Fr. Theodore Zisis, of whom I am a huge fan, has ceased to commemorate his bishop over disputes revolving around the Creten Event.
Update: More detailed report from Pravoslavie...
On March 5, the Sunday of Orthodoxy, well-known theologian
Archpriest Theodore Zisis announced from the ambo of his
church that he was ceasing commemoration of Metropolitan
Athimos of Thessaloniki, reports Credo.ru.
After years of involvement in the ecumenical movement,
since the 1980s Fr. Theodore has become one of
Greece’s strongest and most-trusted outspoken
critics of ecumenism. Most recently he has been a vocal
critic of the June 2016 Pan-Orthodox Synod on Crete,
both before and after its convocation. Critics of the
council have mainly focused on the text “Relations of
the Orthodox Church with the Rest of the Christian
World,” arguing that when the Church is coming
together to give voice to its dogmatic self-understanding,
it cannot use the term “church” in reference
to any other confessions, but must strictly speak of the
one Church confessed by the Nicene Creed.
In November, His All-Holiness Ecumenical Patriarch
Bartholomew called
upon Archbishop Ieronymos of Athens to defend the
documents produced at the Crete Council and to quell
criticism of them, warning that he would break communion
with those individuals who vocally criticized the council,
after which Metropolitan Anthimos of Thessaloniki
instructed Fr. Theodore to cease expressing any criticisms
of the council.
After a time of prayer and discernment, Fr. Theodore has
decided that his conscience will not allow him to be
silent about what he sees as a danger to the Church, and
thus he has responded by ceasing commemoration of his
ruling bishop, stating, that the metropolitan has shown
“bareheaded” his alignment with the heresy of
ecumenism through his acceptance of the Crete Council and
his push for a Church-wide acceptance of it at the Holy
Synod meeting of November 23-26, 2016.
In using the term “bareheaded” Fr. Theodore
alluded to Canon 15 of the First-Second Council, held in
Constantinople in 861 and attended by 318 holy fathers,
including St. Photios, the Patriarch of Constantinople,
which allows for a priest to cease commemorating a bishop
who is “preaching the heresy publicly, and teaching
it barehead in church.” The canon notes that this
“walling off” is not an act of schism, but is
indeed praiseworthy, done in defense of holy Orthodoxy.
Fr. Theodore also stated that the Crete Council cannot be
justified as it was neither holy, nor a synod, nor
representative of the mind of the fullness of the Church.
Then directly citing Canon 15, Fr. Theodore announced that
on the Sunday of Orthodoxy, when the Church proclaims its
triumph over all soul-destroying heresies, he would cease
commemoration of his bishop, as he is unable to
commemorate all the great saints who have battled against
heresy, while commemorating a bishop he believes has
fallen into heresy.
His announcement was met with cheers and applause from the
congregation.
Both Fr. Theodore and another Thessaloniki priest, Fr.
Nicholas Manolis, who has also ceased commemoration, have
been summoned to a spiritual court and face the
possibility of being defrocked from the holy priesthood.
In his announcement, Fr. Theodore asked Metropolitan
Anthimos to defer to Canon 15 of the First-Second Council
and to allow Fr. Theodore to continue his work.
Note that among critics of the Crete Council there is
disagreement over how to proceed. In January, Metropolitan
Hierotheos (Vlachos), one of the most respected bishops
and theologians in the Church today, who has offered
several weighty critiques
of the council, urged
others not to cease commemoration of their hierarchs.
The Infant God
6 hours ago
1 comment:
FYI:
1. https://orthodoxethos.com/post/formal-accusation-of-heterodox-teaching-by-patriarch-bartholomew-submitted-to-the-hierarchy-of-the-church-of-greece
2. https://orthodoxethos.com/post/the-council-of-crete-and-the-new-emerging-ecclesiology-an-orthodox-examination
3. https://orthodoxethos.com/post/the-recent-history-of-ecumenism-and-the-struggle-for-orthodoxy-part-a
4. https://orthodoxethos.com/post/when-did-ecumenism-first-appear-in-the-theological-schools
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