And the Catholic Church would also hold that a validly ordained Orthodox bishop - even if he were laicized, excommunicated, censured, etc by his patriarch or synod - could continue to perform valid ordinations or consecrations.
And the Catholic Church would also hold that a validly ordained Orthodox bishop - even if he were laicized, excommunicated, censured, etc by his patriarch or synod - could continue to perform valid ordinations or consecrations.
Really?? Does anyone wonder why folks just remove themselves from discussions like this? How did we ever get so far removed from the Last Supper? I have to believe Jesus has a great sense of humor.
Perhaps this is an appropriate forum to ask this question.
How do you consider the case of the recently erected Exarchate of the Moscow Patriarchate in Africa, within the boundaries of the Patriarchate of Alexandria? Do not the priests celebrating liturgy and sacraments not have the permission from their local authorities to do so? Or do you consider the permission to come from Moscow rather than Alexandria, as these hundred-odd priests have declared their intent to abandon submission to their Patriarch in Alexandria in favour of Moscow? Does the intent of the newly-minted Exarchate priests to serve Moscow "make valid" their offerings of liturgy and holy mysteries, despite directly rejecting their "local authorities"?
Drawing this analogy out a bit further, if you consider the Exarchate priests to be offering valid liturgies and mysteries despite their rejection of local authority, what would stop a Patriachate from establishing an Exarchate inside another's geographical boundaries? If, say, the Patriarchate of Antioch declared an Exarchate in Jerusalem and decided to grant faculties to Exarchate priests there; or if the Patriarchate of Romania decided to "colonise" its neighbour Bulgaria with Exarchate priests. Would you hold these Exarchate priests to essentially be in rebellion against their rightful local authority? Or would you consider their faculties approved by the "local authority", even if said authority was carpetbagging in from another Patriarchate?
Asking as a Roman Catholic Colombian-American from California with a particular interest in the Eastern Churches.
"Even more interesting is KissingerтАЩs zooming of his thinking to the Ukraine crisis of today. He points to problems in Western management of the crisis. Ukraine also demonstrates his basic concern for the tension between Western universalism and Realpolitik: тАЬThe west has defined the current issue as demonstrating to Russia that it must adhere to the Western international system. And thatтАЩs OK, for the present. But for the long term, one has to think of Russia as a huge state.тАЭ And according to Kissinger, todayтАЩs Western policy towards Ukraine and Russia opens no attractive scenarios for the West. Kissinger criticizes in the Ukraine crisis as well as in Iraq the Western effort to educate another civilization to follow its own model. He is strongly concerned about Russian and Islamic universalism, but he is not very much less concerned about American or European universalism. To put it shortly, if three or four universalistic civilizations try to fulfill their universalistic visions against each other, the result is at least thirty years of troubles or confrontations for all of them.To put this into perspective, this is not the first time Western and Russian universalisms collide with each other. The competition between the Eastern and the Western Churches in Europe was the first larger confrontation, including a large number of European crusades and defining the European borderlands, which became for centuries the battlefields of the East and the West. In the last three centuries there have been confrontations 1тАУ3 times a century: the Great Northern War, the Napoleonic Wars, the Crimean War, World War I, World War II and the Cold War. Now Ukraine crystallizes the question: Should there be for one more generation one more confrontation between these post-Roman universalistic powers, just to move their border line a few hundred miles, or to teach each other a lesson тАФ or to waste their resources in a time when their 500 years-old global hegemony is fading anyway?" Comment. Note the last sentence.
2. The *boundaries* of the Patriarchate in Alexandria are a relatively recent innovation, since the fall of the Egyptian Moslem dynasties in 1952. There's a difference between what it claims and who it can serve. The hierarchy of the Patriarchate are faithful servants but even their ability to serve all of Africa are limited.
3. Having served as a missionary in Ghana, I know first hand that the Alexandrian Patriarchate struggles to serve its priests and their missionary efforts, educationally, monetarily, with infrastructure, texts, etc. Ghana is blessed to have its present leadership.
3. The Moscow Patriarchate was *invited* into Africa by Alexandrian priests who *rebelled at the recognition of the OCU* -- the international geo-political games played by the USG. The Russian priests serving in Africa do so under the authorities of the Moscow Patriarchate. The "newly-minted Exarchate priests" are serving validly and licitly (to use RCC terminology).
*My* conclusion. In Orthodoxy, respect for nation-state boundaries in many ways equates to respect for the *boundaries* of the state's Orthodox churches. The Ecumenical Patriarch has historically and consistently violated such local Orthodox church *territorial* boundaries, cite the OCU, Estonia, the Greek islands, etc. The *American model* for Orthodoxy which has nearly every local Orthodox church present is now (possibly and sadly) being implemented worldwide.
Comment. *Carpetbagging?* Oof! Your viewpoint received.
An excellent book to read, written by a Greek(!) hierarch is "The Ecclesial Crisis in Ukraine and its Solution According to the Sacred Canons"
"Essential reading for all Orthodox believers to understand what the Ukrainian crisis means for the future of their Church. It will also assist others to see beyond the characterization of the crisis as a political event in relations between Russia and the West. Simply put, this is a crisis of Orthodox ecclesiology requiring a conciliar solution."
Thank you for your detailed and considered answer. I will take some time to read through the links you posted. I especially appreciate the "translation" into RC ecclesiology!
It is very fascinating to me how so much of what you have described about Orthodoxy is dependent upon local boundaries, local authorities, and other geographical concerns. I will admit this perspective is unfamiliar to me, who am so used to thinking of Churches (East and West) being entirely independent of or even indifferent to their host countries; "pilgrims on the journey", if you will, or even "strangers in a strange land".
This is one reason I strive to understand the conflicts within Orthodoxy; it seems to my (admitted Latin viewpoint) that a good portion of the animosity and emotional energy (for lack of a better term) is bound up in the geographical, territorial, cultural histories of the actors, which may inordinately complicate a conciliar approach to resolving these conflicts and achieving greater unity. Perhaps this is nothing new, especially in light of the history of the East-West split.
As a pilgrim son of pilgrim forefathers, I am accustomed to carrying my culture with me, never quite laying it down but allowing it to shine more or less according to circumstance. But where is the line between celebrating one's unique cultural heritage and the richness and perspective it provides, and holding to what divides, rather than unites, us? Both as individuals and as Churches. I would think it is especially important as Churches to be able to detach enough from the historical trauamas in order to be conciliar and have honest discussion, like the priests in the aforementioned article... but at what point does one risk letting go of one's identity, and thus foregoing one's ability to dialogue (to borrow a phrase from the Vatican's instruction on Catholic education)? There must be a middle ground, but I from my comfortable armchair cannot easily define it. Perhaps it is something best learned through the doing, rather than the positing.
Re: my comment: I apologise if the "carpetbagging" term was received as uncharitable. As you may imagine, I hold no particular love for large nation-states swanning in from other parts of the world and telling smaller countries how to conduct their own business (see: Panama). This does perhaps colour my view of geopolitics somewhat, so I suppose I ought to be more cognisant of that blind spot moving forwards.
Thank you again for your considered response, and may God bless you for the work you do!
I think I understand. He could validly ordain a priest, but it would be against the law and so be illicit. Valid because Jesus shows up, illicit because He would not be pleased.
And the Catholic Church would also hold that a validly ordained Orthodox bishop - even if he were laicized, excommunicated, censured, etc by his patriarch or synod - could continue to perform valid ordinations or consecrations.
That's just fascinating.
In Orthodoxy, it is completely the opposite; the bishop, priest, or deacon would have no authorities; hence the scandal.
Really?? Does anyone wonder why folks just remove themselves from discussions like this? How did we ever get so far removed from the Last Supper? I have to believe Jesus has a great sense of humor.
Come to think of it, if you guys want Metropolitans Filaret & Epifaniy (OCU), please by all means, take them!
Perhaps this is an appropriate forum to ask this question.
How do you consider the case of the recently erected Exarchate of the Moscow Patriarchate in Africa, within the boundaries of the Patriarchate of Alexandria? Do not the priests celebrating liturgy and sacraments not have the permission from their local authorities to do so? Or do you consider the permission to come from Moscow rather than Alexandria, as these hundred-odd priests have declared their intent to abandon submission to their Patriarch in Alexandria in favour of Moscow? Does the intent of the newly-minted Exarchate priests to serve Moscow "make valid" their offerings of liturgy and holy mysteries, despite directly rejecting their "local authorities"?
Drawing this analogy out a bit further, if you consider the Exarchate priests to be offering valid liturgies and mysteries despite their rejection of local authority, what would stop a Patriachate from establishing an Exarchate inside another's geographical boundaries? If, say, the Patriarchate of Antioch declared an Exarchate in Jerusalem and decided to grant faculties to Exarchate priests there; or if the Patriarchate of Romania decided to "colonise" its neighbour Bulgaria with Exarchate priests. Would you hold these Exarchate priests to essentially be in rebellion against their rightful local authority? Or would you consider their faculties approved by the "local authority", even if said authority was carpetbagging in from another Patriarchate?
Asking as a Roman Catholic Colombian-American from California with a particular interest in the Eastern Churches.
Jeanatan, you've posed excellent questions.
1. Sadly, with regard to Africa, the current situation begins with the Ukrainian matter. https://orthochristian.com/144060.html
a. Nation-State politics abound as historical games are undertaken to break up the Orthodox churches https://orthochristian.com/136386.html
b. Even Henry Kissinger, who is not necessarily a friend of Orthodoxy - see: https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/opinions/1991/02/09/the-conscience-of-the-church/eeb56a39-2008-4c8d-8a6f-d0403350e12d/ - recognizes the differing world views colliding. The following was written in 2014 https://www.academia.edu/8954040/Henry_Kissingers_World_Order_as_an_Insight_to_understand_our_Age
"Even more interesting is KissingerтАЩs zooming of his thinking to the Ukraine crisis of today. He points to problems in Western management of the crisis. Ukraine also demonstrates his basic concern for the tension between Western universalism and Realpolitik: тАЬThe west has defined the current issue as demonstrating to Russia that it must adhere to the Western international system. And thatтАЩs OK, for the present. But for the long term, one has to think of Russia as a huge state.тАЭ And according to Kissinger, todayтАЩs Western policy towards Ukraine and Russia opens no attractive scenarios for the West. Kissinger criticizes in the Ukraine crisis as well as in Iraq the Western effort to educate another civilization to follow its own model. He is strongly concerned about Russian and Islamic universalism, but he is not very much less concerned about American or European universalism. To put it shortly, if three or four universalistic civilizations try to fulfill their universalistic visions against each other, the result is at least thirty years of troubles or confrontations for all of them.To put this into perspective, this is not the first time Western and Russian universalisms collide with each other. The competition between the Eastern and the Western Churches in Europe was the first larger confrontation, including a large number of European crusades and defining the European borderlands, which became for centuries the battlefields of the East and the West. In the last three centuries there have been confrontations 1тАУ3 times a century: the Great Northern War, the Napoleonic Wars, the Crimean War, World War I, World War II and the Cold War. Now Ukraine crystallizes the question: Should there be for one more generation one more confrontation between these post-Roman universalistic powers, just to move their border line a few hundred miles, or to teach each other a lesson тАФ or to waste their resources in a time when their 500 years-old global hegemony is fading anyway?" Comment. Note the last sentence.
2. The *boundaries* of the Patriarchate in Alexandria are a relatively recent innovation, since the fall of the Egyptian Moslem dynasties in 1952. There's a difference between what it claims and who it can serve. The hierarchy of the Patriarchate are faithful servants but even their ability to serve all of Africa are limited.
3. Having served as a missionary in Ghana, I know first hand that the Alexandrian Patriarchate struggles to serve its priests and their missionary efforts, educationally, monetarily, with infrastructure, texts, etc. Ghana is blessed to have its present leadership.
3. The Moscow Patriarchate was *invited* into Africa by Alexandrian priests who *rebelled at the recognition of the OCU* -- the international geo-political games played by the USG. The Russian priests serving in Africa do so under the authorities of the Moscow Patriarchate. The "newly-minted Exarchate priests" are serving validly and licitly (to use RCC terminology).
4. Your example of Antioch going into Jerusalem is a valid question, but it happened the other way around. https://orthochristian.com/70416.html https://orthochristian.com/80640.html
*My* conclusion. In Orthodoxy, respect for nation-state boundaries in many ways equates to respect for the *boundaries* of the state's Orthodox churches. The Ecumenical Patriarch has historically and consistently violated such local Orthodox church *territorial* boundaries, cite the OCU, Estonia, the Greek islands, etc. The *American model* for Orthodoxy which has nearly every local Orthodox church present is now (possibly and sadly) being implemented worldwide.
Comment. *Carpetbagging?* Oof! Your viewpoint received.
An excellent book to read, written by a Greek(!) hierarch is "The Ecclesial Crisis in Ukraine and its Solution According to the Sacred Canons"
"Essential reading for all Orthodox believers to understand what the Ukrainian crisis means for the future of their Church. It will also assist others to see beyond the characterization of the crisis as a political event in relations between Russia and the West. Simply put, this is a crisis of Orthodox ecclesiology requiring a conciliar solution."
https://bookstore.jordanville.org/9781942699415
Father,
Thank you for your detailed and considered answer. I will take some time to read through the links you posted. I especially appreciate the "translation" into RC ecclesiology!
It is very fascinating to me how so much of what you have described about Orthodoxy is dependent upon local boundaries, local authorities, and other geographical concerns. I will admit this perspective is unfamiliar to me, who am so used to thinking of Churches (East and West) being entirely independent of or even indifferent to their host countries; "pilgrims on the journey", if you will, or even "strangers in a strange land".
This is one reason I strive to understand the conflicts within Orthodoxy; it seems to my (admitted Latin viewpoint) that a good portion of the animosity and emotional energy (for lack of a better term) is bound up in the geographical, territorial, cultural histories of the actors, which may inordinately complicate a conciliar approach to resolving these conflicts and achieving greater unity. Perhaps this is nothing new, especially in light of the history of the East-West split.
As a pilgrim son of pilgrim forefathers, I am accustomed to carrying my culture with me, never quite laying it down but allowing it to shine more or less according to circumstance. But where is the line between celebrating one's unique cultural heritage and the richness and perspective it provides, and holding to what divides, rather than unites, us? Both as individuals and as Churches. I would think it is especially important as Churches to be able to detach enough from the historical trauamas in order to be conciliar and have honest discussion, like the priests in the aforementioned article... but at what point does one risk letting go of one's identity, and thus foregoing one's ability to dialogue (to borrow a phrase from the Vatican's instruction on Catholic education)? There must be a middle ground, but I from my comfortable armchair cannot easily define it. Perhaps it is something best learned through the doing, rather than the positing.
Re: my comment: I apologise if the "carpetbagging" term was received as uncharitable. As you may imagine, I hold no particular love for large nation-states swanning in from other parts of the world and telling smaller countries how to conduct their own business (see: Panama). This does perhaps colour my view of geopolitics somewhat, so I suppose I ought to be more cognisant of that blind spot moving forwards.
Thank you again for your considered response, and may God bless you for the work you do!
I think I understand. He could validly ordain a priest, but it would be against the law and so be illicit. Valid because Jesus shows up, illicit because He would not be pleased.
I don't want to make Jesus mad.