| Orthodox Outlet for Dogmatic Enquiries | Papacy - Protestantism |
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THE ORTHODOX ROOTS OF THE WEST :
A
FACTOR FOR PAN-EUROPEAN UNITY

By: Theodoros I. Riginiotis
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The religion-less character that the European Union has embraced is
absolutely contrary to the Christian spiritual roots of Europe.
This character happens to also be driven by a “defensive” spirit that
has led -for example- to activities by political groups, for the
exclusion of
religion from public life,1
while abundant phenomena of “Christianophobia” have also been observed
in various European countries - such as racist behavior towards people
who publicly express their Christian beliefs. This phenomenon is mainly
attributed to the unhealed wounds inflicted on Western societies by
“Christian” representatives who have been dominating them over the last
thousand years. The horrific “Middle Ages”, as well as colonialism, the
religious wars, moralism and many other ugly experiences, have hurt and
continue to hurt the Western European so much, that they felt forced to
dispose of the Christian religion that was imposed on them like a heavy
quilt.
However, Western European brethren are not
aware that
all the “versions of Christianity” which have
dominated the Western European world for the last thousand years
- in the Roman Catholic and Protestant areas - are clearly heretical and
are essentially deviations from the authentic teaching and life of the
original Church that was founded by Jesus Christ, in all its basic
points
2.
This deviation is not theoretical: God was perceived as a
cruel
dictator, man was underestimated and annihilated; he was excluded
from the possibility of union with God (which constitutes salvation -
which Christ came to actualize) and he was made to feel like an accused
before Him; the Church was separated from the people and had assumed
absolute authority over the people – as did the pope, over the entire Church.
The Middle Ages with all its pathology is a product of these deviations,
the consequences of which continue to this day.
It is self-evident that the teaching of Jesus
Christ about love for one's neighbor has nothing to do with fanaticism,
cruelty, pietism and moralism, which –sadly- Western Europeans have come
to believe as characteristics of Christian religiosity.
Unfortunately
they do not know - although some are slowly discovering it -
that
the authentic, primordial Church that He founded
- the Church of indigent apostles and martyrs, spiritual fighters and
open-minded teachers of love - has never ceased to exist.
It
existed and continues to exist - just a breath's distance from their
homes.
It is
the Orthodox Church.
Impacted by the judgments of prejudiced
scholars, mainly the much earlier ones, about the historical space of
Orthodoxy, most Western Europeans probably identify Orthodoxy with
imperial Byzantine machinations or with tsarist feudalism. But Orthodoxy
does not in the least identify with them. On the contrary, the true,
holy, Orthodox teachers fought against injustice and oppression,
wherever it may have come from. Orthodoxy also does not identify with
any rich and powerful ecclesiastic establishment that “manages” people's
faith and superstitions. The Body of Christ (the Church) consists of
God’s people, - of all people, clergy and laity, men
and women, children and adults, rich and poor, educated and illiterate,
rulers and workers, even virtuous and sinful, brave and cowardly,
believers and unbelievers, are
invited to unite on par with
fellow man, with Jesus Christ, with the Triune God, and by extension with
all beings, and to reach (while still living, not just 'after death')
the most perfect possible spiritual state: to become ‘gods by grace’ -
that is, saints - and to reign with Christ in His eternal Realm.
It is a way of life, which, when followed with seriousness and
consistency, leads man to the healing of his soul from the passions
(that is, from whatever causes him dependency) and the establishment
within him of humble and selfless love for all people and all beings.
All the elements that this way of life contains, such as confession,
Holy Communion, prayer, fasting, but also the practice of the virtues,
exist to help man walk this path - the path that Christ Himself had
taught.
Historically, hundreds of thousands of people of every era have
progressed spiritually along this path and have become saints. Of
course, not even in traditionally Orthodox nations do all people follow
this path, especially in our time, as the ideological currents of the
West are spreading through all the lands (including Greece), making spiritual
confusion spread more and more. However this path is a fundamental
element of our civilization and is followed even today by many; in
fact, it is also being discovered by
increasingly more people.
Important holy teachers of the 20th
century, as well as Orthodox
thinkers (from St. John Maximovich to St. Sophrony of Essex; of the
fathers and academics, George Florovsky and John Romanides to Fr.
Nicholas Loudovikos and several others from Western countries are also
mentioned below), have enriched recent bibliography with exceptional
works, which can now inform the reader about the authentic character of
Orthodoxy.
In Western Europe, 'liberation from religion'
was inevitably not accompanied by any moral progress, nor, of course, by
the acquisition of happiness.
Even
today the world is ruled by the potentates of wealth, while the laity is
sinking in despair and misery -
albeit in a different manner than during the era of feudalism, or even
later on, during the industrial revolution. Thus,
in their search for substitutes to fill the spiritual void left by the
expulsion of religion, people have been resorting to new 'opiates', such
as yoga, ecological and social activism, cultural events, the internet
or social networks. The demand for freedom and justice continues to
plague Western Europe, exactly as it did during the Age of
“Enlightenment”.
Just
as a West European person does not suspect that the “Christianity” of
his medieval ancestors is a mosaic of heresies, he likewise does not
suspect that in the past, more than a thousand years
(before the Great Schism of 1054),
Western Europe was an Orthodox Christian continent.
Nowadays many assert that we share a “common religious heritage” of the
first thousand years of Christianity together with the “Roman Catholic
Church”. Unfortunately, this is untrue. Although it is self-evident that
in the Roman Catholic world (as in many other religions) many
commendable personalities have emerged - full of sincerity and love -
the truth is that the “Roman Catholic Church” is the rejection and the
negation of the authentic Christian origins.
Orthodoxy indeed has a common religious tradition with
Western Europe – but of the early Christian centuries
– however, contemporary Western Europe did not continue to pursue this
tradition.
In their past, Western European peoples had
hundreds of their own saints, ascetics, martyrs, spiritual fighters and
teachers, who were
Orthodox
saints, ascetics, fighters, etc.3,
whose spiritual heritage was disregarded when Catholicism dominated the
Western European territories, altering Christianity from a path of love,
healing, self-knowledge and holiness, into an oppressive superstition.
Thus arises a
strong and urgent necessity,
not only for the discovery by Western European brethren of their ancient
Christian roots, but more importantly for
their
return to them.
This return is regarded as necessary and urgent, for serious reasons
such as:
A)
Orthodoxy is the authentic, original European spiritual heritage, the
one that can offer every European inner peace, self-knowledge and joy
and can also heal wounds, both of individuals and of society. The
constant and uncompromising struggle of the holy Fathers and Teachers of
Orthodoxy for fellow-man is evidence of a treasury of spiritual energy
which drives a person to action: action that is motivated by love and
forgiveness (also providing all the means necessary for their
acquisition and cultivation), not hatred, nor the relentless demand for
justice or the thirst for revenge.
B)
Regardless of individual beliefs, it must be reassured with awareness
and honesty that Orthodoxy is the path for man’s union with God, through
Christ – a union that also constitutes the union of love for one another
- among people, and with the whole of God's creation - of all beings.
In our day and age, what Western man is
seeking from within the pantheism of Native Americans or the Shamans or
the mystical practices of Buddhism and Hinduism (i.e., harmony with the
self and with the almost obliterated
-by
their own civilization- natural environment to become 'one with
creatures'), is actually the heart of their true spiritual
Tradition, which they had abandoned ages ago - even though in
close proximity, the neighboring Orthodox countries had never
abandoned that original Tradition.
More
accurately, it was never
entirely abandoned, because
(indicatively), Greek societies had suffered serious defeats (including
spiritual ones) from Western expansionism, and their losses were heavy.
But,
thank God, holy people still exist, in the streets of their cities, in
their villages, in their forests, as well as in their monasteries.
C)
The truly common, original Christian Tradition of Europe - which is a
unifying factor for the European peoples of East and West - is
Orthodoxy. Orthodoxy unites the peoples of Eastern Europe and it should
be acknowledged as the most precious treasure. It also unites them with
the peoples of the West. Without Orthodoxy – if one may say so – in
essence it will be very difficult to find connecting links with the
West.
The history of the last centuries has been
separating East from West, whereas Orthodoxy only connects them.
The ideas and practices of the Franks
-and
later of Catholicism- had been condemned as heretical by the Ecumenical
Councils of 879-880 and 1341 (which are regarded by some to be the 8th
and 9th
Ecumenical Councils respectively), while a direct and analytical
condemnation of the papal heresies can be found in the
1848
Council of the Patriarchates of the East, and of course in a large
number of individual holy Fathers and Teachers of Orthodoxy - from Saint
Mark of Ephesus to contemporary
Saint Justin Popovich
– and even Westerners, such as Popes John VIII, who participated in the
Council of 879-880, and also Leo III.
Hence,
it is not a question of whether Catholicism perhaps “is not a heresy”;
this fact is also revealed by common sense: a simple comparison of
Catholicism’s history with the Gospel (with shining exceptions, as
already mentioned above) is enough to reveal the vast gulf that
separates them.
The same applies to the Protestant sphere and of course to the
Pentecostals and the so-called 'born again' or the 'charismatic
Christians' (groups that fall into a trance and believe that 'the Holy
Spirit' enters them and leads them into various prophetic and miraculous
situations) – all of which have practically nothing in common with the
Orthodox – the exception being their invocation of a general faith in
Christ (4).
However, the necessity for the return of the
Western Europeans to their Orthodox roots by no means implies a return
'to us' - to
a specific ‘Orthodox embrace' - since all human beings likewise need a
return to Christ. It means exactly what was said previously:
a
return to one’s proper self.
The
West may have discovered “human rights” for every person and citizen,
for all ages, for both genders, at educational and economic levels... as
well as for the rights of animals, plants and the planet itself (which
are often inspired by pagan or pantheistic cultures of other
civilizations). However, it was not the West which had discovered the
way for man to transcend passions and show respect (in practice) to the
aforementioned rights of others, nor the path (through that said
respect) that leads mankind to its divine destination.
Of
course the West remains unaware of the (existing) sources of
inspiration on these issues by which it can be guided: that is, by the
lives and teachings of (even its own) ancient saints, the unified and
Orthodox Western saints, with their particular cultural characteristics,
but nonetheless belonging to the universal Orthodox Church.
In recent years, a number of spiritual seekers have appeared in the
Western world, who are discovering the ancient Christian Church –
Orthodoxy
- and finding the confidence to join it.
To
mention some examples: the Spanish Franciscan monk
Paul de Ballester Convalier
(who was murdered in Mexico in 1984, after having been ordained an
Orthodox bishop); the French monk
Fr. Placide Deseille; the French
Professor of Patrology Jean-Claude Larchet (author of the work
The
Healing of Spiritual Diseases, in which he highlights the
therapeutic
character
of Orthodoxy);
the English professor of the University of Oxford and Bishop of
Diokleia, Fr. Kallistos Ware;
the Swiss theologian and monk
Fr. Gabriel Bunge;
the American philosopher Fr. Seraphim Rose; the well-traveled spiritual
seeker Klaus Kenneth, e.a.. Of course, there are thousands more
examples. A particularly characteristic case is of a Protestant
Confession in the USA, which returned to Orthodoxy in the 1980s in its
entirety, together with its priests and bishops, after their meticulous
research into the ancient sources of Christianity. Their history is
recorded by their bishop, Fr. Peter Gilquist, in his book “Becoming
Orthodox”.
Albeit beyond Europe, it is worth mentioning
that in Latin America there has been a
movement towards Orthodoxy of hundreds of thousands of people in recent
years, especially in
Guatemala,
who have departed from Catholicism and the “charismatic movement” sphere.
This
is Europe’s future.
With
sincere love and respect for everyone, it must be stressed that outside
of Orthodoxy - even in the noblest, atheistic, humanitarian activisms,
or in the wanderings through the streets of ancient European paganism,
of magic, and of Asian mysticism,
hell rages,
relentlessly: the personal hell of loneliness, despair, depression, and
the social hell of the domination of the neo-colonialist giants of
Economy, who manage the fate of all the peoples - not just in a certain
continent, but in the entire planet.
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** NOTES **
(1)
Various related news articles:
·
Isabel Vaughan-Spruce: Arrested for silent prayer
·
Woman paid £13k after silent prayer arrest
·
Silent prayer outside abortion clinics to be banned under new law
·
2024 Annual Report – United Kingdom Section
·
Army veteran convicted for silent prayer near abortion clinic
·
BBC News: Silent prayer arrest and settlement
·
The Public Order Act 2023 – UK Legislation.
(2)
Although it may be redundant for some
Roman Catholic readers, there is a link by the Rev.Metropolitan
Hierotheos of Nafpaktos and Saint Vlasios, here:
Basic points of difference between the Orthodox Church and Papism
(3)
To name a few of the ancient saints of the West:
Irenaeus of Lyons, Clement of Rome, Hilarion of Poitiers, Martin of
Rome, Gregory Dialogus,
John Cassian of Autun,
Ambrose of Milan,
Martin of Tours,
Dionysus and Genevieve of Paris, Benedict of Nursia, David of Wales,
Columba of Iona, Cuthbert of Lindisfarne,
Patrick of Ireland,
Hilda of Whitby, Isidore and Leander of Seville, and many others...
For the Orthodox roots of the West, there are several other sources that
may be of added interest to Greek speaking readers - for example in the
books by Professor George Piperakis, “Ç
åí
Ïñèïäïîßá
ÇíùìÝíç
Åõñþðç”
(Europe United in Orthodoxy), Eptalofos publications, Athens 1997, and “ÐáíÜãéïí
Ïñèïäüîùí
Áãßùí”
(All-holy Orthodox Saints), Metamorfosis Sotiros publications, Milesi
2006; in the book by Christoforos Commodatus, Bishop of Telmissos, "Ïé
Üãéïé
ôùí
Âñåôôáíéêþí
ÍÞóùí”
(Saints of the British Isles), Athens 1985, but also in the book by
Hieromonk Damascenos, “Father
Seraphim Rose – His life and Works”,
Vol.B, Myriobiblos publications 2006, chapter 78 “Orthodox Roots in the
West), pp.520-543.
Additional links are available at the following addresses:
-Pre-Schism Orthodox Saints of the West
-Orthodox Saints who evangelized Western Europe and
Scandinavia
-Index of British & Celtic Orthodoxy
-A Brief History of the Orthodox Church in the British
Isles
There are also very many Orthodox sites by Metropolises and Parishes in
Western European countries, including related dedications in the
periodical “The Orthodox Word”, editions 64, 72 and 74 (here) (4) On this matter one can refer to the work by Fr. Seraphim Rose, “Orthodoxy and the Religion of the Future” ed. 2011 (in full, here) and the book by Fr. Alexios of Karakalou Monastery, Holy Mountain, publ. 2006: “ In Peace Let Us Pray to the Lord: An Orthodox Interpretation of the Gifts of the Spirit” (English publication) .
Translation AN |
Article published in English on: 17-01-2026.
Last update: 21-01-2026.