<< back to Online Library Table of Contents
Content:
Concerning God the Father.
Concerning the Holy Trinity.
Concerning the Incarnation.
Concerning Creation.
Concerning the Spiritual Hosts.
Concerning Immortality.
Concerning Evil.
Concerning Sin.
Concerning Man’s Free Will.
Concerning Faith and Works.
Concerning the Virgin Mary (Theotokos).
Concerning the Saints.
Concerning the Holy Icons.
Concerning the Holy Relics of the Saints.
Concerning the Holy Scriptures.
Concerning the Church.
Concerning How the Church's Organization
is Superior to Ethnic Considerations.
Concerning the Head of the Church.
Concerning the Church and Holy Tradition.
Concerning the Life That is to Come.
Concerning God the Father
I
believe in God the Father, Who is without beginning, indescribable,
incomprehensible, Who is beyond every created essence, Whose essence is known
only to Himself, to His Son and the Holy Spirit; as it says in the Holy
Scriptures, upon Him even the Seraphim dare not gaze.
I
believe and confess that God the Father never became the likeness of any
material form nor was He ever incarnate. In the theophanies (appearances of God)
of the Old Testament, as our Holy Fathers bear witness, it was not God the
Father Who appeared, but rather it was always our Savior, the Second Person of
the Holy Trinity (i.e., the Word or Logos, the Angel of the Lord, the Lord God
of Sabaoth, the Angel of Great Counsel, the Ancient of Days) Who revealed
Himself to the prophets and seers of the Old Testament. Likewise, in the New
Testament, God the Father never appeared but bore witness to His Son on several
occasions solely by a voice that was heard from Heaven. It is for this reason
that our Savior said, “No man hath seen God at any time; the Only-begotten
Son, Who is in the bosom of the Father, He hath declared Him,” (John 1:18)
and “Not that any man hath seen the Father, save He Who is of God, He hath
seen the Father” (John 6:46). In addition, Acts Four, Five and Six of the
Seventh Ecumenical Council state that the Holy Trinity cannot be portrayed
iconographically since He is without from and invisible. Therefore, God the
Father is not depicted in the holy icons.
I
believe that He is the cause of all things as well as the end purpose of all
things. From Him all visible and invisible creatures have their beginning and
there was a time when they did not exist. He created the universe out of
absolutely nothing. The earth too had a beginning and man was created by God's
love. The creation of man and of the universe was not out of necessity. Creation
is the work of the free and unconditional will of the Creator. If He had so
wished, He need not have created us; the absence of creation would not have been
a privation for Him. The creature's love is not one which gives Him
satisfaction. God has no need to be satisfied. He needs nothing. God's love
cannot be compared to human love, even as His other attributes such as
paternity, justice, goodness cannot be compared to their human counterparts.
God's love is a love which constitutes a mystery unfathomable to man's reason or
intellect. God has no “emotions” which might create passion, suffering, need or
necessity in Him. Nevertheless, although the nature of divine love remains
incomprehensible and inexplicable to human reason, this love is real and genuine
and I confess, in agreement with Scripture, that God is love.
Concerning the Holy Trinity
I
believe, confess and worship the Holy Trinity. I worship the One, Holy,
Indivisible, Consubstantial, Life-Creating and Most Holy Trinity. In the Trinity
I worship three persons — three hypostases — that of the Father, that of the Son
and that of the Holy Spirit. I do not confuse the persons of the Most Holy
Trinity. I do not believe that the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit are, as
it were, three masks of a single person. None of the persons is alienated from
the others, but each has the fullness of the Three together.
Concerning the Incarnation
I
believe that from the moment of His conception in the virginal womb, Jesus
Christ was one person, yet having two natures. From His conception, He was God
and Man before birth, during birth and after birth.
I
believe and confess that the Most Holy Virgin Mary, after the image of the bush
which burned and was not consumed, truly received the fire of the Godhead in
Herself without being consumed thereby. I believe and confess that She truly
gave of Her own blood and of Her own flesh to the Incarnate Word and that She
fed Him with Her own milk.
I
confess that Jesus Christ was, in His Godhead, begotten of the Father outside of
time without assistance of a father. He is without mother in His divinity, and
without father in His manhood.
I
believe that through the Incarnation, the Most Holy Virgin Mary became truly the
Theotokos — the Mother of God — in time. She was a Virgin before, during and
after birth. Even as Jesus Christ arose from the dead despite the fact that the
Jews had sealed His tomb with a stone, and even as He entered into the midst of
His disciples while the doors were shut, so also did He pass through the
virginal womb without destroying the virginity of Mary or causing Her the
travail of birth. Even as the Red Sea remained untrodden after the passage of
Israel, so also did the Virgin remain undefiled after giving birth to Emmanuel.
She is the gate proclaimed by the Prophet Ezekiel through which God entered into
the world “while remaining shut” (Ezekiel 44:2).
Concerning Creation
I
believe that matter is not co-eternal with the Creator, and there was a time
when it did not exist, and that it was created out of nothing and in time by the
will and the Word of God. I believe that matter was created good but drawn into
sin and corruption because of man, who was established initially as the ruler of
the material world. Even though the creation “lieth in evil” and corruption, yet
it is God's creation and therefore good; only through man's will in using
creation evilly can sin be joined to creation. I believe that creation will be
purified by the fire of the Last Judgment at the moment of the glorious Advent
of our Savior Jesus Christ and that it will be restored and regenerated and that
it will constitute a New Creation, according to the promise of the Lord:
“Behold, I make all things new” (Rev. 21.5). “New heavens and a new earth
wherein dwelleth righteousness” (II Peter 3:13).
Concerning the Spiritual
Hosts
I
believe that the angels are not mythical but noetic beings created by God, that
they had a beginning in time and that they are not eternal or immortal by
nature, but only by Divine Grace. Although they possess a different nature than
ours, their spiritual and incorporeal nature is nonetheless real and is subject
to other laws and other dimensions foreign to human nature. They are conscious
persons. In the beginning they were created perfectly good, perfectly free,
having the faculty of will and choice. Some angels made a good choice by
remaining faithful to their Creator, whereas others used their liberty in an
evil manner and estranged themselves from their Creator and rose up against Him
and, becoming darkened and wicked, fell from God and turned into demons.
The
demons are envious of man because of the glory of the eternal destiny for which
he was created, and they seek his ruin and utter destruction. They have no real
power over those who have received Baptism, yet they tempt us so that we
ourselves might make ill use of our freedom. But the angels, because of their
loyalty and their communion with God, know no envy and are not jealous of man's
destiny. Rather, they have been endowed with a nature superior to man's so that
they might help man realize his purpose through the aid of Divine Grace; they
rejoice when a man succeeds in realizing the aim of his existence. The angles
are humble, they are instructed by the Church, they belong to the Church and
celebrate with us in glorifying the Creator; they pray for us and attend to our
prayers. All beings created by God's wisdom, will, and love are fashioned on a
hierarchical principle and not on an egalitarian principle. Even as men on earth
differ according to what gift each has received, so also do the angels have
distinctions among themselves in accordance with their rank and their ministry.
Concerning Immortality
I
believe that only God is eternal and immortal by nature and in essence. The
angels and the souls of men are immortal only because God bestows this
immortality upon them by grace. If if were not for the immortality which God
bestows by His divine will, neither the angels nor the souls of men would be
immortal of themselves.
Men's
souls have no pre-existence. The how of the soul's birth, as well as separation
from the body at the moment of the latter's biological death that it might be
reunited to the body when the dead are raised at the Second and glorious Coming
of our Savior is a mystery which has not been revealed to us.
Concerning Evil
I
believe that God created neither death nor suffering nor evil. Evil has no
hypostasis or existence as such. Evil is the absence of good; death is the
absence of life. Evil is the alienation of the created being who has estranged
himself from God; it is the degeneration of an essence which was created good.
The sinner dies, not because God slays him in punishment so that He might
revenge Himself on him — for man cannot offend God, nor does God experience any
satisfaction at the death of a man — the sinner dies because he has alienated
himself from the Source of Life. God is not responsible for evil, nor is He its
cause. Neither is God blameworthy because He created man's nature with the
possibility of alienating itself. If He had created human nature without free
will, by this imposed condition He would have rendered the created intelligent
being purely passive in nature; the creature would simply submit, not having the
possibility of doing otherwise, since it would not be free.
However, God wished that, after a fashion, we too should be His co-workers in
His creation and be responsible for our own eternal destiny. God knows in His
infinite wisdom how to transform the causes of evil into that which is
profitable for man's salvation. Thus God uses the consequences of evil so as to
make roses bloom forth from the thorns; although He never desired the thorns,
nor did He create them in order to use them as instruments. He permitted these
things to exist out of respect for our freedom. Thus God permits trials and
sufferings without having created them. When suffering comes upon me, I must
receive this as an unfathomable proof of His love, as a blessing in disguise and
without feeling indignant, I must seek out its significance. As for temptations,
I must avoid them, and for the sake of humility, beseech God to spare me from
them, even as our Savior teaches us in the Lord's Prayer: “And lead us not into
temptation, but deliver us from the evil one.” Yet, in all trials, temptations,
and sufferings, we conclude our prayer as did the Savior in the garden of
Gethsemane: “Not My will, but Thine be done” (Luke 22:42).
Concerning Sin
I
believe and I confess that God created man neither mortal nor immortal, but
capable of choosing between two states, as St. John of Damascus teaches us
(Exposition of the Orthodox Faith, Book II, chap. 30). Man's bad choice and ill
use of his free will caused his nature to be defiled by sin and become mortal.
Human nature's defilement and alienation from God are caused by sin which
entered into the world through a single man, Adam. Baptism in the true Church
liberates us from the effects of sin and enables us to “work” for our salvation.
Yet, even as after the Lord's Resurrection both the memory of His sufferings and
also the marks of these sufferings were preserved in a material manner, so also
after our Baptism does our nature preserve our weakness, in that it has received
only the betrothal of the Divine adoption which shall be realized only at the
glorious coming of our Lord Jesus Christ. Nevertheless, our regeneration by
Baptism is just as real as our Savior's Resurrection. The Most Holy Virgin Mary
was born with the same nature as ours. She could not of Herself have maintained
the state in which the Archangel found Her on the day of the Annunciation,
because She also, like all of us, had need of God's Grace. God is the Savior of
the Virgin not only because He purified Her, but also because by Divine Grace
and Her will She was protected from a state of personal sin.
Concerning Man’s Free Will
I
believe that man “works” for his salvation. Salvation is not imposed upon him in
spite of himself as Augustine of Hippo's and John Calvin's doctrine of
predestination would have it, nor is it obtained solely by the endeavors of
human will, as Pelagius taught. Salvation is synergetic, that is, man
co-operates in the work of his salvation. God does not take upon Himself the
role which belongs to man; likewise, man can attain to nothing by his own
efforts alone, neither by his virtue, nor by observing the commandments, nor by
a good disposition. None of these things have any value for salvation except in
the contest of Divine Grace, for salvation can not be purchased. Man's labors
and the keeping of the commandments only demonstrate his will and resolve to be
with God, his desire and love for God. Man cannot accomplish his part of
co-operation in his salvation by his own power, however small this part may be,
and he must entreat God to grant him the strength and grace necessary to
accomplish it. If he perceives that he does not even wish his own salvation, he
must ask to receive this desire from God “Who gives to all men and disregards
none.” For this reason, without despising man's role, we say that we receive
“grace for grace” (John 1:16) and that to approach and enter the Church
is according to the Fathers, “the grace given before grace,” since in reality
all is grace. This is the true meaning of the words of the Holy Fathers,
“although it be a question of grace, yet grace is granted only to those who are
worthy of it” indicating by the word “worthy” the exercise of our freedom of
will to ask all things from God.
Concerning Faith and Works
I
believe that man's natural virtue — whatever its degree — cannot save a man and
bring him to eternal life. The Scriptures teach: “All our righteousness is
like unto a menstrual rag” (Isaiah 64:6). The fulfillment of the works of
the Law does not permit us to demand or to merit something from God. Not only do
we have no merits or supererogatory works, but Jesus Christ enjoins us that when
we have fulfilled all the works of the Law, we should esteem ourselves as
nothing but “unprofitable servants” (Luke 17:10). Without Jesus Christ, a man's
personal virtue, his repute, his personal value, his work, his talents and his
faculties matter but little; they matter only insofar as they test his devotion
and faith in God. Our faith in Jesus Christ is not an abstraction but rather a
communion with Him. This communion fills us with the power of the Holy Spirit
and our faith becomes a fertile reality which engenders good works in us as the
Scriptures attest “which God prepared beforehand that we should walk in them”
(Eph. 2:10).
Thus,
according to the Apostles, faith engenders true works; and true works, which are
the fruit of the Holy Spirit, bear witness and prove the existence of a true
faith. Since faith is neither abstract nor sterile, it is impossible to
dissociate it from good works. It was by this same faith in the same Jesus
Christ that the righteous of the Old Testament (who are venerated to the same
degree as the other saints in the Orthodox Church) were saved, and not because
of their legalistic or disciplinary observance of the Law. Faith is also a gift
of God, and a man relying on his own efforts, his own piety, or his own
spirituality, cannot of himself possess this faith. Yet faith is not imposed: to
those who desire it, God grants it, not because of a fatalistic predestination,
but because of His Divine foreknowledge and His disposition to co-operate with
man's free will. If God has given us faith, we must not think ourselves better
than others, nor superior or more worthy than them, nor should we think that we
have received it because of our own merits, but we should attribute this favor
to the goodness of God Whose reasons escape us. We must thank Him by bowing down
before the mystery of this privilege and be conscious that one of the attributes
of faith is the “lack of curiosity.” It is neither works nor faith, but only the
Living God Who saves us.
Concerning the Virgin Mary (Theotokos)
I
believe that the nature of the Most Holy Virgin Mary is identical to our own.
After Her free and conscious acceptance of the plan of salvation offered to man
by God, the Holy Spirit overshadowed Her and the power of the Most High covered
Her, and “at the voice of the Archangel, the Master of all became incarnate in
Her.” Thus our Lord Jesus Christ, the New Adam, partook of our nature in all
things save sin, through the Theotokos, the New Eve. The nature of fallen man,
the nature of Adam, which bore the wounds of sin, of degeneration, and of
corruption, was restored to its former beauty, and now it partakes of the Divine
nature. Man's nature, restored and regenerated by grace, surpasses Adam's state
of innocence previous to the fall, since as the Fathers say, “God became man so
that man could become God.”
Thus
St. Gregory the Theologian writes: “O marvelous fall that brought about such a
salvation for us!” man, created “a little lower than the angels” (Ps. 8:5), can,
by God's grace, surpass even the angelic state, and so we praise the Most Holy
Virgin Mary, as: “More honorable than the Cherubim and beyond compare more
glorious than the Seraphim.” I reject all the doctrines, which are alien to the
teachings of the Fathers, concerning original sin and the “immaculate conception
of Mary.” Likewise, I reject every doctrine which endeavors to distort the
position of the Theotokos, Who, with a nature identical to ours, represented all
humanity when she accepted the salvation offered Her by God. Thus, God is the
Savior of the Most Holy Virgin as well and She is saved by the same grace
whereby all those who are redeemed are saved. She is not the “Mother of the
Church,” as though She were dissociated from the Church or superior to It., but
rather She is the Mother of all the faithful of the Church, of Which She also is
a part.
Concerning the Saints
I
believe that God “glorified those who glorify Him” (I Kings 2:30), that He is
“wondrous in His saints” (Ps. 67:35), and that He is the “Savior of the body” of
the Church (Eph. 5:23). I believe that we are saved insofar as we are members of
the Body, but that we cannot be saved by any individual relation with God
outside of the Church. For the Lord said, “I am the true vine... As the branch
cannot bear fruit of itself, except it abide in the vine, no more can ye, except
ye abide in Me. If a man abide not in Me, he is cast forth as a branch, and is
withered; and men gather them and cast them into the fire, and they are burned.”
(John 15:1, 4, 6). The saints are those members of the Church, the Body of
Christ, who have achieved great sanctity and perfection. I believe that our God
is the “God of our Fathers” and that He has mercy upon us because we are the
children of our Fathers, who were and are His saints and His servants, as the
Holy Scripture attests in many places. I believe that, even as St. James the
Apostle says, “the prayer of a righteous man availeth much” (James 5:16), even
as the Three Youths who prayed in the fiery furnace attest: “Cause not Thy mercy
to depart from us for Abraham's sake, Thy beloved, for Isaac's sake, Thy
servant, and for Israel's, Thy holy one” (Dan 3:34).
Those
whom God has glorified, I also glorify. Because of Him Who glorifies them, I
entrust myself to their prayers and intercessions, even as the Scriptures
require, for the angel of the Lord appeared to Abimelich and counseled him to
seek Abrahams's prayers, saying: “He shall pray for thee and thou shalt live”
(Gen. 20:7). I believe that my worship and veneration of the saints is a
well-pleasing worship offered of God since it is because of Him and for His sake
that I worship them. I give adoration to no created thing, no other being, be it
visible or invisible. I venerate no man for his own virtue's sake but “for the
grace of God which is given” him (I Cor.1:4). In celebrating the feast of a
saint, it is God Who is always worshipped, the saint's contest and victory being
the occasion for God to be worshipped. Indeed, He is worshipped and glorified in
His saints; He “is wondrous in His saints” (Ps 67:35). As He said, “I will dwell
in them” (II Cor. 6:16) and, by grace and adoption, they shall be called gods
(John 10:34-35). God Himself has granted His saints their ministry of
interceding on our behalf. I supplicate them and I am in communion with them,
even after their death in the flesh, since this death, according to the Apostle,
cannot separate us from the love of Christ which unites us. According to the
Lord's promise, they who believe in Him “shall never die... but are passed from
death into life” (John 11:26, 5:24).
Concerning the Holy Icons
I
venerate holy icons in perfect accord with the second commandment of the
Decalogue [Ten Commandments] and not in contradiction to it. For, before the
Incarnation of God, before the Nativity of Jesus Christ, any representation of
Him would have been the fruit of man's imagination, a conception of man's
reasoning concerning God Who is by nature and in His essence incomprehensible,
indescribable, immaterial, inexpressible and unfathomable. Every conception or
imagination concerning God will, by necessity, be alien to His nature; it will
be false, unreal, an idol. But when the time was fulfilled, the Indepictable One
became depictable for my salvation. As the Apostle says, “we have heard Him, we
have seen Him with our eyes, we have looked upon Him and have handled Him with
our hands” (I John 1:1). When I venerate the holy icons I do not worship matter,
but I confess that God Who is immaterial by nature has become material for our
sakes so that He might dwell among us, die for us, be raised from the dead in
His flesh and cause our human nature, which He took upon Himself, to sit at the
right hand of the Father in the Heavens. When I kiss His venerable icon, I
confess the relatively describable and absolutely historical reality of His
Incarnation, His Death, His Resurrection, His Ascension into the Heavens, and
His Second and Glorious Coming.
I
venerate the holy icons by prostrating myself before them, by kissing them, by
showing them a “relative worship” (as the definition of the Seventh Ecumenical
Council says) while confessing that only the Most Holy Trinity is to be offered
adoration. By the words “relative worship” I do not mean a second rate worship,
but that they are worshipped because of their relation to God. God alone, Who is
the cause and the final goal of all things, deserves our worship; Him alone must
we worship. We worship the saints, their holy relics and their icons only
because He dwells in them. Thus, the creatures which are sanctified by God are
venerated and worshipped because of their relation to Him and on account of Him.
This has always been the teaching of the Church: “The worship of the icon is
directed to the prototype.” Not to venerate the saints is to deny the reality of
their communion with God, the effects of Divine sanctification and the grace
which works in them; it is to deny the words of the Apostle who said, “I no
longer live, but Christ liveth in me.” (Gal. 2:20). I believe that icons are a
consequence of and a witness to the Incarnation of Our Savior and an integral
part of Christianity; thus there is no question of a human custom or doctrine
having been superimposed upon the Tradition of the Church, as though it were an
afterthought. I believe and I confess that the holy icons are not only
decorative and didactic objects which are found in Church, but also holy and
sanctifying, being the shadows of heavenly realities; and even as the shadow of
the Apostle Peter once cured the sick — as it is related in the Acts of the
Apostles — so in like manner do the holy icons, being shadows of celestial
realities, sanctify us.
Concerning the Holy Relics
of the Saints
I
believe and I confess that when we venerate and kiss the holy relics, the grace
of God acts upon our total being, that is, body and soul, and that the bodies of
the saints, since they are the temples of the Holy Spirit (I Cor. 6:9),
participate in and are endued with this totally sanctifying grace of the Holy
Spirit. Thus, God can act through the holy relics of His saints, as the Old
Testament bears witness; for there we see that a man was resurrected by touching
the bones of the Prophet Elisseus (II Kings 13:21). Therefore, I neither
venerate holy relics for some sentimental reason, nor do I honor them as merely
historical remains but acknowledge them as being, by the grace of God, endowed
with intrinsic holiness, as being vessels of grace. Indeed, in the Acts of the
Apostles we see that the faithful were healed by touching the Apostles'
“handkerchiefs” and “aprons” (Acts 19:12).
Concerning the Holy
Scriptures
I
believe that all the Scriptures are inspired by God and that, as St. John
Chrysostom says, “It is impossible for a man to be saved if he does not read the
Scriptures.” However, the Holy Scriptures cannot be dissociated from the Church,
for She wrote them. The Scriptures were written in the Church, by the Church and
for the Church. Outside the Church, the Scriptures cannot be understood. One
trying to comprehend the Scriptures though outside the Church is like a stranger
trying to comprehend the correspondence between two members of the same family.
The Holy Scriptures lose their meaning, the sense of their expression and their
content for the man who is a stranger to the Church, to Her life, to Her
Mysteries and to Her Traditions, since they were not written for him. I believe
and I confess that there is no contradiction whatsoever between the Sacred
Scriptures and the Tradition of the Church. By the word “Tradition,” I do not
mean an accumulation of human customs and practices which have been added to the
Church. According to the holy Apostle Paul, the written and oral Traditions are
of equal value; for it is not the means of transmission that saves us, but the
authenticity of the content of what has been transmitted to us. Furthermore, the
teaching of the Old Testament as well as that of the New Testament were
transmitted orally to God's people before they were written down.
Therefore, the Holy Scriptures themselves are a part of Holy Tradition which is
a unified whole and we must accept it as a whole, and not choose bits and parts
according to our private opinions or interpretations. The official versions and
texts of the Orthodox Church are the Septuagint version of the Old Testament
(which was used by the Apostles when they recorded the New Testament) and the
Greek text of the New Testament. Translations into the various languages have
also been approved by the Church and are extensively used. I acknowledge that
there are a plurality of meanings for each verse of the Bible, provided that
each interpretation be justified by the teachings of the Holy Fathers who are
glorified by God. I reject all human systems of interpretation of the Holy
Scriptures, whether they be allegorical, literalistic, or otherwise. I confess
that the Holy Scripture was written through the inspiration of the Holy Spirit,
and that it is solely through the Holy Spirit that we can read and understand
It. I acknowledge that I cannot read or understand the Scriptures without the
assistance of the Holy Spirit and the illumination of the Tradition of the
Church, even as the eunuch of Candice could not understand the prophets without
the aid of St. Philip, who was sent to him by the Holy Spirit (Acts 8). I
denounce as blasphemous every attempt to correct, re-adapt or “de-mythologize”
the sacred texts of the Bible. I confess that Tradition alone is competent to
establish the Canon of the Holy Scriptures since only Tradition can declare what
belongs to it and what is foreign to it. Moreover, I confess that the
“foolishness of preaching” (I Cor. 1:21) is superior to the wisdom of man or his
rationalistic systems.
Concerning the Church
I
believe that the Church of Jesus Christ is One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic,
and that It was instituted by God through the power of the Holy Spirit and by
revelation. I reject the idea that the Church is a form of piety which is the
fruit of a philosophical or historical evolution, or the fruit of human reason
and ingenuity. The Church is instituted by God and is a tree which is rooted in
the Heavens. We receive nourishment of its fruits, although the planting remains
supernatural. I believe that no other Name under heaven has been given us by
which we can be saved, besides that of Jesus Christ. I believe that one can not
dissociate Jesus Christ from His Church, which is His Body. I believe with St.
Cyprian of Carthage that the man who does not have the Church for his Mother
cannot have God as his Father, and that outside the Church there is no
salvation.
I
believe that neither ignorance, nor lack of awareness, or even the best
intentions, can excuse one and justify him or her for salvation; for if even in
the true Church, “the righteous will scarcely be saved” (I Peter 4:18) as the
Scriptures say, how can one conclude that ignorance or error — even if it be
inherited — can excuse one or that good intentions can lead us with certainty
into the Kingdom of Heaven? According to His boundless mercy and righteousness
God deals with those who are outside the Church, and the Apostle forbids us to
concern ourselves with the judgments of God concerning such people. God did not
institute schismatic and heretical assemblies that they might work in parallel
with the Church for the salvation of men. For this reason, schismatic and
heretical assemblies ("churches") are not workshops of salvation; rather, they
are obstacles created by the devil, wherein error and truth are mingled in
different proportions so that the true Church may not be recognized. Therefore,
with the Holy Fathers I confess that: “The martyrdom of heretics is suicide and
the virginity of heretics is fornication.” Outside of the Church there is no
true Baptism, nor any other Mystery. Hence, the Apostolic Canons and the canons
of the Ecumenical Councils forbid us to pray with schismatics and heretics, be
it in private or in Church, as they forbid us, under the penalty of defrockment
and excommunication, to permit them to function as clergymen.
Concerning How the Church's
Organization
is Superior to Ethnic Considerations
I
believe and I confess that the Church makes no distinction in the race of Her
believers or their nationality or their language. The sister and autocephalous
Orthodox Churches have been historically delimited by national, geographic, and
jurisdictional boundaries, but not as if these had any scriptural or messianic
significance. Thus, according to Canon Law, there can not be two bishops named
for the same area. The Church's brotherhood and unity is enacted by God and
permeates the very essence and nature of God. This unity is not subject to
racial, familial, national, political, economic, cultural or social
considerations, which are of this world (“The things which are Caesar's,” Matt.
22:21). The brotherhood of the Church is one of “the things which are of God,”
and the “world has no part in it.” (In 1872, the Ecumenical Patriarchate
condemned as heresy the concept of “phyletism” which places a particular
nationality and its interest, goals and aspirations above the Church.)
Concerning the Head of the
Church
I
believe that the only Head of the Orthodox Church is our Lord Jesus Christ. The
Orthodox Church has never had, nor shall ever have a “universal” bishop. A
“primate” or an “Ecumenical Patriarch” is not a prelate with universal
jurisdiction over the Church, nor was the Pope of Rome, nor the Pope of
Alexandria, for that matter, ever so considered in the early centuries before
the rise of Papal pretensions, especially from the ninth century on. The titles
“patriarch,” “archbishop,” “metropolitan,” and so forth, do not denote a
difference of episcopal grace. The unity of the Orthodox Church is expressed by
the harmony of Her bishops, by Her common Faith, common Law, and common
spiritual life. Every bishop (the visible head) and his flock (the visible body)
constitute the fullness of the Body of Christ. There can be no Church without a
bishop, even as a body cannot exist without a head. Since He is God, our Lord
Jesus Christ, despite His Ascension into the Heavens, remains with us until the
end of time in accordance with His promise (Matt. 28:20); therefore, since He is
not absent, He does not require a “vicar,” in the Papal sense, to rule over His
Body. The Holy Spirit directs the Church and accomplishes that incomprehensible
identification in which our incarnate Lord Jesus, and the Holy Eucharist, and
the assembly of the Church are one and the same and are called the Body of
Christ.
The
Ecumenical and Local Councils do not invent symbols of faith, but, guided by the
Holy Spirit, bear witness to what has been delivered by the Church at every
time, in every place, and by every one; and they promulgate the canons necessary
to put the Faith into practice as it has been lived and professed from the
beginning. Infallibility is an attribute of the Catholicity of the Church of
Christ, and not an attribute of a single person or, de facto, of an hierarchical
assembly. A council is not “ecumenical” because of the exterior legality of its
composition (since this factor does not oblige the Holy Spirit to speak through
a council), but because of the purity of the Faith of the Gospels which it
professes. “Truth (i.e. conformity to the Apostolic Tradition) judges the
Councils,” says St. Maximus the Confessor. There is no “pope,” superior to the
Councils who must ratify them, but rather it is the conscience of the Church,
which, being infallible, does or does not recognize the authenticity of a
Council, and which does or does not acknowledge that the voice of the Holy
Spirit has spoken. Hence, there have been councils which, though fulfilling the
exterior conditions of ecumenicity, were nonetheless rejected by the Church. The
Church's criterion, according to St. Vincent of Lerins, is the Church.
Concerning the Church and
Holy Tradition
I
believe that the Church is directed by the Holy Spirit. I believe that, in the
Church, man cannot invent anything to take the place of revelation, and that the
details of the Church's life bear the imprint of the Holy Spirit. Hence, I
refuse human reason the right to make clear distinctions between what it thinks
to be primary and what secondary. A Christian's moral life can not be
dissociated from his piety and his doctrinal confession of faith. I denounce as
being contrary to Tradition the dissociation of the Church's profession of Faith
from Her administration. By the same token, the Church's disciplinary canons are
a direct reflection of Her Faith and Doctrine. I reject any attempt to revise or
“purge,” “renovate,” or “make relevant” Orthodoxy's canonical rules or
liturgical texts.
Concerning the Life That is
to Come
I
believe in the existence of eternal life. I believe in the Second Coming, that
is, the glorious return of the Lord, when He shall come to judge the living and
the dead, and render to each man according to the works that he did while living
in the body. I believe in the establishment of the Kingdom of His righteousness.
I look for the resurrection of the dead, and I believe that we will be
resurrected in the body. I believe that both the Kingdom of God and Hell shall
be eternal. I do not transgress the Fourth Commandment when I observe Sunday,
the eighth day, the day which prefigures the “new creation,” since formerly,
before the Incarnation, the primordial perfection of the creation of the world
was commemorated by the Sabbath day of rest. By observing Sunday, I confess the
new creation in Jesus Christ, which is of greater import and more real than the
existing creation which yet bears the wounds of sin.
I
believe also that both the righteous and the sinners who are departed now enjoy
a foretaste of their final destiny, but that each man shall receive the entirety
of what he deserves only at the Last Judgment. God loves not only those who
dwell in Paradise, but also those who are in Hell; in Hell, however, the Divine
love constitutes a cause of suffering for the wicked. This is not due to God's
love but to their own wickedness, which resents this love and experiences it as
a torment. I believe that, as yet, neither Paradise nor Hell has commenced in a
complete and perfect sense. What the reposed undergo now is the partial
judgment, and partial reward and punishment. Hence, for the present, there is
also no resurrection of the bodies of the dead. The saints, too, await this
eternal and perfect state (even as a “perfect” and everlasting Hell awaits the
sinners), for, in his Epistle to the Hebrews, St. Paul states, “and these all
(i.e., all the saints), having obtained a good report through faith, received
not the promise, since God has provided some better thing for us, so that they
without us should not be made perfect” (Heb. 14:40).
Therefore, all the saints await this resurrection of their bodies and the
commencement of Paradise in its perfect and complete sense, as St. Paul declares
in the Acts of the Apostles, “I believe all things which are written in the law
and in the prophets, and have hope in God, which they themselves also accept,
that there shall be a resurrection of the dead, both of the just and the unjust”
(Acts 24:14-15). But even though they do not yet partake of their glory fully,
the intercessions of the saints are nonetheless efficacious even now, for St.
James in his Catholic Epistle, did not say “the effectual prayer of a righteous
man shall avail much,” but rather, “availeth much” (James 5:16) even now. I
believe that Paradise and Hell will be twofold in nature, spiritual and
physical. At present, because the body is still in the grave, both the reward
and the punishment are spiritual. Therefore, we speak of Hades (i.e., the place
of the souls of the dead) because, as such, Hell (i.e., the place of everlasting
spiritual and physical torment) has not yet commenced. Hades was despoiled by
our Savior by His descent thither and by His Resurrection, but Hell, on the
contrary, shall be eternal. In that day, Christ shall say unto those on the
left, “Depart from Me, ye cursed, into everlasting fire, prepared for the Devil
and his angels” (Matt. 25:41).
This
is attested to in the Gospels by the demons also, in the miracle of the healing
of the demoniac who lived in the district of the Gadarenes. For, at the approach
of our Savior, the demons cried out, “What have we to do with Thee, Jesus, Thou
Son of God? Art Thou come hither to torment us before the time?” Thus, they are
not yet in Hell, but they do know that a Day has been appointed when Hell shall
commence. I do not believe in “purgatory,” but I believe, as the Scriptures
attest, that the prayers and fasts made by the living for the sake of the dead
have a beneficial effect on the souls of the dead and upon us, and that even the
souls that are in darkness are benefited by our prayers and fasts. The public
prayers of the Church, however, are reserved exclusively for those who have
reposed in the Church. Insofar as it depends upon my own wish, I shall not
permit my body to be cremated, but shall specify in my Will that my body be
clothed, if possible, in my Baptismal tunic and be buried in the earth from
which my Creator took me and to which I must return until the Savior's glorious
Coming and the Resurrection from the dead.