Thank you Maria for the confirming account from your W.O. days.
The Agreed statement quoted above claims that Traditionalist True Orthodox claims are entirely predicated on the "modern false logic" of the 19th Century called "Sacramental Economy", which they say is entirely foreign to the perennial teaching of the Orthodox Church which supposedly is to recognize the reality of genuine baptism among the Latins and, suggestively, even other heretics and schismatics who have maintained the apostolic forms and rites [presumably it is on this basis that the Roman Catholic Church recognizes and does not baptize anew Lutherans, Anglicans, and Presbyterians, for example, though they are grossly deficient in a number of dogmatic essentials such as belief in a Real Presence eucharist and recognition of ikons and the ever virginity of Mary.
Here then are two critiques of the assumed errors of "Sacramental Economy" noted in the heretical "Agreed Statement".
NOTE: only the first paragraph will be quoted to whet the appetite to visit the original source which for copy right reasons will not be posted here in full.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Ecumenist Charges against “Sacramental Economy” Critiqued
The influential theory of "sacramental economy" propounded in the Pedalion commentaries does not represent the tradition and perennial teaching of the Orthodox Church; it is rather an eighteenth-century innovation motivated by the particular historical circumstances operative in those times. It is not the teaching of scripture, of most of the Fathers, or of later Byzantine canonists, nor is it the majority position of the Orthodox churches today.
--III. Conclusions and Recommendations, A5
That our churches address openly the danger that some modern theories of "sacramental economy" pose, both for the continuation of ecumenical dialogue and for the perennial teaching of the Orthodox Church;
--III. Conclusions and Recommendations, C2
Note: Both of these critiques, while making helpful points worthy of reading, are nonetheless presented by men outside of the Church; men who entertain yet another, more subtle heresy, the heresy that one can be right-believing but in communion with heretics who are publicly and formally affirming heresies and yet these “anti-ecumenist World Orthodox” can be in communion with those heresies but it does not deprive them of grace, thus declaring, contrary to the teaching of the Holy Fathers and ecumenical councils, that heresy does not in itself drive out or deprive grace, or that there are two kinds of heresy, one serious and 100% grace depriving, and another, not so serious that, while problematic, does not deprive either the heretic bishop or those in communion with him (decade after decade) of the genuine grace of the Holy Mysteries. This of course is an error, though more subtle, that is equally destructive to salvation and the maintenance of membership in the true Mystical Body of Christ that is the Genuine Orthodox Church. Hence, we must read with caution, not uncritically accepting all that they say, either here, or in any of their other works.
By the mercy of God,
Matthew
First Critique by Hierotheos Vlachos
http://orthodoxinfo.com/ecumenism/methi ... ptism.aspx
Baptismal Theology
by Metropolitan Hierotheos (Vlachos) of Navpaktos and Hagios Vlasios
THERE HAS BEEN in the past, and there is in our own day, a good deal of discussion about the Baptism of heretics (the heterodox [1]); that is, whether heretics who have deviated from the Orthodox Faith and who seek to return to it should be Baptized anew or simply Chrismated after making a profession of faith. Decisions have been issued on this matter by both local and Œcumenical Synods. In the text that follows, I should like to discuss, by way of example, the agreement reached between the Standing Conference of Canonical Orthodox Bishops of America and the National Conference of Catholic Bishops in America [2] on June 3, 1999. The Greek translation of the original text was made by Protopresbyter George Dragas, a professor at the Holy Cross Greek Orthodox School of Theology in Boston [Brookline—Trans.], who also provided a summary and critique of this agreed statement between Orthodox and Roman Catholics in America. The basis of this document is the Balamand Agreement of 1993, “Uniatism, Method of Union of the Past and the Present Search for Full Communion,” which it evidently wishes to uphold. The text on which we are commenting, that is, the agreement signed by Orthodox and Roman Catholics in America and entitled “Baptism and ‘Sacramental Economy,’” is based on several points, in my observation, that are very typical of the contemporary ecumenical movement and indicative of its entire substance. The first point is that “Baptism rests upon and derives its reality from the faith of Christ Himself, the faith of the Church, and the faith of the believer” (p. 13). At first sight, one is struck by the absence, here, of any reference to the Triune God—perhaps in order to justify this flexible interpretation of Baptism. Faith, then, becomes the fundamental mark and element of Baptism. The second point is that Baptism is not a practice required by the Church, but is, “rather, the Church’s foundation. It establishes the Church” (p. 26). Here, the notion that Baptism is not the “initiatory” Mystery whereby we are introduced into the Church, but the foundation of the Church, is presented as the truth. The third point is that “Baptism was never understood as a private ceremony, but rather as a corporate event” (p. 13). This means that the Baptism of catechumens was “the occasion for the whole community’s repentance and renewal” (p. 13). One who is Baptized “is obliged to make his own the community’s common faith in the Savior’s person and promises” (p. 14). The fourth point is a continuation and consequence of the foregoing points. Since Baptism rests upon faith in Christ, since it is the basis of the Church, and since, moreover, it is the work of the community, this means that any recognition of Baptism entails recognition of the Church in which the Baptism is performed. In the Agreed Statement we read: “The Orthodox and Catholic members of our Consultation acknowledge, in both of our traditions, a common teaching and a common faith in one baptism, despite some variations in practice which, we believe, do not affect the substance of the mystery” (p. 17). .....
Second Critique by Hieromonk Patapios
http://orthodoxinfo.com/ecumenism/orth_ ... ponse.aspx
When Is A Chrismation Not A Chrismation?
A Critique of the Orthodox-Catholic "Agreed Statement" of the North American Orthodox-Catholic Theological Consultation
by Hieromonk Patapios
On June 3, 1999 (New Style), in the context of a meeting at St. Vladimir's Orthodox Theological Seminary in Crestwood, New York, the North American Orthodox-Catholic Theological Consultation issued an "Agreed Statement" entitled "Baptism and 'Sacramental Economy.'" Present at this meeting were, on the Orthodox side, Metropolitan Maximos of Ainou (Bishop of Pittsburgh), Bishop Demetrios of Xanthou, Fathers Nicholas Apostola, Alkiviadis Calivas, James Dutko, Alexander Golitzin, Emmanuel Gratsias, Paul Schneirla, and Robert Stephanopoulos, Professor John Erickson, and Drs. Robert Haddad and Lewis (Elias) Patsavos; and on the Roman Catholic side, Archbishop Rembert Weakland of Milwaukee and Fathers Brian Daley, Peter Galadza, John Galvin, Sidney Griffith, John Long, David Petras, and Ronald Roberson. It is interesting to note that two of the Roman Catholic members of the Consultation, namely Father Galadza and Father Petras, are Uniates, representing the Ukrainian and Ruthenian rites, respectively. Given this, it was a foregone conclusion that the Consultation would seek to re-affirm the notorious Balamand Agreement of 1993, in which the Orthodox participants, to their great shame, accepted not only that the Uniates "have a right to exist and to respond to the spiritual needs of their faithful" ( 3), but also that they "should be fully incorporated...into the dialogue of love...with all of the functional rights that accrue thereto" ( 16 and 34). By contrast, the Third Pan-Orthodox Consultation, meeting in Rhodes in 1963, "demanded the total removal from Orthodox countries of all the Uniate agents and Vatican propagandists before the dialogue [with the Catholics] could begin," ...because "Unia and dialogue are simultaneously incompatible" (John N. Karmiris (Ed.), Ta Dogmatika kai Symbolika Mnemeia tes Orthodoxou Katholikes Ekklesias, Vol. II [Graz, Austria: Akademische Druck u. Verlagsanstalt, 1968], pp. 1007-1008). No attempt is made, in the Agreed Statement issues by the participants in the Consultation to explain how is it that the Uniates no longer constitute an impediment to dialogue between Orthodox and Roman Catholics; nor are the legitimate concerns raised by critics of the Balamand Agreement addressed anywhere in this document, despite an intimation, in its opening section, that such would be the case......