15.
There
are two types of Councils within the Church. What are they called?
From profound Christian antiquity, local councils of separate Orthodox
Churches gathered twice a year, in accordance with the Thirty-Seventh Canon of
the Holy Apostles. This canon states: “Let there be a meeting of the bishops
twice a year, and let them examine among themselves the decrees concerning
religion and settle the ecclesiastical controversies which may have
occurred....” [Eerdmans Seven Ecumenical
Councils, p. 596.] Local councils were attended by all the bishops of a
particular province of the Roman Empire. These councils would ordinarily convene in a provincial capital and
would be presided over by the bishop of the capital, the metropolitan. These
assemblies, as the canon states, had as their purpose the bishops' giving their
opinions on problems that arose — that is, local problems. (Although not
mentioned in the textbook, Protopresbyter Michael Pomazansky notes that often
in the history of the Church there were also councils of regional bishops
representing a wider area than individual Churches). The textbook goes on to list
general councils in which bishops
from the whole Orthodox Church, both East and West,
gathered in order to reach a common mind with regard to problems pressing to
the entire Church. Included in these general councils are the Ecumenical
Councils. The same Fr. Michael explains that when the decisions reached in
general councils are approved and accepted into the Tradition of the Church by
the confirmation of the bishops at a subsequent general council, the councils
then received the title Oikoumenkie Synodos
(Ecumenical Synods), from oikoumenikos,
meaning from all the inhabited earth — that is, the land which belonged to the
Graeco-Roman civilization.
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