Especially
in advance of the much-anticipated Great and Holy Council scheduled for later
this year, there has been much talk about the importance of our ecumenical
connections, including the possibility of recognizing the baptisms of all the
other Christian churches and denominations. Part of the discussion has revolved around the
question of how to receive Christians from such churches who desire to convert
to Orthodoxy—do we receive them by baptism, thereby effectively totally denying
the basic ecclesial reality of their churches, or merely by chrismation,
accepting their baptisms as valid and thereby giving more ecclesial validity to
their churches? Some of the scholarly
discussion has invoked the wisdom of St. Basil, who dealt with questions like
these in his “canonical letter” to Amphilochius, bishop of Iconium, which was
in turn utilized in the canons attached to the Quinisext Council in Trullo, in
canon 95.
This
material distinguished between three different situations—1. Christians whose
faith (represented sometimes by the baptismal formula they used) was
sufficiently different from that of the Church to require them to be received
by re-baptism—which of course, was not really a re-baptism, but simply a baptism, since the baptism they received
from their heretical church was regarded as no true baptism; 2. Christians
whose faith retained enough similarities to that of the Church so as to allow
them to be received by chrismation alone, without re-baptism; and 3. Christians
whose faith was sufficiently similar to that of the Church so as to allow them
to be received into the Church upon them simply renouncing and anathematizing
their former heresies. Examples of the
first group of converts requiring rebaptism were the Paulianists, as well as
the Eunomeans, who baptized with a single immersion. Examples of the second group, those received
by chrismation alone, were Apolliniarians, who declared that Christ had no
human soul, but that the Logos took the place of the soul in Him. Examples of the third group, converts
received through simple renunciation of error, were groups like the Nestorians.
Here the details
concerning the heresies are less important than the underlying principle
involved, which is that various groups were received according to the principle
of how far their faith differed from Orthodoxy.
Groups judged close to Orthodoxy were only required to renounce their
previous errors. Groups judged further
out and differing more dramatically from the faith of the Church were required
to be chrismated. Groups whose faith was
judged as radically incompatible to Orthodoxy were received by baptism, with
the implicit judgment that their former faith was not truly Christian, whatever
it claimed to be and whatever its outward similarities.
Many
scholars still invoke these principles today, and on the basis of them suggest
that the Church recognize the baptism of all the other Christian churches. Those churches, they suggest, are
sufficiently close to Orthodoxy so as to allow the Orthodox to accept their
baptism because they accept the same Trinitarian faith as Orthodoxy does. But are they really?
Here
we must speak of the elephant in the ecumenical room. It is probable that most of the
representatives of those Protestant churches do indeed accept a Trinitarian
faith, and have enough proximity to Orthodoxy to allow them to hang out in
ecumenical circles and talk to us very articulately. But we Orthodox have had a similar experience
before which should caution us to take what is said in such ecumenical
discussions with a grain of ecumenical salt.
Our previous discussions with Anglicans, for instance, gave us the
impression that 1. Anglicanism was confessionally homogenous, with all
Anglicans committed to the same faith; and 2. this faith accepted (for example)
seven sacraments and seven ecumenical councils.
That was because the ecumenical delegates talking to us at ecumenical
gatherings accepted these things, and we assumed (gratuitously, as it turned
out) that they represented all Anglicans.
It was not so. Many Anglicans
accepted not seven sacraments, but two, and not the seven ecumenical councils,
but four (or possibly five or six), but certainly not the last one, which blessed
icons. It turned out that there were
High Anglicans, Low Anglicans, and Broad Anglicans, and heaven knows what in
between. Having no such experience of
confessional diversity (or “comprehension” as the Anglicans called it) we
assumed that such diversity did not exist within the churches with whom we were
speaking. We were naïve, as it turned
out, and were soon disabused of our naivety.
It
is high time to learn from our past mistakes.
The delegates speaking for the various Protestant churches, let us
charitably assume, are convinced and devout Trinitarians, persons whose faith
approximates ours enough to allow them to take part in ecumenical
discussions. But the devout Anglican
Trinitarian does not represent all Anglicans.
Anglicanism (to take but one example) allows its members and even its
bishops a great latitude in their faith, so that some have been famously
anti-trinitarian with no ecclesiastical consequences whatsoever (men such as
Bishop Pike and Bishop Spong). Evidently
such diversity (or comprehension) is entirely legitimate within the Anglican
Communion.
It
is not just anti-trinitarianism that is allowed within the boundaries of their
“orthodoxy”. Their refusal to condemn
abortion is allowed, as is the view which says that women can be bishops, and homosexuals
and lesbians can be married (and ordained).
The rejection of Scripture, Tradition, and the canonical tradition
implicit in accepting such teachings is also allowed and is mainstream in these
traditions. This reigning theological
liberalism is the elephant in the room. Bishop
Spong, for example, may declare himself a Trinitarian according to his
redefined definitions and recite the Creed every Sunday, but what of it? Liberalism allows him to redefine the ancient
creedal words in whatever way he likes, so that although he may say the
traditional Creed, he may actually not believe a word of it. We know that this is allowed, because Spong
has written best-sellers to boast about it, and remained a best-selling bishop.
Anglican Comprehension apparently is
wide and comprehensive enough to include such diversity. Given this, it really scarcely matters what
the devout Trinitarian attending the ecumenical gatherings believes. His or hers is a private opinion, and cannot
be regarded as really representing the church which he or she purports to
represent.
Let
us for a moment prescind from this discussion and play a game of historical
imagination. Let’s pretend that St.
Basil could be presented with the case of a church that allowed its bishops to
publically and emphatically reject the virgin birth, the divinity of Christ,
the existence of hell, and the uniqueness of the Christian faith. Let us assume that he knew further that this
church allowed abortion, blessed homosexual marital unions, and even ordained
such homosexuals to the highest offices in the church. In which of the three categories we have
mentioned above do you guess he might place this church? Is there any doubt that he would regard such
a confession as essentially Gnostic, and receive its converts by baptism? For all of the churches he surveyed in his
days agreed with his Orthodox church regarding all these moral issues. Churches which dissented so radically about
such basics as our modern liberal Protestant churches do would not have been
accepted by Basil and the Councils after him as sufficiently close to Orthodoxy
as to allow their baptisms to stand. The
issue of what determines ecclesial legitimacy cannot be confined to
Christological matters and Trinitarian theology. It embraces orthodoxy of moral praxis as well
as orthodoxy of belief, and churches which diverge so dramatically in matters
of basic moral issues cannot be considered true churches. Calling darkness light (see Isaiah 5:20) is
enough to forfeit credible claim to be the Church founded by Jesus Christ.
This
being so, it has important implications for our ecumenical discussions. All our past ecumenism has been based upon
the happy principle of confessionalism—i.e. that a certain church or
denomination was more or less consistent in its confession of faith. Thus all Protestants could be counted upon
to accept the divinity of Christ, all Calvinists could be counted upon to
accept the Westminster Confession, and all Lutherans could be counted upon to
accept the Augsburg Confession. That is
why the rite of receiving such converts found in Hapgood’s Service Book asks the Reformed converts (for example) if they
renounce the “false doctrine of predestination of men”, because they assumed
that all Reformed converts accepted the same Reformed confession of faith. We assumed that each denomination was
characterized by fidelity to its historic confessions and could be counted on
to keep to that historic path. For the
last generation at least it has clearly not been so, and Christians from those
confessions have been free to accept or reject the historic confessions of
their past, or in fact anything else they liked. That is why they now reject Protestantism’s
historic theology of the sanctity of unborn life, of Holy Orders, of sexuality,
and of gender. It should be noted that I
am here referring only to the “historic” Protestant churches of the Reformation
now characterized by theological liberalism, not the more conservative
Evangelical Protestant churches which have retained a more traditional moral
praxis. It should also be noted that
these reflections are intended to have implications only for those converting
to Orthodoxy in the future; those
already received by chrismation alone should of course be fully accepted with
no suggestion that their previous baptism requires remedy.
As long as
Protestant churches allow such diversity (or heresy, to give its ancient name)
our ecumenical discussions will partake of a certain unreality. We will pass motions accepting the baptisms
of all Lutherans, assuming that all Lutherans are like the Lutherans we have
been talking to, when in fact many of them are nothing like them at all. The fact that theological liberalism reigns
in the historic Protestant churches has not been mentioned in any of the
ecumenical documents I have seen. If
that elephant in the room has indeed been noticed by Orthodox participants, no
one has been speaking about it. It is
time that we did.
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