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THE
ECCLESIOLOGY OF
ST. IGNATIUS OF ANTIOCH
by Fr. John
S. Romanides
The key to
understanding the ecclesiology of St. Ignatius is clearly his presuppositions
concerning salvation. As will be indicated, the Church as the body of
Christ exists, according to St. Ignatius, for the sole purpose of salvation
in Christ. Thus his ecclesiology without at least a general examination
of his soteriology would be incomprehensible.
In the extant writings of St. Ignatius one cannot find any systematic
exposition of soteriology. This is quite natural since he is writing
to baptized Christians primarily concerning internal Church unity and
order, against certain heretics, and also concerning his impending martyrdom.
Nevertheless, in order that the soteriological basis of St. Ignatius'
doctrine of the visible manifestation of the Church be understood, this
paper shall deal with: 1) salvation (from corruption) and ethics, 2)
the appropriation of salvation in Christ and the mystical conception
of the Church, 3) the Church and the Eucharist, 4) the Church or the
Community, 5) the clergy, 6) relative observations concerning the origin
and basis of the episcopate, 7) the basis for the equality of bishops,
and 8) concluding remarks.
1) Salvation (from corruption [ 1 ] ) and Ethics.
St. Ignatius writes that "the virginity of Mary and her offspring,
as well as the death of the Lord, seized (elaven) the prince of this
world: three thunderous mysteries wrought in the silence of God... Henceforth
all things were in a state of tumult because He meditated the abolition
of death." (Ign. Eph. 19) The abolition of death is non other than
the seizure of Satan and was accomplished by these three mysteries.
Satan here is closely related to death. By means of death and corruption
the devil rules a captive humanity. (Heb 2:14-15.) "The sting of
death is sin." (I Cor. 15:56.) "Sin reigned in death."
(Rom. 5:21.) Because of the tyrant death man is unable to live according
to his original destiny of selfless love. [
2 ]
He now has the instinct of self-preservation firmly rooted within him
from birth. Because he lives constantly under the fear of death he continuously
seeks bodily and psychological security, and thus becomes individualistically
inclined and utilitarian in attitude. Sin is the failure of man to live
according to his original destiny of selfless love which seeks not its
own and this failure is rooted in the disease of death. Because death
in the hands of Satan is the cause of sin, the kingdom of the devil
and sin is destroyed by the "abolition of death." (Ign. Eph.
19.)
For Ignatius death and corruption is an abnormal condition which God
came to destroy by the incarnation of His Son. The cosmology of St.
Ignatius is neither monophysite or monothelite. Besides the will of
God and the good, there exist now the temporary kingdom of Satan, who
rules by death and corruption, and man oppressed by the devil but at
the same time supported by God and free, at least according to will,
to follow the one or the other. The world and God has each his own character
- the world death, and God life. (Ign. Mag. 5.) Nevertheless, the material
world is neither evil, nor the product of the fall. It exists now under
the power of corruption (Rom. 8:20-22), but in Christ is being cleansed.
Our Lord was "born and baptized that by His passion He mighty purify
the water." (Ign. Eph. 18.) Life and immortality are not proper
to man, but to God. "For were He to regard us according to our
works we should cease to be." (Ign. Mag. 10.) God Himself was manifested
in the flesh "for the renewal of eternal life." (Ign. Eph.
19.) Christ is the source of life (Ign. Eph. 3; Mag. 1; Smyr. 4) and
"breathes immortality into the Church" (Ign. Eph. 17) "apart
from whom we do not possess the true life." (Ign. Tral. 9.)
In the epistles of St. Ignatius the idea of natural immortality as a
proper element of man's soul is completely absent. Both those before
and after Christ have the death and resurrection of Christ as their
source of life. Christ raised the prophets (Ign. Mag. 9) who "were
saved through union with Jesus Christ." (Ign. Phil. 5.) He "the
High Priest .. to whom the Holy of Holies has been committed ... is
the door of the Father by which enter in Abraham, and Isaac, and Jacob,
and the prophets, and the apostles, and the Church." (Ign. Phil.
9.) For the athletes of God "the prize is incorruption and eternal
life." (Ign. Pol. 2.) "The gospel is the ornament of incorruption."
(Ign. Phil. 9.) The Church has now peace by the flesh and blood and
passion of Jesus Christ. (Ign. Tral. salutation.) The death of Christ
"seized" the devil (Ign. Eph. 19) and as such is the source
by which life was renewed (Ign. Mag. 9) that "by believing in His
death you may escape from death." (Ign. Tral. 2.) "The passion
of Christ ... is our resurrection." (Ign. Smyr. 5.) Those who ignore
the death and the fleshly resurrection of Christ "have been denied
by Him, being the advocates of death rather than of the truth."
(Ign. Smyr. 5.) He who doen not confess him a "bearer of flesh
... has in fact altogether denied Him, being a bearer of death."
(Ibid.) "... if they believe not in the blood of Christ, then to
them there is judgment." (Ibid. 6.) "Those, therefore, who
speak against this gift of God, in the midst of their disputes, incur
death." (Ibid. 7.)
St. Ignatius emphatically and persistently points out the absolute necessity
of faith in the real historical facts of the incarnation of God from
the Virgin and of the death and fleshly resurrection of the God-man.
(Tral. 2,9,10; Phil. 8,9; Smyr. 1,2,3,4,7.) "I desire to guard
you... that you fall not upon the hooks of vain doctrine, but that you
attain to full assurance in regard to the birth, and passion, and resurrection
which took place in the time of the government of Pontius Pilate.: (Mag.
11.) Faith in the flesh and spirit (Smyr. 3) of Christ is the very basis
of the whole structure of New Testament and ancient Christian ethics.
The life of selfless love and the successful struggle against the powers
of death and the devil are impossible without communion with the real
life-giving and resurrected flesh of the Lord. "Consider those
who are of a different opinion with respect to the grace of Christ which
has come unto us, how opposed they are to the will of God. They have
no regard for love, etc. ..." (Ibid. 6.) Most probably St. Ignatius
is here referring to heretics with dualistic doctrines who ignore the
true nature of material creation and by consequence the real meaning
of death and corruption. It is possible to suppose that Ignatius is
here exaggerating the inadequate ethics of the heretics he has in mind.
Such a judgment is especially tempting when one realizes the fact that
some of the heretics attacked by Ignatius admired and respected the
Orthodox, even as happens today. "For what does any one profit
me if he commends me but blasphemes my Lord, not confessing that He
is possessed of flesh?" (Ibid. 5.) Such a value judgment, however,
concerning such possible exaggeration can be made only when one uses
as criteria ethical theories foreign to the basis of Ignatius' thought.
The ethical criteria of St. Ignatius cannot be judged according to theories
of natural moral law which conceive of man's quest for security and
happiness as normal. It is quite obvious that Ignatius unites the possibility
of a Christian ethic not to natural utilitarian principles of happiness,
but solely to the resurrected flesh of Christ. This relationship of
Christian ethics to the physical death and resurrection of Christ must
be comprehended for an adequate understanding of the presuppositions
of Ignatian ecclesiology.
Satan rules parasitically in creation and man by death. (Rom. 8:20-22;
Heb. 2:14.) The children of God "through fear of death were all
their lifetime guilty of bondage." (Heb. 2:15.) Because the rule
of Satan consisted in the physical and material reality of death and
corruption, the destruction of Satan could be brought about only by
a real resurrection of the flesh - not by the escape of the soul from
creation to some other supposed reality. By the indwelling of the life-giving
flesh of Christ the faithful are liberated from slavery to the devil
and by prayer, fasting, and corporate selfless love are enabled to overcome
the consequences of death, viz. sin, by the grace of God in Christ and
the Holy Spirit. "...the believing have in love the character of
God the Father by Jesus Christ, by whom, if we are not in readiness
to die into His passion, His life is not in us." (Mag. 5.) Both
the ontological reality and the ethical meaning of the incarnation,
death and resurrection of Christ, are necessarily united and inseparable.
The denial of the one leads to the rejection of the other. If the ontological
and material power of "him that had the power of death, that is,
the devil" (Heb. 2:14) has not been destroyed in the death and
resurrection of Christ, then sin is still reigning. "If Christ
be not raised ... you are yet in your sins." (I Cor. 15:17.) The
struggle of Christians against sin and for salvation through selfless
love would be useless and senseless. "Let us eat and drink for
tomorrow we die." (Ibid. 15:32.) Besides the ethical implications
of Christ's not having risen, there would be no hope of life after death.
"Then they also which are fallen asleep in Christ are perished.
If in this life only we have hope in Christ, we are of all men most
miserable." (Ibid. 15:18-19.) Therefore those who deny the real
birth, death and resurrection of the incarnated Word of God are "advocates
of death" and "bearers of death" and "their names"
are "unbelief." (Smyr. 5.)
Christian ethics, therefore, for St. Ignatius is not a mere matter of
preserving imagined innate moral laws of a supposed natural world for
the attainment of personal happiness, whether immanent or transcedental.
What is considered a natural quest for security and happiness is really
a life according to the dictates of death, or the flesh dominated by
death, constantly seeking bodily and psychological security of existence
and worth. "... let no one look upon his neighbor after the flesh,
but do you continually love each other in Jesus Christ." (Mag.
6.) Love in Christ differs sharply from the "kata sarka" eudaimonistic
and utilitarian love of so-called natural humanity. Christian love "seeks
not its own." (Rom. 14,7:15, 1-3; I Cor. 13,5:5, 15:10, 24, 29-11,
1:12, 25-26:13, 1ff: II Cor. 5,14-15; Gal. 5, 13:6, 1; Eph. 4,2; I Thes.
5,11.) "...exhort my brethren, in the name of Jesus Christ, that
they love their wives, even as the Lord the Church." (Ign. Pol.
5.) This love is such that Christ "pleased not himself" (Rom.
15:3) but "He died for all, that they who live should no longer
live for themselves." (II Cor. 5:15.) For this reason a Christian
wedding which has as its motive selfless love in Christ "is a great
mystery: but I speak concerning Christ and the Church." (Eph. 5:32.)
That is, it is a great mystery for Christians only, not because those
outside the Church are not married, but because a Christian wedding
takes place in another dimension. Therefore, "it becomes both men
and women who marry, to form their union with the approval of the bishop,
that their marriage be according to God, and not after their own lust."
(Ign. Pol. 5.)
Because of the character of the principle of sin, perfection in this
age is attained to not fully but in part according to the quality of
the war carried against the powers of the devil. Good works are not
part of a business agreement between God and man whereby God is obligated
to reward external and utilitarian acts of charity. Rather good works
are the product of the double struggle waged against the devil and for
non-utilitarian selfless love for God and the neighbor. [
3 ]
Therefore communion of divine life through the human nature of Christ
is not enough for salvation. The mystical (sacramental) life is not
a magical guarantee of eternal life. Christians must also wage an intense
war against Satan. " ... if we endure all the assaults of the prince
of this world and escape them we shall attain to ( or enjoy) God."
(Mag. 1)
It is only when one perceives the inseparable bond which exists in the
Bible and ancient Church between the destructive powers of death, corruption
and disease, and the person of Satan that he can comprehend the attitude
of the first Christians toward death and martyrdom. "... they touched
Him and believed, being supported by both His flesh and spirit. For
this cause also they despised death, for they were found above death."
(Smyr. 3.) He who fears death and is thereby s slave to its consequences
is incapable of living according to Christ "by whom, if we are
not in readiness to die into His passion, His life is not in us."
(Mag. 5.) The canons of the Church are quite severe for those who would
reject Christ because of fear. [
4 ]
The rejection of Christ for fear of death was considered as a fall into
the hands of the devil. [
5 ]
Thus the persistent desire of St. Ignatius not to be hindered in his
impending martyrdom was not the product of eschatological enthusiasm
or psychopathic disturbances, but clearly the consequence of the realization
of the inseparable relationship existing between death and Satan, who,
with man as his co-worker, is himself the cause of ethical and physical
evil. Condemned to death according to law already dead, it was impossible
for St. Ignatius to seek to avoid martyrdom. This would have meant slavery
to Satan. "The prince of this world would fain carry me away (or
capture me), and corrupt my disposition (or opinion ) toward God. Let
none of you, therefore, who are in Rome help him." (Ign. Rom. 7.)St.
Ignatius was not a psychopath. On the contrary he had a keen understanding
of biblical demonology (II Cor. 2:11) which not only dominated his own
approach to faith and practice, but also regulated the whole theology
of the ancient Church concerning martyrdom. "Pray for me that I
may attain ... If I shall suffer you have wished well to me; but if
I am rejected you have hated me." ( Ign. Rom. 8.) "... let
cutting off of members; let shatterings of the whole body; and let all
the evil torments of the devil come upon me: only let me attain to Jesus
Christ." (Ibid. 5.)
2) The appropriation of salvation
in Christ and the mystical conception of the Church.
By the victory of Christ over death and Satan he who believes in the
flesh of Christ is restored to the communion of the life and love of
God in union with his neighbors and loves "nothing but God only."
(Ign. Eph. 9, 11; Mag. 1.) "It is therefore befitting that you
should in every way glorify Jesus Christ, who had glorified you, that
by a unanimous obedience you may be perfectly joined together in the
same mind, and in the same opinion, and may all speak the same thing
concerning the same thing." ( Ign. Eph. 2.) For St. Ignatius the
primary characteristic of Christians is their corporate and selfless
spirit of love and their complete unanimity of faith. (Ign. Eph. 20;
Tral. 12; Phil. sal.; Pol. 6.) Faith and love for each other is one
identical reality, as well as the beginning and the end of life in Christ.
(Ign. Eph. 14.) Unity with each other in love is "a type and evidence
(of teaching) of immortality." (Mag. 6.) "All these things
together are good if you believe with love." (Ign. Phil. 9.) Faith
is to "be gathered together (synaxis) unto God." (Mag. 10.
Therefore in your concord and harmonious love Jesus Christ is sung."
(Ign. Eph. 4.) Only in such a harmony of love can we know that we are
partakers of God. (Ibid.) Therefore salvation and sanctification can
be accomplished only by a unity of love with each other in the life
of Christ. (Ign. Eph. 2.)
For Ignatius man does not have life of himself. Only God is self-life
(autozoe). Man lives be participation. Because man is held captive in
death by the devil his communion with God is of a distorted nature and
ends in the grave. The act of restoration of permanent and normal communion
between God and man can be accomplished only by a real resurrection
of man by God Himself. (Ezek. 37:12ff.) "Who alone hath immortality."
(I Tim. 6:16.) This immortality of God, however, is not to be separated
in its bestowal upon creation, from God's energy of love. Therefore,
"the drink of God, namely His Blood, ... is incorruptible love
and eternal life." (Ign. Rom. 7.) The love of God is not a relationship
(to pros ti) dominated by ulterior motivations. If God were within the
realm of happiness and so dominated thereby, then all His relationships,
if such could really exist, would be necessary. [
6 ]
The life of God the Father, however, who by essence generates the Son
and projects the Spirit, is personal and selfless love, which by grace
and in complete freedom through the Son and in the Spirit creates ex
nihilo, sustains, saves, and sanctifies creation, not by created means,
but by His own uncreated energy. Salvation is not a mere restoration
of proper relations between God and man. On the contrary man is saved
by being restored to life which is given to created beings only by God.
Saving grace, therefore, is the very uncreated life-giving energy of
God which vivifies and justifies man by defeating the devil. [
7 ]
The flesh of Christ is the source of life and justification [
8 ]
not as flesh per se, but because it is the flesh of God. It is for this
reason that St. Ignatius can say, "I desire the drink of God, namely
His Blood." (Ign. Rom. 7; also Eph. 1.) [
9 ]
Moralistic doctrines of atonement whereby man is already in possession
of an immortal soul, so that salvation is a matter of changing the disposition
of God toward man, and man toward God, by balancing the business interest
of each, are completely missing from the thought of Ignatius. Atonement
is not a simple adjustment and rearrangement of divine and human psychologies.
Neither is it an intellectual problem of identifying human concepts
with the immutable prototypes of God's essence which all together comprise
truth. It is not the proper relationship of two immortalities, that
of God and man, that is at stake, but rather the restoration of a lost
immortality now bound to death, and as a consequence morally corrupted.
It is only by participation in the divine life and love of God in Christ
through corporate love of neighbors that one may attain to immortality,
be justified, and avoid death. (Ign. Eph. 20; Rom. 7; Smyr. 7.) It is
exactly for this reason that those who live in Christ with selfless
love for each other are "stones in the temple of the Father, prepared
for the building of God the Father, and drawn up on high by the instrument
of Jesus Christ, which is the cross, making use of the Holy Spirit as
a rope... You, therefore, as well as your fellow-travellers, are God-bearers,
temple-bearers, Christ-bearers, bearers of holiness, adorned in all
respects with the commandments of Jesus Christ." (Ign. Eph. 9;
also 15; Mag. 12; Phil. 7.) Christians do everything together "in
the Son, and in the Father, and in the Spirit." (Mag. 13.)
St. Ignatius' mystical conception of the Church as the body of Christ
is not a result of personal enthusiasm for a mystical union with God
as happens with certain philosophical types who individualistically
seek ever more clear visions of eternal truths contained in the essence
of the one by the soul's transcending or penetrating material phenomena
and uniting with reality. The mysticism of Ignatius has nothing to do
with philosophical or natural mysticism which operates according to
the presupposition that reality consists in overcoming the material
so that two natural immortalities, the soul and God, may again become
one. For Ignatius this world is itself reality because it was created
by God to be reality and proof of this is the resurrection of Christ
in history for the salvation of history and time, not from history and
time. In sharp contrast to his spiritualistic adversaries, Ignatius
presents a mysticism completely Christocentric and indeed Sarkocentric
- only the flesh and blood of the resurrected God-man are the source
of life and resurrection of all men of all ages. (Ign. Eph. 1, 7, ,19,
20; Mag. 6, 8; Smyr. 1, 3; Pol. 3; Mag. 9; Phil. 5,9.) The human nature
of God is none other than salvation itself - namely 1) the restoration
of immortality to those who partake corporately in selfless love, 2)
the justification of man by the destruction of death and man's accusor
and captor, the devil, and 3) the granting of the power to defeat the
devil by struggling to attain to selfless love for God and neighbor
through the flesh of Christ. The Christocentric and flesh-centered mysticism
of Ignatius is not a simple luxury of the more enthusiastically inclined,
but on the contrary an absolute necessity for salvation, and constitutes
the very basis of his ecclesiology, which is indeed that of the New
Testament and ancient Church.
3) The Church and the Eucharist.
Man is saved by communion of divine life through the human nature of
Christ by love of neighbor, but "where there is division and wrath,
God does not dwell." (Ign. Phil. 8.) "He who does not love
his brother remains in death... And this is His commandment, That we
should believe in the name of His Son Jesus Christ, and love one another,
as He commanded us. And he that keeps His commandments dwells in Him
and He in him. And hereby we know That He abides in us by the Spirit
which He has given us." (I John 3:23-24.) Therefore, "avoid
all divisions as the beginning of evils." (Ign. Smyr. 7.) "Do
not err, my brethren. If any man follows him that makes a schism in
the Church, he shall not inherit the kingdom of God." (Ign. Phil.
3.)
Participation of the love of God in union with each other, which is
indeed communion of divine life, can be weakened and even destroyed
by man's inattention to the ways of Satan. "Flee therefore the
wicked devices and snares of the prince of the world. lest at any time
being oppressed by his will, you grow weak in your love." (Ign.
Phil. 6.) "Be not anointed with the bad odour of the teaching of
the prince of this world; do not let him lead you away captive from
the life which is set before you." (Ign. Eph. 17.) "For there
are many wolves (heretics who pluck the weak from the Church) that appear
worthy of credit, who, by means of a pernicious pleasure, carry captive
those that are running towards God; but in your unity they shall have
no place." (Ign. Phil. 2.) Because of unity with each other in
the love of Christ Satan cannot prevail since love is the blood of Christ
and eternal life by which the devil is destroyed. "Take heed, then,
often to come together to give thanks to God and show forth His praise.
For when you assemble frequently in the same place (epi to auto), the
powers of Satan are destroyed and the destruction at which he aims is
prevented by the unity of your faith." (Ign. Eph. 13.) "Let
no man deceive himself: if any one be not within the altar, he is deprived
of the bread of God... He, therefore, that does not assemble in the
same place (epi to auto), has already manifested his pride and condemned
himself." (Ign. Eph. 5.) "He that is within the altar is pure,
but he that is without is not pure." (Ign. Tral. 7.) [
10 ]
The visible Church (both visible and invisible Church constitute one
continuous reality for Ignatius), then, is composed of those baptized
faithful who conduct an intense war against Satan and the consequences
of his power rooted in death by their unity of love with each other
in the life-giving human nature of Christ, and manifest this unity and
love in the corporate Eucharist in which their very life and salvation
is rooted. In other words, the Church has two aspects, one positive
- love, unity, and communion of immortality with each other and with
the saints in Christ, and one negative - the war against the Satan and
his powers already defeated in the flesh of Christ by those living in
Christ beyond death awaiting the general (or second) [
11 ]
resurrection - the final and complete victory of God over Satan. Christology
is the positive aspect of the Church, but is conditioned by biblical
demonology, which is the key negative factor which determines both Christology
and Ecclesiology, both of which are incomprehensible without an adequate
understanding of the work and methods of Satan. "For this purpose
was the Son of God manifested, that He might destroy the works of the
devil." (I John 3:8.)
From this twofold aspect of the Church it is quite obvious that baptism
is not a magical guarantee against the possibility of becoming once
again a slave to the devil and thus being excluded from the body of
Christ. (I Cor. 5:1-13; II Thes. 3:6-14; II Tim. 3:5; Rom. 11:21; "me
toinyn tharromen hoti gegonamen hapax tou somatos." St. John Chrysostom,
3rd Homily on Ephesians, 4.) Selfless love, the sine quo non of salvation
(I Cor. 13:1 ff.), is not something which can be acquired by a mere
intellectual decision, or by a sentimental disposition to an idea of
good in general, or by a psychological conviction that one has become
the object of irresistible grace and so predestined. On the contrary,
true non-utilitarian and selfless love is formed in the faithful by
the power of the death and resurrection of Christ through an intense
effort at self denial by spiritual exercise and by unconditional war
against Satan. On this side of death the body of Christ is the Church
of the Passover continuously crossing the Red Sea opposite those of
Pharo (the devil) by participation in the death and resurrection of
the Lord epi to auto. At each Eucharist the chosen people, the New Zion,
gather together triumphantly on the banks of the Red Sea opposite those
of Pharo and glorify God for the salvation already granted and simultaneously
await the final victory. On the difficult and dangerous road to the
Land of Promise, from Sunday to Sunday, and from day to day, one may
fall into the hands of Satan and be cut off from the body of Christ.
At each gathering "epi to auto" by means of each Eucharist,
the body of Christ, the Church this side of death, is in the process
of formation - the Word made flesh is being formed in the faithful by
the Holy Spirit (I John 3:23-24), and thus the Church, although already
the body of Christ, is continuously becoming what she is. [
12 ]
4) The Church or the Community.
Since for Ignatius the Eucharist is the formative and manifest center
of corporate love unto immortality, and at the same time the weapon
which insures the continues defeat of the devil, it is quite clear that
the corporate liturgy is the very pivotal point of faith in action,
the participation of which is the only sure sign of continuous communion
with God and neighbor unto salvation. This unity of selfless love in
Christ with each other and the saints is an end in itself - not a means
to another end. The existence of any other utilitarian and eudaimonistic
motive other than unconditional selfless love for God and neighbor in
Christ simply means slavery to the powers of Satan. "... love nothing
except God." (Ign. Eph. 9, 11; Mag. 1.)
In the Eucharistic life of selfless love is thus understood as an end
in itself and the only condition for continual membership in the Church,
it follows that the relationship of one community to another cannot
be one of inferiority or superiority. Nor can one community be considered
a part to another community because the fullness of Christ is to be
found in the Eucharist which itself is the highest and only possible
center and consummation of the life of unity and love. " ...whether
Jesus Christ is, there is the Catholic Church." (Ign. Smyr. 8.) [
13 ]
Besides, the devil is not destroyed by an abstract idea of unity and
love. He can be defeated only locally by the unity of faith and love
of real people living together their life in Christ. An abstract federation
of communities whereby each body is a member of a more general body
reduces the Eucharist to a secondary position and makes possible the
heretical idea that there is a membership in the body of Christ higher
and more profound than the corporate life of local love for real people
and thus the whole meaning of the incarnation of God and the destruction
of the Satan in a certain place and at a certain time in history is
destroyed. Each individual becomes a member of the body of Christ spiritually
and physically at a special time and in a certain place in the presence
of those to whom he is about to be joined. [
14 ]
Those who share in one bread are one body. (I Cor. 10:17.) This sharing
in one bread cannot happen in general, but only locally. There, are,
however, many liturgical centers each breaking one bread, but together
totaling many breads. Nevertheless there are not many bodies of Christ,
but one. Therefore each community having the fullness of Eucharistic
life is related to other communities not by a common participation in
something greater than the local life in the Eucharist, but by an identity
of existence in Christ. "...wherever Jesus Christ is there is the
Catholic Church." (Ign. Smyr. 8.) [
15 ]
5) The Clergy.
The three orders of the clergy "have been appointed according to
the mind of Jesus Christ, which (clergy) He has established in security,
after His own will, and by His Holy Spirit." (Ign. Phil. sal.;
also Eph. 3:6; Phil. 4.) Since the Holy Eucharist is "the medicine
of immortality," it follows that unity with those who have been
entrusted with the proper liturgy of and teaching concerning the mysteries
is an absolutely necessary condition for salvation. Thus "be united
to your bishop and to those that preside over you as a type and teaching
of immortality." (Ign. Mag. 6.) All things pertaining to the Church
must be done corporately with the bishop, presbyters, and deacons (Mag.
4, 6, 7; Pol. 6) because the life of unity epi to auto is centered in
them. (Ign. Eph. 2, 4, 5: Tral. 7; Phil. sal; Pol. 6.) Unity in the
bishop is an image of the Church's unity with Christ and of Christ with
the Father. (Ign. Eph. 5; Mag. 2, 13; Tral, 7; Phil. 2, 3: Smyr. 8,
9.) Subjugation to the bishop is an icon of subjugation to God, Christ,
and each other. (Ign. Eph. 5, 20; Mag. 2, 13; Phil. 7.)
According to the thought of Ignatius there exists an inseparable relationship
between the bishop and the Eucharist. Unity with the bishop and unity
with each other in the one bread within the altar is precisely one identical
reality. There is one flesh of the Lord, one cup, one altar, as there
is one bishop. "Take heed, then, to have but one Eucharist. For
there is one flesh of our Lord Jesus Christ, and one cup unto unity
of His blood, one altar, as there is one bishop, along with the presbytery,
and deacons, my fellow-servants, so that whatever you do, you may do
it according to God." (Ign. Phil. 4; also to be interpreted in
the light of this passage: Eph. 20; Mag. 7; Tral. 7; Phil. sal.) The
liturgy is a distinctive characteristic of the office of the bishop
under whose personal surveillance all mysteries must be performed. "Let
no man do anything connected with the Church without the bishop. Let
that be deemed a firm Eucharist which is under the bishop, or one to
whom he has entrusted it." (Smyr. 8.) Only in case of necessity
could the Eucharist be administered under the surveillance of a presbyter.
This is clearly indicated by the fact that, "It is not lawful without
the bishop either to baptize or to celebrate an agape." (Ibid.)
Such a claim that even the agape cannot be held without the bishop would
be incomprehensible and extremely fantastic if it were not presupposed
that in the thought and experience of St. Ignatius each liturgical center
necessitated the existence of a bishop-that the relationship of one
bishop to each liturgical center was an inseparable reality.
For a further clarification of the essential relationship of the office
of one bishop to one Eucharistic center, St. Ignatius offers up the
fact that the local unity of Christians in Christ epi to auto is clearly
and visibly imaged by unity in the person, or office, of the bishop.
Unity in the bishop is a living image of unity in Christ. "It is
manifest, therefore, that we should look upon the bishop even as we
would upon the Lord Himself." (Ign. Eph. 6.) "... take heed
to do all things in the harmony of God with the bishop presiding in
the place of God." (Mag. 6) " For when you are subject to
the bishop as to Jesus Christ you appear to me to live not after the
manner of men but according to Jesus Christ... " (Tral. 2.) "...
let all reverence ... the bishop as Jesus Christ." (Ibid. 3.) "Wherever
Jesus Christ is, there is the Catholic Church." (Smyr. 8.) It is
obvious beyond any doubt that St. Ignatius is here borrowing the concept
of the bishop as the image of Christ from the liturgical practise of
the Church. He never refers to the presbyters as icons of Christ or
in the place of God as he no doubt would have had they been in communities
without bishops the regular and proper administrators of the mysteries
and the center of local life in Christ epi to auto. On the contrary
he always refers to them corporately in the plural as "presbyters"
or "presbytery" in the place of the apostles (Mag. 6; Tral.
2, 3: Phil. 5; Smyr. 8.) and as a "council of God." (Tral.
3.) It would have been complete nonsense for Ignatius to compare the
presence of the Catholic Church in Christ with the presence of the multitude
in the bishop (Smyr. 8) if each local community did not possess a bishop.
Is it possible that Ignatius believed that Christ is not present in
all His glory in the Eucharist administered under a presbyter? This
is hardly the case since he insists that "wherever Jesus Christ
is there is the Catholic Church." (Smyr. 8.)
According to Ignatius the faithful are not saved through the bishop
as an individual as such as having some sort of magical power. The Church
as the very body of Christ has God Himself operating salvation in Christ
by His Spirit in the corporate mysteries. Herein lies the whole theology
of the "epiclesis" whereby the community is continuously vivified
and justified by the Spirit in the life of love by the flesh of Christ,
whereby the devil is continuously judged a false accusor and destroyed,
and whereby the world is constantly reproved of sin because of lack
of such faith as would lead it to the community of salvation living
by corporate love in Christ. (John 16:7-11.) The saving grace of God
is His own uncreated energy because only He Who has the power to create
ex nihilo can vivify and thereby justify man by slaying the devil. Thus
the bishop is the sine quo non of salvation, not as an individual as
such, being some sort of magical means between God and man, [
16 ]
but as the necessary center of corporate life in Christ epi to auto,
to whom, together with the presbytery and diaconate, has been entrusted
the faithful and correct administration of and teaching concerning the
corporate mysteries. When St. Ignatius says of the bishop, presbytery,
and diaconate, that "apart from them there is no Church" (Tral.
3), he clearly means that "apart from them there is no local community."
Within the framework of the above-mentioned presuppositions the reasons
are apparent why Ignatius can most emphatically claim "he who does
anything without the knowledge of the bishop worships the devil."
(Smyr. 9.) "Flee, therefore, those evil offshoots which produce
death-bearing fruit whereof if any one tastes he instantly dies."
(Tral. 11.) The altar and the bishop are inseparable. He who is not
subject to the bishop is outside of the altar. He who is outside of
the altar is not subject to the bishop. "Let no man deceive himself:
if any one be not within the altar, he is deprived of the bread of God.
For if the prayer of one or two possesses such power, how much more
that of the bishop and the whole Church! He, therefore, that does not
assemble with the Church has already manifested his pride and condemned
himself... Let us be careful, then, not to set ourselves in opposition
to the bishop in order that we may be subject to God." (Ign. Eph.
5.) "...one flesh, ...one cup, ...one altar, as there is one bishop..."
(Ign. Phil. 4.)
As the center of unity in the mystagogical life the bishop is an absolute
necessity for salvation. But his ministry is not something independent
of the ministry of the faithful. The bishop obtains "the ministry
which belongs to the community (or people - ten diakonian ten eis to
koinon anekousan), not of himself, neither be men, nor through vainglory,
but the love of God the Father and the Lord Jesus Christ." (Ign.
Phil. 1.) The representatives of one community to another are not appointed
by the bishop, but elected by a council. "It is fitting, O most
blessed in God Polycarp, to assemble a council most befitting of God
and elect someone whom you greatly love ..." (Pol. 7.)
6) Relative observations concerning
the origin and basis of the episcopate.
The idea that the bishop is now what the apostles once were is completely
missing from the epistles of Ignatius. Peculiarly enough it is the presbyters
who are always compared to the apostles. One finds in the thought of
Ignatius a distinction between apostles and bishops. The apostles could
command in a general manner, while the jurisdiction of a bishop is limited
to one community. "Shall I, when permitted to write on this point,
reach such a height of self-esteem, that though being a condemned man,
I should issue commands to you as if I were an apostle?" (Tral.
3: or according to the longer version, "I do not issue orders like
an apostle.") "I do not, as Peter and Paul, issue commandments
unto you. They were apostles; I am but a condemned man; they were free,
while I am even until now a servant." (Ign. Rom. 4.) It is quite
evident that Ignatius is here giving expression to the mentality and
attitude of an age still living in the shadow of the great apostles
not long dead, which are did not dare compare the office of a bishop
with that of an apostle. For Ignatius the bishop is the liturgical center
of a local group of faithful who gather together in love epi to auto.
An apostle was one who traveled everywhere establishing Churches. St.
Paul writes, "Christ sent me not to baptize, but to preach the
gospel." (I Cor. 1:17.) St. Ignatius writes, "It is not lawful
without the bishop either to baptize or the celebrate an agape."
(Smyr. 8.) The origin of the episcopate cannot be understood when one
compares bishops with apostles and tries to prove that they differ only
in name. On the contrary, the source and basis for the episcopate is
to be found in the litourgical practise of the Church and in the doctrine
of the Church as defined in this same liturgical life and conditioned
by the biblical doctrines of Christology and demonology. Only when one
grasps the meaning of corporate communion of immortality and love through
Christ epi to auto as the only condition for salvation, can one understand
the life and doctrine of the primitive Church.
Because all the faithful communicated at every Eucharist, and since
it was necessary to maintain the various orders of catechumens and penitants,
it is quite obvious that the presbytery and diaconate were absolutely
necessary as concelebrants of the bishop and as a council to help in
regulating the penitants, in preparing the catechumens, and in general
ruling the community and teaching. What distinguishes the clergy from
the rest of the community is not any individual power to administer
the mysteries as intermediates between God and man. The whole community
is the body of Christ in which God Himself operates salvation in the
corporate mysteries. The special distinction of the clergy lay rather
in its responsibility to keep the communicating members of the body
of Christ from the pollution of the devil by properly regulating the
entrance into the Church of new members through baptism by continuously
preserving the life of the body by keeping beyond its limits the evil
spirit of division and individualistic and ulterior motivations. The
clergy are not over the local body, but themselves members of the local
body who are given the special charisma of being the center of unity
and the regulating force which protects and increases (Eph. 4, 11-13)
the life of corporate love in Christ. To Polycarp Ignatius writes, "Maintain
your position with all care ... preserve the unity than which nothing
is better." (Pol. 1.)
7) The basis for equality of bishops.
The origin of the patristic insistence on the equality of all bishops
(e. g. St. Cyprian, Sententiae Episcoporum, op. 1) can be understood
only in terms of the presuppositions 1) that the corporate eucharistic
life locally manifested is an end in itself, 2) that individual communities
are related to each other by their identity of existence in Christ,
3) that the fullness of Christ dwells in the faithful who gather together
in the life of Christ epi to auto, and 4) that the episcopate is an
inseparable part of this local life epi to auto. The order of the episcopate
was not something that existed in itself, or itself, and over or apart
from the local Church. It was definitely within the Church, and since
the visible Church could be defined only in terms of the body of Christ
locally manifested in its mystagogical life, the episcopate was definitely
of local character. The existence of bishops in the smallest and remotest
villages of the empire cannot be explained otherwise than in terms of
the necessity to have a bishop and council of presbyters within and
responsible for the life of each eucharistic center. Therefore bishops
were equal because communities were equal. One local manifestation of
the body of Christ could not be more body of Christ or less than another.
Likewise the living image of Christ (the bishop) could not be more image
or less image than another image because Christ, whose image the bishops
are, is identically One and Equal with Himself.
Communities without bishops appeared for the first time in large cities
where the overgrown Christian population could not be accommodated any
longer in one liturgical center. Whereas in the city of Alexandria the
various liturgical centers at first had each a bishop (P. Trembelas,
Taxeis Cheirothesion kai Cheirotonion, Athens 1949, p. 26-29, n.), in
Rome not only were presbyters appointed to the different liturgical
centers, but were originally not given permission to administer the
Eucharist. Rather a portion of the already consecrated elements was
sent from the bishop's liturgy to the faithful gathered together at
the lesser centers. When finally the presbyters did receive permission
to celebrate the liturgy, the bishop of Rome continued to send a portion
of the consecrated elements from his own liturgy to be put into the
chalices of the lesser eucharistic centers. This practise continued
in Rome until the 14th century and did not completely disappear until
1870. (Dom G. Dix, op. cit. p. 21.) Thus the Churches in Rome very early
lost the meaning of the Eucharist as an end in itself and vividly introduced
the idea that the office of the bishop is rather something in itself
and that somehow the elements consecrated at the bishop's liturgy were
somewhat superior to those consecrated at the liturgy of presbyters.
Most probably because of the initial refusal of the original city communities
to install bishops in the newly-founded communities of the same city,
it became normal in cities to have local Churches with presbyters celebrating
the liturgy. When this became a normative practise in the big cities,
the bishop of the city became much more authoritative than the village
bishop who was still the bishop of one community. This, plus the fact
that the bishop of the city was very influentially situated, obviously
introduced the idea that he was somehow more important than the village
bishop. Gradually the village bishop was deprived of some of his most
important functions and subjected to the surveillance of the city bishop.
"... even though they may have received episcopal ordination (cheirothesian)
... let them dare not ordain neither presbyters nor deacons without
the city bishop to whom he and his village is subject." (Canon
10 of Antioch; Chrysostomos Papadopoulos, Peri Chorepiscopon, Athens
1935, p. 8-10). In the Church of North Africa of the late 4th century
one could still find small village communities with a bishop and only
one presbyter. (Canon 55 of Carthage, H. Alibizatos, The Holy Canons,
Athens 1949, p. 254.) Progressively, however, St. Ignatius' conception
of the bishop in terms of the local eucharistic life as an end in itself
is either mitigated or completely forgotten, and the episcopate conforms
to the political structure of the empire. Because the city Churches
had become accustomed to the existence of communities with presbyters
celebrating the mysteries, it is obvious that the village bishop, having
already been deprived of his rights to ordain his own presbyters and
deacons, was in reality of no more importance than a presbyter of a
city Church. [
17 ]
Thus the city bishops could see no reason why the village Churches should
have a bishop at all since the city communities were functioning quite
well with presbyters. Therefore, "one must not establish bishops
in the town and villages, but travelers: those, however, already established
must do nothing without the opinion of the bishop in the city."
(Canon 57 of Laodicia.) Very characteristic of the new mentality is
the 6th canon of the Council of Sardica: "It is forbidden to simply
establish a bishop in some town, or small hamlet, where only one presbyter
suffices. For it is not necessary to establish bishops there, that the
name and authority of the bishop may not be cheapened."
8) Concluding Remarks.
The ecclesiology of St. Ignatius rests exclusively and harmoniously
upon the biblical teaching concerning salvation and its appropriation.
The resurrected flesh and blood of God (Ign. Rom. 7; Eph. 1) is the
only source of immortality, of unity with each other in Christ, and
of power to struggle for selfless love and simultaneously defeat the
devil. Salvation is not magical. God Himself saves those who gather
together in the life of selfless love with their clergy epi to auto.
The visible Church is composed of those only who continuously share
in the corporate eucharistic life. This life of selfless love for God
and neighbor is an end in itself. Good works are not, therefore, performed
for utilitarian motivations as part of a divine-human business, but
rather are expressions of the struggle for selfless love, as well as
a most effective weapon against Satan. God has no need of man's acts
of charity. It is man who needs good works, prayer and fasting as a
spiritual exercise for selfless love and as an effective means of remaining
attentive and spiritually alert against the attacks of Satan. Justification
by faith alone is a non-biblical myth (Eph. 6:11-17) of sentimental
magic based on the false presupposition that salvation is primarily
and essentially a matter of divine internal psychology. [
18 ]
Beyond the life of unity centered in the corporate Eucharist as an end
in itself there is no Church and only God can know if there is any salvation.
Where the Church is not locally manifested and being formed by God epi
to auto there is the rest humanity being carried to and fro by the prince
of this world. "I pray not for the world, but for them which Thou
hast given me." (John 17:9)
As all other things pertaining to the Church, the clergy aslo exists
for the sole purpose of preserving and increasing the life of unity
and love epi to auto in the flesh and blood of Christ. "Maintain
your position with all care ... preserve the unity, than which nothing
is better." (Pol. 1.) The authority of the clergy is founded exclusively
upon the mysteries of unity in Christ and not at all upon any imagined
personal power of magic. The clergy as such cannot save. Only the resurrected
flesh of Christ saves when received in unity and selfless love for each
other epi to auto. Even within the corporate life of the mysteries it
is Christ and not the Church that saves. The Church locally manifested
is herself being saved by the Father Who continuously sends His Spirit
to form the body of Christ gathered epi to auto. (epiclesis, John 16:7-11;
I John 3:23.)
In the Constantinopolitan Synods of 1341 and 1351 (John Karmiris, The
Dogmatic and Symbolic Monuments of the Orthodox Catholic Church, Athens
1952, vol. 1, p. 294ff.) the Orthodox Church vigorously condemned all
magical understandings of salvation which might conceive of the saving
grace or energy of God as something created, stored quantitatively within
a so-called bank of grace, and distributed quantitatively through sacramental
acts and indulgences, by proclaiming the biblical and patristic teaching
that God Himself saves men directly by His own uncreated energy. The
very basis of all Orthodox doctrine concerning Trinity, Christology,
Ecclesiology, and Soteriology is the fact that God creates, sustains,
and saves creation not by created means, but by His Own life-giving
energy. Only God can be the source and subject of His uncreated energies.
The divine energies are neither the essence of God (God is not actus
purus), for this would mean that God acts by essence and not by will
(pantheism), nor hypostatic (individual entities), for this would either
reduce God to a mere platonic conglomeration of ideas, or to a neo-platonic
source of emanating creatures, thereby confusing the Son and the Spirit
with such creatures. (A good example of such views concerning divine
energies may be found in the teachings of the heretics attacked by St.
Irenaeus.) The divine energies are not creatures, but precisely the
creating, life-giving, justifying, uncreated energy of God. [
19 ]
Therefore grace cannot be manipulated and distributed by man who can
only partake of this uncreated light of God in the corporate life of
selfless love in the flesh of Christ locally manifested and formed by
God Himself in real people epi to auto. This fact is extremely clear
in the thought of St. Ignatius and is repeated by the whole patristic
tradition of the East, and is especially re-emphasized by the anti-scholastic
polemics of the 14th century.
The position of modern Orthodox theology, therefore, concerning ecclesiology
cannot be dogmatically different from that of St. Ignatius. Unfortunately,
however, the traditional doctrine of salvation and its appropriation
has been in recent centuries much obscured by the invasion of many Western
and especially Latin presuppositions used dishonestly in a convenient
way both to combat Protestantism and to justify nationalism which is
another form of papism in so far as the limits of the Church are extended
beyond the corporate mysteries to something else. Whereas in the 14th
century Nicholas Cabasilas could say that "the Church is indicated
in the mysteries" (Migne, P. G. t. 150, col. 452), many modern
Orthodox think of the Church as something peculiar to their national
character and identify her boundaries with those of the nation, and
thereby the Church is reduced to some sort of national institution. [
20 ]
Because in their conception the Church is of a wider range than the
corporate life within the mysteries as an end in itself and more or
less identical with the national character, it has become quite common
to uncritically accept some form of the individualistic magical interpretations
of Holy Orders common to the Roman and Anglican Churches. Since holy
order, and especially that of the episcopate, are conceived of as something
loosely connected to or almost detached from the corporate life of love
epi to auto, it is only natural that the priesthood be interpreted as
in itself having individual powers apart from the laity. Such an attitude
has been further intensified by the heretical idea that all baptized
Christians are members of the body of Christ even though they are hardly
go to Church to communicate and have not the slightest desire to struggle
for selfless love and fight the devil epi to auto as they solemnly swore
in baptism.
In this day and age of Ecumenical discussions concerning Christian unity,
when one sees heterodox seeking truth and admitting the theological
sins of their fathers, Orthodoxy must make her contribution. She will
never be able to do this, however, if she does not first drop her cultural,
political, and national pretentions [
21 ]
by keeping to her struggle against Satan epi to auto. Both Christian
unity and dogmatic truth can come only by a profound understanding of
who the devil is, what his methods are, and how he is destroyed by God
in Christ by the Holy Spirit epi to auto. All dogma is implied in eucharistic
experience, which in turn is the test of all heresy. "... our opinion
is in accordance with the Eucharist, and the Eucharist in turn establishes
our opinion." (Irenaues, Against Heresies, bk. IV, xviii, 5.) Heretical
teachings concerning Trinity, Christology, Sin, Grace, Mysteries (sacraments),
Ecclesiology, and even Mariology, etc., are indeed heresies because
they overthrow the soteriological presuppositions of eucharistic life
and thereby distort the meaning of the corporate life of love epi to
auto in the resurrected flesh of Chist. The life-giving resurrected
flesh of God is the anchor of faith and selfless love and is given to
the faithful epi to auto by the Spirit of the Father. At each eucharistic
gathering God gives us His uncreated life-giving energy to partake through
the flesh of Christ and thus reveals Truth by His Holy Spirit. "For
when He, the Spirit of Truth, comes, He will guide you into all truth
... for He shall receive of what is mine (most probably to be interpreted
as reference to His life-giving flesh) and disclose it unto you."
(John 16:12-16.) Dogmatic truth is an ever-present and existential reality
fully manifested by the Holy Spirit at every eucharistic gathering.
The infallibility of the Church, expressed in Ecumenical Councils and
elsewhere, is rooted in the very life of love epi to auto. Infallibility
is a moral experience and so cannot be separated from the life of selfless
love in the mysteries. Only God is infallible, and this the body of
Christ shares directly and existentially in the corporate mysteries
of unity wherein the very powers of falsehood and division are destroyed
by God Himself Who by His Spirit forms His Son in those who believe
in love. "For when you assemble frequently in the same place (epi
to auto) the powers of Satan are destroyed and the destruction at which
he aims is prevented by the unity of your faith." (Ign. Eph. 13.)
******************************************
FOOTNOTES
[
1 ]
The so-called physical or psychosomatic magical doctrine of salvation
misunderstood by Western theology in general.
[
2 ]
See my article "Original
Sin According to St. Paul"
St. Vladimir's Quarterly, New York 1955, Vol. IV, No. 1-2.
[
3 ]
Augustine's acceptance of a utilitarian interpretation of love for neighbor
is forced upon him because of his acceptance of the pagan principle
of happiness as man's goal. Love of neighbor is a means to attaining
happiness, not part of a struggle for selfless love. De Doctrina Christiana,
I, 20. The acceptance of such an interpretation of human destiny underlies
Harnack's silly observations of the fact that in spite of baptism and
participation in salvation in this life the voraugustinische Christians
experienced not happiness in this life, as if this were what they striving
for, because they had not that feeling of being the object of irresistible
grace. Their frominigkelt war ein Schwanken swischen Furcht und Hoffnung.
Dogmengeschichte, Tuebingen, 1931, p. 293ff.
[
4 ]
Canons 10, 11, 12 of First Ecumenical Council; 62 of the H. Apostles;
Can. 1, 2, 3, etc., of Angyra; Canons 1, etc., of Peter of Alexandria.
Enumeration system followed in this paper are those of H. Alibizatos,
The Holy Canons, Athens, 1949.
[
5 ]
Canon 11, Peter of Alexandria
[
6 ]
It is exactly for this reason that the Thomists must limit real relations
to the Trinity, for otherwise creation and God would be consubstantial.
Because God is supposedly completely happy within Himself and is Actus
Purus His actions toward the world cannot be uncreated. Therefore sanctifying
grace must be of a created nature and the love of God for the world
expressed not directly but through this created means, e.g. Thomas Aquinas,
Summa Theologica, pt. 1, q. 43, art. 3. Thus the love of God for creation
cannot be an immediate uncreated energy. This would entail pantheism.
Therefore God can love the world only in the sense that He loves from
all eternity the prototypes of creation which are of His essence. (Ibid.
pt. 1, q. 20, art. 2, obj. 2, reply 2.)
[
7 ]
The basic presupposition of Chalcedonian Christology, "to aproslepton
atherapeuton," which understands salvation as a destruction of
Satan and death by the restoration of immortality to the world through
the flesh of Christ, is foreign to the moralistic and juridical Western
doctrines of atonement. It is interesting to note the tendency amongst
some Protestants to conclude that Nestorius was not really a Nestorian.
This is quite natural since both have a moralistic understanding of
salvation.
[
8 ]
For a discussion of the term "dikaiosis" or "dikaiosyne"
as God's vindicating the right, redressing wrong, and delivering men
from the power of evil, see C. H. Dodd, The Epistle of Paul to the Romans,
London, 1932, p. 9-13.
[
9 ]
The basic biblical presuppositions of the ancient Church that God does
not create, sustain, and save by created means, rejected by Arians,
Macedonians, and Nestorians, have been overthrown by the Roman doctrine
that grace is created. Council of Vienna; Council of Trent, Sess. VI,
Canon 11.
[
10 ]
Compare this corporate understanding of Ignatius with Harnack's praise
of Augustine. "Vor allem ... er hielt jeder Seele ihre Herrlichkelt
und ihre Verantwortlichkelt vor, Gott und die Seele, die Seele und ihr
Gott. Er fuchrte die religion aus der Gemelnde und kultusform in die
Herzen als Gabe und Aufgabe hinein." Augustine retrograted, although
not completely, back to theories of individualistic happiness, etc.,
common to all natural religions in one way or another. It is for this
reason that Harnack, who himself sought to find universal religion through
and above any particualr one, could say that, "Augustine hat in
der religion die religion entdeckt." (op. cit. p. 292-293.)
[
11 ]
First resurrection is that of Christ shared by the prophets, etc., who
lived before Christ and in baptism and the mysteries by those after
Christ and uninterrupted by death for those who are to share in the
final victory.
[
12 ]
The meaning of the Church as a continuous becoming through the corporate
Eucharist epi to auto, is clearly manifested in the fact that even though
the ancient Christians communicated daily at home from the reserved
elements, it was considered an absolute necessity for them to be present
at every corporate Sunday Eucharist even during times of intense persecution.
Dom G. Dix, The Shape of the Liturgy, Glasgow 1949, p. 141-155. Absence
from the Eucharistic gathering because of fear was considered as proof
that one had once again become a slave to the devil. This can be the
only explanation of the ancient Church's practise of excommunicating
even during persecutions those who abstained from the corporate life
in the mysteries.
[
13 ]
Compare St. Athanasius, Migne, P. G. t. 25, col. 260.
[
14 ]
Very interesting in this respect is a statement made by Polycarp about
the presbyter Valens and his wife, "but call them back as suffering
and straying members that you may save your whole body." Epistle
of Polycarp, ch. XI.
[
15 ]
The word ecclesia for Ignatius means a local community. Eph. sal., 5,
8; Mag. 1, 14, 15; Tral. sal., 3, 12, 13; Rom. sal., 9; Phil. sal.,
10; Smyr. sal., 11; Pol. sal., 7, 8. the term "Catholic Church"
has the same meaning as the term "to katholikon" used to designate
the Church building of Orthodox monastic communities. In monastic usage
it means the place of gathering where the faith according to all (kath'
holous) is expressed and maintained in liturgical worship and communion.
For Ignatius "Katholike ecclesia" designates the people themselves,
that is, "the Church, or community according to all." In this
term the identity of communities living in Christ is presupposed, as
will become clearer in discussing the position of the bishop in the
thought of St. Ignatius.
[
16 ]
"Entha gar he kephale, ekei to soma; oudeni gar meso dieigetao
he kephale to soma: ei gar dieirgeto, ouk an eie soma, ouk an eie kephale."
St. J. Chrysostom, Migne, P. G., t. 62, col. 31.
[
17 ]
Orthodox presbyters today are according to their function what the chorepiscopl
were once they had been deprived of the right to ordain. In contrast
to Western practise this is the only difference existing between bishops
and presbyters in the East, viz: presbyters cannot ordain.
[
18 ]
That man is justified by God in the eyes of God and not delivered from
captivity to the devil who could be no more than the punishing agent.
If Western theologians would rid themselves of their monothelite cosmologies
and their happiness complexes maybe they would understand the moral
and ethical implications of the biblical and patristic doctrines of
salvation from corruption and the devil, and cease putting forth the
accusation that Eastern theology ignores the so-called moral problem
of divine justice, wrath, etc. In reality it is the West that has forgotten
the meaning attached to Satan and death by the biblical witness, and
has made God's justice and happiness psychology in the image of fallen
man by attributing to His essence moral attributes of corrupted human
imagination.
[
19 ]
According to Eastern patristic tradition the energies or activities
of God are not of the immutable divine essence. The justice of God is
His own saving energy operated and revealed fully in Christ. This is
very clearly emphasized by the Palamite Councils of the 14th century.
It is interesting to note that C. H. Dodd makes such a distinction in
his interpretation of the term justice as used by Paul, op. cit. p.
9-10. The acceptance of the term justice according to its Greek usage,
however, as a moral attribute of God's essence, accepted by Western
theologies since Augustine, is rejected by the Greek Fathers who although
Greek are biblical (Hebrew) in thought. See e. g. St. Basil, epistle
149, to Eustathius Chief Psysician, ed. R. J. Deferrari, London 1930,
p. 64-66.
[
20 ]
Unlike the Slavic Churches the Greek Churches are not grouped according
to national boundaries. Greek-speaking Christians e. G. predominantly
comprise such autocephalous groups as the Churches of Constantinople,
the Churches of Alexandria, the Churches of Greece, the Churches of
Cyprus, the Church of Sinai, and together with numerically more Arab
Christians the Churches of Palestine. The Churches of Crete and some
more other Greek islands, and the Churches of Thrace, although nationally
a part of the kingdom of Greece, belong to the Autocephalous groupings
of Constantinople. Such groupings of the Greek and Arabic speaking Orthodox
is a remnant of the byzantine mentality and is a living refutation of
the connection that the byzantine Churches are the source of Orthodox
nationalism. The winds of ecclesiastical nationalism blew into Eastern
Church history from the North and not from the South.
[
21 ]
This is not to be interpreted as a disapproval of clerical participation
in struggles for freedom.
Source:
http://www.oodegr.com/english/ekklisia/ecclesiology_ignatius_antioch.htm
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