THE PATH OF THE RUSSIAN ORTHODOX CHURCH ABROAD

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pjhatala
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THE PATH OF THE RUSSIAN ORTHODOX CHURCH ABROAD

Post by pjhatala »

Mitred Archpriest Roman Lukianov, Parish Rector,

HOLY EPIPHANY RUSSIAN ORTHODOX CHURCH IN BOSTON

THE PATH OF THE RUSSIAN ORTHODOX CHURCH ABROAD
Observations and Thoughts of an Old Priest.

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        In connection with the recent turmoil within the Russian Orthodox Church Abroad, I think it would be beneficial to share certain observations and reflections. Recently there has been much talk about the path followed by the ROCA.  Now it has become obvious that the -�straight-+ path which some people refer to, has led in the end to a schism within the ROCA.  This schism has been ripening over many years.  In order to understand what is going on, one should look first of all at the Guideposts that actually have determined the course of the ROCA throughout its history.

The First Guidepost was Ukaz (Decree) No. 362 of Patriarch Tikhon, dated Nov. 20, 1920, paragraph 2: -�In the event that a diocese, as a result of movement of the front lines, or changes of state borders, finds itself out of communication with the highest church authority, or that the highest church authority itself, headed by the Holy Patriarch, for some reason terminates its activity, the diocesan bishop should immediately contact the bishops of the adjacent dioceses in order to organize a higher level of church administration for several dioceses which find themselves in similar circumstances (in the form of a temporary church government or a metropolitan district, or in some other way)-+.

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        This Ukaz was formulated at the time of the Civil War in Russia, whose consequence was the departure abroad of a sizeable lay flock (estimated at over a million), and of a substantial number of clergy and bishops.

The Second Guidepost on the path of the ROCA were the early Sobors (Councils) of Bishops Abroad, presided over by Metropolitan Anthony (Khrapovitsky): the First Sobor in Constantinople in 1920, in which 34 bishops participated in person or in writing; the First Sobor of representatives of the entire ROCA, held in the town of Sremskii Karlovtsi in Serbia in 1921; and the Sobor of Bishops Abroad on September 13, 1922, which estabilished a Temporary Synod of Bishops, based on the above-quoted Ukaz No. 362 of Patriarch Tikhon. At those Sobors, which led to the formal establishment of the Russian Orthodox Church Abroad, were represented parishes in Europe, the Balkans, the Near and Far East, North and South America, including the soon-to-be-separated Metropolitan Districts: one known as the Paris Metropolia, presently under the Patriarch of Constantinople, and the other known today as the Orthodox Church in America in the USA.

The Third Guidepost was the Resolution of the Sobor of Bishops of the ROCA, in September of 1927, which rejected the Declaration of Metropolitan Sergius and defined the following rule: -�The part of the All-Russian Church located abroad must cease all administrative relations with the church administra-tion in MoscowGǪuntil restoration of normal relations with Russia and until the liberation of our Church from persecutions by the godless Soviet authoritiesGǪThe part of the Russian Church that finds itself abroad considers itself an inseparable, spiritually united branch of the Great Russian Church. It does not separate itself from its Mother Church and does not consider itself autocephalous.-+ This Resolution makes it clear that the emigre Hierarchs, while rejecting what later became known as -�Sergianism-+, did not separate the part of the church that was abroad from that in the homeland, thus showing compassion to those who did not withstand the terror. At about that time evolved the concept of the three parts of the Russian Church: the -�Church enslaved-+, that is, the Moscow Patriarchate; the -�Catacomb Church-+, i.e, the secret, persecuted, underground Church of confessors within the borders of the Soviet Union; and the -�Russian Orthodox Church Abroad-+, which was the free voice of the whole Russian Church.

The Fourth Guidepost was the adoption of the Temporary Polozheniye (Fundamental Law) of the ROCA by the General Sobor of Bishops on September 22-24, 1936. Its first paragraph states: -�The Russian Orthodox Church Abroad, which consists of dioceses, spiritual missions, and parishes outside Russia, is an inseparable part of the Russian Orthodox Church, which exists temporarily under autonomous administration-+. This Sobor, in effect, established an orderly administrative leadership of the ROCA for the entire period of its independent existence.

The Fifth Guidepost is defined by the Reply of the Blessed Metropolitan Anastassy in 1945, and of the Bishops' Sobor in Munich in 1946, in response to the address of the Patriarch of Moscow Aleksey I, who called for reunification after the Second World War. During this terrible period of manhunts by Soviet agents for displaced persons and non-returnees all across Western Europe, Metropolitan Anastassy, reasserting the necessity for the continued existence of independent ROCA, writes: -�The bishops, the clergy and the laymen, subordinate to the jurisdiction of the Synod of Bishops Abroad, never broke canonical, prayer, or spiritual unity with their Mother Church.-+ The Sobor of Bishops in its message, writes to the Patriarch of Moscow: -�We trust thatGǪon the bones of martyrs a new free Russia will arise, strong in Orthodox truth and brotherly loveGǪthen all of her scattered sons, without any pressure or force, but freely and joyfully, will strive to return from all over into her maternal embrace. Recognizing our unbroken spiritual bonds with our homeland, we sincerely pray to the Lord that he may speedily heal the wounds inflicted upon our homeland by this heavy, although victorious, war, and bless it with peace and well-being.-+ This message was signed by Metropolitan Anastassy, three archbishops, and ten bishops.

The Sixth Guidepost, and probably the most important one in our days, is the Corporate Charter in the USA of our Church Abroad, which was signed by its most prominent Hierarchs, Metropolitan Anastassy, Archbishop Vitaly (Maximenko), Archbishop Tikhon, Archbishop Hieronim, Bishop Seraphim, and Bishop Nikon, and registered in the State of New York on April 30th, 1952. It states:

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        -�II. The principal aim and purpose of the corporation shall be to provide for the administration of dioceses, missions, monasteries, churches and parishes of the Russian Orthodox Church, which are located in the United States of America, the Dominion of Canada and other countries which are outside of the Soviet Union and the satellites of the Soviet Union, but including dioceses, missions, monasteries and churches which recognise the corporation as the supreme ecclesiastical authority over them.

        -�III. The corporation in its corporate functions and operation, and all of its trustees and officers, shall maintain no relations whatever with the Russian ecclesiastical authorities and organizations within the boundaries of the Soviet Union and the satellites of the Soviet Union, so long as the said countries, or any of them, shall be subject to Communist rule.-+

        Further on, the next paragraph of the Charter refers to Ukaz #362 of Patriarch Tikhon of November 20, 1920, and its acceptance by the Sobor of Bishops on November 24, 1936. This

demonstrates that Metropolitan Anastassy and all Bishops, signatories of the Charter, just as, in their time, Metropolitan Anthony and the founding Bishops of the Russian Church Abroad, accepted the fact that the validity of the Ukaz of Patriarch Tikhon, which, in effect, is his Patriarchal Blessing, is limited in time. In turn, they also Blessed the time-limited independent existence of the Russian Church Abroad until the fall of the Communist regime.

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        The Seventh Guidepost is again the Polozheniye (Fundamental Law) of the Russian Church Abroad, revised and approved by the Sobor of Bishops, presided over by Metropolitan Anastassy, in 1956.  Its paragraph #1 states: -�The Russian Orthodox Church Abroad is an inseparable part of the Local (Pomestnoy) Orthodox Church, temporarily self-governing until the fall in Russia of the godless authorities, in compliance with the Decision of Holy Patriarch Tikhon and the Highest Church Council of the Church in Russia of 7 /20 November 1920, #362.-+  The same Paragraph is repeated word for word in the Polozheniye, reviewed and re-approved in 1964.

In 1956 the Reply of Metropolitan Anastassy was reprinted by Holy Trinity Monastery. The same themes were voiced by Archbishop Vitaly (Maximenko) of blessed memory, in his work -�Motifs of My Life-+. Archbishop Andrew (Fr.Adrian) used to refer to the Church Abroad as a temporarily self-governing Diocese of the Russian Church. Holy Archbishop John of Shanghai and San Francisco wrote: -�The Russian Church Abroad does not separate itself spiritually from the suffering Mother Church. She offers up prayers for her, preserves her spiritual and material wealth, and in due time will reunite with her, when the reasons which have caused the separation will have vanished.-+ Similar statements were made by many other archpastors, priests and writers in the church press. It is from them that our generation, which came into the Church after the end of the Second World War in 1945, has acquired the understanding of the temporary existence of the independent Russian Church Abroad until the liberation of Russia from the Communist yoke. The calls of Metropolitans Anastassy and Philaret of blessed memory to abstain even from conventional contacts with the representatives of the Moscow Patriarchate had to do with the period of the 1960s and 1970s, when the Soviet government began to use the Church for its own ends througout the Western world. And Metropolitan Vitaly was completely correct when he said that we cannot declare that the Church in Russia is without Grace, but certain specific deeds of its clergy, performed on orders of the godless authorities in order to harm the Church, are, of course, graceless.

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        In 1991 the Communist regime fell and the totalitarian Soviet state ceased to exist.  The leftovers of the Soviet mentality and even of the State government still remain, but the country and the Church consider themselves free and feel free, and there is no more party ideology to interfere with Church communications.  Therefore, with the fall of the Soviet government and cessation of terror in 1991, there also ended the time span, blessed by Holy Patriarch Tikhon and the founding Archpastors of the Russian Orthodox Church Abroad for the existence of ROCA as a separate entity.

        The Path marked by the abovementioned Guideposts began to be subtly changed with the secret (and canonically questionable) consecration of Bishop Varnava (Barnabas) in about 1984.  A new ideology began to be evident, subtly but deeply russophobic.  Under the guise of restoring the archpastorship of the Catacomb Church, new church bodies began to be created within Russia, subordinate to the Church Abroad.  The old Catacomb Church, which was highly respected as the Church of true confessors, was soon forgotten.  The new ideology promoted the idea that the Russian Church Abroad is the only true Church, and the bearer of the restoration of the Church in Russia.  This led to estrangement and unnecessary confrontations between the Russian Church Abroad and the Mother Church, and then to a strange set of attitudes and actions on the part of some ROCA bishops, first in Russia, and more recently abroad.  Now that these bishops and their followers have expelled themselves from the Church Abroad and created their own church organizations, the Church Abroad has regained freedom of opinion and an opportunity to return to the path blessed by Holy Patriarch Tikhon and the Founding First Hierarchs and Archpastors of blessed memory.

        The new obstacles to normal relations that have been brought forward within our Church Abroad, such as the absence of repentance, failure to glorify the Royal New Martyrs, Sergianism, and participation in the ecumenical movement, have today ceased to be insurmountable.  Back in 1993 His Holiness, Patriarch of Moscow and All Russia, Alexey II and the Holy Synod of the Russian Orthodox Church proclaimed, before God and the Russian people, repentance for the sin of regicide.  Their Epistle on the 75th anniversary of the murder of Emperor Nicholas II and his family states:  -�With augmented prayer and great pain in our hearts we commemorate this sad AnniversaryGǪ The sin of regicide, which took place amid the indifference of the citizens of Russia, has not been repented of by our people. Being a transgression of both the law of God and civil law, this sin weighs extremely heavily upon the souls of our people, upon its moral conscience.  And today, on behalf of the whole Church, on behalf of her children, both reposed and living, we proclaim repentance before God and the people for this sin. Forgive us, O Lord!  We call to repentance all of our people, all of our children, regardless of their political views and opinions about history, regardless of their attitude toward the idea of Monarchy and the personality of the last Russian Tsar.  Repentance of the sin committed by our forefathers should become for us a banner of unity.  May todayG��s sad date unite us in prayer with the Russian Orthodox Church Abroad, with whom we so sincerely desire restoration of spiritual unity in faithfulness to the Spirit of Christ... .-+   The call was, unfortunately, ignored.

        The Royal New Martyrs were glorified, and Sergianism and ecumenism rejected, by the Jubilee Sobor of Bishops of the Russian Orthodox Church in the year 2000.  Sergianism, being in fact not a doctrine but a mode of behavior, was rejected in the chapter -�Fundamental Conceptions of Society-+ in the published Acts of the Sobor, and ecumenism in the chapter -�Fundamental Principles of Relations of the Orthodox Church to the Heterodox.-+  In October of 2001, in his -�Brotherly Epistle to the Sobor of Bishops of the Russian Church Abroad,-+ His Holiness, Patriarch Alexey II again called for mutual forgiveness and restoration of liturgical communion.  The answer of the ROCA Sobor of Bishops was only mildly encouraging.

        Just as in the Church in Russia the veneration of the Royal New Martyrs was widely practiced by believers long before their official glorification, so it is that parishioners of the Church Abroad, when they visit Russia, pray, confess, and partake of Holy Communion in their beloved churches and monasteries of the Moscow Patriarchate, and have humbly done so for many years, without making an issue of it. And after visiting Russia, many of our clergy, including American converts to Orthodoxy, state in private conversations that those who say there is no Grace in the churches of the Moscow Patriarchate do not know what they are talking about.  As no one has wanted to provoke the ill winds of dissension within our ranks, it has been customary not to make such observations publicly.  However, now that the bearers of ill winds have expelled themselves from the Church, showing no respect for anyone including the Sobor of Bishops, the possibility has arisen again, and perhaps for the last time, of restoring God-pleasing spiritual unity and normal relations with the whole Mother Church.

        Sinful individuals and bad deeds have always existed, exist now, and will continue to exist both there, in Russia, and here in our midst. But a division which was lawful, must  not be allowed to evolve into sectarian schism, a phenomenon much discussed and feared by many of our priests and parishioners, both, Russians and Americans. If the Russian Church Abroad is allowed to become -�a broken-off vine-+, it will be doomed to a slow but inevitable drying out, an atrophy from which no collection of selected quotations from the Canons will save us. On the other hand, the restoration of Eucharistic and Canonical unity with the Mother Church, with an autonomous administration of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia, appears to be the natural next Guidepost in the current History of the Church of the Great Russian Exodus into Diaspora.

                                                                                Archpriest Roman Lukianov

December 11, 2001 Boston

New Martyr Metropolitan Seraphim

(Chichagov) of St. Petersburg.

Emphases are the authorG��s.

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SouthernOrthodox
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Post by SouthernOrthodox »

Wondering why no one responsed. Guess when "thems the facts" what can you say?

1937 Miraculous Cross
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Post by 1937 Miraculous Cross »

Dear "Southern Orthodox" --geez, don't people have real names?

You wrote:

Wondering why no one responsed. Guess when "thems the facts" what can you say?

Yes, Fr. Roman's sermon is quite compelling until you stop and realize the MP is a part of "world" Orthodoxy, ecumenism, and their KGB clergy have yet to repent.

Personally, I really am disinterested in the ROCOR/MP merger. Our tiny mission left ROCOR and are happily under the omophorion of Abp. Nicholaus of the GOC of Greece. If ROCOR wants to merge, that is fine in my opinion; however, what I cannot understand is for many years there was also an anti-ecumenistic stance within ROCOR, and now that seems to be all swept aside so ROCOR can cease being in schism with the "mother"Chruch -- a "mother" born from Stalin.

I just don't comprehend this, and can you help the rest of us understand?

in Christ,
Nectarios Manzanero

Nathaniel Kapner

The Royal Family glorified as "passion bearers not &quo

Post by Nathaniel Kapner »

"The Royal New Martyrs were glorified," wrote Fr Roman Lukianov.

Dear +ROCOR Fr Roman.

Of course you and I go a long way back and it was you and rescued
me out of the HTM/HOCNA trap.

I must disagree with your statement as it contains a half truth.
Fact is, is that the Holy New Martyrs of Russia were not canonized
as "martyrs" by the MP - but only as "passion bearers."

Thus it was made clear that they were being glorified, not for
the way in which they lived their lives, but for the meekness with
which they faced their deaths. This allowed the anti-monarchists
to feel that Nicholas was still the “bloody Nicholas” of Soviet
mythology, and that it was “Citizen Romanov” rather than “Tsar Nicholas”
who had been glorified - the ordinary layman stripped of
his anointing rather than the Anointed of God fulfilling the
fearsomely difficult and responsible role of “him who restrains”
the coming of the Antichrist.

What is noteworthy here is that he MP just keeps falling short
at every step along the way.

+ROAC Subdeacon Nathanael Kapner
Milton L Kapner
More on the ROCOR/MP Personalities at
http://www.livejournal.com/users/sbn_nathanael/

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Post by John Haluska »

Dear Peter and list,

Posted today, under the main ‘subject’ title, was an article by, Fr. Andrei Novikov, professor at the Odessa Theological Seminary.

In the article, Fr. Andrei states specifically concerning the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia:

“…Now, as concerns the canonical aspect:…”

If I may, please consider the following attached materiel referring to the 1971 SOBOR of Bishops of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia, and specifically the two resolutions and one decree, as adopted by the Hierarchs listed at the end of said materiel.

Fr. Andrei, as other Moscow hierarchs and clergymen have stated, with increasing regularity, that there was some type of non-canonicity regarding the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia.

The most recent ‘challenge’ came from Metropolitan Herman of the Orthodox Church in America a few months ago. He called the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia “…schismatics…”

It appears to me that one side, in the rapprochement negations, is possibly creating obfuscation with respect to the other.

The materiel presented is quite clear and precise. If it is not, then please point out the specific inaccuracies. Otherwise, it appears that Moscow is purposefully trying to belittle and otherwise, with a lot of “words” (their “style”) further obfuscate and cloud individual’s minds in general.

Simply put:

“Who is telling the truth?”

Also,

The question immediately following is not meant to be considered “pro” or “anti” anything.

It simply refers to two “resolutions” and a “decree” enacted by the Hierarchs mentioned at the end of the materiel presented.

It is being presented as a fact.

In “ordinary” secular life, “resolutions” enacted at a gathering of individuals be they corporate or private, indicate a “resolve” to either adopt what was “resolved” or to further a direction by means of a “resolution”.

The question posed has never been answered specifically referring to the materiel “attached”.

Question:

“If a “resolution” is enacted, is that “resolution” binding on the group which enacted the “resolution” and further groups in the same entity to which the “resolution” was enacted; and if a “resolution” is considered non-binding on the initiating and subsequent groups, should not said “resolution” be publicly rescinded and declared null and void?”

The following “resolutions” and “decree” are verbatim quotes from the "Jubilee Album", commemorating the 50th anniversary of the existence of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia.

(NOTE: Evidently, said SOBOR was actually held in New York, and not Montreal, as per a respected Clergyman, who was present at said SOBOR.

The fact still remains; the “resolutions” and “decree” are still in effect, irrespective of where the SOBOR was held.)

QUOTE:

THE OPENING IN MONTREAL, CANADA, OF THE SESSION OF THE SOBOR OF BISHOPS OF THE RUSSIAN ORTHODOX CHURCH OUTSIDE OF RUSSIA

(Canada, September 1971), as delivered by Metropolitan Philaret:

Most important on the agenda of the Sobor was the question of the attitude to be taken towards the election in Moscow of Patriarch Pimen...These matters were totally discussed at this session.

THE RESOLUTION OF THE COUNCIL OF BISHOPS OF THE RUSSIAN ORTHODOX CHURCH OUTSIDE OF RUSSIA, OF 1/14 SEPTEMBER 1971 ON THE CATACOMB CHURCH

The Council of Bishops of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia, the only free part of the Russian Church, looks with sorrow on the suffering to which the faithful are subjected within the boundaries of the Soviet Union.

To the open persecutions by the atheistic rulers, whose purpose is to destroy all religion, there are added temptations by false brethren.

In 1927, when the late Metropolitan of Nizhny Novgorod Sergius, who called himself Patriarch of Moscow, published his well-known declaration, the elder bishops of the Russian Church and among them those chosen by Patriarch Tikhon in his legacy for temporary leadership of the Russian Church, did not agree with him, seeing the peril for Orthodox souls in the new course along which he led the Church despite the orders of Metropolitan Peter of Krutitsa.

The names of Metropolitans Peter, Cyrill, Arsenius, Joseph, Archbishop Seraphim of Uglich and many other hierarchs, clerics and laymen will go down in the history of the Church on an equal par with the famous confessors of Orthodoxy in the face of persecutions, villainy and heresies.

The free part of the Russian Church, located outside the boundaries of the USSR, is heart and soul with the confessors of the faith, whom the antireligious guidebook call "True Orthodox Christians" and who in common usage are often called "the Catacomb Church", since they are obliged to hide themselves from the secular authorities in the same way the first centuries of Christianity.

The Council of Bishops acknowledges its spiritual unity with them and the Russian Church Outside of Russia always prays for all those who in conditions of persecution manage to keep the true faith and "do not bend under a foreign yoke with the unbelievers", recognizing that there is nothing in common between light and darkness and no agreement between Christ and Belial ((II Cor. 6, 14-15).

The free part of the Russian Church, besides praying, tries to help its brethren who suffer for the Faith in the Fatherland also by continually seeking to reveal to the world the true position of the Church in the Soviet Union, exposing the falsehood of her supposed well-being, which false pastors, traveling abroad, attempt to spread there, glorifying the persecutors and disparaging the persecuted. In the difficult circumstances which our brethren in the Soviet Union must experience, it is a consolation for us to look at the first centuries of Christianity, when the persecutors of Christ also attempted a physical humiliation of the Holy Church. But we remember the encouraging words of the Saviour, "Fear not, little flock" (Luke 12, 32). And we remember the Saviour's words of encouragement for those whom the Lord has judged to be on this earth in the last days of her existence: "then look up and lift your heads, for your redemption draweth nigh"; Luke 21, 28.

RESOLUTION OF THE RUSSIAN ORTHODOX CHURCH OUTSIDE OF RUSSIA CONCERNING THE ELECTION OF PIMEN (ISVEKOV) AS PATRIARCH OF MOSCOW

The Council of Bishops of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia on September 1/14, 1971 considered the gathering which, calling itself an All-Russian Church Council, met in Moscow from May 30 to June 2 of this year for the purpose of electing a Patriarch of Moscow and all Russias.

This gathering declared that Metropolitan Pimen was elected to the Patriarchal Throne.

After considering all aspects of this election, the Council of Bishops, representing the free part of the Russian Orthodox Church, came to the following conclusion:

  1. For the election of the Primate of a Local Church it is essential that such an election take place according to the laws of the given Church and that it be free, representing a genuine expression of her voice.

  2. In 1917 the All-Russian Council adopted a resolution restoring the Patriarchate in Russia, and elected to the Patriarchal See His Holiness Patriarch Tikhon.

This council included all canonically consecrated bishops of the Russian Church, representatives of the monastic clergy and the Orthodox Theological Academies, invited by the Synod on the basis of the Regulation it had issued.

All the representatives of the diocese were chosen freely at elections on three levels: parish elections, deanery elections and diocesan meetings.

The actual election of the Patriarch took place in a fashion that guaranteed freedom in the nominating of candidates for election. The latter were established by a secret ballot, and at first a large number of candidates were named.

From among them, by systematic balloting, the three who received the highest number of votes were picked, and of those one was finally elected by the drawing of lots.

This system of election, guaranteeing complete freedom and confirmed by the All-Russian Church Council, was never abolished by a free council of equal authority.

Therefore, and election of Patriarchs, effected otherwise and not in a free manner,does not express the voice of the Russian Orthodox Church and is not lawful.

Not only the election of the present Pimen, who claims to be Patriarch, but those of his two predecessors must also be regarded as unlawful.

Their supporters can not defend these elections by saying that the external conditions caused by persecutions against the Faith prevented the realization of a lawful form of election, since, despite the obvious, they constantly insist on the supposed full religion's freedom in the Soviet Union.

Similar decisions were made the now-elected Patriarch Pimen. At all three Patriarchal elections, no one attempted or had any possibility of nominating a candidate other than the one indicated beforehand by representatives of the secular authorities.

  1. The lawful succession of higher Church authority in the Russian Church has been broken since 1927, when the Acting Locum-Tenens of the Patriarchal Throne, Metropolitan Sergius of Nizhny-Novgorod, went against the order of the Metropolitan of Krutitsa whom he was replacing and signed an agreement with the atheistic authorities, to which neither Metropolitan Peter nor the other elder hierarchs agreed.

The Soviet government began to throw all the hierarchs who did not agree with Metropolitan Sergius in prison, thus clearing the path for him to become the head of the Russian Church.

He for his part, taking no account of the elder bishops, formed a Synod by his own personal choice and, while Metropolitan Peter of Krutitsa, to whom by position the Moscow diocese belonged, was still alive, he unlawfully gave himself the title of "His Beatitude the Metropolitan of Moscow" with the right to wear two Panaghias In 1943, by orders of the atheist and the malicious persecutor of the Church, Stalin, he hurriedly (in four days) pulled together, in fulfillment of the latter's political plans, a Council consisting of bishops specially chosen and freed from prison for the purpose by Stalin, a Council which, counting Metropolitan Sergius, consisted of only 19 bishops, and which elected him Patriarch.

In 1945, after the death of Patriarch Sergius, Metropolitan Alexis of Leningrad gathered a Council, to which representatives of the clergy and laity, picked without elections and prepared for the election of a Patriarch, and, submissively following the directions of the atheistic authorities, unanimously elected as Patriarch Alexis of Leningrad.

After his death, in the same illegal manner the so-called All-Russian Council was convoked this year for the election as Patriarch of Metropolitan Pimen, known not so much for his devoutness or theological education, but rather for his diligence in carrying out the orders of the atheistic government, which are directed toward the destruction of the Church and toward fulfilling the political plans of the Soviet Regime.

4 All the elections of Patriarchs in Moscow, beginning in 1943, are invalid on the basis of 30th Canon of the Holy Apostles and the 3rd Canon of the 7th Ecumenical Council, according to which, "if any bishop, having made use of secular rulers, should receive through them Episcopal authority in the Church, let him be defrocked and excommunicated along with those in communion with him".

The significance that the Fathers of the 7th Council gave to such an offense is obvious from the very fact of a double punishment for it, that is, not only a deposition but excommunication as well, something unusual for ecclesiastical law.

The famous commentator on Canon Law, Bishop Nicodemus of Dalmatia, gives the following explanation of the 30th Canon of the Holy Apostles:

"If the Church condemned unlawful influence by the secular authorities in the ordination of bishops at a time when the rulers were Christians, then it follows that She should condemn such actions all the more when the latter are pagans and place even heavier penalties on the guilty parties, who are not ashamed of asking for help from pagan rulers and the authorities subjugated to them, in order to gain the episcopate. This (30th) Canon has such cases in view". If in defense of this position examples are given of the Patriarchs of Constantinople who were placed on the Throne at the caprice of the Turkish Sultans, one can reply that no anomaly can be regarded as a norm and that one breach of Canon Law cannot justify another.”

Taking into consideration all the above-mentioned reasons, the Council of Bishops of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia, as the representative of the free part of the Russian Church, determines:

The election of Pimen (Izvekov) as Patriarch of Moscow and All Russias at the gathering calling itself an All-Russian Church Council in Moscow the 2nd of June of this year, on the authority of the 3rd Canon of the 7th Ecumenical Council and other reasons set forth in this decision, is to be regarded as unlawful and void, and all his acts and directions as having no strength.

THE RELATIONSHIP TO THE SO-CALLED METROPOLIA

As regards the relationship to the so-called Metropolia

IT WAS RESOLVED:

The Sobor of Bishops, having heard the report of the Synod of Bishops about the fact of the so called Metropolia has received autocephaly from the Moscow patriarchate, approves of all the steps taken by the Synod of Bishops to convince Metropolitan Ireney and his associates of the fallacy of their decision, which increases the rift provoked in 1946 by the Cleveland Sobor with the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia.

The American Metropolia has received its autocephaly from the Moscow Patriarchate, which does not have a true succession from His Holiness Patriarch Tikhon ever since the time when Metropolitan Sergius, later called the Patriarch, broke his obligations toward the Locum Tenens of the Patriarchal Throne, Metropolitan Peter, and embarked on a course which was immediately condemned by the eldest Exarchs of the Russian Church.

The Moscow Patriarchate, more and more subservient to the influence of the atheistic and anti-Christ government, ceased to be the voice of the Russian Orthodox Church.

Therefore, as correctly stated by the Synod of Bishops, none of its acts, including the granting of autocephaly to the North American Metropolia, have any legal effect.

Besides, independently of this, this act, which has affected the rights of other numerous Churches has resulted in protests by a number of Orthodox Churches which have severed relations with the American Metropolia.

Observing with sorrow this illegal act and acknowledging it to be without effect, the Synod of Bishops of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia, up to now not relinquishing the hope for the reunification of the American Church unity detects in the announcement of the American autocephaly a step leading the American Metropolia to even further rift away from unification of the Russian Church.

Seeing in it a mortal sin toward the subservient and suffering Russian Church,

the Synod of Bishops DECREES:

That hereafter, the clergy as well as the laity should not have spiritual or liturgical relation with the hierarchy and clergy of the American Metropolia.

Unless my "Russian" is incorrect, the following Hierarchs of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia were in attendance at this Sobor:

Metropolitan Philaret
Archbishop Nikon, Washington and Florida
Archbishop Seraphim, Chicago and Detroit
Archbishop Philothei, Berlin and Germany
Archbishop Vitaly, Montreal and Canada
Archbishop Anthony, Los Angeles and California
Archbishop Averky, Syracuse and New York
Archbishop Anthony, Geneva and Europe
Archbishop Anthony, San Fransisco
Archbishop Seraphim, Brazil, SanPaulo, Venezuela
Archbishop Theodosi, Sydney, Australia, New Zeland
Bishop Paul, Stuttgart and Germany
Bishop Laurus, Manhattan
Bishop Constantine, Brisbane

The following was appended by the original authors as listed below:

History shows that this "autocephaly" granted to the Metropolia produced one thing...the result was the emergence of a new autocephalous Church, the Orthodox Church in America. #1.

#1 – "A History of the Russian Church Abroad": 1917 - 1971).
Published by St. Nectarios Press, 9223-20th Avenue, N.E., Seattle,
Washington, 98115. ISBN 0-913026-04-2.

This History was prepared by Holy Transfiguration Monastery in Brookline, Massachusetts.

UNQUOTE

John Haluska

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