Mark Templet wrote:Dear Cyprian,
I have two points I would like to make:
1) I don't believe that you are sticking with my initial proposal for this thread.
Greetings Fr. Mark,
Your very first proposal in this thread asked for calm and rational discussion on what it would take to begin seeing official unity. I believe my post was both calm and rational, and I specified four doctrinal issues that I personally feel have not been addressed fully (if at all) by some or all of these various jurisdictions. I do not consider these issues to be mere "nuances," but rather serious matters of the Faith.
I disagree with your main premise, which is that there are no serious dogmatic differences between any of these three groups, but only "nuances". I believe this is wishful thinking, not based in reality. Talk of accentuating the positives, while ignoring or setting aside differences, is what we have grown accustomed to hearing from the ecumenists. There are no compromises when it comes to matters of the Faith.
I believe that you are attempting to bring personal issues into a discussion that I intended to be the exact opposite.
Such as? Please be specific. The issues I have broached are all matters of the Faith, and not mere "personal issues".
Rather that imply defects of Vladyka Andrei (which you seem ironically interested in doing, versus your disgust of those who are critical of St. Augustine of Hippo), I wanted this to be a discussion on progress rather than a rehash of the past.
I am not interested in exploring any personal "defects" of your Vladyka, but rather am only interested to learn his opinions with regards to matters of the Faith. If you're confident that your bishop has maintained a pure confession of the Faith, then my questions shouldn't disturb you in the least. The circumstances surrounding Fr. Michael's departure from the Matthewites and his submission to monastic obedience under Gregory of Colorado gives genuine cause for concern, and raises serious questions.
2) You seem to be bit like a prosecutor in a courtroom who is asking Vladyka Andrei to prove his innocence,
Let's examine the facts, shall we? By all means, correct me if I am in error as to the precise nature of the circumstances. As I understand it, the then Fr. Michael (now Bp. Andrei) had been with Fr. Anthony Gavalas in Astoria for years, and both were received by the Matthewite synod of Abp. Andreas in 1997. Approximately six years later, Fr. Michael leaves the synod of Abp. Andreas, and is accepted into the ROAC by Bp. Gregory of Dormition Skete. I believe Bp. Gregory subsequently tonsured Fr. Michael with the name Andrei. Now, this prompts an interesting question. The unmitigated hatred and revulsion Gregory of Colorado displays toward all Matthewites, extending back to the holy personage of Abp. Matthew himself, is well-known and no secret to anyone. Gregory has published all kinds of slander and calumny on his websites, which remains to this day.
This set of circumstances prompts a number of obvious questions.
...while you use coy words like "nebulous circumstances," if they are so nebulous then why does your tone sound as if you want a potential reader to believe that nebulous is equivalent to nefarious?
How else should one describe it? Let's examine the facts. The Matthewites are not and were not in communion with the ROAC at the time of Fr. Michael's departure. Furthermore, why would the Matthewite synod of Abp. Andreas grant Fr. Michael a canonical transfer to someone like Gregory of Buena Vista who publicly reviles and slanders their synod? It makes absolutely no sense. Since, to my knowledge, no canonical release has ever been mentioned or presented publicly, I think it is safe to speculate that Fr. Michael was likely not given any kind of canonical transfer when he left the Matthewites. On the other hand, I am not aware of there being any kind of canonical trial to depose or expel him from the synod, either. Since the official ROAC website totally glosses over this portion of Bp. Andrei's bio, what is one left to conclude, but that his departure from the Matthewites was under "nebulous circumstances"? How would you characterize it differently?
This only serves to beg the question: why would Fr. Michael join himself in monastic obedience to one who openly reviles his former synod, with whom he sojourned for around six years? What does that reveal about his opinion of the synod of which he was formerly a member? Obviously one would be left to conclude that Fr. Michael did not leave the Matthewites under the best of circumstances, or he wouldn't have gone straight to that vagante scoundrel Gregory of Dormition Skete. Since Gregory of Colorado is a blasphemer who engages in every kind of slander, and scandalizes many with his zeal not according to knowledge, what does this say about Fr. Michael, who went and joined himself in obedience to Dormition Skete?
Naturally the question arises, in what way does (the now) Bp. Andrei agree with the opinions of Gregory of Colorado, the one who tonsured him, or not? Gregory of Colorado learned to slander and calumniate the saints, especially St. Augustine, from the Panteleimonites with whom he sojourned with at the Boston monastery. He also learned to reject certain icons of the Holy Trinity as heretical from this same monastery. Also, there was a time during which Gregory sojourned with the Panteleimonites in Brookline, when they held heretical opinions relating to the so-called theory of Evolution. The HOCNA monastery in Boston has been shamed into recanting these opinions in recent years.
But I digress, let me reverse the challenge on you: if you really want to know his personal history, then ask him yourself, his phone number is....... He is out of the country at the moment, but in a few weeks you can get the answer you feel so entitled to.
There is nothing personal about a bishop's confession of the Faith. I don't consider it a personal question to inquire of your bishop whether or not he left the Matthewites over matters of the Faith or not. If his grace left the Matthewite synod of Abp. Andreas because he deems them to be heretical or schismatic in some way or fashion, I would like to know the reason why. If (the then) Fr. Michael did not leave over matters of the Faith, then I would be interested in hearing his canonical justification for leaving.
In Christ our only Hope,
Cyprian