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The attributes of the Church are innumerable because her attributes are actually
the attributes of the Lord Christ, the God-man, and, through Him, those of the
Triune Godhead. However, the holy and divinely wise fathers of the Second
Ecumenical Council, guided and instructed by the Holy Spirit, reduced them in
the ninth article of the Symbol of Faith to four—I believe in
one, holy, catholic, and apostolic Church. These attributes of the
Church—unity, holiness, catholicity (sobornost), and apostolicity—are
derived from the very nature of the Church and of her purpose. They clearly and
accurately define the character of the Orthodox Church of Christ whereby, as a
theanthropic institution and community, she is distinguishable from any
institution or community of the human sort.
I. The Unity and Uniqueness of the Church
Just as the Person of Christ the God-man is one and unique, so is the Church
founded by Him, in Him, and upon Him. The unity of the Church follows
necessarily from the unity of the Person of the Lord Christ, the God-man. Being
an organically integral and theanthropic organism unique in all the worlds, the
Church, according to all the laws of Heaven and earth, is indivisible. Any
division would signify her death. Immersed in the God-man, she is first and
foremost a theanthropic organism, and only then a theanthropic organization. In
her, everything is theanthropic: nature, faith, love, baptism, the Eucharist,
all the holy mysteries and all the holy virtues, her teaching, her entire life,
her immortality, her eternity, and her structure. Yes, yes, yes; in her,
everything is theanthropically integral and indivisible Christification,
sanctification, deification, Trinitarianism, salvation. In her everything is
fused organically and by grace into a single theanthropic body, under a single
Head—the God-man, the Lord Christ. All her members, though as persons always
whole and inviolate, yet united by the same grace of the Holy Spirit through the
holy mysteries and the holy virtues into an organic unity, comprise one body and
confess the one faith, which unites them to each other and to the Lord Christ.
The Christ-bearing apostles are divinely inspired as they announce the unity and
the uniqueness of the Church, based upon the unity and uniqueness of her
Founder—the God-man, the Lord Christ, and His theanthropic personality:
"For other foundation can no man lay than that is laid, which is Jesus
Christ" (I Cor. 3:11).
Like the holy apostles, the holy fathers and the teachers of the Church confess
the unity and uniqueness of the Orthodox Church with the divine wisdom of the
cherubim and the zeal of the seraphim. Understandable, therefore, is the fiery
zeal which animated the holy fathers of the Church in all cases of division and
falling away and the stern attitude toward heresies and schisms. In that regard,
the holy ecumenical and holy local councils are preeminently important.
According to their spirit and attitude, wise in those things pertaining to
Christ, the Church is not only one but also unique. Just as the Lord Christ
cannot have several bodies, so He cannot have several Churches. According to her
theanthropic nature, the Church is one and unique, just as Christ the God-man is
one and unique.
Hence, a division, a splitting up of the Church is ontologically and essentially
impossible. A division within the Church has never
occurred, nor indeed can one take place, while apostasy from the Church
has and will continue to occur after the manner of those voluntarily fruitless
branches which, having withered, fall away from the eternally living
theanthropic Vine—the Lord Christ (Jn. 15:1-6). From time to time, heretics
and schismatics have cut themselves offend have fallen away from the one and
indivisible Church of Christ, whereby they ceased to be members of the Church
and parts of her theanthropic body. The first to fall away thus were the
gnostics, then the Arians, then the Macedonians, then the Monophysites, then the
Iconoclasts, then the Roman Catholics, then the Protestants, then the Uniates,
and so on—all the other members of the legion of heretics and schismatics.
II. The Holiness of the Church
By her theanthropic nature, the Church is undoubtedly a unique organization in
the world. All her holiness resides in her nature. Actually, she is the
theanthropic workshop of human sanctification and, through men, of the
sanctification of the rest of creation. She is holy as the theanthropic Body of
Christ, whose eternal head is the Lord Christ Himself; and Whose immortal soul
is the Holy Spirit. Wherefore everything in her is holy: her teaching, her
grace, her mysteries, her virtues, all her powers, and all her instruments have
been deposited in her for the sanctification of men and of all created things.
Having become the Church by His incarnation out of an unparalleled love for man,
our God and Lord Jesus Christ sanctified the Church by His sufferings,
Resurrection, Ascension, teaching, wonder-working, prayer, fasting, mysteries,
and virtues; in a word, by His entire theanthropic life. Wherefore the divinely
inspired pronouncement has been rendered: ". . . Christ also loved the
Church, and gave Himself for it; that He might sanctify and cleanse it with the
washing of water by the word, that He might present it to Himself a glorious
Church, not having spot, or wrinkle, or any such thing; but that it should be
holy and without blemish" (Eph. 5:25-27).
The flow of history confirms the reality of the Gospel: the Church is filled to
overflowing with sinners. Does their presence in the Church reduce, violate, or
destroy her sanctity? Not in the least! For her Head—the Lord Christ, and her
Soul—the Holy Spirit, and her divine teaching, her mysteries, and her virtues,
are indissolubly and immutably holy. The Church tolerates sinners, shelters
them, and instructs them, that they may be awakened and roused to repentance and
spiritual recovery and transfiguration; but they do not hinder the Church from
being holy. Only unrepentant sinners, persistent in evil and godless malice, are
cut off from the Church either by the visible action of the theanthropic
authority of the Church or by the invisible action of divine judgment, so that
thus also the holiness of the Church may be preserved. "Put away from among
yourselves that wicked person"
(I Cor. 5:13).
In their writings and at the Councils, the holy fathers confessed the holiness
of the church as her essential and immutable quality. The fathers of the Second
Ecumenical Council defined it dogmatically in the ninth article of the Symbol of
Faith. And the succeeding ecumenical councils confirmed it by the seal of their
assent.
III. The Catholicity (Sobornost) of the Church
The theanthropic nature of the Church is inherently and all-encompassingly
universal and catholic: it is theanthropically universal and theanthropically
catholic. The Lord Christ, the God-man, has by Himself and in Himself most
perfectly and integrally united God and Man and, through man, all the worlds and
all created things to God. The fate of creation is essentially linked to that of
man (cf. Romans 8:19-24). In her theanthropic organism, the Church encompasses:
"all things created, that are in Heaven, and that are in earth, visible and
invisible, whether they be thrones, or dominions, or principalities, or
powers" (Col. 1:16). Everything is in the God-man; He is the Head of the
Body of the Church (Col. 1:17-18).
In the theanthropic organism of the Church everyone lives in the fullness of his
personality as a living, godlike cell. The law of theanthropic catholicity
encompasses all and acts through all. All the while, the theanthropic
equilibrium between the divine and the human is always duly preserved. Being
members of her body, we in the Church experience the fullness of our being in
all its godlike dimensions. Furthermore: in the Church of the God-man, man
experiences his own being as all-encompassing, as theanthropically
all-encompassing; he experiences himself not only as complete, but also as the
totality of creation. In a word: he experiences himself as a god-man by grace.
The theanthropic catholicity of the Church is actually an unceasing
christification of many by grace and virtue: all is gathered in Christ the
God-man, and everything is experienced through Him as one's own, as a single
indivisible theanthropic organism. For life in the Church is a theanthropic
catholicization, the struggle of acquiring by grace and virtue the likeness of
the God-man, christification, theosis, life in the Trinity, sanctification,
transfiguration, salvation, immortality, and churchliness. Theanthropic
catholicity in the Church is reflected in and achieved by the eternally living
Person of Christ, the God-man Who in the most perfect way has united God to man
and to all creation, which has been cleansed of sin, evil, and death by the
Savior's precious Blood (cf. Col. 1:19-22). The theanthropic Person of the Lord
Christ is the very soul of the Church's catholicity. It is the God-man Who
always preserves the theanthropic balance between the divine and the human in
the catholic life of the Church. The Church is filled to overflowing with the
Lord Christ, for she is "the fullness of Him that filleth all in all"
(Eph. 1:23). Wherefore, she is universal in every person that is found within
her, in each of her tiny cells. That universality, that catholicity resounds
like thunder particularly through the holy apostles, through the holy fathers,
through the holy ecumenical and local councils.
IV. The Apostolicity of the Church
The holy apostles were the first god-men by grace. Like the Apostle Paul each of
them, by his integral life, could have said of himself: "I live, yet not I,
but Christ liveth in me" (Gal. 2:20). Each of them is a Christ repeated;
or, to be more exact, a continuation of Christ. Everything in them is
theanthropic because everything was recieved from the God-man. Apostolicity is
nothing other than the God-manhood of the Lord Christ, freely assimilated
through the holy struggles of the holy virtues: faith, love, hope, prayer,
fasting, etc. This means that everything that is of man lives in them freely
through the God-man, thinks through the God-man, feels through the God-man, acts
through the God-man and wills through the God-man. For them, the historical
God-man, the Lord Jesus Christ, is the supreme value and the supreme criterion.
Everything in them is of the
God-man, for the sake of the God-man, and in the God-man. And it is always and
everywhere thus. That for them is immortality in the time and space of this
world. Thereby are they even on this earth partakers of the theanthropic
eternity of Christ.
This theanthropic apostolicity is integrally continued in the earthly successors
of the Christ-bearing apostles: in the holy fathers. Among them, in essence,
there is no difference: the same God-man Christ lives, acts, enlivens and makes
them all eternal in equal measure, He Who is the same yesterday, and today, and
forever (Heb. 13:8). Through the holy fathers, the holy apostles live on with
all their theanthropic riches, theanthropic worlds, theanthropic holy things,
theanthropic mysteries, and theanthropic virtues. The holy fathers in fact are
continuously apostolizing, whether as distinct godlike personalities, or as
bishops of the local churches, or as members of the holy ecumenical and holy
local councils. For all of them there is but one Truth, one Transcendent Truth:
the God-man, the Lord Jesus Christ. Behold, the holy ecumenical councils, from
the first to the last, confess, defend, believe, announce, and vigilantly
preserve but a single supreme value: the God-man, the Lord Jesus Christ.
The principal Tradition, the transcendent Tradition, of the Orthodox Church is
the living God-man Christ, entire in the theanthropic Body of the Church of
which He is the immortal, eternal Head. This is not merely the message, but the
transcendent message of the holy apostles and the holy fathers. They know Christ
crucified, Christ resurrected, Christ ascended. They all, by their integral
lives and teachings, with a single soul and a single voice, confess that Christ
the God-man is wholly in His Church, as in His Body. Each of the holy fathers
could rightly repeat with St. Maximus the Confessor: "In no wise am I
expounding my own opinion, but that which I have been taught by the fathers,
without changing aught in their teaching."
And from the immortal proclamation of St. John of Damascus there resounds the
universal confession of all the holy fathers who were glorified by God:
"Whatever has been transmitted to us through the Law, and the prophets, and
the apostles, and the evangelists, we receive and know and esteem highly, and
beyond that we ask nothing more. . . Let us be fully satisfied with it, and rest
therein, removing not the ancient landmarks (Prov. 22:28), nor violating the
divine Tradition." And then, the touching, fatherly admonition of the holy
Damascene, directed to all Orthodox Christians: "Wherefore, brethren, let
us plant ourselves upon the rock of faith and the Tradition of the Church,
removing not the landmarks set by our holy fathers, nor giving room to those who
are anxious to introduce novelties and to undermine the structure of God's holy
ecumenical and apostolic Church. For if everyone were allowed a free hand,
little by little the entire Body of the Church would be destroyed."
The holy Tradition is wholly of the God-man, wholly of the holy apostles, wholly
of the holy fathers, wholly of the Church, in the Church, and by the Church. The
holy fathers are nothing other than the "guardians of the apostolic
tradition. " All of them, like the holy apostles themselves, are but
"witnesses" of a single and unique Truth: the transcendent Truth of
Christ, the God-man. They preach and confess it without rest, they, the
"golden mouths of the Word." The God-man, the Lord Christ is one,
unique, and indivisible. So also is the Church unique and indivisible, for she
is the incarnation of the Theanthropos Christ, continuing through the ages and
through all eternity. Being such by her nature and in her earthly history, the
Church may not be divided. It is only possible to fall away from her. That unity
and uniqueness of the Church is theanthropic from the very beginning and through
all the ages and all eternity.
Apostolic succession, the apostolic heritage, is theanthropic from first to
last. What is it that the holy apostles are transmitting to their successors as
their heritage? The Lord Christ, the God-man Himself, with all the imperishable
riches of His wondrous theanthropic Personality, Christ—the Head of the
Church, her sole Head. If it does not transmit that, apostolic succession ceases
to be apostolic, and the apostolic Tradition is lost, for there is no longer an
apostolic hierarchy and an apostolic Church.
The holy Tradition is the Gospel of the Lord Christ, and the Lord Christ
Himself, Whom the Holy Spirit instills in each and every believing soul, in the
entire Church. Whatever is Christ's, by the power of the Holy Spirit becomes
ours, human; but only within the body of the Church. The Holy Spirit—the soul
of the Church, incorporates each believer, as a tiny cell, into the body of the
Church and makes him a "co-heir" of the God-man (Eph. 3:6). In reality
the Holy Spirit makes every believer into a God-man by grace. For what is life
in the Church? Nothing other than the transfiguration of each believer into a
God-man by grace through his personal, evangelical virtues; it is his growth in
Christ, the putting on of Christ by growing in the Church and being a member of
the Church. A Christian's life is a ceaseless, Christ-centered theophany: the
Holy Spirit, through the holy mysteries and the holy virtues, transmits Christ
the Savior to each believer, renders him a living tradition, a living life:
"Christ who is our life" (Col. 3:4). Everything Christ's thereby
becomes ours, ours for all eternity: His truth, His righteousness, His love, His
life, and His entire divine Hypostasis.
Holy Tradition? It is the Lord Jesus Christ, the God-man Himself, with all the
riches of his divine Hypostasis and, through Him and for His sake, those of the
Holy Trinity. That is most fully given and articulated in the Holy Eucharist,
wherein, for our sake and for our salvation, the Savior's entire theanthropic
economy of salvation is performed and repeated. Therein wholly resides the
God-man with all His wondrous and miraculous gifts; He is there, and in the
Church's life of prayer and liturgy. Through all this, the Savior's
philanthropic proclamation ceaselessly resounds: "And, lo, I am with you
always, even unto the end of the world" (Mt. 28 20): He is with the
apostles and, through the apostles, with all the faithful, world without end.
This is the whole of the holy Tradition of the Orthodox Church of the apostles:
life in Christ = life in the Holy Trinity; growth in Christ = growth in the
Trinity (cf. Mt. 28: 19-20).
Of extraordinary importance is the following: in Christ's Orthodox Church, the
Holy Tradition, ever living and life-giving, comprises: the holy liturgy, all
the divine services, all the holy mysteries, all the holy virtues, the totality
of eternal truth and eternal righteousness, all love, all eternal life, the
whole of the God-man, the Lord Christ, the entire Holy Trinity, and the entire
theanthropic life of the Church in its theanthropic fullness, with the All-holy
Theotokos and all the saints.
The personality of the Lord Christ the God-man, transfigured within the Church,
immersed in the prayerful, liturgical, and boundless sea of grace, wholly
contained in the Eucharist, and wholly in the Church—this is holy Tradition.
This authentic good news is confessed by the holy fathers and the holy
ecumenical councils. By prayer and piety holy Tradition is preserved from all
human demonism and devilish humanism, and in it is preserved the entire Lord
Christ, He Who is the eternal Tradition of the Church. "Great is the
mystery of godliness: God was manifest in the flesh" (I Tim. 3 16): He was
manifest as a man, as a God-man, as the Church, and by His philanthropic act of
salvation and deification of humanity He magnified and exalted man above the
holy cherubim and the most holy seraphim.
Originally published in Orthodox Life, vol. 31, no. 1 (Jan.-Feb., 1981), pp.
28-33. Translated by Stephen Karganovic from: The Orthodox Church &
Ecumenism (in Serbian) by Archimandrite Justin (Popovich) (Thessalonica:
Chilandar Monastery, 1974), pp. 64-74. |