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Pan-Orthodox Council

2016 Eastern Orthodox synod From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Pan-Orthodox Council
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The Pan-Orthodox Council, officially referred to as the Holy and Great Council of the Orthodox Church (Ancient Greek: Ἁγία καὶ Μεγάλη Σύνοδος τῆς Ὀρθοδόξου Ἐκκλησίας;[1] also sometimes called the Council of Crete), was a synod of set representative bishops of the universally recognised autocephalous local churches of the Eastern Orthodox Church held in Kolymvari, Crete. The Council sat from 19 to 26 June 2016.

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The Pan-Orthodox Council, Kolymvari, Crete, Greece, June 2016
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Preparations

In March 2014, the Primates of local Orthodox Churches convened in Fener, the residence of the Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I, and reached a decision: "The Holy and Great Council of the Orthodox Church will be convened by the Ecumenical Patriarch in Constantinople in 2016, unless something unexpected occurs."[1][2]

In January 2016, at the invitation of the Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew, the Synaxis of Primates of the Orthodox Autocephalous Churches was held at the Orthodox Center of the Ecumenical Patriarchate in Chambésy, Switzerland.[3] The Primates of the local Orthodox Churches and three official delegations representing the Church of Antioch, the Church of Greece, and the Church of Poland, convened to finalise the texts for the Holy and Great Council.[3] Due to the heightened tensions between Russia and Turkey, a decision was reached to hold the Synod in Greece.[4][5]

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Agenda, decisions and reception

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The items officially approved at the 2016 Synaxis for referral to and adoption by the Holy and Great Council were:[6][7]

  • The Mission of the Orthodox Church in Today's World;
  • The Orthodox Diaspora;
  • Autonomy and the Means by Which it is Proclaimed;
  • The Sacrament of Marriage and its Impediments;
  • The Importance of Fasting and Its Observance Today;
  • Relations of the Orthodox Church with the Rest of the Christian World.

Elizabeth Prodromou, an American professor who was on the team advising Patriarch Bartholomew at the Council, stated that the Council would enable the Orthodox church to express a "robust theology of global engagement".[8]

The Council in Crete approved, with minor amendments, the documents that had been elaborated by all the Churches in the course of their consultations prior to the Synod, and adopted the Message and the Encyclical.[9]

In view of non-attendance by the four Churches, the Synod's official spokesman Archbishop Job Getcha stated that all the documents adopted by the Council in Crete would be binding to all the Orthodox Churches.[10][11]

On 27 June 2016, the Synod of the Church of Antioch issued a statement concerning the Crete Council that stated that the documents adopted by in Crete were not binding for the Patriarchate of Antioch; the Church of Antioch recognized the Synod as "a preliminary gathering on the way to a Pan-Orthodox Council", while the documents it adopted as not final and open for discussion.[12][13]

The Synod of the Russian Church (the Moscow Patriarchate) in July 2016 passed a resolution that designated the Crete Council as "an important event in the history of the synodal process in the Orthodox Church that was begun by the First Pan-Orthodox consultation in Rhodes in 1961", but the Russian Church Synod refused to recognise the Synod as pan-orthodox and the documents thereof as "reflecting pan-orthodox consensus".[14] The Russian Church Synod decided to have the Crete Synod's documents examined for further conclusions.[14][15] In early December 2017, the Bishops′ Council of the ROC approved the previous resolution of the ROC Synod that stated that the ROC did not recognise the Council in Crete as Pan-Orthodox, nor its decisions binding for all the Orthodox Churches.[16]

On 18 November 2016, Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I of Constantinople sent a letter to the Archbishop of Athens asking him to admonish some of the Greek Orthodox clergy who reject the Holy and Great Council. According to the document, Patriarch Bartholomew reserved to himself the right to sever ecclesiastical and sacramental communion with those clergymen if Greek ecclesiastical authorities decide not to act on the patriarch's request to discipline them.[17] As Dr. Ines Murzaku, professor of Ecclesiastical History and Founding Chair of the Department of Catholic Studies at Seton Hall University, elaborated in her email interview to Crisis Magazine, such "interference and pressure to excommunicate might sound more as rules/jurisdiction that apply in the West“, and for this reason the Patriarch Bartholomew "might be viewed by many as ‘the Pope of the East’ or ‘Orthodox Pope’”.[18]

However, other Catholic scholars such as Ludwig Hertling, would disagree as he says in his book, Communio: Church and Papacy in Early Christianity, anyone could and did break communion when the parties felt necessary. The most prominent example is the excommunications between Patriarch Michael Kerularios and Cardinal Humbert (a representative of Pope Leo, but not Leo himself) when the latter excommunicated the former. That is still practiced in the Church today. The Patriarch's request for admonishment concerning the clerics in question is not based on their rejection of the Council per se, since others also disagree, but with the manner they conduct their activities as well as their allegations and charges, including that of heresy (both type of actions denounced by the Holy Synods of other autocephalous Churches).

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Participants and delegations

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Churches that attended

Church of Constantinople
Church of Alexandria
  • Patriarch Theodore II (Choreftakis), Pope and Patriarch of Alexandria and All Africa.[20][21]
  • Metropolitan Elder Petros (Giakoumelos) of Aksum.
  • Metropolitan Elder Gabriel (Raftopulos) of Leontopolis.
  • Metropolitan Makarios (Tillyrides) of Nairobi and All Kenya.
  • Metropolitan Jonah (Lwanga) of Kampala and All Uganda.
  • Metropolitan Seraphim (Iakóvou) of Zimbabwe and Angola
  • Metropolitan Alexandros (Gianniris) of Nigeria.
  • Metropolitan Theophylaktos (Tzoumerkas) of Tripoli.
  • Metropolitan Sergios (Kykkotis) of Good Hope.
  • Metropolitan Athanasios (Kykkotis) of Cyrene.
  • Metropolitan Alexios (Leontaritis) of Carthage.
  • Metropolitan Ieronymos (Muzeeyi) of Mwanza.
  • Metropolitan George (Vladimirou) of Guinea.
  • Metropolitan Nicholas (Antoniou) of Hermopolis.
  • Metropolitan Dimitrios (Zaharengas) of Irinopolis.
  • Metropolitan Damaskinos (Papandreou) of Johannesburg and Pretoria.
  • Metropolitan Narkissos (Gammoh) of Accra.
  • Metropolitan Emmanuel (Kagias) of Ptolemaidos.
  • Metropolitan Gregorios (Stergiou) of Cameroon and Exarch of Central Africa.
  • Metropolitan Nicodemos (Priangellos) of Memphis.
  • Metropolitan Meletios (Kamiloudes) of Katanga.
  • Bishop Panteleimon (Arathymos) of Brazzaville and Gabon.
  • Bishop Innokentios (Biakatonta) of Burudi and Rwanda.
  • Bishop Crysostomos (Karagounis) of Mozambique.
  • Bishop Neofytos (Kongai) of Nyeri and Mount Kenya.
  • Special Consultants:
    • Dr. Panagiotis Tzoumerkas, Professor, University Ecclesiastical Academy of Thessaloniki.
    • Archimandrite Paisios (Larentzakis).
    • Archimandrite Peter (Parginos).
    • Protopresbyter Athenodoros Papaevropiadis.
    • Protopresbyter Joseph Kwame Labi Ayete.
    • Deacon Emmanuel Kamanua.
Church of Jerusalem
  • Patriarch Theophilos (Giannopoulos) III, of Jerusalem.[20]
  • Metropolitan Benedict (Tsekouras) of Philadelphia.
  • Archbishop Aristarchos (Peristeris) of Constantina.
  • Archbishop Theophylaktos (Georgiadis) of Jordan.
  • Archbishop Nektarios (Selalmadzidis) of Anthedon.
  • Archbishop Philoumenos (Machamre) of Pella.
  • Special Consultants:
    • Archimandrite Christophoros (Mousa).
    • Archimandrite Damianos (Panou).
    • Archimandrite Nikodemos (Skrettas).
    • Archimandrite Chrysostomos (Nasis).
    • Archimandrite Ieronymos (Delioglou).
    • Protopresbyter Georgios Dragas.
    • Professor Theodoros Yiangou.[22]
Serbian Orthodox Church
Church of Romania
Church of Cyprus
Church of Greece
Church of Poland
  • Metropolitan Sawa (Hrycuniak) of Warsaw and All Poland.[20][21]
  • Archbishop Szymon (Romańczuk) of Łódź and Poznań.
  • Archbishop Jeremiasz (Anchimiuk) of Wrocław and Szczecin.
  • Archbishop Abel (Popławski) of Lublin and Chełm.
  • Archbishop Jakub (Kostiuczuk) of Białystok and Gdańsk.
  • Bishop Jerzy (Pańkowski) of Siemiatycze.
  • Bishop Paisjusz (Martyniuk) of Gorlice.
  • Special Consultants:
    • Archimandrite Andreas.
    • Archpriest Anatol Szymaniuk.
    • Archpriest Andrzej Kuźma.
    • Archdeacon Paweł Tokajuk.
    • Mr. Jarosław Charkiewicz, journalist.
    • Mr. Jerzy Betlejko, interpreter.
    • Mr. Mikołaj Podolec, interpreter, steward.
Church of Albania
Church of Czech Lands and Slovakia

Churches that did not attend

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Notes

  1. The delegation of the Church of Russia that had been approved on May 4 had included the following bishops:[38]
    • Patriarch Kirill of Moscow.
    • Metropolitan Onufriy (Berezovsky), of Kyiv and All Ukraine.
    • Metropolitan Juvenal (Poyarkov) of Krutitsy and Kolomna.
    • Metropolitan Vladimir (Cantarean) of Kishinev and All Moldavia.
    • Metropolitan Alexander (Mogilyov) of Astana and Kazakhstan, head of the Metropolitan Region in the Republic of Kazakhstan.
    • Metropolitan Vincent (Morar) of Tashkent and Uzbekistan, head of the Central Asia Metropolitan Region.
    • Metropolitan Barsanuphius (Sudakov) of St Petersburg and Ladoga, Chancellor of the Moscow Patriarchate.
    • Metropolitan Paul (Ponomaryov) of Minsk and Zaslavl, Patriarchal Exarch for All Belarus.
    • Metropolitan Hilarion (Alfeyev) of Volokolamsk, head of the Moscow Patriarchate department for external church relations.
    • Metropolitan Agathangel (Savin) of Odesa and Izmail.
    • Metropolitan Aleksandrs Kudrjašovs of Riga and All Latvia.
    • Metropolitan Tikhon (Yemelyanov) of Novosibirsk and Berdsk.
    • Metropolitan Sergius (Gensitsky) of Ternopil and Kremenets.
    • Metropolitan Сyril (Nakonechny) of Yekaterinburg and Verkhoturye.
    • Metropolitan Mercurius (Ivanov) of Rostov and Novocherkassk.
    • Metropolitan Mitrophan (Yourchuk) of Luhansk and Alchevsk, chairman of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church department for external church relations.
    • Metropolitan George (Danilov) of Niznniy Novrogod and Arzamas.
    • Metropolitan Anthony (Pakanych) of Borispol and Brovary, chancellor of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church.
    • Archbishop Mark (Arndt) of Berlin-Germany and Great Britain.
    • Archbishop Innocent (Vasilyev) of Vilna and Lithuania.
    • Archbishop Gurius (Apalko) of Novogrudok and Slonim.
    • Archbishop Seraphim (Tsujie) of Sendai.
    • Archbishop John (Pavlikhin) of Magadan and Sinegorye.
    • Archbishop Lazar (Gurkin) of Narva and Prichudje.
    • Bishop Anthony (Sevryuk) of Bogorodsk.
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References

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