The following essay is from The Holy Synod Of Resistance and deals with one of the most important questions for old-calendarists: How to relate to orthodox christians who belong to bishops who have made public heterodox pronouncements.
On the Status of
Uncondemned Heretics*
INTRODUCTORY THOUGHTS
The present paper deals in brief with two fundamental deviations
in ecclesiology, and was originally written in May 1997, in a more extensive
form, which was intended to address other subjects as well.
The ensuing ecclesiological views, as summary expressions of
our Church’s ecclesiological self-understanding, are the natural outgrowth
of this earlier article, “The ‘Lawful’ Character of the Sacred
Struggle Against Ecumenism” (and its first and second theses, especially),
and are presented for the following two primary reasons:
1) They constitute a well-intentioned effort, by way of a thorough
clarification of their ecclesiological identity, at a balanced contribution
to the intra-Orthodox dialogue among the [various groups of] Old
Calendarist anti-ecumenists, with the goal of reconciliation, unity, and
the recovery of their substantially compromised synodal authority.
2) They aid in an understanding of our own Church’s critical
stand towards the grievous fragmentation within the Old Calendar
movement and the yet more grievous in-fighting between the evermultiplying
factions of bishops, which is essentially the result of the
incorrect and incoherent ecclesiological grounding of the anti-ecumenist
struggle, with all of the tragic consequences on the theological,
pastoral, and spiritual level.
In particular, let us draw the attention of the Faithful to the fact
that they will see, here, no hyperbole in the minute, precise, and detailed
explanation that we have undertaken of the extremely thorny
issue of the ecclesiological identity of heretics who have not yet been
brought to trial.
In questions of such seriousness, all superficialities, simplifications,
and unfounded opinions have an adverse effect on the basic
characteristics of Patristic theology, since—“not content with the
teachings and precepts of the Divine Fathers”—such opinions come
to constitute “warfare against the Fathers” and “warfare against God,”
according to St. Theodore the Studite.1
Far from any such inadmissible generalizations and simplifications,
and in a typically painstaking and, at times, somewhat detailed
way, St. Basil the Great, for example, dealt with the distinction between
heretics, schismatics, and unlawful congregations;2 the Second
and Sixth Holy OEcumenical Synods dealt with the variety of ways of
receiving those outside the Church;3 the Seventh Holy OEcumenical
Synod dealt with the possibility of the incorporation, in general, of
formerly heretical clergy into the Orthodox clergy;4 and St. Theodore
the Studite dealt with all of the foregoing questions together; indeed,
he admonished his disciple Arsenios, who had a penchant for uninformed
generalizations.5
There has always been a temptation in the Church to resort to generalities
and to the over-simplification of theological issues, which has
led to extreme views and positions, and which derived chiefly from
those who were unpardonably ignorant of how the Holy Fathers “handled
particular circumstances, and [of] what their goals were,” as St.
Tarasios says,6 and, in this ignorance of theirs, “have not yet read the
words of the Fathers, and if they have read them, have done so cursorily,
not circumspectly,” to quote from the pronouncements of the
Seventh Holy OEcumenical Synod.7
Notes
Patrologia Græca, Vol. XCIX, cols. 1064D and 1484D.
First Canon.
Seventh Canon of the Second Synod and the Ninety-Fifth Canon of
the Sixth Synod.Mansi, Vol. XII, cols. 1015E-1050E; Praktikå t«n ÑAg¤vn ka‹
Ofikoumenik«n SunÒdvn [Proceedings of the Holy OEcumenical Synods], ed.
Spyridon Melias (Holy Mountain: Kalyve of the Venerable Forerunner Publications,
1981), Vol. II, pp. 731b-741a (First Session).Patrologia Græca, Vol. XCIX, col. 1052D.
Mansi, Vol. XII, col. 1050C; Praktikã, Vol. II, p. 741a.
Mansi, Vol. XIII, col. 248C; Praktikã, Vol. II, p. 843a.
THESIS I
“It has been argued that the ecumenists, and, more generally, the
ecumenist Churches, have already fallen away from the Body of the
Church entirely, that is, they are branches that are automatically cut
off from the Vine, and this, indeed, can be demonstrated from the fact
that we do not have Mysteriological (Sacramental) communion with
them.”
RESPONSE
A. Basic principlesThose who commune with heretics: the Synodal proclamation
a. First and foremost, it is not correct, or even just, that a local
Church should be characterized and regarded as ecumenist in toto,
simply because a number of Her clergy—and sometimes a small number,
at that—are actually ecumenists: they are certainly not to be equated
with the local Church.
b. The local Orthodox Churches today are fundamentally anti-ecumenist;
the inertia of the silent majority does not in any way imply
agreement with, or endorsement of, ecumenist activities and teachings.
c. It should not be forgotten that no local Church has proclaimed
synodally that the primary dogma of the ecclesiological heresy of ecumenism
is a teaching of the Orthodox Church that must be believed
and that is necessary for salvation; and neither has this ever been proclaimed
in a pan-Orthodox manner.
d. The aforementioned views, concerning the need to avoid indiscriminate
generalizations, if one is to have a reliable understanding of
the true ecclesiological identity of our ecumenist brothers who are
caught up in innovation and heresy, but have not yet been brought to
trial, are grounded in the Fathers and are strongly upheld by St. Theodore
the Studite, as follows:
• St. Theodore, in his detailed analysis of the extremely intricate
question of “whether one should receive communion from the Presbyter
of a Bishop who is himself Orthodox,”1 but out of fear “commemorates
his own Metropolitan” [see note 1], who is a heretic, ultimately
makes the following declaration: “If the Metropolitan falls
into heresy, it is not the case that all of those who are in direct or indirect
communion with him are regarded automatically and without
distinction as heretics,” despite, of course, the fact that by this stand
of theirs “they bring upon themselves the fearful charge of remaining
silent.”2
• In explaining subsequently, and at length, that Moechianism [the
specific ill to which he addresses himself] is “a most grievous heresy,”
he invokes as his main argument the fact that this dogma was proclaimed
synodally and was confirmed by an anathema: the Moechians
“proclaimed [their transgressions] synodally,” “taught their transgressions
synodally as dogma,” “and placed those who opposed their
dogma under anathema....”3The twofold character of the Church
a. Next, it is necessary to remind ourselves of the following basic
ecclesiological principle: the Theanthropic body of the Church, since
it possesses a Theandric structure, is, on the one hand, a community
(a spiritual relationship according to Grace and the communion of the
Faithful with each other and with the Holy Trinity—we are united
with the Father in the Holy Spirit through the Savior), and, on the
other hand, and at the same time, an institution (an historical and concrete
organization, the visible Body of Christ), corresponding to the
unconfused and indivisible union of the Divine and human natures in
the one Person and the one Hypostasis of our Savior Jesus Christ.
b. The inward and invisible reality of the Divinely-preserved
Church, defined as a communion transcending nature and comprehension,
is founded as much on Her Divine Head, Christ, as on Her
Divine Soul, the Holy Spirit.
• “We have communion one with another”; “and our communion
is with the Father, and with His Son Jesus Christ”;4 “the communion
of the Holy Spirit be with you all.”5
• Christ “is the Head of the Body, the Church”;6 He constitutes the
corner stone,7 the foundation,8 and the center that holds the entire organism
together.9
• In the Divine Edifice of the Church, according to St. John Chrysostomos,
“it is Christ Who binds the whole together”; “Whether you
speak of the roof, or of the walls, or of any other part whatsoever, He
it is Who supports the whole.”10
• The Holy Spirit dwells in the Body of Christ and constitutes its
life-giving, sanctifying, and unifying, or cohesive, principle: “What
the soul is in the human body,” says St. Augustine, “the Holy Spirit is
in the whole Church,”11 and for this reason, according to the Divine
Chrysostomos, “we are always able to celebrate Pentecost.”12
• Finally, the “New Life” of Grace “is bestowed” on the members
of the Church, according to St. Basil the Great, “by God (the Father),
through Christ, in the Holy Spirit,”13 and because of this, in the
Church, “the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit alike hallow, quicken,
enlighten, comfort, and do all such things.”14
c. The outward, empirical, and visible character of the earthly
Theandric community of the Church is underscored primarily by Her
preëminently historical dimension, according to which the eschatological
“People of God,” the new and true “Israel of God,”15 are on a
path towards the “Eighth Day,” “the unceasing day which knows no
evening and no successor, that age which does not end or grow old,”16
and secondarily by the variety of Her images and names, which, incidentally,
offer only a descriptive and symbolic definition of this organism
of Divine Grace (“metaphorically,” “as in an image” [St. John
Chrysostomos]17).
• “But ye are a chosen generation, a royal priesthood, an holy nation,
a peculiar people,” “which in time past were not a people, but are
now the people of God, which had not obtained mercy, but now have
obtained mercy.”18
• The Holy Prophets, the Lord, and the Divine Apostles compared
the Church to and described Her as a “glorious Mountain of the Lord”
and a “House of God,”19 a “Kingdom,”20 a “Flock,”21 a “Building,”22
a “Vineyard,”23 a “Vine,”24 a “Temple,”25 a “City,”26 a “Tower,”27 a
“Tabernacle,”28 “Husbandry,”29 an “Ark,”30 a “House,”31 and, indeed,
the Divine Paul saw Her chiefly as a “Body,”32 that is, a living organism.
d. Consequently, and on the basis of the foregoing very condensed
remarks, a member of the Church (whether as a person or as a community)
has, at the same time, a twofold relationship to Her: he communes
with the Holy Trinity (the “Communion of Deification” [St.
Gregory Palamas]33) and he belongs liturgically to the organized,
earthly body of Christians, as a “member” of the Body (Apostle
Paul34).
B. Practical ConsequencesExclusion from communion
a. The members of the Body can be ailing, that is, they can be in
error regarding the Orthodox Faith, and in this way their spiritual
communion with the God-Man can be ruptured; in spite of this, even
as ailing members, they are not dead; they continue to belong institutionally
to the Body, which is precisely what happens with a healthy
human body, in which there can also exist unhealthy cells, or with a
tree in bloom, which may also have sickly branches.
• St. Gregory of Sinai gives us a very vivid description of this
twofold condition of the ailing member: the Spirit of Christ “prevails”
in His Body, even over the members that are “ailing and [cannot] partake
of [life],” which, because of “unbelief,” have become “inactive,”
“unenlightened,” “sluggish,” and “incapable of participating in the
Grace of Christ.”35
• The word of the Lord to Nicodemos, “he that believeth not is
condemned already,”36 contributes substantially to a deeper understanding
of this truth: he who teaches false doctrine “is condemned already”
(“for to be outside of the light, this alone is a very great punishment”
37 [a rupture in spiritual communion]), but his full (and institutional)
condemnation will be registered in the future, because
“everyone who sins is immediately condemned by the nature of the
sin; but subsequently by the verdict of the magistrate.”38
• The distinction between healthy and ailing, “good wheat” and
tares, good and rotten fish, which can co-exist and “grow together” in
the same “field” and the same “net” of the Church, is strikingly emphasized
in the relevant parables of the Lord;39 the healthy and ailing
will be separated decisively either through a “synodal decision” by
the Church,40 or at the time of “the harvest,” i.e., “at the end of the
world,” by the Lord.41Exclusion from the Body
a. The mortification of ailing members, through their decisive
alienation from the Body, occurs in two ways:
b. Through schism. In this case, those who are in error regarding
the Orthodox Faith, who are “alienated in matters concerning the
Faith itself,” according to St. Basil,42 sever, by themselves, their institutional
connection with the healthy Body of the Church.
• As this Revealer of heavenly things (OÈranofãntvr) says, in
“apostatizing”43 and “withdrawing from the Church”44 “through
schism” [see note 43], such individuals are, and should be considered
to be, decisively and “entirely cut off” [see note 42], since, indeed,
they organize themselves, in unlawful congregations, into their own
separate community, as was done, for example, by the extreme faction
of the Arians, the Anomoeans, who were for this reason characterized
by the same Saint as “manifestly broken off from the body of the
Church.”45
• In line with this, schismatics and heretics are considered literally
and in actuality to be “those who have estranged themselves from
the Church,”46 who cease any longer even to be ailing members of the
Church, since, prior to their synodal judgment, “they have broken
away from the body of the Church,”47 according to the canonists Aristenos
and Zonaras.
• Those who have in this way been “broken off” [see note 44] and
split off from the institutional unity of the Body are moribund “immediately”
48 and certainly do not have saving Mysteries, according to
St. Nicodemos the Hagiorite.
c. Through a synodal verdict. Ailing, but not “broken-off,” members
are subject to synodal judgment; this judgment is necessary and
the competent ecclesiastical bodies are ordered to implement it, as,
moreover, the Holy Apostle Paul exhorts the Corinthians, that one
who has sinned terribly “might be taken away from among you”
(thrown out of the Church, “cut off” [St. Theophylact]49), assembling,
according to Theodoret of Kyros, “a tribunal full of fear; for he first
gathered everyone in the name of the Lord, and then presented himself
through the Grace of the Spirit, showing the Master Himself to be
the presider”;50 “in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, when ye are
gathered together, and my spirit, with the power of our Lord Jesus
Christ, to deliver such an one unto Satan....”51
• In this way, for example, the Seventh Holy OEcumenical Synod,
in its ÜOrow, decrees the following: “We order that those who dare to
think or teach differently, or, in accordance with the abominable
heretics, to overthrow the Traditions of the Church and devise some
innovation..., if they are Bishops or clergy, should be deposed, and if
monastics or laymen, should be excommunicated.”52
• It is obvious that if such individuals were reckoned to be automatically
cut off from the healthy Body and mortified, there would be
no need for deposition or excommunication, since the Church does
not judge those outside of Herself:53 “I have no concern with those
outside, says (St. Paul)”; “therefore, it is superfluous to apply the ordinances
of God to those outside Christ’s fold; for whatever the law
says, it says to those under the law,” as St. Theophylact says.54
• It is significant, furthermore, that the Second Holy OEcumenical
Synod makes the following clarification: “By heretics we mean [on
the one hand] those who have previously been excised from the
Church, and [on the other hand] those who have recently been anathematized
by us,”55 which certainly indicates that the excision of earlier
heretics and the anathematization of recent ones requires a synodal
verdict.
• Likewise, St. Nicodemos the Hagiorite makes the telling comment
that those liable to deposition or excommunication are “subject,
on earth, to deposition and excommunication or anathematization,
and, in the hereafter, to Divine retribution,” because “unless it is actually
put into effect by a Synod (‘of living [that is, presiding] Bishops’),
the imperative force of Canons [and of the ÜOrow of the Seventh
OEcumenical Synod] remains unexecuted and does not act of itself, either
immediately or before a decision.”56
• It should be noted that the Seventh Holy OEcumenical Synod,
after condemning the Iconoclasts, declared the following: “And we
cast the inventors of the innovating babble far away from the
precincts of the Church”;57 that is, their “rejection” was carried out
properly by the Holy Synod in the wake of a decisive judgment and,
indeed, after sixty entire years had elapsed since the manifestation of
the heresy.
• The same Holy Synod, referring, in its ÜOrow, to the Third Holy
OEcumenical Synod, affirms that “the Synod in Ephesus” “expelled
the impious Nestorios and his followers from the Church,”58 which
clearly demonstrates that the exclusion of a heretic is not accomplished
automatically, but constitutes an act of “expulsion” (a driving
out, a forcible casting out), requiring a competent body, that is, a Synod.
• Indeed, in this ÜOrow of the Seventh Holy OEcumenical Synod
there is a similar reference to the Fourth OEcumenical Synod, and in
this way the uniformity of the Synodal tradition is borne out: the
Synod in Chalcedon proclaimed the two perfect natures of the Savior,
“driving out of the divine fold” the “blasphemers Eutyches and Dioscoros.”
59
• Finally, the holy Patriarch Nicephoros of Constantinople, writing
to Pope Leo III of Rome, informs him that “we [the Fathers of the
Seventh OEcumenical Synod] have cast out of the Church” the Iconoclast
Bishops “who occupied their Episcopal thrones in defiance of
God,”60 which underscores very sharply, on the one hand, the ecclesiological
content of the act of “casting out” by a competent Synod,
and, on the other hand, the fact that, until the institutional “casting
out” and “expulsion” from the Church of the Hierarchs who taught
false doctrine, such Hierarchs were regarded as “occupying Episcopal
thrones.”
• Needless to say, we recall the very severe admonition of our
Savior, according to which if the ailing member of the Christian community
should “neglect to hear the Church, let him be unto thee as an
heathen man and a publican”:61 that is, not automatically or at the
same time as the transgression is committed, but after a specific procedure
has been followed; transgression is denounced by “the
Church,” that is, “the Leaders of the Church.”62 She looks into each
case judicially through a competent body, in line with the authority
given to Her;63 in the event that someone persists unrepentant, then—
according to Zigabenos—“let him be deprived of communion with
you, as one incurable.”64
• In particular, we note that the Lord, through the provision of
such authority (“ye shall bind” and “ye shall loose” are in the plural
[see note 63]) to the Holy Apostles and their successors, the Hierarchs,
assembling in a synodal tribunal, on the one hand excluded once
and for all partial, arbitrary opinions and individual verdicts of guilt
in the Church, exhorting the healthy member only to “tell it unto the
Church” [see note 61], and on the other hand confirmed the full, exclusive,
and sovereign spiritual jurisdiction of the synodal body, saying,
in essence, the following, according to Zigabenos: “Whatever
you decide on earth, God will validate it in Heaven, whether you cut
those who are incurable off from the Church or later receive back
those who repent.”65
d. Additionally, if the “diseased” but not “excised” part of the
Church is out of communion with the “healthy part” (the distinction
between “diseased” and “healthy” is made by St. Basil the Great and
St. Theodore the Studite66), which should certainly be “walled off”
from the former, this does not at all entail that the “diseased” part has
already fallen away from the Body, because in that case it would not
be characterized as “diseased,” but as “mortified”; mortification, however,
will come about through a “synodal decision,”67 that is, a “final
decision.”68
• Moreover, the need for a decisive judgment and “excision” of
unfruitful branches (St. Cyril of Alexandria writes: “awaiting the suitable
time for excisions”69) is suggested very clearly by the relevant
Parable: the Father, as “husbandman,” at a definite moment and after
a due process of inquiry, “taketh away every branch that beareth not
fruit” and “casteth it out.”70
• The holy hymnographer of the First Holy OEcumenical Synod
defines very clearly the meaning of “disease”—and indeed of the “incurable”
disease—in the image of the act of “expelling” heretics from
the Body: “The divine shepherds” “cast out” “the prowling and destructive
wolves,” “driving far off with the sling of the Spirit those
who had incurred a fall that leadeth unto death and were afflicted with
an illness that could not be cured.”71
• It should be noted that the natural ramification of the ecclesiological
distinction between “healthy” and “diseased” members is that
it introduces, without forcing the issue, the notion of schismatics and
heretics of a “potential” and “actual” (i.e., “under judgment” or “already
judged”), and constitutes the best interpretation of the self-understanding
of the Seventh Holy OEcumenical Synod, which, on the
one hand, made it clear that the Church was at that time “at variance,”
“in division,” “in discord,” and “at odds,”71a while the Synod had convened
“for the union and harmony of the Church,”72 “for the union of
the Holy Catholic Church of God,”73 “that what was sundered might
be united,”74 and was praying that the peace of God “might unite what
was separated and heal the chronic wound,”75 and on the other hand,
glorified “God Who had united what had been estranged.”76
• If the Seventh Holy OEcumenical Synod had believed in the automatic
exclusion of heretics, it would never have stated, through St.
Tarasios, that it regarded the Church of Christ as “divided, split, and
broken, Her members moving this way and that,”77 but, on the contrary
it would have thanked God for the repentance and return of the
heretics and their re-enrollment in the never-divided Body of Christ.
• Indeed, in delving still more deeply into this burning question
and interpreting the ecclesiological position of the Seventh Holy
OEcumenical Synod, we observe that this Synod, having condemned
every heresiarch who had already “perished in this [heresy of Iconoclasm],”
78 and especially those who “successively” presided over “the
throne of Constantinople” [see note 78], as well as other Bishops who
were ringleaders in the heresy, as “having perished irretrievably,”79
did so in the awareness that they belonged to the portion “of the earlier
heretics in the Catholic Church” [see note 79], according to St.
Tarasios, when, that is, they were still institutionally united with the
Body (they presided over thrones and were heretics in the Church); if
they had really been cut off and excluded automatically, why would
they have undergone such judgment and condemnation, when they
had no life in them?
• Finally, when the Holy OEcumenical Synods summoned Nestorios
of Constantinople (the Third Synod in Ephesus80) and Dioscoros
of Alexandria (the Fourth Synod in Chalcedon81) three times to appear
for judgment, they acknowledge that the heresiarchs in question still
occupied their Sees, up to that time, from which they spoke and acted
in the name of, and on behalf of, the Orthodox Church.
C. ConclusionsIn conclusion, let us summarize the foregoing as follows:
a. One who is heretically-minded, but is not “completely broken
off,” is still a member of the Body, though an ailing one.
b. When we break communion with this ailing member, we have
the following goals in view:
• that we should not become sick ourselves (lest his illness be
transmitted to us);
• that we should make the other members of the Body aware that
they ought to do likewise—that is, that they should break communion,
so as not to become diseased or polluted themselves;
• that we should aid in the repentance and cure of the ailing member,
so as to avoid the worsening of his illness and his final excision
from the Body;
• that we should contribute, finally, to the convocation of a competent
synodal body, which would take the following measures to prevent
the disease from spreading to the entire Body (“as one hastens to
check a plague before it spreads to the entire Body of the Church” [St.
Theophylact]82—lest the healthy members, who stand firm in their
good confession, be ruined by the soul-destroying disease” [St.
Nicephoros of Constantinople]83): excision of the member—if he does
not repent; the proclamation of “sound doctrine”84—the remedy for
the disease; and the exhortation of the Orthodox to live, as St. Ignatios
of Antioch says, “only on Christian fare, and to refrain from
strange food, which is heresy.”85
THESIS II
“It has also been asserted that the Fifteenth Canon of the First-
Second Holy Synod in Constantinople, under St. Photios the Great
(861), in characterizing the Bishops who preached heresies that had
previously been condemned as ‘pseudo-bishops’ and ‘pseudo-teachers,’
opened up a new era in a certain way, giving us the right to consider
such Bishops, henceforth, as automatically deposed, ‘prior to a
synodal decision,’ and no longer as being Bishops.”
RESPONSE
A
This interpretation is totally arbitrary and subjective, since the
Holy Synod of 861, in passing the Fifteenth Canon, did not introduce
anything new or unknown in the life of the Church, let alone in order
to destroy age-old canonical order.
B
The Fifteenth Canon is included organically in the correct interpretation
of the Thirty-first Canon of the Holy Apostles, which the
First-Second Synod undertook by way of four ad hoc Canons
(Twelve, Thirteen, Fourteen, and Fifteen), with a view towards uniting
the Orthodox after the cessation of the Iconoclastic controversy.
C
The incorrect interpretation of the Thirty-first Apostolic Canon
during that period had given rise to misunderstandings and to schisms
and unlawful congregations that were unjustified, since the ecclesiastical
authority was not openly and publicly preaching a known heresy,
the only case in which “walling off” can be justified “prior to a synodal
decision.”
D
That is to say, “walling off” from a heretical Shepherd “for reasons
of doctrine”86 is regarded as an obvious and familiar course of
action that has always been pursued and does not carry with it any
penalties, but which, on the contrary, invites honors and commendations.
• Moreover, an almost identical idea had been formulated over
two hundred years before by St. Sophronios of Jerusalem (†637), a
fellow-struggler of St. Maximos the Confessor against Monotheletism:
“If any should separate themselves from someone, not on the pretext
of an offense, but on account of a heresy that has been condemned by
a Synod or by the Holy Fathers, they are worthy of honor and approbation,
for they are the Orthodox.”87
E
The characterization of a Shepherd as a “pseudo-bishop” “prior to a
synodal decision” is heuristic or diagnostic in nature (the doctor ascertains
the disease) and not final and juridical or condemnatory (the
doctor diagnoses the incurability of the ailing member and reaches a
firm decision to amputate it).We will recall that before the Third Holy OEcumenical Synod,
St. Cyril called the heresiarch Nestorios “the Most Reverend Bishop
Nestorios,” and at the same time characterized him diagnostically as
a “wolf.”88For precisely this reason, the Third Holy OEcumenical Synod
can call Nestorios “Most Reverend” and “Lord”89 before his synodal
condemnation, but after his sentencing can characterize him as “most
impious.”90
F
If the First-Second Holy Synod had, by its Fifteenth Canon, decreed
the automatic exclusion and deposition of one who teaches
heresy, then this local Synod would have been claiming a supra-OEcumenical
authority, since it would have decided on something completely
at odds with the holy Tradition of the Church up until 861;
likewise, it would have come into direct conflict with the Seventh
Holy Oecumenical Synod (which had gathered almost seventy-four
years previously), which, in its ÜOrow, designated deposition and excommunication
as punishments for heretics and innovators; these are
imposed, in any case, by each successive Synod of “living,” that is,
“presiding Bishops,” according to St. Nicodemos the Hagiorite.91Source: Orthodox Tradition, Vol. XVIII, No. 2 (2001), pp. 2-15.
NotesPatrologia Græca, Vol. XCIX, col. 1089A.
Patrologia Græca, Vol. XCIX, col. 1076C.
Patrologia Græca, Vol. XCIX, col. 1072B; col. 1041C.
I St. John 1:7, 3.
II Corinthians 13:13.
Colossians 1:18; Ephesians 1:22, 4:15.
Ephesians 2:20; I St. Peter 2:6-7.
I Corinthians 3:11.
Cf. Ephesians 4:16.
Patrologia Græca, Vol. LXII, col. 44.
Patrologia Latina, Vol. XXXVIII, col. 1231.
Patrologia Græca, Vol. L, col. 454.
Patrologia Græca, Vol. XXIX, col. 664C.
Patrologia Græca, Vol. XXXII, col. 693A.
Galatians 6:16.
Patrologia Græca, Vol. XXXII, col. 192AB.
Patrologia Græca, Vol. LV, col. 199.
I St. Peter 2:9-10.
Isaiah 2:2-3; Micah 4:1-2.
St. Luke 19:11-27 (St. Matthew 13:24ff, 31ff, 47ff; St. Luke
18:29ff).St. Matthew 26:31; St. John 10:1-16.
St. Matthew 16:18; I Corinthians 3:9; Ephesians 2:21.
St. Matthew 21:33-41.
St. John 15:1-6.
I Corinthians 3:16; II Corinthians 6:16; Ephesians 2:21.
Revelation 21:2; Hebrews 12:22.
St. Matthew 21:33.
Acts 15:16; Hebrews 8:2, 9:11.
I Corinthians 3:9.
I St. Peter 3:20-21.
I St. Timothy 3:15; Hebrews 3:6.
I Corinthians 12:27; Ephesians 1:23; Colossians 1:18.
Suggrãmmata [Writings], ed. P.K. Chrestou (Thessaloniki: 1962),
Vol. I, p. 149.I Corinthians 12:12ff.
Patrologia Græca, Vol. CL, col. 1293BC.
St. John 3:18.
St. Theophylact, Patrologia Græca, Vol. CXXIII, col. 1213C.
Zigabenos, Patrologia Græca, Vol. CXXIX, col. 1173A.
St. Matthew 13:24-30, 47-50.
Fifteenth Canon of the First-Second Synod.
St. Matthew 13:30, 49.
Patrologia Græca, Vol. XXXII, col. 665A. [On first reading, it may
seem strange that the author should discuss the subject of heresy under the
heading of schism. After all, St. Basil the Great makes a very important distinction,
in his First Canon, between heretics, who are “alienated in matters
concerning the Faith itself,” and schismatics, who have “separated for certain
ecclesiastical reasons and questions capable of mutual solution.” However,
the main point at issue in this section of the article is not this canonical distinction,
but rather, the manner in which one may end up being decisively excluded
from the Body of the Church. Heresy and schism constitute two different
ways of being separated from the Church. Prior to the Second OEcumenical
Synod of 381, the Anomoeans (or Eunomians) comprised the extreme
faction of Neo-Arians, who actually cut themselves off from the
Church, through schism, by forming their own ecclesiastical community,
whereas the more moderate Arians, namely the Homoeans and the Homoeousians
(or Semi-Arians), still considered themselves to belong to the Body of
the Church and were, therefore, potential rather than actual heretics—Trans.]Patrologia Græca, Vol. XXXII, col. 668B.
Patrologia Græca, Vol. XXXII, col. 669A.
Patrologia Græca, Vol. XXXII, col. 976CD.
Patrologia Græca, Vol. CXXXVIII, col. 585D.
Patrologia Græca, Vol. CXXXVIII, col. 584B.
Phdãlion [The Rudder], p. 589, n.
I Corinthians 5:2; Patrologia Græca, Vol. CXXIV, col. 621C.
Patrologia Græca, Vol. LXXXII, col. 261CD.
I Corinthians 5:4-5.
Mansi, Vol. XIII, col. 380B; Praktikã, Vol. II, p. 874b (Seventh
Session).Cf. I Corinthians 5:12-13.
Patrologia Græca, Vol. CXXIV, col. 628AB.
Second Holy OEcumenical Synod, Sixth Canon.
Phdãlion, pp. 4-5, n. 2 and xxxix, n. 3, § 10.
Mansi, Vol. XIII, col. 404C; Praktikã, Vol. II, p. 880a (Seventh
Session).Mansi, Vol. XIII, col. 377A; Praktikã, Vol. II, p. 873b.
Ibid.
Patrologia Græca, Vol. C, col. 193C; Praktikã, Vol. II, p. 914a.
St. Matthew 18:17.
Zigabenos, Patrologia Græca, Vol. CXXIX, col. 505C.
St. Matthew 18:18.
Patrologia Græca, Vol. CXXIX, col. 505B.
Patrologia Græca, Vol. CXXIX, col. 505D.
Patrologia Græca, Vol. XXXII, cols. 425B, 428A, 432C, 460B,
476C, 481A, 481C, 526C, 753C, 901BC, 908B, 937CD-940A; Vol. XCIX,
col. 1288A.Fifteenth Canon of the First-Second Synod.
Balsamon, Patrologia Græca, Vol. CXXXVII, col. 1068D.
Patrologia Græca, Vol. LXXVII, cols. 124D-125A.
St. John 15:1-11.
Penthkostãrion, Sunday of the Holy 318 Fathers, third Sticheron at
the Praises.
71a. Mansi, Vol. XII, col. 1003D; Praktikã, Vol. II, p. 728b. Mansi,
Vol. XII, col. 1130B; Praktikã, Vol. II, p. 762a/ Mansi, Vol. XII, col.
1154C; Praktikã, Vol. II, p. 768b.Mansi, Vol. XII, col. 1118E; Praktikã, Vol. II, p. 758b.
Mansi, Vol. XII, col. 1126B; Praktikã, Vol. II, p. 760b.
Mansi, Vol. XII, col. 1126D; Praktikã, Vol. II, p. 761a.
Mansi, Vol. XII, col. 1127A; Praktikã, Vol. II, p. 761a.
Mansi, Vol. XII, col. 1011C; Praktikã, Vol. II, p. 730b. Mansi, Vol.
XII, col. 987B; Praktikã, Vol. II, p. 724. Mansi, Vol. XII, col. 1006D;
Praktikã, Vol. II, p. 728b.Patrologia Græca, Vol. XCVIII, col. 1440BC; Praktikã, Vol. II, p.
895b.Mansi, Vol. XIII, col. 400AB; Praktikã,Vol. II, p. 878b-879a.
Patrologia Græca, Vol. XCVIII, col. 1440BC; Praktikã,Vol. II, p.
895b.Mansi, Vol. IV, cols. 1129, 1212; Praktikã, Vol. I, pp. 469b-471ab,
490a.Mansi, Vol. VI, cols. 1045-1093; Praktikã, Vol. I, pp. 115-130.
Patrologia Græca, Vol. CXXIV, col. 621C.
Patrologia Græca, Vol. C, col. 612A.
St. Titus 2:1.
Patrologia Græca, Vol. V, col. 680A.
Mansi, Vol. XII, col. 1042C; Praktikã,Vol. II, p. 739a (First Session).
Patrologia Græca, Vol. LXXXVII.3, cols. 3369D-3372A.
Patrologia Græca, Vol. LXXVII, cols. 124B and 125B.
Mansi, Vol. IV, cols. 1180, 1181; Praktikã, Vol. I, p. 482ab.
Mansi, Vol. IV, col. 1212; Praktikã, Vol. I, p. 490a.
Phdãlion, p. xxxix, n. 3, §10.