Many have heard the dramatic story of the
twenty-one Coptic Orthodox Christians working in Libya who were captured and
beheaded by ISIS as part of their ongoing campaign of provocation and
terror. What may not be as well known in
the media is that all twenty-one were offered the chance to save their lives by
embracing Islam, and that all twenty-one refused, confessing Christ and dying
for Him as true Christian martyrs.
Indeed it appears that the Coptic Orthodox Church has already canonized
them (i.e. declared them to be saints), and some ask what response the
Chalcedonian Orthodox Churches should make as regards these courageous
Christians. The question involves a look
at the evolving practice of official canonization in the church.
People
are most familiar with the process of canonization in the Roman Catholic
Church, since the Roman communion is the best-known and largest church in the
west. Over the years that church has
developed a complicated system and lengthy process which must be followed
before anyone can be officially declared a saint. Previous to that, declarations of sainthood
happened more informally and locally.
But by the tenth century the pope had secured control of all church
canonizations, for in 1181 Pope Innocent III reserved all such declarations of
sainthood to himself. Even then it was
not until the time of the Counter-Reformation in 1634 that a full process for
canonization emerged, with nominations, judges, advocates, counter-advocates
(the so-called “devil’s advocates”), trials, and the final verdict. And of course the whole process, as well as
taking years, also took money to amass testimonials and keep the cause
alive. A certain number of authenticated
miracles were also required to push a candidate along the long path to being
called “Blessed” (a kind of lesser rank of holiness) and then further along yet
to actual sainthood. It was all very
formal, and organized, and official, and lengthy, and expensive.
It
was also very different than it was in the early church. The term “saint” of course simply means “holy
one” (Greek agios), and was used by
St. Paul to describe any baptized and faithful Christian. Certain people whose Christian faith was
clearly authentic and whose lives merited wider attention, were called saints, or
described as “holy” (e.g. not just “Paul”, but “holy Paul”). This of course included the martyrs,
believers who had suffered for their Lord.
There was no process of canonization required; the conviction and
declaration of the local church that these people were truly holy was
sufficient. Such was the credibility of
the laity’s testimony, and the Church’s confidence that its faithful could
discern true holiness when they saw it.
If a church’s bishop was martyred, for example, the faithful treasured
story of their bishop’s heroic end and accorded him the appropriate
honour. They would keep and venerate his
relics, celebrate his martyrdom at its yearly anniversary, and ask for his
heavenly intercession. It was a strictly
local affair, and if other churches from neighbouring cities didn’t want to
join in the acknowledgment of that bishop, they didn’t have to and one tried to
make them. But examples of heroic
holiness were rare enough, and usually the neighbouring churches were all too
happy to acknowledge the sanctity and tell the story of any martyr. Such stories were shared with Christians in
other cities, and sometimes relics were also shared, so that the martyr’s
anniversary celebration in one city was sometimes kept in neighbouring cities
as well.
Orthodoxy
is heir to this local and informal practice of the early church. We are somewhat more formal than our
ancestors were. Nowadays a potential
saint is discussed by the local synod of bishops and discussions are held about
whether or not to canonize him or her.
Then the liturgical services are written and the icon painted and the
day for official canonization (called the saint’s “glorification”)
arrives. The final memorial service is
said for him, and then prayers are no longer said for him, but rather to
him. But even before this final
episcopal process begins, the people still know whether or not the “candidate”
is a saint. Like in the earlier days,
the Church still recognizes holiness when it sees it, and local “unofficial”
veneration always precedes the “official” one.
After all, it is God who makes saints, not bishops. And it seems clear enough that God has made
twenty-one new saints in Libya lately.
Whether or not the bishops give their official stamp of liturgical
approval is almost irrelevant insofar as goes the love and veneration of the
people of God. It seems likely that the
bishops, whose divine task it is to lead the Church and be its liturgical
voice, will respond by officially glorifying these martyrs. The laity have said Axios! and the bishops may well respond Amen!
Fr. Lawrence,
ReplyDeleteI think that that these brave and pious men would be better served by the prayers of the Church rather than our veneration.
The Church does not venerate people outside of her as a rule (like pious Roman Catholics and Protestants that were martyred for their faith). I fully understand that these men, like some Melkites and Eastern Catholics, are likely outside the Church through historical processes. Nevertheless, the wisest (and canonical) policy (see Laodicea canon 9) is to remember them in our prayers and support their churches and families in their desperate need.
May God grant them eternal peace and rest!
in ICXC,
Maximus
The important thing to remember about the Martyrs, is that if we are not careful, we can be the ones who do the killings. Getting ourselves whipped up into a frenzy over these outrages will inspire us to commit similar outrages. It will not do to say "We are Christians, and they are Muslims". Even we are capable of doing such things; else we would have no need of going to confession!
ReplyDeleteAbsolutely! In the right (or wrong) circumstances, anyone is capable of anything. We need to keep our hearts free from rage and rancour, whatever our response might be.
ReplyDelete