MUST WE OBEY WHEN OUR SPIRITUAL FATHER DOES NOT UPHOLD THE ORTHODOX WAY OF LIFE?
What does our ecclesiastical past teach us on the matter of obedience to our spiritual Father when dealing with a matter of Faith, whether of a dogmatic nature or related to the holy Canons? Do we owe our spiritual Father indiscriminate obedience when he opposes the Tradition of the Church or do we not? Do we carry the stigma of "disobedience" before God, or are we ‘covered', by remaining obedient to Christ in accordance with the infallible Tradition of the Church? It is these questions that we shall attempt to answer in this article.
0. Introduction
1. Our Spiritual Father must be the best possible choice
in every sense
2. Since the Spiritual Father is "in type and in place of Christ", he cannot accept heresies
3. Indifference or silence on matters of heresy on the
part of the Spiritual Father is forbidden
4. What the Holy Bible
says about praiseworthy disobedience
5. According to the holy Canons, the Monk
must move away from obedience to a heretical
Hegumen
6. Saint John the
Chrysostom recommends disobedience to cacodox
ecclesiastical leaders
7. The "Ladder"
clarifies that the Monk who is humble may gainsay the Leaders in matters of
Faith
8. The exemplar model example of Saint
Gregory of Decapolis
9. The teaching of Saint Symeon the New
Theologian
10. Saint Ignatius Brianchaninov in favour of
cautious obedience
0. Introduction
As regards issues of Faith, the matter of obedience to one's Spiritual Father (a particularly
delicate subject, unknown to many) is contained
in the more general subject of obedience to one's Bishop; for the relationship
between the Spiritual Father - Confessor and the faithful Christian is
impossible to be considered independently of that of the faithful Christian
with the Ecclesiastical Community's Bishop; a
Spiritual Father does not guide the faithful Christians by means of a personal law that relies on his Priesthood but by
means of a written warrant by the local Bishop,
as determined by in the way that the holy Canons define;
and more evidently per the 50th (46) Canon of the Holy Local Synod of Carthage[1].
Thus, whatever has already been mentioned in previous articles on the subject
of the Bishop and the
interference of the laity in matters of Faith, mostly applies here as
well.
In other words if the faithful Christians, based
on the example of the Saints who lived through the course of ecclesiastical
history as well as the example set by the holy Canons, have
the right to defy heretising Bishops and to sever communion with them (by abandoning
also their congregations), as it has been ordained chiefly by the 31st Apostolic and the First-Second Synod's 15th
Holy Canons, how much more so do they have the right to distance themselves
from unrepentant Spiritual Fathers who persist in developing their heterodox phronema (mindset).
If the Bishop, on whose behalf the Spiritual Father enacts the Mystery of guidance of the faithful Christians to God, namely the Sacrament of Repentance and Confession, is not infallible "ex officio", how much more so does this hold for the Spiritual Father, who partakes of the grace of Priesthood to a smaller degree than the Bishop does, and is therefore most certainly not infallible.
1. Our Spiritual Father must be the
best possible choice in every sense
Very often, we find the Heads of our
Church reminding us of the duty of obedience to the Bishops, to the Presbyters
and to their given orders; and yet the Flock is mostly unaware of the sort of
people the Clerics, who steer the way, are
meant to be.
Saint Nicodemus the Haghiorite, in
his spiritually most edifying work Spiritual
Practices, writes the following when referring to Basil the Great: "Examine the diligence that you have placed
in trying to find a good spiritual father; for what other greater need do you
have than finding a good guide for such a journey that you need to embark upon,
full of dangers, like the one to heaven is? [...] Now my beloved child consider
in what terrible danger you will find yourself in if not only do you not search
for such a spiritually worthy man to guide you correctly to your salvation and
to heal you well from your passions and sins, but you end up even avoiding such
a man [...] So does Basil the Great (Rules in summary 229)[2]
also speak and he says: ‘In the same way that people do not reveal the body's
ailments to everyone or to random people they meet but only to those who are
experienced in therapy, similarly the confession of sins ought to take place in
front of those who can heal them, as it is written: ‘you who are strong are to
carry the illnesses of the weak' [Rom. 15,1];
in other words, you are to carry them with your diligence'"[3].
In relation to the above, father
John Romanides provides the following interpretation: "Of course, the spiritual father ought to
already be in the state of illumination, so that he can also induct others in this state of illumination and to
lead them to the Baptism by water [namely the absolution of sins] and to the
Baptism by Spirit, which is the visitation of the Holy Spirit in the heart of
the one being baptised and the enlightenment of man's
heart"[4].
Consequently, if the Elder -
Spiritual Father - Confessor needs to lead the best possible life and to be
able to give the best possible teaching, how much more so does he need to possess
the minimum requirements, the "ABC", namely keeping the purity of Orthodoxy?
2. Since the Spiritual Father is "in type and in place of Christ", he
cannot accept heresies
The degree of the significance in
averting and fighting off heresy can be deduced from the fact that the entire
dogmatic teaching of the Church has not been fashioned after philosophical
contemplation but after its confrontation with heresies, which have always
threatened the path of Orthodoxy, the only one that can cure human nature from
sin: "The Fathers would change
terminology from time to time and
they would adapt their terminology in order to find the right terms to use,
depending on the needs of the time. They did not do this in order to be able to
comprehend the teaching of the Church in a better way but in order to combat
the heresies that would crop up. For the comprehension of the Church's teaching
comes from illumination and theosis and not from philosophical or philological
fermentation or from philosophical contemplation on the teaching itself. The
purpose of dogma, which is formulated by
the Fathers, is not to comprehend it, but the dogma-led union of man with God"[5].
Thus we see that the Cleric's
acceptance of heresy destroys the therapeutic nature of his Pastoral Theology.
"In the same way that in medicine it is
not possible to allow a ‘quack' to treat patients, it is equally impossible to
allow a heretic to treat the souls of men. For since he is a heretic he does
not know and thus cannot provide treatment"[6].
Of course, the same also holds for a Cleric who is unable or does not care to
discern Orthodoxy from heresy, viz. spiritual "medicine from quackery", for it is simply a matter of time and of
scheming by the evil spirits before both himself and his spiritual children all
fall into a fallacy. Saint Ignatius
Brianchaninov says: "Through the acceptance
of false teachings (i.e. of fallacious concepts
about God), and through the distortion of the dogmatic and ethical teaching
that God Himself revealed to us, the corruption of the spirit is achieved because of the impact and interference of
these false teachings. This way, man ends up as a son of the devil"[7].
Consequently, if the relation
between the Spiritual Father - Confessor and the faithful Christian aims at
providing a real image of the relation between Christ and the faithful
Christian, as the "Ladder" of Saint John of Sinai accordingly mentions ("Do not consider it below your station to
confess your sins in the presence of your helper [i.e. of your Elder], with
humility and contrition as if you were doing so in front of God Himself")[8],
then the disruption of the relation between the Spiritual Father and Christ due
to the Spiritual Father's heresy forces the faithful Christian either to seek another Spiritual Father of
sound Orthodox judgment or - in case the faithful Christian believes there is
still some hope for his Spiritual Father to return to sound dogma - to
avoid at the very least abiding by the fallacious positions and counsel of
his Spiritual Father. According to Saint Gregory of Nyssa, whoever "heretises"without a doubt the one who has been cut off
from the salvific Faith is headless, like Goliath was, who became cut off through
his own sword which he sharpened against the truth, divorcing himself thus from
the true Head"[9].
How will such a Spiritual Father manage to teach salvation to others? (viz. develops a heretical mindset)
becomes cut off from the mystical Head of the Church, Christ: "
Let us not forget that according to
Devout John's "Ladder", the
transmission of Orthodoxy is an Elder's foremost goal. In his exhortations
directed at Pastors, we find the Saint saying the following: "Above all, you
should leave the integral faith and the pious dogmas as a legacy to your
children, so that not only your children but your grandchildren too will you
manage to guide towards the Lord by walking the path of Orthodoxy"[10].
Thus, if the heretising Spiritual
Father chases away the faithful Christian who keeps an Orthodox mindset, then
the blame is placed on the misbelieving ill-minded Elder and Spiritual Father,
for our Church teaches that our obedience to our Elders must have Christ in
mind.
3. Indifference or silence on matters
of heresy on the part of the Spiritual Father is forbidden
Therefore, based on both the
aforementioned evidence and on ecclesiastical experience, it becomes obvious
that the danger from heresy does not only lie in wait for the establishment of complete
and official acceptance of the heretical dogmas by a Spiritual Father (or
indeed by a Bishop), but also lies in wait for the creation of an environment
festering with (a) indifference to the problems
of heresy (which is a sinful transgression, being a delinquency) and/or (b) attempts at dissuasion of any opposition to the
heresy (e.g. the well-known and totally unacceptable statements "do
not talk about matters of Faith", or "do not talk about Antichrists
but about Christ" and so on, which amount to positions well-known in
ecclesiastical history often upheld by the lukewarm - unconcerned or
blameworthy leaders of every era). As a parenthesis, we mention that it is also
a commandment of the Fathers to
prepare our spiritual children for the arrival of the Antichrist[11].
Without a question, the Old
Testament reproaches the shepherds of old Israel who would remain unconcerned
for their flock's protection. The Old Testament tells us characteristically,
through the mouth of Prophet Ezekiel:
"As I live, saith the Lord God,
surely because my flock became a prey, and my flock became meat to every beast
of the field, because there was no shepherd, neither did my shepherds search
for my flock, but the shepherds fed themselves, and fed not my flock. Therefore,
O ye shepherds, hear the word of the Lord. Thus saith the Lord God; Behold, I shall
visit the shepherds; and I will require my flock at their hand, and cause them
to cease from feeding the flock..."[12]
In the New Testament we see Christ criticising the "Angels", namely the Archbishops of Pergamus and of
Thyateira, even more
harshly for even though they
would nurture their flock in an overall admirable manner, they would
nonetheless allow the heretical Nicolaitanes and false prophets (viz. "Jezebel") to harm their flock: "Notwithstanding I have a few things against
thee, because thou sufferest that woman Jezebel, which calleth herself a
prophetess, to teach and to seduce my servants to commit fornication, and to
eat things sacrificed unto idols."[13].
On the other hand, He praises the blameworthy (on some issues) "Angel" of Ephesus because he would recognise
the false prophets and hate the works of the heretical Nicolaitanes: "But this thou hast, that thou hatest the
deeds of the Nicolaitanes, which I also hate"[14].
In practice, the Holy Fathers would
either reprove or find ways to bypass the Emperors' practice of banning
conversations on matters of Faith; a practice that aimed at the preservation of
political peace and unity in the Empire between Orthodox and heretics. During the
course of one of his discussions on the Christological issue with the heretical
Monothelete Patriarch of Constantinople Pyrrhus, we find Saint Maximus the
Confessor overturning this silencing on matters of Faith that had been enforced
from without and replying to Pyrrhus with the following words: "What then? Just because God called us to
become aware of His truth because of our hearts' intention that He foreknew, should
these [erroneous things] that have been communicated to some people as regards
this, either in writing or by word, not be examined in great detail for the
love of all those people who, as it happens, come across them without paying
careful attention or even if they do pay attention are more prone to error?
PYRRHUS: If the examination aims at this, then it is needful to do so. For to
look after the safety of those who are more innocent-minded constitutes
imitation of the divine love for man"[15].
This stance of Saint Maximus can only be interpreted as an opposition to the
politics of imposed silencing on Christological discussions that had been
successfully established through the decree "Typos" (AD 648) dictated by the Monothelete Emperor Constance II[16].
Consequently, it is impermissible to keep silent on matters of Faith when souls are in danger from heresy.
Let us mention a few straightforward yet relevant examples:
- (a) In our days we note a revival of Origenism, a hidden neo-Origenism, in the form of academic exoneration of the heretical theologian Origen for his delusions (3rd century AD). According to this teaching, Origen had supposedly not been a true heretic, for, had that been the case, the Church would have condemned him while he had still been alive and not after his death. Supposedly, his condemnation during the Holy Fifth Œcumenical Synod (AD 553) largely occurred in an attempt to exercise "ecclesiastical diplomacy" in order to appease the spirits of the powerful anti-Origenist theologians and to restore peace in the Church; particularly in the Holy Lands, where, the theological and more general dispute between Origenists and Orthodox had taken a very nasty turn since the time of Saint Sava's death (AD 532). To this neo-Origenist teaching, which has infected many theological academic writings, chiefly however the oral teaching of academic theologians, one must not forget to add the presentment of the Origenist delusion for the restoration of all as a "theologumen" (i.e. as an issue that is still theologically unclear). The Holy Fathers clearly warned us not to accept this delusion on the restoration of all (namely, that the hell of the demons and of the unrepentant sinners will eventually come to an end), for this will completely cast us into sin, since hell supposedly is not eternal and consequently supposedly we do not need to be afraid of it. On the contrary, Saint John of the Ladder characteristically says: "Let us all take heed, and especially those of us who have experienced falls, that our heart does not become affected with the illness of the impious Origen. For this detestable illness, by supposedly advertising God's mercy, becomes welcome to those who are lustful"[17]. This is a characteristic example of how a latent heresy in the ecclesiastical body can destroy souls.
- (b)
The well-known book "The imitation of
Christ", work of the Latin Monk Thomas à Kempis, is still being projected
as soul-edifying reading material for many faithful Christians in Greece; a
work that has managed to become an international best seller and whose
circulation at some point reached second place to the Holy Bible.
However, here is how Saint Ignatius Branchianinov judges the spirituality of this book: "And a typical example of an ascetic book written by an author who at the time of writing had been found in the state of delusion known as ‘aponoia' [lack of an Orthodox mindset and utter shamelessness], can be taken to be "The Imitation of Christ" by Thomas à Kempis. It smacks of a subtle sensualism and haughtiness which stimulate a form of hedonism in people full of passions who are blinded by them, which [hedonism] they mistake to be a ‘foretaste of the divine grace'. Woe, the miserable souls! Woe, the blinded ones! [...]. We see Francis of Assisi, Ignatius Loyola and many other ascetics of the Latins driven to a terrible demonic delusion analogous to the one that Malpas had fallen into; and yet the Latins place these among their saints"[18].
If such a writing of Latin spirituality has already reached such a dangerous point of widespread public acceptance and propagation in an Orthodox country, thanks to the ignorance or indifference of the Spiritual fathers, how much more will Orthodox countries continue to be imbued with such a heretical spirituality if we do not speak openly against the dangers of the Western heretical, rationalist and emotionalist spirituality?
4.
What the Holy Bible says about praiseworthy disobedience
Apostle
Paul's explicit remark on Galatians (Gal. 1, 8.9) (made in fact by using accentuation
twice: "as we said before, so say I now
again"), not to accept any innovation in preaching the gospel, even if that
proceeds from an angel in heaven or from the Apostles themselves, openly
abolishes every notion of "Primacy" in
the hands of individuals over the Tradition inside the Church (since not even
the Apostles can change their Gospel
a posteriori, since it is "from above"), and furthermore it alone provides
us with sufficient guidance in what happens when we are found obligated to show obedience to the Faith of the Church: we must turn
away whoever alters the ancient evangelic kerygma ("let him be anathema").
As regards
another verse, "Obey them that have the
rule over you, and submit yourselves: for they watch for your souls, as those who must give account" (Heb. 13, 17), one
may also pay attention to another point worthy of note: the reasoning behind
the obedience shown to those "that have
the rule", namely to the leaders, is that "they watch for your souls"; obedience
is not without its preconditions. If, based on our ecclesiastical
experience, we come to the realisation that these rulers neglect their duty,
that they do not care for the salvation of the souls that have been entrusted unto
them and that they ignore the spiritual dangers and above all the danger of
heresy, then the duty of obedience to them is abrogated.
As it has
been mentioned accordingly "First of all,
the Holy Bible distinguishes between good and
evil shepherds; between true and genuine shepherds, teachers and prophets on
one hand and false shepherds, false teachers and false prophets on the other
[...]; obedience is not indiscriminate but discriminate"[19].
5. According to the holy Canons, the Monk must depart from obedience to a heretical Hegumen
In the section
of the "Rudder" (that momentous and reputable collection of the holy
Canons by Saint Nicodemus the Haghiorite) where the Saint clarifies the number
of reasons for which a Monk may leave his Monastery, we find mentioned among
them the situation where the Hegumen happens to be a heretic. By referring to
Basil the Great, the Saint adds: "Now,
Basil the Great (Great Rules 36)
forgives one's departure from his monastery for only one reason, namely when
[the Hegumen] has suffered spiritual ruin; something that, according to [Saint
Basil], must first be revealed to those who
have the power to correct it; and if they do not correct it, then [the Monk]
must divorce himself from their company, no longer
as if departing from brothers, but as if from strangers"; and he then continues with the remaining interesting and soul-edifying
admonitions[20].
In this
case, it is also evident that if the Elder - Spiritual Father happens to be a
heretic (or if he happens to be pro-heretical, depending also on the degree of
his acceptance of the heresy), not only do we owe him no obedience, but it is
imperative that we distance ourselves from him.
6.
Saint John
Chrysostom urges disobedience to the cacodox ecclesiastical leaders
Saint John Chrysostom, who is considered by our Church as "a God-inspired instrument and an inexhaustible ocean of dogmas"[21], when interpreting the apostolic commandment on obedience and submission to the Leaders, to the Hegumens (lit. the word means leaders, "them that have the rule"), "obey them that have the rule over you, and submit yourselves", makes the following clarifications: "Perchance someone may tell us that [apart from anarchy and indiscipline] there is a third evil, namely when the ruler [of the Church] is evil. I too know it; and this evil is not small, but much worse even than anarchy is: for it is better not to be guided by anyone, instead of being guided by someone evil. For the former [subordinate] many a time was he saved and many a time was he found to be in danger; but the latter will most certainly stay in danger, being led to an abyss. So how come he says ‘Obey them that have the rule over you, and submit yourselves'? After having mentioned further up those ‘whose faith [you must] follow, considering the outcome of their life' he then says ‘obey them that have the rule over you and submit yourselves'. So what happens then, you ask, when he is cunning and we do not obey him? In what way do you mean "cunning"? If he is such in the faith, avoid him and leave him; not only if he happens to be a man but even if he happens to be an angel descending from heaven [Gal. 1, 8]. If he is so because of the life he leads, then do not be concerned [...].Yet do not pay attention to his life, but to his words; for no one could ever be harmed from his ethos. Why? Because it is plain for all to see; and even if he happens to be cunning a thousand times over, he will never teach cunning things. But when he happens to be [cunning] in the faith, neither is this obvious to all nor will the cunning one stop teaching. For even the words ‘Do not judge in order not to be judged' are meant for one's life and not for the faith"[22].
7. The "Ladder" clarifies that the Monk who is humble may gainsay the Leaders in matters of Faith
In Saint John of Sinai's work "Ladder", this paramount spiritual writing that has been characterised as "a masterpiece of Eastern asceticism" in which "obedience has a fundamental place in virtuousness"[23], it is clarified that exceptions to the rule are allowed. Devout John characteristically mentions the following about the virtue of humility: "You do not find hatred, any form of contradiction or any trace of indiscipline associated with the one who is connected with [this virtue], lest we are dealing with issues of Faith"[24].
8.
The exemplar model of Saint Gregory of Decapolis
Saint Gregory of Decapolis, whose memory we celebrate on November 20, and who shone with his life during the second half of the 8th century in Decapolis of Isauria, had been distinguished for his almsgiving, his unassuming stance, his obedience, his humility and his meekness as early as his teenage years and continued to be equally distinguished for these virtues later on when he became a monk. The Saint's biographer narrates that while the Saint's mother did not dissuade him from becoming a monk, she convinced him nonetheless to enter the brotherhood of another Monastery where his flesh brother also resided, in order for them to struggle spiritually together, and for one to be consoled by the other's presence. The biographer continues the narration by telling us how Saint Gregory dealt with the fact that the Monastery's Hegumen proved to be a heretic: "In order to consent to his mother's will, Gregory went to that Monastery whose Abbot happened to be a heretic, the wretched soul; and when the Saint realised this, he could not stand it, being the fervent zealot of piety that he was, and instead checked him in the presence of the entire brotherhood; and [the hegumen], becoming greatly angered, beat up the Saint badly, who departed from the monastery with his wounds still fresh on his body; and went to another Monastery in this bloodied state, whose Hegumen happened to be a relative of his mother named Symeon, who also happened to be the Archimandrite of all the Monasteries of Decapolis"[25].
9.
The teaching of Saint Symeon the New Theologian
Sublime
Saint Symeon the New Theologian, for whom we cannot say here as much as we
should, has left us with some wonderful teachings and God-inspired experiences
of his divine Eros, but also with a teaching that reproves the state of his
era's clergy. It is believed that Saint Symeon commenced an important spiritual
revolution. Father John Romanides characteristically writes: "... there came a time in the Church when
people would be ordained as clerics that in the ancient Church would not have
been suitable to advance beyond laity [...] In other words, they did not have the
spiritual presuppositions to join the Holy Orders. Saint Symeon the New
Theologian revolted against this irregular situation and he proved so
successful that the Church named him New Theologian. From his time until the time
of Saint Gregory Palamas, a great conflict took place in the Church as regards
the matter of qualifications needed for the election of bishops. Because of this
Hesychast controversy, as it became known, which was resolved by the adoption
of Saint Symeon the New Theologian's theology, it was eventually ordained that
the bishops of the Church should be chosen from the ranks of the monks who
followed the Hesychast tradition, illumination and theosis"[26].
So Saint
Symeon, who is a Saintly spiritual giant of such epic proportions that he was
the third person in our Church to have been assigned the title of a Theologian,
having made such an important contribution to its ascetic teaching, has also
left us with a teaching of particular and characteristic importance to our topic:
"Plead God with prayers and tears for Him
to send you a guide who is dispassionate and holy. At the same time, also study
the divine Scriptures by yourself and particularly the practical writings of
the Holy Fathers; so that by
cross-examining the teachings and works of your teacher and Leader with these [writings] you may become able
to see and to comprehend [his teachings]. And
those teachings that are in agreement with the Scriptures, you should adopt and
hold them dear in your mind, while the adulterated and foreign ones you should
learn to perceive them as such and to turn them away, in order not to be
deceived. For know this: many deceivers and false teachers have come forth in these days"[27].
Another teaching,
analogous to the one mentioned above, has been saved in the Life (i.e. in the
biography) of Saint Symeon by his disciple Saint Nicetas Stethatos. Close to
the time of his death, Saint Symeon advised his disciples to obey the successor
Hegumen Arsenius in all things with one possible exception: "Do not take amiss his words and actions, but
even in case these happen to be in opposition to the Fathers' consensus, you
should bow your heads unto him for the time being. Afterwards, those of you
that may have surpassed the others in years, life experience and words, let
them notify him in private of the reason for the impediment to apply his words,
in accordance with the "Rules" of Basil the Great27a. For the sake of God, you should endure him
when he happens to be sore or bitter, without contradicting or repugning him;
for the one who contradicts or repugns him repugns God's authority, as Paul
says (Rom.
13, 2). Truly, in matters where no transgression of God's commandments or of
the apostolic Canons and ordinances has taken place, you ought to obey him in
all things and to submit yourselves unto him as if he were the Lord Himself. However, in all
things where the Gospel of Christ and the laws of the Church are in danger of
being overturned, not only to him should you not submit when he admonishes and
commands you, but not even to an angel who just came down from heaven
and who evangelises you things different from what the eyewitnesses of the
Logos had been evangelised"[28].
10.
Saint Ignatius Brianchaninov in favour of cautious obedience
This
celebrated Saint and theologian of the Russian Church of the 19th
century, about whom we have already mentioned, dedicates an entire chapter in
his valuable book "An offering to
Contemporary Monasticism" on the subject of "Obedience to an Elder". Among the many other references he quotes
from the Fathers that are found cited in the topic of indiscriminate obedience
to unpurified Spiritual Fathers, he makes important clarifications and additions:
"Obedience makes the subordinate one with
the one he obeys. The Holy Bible says: ‘and
the flocks conceived before the rods' (Gen. 30, 39) [...]. One may say: the subordinate's faith can
replace the elder's inadequacy. Wrong!
Faith in truth saves. Faith in lies and in diabolical deceit harms! This is
said by the Apostle. For those who willingly perish, he says: ‘...they received
not the love of the truth, that they might be saved. And for this cause God
shall send them strong delusion, that they should believe a lie: That they all
might be damned who believed not the truth, but had pleasure in unrighteousness.'
(2 Thess. 2, 10-12) [...] In our times, we observe a general degeneration of
Christianity. [...] And it is a great blessing for us and great joy that we were
given the possibility of being fed with the crumbs that fall from the Spiritual
table of the Fathers. The crumbs themselves do not constitute the most adequate nourishment. But they can (although not
without leaving us with feelings of privation and hunger) save us from
spiritual death"[29].
Let us
also keep well in our hands these "crumbs"
that fall from the patristic teachings, like from the ones presented above, in
order to save ourselves from theological chaos as well as from the relativism of
and subjection to heresy, by staying firmly disobedient to every type of pro-heretical
pseudo-obedience. The homily of Saint Ephraim of Syria on the Second Coming of
Christ is formidable: "Woe unto those who
pollute the holy Faith with heresies or who subject themselves to heretics"[30].
Whether these happen to be lay, or much more so if these happen to be clerics[i].
- [1]Saint Nicodemus the Haghiorite, Rudder, edition Vas. Rigopoulos, Thessalonica 2003, p. 488.
- [2] Saint Basil the Great, Rules in summary 229, PG 31, 1236A
- [3] Saint Nicodemus the Haghiorite, Spiritual Exercises, Exercise III 4, edition V. Rigopoulos, Thessalonica 19917, p. 320 (and notes). The excerpt taken from Basil the Great is a translation.
- [4] Protopresbyter and University Professor John Romanides, Patristic Theology, redaction by Haghiorite Monk Damascene, edition Parakatatheke (Deposit), Thessalonica 2004, p. 176ff.
- [5] Ibid. p. 70ff
- [6] Ibid. p.203ff
- [7] Saint Ignatius Brianchaninov, An offer to contemporary monasticism, tome III, edition Holy Metropolis of Nicopolis, Preveza 1995, p.203.
- [8] Saint John of Sinai, Ladder, Homily IV, On obedience 58, edition Holy Monastery of Paraclete, Horopos Attica, 19946, p.95
- [9] Saint Gregory of Nyssa, Homily against Eunomius 12, PG 45, 912.
- [10] Saint John of Sinai, On the Shepherd 97, edition Holy Monastery of Paraclete, Horopos Attica, 19946, p.402 (PG 88, 1201A).
- [11] Saint Cyril of Jerusalem, Catechesis for Illuminated 15, 18 PG 33, 896A
- [12] Ezekiel 34, 8-10 (KJV)
- [13] Rev. 2, 12-23
- [14] Rev. 2, 6
- [15] Saint Maximum the Confessor, Discourse to Pyrrhus, PG 91, 333C.D (translation).
- [16] Cf. J. Phidas, Ecclesiastical History, Tome I, Athens 19942, p.747
- [17] Saint John of Sinai, Ladder, Homily V, On repentance 29, op. cit. p.133, PG 88, .
- [18] Saint Ignatius Brianchaninov, op. cit. tome I, edition Holy Metropolis of Nicopolis, Preveza 1993, p.136ff.
- [19] Protopresbyter Theodore Zisis, Bad obedience and holy disobedience, Φίλη Ορθοδοξία (Orthodoxy My Friend) 11, edition "Bryennios", Thessalonica 2006, pp.21.23
- [20] Saint Nicodemus the Haghiorite, Rudder, op. cit., p.341, footnote (1)
- [21] Great Vespers, November 13, Kekragarion I
- [22] Saint John Chrysostom, Homily on the Epistle to Hebrews 34, 1. PG 63, 231
- [23] Introduction to Saint John of Sinai's Ladder, op. cit, p.5
- [24] Ibid., Homily 25, On humility 9, p.268
- [25] Matthew Langis, bishop of Oinoe, The Great Synaxarist of the Orthodox Church, tome XI, Athens 19915, p.537ff
- [26] Protopresbyter John Romanides, op. cit. p.104ff
- [27] Saint Symeon the New Theologian, Practical and Theological Chapters 32, by P. Christou in ΕΠΕ (Library of Greek Fathers) Philokalia of the Neptic and Ascetic Fathers 3, Patristic Editions Gregory Palamas, Thessalonica, p.242 (translation)
- [27α] Saint Basil the Great, The Great Rules 27, PG 31, 988A.B
- [28] Saint Nicetas Stethatos, Life of Symeon 66, by P. Christou in ΕΠΕ Philokalia of the Neptic and Ascetic Fathers 19, Patristic Editions Gregory Palamas, Thessalonica, pp.146.147
- [29] Saint Ignatius Brianchaninov, op. cit., tome I, pp.141.143.146ff
- [30] Saint Ephraim of Syria, Homily on the Second Coming of our Lord Jesus Christ in Devout Ephraim of Syria - Works, tome IV, edition "The Garden of Panaghia", Thessalonica 1992, p.26
[i] For a broader analysis on the subject of obedience and disobedience in matters of Faith, see also the very informative first part of the book Bad obedience and holy disobedience by Professor and Protopresbyter Theodore Zisis, Orthodoxy My Friend 11, edition "Bryennios", Thessalonica 2006.