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This website is
presented with
the blessings of
His Beatitude,
Archbishop
N I C H O L A S
of Athens and
all Greece
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DOCTRINE
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The
Church of Christ
THE
CONCEPT OF THE CHURCH OF CHRIST ON EARTH
An Excerpt from Orthodox
Dogmatic Theology by Fr. Michael Pomazansky
(St. Herman of Alaska Brotherhood Press, 1994, pp. 222-246.)
IN THE LITERAL meaning of the word, the Church
is the "assembly," in Greek, ekklesia, from ekkaleo,
meaning "to gather." In this meaning it was used in
the Old Testament also (the Hebrew kahal).
In the New Testament, this name has an
incomparably deeper and more mystical meaning which is difficult
to embrace in a short verbal formula. The character of the Church
of Christ is best explained by the Biblical images to which the
Church is likened.
The New Testament Church is the new planting of
God, the garden of God, the vineyard of God. The Lord Jesus
Christ, by His earthly life, His death on the Cross and His
Resurrection, introduced into humanity new grace-giving powers, a
new life which is capable of great fruitfulness. These powers we
have in the Holy Church which is His Body.
The Sacred Scripture is rich in expressive images
of the Church. Here are the chief of them:
a) The image of the grapevine and its branches
(John 15:1-8). I am the true vine and My Father is the
Husbandman. Every branch in Me that beareth not fruit He taketh
away; and every branch that beareth fruit, He purgeth it, that it
may bring forth more fruit... Abide in Me, and I in you. As the
branch cannot bear fruit of itself, except it abide in the vine,
no more can ye, except ye abide in Me, I am the Vine, ye are the
branches. He that abideth in Me, and I in him, the same bringeth
forth much fruit; for without Me ye can do nothing. If a man abide
not in Me, he is cast forth as a branch, and is withered; and men
gather them, and cast them into the fire, and they are burned...
Herein is My Father glorified, that ye bear much fruit; so shall
ye be My disciples.
b) The image of the shepherd and the flock
(John 10:1-16). Verily, verily, I say unto you, he that
entereth not by the door into the sheepfold, but climbeth up some
other way, the same is a thief and a robber. But be that entereth
in by the door is the shepherd of the sheep... ... Verily, verily,
I say unto you, I am the door of the sheep... I am the door by Me
if any man enter in, be shall be saved, and shall go in and go
out, and find pasture ... I am the good shepherd. The good
shepherd giveth his life for the sheep ... I am the good shepherd,
and know My sheep, and am known of mine ... and I lay down My life
for the sheep. And other sheep I have, which are not of this fold;
them also I must bring, and they shall hear My voice; and there
shall be one fold and one shepherd.
c) The image of the head and the body (Eph.
1:22-23, and other places). The Father hath put all things
under His feet, and gave Him to be the head over all things to the
Church, which is His Body, the fulness of Him that filleth all in
all.
d) The image of a building under construction
(Eph. 2:19-22). Now therefore ye are no more strangers and
foreigners, but fellow-citizens with the saints, and of the
household of God; and are built upon the foundation of the
Apostles and Prophets, Jesus Christ Himself being the chief
cornerstone—in Whom all the building, fitly framed together,
groweth unto a holy temple in the Lord; in Whom ye also are
builded for a habitation of God through the Spirit.
e) The image of a house or family: That thou
mayest know how thou oughtest to behave thyself in the house of
God, which is the Church of the living God, the pillar and ground
of the Truth (I Tim. 3:15). Christ as a Son over His own
house, Whose house are we (Heb 3:6).
To this same thing refer likewise other images
from the Gospel: the fishing net, the field which has been sown,
the vineyard of God.
In the Fathers of the Church one often finds a
comparison of the Church in the world with a ship on the sea.
The Apostle Paul, comparing the life of the
Church of Christ with a marriage, or with the relationship between
man and wife, concludes his thoughts with these words: This is
a great mystery: but I speak concerning Christ and the Church (Eph.
5:32). The life of the Church in its essence is mystical; the
course of its life cannot be entirely included in any
"history." The Church is completely distinct from any
kind whatever of organized society on earth.
The
Beginning of the Church's Existence, Its Growth, and Its Purpose
The Church of Christ received its existence
with the coming to earth of the Son of God, when the fulness of
the time was come (Gal. 4:4), and with His bringing of
salvation to the world.
The beginning of its existence in its complete
form and significance, with the fulness of the gifts of the Holy
Spirit, was the day of Pentecost, after the Ascension of the Lord.
On this day, after the descent of the Holy Spirit upon the
Apostles, in Jerusalem there were baptized about three thousand
men. And, further, the Lord each day added those being saved to
the Church. From this moment, the territory of the city of
Jerusalem, then of Palestine, then of the whole Roman Empire, and
even the lands beyond its boundaries, began to be covered with
Christian communities or churches. The name "church"
which belongs to every Christian community, even of a single house
or family, indicates the unity of this part with the whole, with
the body of the whole Church of Christ.
Being "the body of Christ," the
Church increaseth with the increase of God (Col. 2:19).
Comparing the Church with a building, the Apostle teaches that its
building is not completed, it continues: All the building fitly
framed together groweth unto a holy temple in the Lord (Eph.
2:21). This growth is not only in the sense of the visible,
quantitative increase of the Church on earth; in even greater
degree, this is a spiritual growth, the perfection of
the saints, the filling up of the heavenly-earthly world
through sanctity. Through the Church is accomplished the
dispensation of the fulness of times foreordained by the
Father, so that He might gather together in one all things in
Christ, both which are in heaven, and which are on earth (Eph.
1:10).
In the sense of its earthly growth, the Church
develops in the spheres of Divine services and the canons; it is
made richer by Patristic literature; it grows in the outward forms
which are necessary for its earthly conditions of existence.
The Church is our spiritual Home. As with one's
own home—and even more than that—a Christian's thoughts and
actions are closely bound up with the Church. In it he must, as
long as he lives on earth, work out his salvation, and make use of
the grace-given means of sanctification given him by it. It
prepares its children for the heavenly homeland.
As to how, by the grace of God, spiritual
rebirth and spiritual growth occur in a man, in what sequence
these usually occur, what hindrances must be overcome by him on
the way of salvation, how he must combine his own indispensable
labors with the grace-given help of God—special branches of
theological and spiritual learning are devoted to all these
matters. These are called moral theology and ascetic
theology.
Dogmatic Theology proper limits the subject of
the Church to an examination of the grace-given conditions and
the mystical, grace-given means furnished in the Church for
the attainment of the aim of salvation in Christ.
THE
HEAD OF THE CHURCH
The Saviour, in giving authority to the
Apostles before His Ascension, told them very clearly that He
Himself would not cease to be the invisible Shepherd and Pilot of
the Church. I am with you alway, even unto the end of
the world (every day constantly and inseparably; Matt. 28:20).
The Saviour taught that He, as the Good Shepherd, had to bring in
also those sheep who were not of this fold, so that there might be
one flock and One Shepherd (John 10:16). All power is given
unto Me in heaven and in earth. Go ye, therefore, and teach all
nations (Matt. 28:18-19). In all these words there is
contained the idea that the highest Shepherd of the Church is
Christ Himself We must be aware of this so as not to forget the
close bond and the inward unity of the Church on earth with the
Heavenly Church.
The Lord Jesus Christ is also the Founder of
the Church: I will build My Church, and the gates of hell shall
not prevail against it (Matt. 16:18).
Christ is also the Foundation of the
Church, its cornerstone: Other foundation can no man lay than
that is laid, which is Jesus Christ (I Cor. 3:11).
He also is its Head. God the Father gave
Him to be the head over all things to the Church, which is His
body, the fulness of Him that filleth all in all (Eph.
1:22-23). The Head is Christ, from Whom the whole body fitly
joined together and compacted by that which every joint supplieth,
according to the effectual working in the measure of every part,
maketh increase of the body unto the edifying of Itself in love (Eph.
4:16). As all the members of our body comprise a full and living
organism which depends upon its head, so also the Church is a
spiritual organism in which there is no place where the powers of
Christ do not act. It is "full of Christ" (Bishop
Theophan the Recluse).
Christ is the Good Shepherd of His
flock, the Church. We have the great Shepherd of the sheep, according
to the Apostle Paul (Heb. 13:20). The Lord Jesus Christ is the
Chief of Shepherds. Being examples to t he flock, the
Apostle Peter entreats those who have been placed as shepherds in
the Church, as their co-pastor (Greek syn-presbyteros),
when the Chief Shepherd shall appear, ye shall receive a crown of
glory that fadeth not away (I Peter 5:1-4).
Christ Himself is the invisible Chief Bishop
of the Church. The Hieromartyr Ignatius the God-bearer, an
Apostolic Father, calls the Lord the "Invisible Bishop"
(Greek: episkopos aoratos).
Christ is the eternal High-Priest of His
Church, as the Apostle Paul explains in the Epistle to the
Hebrews. The Old Testament Chief Priests were many, because
they were not suffered to continue by reason of death. But this
one, because He continueth forever, bath an unchangeable
priesthood Wherefore He is able also to save them to the uttermost
that come unto God by Him, seeing He ever liveth to make
intercession for them (Heb. 7:23-25).
He is, according to the Apocalypse of St. John
the Theologian, He that is true, He that hath the key of David,
He that openeth, and no man shutteth; and shutteth and no man
openeth (Apoc. 3:7).
The truth that Christ Himself is the Head of
the Church has always in lively fashion run through, and continues
to run through, the self-awareness of the Church. In our daily
prayers also we read, "O Jesus, Good Shepherd of Thy
sheep" (The Prayer of St. Antioch in the Prayers Before Sleep
of the Orthodox Prayer Book).
Chrysostom teaches in his Homilies on the
Epistle to the Ephesians as follows: "In Christ, in the
flesh, God placed a single head for everyone, for angels and men;
that is, He gave one principle both to angels and men: to the one,
Christ according to the flesh, and to the other, God the Word.
Just as if someone should say about a house, that one part of it
is rotten and the other part strong, and he should restore the
house, that is, make it stronger, placing a stronger foundation
under it; so also here, He has brought all under a single head.
Only then is union possible; only then will there be that perfect
bond, when everything, having a certain indispensable bond with
what is above, will be brought under a single Head " (Works
of St. Chrysostom in Russian, v. 11, p. 14).
The Orthodox Church of Christ refuses to
recognize yet another head of the Church in the form of a"
Vicar of Christ on earth," a title given in the Roman
Catholic Church to the Bishop of Rome. Such a title does not
correspond either to the word of God or to the universal Church
consciousness and tradition; it tears away the Church on earth
from immediate unity with the heavenly Church. A vicar is assigned
during the absence of the one replaced, but Christ is invisibly
present in His Church always.
The rejection by the ancient Church of the view
of the Bishop of Rome as the Head of the Church and Vicar of
Christ upon earth is expressed in the writings of those who were
active in the Ecumenical Councils.
The Second Ecumenical Council of bishops, after
the completion of their activities, wrote an epistle to Pope
Damasus and other bishops of the Roman Church which ended thus:
"When in this way the teaching of Faith is in agreement, and
Christian love is established in us, we will cease to speak the
words which were condemned by the Apostle: I am of Paul, I am
of Apollo, I am of Cephas. And when we will all be manifest as
of Christ, since Christ is not divided in us, then by Gods mercy
we will preserve the Body of Christ undivided, and will boldly
stand before the throne of the Lord."
The leading personality of the Third Ecumenical
Council, St Cyril of Alexandria, in his "Epistle on the Holy
Symbol," which is included in the Acts of this Council,
writes: "The most holy Fathers ... who once gathered in
Nicaea, composed the venerable Ecumenical Symbol (Creed). With
them Christ Himself presided, for He said, Where two or three
are gathered together in My Name, there am I in the midst of them (Matt
18:20). For how can there be any doubt that Christ presided at
this Holy and Ecumenical Council? Because there a certain basis
and a firm, unvanquishable foundation was laid, and even extended
to the whole universe, that is, this holy and irreproachable
confession. If it is thus, then can Christ be absent, when He is
the Foundation, according to the words of the most wise Paul, Other
foundation can no man lay than that is laid, which is Jesus
Christ" (I Cor. 3:11).
Blessed Theodoret, in a homily which was also
placed in the Acts of the Third Ecumenical Council, addressing the
heretics, the followers of Nestorius, says: "Christ is a
stone of stumbling and a scandal for unbelievers, but does not put
the believers to shame; a precious stone and a foundation,
according to the word of Isaiah when he said that Christ is the
stone which the builders rejected and which has become the
cornerstone. Christ is the foundation of the Church. Christ is the
stone which was taken out not with hands, and was changed into a
great mountain and covered the universe, according to the prophecy
of Daniel; it is for Him, with Him, and by the power of Him that
we battle, and for Whose sake we are far removed from the reigning
city, but are not excluded from the Kingdom of Heaven; for we have
a city on high, Jerusalem, whose builder and maker is God (Heb.
11:10), as the Apostle Paul says."
Concerning the rock upon which the Lord
promised the Apostle Peter to found His Church. St Juvenal,
Patriarch of Jerusalem, in his epistle to the clergy of Palestine
after the Fourth Ecumenical Council of Chalcedon writes:
"When the chief and first of the Apostles Peter said, Thou
art the Christ, the Son of the living God, the Lord replied, Blessed
art thou, Simon Bar Jonah: for flesh and blood hath not revealed
it unto thee, but My Father which is in heaven. And I say also
unto thee, that thou art Peter, and upon this rock I will build My
Church; and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it (Matt.
16:17-18). On this confession the Church of God is made firm, and
this Faith, given to us by the holy Apostles, the Church has kept
and will keep to the end of the world."
The
Close Bond Between the Church of Christ on Earth
and the Church of the Saints in Heaven
The Apostle instructs those who have come to
believe in Christ and have been joined to the Church as follows: Ye
are come unto mount Zion, and unto the city of the living God, the
heavenly Jerusalem, and to an innumerable company any of angels,
company I to the general assembly and church of the first born,
which are written in heaven, and to God the Judge of all, and to
the spirits of just men made perfect, and to Jesus, the Mediator
of the new covenant (Heb. 12:22-24). We are not separated from
our dead brothers in the faith by the impassable abyss of death:
they are close to us in God, for all live unto Him (Luke
20:38).
The Church hymns this relationship in the
kontakion of the feast of the Ascension of the Lord. "Having
accomplished for us Thy mission and united things on earth with
things in heaven, Thou didst ascend into glory, O Christ our God,
being nowhere separated from those who love Thee, but remaining
ever present with us and calling: I am with you and no one is
against you."
Of course, there is a distinction between the
Church of Christ on earth and the Church of the saints in heaven:
the members of the earthly Church are not yet members of the
heavenly Church.
In this connection the "Epistle of the
Eastern Patriarchs" (17th century), in reply to the teaching
of the Calvinists concerning the one invisible Church, thus
formulates the Orthodox teaching about the Church: "We
believe, as we have been instructed to believe, in what is called,
and what in actual fact is, the Holy, Catholic, Apostolic Church,
which embraces all those, whoever and wherever they might be, who
believe in Christ, who being now on their earthly pilgrimage have
not yet come to dwell in the heavenly homeland But we do not in
the least confuse the Church in pilgrimage with the Church that
has reached the homeland, just because, as certain of the heretics
think, one and the other both exist, that they both comprise as it
were two flocks of the single Chief Shepherd, God, and are
sanctified by the one Holy Spirit Such a confusion of them is out
of place and impossible, inasmuch as one is battling and is still
on the way, while the other is already celebrating its victory and
has reached the Fatherland and has received the, reward, something
which will follow also for the whole Ecumenical Church."
And in actuality, the earth and the heavenly
world are two separate forms of existence: there in heaven is
bodilessness, here on earth are bodily life and physical death,
there, those who have attained, here, those seeking to attain;
here, faith, there, seeing the Lord face to face; here, hope,
there, fulfillment.
Nonetheless, one cannot represent the existence
of these two regions, the heavenly and the earthly, as completely
separate. If we do not reach as far as the saints in heaven, the
saints do reach as far as us. As one who has studied the whole of
a science has command also over its elementary parts, just as a
general who has entered into a country has command also over its
borderlands; so those who have reached heaven have in their
command what they have gone through, and they do not cease to
be participants in the life of the militant Church on earth.
The holy Apostles, departing from this world,
put off the earthly body, but have not put off the Church body.
They not only were, but they also remain the
foundations of the Church. The Church is built upon the
foundation of the Apostles and Prophets, Jesus Christ Himself
being the chief cornerstone (Eph. 2:20). Being in heaven, they
continue to be in communion with believers on earth.
Such an understanding was present in ancient
Patristic thought, both of East and West Here are the words of
Chrysostom: "Again, the memorial of the martyrs, and again a
feast day and a spiritual solemnity. They suffered, and we
rejoice; they struggled, and we leap for joy; their crown is the
glory of all, or rather, the glory of the whole Church. How can
this be? You will say. The martyrs are our parts and members. But,
whether one member suffer, all the members suffer with it; and
one member be honored, all the member's rejoice with it (I Cor.
12:26). The head is crowned, and the rest of the body rejoices.
One becomes a victor in the Olympic games, and the whole people
rejoices and receives him with great glory. If at the Olympic
games those who do not in the least participate in the labors
receive such satisfaction, all the more can this be with regard to
the strugglers of piety. We are the feet, and the martyrs are the
head, but the head cannot say to the feet, I have no need of
you (I Cor. 12:21). The members are glorified, but the
preeminence of glory does not estrange them from the bond with the
other parts: for then especially are they glorious when they are
not estranged from the bond with them." "If their Master
is not ashamed to be our Head, then all the more, they are not
ashamed to be our members; for in them is expressed love, and love
usually joins and binds things which are separate, despite their
difference in dignity" (St John Chrysostom, "Eulogy for
the Holy Martyr Romanus").
"For the souls of the pious dead,"
says Blessed Augustine, "do not depart from the Church, which
is the Kingdom of Christ. This is why, on the altar of the Lord,
their memorial is performed in the offering of the Body of Christ
... Why should this be done if not because the faithful even after
death remain members of it (the Church)?"
The ever-memorable Russian Pastor, St John of
Kronstadt, in his "Thoughts Concerning the Church"
writes: "Acknowledge that all the saints are our elder
brothers in the one House of the Heavenly Father, who have
departed from earth to heaven, and they are always with us in God,
and they constantly teach us and guide us to eternal life by means
of the church services, Mysteries, rites, instructions, and church
decrees, which they have composed—as for example, those
concerning the fasts and feasts—, so to speak, they serve
together with us, they sing, they speak, they instruct, they help
us in various temptations and sorrows. And call upon them as
living with you under a single roof; glorify them, thank them,
converse with them as with living people; and you will believe in
the Church" (St. John of Kronstadt, "What Does It Mean
To Believe In The Church? Thoughts About the Church and the
Orthodox Divine Services").
The Church in its prayers to the apostles and
hierarchs calls them her pillars, upon which even now the Church
is established. "Thou art a pillar of the Church";
"ye are pillars of the Church"; "Thou art a good
shepherd and fervent teacher, O hierarch"; "ye are the
eyes of the Church of Christ"; "ye are the stars of the
Church" (from various church services). In harmony with the
consciousness of the Church, the saints, going to heaven,
comprise, as it were, the firmament of the Church. "Ye do
ever illumine the precious firmament of the Church like
magnificent stars, and ye shine upon the faithful, O divine
Martyrs, warriors of Christ" (from the Common Service to
Martyrs). "Like brightly shining stars ye have mentally shone
forth upon the firmament of the Church, and ye do illumine the
whole creation" (from the Service to Hieromartyrs).
There is a foundation for such appeals to the
saints in the word of God itself. In the Apocalypse of St. John
the Theologian we read: Him that overcometh will I make a
pillar in the temple of my God (Apoc. 3:12). Thus the saints
are pillars of the Church not only in the past, but in all times
as well.
In this bond of the Church with the saints, and
likewise in the Headship of the Church by the Lord Himself, may be
seen one of the mystical sides of the Church. "By Thy Cross,
O Christ, there is a single flock of angels and men; and in the
one assembly heaven and earth rejoice, crying out, O Lord, glory
to Thee" (Octoechos, Tone 1, Aposticha of Wednesday Matins).
The ninth article of the Symbol of Faith
indicates the four basic signs of the Church: "We believe in
One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church," These attributes
are called essential, that is, those without which the Church
would not be the Church.
The
Unity of the Church
In the Greek text the word "in One,"
is expressed as a numeral (en mian). Thus the Symbol
of Faith confesses that the Church is one: a) it is one as viewed
from within itself, not divided, b) it is one as viewed from
without, that is, not having any other beside itself. Its unity
consists not in the joining together of what is different in
nature, but in inward agreement and unanimity. There is one
body and one spirit, even as ye are called in one hope of your
calling; one Lord, one faith, one baptism, one God and Father of
all, Who is above all, and through all, and in you all (Eph.
4:4-6).
Depicting the Church in parables, the Saviour
speaks of one flock, of one sheepfold, of one grapevine, of one
foundation stone of the Church. He gave a single teaching, a
single baptism, and a single communion. The unity of the faithful
in Christ comprised the subject of His High-Priestly Prayer before
His sufferings on the Cross; the Lord prayed that they all may
be one (John 17:21).
The Church is one not only inwardly, but also
outwardly. Outwardly its unity is manifested in the harmonious
confession of faith, in the oneness of Divine services and
Mysteries, in the oneness of the grace-giving hierarchy, which
comes in succession from the Apostles, in the oneness of canonical
order.
The Church on earth has a visible side and an
invisible side. The invisible side is: that its Head is Christ;
that it is animated by the Holy Spirit; that in it is performed
the inward mystical life in sanctity of the more perfect of its
members. However, the Church, by the nature of its members, is visible,
since it is composed of men in the body; it has a visible
hierarchy; it performs prayers and sacred actions visibly; it
confesses openly, by means of words, the faith of Christ.
The Church does not lose its unity because side
by side with the Church there exist Christian societies which do
not belong to it. These societies are not in the Church, they are
outside of it.
The unity of the Church is not violated because
of temporary divisions of a nondogmatic nature. Differences
between Churches arise frequently out of insufficient or incorrect
information. Also, sometimes a temporary breaking of communion is
caused by the personal errors of individual hierarchs who stand at
the head of one or another local Church, or it is caused by their
violation of the canons of the Church, or by the violation of the
submission of one territorial ecclesiastical group to another in
accordance with anciently established tradition. Moreover, life
shows us the possibility of disturbances within a local Church
which hinder the normal communion of other Churches with the given
local Church until the outward manifestation and triumph of the
defenders of authentic Orthodox truth. Finally, the bond between
Churches can sometimes be violated for a long time by political
conditions, as has often happened in history. [1] In such cases,
the division touches only outward relations, but does not touch or
violate inward spiritual unity.
The truth of the One Church is defined by the
Orthodoxy of its members, and not by their quantity at one or
another moment. St. Gregory the Theologian wrote concerning the
Orthodox Church of Constantinople before the Second Ecumenical
Council as follows:
"This field was once small and poor ...
This was not even a field at all. Perhaps it was not worth
granaries or barns or scythes. Upon it there were no stacks or
sheaves, but perhaps only small and unripe grass which grows on
the housetops, with which the reaper filleth not his hand, which
do not call upon themselves the blessing of those who pass by (Ps.
128:6-8). Such was our field, our harvest? Although it is great,
fat, and abundant before Him Who sees what is hidden ... still, it
is not known among the people, it is not united in one place, but
is gathered little by little as the summer fruits, as the grape
gleanings of the vintage; there is no cluster to eat (Micah
7:1). Such was our previous poverty and grief" (Farewell
Sermon of St. Gregory the Theologian to the Fathers of the Second
Ecumenical Council).
"And where are those," says St.
Gregory in another Homily, "who reproach us for our poverty
and are proud of their wealth? They consider great numbers of
people to be a sign of the Church, and despise the small flock.
They measure the Divinity (the Saint has in mind here the Arians,
who taught that the Son of God was less than the Father) and they
weigh people. They place a high value on grains of sand (that is,
the masses) and belittle the luminaries. They gather into their
treasure-house simple stones, and disdain pearls" (St.
Gregory the Theologian, Homily 33, Against the Arians).
In the prayers of the Church are contained
petitions for the ceasing of possible disagreements among the
Churches: "Cause discords to cease in the Church; quickly
destroy by the might of Thy Holy Spirit all uprisings of
heresies" (Eucharistic Prayer at the Liturgy of St. Basil the
Great). "We glorify Thee ... Thou one rule in Trinity, and
beg for forgiveness of sins, peace for the world, and concord for
the Church ... Grant peace and unity to Thy Church, O Thou Who
lovest mankind!' (Sunday Canon of Nocturne, Tone 8, Canticle 9).
The
Sanctity of the Church
The Lord Jesus Christ performed the work of His
earthly ministry and death on the Cross; Christ loved the
Church... that He might present it to Himself a glorious Church,
not having spot, or wrinkle, or any such thing: but that it should
be holy and without blemish (Eph. 5:25-27). The Church is holy
through its Head, the Lord Jesus Christ. It is holy,
further, through the presence in it of the Holy Spirit and
His grace-giving gifts, communicated in the Mysteries and other
sacred rites of the Church. It is also holy through its tie
with the Heavenly Church.
The very body of the Church is holy: If
the firstfruit be holy, the lump is also holy; and if the root be
holy, so are the branches (Rom. 11: 16). Those who believe in
Christ are "temples of God, temples of the Holy Spirit"
(I Cor. 3:16; 6:19). In the true Church there have always been and
there always are people of the highest spiritual purity and with
special gifts of grace—martyrs, virgins, ascetics, holy monks
and nuns, hierarchs, righteous ones, blessed ones. The Church has
an uncounted choir of departed ones of all times and peoples. It
has manifestations of the extraordinary gifts of the Holy Spirit,
both visible and hidden from the eyes of the world.
The Church is holy by its calling, or its
purpose. It is holy also by its fruits: Ye have your fruit unto
holiness, and the end everlasting life (Rom. 6:22), as the
Apostle Paul instructs us.
The Church is holy likewise through its pure,
infallible teaching of faith: The Church of the living God is, according
to the word of God, the pillar and ground of the truth (I
Tim. 3:15). The Patriarchs of the Eastern Churches, concerning the
infallibility of the Church in its teaching, express themselves
thus: "In saying that the teaching of the Church is
infallible, we do not affirm anything else than this, that it is
unchanging, that it is the same as was given to it in the
beginning as the teaching of God" (Encyclical of the Eastern
Patriarch, 1848, par. 12).
The sanctity of the Church is not darkened by
the intrusion of the world into the Church, or by the sinfulness
of men. Everything sinful and worldly which intrudes into the
Church's sphere remains foreign to it and is destined to be sifted
out and destroyed, like weed seeds at sowing time. The opinion
that the Church consists only of righteous and holy people without
sin does not agree with the direct teaching of Christ and His
Apostles. The Saviour compares His Church with a field on which
the wheat grows together with the tares, and again, with a net
which draws out of the water both good fish and bad. In the Church
there are both good servants and bad ones (Matt 18:23-35), wise
virgins and foolish (Matt. 25:1-13). "We believe,"
states the Encyclical of the Eastern Patriarchs, "that the
members of the Catholic Church are all the faithful, and only the
faithful, that is, those who undoubtingly confess the pure faith
in the Saviour Christ (the faith which we have received from
Christ Himself, from the Apostles, and from the Holy Ecumenical
Councils), even though certain of them might have submitted to
various sins ... The Church judges them, calls them to repentance,
and leads them on the path of the saving commandments. And
therefore despite the fact that they are subject to sins, they
remain and are acknowledged as members of the Catholic Church as
long as they do not become apostates and as long as they hold to
the Catholic and Orthodox Faith."
But there is a boundary, which if sinners go
past it, they, like dead members, are cut off from the body of the
Church, either by a visible act of the Church authority or
by the invisible act of Goes judgment. Thus, those do not
belong to the Church who are atheists or apostates from the
Christian faith, those who are sinners characterized by a
conscious stubbornness and lack of repentance for their sins, as
it says in the Catechism (ninth article). Also among those who do
not belong to the Church are heretics who have corrupted the
fundamental dogmas of the faith, schismatics who out of self-will
have separated themselves from the Church (the 33 rd Canon of the
Council of Laodicea forbids prayer with schismatics). St Basil the
Great explains: "The ancients distinguished between heresy,
schism, and an arbitrary assembly. They called heretics those
who have completely cut themselves off and have become foreigners
in the faith itself; they called schismatics* those
who have separated themselves in their opinions about certain
ecclesiastical subjects and in questions which allow of treatment
and healing, and they called arbitrary assemblies those
gatherings composed of disobedient priests or bishops and
uninstructed people."
The sanctity of the Church is irreconcilable
with false teachings and heresies. Therefore the Church
strictly guards the purity of the truth and herself excludes
heretics from her midst.
The
Catholicity of the Church
In the Greek text of the Nicaean
Constantinoplitan Symbol of Faith (the Creed), the Church is
called "catholic" (in the Slavonic translation, sobornaya).
What is the significance of this Greek word?
The word catholikos in ancient Greek,
pre-Christian literature is encountered very rarely. However, the
Christian Church from antiquity chose this word to signify one of
the principle attributes of the Church, namely, to express its
universal character. Even though it had at its disposal such words
as cosmos (the world), or oikoumene (the inhabited
earth), evidently these latter words were insufficient to express
a certain new concept which is present only to the Christian
consciousness. In the ancient Symbols of Faith, wherever the word
" Church" appears, it is unfailingly with the definition
"catholic." Thus, in the Jerusalem Symbol of Faith we
read. "And in one, holy, catholic Church"; in the Symbol
of Rome: "In the holy, catholic Church, the communion of the
Saints"; etc. In ancient Christian literature, this term is
encountered several times in St. Ignatius the God-bearer, an
Apostolic Father, for example when he says, "Where Jesus
Christ is, there is the catholic Church." This term is
constantly to be found in the Acts of all the Ecumenical Councils.
In the direct translation of the word, it signifies the highest
degree of all-embracingness, wholeness, fullness (being derived
from cath ola, meaning "throughout the whole").
Side by side with this term, there was also
used with the meaning of "universal," the word oikoumenikos.
These two terms were not mixed. The Ecumenical Councils
received the title Oikoumenike Synodos, from oikoumenikos,
meaning from all the inhabited earth—in actual fact, the
land which belonged to Greco-Roman civilization.
The Church is catholic. This corresponds to the
Apostolic words, the fullness of Him that filleth all in all (Eph.
1:23). This concept indicates that the whole human race is called
to salvation, and therefore all men are intended to be members of
the Church of Christ, even though not all do belong to her in
fact.
The Longer Orthodox Catechism, answering the
question, "Why is the Church called catholic, or which is the
same thing, universal?" replies: "Because she is not
limited to any place, nor time, nor people, but contains true
believers of all places, times and peoples" (Eastern Orthodox
Books ed., p. 50).
The Church is not limited by place. It embraces
in itself all people who believe in the Orthodox way, wherever
they might live on the earth. On the other hand it is essential to
have in mind that the Church was catholic even when it was
composed of a limited number of communities, and also when, on the
day of Pentecost, its bounds were not extended beyond the upper
room of Zion and Jerusalem.
The Church is not limited by time: it is
foreordained to bring people to faith "unto the end of the
world." I am with you alway, even unto the end of
the world (Matt. 28:20). The Spirit, the Comforter, will
abide with you forever (John 14:16). The Mystery of the
Eucharist will be performed until the Lord comes again to earth (I
Cor. 11:26).
The Church is not bound up with any conditions
of civil order which it would consider indispensable for itself,
nor with any definite language or people.
The
Apostolic Church
The Church is called "Apostolic"
because the Apostles placed the historical beginning of the
Church. They spread Christianity to the ends of the earth and
almost all of them sealed their preaching with a martyr's death.
The seeds of Christianity were sown in the world by their word and
watered with their blood. The unquenched flame of faith in the
world they lit by the power of their personal faith.
The Apostles preserved and transmitted to the
Church the Christian teaching of faith and life in the form
in which they had received it from their Master and Lord. Giving
in themselves the example of the fulfillment of the commandments
of the Gospel, they handed down to the faithful the teaching of
Christ by word of mouth and in the Sacred Scriptures so that it
might be preserved, confessed, and lived.
The Apostles established, according to the
commandment of the Lord, the Church's sacred rites. They
placed the beginning of the performance of the Holy Mysteries of
the Body and Blood of Christ, of baptism, and of ordination.
The Apostles established in the Church the
grace-given succession of the episcopate, and through it
the succession of the whole grace-given ministry of the church
hierarchy, which is called to be stewards of the Mysteries of
God, in accordance with I Cor. 4:1.
The Apostles established the beginning of the
canonical structure of the Church's life, being concerned
that everything should be done decently and in order; an
example of this is given in the fourteenth chapter of the First
Epistle to the Corinthians, which contains directions for the
assemblies where church services are celebrated.
Everything we have said here concerns the
historical aspect. But besides this there is another, inward
aspect which gives to the Church an Apostolic quality. The
Apostles were not only historically in the Church of Christ, they remain
in it and are in it now. They were in the earthly Church, and
they are now in the Heavenly Church, continuing to be in communion
with believers on earth. Being the historical nucleus of the
Church, they continue to be the spiritually living, although
invisible, nucleus of the Church, both now and forever, in its
constant existence. The Apostle John the Theologian writes: ... Declare
we unto you, that ye also may have fellowship with us; and truly
our fellowship is with the Father, and with His Son Jesus Christ (I
John 1:3). These words have for us the same force as they had
for the contemporaries of the Apostle: they contain an exhortation
to us to be in communion with the ranks of Apostles, for the
nearness of the Apostles to the Holy Trinity is greater than ours.
Thus, both for reasons of an historical
character and for reasons of an inward character, the Apostles are
the foundations of the Church. Therefore it is said of the Church:
It is built upon the foundation of the Apostles and Prophets,
Jesus Christ Himself being the chief cornerstone (Eph. 2:20).
The naming of the Church as "apostolic" indicates
that it is established not on a single Apostle (as the Roman
Church later taught), but upon all twelve; otherwise it would have
to bear the name of Peter, or John, or some other. The Church as
it were ahead of time warned us against thinking according to a
"fleshly" principle (I Cor. 3:4): "I am of Apollos,
I am of Cephas." In the Apocalypse, concerning the city
coming down from heaven it is said: And the wall of the city
bad twelve foundations, and in them the names of the twelve
Apostles of the Lamb (Apoc. 21:14).
The attributes of the Church indicated in the
Symbol of Faith "one, holy, catholic and apostolic,"
refer to the militant Church. However, they receive their full
significance with the awareness of the oneness of this Church with
the Heavenly Church in the one Body of Christ: the Church is one,
with a unity that is both heavenly and earthly; it is holy with a
heavenly-earthly holiness; it is catholic and apostolic by its
unbroken tie with the Apostles and all the saints.
The Orthodox teaching of the Church, which in
itself is quite clear and rests upon Sacred Scripture and Sacred
Tradition, is to be contrasted with another concept which is
widespread in the contemporary Protestant world and has penetrated
even into Orthodox circles. According to this different concept,
all the various existing Christian organizations, the so-called
"confessions" and "sects," even though they
are separated from each other, still comprise a single
"invisible Church," inasmuch as each of them confesses
Christ as Son of God and accepts His Gospel. The dissemination of
such a view is aided by the fact that side by side with the
Orthodox Church there exists outside of her a number of Christians
that exceeds by several times the number of members of the
Orthodox Church. Often we can observe in this Christian world
outside the Church a religious fervor and faith, a worthy moral
life, a conviction—all the way to fanaticism—of one's
correctness, an organization and a broad charitable activity. What
is the relation of all of them to the Church of Christ?
Of course, there is no reason to view these
confessions and sects as on the same level with non-Christian
religions. One cannot deny that the reading of the word of God has
a beneficial influence upon everyone who seeks in it instruction
and strengthening of faith, and that devout reflection on God the
Creator, the Provider and Saviour, has an elevating power there
among Protestants also. We cannot say that their prayers are
totally fruitless if they come from a pure heart, for in every
nation be that feareth Him... is accepted with Him (Acts
10:35). The Omnipresent Good Provider God is over them, and they
are not deprived of God's mercies. They help to restrain moral
looseness, vices, and crimes; and they oppose the spread of
atheism.
But all this does not give us grounds to
consider them as belonging to the Church. Already the fact that
one part of this broad Christian world outside the Church, namely
the whole of Protestantism, denies the bond with the heavenly
Church, that is, the veneration in prayer of the Mother of God and
the saints, and likewise prayer for the dead, indicates that they
themselves have destroyed the bond with the one Body of Christ
which unites in itself the heavenly and the earthly. Further, it
is a fact that these non-Orthodox confessions have
"broken" in one form or another, directly or indirectly,
with the Orthodox Church, with the Church in its historical form;
they themselves have cut the bond, they have "departed"
from her. Neither we nor they have the right to close our eyes to
this fact The teachings of the non-Orthodox confessions contain
heresies which were decisively rejected and condemned by the
Church at her Ecumenical Councils. In these numerous branches of
Christianity there is no unity, either outward or inward—either
with the Orthodox Church of Christ or between themselves. The
supra-confessional unification (the "ecumenical
movement") which is now to be observed does not enter into
the depths of the life of these confessions, but has an outward
character. The term "invisible" can refer only to the
Heavenly Church. The Church on earth, even though it has its
invisible side, like a ship a part of which is hidden in the water
and is invisible to the eyes, still remains visible, because it
consists of people and has visible forms of organization and
sacred activity.
Therefore it is quite natural to affirm that
these religious organizations are societies which are
"near," or "next to," or " close
to," or perhaps even " adjoining" the Church, but
sometimes "against" it; but they are all "outside"
the one Church of Christ. Some of them have cut themselves
off, others have gone far away. Some, in going away, all the same
have historical ties of blood with her; others have lost all
kinship, and in them the very spirit and foundations of
Christianity have been distorted. None of them find themselves
under the activity of the grace which is present in the Church,
and especially the grace which is given in the Mysteries of the
Church. They are not nourished by that mystical table which leads
up along the steps of moral perfection.
The tendency in contemporary cultural society
to place all confessions on one level is not limited to
Christianity; on this same all-equalling level are placed also the
non-Christian religions, on the grounds that they all "lead
to God," and besides, taken all together, they far surpass
the Christian world in the number of members who belong to them.
All of such "uniting" and
"equalizing" views indicate a forgetfulness of the
principle that there can be many teachings and opinions, but there
is only one truth. And authentic Christian unity—unity in
the Church—can be based only upon oneness of mind, and not upon
difference of mind. The Church is the pillar and ground of the
Truth (I Tim. 3:15).
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