Thursday, September 09, 2010

The Endangered Orthodox Patriarchate of Constantinople?

From Phil Lawler and Catholic Culture the other day:

The endangered Orthodox patriarchate of Constantinople
By Phil Lawler | September 07, 2010

The Patriarch of Constantinople is the leading figure in the Orthodox world, the “first among equals” of the Orthodox patriarchs. So it is no small matter that the current Ecumenical Patriarch, Bartholomew I, could be the last man to hold that title.

On the Get Religion site, Terry Mattingly calls attention to an unusually informative CNN story on the topic. As CNN reports, the Orthodox community in Constantinople (Istanbul) is dwindling, endangered by falling birth rates, an increasingly assertive (and sometimes violent) Muslim majority in the region, and the Turkish laws that place sharp restrictions on the Orthodox leadership.

But Mattingly observes that the otherwise excellent CNN story misses one other very crucial element. While discussing the Halki Orthodox seminary, which was closed by the government in 1971 and has not yet received permission to re-open, CNN notes that the Orthodox community is consequently suffering from a shortage of young priests. True, says Mattingly. But there’s more:

"Yet without the seminary’s monastic community, the Orthodox have no monks and, thus, no bishops, since Eastern Orthodoxy follows the ancient tradition of electing only celibate monks and priests as bishops.

"And if there are no Orthodox bishops who are from Turkey and trained in Turkey, this means that — according to Turkish law — there can be no new ecumenical patriarch, since this office must be held by a Turkish citizen."


So at some point in the foreseeable future, there may be no Patriarch of Constantinople. What would that mean for the unity of the Orthodox world? For the prospects of ecumenism? For the future of Christianity? We may find out.

Source: The Endangered Orthodox patriarchate of Constantinople

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