Ecumenisam and Apostasy
Ecumenisam and Apostasy
Ecumenisam and Apostasy
Fili alone, he observes, provides a viable model for resistance in other Orthodox Churches. He further recounts the support given by Patriarch Diodoros I of Jerusalem to Metropolitan Cyprian and his
Bishops, resulting in the formers humiliation by an enraged cumenical Patriarch (pp. 65-66), and the retreat from ecumenism of Elder Adrian of Mt. Sinai into the jurisdiction of the resisters under Metropolitan Cyprian (p. 88). And he subsequently points out that the
Serbian Church can either maintain relations with the ecumenists,
working from within the so-called official Churches for a return
to correct belief, or follow the course of Metropolitan Cyprian, realizing that the issue is not one of thirteen days or the calendar as such,
but the innovation and heresy that ushered in the calendar change.
In the final pages of his book (esp. pp. 100-108), Hieromonk Sava
cites historical examples of, and Patristic justifications for, the same
ecclesiology of resistance espoused by Metropolitan Cyprian and his
Bishops in resisting the contemporary panheresy of ecumenism,
which has infected the official New Calendarist Church of Greece.
He further contends that the walling off of True Orthodox Christians in resistance to various heresies is a matter of canonical necessity for all right-believing Orthodox. Father Savas keen intellect, his
penetrating insight into the nature and direction of the Greek Old
Calendarist movement, and his thorough grasp of the theology of resistance underlying the witness of Metropolitan Cyprians Synod are
particularly evident in the closing comments of this classic work on
ecumenism in our days of widening apostasy. This offers great hope
for the emergence of a traditionalist movement in the ancient Church
of Serbia, which, though it adheres to the traditional Church Calendar, has been beset for decades by overt participation in the ecumenical movement and full communion with the Orthodox ecumenists
and their Faith-betraying activities and policies.
[We suggest that those interested in purchasing the volume in question
write directly to the author, as follows: Jeromonach Sava, Manastir Visoki
Decani, 383 22 Decani, Serbia (Yugoslavia).]
***
The following report, written at the request of the Holy Synod, was submitted to the
Serbian Orthodox Patriarchate on November 17, 1994, by the aforementioned Bishop Artemije, Hieromonk Savas spiritual superior. His Grace, a spiritual son of the
Blessed Archimandrite Justin (Popovich), received his doctorate in theology at the
University of Athens. His view of ecumenism, its source, its dangers, and its effects
on the Serbian Church reflects much of the thinking of our own Church and occasions further hope for the blossoming of True Orthodoxy in Serbia.**
ty. This evil seed, once it had been sown, grew audaciously.
Already by 1910, in Edinburgh, a World Mission Conference of Protestant churches was held, where it was decided to organize a worldwide
Christian movement to resolve questions of faith and church order.
At the same time that this movement was being organized, the Life
and Work movement was formed, the task of which was the realization of
the union of Christians through their mutual coperation in matters of daily
life (a movement for unity). It was these two exclusively Protestant movements that founded, at its First General Assembly in Amsterdam, in 1948,
the World Council of Churches, with its main center in Geneva.
At this gathering, unfortunately, there were present various representatives of the Orthodox Churches: from the Patriarchate of Constantinople, the
Archdiocese of Cyprus, the Archdiocese of Greece, and the Russian Metropolia of North America (now known as the Orthodox Church in America).
3. Unfortunately, Orthodoxy did not distance itself from these temptations of modernism and secularism, and shortly it was infected by them.
Among the Orthodox Churches, the first to surrender to ecumenism
was the Patriarchate of Constantinople. This happened as early as January of
1920, with the encyclical To All of the Churches of Christ. This encyclical
called not only the local Orthodox Churches Churches, but applied this
term, for the first time in history, to various heretical confessions. At the
very beginning of this encyclical it is written: ...[T]he effort of various Christian Churches to approach one another, and their desire for coperation, cannot be rejected because of differences in dogma between them....
The encyclical calls for coperation and the realization of full unity; various heretical groups are called churches, which are not alien to us but are
close and akin to us in Christ, and together with us they are co-inheritors
and co-participants in the promises of Christ Jesus (Ephesians 3:6).
As a first, practical step for attaining mutual trust and love, it is reckoned necessary for the Orthodox Church to accept the New (Gregorian) Calendar, so that all the great Christian feasts can be celebrated by all the
Churches at the same time.
This was quickly done by the Patriarchate of Constantinople (and later,
as well, by sundry other local Orthodox Churches), which paid a high price
for this: an internal schism both in the Church and between the people.
However, other Orthodox Churches for a time resisted this dangerous
temptation. In particular, the Patriarchate of Moscow expressed a wellknown caution concerning ecumenism. The meeting of Bishops of the local
Orthodox Churches held in Moscow on July 8-18, 1948, on the occasion of
the five-hundredth anniversary of the autocephaly of the Russian Church,
bore witness to this. Representatives of the Churches of Alexandria, Antioch,
Russia, Serbia, Romania, Georgia, Bulgaria, Poland, Czechoslovakia, and Albania took part in this meeting.
The representatives of these Churches rejected membership in the
worldwide ecumenical movement and in the World Council of Churches,
which had just been formed, and they condemned the movement as heresy.
But this zeal for the defense of the Divine Truth of the Church did not
continue for long, unfortunately. A mere four years after the formation of
the World Council of Churches, in 1952, Patriarch Athenagoras of Constantinople issued an encyclical which exhorted all the heads of the local Orthodox Churches to join the World Council of Churches.
In spite of the fact that such exhortations were banal and non-ecclesial
(for example, they contained such expressions as: ...[B]oth people and nations are working intensely to come together in confronting the great problems which occupy the whole of humanity), certain Orthodox Churches, in
that very same year, rushed to enroll in the World Council of Churches. The
cumenical Patriarchate began to send its permanent representatives to the
main center of the World Council of Churches in Geneva.
In 1959, the Central Committee of the World Council of Churches met
with the representatives of all the Orthodox Churches for consultations on
the island of Rhodes. Beginning at that moment, we can observe that ecumenism penetrated into Orthodoxy and, like a cancerous tumor, began to
consume it from within.
After the meeting on Rhodes, the Orthodox appear to have begun to
compete with one another, as to who could be the more ecumenical.
Beginning in 1961, Orthodox ecumenists began to convene one conference after another, for the purpose of bringing into reality their ecumenist
agendas and goals. Thus, in 1964, a Third Conference was summoned on
Rhodes, where the decision was made to establish dialogues with heretics
on equal grounds, and each local Orthodox Church was obliged to establish, independently, fraternal relations with heretics. The primary leader
in all of these ecumenist games was Patriarch Athenagoras, who began frequent meetings with the Pope, negotiating for the mutual lifting of the
Anathemas of 1054, for common prayers, and so forth. Since then, his successors and assistants, Archbishops Iakovos of North and South America and
Stylianos of Australia, Damascene of Geneva, and many others, have travelled the same path.
Other representatives of various local Orthodox Churches also act according to this ecumenist plan, even though their actions have not a thing in
common with the teaching and Canons of the Holy Fathers of the Church.
The borders established by our Holy Fathers have been violated, the
borders between truth and falsehood, light and darkness, Christ and Belial.
The primary factor in all of these outpourings of sentiments (which essentially constitute pure hypocrisy) is the desire for all Orthodox Christians
to learn the truth that they are brothers in Christ and members of the one
and true Church together with the non-Orthodox. This is what is discussed
at meetings and conferences, written about in newspapers, journals, and
books, and broadcast on radio and television. These things are necessary in
order to lead us up to the common cup, to communion between us, which
is the basic goal of this so-called dialogue of love.
All of this, according to Father Justin (Popovich), amounts to the betrayal
of Judas, a terrible betrayal of the Lord Jesus Christ and the entire Church of Christ.
The Relationship of the Serbian Orthodox Church
to the World Council of Churches
Following the example of the other local Churches, and likewise citing
the Patriarch of Constantinople, the Serbian Orthodox Church from the very
beginning made an effort to keep in step with the times.
In spite of the fact it was not yet formally a member of the World Council of Churches, it began to establish contacts and connections with this
council of heresy, as Father Justin would have called it, and began to receive representatives of the W.C.C., first as persons who were sending assistance, such as Mr. Tobias, Mr. Maxwell, and Ms. Meyhoffer, and finally, the
General Secretary, Mr. Visser t Hooft.
It is true that the Serbian Church did not have an official representative
or observer at the Second Assembly of the W.C.C. in Evanston, in America,
but at the Third Assembly in New Delhi, in 1961, it had a delegation of three
members (with Bishop Bessarion as its head). At this assembly, the question
of the participation of the Orthodox Churches in the movement was discussed. Apparently, under pressure from the Communist rgime, the Moscow Patriarchate and the Churches of the Soviet satellite countries, along
with it, became members of the W.C.C. Thus, the Patriarchates of Moscow,
Bulgaria, Georgia, and Romania, as well as the Metropolias of Poland and
Czechoslovakia, all became members of the W.C.C.
The Serbian Church joined the members of the W.C.C. by the back
door, unnoticed, unofficially, in the following way. The General Secretary,
Visser t Hooft, went for a visit and made an offer for the Serbian Church to
become a member, without any need of signing theological documents that
might possibly be without dogmatic or canonical foundation. The Synod,
with Patriarch German as its head, decided to join the W.C.C. This decision
was accepted and ratified at the meeting of the Central Committee of the
W.C.C., somewhere in Africa, in 1965.
Since then, the Serbian Church, like the other local Orthodox Churches,
has been a part of the W.C.C.
Through our Bishops and theologians, we began to take part in all conferences, assemblies, meetings, prayer gatherings, and everything else the
W.C.C. concocted, and agreed to everything without argument.
As a result of this coperation, the Serbian Orthodox Church from time
to time received material assistance from the W.C.C., such as medicines,
scholarships, trips to Switzerland, and financial subsidies (e.g., for constructing the new building for the theological faculty [in Belgrade]). For these
crumbs of help, we have lost, in the spiritual plane, the purity of the Faith,
the canonical heritage of the Church, and faithfulness to the Holy Tradition
of the Orthodox Church.
The presence of representatives of Orthodox Churches at various ecumenist gatherings has no canonical justification whatsoever. We do not go
there in order to confess boldly, openly, and unwaveringly the eternal and
unchangeable Truth of the Orthodox Faith and Church, but in order to make
compromises and, more or less, to agree to all the decisions and formulations that the non-Orthodox offer us.
It was through such actions that we arrived at Balamand, at Chambsy,
and at Assisi, all of which together constitute infidelity and a betrayal of the