From Sept. 30 to Oct. 2 Pope Francis visited the ancient
Orthodox nation of Georgia, celebrating Mass in a Tbilisi
stadium on Saturday, Oct. 1 for the capital’s small
Catholic population.
Hierarchs of the Georgian Orthodox Church were noticeably
absent.
As it should be.
The media is variously reporting the absence of any
official Georgian Orthodox delegation as a “shun,” a “snub,” and that the Pope was
met “with disregard.” That such
headlines are false and inflammatory is obvious in that
the pope visited the nation by the invitation of the
president and His Holiness Patriarch-Catholicos Ilia II
himself, who greeted him at the airport and met with
him in an official capacity.
Moreover, the pope was welcomed to the Svetitskhoveli
Cathedral in Mtskheta where he exchanged speeches with His
Holiness in the presence of a number of hierarchs, clergy,
monastics, and faithful.
What we see is that, in fact, the pope was met with the
same respect given to any visiting dignitary. The pope
himself, upon his departure, expressed his gratitude at being so
warmly received. But His Holiness Ilia II also
respectfully maintained his own integrity and that of
the Orthodox faith and Church, given to us by Christ
through His Apostles.
At Saturday’s Mass, Pope Francis declared: ““We should
work together. We should respect each other and pray
together. This is ecumenism.”
It is precisely this ecumenism that the Georgian Orthodox
Church understands, and rightfully rejects, not out of any
hatred or chauvinism, but the righteous desire to preserve
intact the deposit of faith entrusted to the hierarchs and
all the faithful.
The Church and its faithful are guided by the dictum
“lex orandi, lex credendi”—the rule of
prayer is the rule of faith—that is, the Church
believes what it prays, and prays what it believes, and
therefore, unity of faith is an obvious and necessary
presupposition for unity in prayer.
The absence of unity of faith between the Orthodox Church
and the Catholic confession is obvious, and so should be
the absence of unity in prayer. Mutual respect is not
enough to bind us together in Christ, for respect that
disregards truth is no respect at all, and it certainly is
not love.
In his Oct. 1 speech at Svetitskhoveli Cathedral,
the pope invoked the holy Apostle Paul, saying,
“Those baptized in Christ, as Saint Paul teaches,
have been clothed in Christ. Thus… we are called
to be 'one in Christ Jesus' and to avoid
putting first disharmony and divisions between the
baptized, because what unites us is much more than what
divides us.”
In the eyes of the media, the Georgian Orthodox
Church’s seeming rejection of the ideal of unity and
harmony is a “shun” and a “snub,”
but what Pope Francis failed to mention, and which,
naturally, the secular media fails to understand, but
which those of an Orthodox consciousness can never forget,
is that St. Paul spoke not merely of unity in baptism, but
rather of One Lord, one faith, one baptism, which
bind us together in one body, and one Spirit
(Ephesians 4:4, 5). Baptisms not of one faith are indeed
not one baptism. Baptism is unto union with the Body of
Christ, and therefore, naturally, cannot happen outside of
that Body of Christ.
In a statement on the Georgian Patriarchate’s
website, the Church reminded the faithful that: “As
long as there are dogmatic differences between our
churches, Orthodox believers will not participate in their
prayers,” which is entirely in keeping with the
God-breathed universal canonical Tradition of the Church.
Canon 10 of the Holy Apostles reads: “If one who is
not in communion prays together, even at home, let him be
excommunicated,” and Canon 45: “A Bishop, or a
Presbyter, or a Deacon that only prays together with
heretics, should be excommunicated; if he has permitted
them to perform anything as Clergymen, let him be
defrocked.” Thus, we can see that His Holiness
preserved his own good standing in the Church and the
resilient witness of the Orthodox faith. Many later canons
confirm and expound upon the norms laid down here.
For his part, the Catholic pontiff overlooked the vital
dogmatic differences, insisting at his Tbilisi Papal Mass
that Catholics ought never to proselytize the Orthodox,
which would be “a grave sin against
ecumenism,” in light of his belief that Orthodox
and Catholics are brothers and sisters in the faith.
For the Orthodox, it would be precisely the notion that we
must never seek to bring Catholics into the saving
enclosure of the Orthodox Church that would be a sin, and
a grave one at that, wholly lacking in love.
The Pope was met with respect and dignity, but not as a
right-believing bishop of the true Church. He was neither
invited to homilize during any Orthodox divine service,
nor to bless the Orthodox faithful, nor was he seated upon
any episcopal throne, nor was the liturgical Kiss of Peace
exchanged—actions which would only wound the
Orthodox conscience of the faithful, causing confusion and
anger.
As a wise and discerning shepherd, Patriarch-Catholicos
Ilia II maintained a balance between respect for his guest
and respect for his own flock and Church, and his own
ordination, with all its ensuing responsibilities, setting
an example for Orthodox-Catholic interactions, and giving
voice to the Orthodox truth in his own speech at Svetitskhoveli Cathedral:
“True faith, humbleness and our
traditions—these are the ancient treasures that we
preserve and will continue to do so in future. We greet
you again and confess that our unity is in the true
faith. Only true faith and love will open
the path towards our communion.”
-Jesse Dominick
Source
Me and My Bible
11 hours ago
1 comment:
The Patriarch handled this well. It will be a national tragedy for Georgians when he passes. That much is certain.
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