Politics, Society and Culture in Orthodox Theology in A Global Age
Politics, Society and Culture in Orthodox Theology in A Global Age
Politics, Society and Culture in Orthodox Theology in A Global Age
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Volume 11
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14. Church and State in the Orthodox World Today and the
Challenges of the Global Age . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 214
Sveto Riboloff
Contributors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 368
1 Cf. Pantelis Kalaitzidis, Orthodoxy and Political Theology (Geneva: WCC Publications, 2012).
2 Cf. Aristotle Papanikolaou, The Mystical as Political: Democracy and Non-Radical Orthodoxy
(Notre Dame IN: University of Notre Dame Press, 2012).
3 Nikolaos Asproulis, “Pneumatology and Politics: The Role of the Holy Spirit in the Articulation
of an Orthodox Political Theology,” Review of Ecumenical Studies 7 (2015), 58–71; Georgios
Vlantis, “Pneumatologie und Eschatologie in der zeitgenössischen orthodoxen Theologie:
Richtlinien und Perspektiven”, in Petra Bosse-Huber, Konstantinos Vliagkoftis, and Wolfram
Langpape (eds.), Wir glauben an den Heiligen Geist: XII. Begegnung im bilateralen theolo-
gischen Dialog zwischen der EKD und dem Ökumenischen Patriarchat (Leipzig: Evangelische
Verlagsanstalt: 2021), 119–37. For an overview of the current trends in political theology in
today’s Orthodoxy, cf. Kristina Stoeckl, Ingeborg Gabriel, and Aristotle Papanikolaou (eds.),
Political Theologies in Orthodox Christianity – Common Challenges and Divergent Positions
(London: Bloomsburry/T&T Clark, 2017); Pantelis Kalaitzidis, “[Political Theology in] Eastern
Orthodox Thought,” in William T. Cavanaugh and Peter Manley Scott (eds.), Wiley Blackwell
Companion to Political Theology, 2nd ed. (Oxford/New York: Willey-Blackwell, 2019), 97–110;
Nathaniel Wood and Aristotle Papanikolaou, “Orthodox Christianity and Political Theology,”
in Rubén Rosario Rodríguez (ed.), T&T Clark Handbook of Political Theology (London/New
York: T&T Clark, 2020), 337–51.
4 Metropolitan Elpidoforos (Lambriniadis), “Das Verhältnis zwischen Kirche und Staat in der
orthodoxen Tradition,” in Petra Bosse-Huber and Martin Illert (eds.), Theologischer Dialog
mit dem Ökumenischen Patriarchat: Die Beziehungen zwischen Kirche und Staat unter histo-
rischen und ekklesiologischen Aspekten (Leipzig: Evangelische Verlagsanstalt, 2015), 228–35.
Cf. Pantelis Kalaitzidis, “Church and State in the Orthodox World: From the Byzantine
‘Symphonia’ and Nationalized Orthodoxy to the Need of Witnessing the Word of God in a
Pluralistic Society,” in Emanuela Fogliadini (ed.), Religioni, Libertà, Potere: Atti del Convegno
Internazionale Filosofico-Teologico sulla Libertà Religiosa, Milano, Università Cattolica del
Sacro Cuore e Università degli Studi, 16–18 Ottobre 2013 (Milan: Vita e Pensiero, 2014) 39–74.
5 Grigorios Larentzakis, “Die Beziehungen zwischen Kirche und Staat unter dem Blickwinkel
der pastoralen, erzieherischen, sozialen und kulturellen Angelegenheiten der Kirchen,” in
Bosse-Huber and Illert Theologischer Dialog mit dem Ökumenischen Patriarchat, 197–217.
6 Vasilios N. Makrides (ed.), Religion, Staat und Konfliktkonstellationen im orthodoxen Ost- und
Südosteuropa: Vergleichende Perspektiven (Frankurt, etc.: Peter Lang, 2005).
7 George E. Demacopoulos and Aristotle Papanikolaou (eds.), Christianity, Democracy, and the
Shadow of Constantine (New York: Fordham University Press, 2017).
8 Emmanuel Clapsis, The Orthodox Churches in a Pluralistic World: An Ecumenical Conversation
(Brookline MA/Geneva: Holy Cross Orthodox Press/WCC Publications, 2004).
9 Cf. the recent “Declaration” by eminent Orthodox theologians who oppose the “Russian
World”: https://www.polymerwsvolos.org/2022/03/13/a-declaration-on-the-russian-
world-russkii-mir-teaching/ and https://publicorthodoxy.org/2022/03/13/a-declaration-
on-the-russian-world-russkii-mir-teaching/#more-10842/ (accessed 27 March 2022).
10 David Bentley Hart and John Chryssavgis (eds.), For the Life of the World: Toward a
Social Ethos of the Orthodox Church (Brookline MA: Holy Cross Orthodox Press, 2020);
also accessible at: https://www.goarch.org/el/social-ethos?p_p_id=56_INSTANCE_
practical level since many Orthodox churches exist in liberal democratic soci-
eties. In this volume of essays, this debate occurs precisely by critically exam-
ining various earlier concepts (such as the Tsarist model and its “symphonic”
background, Orthodoxy under persecution, etc.) in theological, historical and
political perspectives and linking them to current issues (such as Orthodoxy
and human rights, Orthodoxy and pluralistic societies, etc.).
With regard to the Russian Orthodox Church, the current war conducted by
the Russian Federation opens up the discussion once more of the role played
by a certain version of Orthodox theology and by the nationalist conservative
social ideas of some Orthodox churches in their understanding of state and
society, politics, and culture of the countries of Europe shaped by Orthodox
Christianity. Already in Ukraine, however, the Orthodox churches seem to
have constructively embraced liberal democratic conditions – not to mention
Orthodox churches in many other European countries. In view of the various
political tensions in Europe, which are currently exemplified by the war in
Ukraine, there is a considerable need to better understand the religious char-
acter of various countries of Orthodox tradition in Eastern and Southeastern
Europe.
On a fundamental intellectual level, this discourse is about transparency in
the interconnections between religious identity and the political or social con-
text, as well as the relationship between tradition and innovation with regard
to the understanding of politics, society, and culture in Orthodox theology.
How flexible is Orthodox theology in its response to social changes or to social
and practical conflicts between norms? To what extent has the Orthodox theo-
logical understanding of politics, society, and culture impacted the multiple
changes in the societies of Eastern and Southeastern Europe, so influenced by
Orthodox culture, in the last two centuries?
As editors of this volume, we would like to thank all the contributors for their
erudite and fascinating contributions to the elucidation of these and many
other questions for a better understanding of politics, society, and culture in
the Orthodox theology of the present era of globalisation and for making their
texts available for this purpose. The whole publication and the conference
in Volos would not have been possible without the very substantial financial
km0Xa4sy69OV&p_p_lifecycle=0&p_p_state=normal&p_p_mode=view&p_p_col_
id=column-1&p_p_col_count=1&_56_INSTANCE_km0Xa4sy69OV_languageId=en_US/.
For this official ecclesial document, cf. the monograph by Dietmar Schon, Berufen zur
Verwandlung der Welt: Die Orthodoxe Kirche in sozialer und ethischer Verantwortung
(Regensburg: Pustet, 2021).
For approximately 450 years, Orthodox Russia was governed by the tsars. If we
can indicate a starting point for the “tsarist system,” it would have to be the
last third of the 15th century when the grand princes of Russia first claimed
the title of “tsar” for themselves. The “tsarist system” ended in February 1917
with the abdication of Tsar Nicholas II and the assumption of power by the
Provisionary Government. It had obviously become outdated in the eyes of
many by then. At least, the Orthodox Church in Russia had surprisingly few
problems with accepting new developments: “God’s will has been fulfilled:
Russia has entered the path towards a new governmental state life.” This is the
initial, rather laconic sentence in an official statement by the Holy Synod of
the Orthodox Church, published in early April on the front pages of the leading
church journals.1
The fact that the Russian Orthodox Church, with a delay of almost two
months, felt urged to give its own theologically founded interpretation of
the events in the spring of 1917 highlights a particular element, namely, the
religious aspect of this system that needed to be definitively addressed.2 The
“tsarist system” has always been more than the practical manifestation of one
political theory that demands reflection along with alternative and competing
theories. As a rule, this system it does not even theoretically offer any space for
alternatives.
It is the religious foundation and claim that make the “tsarist system” inter-
esting for a conference on politics, democracy and human rights in Orthodox
thinking. Both the theme of the conference and the many implications of the
tsarist system provide the interdisciplinary nature of any attempt to design an
appropriate picture of this system. Such an attempt, if carried out carefully,
would need to engage at the least cultural and political history and political
theory, in addition to theology and religious studies.
1 See, e.g., the first page of the Holy Synod’s official journal, published after a two months’
hiatus, Tserkovnye Vedomosti, nos. 9–15 (April 1917): 57 (translation mine).
2 For further insight into discussions among Russian clerics about the tsarist system and alter-
natives prior to 1917 see M. Babkin, ed., Rossiiskoe duchovenstvo i sverzhenie monarkhii v 1917
godu; Materialy i arkhivnye dokumenty po istorii Russkoi pravoslavnoi Tserkvi (Moscow: Indrik,
2008); John D. Basil, Church and the State in Late Imperial Russia: Critics of the Synodal System
of Church Government (1861–1914) (Minneapolis MN: University of Minnesota Press, 2005).
The long life of this system is one thing, and the limited space for a contribu-
tion like this is another – the picture under such circumstances can necessarily
only be impressionistic, consisting of some main lines and colors that I hope to
have appropriately identified as constitutive. There are mainly two such con-
stitutive elements: first, we have the position and function – the office – of
the tsar himself; second, there is the notion of pravda as a constitutive moral
element. One can add others that I can touch upon only in passing, like the
noble entourage of the “tsar” with its development from a circle of advisors
and holders of beneficiaries into a bureaucratic system, or the dualism and
inter-relation of church and state derived from the famous symphonia prin-
ciple in Byzantium.
Each of these elements has a prehistory that illustrates its relevance within
Orthodox discourse on political theory, given its particular predecessors in
what Father Georges Florovsky would have called the Byzantine culture of
“sacred Hellenism.” For Florovsky (Georgii Florovskii) and even more so for
some of his followers, Russia, including its political system, would have formed
an integral part of a “Hellenic Orthodox” civilization that emerged in late
antiquity on paths that eventually became distinct from those followed in the
West.3 Wherever necessary, this origin, and what has become of it on the way
to its adoption in Muscovite and Russian Imperial context, also needs to be
briefly addressed.
The Tsar
By calling themselves “tsar,” since the late 15th century, the grand princes of
Muscovy applied a title that in its current, Slavonic form had first occurred in
and eventually been taken over from medieval Serbia and Bulgaria. There the
Latin caesar or Greek kaisar had been transformed in the early Slavic idioms
into the title of “tsar.” By that time, Serbian and Bulgarian kingdoms were vas-
sals of the Byzantine Empire. While this large political entity still existed, there
could – at least in theory – be only one kaisar, which meant that any attempt
3 Florovsky’s ideas are found in various essays, such as his “Christianity and Civilization,”
St. Vladimir’s Theological Quarterly 1, no. 1 (1952): 13–20; later reprinted in his Christianity and
Culture, Collected Works, vol. 2 (Belmont MA: Nordland Publishers, 1974), 121–30; see also
Alfons Brüning, “The Empire and the Desert: Eastern Orthodox Theologians about Church
and Civilization,” in The Law of God: Exploring God and Civilization, ed. Pieter Vos and Onno
Zijlstra (Leiden/Boston: Brill, 2014), 84–104; Paul L. Gavrilyuk, Georges Florovsky and the
Russian Religious Renaissance (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013), especially 201–20,
232–58.
to adopt the title on the part of Slavic vassal states came down to sporadic
attempts to rebellion or at least to achieve greater independence.
The claim made by the Muscovite princes since the late 15th century was
very much of this kind. When first expressed, it lacked the approval of the
Patriarch of Constantinople that it still theoretically needed. There was an
important reason for this delay because, in comparison with the medieval
Balkan states, the situation had basically changed on one pivotal point: since
the conquest of Constantinople by the Ottoman Turks in 1453 the “original”
kaisar had ceased to exist. Against this background, the adoption of the title
in any linguistic adaptation whatever came down to a claim to, not indepen-
dence, but a translatio imperii in full, i.e., a claim to continuing the legacy of
the Byzantine Empire in its entirety. That included all the pillars of its political
structure as well as its eschatologically charged self-understanding since the
time of Emperor Constantine. An illustrative example of the prevalent mood
among Christians at the time are the writings of the historian and church
father Eusebius of Caesarea. He depicted the tolerance of Christianity by and
eventually the conversion of the first Byzantine Emperor to Christianity as the
beginning of a new era in world history, i.e., that of the emergence of the actual
kingdom of God in a political form after the many persecutions Christians had
suffered.4
The Byzantine emperor was much more than just a political ruler.
According to interpretations still current among experts in Byzantine studies,
the image of the emperor had been formed by using a vacuum that had come
into being when the early Christological debates of the council of Nicea and
Constantinople saw the defeat of the Arian party. Whereas Christ was now to
be described – as in the Nicene Creed – as equal to God (homoousios), the
emperor had subsequently adopted the Arian alternative of a man similar
to God (homoiousious).5 It is probably this perspective in which the central
theme in Deacon Agapet’s famous “mirror of princes” from the 6th century
has to be understood: Agapet addresses the emperor as a twofold being – as a
simple human, equal to all others, and at the same time exceptional, raised by
4 Eusebius Pamphilus of Caesarea, “The Life of the Blessed Emperor Constantine,” in Nicene
and Post-Nicene Fathers, vol. 1, 2nd Series, ed. P. Schaff, H. Wace (Edinburgh: repr. Grand
Rapids MI: Wm. B. Eerdmans, 1955); also online, the Medieval Sourcebook, https://source-
books.fordham.edu/basis/vita-constantine.asp (accessed 22 December 2020).
5 See, e.g., Marie T. Fögen, “Das politische Denken der Byzantiner,” in Pipers Handbuch der poli-
tischen Ideen, vol. 2, ed. Iring Fetscher and Herfried Münkler (Munich/Zurich: Piper, 1983),
41–85.
God’s grace above all others to be the representative of the heavenly kingdom
on earth.6
The emperor, therefore, was seen as a figure both political and spiritual. He
was the source of justice and law as well as a defender of the faith and guardian
of the Church. Although there was a certain insistence in Byzantine political
theory on the separation between political and spiritual matters, the two were
supposed to closely combine in the end and cooperate – the famous concept
of symphonia prominently fixed in Emperor Justinianus’ 6th novel issued in
535. In practice and theory the system offered a certain superiority to the office
of the emperor. It was he who convened ecclesiastical synods, and he even
attended Divine Liturgy from a prominent place opposite the altar and high
above the mass of ordinary believers. Byzantium has aptly been described as
a theocracy.7
A matter of particular importance within this framework was the inherent
distinction between the office itself, with all its theological and eschatologi-
cal ornamentation on the one hand, and the real person of its actual holder
on the other hand. The consequences of this distinction were twofold. First,
the office itself was highly morally charged: to become emperor automati-
cally meant being subject to almost superhuman requirements for character,
moral behavior, and lifestyle. This is where a specific category of Byzantine
political literature, the “mirrors of princes” with their explanatory and admon-
ishing style (the above-mentioned Agapet among them) had their purpose
and context. On the other hand, this meant that even in individual cases of
obvious violations of the highly moral norms connected with the Emperor’s
office by a concrete holder, the ideal remained intact. Byzantine history had
already contained numerous usurpers, cruel dictators, and even murderers on
the Emperor’s throne, but all such deficits could be attributed to the particu-
lar person in charge. An emperor might have failed to achieve or even have
ostentatiously ignored the requirements of his office, but the purity of the
ideal did not suffer. Nor did obviously bad developments really generate a real
debate about possible mistakes of the system itself. Byzantine political con-
cepts already had little if any space for system debates – mistakes had to be
corrected morally and were not perceived as conceptual deficits of the politi-
cal system.
6 For a modern English translation, cf. Peter N. Bell (trans., introd.), Three Political Voices from
the Age of Justinian: Agapetus, Advice to the Emperor, Dialogue on Political Science; Paul the
Silentiary, Description of Hagia Sophia (Liverpool: Liverpool University Press 2009), 99–121.
7 Cyril Hovorun, “Is the Byzantine ‘Symphony’ Possible in our Days?” Journal of Church and
State 59, no. 2 (2016): 280–96.
All this – the eschatological perspective and legitimization, the moral ideal,
and the resilience of the system against any theoretical questioning – became
Byzantium’s heritage to the Russian tsars. The idea of the “Third Rome,” so
often quoted and referred to as illustrative of Moscow’s political ambitions, in
fact at the time of its conception had almost nothing to do with political power
claims but rather expressed this eschatological perspective of the emperor’s
office. The admonishing tone of Filofei of Pskov’s famous passage needs to be
compared with similar overtones in the above-mentioned mirrors of princes:
So be aware, lover of God and Christ, that all Christian Empires have come to an
end and are gathered together in the singular empire of our sovereign […] and
this is the Russian empire; because two Romes have fallen, and a third stands,
and a fourth there shall not be.8
In the given context as well as being quite in line with Byzantine examples,
Filofei first and foremost reminds the tsar of the exceptional dignity of his
office and the specific duties and moral requirements linked to it. If there were
any differences from the Byzantine examples, these would have been found in
an even greater emphasis on the particular, in a way superhuman, character
of the office of the tsar, and a greater neglect of the ordinary human aspects
of their holders. The “charisma of power” of the tsar (and also of the patriarch
of Moscow in the period between 1589 and 1721), expressed by numerous ele-
ments in the inauguration ceremonies, raised him to a level highly different
from that of ordinary humans and their usual concerns.9
The office of the tsar was virtually untouchable in Muscovite and later
Russian history. Critique could be directed only at its actual holder, with a
specific set of possible consequences. First, there was in theory the possibil-
ity of resistance by the governed people or the nobility in relation to a tsar
who obviously failed to fulfill his God-given duties. A passage in Iosif Volotskii’s
famous Prosvetitel’ (Enlightener) apparently provides a possibility of refusing
the otherwise obligatory obedience to a tsar who had turned into a negation or
caricature of the ideal:
8 Cf. Marshall Poe, “Moscow, the Third Rome: Origins and Transformations of a ‘Pivotal
Moment’,” in Jahrbücher für Geschichte Osteuropas 49, no. 3 (2011): 412–29 (quotation on
p. 416); still important is Hildegard Schaeder, Moskau – Das Dritte Rom: Studien zur Geschichte
der politischen Ideen in der slawischen Welt, 1st ed. (Hamburg: Friederichsen, de Gruyter,
1929).
9 See the classical study by Boris A. Uspenskii, “Tsar’ i Patriarkh: Kharisma vlasti v Rossii
(Vizantiiskaia model’ i ee russkoe pereosmyslenie),” in: Izbrannye Trudy 1, ed. Boris A.
Uspenskii (Moscow: Gnozis, 1996), 184–204.
However, if there is a Tsar who reigns over the people, but himself is over-
whelmed by evil passions and sin, by greed, violence, lie and defiance and, worst
of all, disbelief and blasphemy, then such a Tsar is not a servant of God but a
devil, not a Tsar but a tyrant. Our Lord Jesus Christ named such a person not a
Tsar, but a fox (Luke 13,33); you do not owe obedience to such a Tsar, or Prince,
who would lead you only into dishonor and cunning – even if he molests you
and threatens you with death.10
The very existence of such a possibility, even in the writings of Iosif Volotskii,
the abbot of the Volokolamsk monastery and a political author otherwise
often quoted as the main theoretician of Russian tsarist absolutism is remark-
able. On the other hand, its significance should obviously not be exaggerated.
Beyond the refusal of obedience, the passage does not give any further indica-
tions about other possible kinds of active resistance. Furthermore, the author-
ity of decision, i.e., the answer to the question who would be authorized to
decide whether a given tsar did not only display a bit too much human weak-
nesses but had truly turned into a bad governor or tyrant, remains within the
church. Till its end, the Muscovite and tsarist Russian system did not develop
any formal, let alone constitutional, mechanisms to control or restrict the
tsar’s power even in case of obvious violations of the high requirements linked
to the ruler’s office.
Probably the best example is the reign of Ivan IV, who became known as
“the Terrible” (an English translation of the Russian groznyi, which in fact
means “the strict, severe” and is just one of the possible titles along a scale of
stereotypical properties of tsars, ranging from “humbleness” to “authority and
severity”). Even the disastrous consequences of his reign – like the extinction
of a 600-year-old dynasty through Ivan’s murder of his son and heir, the dev-
astation of entire regions, the numerous victims of the tsar’s personal cruelty
and of his notorious private militia (the oprichnina), eventually the “time of
Troubles” as well that would result from Ivan’s government – did not lead any
political writer to question the institution of the tsar’s office itself. Such writers
in the late 16th and early 17th centuries might well have felt urged to specify the
ideal and redefine the moral requirements of the tsar’s office a bit, but there
was still no attempt whatsoever to reconceptualize the political system itself.
Reflections made against the background of the crisis had a predominantly
certain sense, at least if they were directed not against an individual tsar (only
Alexander II enjoyed the reputation of a reformer) but the institution. The
revolutionaries of the narodnaia volia (“people’s will”) movement after 1860,
within the ranks of which the murderers of the “Tsar liberator” were recruited,
had in fact an ambiguous relationship with the institution of the tsar. Some
felt that only its annihilation could make the Russian peasants abandon their
veneration of the tsar and develop instead a clear view of their miserable con-
ditions that would have resulted in revolt; others shared the veneration of
the tsar like the people widely did and openly bemoaned the assassination of
Alexander II.14 A reform of the system, certainly if it included a downgrade
of the tsar’s sacred office to a mere constitutional context for quite a few of
them was not an option. Change could only be attained by annihilating the
tsar himself.
On the positive side, the tsar’s obligations subsequently changed in the
course of modern history. This began as just a mere moral profile as the “righ-
teous” (pravednyi, derived from pravda, a term we are about to explain more
thoroughly) and the “caring” one – a protector of the right faith on the one
hand and a defender of the poor, the oppressed and the weak on the other.
This basic, predominantly moral, profile did not change, but it did take on a
more “bureaucratic” character through the centuries, in line with the devel-
opment of Muscovite and Russian state structures. The responsibility of the
tsar, according to changing definitions, was less related to the welfare of an
amorphous people or particular groups (nobility, church) and more to the
state system and its functioning. Moral requirements were partly “translated”
into technical measures and institutionalized: redistributing wealth as a mat-
ter of practicing justice became an issue of the tax system; listening to advisors
and commissioning embassies to foreign powers resulted in the installation of
offices (the Muscovite prikazy since the 16th century) and the appointment of
office holders and secretaries.
Responsibility for the accurate functioning of the system, in the sense of
fostering the “common good” became a concretization of the tsar’s duties for
the state together with the development of a bureaucratic system with offi-
cers, defined tasks, and a legal and financial system. Not earlier than the end
of the 17th century was a term like “the common good” (obviously a borrowing
from Western political theory transferred to Russia via 17th-century Ukrainian
14 Cf. Vitalij Fastovskij, Terrorismus und das moderne Selbst: Religiöse Semantiken revolution-
ärer Gewalt im späten Zarenreich (1860–1917) (Goettingen: Vandenhoek & Ruprecht, 2018),
153f., 170f.
intellectuals) made it into the tsars’ speeches.15 By then, slowly but surely the
“reforming tsar” appeared as a more professional and less as a merely moral
manifestation of the tsarist ideal.16 On the other hand, even a partial recep-
tion of Western political theory in the Russian context led ultimately to just a
more sophisticated theoretical foundation of tsarist sovereignty. One promi-
nent example from the early 18th century is Bishop Feofan Prokopovich’s
Pravda voli monarshei (“Justice of the Monarch’s Will”), which he published
in 1721. Despite all its borrowings from contemporary Western political theory,
the learned monk and bishop Prokopovich became one of the main theoreti-
cians in transforming old Byzantine and Muscovite rule into modern forms
of Russian-style absolutism.17 In that same year, which saw the publication
of Prokopovich’s treatise, the Petrine church reform, carried out according to
guidelines fixed in the famous Dukhovnyi Reglament (“Spiritual Reglement”)
came into force. Once again, Prokopovich was the main author of these guide-
lines. What started here was the so-called “synodal period,” in which the church
was completely formally subordinated to the state, governed by a “holy synod,”
presided over by the oberprokur, a delegate appointed by the tsar. This period
ended only in 1917, after the February revolution and the abdication of Tsar
Nicholas II.
Some corporative elements as part of the system before and still after the
Petrine reforms did not basically change the picture. Indeed, there was a pecu-
liar role in the Russian empire for the nobility as well, but this could be com-
pared to Western estates in a feudal system in only a rather limited sense.18
Rather, once again, everything depended on the tsar’s favor. Already accord-
ing to the Byzantine model, the tsar was supposed to listen to his advisors
and consult his entourage in case of difficult political decisions. The Russian
system distinguished between different ranks among the nobility and had a
15 Cf. Hans-Joachim Torke, “Moskau und sein Westen. Zur ‘Ruthenisierung’ der russischen
Kultur,” in Berliner Jahrbuch für osteuropäische Geschichte 1 (Berlin: Akademie-Verlag,
1996), 101–20; idem, Die staatsbedingte Gesellschaft (n. 12), 13; Brüning, “Symphonia, kos-
mische Harmonie, Moral,” 46–9.
16 Cynthia H. Whittaker, “The Reforming Tsar: The Redefinition of Autocratic Duty in
Eighteenth Century Russia,” Slavic Review 51, no. 1 (Spring 1992): 77–98.
17 Cf. Jaroslava Stratii, “Idei pryrodnoho prava i suspil’noho dohovoru na sluzhbi
petrovs’koho absolutism (‘Pravda voli monarshoi’ Feofana Prokopovycha),” in Ukraina
XVII stolitija: Suspil’stvo, Filosofiia, Kul’tura, ed. Larisa Dovha, Natalia Jakovenko (Kiev:
Krytyka, 2005), 128–51. Earlier studies emphasize the still important Byzantine features
in Prokopovich’s system. Cf. Hans-Joachim Härtel, Byzantinisches Erbe und Orthodoxie bei
Feofan Prokopovič (Wuerzburg: Echter, 1970).
18 See already Günther Stökl, “Gab es im Moskauer Staat ‘Stände’?” Jahrbücher für Geschichte
Osteuropas 11 (1963): 321–42.
system that was even enhanced by Peter the Great’s introduction of a “table
of ranks.” Nonetheless, an ethos of service to the tsar and therefore to the
country was always the conditioning pattern of the mentality of the Russian
nobility, whereas, in turn, everything concerning rank and welfare ultimately
depended on the tsar’s favor. The situation changed dramatically once more,
when Tsarina Catherine abolished the obligatory state service for members
of the boiar elite in the late 18th century. What resulted was a class with no
defined task within the state, even though they retained a feeling of commit-
ment as “sons of the fatherland.” Noblemen, like the writer and philosopher
Alexander Radishchev (1749–1802) in his famous Journey from Petersburg to
Moscow, took pride in presenting to the tsar a mirror, an authentic picture of
the miserable conditions in his country.19 Nobles regarded this for some time
as a patriotic duty connected with their status to admonish the tsar about nec-
essary improvements of the system. The ethos culminated in use of the term of
a “son of the fatherland” (syn otechestva) by patriotic noblemen to express their
code of behavior and allegiance to the Russian state. Radishchev still remained
unheard, as happened to this and another generation of reform-oriented noble
politicians. The institution of tsarist autocracy (samoderzhavie) in the further
course of the 19th century was in addition charged with a patriotic spirit and
provided with ideological justification. Conservative ideologists came to see
in it the main representative of the uniqueness of the Russian political system
that would also distinguish Russia from suspicious Western models. Attempts
at reform to transform autocracy into forms of constitutional monarchy ended
in failure and another return to restrictive authoritarianism. The most promi-
nent example, representing the following generation of noble reformers and
“sons of the fatherland” was the revolt of the Decembrists. This was a group
of officers and young noblemen who tried in December 1825 to use the occa-
sion of the enthronement of the new Tsar Nicholas I for the establishment
of constitutional reforms. Inspired by Western ideas they had picked up dur-
ing the Napoleonic wars, they led their regiments to St Petersburg’s Senate
Square and demanded the assumption of Nicholas’ elder brother Constantine
and the introduction of a constitution. The revolt was quickly put down, after
Constantine had already relinquished the throne. The ideas of the relatively
small circle of noblemen had never found a wide echo among the majority of
the Russian people. The actual prospective of the rebels’ program is best illus-
trated by the fact that the slogan “for Constantine and a constitution” (Russian:
za Konstantin i konstitutsiia) shouted during the rebellion had apparently been
19 Aleksandr Radishchev, A Journey from St Petersburg to Moscow, transl. Leo Wiener, ed. and
introd. Roderick P. Thaler (Cambridge MA: Harvard University Press, 1958).
gravely misunderstood by the majority of the rank and file soldiers in the regi-
ments. As has been reported, most of them understood the slogan as indicat-
ing that the campaign wanted the assumption of Constantine and his wife
called “konstitutsiia” to the throne.20 The new tsar, Nicholas I, soon became
known throughout Europe as a reactionary, suppressing all kind of dissent. The
Decembrists, many of whom were deported to remote Siberia, added stories
of the heroic fate of exile to Russian history books. This, however, also marked
a preliminary end to influence of the nobility on state affairs. Just a few years
after the revolt, the new Deputy Minister of national education, count Sergei
Uvarov (1786–1855), created the threefold formula of “Orthodoxy, Autocracy,
Nationality” (Pravoslavia, Samoderzhavie, Narodnost’) denoting what he and
the regime would come to see as the pillars of both the Russian state order and
public education.21 Public debate about Russia’s place in post-revolutionary
Europe, usually roughly summarized as the Slavophiles vs. Westerners debate,
took place in – often clandestinely published – newspapers, letters and memo-
randums and was cut off from the tsarist court. Since the time of Radishchev at
least several generations of a patriotic (in whatever sense) noble elite remained
largely unheard. The stereotype of the “unnecessary man” (lishnyi chelovek)
emerged in the further course of the 19th century: an individual deprived of
both a defining task according to his talents and of contact with real life due
to his isolation. It has been argued that the origins of the Russian intelligentsia,
including the inherent radicalism of ideas prevailing in those circles, have to
be found in 18th-century nobility.22
So, the tsarist system might have been “modernized” and further developed
in terms of law, institutionalization, bureaucracy, but in fact the tsar relied
exclusively on himself and an entourage of loyal officials. At the same time, the
tsar remained in theory the ultimate source of any existing right. In praxis, the
complete absence of any constitutional background allowed several peculiari-
ties of the tsarist system and for some time Russian legal culture in general.
Because whatever the legal system granted, be it privileges for the nobility,
the appointment of a particular officer (state secretary, local governor) or the
20 Cf. Valentin Giterman, Geschichte Russlands 2 (Zurich: Büchergilde Gutenberg, 1945), 396.
21 Sergei S. Uvarov, Gosudarstvennye osnovy (Moscow: Institut russkoi tsivilisatsii, 2014). The
edition also testifies to a continuing attractiveness of such conservative ideas in some
circles in modern, post-Communist Russia.
22 Marc Raeff, Origins of the Russian Intelligentsia: The Eighteenth-Century Nobility (New
York: Harcourt, 1966). Recently, more sketches have been added to the image and self-
understanding of the nobility; cf. Martin Aust, Adlige Landstreitigkeiten in Russland: Eine
Studie zum Wandel der Nachbarschaftsverhältnisse 1676–1796 (Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz,
2003).
Pravda
At any rate, if the tsar acted as the just and righteous tsar he was supposed
to be, he acted in accordance with pravda. In most dictionaries, this Russian
term is usually rendered (in English) as either “justice” or “truth.” In fact, the
term belongs among those which are impossible to translate adequately into
other, at least Western, languages.25 To start with, current Russian uses the
term spravedlivost for “justice,” but this denotes a semantic shift. “Justice” –
certainly in the sense of “equivalence, balance,” with the usual connotations of
equal distribution or adequate treatment probably first entering the mind of
a Western observer – entered the Russian language not earlier than the early
23 The Russian term for a petition to the tsar, the so-called chelobitiie, is derived from this
phrase.
24 Cf. Tatiana Artemyeva, “From ‘Natural Law’ to the Idea of Human Rights in 18th-Century
Russia: Nobility and Clergy,” in Orthodox Christianity and Human Rights, ed. Alfons
Brüning and Evert van der Zweerde (Leuven: Peeters, 2012), 111–24.
25 See Constantin Sigov, s.v. “Pravda,” in Dictionary of Untranslatables: A Philosophical
Lexicon, ed. Barbara Cassin, Emily Apter, Jacques Lezra, Michael Wood (Princeton NJ:
Princeton University Press, 2014), 813–9; Wilhelm Goerdt, “Pravda: Wahrheit (Istina)
und Gerechtigkeit (Spravedlivost),” Archiv für Begriffsgeschichte 12 (1968): 58–85; Stefan
Plaggenborg, Pravda: Gerechtigkeit, Herrschaft und sakrale Ordnung in Altrussland
(Munich: Wilhelm Fink Verlag, 2018).
26 See Natalja Pečerskaya, “Spravedlivost’ [Justice]: The Origins and Transformations of the
Concept in Russian Culture,” Jahrbücher für Geschichte Osteuropas 53, no. 4 (2005): 545–
64; Christoph Schmidt, “Von Gottes und Rechts wegen oder zu einigen Charakteristika
von Gerechtigkeit in Russland: Ein Kommentar,” Jahrbücher für Geschichte Osteuropas 53,
no. 4 (2005:): 565–8.
27 Sigov, “Pravda,” col. 813; Goerdt, Pravda, 59–63. See also Brüning, “Symphonia, kosmische
Harmonie, Moral.”
latter’s loss of the sense for pravda.28 At the same time, pravda has a strong
mystical component; as the secret harmony in divine creation that lies behind
all things, it is not always obvious and can only partly be translated into writ-
ten law. Viewing pravda as the order of creation implies a kind of religiosity
that religious science has qualified as primary religiosity. It includes notions
of “cosmological-theopolitical order” that are repeatedly found in the Old
Testament.
That does not mean that there is no exceptional role for the individual
human being. On the contrary, pravda can be translated into hymns about
the glory and exceptional dignity of the human being – early modern Russian
Orthodox anthropology is in fact much more positive about human nature
than Protestant or Catholic anthropology in the West.29 At the same time,
this is hardly to be understood in an abstract and individualistic sense. Every
human is part of a prefigured natural order in his relation to creation, to other
human beings, and within a quasi-natural hierarchy. Quite similar to Byzantine
ideas, this also includes patterns of social hierarchy, with the emperor or tsar at
the top. To move outside this prefigured divine order would threaten both the
stability of the system and human individuals themselves.
Just as was the case with the office and position of the tsar, pravda denotes
more an ideal than an actual state of affairs. Political hierarchy, legal systems
and social interaction can all be fixed, to some extent, in accordance with
pravda but can hardly ever be considered a complete expression of all the
mysteries of the divine harmony prevalent in the whole of creation. So, there
is constant effort required not only by the tsar (as pointed out above) but by
all political dignitaries, right down to the common people, to realize the divine
order and live according to this principle.
This might introduce a certain dynamic element into every given political
and social order, which can and always needs to be improved. On the other
hand, this approach once again excludes systematic critique and the possibil-
ity of alternatives and radical system changes. Even if a current state of affairs
by alert contemporaries would be regarded as being extremely deficient or
even “unjust” for the majority of the state’s inhabitants, the advisable conse-
quence is not a system change but rather a return to the true path, the righ-
teous order already long established. Debates about the correct interpretations
and actual requirements of the pravda principle might occur, but they will
never go beyond the surface of a certain consensus and reach the foundations.
In other words, there is little if any space for aspects otherwise regarded as
essential for modern democracy: if a culture of discussion is regarded as the
basic element of democracy, in the pravda perspective this is connoted rather
negatively as endless struggle and discord. In contrast to this, in ancient Russia,
there was a quite dominant preference for unity and social harmony among
social theorists as well. It has been argued that this predilection for patterns
of unity and social harmony forms the root of a certain distance that modern
Russian Orthodoxy takes towards central elements of political modernity, like
the secular state, civil society and pluralist democracy.30
This view of political issues on the eve of the tsarist system in the late
19th century generated a variety of philosophical derivations, most of them
falling within the main theories of Russian conservatism. But the spectrum
was actually wide. Perhaps the most adept philosopher of pravda, at the
same time critical of contemporary tsarist autocracy, was the “Narodnik”
Nikolai S. Mikhailovskii, who saw pravda as the exclusively Russian term for
reconciling the ideal and reality, theory and practice, divine will and human
existence.31 On the other hand, a conservative theorist like Konstantin
Pobedonostsev, the legal theorist and tsarist oberprokuror (the tsar’s represen-
tative at the Orthodox Holy Synod), developed a vision of an organically struc-
tured society that displayed more than superficial borrowing from, or at least a
striking concurrence with, the pravda principle.32 At any rate, there was little
latitude for deviating opinions in this system – to question implicitly this kind
of order, sanctioned by divine principles, could only be done by questioning
the divine order itself and necessarily required a radicalism that the guard-
ians of this order could only see as demonic. As noted before with regard to
the office of the tsar, perhaps this explains the radicalism of late 19th-century
political opponents, as well as the image of them encountered in some of
Dostoevsky’s novels.
These are examples, and there is also a possibly more positive aspect to it.
What needs to be explored is in what sense this ancient understanding of the
human being as part of a larger whole leads to Russian and Orthodox views of
30 See Regina Elsner, Die Russische Orthodoxe Kirche vor der Herausforderung Moderne:
Historische Wegmarken und theologische Optionen im Spannungsfeld von Einheit und
Vielfalt (Wuerzburg: Echter, 2018).
31 On Mikhailovskii and other philosophers referring to pravda for modern concepts, see
Goerdt, Pravda, 65–85; cf. also Sigov, Pravda, col. 814–9.
32 John Basil, “K. P. Pobedonostsev and the Harmonius Society,” Canadian-American Slavic
Studies 37, no. 4 (January 2003): 415–26.
the human as not an atomized individual but a person, with all the mystical
and theological implications this concept might have. Orthodox personalism
in fact puts a strong accent on the relatedness of the human being to his social
environment on the one hand and to the divine Creator on the other. Since
late 19th century, Orthodox thinkers have taken pride in juxtaposing notions
of “personhood” to an allegedly isolated individualism they saw dominant in
Western ideologies of their time.33
It would need yet another shift of the focus, the oft-mentioned “anthropo-
logical turn” of Russian religious philosophy of the Silver Age, to make such
concepts actually fruitful. This entails, in other words, not speaking about a pre-
figured ideal of harmony that was supposed to prevail in the totality of human
interactions but reflecting, again as a way to realize God’s will, on appropriate
virtues in order to realize this harmony in inter-human relations by mutual
respect and love. It is important to note that this “anthropological turn” had
its final breakthrough only after the tsar had gone. Thinkers advocating this
kind of approach, however, like the Parisian diaspora around such profiled and
peculiar thinkers as Nikolai Berdiaev, Sergii Bulgakov or Georges Florovskii,
already preferred a vision of society that could do, if necessary, without a tsar.
In the decades after the 1917 events, this was their way of understanding the
message of God’s providence – but this is another story.
33 Cf. Ruth Coates, “Theosis in Early Twentieth Century Russian Religious Thought,” in The
Oxford Handbook of Russian Religious Thought, ed. Caryl Emerson, George Pattison and
Randall A. Poole (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2020), 240–56.
Ina Merdjanova
Introduction
In this paper, I discuss major political contexts and legacies in the history of
Orthodox Christianity that defined, in important and often challenging ways,
the trajectories of Orthodoxy’s institutional development, social presence and
theological responses to important issues such as modernity, secularization,
globalization, religious pluralism, human rights and gender equality, among
others. I introduce the notion of self-colonization and argue that Orthodoxy’s
responses to adverse historical circumstances, particularly in Eastern Europe,
have typically been dominated by a “besieged fortress” mentality. This mental-
ity has entailed a self-imposed institutional and theological stagnation that
can be described as self-colonization.
The notion of self-colonization proposed here differs from the “self-
colonizing metaphor” explicated by Alexander Kiossev1 as well as from the
narrative of “internal colonization” introduced by Alexander Etkind.2 Kiossev
showed that the countries in Eastern Europe and other places not subject to
an actual military, economic, financial, and administrative rule by a colonial
power nevertheless succumbed to the rule of colonial Eurocentric imagina-
tion. Etkind interpreted Russia’s imperial experience as simultaneously exter-
nal (the colonization of other people) and internal (the colonization of its
own people). In my usage, self-colonization refers to Orthodoxy’s self-induced
encapsulation and stagnation as a result of the traumatic experiences of sig-
nificant social and economic restrictions under Ottoman rule and of oppres-
sion and persecution under totalitarian communism. This psychological
1 According to Alexander Kiossev, “The concept of self-colonizing can be used for cultures hav-
ing succumbed to the cultural power of Europe and the west without having been invaded
and turned into colonies in actual fact. Historical circumstances transformed them into an
extracolonial ‘periphery,’ lateral viewers who have not been directly affected either by impor-
tant colonial conflicts or by the techniques of colonial rule.” See Alexander Kiossev, “The
Self-Colonizing Cultures,” in Cultural Aspects of the Modernization Process, ed. Dimitri Ginev,
Francis Sejersted and Kostadinka Simeonova (Oslo: TMV-senteret 1995), 73–81.
2 Alexander Etkind, Internal Colonization: Russia’s Imperial Experience (Cambridge, UK: Polity,
2011).
Historical Legacies
of the Byzantine theocratic legacy, which often impedes their support for the
democratic principles of church-state separation and multiculturalism.6
An in-depth critical assessment of this legacy and its continuous influence
on contemporary Orthodox self-definitions, symbolic appropriations and
political practices still remains to be done. It bears mentioning that the largest
church body in the Orthodox world today, the Moscow Patriarchate, has fre-
quently insisted, through some of its spokesmen – particularly Father Vsevolod
Chaplin – that Byzantium did not vanish without a trace but “has been rein-
carnated in Russia.”7
Post-Communism
The Orthodox Churches’ experience with democratic regimes started with the
democratization of Greece after 1974 and the rest of the Orthodox countries
after the fall of communism in 1989. Democratization established a free, com-
petitive public sphere and fostered ethnic, religious and cultural heterogene-
ity. The dynamics of multiple transitions, particularly in the post-communist
societies, from a command economy to a liberal market one, from authoritar-
ian to democratic polities, from non-freedom to freedom of religion presented
the Orthodox Churches with enormous challenges.
The Orthodox Churches were ill-equipped to come to terms with those
challenges – and particularly with the increasing religious pluralism. The com-
petition implied by religious heterogeneity and requiring adequate “theologi-
cal ideas, financial resources, institutional networks, and human capital”10 was
difficult to handle. All these assets were immensely weakened by the historical
contexts in which Orthodox Churches evolved.
What are the major traits in the organizational behavior of the Orthodox
Churches today that exhibit persistent ecclesiastical self-colonization and
impede constructive responses to the contemporary challenges?
(a) The persistence of a “besieged fortress” mentality, which was related
to the struggle for survival under Ottoman rule and later under oppressive
authoritarian and atheistic regimes, has reinforced the encapsulation of the
Orthodox Churches. It has hampered enormously their capacities to address
constructively their internal pluralization as well as the external religious and
social heterogeneity. Both internal and external diversity are often seen by
these churches as a threat to their survival. Consequently, the former is heav-
ily restricted while the latter is either tacitly ignored or forthrightly dismissed.
This stagnating mentality also obstructs a constructive reevaluation of the
Orthodox Churches’ patriarchal and anti-modernist positions in line with con-
temporary core liberal democratic values of human rights and gender equality.
Self-colonization in the case of the Bulgarian Orthodox Church, for example,
is evident in its growing isolationism. The Church withdrew from the ecumeni-
cal movement, leaving the World Council of Churches in 1998. Furthermore,
it gradually alienated itself from other Orthodox Churches, with the notable
exception of the Russian Orthodox Church. Conspicuously, it refused to take
part in the historical Pan-Orthodox Council in Crete in 2016, an important event
organized by the Ecumenical Patriarch to consolidate an Orthodox position
on pressing contemporary issues such as the mission of the Orthodox Church
in today’s world and its relations with the rest of the Christian world, among
others. More broadly, the Church regularly expresses “traditionalist”11 nega-
tive attitudes towards modernity, the West, liberalism, the rights of women,
sexual minorities, and the “sects,”12 among other things. However, it has never
expressed a critique of the neo-liberal economic restructuring and its disas-
trous social costs, of the rise of poverty, endemic corruption, inequality and
discrimination against ethnic and religious minorities. In the rare cases when
it takes a public stance on sensitive issues, it raises eyebrows among many of
its followers. In 2018, the Bulgarian Orthodox Church vehemently opposed
government plans to ratify the Council of Europe Convention on preventing
and combating violence against women and domestic violence, known as
the Istanbul Convention. In its official statement, the Synod insisted that the
Convention tried to introduce “a third gender,” whereas “sex can be only bio-
logically defined because man and woman are a creation of God.” It expressed
concerns regarding the Convention’s Article 12, which calls for the eradication
of “prejudices, customs, traditions and all other practices which are based on
the idea of the inferiority of women or on stereotyped roles for women and
men”13 – thus inadvertently displaying its attitude towards women’s equal-
ity. The ecclesiastical hierarchy’s take on the document left the impression
that they did not see violence against women as a serious social issue, even
though they condemned it in general terms. Furthermore, in a baffling effort
to denounce the Convention, the Synod ordered parish priests to distribute a
special prayer called “The Canon of the Holy Mother of God” so that it would
not be ratified.14
Religiosity in Orthodox Christianity, ed. Ina Merdjanova (New York: Fordham University
Press, 2021), 50–75, here 66–9.
15 This official document lists as one of the areas of church-state cooperation “opposition to
the work of pseudo-religious structures presenting a threat to the individual and society.”
“Basis of the Social Concept of the Russian Orthodox Church,” Department for External
Church Relations of the Moscow Patriarchate, http://orthodoxeurope.org/page/3/14.aspx
(accessed 25 January 2020).
16 Izvǎnрedno sǎobštenie na Sv. Sinod na BPČ po povod krizata s bežancite [Special
announcement of the Holy Synod of the Bulgarian Orthodox Church with reference to the
refugee crisis on 26 November 2016], http://www.bg-patriarshia.bg/news.php?id=184530
(accessed 3 October 2018).
17 The situation is different in Greece, where, already in the 1930s, the study of world reli-
gions was introduced into the curricula of the theological schools. The theological fac-
ulties in Athens and Thessaloniki run well-established chairs in the history of world
religions and comparative religion.
failed to come to terms with ecumenism, human rights, gender equality and
the cultural and religious diversity in contemporary society. Disturbingly for
many Orthodox believers around the world, the Moscow Patriarchate praised
and celebrated the annexation of the Crimean Peninsula from Ukraine in 2014,
and openly condoned President Vladimir Putin’s war against Ukraine in 2022.
Admittedly, the general absence of critical reflections and cogent politico-
theological analyses by ecclesiastics and theologians on the state of affairs in
the Orthodox Churches and societies in Eastern Europe has been aggravated
by the lack of a transnational institutional structure and authority in Orthodox
Christianity. This, according to Aristotle Papanikolaou, has prevented “any
meaningful deliberation on the contemporary challenges and questions con-
fronting the Orthodox churches.”22
Yet Orthodox Christianity is not a cultural monolith, and the post-
communist churches often differ from the vibrant Orthodox communities in
Western Europe, North America and Australia, both in their social and politi-
cal outlook and in their role in the public sphere.23 Orthodoxy in the West
has a long experience with democratic systems, where human rights policies
figure prominently, and with living in a heterogeneous social environment.
Different political contexts and sociocultural dynamics, especially the histori-
cal and sociocultural realities of being a majority versus being a minority reli-
gion, have shaped varied approaches to pressing contemporary issues. Father
Dragos Herescu, for example, points to the existence of “multiple Orthodoxies”
and counterposes Orthodoxy mediated by ethnicity, place and custom versus
Orthodoxy as a universal, mobile, voluntary religion. He also usefully reminds
us of a generational gap as younger generations in Eastern Europe who have
firsthand experiences of Western modernity, secularization and pluralism
relate in a different way than their parents and grandparents to contempo-
rary sensitive issues.24 Indeed, the emergence of new generations of clergy,
theologians and lay people, who have enjoyed better educational opportuni-
ties, international travel, study abroad programs, access to internet resources
and social media, is inevitably transforming Orthodox identities.
More importantly, Orthodox Christianity can draw on a significant body
of theological doctrines that can serve as cornerstones for laying out a theo-
logical framework to explore and justify its engagement with contemporary
challenges. These doctrines include its teaching about the human being as
the image and likeness of God and the associated ideas about personal free-
dom and responsibility, its soteriology that proclaims that Christ died for all
and especially its Trinitarian doctrine which emphasizes diversity in unity.
Theologies of asceticism certainly have a lot to teach us regarding consum-
erism and the commodification of life, and the pioneering work by Father
Gregory Jensen on asceticism as a cure for consumerism is an inspiring exam-
ple to follow.25 Tenets about the “traditional values,” instead of being employed
as a strategy to reconfirm patriarchal orders of male leadership and female
subordination, can serve as a program for resistance against the dominance
of the “neoliberal values” in society and the attendant marketization of educa-
tion, healthcare, culture and even human bodies. Teachings about the divine
economy of all creation have underlined the humanity’s intrinsic relationship
with nature and ecological responsibility. God gave human beings “dominion”
over creation, according to Genesis 1:28, which involves responsible steward-
ship and duty of care for the planet Earth rather than the ruthless exploitation
of natural resources in the name of unlimited economic growth and consump-
tion. Orthodox authors, among whom Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew fig-
ures prominently, have already laid the groundwork for a sound theology of
the environment.26 Last but not least, Christianity has a preferential option
for the poor and vulnerable (“Blessed are the meek, for they will inherit the
earth” Matthew 5:5). This option emphasizes social justice and the duty of the
faithful to help the oppressed and to recognize the marginalized, which in
publicorthodoxy.org/2019/10/29/secularization-multiple-orthodoxies/ (accessed
31 January 2021).
25 Gregory Jensen, The Cure for Consumerism (Grand Rapids, MI: Acton Institute for the
Study of Religion & Liberty, 2015).
26 The Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew has been promoting a theology of the environ-
ment for decades. For an overview of eco-theological writing by Bartholomew and other
Orthodox authors, see Theokritoff who also states that “the Orthodox tradition goes
beyond the dichotomy of man and nature to offer a ‘deeper ecology’ in which the physi-
cal interrelations between creatures are set within the divine economy for all creation.”
Elizabeth Theokritoff, “Green Patriarch, Green Patristics: Reclaiming the Deep Ecology of
Christian Tradition,” Religions 8, no. 7 (2017): 116; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel8070116.
Acknowledgements
This paper was inspired by my participation as Senior Fellow in the “Orthodoxy
and Human Rights” project, sponsored by Fordham University’s Orthodox
Christian Studies Center and generously funded by the Henry Luce Foundation
and Leadership 100.
Nathaniel Wood
Introduction
This essay will offer a broad overview of three major “democratizing” themes
within Russian religious philosophy, themes that gesture toward an Orthodox
theology of democracy. The first is the ecclesiological theme, centered on the
doctrine of sobornost’ as the ideal shape of community life, both within the
church and within broader society. Second is the anthropological theme, or
perhaps more correctly the theo-anthropological theme, which considers the
deification of the human person as the basis of human dignity. Third, there is
the incarnational theme, wherein the Chalcedonian formula of Christ’s two
natures becomes a model for divine-human relations generally and, by exten-
sion, for church-state relations. These three themes are united by a broader
motif that runs throughout much of Russian religious philosophy: the partici-
patory theme. As will be demonstrated, the ecclesiological, anthropological
and incarnational themes all center on the free participation of human beings
in the coming of the Kingdom of God, whether in humanity’s collective par-
ticipation in God’s work of redeeming fallen creation or in the unique partici-
pation of all persons in the transformation of social life. The present essay will
focus on the theme of participation as it was developed in four major sources
of Russian religious philosophy: early Slavophile thought (active 1830s–60s),
the religious philosophy of Vladimir Soloviev (1853–1900), and the political
theologies of two of Soloviev’s intellectual heirs, Father Sergei Bulgakov (1871–
1944) and Semyon Frank (1877–1950).
The thesis presented here is that these themes “gesture toward” democracy.
There is no fully formed democratic political theology in Russian religious phi-
losophy, and not all of the thinkers who contributed to the development of
these themes endorsed democratic politics at all. Soloviev, for example, never
abandoned the basic framework of Christian monarchy even after losing faith
in the most ambitious articulations of his “free theocracy,” while others like
Bulgakov who at times voiced high praise for democratic politics were also
at times ambivalent toward it, recognizing democracy’s potential to devolve
into a kind of pseudo-theocracy. The most explicit theological endorsements
for a particular mode of governance within these thinkers’ works tend to be
governance being, in his view, one of the great strengths of Russian culture.3 It
was devotion to the obshchina that led Slavophile thought to reject the rights of
the people to participate democratically in government and instead to defend
the legitimacy, even the necessity, of autocracy. In this understanding, it was
an advantage of autocracy that it excluded the common people from such par-
ticipation. But an advantage in what sense?
The answer to this question helps to illuminate, ironically, the positive
role of participation in the Slavophiles and thus the democratizing thrust of
their theology. The problem with democracy is that, as a form of politics, it
belongs to the domain of the state, which for the Slavophiles is always associ-
ated with the dualism of coercive external authority and superficial, artificial
social relations. State politics, as the Slavophiles understood it, is inseparable
from conflict, and as such it stands in tension with the sort of harmonious
communion that they idealized in the obshchina. Democracy is dangerous
precisely because it draws the common people into the politics of the state
and thus entangles them in conflicts that risk eroding the communal bonds
between them. Democracy risks debasing communal relations into merely
contractual relations; or, as Andrzej Walicki describes it, borrowing Ferdinand
Tönnies’ terminology, democracy risks transforming the Gemeinschaft into the
Gesellschaft.4 The Slavophiles’ support for autocracy was not a celebration of
state power for its own, nor was it an uncritical defence of the actually exist-
ing Russian autocracy of their time, but instead reflected their desire to shield
the Russian people from the potentially corrosive effects of democratic poli-
tics on social life. Ultimately, its purpose was to “depoliticize” social relations.
This desire is reflected in Slavophile advocacy for a principle of “mutual non-
interference” between the state and the common people, according to which
the people freely renounce democratic political rights and entrust the neces-
sary work of state governance entirely to the autocrat, while at the same time
narrowly restricting the proper scope of autocratic power essentially to that
which is necessary to preserve the conditions for community life, without
interfering in that life. This principle, which barred the people from demo-
cratic participation, was thus intended to free the people from absorption into
the state, carving out a space for community to flourish outside the conflictual
realm of the political.
5 For more on the comparison between the Slavophiles and these critics, especially Cavanaugh,
see Nathaniel Wood, “Sobornost’, State Authority, and Christian Society in Slavophile Political
Theology,” in Religion, Authority, and the State, ed. Leo Lefebure (London: Palgrave Macmillan,
2016).
6 The concept of “possessive individualism” was developed by C. B. Macpherson, The Political
Theory of Possessive Individualism: Hobbes to Locke (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1962).
7 Ivan Kireevsky, “On the Nature of European Culture and Its Relation to the Culture of Russia:
A Letter to Count E. E. Komorovskii,” in Russian Intellectual History: An Anthology, ed. Marc
Raeff (New Jersey: Humanities Press, 1978), 199.
8 Ivan Kireevsky, “A Reply to Khomiakov,” in Documentary History of Russian Thought, trans.
and ed. W. J. Leatherbarrow and D. C. Offord (Ann Arbor: Ardis Publishers, 1987), 82.
good, and rest on the threat of coercive power; thus, they do not reach the level
of authentic community.
The rejection of political democracy therefore stems in part from its asso-
ciation with this flawed individualist anthropology and its erosive effects on
communion – placing their critique in the company of later theological crit-
ics of liberal democracy, who in similar fashion understand the contractual
liberal order as resting on an atomistic individualism and primordial conflict.
Yet, just as for these later critics, the critique of the democratic state can be
seen as an effort to make space for a different kind of “democracy” realized out-
side the state, one not based on the external coercive power of the state or on
conflicting individual rights claims but instead based on kenotic communion
and consensus. Initially for the Slavophiles, this alternative democracy was to
be realized within the obshchina, which exchanged the “feudal” right of self-
possession for a Christian ethic of self-renunciation – including, importantly,
the renunciation of individual property, severing the feudal link between per-
sonhood and private ownership.9 Along these lines, Aksakov imagines the citi-
zens of the obshchina not as feudal lords but as singers in a choir: ones who
freely renounce their self-sufficient individuality to sing, with a greater collec-
tive voice, a common song in harmony with others.10 Thus, even while reject-
ing democratic participation in state politics, Aksakov envisions a community
shaped by its own sort of participation, one in which persons freely donate
their diverse gifts as unique and essential contributions to the realization of
the common good and in so doing become something more than what they
were on their own.
Eventually, the marks of this “democratic” vision of the obshchina would
be transferred to the Church, primarily through Khomiakov’s contributions, in
the ecclesiological doctrine of sobornost’.11 It is in the Church that true democ-
racy is realized. The sobornost’ doctrine offered an account of ecclesial life as
a perfect communion based on the kenotic renunciation of individual egoism
and the harmony of consensus. In place of democratic politics, it promised a
deeper sort of participation in ecclesial communion and in enacting Christian
truth. For Khomiakov, Christian truth is an event of communion, because it
is dispersed throughout the whole ecclesial body, such that this truth must be
9 See Kireevsky, “European Culture,” 199; “Reply to Khomiakov,” 83; also see Paul Patrick
O’Leary, O.P., The Triune Church: A Study in the Ecclesiology of A. S. Xomjakov (Dublin:
Rollebon Press, 1982), 48.
10 See Zenkovsky, A History of Russian Philosophy, 236.
11 For Khomiakov’s main statement of the doctrine, see his “The Church is One,” in On
Spiritual Unity: A Slavophile Reader, trans. and ed. Boris Jakim and Robert Bird (Hudson,
NY: Lindisfarne Books, 1998).
democracy community that offers more than the “uneasy peace of contract”16
but – expressed in various ways – “the perfection of concordantia,”17 the “har-
monious blending of diverse gifts,”18 “peaceful consensus”19 or “perfect social
harmony.”20 The resonances with the Slavophiles’ emphasis on consensus,
communion, and gift exchange are no accident; Milbank explicitly invokes
sobornost’ as inspiration for his democratic vision of the Church.21
Milbank’s concept of “deified democracy” is helpful for making sense of
Khomiakov’s ecclesial community. But if this higher democratic life belongs
to ecclesiology, what does that mean for democratic politics? On the one
hand, because of their strong separation between the state and the people,
the Slavophiles do not offer a real democratic political theology; their ecclesial
“democracy,” as we have seen, is entirely compatible with political autocracy,
even supportive of it. On the other hand, the Church’s democratic principles
were not meant to remain locked within the Church’s walls but were meant to
shape the wider society. Khomiakov expresses hope that the sobornal spirit
should “penetrate man’s whole being and all his relations with his neighbor,”
thereby becoming Russia’s “highest social principle.”22 Likewise, Kireevsky
writes that his “only wish” is that the Church’s sobornal life “should become
part and parcel of the beliefs of all estates and strata of our society; that these
lofty principles, in dominating European culture, should […] engulf it in
their fullness, thus giving it a higher meaning and bringing it to its ultimate
development.”23 Christians are called to transform the social order in the direc-
tion of ecclesial democracy; but, given the constraints of their larger “depo-
liticizing” project, there is in the end no clear role for democratic politics to
play in carrying out this transformation. The Slavophile path is one of ecclesial
withdrawal from the political; sobornost’ as “deified democracy” simply takes
the place of democracy as it is normally understood.
Nevertheless, the basic shape of sobornost’ would serve as a foundation
for subsequent, more developed Russian political theologies – such as those
16 John Milbank, Theology and Social Theory: Beyond Secular Reason, 2nd edition (Malden
MA: Blackwell, 2006), 367.
17 Milbank, Being Reconciled, 128.
18 Milbank, Being Reconciled, ix.
19 Milbank, Being Reconciled, 128.
20 John Milbank, The Word Made Strange: Theology, Language, Culture (Malden MA:
Wiley-Blackwell, 1997), 154.
21 Milbank, Being Reconciled, 132.
22 Aleksei Khomiakov, “To the Serbs: An Epistle from Moscow,” in A Documentary History of
Russian Thought from Enlightenment to Marxism, trans. and eds. William J. Leatherbarrow
and Derek C. Offord (Ann Arbor: Ardis Publishers, 1987), 93–94.
23 Kireevsky, “European Culture,” 207.
This notion of sobornost’ as the social ideal is closely linked to the second
“democratizing” theme in Russian political theology: the revitalization of
the doctrine of deification as part of a defense of the dignity of the human
person. Soloviev’s famous doctrine of bogochelovechestvo, “Godmanhood” or
“Divine-Humanity,” is central to this second theme. Soloviev’s interest in cre-
atively retrieving the patristic doctrine of theosis was driven largely by the
urgency defending the “absolute significance and worth” of the human person,
which was under threat, in different ways, from both the tsarist regime and
its radical secular alternatives. Soloviev believed that modernity had brought
about a greater recognition of what he referred to as the “negative absolute-
ness” of the human person or the intuition of the human person’s moral free-
dom and perfectibility. However, “positive absoluteness,” the actual attainment
24 Vladimir Soloviev, “On Spiritual Authority in Russia,” in Freedom, Faith, and Dogma: Essays
by V. S. Soloviev on Christianity and Judaism, trans. and ed. Vladimir Wozniuk (Albany NY:
SUNY Press, 2008), 18.
25 S. L. Frank, The Light Shineth in Darkness: An Essay in Christian Ethics and Social Philosophy,
trans. Boris Jakim (Athens OH: Ohio University Press, 1989), 220.
26 Sergei Bulgakov, “Social Teaching in Modern Russian Orthodox Theology,” in Sergii
Bulgakov: Towards a Russian Political Theology, ed. Rowan Williams (Edinburgh: T&T
Clark, 1999), 282.
of perfection, requires union with God – deification.27 In this way, Soloviev tied
Orthodox soteriology directly to a political program centered on the liberation
and the dignity of human persons, offering an Orthodox theological rationale
for several political values commonly associated with modern liberal democ-
racies: freedom of conscience and freedom of the press, a degree of church-
state separation, welfare rights, freedom from cruel punishments and so forth.
More directly pertinent to the question of democracy, however, is the impor-
tance of participation in Soloviev’s project. On the basis of theosis, Soloviev
pointed to the necessity of broad participation in the transformation of the
social order – and this despite his formal support for monarchy. The key move
here is Soloviev’s recognition of the vocational character of deification, the
linking of deification to humanity’s “common task” of preparing the way for
the eschatological arrival of God’s Kingdom.28 Soloviev, like so many others of
his time, had a progressive view of history; in his case, the end toward which
history is progressing is the perfect communion of the divine and the human,
the universal incarnation of Christ – the “materialization of spirit” and “spiri-
tualization of matter.”29 This is to say that the end of history is a relationship,
and as such, it must be brought about through personal freedom rather than
by some immutable law of historical necessity. Therefore, even though God
has been luring creation toward this end from the outset, the end is attained
only as the movement toward it becomes “more and more conscious and free,
i.e., really personal – that each should more and more understand and fulfill
the work [of universal incarnation] as if it were his own.”30 In other words,
deification – which here includes the transformation of the social order in line
with sobornost’ – depends utterly on the full and free participation of human-
ity, not only collectively but also as individuals. There is thus a “democratic”
undercurrent to Soloviev’s theology that tempers the monarchism of his poli-
tics, since it is precisely the capacity of the human person to participate in the
27 Vladimir Soloviev, Lectures on Divine-Humanity, trans. Peter Zouboff, revised trans. Boris
Jakim (Hudson NY: Lindisfarne Press, 1995), 17–23.
28 Soloviev’s focus on the task character of Christianity was influenced by the thought of
Nikolai Fedorov. See Fedorov, What Was Man Created For? The Philosophy of the Common
Task, trans. and ed. Elisabeth Koutaissoff and Marilyn Minto (Lausanne: Honeyglen
Publishing/L’Age d’Homme, 1990).
29 Soloviev uses this language in God, Man, and The Church: The Spiritual Foundations of
Life, trans. Donald Attwater (Cambridge, UK: James Clarke, 1937), 23. For more on this
theme, see Oliver Smith, Vladimir Soloviev and the Spiritualization of Matter (Boston MA:
Academic Studies Press, 2011).
30 Vladimir Soloviev, The Justification of the Good: An Essay on Moral Philosophy, trans.
Nathalie A. Duddington, ed. Boris Jakim (Grand Rapids MI: Wm. B. Eerdmans, 2005),
176–7.
common task of working toward the Kingdom that grounds his or her positive
absoluteness. It is only in this capacity that “the absolute significance, dignity,
and worth of the human personality consist, and this is the basis of its inalien-
able rights.”31
This vocational dimension of deification remained in the next generation
of Russian political theology. Bulgakov made it central to his critique of posi-
tivism and theories of progress that instrumentalize and cannibalize actual
human persons. As for Soloviev, the defense of the human person was cen-
tral to Bulgakov’s religious philosophy and one of the sources of his disillu-
sionment with Marxism;32 this defense rested on divine-human communion
and humanity’s call to participate in God’s redemptive work. Frank, too, in his
response to the horrors of the Russian Revolution, likewise appealed to deifi-
cation as human vocation to defend the dignity and freedom of the person.
For Frank, it is precisely the obligatoriness of this vocation, the imperative for
human persons to become co-workers with God, that transforms mere individ-
ual demands into genuine human rights – the right to participate in construct-
ing the divine-human future, to freely contribute one’s gifts to the common
task.33 Frank sees a clear link between human vocation and democratic princi-
ples: He writes that “democracy has as its genuine foundation the commonal-
ity of the aristocratic nature of all people as the children and free collaborators
of God.” The equal dignity of all people is based in this common task; in the
sphere of politics, therefore, equality entails “above all […] the universal right
to participate in the construction of the society.”34
This democratic impulse arises from one of the core principles Frank shares
with Soloviev and Bulgakov: namely, that a fundamental aim of Christian poli-
tics is (in Bulgakov’s words) “the creation of the conditions for the free devel-
opment of personhood.”35 To paraphrase Soloviev’s approach, the Christian
state aims to interfere as little as possible with the inner moral and spiritual
lives of the people (preserving here a degree of the church-state separation
upon which the Slavophiles had insisted) while working to order the external
conditions of life – the economy, political systems, etc. – in ways that maxi-
mize opportunities for personal development.36 But if personal develop-
ment is rooted in human beings’ vocation to participate in the deification of
the world, then it follows that the conditions for personal development must
include the opportunity for participation in the redemption of the social order.
The implications of this view of deification are sobornal and thus democratic:
I develop my own personality, and struggle toward my own deification, by par-
ticipating in God’s redemptive work, and this means assisting others in their
deification by empowering them also to become co-participants in God’s work.
The social dimension of deification entails a continual expansion of the scope
of democratic participation in society, drawing all in as free collaborators in
the common task.
None of this, however, suggests that just any sort of democracy is adequate
from a theological perspective. The Slavophiles’ reservations about individu-
alistic, contract-based democracies remain, and the democracy that emerges
here is instead one based on the common pursuit of deification. Genuine
democracy continues to be the “deified democracy” of ecclesial sobornost’,
and it is therefore little wonder that Soloviev and those who followed him
continued to locate the culmination of human personality not in the state
(democratic or otherwise) but in the sobornost’ of the Church. Human per-
sonality reaches the height of its development only when it “takes its place in
the Church,” Soloviev argues.37 He maintains that it is “through the universal
Church alone that the individual person can obtain positive freedom,” and it
is only through integration into sobornost’ that “the unconditional significance
of each human being” is realized.38 Christian democracy in this view cannot
ground itself in the subjective self-assertion of self-sufficient individuals, but
instead holds as its objective aim the infusion of the social order with the dei-
fying spirit of self-emptying ecclesial love. Yet this outcome is precisely one
that democratic politics, in its standard secular forms, can never guarantee.
For this reason, it might seem that the “democracy” in question here is really
something else altogether, and in the end just another word for the Church. If
that is the case, then result might be an ecclesiastical triumphalism, one that
might justify the ecclesial “democracy” being non-democratically imposed on
the society – for instance, by a Christian monarch. In this case, support for
monarchy – whether by Russian religious philosophers or by contemporary
political theologians, such as Milbank, who invoke them – might be considered
the natural conclusion of the “democratic” themes so far described. But does
it need to be?
The third major “democratizing” theme of Russian religious philosophy has the
potential to challenge the monarchical temptation: namely, the incarnational
theme, the new understanding of the relationship between Christ’s divine and
human natures, based on a deepening of the Chalcedonian formula. This new
approach, first given a somewhat detailed articulation in Soloviev’s Lectures on
Divine-Humanity, offers a framework for a modern Orthodox understanding of
the Church’s relationship to the political order: neither a withdrawal from the
political nor a domination of it.
In keeping with the themes covered above, this approach to Chalcedonian
theology places central emphasis on participation, specifically the free, active
participation of Christ’s humanity in his incarnation. In this understanding,
divine action does not bypass human freedom but operates in and through it
as “divine-human” action. In the incarnation, Christ acts divinely only insofar
as he acts humanly, that is, in accordance with the properly human capacities
of the nature he assumes. Soloviev laid the groundwork for this approach in his
discussion of a “double kenosis” in the Lectures: in the incarnation, Christ, as
God, renounces his divine power so that, as a human, he can freely renounce
the self-sufficiency of his human will and harmonize himself with the will of
God, thereby deifying his humanity.39 Bulgakov’s Lamb of God expands on the
meaning and significance of this double kenosis in much great detail. There
Bulgakov argues that the incarnation, as the union of the two natures, should
not be understood as a single event accomplished at one moment in time
(such as the conception of the Christ child in Mary’s womb), but – in keeping
with the larger notion of bogochelovechestvo – as a dynamic relationship that
is progressively realized in the development of Christ’s consciousness across
the whole course of his earthly life. There is no point in this process at which
Christ’s divinity outstrips or outpaces his humanity, since Christ “actualizes
His divinity for Himself in inseparable union with the human nature, as a func-
tion of [that nature’s] receptivity,” or, in other words, “only to the extent of
39 See Vladimir Soloviev, Lectures on Divine-Humanity, trans. Peter Zouboff, revised trans.
Boris Jakim (Hudson NY: Lindisfarne Press, 1995), 159–61.
40 Sergius Bulgakov, The Lamb of God, trans. Boris Jakim (Grand Rapids MI: Wm. B. Eerdmans,
2008), 256.
41 Bulgakov, Lamb, 418.
42 Bulgakov, Lamb, 399.
43 Soloviev, Spiritual Foundations of Life, 180.
44 Frank speaks of sobornost’ as the often-hidden foundation of all social relations in
Semyon Frank, The Spiritual Foundations of Society: An Introduction to Social Philosophy,
trans. Boris Jakim (Athens OH: Ohio University Press, 1987). At a deeper level, society
has its ontological basis in the Divine Sophia, in what Bulgakov refers to as the “univer-
sal cosmic sobornost’” (Lamb, 104) and Frank the “universal sobornost of being” (Spiritual
Foundations, 61).
45 Sergei Bulgakov, “The Soul of Socialism,” in Sergii Bulgakov: Towards a Russian Political
Theology, ed. Rowan Williams (Edinburgh: T&T Clark, 1999). Bulgakov uses the language
of “inward overcoming” in relation to the two natures throughout The Lamb of God.
46 Sergius Bulgakov, The Orthodox Church, trans. Lydia Kesich (Crestwood NY: St. Vladimir’s
Seminary Press, 1988), 163.
47 This is the theme of Frank’s The Light Shineth in Darkness.
Conclusion
This essay has sought to illustrate how three key features of Russian religious
philosophy – ecclesial sobornost’, the call to deification and the incarnation
of Christ – are united by a common thread: the theme of free participation.
Although this focus on participation does not lead Russian religious philos-
ophers to an unambiguous endorsement of democratic politics or a clean
break from the Orthodox heritage of Christian monarchy, the present essay
has attempted to amplify the inchoate democratic gestures in their thought
that might inform further Orthodox theological reflection on democracy. From
what has been shown in the preceding pages, a theology of democratic partici-
pation that draws on Russian religious philosophy would not simply provide
a theological rubber stamp for liberal democracy, but neither should it sim-
ply reject democracy as antithetical to Orthodox faith. Rather, such a political
theology should recognize the essentially democratic shape of God’s coming
Kingdom, which stands in judgment of the democracies of this world. The
present task is to understand how Christians are to participate in the demo-
cratic communities in which they find themselves in light of this tension.
Cyril Hovorun
Introduction
Father Georges Florovsky (1893–1979) was one of the most influential Orthodox
intellectuals in the 20th century.1 Born in the Russian Empire not long before
its collapse in 1917, he spent most of his life in the West as an immigrant. He
was associated with the St. Sergius Institute of Orthodox Theology in Paris,
St. Vladimir’s Orthodox Theological Seminary near New York, and later with
Holy Cross Greek Orthodox School of Theology near Boston, as well as with
Harvard and Princeton. Florovsky was known as a historian and theologian,
but he also implicitly propagated a political program, that shaped the ideologi-
cal profile of modern Eastern Christianity to a significant extent. This paper
argues that Florovsky’s famous “Neopatristic synthesis”2 was also his political
theology.
Two Syntheses
1 On Florovsky, see Andrew Blane, Georges Florovsky: Russian Intellectual and Orthodox
Churchman (Crestwood NY: St. Vladimir’s Seminary Press, 1994).
2 Paul Ladouceur, Modern Orthodox Theology (London: T&T Clark, 2019), 95–122.
3 Georges Florovsky, “Christianity and Civilization,” St Vladimir’s Seminary Quarterly 1 (1952):
13–20, 14.
Florovsky responded to this critique by arguing that it was not Christianity that
had changed. Rather, he proposed, Hellenism had changed from its classical
version in its “churchified” form. Hellenism had been “dissected with the sword
of Christian Revelation, and was utterly polarized thereby.” As a result of its
synthesis with Christianity, it turned into a “New Hellenism.”4
On the other hand, and on different occasions, Florovsky spoke about
the “pseudomorphosis” of Orthodox theology. Paul Gavrilyuk has presented
Florovsky’s concept of “pseudomorphosis” as a drama in three acts, with each
act corresponding approximately to the 17th, 18th, and 19th centuries.5 In the
17th century, the pseudomorphosis was caused by Roman Catholic influence.
It was imposed upon Russia via Ukraine, which was struggling at that time
with uniatism. In the 18th century, the pseudomorphosis was Protestant, based
in Protestant scholastic theology, mostly from Germany. Finally, in the 19th
century, German philosophical idealism produced a new form of the pseudo-
morphosis of Orthodox theology. The common denominator of all these forms
of pseudomorphosis, according to Florovsky, was their scholastic character. In
his main work, Ways of Russian Theology, where he tried to identify Eastern
theology’s pseudomorphoses, he used the word “scholastic” and its derivatives
around seventy times, always with negative connotations. For example, he
described Catholic “scholasticism,” which had been introduced to the Russian
Orthodox milieu through the Kyiv-Mohyla Academy, as follows:
In practically every respect the Kiev collegium represents a radical break with
the traditions of earlier schools in West Russia […]6. Its students were hardly
initiated into the heritage of the Orthodox East. Scholasticism was the focus
of teaching. And it was not simply the ideas of individual scholastics that were
expounded and assimilated, but the very spirit of scholasticism.7
who was Metropolitan of Moscow at the turn of the 19th century (1775–1812),
Florovsky lamented his theological method: “How greatly his outlook had been
restricted by scholastic tradition and how little he sensed the church’s needs.”9
Probably the only positive hero in Florovsky’s narrative about the ways of
Russian theology, Filaret Drozdov (1821–1867), the Metropolitan of Moscow
was – in Florovsky’s eyes – an ardent opponent of scholasticism. He fought
against “the captivity or slavery of scholasticism”10 but could not win this fight.
The time for such a victory had not yet come. Florovsky believed that his time
was the kairos to put an end to “the slavery of scholasticism.” He personally led
an assault against the scholastic windmills. Florovsky fought valiantly against
scholasticism in his project of Neopatristic synthesis, which he described as
a “return from scholasticism to patristics.”11 There seems to be a contradic-
tion, however, between two syntheses that Florovsky endorsed: “Churchified
Hellenism” on the one hand and the anti-scholastic Neopatristics on the other.
Scholasticism
group, also known as dialectical and logical, are On Interpretation,13 Prior and
Posterior Analytics,14 and Topics.15 These texts were grouped in the first cen-
tury BCE by the publisher of the Aristotelian corpus, Andronicus of Rhodes.
Andronicus also commented on the Categories, but this commentary has not
survived. He boosted interest in the Aristotelian studies in the Hellenistic
period and opened doors for numerous commentaries on Aristotle that mush-
roomed into different philosophical schools.16
The Neoplatonic philosopher Porphyry of Tyre (ca. 234–ca. 305 CE) penned
the most famous commentary on Aristotle’s Categories. The title of Porphyry’s
work is Introduction (Εἰσαγωγή).17 Porphyry believed that Aristotelian logic
could be the best introduction to philosophy, and this applied not only to the
Peripatetic but also to the Platonic school. Porphyry also believed that the
Aristotelian categories could help reconcile Platonic and Aristotelian branches
of philosophy. Such reconciliation became one of the goals of Neoplatonism.
Other Neoplatonists after Porphyry followed his line and produced exten-
sive commentaries on the Categories, including Dexippus18 and Simplicius of
Cilicia.19 Simplicius was one of the latest representatives of the pagan school
of Neoplatonism. He also wrote commentaries on the Categories, and these
commentaries have survived.20
The Neoplatonic school had two most important centers of teaching
and research: Athens and Alexandria. Athenian Neoplatonism focused on
and insisted on the Christian teaching that the world was created by God.27
He also applied Aristotelian categories to explain the Trinity and Incarnation.
He arrived at conclusions, however, that were rejected by other theological
schools of his time. In particular, he claimed that the Christian God should be
regarded as three separate beings and that Christ, as a single being, had only
one nature.28 As a result, the ecumenical council held in Constantinople in
680–681 condemned Philoponus posthumously. His interpretation of Christ’s
singularity was too radical even for the Miaphysites who, like Philoponus,
advocated one nature in Christ. In contrast to Philoponus, they admitted the
double consubstantiality of Christ, which was a way of saying that he is con-
substantial with the Father according to his divinity and with us according to
his humanity.
The church condemned Philoponus not because of his scholasticism, i.e.,
the use of the Aristotelian categories, but because he used them in the wrong
way. All prominent theologians in late antiquity relied on these categories.
According to Theodore of Raithu (flourished at the end of the 6th century and
the beginning of the 7th), Severus of Antioch (ca. 465–538), one of the key
participants in the controversies around the Council of Chalcedon (451), used
to say that a good theologian has to be “trained in Aristotle’s Categories and
similar texts of outside philosophers.”29
Theodore himself, who belonged to the Chalcedonian camp, which was
opposed to the theological school of Severus, produced a handbook on logic
called Preparation (Προπαρασκευή).30 In this handbook, he systematically elab-
orated on various categories from the logical nomenclature of Aristotle and
Porphyry. It became a popular handbook that has survived in many editions,31
27 Philoponus polemicized against the Neoplatonic philosopher Proclus (ca. 410–485); see
H. Rabe, ed., Ioannes Philoponus, De aeternitate mundi contra Proclum (Leipzig: Teubner,
1899); Ioannis Philoponus, Philoponus: Against Proclus on the Eternity of the World, trans.
Michael Share (London: Bloomsbury, 2014). He also elaborated on arguments in favor of
creationism; see W. Reichardt, ed., Joannis Philoponi de opificio mundi libri vii (Leipzig:
Teubner, 1897); See also Richard Sorabji, ed., Philoponus and the Rejection of Aristotelian
Science (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1987).
28 Michael Lang, John Philoponus and the Controversies Over Chalcedon in the Sixth Century:
A Study and Translation of the Arbiter (Leuven: Peeters, 2001).
29 Quoted by Theodore of Raithu, Praeparatio 10, Franz Diekamp, ed., Analecta Patristica
(Rome: Pontificum Institutum Orienatlium Studiorum, 1938), 200, 14–6.
30 Franz Diekamp, ed., Analecta Patristica. See also a study on this logical treatise by
Ἀθανάσιος Νίκας [Athanasios Nikas], Θεόδωρος τῆς Ραϊθοῦ [Theodoros of Raithou] (Athens:
Holy Monastery of Sina Publications, 1981).
31 At least 24 manuscripts from the 10th through the 17th centuries contain this work; see
Nikas, Θεόδωρος τῆς Ραϊθοῦ, 17–19.
even though its author was condemned by the councils of Lateran (649) and
Constantinople (680–681) for monoenergism. This was a doctrine32 that
had emerged within Neochalcedonianism. The latter, in turn, tried to reart-
iculate the theological points of the Chalcedon in the theological language of
Cyril of Alexandria (376–444).33 Several other handbooks and reflections on
the categories emerged to facilitate Christological debates within the same
Neochalcedonian framework. A Neochalcedonian theologian who flourished
at the end of the seventh century, Anastasius of Sinai, composed a Guidebook
(Ὁδηγός) to the categories.34 He instrumentalized the Aristotelian-Porphyrian
dialectics to defend the teaching of two energies or operations (ἐνέργειαι) and
two wills in Christ.
Anastasius’ dyothelite approach to Neochalcedonianism was followed by
John of Damascus (ca. 675–749) who compiled a summa of theology called
The Fountainhead of Knowledge (Πηγὴ γνώσεως). This summa was scholastic
not only because it sorted out the entire corpus of theology known in John’s
time in a systematic and almost dull way but also and primarily because it was
garnished with a selection of categories: Dialectica.35 In his logical introduc-
tion to Orthodox theology, John relied on Aristotle’s Categories.36 A prominent
Syrian theologian, Theodore Abū Qurrah (ca. 750–ca. 825), followed in John of
Damascus’ steps. He summarized the Neochalcedonian dyothelite theology in
Arabic, including a detailed exposition of the categories.37 Through Theodore,
the Aristotelian categories, having been elaborated by Christian theologians,
32 See Cyril Hovorun, Will, Action and Freedom: Christological Controversies in the Seventh
Century (Leiden: Brill, 2008).
33 See Charles Moeller, “Le chalcédonisme et le néo-chalcédonisme en Orient de 451 à la fin
du VIe siècle,” ed. A. Grillmeier and H. Bacht, Das Konzil von Chalkedon: Geschichte und
Gegenwart (Würzburg: Echter-Verlag, 1951) 637–720; Patrick Gray, “Neo-Chalcedonianism
and the Tradition: From Patristic to Byzantine Theology,” Byzantinische Forschungen 8
(1982): 61–70; Karl-Heinz Uthemann, “Der Neuchalkedonismus als Vorbereitung des
Monotheletismus: Ein Beitrag zum eigentlichen Anliegen des Neuchalkedonismus,”
Studia Patristica 29 (1997): 373–413.
34 Karl-Heinz Uthemann, ed., Anastasii Sinaitae Viae Dux (Turnhout: Leuven University
Press, 1981).
35 There are shorter (earlier) and longer (later) editions of the Dialectica; see Bonifatius
Kotter, ed., Die Schriften des Iohannes von Damaskos, Band 1: Institutio elementaris: Capita
philosophica (Dialectica) (Patristische Texte und Studien, 7, Berlin, 1969), 51–146; John
of Damascus, John of Damascus: Writings, trans. Frederic H. Chase (Washington DC:
Catholic University of America Press, 1958).
36 Andrew Louth, St. John Damascene: Tradition and Originality in Byzantine Theology
(Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2002), 40.
37 Najib George Awad, Orthodoxy in Arabic Terms: A Study of Theodore Abu Qurrah’s Theology
in Its Islamic Context (Berlin: de Gruyter, 2015).
were transmitted to the Arabic language and world. Muslim scholars con-
tinued reflecting on them from their perspective. In particular, Abū Qurrah
influenced such thinkers as Al-Kindī (d. 870), Jābir Ibn Hayyān (d. 925/35),
Ishāq Al-Isrā’īli (d. c. 932), Ibn Suwār (d. 1017), and Ibn Sīnā (d. 1037). They
also used Syriac compendiums of the categories, which had been composed
by Christian authors like Sergius of Resh’aina (d. 536), Ahoudemmah (d. 575),
‘Enanishū (flourished around 650), Severus Sebokht (d. 667), Jacob of Edessa
(d. 708), Severus bar Shakko (d. 1241), and Yūhannā bar Zo’bi (flourished in the
13th century) and others.38 Arab logicians, in their turn, influenced Western
scholastics.
Even more, the posterior Western dialectics was influenced by the system-
atic expositions of the categories in the Eastern Christian theology, which we
have just examined. There were even more Eastern non-systematic scholastic
reflections in the East, which influenced Western scholasticism. For example,
Maximus the Confessor (ca. 580–662) remarked that he preferred to address the
categories not in the “book-writing” but the “letter-writing” format.39 Despite
his brevity on the categories, Maximus appeared to be among the most insight-
ful logicians in the Eastern Christian tradition.40 His take on the categories
was particularly innovative. It is also noteworthy that Maximus approached
logic within the frame of the Christological controversies, from the perspective
of Neochalcedonianism.41 In his dialectical reflections, Maximus relied on the
analytical work of the Neonicaeans, who had applied categories to solve the
main theological problem of the 4th century: how God can be simultaneously
singular and plural. They used the Aristotelian distinction between generality
and particularity to address this issue. The first who adopted this distinction
was the Neonicaean theologian Apollinaris of Laodicea (ca. 310–ca. 390).42 His
view was upgraded by the Cappadocians, who suggested calling the former
43 See especially letter 38 ascribed to Basil of Caesarea but probably authored by Gregory of
Nyssa: Y. Courtonne, ed., Saint Basile Lettres (Paris: Les Belles Lettres, 1957–66); Basil of
Caesarea, Basil of Caesarea. The Letters, trans. Roy J. Deferrari (Cambridge MA: Harvard
University Press, 1986); see also Johannes Zachhuber, The Rise of Christian Theology and
the End of Ancient Metaphysics: Patristic Philosophy from the Cappadocian Fathers to John
of Damascus (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2020).
44 Only fragments of Porphyry’s Contra Christianos have survived and were first published
by Adolf von Harnack, ed., Porphyrius Gegen die Christen (Abhandlungen der preus-
sischen Akademie der Wissenschaften, Philosoph.-hist. Kl. 1., Berlin: Reimer, 1916). The
most recent publication in a German translation is by Matthias Becker: Porphyrios,
Contra Christianos: Neue Sammlung der Fragmente, Testimonien und Dubia mit Einleitung,
Übersetzung und Anmerk (Berlin: De Gruyter, 2015). See also Robert M. Berchman,
Porphyry Against the Christians (Leiden: Brill, 2005).
45 Porphyry, Introduction, ix.
Each common thing is constructed by our intellect from particulars. For this rea-
son, the Ancients called such things posterior and intellectual beings. For, cor-
rectly speaking, Peter, John and every individual man are animal and substance,
and the same goes for this horse and that ox. However, these names passed from
these (particulars) to what is called genera and species, that is, from things which
subsist in substance to those which are inferred by our intellect.46
From all eternity, He (the Logos) contained within Himself the pre-existing
logoi of created beings. When, in His goodwill, He formed out of nothing the
substance of the visible and invisible worlds, He did so on the basis of these
logoi. By his word (logos) and His wisdom He created and continues to create
all things (see Wis 9:1–2) – universals as well as particulars – at the appropri-
ate time. We believe, for example, that a logos of angels preceded and guided
their creation; and the same holds true for each of the beings and powers (see
1 Pet 3:22) that fill the world above us. A logos of human beings likewise preceded
their creation, and – in order not to speak of particulars – a logos preceded the
creation of everything that has received its being from God.47
Now we can see the contradiction within the project of Neopatristic synthesis
suggested by Georges Florovsky better. On the one hand, he praises “Christian
Hellenism,” whose best fruit, as we have demonstrated, was Byzantine scho-
lasticism. On the other hand, he considers scholasticism the most dangerous
threat to Orthodox theology, the reason for its pseudomorphosis. The same
thing is a blessing and a curse for him – depending on where it comes from:
East or West.
Eurasian Temptation
link between them is Occidentalism – the fear and mistrust of the West.53
Occidentalism is the first article in the Eurasian creed. It remained deeply
rooted in Florovsky’s thought even after he rejected Eurasianism. It is difficult
otherwise to explain how the same scholasticism is acceptable for Florovsky
when it is a part of the Eastern Hellenism, and a pseudomorphosis when it is a
result of Western influences.
It is noteworthy that Florovsky’s concept of pseudomorphosis comes from
the work of Oswald Spengler, The Decline of the West.54 This work was also one
of the main inspirations for the Eurasian movement. Spengler’s definition of
pseudomorphosis covers that of Florovsky:
This Muscovite period of the great Boyar families and Patriarchs, in which a con-
stant element is the resistance of an Old Russia party to the friends of Western
culture, is followed, from the founding of Petersburg in 1703 by the pseudomor-
phosis which forced the primitive Russian soul into the alien mould, first of full
Baroque, then of the Enlightenment and then of the nineteenth century. The
fate-figure in Russian history is Peter the Great.56
Dimitrios Moschos
Introduction
1 Samuel Huntington, The Clash of Civilizations and the Remaking of the World Order (New
York: Simon & Schuster 1996), 70.
2 In the case of the separation of the spiritual and secular realm, Huntington notes: “God and
Caesar, Church and state, spiritual authority and temporal authority, have been a prevailing
dualism in Western culture. Only in Hindu civilization were religion and politics also so dis-
tinctly separated. In Islam, God is Caesar; in China and Japan, Caesar is God; in Orthodoxy,
God is Caesar’s junior partner.” As far as the rule of law is concerned: “The tradition of the
rule of law laid the basis for constitutionalism and the protection of human rights, including
property rights, against the exercise of arbitrary power. In most other civilizations, the law
was a much less important factor in shaping thought and behavior” Huntington, Clash of
Civilizations, 70–2.
3 For an excellent introduction to this phenomenon, see Paschalis M. Kitromilides,
Enlightenment and Revolution: The Making of Modern Greece (Cambridge MA: Harvard
University Press, 2013).
4 Meletios of Athens, Ἐκκλησιαστικὴ Ἱστορία [Ecclesiastical History], v. 1 (Vienna, 1783),
Introduction 13, 5, p. 55–6.
5 Meletios of Athens, Ecclesiastike Istoria, 56–7.
around 1780. This work’s Introduction provides a lengthy argument about the
rule of law as a feature of an organized society like classical Greece and Rome.6
These are examples that are positively related to the Enlightenment’s intellec-
tual trends and the emergence of the modern Hobbesian state.
It is well known that the newly created Greek state following the revolution
of 1821 was established essentially at the height of the restoration of the mon-
archy. The legacy of the French Revolution and the ideal of self-determination
remained, however, in the circle of the most eminent advocate of the
Neohellenic Enlightenment, Adamantios Korais (1748–1833), and the circle
around the journal Hermês Logios (Hermes the Scholar) published in Vienna
from 1811 to 1821. The director of the journal, the archimandrite Theoklitos
Farmakidis (1784–1860), claimed autocephaly for the Church for the Greek ter-
ritory that had rebelled, without the consent of the Ecumenical Patriarchate.
We tend to consider the reasons for this proclamation to be ecclesiastico-
political in nature, namely, as an effort to launch a process that would turn
the Greek ecclesiastical hierarchy away from its canonical subjugation to its
traditional source, the Patriarchate, and facilitate their independence from
the Western colonial powers. Theoklitos justifies this unilateral proclamation,
however, by using the notion of natural law and the law of self-determination
as leading to the creation of a new state. In a similar way, a local church could
proclaim its independence without needing any approval of a higher authority:
The Greek nation having declared its political autonomy and independency
before God and men through its glorious revolution it manifested simultane-
ously that, according to its right, its Church should also be autocephalous and
independent, as it will be proved elsewhere.7
The cause of this holy struggle was not only the political but also the ecclesias-
tical autonomy and independence. In everything that the Greek nation accom-
plished it did not need any permission or consent by anybody as it did not
need any permission for its political autonomy and independence.
As we all know, the Autocephaly was granted officially by the Ecumenical
Patriarchate in 1850 (with the so-called “Tomos of Autocephaly”). Farmakidis
criticized this Tomos vehemently as surrendering the natural rights of the
6 For an attempt to demonstrate this, see Dimitrios Moschos, “The Churches of the East
and the Enlightenment,” in Oxford Handbook of Early Modern Theology 1600–1800, ed.
Ulrich L. Lehner, Richard Muller and A. G. Roeber (New York: Oxford University Press, 2016),
499–516.
7 Theoklitos Farmakidis, Ἀπολογία [Apology] (Athens: Aggelidês, 1840), 14.
Greek Church. He was criticized in turn on the ground that his negative atti-
tude against the Tomos “crushes and takes apart the cornerstone of the Great
Idea,” opposing the new constitution and the nation’s sacred mission and goal.
Farmakidis did not deny the Church’s unity (here the Church of Greece and
the Patriarchate), but he understood it in a democratic way. He defines the
nation in a purely political way: “When we refer to the Greek Nation we use
this term according to national decisions, meaning the Greeks who waged the
Revolution, not the whole Greek race, nor all Orthodox who believe in Christ
and live and inhabit within the limits of the Ottoman State.”8 This definition
shows an in-depth understanding of the nation by a clergyman in a purely
political way, far removed from any mystical, metaphysical, or emotional/
romantic interpretation. In that case, it provides an excellent example of con-
textualizing ecclesiastical institutions in a political democracy, an idea that
was developed during the French Revolution.
It is worth noting a crucial evolution in the realm of ideas throughout the con-
tinental European area, leading to a more idealistic or mystical interpretation
of the idea of the nation. In Greece, national identity was concretized in the
unifying historiographical program of the Professor of History at the University
of Athens, Konstantinos Paparrigopoulos (1815–1891), in his Historia tou
hellênikou ethnous [“History of the Greek Nation”] that was completed in 1874.
This became the historical manifesto of Greek national identity. In the eyes
of National Romanticism, the modern Greek nation is marked by the uninter-
rupted continuity of all Greek-speaking people in a time-space continuum that
originates in antiquity and continues through the Middle Ages/Byzantium up
to the present day. This basic thesis redefines the until then dominant classicist
idea that conceived the Greek nation basically as people that originated in the
classical and Hellenistic cities being conquered by the Romans, living for cen-
turies under Roman, “Byzantine,” and Ottoman yokes and being liberated only
after the Revolution and rebirth (“paliggenesia”) of 1821. Following the 1860s,
the national romantic “extension” of the nation through the Middle Ages forced
8 See the references and the relevant discussion in Georgios D. Metallinos, “Ἐπακριβώσεις στὴν
ἰδεολογικὴ ταυτότητα τοῦ Θεόκλητου Φαρμακίδη” [Clarifications in the ideological identity of
Theoklitos Farmakidis], in Ἑλληνισμὸς Μετέωρος [Pending Hellenism] (Athens: Apostoliki
Diakonia, 1999), 168–83.
9 See Effi Gazi, Ὁ Δεύτερος Βίος τῶν Τριῶν Ἱεραρχῶν: Μιὰ γενεαλογία τοῦ “Ἑλληνοχριστιανικοῦ
Πολιτισμοῦ” [The Second Life of the Three Hierarchs: A Genealogy of the “Helleno-Christian
Civilisation”] (Athens: Nefele, 2004).
10 Gregorios Chiou, Τὸ Ἑλληνικὸν Πνεῦμα: Ἤτοι Σχέσις τοῦ Ἑλληνισμοῦ πρὸς τὴν Ὀρθοδοξίαν [The
Hellenic Spirit or The Relation of Hellenism to Orthodoxy in Greece] (Chios: Prokidis
1869), 5; cf. Aristotle, Polit. IV, 2 and VI, a, 10: “Χαρακτῆρες τῆς ἑλληνικῆς πολιτείας εἰσὶν οἱ
ἑξῆς α, κυριαρχία τοῦ λαοῦ, τουτέστι τὸ δύνασθαι, κατ’ Ἀριστοτέλη, πάντα πολίτην ἔχοντα τὰ
ἁρμόδια προσόντα ἄρχειν πᾶσαν ἀρχήν.”
11 Chiou, “β, ἰσονομία, τουτέστιν ἴση ἀπονομή τοῦ δικαίου καθοριζόμενη ὑπὸ τοῦ νόμου.”
12 Chiou, “γ, ἰσηγορία, ἤτοι ἔκφρασις τῆς ἀτομικῆς γνώμης καὶ ἐλευθέρα συζήτησις (ἐπὶ τῇ βάσει
τῶν πατρίων νόμων καὶ παραδόσεων).”
13 Chiou, “ὑπεύθυνον τῶν ἐν τέλει.”
14 Chiou, Τὸ Ἑλληνικὸν Πνεῦμα: Ἤτοι Σχέσις τοῦ Ἑλληνισμοῦ πρὸς τὴν Ὀρθοδοξίαν 11–12, 20–21.
the Greek state mostly favorably, but it was not very actively involved. There
were occasional voices from theologians from time to time against the domi-
nance of the state over the Church (which was a legacy of Josephinism), but
not equally insistent on the formation of a democratic political ethos on a
practical level, e.g., against corruption in the Church hierarchy. A turn can be
detected after the dissolution of the 19th-century religious uprisings founded
on a romantic/mystical basis among instigators in the Peloponnese such as
the monks and preachers Christophoros Papoulakos (1770–1861) and Cosmas
Flamiatos (1786–1852) and his “Philorthodoxos Etaireia” (Society of Friends of
Orthodoxy) in the 1840s. Apostolos Makrakis (1831–1905), a younger associate
of Flamiatos, constitutes a pivotal case in that turn: he gradually distanced
himself from the old enthusiastic communal opposition to the modernization
of society based on Western models and shifted toward preaching ethics and
the regeneration of the Greek Orthodox Church. His sermons were eschato-
logical calls in favor of Christian Socialism.15 He participated in the modern
democratic state, running for Parliament but without success (1875). He was
eventually condemned by the Synod and marginalized. Consequently, his
younger followers abandoned any political attempt within the framework of
parliamentary democracy. They committed themselves to the regeneration of
the rapidly urbanized Greek population founding the religious organization,
the Zoe [“Life”] Brotherhood in 1907, which aspired to encourage a more con-
scious moral Christian life and was involved in catechetical work. Others of his
followers founded the society and the review Anaplasis with a similar purpose
(1886).
An important exception to politically radicalized Christians who fought for
a redistributive land policy was the Eptanisioi Rizospastai (Ionian Radicals)
movement, which emerged as a political party in the autonomous Ionian
“state” (i.e., the British Protectorate of the Ionian Islands) struggling for justice
and peace based on Orthodox tradition. Marinos Antipas was a member of this
party, and he also played a prominent role in the rural uprisings in Thessaly at
the beginning of the 20th century during the so-called “agricultural issue” (the
distribution of the land of the great estates of Central Greece to the landless
serfs). This phenomenon is not, however, related to academic theology or offi-
cial ecclesiastical discourse.
Modernization movements proliferated after 1909. Τhe Cretan politician
Eleftherios Venizelos played a prominent role in leading the modernization
wave and became the architect of the alliance with other Balkan states against
15 See Effi Gazi, “Revisiting Religion and Nationalism in 19th-Century Greece,” The Making of
Modern Greece, ed. David Ricks and Roderick Beaton (London: Routledge, 2019), 95–106.
the Ottoman empire that was in decline. This alliance allowed the territorial
expansion of the Greek state in the Balkan wars of 1912–1913. Venizelos had also
adopted a high-risk policy (and territorial gains) endorsing the participation of
Greece in the First World War on the side of Entente despite the opposition of
King Constantine (who had no constitutional authority to interfere in politics
but still had kinship relations with the German Kaiser). This political shift led
the Greek nation to a long and bitter division. This great division did not leave
the Church unaffected. Several bishops supported Venizelos, but they were
not enough to establish a critical series of reforms in the Church and theology
that would positively and critically address the demands for a democratic soci-
ety. The majority in the Church hierarchy continued to believe that the entire
Greek nation adhered to their own ideas. This belief was directly related to the
national romanticism and the tradition of the nation leadership (Ethnarchia).
Many bishops were responsible for leading and representing the Greek pop-
ulation in the Christian dioceses that were located in the Ottoman Empire.
Many of them were also committed to the Greek national cause; they man-
aged to confront the Ottoman administration and developed brilliant political
tactics. Nevertheless, it was a typical reaction for laypeople and clerics to side
with the King.16 They regarded kingship as a perennial institution vital to the
solidarity of the nation.
The end of the First World War turned the tables. The dissolution of the
empires, the prevalence of secular regimes in the newly established USSR and
the successor-state of the Ottoman Empire, the Kemalist Turkish Republic, as
well as the expulsion or extermination of Greeks (and other Christians) from
Turkey, which marked the end of the Great Idea, were accompanied in the
interwar period by the rise of the pseudo-messianisms of the fascist and Nazi
regimes in Western Europe. In Greece, under the repeated coups d’état and
the consolidation of the fascist regime by Ioannis Metaxas (4 August 1936),
some hierarchs and theologians began to sympathize with the civil democracy
notions that could be a solution to the political issue.
16 For more on this period, see Andreas Nanakis, “Venizelos and Church-State Relations,”
in Eleftherios Venizelos: The Trials of Statesmanship, ed. Paschalis M. Kitromilides
(Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2006), 346–73.
At a time when most Christians were attacking the atheistic communist sys-
tem of the USSR, the theologian and later Professor of Ecclesiastical History
at the Theological Faculty of the Athens University, Gerasimos Konidaris
(1905–1987), became acquainted with National Socialism during his studies in
Germany and refuted it, demonstrating that the Gospel transcends racial differ-
ences. Konidaris’ critical remarks are clear and insightful. They are also based
in his vivid personal experience of dramatic events, such as the attack by the
Nazi Youth against the Jewish Professor of Law, Martin Wolff (1872–1953), dur-
ing his lecture at Humboldt University (June 1933). Moreover, he witnessed the
celebration of liturgy in the churches of German Christians (Deutsche Christen)
after they had won the elections of 1933 for the ecclesiastical councils – this
group was a device constructed by Adolf Hitler to control the newly estab-
lished structural unification of the Evangelical Church in Germany. He man-
aged it by having his puppet, Ludwig Müller, elected as Reichsbischof.17 What is
most impressive, however, is that Konidaris goes beyond the usual moralistic
Christian criticism of Nazism that targeted mainly its pagan elements or its
radical nationalism. Konidaris proceeds from a significant theoretical reflec-
tion on the relationship between Christianity and modern politics in which his
Eastern Orthodox identity also plays a distinct role. He agrees that the Church
should not be identified with a specific state form like monarchy or democracy,
but, on the other hand, he points out that parliamentary democracy and the
legal admissibility of political opposition (and at the same time the existence
of minority rights) is much closer to the standards of the Christian Church
concerning how a society should operate because it grants more freedom to
the individual as well to the state.18 He published his reflections during 1933
and 1934 in a series of articles in the Anaplasis review and later (1937) reprinted
them in a separate book.
The aforementioned review, Anaplasis (literally “Regeneration”), inspired a
profound intervention in the political situation of the church in Greece towards
a moral reform of the Church. The former editor-in-chief of Anaplasis, Michael
Galanos (1868–1948)19, envisioned a more active role for Christians in the
Greek political scene in a more progressive direction and had also been elected
17 The events broadly called “Kirchenkampf”; see Thomas Martin Schneider, Reichsbischof
Ludwig Müller: Eine Untersuchung zu Leben, Werk and Persönlichkeit (Göttingen:
Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1993).
18 Gerasimos Konidaris, Ἡ ἐθνικιστικὴ Γερμανία ἐκκλησιαστικῶς. Προτεσταντισμός, Παπικὴ
Ἐκκλησία. Κείμενα Νόμων [Nationalist Germany from an Ecclesiastical Point of View:
Protestantism – Papal Church – Texts of Laws] (Athens: 1934–1937), 54.
19 P. Marketos, l. “Anaplasis,” in Egkyklopaideia tou Ellenikou Typou 1784–1974 [Encyclopedia
of the Greek Press 1784–1974], vol. 1, ed. Loukia Droulia and Gioula Koutsopanagou
(Athens: National Hellenic Research Foundation, 2008), 197–99. Galanos presented him-
self as a “Christian of liberal principles.”
20 As Damaskinos was considered a “democrat,” Metaxas manipulated the election of
Chrysanthos in 1938. Konidaris later stated that “the democratic sentiment of Damaskinos
was well known”; see Polykarpos Karamouzis, Κράτος, εκκλησία και εθνική ιδεολογία στη νεώ-
τερη Ελλάδα: κλήρος, θεολόγοι και θρησκευτικές οργανώσεις στο μεσοπόλεμο [State, Church and
national ideology in modern Greece: clerics, theologians, and religious organizations in
the Interwar], PhD diss. (Athens: Panteion University of Social and Political Sciences,
2004), 382.
of political crimes, conducted censorship, and even sent into exile those who
were suspected of adhering to the radical left or having leftist ideas. Many bish-
ops of the Greek Church (apart from two of them who supported the National
Liberation Front during the Occupation) sided with the official Greek state.
In view of this background, one can better understand the awkward effort to
form a Greek type of middle-class “Christian democracy” movement under
the guidance of a Christian Professor of Commercial Law in Athens, i.e.,
Alexandros Tsirintanis (1903–1971). His name was associated with the cat-
echetical movement Zoe, which was an old organization founded around 1907
at the end of the above-mentioned circle of messianic ideas and was aspir-
ing to the renaissance of theology and ecclesiastical discourse.21 Zoe was used
as a primary ideological weapon against communism.22 Yet that movement
did not manage to create a robust theological argument supporting the idea
of liberal democracy in its own right and not as a defense against commu-
nism. Tsirintanis understood this failure and distanced himself from it, issu-
ing manifestos such as the Declaration of Christian Scientists (1946)23 signed by
scientists and scholars and showing the need for a social revival through law,
morality and social justice. Later (1950), Tsirintanis published the declaration
Toward a Christian Civilization signed by him and articles in his review Sizêtêsis
(“Discussion” or “Common Quest”) until the establishment of the dictatorship
in 1967. His works are characterized by an appeal to moral restoration, the rule
of law and solidarity as the main political goals that go along with an utterly
reactionary catechism and a condemnation of the loose lifestyle of the young
generation of his time. In that way, a sincere and comprehensive encounter of
Orthodox Christianity with the values of democracy on the political field was
not able to be developed.
Nevertheless, there were theologians, members of those “organizations,”
that considered the Orthodox Church compatible with liberal democracy. One
21 See also Stanley Harakas, “Alexander Tsirintanis on the Present Age,” The Greek Orthodox
Theological Review 2 (1956) 75–82.
22 See more on this in Vasilios N. Makrides, “Orthodoxy in the Service of Anticommunism:
The Religious Organization Zoë during the Greek Civil War,” in Philip Carabott and
Thanasis D. Sfikas (eds) The Greek Civil War: Essays on a Conflict of Exceptionalism and
Silences (Aldershot: Routledge, 2004), 159–73.
23 Declaration of the Christian Union of Scientists, Athens 1946.
of them was Hamilcas Alivisatos (1887–1969), who reasserted in 1964 the old
thesis that the Orthodox Church is inherently democratic, something that also
appears in the equality of its members.24
Strangely enough, the far-right Regime of the Colonels (1967–1974) has led
many people to be disappointed and disillusioned by the right-wing nationalist
messianism. This messianism culminated in senseless propaganda about the
national grandeur of a “regenerated” Greece consisting of “Greek Christians,”
using slogans such as “Hellas of Greek Christians.” This pattern served as a pre-
text for the ecclesiastical anticommunism and conservative puritan discourse
that justified the lack of civil rights and democratic freedom. This changed
quickly after the Turkish invasion of Cyprus (1974), however. The pretext for
this invasion was given by the Greek military regime, proving that the anticom-
munist nationalist rhetoric and the suppression of democracy were treacher-
ous and devastating for the national interest. It also revealed the failure of
the Church hierarchy (despite significant exceptions) to address the quest for
democracy, freedom of speech, social justice and similar demands that had
been formed in the meantime by progressive liberal (and not only communist)
political forces in the country since the 1960s.
At the same time, the most creative, free and fertile current of critical think-
ing in theology emerged paradoxically from the Zoe Organization and its mem-
bers who started to write in the review Synoro [“Frontier”]. This review formed
the famous current of the so-called “Theology of the 1960s,” which endeavored
to address comprehensively significant issues such as Christianity and poli-
tics, the social question, etc. This group was influenced by an older cultural
movement that had emerged in Greek literature during the 1930s (the so-called
“generation of the 1930s”) that focused on a creative rediscovery of the Greek
folk tradition, Greek language, etc. The contributors to Synoro understood the
relation between Greek culture, Orthodox theology and social and political
theory in a non-triumphalist and certainly more progressive and self-critical
way. While Synoro deliberately suspended its publication on the day of the
coup d’état on 21 April 1967, one cannot describe the theology of the 1960s as
“political.” Nevertheless, it is important to remember that the key parameters
of Synoro stem from Christian anthropology and the Christian belief in the fall
of human nature. This fall explains social evil and the need for salvation by the
entire society through Jesus Christ. These basic teachings are considered in
the light of contemporary issues and theories such as Marxist philosophy and
economy, the state’s role in the life of the Christians, etc.25 This theological cur-
rent also included Christos Yannaras, doctor in philosophy and theology and
Professor of Philosophy at Panteion University of Social and Political Sciences
1982–2002). In his book Kephalaia politikês theologias (“Chapters of Political
Theology”), one can note the central axes of his thought, which are related to
the notion of democracy. These are: a) democracy in Greece is imposed from
without and results in the alienation of Greek people from their collective self-
identity, which is integrated with Orthodox Christianity; and b) the essence of
politics resides in the revelation of the existential truthfulness of the human
being as a person (i.e., in an ontological relation to the Other) and not to a
rational accommodation of individual interests.26 Later, during the period
of Metapolitefsi27, he claimed in his work Ὀρθὸς Λόγος καὶ κοινωνικὴ πρακτικὴ
(Rationalism and Social Practice), that Being should be connected existentially
both with the critical function of reason as well as freedom. This connection
forms a “critical ontology.” According to Yannaras, this relation was affirmed by
the young Karl Marx and Jacques Lacan. Then he tried to give a rough sketch
of his idea of this connection in which rationality functions apophatically (i.e.,
without posing limits to existing truth and confining it to reason) and real exis-
tence means “shared existence” (koinonein). Therefore, politics is redefined
through forms of immediate democracy, autogestion and other possibilities
that show that Otherness can constitute and not dismantle an ontologically
truthful polis.28
25 For further remarks on the whole theological generation of the 1960s, see Dimitrios
Moschos, “Theology and Politics in Contemporary Greece: A Missed Opportunity for the
Greek Theology of the 1960s,” The Ecumenical Review 70, no. 2 (July 2018): 309–21.
26 Christos Yannaras, Κεφάλαια Πολιτικῆς Θεολογίας [Chapters on Political Theology] (Athens:
Papazisis, 1976).
27 In modern Greek, the technical term “Μεταπολίτευση” (Metapolitefsi means the transition
from one political situation to another) denotes a unique moment in the modern political
history of the Greek state. It is the fundamental transition from the “quasi-democracy”
of the post-Civil War state, which was under the political control of the West and para-
lyzed because of the suspension of civil rights, to a modern, Western democratic state. It
occurred in July 1974 with the fall of the dictatorship and the ratification of a new consti-
tution in 1975.
28 There is ample literature on the political implications of Yannaras’ thought. See Jonathan
Cole, “The Commune-centric Political Theology of Christos Yannaras in Conversation
with Oliver O’Donovan,” Mustard Seeds in the Public Square: Between and Beyond Theology,
Philosophy, and Society, ed. Sotiris Mitralexis (Wilmington DE: Vernon Press, 2017), 61–92;
Dionysios Skliris, “Aristotelian Marxism, Critical Metaphysics: The Political Theology of
Christos Yannaras,” Political Theology 20, no. 4 (2019): 331–48.
Before the 1970s, a minor political movement that emerged in the 1950s is
worth noting: “Christian Democracy” (Christianikê Dêmokratia), which recalls
Christian democratic parties in Italy, Germany, and Belgium. Like many oth-
ers, its goal was to draw a middle line between capitalism and communism by
proclaiming a social Gospel. The most crucial difference with the project of a
bourgeois Christian Democrat like Tsirintanis’ was the utterly radical attack
on the post-Civil War political establishment, accompanied by the view that
capitalism and communism are two sides of the same coin, projections of the
inhuman, unchristian condition defined as materialism. Consequently, the
founder and leader of Christianikê Dimokratia, Nikos Psaroudakis (1917–2006),
a schoolteacher and lawyer (but not an academically trained theologian), and
his rather few associates, spoke out openly against the dictatorship after 1967.
Psaroudakês defended human rights and democratic freedom from a Christian
social perspective. He and the party’s newspaper were persecuted and cen-
sored while Psaroudakis was imprisoned and sent to exile. Despite the bold and
sometimes naive messianic elements (proclaiming to build a pure Christian
society of equality and justice for all) of the movement, Nikos Psaroudakis,
with books such as Τὸ χριστιανικὸ πολιτικὸ μανιφέστο (The Christian Political
Manifesto) (Athens, 1947), Ἡ ἐπανάστασις τῆς ἀγάπης: Λύσις τοῦ κοινωνικοῦ προ-
βλήματος ὑπὸ τὸ φῶς τῆς χριστιανικῆς κοινωνιολογίας (The Revolution of Love:
The Solution of the Social Problem under the Light of Christian Sociology)
(Athens, 1959) or the collection of articles against the dictatorship Νὰ πέσει ἡ
τυραννία (Down with Tyranny) (edited by him, published later in Athens, 1978)
and many others, formed the first comprehensive effort of Christians to reform
not only individual ethics (as was the case with organizations like Zoe) but
also the political situation. Although many theoretical issues such as the role
of the capitalist economy or the place of minorities are treated with relative
oversimplification, one should give credit to Christianikê Dimokratia because
of its combatant attitude demanding political freedom, equality, solidarity,
and similar democratic values. But the movement often declared that civil
democracy is insufficient for establishing a just and moral society. Although
it had won a small percentage in all free elections after 1974, the movement
influenced many theologians after the 1970s who were committed to politi-
cally progressive actions in trade unions and youth work. There was a student
movement of the party called the “Christian Socialist Student Movement,” and
it later (after 1980) hosted a fertile encounter with representatives of the theol-
ogy of the 1960s. Among other things, the party’s publishing activity presented
translations of important works in liberation theology, introducing them to the
Greek public.
In 1974 there was a cataclysmic political change, which led to the reform of the
Greek Republic. The new constitution marked the transition to a modern dem-
ocratic state with the separation of powers and the establishment of the rule
of law, guaranteeing democratic rights to all and the subsequent admittance of
Greece to the European Union (1981). These developments rendered obsolete
not only the remnants of national romanticism (the central platform of the old
conservative nationalism) but also the Orthodox Church’s role. The Orthodox
Church had to face new challenges, nevertheless every change brings positive
and negative effects. The legal framework of the relations between the Church
and state has changed substantially according to the constitutional revision of
1975. Consequently, the Orthodox Church regained its freedom at last and was
liberated from the nationalistic fetters of the 19th century, i.e., the dominance
of the state. It was indeed a positive experience.
On the other hand, the Church considered a series of state laws encour-
aging secular modernization as an attack on the Church: the new family law
that corrected aspects of discrimination against women, the decriminaliza-
tion of adultery, the legal recognition of civil marriage, the development of
religious education at schools that was escaping from the institutional con-
trol of the Church Synod. Following the 1990s, it is worth noting the elimina-
tion of the mandatory indication of religious affiliation on public documents,
including identity cards, because it was contrary to the law on the protection
of data and was also imposed as a measure against discrimination. All these
acts were signs that the vital core of the raison d’être of modern Greece and
the Greek Republic was something different from the romantically fabricated
alias of “Christian-Hellenic” identity (which tacitly excluded other religions
and national minorities from the possibility of belonging to the national
identity). Greece was being transformed into a “political nation” consisting of
citizens who follow the rule of law in accordance with the legal right of self-
determination that was put forward by the Greek Revolution and the build-
ing of a modern democratic state. It can be said that Orthodox Greece had
fulfilled its role at last in constructing the ideology of modern Greece and now
the main challenge for it is to assume and develop a new role in this secular
environment.
During the same period, on the grassroots level, ecclesiastical rhetoric and
theology interact with the anti-colonial, anti-Western political rhetoric of the
Metapolitefsi, where a belated reception took place of ideological debates that
occurred during the 1960s in the rest of the world. In these debates, Marxism
in a free, unofficial (non-Soviet) form had a key role, i.e., the quest for the
“young Marx,” and economic theories that analyzed the relations between
the metropolis and the periphery, the Frankfurt school, etc., along with the
socialist experiments of the Non-Aligned Movement and the Arab world, the
emergence of the political understanding of psychoanalysis and ecology and
many more currents that redefined the concept of progressive thinking and
activism especially after the protests of 1968. Greek society encountered this
widespread anti-colonial sentiment through heated political debates about
socialism and the course of the newly established democracy in the country.
Marxism (as Neomarxism) and socialism were the focus of many Orthodox
theologians in this context.
As a product of this situation, the so-called Christian-Marxist dialogue
(1983–1987) encouraged many Orthodox theologians to take seriously the
social problem (which many of them approached in a mere humanistic and
moral way) on the one hand and the East as a cultural periphery that had to
articulate its emancipated discourse against the western metropolis on the
other. The theology of the 1960s contributed significantly to this since it rein-
terpreted the history and the achievements of Eastern Orthodox theology in
order to respond to the dead end of Western rationalism. Nevertheless, this
encounter with the theories of 1968 made the restoration of civil democracy
and its principles irrelevant and outdated for theology. A typical example of
a historian influenced by theologians of the 1960s generation with a strongly
anti-Western/anti-colonial approach to modern Greek history was a priest
committed to the Church’s democratization, Georgios Metallinos (1940–
2019), Professor of Intellectual Trends in the East after the 15th Century at the
Theological Faculty of the University of Athens. In his work, he showed a great
affinity with Marxist ideas and a Gospel-based approach to social problems as
a shared basis.29
Standing more in the theological margins of the 1960s, the professor of
New Testament at the Theological Faculty of Athens, Ioannis Panagopoulos
(1938–1997), published a small book in 1982, Δημοκρατία καὶ Ἑλληνικὴ Ὀρθοδοξία
(Democracy and Greek Orthodoxy), that can be considered as an attempt at
dialogue with the Orthodox spirit. It was a time of the alleged war between
the Panhellenic Socialist Movement, which had governed Greece since 1981,
29 Unlike Christos Yannaras, he stated that “the fact that Marxist philosophy recognizes
the omnipotence of science cannot be considered contrary to Orthodox spiritual-
ity in advance because this spirituality is also scientific and practical. Like positive
science, Orthodox spirituality relies on a specific method, practice, and experimentation.”
Georgios Metallinos, Εἰσαγωγικὴ πρόσβαση στὴν ὀρθόδοξη πνευματικότητα [Introduction to
Orthodox Spirituality], Semadia 9 (February 1984): 20.
The ultimate purpose of civil democracy is to transform the people (demos) into
a society of free and responsible community, characterized by justice, equality,
freedom, peace, happiness, as Aristotle wanted. According to the teaching of the
Church, the ultimate destiny of the world and all creation is to be developed and
be a ripe fruit of God’s kingdom. There is no radical contrast between these two
objectives, as many want to believe, but only qualitative differences.30
32 Some interesting remarks about the period of Archbishop Christodoulos see in Evangelos
Karagiannis, Die Kirche von Griechenland und die Herausforderung der offenen Zukunft,
in Grenzüberschreitungen. Traditionen und Identitäten in Südosteuropa. Festschrift
für Gabriella Schubert, ed. W. Dahmen, P. Himstedt-Vaid and G. Ressel (Wiesbaden:
Harrassowitz, 2008), 262–84.
33 Savas Agourides, Τὰ ἀνθρώπινα δικαιώματα στὸ Δυτικὸ Κόσμο [Human Rights in the Western
World] (Athens: Filistor, 1998).
Movement and among other things as a member of the Greek section of the
Minority Rights Group International. According to him, human rights are an
essential achievement of humanity that is based on the notion of tolerance
that emerged due to the religious wars in early modernity. In the same year,
1998, Christos Yannaras published his book with the significant title Ἡ ἀπαν-
θρωπία τοῦ δικαιώματος (The Inhumanity of Rights).34 Yannaras attacked the
ideology of “human rights-ism,” which regards the accommodation of individ-
ual interests in an individualistic segmentation of the classical polis as a logical
consequence of the understanding of politics. This segmentation is the legacy
of the rise of individualism in the anthropological model of modernity.
Some other collective efforts initiated a substantial practical interven-
tion related to the openness of modern society in an attempt to understand
its modern framework: the theological journal Synaxi (founded in 1982 by
another prominent representative of the theology of the 1960s, Panayiotis
Nellas 1936–1986) has up to now published many articles on different aspects
of the Orthodox tradition and its relation to modernity, politics being one of
them. Another one is our host here, the Volos Academy for Theological Studies
(founded in 2000), which organizes panels, seminars, and conferences on
Orthodox Christianity and democracy in countries belonging to the Orthodox
East.
The work of such initiatives sets a pivotal example in a time when democ-
racy is being eroded because of the usurpation of the popular will through
economic power with examples such as the outsourcing of state authority
to private enterprises (like banks), an action assisted by the political status
quo in many countries, the uncontrolled power of the EU Commission that
seems to set capital above the unity and the prosperity of its members and the
European peoples, the capability of the international financing mechanisms to
impose their conditions for lenting money, the corruption of governing elites,
and the like. All this undermines the real meaning of society with the result
that democracy as a set of political principles and liberties becomes less and
less convincing. Given that neo-isolationism in the form of anti-globalization
movements is on the rise, what it is developing is a kind of populism/ethno-
populism and irrationalism in the form of mistrust of scientists and scholars
(who became dependent on private donors and patrons). This kind of neo-
despotism in opposition to the corrupt parliamentary institutions prevails in
34 Christos Yannaras, The Inhumanity of Right, trans. Norman Russell (Cambridge: James
Clark, 2021). One can also consult Christos Yannaras, “Human Rights and the Orthodox
Church” in The Orthodox Churches in a Pluralistic World: An Ecumenical Conversation, ed.
Emmanuel Clapsis (Geneva: WCC Publications), 83–9.
many countries, while democratic rights and the achievements of the two pre-
vious centuries are seriously at stake. These phenomena became more dan-
gerous after the third phase (i.e., after 1974 and 1990) of large migration flows
(immigrants and refugees). These migration flows are caused by the destabili-
zation of the Middle East and the overthrow of authoritarian (yet secular and
non-religious) regimes in many Middle Eastern countries, as well as the subse-
quent chaos, the widening of the economic gap in the periphery and climate
change.
The fragility of democracy as a system of values was evident in Greece
after 2012 when the disapproval of the mainstream ruling parties and the
state’s factual bankruptcy was unleashed under the guise of a neo-Nazi party
(“Chrysi Avgi”). The fact that many ecclesiastical persons (clerics and monks,
some of them in Mount Athos) initially encouraged the “Chrysi Avgi” (Golden
Dawn) party in word and in deed was enough to understand that there were
hidden paths connecting the isolationist, hysterical and sectarian defense of
Orthodoxy on the one hand and secular populism and irrationalism on the
other.35
Conclusion
35 More about the criticism against ultra-right tendencies in the Church see in Stavros
Zoumboulakis, Χρυσὴ Αυγὴ καὶ Ἐκκλησία [Golden Dawn and the Church] (Athens: Polis,
2013).
Introduction
Democracy came rather abruptly to Eastern Europe during the course of about
six months in 1989, with the collapse of the communist regimes in a quick
succession one after the other, like in a game of dominoes. It all started with
Poland in June 1989 and ended with Romania in December 1989. The disman-
tling of the Soviet Union followed in 1991. People in the region opted for a
Western-style capitalist democracy that defended private property and indi-
vidual (as opposed to economic and communal) rights. The 1990s were a rather
painful decade in much of the region due to the transition from a state-owned
to a private economy, the loss of guaranteed markets for selling one’s economic
output in the former Soviet bloc countries, a worsening of living standards due
to the loss of guaranteed employment, and the absence of legislation that would
properly regulate the economic, political and social situation. Things were
further complicated depending on whether a country adopted a “piecemeal”
slow transition or “shock therapy” fast transition. Romania chose a “piecemeal”
approach, while Poland, Hungary, and Czechoslovakia went for “shock ther-
apy.” In 2004, a majority of the Eastern European countries were admitted into
the European Union, and the predominantly Orthodox Romania and Bulgaria
were also admitted in 2007, thus contradicting Samuel Huntington’s contro-
versial theory of the clash of civilizations that predicted in 1996 that Eastern
Orthodox “civilizations” would never make it into a Western-style civilizational
bloc.
In reaction to the arrival of democracy in Eastern Europe, churches in the
region had to “hit the ground running,” that is, adapt rather quickly to the new
market mentality of competition. Most chose to avoid a passive attitude that
would just allow democracy to happen and decided to be involved in shaping
it. Demands for increased religious freedom, legalization of churches banned
under communism (e.g. the Greek Catholic Church), restoration of religious
rights and freedoms, as well as calls for reparations for the persecution and
damages they sustained during communism began to be heard from many reli-
gious groups, small and large. One such demand included the introduction of
religious instruction in public schools, due to the fact that such instruction was
forbidden under communism. Churches justified it by attempting to fill the
void left in the children’s education by the atheistic, corrupt morality that was
allegedly spread under communism. Communism had used lies to promote an
imaginary happy society existing in an undetermined future, while the popu-
lation suffered crisis after crisis and privation after privation in an unhappy,
never-ending present.
In this contribution, I would like to focus on the Romanian Orthodox Church
(hereafter: RomOC) and its interaction with democracy. I will focus specifically
on the participation of priests and bishops in politics; the support given by
the church to various political candidates during electoral campaigns, as well
as pronouncements by the Holy Synod on such participation; the protocols
of collaboration between RomOC and government; and evolving models of
church-state relations that RomOC experienced during the past three decades
since the collapse of communism.
One way in which the RomOC manifested its attitude towards the new democ-
racy taking root in the country was in regard to elections and clerical partici-
pation in politics. Many Romanian politicians sought electoral support from
the RomOC during electoral campaigns. During local and national elections,
politicians of all ideological persuasions and religious leaders from Orthodox,
Catholic, Greek Catholic, and Protestant denominations closely cooperate,
continuously forging new ties and renegotiating old ones to fit their respec-
tive goals. First, when it comes to populist Romanian politicians seeking
support from the RomOC during the electoral campaigns, several examples
can be mentioned. Ion Iliescu is a former communist apparatchik and one-
time collaborator with Nicolae Ceausescu, and his National Salvation Front
is a large umbrella organization that brings together second-echelon officials
of the Communist Party. The party is known today as the Social Democratic
Party (PSD, to use the Romanian acronym). A convinced communist who
seemed to share Marx’s belief that religion is the opium of the masses and
who blamed Ceausescu more than the communist ideology for the country’s
bankruptcy, Iliescu initially refused to employ religion as an electoral instru-
ment, convinced of its lack of importance for the Romanian electorate in
the post-communist context. The highlight of the 1996 presidential race was
the televised debate in which the Christian Democrat Constantinescu sur-
prised the incumbent Iliescu, a self-declared atheist, by asking him whether
he believed in God. Iliescu tried to affirm his Freethought convictions while
3 Lavinia Stan and Lucian Turcescu, “Politics, National Symbols and the Romanian Orthodox
Cathedral,” Europe-Asia Studies 58, no. 7 (November 2006): 1119–39.
4 Lavinia Stan and Lucian Turcescu, “The Romanian Orthodox Church and the Government,”
in Romania under Basescu: Aspirations, Achievements, and Frustrations during his First
Presidential Term, ed. Ronald King and Paul Sum (Lanham MD: Lexington, 2011) 203–19.
5 Claudiu Pădurean, “Dovezile vânzării Bisericii Ortodoxe către Ponta. Reprezentanții Bisericii
promit cercetări. Vor fi și sancțiuni?” România curată (12 November 2014), http://www.
romaniacurata.ro/dovezile-vanzarii-bisericii-ortodoxe-catre-ponta-video-reprezentantii-
bisericii-promit-cercetari-vor-fi-si-sanctiuni (accessed 12 January 2020).
up its own past of collaboration with the communist regime, property restitu-
tion, obtaining state funds for the construction of numerous churches, salaries
for the clergy, support for its policies against abortion and homosexuality, and
limiting other religious groups’ abilities to pursue their religious missions in
the country.
The other aspect of elections and religion is the direct participation of clergy
in the country’s political life, and this is where the views of the Orthodox Church
are officially represented. As citizens, clergy themselves would have the right
not only to vote but to participate in the country’s political life, which is what
some of them have done right since the early 1990s. The political involvement
of religious leaders is not a novelty to Romania. In pre-communist times, the
clergy were actively involved in elections, advising parishioners to vote for cer-
tain candidates, blessing electoral banners, and praising their favorite parties
from the pulpit. For a brief period, the RomOC’s first Patriarch, Miron Cristea
(1925–1939), was a member of the regency that ruled the country on behalf of
the child King Michael, and became the country’s Prime Minister in 1938–1939.
In the interwar period, many Orthodox priests joined the fascist Iron Guard and
the Legion of Archangel Michael, a paramilitary fascist organizations opposing
Soviet communism and extolling Orthodoxy as central to Romanian identity.
After 1989, the Orthodox Church leaders advised clergymen to refrain from
participating in politics, joining parties, running for public office, and influenc-
ing their parishioners’ political options. At a January 1990 meeting, the Synod
banned priests from engaging “in any form of political partisanship,” including
party membership, allowed bishops to sanction politically active priests and
monks, and obliged priests holding public office to cease their priestly activity
for the duration of the political mandate. This latter provision forbade priests
from collecting a salary from the church while receiving wages for performing
the duties of public office. But at a time when the Orthodox leadership was
vehemently opposed by various intellectuals because of its collaboration with
the previous communist regime and the Synod was divided between reformers
and conservatives, most priests and monks disregarded the recommendation.
The Synod Decision no. 1066 of 1996 reiterated that “according to canon law
[canon 6 Apostolic, canon 7 of the 4th Ecumenical Synod, canon 10 of the 7th
Ecumenical Synod, canon 11 of the local synod of Cartagena], bishops, priests,
deacons, and the spiritual fathers of all faithful will abstain from running in
elections to become deputies or senators. Priests and monks are called to fulfill
their spiritual mission, which is incompatible with a systematic party engage-
ment.” The decision banned clergy from becoming active party members,
but left the door open to political involvement by permitting priests to run
in elections as independent candidates. Several times during electoral years,
the Synod reminded priests that they could run in local but not general elec-
tions and only as independent candidates if they secured the approval of their
superiors. The Orthodox leadership further specified that, in light of canon law
on political neutrality, clergy should abstain from openly supporting parties
and candidates. Because of its vague formulation and lack of sanctions, the
decision was treated as a mere recommendation. Bishops failed to sanction
politically active priests and allowed priests holding public office to perform
the liturgy, religious services like marriage and baptism, preaching, and hear-
ing confession. By design or accident, the decision offered priests the possibil-
ity of contributing to politics in the hope of obtaining tangible advantages for
the Orthodox Church or their parish, while showing society, the political class
and other religious denominations that the Orthodox Church as an institution
opted for political neutrality. Many priests and even bishops joined political
parties and some even gained seats in parliament or even as government min-
isters. Some bishops, such as the powerful Metropolitan Bartolomeu Anania
of Cluj – a counter-candidate of the current Patriarch Daniel Ciobotea for the
patriarchal see in 2007 – expressed official opposition to the Synod decisions
and insisted that political participation is important for the RomOC.
In 2008, less than a year after he became patriarch, Daniel Ciobotea decided
to call everybody to order and enforce uniformity in his church. Thus, on
7 March 2008, the Holy Synod issued its Decision no. 1676 concerning the Issue
of Priestly Participation in Politics. This Decision re-examined and maintained
the previous recommendations of 1996 and 2000, as well as Decision no. 410
(12–13 February 2004), on the non-participation of clergy in party politics,
while allowing priests (with the approval of their bishops) to participate in
the political life of their community as an independent city, county or village
councilors. However, the Decision refers to participation as a councilor in the
life of the community as a necessary dispensation (economy) until “Orthodox
lay members will be found who will properly represent the interests of their
local community in which there are also Orthodox believers.”6 This last com-
ment about laypeople is quite insulting of their intelligence, as many of them
throughout Romania are already well prepared to properly represent their com-
munity politically. But perhaps some justification needed to be provided about
the exceptionalist character of priestly participation as a low-level politician.
6 “Decizia Sf. Sinod privind problema implicării preoților în politică” (7 March 2008),
https://basilica.ro/decizia-sf-sinod-privind-problema-implicarii-preotilor-in-politica
(accessed 12 January 2020).
My book, Religion and Politics in Romania (Oxford University Press, 2007) iden-
tified several models of church-state relations that various groups were pro-
moting in the country as a new approach to understanding the relationship
between religion and politics in the country. While the political elite tradition-
ally embraced a managed quasi-pluralist model of church-state relations, after
1989 prominent political actors were tempted to codify into law the privileged
position they were ready to grant to the powerful Orthodox Church. Those
attempts were rapidly quashed under pressure from other religious groups, the
local civil society, and the EU in which Romania sought acceptance as a full
member. Until 2007, the RomOC advocated an established church model that
recognized its role as defender of Romanian identity, qualified it for record
levels of state financial support, and guaranteed its formal representation in
the national legislative assembly. This model was proposed with an eye to
the (semi)established church model upheld in the United Kingdom, Norway,
Sweden, Denmark, and Greece. My book provided numerous examples to sup-
port the argument about this model, and I will not repeat them here.
The established church model advocated by the RomOC and some politi-
cians came under attack from religious minorities favoring a pluralist model
firmly grounding all denominations outside the state and in civil society and
recognizing religious minority and majority groups as equal before the law.
Some intellectuals who represent the best organized and most vocal segment
of the local civil society have countered the unprecedented levels of religios-
ity and the growing reliance of the political elite on religious symbols by way
of articulating a model calling for the strict separation of church and state.
Eventually, the long-awaited Law on Religious Freedom and the General
Regime of Religious Denominations 489 of 28 December 2006, agreed upon
days before the country was officially admitted into the EU on 1 January 2007,
confirmed the pluralist model as the one the country embraced.7 So, neither
the separation model nor the established church-state model was adopted by
Romania. After the death of Patriarch Teoctist, the new Patriarch Daniel has
seemingly abandoned the search for an established church model in which the
Orthodox Church would be the state church. Instead, with an eye to Germany,
Patriarch Daniel has pushed for a model of partnership between church and
state.8 According to Monsma, den Dulk and Soper:
Under this model the state and the church form a partnership in advancing the
cause of religion and the state. Church and state are seen as two pillars on which
a stable, prosperous society rests. The state provides the church with recogni-
tion, accommodation, and often financial support; the church provides the state
with an aura of legitimacy and tradition, recognition, and a sense of national
unity and purpose.9
Similarly, Patriarch Daniel has promoted partnership with the state and auton-
omy from it. This is perhaps due to his familiarity with the German model.
Although born and educated in Romania, in 1979, Daniel obtained a doctor-
ate in theology from the University of Strasbourg (France), after having done
graduate-level work in both France and Germany for four years. Starting in
1980, he served as a lecturer at the Ecumenical Institute in Bossey (Switzerland)
and as its associate director (1986–1988), while being an adjunct professor at
the Universities of Geneva and Fribourg (Switzerland). In an interview granted
to me in 2004, when he was still Metropolitan of Moldova and Archbishop of
Iași, Ciobotea approached the topic of partnership between church and state
and indicated his admiration for the German model. When asked to comment
on the Byzantine model of church-state symphonia, he indicated that this out-
dated model should be replaced by collaboration between church and state
and active participation by the RomOC in the social life of the country. He
added that
the Orthodox Church in the sense that they have to adapt to the new contractual
nature of democracy.12
The current patriarch is also better fit to lead the church into the 21st century.
In contrast with the previous patriarch, Daniel no longer seeks to obtain privi-
leges for his church from the state, by forcing undemocratic legislation that
would guarantee the RomOC a leading position. Instead, he is aware that he
must build an image of his church as an important social player and make
it known inside and outside the country. Whereas the previous patriarch did
little to promote his church, while he was still Metropolitan of Moldova, Daniel
founded the radio station Trinitas, which broadcasts live 24/7. Since 2007 he
has expanded the station to cover the entire country and to also broadcast on
the internet, began the television station Trinitas TV, a news agency Basilica
(also with a strong online presence), and the newspaper Lumina.
Two important protocols signed by the RomOC and the Romanian govern-
ment testify to the desire of the RomOC to serve as an important social partner
in the country and therefore they support the new model of church-state rela-
tions of partnership that we propose here. These documents are the Protocol
of Cooperation in the Area of Social Inclusion, and the Collaboration Protocol
regarding the Social Assistance Partnership.
On 2 October 2007, just days after his ascension to the patriarchal throne, on
behalf of the RomOC, together with Prime Minister Calin Popescu-Tăriceanu
Patriarch Daniel signed the Protocol of Cooperation in the Area of Social
Inclusion.13 This protocol is meant to simplify the procedures of collaboration
between church and state when dealing with social projects, especially those
dealing with disadvantaged persons and minorities such as the Roma. In 2007,
over 300,000 persons received some form of assistance from the RomOC.14
The purpose of the ten-year protocol is cooperation between the two parties
in strengthening the social inclusion mechanism in Romania, the promotion
of social dialogue for the improvement of the national legislative and institu-
tional framework with regard to social inclusion and participation in common
projects meant to meet the needs of people in difficulty. One substantial role
in this regard is to be played by graduates in Orthodox theology who major in
22 “Law on Religious Freedom and the General Regime of Religious Denominations,” no. 489
(28 December 2006), http://www.cdep.ro (accessed December 21, 2020).
23 “Law on Religious Freedom.”
Branko Sekulić
5 See Pantelis Kalaitzidis, “Church and State in the Orthodox World: From the Byzantine
‘Symphonia’ and Nationalized Orthodoxy, to the Need of Witnessing the Word of God
in a Pluralistic Society,” in Religioni, Libertà, Potere: Atti del Convegno Internazionale
Filosofico-Teologico Sulla Libertà Religiosa, ed. Emanuela Fogliadini (Milan: Vita e
Pensiero, 2014), 68.
6 See Papanikolaou, Mystical, 55–87; Papanikolaou, “Byzantium, Orthodoxy, and
Democracy.”
7 James H. Billington, “Orthodoxy and Democracy,” Journal of Church and State 49, no. 1
(2007): 19–26; Papanikolaou, Mystical, 163–200; C. Marsh, ed., Burden or Blessing? (Boston:
Institute on Culture, Religion and World Affairs, 2004).
8 Papanikolaou, Mystical, 80.
9 Papanikolaou, Mystical, 6–7.
10 Papanikolaou, Mystical, 47.
democracy brought with it: religious pluralism that allows other confessions
and religions to have an equal impact on society; human rights including the
right to abortion, LGBT rights and gender equality; secularization as a threat
to the deep connection between a particular Orthodox church; and a particu-
lar national and cultural identity and the like.11 The position of the church in
Eastern Europe is of particular socio-political importance, which is particu-
larly evident in the territory of the former Yugoslavia where, according to Ivo
Žanić, politics has often been guided by priests throughout history. This was so
because, apart from their intensive participation in public life, the church was
sometimes the strongest substitute for the state.12 This aspiration to control
the public space became visible particularly after the dissolution of the SFR
Yugoslavia, when, after almost half a century, the church institution became a
constitutive social factor, and an inevitable element in the construction of the
identity of the post-Yugoslav communities.
But this is not a kind of post-Yugoslav specificity; rather, it is part of a
broader, global phenomenon that is taking place within the so-called post-
secular period, whose main characteristic is the emergence of religious iden-
tities from the sphere of privacy and their assumption of significant roles in
social and political decision making.13 According to Jürgen Habermas, religion
appears to be a great temptation for 21st-century society because this process
of secularization brings with it a strong growth of fundamentalist communi-
ties and the political instrumentalization of violent religious potential.14 Many
of today’s world conflicts are presented as religious ones in the media, which
shifts religion from its former socio-political margins to the very centre of con-
temporary socio-political events.15 But the importance of religion, Habermas
says, is evident not only on a global scale but also on many national levels
where it has taken on the role of interpreter in some very delicate social issues
(abortion, euthanasia, assisted reproductive technology, emigrants and refu-
gees, etc.), becoming a powerful actor in shaping public opinion and culture.16
In this sense, the key question of the post-secular age is not whether religion is
public or private, but rather what a particular religious institution represents
within a particular socio-political context – for instance, whether it is more
left-wing or more right-wing, pro-democratic or anti-democratic, whether it
is more conservative or more liberal, and the like – i.e., what is its ideological
agenda?
20 See Radovan Bigović, The Orthodox Church in the 21st Century (Belgrade: Foundation
Konrad Adenauer-Christian Cultural Center, 2013), 41–2.; Vjekoslav Perica, Balkan Idols
(New York: Oxford University Press, 2002), 216–7; Treaties between the Republic of Croatia
and the Holy See include four international agreements between the Holy See and the
Republic of Croatia, 1. Cooperation in areas of upbringing and culture, 24 January 1997;
2. Care of the spiritual needs of Catholic believers and members of the armed and
police forces, 24 January 1997; 3. Legal matters 9 February 1997; 4. Economic matters,
4 December 1998; Cf. Branko Sekulić, Ethnoreligiosity in the Contemporary Societies of
the Former Yugoslavia: The Veils of Christian Delusion (Lanham MD: Lexington Books/
Fortress Academic, 2022), 193–4.
21 See Dejan Jović, Rat i mit [War and Myth] (Zagreb: Fraktura, 2017), 309.
22 Jović, Rat i mit, 298–9.
23 Perica, Balkan, 214–5.
24 Perica, Balkan, 215.
25 For more about this see Sekulić, Ethnoreligiosity in the Contemporary Societies of the
Former Yugoslavia.
26 For what is discussed in this paragraph, see Sekulić, Ethnoreligiosity in the Contemporary
Societies of the Former Yugoslavia, 1–2.
27 See Bigović, Orthodox Church, 47–56.
noting that Orthodoxy cannot be identified with any social system, with any
form of state, be it monarchy, republic, democracy, autocracy or something
similar, because Orthodoxy is exclusively a church, universal, ecumenical,
all-embracing, the essence of which is not of this world.28 But, Bigović con-
tinues, if one considers the principles on which democracy rests as an idea,
it can be argued that, to the Orthodox Church, the democratic state system
is far closer than any other.29 “If a state should exercise the rule of law, if it is
truly free and democratic, then the Church functioning in such a society would
have the necessary freedom of action, i.e. the freedom to put her mission into
practice.” Here, however, Bigović delves deeper into the issue of the connec-
tion between democratic principles and the Orthodox religion, arguing that
despite its closeness to a democratic order, the church cannot accept the dem-
ocratic utilitarian ethics and axiology prevalent in liberal democratic societies,
given they encourage egoism, the will for power and many other anomalies
that are incompatible with the Orthodox worldview. Accordingly, he insists
on the distinction between a liberal democratic ideology, which, according to
him, is based on the inviolability of the ideology of human rights and a liberal
democratic state as neutral and as such allows the existence of different beliefs
and worldviews, without interfering with the individual’s freedom of choice.
On this point, Bigović is moving from a general account of the problems of
the relationship between Orthodoxy and democracy to their relationship in
the Serbian Orthodox context, which is characterized by both openness and
disappointment.
What Do the Works of the Serbian Orthodox Church Say about It?
After looking at what the Serbian Orthodox Church says about itself on the
issue of Orthodoxy and democracy, we will now look at what its works say
about it. On this occasion, Ivan Čolović’s thesis about the spiritual space of
the nation will be taken into account.38 This thesis shows how the Serbian
Orthodox Church, as an institution, regardless of what it said about itself, real-
ized its democratic potential and manifested its Orthodox nature, both during
the last war in Yugoslavia and in the post-Yugoslav period.
36 For what is stated in this paragraph, see Bigović, Orthodox Church, 47–50.
37 See Tonči Kuzmanić, “Raspad SFR Jugoslavije i nasljedstvo: Narodnjaštvo, a ne nacional-
izam” [Disintegration of the SFR Yugoslavia and Its Legacy: Populism, Not Nationalism],
in Nasilno rasturanje Jugoslavije [The Violent Disintegration of Yugoslavia], ed. Miroslav
Hadžić (Beograd: Centar za civilno-vojne odnose, 2004), 85.
38 See Ivan Čolović, The Balkans: The Terror of Culture (Baden-Baden: Nomos, 2011), 59–66.
In this regard, by explaining the idea of the spiritual space of the nation,
Čolović stated that it is a space that remained outside the ethnic boundar-
ies of a particular ethnonational corpus after the war in the former Yugoslavia
(1991–1995) – a war aimed at dividing territories according to ethnicity.39 In
the case of Serbian Orthodoxy, these would be all those parts of the former
Yugoslavia where the Serbian population lives or has lived and which do not
formally belong to the Serbian state. Consequently, the spatial unity of an eth-
nonational collective occurs on the plane of symbolic topography, that is, as
an integral part of the ethnonationalistic imaginaria. In this regard, Čolović
divides the spiritual space of the nation from the Serbian perspective into four
aspects. Two of these aspects can be taken as having consequences primar-
ily for the democratic potential of the Serbian Orthodox Church and Serbian
Orthodoxy, and two for the very nature of Orthodoxy.
39 For what is stated in this paragraph, see Čolović, The Balkans, 59.
40 Čolović, The Balkans, 60–1.
41 See Čolović, The Balkans, 60.
42 Čolović, Smrt na Kosovu polju [Death on Kosovo Plain] (Beograd: Biblioteka XX. vek,
2016), 384; Perica, Balkan, 128; cf. Sekulić, Ethnoreligiosity in the Contemporary Societies of
the Former Yugoslavia, 151.
1963 when the community in the American diaspora separated from its Serbian
mother church. But it was also the act of integrating the Serbian Orthodox
diaspora with its mother country.43 Therefore, these two events can be taken
as examples par excellence of determining the boundaries of the Serbian spiri-
tual national space, as to whether a potential (desired) integration of the popu-
lation or of the territory into the Serbian state was needed. Whether it was
the intention of the institution of the Serbian Orthodox Church or not, the
ensuing war in Yugoslavia led to the conclusion that the events with the carry-
ing of the relics of Lazar and the return of Velimirović heralded the policy of
ethnic cleansing and of the violent attempt to seize territories that the Serbian
ethnonationalistic agenda considered their own. The peak of the event of the
transfer of Prince Lazar’s relics through the territory of the Yugoslav Federation
was the 600th celebration of Vidovdan at Gazimestan on 28 June 1989, during
which Milošević was presented by the Serbian Orthodox Church leaders as a
long-awaited statesman, a new Lazar who would return dignity to Serbs and
Serbia.44 By dignity, the Serbian Orthodox Church meant their dissatisfaction
with the treatment that, according to them, Serbia had endured within SFR
Yugoslavia, arguing that it was doubly disadvantaged: with respect to status
because of its enormous victimhood in WWI was not valued and appreciated
enough, and iwth respect to space because the delineation of state borders
by the communists in the Yugoslav Federation left many Serbs outside the
Serbian state.45
With Milošević, however, they did not experience the return of dignity
to Serbia, in the way they thought that it should be returned. According to
Čolović, this love lasted for a short time because Milošević very quickly
removed the church and other creators of ethnonational discourse – the
Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts, Association of Writers of Serbia, intel-
lectuals at the University of Belgrade and the like – from its governing system,
and he did that in such a manner that he kept the ideology and got rid of the
43 See Vjekoslav Perica, “Nacije i dijaspore: mit o sakralnom centru i vječnom povratku”
[Nation and Diaspora: The Myth of the Sacred Centre and the Eternal Return], in Mitovi
nacionalizma i demokratija [Myths of Nationalism and Democracy], ed. Darko Gavrilović,
Ljubiša Despotović, Vjekoslav Perica and Srđan Šljukić (Novi Sad: Centar za istoriju,
demokratiju i pomirenje, 2009), 95–6.
44 See Čolović, Smrt na Kosovu, 384–5.; Perica, Balkan, 143–4; cf. Sekulić, Ethnoreligiosity in
the Contemporary Societies of the Former Yugoslavia, 151–52.
45 See Jozo Tomasevich, War and Revolution in Yugoslavia, 1941–1945 (Standford, CA:
Stanford University Press, 2001), 741–3; Radmila Radić, “Srpska pravoslavna crkva tokom
90-ih [Serbian Orthodox Church in the 1990s],” Poznańskie Studia Slawistyczne, no. 10
(2016): 260; cf. Sekulić, Ethnoreligiosity in the Contemporary Societies of the Former
Yugoslavia, 129.
46 Čolović, Smrt na Kosovu, 385, 389; cf. Sekulić, Ethnoreligiosity in the Contemporary Societies
of the Former Yugoslavia, 152–3.
47 See Barišić, “Serbian Orthodox Church”; Radić, “Srpska pravoslavna crkva,” 262.
48 See what Dragan Bursać has said on this according to Čolović, Smrt na Kosovu, 386;
Radić, “Srpska pravoslavna crkva,” 261–2; Perica, Balkan, 142; Srđan Vrcan, Nacija, nacio-
nalizam, moderna država [Nation, Nationalism and Modern State] (Zagreb: Golden
Marketing-Tehnička knjiga, 2006), 204; Medina Šehić and Suzana Šačić, Balkan bluz
[Balkan Blues] (Sarajevo: Vlastita naklada, 2007), 99–103.
49 See Barišić, “Serbian Orthodox Church”; Radmila Radić, Država i verske zajednice: 1945–
1970. [The State and Religious Communities 1945–1970] (Belgrade: Institut za noviju istoriju
Srbije, 2002), 331.
50 Barišić, “Serbian Orthodox Church”; Radić, “Srpska pravoslavna crkva,” 261; Šehić and Šačić,
Balkan bluz, 99–103.; Ilija T. Radaković, “Vjerska buđenja ili vjerski ratovi,” [Religious awak-
enings or religious wars] chap. V in Besmislena YU-ratovanja 1991–1995 [Meaningless YU
warfare 1991–1995] (Belgrade: Društvo za istinu o antifašističkoj narodnooslobodilačkoj
borbi u Jugoslaviji 1941–1945, 2003), http://www.znaci.net/00001/23.htm (accessed
27 December 2019).
most needed on the other.54 Accordingly, the heavens will reward those who –
between the earthly and the heavenly realms – have chosen the latter, opening
thereby the doors of Heavenly Serbia to themselves.55 Heavenly Serbia presents
a kind of idealized image of the Serbs as the most spiritual and humane peo-
ple on the planet. After going through the passage of historical events, they
finally find peace in reconciliation with God in that Heavenly Serbia.56 It is also
worth noting that the story of Heavenly Serbia serves as a narrative of comfort
for the Serbian people for their political and military failures. The story of the
latent spiritual space of the nation, however, is primarily aimed at pointing out
unbelievers, apostates from the Serbian ethnic corpus who refuse to accept
that the essence of their existence is found in Serbianism and Orthodoxy as
a homogeneous and indivisible unity.57 These anational people, in that part of
the Serbian Orthodox Church, are perceived as a field of mission, as objects of
evangelization, though here the evangelization is not done in accordance with
the New Testament but according to ethnonationalistic principles.
Consequences
the church as a powerful source of their own legitimacy. “Religion was seen as
a fresh spiritual and emotional compensation for the breakdown of the social
and value systems,” Radić claims, “as well as a repository of cultural arguments,
collective memory and symbolic power needed to build new national, group
and individual identities.” The rapprochement between church and state was
seen as a return to the tradition of the symphony and an overture to the univer-
sal clericalization of society. What happened in Serbian Orthodoxy during the
1990s, however, was the emergence of extremely close ties between Serbian
ethnonationalist representatives and the top of the Serbian Orthodox Church.
This led to the rapprochement of ethnototalitarian ideology and ethno-
clerical aspirations, the hybridization of which gives birth to the phenomenon
of ethnoreligiosity.59 Ethnototalitarianism is an ideology and doctrine, says
Dejan Jović, which aims to create an ethnically pure and absolutely sovereign
state, treating the ethnic community as a homogeneous community, implying
it as a single political entity regardless of any state borders that may divide
it.60 According to Vjekoslav Perica, ethnoclericalism is a Balkan contribution
to contemporary religious fundamentalism, based on the idea of a nation con-
structed on an ethnic aspect, and of the concept of a church whose clergy con-
stitute one group of leaders of that ethnonational community.61
Also, ethnoreligiosity should not be confused with ethnophyletism because
although they share some similarities, they are two different phenomena.
Ethnophyletism puts the idea of people (Volk) or nation above the idea of faith,
thereby harnessing the church in the service of that people (Volk) or nation,
while the ethnoreligiosity does this in a far more political way, not only by put-
ting the idea of people (Volk) or nation over the idea of faith but by emphasiz-
ing the specific ethnonationalistic thought as the basis of a religious concept
that the church needs to follow.62 More specifically, in this case it is not about
putting the idea of Serbianism ahead of the idea of Orthodoxy but about view-
ing the Chetnik ethnototalitarian pattern as a prefix to Orthodox religious
discourse. Namely, for ethnoreligiosity, it is not enough to be a member of a
certain people but one must be that people in an ideologically right, ethnoto-
talitarian way.63 Ultimately, religion is shaped in this way through a sacralized
ethnototalitarian concept that separates people in two ways: through the eth-
nonationalistic key of traitors and Orthodox and through the religious key of
the faithful and apostates.64 Combining these two criteria yields the spiritual
space of the nation par excellence, whose logic, according to Čolović, requires
the erasure of others within the national space, whether this erasure is done
through absolute homogenization within their own ethnic ranks or through
the complete destruction of the historical and cultural heritage of other ethnic
groups.65 Through the policies of ethnic cleansing, this led to the creation of
what Viktor Ivančić calls a culture of killing within which the destruction of
others became a central creative act because liquidation shows itself as the
only creation.66 Consequently, this led to the glorification of one’s own crimes
and the contempt for the victims of others, the logical consequence of which
is the emergence of historical revisionism and self-victimology. Because it
enables the forgery of facts, revisionism eliminates the desire, courage and
humanity to deal with their own crimes and all responsibility for them. Self-
victimology serves to justify crimes by one’s own ethnic group with the crimes
of another ethnic group against the members of one’s own people, the side
effect of which is the development of the ideology of the memory of evil.
In all this, the Church plays a major role in the territory of the former
Yugoslavia because, according to Mardešić, the political elites in Yugoslavia
could never cause conflicts of such a bloody nature and on such a scale with-
out the religious aspect.67 Therefore, taking this into account, I would twist
Bigović’s aforementioned thesis about certain members of church structures
and theologians who have strayed from the official stance of the institution
of the Serbian Orthodox Church on the topic of Orthodoxy and democracy
and say that the aberration from the nature of Orthodoxy and the denial of
democratic achievements was more a rule and not an exception in the attitude
of the Serbian Orthodox Church. That has been demonstrated for decades by
the behaviour of part of its clergy who politicize the Gospel on ethnonational-
ist grounds without considering larger or even any sanctions at all by Church
authorities. Accordingly, we can see how this church understands democracy
in an ethnototalitarian sense, while Orthodoxy within that ethnototalitarian
agenda is experienced almost exclusively through the pattern of the ethno-
clerical concept. This is followed by the idea that the Serbian state coincides
ideally with the borders of Serbian Orthodoxy, notwithstanding all the perni-
ciousness caused by such ideological aspirations. As a consequence, we can
conclude that Orthodoxy and democracy in contemporary Serbian theology
and thought are, in essence, unquestionably burdened with ethnoreligiosity,
which is an issue to which the Serbian Orthodox Church must urgently find an
answer, if it is to be prevented from collapsing entirely under it in the future.
Pantelis Kalaitzidis
Introduction
* Sincere thanks are due to Prof. Dr. Hans-Peter Grosshans, Director of the Institute for
Ecumenical Theology and Professor at the Faculty of Protestant Theology, Münster University,
Germany, for the hospitality he provided at the Institute and its library, which enabled me
to finalize this paper. I would also like to warmly thank my colleagues at the Volos Academy
Dr. Nikolaos Kouremenos, Dr. Ioannis Kaminis, and Mrs. Anna-Theodora Valsamou, MTh, for
their insightful comments, remarks and suggestions in a previous version of this paper. I am
also grateful to Dr. Nikolaos Asproulis, Deputy Director of the Volos Academy for Theological
Studies, and Lecturer at the Hellenic Open University, for his gracious editing of the English
of my text. I am happy to extend my thanks to Rev. Philoktimon Stamopoulos-Samaras, BA,
and Mrs. Valila Giannoutaki, MTh, MA, Staff members of the Volos Academy, for facilitating
my access to library material.
The present paper benefits from my previous publications, “Church and Nation in
Eschatological Perspective,” The Wheel, issue 17–18 (2019), 52–61; “La relation de l’Église à la
culture et la dialectique de l’eschatologie et de l’histoire,” Istina 55 (2010), 7–25; “Orthodoxy
and Hellenism in Contemporary Greece,” St. Vladimir’s Theological Quarterly 54, nos 3–4
(2010), 365–420; and Ἑλληνικότητα καὶ Ἀντιδυτικισμὸς στὴ “Θεολογία του ᾽60” [Greekness and
Anti-Westernism in the “Theology of 1960s”], PhD Dissertation (Thessaloniki: Aristotle
University of Thessaloniki, School of Theology, 2008).
1 Cf. the special issue of the leading Greek theological journal Synaxi with the same
title: “Church and Nation: Ties and Shackles” issue 79 (2001), and with papers by Father
Antonios Pinakoulas, Pantelis Kalaitzidis, Vasilis Filias, Father Vasileios Thermos,
Athanasios N. Papathanasiou, Dimitris Arkadas, and a round table discussion that includes
Christos Yannaras, Stavros Zoumboulakis, Paschalis Kitromilides, Nikos Kokosalakis, Antonis
Manitakis, and Panos Nikolopoulos.
2 Cf. Paschalis M. Kitromilides, “The End of Empire: Greece’s Asia Minor Catastrophe and the
Ecumenical Patriarchate,” Δελτίο Κέντρου Μικρασιατικῶν Σπουδῶν [Bulletin of the Centre for
Asia Minor Studies] 17 (2011), 29–42: “From the point of view of the substantive history of the
Christian Church, the most significant development in the life of the Ecumenical Patriarchate
in the period following the Asia Minor Catastrophe and the expulsion of the largest number
of its Orthodox flock from Turkey was the development of a model of a non-national Church
in its jurisdiction: the communities dependent on it in Turkey and the diaspora were held
Patriarchate of Antioch in Syria and Lebanon3, with all this confirming the
existence of ethnotheology and an ethnocentric understanding of the ecclesial
event.
together by a common faith and by the shared consciousness of belonging to the Orthodox
tradition, not by national loyalties, as it has been as a rule the case in the national Orthodox
Churches, whose attitudes and behaviour have contributed to the unfortunate and spiritu-
ally indefensible identification of Orthodoxy with nationalism.” Cf. also Metropolitan Ioannis
of Pergamon (John D. Zizioulas), “The Ecumenical Patriarchate and its Relations with the
other Orthodox Churches,” in P. Kitromilides and T. Veremis (eds.), The Orthodox Church in a
Changing World (Athens: Hellenic Foundation for European and Foreign Policy and Centre
for Asia Minor Studies, 1998), 155–64, here 157, 160: “In the nationalistic fever of that time all
the Balkan states started doing the same, and in this way autocephaly and autonomy became
matters of national identity. Nationalism became an almost integral part of Orthodoxy and
the consequences of that are still with us and are felt particularly in our time. […] The way
the Ecumenical Patriarchate tried to avoid being absorbed by the spirit of nationalism was
by dissociating itself from the aims of the Greek nationalism of that time.” Under the present
circumstances, the role of the Ecumenical Patriarchate is really unique and, indeed, vital for
Orthodox unity, the connection between the local and the universal church, and with regard
to the perspective of a postnational Orthodoxy, provided, of course, that the actions and
words of its representatives – particularly in the “diaspora” – give priority to the universal
rather than the Greek, and that secular national or racial Hellenism will recede in favor of
Christian Hellenism, the Hellenism of the Gospel, the Councils, the Fathers, and worship.
3 Cf. Assaad Elias Kattan, “Beyond Nationalism? The Case of the Orthodox Church of Antioch,”
St Vladimir’s Theological Quarterly 57. nos 3–4 (2013), 353–60. If religious nationalism did not
find fertile ground to develop in the Church of Antioch, communitarianism remains one of
the major problems of the Christian communities in that region.
4 A major reference for the discussion on the normativity of the future and the eschatological
hermeneutics remains the work by Reimund Bieringer and Mary Elsbernd (eds.), Normativity
of the Future: Reading Biblical and Other Authoritative Texts in an Eschatological Perspective
(Leuven: Peeters, 2010). Especially for the Orthodox, cf. Pantelis Kalaitzidis, “Eschatology
and Future-oriented Hermeneutics in Contemporary Orthodox Theology: The Case of
Metropolitan John D. Zizioulas,” in Reimund Bieringer, Peter De Mey, Ma. Marilou S. Ibita,
and Didier Polleffeyt (eds.), The Spirit, Hermeneutics, and Dialogues (Leuven: Peeters, 2019),
155–180.
In the world, but not of the world. These words capture the antinomical relation-
ship of the Church to human society and culture. On the one hand, the incarna-
tional character of the Church establishes her in history, in this particular time
and place and culture [in every nation I would add from my side, with regard to
the topic of the present paper]. On the other, the sacramental character of the
Church transcends time and space [and nation, I would add], making present
another world, the kingdom of God, which is both here and now and yet still to
come. Throughout the history of Christianity, the temptation to relax this antin-
omy has led Christians to represent the Church as an ethereal transcendent mys-
tery unrelated and antithetical to human society and culture. Or, alternatively,
it has prompted Christians to so identify the Church with a particular society,
culture, or ethnicity as to turn Christianity into a religious ideology.7
5 John Meyendorff, “Does Christian Tradition Have a Future?” St. Vladimir’s Theological
Quarterly 26 (1982), 141.
6 See on this issue Pantelis Kalaitzidis, “From the ‘Return to the Fathers’ to the Need for a
Modern Orthodox Theology,” St. Vladimir’s Theological Quarterly 54. nos 3–4 (2010), 5–36.
7 Albert J. Raboteau, “American Salvation: The Place of Christianity in Public Life,” Boston
Review (April/May 2005). See also idem, “In the World, Not of the World, For the Sake of the
The main argument of this contribution is that at the root of all the prob-
lems and difficulties Orthodoxy faces today, including that of ecclesiastical
nationalism and the pending encounter with modernity, lies the inversion of
the paradoxical and antinomic relationship between eschatology and history
or the oblivion of the biblical “in the world, but not of the world, for the sake of
the world.” Orthodoxy is usually (and especially in the theological analyses of
the second half of the 20th century) described as defined by the eschatological
vision of the church. Nevertheless, a more attentive approach to the topic will
reveal that, without completely losing its eschatological identity and orienta-
tion, Orthodoxy is to a large extent shaped by history and more precisely by
the historical experiences and wounds of its peoples, especially by the fall of
Byzantium in 1453 and the four or even five centuries of Ottoman occupation.
This is evidenced particularly in its social conservatism and even anachronism
as well as in the phenomena of ecclesiastical culturalism and nationalism that
have marked the Orthodox world for centuries.11
In fact, and based on serious theological and historical arguments, it seems
that ecclesiastical nationalism is probably the most serious problem facing the
Orthodox Church since the fall of Byzantium (1453). The latter represents a
decisive historical event that led to a period of introversion for Orthodoxy as
well as to the understanding of the Gospel and the ecclesial event in national
terms. Following the Turkish conquest, the Orthodox peoples of the Balkans
and Eastern Europe – who, according to Dimitri Obolensky’s excellent analy-
sis, participated in the “Byzantine Commonwealth”12 – maintained throughout
the Ottoman occupation a community of people with common roots, common
values, and a common orientation, a phenomenon that has been described by
the Romanian historian Nikolai Iorga as “Byzance après Byzance” in his semi-
nal book of the same name (1935).13 Thus, the end of Byzantium and the period
of Ottoman domination formed the basis for a common history among all the
Orthodox peoples (Russia being the only exception). This common history of
the Orthodox people of the Balkans and Eastern Europe was marked by a) the
14 Steven Runciman, The Great Church in Captivity (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,
1968).
15 Alexander Schmemann, The Historical Road of Eastern Orthodoxy, trans. by L. W. Kesich
(Crestwood, NY: St Vladimir’s Seminary Press, 1977), 271–91.
16 For a more up-to-date and balanced discussion of this complex picture, cf. Tom
Papademetriou, Render unto the Sultan: Power, Authority, and the Greek Orthodox
Church in the Early Ottoman Centuries (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2015);
Paschalis M. Kitromilides, Religion and Politics in the Orthodox World: The Ecumenical
Patriarchate and the Challenges of Modernity (London/New York: Routledge, 2019);
Christian Gastgeber, Ekaterini Mitsiou, Johannes Preiser-Kapeller, and Vratislav Zervan
(eds.), A Companion to the Patriarchate of Constantinople (Leiden: Brill, 2021).
altered in the 18th century and especially the 19th through the influence of
the European Enlightenment and the rise of nationalism that this engendered.
The Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople was strongly opposed to this
nationalism, but in the end, at the turn of the 20th century and because of
the national struggles and antagonisms in Macedonia, it was also converted
to Greek nationalism/irredentism and to the Greek Great Idea. This national
splintering and definitive divorce of the Orthodox people of the Balkans was
made final with the dominance of the principle of nationalities, the growth
of competitive national narratives/mythologies, the creation of nation states,
the separation of the respective national churches from the Ecumenical
Patriarchate, and the state-supported declarations of their autocephaly. This
turned them into departments of the state and organs for the formation and
building of national identity and the spread of the respective ideology. The
epitaph for the idea of the Christian oikoumene was written when armed com-
bat broke out between Greece, Serbia, Montenegro, and Bulgaria in the Balkan
Wars of 1912–1913 over rival claims concerning Macedonia and especially with
the Asia Minor Catastrophe (1922) and the compulsory population exchange
(1923–24) between Greece and Turkey, which meant the end of the unique
Eastern version of multiculturalism and multi-ethnicism and its replacement
by the principle of ethnically “pure” states.
Typical examples of ecclesiastical nationalism are the instrumentalization
of Orthodoxy for the sake of the nation states in the identity formation process,
the gradual articulation of the theory of the “new chosen people of God” in its
various versions (Greek, Russian, Romanian, Serbian, Bulgarian, etc.) as well
as both the idea and the reality of the national churches. In the end, the latter
suggests the inability to think of the Orthodox Church, its mission and witness
to the world apart from the national perspective and the individual national
history or narrative. As a result of this substitution of the ecclesial criterion by
the national, and the “replacement of the history of salvation with the history
of national revival,”17 the Orthodox Church has for decades experienced a pro-
found division between the different national churches, as typically depicted
17 Cf. Pantelis Kalaitzidis, “The Temptation of Judas: Church and National Identities,” The
Greek Orthodox Theological Review 47 (2002), 357–79. The original Greek publication (“Ὁ
πειρασμὸς τοῦ Ἰούδα. Ἀπὸ τὴν ἱστορία τῆς θείας οἰκονομίας στὴν ἱστορία τῆς ἐθνικῆς παλιγγε-
νεσίας,” Synaxi, issue 79 (2001), 51–65) and the title of its French translation (“La tenta-
tion de Judas. Église, nation et identités: De l’histoire de l’économie divine à l’histoire de
la renaissance nationale,” Contacts, issue 197 (2002), 24–48) make clear reference to this
replacement.
on the occasion of the Holy and Great Council of Crete in 201618, while it is
called to confront an extremely problematic ecclesiological conception that
understands the Orthodox Church as a mere “confederation of autocephalous
national churches.”19 All these phenomena legitimized those who wonder to
what extent religious nationalism and the nationalization of the church are
inherent to the Orthodox tradition.20
As has been rightly pointed out, however, this identification between church
and nation and the ensuing “national” role of the church constitutes a “nov-
elty,” a modern phenomenon for the Orthodox Church, which has for many
centuries been the Church of the multinational Byzantine and then Ottoman
Empire. But the national role of the Church and the dialectics of tradition and
innovation are much more complex issues, given that change and innovation
have not always led to a genuine renewal of ecclesial life.21 It should be noted
that, in general, until the time of the Turkish conquest (the 15th to the 19th or in
18 See Pantelis Kalaitzidis, “The Holy and Great Council of the Orthodox Church between
Synodal Inertia and Great Expectations: Achievements and Pending Issues,” in Herman
Teule and Joseph Verheyden (eds.), Eastern and Oriental Christianity in the Diaspora
(Leuven: Peeters, 2020), 77–153, especially 104–10. Father Cyril Hovorun (“Ethnophyletism,
Phyletism, and the Pan-Orthodox Council,” The Wheel, issue 12 (2018), 62–7), adopted a
more positive and optimistic approach as regards the issue of nationalism and the Holy
and Great Council.
19 For a theological discussion of this crucial issue, see Jean Meyendorff, “Régionalisme ecclé-
siastique, structures de communion ou couverture de séparatisme?” in Giuseppe Alberigo
(ed.), Les Églises après Vatican II: Dynamisme et prospective. Actes du Colloque interna-
tional de Bologna – 1980 (Paris: Beauschesne, 1981), 329–45; Grigorios Papathomas, “Face
au concept d”Église nationale’: La réponse canonique orthodoxe: l’Église autocéphale,”
L’année canonique 45 (2003), 149–70, and reprinted in Grigorios D. Papathomas, Essais de
Droit canonique orthodoxe (Firenze: Università degli Studi di Firenze/Facoltà di Scienze
Politiche “Cesare Alfieri,” 2005), 51–76. On the connection of autocephaly with nation-
alism from a religious studies perspective, see the paper by Pedro Ramet, “Autocephaly
and National Identity,” in idem (ed), Eastern Christianity and Politics in the Twentieth
Century (Durham/ London: Duke University Press, 1988), 1–19, and the recent volume by
Marie-Hélène Blanchet, Frédéric Gabriel, and Laurent Tatarenko (eds.), Autocéphalies:
L’exercise de l’indépendance dans les Églises slaves orientales (IXe–XXIe siècle) (Rome:
École Française de Rome, 2021).
20 See, e.g., Vasilios N. Makrides, “Why Are Orthodox Churches Particularly Prone to
Nationalization and Even to Nationalism?” St. Vladimir’s Theological Quarterly 57,
nos. 3–4 (2013), 325–52.
21 For the complex issues of change and innovation with regard to the Orthodox theology
and tradition, cf. Trine Stauning Willert and Lina Molokotos-Liederman (eds.), Innovation
in the Orthodox Christian Tradition? The Question of Change in Greek Orthodox Thought
and Practice (Farnham: Ashgate, 2012); Sebastian Rimestad and Vasilios Makrides (eds.),
Coping with Change: Orthodox Christian Dynamics between Tradition, Innovation, and
Realpolitik (Berlin: Peter Lang, 2020).
some cases the 20th century), at the end of which the first signs of this national
role can be observed, the Orthodox Church – despite or perhaps, because of,
its ties to imperial power – ignored the so-called “national logic,” both in its
ecclesiological structure and in its theological self-consciousness. Taking on
this new role, however, and being involved in shaping particular ethno-cultural
identities, the Orthodox Church not only seems to be facing serious problems
in affirming its catholicity, ecumenicity and ecclesial unity, slipping from a
baptismal/Eucharistic into an ethnocultural community.22 It also seems to
have abandoned in practice the foundation and geographical criterion of its
ecclesiology, that is, the principle of the local and not the national church.23
Through a long and complex historical process, especially after the creation
of the modern “Orthodox” states, mainly during the 19th century, the Orthodox
Church in the Balkans and in the East finally espoused the respective national
ideologies and the particular national narratives. At the same time, because
of an intense historical anachronism, traditional Balkan historiography
attributed to Orthodoxy a significant role in the emergence and building of
Balkan nations.24 The final nationalization and national fragmentation and
Balkanization of Orthodoxy was made possible through the replacement of
a religious “imagined community,”25 i.e., the Orthodox Church, by a series of
competing or even mutually exclusive “imagined communities,” i.e., national
states and their national narratives and identities.26 Following a relevant
Great Powers granted us the Balkan monarchies in the 19th century, to which
we hastened to ascribe a metaphysical dimension and messianic expectations.
But we had previously exchanged the kingdom of God and its journey toward
the eschaton with the earthly kingdom and its establishment within history;
the spirit of the desert with the ideal of the empire;32 the contest of faith and
its witness to the new life in Christ for all kinds of “Christian” civilizations,
all kinds of “Christian” kingdoms, all kinds of “Christian” societies that were
nothing but Christian versions of the agrarian or traditional society. And while
we have almost identified the Orthodox faith with our customs and habits
and with our cultural heritage, we stubbornly deny the peoples we evange-
lize the opportunity to incarnate the truth of the Gospel in the language and
the symbols of their own culture. We thus oppose the needed inculturation of
Orthodoxy in the Global South and the imperative and urgent deculturation in
the case of the traditional “Orthodox” peoples. In other words, we refuse the
unavoidable re-ordering of priorities vis-à-vis theological and cultural criteria
and the required new balance between the local and the universal, the particu-
lar and the catholic.33
The Enlightenment and modernity marked the end of religiously organized
societies but not necessarily the end of the quest for the true God or the thirst
for genuine spiritual life. The presence of God, however, is no longer imposed
on the whole of society nor is it an element of the social order and social orga-
nization. Belief in God is no longer considered a given but something to be
sought and found. Therefore, it is no longer possible to continue talking about
sacred societies or empires, about Christian societies, about Christianitas,
Chrétienté, Christendom, Christentum. There is a general sense that we
have not yet recovered from this trauma, from this loss of the homogenous
“Christian” society. Suffice it to think here how fascinating all forms of premod-
ern social and civilizational organization still are to many Orthodox Christians
throughout the Balkans, Central and Eastern Europe, the Middle East, but also
to the so-called “diaspora” communities (monarchism/pro-royalism, denial of
human rights and political liberalism, yearning for communitarian, holistic
political and cultural models, etc.). That is why the yearning for the empire
has replaced the yearning for the eschaton and the journey to the kingdom
of God. In this vein, we, the Orthodox, are referring complacently – if we do
not boast about it – to Byzantinism, Hellenicity and Greek uniqueness, Holy
Russia, and the “Third Rome” or the Slavophile movement, the Serbian people
“as a servant of God,” the Antiochian uniqueness and Arabhood, the Latinness
of Romanian Orthodoxy, and many other ethnotheological narratives, inven-
tions and “constructions.”34 It is obvious that the vast majority of the Orthodox
have exchanged the ecclesial sense of “belonging” for an ethnocultural or com-
munitarian one while identifying the structures and authoritarian patterns of
a patriarchal society with the golden age of the church and “Christian” civili-
zation. That is why we among other things, continue to oppose modernity or
human rights as well as any attempt to improve the position of women in the
Church.35
In the attempt to free Orthodox faith from its identification with nation, cul-
ture, and ethnocultural identity, in this urgent call for deculturation, our gen-
eration may feel rather alone and orphaned. This is so because wherever we
look around the Orthodox world, we see a constant slide from the theological
and ecclesial to the cultural and ethnotheological, a problematic mixture of
theology and ethnocentric discourse, theology and “Great Idea” (either terri-
torial/national or cultural), theology and the defense of the nation, cultural
or national identity, the spiritual tradition and ethnoreligious/ethnocultural
pride. Let me give just a few typical examples of this.
of Orthodox theology in the 20th century, could not avoid – mainly in the early
phase of his work but not only in this – the theological idealization and exal-
tation of the Romanian patriotism and greatness, of agrarian and patriarchal
society, while his anti-Semitic references in his early writings as well as his lau-
datory comments on the persecution of Jews in pro-Nazi Romania and even on
the “important work” done by Hitler himself are indeed shocking. In the words
of this Romanian theologian: “All countries should understand that it is in their
own interest and in the interest of world peace not to transform themselves
into instruments of International Jewry but to begin by mutual agreements to
clear the air of a germ that fosters continuous strife between peoples.”36
Furthermore Father Staniloae believes not only that the human person can-
not exist outside of the nation in which he/she was born and raised but also
that he/she cannot be saved without it: “The individual is saved at the same
time as the nation. Nations are undiminished entities. They are the last specific
units of humanity. From them the individual emerges and lives through them.”
For this Romanian theologian, the church is the basic component of the nation
and vice versa. Romanianism is synonymous with Orthodoxy and vice versa.37
The struggle for the increase of the nation along the lines of Christian virtues is
nothing but the struggle for the glorification of God in the creation. And when
we emphasize the Orthodox element in the Romanian character, we show one
more reason for the necessity for our nation to continue to follow the Orthodox
line, if it does not want to fall from Romanianism and, in general, from a superior
situation to an inferior one. This would not only be a fall in the natural order but
also a sin against God that would not remain unpunished.38
36 Cf. “Necesitatea soluționării problemei evreiești” [The Need to Solve the Jewish Problem],
Telegraful Român issue 3 (10 January 1938), 1–2. The quote comes from the unsigned
editorial of this particular issue of which Staniloae was the editor-in-chief. It is known
that no issue of this magazine was printed without the prior approval of its editor-in-
chief, i.e., Father Staniloae. This policy of the periodical under question was confirmed
by Stalinoae’s daughter, Lidia, in her father’s biography. Cf. Roland Clark, “Nationalism,
Ethnotheology, and Mysticism in Interwar Romania,” The Carl Beck Papers in Russian and
East European Studies, No. 2002, (University of Pittsburgh, 2009), 6.
37 Staniloae, “Orthodoxie și Națiune,” 20.
38 Dumitru Staniloae, “Iarăși Ortodoxie și Românism” [Again Orthodoxy and Romanianism],
in Dumitru Stăniloae, Ortodoxie și Românism (Bucharest: Basilica, 2014), 85. Cf. Anna
Theodora Valsamou, Πολιτικὴ Θεολογία καὶ Ἐθνο-θεολογία στὸν π. Δημήτριο Στανιλοάε
[Political Theology and Ethnotheology in Father Dumitru Staniloae] (Patras: Hellenic
Open University, 2019), 45.
And Stalinoae concludes that, because of the above features, the Romanian
people have the most refined spirituality in the world: “In this respect we are
closer to primal Christian spirituality that is still present in the spirituality of
the Greek people, although with a lesser sentimental experience of this light
than in Romanian spirituality.”39
Furthermore, what is considered to be a deadly sin for the person, such as
pride, automatically turns into virtue if it refers to the national community,
as Berdiaev had observed.40 Driven by his personal beliefs but also to explain
and justify the extreme nationalism of his time41 (most of the Romanian intel-
lectuals in the 1930s belonged to or were sympathetic to the ultra-nationalistic,
fascist, anti-Semitic, and pro-Nazi movement of the Iron Guard or the Legion
of the Archangel Michael),42 Staniloae understood the nation as a spiritual
entity, through which humans can be saved. He believed in fact that humans
are saved only through their national community and not individually: “Man
exists only in a national form, with a national coloration. […] It is not possible
to extract the defining individual or national characteristics from an individual
or a nation and leave the pure human element behind. To do so would mean
the very destruction of the human element.”43
Staniloae’s political theology seeks to defend the absolute identification
between the national and the ecclesial:
And the thread that runs through the essence of a nation’s history, that keeps it
true to its very being, is its tradition, whatever is essential, good and characteris-
tic. And the first institution that represents the continuity of tradition in the life
of a nation is the Church. In the present practices and beliefs of the Church, we
find again the very content of the soul life of our nation from each of the previ-
ous centuries.44
In Revelation it has been said: not as individuals, but “nations will walk in the light
of the city of Lamb,” while it is not individual persons who will enter through the
doors of the city but “the glory and honour of the nations” (Rev 21:24–25), that is,
each nation will bring its own spirituality through the Christian faith, thanks to
the special gifts it has received from God.45
Church and the Iron Guard (1930–1941) (PhD Diss., Budapest: Central European University,
2013); Roland Clark, Holy Legionary Youth: Fascist Activism in Interwar Romania (Ithaca
NY: Cornell University Press, 2015).
43 Dumitru Staniloae, “Scurtă interpretare teologică a națiunii” [Short Theological
Interpretation of the Nation], in Staniloae, Ortodoxie și Românism, 42.
44 Dumitru Staniloae, “Partidele politice și Biserica” [The Political Parties and the Church],
in Dumitru Staniloae, Cultură și Duhovnicie, vol. 3 (Bucharest: Basilica, 2012), 635.
45 Dumitru Staniloae, “Unitatea spirituală a neamului nostru și libertatea” [The Spiritual
Unity of our Nation and Liberty], Națiune și Creștinism, preface by Constantin Schifirneț
(Bucharest: Editura Elion, 2004), 281.
The nation is a mandatory and constituent element for the formation of the
ecclesial body, while the relationship between church and history definitely
passes through the national collectivity.
Staniloae’s collectivistic and ethnocentric understanding of the church
did not remain without effect but pervades almost the whole of Romanian
theology, with few exceptions. For example, the Romanian Metropolitan of
Transylvania Antonie Plamadeala (1926–2005), expressed similar views at the
Second International Conference of Orthodox Theology, in Athens (1976) and
radicalized the former’s ethnotheology, leading thus to the substitution of the
local character of the church by a national character and to the interpretation
of the relevant canons of the church, such as the well-known 34th “Apostolic”
Canon.46 Following Metropolitan Antonie Plamadeala and the way he inter-
prets this canon:
46 “The bishops of every nation must acknowledge him who is first among them and account
him as their head, and do nothing of consequence without his consent; but each may do
those things only which concern his own parish, and the country places which belong to
it. But neither let him (who is the first) do anything without the consent of all; for so there
will be unanimity, and God will be glorified through the Lord in the Holy Spirit.” English
translation from the Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, Series II, vol. 14, ed. by P. Schaff and
H. Wace (Grand Rapids MI: Eerdmans, 1885), 596.
47 Évêque Antonie Plamadeala, “Catholicité et Ethnicité,” in Savas Chr. Agouridès, Deuxième
Congrès de Théologie Orthodoxe à Athènes, 19–29 Août 1976 (Athens, 1978), 490–500, here
495–97.
adopt the national principle in its canonical organization but rather the local,
thus remaining faithful to the Ignatian view of the local church as the catholic
church.
In 1939, however, Staniloae argued that “An a-national sentiment does not
exist.”48 For him, nations are not only ontologically given but also have the
potential to shape individuals in the image of God. According to his ethno-
theological account, Father Staniloae was absolutely convinced that if the
Romanian state would be structured on the principles of Orthodoxy and
Romanianism, then it would not only fulfil its eschatological mission but
would also be the only nation that could offer the world a model of salvation
(the nationalist-Christian).49
Romanity in 1975,51 his work marked a dramatic shift from theology to cultural
criticism, historiography and ethnology, and to forms of neo-Romantic and
neo-nationalist ideology. Romanides’ theory now moved in an undifferentiated
national-religious, historical-theological, theological-cultural and theological-
political milieu. It is thus grounded not in the well-known distinction between
Greek (Orthodox) East versus Latin (Roman Catholic) West but in the abysmal
rivalry between the Greek-speaking and the Latin-speaking Romanity on the
one hand and heretical “Frankism” on the other.52 This radical distinction and
divide was thenceforth played against the backdrop of a seamlessly fabricated
theological-cultural and theological-political ideology. In this understanding,
the West is wholly demonized and held responsible for all the misfortunes
of the Orthodox, both theological and historical/national. Here, Frankism is
portrayed as the scene of endless conspiracies aimed at the extermination of
Romanity. In fact, Romanides’ hermeneutics formed the necessary alibi for a
conspiratorial, non-self-critical, historical interpretation of the sufferings and
adventures of Romanity, attributing them all to Western machinations.
In this spirit, Romanides adds a new prologue to his 1989 second Greek edi-
tion of his Ancestral Sin,53 where, in a frenzied tone strongly reminiscent of
conspiracy theories, he accuses the “Franks” of conniving against Romiosyne
and Orthodoxy. The opening lines of this prologue are highly enlightening as to
his ulterior motive of incorporating a historical-political manifesto in the body
of an otherwise theological work.
The present study dates from a time when efforts were made to isolate hetero-
dox influences on Orthodox theology, and digressions from patristic tradition
were all too evident. Nowadays, we are in a position to account for the political
and theological circles that launched heterodox initiatives for the annihilation
of Romiosyne and the Westernization of Orthodoxy.
54 Romanides, Τὸ προπατορικὸν ἁμάρτημα, 2nd ed., xv. The English translation of this impor-
tant theological work by Romanides, although published and republished many years
after the publication of the second edition of the Greek original, did not include this new
preface. In his “Introduction,” the translator notes the following: “In 1989 a second Greek
edition was published, and he wrote [sc. Romanides] a second preface for it. I have not
included the 1989 Author’s Preface here because it discussed issues largely as they related
to Western European political and intellectual efforts to reshape the national and ecclesi-
astical ethos of Greece in the turbulent 19th century.” See George Gabriel “Introduction,”
in Romanides, The Ancestral Sin (Ridgewood, NJ: Zephyr Publications, 2008), 11–12.
55 Romanides, Τὸ προπατορικὸν ἁμάρτημα, 2nd ed., xx.
56 See John S. Romanides, “Εἰσαγωγὴ εἰς τὴν Θεολογίαν καὶ τὴν πνευματικότητα τῆς Ρωμαιοσύνης
ἔναντι τῆς Φραγκοσύνης” [Introduction to the Theology and Spirituality of Romiosyne
over and against Frankism], in John S. Romanides and Despoina Kontostergiou, Ρωμαῖοι
ἢ Ρωμηοὶ Πατέρες τῆς Ἐκκλησίας: Γρηγορίου Παλαμὰ Ἔργα Ι. Ὑπὲρ τῶν Ἱερῶς ἡσυχαζόντων. Τριὰς
Α΄ [Romans or Romioi Fathers of the Church: The Works of Gregory Palamas I: In Defense
of the Holy Hesychasts. Triads I] (Thessaloniki: Pournaras, 1984), 11–33, 49–194.
57 Romanides, “Εἰσαγωγὴ εἰς τὴν Θεολογίαν καὶ τὴν πνευματικότητα τῆς Ρωμαιοσύνης ἔναντι τῆς
Φραγκοσύνης,” 13.
who are held responsible for the destruction of Romiosyne and the undoing of
its spiritual context. The introduction then closes with a call addressed to all
genuine Romans to reclaim their leadership and unfetter Romiosyne from its
alien spiritual bonds.58
The above historical-theological hermeneutic (Greek-speaking and Latin-
speaking Romans versus heretical Frankish invaders, Romanity versus the
Franks), combined with the “three stages” theory (purification, enlighten-
ment, glorification/theosis), hailed by Romanides as the distinctive hallmark
of Orthodoxy – i.e., what sets it apart from all other religions and traditions59 –
will henceforth assume dominance in Romanides’ scholarship. It will color
and undergird all of his remaining texts, regardless of topic (ecclesiological,
dogmatic, or ecumenical, the relationship between faith and culture, national
issues and territorial and national disputes with Greece’s neighbors, or even
the relationship between religion and Orthodoxy and science and Orthodoxy).
The unbridgeable rivalry between Romanity and the Franks, the rancorous
common struggle of Greek and Latin speaking Romanity against the Frankish
usurpers of Rome’s throne and the Teutonic distorters of the true spiritual
experience (purification, enlightenment, glorification/theosis), was bound to
be Romanides’ permanent theme after the 1970s, his hermeneutical key for
understanding and explaining all kinds of problems, concerns, and challenges
(theological, ecclesiological, etc.).
During the 1980s, 1990s, and partly even during the 2000s, Romanides’ the-
ology strongly influenced the Greek theological and wider ecclesiastical land-
scape. It has had a decisive impact on the thought not only of bishops, priests,
and especially monks but also lay theologians and numerous religious groups
as well, inasmuch as it furnished a convenient and comforting conspirato-
rial explanation for the historical woes of Orthodoxy and the Romiosyne. As
an explanation, of course, it is devoid of the slightest traces of repentance
and self-criticism, for blame is always placed upon others: the heretics, the
Franco-Latins, the Pope, Westerners, Napoleon Bonaparte, the Slavs, etc.
58 Romanides, “Εἰσαγωγὴ εἰς τὴν Θεολογίαν καὶ τὴν πνευματικότητα τῆς Ρωμαιοσύνης ἔναντι τῆς
Φραγκοσύνης,” 189.
59 John S. Romanides, Πατερικὴ Θεολογία [Patristic Theology], Foreword by Fr. George
Metallinos, edited with notes by Monk Damascene of the Holy Mountain (Thessaloniki:
Parakatathiki Publications, 2004), 30: “But Orthodoxy is not a religion. Orthodoxy is not a
religion like all the other religions. Orthodoxy is distinguished by one unique character-
istic, which is not found in the other religions. This is its anthropological and therapeutic
aspect. It is on this point that it differs. Orthodoxy is a therapeutic course that treats the
human person.”
Small wonder, then, that Romanides’ theology has won such a large and
widespread following among conservative circles in the church as well as on
the far-right: he flattered the repressed frustrations, prejudices, and psycho-
logical complexes of the historically defeated modern Greeks, with the effect
of cultivating theological self-sufficiency, cultural introversion, aggressiveness,
and an intemperate sense of superiority. His theories on the Romiosyne have
never been resisted or challenged by a robust counter-theology, nor has his
book (and other related publications) been subjected to serious critical com-
mentary in the forty-seven years after its first appearance.60 What interests
us here, with regard to Romanides’ texts and teaching, is the total demoniz-
ing of the West, the chiliastic conflation of Orthodoxy and spirituality with
Romanity/Romiosyne, and last but not least, the reductive geographical iden-
tification of all those graced with the vision of God and the uncreated light
with the so-called citizens of Romanity/Romiosyne! In the characteristic
words of Metropolitan Hierotheos of Nafpaktos and St. Vlassios, one of Father
John Romanides’ most faithful followers, “Father Romanides had devoted him-
self entirely to the cause of Romiosyne, which to him was the quintessence of
all genuine spirituality, the kind that frees us from self-love, material lust, and
every other expression of fallen humankind.”61
Outside the territory of Romanity, Greek-speaking or Latin-speaking, there
does not seem to be – for Father Romanides – either repentance and spiritual
struggle, holiness, theosis/theoptia, nor salvation, as all the above seem to be
limited or connected to a specific cultural and geographical domain. Bearing
in mind the definition of Romanity and Roman given by Romanides himself
(the citizen of the Roman Empire, incorrectly called Byzantium), we can con-
clude that holiness, theosis, and genuine Orthodoxy is ultimately identified for
the Greek-American theologian with a particular empire (the Roman), and its
culture, its territory, and its citizens. Orthodox peoples who formed no part
of this empire, by chance or choice, such as the Slavs, are either ignored by
Romanides or openly denounced as collaborators with the Franks and traitors
60 For pertinent criticisms, see André de Halleux, “Une vision orthodoxe grecque de
la romanité,” Revue Théologique de Louvain 15 (1984), 54–66; Wolfhart Pannenberg,
Systematic Theology, vol. 3, trans. Geoffrey W. Bromiley (Grand Rapids, MI/Edinburgh:
Eerdmans and T&T Clark, 1998), 511–5. For a sympathetic appraisal of Romanides’ work
in English language cf. Andrew Sopko, Prophet of Roman Orthodoxy: The Theology of John
Romanides (Dewdney BC: Synaxis Press: The Canadian Orthodox Publishing House,
1998).
61 Father George Metallinos, Πρωτοπρεσβύτερος Ἰωάννης Σ. Ρωμανίδης. Ὁ “προφήτης τῆς
Ρωμηοσύνης” προσωπογραφούμενος μέσα ἀπὸ ἄγνωστα ἢ λίγο γνωστὰ κείμενα [Protopresbyter
John S. Romanides: The “Prophet of Romanity”: A Profile through Unknown or Little
Known Texts] (Athens: Armos, 2003), 67.
Christos Yannaras
Another very influential Greek theologian, philosopher, and columnist,
Christos Yannaras was the most characteristic representative of the Greek gen-
eration of the 1960s. He contributed so much through his work to the renewal
of Orthodox theology in Greece and the wider Orthodox world. Yannaras came
to support and systematize – as a sort of a metaphysical axiom – the theory of
an unbroken continuity of Hellenism, not in the field of history but in that of
thought and culture. Yannaras’ unbroken continuity, which illustrates in the
most characteristic way, the cultural hermeneutics of Florovsky’s “Christian
Hellenism,” clearly differs from the racial one and focuses specifically on the
dialogical/communal and apophatic version of truth from Heraclitus through
St. Gregory Palamas and in his theory of the survival of an enduring cultural
Greekness. In his view, this Greekness transcends historical, political, and reli-
gious divisions and maintains certain unique characteristics unchanged over
time. Yannaras’ hermeneutic first debuted, in its original form, in his early
works at the beginning of the 1970s whereas, after 1979–80,62 there’s hardly a
single work by Yannaras that does not derive from or add further support to his
theory of an unbroken continuity of Hellenic culture from classical antiquity
to the present. According to Yannaras, the truth is never exhausted in its for-
mulation, just as the cognizance of prepositional truth cannot be completely
identified with its non-verbal, original version. Thus, Yannaras developed his
thesis of “the Greek identification of the truth with the common logos, in other
words with a social version of the truth,” a Heraclitian identification of being in
truth with being in communion. Without this identification, Yannaras claims,
“it is simply impossible to make any sense of the Greek way of life from the
62 In 1980–1981, Yannaras published his two-volume work in Greek: Σχεδίασμα Εἰσαγωγῆς στὴ
Φιλοσοφία [An Outline of an Introduction to Philosophy] (Athens: Domos Publications),
in which he developed his view of this issue. It was then translated into French under the
characteristic title: Philosophie sans rupture, trans. André Borrély (Geneva: Labor et Fides,
1986). The title of the English translation focuses not on the issue of continuity between
ancient Greek and Christian thought but on the discontinuity between Hellenic (ancient
pre-Christian and Christian alike), and Western thought: The Schism in Philosophy: The
Hellenic Perspective and its Western Reversal, trans. Norman Russell (Brookline, MA: Holy
Cross Orthodox Press, 2015).
5th century BC to the 15th century AD.”63 It thus follows that the suggested
epistemological continuity, premised on the concept of truth, common to both
pre-Christian and Christian Hellenism, as an event of interpersonal participa-
tion and communion, would now serve as a point of contact and a platform for
the encounter of Hellenism and Christianity, chiefly through the grand theo-
logical synthesis of the Greek Fathers.64
For Yannaras, this version of the truth constitutes the very crux of the cul-
tural identity of Hellenism, inasmuch as “yet … the moderately formed Greek,
with at least some philosophical and theological education, suspects or knows
that it is a peculiarity of his culture to be defined in particular by the apo-
phatic interpretation of truth – from the time of Heraclitus to that of Gregory
Palamas.”65 It is actually this definition of truth, above all else, that “determines
every other difference between the two traditions or cultures,”66 i.e., the Greek
and Western respectively.
Elsewhere, Yannaras reiterates his standard position that what sets the
Greek tradition apart from the West is the former’s consistent preservation,
again from Heraclitus to Gregory Palamas, of apophatic epistemology. He sees
this divergence as instrumental in the ecclesiastical schism between East and
West and no less responsible for the “religious” distortion of the church:
Had the Greek intelligentsia been more resistant to [sweeping slogans], they
would have discovered more kinship with the heretical founders of modernity.
For what radically sets Greece (ancient and medieval alike) apart from the West
is its consistent commitment to apophaticism, as evidenced in the tradition
from Heraclitus to Gregory Palamas. The search for “meaning” in the Greek tra-
dition, i.e., the ontological concern, was never trapped in dogmas or in different
authoritarian forms a priori. The Greek intelligentsia learned at long last that
Christianity was once split into two because the Greek Church consciousness
and experience refused to walk with the then-barbaric West on the way to a “reli-
gious” distortion of the ecclesial event and its submission to doctrines and infal-
lible authorities.67
63 Christos Yannaras, “Μυστράς: Ἀπὸ τὸν βυζαντινὸ στὸν Νέο Ἑλληνισμό” [Mystras: From
Byzantine to Modern Hellenism], Κριτικὲς Παρεμβάσεις [Critical Approaches], 2nd
expanded ed. (Athens: Domos, 1987), 45. Cf. idem, Elements of Faith: An Introduction to
Orthodox Theology, trans. K. Schram (London/New York: T & T Clark, 1991), 153–4.
64 Cf. Cyril Hovorun, Political Orthodoxies: The Unorthodoxies of the Church Coerced
(Minneapolis MN: Fortress Press, 2018), 168–70.
65 Christos Yannaras, On the Absence and Unknowability of God: Heidegger and the Areopagite,
edited and with an Introduction by Andrew Louth, trans. by Haralambos Ventis (London/
New York: T&T Clark, 2005), 17.
66 Yannaras, On the Absence and Unknowability of God: Heidegger and the Areopagite, 15.
67 Christos Yannaras, Ἡ κατάρρευση τοῦ πολιτικοῦ συστήματος στὴν Ἑλλάδα σήμερα [The Colapse
of the Political System in Greece Today] (Thessaloniki: Ianos, 2008), 240.
68 Christos Yannaras, Ἀόριστη Ἑλλάδα. Κοντσέρτο γιὰ δυὸ ἀποδημίες [Undefined Greece:
Concerto for Two Migrations] (Athens: Domos, 1994), 58; cf. 59, 120–1.
69 Yannaras, Ἀόριστη Ἑλλάδα, 28–31.
eschatological kingdom and all that this entails in theological and ecclesias-
tical terms does not appear to interest Yannaras here. The Divine Liturgy is
not seen in terms of participating in the eschatological banquet of the coming
Lord, which constitutes the Body of Christ and the people of God. Rather, what
matters in the passage under discussion is the cultural dimension of worship,
the expression through liturgy of Greekness and the spirit of resistance the
latter preserves. For this reason, this understanding of the Divine Liturgy con-
cerns every Greek – regardless of faith and regardless of his spiritual struggle
and the existential leap of faith that this presupposes. In the words of Yannaras
himself:
And we ordinary and unimportant citizens have something even more signifi-
cant in our hands: a living, weekly act of the people that continues ancient Greek
dramaturgy. It recapitulates the historical evolution of our language and our cul-
tural contribution in dazzling poetry, revelatory painting, and engrossing mel-
ody. We have the Greek Orthodox liturgy – every week in thousands of churches,
throughout the world, wherever there is a Greek community.
I will be so bold as to say that it does not matter whether someone “believes” or
not, whether someone is “religious” or not. The tangible expression of Greekness
that is the liturgy is our living and active culture and must be preserved at all
costs. It is up to every Greek to save it.
We must preserve the cultural dynamic of the Greek Orthodox liturgy, and we
must all enlist in the service of cleansing it from “religionization,” which is for-
eign to it. Specifically, this is what I propose: That we establish groups toward
this end in every city, every neighborhood, and every village and community.70
70 Christos Yannaras, Ἑλληνότροπος πολιτική. Ἐξ ἀντιθέτου κριτήρια καὶ προτάσεις [Politics in the
Greek Mode: Criteria and Proposals from an Opposite Point of View] (Athens: Ikaros, 1996),
175–6.
71 For a representative example, see this characteristic piece from Yannaras’ column in the
widely read Athenian newspaper Kathimerini (9 September 2001): “Three and a half thou-
sand years of rich Greek culture are on display in the living worship of the Orthodox
is inextricably tied to the search for identity and reflection on Greek unique-
ness. Orthodox worship, then, comes to be understood in some of Yannaras’
works in a cultural rather than a theological way and less in an eschatological
way. It is conceived of as the most, if not only, defining characteristic of Greeks
today, and thus represents that expression, that aspect of life, by which the
Greek people still manage to be culturally distinct from the dominant globaliz-
ing Western model.72 Even in his autobiographical work On Himself, Yannaras
was not able to avoid a reference to or tangent about Orthodox worship as a
distinctive mark of the Greeks’ nobility, gentleness, and culture or about the
liturgical act as fidelity to and confirmation of the cultural superiority of the
Orthodox and the Greeks over all others.73
In such a reading and understanding of worship, it is of little importance
that this wonderful “we” is not national/racial but cultural. It matters little that
the divisive role of ethnophyletism is undertaken by cultural or ecumenical/
universal Hellenism since it is diametrically opposed to the liturgical “we” that
highlights the church as a spiritual homeland for all people in one spiritual
race and since it contradicts the very core of the Gospel, the consciousness
of the Orthodox Divine Liturgy as a work of every single believer everywhere
throughout the world.
But Yannaras’ theory of the unbroken continuity of Greek thought from
Heraclitus to Gregory Palamas is inconceivable without his understanding of
the relationship between church and culture, between truth and cultural con-
text, as it has taken shape over the last few years. In fact, in his writings,74 the
pivotal role the cultural criterion plays in Yannaras’ thought leads him to make
the catholicity of each local church (and the authentic manifestation thereof)
dependent on the conditions of its cultural milieu, with language regarded
as the foremost criterion. For Yannaras, culture is a prerequisite for granting
access to the ecclesial event and way of life. Small wonder, then, that Yannaras
Church: There we have the continuity of ancient Greek politics, the ‘assembly [ecclesia]
of the people [dimos]’ as the gathering [ecclesia] of the faithful. There we have the con-
tinuation of tragedy, drama that functions as revelation. There we have the historical con-
tinuity of the language, from Homer to Gerasimos Mikragiannanitis, at every Vespers and
Matins service. There we have the unbroken continuity of poetry, the continuity of music,
and painting, from Fayyum to Theophilos.”
72 Christos Yannaras, Πολιτιστικὴ Διπλωματία. Προθεωρία ἑλληνικοῦ σχεδιασμοῦ [Cultural
Diplomacy: A Theory of Greek Planning] (Athens: Ikaros, 2003), 158–9. In the same vein,
see Yannaras, Ἀντιστάσεις στὴν ἀλλοτρίωση. Ἐπίκαιρη κριτικὴ σχοινοβασία [Resistance to
Alienation: A Vital Critical Balancing Act] (Athens: Ikaros, 1997), 236.
73 Christos Yannaras, Τὰ καθ᾽ ἑαυτόν [On Himself] (Athens: Ikaros, 1995), 184–5; cf. 186.
74 In regard to this point, see his very important paper: “Ἐκκλησία καὶ πολιτισμός” [Church
and Culture], Synaxi 88 (2003), 11–17.
has increasingly supported the view that one cannot be fully Orthodox if one
does not participate in the ultimate synthesis of Hellenism and Christianity
that was produced by the great Greek Fathers of the 4th century AD, if one is
not familiar with the unprecedented achievements of ancient Greek philoso-
phy and semantics, or if one is not conversant in the language of Greek ontol-
ogy that contributed so much to the formulation of Christian doctrine.
This remarkable and unique position of Christian Hellenism makes it part
and parcel or “flesh of theology’s flesh,” the diachronic (and henceforth obliga-
tory) historical-cultural flesh of the church. It is this to such a degree, in fact,
that even today, according to Yannaras, the church must formulate and preach
the truth of the Gospel of salvation in every place and time in Greek cultural
and philosophical terms. In the same way, Yannaras routinely attributes the
limited – and, in his view, problematic – assimilation of Christianity by the
so-called “barbaric tribes” that conquered Rome in the 5th century AD to their
cultural and intellectual retardation. Even today, he thinks that the people of
mission, such as Africans and Asians, have to become acquainted with Greek
cultural and philosophical achievements in order to become fully Orthodox.75
Hellenism is thus elevated to the status of a crucial and indispensable prerequi-
site for the manifestation of the true, catholic church, just as “Jewishness” was
deemed the necessary medium for the Ιncarnation of Christ, God’s manifesta-
tion in the flesh. In this way, Hellenism is assigned a special role in Yannaras’
thought in the Divine economy of salvation.
Indeed, a particular and crucial aspect of Yannaras’ Helleno-Christian
theology, which was manifest already fairly early (1977)76 but became more
prominent over time throughout his later work, especially in his texts after
1990,77, not only raises the idea of the diachronic unity and continuity of the
individual phases of Hellenism’s cultural development. It also hints at a theory
in which Greekness, as the historical flesh that presented Hellenism as the full
expression of Orthodoxy gives us the right to speak about Hellenism’s unique
(and not incidental) role in the plan of the Divine economy, a role analogous
to that of the Ιncarnation of God through the Jews, which, for a believer, is
also not coincidental. More precisely, ecclesiastical catholicity for Yannaras
is connected not only to ecclesial and theological presuppositions but also to
the Causal Principle of any being, inaccessible to the mind and senses, assumed
the flesh of biological individuality, the flesh of a rational subject of a particu-
lar background and a particular historical place. He assumed ethnicity and lan-
guage and, with that, the inherent worldview of the time in order to deify this
assumption.79
embodied in the practice of life, and only when it is incarnate does it become a
mode of being.80
83 Bishop Nikolai Velimirovich, The Serbian People as a Servant of God, trans. Rt Rev. Theodore
Mika and Very Rev. Stevan Scott (Grayslake IL: The Serbian Orthodox Metropolitante of
New Gracanica, Diocese of America and Canada, 1999).
84 Bishop Nikolai Velimirovich and Archimandrite Justin Popovic (select writings of), The
Mystery and Meaning of the Battle of Kosovo, trans. in honor of the 600th Anniversary of
the Battle of Kosovo by Rt Rev. Todor Mika and Very Rev. Stevan Scott (Grayslake IL: The
Serbian Orthodox Metropolitante of New Gracanica, Diocese of America and Canada,
1999). Cf. Thomas Bremer, “The Attitude of the Serbian Orthodox Church towards Europe,”
in Jonathan Sutton and William Peter Van Den Bercken (eds.), Orthodox Christianity
and Contemporary Europe: Selected Papers of the International Conference held at the
University of Leeds, England, in June 2001 (Leuven: Peeters, 2003), 423–30; Julia Anna Lis,
Antiwestliche Diskurse in der serbischen und griechischen Orthodoxie: Zur Konstruktion des
“Westens” bei Nikolaj Velimirović, Justin Popović, Christos Yannaras und John S. Romanides
(Berlin: Peter Lang, 2019). In contrast, see the defence of the two Serbian theologians
(now recognized as saints by the Serbian Orthodox Church) undertaken by Vladimir
Cvetković in his “The Reception of the Serbian Orthodox Church in the 21st-Century
German Academia,” in Mikonja Knežević (ed.), in collaboration with Rade Kisić and
Dušan Krcunović, Philosophоs – Philotheos – Philoponоs: Studies and Essays as Charisteria
and a theory of victimization among the Serbian people. In doing so, both
authors are well within the prevailing (at the time) understanding and appli-
cation of the tradition of saintsavaism, which as a theological orientation
appears in the Kingdom of Yugoslavia in the 1930s. The movement took its
name from the founder of the Serbian Church, St. Sava, a fact that empha-
sizes the national character of Serbian Orthodoxy as opposed to the catho-
lic character of the Orthodox Church.85 Saintsavaism was nominally rooted
in and particularly promoted by Popovic’s views onit as a holistic philosophy
of life.86 This philosophy placed the primacy of the Divine over the human at
its center and – because of its very strong exclusivist soteriology, ecclesiology,
and theology of virtues – was criticized to promote and expand antimodernist
ideas, religious intolerance, and ethnoreligious nationalism and even to have
affinities with totalitarian ideologies such as National Socialism.87 The debate
in Honor of Professor Bogoljub Šijaković on the Occasion of his 65th Birthday (Belgrade and
Podgorica: Gnomon Center for the Humanities Matica srpska – Društvo članova u Crnoј
Gori, 2021), 993–1004, who opposes Julia Anna Lis’ and my own analysis (on Yannaras and
Romanides, and their relation to Serbian theology).
85 Cf. also on this Christos Mylonas, Serbian Orthodox Fundamentals: The Quest for an Eternal
Identity (Budapest/New York: Central European University Press, 2003), 52: “Saint-Savism
(Svetosavlje) as a primordial given factor of Serb culture constitutes the principled and
fundamental expression of the love of and the life in Orthodoxy, in accordance with
the national traditions. It is ‘the soul [which] kept its memory alive […] when the body
succumbed to the Turks” to partly paraphrase Ivo Banac’s account of the relationship
between the Nemanjic Kingdom and the Serbian Church, or rather the foundations of
heavenly Serbia. In the case of the former, Orthodoxy’s transcending nature and spiritual-
ity connotes – in an ironic manner, when considering the destruction of St. Sava’s remains
by the Turks – my primary hypothesis, which has identified Orthodoxy as the sacralisa-
tion of the Serbian identity.”
86 See Justin Popovic, Pravoslavna Crkva i ekumenizam; Svetosavlje kao filosofija zivota [The
Orthodox Church and Ecumenism – Saintsavaism as a Philosophy of Life], ed. Atanasije
Jevtic (Belgrade: Manastir Celije; Naslednici Oca Justina, 2001).
87 Cf., e.g., Maria Falina, “Svetosavlje a Case Study in the Nationalization of Religion,”
Schweizerische Zeitschrift für Religions und Kulturgeschichte 101 (2007), 505–27; Neven
Vukic, “Saintsavaism(s) and Nationalism: An Overview of the Development of the Serbian
Orthodox Phenomenon of Saintsavaism, with a Special Focus on the Contribution of
Justin Popovic (1894–1979),” Exchange: Journal of Contemporary Christianities in Context
50 (2021), 77–98; idem, Engaging the Religious Other: Studies in Orthodox-Muslim Dialogue,
PhD Dissertation (Leuven: KU Leuven Faculty of Theology and Religious Studies, 2021),
87–91; Branimir Anzulovic, Heavenly Serbia: From Myth to Genocide (New York: New York
University Press, 1999), especially 23–31; Lis, Antiwestliche Diskurse in der serbischen und
griechischen Orthodoxie, 225–36. A more sympathetic approach to Popovic’s saintsava-
ism is proposed by Bogdan Lubardić, “‘Revolt against the Modern World’: Theology and
the Political in the Thought of Justin Popović,” in Kristina Stoeckl, Ingeborg Gabriel,
and Aristotle Papanikolaou (eds.), Political Theologies in Orthodox Christianity: Common
One must render homage to the present German leader who, as a simple crafts-
man and man of the people, realized that nationalism without religion is an
anomaly, a cold and insecure mechanism. Thus, in the twentieth century he
arrived at Saint Sava’s idea and as a layman undertook the most important task
in his nation that befits a saint, genius, and hero.88
Taking into account Velimirovic’s later biography and his detention in the
Dachau Nazi concentration camp during WWII, many would agree with
Neven Vukic’s opinion that, at worst, the above unfortunate quotation was “an
error in judgement on the part of Velimirovic, with regards to the character of
the German dictator.”89
The cases of the distinguished late Serbian hierarchs and eminent theolo-
gians of the Belgrade Faculty of Theology (both died of COVID during the aca-
demic year 2020–21, refusing to practise social distancing), the former Bishop
of Zahumije and Herzegovina Atanasije Jevtic, and Metropolitan Amfilohije
Radovic of Montenegro and the Littoral, should be listed among the examples
of ethnotheology in Orthodoxy. Both developed an ethnotheological discourse,
tolerating – if not encouraging and blessing – violent acts, war crimes, or even
crimes against humanity while both were criticized as being among those who
energetically opposed peace plans during the Yugoslav wars.90 Both bishops
were among the most influential hierarchs of the Serbian Orthodox Church
with great influence not only within church related milieus but also among
politicians, journalists, intellectuals, university professors, and the wider
society of Serbia, Montenegro, Bosnia and Herzegovina. In the context of the
dramatic conditions of the breakup of the former Yugoslavia, these hierarchs
increasingly slipped away from theology into ethnotheology and “patriotic
Challenges and Divergent Positions (London: Bloomsburry/T&T Clark, 2017), 207–28, here
215–9.
88 See Nikolai Velimirovic, Nacionalizam svetoga Save (Belgrade: Association of the Serbian
Orthodox Clergy of the Belgrade–Karlovci Eparchy, 1935), 27–8, quoted in Anzulovic,
Heavenly Serbia, 30.
89 Vukic, Engaging the Religious Other: Studies in Orthodox-Muslim Dialogue, 88–9.
90 See for example Radmila Radic, “The Church and the ‘Serbian Question,’” in Nebojsa
Popov and Drinka Gojkovic (eds), The Road to War in Serbia: Trauma and Catharsis
(Budapest/New York: Central European University Press, 2000), 247–73, here 269.
91 In some cases, these phenomena could be found even before 1992, as these bishops, and
others too, were among those who enflamed Serbians about the Kossovo issue, and pre-
sented Kosovo as the “Serbian Jerusalem,” and enthusiastically praised Milosevic’s relevant
speech in June 1989. Metropolitan Amfilohije Radovic, for example, will state in an inter-
view to the foreign press that, “between 1987 and 1989, as it was so clear during the jubilee
of the Kosovo Battle (sc. in 1989), Serbia has demonstrated a national unity, unseen proba-
bly since 1914.” See the bishop’s statement to the BBC evening radio news (4 August 1989),
Religion, Politics, Society (17 August 1989), as quoted by Vjekoslav Perica, Balkan Idols:
Religion and Nationalism in Yugoslav States (Oxford/ New York: Oxford University Press,
2002), 143. On this, see Marko Živković, “Stories Serbs Tell Themselves: Discourses on
Identity and Destiny in Serbia since the Mid-1980’s,” Problems of Post-Communism 44,
no. 4 (1997), 22–29, especially 24. Cf. Srdjan Vrcan, “A Christian Confession Possessed by
Nationalistic Paroxysm: The Case of Serbian Orthodoxy,” Religion 25 (1995), 357–70, espe-
cially 359, 363–6. The Serbian Orthodox reply to all these critiques, and the interpreta-
tion of the relevant historical events can be found in the volume, The Christian Heritage
of Kosovo and Metohija: The Historical and Spiritual Heartland of the Serbian People (Los
Angeles CA: Sebastian Press, 2015).
92 Naša Borba, 8 April 1998, quoted by Perica, Balkan Idols, 143.
called on Vojislav Seselj to continue his chivalric work of defending the soul
and face of the Serbian people.93
In addition, Metropolitan Amfilohije Radovic, took it upon himself to orga-
nize a conference in Cetinje, Montenegro, in 1996 in the wake of the end of the
Bosnian War, and looming war crimes proceedings, on the relation between
Orthodox Christianity and war. At this conference, he did not fail to include
the leader of the Bosnian Serbs of that time, Radovan Karadzic, among the
invited speakers. Karadzic is now a convicted war criminal, who has been
found guilty of the charge of genocide and of other crimes committed dur-
ing the war in Bosnia (1992–995), and who had already been indicted at that
time by the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia in The
Hague (Netherlands) for his direct responsibility in the Srebrenica Genocide.94
The proceedings of that conference were published later that same year by the
publishing house of the Metropolitanate of Montenegro and the Littoral with
the blessing of Metropolitan Amfilohije as The Lamb of God and the Beast from
the Abyss.95
93 Vukic, Engaging the Religious Other, 103, n. 293, from whom I borrow most of the informa-
tion in the present section.
94 Vukic, Engaging the Religious Other, 103–4.
95 See the collective volume Jagnje Bozije i Zvijer iz Bezdana [The Lamb of God and the Beast
from the Abyss], ed. Rados M. Mladenovic and (Hierodeacon) Jovan Culibrk (now Bishop
of Pakrac and Slavonia) (Cetinje: Svetigora 1996), and Vukic, Engaging the Religious Other,
103–4.
96 Florian Bieber, “Montenegrin Politics since the Disintegration of Yugoslavia,” acces-
sible at https://web.archive.org/web/20100703005659/http://www.policy.hu/bieber/
Publications/bieber.pdf/ (accessed 19 March 2022). Bieber refers also to Stjepan Gredelj,
“Klerikalizam, etnofiletizam, antiekumenizam I (ne)tolerancija,” Sociologija 41. no. 2
(April–June 1999), 157–8.
owed to religion and the church and that whatever he did, he did “with God in
mind.”97
In his turn the former Bishop of Herzegovina Atanasije Jevtic, who also contrib-
uted to the aforementioned conference in Cetinje, and to its Proceedings, went
so far as to argue that: “war is intrinsic to the whole of creation (even angels
warred against each other), that is simply the way of the world.” Apparently,
he was under a strong emotional shock provoked by aggressions of the rival
side of the Yugoslavian wars (Bosnian Croats, the allies of Muslims in the civil
war, destroyed his cathedral church of the Holy Trinity in Mostar, in 1992).
According to Bishop Atanasie Jevtic, the Serbs fought a valiant and heroic war, a
defensive war that was conducted as self-defence against probable genocide at
the hands of the Croats and Muslims. Here, he was referring to the war crimes
committed by the Nazi-collaborationist government of Ustashe of the so-
called “Independent State of Croatia,” a puppet state of the Axis Powers, which
had implemented its own racial laws and ran its own death camps. Atanasije
Jevtic was even opposed to the peace that was established in Bosnia with the
Dayton Accords (1995), and defended this view theologically by asserting that
“any war is better than a peace that separates one from God.”98
Neven Vukic attempts to recount and frame the wider context in his doc-
toral dissertation. He writes:
Similar sentiments on the preference for war rather than the “wrong kind of
peace,” had been expressed […], in the official journal of the Serbian Church,
Pravoslavlje, by Archpriest Bozidar Mijac. In addition to elaborating on the pref-
erence for a “good war” over a “bad and godless peace,” the author apparently
argues for the presence of not only “just” and “unjust” individuals in wars but
also for that of “just” and “unjust” nations. Moreover, the enemies of the Serbian
forces in the wars are likened to the apocalyptic beasts and the forces of chaos
described in the Book of Revelation.99
97 Radic, “The Church and the ‘Serbian Question,’” 268. Cf. Vukic, Engaging the Religious
Other, 102–3.
98 See Atanasije Jevtic, “Najgori od svih mogucih ratova,” in the volume Jagnje Bozije i Zvijer
iz Bezdana, 69–76, quoted in Vukic, Engaging the Religious Other, 104, from whom I am
borrowing this information.
99 See Bozidar Mijac, “Mir, da, ali kakav?” [Peace, Yes, but What Kind?], Pravoslavlje 600
(15 March 1992), 5, quoted by Vukic, Engaging the Religious Other, 104. We should note
that there were, however, Orthodox theologians like the hieromonk (now Bishop) Ignatije
Midic, who condemned the war as a means to achieve “higher aims, either defensive or
aggressive” and who thought the war an unacceptable and unjustifiable means from
the human point of view, let alone the church perspective.” See Radic, “The Church and
the ‘Serbian Question,’” 264–5. A self-critical approach to a range of difficult issues with
regard to the Serbian Orthodox Church is also provided by the writings of the the late
Before closing this section with examples from Serbian ethnotheology or “patri-
otic theology” or even “war theology,” it should be noted that both hierarchs at
the beginning of their theological journey seemed to follow a different path.
In commenting on the religious nationalism and ethnophyletism in a very
dense, penetrating, and theologically promising paper published in Greek in
1971, Metropolitan Amfilohije raised the pertinent question of the role played
by Ottoman domination and the Qur’an (with its conflation of religion and
nation) in the emergence and shape of religious nationalism in Orthodoxy.100
In the same work,101 this distinguished Serbian clergyman and theologian,
alluding to the related formulations of the 1872 Synod of Constantinople’s dog-
matic “decree,” connects the phenomenon of ethnophyletism, which annuls
the catholicity and universality of the church, to the resurgence of a particular
“Jewish temptation.” This temptation lies in the priority of physical realities
and the worship of ancestors and relatives according to the flesh, in the over-
valuation of the “religion of the ancestors” and the “national god” over and
against the universal call to salvation and ecumenicity.102 On the other side,
Bishop Atanasije Jevtic, then an hieromonk preparing his PhD dissertation at
Athens University, was the first to translate and introduce to the Greek public
the work of Father Justin Popovic and especially his now illustrious collection
of articles, Ἄνθρωπος καὶ Θεάνθρωπος [Man and the God-Man], which was pub-
lished in Greek in 1969, and then in different languages. One of the famous
quotations of this book deals exactly with the issue of the church-nation rela-
tionship, summarizing the foregoing patristic tradition in Popovic’s theologi-
cal language:
Father Radovan Bigović, The Orthodox Church in the 21st Century (Belgrade: Foundation
Konrad Adenauer / Christian Cultural Center, 2013); idem, My Brother’s Keeper: Human
Dignity, Freedom and Rights from the Perspective of the Orthodox Church (Alhambra CA:
Sebastian Press, 2013). See also, Vukašin Milićević, “Religion and National/Ethnic Identity
in the Western Balkans: Serbian Orthodox Context,” in Balkan Contextual Theology: An
Introduction, ed. Stipe Odak and Zoran Grozdanov (London: Routledge, 2022), 30–44.
100 Hieromonk Amfilohije Radovic, “Ἡ καθολικότης τῆς Ὀρθοδοξίας: Σομπόρνοστ ἢ ὁ βυθὸς τῆς
ἀλογίας” [The Catholicity of Orthodoxy: Sobornost or the Height of Absurdity,” in the
volume edited by Elias Mastroyannopoulos, Μαρτυρία Ὀρθοδοξίας [Orthodox Witness]
(Athens: Hestia, 1971), 9–39, here 38.
101 Radovic, “Ἡ καθολικότης τῆς Ὀρθοδοξίας,” 36–8.
102 For the manifestations of this view in the current ecclesiastical climate, cf. Pantelis
Kalaitzidis, “The Temptation of Judas: Church and National Identities,” The Greek
Orthodox Theological Review 47 (2002), 357–79.
petty, transient, time-bound aspirations and ways of doing things. Her purpose
is beyond nationality, ecumenical, all-embracing: to unite all men in Christ, all
without exception to nation or race or social strata. “There is neither Jew nor
Greek, there is neither slave nor free, there is neither male nor female: for you are
all one in Christ Jesus,” (Gal. 3:28), because “Christ is all, and in all.” The means
and methods of this all-human God-human union of all in Christ have been pro-
vided by the Church, through the holy sacraments and in her God-human works
(ascetic exertions, virtues). And so it is: in the sacrament of the Holy Eucharist
the ways of Christ and the means of uniting all people are composed and defined
and integrated. Through this mystery, man is made organically one with Christ
and with all the faithful.103
Even under the tragic and very difficult circumstances, defined by the war and
the persecution, it is difficult to reconcile what was said at the beginning of the
1970s with what was done during the 1990s. I have consciously avoided general-
izing the discussion on the complex issue of the attitude and responsibilities of
the Serbian Orthodox Church during the wars and ethnic conflicts of the 1990s
in former Yugoslavia, as such a discussion is neither easy nor can it be con-
ducted without certain presuppositions (such as knowledge of the language
and free access to the relevant sources). It is clear that further research should
be done in this area, while self-criticism and the healing of memories and the
reconciliation process (like the one undertaken in 2012–2013 by the Serbian
Orthodox Bishop Grigorije of Herzegovina [now Serbian Bishop in Germany]
and the Catholic Bishop of Dubrovnik in Croatia ([now Archbishop Coadjutor
of the Archdiocese of Rijeka], Mate Uzinic), is greatly needed.104
103 Justin Popovich, “The Inward Mission of Our Church,” in Orthodox Faith and Life in
Christ, trans. Asterios Gerostergios (Belmont MA: Institute for Byzantine and Modern
Greek Studies, 2005), pp. 23–4. The same essay is also included in a newer version in
Archimandrite Justin Popovich, Man and the God-Man (Alhambra CA: Sebastian Press,
2008).
104 On this, see also Vjekoslav Perica, “Religion in the Balkan Wars,” in Oxford Handbooks Online;
https://www.oxfordhandbooks.com/view/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199935420.001.0001/
oxfordhb-9780199935420-e-37?print=pdf/ (accessed 20 March 2022). For the discussion
on Orthodoxy and democracy in Serbian Orthodoxy see the paper by Branko Seculić,
“Eyes Wide Shut: Discussion about Orthodoxy and Democracy in Serbian Theology and
Thought,” in the present volume.
105 The presentation and analysis of the Russkii Mir is based mainly on the following:
Nicholas Denysenko, “Fractured Orthodoxy in Ukraine and Politics: The Impact of
Patriarch Kyrill’s ‘Russian World,’” Logos: A Journal of Eastern Christian Studies 54.1–2
(2013), 33–68; Sergei Chapnin, “A Church of Empire: Why the Russian Church Chose to
Bless Empire,” First Things (November 2015); Brandon Gallaher, “The Pure Signifier of
Power: Remembering, Repeating and Working through the Significance of the Papacy
and Pope Francis for Eastern Orthodoxy,” in Jan De Volder (ed.), The Geopolitics of Pope
Francis (Leuven: Peeters, 2019), 169–98; Moritz Pieper, “Russkiy Mir: The Geopolitics of
Russian Compatriots Abroad,” Geopolitics 25, no. 3 (2020), 756–79. It takes also advan-
tage from the recent international “Declaration” by Orthodox theologians on the “Russian
World” teaching (see https://publicorthodoxy.org/2022/03/13/a-declaration-on-the-
russian-world-russkii-mir-teaching/#more-10842/ and https://www.polymerwsvolos.org/
2022/03/13/a-declaration-on-the-russian-world-russkii-mir-teaching/ (accessed 19 March
2022). Cf. further in the present contribution for more details on this, and the article by
the Lebanese Orthodox public intellectual Antoine Courban, “Les nations sacralisées des
terres saintes,” https://icibeyrouth.com/monde/50702/ (accessed 21 March 2022). I also
consulted the Address by Metropolitan Hilarion (Alfeyev) of Volokolamsk, Chairman of
the Department of External Church Relations in the Moscow Patriarchate, and de facto
number two of the Russian Orthodox Church. The Address was given at the conference
on “Russia-Ukraine-Belarus: A Common Civilizational Space?” held at the University of
Fribourg in Switzerland, 1 June 2019. Without using the term “Russian World,” the text
of the Address perfectly reflects this idea and defends the political project that sustains
it. See https://mospat.ru/en/news/46324/ and https://orthodoxie.com/en/conference-
in-fribourg-russia-ukraine-belarus-a-common-civilizational-space/ (accessed 23 March
2022).
106 Denysenko, “Fractured Orthodoxy in Ukraine and Politics,” 33.
107 See Gallaher, “The Pure Signifier of Power,” 190.
The Church has taken on a complex ideological significance over the last decade,
not least because of the rise of the concept of Russkiy Mir, or “Russian World.”
This way of speaking presumes a fraternal coexistence of the Slavic peoples –
Russian, Ukrainian, Belarussian – in a single “Orthodox Civilization.” It is a pow-
erful archetype. It is an image of unity that appeals to Russians, because it gives
them a sense of a larger destiny and supports the imperial vision that increas-
ingly characterizes Russian politics. The currency of “Russian World” within the
Church today indicates that Orthodoxy is becoming a political religion. That
the Church has come to mirror the state in its rhetoric and animating vision
is hardly surprising. […] In these cultural circumstances, people in high places
in both the government and Church see that, with an imperial outlook of her
own, Orthodoxy might be able to fill the vacuum left by the defunct Communist
Party in the system of post-Soviet administration. This potential has been clear
even to those functionaries who keep their distance from the Church. The need
for a political religion was formulated by state authorities around 2010 – some-
thing that coincided with the election of Kyrill, a Russian World enthusiast, to
the Patriarchal See of Moscow. It is in one sense natural that church leaders such
as Kyrill would wish to promote a Russian World that transcends the political
boundaries of present-day Russia. Orthodox believers are united theologically
even if they live in different countries, and many are formally united under the
authority of the Patriarch of Moscow. Church leaders are certainly right to fur-
ther this unity, expanding and deepening our friendship in Christ across geo-
graphical borders. But as critics point out, speaking of a Russian World serves the
state more than it serves the Church. It mobilizes religion, especially the esteem
of the Slavic peoples for the Patriarch of Moscow and all Russia, for political pur-
poses. Its primary effect will surely be not church unity, but rather the strength-
ening of Russian influence in Ukraine and Belarus.111
Russia, Ukraine and Belarus constitute one spiritual space framed by the Russian
Orthodox Church. This space was formed over a thousand years, during which
national borders appeared, disappeared and were moved many times, but spiri-
tual commonality remained intact despite numerous external efforts aimed at
shattering this unity. […]
As far back as the 10th century, the diptychs of the Church of Constantinople first
mention the Metropolia of Rus’. Initially the title of its head had no additional
naming of a city, but was just τῆς Ῥωσίας, that is “of Rus.” When Prince Vladimir
Svyatoslavovich and after him the whole Rus’ embraced Christianity, Orthodoxy
became the main spiritual and moral pivot for all the East Slavic ethnic groups
that soon appeared in these territories. That moment marked the outset of the
history of “Holy Rus’” – a historical phenomenon which owed its existence to the
powerful unifying role of the Russian Church in the vast territories of the Great,
Little and White Rus’ and in other territories which at different times were in the
sphere of its influence.
[…] [I]t was the Church of Constantinople that defended the unity of the Russian
Metropolia in the 12th century. Patriarch Luke Chrysoberges added a word “all”
to the old title of Metropolitan of Kiev – τῆς πάσης Ῥωσίας (“of All Rus’”) – in
order to emphasize the indivisibility of the Russian Church.
[…] Signs of crisis in the life of the Soviet Union were constantly increasing in the
late 1980s. […] On 17 March 1991, the all-Union referendum, the only one in the
history of the USSR, was conducted on whether to preserve the united state or
not. The majority of citizens of the Soviet Union voted in favor of its preservation.
However, on 8 December 1991, leaders of the three USSR Republics – Ukraine,
111 Sergei Chapnin, “A Church of Empire: Why the Russian Church chose to Bless Empire,”
First Things (November 2015).
On the other hand, the disintegration of the united state and establishment on
its basis of a whole number of independent countries with their own views on
future development caused numerous divisions that affected not only territo-
ries, but also people, their families. […]
By God’s mercy the disintegration of the Soviet Union did not bring about the
disintegration of our Church, which now, just like hundreds of years ago, carries
out its mission in the lands of its historical presence.
The unity of the Russian Church is the most important aspect of spiritual and
cultural commonality of the Slavic nations in the post-Soviet countries – of
the Russians, Ukrainians and Belarusians. Disregard for this historical fact and,
moreover, attempts to shatter this unity, as well as interference of authorities
and politicians in church affairs with the view of gaining momentary benefits
are a crime against this and future generations.
[…] We believe that the one Church is the strong Church. Its strength lies not in
the secular attributes of power, welfare or might, but in its ability to exert spiri-
tual and moral influence on human souls, on the attitude to those near and those
far off, and even on the relations between nations and people on the global level.
We pursue the upholding of Gospel values in the life of European society because
Orthodox people in many countries of pastoral responsibility of our Church live
in Europe. Their faith, spiritual ideals, culture and traditions bring an important
contribution to the European Christian heritage. Therefore, we bear our part of
responsibility for civilizational space of the European continent.
We cannot stay indifferent to the attempts to destroy the traditions of the fam-
ily, to erode the notion of Christian marriage and the God-commanded founda-
tions of relations between man and woman, and to abortions and euthanasia
that devalue human life.
At all international forums, including the European ones in the first place, we
bear witness to the Gospel truth. This witness, as well as acts of mercy and peace-
making serve the reinforcing of the Christian roots of Europe and foundations
of its civilization.
As to the question put in the title of our conference, I would like to underscore
that Russia, Ukraine and Belarus are one spiritual space. We contest neither
national self-identification of the three Slavic nations, nor the boundaries of
the independent states, but we will continue our struggle for the preservation
of the unity of the Russian Orthodox Church which assures spiritual unity of
all Orthodox believers living within its space irrespective of their national and
ethnic belonging. Simple words of the holy elder Lavrenty of Chernigov “Russia,
Ukraine, Belarus – all these are Holy Rus’” remain topical and resound in the
hearts of millions of people.112
The whole “Russian World” idea and the way it has been implemented meet
the main criteria of ethnotheology, i.e., the pre-eminence of the political and
national element over the ecclesial, the uniqueness of Russia as a Christian
civilization, and the understanding of faith in terms of culture, civilization,
and ancestral heritage, as well as the inversion of the paradoxical and anti-
nomic relationship between eschatology and history, or the oblivion of the
biblical “in the world, but not of the world, for the sake of the world.” Thus,
according to the “Russian World” teaching, there is a transnational Russian
sphere or civilization or ecumene (another translation for the word mir) or
peace (an alternative translation for mir along the lines of the Pax Romana),
called Holy Russia or Holy Rus’ (to make a clear reference to the connection of
all “Russian” peoples to the Baptism of Rus’) that includes Russia, Ukraine and
Belarus (and sometimes Moldova and Kazakhstan) as well as ethnic Russians
and Russian-speaking people throughout the world. It thus introduces an
ecclesiological conception that understands the church on the ethnocul-
tural identity of its members (“phyletism”). It holds that this “Russian World”
is bonded together by a common spiritual center (Kyiv as the “mother of all
Rus”), a common political center (Moscow), a common language (Russian), a
common church (the Russian Orthodox Church, Moscow Patriarchate), and a
common Patriarch (the Patriarch of Moscow) who works in “symphony” with
a common president/national leader (Putin) to govern this Russian World, as
well as upholding a common distinctive spirituality, morality, and culture.113
Thus, Patriarch Kyrill is supposed to work
With all these ideological characteristics, it becomes clear that a central place
in the “Russian World” is occupied “not by a nation but an imagined civiliza-
tion. In this regard, the Russian world is one of those ‘imagined communities’
described by Benedict Anderson. As an ideology, the Russian word does not
reflect an empirical reality but resides in and captivates the imagination of a
people.”115
In addition, and as a logical consequence, on the occasion of Patriarch
Kyrill’s meeting with Pope Francis in Havana in 2016, he described himself in
his remarks to the press as the Patriarch of “All Russia,” meaning, in his own
view, the “historical [i.e., greater] Russia.” If that is the case, then and as soon as
the Moscow Patriarchate and its leader constitute the canonical Church of his-
torical Russia and the bearer of its eternal Orthodox values, and it is Patriarch
Kyrill, rather than the Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew of Constantinople
(regarded in this light as the Second Rome), who is the only legitimate leader
of the Orthodox worldwide.116 Or to put it in other words, with reference to
the conflict between the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople and the
Moscow Patriarchate, “Kyrill’s mobilization of a trans- and multi-national
Russian World consolidated through the Moscow Patriarchate serves as a sober
reminder that in practice, global Orthodoxy has two competing ‘ecumenical
patriarchates’ in Constantinople and Moscow.”117
Commenting on the close and supposed indissoluble ties between all these
parts and components of the notorious “Russian World” and highlighting their
implications for the 2014 Donbas war and the annexation of Crimea (as well
as for the current Russian invasion of Ukraine, I would add), Deacon Brandon
Gallaher explains that following this “ethnophyletist ideology,” the division
“of Russia from Ukraine is quite unnatural (hence the present spiritual and
political crisis of the Russian Federation and the Moscow Patriarchate given
its clash with Ukraine).” And he concludes, by criticizing the 2016 Havana
Joint Declaration between Patriarch Kyrill and Pope Francis, that “the break
between the two nations, the Joint Declaration claims, is not due to any
Kyrill […] identifies the city of Kyiv and contemporary Ukraine as key agents on
the Russian World strategy, equal to Moscow in the propagation of his Russian
World. Kyrill refers to Kyiv as the “mother of Rus’ cities” […] that is now poised
to become “one of the most important political and public centers of the
Russian World.” The role of Kyiv and Ukraine is to vivify the ideal of ecumenical
Orthodoxy by contributing to the development of Rus’ civilization. Kyrill clearly
establishes the active agency of Kyiv and Ukraine in building the Russian World
as opposed to being “locked in its nationalist cell.” Kyrill envisions Ukraine’s
role by presenting a contradistinction between embracing all people through a
Russian World and choosing isolation in nationalism through Orthodox ecclesio-
logical vocabulary, as Ukraine is to “preserve Holy Orthodoxy and manifest in its
life its all-peoples or ecumenical character – to be a home for many people.”119
Thus, according to the 2016 Havana Joint Declaration, the “Russian world” is
regarded as an exemplary, holistic and providential Christian civilization that
has experienced an “unprecedented renewal of Christian faith” after a long
period under the communist atheist regime (§14). The Orthodox heritage and
experience of the “first millennium of Christianity” (§4) ascribes to the Russian
world a unique position of uninterrupted Christian witness in our modern
world, which is characterized by the bold secularization of Western Europe.
To the degree that Russia remains the last genuine Orthodox Christian civiliza-
tion, it is a sort of God-inspired imperative to fight terrorism (§11), to protect
Christian victims of violence in the Middle East and North Africa (§§8–11),
and to support and cultivate peace, bring justice, and do everything one can to
avoid a “new world war” (§11).120
The “Russian world” ideology appears then to be a form of civilizational
nationalism with a clearly Messianic character that includes a full-scale
Over and against the West and those Orthodox who have fallen into schism and
error (such as Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew and other local Orthodox
churches that support him) stands the Moscow Patriarchate, along with Vladimir
Putin, as the true defenders of Orthodox teaching, which they view in terms of
traditional morality, a rigorist and inflexible understanding of tradition, and ven-
eration of Holy Russia.123
It is hard not to see in all these actions and talks the influence and reason-
ing of the Russian philosopher and ideologist Alexander Dugin who serves
as personal advisor of President Putin. Over against the failure of the three
dominant political theories of the 20th century, i.e., capitalism, communism,
and fascism, Dugin suggests inventing a fourth theory rooted in traditional
spiritualities in order to face the future in a victorious way. So, according to this
Russian thinker who is very close to Putin’s system of power, one has to guard
against Western postmodernity, by force of arms, to preserve unconditionally
the geopolitical sovereignty of the Eurasian continental powers: Russia, China,
Iran, India, guarantors of the freedom of the people of the world. The very core
of this Eurasian ideal is none other than Russkii Mir. Moscow is therefore, in
Dugin’s view, the pivot of this continental fellowship/collectivity. Against this
morbid West and all those who support it stands the Third Rome, a fortress
of inflexible tradition, that of the Holy Russia and its people, guardian of an
Orthodox truth that will determine “the salvation of every man,” according
to the homily of Patriarch Kyrill at the cathedral church of Christ the Savior,
in the Kremlin on Sunday 6 March 2022.124
121 Gallaher, “The Pure Signifier of Power,” 191; Kristina Stoeckl, The Russian Orthodox Church
and Human Rights (Oxford/New York: Routledge, 2014).
122 Gallaher, “The Pure Signifier of Power,” 173–4.
123 See “Declaration.”
124 Courban, “Les nations sacralisées des terres saintes.”
The war crimes and crimes against humanity committed in the name of the
Orthodox tradition during the recent Russian invasion of Ukraine did not
remained theologically unaddressed. The barbarian acts justified theologically
by Patriarch Kyrill (in his sermon of March 6, 2022, the Sunday of Forgiveness,
the last Sunday before the beginning of the Great Lent in the Orthodox cal-
endar) on the basis of the “Russian World” teaching (both the Patriarch and
President Putin routinely justify the invasion of Ukraine on the basis of bringing
it back into the fold of the “Russian world”), the Anti-Western rhetoric, and the
appealing to the “metaphysical meaning of the war,” provoked strong reactions
and emotion both among the Orthodox and Christians of other traditions, as
well as religious and secular people. Far from condemning Russian aggression
against Ukraine, the Russian Orthodox Church constantly repeats Kremlin pro-
paganda about the invasion of Ukraine as a “special military operation” aimed
at “de-nazistification,” and the protection of the break-away Donbas region of
Ukraine against Ukrainian aggression and Western ideas, such as gay rights. All
these concerns led a group of pioneering Eastern Orthodox Christian schol-
ars around the world to unite with one voice in a sound “Declaration on the
‘Russian World’ (Russkii mir) Teaching” that denounces the religious ideology
driving Vladimir Putin’s invasion and repudiating the Russian Patriarch’s sup-
port of the war in Ukraine. As noted in a relevant press release, over against
this ideology, Orthodox scholars uphold the original teachings of Jesus in the
New Testament and the writings of the church fathers. Among other things,
the “Declaration” affirms:
That the church should not subject itself to the state or become an agent of the
state for the promotion of geopolitical goals dictated by personal ambition or
the assertion of superiority of one group over another, such as Russians over
Ukrainians.
That love is the core of the Christian message and that engaging in war is the
ultimate failure of Jesus’ commandment of love.
The “Declaration” of the Orthodox theologians did not fail to call to mind
that “the principle of the ethnic organization of the Church was condemned
at the Council of Constantinople in 1872” and that “the false teaching of
ethno-phyletism is the basis for the ‘Russian world’ ideology.” It also notes
that “if we hold such false principles as valid, then the Orthodox Church
ceases to be the Church of the Gospel of Jesus Christ, the Apostles, the
Nicene-Constantinopolitan Creed, the Ecumenical Councils, and the Fathers
of the Church.”
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156 Pantelis Kalaitzidis
To date (6 April 2022), the “Declaration” has had over 130,000 views on
different websites and social media; it has been published into 19 languages
(English, Russian, Ukrainian, Greek, French, Italian, Romanian, Serbian,
Bulgarian, Georgian, Arabic, Dutch, German, Finnish, Croatian, Estonian,
Hungarian, Japanese, Polish), and has been signed by more than 1,300 individ-
uals (bishops, priests, theologians, scholars, and ordinary faithful; the number
of signatories rises every day) from all over the world (Russia itself included),
from the north and the south, from the East and the West, from Europe and
the Americas. Drawing on elements and schemata from two historic ecclesial
texts, the “Synodikon of Orthodoxy” (843 AD), and the “Barmen Declaration”
(1934), the “Declaration” of Orthodox theologians was prompt to express “uni-
versal Christian values” and has been signed not only by Orthodox but also by
Christians of other traditions as the latter recognized it contained universal
Christian truths.125
Perhaps the most severe and radical critique of the “Russian World”
comes from an Orthodox public intellectual from Lebanon, a place where
traditionally – but especially since the Syrian war – the politico-religious influ-
ence of Russia has been strongly felt. It is not merely a condemnation but
rather a warning against and in-depth analysis of the risks encountered by the
prevalence of this ideology:
125 The full English original text of the “Declaration” can be found on these websites:
https://publicorthodoxy.org/2022/03/13/a-declaration-on-the-russian-world-russkii-
mir-teaching/#more-10842/ and https://www.polymerwsvolos.org/2022/03/13/a-
declaration-on-the-russian-world-russkii-mir-teaching/ (accessed 27 March 2022).
126 Courban, “Les nations sacralisées des terres saintes.”
Having described in some detail certain trends tending toward various ver-
sions of ethnotheology, one can clearly see that anti-Westernism is regarded
as the common denominator and an implied or subconscious perception that
truth is fully realized within the confines of history and culture, a tendency to
consider culture, history, and even the state (the “Christian” one) as the locus
(topos) of the realization of truth and authenticity. In other words, there is a
peculiar sense of immanence, a “sacred” and “theoptic” but at the same time
intra-historic perspective that goes so far as to identify truth and authentic-
ity with specific given historical forms, with cultures or civilizations labeled
“Holy,” “Christian” or indeed “Orthodox,” such as Byzantium, Romiosyne, Holy
Russia, the medieval Christian kingdom of Serbia, etc. This peculiar sense of
immanence leaves no room for the eschatological outlook and expectation,
for the utopian character (from the Greek οὐτοπία, οὐ-τόπος, utopia, no land, no
locus) of Christian preaching about the kingdom of God. In other words, it
makes no room for the anticipation and vision of another world, for the dialec-
tics between the present and the future – the “already” and the “not yet,” the
lasting city and the city to come – nor to the ultimately migratory character of
Christian existence,127 or to the reality of the “in part” and “in a mirror, dimly”
which defines our present experience (cf. 1 Cor 13:9–12).
Trapped in this peculiar, secularized eschatology, we remain virtually
unaware of the radical changes that the broader New Testament perspective
has introduced, such as the overcoming of exclusivity, radical “delocalization,”
and a radical cancellation of geographical borders – ideas that come into direct
conflict with the identification of truth with a particular land, a particular his-
torical form, or a particular state and people. In this perspective, there is no
place for theories about a “chosen people” or a “promised land” – there is no
room, in other words, for any “sacred” geography or topography, for any kind of
idolization of religion and nation, for a paganism of the land or the homeland,
for “God-bearing” people, or for the various forms of collective conceit, such as
nationalism, whether it be secular or ecclesiastical, ethnic or cultural.
The most reliable historical and theological/liturgical references128 inform
us that the concept of “holy places” only started in the time of Constantine and
127 Cf. Heb 13:14: “For here we have no lasting city, but we are looking for the city that is to
come.”
128 Bernanrd Flusin, “Religious Life, Christians and the Mundane – Monasticism,” in the vol-
ume: Cécile Morrisson (ed.), Le Monde byzantin, vol 1: L’Empire romain d’Orient, 330–641
(Paris: PUF, 2004), 228, which also includes a rich bibliography; Gregory of Nyssa, Letter 2:
On Pilgrimages to Jerusalem, PG 46, 1009C, 1012D, 1015C–1016A. (English translation by
that it was unknown and foreign to early Christianity. Given that, we can easily
imagine what a tragic misunderstanding of the Christian faith and the spiritual
life resulted from this association – or even worse, identification – with a land,
an empire, with a governmental and historical form, with a special culture and
civilization. From this perspective, this identification forms a peculiar cultural
theology or ethnotheology.
Historical Orthodoxy’s connection with a particular place and culture, or
with a particular nation, appears to be the most serious – but unfortunately
not the only – obstacle in Orthodoxy’s attempt to adapt to the new conditions
of globalization that so frightens the Orthodox. It is worth mentioning here the
analysis provided by the French professor Olivier Roy,129 a specialist in political
Islam and religious phenomena. According to Roy, with globalization – with
satellite TV, the internet and virtual networks – religions that are overly con-
nected or identified with a particular place or culture, such as Orthodoxy and
Roman Catholicism, have greater difficulty adapting. Conversely, religious tra-
ditions that are noted for their mobility, their disconnection from any particu-
lar culture and from being entrapped by narrow geographical limits, such as
Evangelical Protestantism and Salafi Islam, move with greater ease and have
greater “success” in the “free” religious market. The implications here are obvi-
ous and alarming, especially for the Orthodox and for those who insist on iden-
tifying religion with ethno-cultural identity.
In Place of a Conclusion
The above remarks make me think that the time has come to pose some pain-
ful questions about our ecclesial self-awareness. For example, if we believe that
the church images and prepares the coming Kingdom of God, a new world
of love, justice, reconciliation, and communion with God and fellow human
beings, then we should accept that all people potentially belong to the church:
Jews and Gentiles, slaves and free, men and women, thus overcoming all kinds
of divisions (race, sex, religion, culture, social class, hierarchy and office) in
William Moore and Henry Austin Wilson, Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, 2nd series, vol. 5,
ed. Philip Schaff and Henry Wace [Edinburgh: T&T Clark, 1892], 42–3.); Father Alexander
Schmemann, Introduction to Liturgical Theology, trans. by Asheleigh E. Moorehouse
(Crestwood NY: St Vladimir’s Seminary Press, 2003), 116; idem, For the Life of the World
(Crestwood NY: St Vladimir’s Seminary Press, 2002), 20.
129 See Olivier Roy, Sainte Ignorance: Le Temps de la Religion sans Culture (Paris: Seuil, 2008);
English edition: Holy Ignorance. When Religion and Culture Part Ways, trans. Ros Schwartz
(London: Hurst & Company, 2010).
Christ, to recall St. Paul’s relevant quotations (Gal 3:27–28; Col 3:10–11). If we
consider the church to be a spiritual genos, a spiritual homeland, with its truth
lying beyond and above the earthly nations and earthly homelands, then for
Christians there is only one homeland, the spiritual homeland of every per-
son longing for God, according to Gregory of Nazianzus.130 In critical and
extremely difficult moments (e.g., Turkish occupation), the Orthodox Church
in the Balkans and the East emptied itself in a kenotic mood, deviated from its
main mission and undertook the role of saving a genos/an ethnos, its language,
existence, and political representation. But it is a completely different reality
today in which the (secular) state and the wider historical context by no means
resemble the centuries of the Ottoman rule.
In the context of a multinational, pluralistic, postmodern society, Orthodoxy
seems to be exhausting the theological and spiritual richness of its patristic and
eucharistic tradition in a rhetoric of “identities,” and in an outdated religious
phyletism and tribalism that goes in the opposite direction of the ethos and
practice inspired by the Gospel. The theocratic dreams of some lay and espe-
cially Orthodox monastics as well as the insistence of many Orthodox coun-
tries to understand Orthodoxy as merely a part of their ethnocultural identity
and heritage undermines any serious attempt by Orthodoxy to finally meet the
challenges posed by the modern world, thus condemning it to traditionalism,
fundamentalism, social conservatism, and anachronism.
But theocracy, ethnotheology, and neo-nationalism, which are nothing
more than secularized forms of eschatology, constitute the permanent his-
torical temptation of Orthodoxy and cannot by any means continue to be the
political proposal of the Orthodox Church in the 21st century. It is time to close
the parenthesis that began in 1453 with the fall of Constantinople and for the
Church to return to its fundamental mission, which is the witness to the Gospel
and the transformation of the world and humanity. To the thirst of today’s per-
sons for life, the church can and must respond with its own proposal of life,
with its own “words of eternal life” (Jn 6:68), and not by constantly invoking its
contribution to the historical battles of the nation. That is why the adoption of
an ecumenical ecclesial discourse, free from constant references to the nation
and the forms of the Constantine era, is not merely a demand for authentic-
ity and fidelity to the Orthodox tradition; it is at the same time an absolutely
necessary and urgent prerequisite for our Church to enter the century we live
in and not find refuge in bygone eras.
130 Gregory of Nazianzus, Against the Arians, and Concerning Himself (Oration 33), PG 36,
col. 229; idem, Oration 24, PG 35, col. 1188; idem, Panegyric on His Brother St Caesarius
(Oration 7), PG 35, col. 785.
K. M. George (Kondothra)
1 Paulos Gregorios, William H. Lazareth and Nikos A. Nissiotis (eds.), Does Chalcedon Divide
or Unite? (Geneva: WWC, 1981), ix–xii; On the six “Oriental Orthodox Churches,” see also
R.G. Roberson, The Eastern Christian Churches: A Brief Survey (Rome: Pontifical Oriental
Institute, 2016).
2 The four unofficial conversations between the Eastern Orthodox and the Oriental Orthodox
families took place in a series: Aarhus 1964, Bristol 1967, Geneva 1970 and Addis Ababa 1971.
The Dialogue
The unofficial dialogue between the Eastern and the Oriental churches started
in 1964 under the auspices of the Faith and Order Commission of the WCC
through the joint initiative of Prof. Nikos Nissiotis, then director of the Bossey
Ecumenical Institute, and Father Paul Verghese (later Metropolitan Paulos Mar
Gregorios of New Delhi from the Malankara Orthodox Church), then Associate
General Secretary of the WCC. This dialogue was taken up at the official level
from 1985 onwards, in meetings that took place in Chambésy, Geneva and
Amba Bishoy Monastery of the Coptic Church in Egypt. Both the unofficial and
official dialogues resolved the 1500-year-old Christological dispute and came
to the formal conclusion that both families of churches held the same apos-
tolic faith, though linguistic, terminological and cultural issues in the 5th cen-
tury exacerbated the Christological issue that had divided them.3 In a meeting
in Chambésy, Geneva, follow-up steps were suggested by the joint commission
in order to bring the two families to full Eucharistic communion. There was
a follow-up meeting of a core committee held in Athens as recently as 2014.4
The unity in faith of the Oriental Orthodox Churches is underscored by
their great diversity in terms of culture, race, language and liturgy. Unlike
in the Eastern Orthodox Churches, which are held together by the common
Byzantine liturgical tradition, the Oriental Orthodox churches have no com-
mon Eucharistic liturgical order that they can celebrate together. They are pri-
marily African and Asian churches, (provided the “Middle East” of European
colonial geography is more appropriately called West Asia), and their spiri-
tual sensibility and liturgical-theological ethos are very close to the Eastern
Orthodox Churches, and, of course, doubly removed from the Western Roman
Catholic and Protestant traditions.
society. As it is too risky and unfair to make sweeping statements on a vast cul-
turally and liturgically diverse family such as the Oriental Orthodox Churches,
I shall limit myself to my own Indian Church’s practice as a case in point.
Let me say at the very beginning that I take the word synod in its etymologi-
cal sense of “taking the same road” or “walking together” (syn+hodos) because
it provides a beautiful and tangible image to anyone in any cultural setting. I
do not wish here to go into the technical meaning the word synod has acquired
in several churches, where it is a formal assembly of bishops to transact offi-
cial agenda. But in my ancient apostolic Malankara Orthodox Church in India
today, whenever we use the word synod for the meeting of bishops, we qualify it
with the adjective “episcopal” because, in our earlier tradition, a synod meant a
representative assembly of the whole church – lay people and priests together
with the bishops. This assembly is still the highest decision-making body. Since
the number of elected lay representatives from parishes is proportional to the
number of parish members, the majority in the assembly are laypeople. They
meet every five years, elect the regular governing bodies, and when necessary,
elect the bishops and the Catholicos, and make necessary amendments in
the constitution of the Malankara church. Every member whether layperson,
priest or bishop has only one vote.
Unlike in earlier ages when authority structures were very clear in church
and society, our present world lives in conditions of confusion and uncertainty.
On the one hand, liberal democracies emphasize individual freedom whereas
theocratic societies and dictatorial regimes with fascist tendencies place great
restrictions on individual freedom on the other. These tendencies exist side by
side in our contemporary world. Secularism and irreligion coexist with reli-
gious fundamentalist tendencies. It is in between such extremities that the
members of the church are seeking counsel and guidance.
We may identify at least a few christological, pneumatological, and trinitar-
ian principles that underlie the practice of synodical democracy in the Church.
Spirit and to us” (Acts 15:28) became the fundamental principle of synodality
in the Church. The experience of a genuine sisbro (sister-brother) feeling in
Christ and the consultative mode of church governance guided by the Holy
Spirit constitute the synodical character of the Church. The way of life of the
early church was synodical at its best. Whether it was a matter of election to
a responsible position or urgent ethical and legal issues affecting the commu-
nity, there was a great effort to promote consensus among the members of the
church and dependence on the guidance of the Holy Spirit.
there is no hierarchy in the Trinity in the sense of our human logic of order
and number, as taught to us by fathers like St Basil of Caesarea and St Gregory
the Theologian, a genuine reflection of divine perichoresis in the Church would
help us envisage a new world order in radically different ways. Jesus very clearly
draws a contrast between the mode of authority as exercised by rulers in this
world and the mode of authority exercised by his followers. “You know that
the rulers of the gentiles lord it over them, and their great ones are tyrants
over them” (Matthew 20:25). He is emphatic when he says to the disciples: “It
will not be so among you; but whoever wishes to be great among you, must be
your servant […] just as the Son of Man came not to be served but to serve, and
to give his life a ransom for many” (Matthew 20:25–28). This is radically sub-
versive in the sense that He turns our sense of hierarchy and the order of our
perceived reality upside down. The values of the kingdom of God are clearly
distinguished from the norms of the order of the world. Jesus literally exempli-
fied this when he washed the feet of his own disciples.
themselves from favoring any religion or promoting the doctrines of one reli-
gion. In other words, a democratic system is not required to have any reference
to a transcendent reality.
The classical tradition of India includes the history of a great ruler called Ashoka
(ca. 268–239 BCE) who became the emperor of a large part of India some
500 years before Constantine became the emperor of Rome. He accepted the
Buddhist way of life and became a conscientious follower of the Buddha who
had lived 300 years before him. Like Constantine who accepted the Christian
faith and became its defender some 300 years after the incarnate life of Jesus
Christ, Ashoka became the defender of Buddhism and sent out missionaries
to Asian countries and as far as the Mediterranean coast. Unlike Constantine,
Ashoka laid down all his weapons as a Buddhist after witnessing a bloody
war with a neighboring kingdom, became a great pacifist, embraced the great
Indian principle of Ahimsa or non-violence, and erected pillars and rock edicts
throughout India urging people to practice compassion to all creatures, care
for the common good, and toleration and harmony among the various compet-
ing religions.
Ashoka’s period illustrated “what the ruler and the ruled owed to one
another,” as phrased in a recent article by Rajeev Bhargava, a political theo-
rist in Delhi.7 The Indian word for emperor is chakravarti, a Sanskrit word
that means “one who turns the wheel.” The chakra or wheel is that of dharma
(dhamma in Pali), that is, the law inspired by morality. Buddha turned the
wheel of dharma in the religious, philosophical and ethical spheres. You can
still see a wheel in the state emblem of India, adapted from an extant stone
sculpture with Ashoka’ s edicts that was erected in Sarnath in 250 BCE, (near
the city of Benares), where Buddha preached his first sermon. Bhargava says
that the turning of the wheel is a radical restructuring of the world in accor-
dance with a politico-moral vision. The king initiates political and administra-
tive measures inspired by public morality with the goal of justice, peace and
prosperity for his subjects. The conquest of other kingdoms is to occur not by
physical force but by the moral appeal of dharma. The Pillar Edict 7 shows that
compliance with dharma must arise largely from nijjihattiya (persuasion), not
only from niyama (legislation). The people have to internalize dharma because
it is good, not merely because the ruler so commands. Pillar Edict 6 speaks
about the welfare and happiness of all living beings in this world and hereaf-
ter in heaven. The Buddha sent the missionaries on a totally peaceful mission,
whose principle was the welfare and happiness of all people (bahujanahitaya,
bahujanasukhaya).
The king or ruler is not above dharma but is subject to the collective moral
order that all people have to follow. He is not just a ruler, but the leader, teacher,
father, healer and moral exemplar. These principles practiced by the emperor
Ashoka are relevant in modern democracy and its ideals of justice, tolerance,
freedom, equality and civic friendship. “The Chakravarti tradition remains a
valuable resource for our democratic republic” (Bhargava).
The second decade of the 21st century was marked by the pervasive use and
influence of social media – Facebook, Whatsapp, Twitter and Instagram, in
addition to hundreds of TV channels and traditional print media. Since, given
that this phenomenon is totally new, we are now completely taken up with it,
we are unable to make a thorough judgment from within. In a political demo-
cratic system, the role played by the social media is still being hotly debated.
There are positive and negative elements. Some of the positive aspects are:
– unlike print media and TV channels, social media provide instant opportu-
nities to debate or respond to an issue
– the participation of the people in a debate on common political and social
interest can be maximized, provided all people can make use of the social
media and there is complete connectivity
– all social hierarchies are abolished, and everyone irrespective of one’s posi-
tion, age, religion, gender, nationality, location and profession can take part
and voice their opinion in any issue.
– a literally global discussion on any subject is possible since the net is literally
worldwide
– voters can interact directly with their elected representatives to bring their
issues to parliament or the constitutional assembly
– people can challenge their political leaders individually and collectively
without fear of physical suppression or retaliation
– mass movements for social and political change that once required a bloody
political revolution can be organised on the Internet in a possibly non-
violent manner.
These are some of the very important positive features that underscore social
media. In a way, they were embedded as fundamental principles in the notion
of democracy from the very beginning in ancient Greece to contemporary
India.
The negative elements are now clear to all users of social media:
– generating and spreading fake news continue to haunt democratic govern-
ments in many countries; this is particularly venomous in times of election.
– the enormous waste of words and images wantonly thrown up on the Net
through social media does not edify society nor promote democracy in a
creative way; it undermines many of humanity’s venerable principles
– human freedom in a democratic system that goes along with responsibility,
care for the other and concern for the common good is increasingly abused
on social media without any controls
– the evil forces of jealousy and vengeance can jeopardise great educational
and social causes
– the concept of post-truth itself arises mainly from the negative use of social
media in relativizing factual truth and erasing all ethical norms in favour of
political or financial gain.
Tanmoy Chakraborty, then product manager at Facebook, discusses the effect
of social media on democracy.8 He frankly admits that social media, which was
heralded as the technology of liberation during the time of the Arab Spring,
can damage even a well-functioning democracy. He laments that Facebook,
originally designed to connect friends and family, is now being used in unfore-
seen ways with societal repercussions that were never anticipated because
unprecedented numbers of people channel their political energy through this
medium. The use of social media as an information weapon for cyberwar, as a
forum for hate speech, hoaxes, misinformation and disruption of social causes
increasingly offsets its positive features. The phenomenon social scientists call
“confirmation bias” is corrupting the value of social media since its users are
drawn to information that strengthens their preferred narratives, and they
reject information that undermines those narratives.
8 “Hard Questions: What Effect Does Social Media Have on Democracy?”, 22 January 2018,
https://about.fb.com/news/2018/01/effect-social-media-democracy/.
Conclusion
De nominibus
1 See the extensive bibliography in: Pantelis Kalaitzidis, Ὀρθοδοξία καὶ Νεωτερικότητα.
Προλεγόμενα [Orthodoxy and Modernity: Prolegomena] (Athens: Indiktos, 2007; to be pub-
lished in English translation by Brill/Schöningh in the fall of 2022 under the title: Orthodoxy
and Modernity: Introducing a Constructive Encounter); Vasilios N. Makrides, “Orthodox
Christianity, Modernity and Postmodernity: Overview, Analysis and Assessment,” Religion,
State & Society 40, nos. 3–4 (2012): 248–85; Paul Ladouceur, Modern Orthodox Theology
(London: T&T Clark, 2019); Nikolaos Asproulis, “Östliche Orthodoxie und (Post-)Moderne:
Eine unbehagliche Beziehung,” Una Sancta 74 (2019): 13–37.
(Farnham: Ashgate, 2012). Cf. Zygmunt Bauman, Modernity and Ambivalence (Ithaca NY:
Cornell University Press, 1991).
4 Hans Blumenberg, Die Legitimität der Neuzeit, 6th ed. (Frankfurt am Main: Suhrkamp, 2012).
5 On the importance of Kant’s “Copernican turn” for the self-understanding of modernity, see
Blumenberg, Die Legitimität der Neuzeit; idem, Die kopernikanische Wende (Frankfurt am
Main: Suhrkamp, 1965); Alfredo Ferrarin, The Powers of Pure Reason: Kant and the Idea of
Cosmic Philosophy (Chicago IL: University of Chicago Press, 2015), the emphasis on Kant in
this contribution has a rather symbolic character because of the centrality of his thought in
Western modernity and is not meant to underestimate the complexity, variety and impor-
tance of other currents that shaped and continue to shape the modern world philosophically.
6 Cf. the remarks in Makrides, “Orthodox Christianity, Modernity and Postmodernity,” 273–4.
also the coexistence of people adopting secular views with the faithful of vari-
ous religions and denominations in the same social contexts.
7 E. Hirsch, Geschichte der neuern evangelischen Theologie im Zusammenhang mit den allge-
meinen Bewegungen des europäischen Denkens (Gütersloh: Bertelsmann, 1949–1954.)
8 See Paul Gavrilyuk, Georges Florovsky and the Russian Religious Renaissance (Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 2013); Paul Ladouceur, Modern Orthodox Theology, especially 59–156.
9 Vasilios Stefanidis, Ἐκκλησιαστικὴ ἱστορία ἀπ’ ἀρχῆς μέχρι σήμερον [Church History: From the
Beginnings until Today], 2nd ed. (Athens 1959); Daniel P. Payne, The Revival of Political
of his times less solid than Christos Yannaras’ reading (b. 1935)?10 In spite of
reservations regarding some of its contents, is Christos Androutsos’ (1869–
1935) rigorous system not important, also because of its academic methodol-
ogy, in comparison to later Orthodox aversions to any notion of a system and
the Orthodox recourse to essay form with its pros and contras?11 How many
contributions of Father Bulgakov to a discussion with modernity have been
overlooked because of his attitude in the sophiological controversy?12
I do not propose a radically revisionist reading of the history of Orthodox
theology; rather, I am arguing for a more nuanced approach to its past. Some
quite strongly polemic, “ideological” readings of it are available, but a rigorous
scholarly history of Orthodox theology in the second millennium has yet to be
written.13 And it is an interesting question as to why it has not yet appeared –
and also why some encounters like the ones I mentioned above could not prove
fruitful on a larger scale. Should the notion of Western influence be always eval-
uated negatively?14 And should an Orthodox encounter with modernity always
retain a strong confessional character? Should it have to be demonstrably
Orthodox? Does one serve one’s confession by strengthening confessionalism?
After the short comment on history above, I would like to structure the main
part of my contribution according to four fundamental questions formu-
lated by one of the great figures of modernity, Immanuel Kant.15 In a certain
way, these include the core of the challenge of (post)modernity and (post-)
secularism.
1) By asking “What can I know?”, Kant accentuates what is perhaps the most
decisive point for the Copernican turn associated with modernity. “What can
I know?” is directly connected to “How I know” and has serious implications
for the understanding of authority and power in modernity. The quest for solid
criteria for knowledge characterizes the whole history of modern thought from
Descartes’ Discours de la méthode right up until Jürgen Habermas and modern
philosophy of mind or neurophilosophy.16 Modern individuals are also reluc-
tant to become members of religious communities because of doubts about the
validity of the faith preached by them. While Roman Catholic and Protestant
theologies tried to respond extensively to this challenge from neo-Thomism
and natural theology to Karl Barth’s prophetic pathos, Orthodox theology does
not seem to focus sufficiently on this issue. The few serious critiques to modern
approaches to the theory of knowledge17 are often versed in anti-Western con-
texts, emphasizing the supposed individualistic basis of modern gnoseologies
(as if gnoseological challenges can be refuted merely on the basis of ethical
categories) and interpreting it, in the final analysis, as a result of the erroneous
development of Western theology.18 This critique oversimplifies and proposes
monocausal explanations for a very complicated history. Sometimes, it allows
the impression that the critique of theology modernity exercised has nothing
to do with Orthodoxy and its presuppositions: on the contrary, it sounds like a
15 Patrick Frierson, Kant’s Questions: What is the Human Being? (New York: Routledge, 2013).
16 Gottfried Gabriel, Erkenntnis (Berlin: de Gruyter, 2015).
17 On the contrary, numerous studies have been published concerning the gnoseology of
the church fathers. Nevertheless, these are contributions to the history of gnoseology, not
systematic approaches.
18 Cf., e.g., Christos Yannaras, Χάϊντεγγερ καὶ Ἀρεοπαγίτης: Ἢ περὶ ἀγνωσίας καὶ ἀπουσίας τοῦ
Θεοῦ, 2nd rev. ed. (Athens: Domos, 19882); see also the English edition, On the Absence and
Unknowability of God: Heidegger and the Areopagite, trans. Haralambos Ventis (London:
T&T Clark, 2005).
confirmation of its truth because it proves the error of its Latin opponents. The
genealogy of a critique is one thing, and its gnoseological relevance another.
Modernity’s critique of metaphysics is much more radical; it is not directed
only at Western metaphysics but at every religious ontology, including the
Orthodox worldview.19
By representing a polemical attitude toward profane knowledge, fervent
contemporary supporters of Palamism show no will to discuss epistemologi-
cal challenges to their worldview. Theologians who focus more on Maximus
the Confessor’s ontology also seem to overlook radical critiques of medieval
ontologies, however delicate and promising in their speculative vitality such
critiques may sound.20
Modernity criticizes Christianity not only on metaphysical but also his-
torical grounds. The use of the historical-critical exegesis of the Bible and of
approaches to the Christian past that do not presuppose dogmatic-confessional
dependence and pointing to the parallels to Christian doctrines and practices
in other religions inevitably call into question absolute claims made in the
name of Christianity. Many classics of this literature have not been translated
in traditionally Orthodox countries.
It is unrealistic to expect that the relation between faith and reason will
ever find a definite solution. Nevertheless, Orthodox theology could contribute
to this crucial matter on a more solid basis. The challenge is not to articulate
correct, definitive answers but rather to understand the decisive questions.
Orthodox theology could i) liberate itself from anti-Western interpretations of
modern gnoseology; ii) engage in a discussion with truly modern approaches
to knowledge; iii) work more intensively for a stronger connection between
biblical studies and systematic theology; iv) reflect further on hermeneutics,
which is also a crucial condition for a sufficient understanding of tradition;
and v) find the prophetic courage to criticize situations when mythology,
superstition and bigotry is being propagated in the name of faith.
2) The second Kantian question is: “How should I act?” Important contribu-
tions on human rights or democracy, politics and Orthodoxy, etc. appear in
this volume. Therefore, I would just like to focus on one question: What is the
theological and soteriological value of non-religious aspects of life? In spite of
Orthodox critics of the term religion, Orthodoxy insists upon a deeply religious
21 In the West there are theologies of culture, for example Tillich’s, that tried to emphasize
the theological importance of the profane. See Euler Renato Westphal, Secularization,
Cultural Heritage and the Spirituality of the Secular State between Sacredness and
Secularization (Paderborn: Ferdinand Schöningh, 2019).
22 Cf. William Gibson, Dan O’Brien and Marius Turda, eds., Teleology and Modernity
(London: Routledge, 2020).
23 Georgios Vlantis, “In Erwartung des künftigen Äons: Aspekte orthodoxer Eschatologie,”
Ökumenische Rundschau 56 (2007): 170–82; idem, “Pneumatologie und Eschatologie in der
zeitgenössischen orthodoxen Theologie: Richtlinien und Perspektiven,” in Wir glauben an
den Heiligen Geist: XII. Begegnung im bilateralen theologischen Dialog zwischen der EKD
und dem Ökumenischen Patriarchat, ed. Petra Bosse-Huber, Konstantinos Vliagkoftis, and
Wolfram Langpape, Beihefte zur Ökumenischen Rundschau 130 (Leipzig: Evangelische
Verlagsanstalt, 2021), 119–37. Cf. Georg Essen, Geschichtstheologie und Eschatologie in der
Moderne: Eine Grundlegung, Lehr- und Studienbücher zur Theologie 6 (Μünster: LIT
Verlag, 2016).
the Eastern Church have also written marvelous pages on this hope and vision.
But what is their convincing power beyond the context of those who already
believe? How can modern people be persuaded by the eschatological message
of Christianity?
ii) The content of eschatology. What do we mean exactly when we speak
about eschatology? In the 20th century, many Orthodox insisted that eschatol-
ogy is not just the last chapter of dogmatics. This is true, but what about this last
chapter and its very specific content? The Western Churches have made seri-
ous explicit or implicit developments in their eschatological teachings. In his
book Die Zivilisierung Gottes, the German sociologist and theologian Michael
Ebertz summarizes such developments and discusses the dynamics they pro-
voke for the understanding of faith, such as the disappearance of hell from
theological discourse. What is the response of the Orthodox to such issues?24
iii) The character of eschatology. Orthodox theologians criticize nationalis-
tic alienations of Orthodox eschatology that appeared due to the close relation
between Church and state in the Orthodox world. They apply eschatological
teachings to political theology and encourage a realization of the implications
of eschatology for social engagement. What are the criteria of this extension
of eschatological thinking? What does it mean for the Christian thought when
secularized eschatologies are being re-Christianized? Does this broadening of
eschatological thinking make eschatology more convincing in its dogmatic core
or does the latter (and theologically more decisive) still remain problematic?25
4) “What is the human being?” Kant thought that all his three previous ques-
tions are summarized in this one. Anthropology is indeed crucial in modernity,
which is sometimes schematically understood as the passage from theocen-
trism to anthropocentrism. Metropolitan Kallistos Ware claims that anthropol-
ogy will define the agenda of theology in the 21st century.26 This is not yet the
case in Orthodoxy, which has nevertheless started to work in a courageous way
This short remark on critique serves as bridge from the Kantian questions to
the connection of Orthodox theology and the structures of the Church in mod-
ern contexts. For the Orthodox, the Church is the natural place for theology,
even if Orthodox theology mostly flourishes in contexts where the connection
with Church hierarchy does not suffocate it.29 The encounter of Orthodox the-
ology with modernity is expected to have an impact on Church life, but this
presupposes adequate structures in the Church. The faithful live in the modern
world and have concerns that come directly from their contexts; their voice
should be heard in the structures of the Church and be further elaborated.
Synodality is indeed a central point in the Orthodox approaches and concerns
27 A promising example is the document For the Life of the World: Toward a Social Ethos of the
Orthodox Church, ed. David Bentley Hart and John Chryssavgis (Brookline MA: Holy Cross
Orthodox Press, 2020) https://www.goarch.org/social-ethos (accessed 13 February 2022).
28 Aristotle Papanicolaou, “Personhood and Its Exponents in Twentieth-Century Orthodox
Theology,” in The Cambridge Companion to Orthodox Christian Theology, ed. Mary
Cunningham and Elisabeth Theokritoff (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2008),
232–45; idem, “The Hermeneutical and Existential Contextuality of Orthodox Theologies
of Personhood,” The Journal of Eastern Christian Studies 69 (2017): 51–67.
29 One of the last unpleasant examples: Rodoljub Kubat, “Redeverbot für Dozenten an der
Theologischen Fakultät in Belgrad,” 30 April 2020, Nachrichtendienst Östliche Kirchen,
https://noek.info/hintergrund/1520-redeverbot-fuer-dozenten-an-der-theologischen-
fakultaet-in-belgrad?fbclid=IwAR2SWhGTmqrKc3Y46_P8XLJNnw9wmZZMm5y
Mcvd24wcMRlY5GdkTLhcHCrY (accessed 13 February 2022).
on ecclesiology. Even if one could claim that the Church is not a democracy
in the modern sense of the world, synodality remains a central expression of
the Church on all levels of its life, not only in that of the bishops. Not only
is its existence crucial but its modus operandi is as well. What is crucial for
modernization processes in any case is to learn how to live with minorities and
majorities, and also with critique.
Pastoral Aspects
30 Peter Berger, “First Things First: ‘The Vernacularist Illusion’,” April 1995 https://www.
firstthings.com/article/1995/04/the-vernacularist-illusion (accessed 13 February 2022);
Martin Mosebach, Häresie der Formlosigkeit: Die römische Liturgie und ihr Feind (Munich:
Hanser, 2007).
Christian values (particularly those regarding sex, marriage and gender) and
live their faith consistently, uninfluenced by the Zeitgeist.31
Consistency is a virtue, also for Christians, insofar theology is something
that develops with the assistance of the Holy Spirit and does not change in the
name of Zeitgeist. On the other hand, such an approach should not lead to a
theology refusing to accomplish its incarnational duty, the function of sancti-
fying the world, a theology preferring to encase itself in a sterile sphere, with
no communion with the world. Such a practice leads in the long run to more
tension than the one it avoids; it is not easy to ignore the encounter with mod-
ern questions. These are waiting at every corner.
31 Rod Dreher, The Benedict Option: A Strategy for Christians in a Post-Christian Nation (New
York: Sentinel, 2018).
32 Jürgen Habermas, Die Moderne: Ein unvollendetes Projekt. Philosophisch-politische
Aufsätze, 1977–1992, 2nd ed. (Leipzig: Reclam, 1992).
33 Michaela Labudda and Marcus Leitschuh (eds.), Synodaler Weg – letzte Chance?
Standpunkte zur Zukunft der katholischen Kirche (Paderborn: Bonifatius, 2020); Anne
Kathrin Preckel, Der Synodale Weg: Fragen und Antworten (Stuttgart: Katholisches
Bibelwerk 2020); Bernhard Sven Anuth, Georg Bier and Karsten Kreutzer (eds.), Der
Synodale Weg: Eine Zwischenbilanz (Munich: Herder, 2021).
Conclusion
In his voluminous, 1700-page book Auch eine Geschichte der Philosophie, which
appeared in the year when he celebrated his 90th birthday,34 Jürgen Habermas
aims at a reconstruction of the intellectual history of the Western world from
the perspective of the relation between faith and reason. On the last page of
this book, he calls religious experience “a thorn in the flesh of modernity,” leav-
ing open the question as to whether there is still semantic content that should
be translated into the language of the profane. Religion as thorn in the flesh of
modernity – perhaps modernity is also and should be a thorn in the flesh of
the Church, or something like Socrates’ gadfly.35 It is important that the terms
retain their sharpness, their challenging character; this is a condition for every
sincere encounter. And it is this for every non-boring encounter, and the one
between Orthodoxy and the (post)modern / (post-)secular world should be
anything but boring.
34 Jürgen Habermas, Auch einer Geschichte der Philosophie, I-II (Berlin: Suhrkamp, 2019).
35 Plato, Apology, 30e.
Nikolaos Asproulis
Introductory Remarks
After the fall of communism, the debate that seems to be prevalent in the
research among theologians, sociologists and political scientists is the one
concerning the relationship between the Church and liberal democracy.
Although Eastern Orthodoxy does not seem to be completely absent from the
discussion,1 the dissemination and consolidation of the (post-)modern prin-
ciples, globalization and all the major political, social and economic develop-
ments that have taken place or are in progress have led to an unprecedented
amount of interest in the field of political theology2, where the topic under
discussion is situated.
Too often the Orthodox present themselves, in a rather arrogant way, as the
democratic church par excellence, as the church where the synodal spirit per-
vades its whole life, as the Church of the Synods that positions itself between
the authoritarian structure of the Roman Catholic Church and the extreme
relativism or fragmentation of the Protestant world. Although such an under-
standing does not take seriously into account the varied patterns of organi-
zation or long historical developments, it still occupies a central place in the
Orthodox imagination, determining in advance any discussion of the relation-
ship between Orthodoxy and democracy. At the same time, however, the very
concept and reality of democratic governance, ethics and values have been
1 Cf. Paschalis Μ. Kitromilides, Religion and Politics in the Orthodox World: The Ecumenical
Patriarchate and the Challenges of Modernity (New York: Routledge, 2019); Aristotle
Papanikolaou, The Mystical as Political. Democracy and Non-Radical Orthodoxy (Notre
Dame IN: Notre Dame University Press, 2012); Emmanuel Clapsis, “An Orthodox Encounter
with Liberal Democracy,” in Christianity, Democracy and the Shadow of Constantine, ed.
George E. Demacopoulos and Aristotle Papanikolaou (New York: Fordham University Press,
2017), 111–26; Lavinia Stan and Lucian Turcescu, “The Orthodox Churches and Democratization
in Romania and Bulgaria,” in Religion and Politics in Post-Socialist Central and Southeastern
Europe, ed. Sabrina Ramet (Hampshire UK: Palgrave 2014), 263–85; Boris Begovic, “Must
Orthodoxy be a Barrier to Liberal Democracy? The Case of Serbia,” Public Orthodoxy,
5 June 2018, https://publicorthodoxy.org/2018/06/05/orthodoxy-serbia-liberal-democracy-2/.
2 Cf. Kristina Stoeckl, Ingeborg Gabriel and Aristotle Papanikolaou (eds.), Political Theologies
in Orthodox Christianity: Common Challenges – Divergent Positions (London: T&T Clark, 2017).
much debated. This occurs to the extent that there are frequent shifts or muta-
tions either towards more liberal and social or more authoritarian and populist
forms of democratic organization, especially in Western societies (Trumpency
is a recent example), which leads to a necessary reconsideration of the present
and future of liberal democracy.
After describing the context within which the debate should take place
(namely post-modernity, secularization and globalization), I will discuss some
fundamental methodological terms of this dialogue from a theological point of
view. The goal of this introductory text is to show that the Orthodox Church is
not incompatible with the basic principles of liberal democracy (e.g., church-
state separation, representation, participation by the people, human rights)
at the level of theology. To the contrary, the Orthodox Church is the escha-
tological fulfillment of the latter, even if, in the realm of history, Church life
often displays dysfunctions (undermining of the laity, imperialistic attitudes,
nationalism) that cause embarrassment. Unless the Church is viewed primar-
ily in terms of communion, an event, and not just as a fixed community or insti-
tution, it cannot be fully defined as democratic.
To cope better with the issue under discussion, one needs to make use of
“contextual hermeneutics” to avoid projecting general socio-political theories
onto completely different contexts. This applies especially to the relationship
between Orthodoxy and post-modernity, secularization and globalization,
phenomena to which the development of Orthodoxy has contributed little.
This is particularly important to the extent that liberal democracy itself, as we
know it today, is a product of post-modernity, as especially exemplified in cer-
tain parts of the Western world. Therefore, “it is wrong if we discuss this issue
to attribute either a democratic or non-democratic ethos to Christianity before
the birth of modern democracy itself.”3 Orthodoxy, as a historical product of
late antiquity, already existed before modernity.
It has been rightly argued4 that Eastern Orthodoxy came more or less to
a halt before modernity, succumbing in some cases to an innate desire to
move backwards to pre-modern forms of organization of life and society (for
example, the adoption of forms and symbolisms of rural society). The Orthodox
Church, especially in the so-called Orthodox countries (in the Balkans and
Eastern Europe), often seems to have completely rejected the major achieve-
ments of modernity, such as human rights language or political liberalism,
expressing instead a preference for pre-modern organizational structures, an
inclination towards the glorious theocratic or even anti-democratic past, a
patriarchal lifestyle and generally a worldview that represents Orthodoxy as
fully anti-modern. This is the dominant attitude of Orthodoxy towards moder-
nity, despite some exceptions, such as the Russia of Tsar Peter I and Catherine
II or the plethora of important thinkers of the Russian Religious Renaissance
of the late 19th and early 20th centuries who often fruitfully addressed, regard-
less of the result, certain aspects of modernity. So, the question is not so much
whether or not Orthodoxy stopped developing before modernity,5 but rather
why Orthodoxy did not succeed in embracing fundamental democratic values,
with the result that its encounter with modernity still remains at a preliminary
stage today.
Against this ambivalence regarding to modernity, there is a consensus
among contemporary sociologists of religion that secularization is a more
nuanced and complex phenomenon that varies widely depending on the spe-
cific context. It has been justly argued that the religious and the secular are
“inextricably bound and mutually conditioned.”6 By saying this, one is obliged
to talk about multiple secularizations or patterns of secularization, following
the most recent analysis in this vein that accounts for “multiple modernities.”7
Regardless of this general agreement, certain features have already been
determined by which an attempt has been made by sociologists and political
theorists to describe or evaluate this phenomenon: a) structural differentia-
tion of the secular sphere; b) decline of religious belief and c) privatization of
religion.8
5 Nikolaos Asproulis, “Ostliche Orthodoxie und (Post) Moderne: Eine unbehagliche Beziehung,”
Una Sancta 74, no. 1 (2019): 13–37; idem, “Is a Dialogue between Orthodox Theology and
(Post) modernity Possible? The Case of the Russian and Neo-patristic ‘Schools,’” Communio
Viatorum 54, no. 2 (2012): 203–22.
6 See Jose Casanova, “Rethinking Secularization: A Global Comparative Perspective,” The
Hedgehog Review (Spring & Summer 2006): 7–22, 10 and passim.
7 Casanova, “Rethinking Secularization,” 11. This term was initially coined by S. N. Eisenstadt,
“Multiple Modernities,” Daedalus 129, no. 1 (Winter, 2000): 1–29.
8 In this perspective see Casanova, “Rethinking Secularization,” 7ff.; Nicos Mouzelis,
“Modernity: Religious Trends: Universal Rights in a World of Diversity. The Case of Religious
Freedom,” Pontifical Academy of Social Sciences, Acta 17, (2012): 71–90. Cf. also David Martin,
A General Theory of Secularization (Oxford: Blackwell, 1978); David Martin, On Secularization:
Towards a Revised General Theory (Aldershot: Ashgate, 2005); Rhys H. Williams, “Movement
Even if one or more of these features apply in most Western societies, the
reality in predominantly Orthodox countries, such as Greece, Serbia, Russia,
etc., appears quite different. Despite a certain change or progress in various
aspects of institutions or daily life and the experience of the Orthodox people
(e.g., adoption of digital technology), one could hardly trace a robust decline of
religiosity and practice among the Orthodox, despite the frequency of church-
going or church attendance, which remains high, according to relevant studies,
especially in Eastern European countries. For instance, the Greeks are deeply
religious – whether indifferently Orthodox or pagan.9 Therefore, despite the
efforts by especially socialist or left-wing governments to reconfigure the state-
church relationship towards a more secular perspective, intending to limit the
public role or often the hegemony of the Orthodox Church in state affairs –
since it was always the state that took any kind of initiative in this direction – it
would not be easy for one to argue for a clearly secularized Greek, Serbian or
similar society.
On the one hand, it would be true to argue that religion in Greece, for
instance, has increasingly essentially been a lesser direct influence on the vari-
ous institutional spheres (professional, etc.), thus providing space to what has
been described as “inter-institutional secularization,”10 i.e., the theory of the
institutional differentiation of the secular spheres. On the other hand, how-
ever, due to its strong and diachronic tie with the Greek national ideology,11 as
well as with charity and solidarity works, the Church still strongly intervenes in
the political or public sphere, in this way inhibiting any real process of secular-
ization understood as a high wall of separation between church and state or as
a decline in religiosity. It seems then that any attempt to approach the distinc-
tiveness of the Greek experience (or any other traditional Orthodox country)
12 For the meaning of the term, see Grace Davie, Religion in Britain since 1945: Believing with-
out Belonging (Cambridge, MA: Blackwell, 1995).
13 For the meaning of the term, see Grace Davie, Europe: The Exceptional Case. Parameters of
Faith in the Modern World (London: Darton, Longman & Todd, 2002), 46.
14 See Charles Taylor, The Secular Age (Cambridge MA: The Belknap Press of Harvard
University Press, 2007), 530; cf. Mouzelis, “Modernity: Religious Trends,” passim.
15 Cf. Casanova, “Rethinking Secularization,” 8ff.
16 Gabriel Flynn and Paul D. Murray (eds.), Ressourcement: A Movement for Renewal in
Twentieth-Century Catholic Theology (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2012).
the level of the uncreated and grace was re-emphasized. An ontology of partic-
ipation then became the banner of this new theological perspective, according
to which “nature is not only made for Grace, but is made, from the beginning,
by Grace.”17 To some extent, this view understands the whole creation as the
Church, and no aspect of human existence and life can be understood as out-
side of the realm of grace. Obviously, such an understanding of the relation-
ship between nature and grace is firmly rooted in the patristic tradition (e.g.,
Justin the Philosopher’s “spermatikos logos,”18 Maximos the Confessor’s theory
of Logos-logoi,19 and Gregory Palamas’ essence-energies distinction20) and in
modern (including Orthodox) theology. Suffice it here to recall nouvelle théolo-
gie21, Radical Orthodoxy22 or the sophiology of certain Russian emigrants,23 an
attitude represented also in thinkers like John Milbank, William Cavanaugh,
Vigen Guroian, Christos Yannaras, etc.24 Such a holistic perspective (where,
for instance, “democracy is clearly the Church”)25, although correctly recog-
nizing that nature, as a product of God’s creative will, can always be firmly
oriented to its creator. At the same time, however, it degrades the distinction
(otherness) between the two fields, which seems that they alone can ensure
personal otherness and freedom, the existence of a field of action where the
human is called to freely decide whether or not she will move towards grace.
A more Chalcedonean (“without confusion and separation”) understanding of
the relationship between nature and grace in this regard prevents the Church
and its theology from embracing authoritarian or unfree ideologies and forms
of social organization. After all, the source of the Church’s authority comes
from God and not from this age. Therefore, the identification of any polis, even
the most ideal democratic state with the Church, could hardly be justified
theologically insofar as the relationship (and distinction) between nature and
grace does not prevent but also does not force nature to turn towards grace,
respecting thus the (post-modern) autonomy and dignity of nature and the
loving but free action of grace. In this light, matters like the way in which
decisions are made in the Church or in a democratic state (e.g., unanimity or
majority) should be treated as belonging to different levels. Grace can always
be expressed unanimously and freely, in contrast to nature, especially created
nature, which is always subject to majority rule (either relative or absolute),
defined by necessity due to the innate fragmentation of the created order. At
this point, one needs to insist even more: to better understand the relationship
between nature and grace, one should allude to Augustine’s theory of the two
cities. For St. Augustine, the city of God (here grace) is an alternative society,
which maintains its otherness while coexisting with the earthly one (nature).
The two cities coexist while in dialogue in space and time. They are not identi-
cal but two distinct parts of the saeculum. It is a dynamic relationship that can
protect the Church from the threat of secularization or any escapist tendency
from history while fully maintaining its worldly character.26
26 Cf. Robert Markus, Christianity and the Secular (Notre Dame IN: University of Notre Dame
Press, 2006) as cited in Luke Bretherton, “Power to the People: Orthodoxy, Consociational
Democracy, and the Move beyond Phyletism,” in Christianity, Democracy, and the Shadow
of Constantine, ed. George E. Demacopoulos and Aristotle Papanikolaou (New York:
Fordham University Press, 2017), 68–9.
27 For my perception of eschatology, I depend mainly on John D. Zizioulas’ “Towards an
Eschatological Ontology” (lecture, London King’s College, 1999); “Eschatologie et Société,”
Irénikon 73, nos. 3–4 (2000): 278–97; “Déplacement de la perspective eschatologique,” in
La Chrétienté en débat, ed. G. Alberigo et al. (Paris: Les Editions du Cerf, 1984), 89–100;
“Eschatology and History,” in Cultures in Dialogue: Documents from a Symposium in Honor
of Philip A. Potter, ed. T. Wieser (Geneva: WCC Publications, 1985), 62–71, 72–3.
30 Cf. Georges Florovsky, “Eschatology in the Patristic Age,” in The Patristic Witness of Georges
Florovsky: Essential Theological Writings, ed. Brandon Gallaher and Paul Ladouceur
(London: T&T Clark 2019), 322.
In relation to the synodal institution, it is obvious that its two terms (pri-
mus and synod) are inextricably linked, a fact that excludes either the author-
itarianism of the one/primus or the populism of the many. It is not merely
a functional relationship, as is perhaps the case in some versions of liberal
democracy, where the primacy of, for example, the President of the Republic
may be only honorary and without actual power, or the Prime Minister may
be the captive of political balance within his own party. Rather, it is a deeply
ontological relationship between the two poles. Regardless of the actual form
that the synodal institution can take in light of the 34th canon, using political
terms, either the form of the presidency (see for instance the synodal insti-
tution in the Ecumenical Patriarchate) or the form of the presiding democ-
racy (e.g., the Church of Greece), one and many, primacy and synod can by
no means be understood separately. On the contrary, they are concentric cir-
cles (and less a pyramidal, hierarchical structure) that express an identity of
will and unanimity, echoing the common albeit distinct ad extra activity of
the three Trinitarian persons in creation. Such a perspective, however, could
hardly be put into practice in the realm of history where the fragmentation of
nature does not allow for consensus. Such a view would possibly echo authori-
tarian institutional expressions, while it would be far from its eschatological
archetype. If not taken into account, this historical antinomy very often turns
the Church into a secular institution, with all the problems that it entails, like
authoritarianism, the excess of power, and finally, its entrapment in history
and loss of the eschatological vision.
Conclusion
its members in the transformation of the unjust social structures, the rejec-
tion of every despotic spirit and pyramidal mentality in the organization of the
ecclesiastical body, can only reflect aspects of its eschatological vision. At the
same time, however, we should be seriously concerned with the evident dis-
cordance between theory and practice in the life of the Church, both as com-
munity and as individuals. Although historical antinomies can in no way find
an intra-world solution, the more the Church is inspired by the eschatological,
liberating spirit of the Divine Eucharist, where all members of the community
actively participate in the life of the Triune God, the more democratic it will
be. In contrast, the more the Church turns to a fixed historical reality, trapped
in the saeculum, and identified with the city of this age, the more it is in danger
of adopting the mentality and manifesting the problems of the various forms
of democracy, from populism to corruption and from authoritarianism to the
restriction of human freedoms and rights. Whenever the Church forgets that
“it is not of this world,” that it is more a communion, an event, that derives
its identity from the eschata, it risks being trapped in intra-world patterns, as
one among many communities, or associations. Otherwise, as a communion of
the eschata, the Church can be the eschatological justification of democracy,
cleansed of its historical failures and imperfections, always bearing in mind
that an establishment of the Kingdom of God in the historical present is as
dangerous as the idealization of any form of worldly organization of human
life. The above methodological principles attempt precisely to point out this
antinomy that runs through the relationship between Orthodoxy and democ-
racy, as they are primarily manifested in its synodal institution.
Atanas Slavov
Without exception, the process of founding of new nation states in the SEE
(Southeast Europe) region in the 19th century took the legal shape of the mod-
ern constitutional state. Newly formed states with predominantly Orthodox
populations (Greece, Serbia, Romania, Bulgaria) were shaped as constitutional
monarchies, based on popular sovereignty, accepting the rule of law and the
separation of powers as their guiding principles, protecting fundamental civil
and political rights. National Orthodox Churches that achieved their indepen-
dence and autocephaly from the Ecumenical Patriarchate in Constantinople,
not without temporary tensions and even schisms, coexisted and cooperated
with established constitutional authorities without questioning their form and
legitimacy from a Christian theological perspective. That is to say, Orthodox
Churches did not struggle with the values, principles, and structures of the
new constitutional architecture. They relied on governmental recognition and
support of their privileged status as official state churches, publicly visible and
institutionalized, having specific roles in the fields of public education, social
policies and state ceremonies. It was not uncommon for some members of the
clergy to be engaged politically, assuming offices in the parliament, govern-
ment or the local municipal councils. Struggles or tensions between consti-
tutional states in the region and national churches occurred not because of
principles or values of the system of government but concerned more specific
policies or the attitude of authorities towards different day-to-day issues. The
political engagement of the autocephalous Orthodox Churches was through
the prism of ethnonationalism and their role in the process of liberation and
nation-building. Thus, they substituted the history of the national awaken-
ing and liberation for the history of divine economy and salvation.1 Merging
1 Pantelis Kalaitzidis, Orthodoxy and Political Theology (Geneva: WCC Publications, 2012), 54,
65–9.
and equating religious and national identity created a powerful and explosive
amalgam that was easily instrumentalized on political battlefields.2
The doctrine of establishing and protecting the “Christian nation” (in each
of the nation states in the region) emerged as a specific nationalized and
regionalized form of the traditional Byzantine symphonia model.3 It was a by-
product of a religious-political synthesis in which several processes developed
simultaneously: the nation-building process in the 19th century that aimed at
spiritual emancipation from the very powerful Ecumenical Patriarchate and
political independence from the Ottoman Empire, resulting in the founding
of the new sovereign nation states. At the end of that process, the political
and cultural boundaries of the nations coincided with those of the national
Orthodox Churches, thus blurring the important difference between religious
and national identity.4
In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, Orthodox Churches lacked a com-
prehensive political theology with respect to fundamental principles and doc-
trines of constitutional government. Rather, they accommodated themselves
to the situation in place, taking for granted established institutions and forms
of government as far as they were perceived as overall Christian institutions.
They thus chose the strategy of mutual recognition and cooperation, rather
than questioning their legitimacy or calling for institutional reform and trans-
formation. This more conformist view of the Orthodox Churches could be
explained by the predominantly theological focus of Orthodox doctrines and
teaching, directed to the Christian community of individual persons and not
to the secular societal forms and structures in general. Hence, religiously based
requirements set for the secular governments were very broad (to administer
justice, not to be abusive or oppressive, to help the poor), but they did not
translate into concrete political-theological teachings on constitutional forms
and structures. Moreover, the political context of having new Christian mon-
archs and governments was very preferable to the previous oppressive govern-
ment under the Ottoman Empire.
It should be noted, however, that, for most of that period, behind the con-
stitutional form of a democratic state, the political regimes in these coun-
tries departed significantly from democratic principles and values. In reality,
national Orthodox Churches very often coexisted and cooperated with weak
semi-democratic or non-democratic authoritarian regimes. That, in turn,
affected their role and recognition in society when political regimes trans-
formed to more democratic forms in the latter decades of the 20th century.
Currently, all countries in the region with predominantly Orthodox popula-
tions (Greece, Bulgaria, Romania, Serbia, North Macedonia, Montenegro) have
established constitutional regimes that are qualified as constitutional, repub-
lican and democratic, endorsing principles of the rule of law, popular sover-
eignty, the separation of powers, protection of fundamental rights, and respect
for international law (including human rights conventions). All countries are
members of the Council of Europe and implement the European Convention
of Human Rights, while three are full members in the European Union (Greece,
Bulgaria, Romania). According to the Freedom House reports in 2020, three
countries are considered free (Greece, Bulgaria, Romania) and the rest partly
free (Serbia, North Macedonia, Montenegro), and, with respect to democracy –
one is a consolidated democracy (Greece), two are semi-consolidated democ-
racies (Bulgaria, Romania), and the rest are qualified as transitional or hybrid
regimes.5 To illustrate the complex dynamics of church-state relations through
the prism of constitutional government, it is useful to focus on specific country
models.
Greece
Greece was the first among the countries in the region to face the challenges
of globalization, democratization and EU accession and thus had a chance
to elaborate meaningful answers that could be considered by the rest of the
states. In this respect, it is worth providing a brief overview of the role the
Greek Orthodox Church played in that process – most importantly, of
the direction it has influenced the new constitutional order of the republic
(established with the 1975 Constitution).
The recent history of church-state relations in Greece is also indicative for
the complex and often ambiguous position of the Orthodox Church. In some
cases, the Church sided with ultra-nationalist, reactionary and even authori-
tarian governments (1967–1974). Nowadays, the Church of Greece supports the
democratic constitutional order, while remaining very sensitive to its privi-
leged status of official religion.
6 Respecting the freedom of religion and conscience, there is an option for a non-religious
ceremony.
7 Evangelos Karagiannis, “Secularism in Context: The Relations between the Greek State and
the Church of Greece in Crisis,” European Journal of Sociology 50, no. 1 (2009), 146.
8 Though there were considerations and plans in the opposite direction during the final
year of Alexis Tsipras government, in 2019 the New Democracy government agreed to con-
tinue the established practice: Reuters, “Greek conservatives scrap plans to take clergy off
state payroll,” Reuters, 16 July 2019, https://www.reuters.com/article/us-greece-church/
greek-conservatives-scrap-plans-to-take-clergy-off-state-payroll-idUSKCN1UB1IW.
9 Basilius J. Groen, “Nationalism and Reconciliation: Orthodoxy in the Balkans,” Religion State
& Society 26, no. 2, (1998), 116–8.
Romania
In the 1991 Constitution of Romania, the autonomy of the religious denomina-
tions from the state is safeguarded along with the provisions on the freedom
of religion. The right of the religious institutions to receive support from the
state for its public presence and social mission is also guaranteed (“including
the facilitation of religious assistance in the army, in hospitals, prison, homes
and orphanages” – Art. 29, 5).11 The public presence of religion is also visible in
the official state ceremonies – for instance, the ceremony of taking the consti-
tutional oath by the president during his inauguration ends with the solemn
formula of the invocation of God (“So help me God!”; Art. 82, 2). This consti-
tutional regulation, based on the principles of autonomy and cooperation
between the state and religious communities, was laid down after a heated
debate on the role of the Romanian Orthodox Church (ROC). The church’s
claims had emphasized its traditional role as a national church with significant
contributions to the formation of the Romanian nation.
In December 2006, the new Law on Religious Freedom was adopted, secur-
ing to some extent the privileged position of the ROC – the law specifies the
state’s recognition of the “important role of the Romanian Orthodox Church”
as well as the role of “other churches and denominations as recognized by the
national history” of the country.12 Specific provisions in the law were included
that limit religious proselytizing. Religious minorities (some Evangelical
Christian denominations) and independent international observers deem
them highly restrictive. Some of the controversial provisions include restric-
tive requirements for religious associations on eligibility for state support.
Only the registered religious denominations (preferential status is limited to
18 religious organizations) are eligible for state financial and other support.
Other restrictions include limits on certain forms of freedom of expression
Bulgaria
In recent years, the Bulgarian Orthodox Church (BOC) developed good and
constructive relations with Bulgarian institutions, especially the executive
branch. In general, the BOC is supportive of the democratic constitutional
order, while it remains concerned about its privileged status. The specific pub-
lic law status of Eastern Orthodoxy as the traditional religion was negotiated
in the first years of democratization and established with specific constitu-
tional provisions in the new democratic 1991 Constitution: “Eastern Orthodox
Christianity shall be considered the traditional religion in the Republic of
Bulgaria” (Art.13.3). This status reflected the historical role of the predominant
religion for preserving and cultivating Bulgarian national identity and culture.
This constitutional provision does not secure any specific privileged position
for the Church, though the practices that have emerged and subsequent leg-
islation have moved in this direction. In line with the prevailing liberal and
democratic character of the 1991 Constitution, it provides for church-state sep-
aration (Art. 13.2), as well as guaranteeing the freedom of religion and its free
exercise (Art. 37). A specified provision bans the use of religious institutions,
communities and beliefs for political ends (Art. 13.4), thus limiting the possi-
bility for religiously motivated political extremism.15
The current law on religious organizations (Denominations Act) was
adopted in 2002 in an attempt to modernize the existing legal framework
on religious entities and to provide legislative protection of the Bulgarian
Patriarchate weakened by an internal division movement (Alternative Synod).
This new framework established a privileged role for the Bulgarian Patriarchate,
13 Cristian Romocea, Church and State: Religious Nationalism and State Identification in
Post-Communist Romania (London: Continuum International Publishing Group, 2011),
33–4.
14 Lavinia Stan and Lucian Turcescu, Church, State and Democracy in Expanding Europe
(New York: Oxford University Press, 2011), 148–9.
15 Merdjanova, Religion, Nationalism, and Civil Society, 12–3.
16 This provision was used to silence the internal divisions in the BOC. Some aspects
of the 2002 law were found to contravene the standards of the European Convention
(Art. 9): Holy Synod of the Bulgarian Orthodox Church (Metropolitan Inokentiy) and
Others v. Bulgaria (Judgement on Just Satisfaction), no. 412/03; 35677/04, Judgment of
16 September 2010, § 49.
17 Atanas Slavov, “From Traditional to Official Religion: The Legal Status of the Bulgarian
Orthodox Church after 2019,” Occasional Papers on Religion in Eastern Europe 40, no. 5
(2020), 9–27 available at: https://digitalcommons.georgefox.edu/ree/vol40/iss5/3.
18 Kristen Ghodsee, “Symphonic Secularism: Eastern Orthodoxy, Ethnic Identity and
Religious Freedoms in Contemporary Bulgaria,” Anthropology of East Europe Review 27,
no. 2 (2009), 227–52.
The public presence of the BOC has been changing in a positive way in
recent years. While its public image suffered in the 1990s from decades of
collaboration by high clergy with the totalitarian regime19 and deep internal
divisions20, the BOC increased its public visibility in the most recent decade.
It gradually became an influential player in public debates, delivering public
statements on a variety of issues, some of them quite controversial (the ratifi-
cation of the Istanbul Convention, registered cohabitation in the Family Code,
reproductive procedures). In criticizing certain policies and measures, the
BOC does not question the legitimacy of the established democratic consti-
tutional structures. As of 2020, the BOC enjoys a very high public trust (above
50%), thus one of the most supported institutions in the country.21
After the democratization of the SEE countries, opportunities for active par-
ticipation in church life as well as public witness of the Christian faith were
revived. Thus, at the beginning of the 21st century, an important evolution
in the understanding of the Orthodox Churches in the SEE region is under
way: from a traditionally nationalist-oriented political theology, they have
begun to develop a public theology enhancing democratic values and institu-
tions while remaining sensitive to the national culture and traditions. When
some new claims to rights or status arise that are presented as modern and
democratic (e.g., abortion, gay marriage), it is typical for Orthodox Churches
to react against them because these claims are seen to be contrary to certain
core Christian values and doctrines. This, however, is not a reaction against
democracy or fundamental human rights but rather an expression and exer-
cise of the freedom of religion, which also means being allowed to profess the
faith as a particular community understands it. Moreover, in the SEE societies,
as in many others, there is no popularly accepted negotiated compromise on
some of these issues, and the public space remains open to challenging views
represented by different civic, political or religious groups.
19 Momchil Metodiev, Between Faith and Compromise: The Orthodox Church and the
Communist State in Bulgaria 1944–1989 (Sofia: CIELA, 2010).
20 James Lindsay Hopkins, “Post-Glasnost, Contemporary Bulgaria & The Orthodox Church,”
chap. 7 in The Bulgarian Orthodox Church: A Socio-Historical Analysis of the Evolving
Relationship between Church, Nation, and State in Bulgaria (Boulder CO: East European
Monographs, 2008).
21 “Research Center Trend,” October 2020 poll, https://rctrend.bg/project (accessed
November 2020).
Beyond any political stance, we categorically condemn once again the use of
all forms of violence, appealing to the rulers of this world to respect the funda-
mental human rights of life, honor, dignity and property, recognizing and prais-
ing the peaceful lifestyle of Christians as well as their constant effort to remain
far from turmoil and trouble. […] The Ecumenical Patriarchate will never cease,
through all the spiritual means and truth at its disposal, to support the efforts
for peaceful dialogue among the various religions, the peaceful solution to every
difference, and a prevailing atmosphere of toleration, reconciliation and coop-
eration among all people irrespective of religion and grace.
Human rights and the freedom of religious conscience are gifts which were
“once given to the saints” (Jude 1:3), but which are constantly acquired along
the journey of life. They are acquired through the experience of communion in
Christ within the harmonious cosmic liturgy. We have been talking for 1700 years
about the freedom of human conscience.22
(16.) The Church does not involve herself with politics in the narrow sense of the
term. Her witness, however, is essentially political insofar as it expresses concern
for man and his spiritual freedom. The voice of the Church was always distinct
and will ever remain a beneficial intervention for the sake of humanity.
The local Orthodox Churches are today called to promote a new constructive
synergy with the secular state and its rule of law within the new framework
of international relations, in accordance with the biblical saying: “Render to
Caesar the things that are Caesar’s and to God the things that are God’s” (cf.
[Matthew] 22.21).
This synergy must, however, preserve the specific identity of both Church and
state and ensure their earnest cooperation in order to preserve man’s unique
dignity and the human rights which flow there from, and in order to assure social
justice.23
23 Encyclical of the Holy and Great Council of the Orthodox Church, Crete 2016, https://
www.holycouncil.org/-/encyclical-holy-council (accessed 10 October 2020).
24 Encyclical, Section 16.
The key conciliar document that engages with contemporary issues (democ-
racy, human rights, globalization, church-state relations, international rela-
tions, peace and security) and delivers a comprehensive public theology is the
Mission of the Orthodox Church in Today’s World.25 Its subtitle (“The contri-
bution of the Orthodox Church in realizing peace, justice, freedom, fraternity
and love between peoples, and in the removal of racial and other discrimina-
tions”) points to the importance of this document for understanding the active
role in diverse societies that the Orthodox Church is expected to play. Its six
parts consecutively reveal the specific internal logic of Christian personalism
and communion: starting with the fundamental value of “The Dignity of the
Human Person” (part one), moving towards “Freedom and Responsibility” (part
two), expanding towards “Peace and Justice” (part three), “Peace and Aversion
of War” (part four), “The Attitude of the Church toward Discrimination” (part
five) and proclaiming “The Mission of the Orthodox Church As a Witness of
Love through Service” (part six).
Each part of the document deserves specific attention, combining a deeply
scriptural and patristic understanding of the core Christian values and mes-
sage with an assessment of their contemporary relevance. The value of the
dignity of the human person is viewed through the prism of the creation of
humankind in the image and likeness of God, followed by the Incarnation of the
divine Word and directed to the deification of the human being. Safeguarding
the dignity of the human person presupposes engagement with peace-keeping
efforts, dialogue, inter-Christian and interreligious cooperation. As proclaimed:
“as God’s fellow workers (I [Corinthians 3:9), we can advance to this common
service together with all people of good will, who love peace that is pleasing
25 The Mission of the Orthodox Church in Today’s World, Crete 2016, https://www.holycoun-
cil.org/-/mission-orthodox-church-todays-world (accessed 10 October 2020).
to God, for the sake of human society on the local, national, and international
levels. This ministry is a commandment of God ([Matthew] 5:9).”
The value of freedom is presented as “one of God’s greatest gifts to the
human being.” At the same time, it has a rather ambivalent nature: it creates
opportunities for human development towards perfection and full commu-
nion with God but also allows the person to choose a different path away from
the divine plan and grace. The Orthodox Church unequivocally states that
“Freedom without responsibility and love eventually leads to loss of freedom.”
In this official document, the Orthodox Church recognizes the centrality
of peace and justice in human life, while emphasizing “the universality of the
principles of peace, freedom, and social justice,” which should lead to “the
blossoming of Christian love among people and nations of the world.”
The Orthodox Church openly endorses peace-fostering and peace-keeping
efforts while recognizing “her duty to encourage all that which genuinely
serves the cause of peace and paves the way to justice, fraternity, true free-
dom, and mutual love among all children of the one heavenly Father as well as
between all peoples who make up the one human family.”
In the document, this genuine emphasis on peace, solidarity and justice
leads logically to the express condemnation of all kinds of war and aggres-
sion that cause the destruction of life and the erosion of human dignity. In the
view of the Church, the state of war cannot be justified; there is no just war;
and religion should not serve to legitimate wars. Along with that, the Church’s
view remains realistic: “When war becomes inevitable, the Church continues
to pray and care in a pastoral manner for her children who are involved in
military conflict for the sake of defending their life and freedom, while making
every effort to bring about the swift restoration of peace and freedom.”
The Church engages openly with the values of equality, tolerance and non-
discrimination and interprets them as universally valid:
The Orthodox Church confesses that every human being, regardless of skin color,
religion, race, sex, ethnicity, and language, is created in the image and likeness of
God, and enjoys equal rights in society. Consistent with this belief, the Orthodox
Church rejects discrimination for any of the aforementioned reasons since these
presuppose a difference in dignity between people.
The Church, in the spirit of respecting human rights and equal treatment of all,
values the application of these principles in the light of her teaching on the sac-
raments, the family, the role of both genders in the Church, and the overall prin-
ciples of Church tradition.26
26 The Mission of the Orthodox Church in Today’s World, Crete 2016, https://www.holycoun-
cil.org/-/mission-orthodox-church-todays-world (accessed 10 October 2020).
27 Anastasios Yannoulatos, Facing the World: Orthodox Christian Essays on Global Concerns
(Crestwood NY: St. Vladimir’s Seminary Press, 2003), 77.
28 Yannoulatos, Facing the World, 18–9.
29 Atanas Slavov, “Between Endorsement and Ambivalence: Democracy and Eastern
Orthodoxy in Post-Communist South East Europe” (CAS Working Paper Series no. 7,
Sofia, 2015) available at: http://www.cas.bg/uploads/files/WPS-APP-7/Slavov,%20Atanas.
pdf.
30 Encyclical of the Holy Synod of the Bulgarian Orthodox Church for Peace and Unity of the
People, 29 September 2011, http://dveri.bg/a8 (accessed 12 May 2020).
31 Bulgarian Orthodox Church, Opinion of the Holy Synod regarding the Istanbul
Convention, 22 January 2018, https://bg-patriarshia.bg/news.php?id=254101 (accessed
12 May 2020).
In the last decade, leading Orthodox scholars have creatively engaged issues
of democracy, constitutional government and human rights from a political-
theological perspective.35 One of these distinguished scholars of Orthodoxy
is Aristotle Papanikolaou. In his recent study, he frames a political-theological
system that favours a liberal-democratic political community. His approach
centres the political-theological dimension on the principle of divine-human
communion (deification, theosis), which is essential and characteristic of the
Orthodox understanding of relations between human beings and the divine.
This approach predetermines an activist and participatory aspect when it is
projected into the political realm. A key aspect of his approach is the emphasis
on the compatibility between Orthodoxy and liberal democracy understood
broadly. Papanikolaou advocates
32 Klaus Buchenau, “The Serbian Orthodox Church,” in Eastern Christianity and Politics in
the Twenty-First century, ed. Lucian N. Leustean (Oxon UK: Routledge, 2014), 68–94.
33 Radovan Bigović, The Orthodox Church in the 21st Century (Belgrade: Konrad Adenauer
Stiftung, 2009).
34 John Witte Jr., God’s Joust, God’s Justice: Law and Religion in the Western Tradition (Grand
Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 2006), 91–3.
35 Aristotle Papanikolaou, The Mystical as Political: Democracy and Non-Radical Orthodoxy
(Notre Dame, IN: University of Notre Dame Press, 2012); Kalaitzidis, Orthodoxy and Political
Theology; Political Theologies in Orthodox Christianity: Common Challenges – Divergent
Positions, ed. Kristina Stoeckl, Ingeborg Gabriel and Aristotle Papanikolaou (London: T&T
Clark, 2017).
choice, religious freedom […] the protection of human rights […] and church-
state separation.36
peripheral problem for mainstream Orthodox theology. The output of this pro-
cess is a modified version of the traditional symphonia concept, intertwined
with the dominant ethnoreligious ideology, that is applied in the modern
nation states in the SEE region.45 Current developments in Orthodox politi-
cal theology include reflections and discourses on and engagements with the
concepts of democracy, human rights, and constitutional government in the
former communist states.46
In my recent studies, I examined the political-theological potential of core
Orthodox theological doctrines and concepts (theosis and synergy, ecclesia
and Eucharist, conciliarity and catholicity, economy and eschatology) and
attempted to link them to secular values of personalism, participation, com-
munity and universalism. This synthesis is called “participatory political theol-
ogy,” that is, a system of values and principles, that requires respect for human
dignity and human rights, and support for a liberal constitutional state, based
on active civic participation and democracy. The main challenge remains as
follows: if we assume that these values and principles may well be accepted
among certain Orthodox Christian communities, Christian civic organizations
or public intellectuals, or even endorsed in official church documents, they are
much less recognized among the high clergy and are often neglected in day-
to-day ecclesiastical life and organization. Thus, the main issue of this type of
political theology is not its doctrinal possibility but its viability in the social
ethos of a larger Orthodox community.47
Conclusion
Since the formation of nation states in the SEE region, Orthodox Churches
have had to coexist with different political regimes: constitutional monarchies,
authoritarian and totalitarian dictatorships and constitutional democracies.
Thus, in a very condensed and intensified form, Orthodox Churches had to
experience struggles, tensions and contradictions with political modernity in
its very late phase. Despite the compromises made in the past, which led to
an ambivalent public presence, there is now a positive trend. In their official
Sveto Riboloff
Perhaps most of you know that the Orthodox world, i.e., societies where the
majority of the population are affiliated with Orthodox Christianity, is broadly
diverse. Some of these countries, such as Greece, Cyprus, Romania, Bulgaria,
North Macedonia, Montenegro, Ukraine and Georgia, are already part of the
Western political alliance to varying degrees. On the other side is the authori-
tarian Russian Federation, with its closely allied countries like Belarus, Serbia
and Moldova. It is not a unified space, but one of a great variety of types or
models of church-state relationships, ranging from “established Church” to
“strict separation.” A further difficulty – and even a paradox in our topic –
is that, legally speaking, the most secular country with a strict church-state
separation model like Russia, is more authoritarian and much less democratic
than, for example, Greece, which reflects an imperfect secular model and has
an establishment type of church-state relationships.1 Balkan countries such
as Bulgaria, Serbia, Romania, North Macedonia and Montenegro are work-
ing democracies that sometimes suffer from economic problems and politi-
cal corruption, but no one can doubt their democratic regimes. The respect
for human and religious rights is part of their political system.2 International
human rights reports for some of these countries, however, reveal unflattering
facts. During the last decade, Ukraine and Georgia left the Russian sphere of
influence and still have problems with economic freedom, but they have made
some remarkable achievements in securing human rights and political free-
dom. In all these achievements, however, one can observe features of a crisis in
church-state relationships. It is a specific problem in their social life.
With the breakup of the Ottoman, Austro-Hungarian and Russian empires
after WWI, the Orthodox Church entered a deep crisis that reflects events
1 See Pantelis Kalaitzidis, “Church and State in the Orthodox World: From the Byzantine
‘Symphonia’ and Nationalized Orthodoxy, to the Need of Witnessing the Word of God
in a Pluralistic Society,” in Religioni, Liberta, otere: Atti del Convegno Internazionale
Filosofico-Teologico Sulla Liberta Religiosa, ed. Emanuela Fogliadini (Milan: V&V Vita e
Pensiero 2014), 39–74.
2 Kalaitzidis, “Church and State.”
dating back to the late Middle Ages. To be sure, the dependence on the par-
ticular model of complete legal convergence between secular and ecclesiasti-
cal law in Byzantium (and its satellite countries like Bulgaria, Serbia, Valahia,
Georgia and Armenia3) has left its traces in the particular reflexes of Orthodox
Christians to the surrounding world. The obligations of the Orthodox Church
in the Ottoman Empire, i.e., to represent Christians before the sultan and to
function as a court and tax collector, also had an impact, as did the particular
hybrid form of state control, following the Protestant model, of the Russian
church by the tsar. The Austro-Hungarian discriminative regime also exerted
some influence on the Orthodox Christians in its territory.4
The so-called National Churches, which appeared in the new national states
in the territories of the old empires, have chosen different constitutional mod-
els. Nevertheless, they share some common features. According to Pantelis
Kalaitzidis, they share the cultural legacy of Byzantium.5 Regardless of their
constitutional regime, all these countries exercise state intervention under
unwritten laws in the religious affairs in support of the Orthodox Church in
a discreet (democratic regimes) or brutal (authoritarian regimes) manner for
purely political purposes.6 Undoubtedly, behind this political practice lies a
certain public mood that politicians take into account.
In May 2017, the Pew Research Center7 published a study on Religious Belief
and National Belonging in Central and Eastern Europe. The results give a realis-
tic and intriguing picture of the religious self-consciousness of the Christians
in the region and emphasize the specific approach of the Orthodox Christians
to the relationship between church and state. Here I shall present just some
points and elements of the study related to my topic that explain the political
practice in question and the problems that may occur in the near future.
3 The Armenian Church is included in this study because of Armenia’s social structure and
history. Nevertheless, its Church is not part of the Eastern Orthodox Church.
4 See S. Riboloff, “The Orthodox Church in the Ottoman Empire and its Perspectives for
Theological Dialogue,” Occasional Papers on Religion in Eastern Europe 33 (2013), 7–24.
5 Kalaitzidis, “Church and State,” 39–40.
6 Kalaitzidis, “Church and State,” 39–40.
7 See Religious Belief and National Belonging in Central and Eastern Europe http://www.pewfo-
rum.org/2017/05/10/religious-belief-and-national-belonging-in-central-and-eastern-europe/
(accessed 6 September 2019).
8 All figures are taken from the research of Pew Research Center: Religious Belief and National
Belonging in Central and Eastern Europe. National and religious identities converge in a
This graph (Fig. 14.1) shows the general landscape in the region – Orthodox,
Catholics, Protestants and Muslims. It can also be pointed out that the
Orthodox Christianity is the dominant religion in the region but also coexists
with considerable Catholic and Muslim communities. Unlike the communist
era, when most citizens expressed their alienation from religion, the percent-
age of the so-called unaffiliated is now very small except in countries like the
Czech Republic (72%), Estonia (45%), Latvia (21%) and Hungary (21%). The
largest atheistic community is found in Russia (15%). Of the population of
countries like Moldova, Georgia, Greece, Romania and Serbia, between 92 and
86% consider themselves Orthodox Christians. The number of those who view
themselves as Orthodox Christians in the other countries in the study, such as
Bulgaria, Belarus, Russia and Ukraine, suggests a greater diversity of religious
ideas.
According to the study in question, after the fall of the atheist regimes in the
early 1990s, interest in religious beliefs rose sharply, and the authority of the
traditional social structures as a whole increased (Fig. 14.2). One can observe a
considerable diffeence between 1991 and 2015 in Russia, Bulgaria and Ukraine.
If Bulgaria experienced a rise of about 16%, in Russia and Ukraine it was huge –
almost 40%.
Fig. 14.3
Catholic shares declining in parts of
Central Europe
This graph can be easily explained. In these three cases, the rise in interest is
a result of political conflicts. In Bulgaria in the 1980s, the communist regime
was carrying out a strongly nationalistic and anti-Muslim propaganda pro-
gramme and used the Orthodox cultural heritage of the Bulgarian people to
this end. So the state mobilized people in accordance with their affiliation with
the Orthodox Church and the trauma of the Ottoman past of the country. On
other hand, after 1989, the Russian state started searching for a new ideology to
replace the communist one.9 At the same time, Ukraine was implementing a
9 See S. Riboloff, “Ἡ Ἁγία καὶ Μεγάλη Σύνοδος καὶ ὁ Ὀρθόδοξος Νεοσυντηρητισμός” [The Holy
and Great Council and Orthodox Neoconservatism], paper presented at The 8th International
Conference of Orthodox Theology: The Holy and the Great Council of the Orthodox Church:
Orthodox Theology in the 21st Century, ed. Dimitra Koukoura, Anna Nikita-Koltsiou and Anna
Karamanidou, Thessaloniki, 21–25 May 2020, 65–71.
If one compares the results for the whole region, the countries that are
closer to Moscow – in line with pro-Russian sentiments – indicate an intensifi-
cation of interest in religion since the 1970s. In the countries where Russia has
more influence, these tendencies are related to Orthodox Christianity to a
greater degree (Fig. 14.4). Pro-Western countries display an obvious tendency
towards less interest in a nominal declaration of religious affiliation. In these
countries, faith appears less intense and less politicized. Nevertheless, the peo-
ple in these countries are better informed about religion and appear to be
more interested in active practice (fewer people, but more active).
Fig. 14.5
Relatively low shares of Orthodox
across Central and Eastern Europe
attend church weekly
As we can see in these graphs, personal belief does not play that important a
role for the Orthodox majority. For instance, just 15% of Russians say that reli-
gion is very important in their everyday lives (Fig. 14.6). This point, i.e., that
faith does not play an important role in personal life, leads to the conclusion
that the most of the Orthodox Christians in Russia and the countries in the
region view their Orthodox Church much more as a communal organization
for social mobilization, i.e., the political element is much more important than
the spiritual one (Fig. 14.7). For instance, there is also a graph regarding faith in
life after death. Here the results, as seen in Fig. 16.8 are also very discouraging.
Moreover, only 25% of Russians believe God exists, and only 30% of Bulgarians
do so – much less than the Greeks, Georgians or Romanians (59 to 73%)
(Fig. 14.8). As we have stated, a large section of Orthodox Christians view their
religious identity as national and vice versa. In Central Europe, one can see a
similar picture among the Catholics but to a lesser extent (Fig. 14.9).
Fig. 14.8 While most believe in God, fewer are absolutely certain
10 See Religious Belief and National Belonging in Central and Eastern Europe http://www.
pewforum.org/2017/05/10/religious-belief-and-national-belonging-in-central-and-
eastern-europe/ (accessed 6 September 2019), 68, 78.
11 Sveto Riboloff, “Neo-Konservatizmat i choveshkite prava” [Neo-Conservatism and Human
Rights], Hristianstvo i kultura 124 (2017), 35–47 (in Bulgarian).
Fig. 14.11
Higher support in Orthodox-majority countries
for governments promoting religion
I believe that the next graph is the most disturbing. It shows that most Orthodox
Christians – at least in 2017 – support Russia as a protector of Orthodox
Christians worldwide (Fig. 14.13). We can assume that in the last three years
this influence has been diminished due to the conflict in Ukraine and the mul-
tiple attempts of the EU and NATO to tackle the information war.
Fig. 14.13
In Orthodox-majority countries,
widespread support for Russia
protecting Orthodox Christians
Conclusion
In conclusion, it can be said that the relationships between church and state
represent an unstable system in most of the countries in Eastern Europe. They
are the reason for a number of crises in these societies. Only strong reform-
ist governments deeply integrated into the Western political system can carry
out profound reforms to free the churches from political exploitation. Also,
all these churches need courageous and determined bishops to carry out such
reforms on the part of the Church. On the other hand, an eventual lack of state
control over some of these churches in countries that are allied with the West
may lead to uncontrolled influence by the Russian Federation on their clergy. It
will lead to a kind of asymmetry between the political obligations of the state
and the political implications of the actions of certain representatives of the
churches. One encounters such a case in the refusal of the Bulgarian Orthodox
Church and the Georgian Orthodox Church to take part in the Pan-Orthodox
Council in 2016. Both churches are often opposed to the political course of
their governments and their highest-ranked clergy openly oppose NATO and
the EU. Ιn addition to clear expectations of a deepening crisis in the Orthodox
churches in the region, with the exception of the churches of Greece and
Romania, we can add the persistent lack of vision for the development of these
relationships between church and state. This instability and the inability of
these societies to modernize these relations opens up space for the influence
of extreme ideas promoted by authoritarian regimes such as the Russian.
Owing to the panic raised by the collapse of past certainties and the sweep-
ing march of pluralism in the Western world, liberal democracy is nowadays
increasingly accused, among other things, of undermining established norma-
tive principles in the name of a disoriented relativism intolerant of any collec-
tive and traditional vision of life. Moreover, according to this view, liberalism is
broadly incriminated for inducing atheistic nihilism as well as an open hostil-
ity to religion and spirituality. As a result, liberal culture is presented on the
whole as intrinsically incompatible with the metaphysical and, by extension,
normative claims of monotheistic religions. Meeting the above indictment
head-on, we shall argue that not only is liberal democracy not devoid of ethi-
cal principles but in actuality constitutes a valuable ally for Christianity, one
that is more dignified and trustworthy than neoconservative alternatives of a
communitarian bent vying for faith’s comradeship.
Arguably one of the most crucial questions currently engaging political theory
in the Western world is the legitimacy of the interplay between politics and
ontology (as well as eschatology, the teleological horizon of ontology). Stated
more elaborately, we believe that the debate on whether politics is entitled
to pose ontological questions derived from religious and other transcenden-
tal sources is only bound to intensify insofar as politics stands for democracy
and the promotion of human rights. This is demonstrated by the cultural wars
raging almost everywhere in the Western world nowadays, particularly in the
United States. This controversy is fuelled by the perception of metaphysical
foundations of morality (and by extension, of policymaking) as inherently
incompatible with the fluidity of revisable truths that appear more suitable to
* I would like to extend warm thanks to Dr. Ioannis Kaminis for the English translation of the
shorter version of the paper at hand.
1 MacIntyre’s disdain for the Enlightenment philosophers is starkly evident as early as his
book A Short History of Ethics, see Alasdair McIntyre¸ A Short History of Ethics (New York:
Macmillan, 1966), 183: “We can bring out Rousseau’s importance best by considering the dif-
ferent attitude to liberty taken by the typical writers of the Enlightenment and by Rousseau.
For Montesquieu, Voltaire, and Helvétius alike the ideals of political liberty are incarnated
in the English Revolution of 1688. Freedom means freedom for Whig lords and also for intel-
lectuals like themselves. But for those whom Voltaire called ‘the rabble’ obedience is still the
order of the day. Thus on the only point on which the writers of the Enlightenment were
predisposed to be moral innovators they adopted a position which was essentially arbitrary,
which accepted the status quo as a whole, while questioning it in part, especially where it
affected their own interests. No wonder that these would-be radicals so eagerly sought and
accepted relationships with royal patrons, Diderot with Catherine of Russia, Voltaire with
Frederick of Prussia.” On the whole, MacIntyre seems to prefer, if critically, the pessimism
of a Schopenhauer as “an important corrective to the easy liberal optimism of so much of
nineteenth-century life” (222).
2 Alasdair MacIntyre, After Virtue 3rd ed. (Notre Dame IN: Notre Dame University Press, 2007).
3 MacIntyre, “Nietzsche or Aristotle: Trotsky and St. Benedict,” in After Virtue, 256ff. The ques-
tion “Nietzsche or Aristotle?” was first posed in the ninth chapter of the same book.
4 See MacIntyre, “Why the Enlightenment Project of Justifying Morality Had to Fail,” in After
Virtue, 51–61.
5 MacIntyre, After Virtue, 54.
6 MacIntyre, After Virtue, 80–81.
7 Christos Yannaras, Ἡ ἀπανθρωπία τοῦ δικαιώματος [The Inhumanity of Right] (Athens: Domos
Publications, 2006).
8 Literary theorist Terry Eagleton is a noteworthy example of this trend as an outspoken
defender of both Marxism and Christianity. See especially Terry Eagleton, Reason, Faith, and
Revolution: Reflections on the God Debate (New Haven CN: Yale University Press, 2010); idem,
Why Marx was Right (New Haven CN: Yale University Press, 2018). Slavoj Žižek is another
major representative of this trend. Slavoj Žižek, The Puppet and the Dwarf: The Perverse core
of Christianity (Cambridge MA: The MIT Press, 2003).
9 Philippos Vasiloyannis, Τὸ μίσος γιὰ τὴ φιλελεύθερη δημακρατία [The Hatred of Liberal
Democracy] (Athens: Eurasia Publications, 2019), 94.
spiritually destitute, deprived of values and afflicted by the worst form of lone-
liness: the lack of a comprehensive profound answer to the meaning of life.
The fact that human beings are predominantly not content with mere survival
but aspire rather to know why they exist in the first place, thereby in search of
a deeper purpose in life, often leads them to religion (for, after all, humans are
theopoietic or god-making creatures as well). Alternatively, they are given to
the lure of utopias as a refuge from life’s nagging uncertainties. Conservative
intellectuals increasingly underscore the significance of existential meaning as
an indispensable requirement for a fulfilling life, which is why they flaunt the
fear of “nihilism” and “depression” affecting northwestern societies in support
of their communal or even nationalistic rhetoric. In doing so, however, they
make an unfair demand of politics, asking from it what is alien to its nature –
sanguinely disregarding or concealing the fact that whenever metaphysics of
any sort is forcefully mixed with politics, the result is disastrous, as has become
painfully evident in the various totalitarianisms that bedeviled the previous
century.
Nevertheless, while the ghost of totalitarianism haunts progressive histo-
rians and intellectuals, it is invisible to the average person who is left acutely
frustrated when stripped of familiar, domesticated coordinates. Quite evi-
dently, people deeply resent the resulting emptiness that follows the ebb of
the “great narratives” serving as purveyors of a fixed grand meaning; they find
the ensuing reign of a “confusing” pluralism that only grounds us in prosaic,
“small scale” life goals just as unnerving – particularly when such minimal-
ism is combined with the uncertainty of a fluid and constantly changing world
such as ours. As a result, the demand for a spiritual port providing a meaning
that supersedes daily turmoil and the vacuity of consumerism is recurringly
on the rise – usually in the form of an instinctive regression of societies to
a conservative mindset often manifested in the electoral support of populist
demagogues (merchants of political messianism) backed by similar trends in
philosophy and art.
This “black hole” allegedly ailing contemporary life is habitually associ-
ated with Western civilization as its unmistakable malaise after the advent of
modernity, with liberal democracy being designated as the main culprit for
the said dead-end. It is worth mentioning that Yannaras refers scornfully to
liberal democracy as “the right-wing pole of historical materialism,” a witti-
cism intended to depict liberalism as the worldly, lewd flipside to Marxism.
Philosophical and literary adversaries of modernity and the liberal versions of
the social contract articulate their consternation by asking a series of reason-
able, if exaggerated, questions, occasionally bordering on emotionalism: “Can
the 20th century mass society with its technological development provide a
satisfactory meaning for life to ordinary people? God is dead, the ancient regime
is also past us, but what succeeds them? At the end of the day, is the human
race really receptive to improvement? Did modernism live up to its promise to
instill liberation or has it delivered nothing but a void?” Intellectuals nostalgic
for the “lost pre-modern centre” mockingly conclude that “the 20th century
did not provide us with optimistic answers to these questions, even though
in theory it should have been the era of the triumph of the Enlightenment’s.”
The Czech philosopher Karel Kosík, for one, was unflinchingly caustic in his
uncharitable judgment of modern liberal culture. He faults it for comprising
the realm of the “accidental” and the “meaningless,” which recklessly erased
every trace of tragedy from the human radar, blithely surrendering the modern
conscience to the dictatorship of the markets without resistance.10 He ascer-
tained that
humans nowadays are hasty and anxious. They rush from one place to another,
stripped of any sense of real direction […]. The essential meaning in human
life is now long lost, having been replaced by the pursuit of the non-essential.
The philosophical formula encapsulating the immersion in what is downright
meaningless is the phrase ‘God is dead.’[…] Having thoughtlessly glorified the
trivial, people find a purpose in life in the accumulation of products, in prop-
erty and the unlimited consumption of things, goods, pleasures and information
[…]. Production has become the predominant means of shaping how humans
relate to the world: production has absorbed creativity and initiative […]. [Kosík
concludes, adding ruefully that] “the modern age is a time of crisis, because its
foundations are in crisis.”11
10 Liberal democracy does not assume it should be shielded from criticism, if anything,
thanks to its open-ended, dialogical nature. Thus, it can converse with and learn from
serious conservative critics such as Michael Oakeshott. For a condensed exposition of his
conservatism, see Michael Oakeshoot, Rationalism in Politics and Other Essays (London:
Methuen, 1962). For a more recent challenging critique of liberal democracy akin to
Kosík’s negative appraisal of it (minus the latter’s emphasis on the so-called “existential
meaninglessness” supposedly intrinsic to liberal culture), see Adrian Pabst, The Demons
of Liberal Democracy (Cambridge UK: Polity Press, 2019).
11 Karel Kosík, Ἡ κρίση τῆς Νεωτερικότητας [The Crisis of Modernity] (Athens: Psychogios
Publications, 2003), 72–4.
Nietzsche denounces the century that killed God and is unwilling to under-
stand the broader consequences of the replacement of God by various abstract
ideas: Progress, Ethics, Democracy, Socialism, Nationalism, Rationalism and
other resounding concepts bound to collapse under the crashing wave of the
coming Nihilism. The more optimistic and reassuring these false gods appear
to be, the more humans are convinced of their self-sufficiency. But they will be
stripped just as quickly of all that is meaningful and essential; and the erosive
work of Nihilism that nullifies the foundations of existence will be all the easier.
The bond of humankind with its own life will be even more troubling and the
inversion of values will be more effective, transforming human spirituality into
a problem.12
In light of the above accusations, the equation of liberal democracy with nihil-
ism, individualism and the self-negation of politics in general would seem to
be self-evident. This equation is overwhelmingly popular among theological
circles, especially in Greek Orthodoxy, where the cultural model of Christian
Hellenism is touted as a unique purveyor of universal existential meaning. The
alluring promise of this cultural paradigm, however, is marred by a resentful
elegy for the past, a craving for the lost glamour of a once imperial, flourish-
ing Orthodoxy, which presently lies in hopeless decline. How so? Because (so
the story goes) Orthodox culture was foolishly exchanged for (deleterious!) for-
eign, Western socio-political models and customs, unreflectively imitated by
modern Greeks unappreciative of the value of their own tradition. Yannaras,
the premier representative of this antimodern trend, sums up its reactionary
core neatly when he states that:
The lament for the loss of the socio-political primacy of Christianity and the
monopoly of Christian values in Western society is often portrayed as a devious
persecution of faith, as an exile of the sacred from the public sphere, all thanks
to the malevolent anti-religious prejudice of liberalism. For example, in the
same collection of essays penned by Yannaras, we are told bluntly – without
further analysis and substantiation – that “the notion of social and political
‘Liberalism’, as formed in Western Europe by the so-called ‘progressive’ move-
ments of past centuries, sternly presupposes an open opposition to the clergy
and institutional Christendom.”14 Is this assessment valid? Definitely not. To
begin with, we should be reminded that liberal democracy is intrinsically
secular, not atheistic. The difference between freedom of and from religion
on the one hand and atheism on the other is vast and fundamental to any
attempt at discussing liberal democracy’s stance on faith responsibly. It must
therefore be thoroughly delineated because it is frequently obscured, often
due to ignorance but occasionally also deliberately. Liberals include in their
ranks people of all metaphysical beliefs, from agnostics and the religiously
indifferent to believers and atheists.15 Monumental figures in European his-
tory such as Hugo Grotius, Pierre Bayle, Johannes Althusius, the Jesuit theolo-
gian Balthasar Gracián and the empiricist John Locke could be listed, among
others, as practicing Christians and liberals. Liberal democracy does not
engage in debates on religious doctrines, meaning it abstains from adjudicat-
ing their reasonableness, plausibility or worth, unless doctrines are deemed
detrimental to the freedom and security of citizens. We are indebted to John
Rawls, the father of modern political liberalism, for the crucial reminder that
the model of the social contract he favours, leaves religious beliefs completely
untouched, if not respectfully insular from scientific or philosophical criti-
cism.16 Rawls does not embrace any philosophical or ideological worldview,
such as the Enlightenment, for example, as more suitable for democracy in the
present era. Moreover, according to Rawls, even atheism falls into the category
of metaphysical or “comprehensive doctrines,” inasmuch as it constitutes an
all-inclusive worldview not corroborated by science. As such, it is considered
unsuitable for invocation in public debates from the liberal angle in much the
same way that religious doctrines per se are excluded.17
But whence their exclusion? At this point, a further clarification is in order:
theists, agnostics and atheists should be equally entitled to join debates on any
matter of public interest, with the sole provision that they express their views
in the idiom of public reason, agreed upon in advance by every interlocutor.
Such an idiom is, by definition, as metaphysically neutral as possible: argu-
mentation so structured may contain scientific facts, statistics, references to
historical precedents, as well as reasonably expected results and reliable data
subject to scientific checks and falsifiability. Given this requirement, stand-
points that are based on religious traditions and doctrines, including atheism,
clearly cannot be endorsed as appropriate for deliberating public affairs – not
only by virtue of their divisive nature but chiefly because the metaphysical jus-
tification of any view does not constitute a genuine form of argumentation; it
is but a mere tautology, a question-begging reference unable to contribute any-
thing substantial to the debate beyond simply indicating partisan preference.
For example, quoting the Qur’an or the New Testament cannot demonstrate in
a rational way (as befits the ancient Greek tradition of λόγον διδόναι or being
accountable to reason for one’s statements) the intrinsic uncleanliness of eat-
ing pork or the wrongness of blood transfusions as advocated by Jehovah’s
Witnesses. To be sure, the whole issue of determining the criteria demarcat-
ing legitimate from illegitimate argumentation in public debates as regards the
social contract is deep and much too complicated to be analyzed here in any
meaningful length. Suffice it to point out then, given my space restrictions,
that liberal democracy is fully and sincerely respectful of everyone’s religious
and/or ideological beliefs without discriminating in favour of any party. At the
[since] these are not the same as public reason. For I define secular reason [itself] as
reasoning in terms of comprehensive nonreligious doctrines. Such doctrines and values
are much too broad to serve the purposes of public reason. […] Moral doctrines are on a
level with religion and first philosophy. By contrast, liberal political principles and values,
although intrinsically moral values, are specified by liberal political conceptions of justice
and fall under the category of the political” (775–6). The above thesis is integral to Rawls’
later magisterial work, see his Political Liberalism, with a New Introduction and a Reply to
Habermas (New York: Columbia University Press, 1996).
17 Rawls famously insisted that “to deny certain metaphysical doctrines is to assert another
such doctrine.” See Political Liberalism, 379, n. 8.
same time, however, it raises limits aiming to forestall the hijacking of pub-
lic debates by fundamentalist, partisan and similar defective forms of circu-
lar reasoning. In doing so, liberal democracy categorically assumes that in
free, non-theocratic or other non-totalitarian societies, policymaking occurs
by consensus attained through compromise than it does by submission to
revealed truths – whether divinely dictated or imposed by the so-called iron
laws of history. In fact, the neutrality upheld by liberal democracy with regard
to metaphysics, secular or religious alike, is precisely what safeguards every-
one’s rights to either worship (privately or in public) or abstain completely
from any kind of worship without sufffering persecution. Interestingly, the
impartiality of Rawlsian liberalism runs counter to the “paternalistic” version
of autonomy maintained by Cornelius Castoriadis,18 who set atheism as a sine
qua non prerequisite for the success of democracy.
For all its neutrality versus doctrine, though, liberal democracy is not mor-
ally spineless, nor does it lack sufficient spiritual coordinates. Much less does
it promote a kind of morbid individualism devoid of social empathy,19 as is so
irresponsibly claimed. On the contrary, liberal democracy is motivated by
high ethical principles. As was alluded above, it values tolerance, rational and
sober argumentation, respectful disagreement, innovation, and above all the
twin freedoms of conscience and thought. These are some of the key virtues
the primacy of the individual has often been the subject of insults and humili-
ation by the worshipers of collectivities, who look down upon it as a disdain-
ful way of life. […] Remnants of this contempt can be traced in some Greek
intellectuals who […] accuse the individual of being indifferent to noble and
elevated ideals, such as revolution, social change, the right faith, the arts, the
glory of the motherland, and nowadays the clean environment. […] [T]his feared
primacy of the individual, however, does not mean that collectivism is an illu-
sion or that coexistence by itself is problematic, as some other philosophers have
maintained. It merely means that the individual bears sole responsibility for her
relations with others and that any collective body depends for its existence on
the free will of the individuals consenting to its formation; that it exists, in other
words, for as long as these individuals persist in their choice. […] No one can
be a collective product. […] The party does not “generate” people. People are
those who generate, constitute and form it. If they change their mind, the party
ceases to exist, it dissolves and becomes an event of the past. […] Liberalism
fosters the humanist tendency – a tendency born in Greek antiquity – [to ques-
tion the givens of life]: instead of resting content with merely asking “why” about
whatever already exists, liberalism asks “why not” about something new that can
be imagined. Reason aside, as humans we could not have outgrown the sover-
eignty of instincts without the gift of imagination, an overflowing of the soul
permitting us to cut off the ropes and let our life vessel sail out to the open sea.
On the opposite end of this innovative curiosity are the frantic worshipers of
prescribed “ends” and ultimate goals, the lovers of censorship bent on uproot-
ing or stigmatizing dissenters as “selfish.” Liberalism does not prescribe policies.
It is content with securing the freedoms of thought, speech, religious worship,
the press, communication and suffrage for everyone. Citizens dwelling in liberal
states enjoy the rights to life, dignity, self-determination, equal treatment by the
authorities, free speech, equality before the law and of course the right to private
ownership. These principles do not by themselves establish a systematic ethics,
but they can nonetheless shed some light on human actions.”20
Liberal democracy certainly respects majority rulings when these are freely
administered. At the same time, however, it strives to protect minorities from
the tyranny and impunity of the majorities, for, as the historical record demon-
strates, the masses are never keen on willingly granting freedoms or privileges
to helpless minorities, notwithstanding the former’s self-exonerating rhetoric.
One need only cite the tribulations of Frangoyannou, the literary heroine from
A. Papadiamantis’ novel The Murderess, and the near stoning of the adulteress
in the New Testament as atrocities enacted by the pious, yet inhuman, will
of the majority. Given the perpetuating tyranny of majorities, then, what line
of defense could be mounted against it? Perhaps the most potent theoretical
weapon in that direction comes from John Stuart Mill, whose argument is in line
with the unequivocal Christian (as well as Kantian) emphasis on the distinction
and dignity of persons. Mill submits that governments must indeed heed the
“will of the people” yet warns vehemently against its unrestricted glorification.
Mill was among the first to perceive that, because masses feel immune from
trouble, they are often so set in their ways as to become insensitive to the plight
of the unprivileged – worse still, they are even likely to desire the oppression
of voiceless members of society, given the chance. A major insight of modern
political thought is that power corrupts both leaders and citizens when left
unchecked, meaning if it is not curtailed by constitutional provisions drawn
up for the protection of the weak and marginalized. For these reasons, Mill
insisted, the “tyranny of the majority” must now be included among the evils
against which society must be on guard.21 Christians, more than others, should
feel especially motivated to stand in support of vulnerable and marginalized
people, assuming, of course, that they are determined to follow in the steps of
Christ and not the self-righteous Pharisees – the religious leaders whose legal-
ism incited the stoning of certain women.
race, ethnic origin, education, and sexual orientation espousing diverse, even
contrasting beliefs. The importance of this requirement cannot be overstated,
given the flagrant historical failure of organized religion (including Orthodox
Christianity) to restrain themselves from violence against “others.” A healthy
model of culture is one that respects people’s life options and preferences
(to the extent that these are not harmful to others), and not only permits but
actively encourages the pursuance of one’s dreams, even when it runs coun-
ter to the tastes of social majorities – in essence, allowing for the unimpeded
possibility of citizens’ self-realization as they see fit for themselves. “Culture”
(unless the term refers to mere folklore) means the actual transition from the
category of subject to that of citizen. The shift denotes the liberation of indi-
viduals and societies from the fear of an arbitrary authority (whether secular
or religious) set on monopolizing and preemptively determining the mean-
ing and content of the “public good” on behalf of its subjects. Lastly, “civili-
zation,” in its advanced stage, is synonymous with the enrichment of human
life through its exposure to a wealth of different cultural affairs, as in the case
of 5th-century BC Athens, where citizens gained immensely from the free
exercise of an incredible variety of sophisticated events, schools and ideas – a
myriad of life perspectives, whose combined interplay caused the city to shine
through as “the education center of Greece.” In contrast, intellectual atrophy –
partial or total – is the proven outcome of the monopoly of public space by a
single faith or ideology.
As stated in Pericles’s Funeral Oration, moreover, civilization is the recog-
nition of the citizens’ right to privacy, one of the most sacred and inviolable
principles of democracy and one of the first freedoms to suffer prohibition in
theocratic or otherwise totalitarian regimes. Finally, civilization is synonymous
with the smooth operation of democratic institutions, which are the first and
the last refuge of the weak. The liberal democratic state, whose forerunner was
the Athenian Republic, respects and protects religion, unlike ignorant pseudo-
liberals who naively and pretentiously attach political value to their aversion
to religion. At the same time, though, liberal democracy is equally protective of
individuals from religion, ensuring that its doctrines and principles are never
enforced on citizens. On the whole, liberal democracy is astutely aware of its
definite limits, which is why it refrains from providing “existential” or other
similar psychotherapeutic “visions” to citizens – the freedom it upholds and
strives towards is always a political freedom, not a soteriological one imbued
with metaphysical and/or ascetical undertones. The disparity between these
two versions of freedom cannot be overstated. Christ has given us an inspiring
blueprint for exercising freedom from self-centredness, but it is not the state’s
role to make us pious or virtuous people, just good citizens, inasmuch as its
22 The role of the Christian concept of personhood as a partial but significant contributor
to the emergence of modern subjectivity and human rights, along with the achievements
of modernity and secularism, has been acknowledged, among other scholars, by Larry
Siedentop, see Larry Siedentop, Inventing the Individual: The Origins of Western Liberalism
(Cambridge MA: Harvard Belknab Press, 2014); Maureen P. Heath, The Christian Roots
of Individualism (London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2019). For a well-argued attempt to build
an honest, meaningful bridge between liberal democracy and Orthodox Christianity, see
Aristotle Papanikolaou, The Mystical as Political: Democracy and Non-Radical Orthodoxy
(Notre Dame IN: The University of Notre Dame Press, 2012).
23 Ioannis Petrou, Πολυπολιτισμικότητα καὶ θρησκευτικὴ ἐλευθερία [Multiculturalism and
Religious Freedom] (Thessaloniki: Paratiritis Publications, 2003), 151.
Christians are not relativists and cannot modify their core doctrine of God
without giving up on the Gospel altogether. But as the relatively recent redis-
covery of Christian eschatology indicates, history, from the biblical perspective
Christians do not worship the past, because they are turned toward the future,
the eschaton, from which they await the fulfilment of their existence. This, how-
ever, is not a denial of the present, because the eschaton does not destroy but
rather transforms history, turning it into eschatological history and imbuing it
with meaning and purpose (cf. Heb. 13:14: For here we have no lasting city, but we
are looking for the city that is to come).
but in the future, in the eschaton, in what it will become. As the scholia attrib-
uted to St. Maximus the Confessor note regarding symbols in the commentary
on the Corpus Areopagiticum, “For the things of the Old Testament are shadow,
the things of the New Testament are image, and those of the future state are
truth.”26 As the theology behind this passage suggests, there is plenty of room
for considered innovation in the Christian faith, and it is the business of theol-
ogy to spell out ways of making room for the new while maintaining the proper
balance between past tradition and future enlargement – fallibility as well as
innovation are virtues fit for the world’s faiths as well.
For all these and more reasons, it should be added by way of conclusion that
the notion of “progress” should not scare or disconcert us Orthodox Christians
as we move forward in our somewhat bumpy trajectory well into the 21st cen-
tury. Contrary to what conservative theorists, more or less eschewers of lib-
eral democracy (of the likes of Georges Sorel27, Karl Kraus, Max Nordau28,
Oswald Spengler29, and others of the same ilk), were fond of rehashing, social
and political progress is real and has been attained in a significant way. It may
be very fragile and subject to terrible setbacks, but it has occurred and, more
often than not, is the accomplishment of contractualist visionaries who dared
to think – at least partially – outside the box of communal, inherited wisdom.
“Freestanding,” namely liberal ethical and political concepts are not ghosts;
they are real and concern the shared values that helped shape Western civili-
zation as a tolerant, open-ended and forward-looking culture.
Conclusion
In the public sphere, Christians are no less willing (or entitled) than others to
proclaim their own vision of justice, featuring a world that respects the dig-
nity of its citizens as living images of God. Drawing on its founding principles,
26 Pantelis Kalaitzidis, Orthodoxy and Political Theology (Geneva: WCC Publications, 2012),
110–2. Maximus’s saying at the end of Kalaitzidis’ passage comes from Maximus the
Confessor, Commentary on the Ecclesiastical Hierarchy, PG 4, 137D. As noted by Kalaitzidis
himself, today, most scholars attribute this work to John of Scythopolis.
27 Georges Sorel, The Illusion of Progress, Foreword by Robert A. Nisbet, John and Charlotte
Stanley, trans. (Berkeley and Los Angeles CA: University of California Press, 1969). For
a liberal critique of Sorel’s reactionary views of science and culture, see Isaiah Berlin,
Against the Current: Essays in the History of Ideas (Princeton NJ: Princeton University
Press, 2001), 296–332.
28 Max Simon Nordau, Degeneration (Eastford CT: Martino Fine Books, 2014).
29 Oswald Spengler, The Decline of the West, trans. Charles Francis Atkison (New York: Oxford
University Press, 1991).
Ioannis Kaminis
Human rights are ethical principles or social norms that set certain standards
of human conduct and are protected as legal rights by domestic and interna-
tional law.1 They are generally regarded as inalienable, fundamental rights that
every person possesses by birth simply because he or she is a human being,
and these rights are inherent in all human beings regardless of their nation-
ality, location, language, religion, ethnic origin or any other status.2 Human
rights are applicable everywhere and at all times in the sense that they are
universal and also egalitarian because they are the same for every person.
They require compassion and the rule of law and impose on every person the
duty to respect the rights of others. They should not be taken away except as a
result of due process or on the basis of specific circumstances.3 For example,
human rights may include freedom from unlawful detention, torture or execu-
tion.4 As Andrew Clapham states, “Human rights are about each of us living
in dignity. […] [T]he human rights project is not simply about implement-
ing a set of obligations fixed in history; rather, the human rights movement
is about people standing up to injustice and showing solidarity in the face of
1 James W. Nickel, Making Sense of Human Rights: Philosophical Reflections on the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights (Berkeley CA: University of California Press, 1987),
1–27; idem, “Human Rights,” The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Fall 2021 edi-
tion), ed. Edward N. Zalta, https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/rights-human/ (accessed
5 December 2021).
2 Magdalena Sepúlveda & Theo Van Banning et al., Human Rights Reference Handbook (Ciudad
Colon: University of Peace, 2004), 6; United Nations Human Rights Office of the High
Commissioner, What are Human Rights? https://www.ohchr.org/en/issues/pages/whatare-
humanrights.aspx (accessed 5 December 2021); B. H. Weston, “Human Rights,” Encyclopedia
Britannica, 5 March 2020, https://www.britannica.com/topic/human-rights (accessed
5 December 2021); Amnesty International UK, What are Human Rights? 24 July 2018, https://
www.amnesty.org.uk/what-are-human-rights (accessed 5 December 2021).
3 United Nations Human Rights, What are Human Rights?
4 Merriam-Webster.com Dictionary, s.v., “Human Rights,” https://www.merriam-webster.com/
dictionary/human%20rights, (accessed 5 December 2021).
the doctrine of human rights is the articulation in the public morality of world
politics of the idea that each person is a subject of global concern. It does not
matter what a person’s spatial location might be or which political subdivision
or social group the person might belong to. Everyone has human rights, and
responsibilities to respect and protect these rights may, in principle, extend
across political and social boundaries.7
encounter the reaction that rights have to be implemented according to the cul-
tural and economic context of the country concerned. This is sometimes seen as
the death knell for the credibility of the so-called “universality” of human rights.
It is, however, a mistake to imagine that human rights can, or should, operate
5 Andrew Clapham, Human Rights: A Very Short Introduction (Oxford: Oxford University Press,
2015), xiii.
6 Samuel Moyn, The Last Utopia: Human Rights in History (Cambridge MA: The Belknap Press
of Harvard University Press, 2010), 11, 8; See also, Gary J. Bass, “The Old New Thing,” The
New Republic, 20 October 2010, https://newrepublic.com/article/78542/the-old-new-thing-
human-rights (accessed 5 December 2021); See also Samuel Moyn, Christian Human Rights
(Philadelphia PA: University of Pennsylvania Press).
7 Charles R. Beitz, The Idea of Human Rights (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2009), 1.
8 Malcolm N. Shaw, International Law, 8th ed. (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2017),
210–3.
divorced from any local context. Even the application of an accepted right, such
as the right to life, can lead to different interpretations depending on the country
context.9
Some authors argue that the definition of human rights should be relatively
narrow so as to prevent the worst violations, while others advocate higher
requirements.10
It is important for our study to determine first of all the origins of the idea
of human rights in order to understand the current debate in the Orthodox
world regarding them and their compatibility with Eastern Orthodoxy. Like
any other idea, human rights did not come from nothing but are the prod-
uct of philosophical and cultural evolution. What we can be sure of, however,
is that the idea of human rights emerged in Europe. Unfortunately, there is a
misconception that human rights are a product of the French Revolution and
the Enlightenment. For example, the prominent Greek theologian and philos-
opher Christos Yannaras argues that
12 For a more thorough critique of Yannaras’ thesis, see Kristina Stoeckl, “The ‘We’ in
Normative Political Philosophical Debates: The Position of Christos Yannaras on Human
Rights,” in Alfons Brüning and Evert van der Zweerde (eds.), Orthodox Christianity and
Human Rights (Leuven: Peeters, 2012): 187–201; Aristotle Papanikolaou, The Mystical as
Political: Democracy and Non-Radical Orthodoxy (Notre Dame IN: University of Notre
Dame Press, 2012), 89–92.
13 Michel Villey, La Formation de la pensée juridique moderne (Paris: PUF, 2013), 225–6, 261.
14 Brian Tierney, The Idea of Natural Rights: Studies on Natural Rights, Natural Law, and
Church Law 1150–1625 (Grand Rapids MI: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company,
2001), 35.
if we go back to the early days of the Order, the whole Franciscan movement can
be seen as a culmination in the religious sphere of the personalism or individu-
alism that also influenced twelfth-century law. From the beginning, there was a
special kind of individualism in Francis’s attitude to the world around him; he
did not love mankind in the abstract but particular men and women. Francis
laid down in his Rule that all the brothers were to obey their superiors, but then
added: “in everything that is not against their conscience.”15
We also have to mention that, according to Tierney, natural rights and con-
sequently human rights started to evolve during the Middle Ages and more
concretely in the 12th century and afterwards. For example, the ancient Greeks
had no doctrine of natural rights and whether they had any concept of sub-
jective rights it is still being discussed. In addition, early Christianity did not
have any concept of natural or subjective rights either. As Tierney points out:
“Paul wrote of a law written on the hearts of men; but he did not assert that ‘all
men are endowed by their Creator with certain inalienable rights’.”16 Tierney
also cites numerous examples from the Middle Ages that show the evolution
of natural rights during this period, and he substantiates his position by pre-
senting various texts related to the language of canonistic rights.17 Particularly
interesting and important is his observation concerning the interpretation of
Jean Gerson of 1 Corinthians 6:12, “All things are lawful’.” According to Tierney,
Gerson associates ius natural with Paul’s text, transforming the ceremonial
Jewish precepts “into a more generalized doctrine of natural liberties,” and “it
was not that Christianity first conferred rights on its followers; rather, by not
imposing the restrictions of the Old Law it left them free to exercise their pre-
existing natural rights.”18
To summarize, it is clear from the sources that Tierney puts forward the
seminal idea by Villey that natural rights and therefore human rights derive
from a particular interpretation and development of Christianity that took
place in Western Europe. This means that human rights are not a product of
secularization, the Renaissance or the Enlightenment, as Yannaras implies. On
15 Tierney, The Idea of Natural Rights, 35; See also Paolo Grossi, “Usus facti: La nozione di
proprietà nella inaugurazione dell’età nuova,” Quaderni Forentini per la storia del pensiero
giuridico moderno I (1972), 285–355. In this paper, Grossi deals with the Franciscan stress
on the individual will as the origin of subjective rights.
16 Tierney, The Idea of Natural Rights, 46.
17 Tierney, The Idea of Natural Rights, 58–77.
18 Tierney, Ἡ Ἀπανθρωπία τοῦ Δικαιώματος, 68.
Since neither the spiritual nor temporal power could wholly dominate the other,
medieval government never congealed into a rigid theocratic absolutism in
which rights theories could never have taken root. Instead, in the vigorous, fluid,
expanding society of the twelfth century, old rights were persistently asserted
and new ones insistently demanded.23
22 A great example of such an individual is St. Maximus the Confessor, who refused to
submit to the official doctrine of the Byzantine authorities and was consequently con-
demned, had his tongue and his right hand cut off and died in exile. By today’s standards,
this saint could be considered a true dissenter or anarchist for the greater glory of God. If
he was living in 19th-century Russia he would have been sent to Siberia as a political crim-
inal. Regarding the anarchist dimension of the teaching of St. Maximus the Confessor,
see Emma Brown Dewhurst, “To Each According to their Needs: Anarchist Praxis as a
Resource for Byzantine Theological Ethics,” in Essays in Anarchism and Religion, ed.
Alexandre Christoyannopoulos and Matthew S. Adams, volume II (Stockholm: Stockholm
University Press, 2018). For more on anarchism and Christianity from a political science
perspective, see Alexandre J. M. E. Christoyannopoulos, Christian Anarchism: A Political
Commentary on the Gospel (Exeter: Imprint Academic, 2010); for anarchism from an
Orthodox Christian perspective, see Davor Džalto, Anarchy and the Kingdom of God: From
Eschatology to Orthodox Political Theology and Back (New York: Fordham University Press,
2021). Here we should also note what Pantelis Kalaitzidis says about the early church
supporting his argument in the Epistle to Diognetus in Pantelis Kalaitzidis, “Church and
Nation in Eschatological Perspective,” The Wheel 17/18 (Spring/Summer 2019), 52–3: “The
early church was not just a voluntary association for ‘religious’ purposes. It was rather
the New Society, even the New Humanity, a polis or politeuma, the true City of God, in
the process of construction. […] [T]he church was conceived as an independent and
self-supporting social order, as a new social dimension, a peculiar systema patridos, as
Origen put it. Early Christians felt themselves, in the last resort, quite outside of the
existing social order, simply because for them the church itself was an ‘order’, an extra-
territorial ‘colony of Heaven’ on earth. Nor was this attitude fully abandoned even later [in
Byzantium] when the empire, as it were, came to terms with the church.”
23 Tierney, The Idea of Natural Rights, 55.
He continues by saying that a feudal lord could simultaneously enjoy all the
rights enumerated in Hohfeld’s modern classification,24 the claim to rents and
services, the power to administer justice, immunity from external jurisdic-
tions or the freedom to hunt, for example, in the neighboring forest. There was
undoubtedly a situation of pluralism and class struggle, but the problems were
solved by the establishment of the rights of each class and not by revolutionary
violence:25
Cathedral canons asserted their rights against bishops. Bishops and barons
demanded their rights against kings. Newly-founded communes sometimes
bought their rights and sometimes fought for them. Even peasants, emigrating to
found new villages in the still vast expanses of forest and wasteland, could claim
enhanced liberties from lords who needed fresh supplies of labor. Medieval peo-
ple first struggled for survival, then they struggled for rights.26
“Church and theology cannot ignore the great importance of human rights.”
As for the Orthodox tradition, Delikostantis maintains that the idea of human
dignity has been developed differently in the East and the West:
Human freedom, which is a gift of the divine grace, does not insist on claim-
ing rights but considers itself embedded in a web of love, which is realized as a
constant self-overcoming and movement towards one’s fellow human being. The
fundamental human right that can be inferred from the thought of Orthodox
spirituality is the right “to love God in the fellow human being, to love one’s fel-
low human being for God’s sake.”28
In contrast to the notion of human dignity and freedom developed in the West,
which, according to Delikostantis is quite individualistic and self-centered,
Orthodox spirituality is “identified with freedom as community and love”;29
that is, Orthodoxy is characterized by a “particular communality,”30 while for
Orthodoxy God Himself is a community of persons and this divine community
has no relation to individualistic salvation but “communalizes” every human
being. For Delikostantis, “the Orthodox theological foundation and interpreta-
tion of human rights open up the horizon of the social dimension of human
freedom. The ethos of responsible freedom, which the human rights express,
is recognized, while their essential social meaning is restored.”31 Thus, human
rights are part of universal tradition that stresses the love of others and has rec-
onciled freedom and love, the individual and the society, while uniting people
and cultures and honored the human person. The depth of Orthodox ethos can
be revealed only in dialogue with human rights and modernity. Delikostantis
points to the value and goal that human rights can have for Orthodox theology
if they are interpreted accordingly because such an interpretation can help
one break away from fanaticism and sterile dogmatism on the one hand and
provide the initiation of dialogue with contemporary philosophical currents
and modernity on the other. Sincere and open-minded dialogue is the only
way for the Eastern Orthodox Church to avoid isolation and to communicate
with the modern world.
The question that arises here is the following: If the doctrine of natural
and thus human rights has its roots to some extent in Christianity and more
specifically in the experience of Western Middle Ages, then what happened
in the Christian East? Could there have been a similar development there as
Christianity acted largely as a precursor to human rights, the rise of the subject
and individuality. As Pantelis Kalaitzidis notes, Christianity has led to the
de-secralization of Caesar and civil authority; the release of the human being
from religious subordination and submission to the city, the state or the sacral-
ized civil authority and biological subordination to the tribe, the patriarchal
family, the clan and the family group; to the new emphasis given by the Gospel
on the unrepeatable uniqueness and value of the human person […] What else
was ultimately the early Christian struggle for the ‘right’ to conversion, if not the
‘right’ of individuals to free themselves from their ancestors’ religious beliefs, or
from their community tradition, as prerequisites for adopting Christian faith?”32
34 Here we can refer to the persecutions, exclusions and purges of “heretics” and all kinds of
dissenters from the “one and only truth,” from the official doctrine of imperial Christianity,
which was formulated by the Ecumenical Councils. The massacre of 30,000 civilian
Byzantine subjects by Justinian and Theodora at the Hippodrome of Constantinople in
532 AD was an actual inhuman event that was established de facto and de jure in the
principle of absolute monarchy. The ruthless controversy between iconoclasts and icon
worshipers lasted from 727 to 843 AD with numerous victims on both sides, along with
the destruction of works of art and books. There was the inhuman act, one of the greatest
atrocities in human history, by Emperor Basil II the Bulgar Slayer following his victory at
Kleidi (1014 AD): he divided 15,000 Bulgarian captives into companies of one hundred
men each, blinded 99 in each company and removed one eye from the hundredth in order
to lead the remaining blind soldiers! When King Samuel of the Bulgarians saw this, he
fainted and died shortly afterwards of a heart attack. The above facts indicate that the
situation in the Byzantine Empire was far from the idealized version that some Orthodox
writers support.
35 Anastasios Yannoulatos, “Eastern Orthodoxy and Human Rights,” International Review
of Mission 73 (1984), 454–66.
36 Nanovic Institute for European Studies, University of Notre Dame, “The Russian Orthodox
Church’s Basic Teaching on Human Dignity Freedom and Rights,” https://nanovic.nd.edu/
assets/17001/seminar_ii_russian_orth_church.pdf.
human being. Again, I think that terms such as “sin” and “salvation” cannot be
a part of a sincere dialogue with the human rights doctrine. In the same vein,
a Buddhist can object to human rights by saying that the goal of the human
being is nirvāṇa, while not taking into account that human rights refer to the
human person on a whole different level that transcends any religious dimen-
sion. According to the same text:
In Orthodoxy the dignity and ultimate worth of every human person are derived
from the image of God, while dignified life is related to the notion of God’s like-
ness achieved through God’s grace by efforts to overcome sin and to seek moral
purity and virtue. Therefore, the human being as bearing the image of God
should not exult in this lofty dignity, for it is not his own achievement but a gift
of God. Nor should he use it to justify his weaknesses or vices, but rather under-
stand his responsibility for the direction and way of his life. Clearly, the idea of
responsibility is integral to the very notion of dignity. (I.2)
It is God alone as the source of freedom Who can maintain it in a human being.
Those who do not wish to part with sin give away their freedom to the devil, the
enemy of God and the father of evil and captivity. While recognizing the value
of freedom of choice, the Church affirms that this freedom will inevitably disap-
pear if the choice is made in favor of evil. Evil and freedom are incompatible
[…]. (II.2)
the difference between the secular and the religious understanding is straight-
forward: secular documents postulate human dignity as a natural quality of
human beings, while the religious document links human dignity to the act of
divine creation. In both cases human dignity is an inalienable quality of the
human being, but in the first this inalienability lies within human nature, while
in the second it lies with the divine will.37
I do not think there is any need to dwell on the ROC document. Its weak-
nesses are obvious, while its discourse is purely religious, with the goal of
contrasting religious-Christian terminology to the language of human rights.
On this point, I agree with Stoeckl who states that “even when a conservative
religious tradition like Russian Orthodoxy engages in the work of ‘translation’,
what it renders understandable to a secular audience is far from reconcilable
37 Kristina Stoeckl, “The Russian Orthodox Church’s Basic Teaching on Human Dignity,
Liberty, and Rights: Analysis and Interpretation,” in Lucian Leustean (ed.), The Russian
Church and Human Rights (New York: Routledge, 2014), 71; in this study Stoeckl offers a
thorough analysis of the document in question.
with liberal democracy.”38 I also agree with the critical statements by Aristotle
Papanikolaou39 and Pantelis Kalaitzidis40 on the same document. For my part,
what I would like to note is the absence of the concept of love in the Russian
text. It is interesting that love is presented mainly in the context of love for the
homeland and compatriots, and not for the whole world, love for the stranger,
and the totally “other.” The text points out that “human rights should not con-
tradict love for one’s homeland and neighbors” (III.4), which means that the
homeland is superior to human rights, probably even if my “homeland” sends
me to an unjust or war of conquest against other people. I do not think that
such ideas are compatible with Christian teaching, St. Paul’s hymn to love
in 1 Corinthians 13:1–13 or with the Epistle to Diognetus, which states that for
Christians “every foreign country is fatherland to them, and every fatherland
is foreign.” This brand of moralistic, legalistic and nationalistic Christianity
seems more like a Christianity of compromises, a Christianity that has suc-
cumbed to the so-called temptation of Judas, an issue not only for the ROC
but for the most autocephalous Orthodox Churches.41 This stance of the ROC
can be explained historically. In fact, ever since the time of Joseph Stalin, the
ROC has gradually begun to become an instrument of influence on behalf
of the foreign policy of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR). The
unsuccessful attempts of the ROC as early the late 1940s and early 1950s to
convene a “Pan-Orthodox Synod” in Moscow are well known; its aim was to
declare itself an Orthodox Vatican and to govern the rest of the autocephalous
churches. Although the Soviet authorities continued to persecute the Church
in the areas under their control, this policy remained the same throughout
the entire historical period of the USSR and even after the formation of the
Russian Federation in 1991. It is in this context that we understand the hostility
and constant attacks by the Russian media against the leader of the Orthodox
Church, namely, the Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople. Nevertheless,
the truth is that Russian pressure on the Patriarchate of Constantinople began
as early as the Ottoman period and has gradually increased with the emergence
of Pan-Slavism in the Russian Empire and the countries under its influence. At
comparison with the documents of the Council shows that the Social Ethos text
is quite significant in this regard. Moreover, the ideas of the text are addressed
to a global audience and not only to countries with a predominantly Orthodox
population. There is an obvious realization that globalization is now a fact and
that we live in a world in which we depend on each other. That is why the Social
Ethos text emphasizes that: “There can be no such thing as ‘Christian national-
ism’, or even any form of nationalism tolerable to Christian conscience’.”45 This
statement is totally opposite to what ROC’s text says about the homeland. It
is also very important that the Orthodox Church seems – perhaps for the first
time – to be moving beyond Byzantinism and its preoccupation with the once
glorious past. This means, in part, that it does not only agree to enter into dia-
logue with modernity but also to accept certain aspects of it that have already
been established in social life. That is why this text points out the following:
The Orthodox Church earnestly seeks unity with all Christians out of love and
desire to share the spiritual riches of her tradition with all who seek the face
of Christ. Moreover, it understands that the particular cultural forms of tradi-
tion must not be confused with either the true apostolic authority or the sac-
ramental grace with which it has been entrusted. The Church seeks sustained
dialogue with Christians of other communions in order to offer them a full
understanding of the beauty of Orthodoxy, not in order to convert them to some
cultural “Byzantinism.” It does so also in order to learn from the experiences of
Christians throughout the world, to understand the many cultural expressions of
Christianity, and to seek unity among all who call upon the name of Jesus. (6.51)
A great many political and social debates in the modern world turn upon the
distinct demands and needs of heterosexual, homosexual, bisexual, and other
sexual “identities.” It is true, as a simple physiological and psychological fact, that
the nature of individual sexual longing is not simply a consequence of private
45 Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America, “For the Life of the World: Toward a Social
Ethos of the Orthodox Church,” https://www.goarch.org/social-ethos.
choice regarding such matters; many of the inclinations and longings of the flesh
and the heart to a great extent come into the world with us and are nourished or
thwarted – accepted or obstructed – in us at an early age. It must be accounted,
moreover, a basic right of any person – which no state or civil authority may
presume to violate – to remain free from persecution or legal disadvantage as a
result of his or her sexual orientation. But the Church understands human iden-
tity as residing primarily not in one’s sexuality or in any other private quality, but
rather in the image and likeness of God present in all of us. (III.18)
Thus, the social ethos of the Orthodox Church, as expressed in this document,
is an ethos of reconciliation and love. Furthermore, the text of the Social Ethos
acknowledges the importance of human rights and traces its Christian roots:
“It is not by chance that the language of human rights, as well as legal con-
ventions and institutions devised to protect and advance those rights, notably
arose in nations whose moral cultures had been formed by Christian beliefs”
(VII.61). Moreover, in addition to recognizing the importance of human rights,
the text also encourages believers to embrace and promote them: “Orthodox
Christians, then, may and should happily adopt the language of human rights
when seeking to promote justice and peace among peoples and nations, and
when seeking to defend the weak against the powerful, the oppressed against
their oppressors, and the indigent against those who seek to exploit them”
(VII.61). Undoubtedly, the text does not replace Orthodox ethics by the doc-
trine of human rights, while recognizing and accepting them, without being
assimilated by them. This means that Christian freedom is something that
transcends rules and measures and cannot be confined solely to human rights.
To be fully free is to be joined to that for which one’s nature was originally framed,
and for which, in the depths of one’s soul, one ceaselessly longs. The conventions
of human rights cannot achieve this freedom for any of us; but those conven-
tions can help to assure individuals and communities liberty from an immense
variety of destructive and corrupting forces that too often conspire to thwart the
pursuit of true freedom. (VII.61)
It is evident that the Orthodox Church accords with the language of human
rights, but, in addition, the text of the Social Ethos goes further, stressing
the importance of social rights such as “the right to free universal health
care, equally available to persons of every economic condition, the right to
social security pensions and provisions for the elderly sufficient to insure
them dignity and comfort in their last years, the right to infant care, and the
right to adequate welfare provisions for the indigent and disabled” (VII.63).
Unquestionably, this approach is relevant to the signs of the times because it
seems that the problems the world community faces can no longer be solved
by invoking the doctrine of human rights. The latter used to be a convenient
framework for cooperation between nation states, but decisions are taken
today at the global level, with nation states taking a less active part. Moreover,
with the coronavirus crisis we have seen how global institutions have taken
responsibility for managing the health crisis. What we need even more now
is a global ethics, ethics based on love and the relation with the “other.” This
is an ethic of relationality that can be traced in the Trinitarian teaching of the
Orthodox Church and especially with the interpretation of this teaching by
Metropolitan of Pergamon John Zizioulas.46
A crucial question that arises from the analysis so far is the following: Why do
we observe such an intolerance of the doctrine of human rights in the Orthodox
world? The Orthodox often believe that the only right way to confront the West
or the image of the West that they have in mind is to react against any real
change or to adopt a stance of sterile negativism. It is as if they suffer from a
fear of persecution, of feeling constantly threatened by the West, which is sup-
posedly planning the erosion of the Orthodox East. This mentality leads to an
absolutism, a form of orthodox integralism and theories that not only do not
help Orthodoxy but keep it stuck in an imaginary past. This peculiar conserva-
tism often manifests itself in the idealization of the golden age of the church
fathers, the praising of the Byzantine system of symphonia and the attachment
to a monastic morality that seems outlandish and very far from the issues that
the modern world faces.47
46 For this, see John D. Zizioulas, Being as Communion: Studies in Personhood and the Church
(Crestwood NY: St. Vladimir’s Seminary Press, 1997); Aristotle Papanikolaou, “Personhood
and its Exponents in Twentieth-Century Orthodox Theology,” in The Cambridge
Companion to Orthodox Christian Theology (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,
2008); Metropolitan John (Zizioulas), “Communion and Otherness,” St. Vladimir’s
Theological Quarterly, vol. 38 no. 4 (1994), 347–61; idem, “The Church as Communion,”
keynote lecture given at the World Council of Churches’ Fifth World Conference on Faith
and Order, Santiago de Compostela, Spain, 3–14 August 1993, St. Vladimir’s Theological
Quarterly 16 (1994), 3–16.
47 Nikolaos Asproulis, “‘Orthodoxy or Death’: Religious Fundamentalism during the
Twentieth and Twenty-First Centuries,” in Fundamentalism or Tradition: Christianity after
Secularism, ed. Aristotle Papanikolaou and George E. Demacopoulos (New York: Fordham
University Press, 2020), 180–204.
48 In the thought of Father John S. Romanides, the term “Riomiosyne” does not have a Greek
nationalistic character; rather, it defines all the Orthodox Christians East and West that
stay true to the Orthodox fathers and adhere to the sacramental and hesychastic tradition
of the Orthodox Church.
49 Pantelis Kalaitzidis, “The Image of the West in Contemporary Greek Theology,” in Orthodox
Constructions of the West, ed. George E. Demacopoulos and Aristotle Papanikolaou (New
York: Fordham University Press, 2013), 143.
50 Basilio Petrà, “Christos Yannaras and the Idea of ‘Dysis’,” in Orthodox Constructions of the
West, 161–80.
that is promoted today as ideal for all Christians, regardless of whether they are
monks or laypeople, and many consider it to be the only authentic Orthodoxy.
Here we would like to add that the relations between monasticism and schol-
arship in Byzantium were usually characterized by mutual dislike, while
Byzantine monasteries – in contrast to Western ones – took a rather hostile
stance towards the teachings of antiquity.51 This stance had been strength-
ened even more in the Orthodox tradition by the affirmation of St. Gregory
Palamas’ teaching and the adoption of this teaching as the foundation of the
anti-Thomist and more generally the anti-Latin debate in the 14th century. Not
all monks were against secular knowledge, however, and some of them had
rather interesting theological opinions that can be related to the Christian
tradition of the West. One example was Nikephoros Blemmydes (1197–1272)
who was closely interested in secular disciplines.52 Blemmydes focuses on the
human cognitive faculty, the purpose of which is to understand the wisdom of
the world as well as what leads human beings beyond the human dimension
of life by emphasizing the human as the image of God. According to him, the
pure spirit attains an immediate knowledge of the highest intelligible objects,
in which knowledge does not depend anymore on logic, syllogisms or proofs.
Blemmydes’ worldview is characterized by two principles: one is a continuous
striving towards God and the other a striving towards the logoi, which – in his
view – are gifts of God, “a benefaction which is the first in order, in this way
science, philosophy and the ascent to God are united and do not negated each
other.”53 Moreover, according to Blemmydes, philosophy is precisely the intel-
lectual pursuit that corresponds to the spiritual purpose of human beings. In
addition, when he points to the common source of all forms of spiritual life,
all of them are unified and harmonized – whether they stand on experien-
tial, extra-experiential or even transcendental grounds. This approach makes
it possible to “justify” secular knowledge and consequently secularity, which
emerges from this perspective.54 As the Russian scholar Viktor Bychkov points
out, it is characteristic of thinkers with a proto-Renaissance orientation to
strive to remove all contradictions in spiritual culture and at the same time to
In Place of a Conclusion
Introduction
Two American authors who published their prominent works in the early 1990s
are relevant to the central discourses on the relationship between democracy,
civil society, modernity in general, and “Orthodoxy”: on the one hand, the polit-
ical scientist Samuel P. Huntington cites his concept of the clash of civilizations
(1993, 1996) and, on the other, the sociologist of religion José Casanova pres-
ents his concept of public religion (1994). Both authors see religion as a highly
controversial public matter. After the publication of their works, dazzling
images shaped the political, scientific, and media discourse: “God’s Century,”1
“God’s Revenge,”2 “Return of the Gods”3 or “Vitality of the Religious,” as Jürgen
Habermas soberly tried to explain this Zeitgeist.4 Another common ground can
be found in the fact that both Huntington and Casanova are dedicated to the
global perspective: the one from the perspective of political science, the other
as a sociologist of religion. So much for the similarities.
The things that separate them show them to be diametrically opposed think-
ers. Huntington represents the typical postcolonial figure of a Eurocentric, “old,
white man” from “the West” who explains to “the rest of the world” its defective
essence that stands in the way of democracy and who wants to impose upon it
the only correct world order – by struggle if necessary. Casanova, on the other
hand, reveals himself to be a modest thinker who reflects the “shortcomings
or limitations”5 of his own thinking by consciously applying to his own think-
ing as well as sociology of knowledge’s stress on sociocultural conditions of
knowledge production.6 Their discursive effects on the (social) scientific pro-
1 God’s Century: Resurgent Religion and Global Politics, ed. Monika Duffy Toft, Daniel Philpott
and Timothy Samuel Shah (New York: W.W. Norton & Company, 2011).
2 Gilles Kepel, Die Rache Gottes: Radikale Moslems, Christen und Juden auf dem Vormarsch
(Munich/Zurich: Piper, 1991).
3 Friedrich Wilhelm Graf, Die Wiederkehr der Götter. Religion in der modernen Kultur (Bonn:
C.H. Beck, 2004).
4 Jürgen Habermas, Nachmetaphysisches Denken II.: Aufsätze und Repliken (Berlin: Suhrkamp,
2012), 310.
5 José Casanova, “Public Religions Revisited,” in Religion: Beyond a Concept, ed. Hent de Vries
(New York: Fordham University Press, 2008), 101–19, here 102.
6 José Casanova, “From Modernization to Secularization to Globalization: An Autobiographical
Self-Reflection,” Religion and Society: Advances in Research 2, no. (April 2011), 25–36, here 25.
7 I define racism from the perspective of Postcolonial Studies. According to Varela and Mecheril,
“At the center of racist thinking is the binary construction of natio-ethno-culturally coded
We and Non-We-and with it the evaluative distinction between We and Non-We”; cf. María
do Mar Castro Varela and Paul Mecheril, “Die Dämonisierung der Anderen. Einleitende
Bemerkungen,” in Die Dämonisierung der Anderen: Rassismuskritik der Gegenwart, ed. María
do Mar Castro Varela and Paul Mecheril (Bielefeld: Transcript, 2016), 7–20.
8 Edward W. Said, Orientalismus (Frankfurt: Fischer, 2014 [1978]).
9 Varela and Mecheril, “Dämonisierung”; Irena Zeltner Pavlović, “Imagining Orthodoxy:
Eine postkoloniale Beobachtungsperspektive der Repräsentation des religiös Anderen,”
in Ostkirchen und Reformation 2017: Begegnungen und Tagungen im Jubiläumsjahr.
Dialog und Hermeneutik, vol. 1, ed. Irena Zeltner Pavlović and Martin Illert (Leipzig:
Evangelische Verlagsanstalt, 2018), 217–29; idem, “Postkoloniale und postsozialistische
Studien. Repräsentierte Orthodoxie,” in Postkoloniale Theologie II: Perspektiven aus dem
deutschsprachigen Raum, ed. Andreas Nehring and Simon Wiesgickl (Stuttgart: Kohlhammer,
2018), 226–42.
The visibility of religion in the modern world has been extensively discussed
by Casanova in his book Public Religions in the Modern World, which was pub-
lished in 1994 and is now considered a key work in the sociology of religion.11
As Astrid Reuter remarked, the book is “avant-garde” in the sense that the
persistence of the public relevance of religion in modernity was recognized
here, much earlier than, for example, the notion of a “post-secular society”
12 Astrid Reuter, “José Casanova: Public Religions in the Modern World (1994),” in
Schlüsselwerke der Religionssoziologie, ed. Christel Gärtner and Gert Pickel (Wiesbaden,
2019), 449–58, here 457.
13 Albrecht Koschorke, “‘Säkularisierung’ und ‘Wiederkehr der Religion’: Zwei Narrative
der europäischen Moderne,” in Moderne und Religion: Kontroversen um Modernität und
Säkularisierung, ed. Ulrich Willems, Detlef Pollack, Helene Basu, Thomas Gutmann and
Ulrike Spohn (Bielefeld: Transcript Verlag, 2013), 237–60; Oliver Hidalgo, “‘Rückkehr der
Religionen’ und ‘Säkularisierung’: Über die Verwobenheit zweier scheinbar gegensätzli-
cher Narrative,” in Das Narrativ von der Wiederkehr der Religion, ed. Holger Zapf, Oliver
Hidalgo and Philipp W. Hildmann (Wiesbaden: Springer, 2018), 13–34.
14 Karl Gabriel, “Der lange Abschied von der Säkularisierungsthese – und was kommt
danach?” in Postsäkularismus: Zur Diskussion eines umstrittenen Begriffs, ed. Matthias
Lutz-Bachmann (Frankfurt/New York: Campus Verlag, 2015), 211–36, 212f.; see also Karl
Gabriel, “Säkularisierung und öffentliche Religion: Religionssoziologische Anmerkungen
mit Blick auf den europäischen Kontext,” Jahrbuch für Christliche Sozialwissenschaften 44
(February 2003), 13–36, here 15.
15 Gabriel, “Abschied,” 220.
16 Reuter, “Casanova,” 457.
17 Casanova, Public Religions, 5.
One could at most, on pragmatic historical grounds, defend the need for separa-
tion between “church” and “state,” although I am no longer convinced that com-
plete separation is either a necessary or a sufficient condition for democracy. The
attempt to establish a wall of separation between “religion” and “politics” is both
unjustified and probably counterproductive for democracy itself.40
A second aspect concerns the hegemonic and ideological use of the secular-
ization narrative. Thus, the secularization thesis is still useful for explaining
certain “particular internal and external dynamics of the transformation of
Western European Christianity from the Middle Ages to the present.”41 But,
according to Casanova the concept of secularization becomes problematic if
one attempts “to reinterpret the particular Western Christian historical process
of secularization in a universal teleological process of human development
from faith to disbelief and from primitive, irrational religiosity to a modern,
rational, secular consciousness.”42 The secularization narrative is thus used as
an ideology when it is stylized as the only teleological path to modernity and
as the norm and normality of modernity.
Closely related to this is the third aspect, which concerns the questioning
of the transferability of this theory to other contexts. In Casanova’s words, it
“becomes problematic once it is generalized as a universal process of societal
development and once it is transferred to other world religions and other civi-
lizational areas with very different dynamics of structuration of the relations
and tensions between religion and world, or between cosmological transcen-
dence and worldly immanence.”43 Since one can observe multiple seculariza-
tions and multiple modernity even in “the West,” this applies all the more to
the rest of the world.44 For the global context, insisting on an intrinsic corre-
lation between modernization and secularization is, according to Casanova,
also a problematic, ideological use and not very persuasive.45 For observing
other contexts, therefore, other theoretical perspectives are needed. Casanova
finds these in the model of multiple modernities, which was first designed
by Shmuel N. Eisenstadt. Eisenstadt opposes both secular cosmopolitanism,
which he regards as the consequence of a secularization narrative, and the
thesis of a clash of civilizations:
41 Casanova, “Secularization” (see footnote 28), 12; see also Casanova, Public Religions (see
footnote 30), 319.
42 Casanova, “Modernity,” 58f.; see also Casanova, “Identities” (see footnote 28), 66; Casanova,
“Erschließung,” 16.
43 Casanova, Public Religions (see footnote 5), 105; see also Casanova, “Secularization” (see
footnote 29), 12; Casanova, “Modernization,” 33.
44 Casanova, “Secularization” (see footnote 29), 11.
45 Casanova, “Secularization” (see footnote 29), 13.
forced to respond and adjust to modern conditions, but in the process of refor-
mulating their traditions for modern contexts, they also help to shape the par-
ticular forms of “religious” and “secular” modernity.46
civil society level.52 In principle, the public religions can be located on all three
levels, but it is true that “civil society has now become the public place of the
church, and no longer, as before, the state or political society,”53 according to
the early Casanova. Elsewhere, he speaks in the imperative, stating “that mod-
ern religious institutions must necessarily be in civil society […].”54
In doing so, he considers the public religions’ “actions” or religious actors in
public to be ambivalent because they can function both as a danger to and an
opportunity for democratization processes. They are a danger when they high-
light conflicts. He distinguishes between religious-secular, ethnic-religious and
confessional conflicts.55 They are an opportunity if they stand up for human
rights, act as a moral resource in social discourse, stimulate public reflection
on the normative structures of a society and plead for the common good and
“‘solidarity’ with all people.”56
In retrospect, he also regards this restriction of public religions to the civil
society arena as a second “limitation” in his thinking.57 In 2006, he revised this
position, considering it a preferable option, but not an absolutely necessary
one:
After becoming aware of his own preconceptions, Casanova later says goodbye
to them for good. He revises his earlier position by self-critically distancing
himself from his own “modern Western secular prejudices,”59 which manifest
themselves in “assumptions about the separation of the religious and secu-
lar spheres and about the idea of a public sphere of civil society,” as well as
his own denominational (Catholic) preconception, which was shaped by the
This means that religions – like all other social groups – can raises their voices
in all public arenas of a democratic community and cannot be prohibited a
priori from participating. Casanova holds Stepan’s findings to be important:
they have shown that it is relevant to base the shaping of the state-church rela-
tionship in a political system on a minimal definition72 of democracy.73 This
relativizes the secularist assumptions that democracy is only possible by sepa-
rating the religious and political spheres.
Under conditions of globalization, world religions do not only draw upon their
own traditions but also increasingly upon one another. Inter-civilizational
encounters, cultural imitations and borrowings, diasporic diffusions, hybridity,
creolization, and transcultural hyphenations are all part and parcel of the global
present.80
75 José Casanova, Global Religious and Secular Dynamics: The Modern System of Classification
(Brill: Leiden 2019), https://doi.org/10.1163/9789004411982.
76 Casanova, Public Religions (see footnote 5), 116.
77 Casanova, Public Religions (see footnote 30), 333.
78 Casanova, Public Religions (see footnote 5), 116.
79 Casanova, Public Religions (see footnote 30), 333.
80 Casanova, “Secularization” (see footnote 29), 17; see also Casanova, “Modernity,” 15.
81 Casanova, Public Religions (see footnote 30), 335.
82 Casanova, “Modernity,” 13.
83 Casanova, “Dynamics,” 65.
84 Casanova, “Modernity,” 15.
85 Casanova, “Modernity,” 15.
On the contrary, these paths are to be thought of in the plural. The recogni-
tion of this plurality, according to Casanova, “should allow a less Euro-centric
comparative analysis of patterns of differentiation and secularization in other
civilizations and world religions.”95
Closely related to this is a third aspect that emphasizes the connectivity of
modern societies and religions. The pluralistic paths to modernity are never to
be considered in isolation, but intersectionally – with crossings. This empha-
sizes the contingency in the dynamics of change, which also arises from the
encounter with the other. At this point, I suggest speaking of connected reli-
gions. Just as the moderns are to be regarded as connected modernities96, his-
tories as connected histories97, so this also applies to religions. They are also
connected This aspect is directed explicitly against essentialist and natural-
izing imaginations of the religious other.
Casanova himself illustrates the implications of his theses and concepts
on the representation of the other in numerous texts using the example of
“Islam” or the much-discussed question of the supposed incompatibility of
modern democracy, individual liberty rights and “Islam.”98 He devotes himself
to “Islam” for two reasons: on the one hand, Huntington’s thesis “has found the
greatest resonance and has provoked the most heated debates,”99 and “Islam”
has since then been represented “as ‘the other’ of the Western civilization.”100
He leaves the answer to the question “Are Islamic norms, values, and prac-
tices compatible with modern democratic political structures and with an
open pluralist civil society?”101 he leaves to Muslim actors themselves. At the
same time, he says that those voices are multivocal: “Obviously, given my lack
of expertise I am not in a position nor is this the proper place to attempt to
address these questions systematically. In any case it is up to Muslim practitio-
ners to answer these questions in their own multivocal ways.”102 Furthermore,
he considers Muslim actors to be reflexive subjects who are able to take a posi-
tion on these questions. In addition, he does not regard them as a monolithic
block but emphasizes the plurality of their positions. Moreover, they are not
only capable of articulating their position but already do so. For example,
whenever “open public spaces appear, either in Muslim countries or in the
diaspora, Muslims seem to find a way of reformulating their tradition in a civil,
democratic direction.”103 Casanova hereby reverses the hegemonic discourse
by transforming the other from the object of observation to the subject of the
discourse.
Instead of discussing these individual discursive statements and dis-
course fragments and interpreting them from his own horizon of normality,
he looks at the question of (in)compatibility on the level of discursive state-
ments on “Islam.” In doing so, he draws attention to the parallelism or “strik-
ing similarities”104 of the debates on the compatibility of “Catholicism” with
democracy that were conducted until Vatican II.105 He regards the comparison
as fruitful because Catholicism “was viewed for a long time as the paradigmatic
anti-modern fundamentalist religion.”106 Just as “Catholicism” was viewed at
that time as “an inner Orient, a primitive and atavistic remnant within Western
civilization,”107 that was neither compatible with modern democracy nor with
individual freedoms, so today Islam is imagined “as the other of Western secu-
lar modernity.”
Against essentialist imaginations of the religions, he emphasizes that “Islam
is also subject to immense processes of change, and likewise has no “unchang-
ing core essence.” Just as “Catholicism,” which is strongly dogmatically struc-
tured, has undergone processes of change108, so this possibility exists all the
more for Islam: “The premise of an unchanging core essence should even be
less valid for other world religions with a less dogmatically structured doctrinal
core or with a more pluralistic and contested system of authoritative interpre-
tation of the religious tradition.”109
The point of this comparison is to set up a hermeneutical frame that is
oriented towards understanding and acceptance, by which the “others” are
but also oriented towards the common good,”115 then, of course, nothing speaks
against this commitment. This applies in the context of democratic states.
But Orthodoxy acts – to express it metaphorically – “from Jerusalem to
Moscow” in completely divergent social contexts in which this choice (cannot/
must not) is not made. In some contexts, it cannot get involved because there
are no civic virtues in society – neither with church actors nor with other dia-
logue partners. In many post-socialist countries, for example, it is customary
to interpret in the style of communist rulers any public activity of the church
as “undue interference in politics” and to discuss away the question of the
legitimacy of the church’s public speech. On the other hand, in the context of
the Serbian Orthodox Church, for example, certain media and even academic
speaking positions are strictly regulated by church actors, even by bans or dis-
missals. Finally, if Orthodoxy opts for the civil society option, it can contribute
to the stabilization of a democratic culture of discussion and democracy. This
option is certainly preferable to dictatorships and other unjust states.
Here it should be emphasized that, as Antonius Liedhegener remarked,
current political science considers it “misleading” to locate religion and the
church exclusively in civil society “because it fails to recognize the autonomy
of religion in the cultural-religious sphere of a society and the multifunctional-
ity of religion in its organized form, which enables religious actors to be part of
other areas or systems of differentiated societies, for example in the context of
the provision of services by the welfare state or the political decision-making
process in the public sphere and the government system.”116 “Orthodoxy” can
also interfere in other public spheres and need not limit its public engagement
to the sphere of civil society.
Conclusion
115 Antonius Liedhegener, “Ein kleiner, aber feiner Unterschied: Religion, zivilge-
sellschaftliches Engagement und gesellschaftliche Integration in der Schweiz,” in
Integrationspotenziale von Religion und Zivilgesellschaft. Theoretische und empirische
Befunde, ed. Edmund Arens, Martin Baumann, and Antonius Liedhegener (Zurich:
Nomos, 2016), 112–82, here 125.
116 Liedhegener, “Unterschied,” 128.
117 Paul Sailer-Wlasits, Verbalradikalismus. Kritische Geistesgeschichte eines soziopolitisch-
sprachphilosophischen Phänomens (Vienna/Klosterneuburg: Edition Va Bene, 2012), 215f.
118 Antonius Liedhegener and Ines-Jacqueline Werkner, Religion, Zivilgesellschaft und poli-
tisches System – ein offenes Forschungsfeld in Religion zwischen Zivilgesellschaft und
politischem System. Befunde – Positionen – Perspektiven, ed. Antonius Liedhegener and
Ines-Jacqueline Werkner (Wiesbaden: Verlag für Sozialwissenschaft, 2011), 9–36, here 9
(Translation I.P.).
119 Casanova, “Religion,” 47.
Introduction
Since the focus of my paper is mission, allow me to begin with two clarifi-
cations. It is wellknown that many, especially in Europe, are uncomfortable
with the concept of mission inasmuch as they identify (in a rather essentialist
manner) mission with colonialism. Since the 1960s, the notorious “guilt feel-
ing” has very often led them not only to reject colonialism (which is the right
thing to do) but also to repudiate any concept of mission. But the repudia-
tion of mission per se is extremely problematic because it fails to account for
all the radically different approaches to mission. The sense of mission that I
advocate is a witness and invitation that is given freely and a participation in
a global dialogue, a dialogue that enriches humankind. Mission has profound
anthropological importance, and this must be understood by all, be they reli-
gious, atheist, or agnostic. It has to do with the human’s fundamental ability
to choose his/her own spiritual orientation, to opt for the meaning of life,
to change him-/herself. In other words, mission reminds us that we are not
immovable boulders nor rolling stones but (as Terry Eagleton has said), “we are
clay in our own hands.”
In this process of self-shaping, action and passivity, the strenuously willed and
the sheerly given, unite once more, this time in the same individuals. We resem-
ble nature in that we, like it, are to be cuffed into shape, but we differ from it
in that we can do this to ourselves, thus introducing into the world a degree of
self-reflexivity to which the rest of nature cannot aspire. As self-cultivators, we
are clay in our own hands, at once redeemer and unregenerate, priest and sinner
in the same body.1
In this regard, mission resembles politics since both deal primarily with human
responsibility and the human ability to make decisions and through them to
inoculate creativity into the determinism of the natural world.
My second clarification has to do with the reservation of certain Orthodox
theologians about mission. They do not reject mission, but they conceive it as
something secondary; as something that does not define the identity of the
Church and is not a decisive component of it. To the contrary, I believe that
1 Terry Eagleton, The Idea of Culture (Oxford & Victoria: Blackwell & Malden, 2000), 11.
mission concerns the very being of the Church since it does not exist for its
own sake but for the sake of the entire creation. The Church is not the end;
it is not the Kingdom of God; it is the sign, the foretaste, the herald and dea-
con of the Kingdom. In that sense, the Church does not have a mission; it is
mission.2 That is why mission has no temporal or geographical limitations.
It is directed both to human contexts that have come to know Christianity
and those that have not. After all, since as early as 1963 the World Council of
Churches’ Commission on World Mission and Evangelism has made it clear
that Christian witness is about “mission in six continents.”3
In this contribution I will approach mission as the specific actions of pro-
claiming and inculcating the Gospel in diverse contexts (actions that imply
both evangelization and solidarity indiscriminately). This approach moves
beyond talking about mission in the abstract, as the salvific task of the Church
at large. So, I will take into account the varied historical experience of missions
as well as the theologies of mission and will try to delineate current quests.
I now come to my subject and pose one key question: Does the proclamation
of the Gospel have a political dimension? My answer is that the proclamation
of the Gospel is a political act, but this requires clarification. The Gospel has
a political character in the sense that it gives meaning to human life and calls
people to make decisions. The real question, then, is not whether the mission
has a political dimension, but what kind of political dimension it has. There
are enormous differences between various strands of theology here, and inter-
pretation always plays a crucial role. For example, Trinitarian doctrine may
be interpreted so as to inspire a type of anarchist, direct democracy (based
on the – let us say – egalitarian community of the three Persons), or, on the
contrary, to reinforce absolute monarchy and authoritarian regimes (based on
the so-called monarchy of the Father). So, I take the responsibility to point out
here what seems to me to be the key features of the political dynamics that are
brought out by missionary work.
4 See Athanasios N. Papathanasiou, “Αn Orphan or a Bride? The Human Self, Collective
Identities and Conversion,” in Thinking Modernity: Towards a Reconfiguration of the
Relationship between Orthodox Theology and Modern Culture, ed. Assaad Kattan and Fadi
Georgi (Balamand: St John of Damascus Institute of Theology, 2011), 133–63.
5 See Athanasios N. Papathanasiou, “If I Cross the Boundaries, You Are There! An Affirmation
of God’s Action Outside the Canonical Boundaries of the Church,” Communio Viatorum 53,
no. 3 (2011), 40–55.
6 See, for example, Frédéric Worms, Les Maladies Chroniques de la démocratie (Paris: Éditions
Desclée de Brouwer, 2017); John Keane, The Life and Death of Democracy (London: Simon &
Schuster, 2009). For an affirmation of liberal democracy from an Orthodox point of view,
see Aristotle Papanikolaou, The Mystical as Political: Democracy and Non-Radical Orthodoxy
(Notre Dame IN: University of Notre Dame Press, 2012), 55–146.
7 Cf. Byung-Chul Han, The Agony of Eros, trans. Eric Butler (Cambridge MA: The MIT Press,
2017), 9–15.
not dependent on majority’s options. At the same time, the great advantage of
democracy is the fact that self-criticism belongs to its very being, together with
its capacity to reform itself and heal its maladies.
The Christian understanding of humans as relational beings (as beings who
live authentically insofar as they love) and of every person as the image of
Christ excludes totalitarianism from its midst and at the same time endorses
the concerns outlined above and a critical reception of democracy. Moreover,
there is another point that, in my view, is particularly relevant to the political
implications of Christian witness and its dialogue with liberal democracy: the
appraisal of the human subject cannot only be expressed as equality before
the law. If class inequality and social injustice run rampant, then individual
rights exist in theory but not in practice. A child, for example, has a legal right
to attend school, but in practice s/he will do so only if s/he is not forced to
drop out of school or college because of poverty. In Betty Smith’s work, A Tree
Grows in Brooklyn (1943), Johnny, a son of Irish immigrants, goes for a walk
with his daughter, Francie. He shows her the hansom cabs and explains that in
free America everyone can ride a Hansom cab, after paying the fare of course.
Francie then asks what kind of freedom it is when it is only enjoyed by those
who are not poor. Johnny cannot answer the question but triumphantly asserts
instead: “Because that would be Socialism, and we don’t want that over here.”
“Why?” insists Francie. “Because we got Democracy and that’s the best thing
there is.”8 Already in Johnny’s last sentence we not only meet an ideological
disconnection of civil rights from social justice, but we also hear the argument
that his brand of democracy represents a universal good. We will deal with this
a little later.
Tangible acts of love are the criterion of the Last Judgment and thus the cri-
terion of the attitude of Christians in history. Mission cannot, therefore, preach
eschatology as an ontological theory without concern for the “least” of Christ’s
brothers and sisters (cf. Matthew 25:40), the unprivileged and the marginal-
ized. This means that missionary work must develop in two ways. It must be
practised as inculturation (i.e., turning the culture into the flesh of Christ), but
it cannot be limited to inculturation: inculturation must be combined with
liberation. Cultures are not monolithic; every culture contains structures of
humanity and inhumanity, but the Church cannot take up forces that pro-
duce inhumanity. I would say therefore that inculturation is the politics of
incarnation, while liberation is the politics of resurrection. The grandfather
of “Liberation Theology,” Gustavo Gutiérrez, has aptly noted that the mission
of the Church includes both proclamation and denunciation:
8 Betty Smith, A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (New York: Harper & Row, 1947), 166–8.
The realization that the Lord loves us and the acceptance of the unmerited gift
of the Lord’s love are the deepest source of the joy of those who live by God’s
word. Evangelization is the communication or sharing of this joy. It is the sharing
of the good news of God’s love that has changed our lives. The proclamation is
in a sense free and unmerited, just as is the love that is the source of our procla-
mation. […] The language of prophecy denounces the situation of injustice and
exploitation […] and denounces as well the structural causes of this situation.9
The first task of the Church in history consists in proclaiming the Good News.
And the proclamation of the Good News inevitably conveys pronouncing a judg-
ment on the world […]. [The Church] does this by word and by acts, for the true
announcing of the Gospel consists precisely in the practice of the new life, in
the demonstration of faith through its acts […]. Conversion is a new start that
must be followed by a long and difficult race. The Church needs to organize the
new life of the converted. The Church needs to show the new mode of existence,
the new mode of life that is of the world to come. God claims the entire person
and the Church gives witness to this total claim of God revealed in Jesus Christ.
The Christian must be a new creature. This is why a Christian is unable to find
a stable place within the confines of the “old world.” In this sense the Christian
attitude is always revolutionary by its relation to “the old order” of this world.10
9 Gustavo Gutiérrez, The Truth Shall Make You Free: Confrontations, trans. Matthew J.
O’Connell (New York: Orbis Books, 1990), 16.
10 Georges Florovsky, The Body of the Living Christ: An Orthodox Interpretation of the Church,
trans. Robert M. Arida (Boston: The Wheel Library, 2018), 83–4.
11 Hong Jei Lee, The Comparative Study of the Christology in Latin American Liberation
Theology and Korean Minjung Theology, PhD diss. (University of Glasgow, 1990), 196–7;
http://theses.gla.ac.uk/2397/.
is respected in their tribe. The spirit ostensibly speaks through the woman and
publicly castigates the authoritarian husband, without the husband being able
to retaliate.12 What is of special importance here is that missiology has recently
acknowledged that the marginalized and the unprivileged are not only the
recipients of the mission but also agents of it. The 10th Assembly of the World
Council of Churches in Busan, Republic of Korea (2013) defined and affirmed
the “Mission from the Margins.” The document reads:
We affirm that marginalized people are agents of mission and exercise a pro-
phetic role which emphasizes that fullness of life is for all. The marginalized in
society are the main partners in God’s mission. Marginalized, oppressed, and
suffering people have a special gift to distinguish what news is good for them
and what news is bad for their endangered life. In order to commit ourselves to
God’s life-giving mission, we have to listen to the voices from the margins to hear
what is life-affirming and what is life-destroying. We must turn our direction of
mission to the actions that the marginalized are taking. Justice, solidarity, and
inclusivity are key expressions of mission from the margins.13
12 Heike Bahrend and Ute Luig, “Introduction,” in Spirit Possession: Modernity and Power
in Africa, ed. Heike Bahrend and Ute Luig (Madison WI: University of Wisconsin Press,
1999), xvii.
13 Together Towards Life: Mission and Evangelism in Changing Landscapes (CWME), World
Council of Churches, https://www.oikoumene.org/sites/default/files/Document/Together_
towards_Life.pdf, par. 107, p. 39 (accessed 25 November 2020). As Rev. Deenabandhu
Manchala states: “In order to understand the reasons for this attempt to re-imagine mis-
sion from the margins, we must recognize a few common features of the experience
of those on the margins. First, these groups of people are a part of the church in many
contexts around the world that unfortunately experience discrimination and margin-
alization right within it. Secondly, they have also been victims of churches’ missionary
expansion and theologies that took shape amidst and legitimized historical processes of
discrimination and oppression of the weak and the vulnerable. And thirdly, these groups
of people have been generally referred to or seen as recipients or objects of churches’
mission. Therefore, it is unique that these marginalized sections, the former victims, for-
mer objects of mission, now attempt a missiological reflection, not as a reaction to what
mission has been to them in the past but of what they imagine God intends for the whole
world and creation today.” See Deenabandhu Manchala, “Mission from the Margins.
Toward a Just World,” International Review of Mission 101, no. 1 (2012), 153–4.
14 Bong Rin Ro, “Korea, South,” in Evangelical Dictionary of World Missions, ed. A. Scott Moreau
(Grand Rapids MI: Baker Books, 2000), 545–6.
15 Adrian Hastings, The Church in Africa 1450–1950 (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1996), 307.
16 William Loyd Allen, “How Baptists Assessed Hitler,” Religion Online; https://www.religion-
online.org/article/how-baptists-assessed-hitler/ (accessed 25 November 2020).
17 Cyril Hovorun, Political Orthodoxies: The Unorthodoxies of the Church Coerced (Minnea
polis: Fortress Press, 2018), 60–3.
men”; Acts 5:29, RSV) only to those instances in which the ruler turns against
the faith. But when Nicodemus looks for hagiographical passages to depict
the unworthy ruler, he comes up against a different sense: in the Bible, the
unworthy ruler is the one who tramples on social justice – not only Orthodox
dogma. Nicodemus thus quotes from the prophets: “Your princes are rebels
and companions of thieves. Everyone loves a bribe and runs after gifts. They
do not defend the fatherless, and the widow’s cause does not come to them”
(Isaiah 1:23, RSV). “Her princes [of the country] in the midst of her are like
wolves tearing the prey, shedding blood, destroying lives to get dishonest gain”
(Ezekiel 22:27, RSV).18
At this point, I suppose all our thoughts turn toward the emblematic phrase
“liturgy after the Liturgy.” Coined in the 1970s, this “catchphrase” has been a
major contribution of Orthodox theology to global Christianity. It emphasizes
that what was made manifest during the celebration of the Eucharist within
the ecclesial gathering needs now to be practiced as an “exodus,” by witness-
ing through word and deed in everyday life. This “exodus” means actual soli-
darity with the weak and a break with the forces of intolerance, oppression
and social exclusion. In my opinion, this stance entails something extremely
important and yet often overlooked. The “liturgy after the Liturgy” does not
envision simply the Christianization of the whole of society; it also represents
the Church’s vision for how a society ought to act in a public sphere in which
both Christians and non-Christians freely coexist.
In our time, it seems that all theologians subscribe to the idea of the “lit-
urgy after the Liturgy.” But I do not think it is quite that simple. Many see the
Church’s celebration of the Eucharist as completely sufficient and thus treat
the Church’s “exodus” as something additional or secondary. But the formula
“liturgy after the Liturgy” means precisely the opposite: that witness – opening
up toward the world – is a continuation of (and not an accessory to) the Divine
Liturgy. If there is no continuation, then the very validity of the Divine Liturgy
is cast into doubt.19 It is no coincidence that this concept of the “liturgy after
the Liturgy” was formed in the field of mission in 1975 by the pillar of mission,
Anastasios Yannoulatos, Archbishop of the Orthodox Church in Albania since
1992.20
Diametrically opposed to this concept of the “liturgy after the Liturgy” are
Neo-Pentecostal theology and the “Prosperity Gospel,” which see the Church’s
mission exclusively as individual redemption from the devil and his wicked
spirits, who bring poverty and sickness as just punishment to those who are
not faithful Christians. According to this view, there is no such thing as social
injustice, since the poor themselves are at fault. Interestingly, we find similar
views among Orthodox Christians who attribute society’s misfortunes either
to the will of God or the personal laziness of the poor – apparently contrary to
the teachings of the Bible and the church fathers, who interpret social injustice
as opposition to God’s will.21
Since the collapse of the Soviet Union (i.e., since the 1990s), political scien-
tists have examined the question whether liberal representative democracy
is a universal human good or – to the contrary – a product that only makes
sense in Western culture. If the values of democracy are not universal, then
their application to other cultural contexts is nothing more than cultural impe-
rialism. Samuel Huntington and Francis Fukuyama triggered the discussion,
and a tsunami of critique, refutations and elaborations followed. I will remind
the reader here only that Huntington claimed that the fall of the dictatorship
in Portugal in 1974 fired a global wave of democratization that reached Latin
America and Asia in the 1980s and Eastern Europe and Africa in the 1990s.22
Fukuyama argued that liberal democracy is, in fact, the final stage of human
political development.23 I am not going to take up the particular discussion of
these much debated views but will only deal with the question of the univer-
sality of liberal democracy in connection with mission. This question is peren-
nially important for Christians, in spite of the changes that have been taking
place on the global level. The current neo-colonialism differs from classical
colonialism (which collapsed after World War II) in that neo-colonialism does
not need Christian missions as one of its vehicles; advanced technologies and
globalized stockexchange market are sufficient weapons or perhaps its new
expansionist religion.
The question pertains to mission diachronically in the sense that mission
by its very nature requires an encounter between cultures. But many of the
theologians who discuss the relationship of Christianity and democracy take
modern political Islam into account, but –surprisingly enough – they are
rather unaware of the field of mission’s vast experience (both positive and
negative, past and current), and are thus deprived of an enormous amount of
research material. For example, in the vita of the 9th century Byzantine mis-
sionaries Cyril and Methodius, we find Cyril’s dialogue with the Khazars of
Crimea regarding their hereditary monarchy, which the Khazars had and the
Byzantines (to the Kazars’ surprise) did not:
Having boarded a ship, Constantine set out for the land of the Khazars by way
of the Meotis Sea and Caspian Gates of the Caucasus Mountains. The Khazars
sent a cunning and resourceful man to meet him, who entered into conversa-
tion with him and said to him: “Why do you follow the evil custom of replacing
one emperor with another of a different lineage? We do this only according to
lineage.” The Philosopher said to him: “Yet in place of Saul, who did nothing to
please Him, God chose David, who was pleasing to Him, and David’s lineage.”24
Moving now to the modern age, the 19th century was marked by the mission-
ary messianism of Americans in particular. Many missionaries believed that
their mission was to spread the Gospel, science and democracy around the
world. The eminent American theologian H. Richard Niebuhr wrote sarcasti-
cally in 1937 that American missionaries were eager to give light to the Gentiles
but used lamps made in the USA.25 The echo of the Social Gospel in America
was still strong and made the German theologian Karl Heim comment: “The
kingdom of God means nothing more than the League of Nations, democracy
and the coming of militant capitalism.”26 And in our time, Ian Buruma, assess-
ing the American mindset, has scathingly pointed out that “the difference
between selling the gospel, agricultural machinery, or a political candidate is
24 Marvin Kantor, trans., “The Vita and Life of Our Blessed Teacher Constantine the
Philosopher, the First Preceptor of the Slavic People,” in Medieval Slavic Lives of Saints
and Princes (Ann Arbor MI: Michigan Slavic Publications, 1983), 45; http://macedonia.
kroraina.com/en/kmsl/index.htm.
25 H. Richard Niebuhr, The Kingdom of God in America (Middletown CT: Wesleyan University
Press, 1988), 179.
26 Timothy Yates, Christian Mission in the Twentieth Century (Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 1994), 65.
not always obvious in the United States. For all mix show business with popu-
lar sentiment, the reassuring air of the regular guy, and the braggadocio of the
carnival huckster.”27
But neither have European missionaries escaped this kind of fair vitriolic
criticism. “When your fathers fixed the place of GOD,” wrote T. S. Eliot at the
same time as Niebuhr,
The export of democracy together with the Gospel, during the colonialist mis-
sions, has haunted the whole discussion. But some elaborations are quite nec-
essary. Two different issues are involved here. On the one hand, we have to
trace the politics that derive from the Gospel itself. On the other hand, we have
to consider the political system of the missionary’s homeland whenever the
missionary considers it to be the proper application of the Gospel in social life.
Despite being a widespread belief, it is not true that every mission was simply
a tool of colonial states. Of course, many were just that. But, for example, non-
conformist missionaries – i.e., Protestants who were in favour of separating
church and state and who were persecuted in their homelands – are a differ-
ent case. They were not financed by the state, and they emphasized individual
freedoms in particular. Already in the late 18th century, the catalyst for modern
mission, William Carey, urged the British to boycott products made in India
under inhumane conditions,29 and there is a strong movement today to sup-
port global fair trade.
27 Ian Buruma, Taming the Gods: Religion and Democracy on Three Continents (Princeton NJ:
Princeton University Press, 2010), 16.
28 Τ. S. Eliot, “Choruses from The Rock, II,” in Collected Poems 1909–1935 (London: Faber &
Faber, 1936), 100–1.
29 Darren Cronshaw, “A Commission ‘Great’ for Whom? Postocolonial Contrapuntal
Readings of Matthew 28:18–20 and the Irony of William Carey,” Transformation 33, no. 2
(2016), 115–8.
We have to take the complexity of the whole issue under serious consideration.
On the one hand, numerous missions served colonialism while, on the other,
several missions cultivated respect towards cultural otherness. The case of the
Protestant missionary Hudson Taylor (1832–1905) in China and his clash with
other missionaries who could not share his respect for Chinese culture is indic-
ative.31 As the colonization of mind and cultural imposition, missions have
really deep roots; but the trends in favour of contextualization were intensified
especially after World War I. This merciless war between (so to say) Christian
states filled the European soul with a new bitter feeling that it no longer made
sense to offer Christianity along with the political and economic implications
of desolate European civilization. At the same time, this bitter feeling contrib-
uted to a liberating shift. The ecclesiastical centres of Europe thus began to
acknowledge the need for missionaries in the Third World to maintain, as far
as possible, the traditional structure of indigenous societies and shape local
churches with indigenous features.32 In missionary discourse, the need for
respect towards the culturally other had been stressed by some already in the
middle of the 19th century33, but after the subversive World War I it began to
touch the metropolitan church centres.
As I said, the notion of conversion lays crucial emphasis on the importance
of the human person. Consequently, this emphasis proves to be a catalyst for
the evaluation of every regime. The capacity for self-orientation implies the
human subject’s ability to judge his or her own culture, even to break from spe-
cific institutions of his or her culture. The purpose of this break is not the exit
of the human subject from its culture and from its societal relations but their
reorientation. No matter how difficult it may be in reality, conversion does
not ask the human subject to become a fleshless (that is, cultureless) phan-
tom, but to insert new meaning into common life. This inevitably implies a
dialectics of affirmations and negations of customs, institutions and concepts.
Of course, to what degree any conversion is genuine or false (colonization of
mind) is an open question, as is every human action. But what interests us
here is conversion as a basic anthropological capacity. This capacity emerges
as a real revolution in contexts where the human subject has atrophied within
a powerful hierarchical or collectivist system, such as the caste system in India
or Confucianism in the Far East (or even in traditionally Orthodox countries
when a strong sense of collectivism identifies religious identity with ethnic
DNA at the expense of personal conversion).34
An early manifestation of this issue (somehow like an introduction to or
anticipation of political theology) has been the missionaries’ stance pro or
contra slavery. Mark Twain’s work, King Leopold’s Soliloquy, written in 1869, is
typical. In this work, the American author denounces Belgium’s brutality in
the Congo. Twain admits that these cruelties came to light only through mis-
sionaries, who were the only ones to stand in solidarity with the indigenous
people.35 Twain’s testimony is important because he generally disliked mis-
sionaries, regarding them as fugitives from life and accusing them of serving
“the Blessings-of-Civilization Trust,” as he called imperialism.36 It goes with-
out saying that not all missionaries had the same views. The Dutch Reformed
Church, for example, supported apartheid in South Africa.37
The missionary work of translating the Bible and other texts into vernacular
languages contributed to strengthening the self-confidence of the receivers.
Translations not only conveyed the message the missionaries wanted to spread
but also gave the indigenous people new possibilities for expressing themselves
in every field. For the Orthodox Church, the case of Saint Nicolas Kasatkin, mis-
sionary to Japan (1836–1912), has been exemplary. The tiny Orthodox Church
in Japan was aptly called “the Church of the Translations.”38 Yet Protestant
missions played a special role in this matter. Protestants’ firm conviction that
everyone should be able to read the Bible in his/her own language – and, by
extension, leaflets and newspapers – led to a particular emphasis on cultivat-
ing the conditions necessary for democratic governments in the Third World.
It is an established fact that, in many colonies, colonial governments imple-
mented educational programmes for the locals. The missionaries’ educational
programs, however, tended to be more radical, in that, while governmen-
tal programs were aimed at men, missionaries included women.39 Through
their educational and publishing programmes, missionaries obviously seek to
spread their own particular views. But, as I said earlier, the crucial point here
is that these programmes unleash a valuable force that often transcends the
missionaries’ visual horizon or intentions. Many anti-colonial independence
movements in the Third World came together through the very means pro-
vided by their access to the written word and the exchange of ideas.40 In the 32
years after the introduction of the printing press in India in 1800, three British
missionaries managed to print over 212,000 books in 40 languages, as well
as newspapers that could be read by anyone. Hindi and Muslim publishing
endeavours began later as a reaction to Christian literature. It stands to reason
that the decisive factor in emancipation was not printing itself but the spirit
that accompanied this publishing activity: the Gospel emphasis on the human
subject. In the Far East (China, Japan, and Korea), printing existed 600–800
years before it existed in Europe. Its use, however, was limited to the elite.41
Very interesting initiatives took place in Africa as well:
38 Charles F. Sweet, “Archbishop Nikolai and the Russian Ecclesiastical Mission to Japan,”
Internationa Review of Mission 2 (1913), 144; cf. Athanasios N. Papathanasiou “Tradition
as Impulse for Renewal and Witness: The Introduction of Orthodox Missiology into the
IRM,” International Review of Mission 393 (2011), 203–15.
39 Tomila Lankina and Lullit Getachew, “Mission or Empire, Word or Sword? The Human
Capital Legacy in Post-Colonial Democratic Development,” American Journal of Political
Science 56, no. 2 (2012), 465–83. Especially for India: Tomila Lankina & Lullit Getachew,
“Competitive Religious Entrepreneurs: Christian Missionaries and Female Education in
Colonial and Post-Colonial India,” British Journal of Political Science 43, no. 1 (2013), 103–
31. The Catholics also developed an extensive printing operation, sometimes before the
Protestants, but they mainly addressed the local elites. See Woodberry, “The Missionary
Roots,” 256.
40 James S. Coleman, “The Problem of Political Integration in Emergent Africa,” The Western
Political Quarterly 8, no. 1 (1955), 54.
41 Woodberry, “The Missionary Roots,” 250.
The first newspaper intended for black readers, the Umshumayeli Wendaba
(“Publishers of the News”), written in Xhosa, was published as an irregular quar-
terly in 1837 and printed at the Wesleyan Missionary Society in Cape Colony.
Isigidimi samaXhosa (“The Xhosa Messenger”), the first African newspaper
edited by Africans, was first released in 1876 and printed at the Lovedale Mission
Press in South Africa. In 1884, the English/Xhosa weekly Imvo Zabantsundu
(“The African Opinion”), the first black-owned and controlled newspaper in
South Africa, was published. On the contrary, in regions where Protestant mis-
sions were less active, the first newspapers appeared only at the beginning of the
20th century, and no indigenous newspapers were created before WWI. The first
paper in Ivory Coast to be owned and edited by an African, the Éclaireur de la
Cote d’Ivoire, only appeared in 1935.42
Current Issues
I will now touch upon some indicative examples of current discourse between
non-Western cultures and Western-style democracy. I will refer to three con-
texts: the Far Eastern, the sub-Saharan African and the Latin American. Each
of them needs extensive discussion of course, but I feel that even a few words
are useful here, so that we take into account the fact that every culture is an
active process (and not a static essence), every culture has to be in dialogue
with itself and other cultures, and the Church has to be ready to accept their
wisdom and enrich the articulation of the Good News in human life.
In the Confucian tradition of the Far East, the principle of “one person, one
vote” remains difficult to digest. Governance must be exercised by the virtu-
ous, i.e., an elite. But some Confucians who are interested in a synthesis of
Confucianism and democracy argue that, in order for the virtuous to emerge,
every individual must participate in the public square. So it is argued that
It is […] possible that Confucian values can emend the less positive features of
Western-style democracy, such as rampant individualism and the lack of commit-
ment to family and community. Democracy, when forged with Confucian ideals,
could result in a system of individualism, participation, consensus, and author-
ity. In Confucian Democracy, for example, Sor-Hoon Tan proposes an alternative
to liberal democracy. Tan argues that unlike a liberal democracy that operates
under the constraints of interest groups, Confucian democracy is capable of pro-
moting both individual freedom and the common good. Confucianism may also
be capable of strengthening democracy. For example, Yung-Myung Kim writes
that the Confucian emphasis on social order and respect for authority, harmony,
42 Julia Cagé and Valeria Rueda, “The Devil Is in the Detail: Christian Missions’ Heterogeneous
Effects on Development in sub-Saharan Africa,” VOXeu CEPR, https://voxeu.org/article/
christian-missions-and-development-sub-saharan-africa (accessed 25 November 2017).
and consensus may aid in the survival of burgeoning democracies. Fetzer and
Soper contend that, like other religions, Confucianism can bend to emerging
democratic trends. Conversely, Confucianism can “temper the excesses” of indi-
vidualism and promote more consideration of past generations.43
In my opinion, the critical question here is whether the so-called “Asian val-
ues” (understood as the justification of authoritarianism after their renowned
contribution to the “economic miracle” of Far Eastern countries since the
1970s) will prevail, or whether they can be oriented to new syntheses like the
one described above.44 What is of special importance is the fact that right
now Chinese Christian theologians are making fascinating attempts at criti-
cally applying the concept of inculturation (with important political implica-
tions, even if they are not voiced loudly), advocating for the place of Christian
theology in the public sphere. At the same time, it has been suggested that
the ecclesiastical community takes the place of the biological family, which
stands in the Confucian tradition as the political subject.45 The emergence of
the faith community (based of free choice) seems to be an important step.
Yet my own skepticism here is whether this transition reinforces the role of
the church leader in the way the absolute power of the father is understood
in the Confucian family. In this case, the political implications will again lean
towards authoritarianism.
In sub-Saharan Africa, things are quite different. The human subject is
emphasized in the pre-Christian African tradition, but not as the autonomous
individual of the European enlightenment. To exist as a human subject without
a community is inconceivable. The sui generis African personalism endowed
Africa with a unique political path through history. As Nelson Mandela aptly
noted:
Then [before colonialism] our people lived peacefully under the democratic rule
of their kings […]. There were no classes […] and no exploitation of man by man.
All men were free and equal and this was the foundation of government. […]
The council was so completely democratic that all members of the tribe could
participate in its deliberations. […] There was much in such a society that was
primitive and insecure and it certainly could never measure up to the demands
43 Nicholas Spina, Doh C. Shin and Dana Cha, “Confucianism and Democracy: A Review of
the Opposing Conceptualizations,” Japanese Journal of Political Science 12, no. 1 (2011), 155.
44 Mark Richard Thompson, “Pacific Asia after ‘Asian Values’: Authoritarianism, Democracy,
and ‘Good Governance’,” Third World Quarterly 25, no. 6 (2004), 1079–95.
45 Alexander Chow, Chinese Public Theology. Generational Shifts and Confucian Imagination
in Chinese Christianity (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2018), 92–105, 146–59.
of the present epoch. But in such a society are contained the seeds of a revolu-
tionary democracy […].46
Conclusion
49 Bernardino Verástique, Michoacán and Eden: Vasco de Quiroga and the Evangelization of
Western Mexico (Austin TX: University of Texas Press, 2000).
50 Walter Nonneman, “On the Economics of the Social Theocracy of the Jesuits in Paraguay
(1609–1767),” in The Political Economy of Theocracy, ed. Mario Ferrero and Ronald
Wintrobe (New York: Pargrace Macmillan, 2009), 119–42.
51 See, for example, Lizzie Wade, “It Wasn’t Just Greece: Archaeologists Find Early
Democratic Societies in the Americas,” Science AAAS, 15 March 2017, https://www.sci-
encemag.org/news/2017/03/it-wasnt-just-greece-archaeologists-find-early-democratic-
societies-americas.
Chris Durante
Introduction
During the violent intra-Orthodox conflicts that occurred in the 19th cen-
tury as a result of ethnonationalistic warfare, the Patriarch of Constantinople
declared phyletism, or tribalistic bigotry, a sin in 1872. Unfortunately, tensions
involving ethnic, cultural and national belonging continue to plague the
Orthodox Christian world. To that end, I will begin this essay with a moral
analysis of phyletism and an examination of the socio-ontological and ethi-
cal dimensions of ethnic and cultural identity as they relate to the Orthodox
Christian tradition. Subsequently, I will place Orthodox Christianity in dia-
logue with contemporary multiculturalism as a means of better enabling
Orthodox Christianity to come to terms with its own internal cultural diversity
and position within global society. Finally, I will suggest that the cultivation of
the virtue of philoxenia can serve as a counterforce to the sin of phyletism and
enable the Orthodox Church to develop a more multicultural understanding
of itself as a global institution.
With the “secularization” of social life that occurred during modernity came a
penetrating empiricism that shifted the world’s social imaginary from one in
which notions of transcendence were pervasive to one in which we could not
see past, what Charles Taylor calls the “immanent frame”: a frame that “consti-
tutes a ‘natural’ order, to be contrasted to a ‘supernatural’ one, an ‘immanent’
world, over against a possible ‘transcendent’ one”1 that decentred people’s
sense of place and purpose in history. Social life became inconceivable outside
of the immanent frame, and hence people sought objects of devotion in the
worldly order. As José Casanova has claimed, in our secular modern age we
1 Charles Taylor, A Secular Age. (Cambridge, MA: The Belknap Press of Harvard University,
2007), 542.
2 José Casanova, “The Secular and Secularisms,” Social Research 76, no. 4 (2009), 1064.
3 Anthony Smith, “Chosen Peoples: Why Ethnic Groups Survive,” Ethnic and Racial Studies 15,
no. 3 (1992), 438. https://doi.org/10.1080/01419870.1992.9993756.
Christian community values its cultural and linguistic traditions does not nec-
essarily imply it is guilty of phyletism.
As a sin, phyletism is not simply a love of one’s ethnocultural group. Rather,
the immorality embodied in phyletism is a sense of an ethnoracial (phyloge-
netic) supremacy that distorts an affectionate sense of kinship with others
into a malicious sense of superiority of one’s own ethnoracial group while
eschewing others. This sin becomes worse when an ethnic group links such a
malicious sense of superiority to their membership in an Orthodox Christian
ecclesial community, for it undermines the very Christian ethic of agapê that
such a community is supposed to embody. Phyletism is immoral precisely
because it involves an egotistical form of collective self-recognition coupled
with either non-recognition or misrecognition of other groups and their mem-
bers. Phyletism emerges when a collective becomes so self-absorbed that they
fail to recognize any value in the customs and culture of other communities
and is thus a distortion of what a morally sound affinity for and fondness of
one’s own ethnolinguistic cultural community can be.
The reason why phyletism has been such a problem in the Orthodox world
is that, for many of the world’s Orthodox Christians, their religious traditions
are intimately bounded by the ethnolinguistic cultures through which they
first experienced and through which they seek to preserve their religiosity. The
diverse cultural expressions of a common faith embody these communities’
unique ways of living out their Orthodoxy and for which they often seek rec-
ognition. When this is denied, anger and hatred become instilled within the
group that is not recognized or negatively characterized and hence morph into
a desire to separate from, or even harm, any group perceived as a potential
threat to their in-group (at times rightfully so due to historical instances of
violence). The issue of non-recognition may at times apply to both groups that
have held more ecclesiastical power historically as well as those that have not.
Ethnolinguistic groups that have held less ecclesiastical power will naturally
feel harmed if their ethnolinguistic traditions and cultural communities are
not recognized or mischaracterized in a derogatory fashionand seek to ensure
their group’s autonomy as a means of ensuring its survival as a unique cultural
community. On the other hand, dominant groups may feel betrayed when oth-
ers seek to break away – when they were united in a common way of life, com-
mon faith, common struggles and a common ethos in the past. And thus they
feel as though the groups seeking autonomy are refusing to recognize their
shared history and identity and may become vengeful due to a sense of betrayal
and a refusal to recognize the two groups’ shared narrative, especially when
such a group is being portrayed as being or having been “an oppressor” by the
other when they do not view themselves as such. The point is that recognition
The thesis is that our identity is partly shaped by recognition or its absence,
often by the misrecognition of others, and so a person or group of people can
suffer real damage, real distortion, if the people or society around them mirror
back to them a confining or demeaning or contemptible picture of themselves.
Nonrecognition or misrecognition can inflict harm, can be a form of oppression,
imprisoning someone in a false, distorted, and reduced mode of being.5
Arguably, part of what spawned the emergence of phyletism in the first place
was precisely the fact that various ethnic groups felt that they were not being
given due recognition of their unique cultural identities by the ethnic groups
that held positions of power and authority within the Church. For instance, the
case of the Bulgarian demand for autocephaly, which led directly to the con-
demnation of phyletism, was certainly the result of ethnonationalism and the
politicization of the Bulgarian Orthodox identity. But it was also partly moti-
vated by the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople’s prior attempts to
enforce the use of the Greek liturgy as part of a larger process of Hellenization
that sought the unification of the Ottoman Rum millet through cultural assimi-
lationism. But to assert any narrative identity that eradicates portions of its
history of intercultural encounter and influence in the interests of national
sovereignty may also be seen as a form of cultural erasure and, hence, a nega-
tive form of homogenization that seeks the same end as assimilationist acts.
Both are merely two methods of striving for the same goals: homogeneity and
autonomy in the sense of separation from otherness. To this end, an ecclesial
telos of homogeneity does nothing but create fertile ground for phyletism in
that it fails to comprehend the plural nature of human sociality and fails to rec-
ognize that another’s language and cultural heritage are as valuable to that per-
son as one’s own language and cultural customs are to oneself. Consequently,
to deny recognition to the various ethnocultural and linguacultural traditions
of the Orthodox world by excluding their experiences and concerns from
ecclesiastical considerations may itself be a form of harm against the members
of these communities as it stifles their sense of identity, historicity and social
relationality. Rather than exclude or assimilate, the Orthodox Ecumene must
“Multiculturalism” is a term that has been widely used in recent years as soci-
eties continue to become more culturally diverse and as nations attempt to
cope with novel forms of religious and cultural pluralism within their borders.
As a term, “multiculturalism” has both a descriptive and normative sense. In
the first sense, it is often used to describe the cultural pluralism and diversity
of contemporary societies; here, “multiculturalism” refers to the contempo-
rary phenomenon that a variety of cultural traditions have come to occupy
the same social spaces. In its normative sense, “multiculturalism” has been put
forth as a socio-political ideal, tied to public policy and, as an ethical theory,
tied to our perceptions of identity and the ways in which we relate to those
who differ from us culturally. Both ties entail some positive evaluation of the
phenomenon of cultural pluralism. Normatively, endorsements of “multicul-
turalism” often promote cultural pluralism and defend ethnic and linguistic
diversity.
As a normative social or political philosophy, multiculturalism can be
regarded as a reaction and alternative to the hegemonic enforcement of cul-
tural homogeneity that is said to have resulted from earlier assimilationist
attitudes and policies in Western democratic societies.6 To this extent, mul-
ticultural political theories seek ways in which the phenomenon of cultural
pluralism can be incorporated into the political philosophy of the state and
can be accounted for in the types of policies and legislation that are subse-
quently enacted. It may thus be argued that a “multicultural society” is one
in which the state attempts to respect, accommodate and promote cultural
pluralism and is a society in which a high degree of linguacultural, ethnocul-
tural and religiocultural diversity is seen as compatible with political unity. A
multicultural society then is one in which pluralism is not conceptualized as a
problem to be overcome but one in which pluralism is thought to be conducive
with the ends and aims of that sociopolitical entity, namely, the stability of the
7 See Will Kymlicka, Multicultural Odysseys: Navigating the New International Politics of
Diversity (New York: Oxford University Press, 2007), 65–6.
long-standing internal tensions about the role that cultural identity ought to
play within the Church and attempt to forge anything even remotely resem-
bling authentic unity among the global Orthodox Christian ecumene.
cultures that have provided the horizon of meaning for large numbers of human
beings […] over a long period of time – that have, in other words, articulated
their sense of the good, the holy, the admirable – are almost certain to have
something that deserves our admiration and respect, even if it is accompanied
by much that we have to abhor and reject.8
If it is true that persons always relate to humanity through the particular socio-
cultural communities that give rise to a sense of social identity and belonging,
I would like to propose that the Orthodox ethical concept of philanthropia, of
“love of humanity,” ought to entail the recognition of cultural particularity as
an integral aspect of the human condition and a person’s ability to exist in a
meaningful relation with others. Conceptions of philanthropia and universal
love that seek to effectively replace all regional, cultural, ethnic and linguistic
forms of fellowship with a mutual benevolence to a global community founded
9 John Deigh, “Empathy and Universalizability,” in Minds and Morals: Essays on Ethics and
Cognitive Science, ed. Larry May, Marilyn Freedman and Andy Clark (Cambridge: MIT Press,
1996), 199–220, 213.
mutual empathy for each other’s concerns, experiences, values and point
of view.
Consequently, as a result of predisposing us toward empathizing with oth-
ers, partiality primes persons to be receptive to the points of view and circum-
stances of another. Ultimately, partiality is not simply an exclusionary attitude
or seed of in-group tendencies. Rather, if partiality is a core feature of friend-
ship or philia, then this implies that our ability to care for the stranger and
embrace the cultural other emerges from the expansion of our horizons of par-
tiality, and not from some imagined sense of impartiality or neutrality towards
the other’s sense of cultural belonging. In the context of members of a shared
ethnocultural and linguistic tradition – who share a common heritage, lin-
guistic and cultural practices, and thereby share a common historically rooted
narrative identity with others with whom they are currently un-acquainted –
partiality towards unknown selves enables them to develop a sense of care
and concern for and even kinship with those not immediately related to them.
To reiterate Anthony Smith’s observation regarding ethnic belonging, “When
people identify with ethnies, they feel a sense of wider kinship with a fictive
‘super-family,’ one that extends outwards in space and down the generations.”12
Smith’s observation highlights one of the ethically positive aspects of ethno-
cultural and linguacultural communities, namely, that they are capable of
binding people together in a transgenerational and trans-regional sense of
communal fellowship. In such a communal bonding, a transcendence within
immanence occurs whereby the self goes beyond itself in affectionate relation
to a family, families to ethnies, the ethnocultural community’s transcendence
of temporality as an intergenerational phenomenon and, in the case of global
diasporas of ethnocultural and linguacultural groups, as communities capable
of transcending spatiality.
If we remain mindful of the ways in which the formation of a sense of social
self-identity occurs within the types of ethnocultural and linguacultural com-
munities of which the Eastern Orthodox ecumene is comprised, we can begin
to comprehend more fully how it is possible for philoxenia to be conceived of
as an extension of, rather than an eradication of, the sense of loving fellowship
and kinship one holds for one’s own cultural community. As a person’s sense of
self begins to emerge, the person begins to empathize with others whom she
feels emotionally close to; initially, this will often take place within a family
setting and eventually begin to expand beyond the familial circle towards the
extended family and neighbors who happen to be a part of the self’s ancestral,
out of empathy that the recognition of difference and otherness can be imple-
mented in cultivating a philoxenia for ethnically distinct and culturally diverse
others.
Conclusion
Introduction
Universalistic egalitarianism, from which sprang the ideals of freedom and a col-
lective life in solidarity, the autonomous conduct of life and emancipation, the
individual morality of conscience, human rights and democracy, is the direct
legacy of the Judaic ethic of justice and the Christian ethic of love. […] To this
day, there is no alternative to it. And in light of the current challenges of a post-
national constellation, we continue to draw on the substance of this heritage.1
This statement from Jürgen Habermas suggests that we already see the roots
of democratic values and ideas in Judaism and Christianity and that to nourish
these values and ideas is to return to these roots. In addition to these positive
values that we appreciate in contemporary democratic societies, however, we
must also consider their illnesses, both sociological and psychological. With
the help of two thinkers, the Polish sociologist Zygmunt Bauman (1925–2017)
and his book Liquid Modernity, and the German philosopher Byung-Chul
Han (born in Seoul in 1959) and mainly his book The Burnout Society,2 I will
unmask some of the illnesses of postmodern democratic life, such as societal
liquidity and the lack of boundaries, over-transparency, individualization and
hyperactivity. I will then look for possible antidotes in the roots of Orthodox
spirituality and explore how these antidotes might transform these destructive
elements in democratic societies and restore a sense of integrity, wholeness
and harmony.
I will work with different discourses. I will speak about the illnesses in post-
modern democratic pluralistic societies using sociological and psycho-political
discourse, but I will respond to them using the language of theology and spiri-
tuality. I will draw on those theological models within Orthodox spirituality
that could help fill out Bauman’s analysis and especially Han’s. At the same
time, I will take into consideration my own context of the Orthodox Church of
the Czech Lands and Slovakia, especially the Czech context.3
1 Jürgen Habermas, “A Conversation about God and the World,” in Time of Transitions, ed. and
trans. Ciaran Cronin and Max Pensky (Cambridge MA: Polity Press, 2006), 150–1.
2 See Byung-Chul Han, The Burnout Society, trans. Erik Butler (Stanford CA: Stanford University
Press, 2015).
3 For more information about the Orthodox Church of the Czech Lands and Slovakia, see
Kateřina Bauerová and Tim Noble, “The Ways from Diaspora to Local Churches,” in The
The Orthodox Church of the Czech Lands and Slovakia represents a small
autocephalic church in the centre of Europe, where Orthodoxy is connected to
neither land nor nation. Its members are mostly Russian, Ukrainian, Greek and
Romanian believers and Czech converts to Orthodoxy so it is multicultural. It
exists in a democratic pluralistic country. But our society also bears many of
the illnesses of postmodern times that find their way into the church.
I have found an accurate description of these destructive elements in the
Polish sociologist Zygmunt Bauman and the German philosopher Byung-Chul
Han. Bauman describes the transition from modernity to postmodernity as
the transition from a solid society to a more liquid one. He notes that while
modernity was characterized by the need for order, the need to categorize and
rationalize the world in order to make it controllable, predictable, and under-
standable, late modernity (or postmodernity) is characterized by the need for
constant change. In Bauman’s view, the term liquid modernity describes the
condition of constant mobility and change in relationships, identities, and
global economics within contemporary society. The only constant thing is
change, and this can be seen everywhere, even in approaches to self-identity.
In liquid modernity, it has become impossible to construct a durable identity –
that is, one that coheres over time and space.
Han’s analysis of late modernity is similar to Bauman’s. For Han, the dif-
ference between modernity and postmodernity lies in the transition from a
disciplinary society, governed by regulations and restrictions, to a society of
pure positivity, where negativity is entirely absent. The society of positiv-
ity is characterized by a limitless “can.” It is a “can-do” society. As Han writes:
“Prohibitions, commandments, and the law are replaced by projects, initia-
tives and motivation.”4 People are free from any external power, repression
and domination, and they are called to personal motivation and responsibil-
ity. Thus, the “subject of achievement” gives itself the freedom to maximize
achievements. Overwork and the drive for performance escalate into self-
exploitation: “The exploiter is simultaneously the exploited,”5 as Han says.
How can we deal with this liquidity and positivity in democratic postmod-
ern countries? Are there any spiritual antidotes that would lead us back to
Ways of Orthodox Theology in the West, Ivana Noble, Kateřina Bauerová, Tim Noble, Parush
Parushev (Crestwood NY: St. Vladimir’s Seminary Press, 2015), 183–239.
4 Han, The Burnout Society, 9.
5 Han, The Burnout Society, 11.
From this brief introduction, we can see that the first issue we need to deal with
is the concept of human identity. Both authors describe human identity in the
postmodern world in terms of instability on all levels of reality. They use simi-
lar metaphors for this unstable human identity: Bauman uses the metaphor
of the “nomad,” and Han that of the “tourist.” Bauman’s nomads are continu-
ally changing jobs, values, spouses, and political and secular identities – and,
I would add, church identities. This liquid society, without restrictions and
regulations, places more responsibility on individuals, who are often unable
to carry such a burden. The result is an emphasis on “shifting” rather than on
“staying,” and people find it more and more difficult to make permanent com-
mitments. Han’s description of the unstable identity of the tourist lies in the
person’s inability to embark on a real journey. The tourist does not understand
the meaning of “journey.” In Han’s view, such tourism is characterized by the
absence of both a guiding narrative and a final purpose. The “touristic journey”
“is not a semantically rich way.”6
With increased globalization and religious pluralism, spiritual seekers are
not fixed to any particular place or community and are free to taste and expe-
rience whatever spirituality takes their fancy. I am not sure we can avoid this
phenomenon, but the question remains: How can we integrate these features
of postmodern identity into the Christian context and replace them with a
metaphor that has deeper spiritual meaning? I offer here the older metaphor
of “pilgrim.” Seeing our lives as a spiritual pilgrimage has a long history within
Christianity; it is not a new concept. The metaphor is found in the Bible and
in the writings of the fathers, such as Gregory of Nyssa.7 The Orthodox Church
in the Czech Republic is made up mostly of people who came from different
countries and Czech believers who came from other Christian denominations.
Pilgrimage does not necessarily require a change of geography. It is a journey
with God, with other people, and with the whole of creation. The spiritual
6 Byung-Chul Han, The Transparency Society, trans. Erik Butler (Stanford: Stanford University
Press, 2015), 35.
7 See, e.g., Tim Noble, “Pilgrims Progressing: Ignatius of Loyola and John Bunyan,” Baptistic
Theologies 3, no. 2 (2011), 64–78, here especially 64.
journey is full of meanings, both contained within our memory and accom-
panied by the eschatological hope of the fulness of God’s presence in God’s
kingdom.
The pilgrim’s perception of space is different from that of the nomad or the
tourist. Bauman’s nomad is not fixed to a particular place but is always moving.
The pilgrim’s perception of space is of a different quality. As Heidegger says,
space is not distinguished by its various places but by one’s sense of being.8
Han’s tourist has no sense of being, lives only in the present, consumes places,
and sees only what is completely transparent.9
The pilgrim’s sense of being on a journey emerges from the cosmological
understanding of being part of the space of creation. The Orthodox theological
emphasis on the material and spiritual worlds emanating from a single source,
as expressed in articles and books by Elizabeth Theokritoff10, helps pilgrims to
understand that the spiritual journey unites them with God. They are not con-
suming the space of creation they dwell in but nourishing it. The natural world
around us is not to be consumed. It is to be used sacramentally. Only then will
we see its real meaning – that it points to God, as Alexander Schmemann says.11
This cosmological notion of creation as the space of the incarnate Word of
God enables the pilgrim, in contrast to the tourist, to see what is hidden – to see
places that are not transparent. What become especially visible are the walls
and boundaries that form part of the structure of space. Structuring the world
by building walls and demarcating boundaries and borders is all very well until
it brings an ontological hierarchy of the inside and the outside.12 The pilgrim is
able to notice and appreciate the meaning of windows and doors as places of
welcome and of letting go; as points of contact for those both inside and out-
side. What is more, if the churches are literally or metaphorically closed, if the
walls are too high to enable people to get in or out, pilgrims always find other
ways, other journeys on which to encounter God. To nourish the space around
us also means to nourish those tiny corners and forgotten paths where pilgrims
encounter God, people and the whole of creation.
8 See Martin Heidegger, “Building Dwelling Thinking,” in Basic Writings: From Being
and Time (1927) to The Task of Thinking (1964), ed. D. Farrell Krell (San Francisco: Harper,
1993), 356.
9 See Han, Transparency Society, 31.
10 See, for example, Elizabeth Theokritoff, Living in God’s Creation: Orthodox Perspectives on
Ecology (Crestwood NY: St. Vladimir’s Seminary Press, 2009).
11 Alexander Schmemann, The World as Sacrament (London: Darton, Longmann and Todd,
1965), 16.
12 For more, see Zygmunt Bauman, 44 Letters from the Liquid Modern World (Cambridge MA:
Polity Press, 2010), 168.
in which people become blind in order to see more. Han adds that sometimes
we need to close our eyes to hear music and see beauty.
This same antinomy is valid for the broader meaning of icon in theological
anthropology. People made in God’s image and likeness are not fully transpar-
ent. There is a difference between people as God’s image and people as masks.
Han describes this difference as that between a real person and a dressmaker’s
dummy. The latter is dead, naked, and can be decorated with whatever clothes
one likes. But a living person who bears God’s image is also the bearer of a
mystery; she is not transparent. As Olivier Clément says in a typically poetic
way, the human body both reveals and covers a person.15 To kill God’s image in
others means to destroy the invisible and make them slaves – people without
faces. Similarly, Han and Bauman suggest that regarding a person in such a way
objectifies them as “the other.” To see and nourish God’s image in the other
means not reducing the mystery.
15 See Olivier Clément, On Human Being: A Spiritual Anthropology (London: New City,
2000), 30–3.
16 Byung-Chul Han, In the Swarm: Digital Prospects, trans. Erik Butler (Cambridge MA: The
MIT Press, 2017), 32.
17 Vladimir Lossky, Théologie dogmatique, ed. Olivier Clément and Michel Stavrou (Paris:
Cerf, 2012).
18 Lossky, Théologie dogmatique, 62.
mystical tradition and contemplative praxis, as found in the life and work of
Father Sophrony of Essex. Father Sophrony’s description of theosis as encoun-
tering God in the Uncreated Light is drawn from his practice of the Lord’s
Prayer, which helps the person praying overcome rational categories and unite
with God. One necessary stage on the spiritual path towards encountering
God in the Uncreated Light is meeting with darkness.19 Cleansing one’s senses,
one’s way of life, descending into one’s own hell, is a pre-condition for being
resurrected with Christ. Whereas the society of positivity and transparency
is about attaining maximum profit or maximum information, the apophatic
way is about attaining a clean heart. Mystical theology and contemplative
praxis can bring healing to the people of a society characterized by hyper-
communication and hyperactivity, people who live in a world without spatial
or temporal breaks.20
The apophatic way is complemented by the cataphatic way. The cataphatic
way emerges through the narratives and symbols in which revelation has taken
place and that are accessible to people because they are based on a common
experience.21 Here we can use another example from the Orthodox monastic
tradition, such as the life and work of Mother Maria Skobtsova. She saw the
creative act as a feature of human freedom, and, when she was in exile in Paris
during the Second World War, she was active in social engagement with Russian
emigrants and Jews. Her theological argument for the importance of creative
work and its spiritual meaning stems from the event of the Incarnation. The
Incarnation represents an invitation to embrace rather than reject the mate-
rial world. Chalcedonian doctrine teaches us not to deny the materiality of
the world or of nature, or the human potential to create. Made in God’s image,
human beings embody the connection between the natural and transcendent
worlds and so must display a creative spirit similar to God’s. God’s creativity is
mirrored in the creative processes on the earth and in the creative cooperation
between people and God.22 Without this cooperation, without two sides – the
human and the divine – creative processes would not exist.23 Mother Maria
shows us the difference between production and creation. The human ability
to create is fundamental to human being and is part of being made in the image
of God. But to create also means to rely on God as a partner. Han describes
the difference between production and creative acts in terms of two forms of
tiredness: production and hyperactivity bring “solitary and divisive tiredness,”
which prevent the subject from seeing what is outside him- or herself; on the
other hand, creative acts bring a tiredness that is “reconciliatory” and opens
the “I” to the world.24
Han suggests that contemplation makes people human. He is right that this
way can save us from all kinds of hyperactivity, both social and political. But
the two ways, the apophatic and the cataphatic, the via contemplativa and the
via activa (if the latter is understood as cocreation rather than production),
interpenetrate each other, critique and enrich each other.
Our opening quotation from Habermas suggests that democratic values are
the direct legacy of the Judaic ethic of justice and the Christian ethic of love.
How do we define this Christian ethic of love? Han and Bauman are equally
sceptical of the human ability to form and sustain relationships based on love
in contemporary society. Both see the digital media as a principal cause of the
fragmentation of a society now composed purely of individuals. Bauman sees
a world where people have stopped communicating face to face, have stopped
knocking on each other’s doors.25 Han suggests that other causes of fragmenta-
tion in society include the absence of negativity and the absence of otherness.
Transparency makes real relationships impossible: what keeps a real relation-
ship alive is precisely the impossibility of complete interpersonal transparency.
It is the space and distance between people that makes relationships possible.
Han writes: “[D]istance and shame refuse to be integrated into the accelerated
circulation of capital, information and communications.”26 The other from
whom otherness is taken is no longer a person and thus cannot be truly loved.
Without the presence of another, communication slowly degenerates into an
information exchange and relationships are replaced by connections.
This is where Orthodox theology and spirituality can help us, especially the
Orthodox theology of personhood, which stems from their theology of the
Trinity in which the categories of love, freedom and otherness are necessary
elements. Relationships of love and freedom are what define a person. We find
one of the ideas behind this equation in the ontology of a person as described
by Metropolitan John Zizioulas.27 Zizioulas is seeking to create an ecclesiol-
ogy that expresses the church as a way of being. But he is also aware that the
mystery of the church is deeply bound to human being and to the being of the
world and of God.
In describing the mystery of the life of the Trinity, Zizoulas shows that,
unlike the Latin fathers, the Greek fathers see the person (hypostasis) of the
Father, rather than some inert substance, as the ontological principle and
cause of the life of God as Trinity. The being of God is therefore not ontological
necessity but personal freedom. The Father freely “begets the Son and brings
forth the Spirit.” Outside of the Trinity there is no other being of God. A per-
son’s true identity can be found only in relationships. There is no true being
without communion. Being comes from the person who loves freely and who
affirms his or her own being by means of communion with other persons. This
concept is not just theoretical but existential. The communion of divine per-
sons is essential for human relationships. Without proper relationships with
others, a human can be an individual but not a person.
God’s ontological freedom lies in his personal existence, in the authentic
relationships of the persons of the Trinity. Freedom is possible only by way of
love as the primordial predicate. In the Trinity, love and freedom are identi-
cal. People created in God’s image always have the hope of being authentic
persons. We are not talking about the freedom of negation, of denying one’s
own existence, but the freedom of love. In Zizioulas’s view, even freedom
understood merely as the ability to choose is false as this is just another kind of
necessity. This view resonates with Han’s criticism of the contemporary notion
of freedom. Han suggests that the imperative “be free” inflicts violence on the
subjects and leads to tiredness and depression: “You can exercise even greater
constraint than You should.” Independence does not bring freedom and eman-
cipation: the dialectic of freedom lies in the fact that it always generates new
limitations.28 On the contrary, Zizioulas’s ontology says that the real ontology
of personhood is based on freedom not “from” the other but “for” the other. It
thus becomes identical with love. “Being as communion” also means accepting
the otherness of the other. Without the otherness of the other, we would have
27 John D. Zizioulas, Being as Communion (London: Darton, Longman and Todd, 2004). The
comments that follow here are taken from this work, pp. 15, 18, 43, 44.
28 Han, The Burnout Society, 38.
no communion. As Zizioulas says: “We can love only if we are persons, that is,
if we allow the other to be truly other, and yet to be in communion with us.”29
Conclusion
29 John D. Zizioulas, Communion and Otherness: Further Studies in Personhood and the
Church (London: T&T Clark, 2010), 10.
Vasilios N. Makrides
Introduction
1 Timothy Fitzgerald, The Ideology of Religious Studies (Oxford: Oxford University Press,
2000); David Chidester, “Colonialism,” in Guide to the Study of Religion, ed. Willi Braun &
Russell T. McCutcheon (London: Bloomsbury, 2000), 423–37; Tomoko Masuzawa, The
Invention of World Religions: Or, How European Universalism was Preserved in the Language of
Pluralism (Chicago IL: University of Chicago Press, 2005); Richard King, “Orientalism and the
Study of Religions,” in The Routledge Companion to the Study of Religion, ed. John R. Hinnells
(Abington, Oxon: Routledge, 2005), 275–90; David Chidester, “Colonialism and Religion,”
Critical Research on Religion 1 (2013), 87–94; Daniel Dubuisson, The Invention of Religions,
trans. Martha Cunningham (Sheffield: Equinox Publishing, 2019).
2 Henry Schwarz and Sangeeta Ray, eds., A Companion to Postcolonial Studies (Malden, MA:
Blackwell Publishing, 2000); Gregory Castle, Postcolonial Discourses: An Anthology (Oxford:
Wiley-Blackwell, 2001); Robert Young, Postcolonialism: An Historical Introduction (Oxford:
John Wiley & Sons, 2001).
new and controversial facets. Suffice it to say that the latest protest actions in
the context of the wider “Cancel Culture” movement3 and the Afro-American
criticism of Classical Studies in academia as perpetuated and disseminated by
Western colonial powers and ideologies4 owe much to the postcolonial turn.
It is thus not unusual to observe major academic and public institutions as
well as organizations and states in the Western world today officially initiating
their own self-critical decolonization process.5 Even if there are reservations
sometimes regarding the extreme application of postcolonial perspectives
on concrete cases and their potential repercussions or regarding other epis-
temological issues at stake,6 postcolonial critique is generally an established
research paradigm nowadays, both within academia and in society and culture
at large.
Edward Said’s Orientalism, first published in 1978, is commonly considered
as the birth of (or at least a turning point in) postcolonial studies. Basically, he
tried to show that Western experts on the Orient constructed the subject of
their research as an inferior other. Moreover, the knowledge produced in this
way was used to consolidate and legitimize colonial power structures (e.g., in
the educational canon of the colonized subjects). Said used material on power
structures, production and dissemination of knowledge and concomitant
relations of dependence (e.g., by Michel Foucault7). This shows the affinities
between postcolonial and postmodern studies, two parallel yet not identical
movements, which engaged in a strong critique of various Western patterns of
development and worldwide dissemination in recent decades. This publica-
tion triggered a huge “Orientalism debate” that still continues in various forms,
especially in connection with Islam and its quite problematic relations to the
Western world.8
3 Pippa Norris, “Cancel Culture: Myth or Reality?” Political Studies (2021), 1–30; doi:
10.1177/00323217211037023.
4 Dan-el Padilla Peralta, “Citizenship’s Insular Cases, from Ancient Greece and Rome to Puerto
Rico,” Humanities (MDPI) 8 (2019), 134; https://doi.org/10.3390/h8030134.
5 Jan C. Jansen and Jürgen Osterhammel, Decolonisation: A Short History (Princeton NJ:
Princeton University Press; 2017); Priyamvada Gopal, “On Decolonisation and the University,”
Textual Practice 35 (2021), 873–99.
6 Vinay Lal, “The Politics of Culture and Knowledge after Postcolonialism: Nine Theses (and a
Prologue),” Continuum: Journal of Media & Cultural Studies 26 (2012), 191–205.
7 Michel Foucault, Power/Knowledge; Selected Interviews and Other Writings 1972–1977
(Brighton: Vintage, 1980); see also Richard Fardon, ed., Power and Knowledge: Anthropological
and Sociological Approaches (Edinburgh: Scottish Academic Press, 1985).
8 Edward W. Said, Orientalism (London: Vintage, 1978), 1–8; see also the new “Preface” and
“Afterword” in a later edition of the book (2003).
Two further developments are worth mentioning in this context. First, the
“Orientalism thesis” has expanded mutatis mutandis to other cultures beyond
the original ones and was considered – with all the necessary adaptations and
modifications – a key perspective for understanding their overall development.
This was also the case with Eastern and Southeast Europe, which were histori-
cally influenced in a decisive way by Western Europe9 and remain dependent
on it in numerous ways, even today.10 This particular situation led to indig-
enous inferiority complexes vis-à-vis the West as well as derogatory Western
views about the “cultural lag” of the East. No doubt, this long-term process also
had a colonial “Orientalist character,” albeit a different one than in the origi-
nal case. Not accidentally, this fresh paradigm opened new vistas for under-
standing and evaluating the modern development of Eastern and Southeast
Europe.11 Ideas about “nesting Orientalisms”12 or the ideology of “Balkanism”13
revealing the West European ways of dealing with and constructing the East
have become quite prominent in recent decades, despite various critiques and
different appraisals.14 Not least of all, this topic is particularly interesting for
this contribution, given that it is exactly in the Eastern parts of Europe that
Orthodox Christianity is predominantly found, both in history and at present.
Characteristically enough, the Western mind has placed East Central Europe,
which has been shaped religiously by Roman Catholicism and Protestantism,
at a higher level than Orthodox Eastern and Southeast Europe.15 This is also
9 Larry Wolff, Inventing Eastern Europe: The Map of Civilization on the Mind of the
Enlightenment (Stanford CA: Stanford University Press, 1994).
10 Katherine E. Fleming, “Orientalism, the Balkans, and Balkan Historiography,” The
American Historical Review 105 (2000), 1218–33; Kerstin S. Jobst, “Orientalism, E. W. Said
und die Osteuropäische Geschichte,” Saeculum 51 (2000), 250–66.
11 Dorota Kołodziejczyk and Cristina Şandru, eds., Postcolonial Perspectives on Post
communism in Central and Eastern Europe (London: Routledge, 2018); cf. also various
related book series, such as Postcolonial Perspectives on Eastern Europe (Peter Lang).
12 Milica Bakić-Hayden and Robert M. Hayden, “Orientalist Variations on the Theme
‘Balkans’: Symbolic Geography in Recent Yugoslav Cultural Politics,” The Slavic Review 51
(1992), 1–15; Milica Bakić-Hayden, “Nesting Orientalisms: The Case of Former Yugoslavia,”
The Slavic Review 54 (1995), 917–31.
13 Maria Todorova, “The Balkans: From Discovery to Invention,” The Slavic Review 53 (1994),
453–82; Maria Todorova, Imagining the Balkans (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1997);
Andrew Hammond, “The Uses of Balkanism: Representation and Power in British Travel
Writing, 1850–1914,” The Slavonic and East European Review 82 (2004), 601–24.
14 Holm Sundhaussen, “Der Balkan: Ein Plädoyer für Differenz,” Geschichte und Gesellschaft
29 (2003): 608–24; Diana Mishkova, “In Quest of Balkan Occidentalism,” Tokovi istorije 1–2
(2006), 29–62.
15 Maria Todorova, “Hierarchies of Eastern Europe: East Central Europe versus the Balkans,”
Balkan Review 11 (1997), 5–47.
indicative of the role played by religious criteria in defining and classifying the
other, thus creating related widespread “mental maps” next to geographical
borders.16
Second, the initial “Orientalism thesis” was also extended beyond the domi-
nant pattern of the West vs. the rest of the world. Even if it is the most preva-
lent form historically, Western colonialism is not the sole and exclusive form
of hegemony, influence, dependence, classification and exploitation. Forms
of colonialism can be located at varied frequency and intensity in numerous
other parts of the non-Western world, sometimes even within the Western
world itself. It is also not unusual that those who have been colonized and
have experienced the many consequences of such colonization may them-
selves apply colonial policies and strategies to others under their direct influ-
ence or control. This can be observed even within Islamic cultures that have
often experienced Western colonialism in extreme forms. This is due to the
fact that there is a gradation of Islamic cultures according to internal criteria.
For instance, following the reforms during the Tanzimat period (1839–1876),
Ottomans started treating other Muslims in an “Oriental” way, especially those
in the Arab provinces of the Empire. They looked down on them and viewed
themselves as superior, as setting the pace, while “Ottomanism” became the
role model for Islamic modernization.17 Hence, colonialism is a multilayered
issue that does not only concern the West. Deconstructing colonial discourses
of all kinds and in all possible settings has become one dominant goal of post-
colonial studies.
It is also pertinent in this context to explain the various meanings of coloni-
zation and colonial dependence and how these terms may be conceptualized
in different contexts. First, the terms may be used in a narrow sense to denote
the military conquest, domination, control, exploitation and forced adapta-
tion of a given culture to a stronger colonial power, be it Western or not. In
the context of Western colonialism, this adaptation was usually understood
and legitimized as a “civilizing process” for the colonized culture, which was
regarded by definition as inferior to the colonizing one. This is basically the key
characteristic that distinguishes colonial rule from mere foreign rule.
Second, there is also another understanding of colonization in a broader
sense. Here, it is about the “colonization of the mind,” following the famous
quote of social anthropologist Mary Douglas: “[T]he colonization of each
16 Frithjof Benjamin Schenk, “Mental Maps: Die Konstruktion von geographischen Räumen
in Europa seit der Aufklärung,” Geschichte und Gesellschaft 28 (2002), 493–514.
17 Ussama Makdisi, “Ottoman Orientalism,” The American Historical Review 107 (2002),
768–96.
other’s minds is the price we pay for thought.”18 This case basically applies
to the unconscious of the colonized people who may adopt foreign thinking,
without being politically subjugated by a colonial power. In other words, this
happens when the gap between two cultures under question is perceived as
huge and when the inferior culture is trying to reach the level of the superior
one out of admiration and without external coercion. As a result, the adoption
and internalization of a foreign dominant thinking, perspectives, horizons,
knowledge production, language and hegemonic colonial discourse are quite
vital in this category. For example, the reception of Western psychotherapeu-
tics in Greece has been considered a “colonization of the Greek mind.”19 The
main problem is that this category of colonization is not always clearly dis-
cernible and cannot be classified as such, a fact that can leave several colonial
cases undetected for a long time.
There are many related issues in this context that are equally instrumen-
tal in capturing the multiple intricacies of the whole topic. One concerns the
timeframe of colonialism, which in the Western context specifically started
with the beginning of the early modern period onwards. Are there any forms
of colonialism before that era, such as a kind of proto-colonialism? Several
scholars distinguish here between pre-modern (e.g., with regard to ancient
Greece20 or medieval Western Europe21) and modern forms of colonization.
More recently, George Demacopoulos has tried to locate Western colonizing
practices in the context of the Crusades and especially that of the Latin occu-
pation of the Byzantine Empire in the 13th century, attesting to a pre-modern
form of “colonial Christianity.” In general, Byzantines were feeling superior to
other peoples and the West, yet, after the sacking of Constantinople in 1204,
they started revising their traditional superiority. Since then, there is almost no
Greek Orthodox text that does not refer to the West either as an alien culture
as such or against the Westernized Orthodox. Aside from the theological dif-
ferences, the cultural differences between East and West also acquired greater
significance in this context.22
18 Steven Shapin, “Citation for Mary Douglas, 1994 Bernal Prize Recipient,” Science,
Technology, & Human Values 20 (1995), 259–61, here 260.
19 Charles Stewart, ed., Colonizing the Greek Mind? The Reception of Western
Psychotherapeutics in Greece (Athens: DEREE – The American College of Athens, 2014).
20 Gabriel Zuchtriegel, Colonization and Subalternity in Classical Greece (Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 2017).
21 Felipe Fernández-Armesto and James Muldoon, eds., Internal Colonization in Medieval
Europe (London: Routledge, 2008); Lucy K. Pick, “Edward Said, Orientalism, and the
Middle Ages,” Medieval Encounters 5 (1999), 265–71.
22 George E. Demacopoulos, Colonizing Christianity: Greek and Latin Religious Identity in the
Era of the Fourth Crusade (New York: Fordham University Press, 2019).
Another important distinction is the one between the usual overseas colo-
nialism, associated with the expansion of Western Europe, and the continen-
tal one pertaining to other regions in various guises, including Europe itself.
Continental colonialism tends to exploit colonial subjects from within the
state. There is also the condition of “reverse colonialism,” namely, when previ-
ously colonized cultures start colonizing Western countries in various ways.
In the end, colonialism always flows both ways, and there is perhaps no place,
country or culture on earth that has remained totally immune to some kind
of colonial encounter and experience. In fact, the relations between the colo-
nizers and the colonized are viewed today as being much more complex than
previous theories held. This is because the top-down approach to the topic has
been relativized, while more emphasis is placed upon the dynamics and the
reciprocal interactions between the two and the concomitant transformations.
Another interesting case is that of neo-colonialism or neo-Orientalism. This
concerns an indigenized colonial thinking, a “double bind,” namely, indige-
nous people seeking national sovereignty and self-determination while repro-
ducing colonial positions and attitudes themselves.23 Furthermore, the notion
of crypto-colonialism or shadow colonialism is also intriguing. According to
Michael Herzfeld, it is “the curious alchemy, whereby certain countries, buffer
zones between the colonized lands and those as yet untamed, were compelled
to acquire their political independence at the expense of massive economic
dependence, this relationship being articulated in the iconic guise of aggres-
sively national culture fashioned to suit foreign models. Such countries were
and are living paradoxes: they are nominally independent, but that inde-
pendence comes at the price of a sometimes humiliating form of effective
dependence.”24 All this is relevant and applicable to a certain extent, as we
shall see, to the case of Orthodox Christianity.
For example, modern Greece has been considered a prime case of crypto-
colonialism. The new independent (since 1830) Greek state remained
totally dependent on West European and generally foreign powers that
had treated it in an explicit or implicit colonial way. Related examples from
the 19th century25 down to the recent deep economic crisis (since 2009)
abound.26 The new Greek state has been rightly regarded as an imperfect and
Athenocentric simulacrum of the West’s imaginary construction of ancient
Hellenic glories. In fact, it was mainly for this imagined Hellenic antiquity
and not so much for its Orthodox Christian heritage that Greece received
considerable support from the West for its independence. The modernizing
Greek elites, as representatives of the West European others, opted for a col-
lective subjugation of their country to a Western (and later on global) cultural
hegemony.27 The modern Greek relationship with the West has been often
criticized from various perspectives, including postcolonial ones. More specifi-
cally, the Western reception of Greek antiquity was regarded as being a par-
ticular one since it obeyed Western criteria and ignored the cultural specifics
of Hellenic civilization as a way of viewing the world and living in it. Hence,
the West ended up distorting the ancient Greek tradition. By contrast, several
modern Greeks – despite the wholesale subjection of the country to Western
colonialism – claimed to have rediscovered the genuine meaning of Greek
antiquity unfettered by Western influences and to have reassessed it in light of
the country’s past, present and future.28 It is exactly here we can observe the
kind of postcolonial reaction that we shall also observe below regarding the
rediscovery of authentic Orthodoxy unpolluted by the West.
Launching now onto our main subject, the key question here would be to
locate the ways and the areas in which Orthodox Christianity can be analyzed
and theorized from a postcolonial perspective. This may initially surprise us,
given that the Orthodox majority states and cultures of Eastern and Southeast
Europe have never been Western colonies in the strict sense of the word. There
were a few notable exceptions, however – for example, the island of Cyprus,
which was under British rule (1878–1960) and was even officially a crown
26 Tereza Capelos and Theofanis Exadaktylos, “‘The Good, the Bad and the Ugly’: Stereotypes,
Prejudices and Emotions on Greek Media Representation of the EU Financial Crisis,”
in The Politics of Extreme Austerity: Greece in the Eurozone Crisis, ed. Georgios Karyotis
and Roman Gerodimos (London: Palgrave McMillan, 2015), 46–68; George Tzogopoulos,
The Greek Crisis in the Media: Stereotyping in the International Press (London: Routledge,
2016).
27 Stathis Gourgouris, Dream Nation: Enlightenment, Colonization, and the Institution of
Modern Greece (Stanford CA: Stanford University Press, 1996).
28 Christos Yannaras, Wem gehört die griechische Antike? Erfurter Vorträge zur Kultur
geschichte des Orthodoxen Christentums, 8 (Erfurt: Universität Erfurt, 2009).
colony (since 1925), a fact that also had an impact on the Orthodox Church
there. Characteristically enough, independent Cyprus did not get rid of all
colonial influences.29 But can this case alone justify a broader consideration
of Orthodox Christianity via postcolonial analysis and critique? The answer
to this question relates to the broader understanding of colonialism explained
above, which involves many facets of colonial dependence and devaluation
that are relevant to Orthodox Christianity in many respects. After all, Western
Europe/the West and its colonial practices have been a perennial problem and
challenge for the Orthodox world at various levels.
29 Vassos Argyrou, “Independent Cyprus? Postcoloniality and the Spectre of Europe,” The
Cyprus Review 22 (2010), 39–47.
30 Larry Wolff, The Enlightenment and the Orthodox World: Western Perspectives on the
Orthodox Church in Eastern Europe (Athens: Institute for Neohellenic Research, 2001).
31 Peter McMylor and Maria Vorozhishcheva, “Sociology and Eastern Orthodoxy,” in The
Blackwell Companion to Eastern Christianity, ed. Ken Perry (Malden MA: Blackwell
Publishing, 2010), 462–79, especially 475–78; Chris Hann, Eastern Christianity and Western
Social Theory, Erfurter Vorträge zur Kulturgeschichte des Orthodoxen Christentums, 10
(Erfurt: Universität Erfurt, 2011).
pro-Western tendencies, a fact that also triggered massive reactions that fall
under the broader spectrum of Orthodox anti-Westernism, old and new alike.32
Postcolonial analysis of these East-West relations not only yields important
insights in capturing their entanglements. It is also relevant mutatis mutandis
for understanding the particularities of Orthodox identity building across his-
tory and may help deconstruct the Western discourse about the Orthodox East.
To be more specific, there have been numerous representations of Orthodox
Christianity articulated from a Western perspective: exotic, archaic, mystical,
irrational, incapable of development, resistant to reform, conservative, other-
and outerworldly, nationalistic, patriarchal, anti-modern, violent, world-
negating and world-indifferent, and many more. For example, Orthodox ritual
practices and spirituality were often viewed as uncanny and bizarre by mod-
ern Western people. It seemed a rather strange and remote religiosity that did
not fit into the growing rationalization of Western Christianity, especially in
the post-Reformation era. In turn, this putative construction of the Western
imagination also had an impact on the Orthodox self-description of alterity
(“We of the East” – ἡ καθ’ ἡμᾶς Ἀνατολή), which also reinforced even more the
centuries-old separation line between Orthodox and Latin Christianity. Truth
be told, most of these Western characterizations of the Orthodox East belong
mostly to a rather distant past, given that there has been some significant rap-
port between Orthodox and Western Christianity in recent decades.33 The
dominance of Western modernity as the sole way to modernization has also
been seriously called into question,34 and this applies to Orthodox Christian
cultures in Eastern and Southeast Europe35 where various indigenous alter-
36 Roumen Daskalov, “Ideas about, and Reactions to Modernization in the Balkans,” East
European Quarterly 31 (1997), 141–80.
37 Irena Zeltner Pavlović, “Imagining Orthodoxy: Eine postkoloniale Beobachtungs
perspektive der Repräsentation des religiösen Anderen,” in Ostkirchen und Reformation
2017. Vol. 1: Dialog und Hermeneutik, ed. Irena Zeltner Pavlović and Martin Illert (Leipzig:
Evangelische Verlagsanstalt, 2018), 217–28; eadem, “Postkoloniale und postsozialisti
sche Studien: repräsentierte Orthodoxie,” in Postkoloniale Theologien 2: Perspektiven
aus dem deutschsprachigen Raum, ed. Andreas Nehring and Simon Wiesgickl (Stuttgart:
Kohlhammer Verlag, 2018), 226–41.
38 Elizabeth Prodromou, “Paradigms, Power, and Identity: Rediscovering Orthodoxy and
Regionalizing Europe,” European Journal of Political Research 30 (1996), 125–54.
39 Srdjan Vrcan, “A Christian Confession Possessed by Nationalistic Paroxysm: The Case of
Serbian Orthodoxy,” Religion 25 (1995), 357–70.
40 Stevan K. Pavlowitz, “Who is ‘Balkanizing’ Whom? The Misunderstandings between the
Debris of Yugoslavia and an Unprepared West,” Daedalus 123, no. 2 (1994), 203–23.
41 Bogoljub Šijaković, A Critique of Balkanistic Discourse: Contribution to the Phenomenology
of Balkan “Otherness” (Toronto: Serbian Literary Company, 2004).
42 Klaus Roth, “Von Europa Schwärmen? ‘Europa’ und die Europäische Union in den
Vorstellungen der Menschen in Südosteuropa,” in Prowestliche und antiwestliche Diskurse
in den Balkanländern/Südosteuropa, ed. Gabriella Schubert and Holm Sundhaussen
(Munich: Sagner 2008), 165–79; Valeska Bopp, Katharina Lampe and Andrea Schneiker,
eds., Balkanbilder in Ost und West. Mythen und Stereotypen auf der Spur: Anregungen zur
Didaktik interkultureller Studienseminare (Berlin: MitOst-Editionen, 2007).
appeal of the postcolonial paradigm. This also concerns other Western ste-
reotypes about Orthodoxy in other contexts, such as those about its alleged
“exotic” character, which are again in need of critical appraisal.43
We are talking, however, about a new phase of Western constructions with
far-reaching consequences that cannot be always effectively stopped. This
is because after the fall of communism, the West as a whole acquired a new
legitimacy, self-assurance and prominence that became visible in numerous
instances. It is not accidental that, in the notorious geopolitical theory of
Samuel P. Huntington about the “clash of civilizations” after the end of the
Cold War, the model of the West vs. the rest of the world acquired new sig-
nificance. In this frame, Orthodox Christianity was not portrayed in positive
colours and was – among other factors – held responsible for the overall cul-
tural lag of Eastern and Southeast Europe. This once more triggered sharp cri-
tiques of Huntington’s ideas as representing a new form of colonialism in the
context of the propagated “new world order.” The same can be said for other
Western theories (e.g., Francis Fukuyama’s The End of History and the Last
Man, 1992), which prophesied the worldwide victory of liberal democracy and
the free market economy and once more prompted postcolonial critiques.
A prime target of Western political and other critical voices is still Russia,
however, which, in the era of Vladimir Putin (since 2000), has once again
become anew a major opponent of Western political and other designs and
strengthened its traditional anti-Westernism in many forms. Not least, the
war against Ukraine in 2022 attests to this. The role of the Russian Orthodox
Church in post-communist times is anything but negligible since it has sys-
tematically promoted “traditional” values against Western ones (e.g., liberal-
ism, secularism, individualism), supported the policies of the Kremlin and
attempted to craft broader anti-Western alliances and fronts.44 This close
connection between state and church policies has been often criticized by
Western actors.45 As the Swedish ex-Foreign Minister Carl Bildt once tweeted
on 24 March 2014, the “force of Putin’s new anti-Western and anti-decadent
43 John Anthony McGuckin, The Orthodox Church: An Introduction to its History, Doctrine
and Spiritual Culture (Malden MA: Wiley-Blackwell 2008), 1.
44 Christopher Selbach, “The Orthodox Church in Post-Communist Russia and her
Perception of the West: A Search for a Self in the Face of an Other,” Zeitschrift für
Religionswissenschaft 10 (2002), 131–73; Alexander Agadjanian, “Tradition, Morality and
Community: Elaborating Orthodox Identity in Putin’s Russia,” Religion, State & Society 45
(2017), 39–60.
45 Zoe Knox, “Russian Orthodoxy, Russian Nationalism, and Patriarch Aleksii II,” Nationalities
Papers 33 (2005): 533–45; Gaziza Shakhanova and Petr Kratochvíl, “The Patriotic Turn in
Russia: Political Convergence of the Russian Orthodox Church and the State?” Politics and
Religion, (2020), 1–28, https://doi.org/10.1017/S1755048320000620.
line” builds “on deeply conservative orthodox ideas.”46 Such utterances, either
official or private, abounded in recent decades and led to counter-reactions
by Orthodox and other actors, reinforcing their anti-Western predispositions.
Not least, they prompted postcolonial deconstructions of related Western dis-
courses. In general, it should not be denied that Orthodox Christianity and
its cultures may exhibit such characteristics in one way or another for socio-
historical and other reasons. But the way such characteristics are portrayed
in Western discourses and media is in most cases fragmentary, misleading,
oversimplifying and generalizing, a fact that underlines and justifies again the
necessity of subjecting them to postcolonial analysis.
46 https://twitter.com/carlbildt/status/448069450437513216.
47 Stuart Hall, “The West and the Rest: Discourse and Power,” in Formations of Modernity, ed.
Bram Gieben and Stuart Hall (Cambridge: Polity Press, 1992), 275–320.
48 Christopher GoGwilt, The Invention of the West: Joseph Conrad and the Double-Mapping of
Europe and Empire (Stanford CA: Stanford University Press 1995).
49 Dipesh Chakrabarty, Provincializing Europe: Postcolonial Thought and Historical Difference
(Princeton NJ: Princeton University Press, 2000).
West Europeans have constructed their own view of Europe, which mostly
excluded the East and Southeast (especially the Balkans) parts of the con-
tinent. The Europeanness of the latter was often called into question, a fact
that still lingers on in various forms. There are still courses, study programmes
and books in Western languages talking about Europe in an inclusive way,
although they refer solely to its Western parts and virtually ignore its Eastern
and Southeast areas.50 “West European history” then easily turns into an all-
encompassing “European history” and claims for itself alone the whole of
the continent. Even a country like Greece, where, in fact, the term “Europe”
arose in antiquity in the first place, was not considered a fully European one in
Western eyes. This became evident when Greece officially joined the European
Economic Community back in 1981, as the first Orthodox majority country to
do so. The Orthodox Christian tradition of the country was also regarded as a
hindrance to its Europeanization.51 The same holds true for other Orthodox
majority countries that exhibit both anti-Western and anti-European senti-
ments.52 Here one can spot a clear difference along confessional lines with
the Roman Catholic or Protestant countries of East Central Europe, which, as
already mentioned, have been treated more positively by the West due to their
greater religious affinity to Western Christianity. It is also no accident that for
a long time Europeanization was almost coterminous with modernization and
Westernization. We are talking here about established and still widespread ste-
reotypes, categorizations and discourses of Western provenance, which post-
colonial theory has only partially deconstructed so far.
There are also further issues in this category in terms of subjecting Western
historiography and its consequences regarding the Orthodox world to postco-
lonial critique, which may deconstruct the discourse about the alleged overall
European coherence from an exclusive West European perspective. To mention
one telling example, this concerns especially the way “Byzantium” was con-
structed and treated by Western Europe in highly negative and inimical terms,
50 Grace Davie, Europe: The Exceptional Case. Parameters of Faith in the Modern World
(London: Orbis Books 2002); Hans Joas and Klaus Wiegandt, eds., The Cultural Values of
Europe, trans. by Alex Skinner (Liverpool: Liverpool University Press, 2008).
51 Vasilios N. Makrides, “Griechenland zwischen Ost und West, zwischen Antiokzidentalismus
und Verwestlichung,” in Prowestliche und antiwestliche Diskurse in den Balkanländern/
Südosteuropa, ed. Gabriella Schubert and Holm Sundhaussen (Munich: Sagner, 2008),
115–36; idem, “Orthodox Anti-Westernism Today: A Hindrance to European Integration?”
International Journal for the Study of the Christian Church 9 (2009), 209–24.
52 Alena Alshanskaya, Der Europa-Diskurs der Russischen Orthodoxen Kirche (1996–2011)
(Frankfurt am Main: Peter Lang, 2016); Julia Anna Lis, Antiwestliche Diskurse in der ser-
bischen und griechischen Orthodoxie: Zur Konstruktion des “Westens” bei Nikolaj Velimirović,
Justin Popović, Christos Yannaras und John S. Romanides (Berlin: Peter Lang, 2019).
given the long-standing animosities between East and West and the definitive
schism between the two churches in 1054.53 It is well known that “Byzantium” –
not as a geographical indication but as a normative neologism – was coined by
the German humanist Hieronymus Wolf (1516–1580), who thereby intended
to deprive the Hellenized “Eastern Roman Empire” of any continuity with
ancient Rome. By contrast, the latter was in fact the sole true and legitimate
heir to the Roman Empire in a Christian frame, given that the Western Roman
Empire had ceased to exist after 476 AD and continuity with it was claimed
there by other peoples (e.g., Franks, Germans). As a result, the later invention
of “Byzantium” should not occasion any surprise, given that it was the outcome
of the hard-fought claim to Roman heritage in the Latin West and of the con-
comitant denial of any such continuity in the Greek East. All this went hand
in hand with the negative depictions of Byzantium in Western historiography
for many centuries, which only came to be critically reassessed since the early
20th century. Despite all this, terms like “Byzantinism”54 are still widespread,
especially in journalistic but sometimes also in academic circles in a negative
sense. The same holds true for other expressions (e.g., “Byzantine intrigues”)
in general usage, thus pointing to the lingering of related remnants of Western
misconceptions and misrepresentations.55 All of this is not unrelated to the
role ascribed to Byzantium in the historical formation of Europe, which has
been downplayed in recent decades on different occasions, even in the con-
text of the European Union (cf. the 1990 book Europe: The History of its Peoples
by Jean-Baptiste Duroselle, which had been commissioned by European
authorities).56 After all, Byzantium was an Orthodox Christian Empire, and this
fact has been regarded for a long time as a hindrance by the Roman Catholic
and Protestant West to its being part of Europe. Characteristically enough, one
can observe here a “colonization of the Orthodox mind,” given that the Western
61 Gayatri C. Spivak, “Can the Subaltern Speak?” in Marxism and the Interpretation of Culture,
ed. Cary Nelson (Urbana IL: University of Illinois Press, 1988), 271–313.
62 Daniel Chirot, The Origins of Backwardness in Eastern Europe: Economics and Politics
from the Middle Ages until the Early Twentieth Century (Berkeley: University of California
Press, 1991); Chris Hann, “Backwardness Revisited: Time, Space, and Civilization in Rural
Eastern Europe,” Comparative Studies in Society and History 57 (2015), 881–911.
63 Christian Sigrist, Das Rußlandbild des Marquis de Custine: Von der Civilisationskritik zur
Rußlandfeindlichkeit (Frankfurt am Main: Peter Lang, 1990); Bruno S. Sergi, Misinterpreting
Modern Russia: Western Views of Putin and His Presidency (New York: Continuum, 2009).
64 Sotirios Mitralexis-Georgakakos, Can the Underdogs Speak? Contemporary Greece’s
“Subaltern” Political Theories through the Lens of Critical Geopolitics and Post-Secularism
(PhD Diss., University of Peloponnese, 2018).
form of the Ottoman Empire, which was viewed negatively and scornfully by
West Europeans.65 This sense of inferiority was shared by many élites in these
areas (political, economic, intellectual etc.), who tried to emulate the Western
prototype as far as possible and transform their states and cultures accord-
ingly. Yet this often created deep gaps within the respective societies and trig-
gered strong anti-Western reactions, which were also mostly supported by the
Orthodox Church and related circles.66
This process can be also described by the notion of “self-colonization”67
or “self-orientalization,”68 namely, a self-imposed colonial status that always
puts a culture on an inferior and dependent status, which obstructs its free
and autonomous development. This concerns cultures that have succumbed
to the cultural power of the West without having been conquered and turned
into colonies. Hence, by feeling inferior to the West on numerous levels, many
Orthodox Christians often exhibited a defensive and fortress mentality. The
question is here how the Orthodox can overcome this self-imposed coloni-
zation. In fact, the growing impact of Western theological influences upon
the Orthodox world has led to counter-reactions and a strengthening of an
Orthodox “indigenism” that was supposed to fight off such adulterating exter-
nal elements. In addition, this process was coupled with the search for a genu-
ine and authentic Orthodoxy beyond the Western alienating and colonizing
elements. The main motto was: Orthodox Christianity is (or should ideally
be) what Western Christianity is not. Although not limited to the theologi-
cal domain, the West was here pre-eminently perceived as the religious and
cultural other. These multifaceted reactions across the East-West binary for
rediscovering a true Orthodox self-identification unfettered by Western influ-
ences can be thus conceptualized as an Orthodox postcolonial search and
movement.
Here are some examples. The well-known and widely disseminated theory of
the Russian theologian Georges V. Florovsky (1893–1979) about the “Babylonian
captivity” of Russian Orthodox theology in early modern times through various
69 Georgij V. Florovskij, Puti russkogo bogoslovija (Paris: YMCA-Press, 1937; with several later
editions); English edition: Ways of Russian Theology, part I, trans. by R. L. Nichols, The
Collected Works of Georges Florovsky, vol. 5 (Belmont MA: Nordland Publishing, 1979);
part II, trans. by R. L. Nichols, The Collected Works of Georges Florovsky, vol. 6 (Vaduz:
Büchervertriebsanstalt, 1987); see also Paul L. Gavrilyuk, Georges Florovsky and the Russian
Religious Renaissance (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013), 159–200.
70 Christos Yannaras, Ὀρθοδοξία καὶ Δύση στὴ νεώτερη Ἑλλάδα [Orthodoxy and the West
in Modern Greece] (Athens: Domos, 1992); see also the shortened English edition,
Orthodoxy and the West: Hellenic Self-Identity in the Modern Age, trans. Peter Chamberas
and Norman Russell (Brookline MA: Holy Cross Orthodox Press, 2007); see also Brandon
Gallaher, “Orthodoxy and the West – The Problem of Orthodox Self-Criticism in Christos
Yannaras,” in Polis, Ontology, Ecclesial Event: Engaging with Christos Yannaras’ Thought,
ed. Sotiris Mitralexis (Cambridge: James Clarke & Co, 2018), 206–25.
71 George E. Demacopoulos, “‘Traditional Orthodoxy’ as a Postcolonial Movement,” Journal
of Religion 97 (2017), 475–99.
72 George Metallinos, “Das Problem der deutschen Einflüsse auf die griechische akade-
mische Theologie in der Gründungsphase der Athener Universität,” Orthodoxes Forum 3
(1989), 83–91; Athanasios Vletsis, “Charismatische oder akademische Theologie? Das
Ringen der orthodoxen Theologie um ihren Platz an einer staatlichen Universität am
Beispiel der griechisch-orthodoxen Kirche,” Una Sancta 66 (2011), 123–32.
Furthermore, many Orthodox actors are also annoyed by the fact that
Orthodox ideas and suggestions remain rather marginal in current interna-
tional debates on modern issues of broader significance (e.g., human rights73),
that in the past were largely dominated by Western perspectives in a norma-
tive manner. Can the Orthodox, despite their residual subalternity, speak for
themselves and become vocal within the global discursive field? Historically
speaking, it is not amiss to argue that, for a long time, the Orthodox remained
anonymous and mute; their voice was hardly heard and even less taken into
account. Even today, despite some improvements, there is still a notable
absence of Orthodox perspectives on various issues that do not seem to play a
significant role internationally or to be taken into account by prominent (often
Western-led) forums and respective actors. Suffice it to say that the Orthodox
Churches have only lately begun to systematically expose their official views
on social issues.74 This marginalized status of the Orthodox discourse usually
strengthens the traditional Orthodox defensive mechanisms against Western
dominance, which again bear postcolonial characteristics, even if subdued in
most cases. Interestingly enough, it is possible that some Orthodox may find the
postcolonial critique of the West a “stroke of luck” for their own anti-Western
purposes and may use it accordingly, even if they distort its original motives
and intention. The point here, however, is that Orthodox anti-Westernism as
such and the formation of Orthodox identities may be subjected to postcolo-
nial analysis and deconstruction too, as we shall see later on.
The case of Orthodox Russia is paradigmatic for this category, not least
because of its particular geographical position both in Europe and in Asia.75
On the one hand, Russia was exposed to an extensive “Western colonization,”
decided from above by its own leaders (e.g., through the Petrine reforms),
on its way to modernization. After all, as already mentioned above, Western
Europe had always looked down upon it as an Asian and not fully European
country. On the other hand, due to its immense gradual territorial expansion
(Caucasus, Central Asia, Siberia, Alaska), Russia undertook a similar colonial
role as a force civilisatrice of its own “Orient” in many ways.76 This concerns
Russia’s internal colonization, a colonization “from within,” which is also
often subsumed under the category of continental colonization. Thus, Russia
became both the subject and object of colonization as well as its corollaries
(e.g., Orientalism).77 In another interesting case, Ukraine was also treated by
Russia in a “colonial” way, both historically and at present. This explains the
heated conflicts between Russia, the West and Ukraine and the concomitant
war in 2022, which are basically about the latter’s decolonization. Ironically
enough, this may lead in the future to another colonization of Ukraine, namely,
by the West. In the ecclesiastical realm, this decolonization was instigated by
the declaration of autocephaly of the Orthodox Church of Ukraine in 2019,
which was supported by the political leadership of the country and the West.
This autocephaly was initiated and effected by the Ecumenical Patriarchate of
Constantinople, a fact that subsequently led to a schism between Moscow and
Constantinople.78
Systematic missionary activities were the primary way to engage in Russia’s
internal colonization. These were also supported and coordinated not only
75 Dmitry Shlapentokh, ed., Russia between East and West: Scholarly Debates on Eurasianism
(Leiden: Brill, 2007).
76 Daniel R. Brower and Edward J. Lazzerini, eds., Russia’s Orient: Imperial Borderlands
and Peoples, 1700–1917, (Bloomington IN: Indiana University Press, 1997); Kaplana
Sahni, Crucifying the Orient: Russian Orientalism and the Colonization of Caucasus and
Central Asia (Oslo: White Orchid Press, 1997); Austin Jersild, Orientalism and Empire:
North Caucasus Mountain Peoples and the Georgian Frontier, 1845–1917 (Montreal:
McGill-Queen’s University Press, 2002); Nicholas B. Breyfogle, Heretics and Colonizers:
Forging Russia’s Empire in the South Caucasus (Ithaca NY: Cornell University Press, 2005);
David Schimmelpenninck van der Oye, Russian Orientalism: Asia in the Russian Mind from
Peter the Great to the Emigration (New Haven CT: Yale University Press, 2010).
77 Alexander Etkind, Internal Colonization: Russia’s Imperial Experience (Cambridge: Polity
Press, 2011).
78 Alexander Ponomariov, “Ukrainian Church Autocephaly: The Redrawing of the Religious
Borders and Political Identities in the Conflict between Ukraine and Russia,” Russian
Analytical Digest 231 (25 January 2019), 2–9.
by the Russian Church but also the state since they served the objectives of
homogenizing a steadily expanding Russia. After all, the intrinsic connec-
tion between missions and colonization has already been evident historically
in the Western overseas expansion. Hence, “missions in Russia were part of
a non-certified colonization process directed by the state and, as such, were
subservient to government interests.”79 On the one hand, the historical model
of Orthodox missions prescribed a different agenda. This was evident in the
Byzantine missionary legacy of Cyril and Methodius, the “Apostles of the Slavs,”
who respected the local languages, customs and traditions of the Christianized
peoples and contributed to their literary development (e.g., through the cre-
ation of the first Slavic alphabet).80 This was a model of missionary incul-
turation (including indigenization and vernacularization) that exhibited
features of pluralism, openness and tolerance. On the other hand, Russian
missions in modern times were strongly affected by state-imposed processes
of Russification (Obrushenie) of the newly acquired territories, which obeyed
various strategies of convergence, centralization and homogenization. Yet
such Russification policies were not very coherent and thus remained gener-
ally unsuccessful. Aside from this, there were significant variations within the
Russian Orthodox missionary endeavours, such as the differences between the
culturally highly indigenous missions (in the Aleutian Islands and Alaska) and
the culturally non-indigenous missions (mainly in Siberia but initially also in
China).81 Moreover, this Russian colonization did not always meet with indig-
enous reactions. In a characteristic case, the Dena’ina people in Alaska pre-
ferred to defend their own Russian Orthodox identity, which was the result of a
previous Russian colonization, than to accept the new Protestant missionaries
and their concomitant colonial practices who became active there after Russia
sold Alaska to the USA in 1867.82
Historically, Russia did often exhibit an “Orientalist attitude” towards oth-
ers, especially towards the Ottoman Empire, with which it had numerous war
engagements and from which it had profited territorially over a long period
of time.83 It is also worth mentioning that these centuries-old Russian con-
tacts with Asia, the Far East and the Orient led to the establishment of a
specific robust tradition of Oriental Studies in the country. These have been
established as an academic discipline since 1804 in Kazan, a historical centre
of Russian Islam but also later in Moscow and St. Petersburg, a tradition that
was continued in the Soviet Union.84 The question arises here as to the par-
allels between the Russian and Western Oriental Studies, given that we can
find a colonial background in both and that the Western ones have been so
much criticized in recent decades in the wake of the aforementioned works by
Edward Said. In general, Russian “Orientology” (Vostokovedenie), as it is called,
is different from Western Oriental Studies, which have been directly or indi-
rectly condemned for supporting colonialism, imperialism and Orientalism.
On the contrary, Russian Orientologists at the turn of the 20th century (e.g.,
Sergei F. Oldenburg, 1863–1934, in St. Petersburg) had already touched upon
multiple interconnections between power, dominance and knowledge regard-
ing their research subject – interestingly enough, long before Said.85 These are
interesting cases showing the multiple ways through which Eastern Europe is
historically connected with modern postcolonial studies.
86 Gerhard Podskalsky, Christentum und theologische Literatur in der Kiever Rus’ (998–1237)
(Munich: Beck, 1982).
87 Francis J. Thomson, “The Nature of the Reception of Christian Byzantine Culture in
Russia in the Tenth to Thirteenth Centuries and Its Implications for Russian Culture,”
Slavica Gandensia 5 (1978), 107–39.
88 William Veder, “Old Russia’s ‘Intellectual Silence’ Reconsidered,” in Medieval Russian
Culture, vol. 2, ed. Michael S. Flier and Daniel Rowland (Berkeley: University of California
Press, 1994), 20–64; Simon Franklin, “Po povodu ‘intellektual’nogo molchaniia’ Drevnei
Rusi,” Russia mediaevalis 10 (2001), 262−70; Donald G. Ostrowski, Europe, Byzantium and
the “Intellectual Silence” of Rus’ Culture (Leeds: Arc Humanities Press, 2018); David Prestel,
“Kievan Rus’ Theology: Yes, No, and It Depends,” Russian History 46 (2019), 177–92.
89 Daniel H. Shubin, A History of Russian Christianity, vol. 1: From the Earliest Years through
Tsar Ivan IV (New York: Algora Publishing, 2004), 9.
90 Paul Meyendorff, Russia, Ritual, and Reform: The Liturgical Reforms of Nikon in the
17th Century (Crestwood NY: St Vladimir’s Seminary Press, 1991).
91 Lora Gerd, Russian Policy in the Orthodox East: The Patriarchate of Constantinople (1878–
1914) (Warsaw/Berlin: De Gruyter, 2014).
92 Sebastian Rimestad, Orthodox Christian Identity in Western Europe: Contesting Religious
Authority (London: Routledge, 2021).
93 Efi Efthimiou, “The Moscow Patriarchate received 102 priests of the Patriarchate of
Alexandria, as announced at the Holy Synod of the Church of Russia, which met today,”
Orthodox Times, 19 December 2021; https://orthodoxtimes.com/moscow-adopted-102-
clergymen-of-the-patriarchate-of-alexandria-forms-exarchate-of-africa-upd/.
First, there are also Orthodox discourses about the West that are based on
stereotypes, false caricatures, artificial binaries, schematic depictions, nega-
tive nuances and a lack of thorough knowledge of the Western tradition.97
Thus, there are various misrepresentations of the East-West differences by
the Orthodox, which end up in the construction of related ideologies about
the West that may be subsumed under the category “Latinism.” Here it is not
about the West as a geographical location, but as a form of civilization that
was historically shaped by Latin Christianity and against which the Orthodox
usually tended to identify themselves. Evidently, it is not only the Latin West
that constructs the Orthodox East, but also vice versa. The ideas of Christos
Yannaras about the “barbarian West” with regard to Latin Christianity offer a
good example of how the West is constructed by an Orthodox intellectual and
how the concomitant Orthodox superiority is subsequently fabricated.98 The
Orthodox receptions of Augustine99 and Scholastic theology (especially that
of Thomas Aquinas)100 are also prime examples of how Orthodox actors have
evaluated and constructed the West throughout history. The same applies to
post-communist Russian Orthodox constructions of the decadent West.101 No
doubt, the relations between these two were historically asymmetrical, given
that the West was, from a certain point in history, stronger and dominant and
could influence the East in more decisive ways. Yet the Orthodox reactions to
this wholesale Western influx should not be ignored or underrated, given that
they are dictated by a similar logic in their attempt to fight off Western colo-
nial influences. Furthermore, the Orthodox case is not unique as it belongs
to the broader reactions of non-Western cultures in global terms to Western
colonial expansion and formative influences. These anti-Western cases have
been subsumed under the term “Occidentalism,” which indicates not only vari-
ous forms of infatuation with the West and resulting anti-Western attitudes,
102 James G. Carrier, ed., Occidentalism: Images of the West (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1996);
Ian Buruma and Avishai Margalit, Occidentalism: The West in the Eyes of its Enemies (New
York: Penguin Press, 2004).
103 Vasilios N. Makrides, “Orthodox Christian Rigorism: Attempting to Delineate a
Multifaceted Phenomenon,” Interdisciplinary Journal for Religion and Transformation
in Contemporary Society 2, no. 2 (2016), 216–52; idem, “The Notion of ‘Orthodoxy’ as the
Sole True Faith: A Specific Cause of Orthodox Christian Rigorism/Fundamentalism,”
in Orthodoxy and Fundamentalism: Contemporary Perspectives, ed. Davor Džalto and
George E. Demacopoulos (Lanham: Lexington Books / Fortress Academic, 2022), 31–50.
104 Vasilios N. Makrides, “Religion, Kirche und Orthodoxie: Aspekte orthodox-christlicher
Religionskritik,” Zeitschrift für Religionswissenschaft 15 (2007), 53–82; idem, “Église contre
religion et critique de la religion dans la théologie orthodoxe grecque moderne,” Contacts:
Revue française de l’orthodoxie 69, nos. 259–60 (2017), 356–401.
Concluding Remarks
105 George E. Demacopoulos and Aristotle Papanikolaou, “Orthodox Naming of the Other:
A Postcolonial Approach,” in Orthodox Constructions of the West, 1–22.
106 Alexander Maxwell, ed., The East-West Discourse: Symbolic Geography and its Consequences
(Oxford: Peter Lang, 2011).
107 Fairy von Lilienfeld, “‘Ost’ und ‘West’ als Kategorien im ökumenischen Sprachgebrauch
in Bezug auf ihre Behandlung in der russischen Geschichtsphilosophie des 19. und
20. Jahrhunderts,” in The Religious World of Russian Culture: Russia and Orthodoxy: vol.
II. Essays in Honor of Georges Florovsky, ed. Andrew Blane (The Hague: Mouton, 1975),
315–48.
To be more specific, this relates to the issue of religious and cultural purity
and authenticity, which is of great concern for the Orthodox in their relation-
ship to the West, as we have already seen. There is, however, a danger lurking
that this quest for Orthodox purity may be transformed into a sterile East-West
polarity. Can there be an ideal condition of religious purity at all without
any external influences, a condition for which the Orthodox display such an
intense and pervasive longing? Referring to a seminal postcolonial thinker,
Homi K. Bhabha’s categories of hybridity, ambivalence, mimicry/irony/mock-
ery, dislocation, and interstitial space (third space)108 are quite useful here and
may offer ways to consider such issues in a more nuanced and differentiated
way. For him, all identities are basically hybrid, hence religious and cultural
purity is a myth and never a tangible reality. This also concerns the construc-
tion of Orthodox identities across history, which have been often viewed as
having been alienated by external Western influences. But does it concern an
alienation here, pollution and the “pseudomorphosis” of genuine Orthodoxy
or perhaps unavoidable inter-confessional contacts and consequently inter-
confessional permeability that affects both the East and the West?109 In all
probability, the existence of hybrid Orthodox identities cannot be excluded
in numerous cases, especially if we consider how many Orthodox critics of
the West have lived and were educated and intellectually formed in the West
while partly adopting Western perspectives and using them for their own sake.
Ironically, in other words, the Orthodox critics of the West are in many cases
themselves “products of the West,” employ its intellectual categories and tools
and in fact end up by being “cultural and religious hybrids.” Their shrill anti-
Western polemic renders them, even inadvertently, often ever more depen-
dent on the West and blinds them by drawing their identity from the Western
other.110
Such a standpoint reveals the sheer relativity entailed in the absolute
demarcation lines drawn between East and West that lead to the construc-
tion of related ideologies, which are widely disseminated and still enjoy pop-
ular support in various contexts. Nevertheless, the experience of the global
111 Antoine Arjakovsky, The Way: Religious Thinkers of the Russian Emigration in Paris
and their Journal 1925–1940 (Notre Dame IN: University of Notre Dame Press, 2013);
Maria Hämmerli and Jean-François Mayer (eds.), Orthodox Identities in Western Europe
(Farnham: Ashgate, 2014).
112 Vasilios N. Makrides, “Le nouveau document social de l’Église orthodoxe: Son orientation,
son élaboration, son contexte et son importance,” Istina 65 (2020), 387–413, especially
395–410.
paperback 2016, translated and published into Bulgarian in 2017); and a recent
edited volume Women and Religiosity in Orthodox Christianity (Fordham
University Press, 2021).
Marx, Karl 38, 69, 72, 79, 235, 259 Molokotos-Liederman, Lina 116
Mary (Virgin) 40 Monsma, Stephen V. 84–5
Mastroyannopoulos, Elias 145 Montesquieu 233
Masuzawa, Tomoko 338 Moore, William 158
Matthias Flacius Illyricus 374 Moorehouse, Asheleigh E. 158
Matthias, apostle 163 Moreau, A. Scott 298
Maximus the Confessor 51, 53–4, 176, 188, Morrisson, Cécile 157
249, 258 Moschos, Dimitrios 58, 60, 69, 373
Maxwell, Alexander 365 Mosebach, Martin 180
May, Larry 322 Moses 163
Mayer, Jean-François 367 Moța, Ion I. 123
McCarthy Spoerl, Kelley 51 Mousalimas, Sotirios A. 358
McCutcheon, Russell T. 338 Mouzelis, Nicos 185–7
McGuckin, John Anthony 348 Moyn, Samuel 253
McMylor, Peter 345 Muldoon, James 342
Mecheril, Paul 274, 289 Müller, Hans-Peter 277
Meid, Christopher 352 Müller, Ludwig 65
Meletios, Metropolitan of Athens, see Mitros Muller, Richard 60
Menozzi, Daniele 112 Münkler, Herfried 3
Merdjanova, Ina 17, 23–4, 199–200, 372 Muradyan, Gohar 48
Metallinos, Georgios D. 61, 72, 129–30, 355 Murray, Paul D. 187
Metaxas, Ioannis 64, 66 Mykhaleyko, Andriy xiii
Methodius, missionary to the Slavs 301, 358 Mylonas, Christos 140
Metodiev, Momchil 202
Mitros, Meletios 59 Nanakis, Andreas 64
Mettepenningen, Jürgen 188 Nantsou, Theodota 368
Meyendorff, John 110–2, 116, 196, 361 Napoleon (Bonaparte) 128–9
Michael, King (of Romania) 82 Neamtu, Mihail 126
Midic, Ignatije 144 Nehring, Adnreas 274, 347
Mignolo, Walter D. 346, 352 Nellas, Panayiotis 75
Mijac, Bozidar 144 Nelson, Cary 353
Mika, Theodore 139 Nicholas I, Tsar 10–11
Mikhailovskii, Nikolai S. 15 Nicholas II, Tsar 1, 9
Mikragiannanitis, Gerasimos 135 Nichols, Robert L. 45, 355
Milbank, John 32, 34–5, 39, 188 Nickel, James W. 252, 254
Milićević, Vukašin 145 Nicodemus the Athonite (saint) 298–9
Mill, John Stuart 243 Niebuhr, H. Richard 301–2
Milošević, Slobodan 98–9, 101–3, 142, 208 Nietzsche 233–4, 238
Minch, Daniel 334 Nikas, Athanasios 49
Minio-Paluello, L. 46–7 Nikita-Koltsiou, Anna 219
Minto, Marilyn 37 Nikolai, Archbishop see Kasatkin
Mishkova, Diana 340 Nikolchev, Dilyan 265
Mitralexis, Sotiris 69, 343, 353, 355, 376 Nikolopoulos, Panos 109
Mitsiou, Ekaterini 114 Nikon, Patriarch of Moscow 361
Mladenovic, Rados M. 143 Nisbet, Robert A. 249
Mladić, Ratko 102 Nissiotis, Nikos A. 112, 160–1
Moeller, Charles 50 Noble, Ivana 174, 329, 368
Moldovan, Ilie 126 Noble, Tim 174, 328–30