- Cyprianism, or the teaching on the "sick in faith" members of the Church
In recent years there has appeared yet one more explanation of the fear of condemning the former Local Churches for ecumenism. The supporters of this position often refer to the ecclesiology of Metropolitan Cyprian (Koutsoumbas) of Fili and Orope. They explain his separation from the "not without grace" churches of World Orthodoxy by their resistance to heresy and walling themselves off from it in anticipation of an all-Orthodox Council which will finally condemn it and subject it to anathema. It is evidently assumed that neither the anathemas of the Old Calendarists against the new calendarists nor the anathema of the ROCA against the ecumenists represents the conciliar voice of the whole Church (although we do not know of a single True Orthodox Church of our time which has considered the anathema of 1983 invalid or "not generally obligatory").
Metropolitan Cyprian and his supporters refer to the fact that "we have pastors, and even Patriarchs, who already preach and affirm heretical opinions with conviction and in council. But their flock has not yet completely understood that in this way their faith and salvation are being subjected to danger." It is fitting at this point to ask: does the flock of, for example, the Pope of Rome understand that they are in a heretical church?? Especially in the 11 th -12 th centuries, the simple believers of Rome were hardly likely to have understood the subtle errors of their bishops. Nevertheless, they were all condemned together with their pastors, and none of the Orthodox Fathers ever took it into his head to call them "the sick part of the Church" and invite them to some kind of "Unifying Councils". Still less did the thought occur to them that their condemnation of the Latins was "invalid" because the "resisters" from the Roman church had not been invited to the Orthodox Council. Naturally, after learning of the conciliar condemnation of the Roman bishops that had apostasised from Orthodoxy, such "resisters" were obliged to abandon them and unite themselves to the Orthodox Church. This consciousness could have come to some sooner, and to others later; but certain members? of the condemned church organisation's slowness in becoming conscious of the given problem could in no way have made it Orthodox and "as yet uncondemned".
On the contrary, the member of the Council of 1848 in their Encyclical Epistle write: the innovatory teaching of the Roman Catholics "is real heresy , and its followers, whoever they may have been, are heretics , according to the above-mentioned conciliar definition of his Holiness Pope Damasus; the communities formed of them are heretical , and every spiritual communion with them in Divine services on the part of the Orthodox members of the Catholic Church is unlawful , by dint especially of the seventh canon of the Third Ecumenical Council."
The Epistle goes on to declare: "Our ever-memorable predecessors and fathers, seeing how the primordial Gospel is being trampled underfoot, and how the robe of our Saviour woven from on high is being torn apart by impious hands, moved by paternal and fraternal love, bewailed the destruction of such a multitude of Christians for whom Christ died [our emphasis T.S.], in spite of the fact that the fathers of the Council recognise (#12) the presence among the peoples of the West of wise and pious "bishops, theologians and teachers" and even call the contemporary Pope of Rome "his Beatitude". From this it is evident, as we pass to our time, that neither the presence of pious and wise Christians amidst the members of the ecumenist "churches", nor the fact that the holy hierarch Philaret, the ever-memorable First-Hierarch of the Russian Church Abroad, in his Sorrowful Epistles called Patriarch Athenagoras "his All-Holiness" (which, however, was before the proclamation of the anathema against the ecumenists) and hoped for the conversion of him and those like him to undefiled Orthodoxy (similar wishes, expressed moreover in the most polite way, were offered in relation to the Pope of Rome by the fathers of the Council of 1848), - none of this alter the fact that the ecumenist churches of "official Orthodoxy" are heretical communities, and that there can be no communion between them and the Orthodox, and that it is necessary to bewail the lot of the multitudes of Christians who follow the heretic bishops.
This is what is written later in the same Epistle: "The duty of his Beatitude [the Pope of Rome] is to show before God and men that he, as the leader of a God-pleasing undertaking, is at the same time a zealous defender of the persecuted truth of the Gospel and of the holy Councils? May it be so! But until this longed-for conversion of the apostate churches to the body of the One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church, whose head is Christ (Ephesians 4.15), takes place, we shall consider every encroachment of theirs, and every self-willed exhortation of theirs that tends towards the corruption of our irreproachable faith that has been given to us from the Fathers, to be not only suspicious and dangerous, but also impious and soul-destroying worthy of conciliar condemnation" (#17). "Our faith, being completely revealed and imprinted, permits neither any addition nor any subtraction, nor any other kind of change, and he who dares to do such, or counsel or think such, has already been rejected from the faith of Christ, and has already voluntarily subjected himself to eternal anathema for blasphemy against the Holy Spirit, as if He [the Holy Spirit] spoke imperfectly in the Scriptures and at the Ecumenical Councils. This terrible anathema, brothers and beloved children in Christ, is not being pronounced by us now, but was uttered before all by our Saviour (Matthew 12.32), was uttered by the divine Paul (Galatians 1.6) The same was uttered also by the Seven Ecumenical Councils, and by the whole order of God-bearing fathers. And so all those who think up something new a heresy or a schism have voluntarily put on, according to the words of the Psalmist (Psalm 108.17), cursing like a garment , whether they be popes, or patriarchs, or clergy, or laity; be he even an Angel from heaven, he, too, will be anathema, if he preach unto you anything other than what you received " (#20).
And so these definitions of the Council of 1848, which is recognised by the whole of the Orthodox Church, show that:
Everyone who falls away from Orthodoxy automatically falls under the anathema of the Saviour, the Apostles, and also of all the earlier Orthodox Councils and Fathers, and the latest Councils do not mark the beginning of his falling away from the Church, but only witness that he has already fallen away from the Church by virtue of his heresy, voluntarily subjecting himself to a curse.
Ecumenism includes within itself communion with all the formerly condemned heresies , and therefore the ecumenists have already long ago been condemned by the Church . Besides, ecumenism directly sins against one of the articles of the Symbol of Faith and is the exposition of "another faith", which has already been condemned by the Ecumenical Councils; and those who are still waiting for some additional condemnation are most likely caring, not for the faith, but for "ecumenist friendship" or some other interests unconnected with Orthodoxy. This is especially noticeable when, even after the condemnation of a heresy by some Orthodox Council, we hear declarations that this Council was "too small" for its decisions to be recognised by the whole of the Church which approach, by the way, was never that of the Orthodox Church.
Church communities whose bishops confess heresy are heretical communities and do not belong to the Body of the One Church of Christ.
Community in spirit and in prayer with such communities is excluded for the Orthodox.
The presence of "pious and wise" bishops, theologians and simple laypeople amidst the members of the heretical communities does not serve for the salvation of these people, if they do not abandon these communities and do not return to the Church.
The members of the heretical communities, whatever their personal faith, are on the path of destruction, for they do not belong to the Body of Christ.