11.
What is
meant by calling the Church conciliar?
The word conciliar
means “of, relating to, or generated by a council” (American Heritage
Dictionary). Calling the Church conciliar underscores the great
importance of the Church's Councils.
Bishop Alexander of Buenos
Aires and South America of the Russian Church in
Exile goes on to explain conciliarism as that special state in which bishops
decide Church matters, first having prayed and implored the grace of the Holy
Spirit. The same bishop adds that through the enlightenment and grace that
overshadow bishops gathered in Councils, the most complicated questions are
resolved and decisions are made which benefit the Church.
In the time of the Apostles,
misunderstandings arose in Antioch regarding the applicability of the ritual law of Moses. Since there was
a need to appeal to a higher authoritative voice or judgment, the Apostles
gathered in a Council at Jerusalem (Acts 15), and the decrees of this Council
were acknowledged as obligatory for the whole Church (Acts 16:4). By means of the Council of Jerusalem, the Apostles gave an
example of the conciliar resolution of the most important questions in the
Church for all times.
It is important to note here that
the Apostolic Council speaks especially clearly against the supremacy of the Apostle Peter. If one were to believe
the Catholic dogma of the supremacy of the Roman pope, then the Christians of
Antioch should have appealed to the Apostle Peter for the resolution of their
perplexity. However, they appealed not
to Peter, but to all the Apostles
and presbyters. At this first Council, the question is subject to a general
discussion, and the completion of the matter belongs to the Apostle James. From
James’ words (not Peter's), the decision of the Council is written. Also
important to note is that Sacred Scripture reveals a number of weighty things
that take place: Peter is sent by the Apostles (Acts 8:19),
he gives an account of his actions
to the Apostles and faithful (Acts 11:4-18), and he also listens to their objections and even denunciations (Gal 2:11-19).
These facts demonstrate that Peter was not the prince of the Apostles and the
head of the Church, as the Roman Catholic Church falsely teaches.
Orthodox theology strictly
differentiates between the ministry of the Apostles and that of the bishops. As
Bishop Alexander Semonov-Tian-Shansky writes in this regard:
The significance of the Apostles was exceptional and in many ways
exceeded the significance of bishops. Bishops head local Churches, while the
Apostles were wandering preachers of the Gospel. An Apostle, having founded a
new Church in some locale, would ordain a bishop for it and would himself go to another place to preach. In consequence of
this, the Orthodox Church does not honor the Apostle Peter as the first bishop
of Rome. Nonetheless, the Holy Church always allowed that among the bishops one is recognized as first in
honor, but concerning his infallibility there is no discussion.
In the first centuries, the primacy of honor belonged to the Roman bishop,
but after his falling away into schism, it passed to the patriarch of Constantinople [As quoted from
Protopriest Victor Potapov, Orthodoxy and
Heterodoxy].
From
Apostolic times and throughout the subsequent history of the Church, even prior
to Rome's departure from the Church in 1054, no bishop had absolute authority
over any other. The Church is not and
never was monarchical in structure, centered around a
single bishop. Instead, all bishops work together in equality, and all
consult with one another to achieve a common mind under the influence of the
Holy Spirit. St. Cyprian of Carthage writes that this collegial structure
(that is, where all bishops share authority) is based on divine law. If the bishop of Rome was everywhere
regarded as the supreme head of the Church, as the Latin Church teaches, why
were there no cries of heresy to such statements as that of St. Cyprian?
From the witness of Church history,
many Roman Catholics readily understand these facts and convert to Orthodoxy.
One who did, Michael Whelton, wrote an entire book that deals with the Orthodox
Church's conciliar tradition (an
understanding that Rome itself adhered to prior to the ninth century),
vis-à-vis Rome's divisive doctrine of papal monarchy. This author's well researched findings merit
special attention. He correctly observes that the early Church was conciliar
in its government, that the Ecumenical Councils represented the highest judicial
body of the Church, that these Ecumenical Councils were not called to advise
the bishop of Rome, and that the bishop of Rome did not enjoy veto power. Mr. Whelton goes on to explain that:
Nowhere in the canons or creeds of these [Ecumenical] Councils do we
find any recognition of Rome's claim to supreme universal jurisdiction. None of the Church Fathers
or general councils settled doctrinal disputes by appealing to an infallible
pope. Claims of infallibility by a single bishop would have been
incomprehensible. Furthermore, the idea that the bishop of Rome was superior to a
council of the Church and that a council was ecumenical only because the bishop
of Rome alone confirmed its decrees was unknown. In fact, all five patriarchs —
[those of] Rome, Constantinople, Alexandria, Antioch and Jerusalem — had to confirm the decrees [Two
Paths: Papal Monarchy — Collegial Tradition, pp. 52-53].
In
another book, the same writer notes that:
For at least the first thousand years, Christendom was an undivided
Church governed by councils that offered a common forum for both Churches East
and West to settle differences and thus provide a common bond. It is probable
beyond doubt that the early Church does not point to the office of a single
bishop as the living tradition of the Church, but to an ecumenical consensus or
collective conscience, which is best exemplified by the early general councils.
It is this model of government that is intrinsic to the nature of the Church
and it is this that supplies her with enduring strength and stability [The Pearl, p. 43].
Mr.
Whelton adds that:
Today the Orthodox Church is the only Church in Christendom that
preserves and guards this collegial tradition; thus she rightly calls herself the Church of the Seven Ecumenical Councils....
Today with her self-governing Churches bound together in a fraternal unity, she
presents herself to the world just as the early Church did [Ibid., pp. 43-44].
(In
the Roman Catholic Church, on the other hand, the Roman Curia was created by
Pope Sixtus V [the “iron pope”] in the sixteenth century in order to crush the influence of cardinals and
bishops. It is of interest to observe that in April of 2002, when the American
cardinals were summoned to the Vatican in
response to a scandal in the Latin Church, the cardinals complained that they
were treated not like bishops, but like altar boys, by the pope. At that time,
the cardinals were clamoring for less dictatorship,
and a more conciliar approach to
resolving matters).
The Orthodox Church believes that the council is the chief means by which God
has chosen to guide His flock. Protopresbyter Michael Pomazansky explains
that the highest organ of authority in the Church, and
the highest authority in general, is a council of bishops. For a local Church,
it is a council of its local bishops, and for the Ecumenical Church, a
council of bishops made up of representatives of independent local Churches, in
conformity with the Thirty-Fourth Canon of the Holy Apostles.
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