Justin Kissel wrote:Ecumenism needs to be formally condemned in an Ecumenical Council.
Indeed it does. But it never will be if things continue going the way they are. Satan has created enough apathy among us Orthodox Christians that we just don't feel the sting of ecumenism. Ecumenism has become the heresy of heresies that only "extremists" and "fringe elements" care about. It was fine for the early fathers to write invectives and the like against heretics, but nowadays any harsh words are automatically labeled "extreme," and anyone who uses such words are automatically considered to be "fringe" or "uncanonical" or "sectarian".
This is astounding! Has there ever been another time in Church history like this one? A great number of people consider ecumensim to be the greatest heresy that has sprung up, and yet many of those same people fight as aggressively as they can against takings steps to eliminate it. Everyone just wants to sit around waiting for an ecumenical council.
I agree with your response. But again, what would that Ecumenical Council be? If the ROAC ecclesiology were to be used, then the ROAC synod WOULD be the Ecumenical Council. Doesnt this seem just a bit absurd?
Another point before I take a break for a while, it seems to me that one can classify the Orthodox who condemn ecumenism as heresy into two ecclesiological camps, one Cyprianite, the other not. On the Cyrpainite side the synods are united, and the non-Cyprianite side there is no unity. The Cyprianite side seeks to, and does attempt to influence and work with World Orthodoxy to alert them to their heresy, for the non-Cyprianites the rest of the world doesnt seem to matter as they are all graceless and spiritually dead anyway. Third, the entity that most of us were converted into is the body that the Cyprianites are a member of. Now, when you were converted from the last religion that you were a part of, what did you convert into, and was it a result of God's grace through that body?
Should I look at my own past, and clump together in the same boat as "foreign religions" my Methodist upbringing and my time in the OCA? Or should I (as I am prone to do) look at my leavning Methodism for the OCA as leaving a "foreign religion" for the Truth of Orthodoxy, and only then after being blessed to recieve God's mercy to see the light of Orthodoxy see that even in this there was a problem and the solution to this problem involved moving to a synod that addressed this problem? I am a very poor articulator of my concerns, I know, but do you understand what my problem with non-Cyprianism is? I feel that it forces me to look at what I believe to be an act of grace on my life as something that was not.
Finally, if it is a heresy to believe that heretics are of the church, then does it not follow that it would be heresy to say that baptized non-heretics are not of the church? My reference here is to the attitude of each of the non-Cyprian synods towards each other as being 'graceless', or essentially lacking in some way important enough to prevent inter-communion. Good trees bear good fruit, right?
And in terms of a heretic being automatically excommunicated with his own acceptace of heresy, then it follows that a heretics ordinations are invalid, and if there have ever been secret or ignorant heresiarchs in the church, then who can ever know who is really 'of the church'. Forgive me if I am being obsinate here, and pray for me if you know that I persist in heresy that I might recieve God's mercy and enlightenment. But I cannot accept the implications I have stated above. It is all too complex. The Truth is so simple and easy to see (except for those blinded by sin, like myself). I need to take a break for a few weeks and focus more on my prayer life. To be totally honest, I will be JUST recieving an Orthodox baptism this Saturday at a ROCOR monastery (as switching to a non-ecumenist synod as been a VERY long and VERY painful experience for my fiance and I that we almost didnt make it through)
and the following Sunday I will be married. :mrgreen: (Both of which I firmly believe will be valid Orthodox Mysteries, and I ask for your prayers whether you agree or not)
I will give more than a couple re-readings of this post as some have put some time into your responses and the points are not always self-evident or elementary. Talk to you in a few weeks!
Noah