute speculation has arisen in
Greece on the subject, because, by lacking the appropriate
experience and the clear-cut use of the Bible, our biblical
scientists (all educated in the West) are showing deep
concern, when noting how we Orthodox are almost indifferent
to the scientific problems posed nowadays by exegetics on
numerous issues. Naturally, we cannot ignore scientific
interpretation altogether; but, on the other hand,
scientific knowledge is not the means by which we
acknowledge the Scripture as the word of God speaking to us.
We have a different context, a different framework, in which
we place the Bible so that it can finally “speak” to us. Of
course it is not proper to say that the things science says
are incorrect, simply because we were taught that way.
Again, the criteria themselves are usually based on older
scientific data and are no longer valid today. You can
therefore see, just how important Western thought, Western
theology, and the “precise” and “accurate” knowledge thereof
are to us Orthodox. They are greatly mistaken who maintain
that they are interested in the West and usually, those who
make such claims are thoroughly steeped in Western thought,
without realizing it at all. All of these things therefore
have to do with Ecclesiology. I will repeat, that the key
for us is the Church – it is the congregating of God’s
people in a specific place and time, portraying the
community of End Times; it is the gathering that is summoned
by the Holy Spirit, which, every time the Church is thus
summoned, the Spirit incarnates anew, every time (and
therefore in a constantly re-manifested historical
continuity) the Body of the historical Christ.
In this way,
we have neither a denial of
History, nor an attachment to History and the Past (the way
the Westerner does), without the intervention of End Times.
For us, the End Times “invade” History via the Holy Spirit - chiefly
during the Divine Eucharist – and it is within this
framework that a true meaning is given to the terms
‘priesthood’, ‘the word of God’, ‘the Holy Bible’, and the
life of the Church in general.
QUESTIONS
Q.
– An application that is inversely
proportional to the kind of congregation that the East has
(which believes that the Spirit summons the Church as a
gathering of the faithful): Could
it be, that precisely the denial of this congregation in the
western ecclesiastic tradition had, as a result, the bishops
of the West to be referred to as being “in absentia of an
episcopate”?
A. –
Not everyone in the West is
without an episcopate.
But this possibility does exist;
however, it is inconceivable for
us to have a bishop who is devoid of an episcopate. He must
definitely have an episcopate, whereas in the West we know
that there are “assistant bishops”, “secondary bishops”
etc.. This is indeed an application, so, what will the
consequence be (if any) on the entire gathering of the
faithful, on the entire Church? In other words, having said
that the bishop is indeed the Church – wherever the bishop
is, there the Church is – what consequence will this thing
have, that is going on in the West?
Of course,
the consequence is that the bishop
might be perceived by us the way he is in the West, i.e., as
an institution that pertains to one person alone. He will
therefore perform certain offices, he will have sanctifying
and other abilities and energies, which somehow “emanate”
from himself only, because he alone has received them and he
has stored them within himself, and he brings them out to
use them. This is of course the perception in the West, and
the sacraments there become canals - channels so to speak –
of Grace, which flows through those persons. This is why a
clergyman who is defrocked in the Roman Catholic church will
continue to be a minister.
For the Orthodox East, the bishop unites
a community. This community may be nonexistent at present,
for various historical reasons as is for example Keryneia,
in the Turkish-occupied part of Cyprus today. And yet, we
have a bishop of Keryneia, who was ordained after the
occupation of that territory by the Turks and continues to
be bishop of Keryneia without actually living in Keryneia
and without his flock being in Keryneia either. We have
many such cases in Constantinople also, and in the
episcopates of Asia Minor etc. Ecclesiastically speaking
they are legitimate, because these are bishops who have
become impoverished on account of historical situations.
They are bishops “rightfully”,
of a “formerly glorious” episcopate. This term, “formerly
glorious”, has nothing to do with historical reality, and
this in a way is Western. But the other term is not Western.
For us, unlike the Roman Catholics
most of the time, the bishop is not unrelated to a certain
community, even if historical circumstances are peculiar. I
imagine that in Cyprus, the Church will not easily agree
that Keryneia is stricken off the Map. She will provide
bishops of Keryneia who will not be able to go to Keryneia,
but that is not important. Those who have overdone it – and
unfortunately they are not Westerners (but as we have said,
the West is a phenomenon which permeates everywhere, without
our realizing it) – are the pre-Chalcedonians, who have
bishops, without any reference to an episcopate. They have
bishop so-and-so with a religious education; bishop
so-and-so for external affairs (just like you have a
minister for the exterior, they similarly have a bishop for
external affairs, a bishop for education etc., without any
link whatsoever to an episcopate. Of course these are all emanations of the Western
perception that high priesthood, just as priesthood, is
acquired by a person without any reference to the
community. And – I repeat - they all spring from the purely
historical and Christological approach: i.e., these things
were delivered by Christ Himself; the Apostle took them, and
gave them to his successor, and he in turn to his successor,
etc. They as persons receive them. But if we place the Holy
Spirit as the composing factor of the Church (as a
community, which it is); as the factor that assembles the
community, then we see that things cannot be otherwise. This
is why, for us, ordination takes place within the sacrament
of the divine Eucharist, and does not constitute a separate
ritual.
Q.-
I am under the impression that
this rejection of Pneumatology is directly linked to the
phenomenon of secularization (and in the East of course).
But could we perhaps ask you, on this basis, to tell us what
sort of interpretation you give to the fact that in the West
there prevails a historical urge
(and a pressing one, quite often) as to why there should be
a historical origin, which also aims at (and rescues us
from) the danger of hypostasizing the “things unseen” – the
things of an inconceivable future?
R. –
As we have said,
historically, we can discern how the Western spirit is
indeed born with these peculiarities. We see this in
Tertullian, where we can trace the first displays of the
Western spirit, the way it appears (clearly, I believe) as
compared to the Christianity of Northern Africa and Rome in
the 2nd century. That is where these phenomena
are observed; not as much in Rome, as –chiefly- in Northern
Africa. This mentality was then transferred into Rome.
Naturally this was the strictly historical framework. But if
you wanted to look for a more profound interpretation, I
would give the same interpretation that I’d give when
interpreting our own (acquired through influences)
narcissism, when it comes to our own historical past.
History satisfies a psychological need
for security. Its objective data withdraws the
responsibility from the person – a responsibility that is
always an adventure, and you never know where it will lead
you. This is often what Westerners claim; for example, with
regard to our Synods, they say: “where is the authority of
your synods? Where does it begin and where does it end?”
And when we tell them about our accepting a conciliar
decision in the fullness of the Church etc., they say: “but
all this leads you to a thorough uncertainty; whereas I am
certain! It was instituted by the synod, that’s why I know
it is correct!” In this way, the Westerner retracts his
personal responsibility and acquires certainty from an
objective event. Just as a Protestant – especially a
fundamentalist – will take God’s word verbatim, since it was
said by the authority of the Apostle Paul. All these
therefore have a psychological reverberation, because they
provide a sense of security, and Man always seeks security.
As for the West, it has always had this characteristic of
objectivizing everything, for two reasons: to feel secure,
and to be able to use it for formulating institutions, which
I believe are in the blood of Western man. If they do not
institutionalize, if they do not make use of something, or,
from the moment that they do make use of it, they regard it
as offering them nothing – that it no longer has any
meaning. In other words, only if a faith can offer something
– be it something sentimental or institutional or something
for improving society, or moral, or something else – only
then is it considered trustworthy. This is how the criterion
of rejection and acceptance takes shape: depending on how
useful something is.
It is my belief that Western man has
always been characterized for this tendency of his, and I
cannot put all the blame on the Franks. This tendency of the
western mentality to institutionalize things so that they
produce results is far older than the Frankish era; it was
the way that the roman state had made progress and had put
together that edifice of legislation - the organizing, that
no-one was able to surpass. This also was the way that the
Roman Catholic church actually survived throughout the
centuries and continues to be so powerful with its
institutions. We Orthodox actually depend on the Holy Spirit
even in the Liturgy, which constitutes -par excellence- the
eschatological event that “invades” History. What I am
trying to say is that the explanation probably lies there:
the Western spirit has always sought a sense of security,
utilitarianism and effectiveness, which, however, in order
to yield, presupposes a conception by the mind,
objectifying, analysis and institutionalizing.
Q.
– You just mentioned the word
“objectify”. Berdiaeff had spent many years of his life to
tell us that truth is not the objective reality in the realm
of objects, which is what is observed in the roman catholic
and the Marxist dogma. In other words, it appears
–according to what we are saying- that Christianity in the
West was objectified and in a certain way, the secularizing
of the conception of Christianity is precedent, as something
stable and finalized. In other words, first comes the
apostle as a secularized institution and then comes the
apostle as a charismatic presence.
A. – That
is correct. You see how interesting these things are and yet
they have not been studied, because even the Byzantine state
was a continuation of the roman one, except that things
changed from that point on. It is more than obvious that the
West with the Franks had changed and had taken on the
non-Byzantine form of the roman state, which is
characterized by all these things. But, as you correctly
pointed out, of course Christianity did not introduce
secularization; it found it already in place; it, too, was
merely subjected to it in the West and the consequences
continue to be apparent.
Q.
– Certain Protestants perform
sacraments, but I would like to ask you: how, and in what
sense, do they perform them?
R. – They too vary amongst themselves, with regard to
the meaning and to the way that they perform them. But for
all of them, it is still just a commemoration of the past.
The eschatological element, the portrayal of the End Time
events, the foretasting of the eschatological feast is
nonexistent. To them, it is a commemoration which, for some
signifies that whatever happened during the Last Supper is
reoccurring to a certain extent, while for others – for most
others – whatever happened during the Last Supper is merely
a symbolism without any content. Anyway, what matters to
them is what took place during that Last Supper, and that is
the Western aspect. Apart from this, we have expressions in
the Hellene Fathers that could also scandalize. Cyril of
Alexandria and others, like Saint Basil, in his Liturgy, say
that the Gifts are “copies” of the Body and the Blood of
Christ. Words like these can give the impression that we
similarly have a viewpoint like that of Protestantism. We do
not have a symbolism, but we also do not have a problem with
what happens if certain elements etc. change or not. What
counts for us, is that what we have at that moment is an
eschatological event, during which the eschatological
reality becomes an actual presence, in the presence of the
Holy Spirit, and in fact through the energy of the Holy
Spirit – which is why the invocation of the Holy Spirit is
so important for the Orthodox. Consequently, the Gifts
actually bear inside them the presence of Christ; they
actually are “this very Body and this very Blood” of Christ.
How this can be, etc., we Orthodox do not bother to examine.
Q.
– With regard to the divine
Eucharist being the depiction of End Times: Can we now say
that the phrase has been completed, about it not simply
being an image – which means it merely symbolizes something
– but that it is an actual foretasting of eschatological
events; that they are being experienced and not just
symbolized? The term “image” is of course a word that needs
to be explained.
A.
- Precisely.
So, how do we interpret the image
of End Times, and if possible, can we say what its
characteristics are, in the Divine Eucharist? What does the
Church experience with the Eucharist? What are the End
Times? How are they realized within History? Why is the
laity asked to transform the world when they return to it,
after the enacting (NOT the “end”) of the Divine Liturgy?
What is it that the Church has a taste of, during the Divine
Eucharist?
First of all, this portrayal of the
eschatological events is not symbolical; it is real – it can
be tasted, it is an experience that primarily consists of
that event per se, and the way in which the Church
congregates. It is a congregation that is not a product of
coercion, but of free will. Consequently, it is not
dependent on exclusive associations, the way that biological
and social associations are. This is why it is so important
for the Divine Eucharist to not be performed, for example,
for children only. This would be a complete distortion of
the Divine Eucharist. The Eucharist is that which gathers
together all ages and all professions. Man needs to overcome
these divisions and contrasts that nature and society impose
- for example, poor, rich, coloreds, whites, etc. You
cannot perform the Eucharist only for white people as they
do in South Africa, and in America in the past. It has
appeared with us also – the phenomenon of performing
Liturgies for children, for students, for scientists of
various specialties, etc. On the contrary, the foretaste of
the Eucharist is the transcending of all natural,
biological, social etc. divisions. This is no small matter.
It is the portrayal of End Times, because it is only during
End Times that will we have overcome such divisions. And of
course, death is essentially yet another aspect of this
division that we have, because of our biological and social
existence. But still, having overcome all of these things,
this is where the portrayal is still incomplete. We are
still waiting for the resurrection of our bodies, so that
the reality will be complete. But we do foretaste it, by
transcending these differences, which are interwoven –as we
said- with death and corruption. This, therefore, is no
symbolism; it is an experience. This is why the Church must
preserve the Eucharist as a proper experience, and not alter
it with various things, like the ones we mentioned. And
naturally, all these things are done in the name of the
historical Christ and the historical Christ is present, but
He is present as Risen in the Spirit; we do NOT have a
repetition of the Last Supper. I have thought of one day
writing something that I will call “The theology or the
Ecclesiology of Forms” – those forms that we are constantly
altering, for example during the moment of the Koenonikon
when we are receiving Holy Communion, we now chant (and this
is a newly introduced thing) “….Thy Secret Supper…”. Why is
it “Thy Secret Supper?” Of course, if we were to comprehend
it in the eschatological sense of a secret supper, then yes.
This hymn indeed has an eschatological significance, yet
many take it as a remembrance. That is why the Church, in
Her rubric, this form of Koenonikon is foreseen only for
Great Thursday. The Koenonikon of all other Sundays is
“praise the Lord, from the heavens”. All these are
eschatological elements. In other words, the eschatological
state is being created.
I remember, when I had gone to the Holy
Mountain some years ago, in one of my first visits there, I
had observed this tradition there – of chanting the
Supplication during the Koenonikon – and I did not know how
that came to be inserted. Anyway, I expressed my surprise
and discussed it with the Prior and some others in one of
the very good monasteries, which resulted in this tradition
being changed – a tradition which proved to have originated
from the previous century. You simply cannot chant “….from
my many sins my body is ailing, and ailing also is my
soul….”, and carry all this depression into the most joyous
and majestic eschatological moment of Holy Communion, where
the hymn of “Praise ye the Lord, from the heavens,
Hallelujah” is more appropriate. There can be no hymn more
triumphant than “Hallelujah”.
The essence, therefore, is that we
Orthodox see “portrayal” as an experience and a foretasting
of End Times, and not of the Past. This portrayal (and
perhaps this is the most important point in the question) is
a matter that pertains to the overall event of the
congregation and not just what the clergyman does or what I
do separately as an individual. The very fact that I go to
Church, that I take my place, that I stand somewhere, all
these are a part of that portrayal of End Times. The
congregating of God’s people is a basic eschatological
element. It exists in the New Testament; it is the
expectation of the Hebrews, which Christ fully realized in
His Person. And in the New Testament also – especially in
the Gospel according to John – there is a mention of the
gathering of everyone in Christ, in the sense, precisely,
that when the Last Day arrives, the Day of the Messiah, the
Son of Man, “everyone shall gather together, from the ends
of the earth”. And the term “shall gather together” was then
the perception that they would gather together in Jerusalem,
because Christ had also told them: “wait until I return to
Jerusalem.” Jerusalem was finally destroyed in 70 AD, and
gradually, the concept of “Jerusalem” began, even before it
was transferred to the Divine Eucharist, in the sense of the
Upper – the New Jerusalem. In the Book of Revelation, we
have precisely that picture of the Upper or New Jerusalem.
Upper Jerusalem is exactly the depiction – the way we have
it in Revelation – of the Divine Eucharist. A basic,
therefore, element, is the congregation. Therefore that is
where we start from; we do not start from what happens.
Quite often they ask how we should go to the Divine
Eucharist – how we should be prepared psychologically, how
we should not go there in a tired state or in a bad mood
etc. But what counts is our actually going there. It seems
odd, in our westernized thought, to want everything to go
through psychology and the mind. It is by going, that you
compose the Church; that is the way God’s people gather
together. And so what, if you are in a bad mood? Well,
basically, you cannot be in a good mood every day. But
neither can divine Grace, nor the divine Eucharist ever be
affected by your mood!
Q.
– What about the moment that laity does not respond with
“Amen”?
A. –
From the moment it does not say “Amen”,
all the things we see around us happen. In other words, the
meaning of laity is rendered useless. And we have indeed
reached the point of saying – as the westerners do and the
newspapers claim – that “the Church has decided” and by
that, imply the bishops.
Q.
– We have said and we know at
least, that we anticipate the resurrection of the dead; we
live in anticipation of End Times. Will the end of Time
come, because we anticipate it, because we yearn for it, or
will it be an objective event on the part of God? In other
words, will the end of Time come, independently of our
intervention, regardless of our will, independently of our
freedom?
A. – The
end of Time will come, because Christ came, and because
Christ rose from the dead.
Q.
– Doesn’t that constitute a compulsory
situation? A necessity?
A. – It
does not constitute a compulsory situation, because Christ
freely brought the End into History. For us, it does not
constitute a compulsory situation, as long as we come
together at the divine Eucharist, which is the free
foretasting of the End Times. If the Church were a
biological event, a congregation, a relationship like the
biological ones, where a mother has to necessarily love her
child and the child its mother, then it would have been a
relationship imposed by nature. But here, nature does not
impose anything; not nature, not society, not anything. Of
course, quite often, social elements may also infiltrate (we
do go to Church for those reasons also); however, we
essentially go freely – nobody actually forces us to go to
Church. Therefore, if you take the matter gravely that you
are going to Church and you interpret it as a foretaste of
an eschatological event, then you will indeed feel that you
are being forced. The end of Time is certainly coming; it
will most certainly come; you of course will not be the one
to bring it on, but it will come freely as far as you are
concerned (because you can quite easily say that you want
nothing to do with this eschatological matter that Christ is
bringing); but even so, the end will come, however it will
no longer be in its positive form for you - only in its
negative one: your undergoing final judgment.
Q.
– Doesn’t this somehow relativize, or rather, negate the
perception that we might return to the pre-Creational Nil?
A. –
The fact that Christ Rose from the
dead does,
indeed, hinder us from saying that Nil
will eventually subjugate, or take over the world. But for
those who freely do not accept the Resurrection, I have my
reservations. I cannot regard absolute death as absolutely
irrelevant to nil – to the return to the pre-Creational
Nil. Consequently, one could say that somehow, my freedom
plays a role in whether I shall return or not to the
pre-Creational Nil. But, “my” freedom – as an individual
Adam – does not decide whether all of Creation will return
to Nil. With his freedom, the first Adam (given that he was
a collective one) dragged all of Creation down with him.
With death (which came with the Fall), we no longer have
that collective Adam; we now have individual Adams, and
subsequently, they are unable to determine the fate of
overall Creation. The one and “catholic” (=overall) Adam is
now Christ, the ultimate Adam, “so that just as everyone
dies in Adam, thus everyone in Christ is vitalized”. Christ
as the ultimate Adam influences all of Creation, but without
depriving the freedom of each individual Adam. We presently
have an Adam that is splintered into many pieces: you, me,
the other person, all of us are in a condition that
splinters the human essence. And that is where the
difference lies, between what influences the freedom of one
individual and what influences the freedom of the “catholic”
(=overall), the ultimate Adam, who is Christ.
I think that there is a certain
difficulty,
precisely in describing the ultimate, the
hindmost, in its purely existential dimension, because we
cannot see its gnosiological texture. It is a “now” which is
more “now” than “now”; it is an event that establishes the
par excellence act of an external, existential,
all-embracing knowledge of the being, of the occurring and
of History.
This is the gnosiological aspect of the
matter, which, however, is not the only one, nor is it the
determining one I would say, because one can lack this
awareness of “now” or of the end events gnosiologically. The
gnosiological aspect is only one aspect.
The one
who goes to Church experiences the ultimate events, without
however developing his awareness. Even a child who has no
idea what is going on when it goes there, is also
experiencing the events of the end, without comprehending
them gnosiologically.
Q.
– Does the child feel this?
A.
– Feel?
I don’t
know what that means.
Perhaps it does.
If you broaden the meaning of gnosiology
even more, then perhaps you can say that indeed, everyone
“feels” and everyone “knows”. I have a few difficulties
there. Gnosiology is rather limited – it demands a certain
noetic energy, which definitely cannot be done in the case
of children or the mentally underdeveloped. We have these
instances also. We cannot exclude them from the ultimate
events, simply because their gnostic receptor is not
developed.
Q.
– You said that for the Westerners,
the Church is built by Christ
only, leaving out the Holy Spirit. Could this perhaps not
have such an impact on Ecclesiology?
A.
–
I think we already went
over that point, but I will repeat the basics, i.e., that it
is one thing for the Holy Spirit to act retroactively on
Christ, and another thing for Christ to have been born of
the Holy Spirit and the Virgin; i.e., to have an identity.
Therefore, since He is born
of the Holy
Spirit and the
Virgin, this is definitely a specific situation, a case of
communion with others. We have the
one and the
many simultaneously; consequently, this will also shape a
different kind of Christology, respectively.
Q.
– At one point you said that the sermon should have a
liturgical character. I have certain reservations on that
point: what do we mean by “liturgical character” and with what
criteria is this judged? What is it, that drastically
differentiates the study of the Holy Bible – or better
still, the sermon in Church – from every other study of the
Holy Bible in any other congregation? After all, even the
sermon that we hear in Church is something that was composed
earlier on, by a priest or a preacher sitting at his desk.
A. –
Correct.
It is not easy for one to say what this liturgical style is,
what its liturgical character is, because it is also not
easy to deliver a correct sermon. This is difficult, for a
sermon that you are preparing in your office – although you
can of course prepare it in your office, “transporting”
yourself in a way into the atmosphere of the Liturgy. What
is important is to be “transported” into the atmosphere of
the Liturgy. A lot of work is required, to see how we can
compose a sermon so that it will be Liturgical in mien.
Because it is not just a matter of what you are going to
say. There are many who suggest that we explain the Liturgy.
That is not the point. The point
is to insert in the corps of the sermon those dimensions (I
will say this once again) that the End Times community will
have; to insert those dimensions of transcendence and of
exclusivity and of death; to somehow give the listener the
hope and the certainty of eternal life.
Because that is what the Liturgy strives
to do. The entire Liturgy prepares the faithful for a taste
of transcending death. One can now understand why, when
departing from a sermon, one says “we must be good, we must
do this, we must do that, on abortions, etc…”. Anyway, you
can say these things per se, if you actually link them to
the problem of transcending death and to a hope for the
events of the future. Give the other person a tragic
picture of things – even if only to begin with – show him
the impasse that man’s existence can reach, but don’t leave
him there, because everything in the Liturgy speaks of
transcending the impasses. Prepare that person, so that he
can afterwards accept that transcendence which is –par
excellence- Holy Communion. However, this needs extensive
analysis, and a huge effort. It is no easy thing, to deliver
an Orthodox sermon.
Q.
– Finally, the question is posed
as to how successful a sermon is, when it is closely tied to
contemporary problems and is limited to just them, or, to
what extent should it be limited? We must not forget its
objective, which is the same, throughout time.
A. –
Correct. To
not remain unaware of problems may not be a bad thing, but
to remain glued to those problems, or to strive to give
ethical solutions to problems is wrong. Unfortunately, that
is what all sermons do: they pinpoint the problems and then
they start with the “must this” and the “must that”… But the
message of the Liturgy is not an ethical one. The message of
the Liturgy is an ontological one. You must make Man stand before the impasses and the change
in the way he lives – the point of reference being God’s way
of living, which one finally tastes by partaking of the
Divine Eucharist. This is no easy task. At least, however,
with the sermon, we do not entirely disorient people from
the ultimate state of events and confine them to only the
secular issues. We need to pay attention to this point.
Q.
–
In the Orthodox Tradition, what place does the institution
of preachers have?
A.
–
This is somewhat difficult to reply to.
The institution itself exists in the Orthodox Tradition, but
it is my belief that it has no place within the Eucharist -
within the liturgical framework. You need to know the
following historical information. In the ancient Church,
the sermon was always delivered apart from the divine
Eucharist. In Alexandria, congregations for Bible study took
place on Wednesdays and Fridays, and all the Patristic
homilies were recited in the framework of those
congregations, which usually took place along with Vespers
or some other Service, but not within the Divine Eucharist
itself. Nor do we see any relative reference, in any
liturgical manuscript. We would have known it, if things
were indeed the way they are today, i.e., that this is the
point at which the sermon is delivered. Nowhere do we find
any such historical testimony. The sermon is NOT a part of
the divine Liturgy. The fact that many people claim that if
we don’t have a sermon, the Liturgy itself is not proper, is
a result of the pressure that the Protestants had placed on
us.
HARNACK
had accused us simply of being a “community of worship”,
which led Balanos to write a book, “Why the Orthodox
Church is not a community of worship”, in lieu of an apology
for Harnack, that we too have sermons; that we too have this
and that…. And we have since developed a conscience that we
must have them, only so that we might not be accused
of not having them. I believe that a layperson can preach,
but in a non-Eucharist framework. However, if a sermon is
delivered therein, it must absolutely be related to the
overall event of the Liturgy, whose head is, of course, the
Officiator. Even I, as a layperson, whenever I was asked to
preach, would refuse to do so, for that reason alone:
because I felt as though a foreign object would be
interjected in the Liturgy. And in the ancient Church, when
Origen would begin to preach – you all know the episode with
Demetrius of Alexandria – he immediately provoked an
objection: “Who ever heard of a layperson speaking, in the
presence of a bishop?!” he had exclaimed. Naturally, he was
not referring to the presence of a bishop inside some
ordinary room; it was in reference to the presence of an
officiating bishop, in the Divine Eucharist.