The Old Calendar. Fifth Edition. Archbishop Chrysostomos, Bishop Ambrose, and Bishop Auxentios. with a Prologue by Metropolitan Cyprian

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The Old Calendar Orthodox Church of Greece Fifth Edition Archbishop Chrysostomos, Bishop Ambrose, and Bishop Auxentios with a Prologue by Metropolitan Cyprian

THE OLD CALENDAR ORTHODOX CHURCH OF GREECE

The Old Calendar Orthodox Church of Greece Fifth Edition by Archbishop Chrysostomos, Bishop Ambrose, and Bishop Auxentios with a Prologue by Metropolitan Cyprian Revised and Edited by Hieromonk Patapios CENTER FOR TRADITIONALIST ORTHODOX STUDIES 2009

First edition, 1985 All rights reserved Copyright, 1985, St. Gregory Palamas Monastery Published by the Center for Traditionalist Orthodox Studies Etna, California 96027-0398 Library of Congress Control Number: 84-73365 Printed in the United States of America ISBN 978-0-911165-86-9

ABOUT THE AUTHORS AND EDITOR The Most Reverend Chrysostomos, Archbishop of Etna, is Senior Scholar at the Center for Traditionalist Orthodox Studies and a former Fulbright Scholar. He received his doctoral degree at Princeton University and has taught at a number of American and European universities. The Right Reverend Ambrose, Titular Bishop of Methone, completed his graduate and undergraduate degrees at the University of London. He is a brother of the Holy Monastery of Sts. Cyprian and Justina in Phyle, Greece, and Director of Missions for the Holy Synod in Resistance. The Right Reverend Auxentios, Titular Bishop of Photike, is Director of the Center for Traditionalist Orthodox Studies. He is a graduate of Princeton University and received his doctoral degree in Liturgics at the Graduate Theological Union, Berkeley. Hieromonk Patapios, a Cambridge University graduate, is Academic Director of the Center for Traditionalist Orthodox Studies. He also completed his doctoral degree, in Patristics, at the Graduate Theological Union, Berkeley, where he was a Newhall Teaching Fellow.

TABLE OF CONTENTS Prologue 9 Introduction 12 Chapter 1 Chapter 2 Chapter 3 The Old Calendar Greek Orthodox Church: A Brief History 17 The Old Calendar Greek Orthodox Church: A Critical Evaluation 40 A Short Life of Metropolitan Chrysostomos of Phlorina 56 Appendix I 61 Appendix II 72 Chronological Table 75 Selected Readings 79 Index of Names 81 Index of Subjects 83

The Old Calendar movement is neither a heresy nor a schism, and those who follow it are neither heretics nor heterodox nor schismatics, but are Orthodox Christians. His Beatitude, Dorotheos Archbishop of Athens (1956-1957) State (New Calendar) Orthodox Church of Greece

PROLOGUE TO THE FIRST EDITION Metropolitan Cyprian of Oropos and Phyle President of the Holy Synod in Resistance We stand in the arena to fight for our common heritage, for the treasure of the sound Faith derived from our Fathers. St. Basil the Great (Epistle 243) We feel, by the Grace of God, a particular joy on account of the endeavors of our spiritual son, the Most Reverend Archbishop Chrysostomos, Exarch of the Holy Synod in America. His endeavors aim to make the reader aware of the fact that the struggle against the innovation in the Festal Calendar, introduced into the Church of Greece in 1924, is not simply a sentimental clinging to a long-lived ecclesiastical custom or to a barren thirteen days, hindering the progress of the Church and its missionary dialogue with the world. His Eminence essays to make it fully known in the West, and particularly in America, that those standing fast in the age-old festal order of the Orthodox Church are, through their actions, denouncing the destructive and divisive force of ecumenism, which they have opposed since 1924, when it disunited the Church. Ecumenism, which, like all heresies, is inimical to the Orthodox self-view and confronts it with hostility, first appeared, we know, at the close of the nineteenth century. Heterodox unfamiliar with Her ecclesiology both theologians and clerics engaged the Holy Orthodox Church in striking dialogue and in activities without precedent, culminating in the famous Encyclical of 1920, issued by the Patriarch of Constantinople. This Encyclical, totally unacceptable by the dogmatic and canonical standards of the Orthodox Church, has been since then, unfortunately, the Constitution of ecumenism.

10 The Old Calendar Church of Greece A consequence of the Encyclical of 1920 was the innovation in the Festal Calendar in 1924: ecumenism in action. This disregard for Orthodox truth divided the Orthodox, in the name of unity with the non-orthodox, putting in motion exterminatory persecutions against the followers of Patristic Tradition. There has issued forth since that innovation such a flood of ecumenical theories and practices, that today there is widespread talk about ecumenical theology. The boundaries between Truth (Orthodoxy) and falsehood (heresy) having been broken down, and the supposed unity of Christianity finding expression in ecumenical gatherings and programs and a syncretic form of inter-religious oneness on a worldwide level, this ecumenical theology has pushed itself forth on all. Respect for our Orthodox uniqueness is gone. The spirit of this deceptive world, the threat of extinction, and the mundane pursuits of extra-ecclesiastical organizations have lured the local Orthodox Churches into coöperating in this universal apostasy. People seek a unity and peace far from that peace of God s Will, to which we are called, that they might obtain the material goods of this world. All speak of union and happiness of a messianic and millennial kind. Does not official (New Calendar) Orthodoxy, condoning and adhering to these movements, violate Her very nature? Does She not deny Herself? Does She not forget that, while our Faith teaches Christian love and respect for all religions, this is not to be accomplished by a denial of the ontological truth which we know Orthodoxy to be? Those Orthodox opposed to the calendar reform of 1924 have the profoundest awareness that theirs is a struggle against ecumenism and, indeed, heresy. Since 1924, we have lived in precisely that kind of period which always preceded the convocation of every great Oecumenical Synod for the condemnation of a newly-appeared heresy. Since that date, there has been a continuous awakening of the Orthodox Christian community with regard to the nature of the innovation in the Festal Calendar and the actual character of the so-called ecumenical movement. The ground has been prepared for a Synod, by the Grace of God, to unite all Orthodox and to condemn the anti-orthodox, Church-hating theories of our day.

The Old Calendar Church of Greece 11 Unfortunately, there have also been deviations from the true path in this holy struggle. However, our profound understanding that we are entering into eschatological times does not with God s help allow us to be discouraged. The struggle for the triumph of Orthodox truth must take place without accommodation, in a spirit of love, humility, prayer, and perseverance. The outcome lies in the prescient hands of the Divine Artificer of the Church. May His glorious Appearance find us in His truth and love! We profoundly pray that the endeavors of Archbishop Chrysostomos and his co-authors, as well as this book, will be abundantly fruitful, to the end that many well-meaning souls might come to know the truth in matters of the Faith and might flee from the soul-imperiling theory of ecumenism.

The Holy Monastery of Sts. Cyprian and Justina Phyle (Athens), Greece

SELECTED READINGS Books and Studies Concerning the Old Calendar Orthodox Church of Greece English Agiokyprianites, Archimandrite (now Bishop) Cyprian, The Immoderate and Self-Absorbed Anti-Old Calendarist Zeal of the Innovationist New Calendarists: A Brief Critique of Five Unfortunate Texts by Father G. Kalpouzos, Father B. Bakogiannis, D. Kokores, A. Korakides, and the Christian League of Kalamata. Etna, CA: Center for Traditionalist Orthodox Studies, 2006. Alexopoulos, A. Damaskinos G. de I., The Old Calendarists in the Diaspora. Trans. Archbishop Chrysostomos and John V. Petropoulos. Etna, CA: Center for Traditionalist Orthodox Studies, 2009. Cavarnos, Constantine, Victories of Orthodoxy. Belmont, MA: Institute for Byzantine and Modern Greek Studies, 1997. Cyprian, Metropolitan, Schism or Walling Off : The Calendar Question and the Heresy of Ecumenism. Trans. Hieromonk Patapios and Archbishop Chrysostomos. Etna, CA: Center for Traditionalist Orthodox Studies, 1998. Kitsikis, Dimitri, The Old Calendarists and the Rise of Religious Conservatism in Greece. Trans. Novice (now Hieromonk) Patapios and Bishop (now Archbishop) Chrysostomos. Etna, CA: Center for Traditionalist Orthodox Studies, 1995. Patapios, Hieromonk, and Chrysostomos, Archbishop, The Church of Patristic Tradition. Etna, CA: Center for Traditionalist Orthodox Studies, 2007. Greek Kavourides, Metropolitan Chrysostomos, Ἅπαντα (Collected Works) in two volumes. Gortynia: Holy Monastery of St. Nikomedos Editions, 1997. Karametsos, Stavros, Ὁ Σύγχρονος Ὁμολογητὴς τῆς Ὀρθοδοξίας (Contemporary Confessor of Orthodoxy). Athens: Panagia he Theotokos Editions, 1990. Mpatistatos, Dionysios, Χρυσόστομος Καβουρίδης: Ἀγωνιστὴς τῆς Ὀρθοδοξίας καὶ τοῦ Ἔθνους (Chrysostomos Kavourides: Struggler for Orthodoxy and for the Nation). Athens: 1981.

INDEX OF NAMES Agafangel, Metropolitan, 39, 49 Akakios, Archbishop, 26, 27 Alexander of Alexandria, St., 69 Ambrose of Methone, Bishop, 14 Anastassy, Metropolitan, 26 Anthony (Khrapovitsky), Metropolitan, 18 Antonios, Metropolitan, 30, 31, 33, 76, 77 Athanasios the Great, St., 51, 69 Athenagoras, Patriarch, 58, 59 Augustinos, Metropolitan, 59 Auxentios, Archbishop, 26, 27, 29, 30, 31, 33, 34, 75, 76, 77 Auxentios of Photike, Bishop, 14 Basil the Great, St., 9, 69 Celestine of Rome, St., 63, 69 Christophoros, Bishop, 19, 22, 24 Christophoros, Patriarch, 24 Chrysostomos II, Archbishop, 34, 35, 37, 38, 77, 78 Chrysostomos of Etna, Archbishop, 34 Chrysostomos of Phlorina, Metropolitan, 14, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 34, 39, 56, 57, 58, 59, 75 Chrysostomos of Zakynthos, Metropolitan, 19 Constantine the Great, St., 52 Cyprian, Metropolitan, 29, 30, 32, 33, 34, 35, 37, 62, 69, 72, 77, 78 Cyril of Alexandria, St., 69 Daniel, Bishop, 35, 78 Diodoros I, Patriarch, 15, 72, 74 Dorotheos of Prusa, Metropolitan, 45 Evgenios (Lemonis), Archimandrite, 18 Florovsky, Father Georges, 44 Giovanni, Metropolitan, 33, 34, 77, 78 Germanos, Bishop, 19, 21, 23, 75 Germanos of Demetrias, Metropolitan, 19, 20, 21, 22, 39 Gerontios, Metropolitan, 31, 33, 77 Glicherie of Romania, St., 32 Gregory of Neocaesarea, 67

82 The Old Calendar Church of Greece Gregory Palamas, St., 51 Gregory the Theologian, St., 69 Hieronymos, Elder, 18 Hilarion, Bishop, 34 Ignatios the God-Bearer, St., 67 Irenaeus of Lyons, St., 51 Joachim III, Patriarch, 56 John III, Archbishop of Jerusalem, 67 John, Archbishop of San Francisco (St.), 26, 35, 78 John, Archimandrite, 24 John Chrysostomos, St., 56, 61, 63 John of Damascus, St., 69 Kallistos, Metropolitan, 27, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33, 76, 77 Laurus, Archbishop, 35, 78 Leonty, Archbishop, 26 Matthew (Matthaios), Bishop, 19, 22, 26, 39, 75 Maximos the Confessor, St., 69 Meletios of Antioch, St., 66 Meletios (Metaxakis), Patriarch, 58 Mitrophan, Bishop, 35, 78 Nikodemos of the Holy Mountain, St., 64 Petros, Bishop, 29, 34, 77 Philaret, Metropolitan, 26, 27, 29 Philotheos (Zervakos), Elder, 30 Photii, Bishop, 34, 39, 78 Plastiras, Nikolaos, 24 Polykarpos, Bishop, 19, 22, 24 Seraphim, Archbishop, 26 Sophronios of Jerusalem, St., 69 Spyridon, Archbishop, 22, 23 Tarasios, St., 63, 66 Teofil, Bishop, 26 Theodore the Studite, St., 64, 70 Theophanopoulos, Kleanthes, 59 Vincent of Lérins, St., 44 Zonaras, Ioannes, 63

INDEX OF SUBJECTS Appearance of Cross in Athens, 17 Calendar Reform aims of, 42-46 origins of, 10, 17 Ecumenism effects of, 44-47, 73-74 intolerance of, 46-47 theory of, 10 Encyclical of 1920, 9, 10, 45 Extremists and fringe groups, 14, 21, 22, 29 Grace and the Mysteries of the New Calendarists, 21, 29, 33, 34, 63, 66, 76-78 Hesychasm and the Old Calendar movement, 51 Living Church movement in Russia, 43 Marxist-Leninist policies, 43 Matthewites ecclesiology of, 22, 29 history of, 21, 22, 27, 29 Monasticism and the Old Calendarists, 22, 23, 38, 41, 51 Mt. Athos and the Old Calendar movement, 13, 18, 19, 24, 27, 58 Old Calendar Orthodox Church of Bulgaria history of, 39 (n. 4) relations with the Russian Orthodox Church Abroad, 37 Old Calendar Orthodox Church of Greece encyclopedic portrayals of, 13-14 foundation of, 17-19 persecution of, 19, 21-24 rationale for, 10, 47-53 separations in, 21ff. Old Calendar Orthodox Church of Romania initial contacts with, 31 relations with the Russian Orthodox Church Abroad, 34, 35, 37 Orthodox Primacy, 45, 46, 74 Orthodoxy and Papism, 61, 73 Orthodoxy and the deification of man, 51

84 The Old Calendar Church of Greece Repose of Metropolitan Chrysostomos of Phlorina, 24-26 Russian Orthodox Church Abroad (ROCA) consecration of Bishop for Greek Old Calendarists, 26 recognition of Old Calendarist Consecrations, 27-28 union with Moscow, 37 ROCA under Metropolitan Agafangel, 39 (n. 6) Synod in Resistance ecclesiology of, 61-71 history of, 34 outreach to other Orthodox, 35, 37-38 Sister Churches, 15, 34, 39 (n. 4) Synod of Archbishop Chrysostomos II deposition of other Bishops, 34 dialogue with Synod in Resistance, 37-38, 39 (n. 7) foundation of, 34

Both Orthodox and non-orthodox Christians know very little about the Old Calendarists, either here or in Greece. This clearly written and well-organized book, presented by leaders of the True Orthodox Church of Greece in the United States and in Greece, gives us a responsible and authoritative account for the first time in English and from an historical and personal perspective of the position of the Old Calendarists in terms of what they believe, what their history has been, what their problems have been, what their relations with the Orthodox Church of Greece have been, and what their future aspirations are. Such a book as this should help promote a better understanding among all Orthodox Christians of each other and of the Orthodox Faith which they hold in common. John E. Rexine. Ph.D. (Harvard University) Charles A. Dana Professor of Classics Director, Division of the Humanities Colgate University ISBN 978-0-911165-86-9 CENTER FOR TRADITIONALIST ORTHODOX STUDIES