Uncut Journal: A Critical Review of Ecclesiastical Life and Events

The Uncut Journal is a critical review of ecclesiastical life and events—events which touch and have ramifications upon the eternal pillars of the faith and the faithful themselves. 

Confession of Faith Against Ecumenism

From a Convention of Orthodox Clergymen and Monks
Greece, April 2009

Those of us who by the Grace of God have been raised with the dogmas of piety and who follow in everything the One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church, believe that:

The sole path to salvation of mankind1 is the faith in the Holy Trinity, the work and the teaching of our Lord Jesus Christ, and their continuance within His Body, the Holy Church. Christ is the only true Light;2 there are no other lights to illuminate us, nor any other names that can save us: “Neither is there salvation in any other: for there is none other name under heaven given among men, whereby we must be saved.”3 All other beliefs, all religions that ignore and do not confess Christ “having come in the flesh,”4 are human creations and works of the evil one,5 which do not lead to the true knowledge of God and rebirth through divine Baptism, but instead, mislead men and lead them to perdition. As Christians who believe in the Holy Trinity, we do not have the same God as any of the religions, nor with the so-called monotheistic religions, Judaism and Mohammedanism, which do not believe in the Holy Trinity.

For two thousand years, the one Church which Christ founded and the Holy Spirit has guided has remained stable and unshakeable in the salvific Truth that was taught by Christ, delivered by the Holy Apostles and preserved by the Holy Fathers. She did not buckle under the cruel persecutions by the Judeans initially or by idolaters later, during the first three centuries. She has brought forth a host of martyrs and emerged victorious, thus proving Her divine origin. As Saint John the Chrysostom beautifully expressed it: “Nothing is stronger than the Church… if you fight against a man, you either conquer or are conquered; but if you fight against the Church, it is not possible for you to win, for God is the strongest of all.”6

Following the cessation of the persecutions and the triumph of the Church over Her external enemies - in other words, the Judeans and the idolaters - the internal enemies of the Church began to multiply and strengthen. A variety of heresies began to appear, which endeavored to overthrow and adulterate the faith once delivered, such that the faithful became confused, and their trust in the truth of the Gospel and traditions was debilitated. In outlining the ecclesiastical state of affairs that was created by the dominance for over 40 years - even administratively - of the heresy of Arius, Saint Basil the Great says: “The dogmas of the Fathers have been entirely disregarded, the apostolic traditions withered, the inventions of the youth are observed in the Churches; people are now “logic-chopping” not theologizing; precedence is given to the wisdom of the world, pushing aside the boasting in the Cross. Shepherds are driven out, and in their place cruel wolves are ushered in, dispersing Christ’s flock.”7

That which happened because of external enemies - religions - also happened because of internal ones - heresies. The Church, through Her great and enlightened Holy Fathers, demarcated and marked the boundaries [perixarakose] of the Orthodox faith with decisions by Local and Ecumenical Synods in the cases of specific, dubious teachings, but also with the agreement of all the Fathers (Consensus Patrum), on all the matters of the Faith. We stand on sure ground when we follow the Holy Fathers and do not move the boundaries that they have set. The expressions “Following after our Holy Fathers” and “Not withdrawing the boundaries that our Fathers have set” are signposts for a steady course of spiritual advance and a guardrail for [remaining within] the Orthodox faith and way of life.

Consequently, the basic positions of our Confession are the following:

Another “Common Baptism” Declaration in Germany

This Agreement follows on the heals of two similar agreements in Germany and Australia in 2004

Ecumenical News International Reports:

30 April 2007 | 07-0328

“German churches sign agreement to recognise baptisms

Magdeburg, Germany (ENI). Eleven German denominations - including Protestant, Roman Catholic, Orthodox, Oriental Orthodox and Anglican churches - have formally recognised each other’s baptism, at an ecumenical ceremony in the eastern German city of Magdeburg.”


Metropolitan Augustinos
Once again we read news of certain Orthodox in Germany formally recognizing the baptism of the heterodox. If this new agreement follows the same logic as the previous agreement made by the Metropolitan Augustinos of the Ecumenical Patriarchate with the Lutherans of Germany at the Phanar in Constantinople in September of 2004 (or of a similiar agreement signed in Australia in Summer of 2004), then what we can expect is a declaration that “Christians who convert from one denomination to another will not be baptized again.” The 2004 agreement also stated that “although church fellowship does not yet exist between our churches, we each regard the other’s members as being baptized and in the case of a change of confession we reject undertaking a new baptism.”

This line of thinking, which is apparently quite en vogue among ecumenist enthusiasts, is truly the Trojan horse of ecumenism. It turns Orthodoxy from The Church into a confession and Holy Baptism, the Mystery of initiation into the life of the Church, into a ceremony of initiation into a variety of confessions, which collectively constitute the Church. It is, in other words, a new expression of the Branch Theory, which has been condemned as heretical by the Orthodox. As has been stated before, “this is a direct challenge to every Orthodox Christian’s faith in the “one baptism for the remission of sins” and the belief that the “one church” of the Nicene Creed is the Orthodox Church.”

This is an ecumenist agreement
which can be characterized without hesitation as heretical. And, if there has ever been a moment in which the Orthodox should rise up in opposition to an ecumenical pact, it is now. For this is now the third such pact signed since 2004, but unlikely to be the last.

As the main idea behind the agreements
is bound to be basically the same, in closing it would be helpful to recall what we wrote back in 2004 concerning the previous pact signed with the Lutherans:

New Book (June 2007): THE MISSIONARY ORIGINS OF MODERN ECUMENISM: Milestones leading up to 1920

Fr. Peter Alban Heers

An address prepared for the academic conference The Mission of the Orthodox Church and The World Council of Churches (Athens, May 15, 2005), organized by the Pan-Hellenic Union of Theologians

20 photographs and icons – 50 pages – $6.00

The impact of the contemporary ecumenical movement on the life of the Church in the 20th century has been immense. Orthodox involvement has steadily increased over the years and is now generally accepted as a given. Still, many questions remain unanswered and unasked. How did the modern ecumenical movement begin? What were the causes, motivations, and reasons for its development? Why and how did the Orthodox first become involved? Did the movement for Christian unity begin with the 1920 encyclical “To the Churches of Christ Everywhere” and arise out of a search for “unity in truth” and doctrinal agreement, as is often maintained?

In this lecture, Fr. Peter Alban Heers, doctoral candidate at the School of Theology of the University of Thessaloniki, answers these questions, extensively citing authoritative sources of ecumenical history to bring us face-to-face with the historical record. The missionary movement of the 19th century, the YMCA and student movements of the late 19th and early 20th centuries, the first World Mission Conference in Edinburgh in 1910, and the 1920 encyclical of the Church of Constantinople are all examined in order to shed light on the origins of the contemporary ecumenical movement. This booklet is essential reading for all those interested in Orthodox involvement in the ecumenical movement.

On Sale: June 2007

Flashback: Pope Declares: Catholics and Orthodox will find full unity through “inventiveness”

Strange “forces of evil” have kept the Roman Catholics and Orthodox apart, and inventiveness born out of our mutual love will lead us onto new paths to overcome these forces. . .

These words of the Pope [see below] wonderfully express the great error of ecumenism and delusion of ecumenists. It is not anyone’s error or pride, nor dogmatic error, and certainly not heresy, that has created and maintained the division, nor will humility and repentance overcome it, but “inventiveness”, as if
Thomas Alva Edison
we were called to imitate Thomas Edison in some laboratory. The Pope and those with him - including some Patriarchs and bishops - resemble technicians or mathematicians who are seeking after some formula for which to “discover” unity - a unity which essentially already exists, like some hidden power of nature, but which simply awaits the right “moment in history” to make its debut and revolutionize humanity, etc. No repentance is necessary. No repudiation of heresy or even admitting that heresy ever existed. Rather, we will “invent” a new path out of our great love for one another.

It is quite tragic that some Orthodox bishops and theologians go along with this worldly thinking or even, at times, believe in it. It is precisely inventiveness - i.e. innovations - that the whole of Orthodox tradition and patristic witness work against. We “follow the Holy Fathers” and preach and proclaim “as the Prophets fortold, as the Apostles proclaimed, as the Fathers declared” etc. The spirit underlying the Pope’s words and the whole mentality on display in the Ecumenical Movement is totally one with the age and is chiliastic, promising new and ever greater things and a kingdom of this world. In the end the only ones at fault here are “forces of evil”. (One is reminded of Eve in the garden who essentially said that “the devil made me do it”. The only problem is that man is free and responsible for his actions, and, what’s more, if he is truly spiritual and of Christ not under the control or sway of the evil one.)

All who would save their soul in this day and age must fight this spirit and delusion with all his might - first in himself and then for the sake and love of the brethren.
-------------------------------------------------------------
Pope: Catholics, Orthodox will find full unity
By Cindy Wooden
2/28/2006

Catholic News Service (http://www.catholicnews.com)
Pope Benedict XVI

VATICAN CITY – With deeper conversion and greater love, Catholics and Orthodox will find the path to full unity, Pope Benedict XVI told staff and students from a Greek Orthodox theological college.

Meeting the group from the Apostoliki Diakonia theological college of Athens, Greece, Feb. 27, the pope said that, despite “the forces of evil” that have kept Catholics and Orthodox from full unity, visits, cultural exchanges and joint projects have brought new hope to ecumenism.

Progress in dialogue, he said, brings hope for “a new dawn, that of the day on which we will understand fully that being rooted and grounded in the love of Christ means concretely finding a way to overcome our divisions through personal and communal conversion, the exercise of listening to the other and prayer in common for our unity.”

The pope said the exchange program with the Orthodox Church of Greece, which includes a scholarship program for Orthodox priests and seminarians to study in Rome and Catholic priests and seminarians to study in Athens, is especially important for preparing future church leaders for ecumenism.

“I am certain that mutual love will increase our inventiveness and will lead us to follow new paths,” the pope said.

A Potentially Historic Opportunity Missed or About to be Grasped?

ROCOR on the Eve of Union with the MP

In an interview with Interfax, the secretary of the ROCOR commission for negotiations with the Moscow Patriarchate Archpriest Alexander Lebedev made the following comments regarding the MP’s involvement in the World Council of Churches and ROCOR’s own stance:


Fr. Alexander Lebedev
”We are satisfied with the Moscow Patriarchate signing a document in which it denounced all harmful sides of ecumenism, such as syncretism, common liturgical prayer with the non-Orthodox, and everything that may blur Orthodox ecclesiology. Of course most our fellow churchmen would welcome Moscow Patriarchate leaving the World Council of Churches because we regard its involvement with the WCC as confusing. Yet the reasons for this involvement have become much clearer to us. We realize that it is based not upon a desire to share in non-Orthodox prayers or a belief that there are other Churches besides the One Church. The Russian Orthodox Church as the world’s biggest Orthodox Church seeks leadership at international forums. If she leaves the WCC, the Orthodox representation will be assumed by the Patriarchate of Constantinople and the voice of the Russian Orthodox Church will remain unheard. We believe this is a serious reason for the Moscow Patriarchate to remain involved with the WCC at least for some time.

I’d like to note that the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia is never going to participate in the WCC even after it enters into canonical communion with the Church in Russia. We will stay aside of that and continue opposing ecumenism in the Orthodox world as we have always done. Our attitude to the ecumenical movement has remained generally unchanged.”

One has to welcome Fr. Alexander’s statement that ROCOR will continue to oppose Orthodox involvement in ecumenism. For, there are not a few who have left or are considering leaving ROCOR for fear of post-union compromise. There can be no doubt that the union of ROCOR and the MP would be quite tragic for the cause of Orthodoxy if ROCOR not only did not maintain its patristic stance but moreover missed the opportunity to work even harder from within the larger Russian church toward the exodus of the Orthodox from the WCC and similiar ecumenist ventures. ROCOR stands at a most crucial crossroads for itself and, indeed, for the Orthodox Church as a whole.


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