SHOULD THE CHURCH BE IN STEP WITH THE TIMES?
By Archbishop Averky (+1976).
Know that we must serve, not the times, but God.
St. Athanasios the Great, "Letter to
Dracontius"
In step with the times! Behold the watchword of all
those who in our time so intensely strive to lead the Church of Christ away
from Christ, to lead Orthodoxy away from true confession of the Orthodox
Christian Faith. Perhaps this watchword does not always (nor with everyone)
resound so loudly, clearly, and openly—this, after all, might push some of them
away! The important thing is the practical following of this watchword in life,
the striving in one way or another, in greater or lesser degree and measure, to
put it into practice.
Against this fashionable, "modern"
watchword, perilous to souls however it may be proclaimed or however put into
practice, openly or under cover, we cannot but fight—we who are faithful sons and
representatives of the Orthodox Church, the whole essence of whose ideology, in
the name of which it exists in the world, is not to be "in step with the
times," but to preserve an unchanging faithfulness to Christ the Saviour,
to the true Orthodox Christian Faith and Church.
Let us recall how the blessed Metropolitan Anthony,
founder and first head of the
Russian Orthodox Church Abroad, in his remarkable
essay, How does the Orthodox Faith differ from the Western Confessions? wrote
concerning the profound difference between our Faith and heterodoxy. He finds
this profound difference in the fact that the Orthodox Faith teaches how to
construct life according to the demands of Christian perfection, whereas
heterodoxy takes from Christi¬anity only those things which are, and to the
degree to which they are, compatible with the conditions of contemporary
cultural life.
He tells us: "Orthodoxy looks upon Christianity
as the eternal foundation of true life and demands of everyone to force himself
and life until they attain this standard; whereas heterodoxy looks upon the
foundations of contemporary cultural life as an unshakable fact. Orthodoxy
demands moral heroism—podvig, heterodoxy searches for what in Christianity
would be useful to us in our present conditions of life. For Orthodox man, called
to eternity beyond the grave, where true life begins, the historically-formed
mechanism of contemporary life is an insubstantial phantom; whereas for the
heterodox the teaching concerning the future life is a lofty, ennobling idea,
an idea which helps one ever better to construct real life here."
These are golden words, indicating for us clearly and
sharply the truly bottomless abyss that separates genuine Christian
faith—Orthodoxy—from its mutilation—heterodoxy! In the one is to be found
ascetic labor (podvig), a turning to eternity; in the other, a strong
attachment to the earth, a faith in the progress of mankind on earth.
Further, as Metropolitan Anthony so sharply and justly
sets forth, "the Orthodox Faith is an ascetic faith," and "the
blessed state which the worshippers of the 'superstition of progress' (to use
the felicitous expression of S. A. Rachinsky) expect on earth, was promised by
the Saviour in the future life; but neither the Latins nor the Protestants
desire to reconcile themselves to this, for the simple reason—to speak
frankly—that they poorly believe in the resurrection and strongly believe in
happiness in the present life, which, on the contrary, the Apostles call a
vapor that shall vanish away (Jas 4:14).
This is why the pseudo-Christian West
does not wish and is unable to understand the renunciation of this life by
Christianity, which enjoins us to fight, having put off the old man with his
deeds, and having put on the new man, that is renewed unto knowledge after the
image of Him that created him (Col 3:9-10).
"If we investigate all the errors of the
West," Vladika Anthony writes further, "both those which have entered
into its doctrinal teaching and those present in its morals, we shall see that
they are all rooted in a failure to understand Christianity as ascetic labor
{podvig involving the gradual self-perfection of man."
"Christianity is an ascetic religion,"
concludes this excel¬ent, forcefully and perspicuously-written essay.
"Christianity is a teaching of constant battling with the passions, of the
means and conditions for the gradual assimilation of virtues. These conditions
are both internal-ascetic labors—and given from without—our dogmatic beliefs
and grace-bestowing sacramental actions, which have one purpose: to heal human
sinfulness and raise us to perfection."
And what do we see now in contemporary
"Orthodoxy"— the "Orthodoxy" that has entered into the
so-called "Ecumenical Movement"? We see the complete negation of the
above-cited holy truths; in other words: renunciation of true Orthodoxy in the
interest of spiritual fusion with the heterodox West. The "Orthodoxy"
that has placed itself on the path of "Ecumenism" thinks not of
raising contemporary
life, which is
constantly declining with regard to religion and morals, to the level of the
Gospel commandments and the demands of the Church, but rather of
"adapting" the Church herself to the level of this declining life.
This path of actual renunciation of the very essence
of holy Orthodoxy—ascetic labor, for the purpose of uprooting the passions and
implanting the virtues—was taken in their time by the partisans of the so-called
"Living Church" or "Renovated Church".
This movement
immediately spread from Russia, which had been cast down into the dust by the
ferocious atheists, to other Orthodox countries as well. Still fresh in our
memory is the "Pan-Orthodox Congress" convened by Ecumenical
Patriarch Meletios IV of sorrowful memory in 1923, at which were devised such
"reforms" as a married episcopate, remarriage of priests, the
abolition of monasticism and the fasts, abbreviation of Divine services,
suppression of special dress for clergy, etc.
Notwithstanding the collapse at that time of these
impious designs, the dark powers were not, of course, pacified, and continued
from that time their obstinate and perseverant activity, finding for themselves
obedient tools in the ranks of the hierarchy of various Local Orthodox
Churches. At the present time also, by the allow¬ance of God, they have
attained great success: almost all the Local Orthodox Churches have already
entered into the "Ecumenical Movement," which ■■■■■■■■ has set as its
purpose the abolition of all presently-existing churches—including, of course,
the Orthodox Church—and the establishment of some kind of absolutely new
"church," which will be completely "in step with the
times," having cast away as useless rags, as something
"obsolete" and "behind the times," all the genuine
foundations of true Christianity; and first of all, of course, asceticism, this
being the indispensable condition for the main purpose of Christianity: the
uprooting of sinful passions and the implanting of Christian virtues.
We have before us, as an example, an official document
of this sort, belonging to the Local Church of Serbia: the journal Theology published
by the Orthodox Theological Faculty in Belgrade (8th year, issues 1 and 2 for
1964). In this journal we find a lead article literally entitled: "The
Necessity for the Codification and Publication of a New Collection of Canons of
the Orthodox Church." The author of this article, while cunningly
affirming that "the ideal principles of the Church will remain everywhere and
always unchanging," nonetheless attempts to prove that the collection of
canons of the Orthodox Church is only the product of a time long since passed
into eternity, and therefore that it does not answer to the demands of
contemporary life and must be abolished and replaced by another.
This new collection of canons, observe, "must be
brought into agreement with the fundamental principles of life," with
which the Church supposedly "has always reckoned." "Our
time," says this cunning author, "is different in many respects from
the time of the Ecumenical Councils, at which these canons were composed, and
therefore these canons cannot now be applied."
Let us look now and see precisely which canons is that
this modernist author considers obsolete and subject to abrogation:
—The 9* canon of the holy Apostles, which demands that
the faithful, after entering church, should remain at the Divine service to the
end, and should not cause disorder by walking about the church.
—The 80th canon of the Council of Trullo, which
punishes clergy by deposition, and laymen with excommunication, for failure to
attend church for three successive Sundays without some important reason.
—The 24th canon of the Council of Trullo, which
prohibits clergy and monks from visiting race tracks and other entertainments;
to this canon the author adds the entirely naive, strange remark that it was
only in ear¬ier times that such amusements were places of depravity and vice,
while now they are supposedly "centers of culture and education."© —The
54th canon of the holy Apostles, which prohibits clergy, without unavoidable
necessity, from entering a tavern; here again it somehow seems that previously
the tavern was some different kind of establishment from what it is now.
—The 77th canon of the Council of Trullo and the 3o'h
canon of the Council of Laodicea, which prohibit Christian men from bathing
together with women; why it is necessary to acknowledge these canons too as
"obsolete" is completely incomprehensible!
—The 96* canon of the Council of Trullo, which
condemns all adornment of oneself with various kinds of finery "for the
enticement of unstable souls"—instead of "adorning oneself with
virtues and with good and pure morals;" this canon in our times, it would
seem, has not only not become "obsolete," it has become especially
imperative, if we call to mind the indecent, shameless women's fashions of
today, which are completely unsuitable for Christian women.
This is sufficient for us to see what purpose it is
that the aforementioned "reform" in our Orthodox Church has in view,
with what aim there is proposed the convocation of an Eighth Ecumenical
Council, about which all "modernists" so dream, already having a
foretaste of the "carefree life" that will then be openly permitted
and legitimized for all!
But let us
reflect more deeply upon what is the terrible es¬sence of all these demands for
the abrogation of supposedly "obsolete" canonical rules. It is this:
these contemporary church "reformers" who now so impudently raise
their heads even in the bosom of our Orthodox Church itself (and terrible to
say, their number includes not merely clergy, but even eminent hierarchs!)
accept contemporary life with all its monstrous, immoral manifestations as an
unshakable fact (which is, as we have seen above, not at all an Orthodox, but a
heterodox, Western conception!); furthermore, they wish to abrogate all those
canonical rules which precisely characterize Orthodoxy as an ascetic faith that
calls to ascetic labor, in the name of the uprooting of sinful passions and the
implanting of Christian virtues. This is a terrible movement, perilous for our
Faith and Church; it wishes to cause, in the expression of Christ the Saviour,
the salt to lose its savor, it is a movement directed toward the overthrow and
annihilation of the true Church of Christ by means of the cunning substitution
for it of a false church.
The above-mentioned article in the Serbian theological
journal is still discreet, refraining from complete openness. It speaks of the
permissibility in principle of marriage for bishops, but in life we hear ever
more frequent and persistent talk of far worse—namely, of the supposed
inapplicability in our times of all those canonical rules which demand of
candidates to the priesthood and of priests themselves a pure and unblemished
moral life; or, to speak more simply, of the permissibility for them of that
terrifying depravity into the abyss of which contemporary mankind more and more
plunges itself.
It is one thing to sin and repent, knowing and acknowledging
that one is sinning and is in need of repentance and correction of life. It is
something else again to legitimize lawlessness, to sanction sin, lulling thus
one's conscience and thus abolishing the very foundations of the Church. To this
we have no right, and it is a most grievous crime before God, the holy Church,
and the souls of the faithful who seek eternal salvation.
And for how long, to what limits may we permit
ourselves to go on such a slippery path, abrogating the Church canons which
uphold Christian morality? Right now in America and, as we hear, in places also
in other countries which have accepted contemporary "culture," there
is increasing propaganda for the official abrogation of marriage and the
legalization in place of marriage of "free love;" the use of
contraceptive pills is being sanctioned for married couples, and even for the
unmarried, since marriage supposedly has as its purpose not the procreation of
children, but "love;" legal recognition is being prepared for the heinous,
unnatural passion of homosexuality, all the way to the establishment for
homosexuals of a special church wedding rite (proposal of an Anglican bishop);
etc., etc.
And so? Should our Church too follow this fashionable
path, "in step with the times," so as not to be left behind the march
of life? But what kind of "church" will this be that will allow
itself all this, or even merely look at it with all-forgiving condescension? It
will be no longer a church at all, but a veritable Sodom and Gomorrah, which
will not escape, sooner or larer, the terrible chastisement of God.
We must not allow ourselves to be deluded and
deceived, for we do not need such a "church," or rather "false
church." We may ourselves be weak, and feeble, and we may often sin, but
we will not allow the Church canons to be abrogated, for then it will become
necessary to acknowledge the very Gospel of Christ, by which contemporary men
do not wish to live, as "obsolete," as "not answering to the
spirit of the times," and abrogate it!
But the Gospel of Christ, together with all the canons
of the Church, as well as the Church ordinances, outline for us that Christian
ideal toward which we must strive if we desire for ourselves eternal salvation.
We cannot allow a lowering of this ideal for the gratification of sinful
passions and desires, a blasphemous abuse of these holy things.
Whatever "reforms" all these contemporary criminal
"re-formers" may desire, the truly-believing Orthodox Church
consciousness cannot acknowledge or accept them. And what-ever the apostates
from true Orthodoxy, from the ascetic Faith, may do, we will not allow the
modernization of our Church, and we will NOT go "in step with the
times"!
Amen.
Orthodox Heritage Page 8 Vol. 13, Issue 01-08
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