The Decline of the Patriarchate of Constantinople
by St. John of Shanghai and San Francisco
Translators' Introduction: The anti-Orthodox career
and statements of the late Patriarch Athenagoras of sorry memory
have been so striking that they have perhaps tended to obscure
the fact that the apostasy of this one man was merely the
culmination of a long and thorough process of the departure from
the Orthodox Faith of an entire Local Orthodox Church. The
promise of the new Patriarch Demetrios to "follow upon the
footsteps of our great Predecessor... in pursuing Christian
unity" and to institute-"dialogues" with Islam and
other non-Christian religions, while recognizing "the holy
blessed Pope of Rome Paul VI, the first among equals within the
universal Church of 0rist" (Enthronement Address)only
confirms this observation and reveals the depths to which the
Church of Constantinople has fallen in our own day.
It should be noted that the
title "Ecumenical" was bestowed on the Patriarch of
Constantinople as a result of the transfer of the capital of the
Roman Empire to this city in the 4th century; the Patriarch then
became the bishop of the city which was the center of the ecumene
or civilized world. Lamentably, in the 20th century the
once-glorious See of Constantinople, having long since lost its
earthly glory, has cheaply tried to regain prestige by entering
on two new "ecumenical" paths: it has joined the
"ecumenical movement," which is based on an
anti-Christian universalism; and, in imitation of apostate Rome,
it has striven to subject the other Orthodox Churches to itself
and make of its Patriarch a kind of Pope of Orthodoxy.
The following article,
which is part of a report on all the Autocephalous Churches made
by Archbishop John to the Second All-Diaspora Sobor of the
Russian Church Abroad held in Yugoslavia in 1938, gives the
historical background of the present state of the Patriarchate of
Constantinople. It could well have been written today, nearly 35
years later, apart from a few small points which have changed
since then, not to mention the more spectacular
"ecumenical" acts and statements of the Patriarchate in
recent years, which have served to change it from the
"pitiful spectacle" here described into one of the
leading world centers of anti-Orthodoxy.
THE PRIMACY among Orthodox
Churches is possessed by the Church of the New Rome,
Constantinople, which is headed by a Patriarch who has the title
of Ecumenical, and therefore is itself called the Ecumenical
Patriarchate, which territorially reached the culmination of its
development at the end of the 18th century. At that time there
was included in it the whole of Asia Minor, the whole Balkan
Peninsula (except for Montenegro), together with the adjoining
islands, since the other independent Churches in the Balkan
Peninsula had been abolished and had become part of the
Ecumenical Patriarchate. The Ecumenical Patriarch had received
from the Turkish Sultan, even before the taking of Constantinople
by the Turks, the title of Millet Bash, that is, the head
of the people, and he was considered the head of the whole
Orthodox population of the Turkish Empire. This, however, did not
prevent the Turkish government from removing patriarchs for any
reason whatever and calling for new elections, at the same time
collecting a large tax from the newly elected patriarch.
Apparently the latter circumstance had a great significance in
the changing of patriarchs by the Turks, and therefore it often
happened that they again allowed on the Patriarchal Throne a
patriarch whom they had removed, after the death of one or
several of his successors. Thus, many patriarchs occupied their
see several times, and each accession was accompanied by the
collection of a special tax from them by the Turks.
In order to make up the sum
which he paid on his accession to the Patriarchal Throne, a
patriarch made a collection from the metropolitans subordinate to
him, and they, in their turn, collected from the clergy
subordinate to them. This manner of making up its finances left
an imprint on the whole order of the Patriarchate's life. In the
Patriarchate there was likewise evident the Greek "Great
Idea," that is, the attempt to restore Byzantium, at first
in a cultural, but later also in a political sense. For this
reason in all important; posts there were assigned people loyal
to this idea, and for the most part Greeks from the part of
Constantinople called the Phanar, where also the Patriarchate was
located. Almost always the episcopal sees were filled by Greeks,
even though in the Balkan Peninsula the population was primarily
Slavic.
At the beginning of the
19th century there began a movement of liberation among the
Balkan peoples, who were striving to liberate themselves from the
authority of the Turks. There arose the states of Serbia, Greece,
Rumania, and Bulgaria, at first semi-independent, and then
completely independent from Turkey. Parallel with this there
proceeded also the formation of new Local Churches which were
separate from the Ecumenical Patriarchate. Even though it was
unwillingly, under the influence of circumstances, the Ecumenical
Patriarchs permitted the autonomy of the Churches in the vassal
princedoms, and later they recognized the full independence of
the Churches in Serbia, Greece, and Rumania. Only the Bulgarian
question was complicated in view on the one hand of the
impatience of the Bulgarians, who had not yet attained political
independence, and, on the other hand, thanks to the
unyieldingness of the Greeks. The self-willed declaration of
Bulgarian autocephaly on the foundation of a firman of the
Sultan was not recognized by the Patriarchate, and in a number of
dioceses there was established a parallel hierarchy.
The boundaries of the
newly-formed Churches coincided with the boundaries of the new
states, which were growing all the time at the expense of Turkey,
at the same time acquiring new dioceses from the Patriarchate.
Nonetheless, in 1912, when the Balkan War began, the Ecumenical
Patriarchate had about 70 metropolias and several bishoprics. The
war of 1912-13 tore away from Turkey a significant part of the
Balkan Peninsula with such great spiritual centers as Salonica
and Athos. The Great War of 1914-18 for a time deprived Turkey of
the whole of Thrace and the Asia Minor coast with the city of
Smyrna, which were subsequently lost by Greece in 1922 after the
unsuccessful march of the Greeks on Constantinople.
Here the Ecumenical
Patriarch could not so easily allow out of his authority the
dioceses which had been torn away from Turkey, as had been done
previously. There was already talk concerning certain places
which from of old had been under the spiritual authority of
Constantinople. Nonetheless, the Ecumenical Patriarch in 1922
recognized the annexation to the Serbian Church of all areas
within the boundaries of Yugoslavia; he agreed to the inclusion
within the Church of Greece of a number of dioceses in the Greek
State, preserving, however, his jurisdiction over Athos; and in
1937 he recognized even the autocephaly of the small Albanian
Church, which originally he had not recognized.
The boundaries of the
Ecumenical Patriarchate and the number of its dioceses had
significantly decreased. At the same time the Ecumenical
Patriarchate in fact lost Asia Minor also, although it remained
within its jurisdiction. In accordance with the peace treaty
between Greece and Turkey in 1923, there occurred an exchange of
population between these powers, so that the whole Greek
population of Asia Minor had to resettle in Greece. Ancient
cities, having at one time a great significance in ecclesiastical
matters and glorious in their church history, remained without a
single inhabitant of the Orthodox faith. At the same time, the
Ecumenical Patriarch lost his political significance in Turkey,
since Kemal Pasha deprived him of his title of head of the
people. Factually, at the present time under the Ecumenical
Patriarch there are five dioceses within the boundaries of Turkey
in addition to Athos with the surrounding places in Greece. The
Patriarch is extremely hindered in the manifestation even of his
indisputable rights in church government within the boundaries of
Turkey, where he is viewed as an ordinary Turkish
subject-official, being furthermore under the supervision of the
government. The Turkish government, which interferes in all
aspects of the life of its citizens, only as a special privilege
has permitted him, as also the Armenian Patriarch, to wear long
hair and clerical garb, forbidding this to the rest of the
clergy. The Patriarch has no right of free exit from Turkey, and
lately the government is ever more insistently pursuing his
removal to the new capital of Ankara (the ancient Ancyra), where
there are now no Orthodox Christians, but where the
administration with all the branches of governmental life is
concentrated.
Such an outward abasement
of the hierarch of the city of St. Constantine, which was once
the capital of the ecumene, has not caused reverence
toward him to be shaken among Orthodox Christians, who revere the
See of Sts. Chrysostom and Gregory the Theologian. From the
height of this See the successor of Sts. John and Gregory could
spiritually guide the whole Orthodox world, if only he possessed
their firmness in the defense of righteousness and truth and the
breadth of views of the recent Patriarch Joachim III. However, to
the general decline of the Ecumenical Patriarchate there has been
joined the direction of its activity after the Great War. The
Ecumenical Patriarchate has desired to make up for the loss of
dioceses which have left its jurisdiction, and likewise the loss
of its political significance within the boundaries of Turkey, by
submitting to itself areas where up to now there has been no
Orthodox hierarchy, and likewise the Churches of those states
where the government is not Orthodox. Thus, on April 5, 1922,
Patriarch Meletius designated an Exarch of Western and Central
Europe with the title of Metropolitan of Thyateira with residency
in London; on March 4, 1923, the same Patriarch consecrated the
Czech Archimandrite Sabbatius Archbishop of Prague and All
Czechoslovakia; on April 15, 1924, a Metropolia of Hungary and
All Central Europe was founded with a See in Budapest, even
though there was already a Serbian bishop there. In America an
Archbishopric was established under the Ecumenical Throne, then
in 1924 a Diocese was established in Australia with a See in
Sydney. In 1938 India was made subordinate to the Archbishop of
Australia.
At the same time there has
proceeded the subjection of separate parts of the Russian
Orthodox Church which have been torn away from Russia. Thus, on
June 9, 1923, the Ecumenical Patriarch accepted into his
jurisdiction the Diocese of Finland as an autonomous Finnish
Church; on August 23, 1923, the Estonian Church was made subject
in the same way, on November 13, 1924, Patriarch Gregory VII
recognized the autocephaly of the Polish Church under the
supervision of the Ecumenical Patriarchatethat is, rather
autonomy. In March, 1936, the Ecumenical Patriarch accepted
Latvia into his jurisdiction. Not limiting himself to the
acceptance into his jurisdiction of Churches in regions which had
fallen away from the borders of Russia, Patriarch Photius
accepted into his jurisdiction Metropolitan Eulogius in Western
Europe together with the parishes subordinate to him, and on
February 28, 1937, an Archbishop of the jurisdiction of the
Ecumenical Patriarch in America consecrated Bishop
Theodore-Bogdan Shpilko for a Ukrainian Church in North America.
Thus, the Ecumenical
Patriarch has become actually "ecumenical" [universal]
in the breadth of the territory which is theoretically subject to
him. Almost the whole earthly globe, apart from the small
territories of the three Patriarchates and the territory of
Soviet Russia, according to the idea of the Patriarchate's
leaders, enters into the composition of the Ecumenical
Patriarchate. Increasing without limit their desires to submit to
themselves parts of Russia, the Patriarchs of Constantinople have
even begun to declare the uncanonicity of the annexation of Kiev
to the Moscow Patriarchate, and to declare that the previously
existing southern Russian Metropolia of Kiev should be subject to
the Throne of Constantinople. Such a point of view is not only
clearly expressed in the Tomos of November 13, 1924, in
connection with the separation of the Polish Church, but is also
quite thoroughly promoted by the Patriarchs. Thus, the Vicar of
Metropolitan Eulogius in Paris, who was consecrated with the
permission of the Ecumenical Patriarch, has assumed the title of
Chersonese; that is to say, Chersonese, which is now in the
territory of Russia, is subject to the Ecumenical Patriarch. The
next logical step for the Ecumenical Patriarchate would be to
declare the whole of Russia as being under the jurisdiction of
Constantinople.
However, the actual
spiritual might and even the actual boundaries of authority by
far do not correspond to such a self-aggrandizement of
Constantinople. Not to mention the fact that almost everywhere
the authority of the Patriarch is quite illusory and consists for
the most part in the confirmation of bishops who have been
elected to various places or the sending of such from
Constantinople, many lands which Constantinople considers subject
to itself do not have any flock at all under its jurisdiction.
The moral authority of the
Patriarchs of Constantinople has likewise fallen very low in view
of their extreme instability in ecclesiastical matters. Thus,
Patriarch Meletius IV arranged a "Pan-Orthodox
Congress," with representatives of various churches, which
decreed the introduction of the New Calendar. This decree,
recognized only by a part of the Church, introduced a frightful
schism among Orthodox Christians. Patriarch Gregory VII
recognized the decree of the council of the Living Church
concerning the deposing of Patriarch Tikhon, whom not long before
this the Synod of Constantinople had declared a
"confessor," and then he entered into communion with
the "Renovationists" in Russia, which continues up to
now.
In sum, the Ecumenical
Patriarchate, in theory embracing almost the whole universe and
in fact extending its authority only over several dioceses, and
in other places having only a higher superficial supervision and
receiving certain revenues for this, persecuted by the government
at home and not supported by any governmental authority abroad:
having lost its significance as a pillar of truth and having
itself become a source of division, and at the same time being
possessed by an exorbitant love of powerrepresents a
pitiful spectacle which recalls the worst periods in the history
of the See of Constantinople.
From Orthodox Word, vol. 8, no. 4
(45), July-August 1972, pp. 166-168, 174-175.