TIMES OF RISE AND DECLINE OF RELIGION AND MORALITY (1)
TIMES OF RISE AND DECLINE OF RELIGION AND MORALITY (1)

In the first volume of the magazine Strannik in 1901 appeared an extensive article by B. Titlinov devoted to the decline of religion and morality, a phenomenon we observe today – the beginning of the 21st century of the third millennium.

In the course of the historical life of mankind it is not difficult to observe periods when the pulse of life seems to begin to beat stronger, in all parts of human activity. Revival begins, energy increases, productivity increases, the whole human body awakens, and humanity takes rapid steps on the path of progress. On the other hand, with these bright epochs we meet other epochs which, like dark stripes, stand against the background of history. These are the periods of decline, stagnation and darkness. There are no glorious names in them, no great events, no immortal works of art and creatures of creative thought, no radiance of genius or at least faint reflections of talent. People seem to have exhausted their strength, exhausted their spiritual treasures, and, exhausted and tired, sank into apathy.

The history of the religious consciousness of mankind shows us the same picture. In it we see periods of decline and periods of rise. And here this alternation of decrease and increase is clearly evident, as well as in the general course of life of the human race. At certain points in history, religious feeling weakens and fades, altars do not see priests, temples are deserted, religion loses its leading role in life, and people go their own way, as if they don’t need heaven and it’s as if they’ve forgotten about it. All their attention is then focused on the immediate material reality; and usually in the field of external culture in such periods mankind achieves remarkable successes. Along with these successes, there was an increase in mental activity, the development of science and philosophical thought. These rapid successes play a significant role in the decline of religion that has characterized such centuries. Intoxicated by the proud consciousness of its power, humanity experiences its frivolous youth with its dreams and ideals, with its self-confidence and self-confidence, with its rejection of authority and tradition. The mind, carried away by the victories in the field of knowledge, boldly takes on the role of omnipresent in all matters and promises man without supreme help, relying only on his own strength to penetrate the secrets of existence. And man’s mighty faith in himself, and at the same time an exaggerated faith, inadvertently gives rise to that indifferentism and skepticism which freezes religious feeling.

But there are other epochs that we can call centuries of human faith. For the most part, they come after centuries of declining religion and their opposite. Man’s adolescence passes quickly, and frivolity is replaced by wise experience. The youth of mankind is transient and the passions and mistakes of the past days are fleeting. Life has not kept its promises; science and philosophy stand helplessly before the mysteries of existence, without being able to penetrate beyond the door of destiny. Then the need for prayer and faith, always alive in the human soul, a need that can weaken but not disappear, is revealed with all its force; which can be muted but not erased. The “eternal questions” seek their solution with particular urgency, and the desire to find answers to them reaches its apogee. Dissatisfaction, dissatisfaction with the present arises with unprecedented force, and because there is no hope for the future, there is only one way out – despair, or return to faith. And helpless humanity appeals to the forgotten sky. Religion, hitherto destroyed, enjoys the most lively interest, and the rise of religious feeling is felt in all spheres of life. Faith has never been hotter and more insistent. Man has never, with greater confidence, turned in his dawn to the afterlife, never with greater devotion has he surrendered himself into the hands of Providence. Indifference and skepticism give way to religious awakening and for a long time lose all meaning in the eyes of the people.

The history of mankind dates back to the primitive times of mankind. We must also turn there if we wish to trace from the very beginning the stages of development through which religious life has passed, the periods of its decline and rise. There are no historical monuments left from those distant times, and the only guide we have is the Bible, although the information reported in it is too short and incomplete. However, and without the possibility in this case accurate research, us and transmitted in the Bible. The facts show that the fluctuations of religious feeling were not alien to the earliest times of history (biblical). Namely, the Bible tells us about the universal forgetfulness of God before the flood. According to her story, this was an age of utter wickedness, when every man plotted evil all his days. Religious feelings, the need for prayer, and help from above have visibly weakened to the point that people did not want to remember even heaven, despite all warnings. The voice of the preacher of repentance thundered in vain among them. Only the waves of the flood could wash away the wickedness from the face of the earth, and with it the depraved humanity, which has forgotten its Creator.

Wheel Turning Day July 14
Wheel Turning Day July 14

By – Staff Reporter

Rejoicing in the Buddha’s first teaching, when he set the wheel of Dharma in motion.

All merit created on this day is multiplied 100,000 times.

“The essence of the Buddha’s teachings is expressed in the Four Noble Truths. By understanding them, we’ll enter the path to liberation and enlightenment.” Ven. Thubten Chodron, Taming the Mind

With these words, Abbey founder and abbess Venerable Thubten Chodron sums up the significance of the Buddha’s fundamental first teaching when he explained the Four Truths of the Aryas, beings who have broken through innate ignorance to see reality as it is.

Thes four are also well known as the Four Noble Truths.

If we understand even a little why this teaching is so precious, we’ll understand why we celebrate Wheel-Turning Day.

Four Truths

In Buddha’s first teaching he described the unsatisfactory nature of our lives and the causes of our suffering.

He also explained the possibility of freedom from these sufferings and the paths to bring it about.

These Four Truths of the Aryas give us encouragement, hope, and inspiration.

In her book, Open Heart, Clear Mind, Venerable Chodron quotes Juan Mascano, Spanish academic and educator, lecturer at Cambridge University, who writes:

“The message of the Buddha is a message of joy. He found a treasure and he wants us to follow the path that leads us to the treasure. He tells man that he is in deep darkness, but he also tells him that there is a path that leads to light. He wants us to arise from a life of dreams into a higher life where man loves and does not hate, where man helps and does not hurt.

“His appeal is universal, because he appeals to reason and to the universal in us all: ‘It is you who must make the effort. The Great of the past only show the way.’ He achieved a superior harmony of vision and wisdom by placing spiritual truth to the crucial test of experience; and only experience can satisfy the mind of modern man. He wants us to watch and be awake, and he wants us to seek and to find.”

Thus we can see why Wheel Turning Day is a very auspicious occasion to engage in virtuous action!”

Orthodox Estonia
Orthodox Estonia

Saint Plato, bishop and holy martyr of Revel (Tallinn) and those with him:

Bishop Plato, in the world Pavel Petrovich Kuldbush, was born on July 13, 1869 in the province of Riga, in the family of a church reader. In 1893 he graduated from the St. Petersburg Theological Academy with a master’s degree and became a priest. In 1894 (according to other sources, 1904) he was appointed trustee of the Estonian Orthodox Church “St. Isidore ”in St. Petersburg. In 1917-18 he was a participant in the Local Council of the Russian Orthodox Church. On Dec. 31. In 1917, at the request of the clergy and parishioners in Riga, he was ordained bishop of Revel (now Tallinn), by the Vicar of the Diocese of Riga, Metropolitan Benjamin of Petrograd and Bishop Artemiy Luga, having been tonsured and elevated to the rank of Archimandrite seven days earlier. Then, on Jan. 10. In 1918 he was appointed bishop of Riga.

Bishop Plato eagerly began to restore order in his diocese, which had been disturbed during the revolutionary clashes of 1917, a terrible time: theft, violence and murder abounded. No one was sure what the next day would bring, and everyone was in need of spiritual encouragement and reassurance. During the short period of his episcopate, Bishop Plato personally visited 71 parishes to restore church life and soothe perplexity in the souls of his flock with words of love and faith.

This did not last long. On Dec. 19. In 1918, the German troops occupying Estonia left the city of Tartu (Yuriev). Three days later, the Bolsheviks recaptured the city and their second terror began there. In just 24 days, more than 500 people were arrested and more than 300 were shot. On Jan. 2. In 1919, when Bishop Plato was recovering from a serious illness, he was arrested on the streets of Tartu by the Bolsheviks and imprisoned with several others in the Credit Bank building, which had been turned into a dungeon. On Jan. 14. In 1919, at 10:30 a.m., about 20 of the prisoners were taken down to the dungeon and executed. After the retreat of the Bolsheviks, about 20 bodies were removed from the bank’s dungeon, some of which were disfigured beyond recognition. On the body of ep. Plato found traces of seven bayonet injuries and four gunshot wounds, one of which was from a dum-dum bullet in his right eye. The thumbs of his right hand were frozen in the sign of the cross …

Two priests were shot dead by Bishop Plato – Archpriest Nikolai Bezhanitsky and Father Michael (Blave). Father Nikolai was born on December 14. 1859 and graduated from the Riga Theological Seminary. On Jan. 16. In 1883 he married the daughter of a candle. Ioan Kazarinov, Maria Ivanovna Kazarinova, and in turn had two daughters. He served in Pernov County, and later in Vira, Viland and Tartu – as chairman of the Estonian Orthodox Church “St. Georgi ”. During his service in Wieland, Fr. Nikolai saved eight innocent people from death at the risk of himself. His popularity among the people was extremely high because he was ready to save everyone – Lutheran or Orthodox, Estonian or Russian. When he served in Tartu, he became especially popular with students because they had a holy wedding with him free of charge. He also helped needy families, and was generally a model of Christian love. In the last hours in the prison in Tartu, Fr. Nicholas behaved with incredible calm and dignity, for which he was called the patriarch of all prisoners.

On February 9. 1919 the body of the Most Reverend Ep. Plato was solemnly buried in Tallinn and on the left choir of the Transfiguration Cathedral. The date of the death of the bishop and his victims was proclaimed a day of general mourning in free Estonia. The bodies of the two priests shot with him were buried in the Assumption Cathedral in Tartu; and annually on January 14 for many years thereafter, a solemn memorial service for them was held in the presence of all the city’s clergy, both Orthodox and Lutheran.

In the Church of the Transfiguration in Tallinn (Issanda Muutmise kirik, “Suur-Kloostri” 14) a bust of St. Plato of Estonia was erected in 1931, made by the famous Estonian sculptor and painter Amandus Adamson (born in Paldiski in 1855 – early . In Paldiski, 1929).

In Estonia, the memory of All Estonian Saints is celebrated on November 18/1. Among them, in addition to the Bolsheviks martyred by the God-fighting martyrs in Tartu described above, are:

1.Holy martyr Isidore of Tartu (Yuriev) and 72 martyrs who suffered with him in 1472, whose memory is celebrated on November 23./Dec. 6.

2.St. Rev. John and Rev. Vasa from the Pskov Cave Monastery (15th century), whose memory is commemorated on the Fourth Sunday after Pentecost (the day of All Venerable Monks from the Pskov Cave Monastery), as well as separately for St. John (March 29 / April 11). ) and for St. Vasa (March 19 / April 1).

3. St. Venerable Serapion of Pskov (1482), – on 15/28 May and 7/20 Sept.

4.St. Venerable Martyr Cornelius of the Pskov Cave Monastery (1570), February 20 / March 5.

5.St. Arseniy (Matsevevich), Metropolitan Rsotovsky (1772), February 28/13

6.St. John of Kronstadt (1908), Dec. 20 / Jan. 2.

7.Martyrs of Ivangorod: Dimitri (Chistoserdov) and Alexander (Volkov) (1918), Dec. 26 / Jan. 8.

8.Martyr John (Koshurov) (1917), Oct. 31/13.

9.Martyr Sergius (Florinski) of Rakvere (1918), December 17/30, June 19 / July 2 (discovery of the relics).

10. St. Agatangel (Transfiguration), Confessor of the Faith, Metropolitan of Yaroslavl (1923), 3/16 Oct.

11. St. torment. Nicholas (Siimo), priest from Kronstadt (1931), 5/18 April.

12. Martyr Carp (Elb) (1937), 11/24 Sept.

(Sources: Akty Svyateishego Patriarkha Tikhona, St. Tikhon Theological Institute, 1994, pp. 886-87, 988; Protopresbyter Michael Polsky, Noviye Mucheniki Rossijskiye, Jordanville, 1949-57, part 1, pp. 82-83; Russkiye Pravoslavnye Ierarkhi , Paris: YMCA Press, 1986; T. Milyuntina, “Protoierej Nikolai Bezhanitsky”, Vestnik Russkogo Khristianskogo Dvizheniya, N 168, II-III 1993, pp. 181-196).

THE GLOBAL WEEK FOR HARMONIC INTERRELIGIOUS RELATIONS
THE GLOBAL WEEK FOR HARMONIC INTERRELIGIOUS RELATIONS

The aim of the Global Week for Harmonious Interreligious Relations, which is celebrated every first week of February, according to the UN Resolution, is to recognize “the imperative need for dialogue between different religions and religions and to mediate mutual understanding and cooperation between people.”

This objective was set as a priority by the Committee of Ministers in its Response (Doc. 9215) to Recommendation 1396 (1999) of the Parliamentary Assembly of Europe, adopted at the 765th Deputy Ministers’ Meeting on 19 September. 2001, obliging governments in cases where religious pluralism creates divisions and tensions, the authorities to respond not by restricting religious pluralism, but to ensure mutual respect between the various groups.

Today we face a variety of global changes and challenges for which we must find original and creative solutions – part of our global responsibility.

I would like to share with you a quote from the famous representative of the Silver Age of Russian religious philosophy Nikolai Berdyaev, whom a year ago in a conference against xenophobia and other forms of intolerance, His Eminence Metropolitan of Korcan Ioan Pelushi of the Albanian Orthodox Church reminded: “There have always been two races of people in the world; they still exist today, and this division is the most important of all. There are those who are crucified and those who are crucified; those who oppress and those who are oppressed; those who hate and those who are hated; the suffering and the suffering; persecuted and persecuted. There is no need to explain whose side Christians should take. “

On February 4. In 2011 the Council of Bishops of the Russian Orthodox Church adopted an important document-definition “On the issues of internal life and external activity of the Russian Orthodox Church”, in which the last three paragraphs 48-50 explain the main tasks of the activity in the field of:

1 / the inter-Christian relations for joint protection of the values ​​of Christian morality and traditional family values, counteraction to the discrimination of Christians and the destruction of the Christian European tradition and common response to the processes of liberal secularization and globalization;

2 / the inter-religious dialogue to find an answer to the common challenges of all believers, ensuring peaceful life and cooperation of people of different religions, nationalities and cultures, joint opposition to extremism, terrorism and attempts to push the religious worldview away from the public life.

Emphasis is on the practical mysticism in which values ​​are applied in action. St. Apostle tells us approximately the same. James in his Epistle, ch. 2:

17. Even so faith, if it hath not works, is dead, being alone.

18. But one shall say, Thou hast faith, and I have works; show me your faith without your works, and I will show you my faith by my works.

19. Thou believest that God is one: thou doest well; and the devils believe, and tremble.

20. But do you want to know, vain man, that faith without works is dead?

26. For as the body without the spirit is dead, so faith without works is dead.

We have two alternatives in terms of non-Orthodox and non-Orthodox religious communities in the country and religion in general. The first is the path of religious monopoly. A model that we know from the religious past, which is a pure form of spiritual totalitarianism on a religious basis, the path of Balkanization, which distorts the modern socio-cultural orientation of the Orthodox believers. The second alternative is the way forward, the path of pluralism and Europeanization, which leads to the cultivation of equality and tolerance in society, legislation and in people’s souls. The realities of pluralism help each person in the global village to critically deepen their knowledge of their own religion in the light of many different cultural and historical perspectives and to accept them tolerantly.

Many great people of different faiths focus on experience and action. In the 2nd century, Justin the Philosopher said: “Our religion teaches us to love not only our own, but also others, even our enemies.” And Tertullian affirms: “If all people love their loved ones, then Christians differ from them in that they love those who hate them.” St. Basil the Great (330-379) believes that “all who truly serve God are obliged to have the goal of restoring the unity of the churches, which at different times and in different ways have separated from each other. Because unity is a gift from God and requires a deep sense of humility without proud stubbornness. With this call for a “non-stop search” for the unity of the church, which is a “non-stop journey”, Patriarch Bartholomew opened on October 7-14. 2010 Faith and Order Commission Meeting in Columbari, Crete – Greece: “It is vital to learn from the early Fathers and Mothers of the Church and from those who, in every generation, have upheld the integrity and intensity of the Apostolic Faith.” .

His Holiness Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I addressed the participants in the forum “Fundamentalism and Faith in the New Millennium: A View from the Crossroads between East and West” (October 25, 1995) with the following words: “The Church of Peace serves the Prince of Peace and will do his best to share it with the blessed human community. ” Because, according to Patriarch Bartholomew, in the words of the American martyr Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.: “Love is the only force capable of transforming an enemy into a friend.” For the teachings of the Orthodox Church, a fundamental belief is that Christianity must play an active role in the effort to reconcile all people. This understanding is based on Christ’s teaching, the methodology of reconciliation, by including in dialogue between the parties with the double obligation to love God and love their neighbor, which reflects the divine attributes of Love, which fills the essence and being of God perfectly, infinitely, indescribably and inexhaustibly. (cf. 1 John 4: 8> “He who does not love has not known God, for God is love”).

About church honors and the forgiveness of sins
About church honors and the forgiveness of sins

The concept of the classical era “archon” (chief, leader, chief) created the last ferment among the Orthodox Bulgarian people. In Classical Greece, the service of strategists immediately referred us to the princes / archons of ancient Greece, Themistocles, Aristides, and Cimon, the earliest examples of strategists who were both political leaders and generals. Pericles was very often chosen as a strategist during his political career, 443-429. BC From 501, a new rule was introduced for the selection of strategists, who were elected annually, one from each phyla. All ten elected had equal status: at the Marathon in 490 (according to Herodotus) the leadership was decided by a vote and each presided on a daily rotation as a polemarch – supreme commander, but from 496 the polemarch, like the other archons were chosen by lot.

The dictionary of liturgical terms in the Greek Church by Leon Clugnet (Léon Clugnet, Dictionnaire Grec-Français des noms liturgiques en usage dans l’Église Grecque, Paris, 1895, p. 22) conveys the meaning of the term “archon” in an Orthodox perspective: 1. A clergyman entrusted with a special ministry or to lead a special service in a cathedral church; 2. “O archon ton ecclesion” is the prefect of the churches, as the patriarchal clergyman was called, whose function was above all to write the texts placed on the antimins, as well as to edit the stauropegs (ie the acts, the imperial charters, authorizing the construction of temples). Today, the Ecumenical Patriarchate has retained some of these Byzantine titles, which are given to laymen and / or clergymen who have distinguished themselves in a certain field, so that modern archons are the leaders in a given endeavor or ministry. To what extent it is possible to introduce such a practice and rite in other local Orthodox churches is not the subject of the present. In no case, however, can these distinctions be regarded as indulgences, and their receipt is not conditional on the remission of sins. Аlthough they give certain rights and impose obligations on their holders.

According to a similar scheme, other distinctions are acquired, such as the scientific title didaskalos (ie Teacher of the Church, roughly equivalent to the medieval Latin doctor ecclesiaticus and doctor angelicus). The didactic was a church official of the Patriarchal Church in Byzantium, whose mission was to explain the Holy Scriptures to the people, as well as to supervise the patriarchal schools. Such a person from the capital’s elite was the Metropolitan of Philippopolis Michael Italic (occupied the diocesan chair 1143-1156), remarkable for his eloquence, called a “monument of knowledge”, who was a kind of Orthodox Leonardo da Vinci – engaged in mechanics, optics, metrics theory of gravitation, music and philosophy (studied Orpheus, Pindar, Sappho, Isocritus, Pyron, Pythagoras). His address to Emperor John II Comnenus in 1138 on the occasion of his appointment as evangelical didactic is known.

The issue of pilgrimages, which are a kind of Orthodox indulgences, is different. Pilgrimage was also paid attention to in some recent studies of the socio-economic and cultural life of the Bulgarians during the Revival. Over the centuries, pilgrimages have had a beneficial effect on human life. They have contributed to the creation and renewal of religious life by consolidating the identity and spiritual unity of human communities in certain areas. A pilgrim is an honorary address received as a tribute to a devotee after a visit to a place sacred to his religion. The etymology of the word in the Balkan languages ​​is related to the name of worship to the Prophet Muhammad and the holy places – Hajj (obligatory worship for Muslims). For Muslims, this is Mecca. For Christians, these are the Holy Land and Jerusalem with God’s tomb. In the past, the title indirectly testified to the qualities of the bearer of this address, both religious piety and wealth and endurance.

In this case we see some traces of the simplifying nature of this type of documents, but they are rather in the direction of certifying the performed pious worship. Because a journey is not a pilgrimage if it does not become a mystical journey, an inner pilgrimage, an effort to get closer and closer to God through prayer and reconciliation. The pilgrimage to the promised place is the fruit of faith and a desire to acquire holiness and renew life. Through pilgrimage, man and God seek and meet each other in a relaxed and mystical way. The Adorer God meets the Adorer. Abraham left his homeland, Ur of the Chaldees, and traveled far away to the land that the Lord had promised him, Canaan (Gen. 12: 1-5). Abraham’s pilgrimage from Chaldea to Canaan is the answer to God’s call to him, and in Canaan the Lord God reveals Himself in the form of three pilgrims who visit Abraham at the oak of Mamre (Gen. 18: 1-8). The Book of the Bulgarian Pilgrims gives us on page 331 a translation of the text of an indulgence by the Patriarch of Jerusalem Abraham from 1776, as received by the pilgrims in the Holy Land: “By the grace of God, Abraham is the patriarch of the Holy City and of all Palestine

Our humility, by grace, and the mercy and authority of the Holy and Life-Giving Spirit, given by our Savior Jesus Christ to His divine and holy disciples and apostles, to bind and resolve the sins of men, telling them: “Receive the Holy Spirit, whom you forgive. sins, they will be forgiven, and to whomever you hold them, they will be retained, and everything you connect and resolve on earth will be bound and resolved in heaven. ” And through them and on us, their successors, when this Divine grace has passed – our spiritual child is forgiven …. everything in which he as a man has sinned and angered God, with word, thought, willingly or unwillingly and with all his feelings: if under a father’s or mother’s oath, if under excommunication a hierarchical or priestly bidet, or as a person under his curse he fell or swore an oath and stepped on it, or connected with some other transgressions and all these confessions of the spiritual fathers and the rule of he accepted them wholeheartedly and tried diligently to fulfill them. All these sins and connections we resolve and have liberated: with the omnipotent authority and grace of the All-Holy and Life-giving Spirit: and all that he left unconfessed due to oblivion, and all that the merciful God forgave him with the prayers of the Most Holy Mother of God and offered Mary and the holy and omnipotent apostle James, brother of God and first saint of Jerusalem and of all the saints. Amen. ”

There was a practice of sending letters of indulgence to other parts, as evidenced by a letter from the Patriarch of Jerusalem to the Protosingle of the Holy Sepulcher, Mr. Paul, dated 15 November. 1850: “We also sent you a hundred letters of indulgence, sending these things to Your Reverence through Hadji Theodoros Parisi of Thessaloniki, who resided here …”

The propagators of anti-pilgrimage were promised eternal damnation and eternal punishment, and in 1728 the Patriarch of Constantinople Paisius had to issue a special encyclical in defense of the pilgrimage tradition, the Orthodox Hajj, whose translation reads: “Christians, clergy and laity , and the spiritual fathers, the hieromonks, who, aroused by wickedness and insufficient piety and greed and selfishness, or diverted from the demon envious of good and good deeds, hinder or break away with vain chatter and words that cool the faith, or by some other means of satanic deception, Christians by going to worship at God’s tomb and giving him alms and gifts, and thereby causing them spiritual harm and harm, and at the Holy Sepulcher causing deprivation of alms to Christian worshipers: these ( Christians), if this satanic and pernicious wickedness and ungodliness and malice do not cease in the future, they will be aphorized by the Lord God Almighty and cursed and unforgiven, and after death unmelted. The stones and iron will melt, and they in no way. They will be paid with the leprosy of Gehazi * and the gallows of Judah, and they will suffer and tremble on the earth like Cain, the earth will dissolve and devour them like Dathan and Abiram ** and they will share the fate of the traitor Judas and the Jews who fought against God, who crucified the Creator of faith. The wrath of God will fall on their heads, their possessions and possessions, their labor and sweat will be exposed to utter destruction and extermination. Above them will weigh the curse of the holy three hundred and eighteen God-bearing fathers of Nicaea and the other councils. They will be condemned to eternal fire and subjected to eternal punishment. ”

Notes:

* Gehazi is the servant of the prophet Elisha, who is mentioned in the history of Sunamkata – 2 Kings. 4: 14-37, and in the story of Naaman (the Syrian), whom he deceived and took a portion of the gift that his master did not take. For this crime, he was punished with leprosy for the rest of his life – 2 Kings. 5: 20-27, (893 BC). The same Gehazi then sees that he tells King Jehoram the great miracles of Elisha, on the same day when God’s providence brought the Sunamka before the king to pray for the fields to be returned to her – 2 Kings. 8: 1-6.

** The sons of Eliab: Nemuel, Dathan, and Abiram. These are those Dathan and Abiram, called to the congregation, who caused trouble against Moses and Aaron, together with the companions of Korea, when they caused trouble against the Lord (cf. Numbers 26: 9); Deuteronomy 11: 6> “And what did he do to Dathan and Abiram, the sons of Eliab, the son of Reuben, how the earth opened its mouth and devoured them before all Israel with their families, their tents, and all living things that belonged to them?”

Chinese Soldiers Enter Ladakh’s Demchok, Object to Dalai Lama’s Birthday Celebrations
Chinese Soldiers Enter Ladakh’s Demchok, Object to Dalai Lama’s Birthday Celebrations

China has striked  India yet again. This time over His Holiness the Dalai Lama’s birthday celebrations in Ladakh. Officials have confirmed to CNN-News18 that on July 6, Chinese army entered the Indian territory in Demchok with banners and objected to locals celebrating His Holiness the Dalai Lama’s birthday. “The incident happened on July 6 at Doley Tango near Koyul which is around 30 kilometers southeast of Demchok,” a source told news18.

In Ladakh, there is a place called – Shiwaye-Tsel (a palace in Leh). There the celebrations used to go on for three days to mark the Dalai Lama’s birthday. People from border areas would come and participate in a horse race; dance performances are held by artists from Kargil, Nubra, Zanskar, and Leh. Similar celebrations are also held in Arunachal Pradesh as well.

In videos which have now surfaced, China’s People’s Liberation Army (PLA) can be seen standing across river Indus with banners. A second video shows villagers holding the Dalai Lama’s portrait atop a vehicle as a small cavalcade rallies around the village. Officials said while the festivities were on, Chinese kept a vigil from distance and conveyed their objection. “They didn’t enter the village but did transgress a bit into Indian territory,” an official told News18.

According to officials, Chinese troops stayed on the Indian territory for about 30 minutes. At least five vehicles can be seen in the video. Locals said Chinese troops were accompanied by civilians.

The banner that Chinese carried said, “Tibetans living on the other side of the LAC bordering India are fully supported by the Chinese,” a source said. Another officer told News18 that the Chinese were reiterating their oft-repeated message that Tibet and China are one.

India and China have been locked in a dispute over eastern Ladakh since the Galwan incident of June 2020. While India at commander level talks has sought restoration of status quo as it existed pre-April 2020, the Chinese side have refused to discuss Demchok and Depsang flashpoints, according to officials. Two sides have had 11 rounds of military talks to resolve the eastern Ladakh flashpoints but friction points remain over Gogra, Hot springs, Demchok and Depsang.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi had greeted the Dalai Lama on his 86th birthday last week. Since becoming Prime Minister in 2014, this is the first time Narendra Modi has openly confirmed communicating with the Dalai Lama.

In a tweet on Tuesday morning, PM Modi said, “Spoke on phone to His Holiness the @DalaiLama to convey greetings on his 86th birthday. We wish him a long and healthy life.”

“Most importantly, all Tibetans are urged to recite the Chenrezig mantra, Om Mani Padme Hung, over 1000 times, or at least 10 rounds of the rosary. The six-syllable mantra is associated with the Bodhisattva of compassion and the patron saint of Tibet, Chenrezig. For Tibetans, His Holiness the Dalai Lama is the human manifestation of Chenrezig. Every year, Trungkar is celebrated with grandeur, glory, and festive spirit.

sourced – News 18

Who wrote the Dead Sea Scrolls?
Who wrote the Dead Sea Scrolls?

The theologian-historian turned to modern tools of analysis.

A new method of handwriting analysis, developed by researchers at the University of Groningen, has suggested who wrote the Dead Sea Scrolls. Testing of the machine learning tool on one of the most famous ancient scrolls reveals that not one, but two scribes are behind the creation of the ancient text, technews.bg reports.

The Dead Sea Scrolls, a so-called set of 981 different texts, were discovered in 1946-1956 near the ancient Palestinian village of Qumran. The texts created between the 3rd century BC. and I century, are of great importance for history, religion and linguistics, as they contain the third oldest surviving manuscript of the Old Testament.

Known as the Great Scroll of Isaiah, it was among the first Dead Sea Scrolls discovered in 1946. It is one of the largest and best-preserved scrolls of all, representing the oldest complete copy of the Book of Isaiah.

Exactly how many scribes wrote this text, as well as the other Dead Sea Scrolls, has been the subject of heated debate in religious and academic circles. To try to find the answer, Mladen Popovic, a theologian-historian, turned to modern tools of analysis – artificial intelligence.

Popovich chose Isaiah’s Great Scroll for his team’s first assignment because it was impressively finished, covering 17 sheets of parchment, NewAtlas reports. This particular scroll has a relatively identical handwriting, which means that it is the work of a single scribe, although a number of scholars have suggested that it may have been the work of at least two scribes who had a similar handwriting and writing style.

To determine how many hands wrote the scroll, the researchers grouped the use of the Hebrew letter “aleph.” The single letter appears more than 5,000 times in the Great Scroll of Isaiah. Popovich suggests that human eyes are limited in their ability to notice small differences in handwriting styles.

Using several recognition techniques, the study revealed changes in handwriting patterns beginning in the middle of the manuscript. In the past, some scholars have suggested that the Great Scroll of Isaiah was the work of two separate scribes – this new evidence confirms the theory.

“We can now confirm this with a quantitative handwriting analysis, as well as with strong statistical analyzes,” Popovic explained. “Instead of relying on judging more or less impressionistic evidence, with intelligent computer assistance, we can prove that there is a statistically significant difference.”

In a new study published in the journal PLOS One, Popovic and his team confirmed that the writing was the work of two people. The significant similarities in handwriting between the two scribes on the Great Scroll of Isaiah point to interesting ideas about how the Dead Sea Scrolls came into being.

The fact that two different scribes contributed to the same manuscript with a seemingly similar handwriting probably suggests the same school or family environment behind the creation of the scrolls.

The similarity in the handwriting of the different scribes may indicate that they studied in the same school, with the same teacher. Or they may have been close “in another social way,” such as in a family context, such as being brothers or father and son, the researchers said.

The applied handwriting analysis technique demonstrated in the study offers scientists entirely new ways to study ancient manuscripts. Further work may focus on examining more of the Dead Sea Scrolls and build on this finding to shed light on who wrote the documents.

“This is very exciting because it opens a new window to the ancient world, which can reveal much more complex connections between the scribes who created the scrolls,” Popovic said. “In our study, we found evidence of a very similar writing style shared by the two scribes of the Great Scrolls of Isaiah, suggesting common training or origins. Our next step is to explore other scrolls where we can find different origins or scribes’ training.” .

The Russian Church: If you don’t get vaccinated, you will regret it for the rest of your life
The Russian Church: If you don’t get vaccinated, you will regret it for the rest of your life

The Russian Orthodox Church has accused people who do not want to be vaccinated against COVID-19 and called them sinners who will atone for their guilt for the rest of their lives.

The statement comes amid a new jump in the number of infected and dead in Russia, Reuters reported.

The call came as 24,353 new cases were reported, including 6,557 in Moscow, bringing the official total to 5,635,294 since the start of the pandemic.

Speaking on state television, Metropolitan Hilarion said those who refused to be vaccinated were committing “a sin they will have to atone for throughout their lives.”

The metropolitan added: “Every day I see cases of people going to a priest to confess that they refused to be vaccinated or to vaccinate their relatives and inadvertently caused someone’s death.” “It is a sin to think of ourselves, but not of others,” Hilarion said.

PROJECTIONS OF NICEAN TRADITIONALISM AMONG MODERATE ARIANS IN THE IV CENTURY (4)
PROJECTIONS OF NICEAN TRADITIONALISM AMONG MODERATE ARIANS IN THE IV CENTURY (4)

Church-legal aspect

After the regulation of the Arian problem with the first canon, the Second Ecumenical Council in its 2nd Canon emphasized the next main point for the reaction of the anti-Nicaean party against the trampling of the metropolitan autonomy and the authority of the provincial synods / councils as a final court. changing the status of the council convened in Serdica from an ecumenical to a local one, and also limited the appetites of the Roman bishop for supremacy. Pope Damasius (366-384) ratified the Creed at the Second Ecumenical Council, held in Constantinople (381), at which new Trinitarian heresies were exposed, but did not accept only the 3rd canon of the same council, which gave precedence. of the Bishop of Constantinople, on equating the dignity of the Primate of New Rome with that of the Primate of Old Rome.

This extremely important rule begins with the words: “District bishops should not extend their authority over churches beyond their district.” A number of other rules of ecumenical and local ecclesiastical councils also stipulate that the affairs of ecclesiastical administration in all dioceses be under the authority of the council of each district (Ecumenical, 4, 5, 6, 7; Ecumenical, 3). ; III Ecumenical 8; IV, 17, 191 28; Trullo 8, 25, 36, 38, 39; VII Ecumenical., 3, 6; Antioch 9, 16, 18, 19, 95, 98, 120; Serdika 3 ; Double 14).

The starting point for us is Canon 5 of the First Ecumenical Council, which prescribes that no one should accept those excommunicated from their own bishops, is in sync and is reaffirmed by many canons: Apostle. 12, 13, 16, 32, 33, 34, 37; ІІ Ecum. 2, 6; IV Ecum. 11, 13, 19; Trul. 17; VII Ecum. 6; Antioch. 6, 7, 8, 11, 20; Laodicean. 40, 41, 42; Heart. 9, 13; Carthage. 11, 18, 23, 29, 73, 106. In his interpretation, Zonara, Aristine, and Valsamon unanimously note that because some are excommunicated unjustly, perhaps out of anger or cowardice of the excommunicator, or out of some bias, the Fathers of the Church have ordered that this rule be subject to excommunication, in case the excommunicated complain of an unjust trial, and that this examination be carried out by the bishops of the district. The Holy Fathers ordered these regional councils to be held twice a year (later it was decided to hold these provincial or regional church councils at least once a year) and ordered them to hear such appeals at second instance. The ecclesiastical-legal interpretation in the Slavic Helmsman’s Book and in Ep. Nicodemus also emphasizes that the 5th canon of Nicaea aims to prevent the abuse of power by bishops in the trial of their subordinate clergy and laity, whereby the convicts are given the right to appeal to the district council; as well as to forbid the decision of one district church from a council of another such church, therefore, the final decision of a case belongs to the proper regional council, respectively the time for convening the annual regional councils is determined. Such an understanding is attested to us by the bishops of the Carthaginian church, e.g. St. Cyprian in his letter to the Roman bishop Cornelius (S. Cyprian, epist. LV ad Cornelium – Migne, s. I., t. 3, col. 821-822) or the message of the Council of Carthage from 424 to the Roman bishop Celestine on the excommunicated African presbyter Apiarius, who appealed to Rome to reconsider his case at second instance, in which it was clearly stated that he had reasonably acknowledged the Council of Nicaea, in the event of dissatisfaction with the decision of the local judges, to appeal to the district council or to the ecumenical council ( quoted in the epic Nicodemus Milash, – see the Rules of the Holy Orthodox Church with their interpretations, vol. I, Sofia, 1912, pp. 280-281); cf. Can. 1 of the Council of Carthage – the decisions of the Council of Nicaea to be observed.

Western participants questioned the metropolitan autonomy of the Eastern bishops and their councils, and this provoked the latter to fight fiercely in defense of the autonomy of the metropolitan administrative system. Ep. Osius of Cordoba, aware of the canonical grounds of the Eastern group of bishops, tried to persuade them not to boycott the universal character of the Council of Serdica not with theological or ecclesiastical-legal arguments, but with a request – “if it pleases your love” (si vestrae dilectioni videtur).

Moreover, it was in Serdica that the intention of the Roman bishop to appropriate a supra-metropolitan authority was expressed. Julius of Rome insisted that he had the right to settle church matters, even outside his jurisdiction. Outraged Eastern bishops reacted against these attempts to seize power in the Church of Christ to the Pope. That is why they wanted the issue to be discussed with them at the council itself for a final decision on their appeals against sentences already imposed by the council. Local councils in the West did not have the right to revoke, or reconsider, decisions of local councils in the East. Only one, with the rank of Ecumenical, council, such as that of 343, convened by the two emperors in Serdica, had the right to rule on such an issue. The Ecumenical Council was to decide on the Nicene Creed. This symbol, made at the First Ecumenical Council in 325, could also be rejected. It was intended to debate whether to accept or reject. During the negotiations between the two groups, the emphasis shifted to the anti-canonical act of Julius I – to receive in communion bishops who had been overthrown by Eastern councils.

The Eastern Episcopate of the Council of Antioch at the Sanctification of 341, in response to Julius and the Council of Rome convened by him in 340, formulated two council rules referring precisely to the case of St. Athanasius to prevent his final return to Alexandria department. Thus, according to the 4th rule, a deposed bishop, who by a decision of a church council, who dared to continue his archpastoral functions, loses forever the right to be reunited. From Zonara’s interpretation of this canon, we understand that the trial of bishops accused of crimes requires a council that judges and decides; if a bishop, overthrown by a council, dares to perform a sacred service, not to be allowed to appeal for a review of his case, and those who are in communion with him and know about the sentence taken against him, to be excommunicated. the church. Aristine summarizes that if a bishop overthrown by a council performs, due to perseverance, worship – he cannot be reinstated or given the opportunity to be re-defended (ie the right to appeal) and acquitted before a larger council (to a higher court) and cannot hope to ever take his previous place. The rule also extends severe punishment to those who have entered into communion with such a person or have served with him.

According to the 12th rule, a bishop, deposed at a church council, who seeks protection from the emperor /i.e. by the secular authorities/ instead of submitting their case for reconsideration to a higher council, he loses forever the right to receive forgiveness, he has no right to raise his appeal for reconsideration and can only leave any hope of being restored to his former rank. It is allowed to turn to the “greater council”, ie to the Ecumenical Council, which alone has the competence and authority to consider at second instance entered into force sentences and disputes from the provincial councils. And Rule 11 of the same council strictly forbids bishops and clergy to go to the royal palace without the necessary diploma from the proper bishop and without extreme necessity, and those who violate this canonical decree will not only be excommunicated but also overthrown.

The canons of the Council of Antioch stipulate that a bishop may appeal to a larger council, provided that the bishops who have previously condemned him have not all agreed, i. some of them found him guilty, others – innocent / f. canon 14/.

PROJECTIONS OF NICEAN TRADITIONALISM AMONG MODERATE ARIANS IN THE IV CENTURY (3)
PROJECTIONS OF NICEAN TRADITIONALISM AMONG MODERATE ARIANS IN THE IV CENTURY (3)

The bishops of the East were provoked by the term “one in essence” (omousios) defined in Nicaea, as many of them saw in it a revival of the heresy of Sabelius. It is most probable that many of those who took part in the Council of the Eastern Party in Philippopolis had previously participated in the Council of the Sanctification in Antioch in 341, and in Sozomen we find several familiar names: Not only Eusebius took part in this council, who after Paul’s expulsion was transferred from Nicomedia to Constantinople, but also …. Theodore of Heraclius (formerly called Perintus) …. and many others ruling the Metropolitan Churches or no less important. “

The two councils convened simultaneously by Constantius II, one for the eastern hierarchs in Seleucia and the other for the western ones in Rimini, had the task of preparing a new formula to be adopted at a third council – in Sirmium. For various reasons, this wording satisfied the two parties into which the Arians had split. Some accepted it because it forbade the use of the term “substance” in reference to God as a word not attested in Scripture; others, because the new formula declared that “the Son of God is like the Father in all things, as the Scriptures say”; both united around the supremacy of the Scriptures.

In Rimini, Western bishops, most of whom are Orthodox, begin by re-signing the Nicene Creed; condemn all formulas after 325; but under pressure from the Arian emperor they came out at the end of the council with a statement forbidding the words “hypostasis” and “substance” and deleting the phrase “in all things” after expressing the resemblance of the Son to the Father, adding that the very pronunciation of the word “One essence” is offensive to the Lord. They so far surpassed the moderate Arians, who formed the majority of the members of the Council of Seleucia, that the emperor with great effort could scarcely persuade the eastern semi-Arian party to accept the formula adopted by the Western Orthodox bishops. This formula from Rimini and Seleucia was reaffirmed by a Council of Constantinople in 360, sent by the imp. Constantius to all the provinces, ordering all the bishops to receive her, for fear of severe punishment. Woolfila and the church he founded recognize Arianism in its wording, defined by the Council of the Omani in Constantinople in 360, in which the “Apostle of the Germanic peoples” himself participated (cf. Rosen Milev, Wulfila, the Goths, Europe, Sofia, 2004). , pp. 26). As an ethnarch of his people, “Gothic Moses” had no alternative but to carry out the will of the emperor, who gave refuge to his people and contributed to his spiritual, educational and missionary work in the Danube region of the Eastern Roman Empire. In the name of the unity of the Church of Christ and the religious pacification of the empire, even the proven firm pro-Nicaean and moderator of the councils of Nicaea and Serdica, Bishop Hosea of ​​Cordoba, now a centenarian, signed the second formula of Sirmium in 357.

The Second Ecumenical Council, with its first rule, defends the confessional formula (Symbol of Faith) developed at the Council of Nicaea in 325, anathematizing any heresy, ancient or emerging, as a branch of Arianism (anti-Trinitarianism) in its final or more moderate forms. This “programmatic” first rule puts an end once and for all to these concerns and resolves Trinitarian disputes in their full spectrum. First, Macedonia (the ancestor of Macedonianism or spiritual struggle) was condemned, who taught that the Holy Spirit is a creature, not God, and is not one with the Father and the Son. In the canon, these heretics are referred to as semi-Aryans because they had the correct teaching about the Son, but they taught the Holy Spirit that he was supposedly created and had no divine nature.

Semi-Aryans are also those who considered the Son and the Spirit to be creatures, but still received being in a different way from other creatures. The position of those who claim that the Word of God and the Holy Spirit are not one, but similar to the Father is also semi-Arian. Thus excommunication is provided for the Eunomians (by the heresiarch Eunomius epic of Kizik), who assumes that the Son is in all respects unlike the Father, and the same heretics are also called Eudoxians (in Kizik). The council also anathematized the Savelians (followers of the heresy leader Savelius the Libyan bishop of Ptolemaida of Pentapolis), who preached a mixture and merging in one face of the three incarnations of one being and deity, i.e. they received in the Trinity a person of the same name, claiming that God was transfigured and took on a different form, either as Father or as Son, and sometimes as the Holy Spirit. What follows is the unappealable condemnation of the theaching of the false teacher Markel of Ankira, who studied the same with Savelius. Savelianism in its defense of the divinity of the Son of God against the theory of subordinationism went so far as to deny the hypostatic differences between the Father and the Son and claimed that the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit constitute a hypostasis without any distinction between the Persons of the Holy Trinity. The participant in the First Ecumenical Council Ep. Markel of Ancyra is a fierce opponent of Arius and a zealous defender of the oneness of the Son with the Father. After the council, he chose the semi-Aryans as his target, attacking in his writings the Arians Asterius, Paul of Antioch, Eusebius of Nicomedia, Origen and Eusebius of Caesarea. In his jealousy he fell from the purity of the faith in Savellianism and approached in his views Paul of Samosata (Euseb., Contra Marcellum, lib. I, cap. 4, – Migne, sg, t.24, col. 749-773).

It is against these two heretical teachings that the pre-Nicene conservative bishops, who supported the anti-Nicene party of the semi-Aryans during the Council of Philippopolis in 343, resolutely fought because they feared that the innovations in the Creed would not revive the above categorical teachings of God. At the Council of Antioch in 330, the supporter of St. Athanasius the Great, Eustatius the Epistle of Antioch, was deposed by his department on charges of Sabellianism. The pre-Nicaean conservative current could not but be satisfied with the anathemas of Marxism, which denied the eternal incarnation of the Son and taught that when the end of the world came, the end of Christ’s kingdom would come, and even of Christ’s very existence. This God-hating teaching of Markel is testified not only by Eusebius of Caesarea, but also by church fathers and teachers such as Athanasius the Great (De Synodis, – Migne, sg, vol. 26, col. 725 et seq.), Cyril of Jerusalem, (De Secundo Christi Adventu, – Catechesis XV, num. 27, – Migne, sg, t. 33, col. 909-912), Hilarii (Hilarii Fragm. II, n. 21, – Migne, sg, t. 10, col. 650-651); as well as authoritative church historians such as Socrates (Socrat., Hist. eccl. II, 19, – Migne, sg, t. 67, col. 224-233) and Theodorit (Theodor., Haeret. fab. comp., lib. II), No. 10, – Migne, sg, v. 83, col. 396-397). Markel’s justification with Athanasius of Alexandria at the Council of Rome in 340 and his defense by the Roman bishop Julius I at the Council of Serdica in 343 were understood by some more conservative bishops as recognition of his teaching as orthodox. Such fears are finally dispelled by the conciliar fathers of the Second Ecumenical Council with the addition, precisely because of this heresy, which denies the eternity of Christ’s kingdom, in the Nicene Creed of the phrase: “and His kingdom will have no end.”

Finally, the canon ends with the transmission of the anathema of Photinianism and Apollinarianism (Apollinarius’ doctrine of the humanity of Christ was condemned by the Council of Antioch in 362). /Note: the word “anathema” in the New Testament is most often used by St. Apostle. Paul (cf. 1 Cor. 16:22; Rom. 9: 3; Gal. 1-8) in the sense of: 1. complete extermination (exsecratio, separation, abalienatio) and 2. eternal destruction (aeternum exitium). Athanasius the Great interpreted the words of the apostle as follows: “Separate him from the Church and from the believers, and let everyone who does not believe be removed from the people” (Athanas., De parabolis Scripturae, quest. CIII: Migne, sg, p. 28, col. 760, – quoted in the Rules of the Holy Orthodox Church with their interpretations, Sofia, 1912, p. 376).

The Patriarchate of Moscow donated vaccines to the Church of Antioch
The Patriarchate of Moscow donated vaccines to the Church of Antioch

The Patriarchate of Antioch received a donation from the Russian vaccine against the Sputnik-V coronavirus, the official website of the Russian Orthodox Church announced. The donation was organized by the External Department of the Moscow Patriarchate and handed over on June 25 at Rafik Hariri International Airport in Lebanon to the abbot of the Patriarchal Monastery of the Assumption in Balamand Archim. Roman (Hanat), from the head of the court of the ROC-MP in Beirut, archim. Philip (Vasiltsev) and the Russian ambassador to the country R. Mamaev.

With the blessing of Patriarch John of Antioch, on June 1, the donated vaccines were officially handed over to the Vaccination Center at Balamand University, a higher education institution of the Patriarchate of Antioch whose jurisdiction covers Syria, Lebanon and Iraq. The Russian ambassador said the donation of Russian vaccines was an expression of concern for the Lebanese people and the Orthodox community and was proof of the ongoing cooperation between the Orthodox Churches of Russia and Antioch in both Lebanon and Syria.

Archim. Philip said members of the Russian-speaking Orthodox community in Lebanon would also be vaccinated at the Balamand Vaccination Center.

“The Gospel of Dostoevsky”
“The Gospel of Dostoevsky”

On June 22, 2021, in the central building of the State Museum of the History of Russian Literature, Metropolitan Hilarion of Volokolamsk presented his new book, The Gospel of Dostoevsky. During the presentation, Bishop Hilarion shared that Fyodor Dostoevsky played a very important role in his spiritual biography.

– I met this writer in my early youth. As a student, I reread almost all of his works. After that, for many years I practically did not return to his books, but his image and his ideas have always been present in my life – said the archpastor.

Metropolitan Hilarion explained that he drew inspiration for the book from a film about the facsimile edition of the Gospel belonging to Fyodor Dostoevsky, which he had read all his life.

– The title of my book – “The Gospel of Dostoevsky” – has a double meaning. First, I am talking about the Gospel of Dostoevsky itself – the book he read until his death.

This book is still kept in the Russian State Library and I had the opportunity and happiness to hold it in my hands – said the priest.

– The second meaning of the title is a look at Dostoevsky’s spiritual path, the attention with which he studies the Holy Scriptures and the reflection of Christian ideas in his books. In all his major works, Dostoevsky, in one way or another, tries to approach the radiant image of Christ… This is the good news that he conveys through his work to his contemporaries and their descendants, including all of us and future generations – said The Metropolitan of Volokolamsk.

He added that this indisputable classic of literature can be described as “a prophet and an apostle in our time of unbelief, of so-called pluralism, when all religious traditions are presented as if they were on the market.”

“Dostoevsky addresses people all over the world in different languages, testifies to Christ and how the Orthodox man experiences Christ,” concluded Metropolitan Hilarion.

FECRIS fined for repeated derogatory statements about Jehovah’s Witnesses
FECRIS fined for repeated derogatory statements about Jehovah’s Witnesses

HRWF (09.07.2021) – On 27 November 2020, the District Court of Hamburg condemned FECRIS (European Federation of Centres of Research and Information on Cults and Sect) for defaming the general movement of Jehovah’s Witnesses in public statements made in the framework of its conferences from 2009 to 2017 that were posted later on its website.

Before deciding to go to court, Jehovah’s Witnesses had sent a warning notice via their authorized legal representatives on 18 May 2018 but FECRIS did not react.   The German court verdict in the case Jehovah’s Witnesses in Germany v. FECRIS (File ref. 324 O 434/18) concerned a long list of 32 claimed defamatory statements: 17 were fully justified and one was partially justified by the Court.  

On 30 May 2021, after Bitter Winter had exposed this case, FECRIS published a press release where it claimed that it had “won” the Hamburg case. This was repeated by some FECRIS affiliates in different countries, but it was just an attempt to throw dust in the eyes of those who have not read the decision. The court decision is available in German and in English on HRWF website.

Since the Jehovah’s Witnesses had claimed that 32 FECRIS statements were defamatory, and the court found 17 of them defamatory, one partially defamatory, and 14 non-defamatory, FECRIS claimed that it had “won” the case since the 14 statements declared non-defamatory were “essential,” and the 18 points for which they were sentenced were “ancillary.”

See full analysis on: https://hrwf.eu/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/Germany-2021.pdf

And another article on: https://hrwf.eu/germany-fecris-sentenced-for-slanderous-statements-about-jehovahs-witnesses/

Team Modi’s Women Ministers Gave a Push to India’s Handloom
Team Modi’s Women Ministers Gave a Push to India’s Handloom

By  —  Shyamal Sinha

Women in India now participate fully in areas such as education, sports, politics, media, art and culture, service sectors, science and technology, etc. Indira Gandhi, who served as Prime Minister of India for an aggregate period of fifteen years, is the world’s longest serving female Prime Minister

Displaying India’s women power, nine leaders from Prime Minister Narendra Modi‘s council of ministers were seen donning handloom sarees in different styles. While some were spotted in ‘ulta pallu’ saree, some others draped the ‘palla’ over both shoulders.

Finance and Corporate Affairs Minister Nirmala Sitharaman shared photos of Smriti Irani, Darshana Jardosh, Pratima Bhoumik, Shobha Karandlaje, Bharati Pravin Pawar, Meenakshi Lekhi, Anupriya Patel and Annapurna Devi on Twitter. She also thanked BJP chief JP Nadda and said, “Grateful to National President @JPNadda for graciously joining us.”

In the photo, Darshana Jardosh, Lok Sabha MP from Surat, Gujarat, could be seen donning an ‘ulta pallu’ blue and teal coloured sari paired with a brown and golden watch. Next to her was Pratima Bhoumik, who chose a simple look by wearing a yellow saree with a red border.

Next was Shobha Karandlaje donning a silk saree, which was grey in colour with a pink border. Smriti Irani, who was shifted from Textile Ministry on Wednesday, was seen in a stunning embroidered Chanderi handloom saree with floral patterns and a bronze border.

Last year, on National Handloom Day, Irani had urged people to be ‘vocal for local’ and request them to choose clothes made by local brands. Bharati Pravin Pawar wore a plain cream coloured saree paired with a pendant.

Meenakshi Lekhi looked gracious in a pink Gadhwal saree that had a striking blue border with embroidery on it. Lekhi is the second-term MP of Bharatiya Janata Party from Delhi.

Anupriya Patel also wore a yellow saree, standing beside Annpurna Devi, who looked elegant in a polka dot print Madhubani saree.

Sitharaman caught everyone’s attention with her simple cotton saree. Her sartorial choices have made headlines on many occasions – from donning beautiful handloom sarees to sporting silk sarees.

For the unversed, she likes wearing subtle yet classy handloom and silk sarees to work and it is safe to say that it is her wardrobe arithmetic that gives her appearance a distinct stamp. Seven women MPs took oath as union ministers on Wednesday in the expansion of the council of ministers.

The women MPs who took the oath of office on Wednesday are Anupriya Patel, Shobha Karandlaje, Darshana Vikram Jardosh, Meenakshi Lekhi, Annpurna Devi, Pratima Bhoumik and Bharati Pravin Pawar. The swearing-in ceremony, which took place at Rashtrapati Bhavan amid COVID-19 protocols, came days ahead of the Monsoon Session of Parliament. It was the first expansion of the union council of ministers by PM Modi in his second term.

(with inputs from ANI)

PROJECTIONS OF NICEAN TRADITIONALISM AMONG MODERATE ARIANS IN THE IV CENTURY (1)
PROJECTIONS OF NICEAN TRADITIONALISM AMONG MODERATE ARIANS IN THE IV CENTURY (1)

Theological aspect

The Eastern bishops, supporters of the semi-Arian party, most of whom were members of the Council of Philippopolis in 343 with the subsequent supreme ecclesiastical forums, express precisely the pre-Nicene conservatism hostile to the term “omousios,” an innovation included in the Creed. the Ecumenical Council. This is one of the main reasons and explanations for the high intensity of church councils in the IV century due to the many anti-Trinitarian heresies and false teachings, in particular the teachings of Arius and his derivatives. Heresies seem to be multiplying, which in turn multiplies the convening of pro and contra fairs, each of them.

Among the bishops gathered in Philippopolis, many came from the Eusevian coalition. For the followers of Eusebius of Nicomedia, there were no longer any theological problems with Arius after he returned from exile with the permission of the emperor. Constantine I at the cost of a religion in which his most extreme views were excluded. The main postulate in their doctrine was the semi-Arian view that the Son had a substance similar to the substance of the Father (omiusios) contrary to the view of the Aecians /in the name of the Antiochian deacon Aetius, who revived classical Arianism /and the Eunomians/ epi in the name of Euphnius. Kizik in Moesia/, according to which no news on the question of the substantiality of the Son can be accepted, because the Son is of a completely different substance from that of the Father /heterousios/ and is an anomios from His Father. Acacius of Caesarea is a representative of pure classical Arianism with his talent and erudition. He is known as the leader of the Eusevian party at a series of councils: in Antioch  /341/, in Philippopolis /343/, in Milan /355/, in Antioch /358/. At the synods of 359 and 360, respectively in Seleucia and Constantinople, he became the progenitor of a new sectarian branch – that of the Acacians (cf. Dictionnaire de Theologie catholique – DTC, Fasc. II, P., 1909, col. 290). The latter preached semi-Arian views, adhering to the term “omios”, in the sense of similar, whence comes the other name by which they are known in church history “omians”. The technical term “omios” meant similar to the Father not in substance, but referred to a similarity in the will (cf. DTC, Fasc. II, P., 1909, col. 290-292; Lacan M.-F ., Petite Encyclopedie Religieuse, Fayard, Paris, 1973, p. 163). The heads of many ancient episcopal bishops in Thrace (Rule 6 of the First Ecumenical Council determined five provinces in Thrace with the capital Heraclia or Heraclea, Heraclia, with its own metropolitan, and Balsamon in the interpretation of Rule 3 of the Second Ecumenical Council testified that from ancient times the bishop of the city of Byzantium – Byzantium was appointed by the Thracian Metropolitan until the adoption of this canon, with which he was equated in advantages and honor with the Roman bishop) in today’s Bulgaria are among the signatories of the decisions of the Eastern Council in Philippopolis (one of the first early Christian centers and an episcopal settlement not only on the territory of today’s Bulgaria, but also in the world): Ep. Eutychius of Philippopolis (+ ca. 347), successor of the disciple of St. Apostle Paul – St. Apostle Hermas /cf. Rom. 16:14/, one of the 70 apostles of Christ; ep. Demophilus of Beroe (now Stara Zagora), successor of the first bishop – the student of ap. Paul, Carp /cf. 2 Tim.4: 13/; in Odessos (now Varna) and in the Thracian city of Heraclea the first bishop was the apostolic disciple martyr. Amplius /cf. Rom. 16: 8/, whence they take part and sign the Eastern Encyclical of Philippopolis, ep. Theodore of Heraclea (hence the Arian bishop Sabin of Heraclia, who left us the valuable source from the IV century for the councils of the Arians “Synagogues of the Councils”) and bishop Timothy of Anhialo (Ankila). It is difficult to accept that all these hierarchs, who accepted their episcopal chairs from the earliest Christian epoch by apostolic succession, have completely and at the same time departed from the correct teaching of Christ.

Rather, they were strongly attached to the ancient religion before the Nicene Creed and reacted sharply to the innovations made at the time, as well as to attempts to establish papal supremacy at the Council of Serdica. The perspective of the decisions of Philippopolis was based on the canonical order established by the Ecumenical Council of Nicaea and the local Council of Antioch, while the decisions of Serdica are in the perspective of the bishop’s obligation to defend the pure Nicene faith.

The second marriage of the clergy in Orthodox perspective (2)
The second marriage of the clergy in Orthodox perspective (2)

The church sees a lack of abstinence in remarriage. This defect also affects the person with whom you marry. That is why this rule protects the shepherd from such a reflection and does not allow those who are married to a widow or who have left (divorced) to be accepted in the sacred hierarchy. There was a similar law in the Old Testament church – Judith 16: 22-23: “She was longed for, but the man did not know her until the end of her days, from the day her husband Manasseh died. She became very famous and grew old in her husband’s house.” (cf. Luke 2: 36-38). Priests in the Old Testament era, with the exception of the high priest, were only allowed to remarry a priestly widow or a virgin from the house of Israel (cf. Ezek. 44:22). The high priest himself could not marry a widow (Lev. 21:14), and there is information that he was a widow, he had no right to remarry at all. Justinian’s Novel 22, chapter 42, warns of the priest’s wife with the same requirement of the 18th Apostolic canon:

“If any of the clergy already appointed over a reader and a singer enters into any form of marriage, we enact our constitution and wish one to be deprived of the priesthood … And if a layman wishes to be ordained a subdeacon or deacon , or a presbyter, and then it turns out that there is a woman who is not married to a virgin or divorced from her husband, or living with him illegally, or he himself is married a second time, then such a person does not receive the priesthood, got to him, to be completely deprived of him.”

Restricting marriage to a slave is not relevant today, nor is the prohibition of the bishop’s wife’s remarriage, because the episcopal rank is assigned to unmarried clergy. Theater in Greco-Roman antiquity (in apostolic times) had a definite religious function and therefore it is forbidden to marry an actress who performed a kind of idolatry of the polytheistic pagan pantheon with her participation in theatrical performances. The Old Testament priests are forbidden in the Book of Leviticus (21: 7-8) to marry a harlot, a woman defiled or rejected by her husband, because they are holy to the Lord. Otherwise, second marriage was known among the Jews, for example, the historian Josephus testified for himself that he had entered into a second and third marriage (cf. H. Sachsse, Die Lehre vom Defectus sacramenti, Berlin-Leipzig, 1881, p. 17). ).

Separated in the question of who is more faithful and suitable for a priest – the one who has two duly concluded church marriages and has divorced according to the church canons or the one who has remained in fornication and has not even bothered to seek heavenly blessing over the created from his family. Otherwise, second marriage was known among the Jews, for example, the historian Josephus testified for himself that he had entered into a second and third marriage (cf. H. Sachsse, Die Lehre vom Defectus sacramenti, Berlin-Leipzig, 1881, p. 17). ).

The absence of a legal ecclesiastical marriage in such cases is the formal reason for the diocesan metropolitans to introduce such candidates into the sacred rank, especially if they have considered them worthy according to the other required conditions for the candidate priests.

It is not right for this restriction on second marriages to be applied to monks who have started a family in their worldly life. On the one hand, the prohibition is for the one who resides in the second marriage. Haircuts in monasticism with the acceptance of vows and a sacred name are a turning point in the life path of the Christian who approaches them, who adopts an angel-like way of life, equivalent to even a martyr’s deed. There are many examples of men and women endowed with Christian holiness, endowed by God with one grace or another and blessings, regardless of their behavior in the previous worldly life. There are among them robbers, thieves, fornicators, murderers, who have not been forbidden by deeds in the world to serve God and to accept sacred dignity. And the Eucharistic-centric character of the ecclesiastical punishments expresses the spiritual and soteriological content of the ecclesiastical law, because it was for the restoration of the human person that Christ gave His life. Therefore, the goal of the church canons is not the punishment itself, but to cause a person to be cleansed from defilement through spiritual struggle in repentance, to become again a healthy member of the church body, in which to be satiated, mature and function through sacramental empathy. in the Holy Eucharist. But the canons of those who have already accepted a sacred rank are extremely harsh: “Priests and clergy for fornication are overthrown by a sacred rank” (Apost. 25; St. Basil. Canonc 3, 7, 32, 51; Neoces. 1) IV Ecumenical Council deprivation of church communion for a monk or nun, if they marry, and the marriage of such to be considered null and void (cf. Basil the Great 6, 51). Of particular importance in this matter is Justinian’s short story CXXIII, called by Petrus de Marca compendium juris canonici (Petrus de Marksa, De Concordia sacerdoti et imperii, lib. IV, p. 1, pag. 339), which in 44 chapters is indeed a set of extensive ecclesiastical legislation on the procedure for replacing the episcopal office and on monasticism and monastic life. (cf. Charles Deal, Justinian and Byzantine civilization in the VI century, St. Petersburg, 1908, pp. 326-327). Imperial ecclesiastical laws were issued without prior conciliar activity, but not without the participation of individual representatives of the ecclesiastical hierarchy.

It follows from the special position of the emperor in the church that he also had the legislative power over church affairs. It goes without saying that the emperor, as a church legislator, was obliged to legislate in the spirit of the church, according to its tradition and not in contradiction with church dogmas. The binding force of imperial laws was recognized unconditionally if the laws were in sync with the canons, or if the ecclesiastical rules did not specify anything about the subject, which was regulated by law. Thus, the legislation of Emperor Justinian the Great on the dissolution of marriage, set forth in his novella XXV, became a guiding norm in the ecclesiastical practice in the East on the grounds for divorce, insofar as no deliberate rules were adopted by the ecumenical councils(cf. Mortreuil, Histoire du droit byzantin, Paris, vol. I-II, 1853; Azarevich, History of Byzantine Law, Yaroslavl, 1876-77). In addition to the Codex repetita praelectionis, published on November 16, 534, the laws on the marriage of clergy are found in three “novellas,” in the 6th of March 10, 535, in the 22nd of 536, and the 123rd. from March 18, 546. They are also mentioned in 137 short stories.

Novella 6, Chapter 5: “One should not be ordained a deacon or presbyter who is in a second marriage or is in a marriage with a divorced and abandoned wife or having a concubine (concubine), but only the one whose wife is taken pure and virgin. Thus one should not be admitted to the priesthood except one who lives in chastity, or does not communicate with women, or belongs (or belongs) to a woman and has chosen chastity, which is, according to divine rules, the first and basic of all other virtues… “(Codex iuris civilis, III, Novelae recognovit Adolfus Schoell, Berolini, 1895: “Neque autem secundus habentem aut eum, qui habuit, nuptias ordinary diaconum aut presbyterum, neque si mulieri coniungitur seiunctae et prorium virum derelinquenti, neque si concubinam habeat, sed et ipsam uxorem si cum castitate viventem, aut uxoribus non cohabitantes, aut unius uxoris virum qui vel fuerit vel sit, et ipsam castitatem eligentem, primum principium et fundamentum manifestum secundum divinas regulas et residuae virtutis constitutam. Si autem et aliquis presbyter aut diaconus aut subdiaconus postea ducat uxorem aut concubinam aut palam aut occulte ducat, sacro statim cadat ordine et deinceps idiota sit”.)

The teachings of St. Scripture is expressed by St. Apost. Paul in 1 Tim. 3: 2, which states that the bishop must be “the husband of a woman,” and in Titus. 1: 6 repeats the same prescription for elders, and again for those receiving the rank of deacon. The phrase “man of one woman” repeated each time (gr. “mias gynekas andra”) acquires the character of a technical formulation, which according to its content can be called a sacred formula.

The second marriage of the clergy in Orthodox perspective (1)
The second marriage of the clergy in Orthodox perspective (1)

As a God-man organism, the Church of Christ evolved according to the historical epoch of codification of individual rules, which right has always belonged to the conciliar conscience of the episcopal college on dogmatic or administrative problems and the adoption of new models in canonical practice.

This does not invalidate or limit the decisions and formulations already taken in the Rules of the Holy Orthodox Church, but requires a precise interpretation of their application by the administrative, criminal, disciplinary or other authorities of the Church (cf. Prof. Vl. Fidas, Canon Law. An Orthodox Perspective, Chambézy, 1998, 145 p.). A necessary feature of the concept of church rules (canons) includes the convening by the emperor of a council, which establishes these canons, created in advance by someone or made during the council sessions, as well as approval by the emperor of these rules adopted by the church council. Thus the imp. Justinian finally attached to the canons of the four ecumenical councils held before his reign the importance of a universally binding ecclesiastical norm, prescribing the veneration of the dogmas established by the universal conciliar conscience as sacred scripture and their rules on an equal footing with imperial laws (Nov. CXXXI c. 1: “sancimus, ut legume vicem obtineant sacri ecclesiastici canones, qui a sanctis quatuor synodis expositi vel confirmati sunt, hoc est a Nicaena trecentorum decem et octo, et Constantinopolitana centum quinquaginta sanctorum partum,et Ephesina prima, in qua Nestorius condemnatus est, et Chalcedonensi, in qua Eutyches cum Nestorio anathemate percussus est. Predicatarum enim sacrarum synodorum et dogmata ut divinas scripturas suscupimus, et canones tanquam leges custodimus.”)

Apostolic Rule 17 is mainly supported in support of the prohibition of second marriage: “Whoever, after holy baptism, was bound in two marriages or had concubines, cannot be a bishop, a presbyter, a deacon, or count at all. in the holy clergy “and rule 12 of St. Basil the Great:” The rulers are completely forbidden to be servants of the church. ” In the first centuries of Christianity, the ecclesiastical practice of divorce was determined by the sublime teaching of the gospel about the indissolubility of marriage. Only St. Ev. Matthew mentions an exception leading to the dissolution of marriage, namely, because of adultery (cf. Matt. 5: 31-32; 19: 3-12), while in other evangelists the commandment of indivisibility is presented as unconditional 10: 2-12 and Luke 16:18). In cases where divorce was morally permissible (ie in the presence of guilt for adultery), a second marriage was morally permissible for the divorced spouse. The form of divorce for early Christians, as well as for Roman citizens, was determined by the law of the imp. August (lex Julia de adulteriis), according to which the declaration of divorce could have legal value only if it was made in the presence of seven adult Roman citizens. Divorce Roman law knew both divorces based on sufficient grounds (divortium ex rationabili causa) and without any grounds, simply by mutual consent (divortium ex consensu) – the latter are strictly prohibited by the XXVII novella of Justinian. Having in mind the tradition of marriage at all levels of the sacred hierarchy in the first centuries of the Church of Christ, we must also consider later additions and interpretations, such as the 4th rule of St. Theophilus of Alexandria (+412): “In the clergy can be accept … and enter into an illegal marriage until baptism, if they are freed from their wives after death or divorce “, i.e. a sharp line is drawn between man’s life before and after his baptism. Similar is the later distinction in the life of a man in peace now and after his incorporation into the monastic army, the most striking example being the instruction of Apostolic canon 52: “Let no man turn away from sin.” Supported by 43 BC at the Sixth Ecumenical Council in the sense that no earlier life prevented a Christian from entering a monastery: to enter a convent and receive a monastic vow, even though he has committed some sin, because our Savior said: He who comes to Me, I will not drive out (John 6:37), and since monastic life represents our life in repentance, therefore, we approve of the one who sincerely chooses him, and no way of living will prevent him from fulfilling his intention. ” This last canon updates an earlier one, such as that of the Fourth Ecumenical Council, 4: “A slave without the will of his master not to be admitted to monasticism” – due to a change in social-class social relations, and in particular, slavery. Rule 5 of the Double Council also stipulates that the three-year probation period may be shortened in the event of a serious illness and when the layman has spent his monastic life in secular attire. In the Eastern and Western ecclesiastical-legal classifications, the grounds for non-admission to the priesthood are set out in two groups: 1. Failure to commit a crime, irregularitates ex delicto, such as premeditated murder, repetition of baptism, schism, heresy, apostasy of faith or monastic vow, simony.2. Grounds for defect, irregularitates ex defectu, among which the ninth, penultimate place, states ‘lack of sacrament’, irregularitates ex defectu sacramenti, bigamia veras successivа or bigamia interpretativа.

The prominent Russian canonist Prof. N. Suvorov interpreted it as follows: a Christian who lives in the insufficiency of his sacrament of marriage could not perform the exact same sacrament himself. These canons meet varying requirements in different epochs, such as the definition of another shortcoming – the so-called “lack of knowledge” necessary for the full performance of spiritual service.

On the principle of economy, “by great mercy”, as the church’s wording states, there are many cases when priests who have had one or even two civil marriages dissolved are ordained as priests, and in some cases the sacrament of Holy Wedding (and sometimes the sacrament of Holy Communion). baptism) takes place before the beginning of the process of drawing up the file of the candidate for priest. In other cases, the wives (candidate presbyters) are in this position and even bring them children from their previous families and marriages, although also a rule of the holy apostles provides for restrictions on entering the priesthood due to a defect in the deacon or presbyter. The 18th Apostolic Rule states: “Whoever marries a widow, or a forsaken, or a prostitute, or a slave, or a disgraceful (actress), can be neither a bishop, nor a presbyter, nor a deacon, nor at all in the list of the clergy.” Marriage to a widow was considered equivalent to bigamy.

The church sees a lack of abstinence in remarriage. This defect also affects the person with whom you marry. That is why this rule protects the shepherd from such a reflection and does not allow those who are married to a widow or abandoned (divorced) to be accepted in the sacred hierarchy. There was a similar law in the Old Testament church – Judith 16: 22-23: “Many wanted her, but a man did not know her until the end of her days, from the day her husband Manasseh died. She gained great fame and grew old in the house of your husband. ” (cf. Luke 2: 36-38). Priests in the Old Testament era, with the exception of the high priest, were allowed to remarry only with a widow of a priest or a virgin from the house of Israel (cf. Ezek. 44:22). The high priest himself could not marry a widow (Lev. 21:14), and there is information that he was a widow, he had no right to remarry at all. Justinian’s Novella 22, chapter 42, warns of the priest’s wife with the same requirement of the 18th Apostolic Rule:

“If any of the clergy already appointed over a reader and a singer enters into any form of marriage, we enact our constitution and wish one to be deprived of the priesthood … And if a layman wishes to be ordained a subdeacon or deacon, or a presbyter, and then it turns out that there is a woman who is not married to a virgin or divorced from her husband, or living with him illegally, or he himself is married a second time, then such a person does not receive the priesthood, got to him, to be completely deprived of him. “

Restricting marriage to a slave is not relevant today, nor is the prohibition of the bishop’s wife’s remarriage, because the episcopal rank is assigned to unmarried clergy. Theater in Greco-Roman antiquity (in apostolic times) had a definite religious function and therefore it is forbidden to marry an actress who performed a kind of idolatry of the polytheistic pagan pantheon with her participation in theatrical performances. The Old Testament priests are forbidden in the Book of Leviticus (21: 7-8) to marry a harlot, a woman defiled or rejected by her husband, because they are holy to the Lord. Otherwise, second marriage was known among the Jews, for example, the historian Josephus testified for himself that he had entered into a second and third marriage (cf. H. Sachsse, Die Lehre vom Defectus sacramenti, Berlin-Leipzig, 1881, p. 17). ).

Separated in the question of who is more faithful and suitable for a priest – the one who has two duly concluded church marriages and has divorced according to the church canons or the one who has remained in fornication and has not even bothered to seek heavenly blessing over the created from his family. The absence of a legal ecclesiastical marriage in such cases is the formal reason for the diocesan metropolitans to introduce such candidates into the sacred rank, especially if they have considered them worthy according to the other conditions required for the candidate priests.

It is not right for this restriction on second-hand couples to apply to monks who have started a family in their worldly life. On the one hand, the prohibition is for the one who resides in the second marriage.

Haircuts in monasticism with the acceptance of vows and a sacred name are a turning point in the life path of the Christian who approaches them, who adopts an angel-like way of life, equivalent to even a martyr’s deed. There are many examples of men and women endowed with Christian holiness, endowed by God with one grace or another and blessings, regardless of their behavior in the previous worldly life. There are among them robbers, thieves, fornicators, murderers, who have not been forbidden by deeds in the world to serve God and to accept sacred dignity. And the Eucharistic-centric character of the ecclesiastical punishments expresses the spiritual and soteriological content of the ecclesiastical law, because it was for the restoration of the human person that Christ gave His life. Therefore, the goal of the church canons is not the punishment itself, but to cause a person to be cleansed from defilement through spiritual struggle in repentance, to become again a healthy member of the church body, in which to be satiated, mature and function through sacramental empathy. in the Holy Eucharist. But the canons of those who have already accepted a sacred rank are extremely harsh: “Priests and clergy for fornication are overthrown by a sacred rank” (Apostle 25; St. Basil. Rules 3, 7, 32, 51; Neoches. 1) IV Ecumenical Council deprivation of church communion for a monk or nun, if they marry, and the marriage of such to be considered null and void (cf. Vas. Vel. 6, 51). Of particular importance in this matter is Justinian’s short story CXXIII, called by Petrus de Marca compendium juris canonici (Petrus de Marksa, De Concordia sacerdoti et imperii, lib. IV, p. 1, pag. 339), which in 44 chapters is indeed a set of extensive ecclesiastical legislation on the order of replacement of the episcopal office and on monasticism and monastic life. Imperial ecclesiastical laws were issued without prior conciliar activity, but not without the participation of individual representatives of the ecclesiastical hierarchy.

It follows from the special position of the emperor in the church that he also had the legislative power over church affairs. It goes without saying that the emperor, as a church legislator, was obliged to legislate in the spirit of the church, according to its tradition and not in contradiction with church dogmas. The binding force of imperial laws was recognized unconditionally if the laws were in sync with the canons, or if the ecclesiastical rules did not specify anything about the subject, which was regulated by law. Thus, the legislation of Emperor Justinian the Great on the dissolution of marriage, set out in his novel XXV, became a guiding norm in the ecclesiastical practice in the East on the grounds for divorce, insofar as no deliberate rules were adopted by the ecumenical councils (cf. Mortreuil, Histoire du droit byzantine, Paris, vols. I-II, 1853; Azarevich, History of Byzantine Law, Yaroslavl, 1876-77). In addition to the Codex repetita praelectionis, published on November 16, 534, the laws on the marriage of clergy are found in three “novellas,” in the 6th of March 10, 535, in the 22nd of 536, and the 123rd. from March 18, 546. They are also mentioned in 137 short stories. Novella 6, Chapter 5: “One should not be ordained a deacon or presbyter who is in a second marriage or is in a marriage with a divorced and abandoned wife or having a concubine (concubine), but only the one whose wife is taken Thus one should not be admitted to the priesthood except one who lives in chastity, or does not communicate with women, or belongs (or belongs) to a woman and has chosen chastity, which, according to divine rules, is first and foremost the basis of all other virtues… “

The teachings of St. Scripture is expressed by St. Apostle. Paul in 1 Tim. 3: 2, which states that the bishop must be “the husband of a woman,” and in Titus. 1: 6 repeats the same prescription for elders, and again for those receiving the rank of deacon. The phrase “man of one woman” repeated each time (gr. “Mias gynekas andra”) acquires the character of a technical formulation, which according to its content can be called a sacred formula.

PROJECTIONS OF NICEAN TRADITIONALISM AMONG MODERATE ARIANS IN THE IV CENTURY (2)
PROJECTIONS OF NICEAN TRADITIONALISM AMONG MODERATE ARIANS IN THE IV CENTURY (2)

Breastfed with the pure Orthodox faith, Wulfila bishop of the Goths (student of Ep. Sophilus Gothic, participant in the First Ecumenical Council) accepted the personal invitation of Emperor Theodosius I to participate in the Second Ecumenical Council in Constantinople and certainly took an active part in the initial synodal sessions, contributing at least to the editing of the fundamental first two canons aimed at establishing religious peace in both the empire and the church. Indicative is the fact that the emperor issued a special law after the end of the council meetings, which authorized special powers of attorney of pure Orthodoxy in a number of areas, among which we find the names of some of the probable allies and sympathizers of the “Gothic apostle” (“Terentius of Scythia and Martyr of Marcianopolis in Moesia and Scythia”) who accompanied him to the Ecumenical Forum of Constantinople, otherwise we could hardly explain the presence them there at a certain historical moment, and it is very possible that they sent him after his death before the end of the Ecumenical Council. Moreover, they come from dioceses where Latin Arianist authors work on the heritage of Wulfila – – Dorostol, Ratiaria, Nove, Markianopol, Nikopolis ad Istrum. Thanks to Auxentius of Durostorum, the Creed of his teacher, Bishop Wulfila, was passed on to us:

“I, Wulfila, Bishop and Confessor, have always believed thus and in this sole and true faith I make my journey to my Lord,

I believe that there is only one God the Father, alone unbegotten and invisible, and in His only-begotten Son, our Lord and God, creator and maker of all things, not having any like unto Him. Therefore there is one God of all, who is also God of our God, And I believe in one Holy Spirit, an enlightening and sanctifying power. As Christ says after the resurrection to his Apostles: “Behold I send the promise of my Father upon you; but tarry ye in the city of Jerusalem until ye be clothed with power from on high.” (Luke 24.49) And again: “And ye shall receive power coming upon you by the Holy Spirit.” (Acts 1.8) Neither God nor Lord, but the faithful minister of Christ; not equal, but subject and obedient in all things to the Son. And I believe the Son to be subject and obedient in all things to God the Father.”

The imperial law ends as follows: “All who are not in agreement with the said bishops must be expelled from the church in order to ever receive episcopal authority in it.” (Codex Theodos., Tit. De fide catholica, lex III; cf. Socrat, Hist. Eccl. V, 8, et Valesii, Annot. In. Cap. Cit. Socratis, – Migne, sg, t. 67, col. 576-581). The migration of the “little Goths” of Woolfila is indicated in 344 and 348, the latter being more probable according to more and more researchers. It seems very plausible to assume that Woolfila did arrive in 344 from the Danube, but it would have been to take part in the Ecumenical Council convened in 343 by the Western and Eastern emperors in Serdica, and its delay of several months was due to of the complicated situation at home, due to the persecutions against the Christianized Goths and personally against him by the pagan Gothic princes. Upon his arrival, he found that the Ecumenical Council had been compromised and failed after being constituted by the Eastern group of bishops at the counter-council in Philippopolis. Even if he did not arrive at the end of the council sessions, he at least came across the representation of the Eastern Party at the court of Constantius II on Easter. The Archbishop of Gothia received his appointment with the favor of the royal father (the Great Constantine), the emperor of the Eastern Roman Empire, and presented to him the question of the migration from the Danube to Moesia to the Kherson Gothic Christians, whose spiritual and secular leader he was. The latter was completed in 348. The fate of his people was entirely in the hands of the Arian emperor, so that the Gothic hierarch adopted the position expressed in the Encyclical of the Bishops of the East, met in Philippopolis the same year, among the pre-Nicene Conservatives and the moderate Arians, who enjoyed it with the benevolence of imperial state power and religious policy. This orientation later led to the emergence of Gothic Arianism. In addition to the above, Wulfila was ordained a bishop with the heresiarch of the moderate Arians, Ep. Eusebius of Nicomedia (close to Emperor Constantine I, a classmate of Arius himself and leader of the Eusebian Semi-Arian Party.

CHRONOLOGICAL TABLE OF THE COUNCILS – IV CENTURY

325 Council of Nicaea (I Ecumenical).

330 Council of Antioch. Council of Tire-Jerusalem.

340 Council of Rome.

341 Council of Sanctification in Antioch.

343 Council of Serdica and Counter-council of Philippopolis.

346 Cologne Council.

351 I Council of Sirmium.

353 Council of Arles (dominated by the Arians).

355 Council in Milan /Milan/.

356 Council of Béziers.

357 II Council of Sirmium.

358 Omius Council in Ancyra. III Council in Sirmium. Council of Antioch.

359 Fair in Seleucia-Rimini.

360 Council of Constantinople.

361 Council of Paris /the bishops of Gaul are in the position of Nicaea/.

362 Council of Alexandria.

381 Council of Constantinople (II Ecumenical).

MONETIZATION OF THE CHRISTIAN CULT
MONETIZATION OF THE CHRISTIAN CULT

The idea of ​​an imperial church was born quite naturally, because the Christian figures of the era were not deprived of political consciousness. The first information about the idea of ​​an imperial church, according to Prot. N. Afanasiev, can be traced back to the III century, when the Council of Antioch of 268 in the case of Paul of Samosata composed a message to all the bishops of the ecumenism (the entire inhabited known world), οἰκουμένη. When the Christian church became the state, this idea developed even more intensively, because the term “imperial church” did not exclude the term “universal-world” church, as the Roman Empire itself perceived itself as universal, universal.

In the imperial title in the third century, four types of titles can be distinguished. First, the old unfolded Flavian-Antoninian type; second, the title Imperator Caesar Augustus (for example, under the emperors Gallienus and Valerian); third, dominus noster (e.g., in Valerian and Gallienus) and, finally, a combination of the first and third types (e.g., under Emperor Diocletian and his co-rulers).

From Emperor Diocletian onwards, the predominance of the second and third types was sharply observed, and under Emperor Constantine dominus noster practically replaced all other variants, and from the 5th century it practically remained the only one. In literary sources, where short titles are often used, dominus and imperator are in circulation, names-titles “Caesar” and “Augustus” and rare in official documents, but common in literary texts title princeps, as statistically none of them is used only to denote the ruler, and some denote not only him. There are also deviations, as in the statement of Emperor Tiberius in Dion Cassius (Dio. 57, 8. 2): the rest – princeps). “A constituent element of Roman imperial self-consciousness is that the Imperium Romanum is the only empire in the world – there can be no two empires. And this empire is called to conquer the whole Orbis terrarium (οἰκουμμένη). If there were parts of the world that were not yet under Roman control, it was a temporary phenomenon. Sooner or later everything had to pass under Roman rule. The Roman world has no borders. It has border areas (σύνορα), but no borders (ὅρια).

It is interesting and useful for the construction of a full profile of the Arian statesman to trace in the numismatic artifacts not only the physical image of Emperor Constantius II, but also the Christian symbolism used in the fourth century in the imperial mints.

The Museum of Art and Archeology at the University of Missouri (USA) has a total of 39 Roman medallions, proto-offices and offices. Of these, one is an imperial coin embedded in a medallion frame/safe, two are real medallions, 15 are “protocontorniates” (regular coins, subsequently raised edges) and 21 are contorniates (or late Roman “medallions”, cast or minted, often representing former Roman emperors), which have an unspecified purpose – there are hypotheses that they were used as tokens in betting or as tickets for the circus or theater, or were distributed as gifts to the people during the New Year holidays (Latin: strenae). Many of these medallions, made of precious metals, are placed in cassettes/frames or fitted with eyelets on the top (the front with the image of the emperor, from the Latin adversus) for hanging, as is the case with the unique gold medallion of Emperor Constantius II ( museum catalog number 3). They are characterized by a much higher than that of ordinary coins quality of artistic workmanship of the details, high relief, providing high sculptural quality of the reliefs. On the reverse (reverse side) directly to a current event of historical or political significance. Very rare, imperial medallions were intended as direct or indirect imperial gifts to the aristocracy or military leaders as a reward for faithful service to the empire, and some were cut down on the occasion of special dynastic celebrations such as adoptions or marriages. The medallion has an additional “ear” soldered over the front portrait for hanging like a necklace. The seated personified image of Constantinople may be associated with the 1100th anniversary of Rome, as some researchers suggest, but was most likely cut off on the occasion of Constantinople’s passage under Emperor Constantius in 339 or its vicennalia, solemnly celebrated in 343-344. There are basically only 4 Christian symbols appearing on Roman coins in the fourth century: Hi-Ro, cross (square or elongated), Cross-Ro and the right hand of God (without or with a wreath).

The most popular of these is the Christogram Hi-Ro (), composed of the first two letters of the name “Christ” in Greek (chi = X and ro = P). In 348 a monetary reform was carried out, which introduced a new, larger denomination with the legend/dedication FEL TEMP REPARATIO (“Happy times are here again”) and several types, one of which is known as “the emperor standing to the left with a flag and two captives. ” On the “standard” there is a flag-flag (vexillum), decorated in three ways: with a cross, with Hi-Ro, or cross-ro (illustration of which we find on three coins of Constantius II, respectively minted in Antioch, Nicomedia and Antioch in the period 348-350.

Like his father, the great Constantine, who supported missionary work among the Goths in India ulterior, Axum, Ethiopia, Iberia, and Armenia, the monetization of the Christian cult was one form of Emperor Constantius’ policy in support of the Christian mission in the East.

THE CHRISTIAN TESTIMONY AMONG PEOPLE OF LIVING RELIGIONS
THE CHRISTIAN TESTIMONY AMONG PEOPLE OF LIVING RELIGIONS

Christians are obliged to convey the message of God’s salvation in Jesus Christ to every person and to every nation. They testify in the context of their neighbors, who live according to other religious beliefs and ideological views. True witness follows Christ in respecting and acknowledging the uniqueness and freedom of others. We must admit that as Christians we have often looked for the worst in others and given a negative assessment of their religions. May we, as Christians, learn to witness to our neighbors in a spirit of humility and joy.

The word works in every human being. In Jesus of Nazareth, the Word became man. The miracle of His ministry of love encourages Christians to tirelessly testify to people of all religions and to those with non-religious beliefs about this great presence of God in Christ. In Him is our salvation. There is still disagreement among Christians as to how this salvation in Christ is valid for all people of different religious beliefs. But everyone agrees that everyone should be testified.

Christians have an assigned position at every opportunity to lend a hand to their neighbors, to work together to build communities of freedom, peace and mutual respect. Somewhere, state law suppresses freedom of conscience and the true exercise of religious freedom. There, Christian churches need to find ways to enter into dialogue with civil authorities to achieve a common definition of religious freedom. With this freedom comes the responsibility to defend together all human rights in these societies. Living with people of other faiths and ideologies is a meeting of the promised. It is also a time when, in a spirit of openness and trust, Christians are able to express their authentic testimony of Christ, Who has called all men to Himself.

God bequeathed us the earth, gave us responsibilities and obligations, without excluding anyone from His providential plan. Christ forbade enmity and abolished privileges and differences, so hatred of people of other ethnicities and religious systems is alien to Christianity, and if problems arise between us, we should solve them with prayer and good. The Christian does not hate anyone and does not fight anyone. Will the unbelievers fall away at God’s judgment? Judging is not ours, but God’s right. Who are we to predict eternal punishment for millions of people? Let us leave the decision to God, even though we know that there is only one truth and it is in the teachings of Christ. God allows the existence of other faiths, and the reasons for us are unknown. A Buddhist or Muslim grows up in his religious environment without being given a choice. However, his very striving for the above-ground, the mystical, the divine is a spiritual merit. The faith of the other, as well as his national traditions, are spiritual values, whatever objections we may have to them. They are the pillars of his personality, on which he builds his life. Did we understand it well? By what right will we insult and insult him? We had better show him the truth of our faith through our deeds. The most cruel and unnatural events in history, when the cry of pain and resentment has reached heaven, are the violent changes of religion or nationality, as well as of names. Violence against the soul is much more terrible than violence against the body. These works of world history are a disgrace to humanity and have nothing to do with the person and teachings of Jesus Christ.