19.
Although
it is not mentioned in the textbook, can you name one set of local councils
which dealt with the same subject, and which obtained ecumenical authority and
inclusion in the Synodikon of Orthodoxy?
Metropolitan Hierotheos of Nafpaktos
devotes the entire last chapter of his book The
Mind of the Orthodox Church to the Synodikon of Orthodoxy. Giving
background information, he explains that through the ages, various heresies
appeared that denied God's revelation and made use of philosophy and
conjecture. When some heresy would spring up, the Holy Fathers would oppose it
at the place where it appeared. (The heretic Arius, for example, was confronted
by the Council of Alexandria, but when his heretical opinions began to be
disseminated beyond the borders of Alexandria as
well, the subject was confronted by the First Ecumenical Council). In their
confrontations with the heretics, the Holy Fathers who formed the Synods did
not seek to find the truth by making conjectures by reasoning and imagination.
Instead, they attempted to formulate in words the already-existing revealed
Truth, of which they also had in their own personal experience. The mind of the
Church is linked to, and is in harmony with, the decisions of the Fathers of
the Church as it has been expressed with conciliar authority.
The metropolitan also explains that
the decisions of the Synods on dogmatic topics are called provisions, and more
generally speaking, each decision of the Synods is called a synodikon. Thus,
there is a symbolical tome and a synodical provision, and moreover, each Synod
has its own synodikon.
Concerning the Synodikon of
Orthodoxy, it is a text contained in the Lenten Triodion and is read on the
first Sunday of Great Lent, the Sunday of Orthodoxy, whence its name. This text
contains the decisions of the Seventh Ecumenical Council, which refer to the
veneration of holy icons. To it, there was later added
the definition of faith of the hesychastic councils of the fourteenth century,
which addressed St. Gregory Palamas' confrontation with the heretic Barlaam.
Thus, the Synodikon of Orthodoxy comprises the decisions of both the Seventh
Ecumenical Council and the councils of the fourteenth century. It is a holy
text, one which, as the metropolitan explains, sums up the entire orthodox
teaching of Christ's Church.
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