AN APPEAL Of the Pastoral
Conference of the Clergy of the Western American Diocese of
the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia
I. It is with deep sorrow and anxiety that we, the clergy
of the Western American Diocese, having gathered together
in the God-preserved city of San Francisco, have come to learn
about statements and actions in the midst of our Russian Orthodox
Church Outside of Russia which have been provoked by mistrust
and misunderstanding, and sometimes even deliberate distortion
of the Epistle and Resolutions of the latest Council of Bishops
of our Church. Our conscience and our hearts cannot be at
peace because of the actions taken against the Church and
because of the rude and sometimes insolent and unfounded accusations
directed towards our Higher Church Authority in the persona
of the Council of Bishops of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside
of Russia, as well as towards individual archpastors. We are
grieved that the very basis of lawful and canonical church
governance in the spirit of true conciliarity is trampled
upon. Because of this, dissension is sown in the midst of
the Church, and this, consequently, leads to schism, which
according to the teaching of the Holy Fathers is worse than
heresy. We are praying, especially before the Directress of
the Russian Diaspora, the miraculous Kursk-Root Icon, and
the relics of Saint John the Wonderworker of Shanghai and
San Francisco, so that peace, unity, trust, the softening
of hearts, love, calm, and sobriety will triumph in all parts
of our Church Abroad. For when one member of our church body
is hurting then the entire Church is in pain. We feel this
pain acutely. Amongst those rising up against our archpastors,
the Council of Bishops, and their Resolutions, we find not
only laymen, but clergymen as well. We would like to believe
that they are not acting consciously, but out of ignorance
or as a result of hidden provocation. Their actions and words
are so foreign to the spirit of trust, love, and obedience
to the Church, a spirit to which we, the clergy, were called
to by our archpastor of many years, the Most Reverend Archbishop
Anthony, a man of prayer, who passed away in the Lord last
year. We are trying not only to remember his loving heart,
but to live according to his testaments. In regards to the
above, we, the clergy of the Western American Diocese, participants
in the Pastoral conference, unanimously express our support,
oneness of mind, and fidelity to the Most Reverend First-Hierarch
of our Church, Metropolitan Vitaly and the entire Council
of Bishops, as well as to our newly assigned Ruling archpastor,
the Right Reverend Bishop Kyrill of Western America and San
Francisco. We consider and believe that the Holy Spirit has
been guiding and continues to guide our archpastors in their
conciliar resolutions, and thus we express our complete agreement
with both the past Epistles and Resolutions of the Council
of Bishops, as well as with the Epistle and Resolutions of
the latest Council of Bishops in October of the year 2000.
Because of the current discord in some parts of the Church
our archpastors are in even greater need of the prayers and
support of the clergy and faithful loyal to the Russian Orthodox
Church Outside of Russia. We call all of our co-pastors and
flock to this as well. At the same time, it is with tears
that we beg those of our co-pastors and faithful who do not
accept the decisions of the Council of Bishops, those who
are revolting against the hierarchy and bringing into temptation
the "little ones", to return to the path of true
church life, obedience, love, and trust.
II. Because of the above mentioned perturbations and opposition
to Higher Church Authority, we consider it necessary, at least
briefly, to witness that no radical change in the course of
the Church or departure from Her historical position took
place at the Council of Bishops in the year 2000. The Epistle
and Resolutions of this Council are in complete agreement
with all of the previous conciliar resolutions and precisely
reflect the unchanging, historical course of the Russian Orthodox
Church Outside of Russia and Her relationship to the Moscow
Patriarchate. Opponents to the latest Council of Bishops are
trying to show that the "new course" of the Russian
Orthodox Church Outside of Russia lies in the recognition
of the Moscow Patriarchate as the "Mother Church".
First, the expression "Mother-Church" is nowhere
to be found in the conciliar resolutions and Epistles of the
Council of 2000. Second, it is completely absurd for the Russian
Orthodox Church Outside of Russia, founded in 1920 in accordance
with Holy Patriarch Tikhon's Ukase, to consider the Moscow
Patriarchate its Mother Church. The Moscow Patriarchate was
unlawfully founded an entire seven years later in 1927 after
the usurpation of the lawful Church Authority by Metropolitan
Sergius, the Deputy to the Locum Tenens to the Patriarchal
Throne. At that time he issued the infamous "Declaration"
of the Church's complete loyalty to the godless Soviet State.
The Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia has always refused
to consider the new church structure created by Metropolitan
Sergius to be lawful and canonical; it refuses this to this
very day. How can our Church consider the hierarchal structure
created by Metropolitan Sergius to be canonical, when a number
of the Moscow Patriarchate's best church historians themselves
refer to Metropolitan Sergius' authority as "non-canonical"
(see the Acts of Holy Patriarch Tikhon published by the Saint
Tikhon Theological Institute in Moscow)? For the Russian Orthodox
Church Outside of Russia the Mother Church always was and
always will be the historical Local Russian Orthodox Church
in Her fullness. The Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia
has always considered itself to be merely the free part of
the Russian Orthodox Church. It is erroneous to consider that
the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia is defined solely
by its opposition to the Moscow Patriarchate. The essence
of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia in not in
the rejection of something, but in the constructive "building
up" in Christ: in the confession of true Orthodoxy to
the whole world; in the preservation of the fullness of the
teaching and traditions of the Russian Orthodox Church; and
the transmission of these without change to the future generations;
in the nurturing of Russian Orthodox people in the Diaspora;
in helping the suffering Russian people in the Homeland; in
missionary activity, in the enlightenment of the people of
all nations where Russians have settled with the light of
Christ's Truth. Among the most important sacred duties of
the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia has been to
witness the truth about the persecuted Church in the enslaved
Russian land and to dispel every lie issuing forth from official
representatives of the godless authority, including the lies
by hierarchs of the Moscow Patriarchate obedient to this authority.
In order to fulfill this sacred duty ? to speak the truth
about the actual condition of the Church in the Homeland ?
cautious and careful observation by the archpastors and pastors
of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia of all aspects
of church life in Russia were and are required. An honest
and objective approach to assessing the events in our Homeland
cannot limit itself exclusively to negative statements. In
the course of the entire nearly seventy-five year period after
the Declaration of Metropolitan Sergius, the Russian Orthodox
Church Outside of Russia has decisively condemned the Moscow
Patriarchate leadership's cooperation with the godless authority
and their false statements on the true condition of the Church
under the Soviet yoke. The Russian Orthodox Church Outside
of Russia immediately and fully justifiably stated that while
the church authority under Metropolitan Sergius and his successors
continues to have close ties and submits to the directives
of the godless authorities, She cannot have any communion
with the Moscow Patriarchate. However, at no time and in no
manner has the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia broken
its spiritual ties with the much-suffering Russian people
and with those clergymen who have faithfully continued to
fulfill their pastoral duties in the most difficult of circumstances.
The Synod of Bishops of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside
of Russia under the ever-memorable Metropolitan Philaret's
leadership wrote about this in 1981. While condemning the
union between the hierarchy of the Moscow Patriarchate and
the godless authorities, the Synod of Bishops in its Resolution
of August 12/25, 1981 stated: "This [absence of liturgical
communion] does not interfere with the fact that we are observing
the currents of religious life in Russia with sorrow and love
for our people. In some cases we see complete ruin. Nonetheless,
in other cases we at least see attempts by some, even while
formally submitting to the Patriarchate, to remain free of
the apostatical politics of her leaders, thus trying in this
way to attain salvation even on the territory of a kingdom
of the antichrist". "Any degree of departure from
Sergianism can be considered a step in the direction of pure
Orthodoxy, although not yet opening the road to our communion."
"Our interest in the events of church life in Russia
cannot help but to take note of the more positive phenomena
on the background of complete apostasy as well. We should
not limit our attention exclusively to those things that deserve
unconditional condemnation". This is what the Synod of
Bishops wrote under the presidency of Metropolitan Philaret
20 years ago. For the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia
the leadership of the Moscow Patriarchate and the Russian
Orthodox faithful were never synonymous. And never, not in
any official documents, did the Russian Orthodox Church Outside
of Russia state that the Moscow Patriarchate was void of grace.
On the contrary, in their official Epistles our First-Hierarchs
and archpastors have often spoken of the courageous struggles
of the Russian faithful ? of those who attended and participated
in Divine Services in those few churches that were open (obviously
not catacomb churches, since the Catacomb Church did not and
could not have any open churches). For example, in 1960 Metropolitan
Anastassy in his Homily on the "Sunday of All Saints
Who have Shone Forth in the Russian Land" noted that
Holy Russia is alive not only in the Catacomb Church, but
that: "She still lives in the hearts of those Russian
people who have remained faithful to Orthodoxy, who openly
confess it, zealously attending any churches that have remained
open in Russia" (Reprinted in "Orthodox Russia",
No. 10, 1999). Likewise, in 1964, the Council of Bishops under
the presidency of Metropolitan Philaret and with the participation
of Saint John of Shanghai and San Francisco the Wonderworker,
the current First-Hierarch of the Russian Orthodox Church
Outside of Russia, Metropolitan (then Archbishop) Vitaly,
and Archbishop Averky (Taushev), in its Epistle writes: "They
[the god-opposing Communists] have contrived a new, truly
diabolical plan in their war against the faithful: it is forbidden
by the godless government of the USSR for children and young
men and women from the ages of 3 to 18 to be allowed into
God's churches and to be communed with the Body and Blood
of Christ. And in order to mock the Church even more, this
directive by the authorities has to be enforced by the clergymen
themselves? they are the ones who must prohibit youth from
approaching the Chalice of Christ and demand the removal of
children and youth from the churches". Could it be that
the archpastors of our Russian Orthodox Church Outside of
Russia under Metropolitan Philaret would make such a statement
if they considered the above mentioned clergymen of the Moscow
Patriarchate to be without grace and the Sacraments performed
by them to be invalid? The opposition to the latest Council
of Bishops maintains that it is "walling itself off"
from those who consider the Moscow Patriarchate a part of
the Russian Orthodox Church. In that case they should be reminded
that they are also walling themselves off from Metropolitan
Philaret, who, in his "Epistle to My Fellow Orthodox
Bishops in Christ and to All to Whom the Fate of the Russian
Church is Dear" (1965) wrote the following: "However,
in the Soviet Union, besides the True Orthodox Church and
the Moscow Patriarchate, who have no liturgical or other contact
between themselves, there exists yet a third part of the Russian
Church (emphasis added)? free of persecution and repression
? the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia". In
1994 the Council of Bishops of the Russian Orthodox Church
Outside of Russia spoke about these various parts of the Russian
Orthodox Church. In their Epistle, the Bishops stated the
following: "Conscious of our own responsibility before
God and men, we, the hierarchs of the Church of Russia who
are free of all outside interference, propose that the time
has come to seek active contact with all the parts of the
One Russian Orthodox Church, which have been separated from
one another as a result of historical circumstances".
Incidentally, this conciliar resolution was signed by the
former Bishop Valentine (Rusanstev) who subsequently fell
into schism. When we read all of these Epistles of the past
Councils of Bishops and First-Hierarchs it becomes apparent
that no contradiction, no "change" in the course
of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia has taken
place. On the contrary, the latest Epistle is a continuation
of past Councils and constitutes with them an organic, complete
and consistent, integrated ecclesiastical world-view and course.
The efforts of a small group of opponents of the Council of
Bishops of 2000 to distort the truth about the historical
positions of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia,
their statements, open letters, responses, appeals and opinions,
distributed almost exclusively by e-mail and over the internet,
will prove to be in vain. As a rule, the spirit of these "statements",
their tone and at times rudeness, animosity and audacity,
reveal how foreign to the true spirit of the Church these
authors are and how gravely they are in error. During these
days of Great Lent the Holy Church especially prays: "may
the tongue be cleansed from improper speech" (First prayer
of the faithful, Liturgy of the Presanctified Gifts). The
Church also warns us that "vain words [should] not find
entry to our sense of hearing" (ibid.). How sad it is
that new members of the Church are influenced by the "vain
words" of those opposed to the Higher Church Authority
and its decisions! Often these relatively new members have
insufficient knowledge or are insufficiently acquainted with
the extensive material witnessing to the true historical course
of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia. And, likewise,
many do not have sufficient experience in church life. Seeds
of doubt are sown in the minds of these "little ones",
and this brings anxiety, dissension, and disobedience into
the fold of the Church. It is appropriate to recall the words
of the ever-memorable Archbishop Anthony of Geneva and Western
Europe regarding obedience in the Church: "You know that
in the Church there exists a hierarchy, in which the lower
members must submit themselves to the higher. So, for example,
if a bishop does not submit himself to the Council of Bishops,
then he ceases to be a bishop of the Church of the Christ.
If a priest does not listen to his bishop, he ceases to be
a priest. If a layman does not listen to his pastors, he ceases
to be a Christian. In this way all of the Church of Christ
is based on obedience to God and every one who is a member
of the Church is bound by this obedience" (Reprinted
in "Orthodox Russia", No. 17, 1999). Let us also
recall the strict warnings of the Synod of Bishops of the
Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia under the presidency
of Metropolitan Philaret. These warnings, although written
20 years ago, are entirely applicable to the contemporary
situation and state of Church life: "If no one is supposed
to condemn his neighbor in haste, even more care is demanded
where our own Primate is concerned. [Note: at that time the
Synod was concerned with criticism directed at the Metropolitan.
In our situation it would be quite appropriate to change the
word 'Primate' to 'Higher Church Authority', since our contemporary
critics are directing their accusations against the entire
Council of Bishops.] Rash implications about his allegedly
unorthodox preaching as well as open criticism in sermons
reveal a tendency towards condemnation and division which
is unseemly in Christians. The Apostle said, 'Who art thou
that judgest another man's servant?' How much more appropriate
might it be to say. 'Who art thou that judgest thy Metropolitan?'
Such an attitude, which can easily develop into schism, is
strongly censured by the canons of the Church, for it shows
willful appropriation by clerics of the 'judgment belonging
to metropolitans' (Canon XIII of the First-and-Second Council).
Everyone must be very careful in his criticism, particularly
when expressing it publicly, remembering that 'Judgment and
justice take hold on thee' (Job 36, 17 Septuagint translation).
If, contrary to the apostolic teaching about hierarchical
distribution of duties and responsibilities, all the clerics
and laymen were to supervise their hierarchs (I Cor. 12, 28-30),
then instead of being a hierarchical Body of Christ, our Church
would turn into a kind of democratic anarchy where the sheep
assume the function of the shepherd. A special grace is bestowed
upon bishops to help them in their work. Those who seek to
control their bishop should be reminded of Canon LXIV of the
Sixth Ecumenical Council which quotes the words of St. Gregory
the Theologian: Learning in docility and abounding in cheerfulness,
and ministering with alacrity, we shall not all be the tongue
which is the more active member, not all of us apostles, not
all prophets, nor shall we all interpret. And again: Why dost
thou make thyself a shepherd when thou art a sheep? Why become
a head when thou art a foot? Why dost thou try to be a commander
when thou art enrolled in the number of the soldiers?.."
"The situation of the Church in Russia is without precedent,
and no norms can be prescribed by any one of us separately.
If the position of the Catacomb Church would change relative
to its position in past years, any change in our attitude
would have to be reviewed not by individual clergymen or laymen
but only by the Council of Bishops, to which all pertinent
matters should be submitted" (Copy of the Resolutions
of the Synod of Bishops from August 12/25, 1981, signed by
Bishop Gregory Grabbe). It is sad that by their actions, today's
critics of the latest Council of Bishops, possibly not even
realizing it, are bringing joy to the enemies of the Russian
Orthodox Church Outside of Russia and especially to the ancient
enemy of our salvation. It is common knowledge that in the
course of decades, organs of the KGB and their obedient collaborators
have attempted to do everything possible towards the annihilation
of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia. Today's
"antagonists" continue their work. The Russian Orthodox
Church Outside of Russia is being attacked from two sides:
ecumenists and modernists on one side and on the other? the
"super-correct of True Orthodoxy". In today's assaults
on the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia we see how
both the Moscow Patriarchate's renovationist elements and
the followers of the so-called "Bishop of Suzdal"
Valentine, the Bostonite group of former Archimandrite Panteleimon
and other pseudo-catacomb and pseudo-Orthodox groups have
joined together. Back in the IV century Saint Gregory the
Theologian wrote about such assaults from both sides: "Whosoever
remains in peace and bends not to the one, nor to the other
side, endures evil from both sides: either they despise him,
or they attack him." (Homily 23, "On Peace").
Are not the archpastors of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside
of Russia in their fullness in this very predicament? The
ever-memorable hieromonk of our Western American Diocese,
Father Seraphim (Rose), wrote the following in 1976: "The
royal path of true Orthodoxy today is a mean that lies between
the extremes of ecumenism and reformism on the side, and a
zeal not according to knowledge (Rom. 10, 5) on the other.
True Orthodoxy does not go in step with the times on the one
hand, nor does it make strictness or correctness or canonicity
(good in themselves) an excuse for pharisaic self-satisfaction,
exclusivism, and distrust, on the other" ("Orthodox
Word", September-October, 1976, p. 147). It is in the
spirit of brotherly love that we remind our brothers in Christ
that the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia zealously
prays for the union of all separated parts of the Russian
Orthodox Church. In the prayer to the Holy New-Martyrs of
Russia, confirmed by the Council of Bishops under the presidency
of Metropolitan Philaret (1981), we hear the following plea:
"O Holy New Martyrs and Confessors of the Church of Russia,
hear our fervent prayer! Implore of God... that all schism
in our Church shall cease, so that we may all be one..."
The clergymen of the Western American Diocese of the Russian
Orthodox Church Outside of Russia, gathered at the pastoral
conference, heard a talk dedicated to the memory of a great
archpastor of the Russian Church, the last bishop of the old
school of Blessed Metropolitan Anthony (Khrapovitsky), the
ever-memorable Archbishop Anthony of Western America and San
Francisco. A month before his repose, on the Feast of the
Transfiguration of the Lord, 2000, he said the following:
"Contemporary Russia hangs between radiant hope and darkness.
She can resurrect or be lost forever." "Tomorrow
the Moscow Patriarchate will canonize the Royal Martyrs...
this is good, this is the first step. We canonized the Royal
Martyrs for both their pious life and for their martyric end.
But we should welcome the Moscow Patriarchate for their initial
step. Many things still separate us, but this first step gives
hope. Despite everything we should manifest goodness".
In these days of Great Lent we call upon both our flock and
our co-pastors who are in the bosom of the Russian Orthodox
Church Outside of Russia and especially those who are disobedient
and are causing unrest and temptation, to heed the words of
our righteous hierarch and despite everything to "manifest
goodness" so that with joy, peace, a pure conscience,
heartfelt simplicity, and love we may greet Him, Who rose
on the third day, our Lord Jesus Christ, the Head of our Church.
All the Participants of the Pastoral Conference of the Western
American Diocese
2/15 of March, 2001 Third Week of Great Lent San Francisco,
California
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