I must admit that I was unaware of much of Church History prior to this exploration. I never thought twice about the fact that I was familiar with a portion of the first century Church, and then my knowledge of Church History went straight to the Reformation and the life story of Martin Luther, and then continued through the development of the Protestant Reformation up to the present day. It was almost as if I was blinded in some way to consider the previous 14 centuries of Church History prior to Martin Luther, since most of American Christian content on Church History willfully neglects to comment on much of what happened between the early Church and the Reformation, and almost never documents the development of the Church in the East (which is ironic, since Christianity is mostly an Eastern faith; it was born out of the Middle East). I was pretty familiar with what happened with the Protestant Reformation and how it developed in both Europe and the Americas. But to consider Christianity spreading in Greece, India, Asia Minor, the Byzantine Empire, Russia, and Africa was unknown to me.
One of the biggest blind spots for me was in regards to the writings of St. Ignatius of Antioch, whose writings are compiled in “The Apostolic Fathers”. My limited scope of understanding assumed that the Protestant view was accurate, but I had never actually searched out the matter like a Berean and actually read what St. Ignatius said himself (and whether it was confirmed by other writers close to the time period considered). The Protestant view is that St. Ignatius of Antioch, although being ordained as the bishop of Antioch by the apostle Peter, was the “first” (supposedly) to recommend that the Church initiate an episcopal form of governance, and that this was not the intention of the apostle Peter or the other apostles. It is believed that Ignatius, being much younger than the apostles, somehow saw an opportunity to seize power and control the Christians in his region by commanding that they all “submit to the bishop, and only do what he commands, as if they were submitting to Christ”. However, after actually reading the writings of St. Ignatius and St. Clement of Rome, St. Clement claims that the apostle Peter and all the apostles commanded them to fill the vacancies of their apostolic offices since they were fully aware that they were approaching martyrdom. See the following quote from his First Epistle to the Corinthians:
“The Apostles received the gospel for us from the Lord Jesus Christ: Jesus Christ was sent from God. Thus Christ is from God, the Apostles from Christ: in both cases, the process was orderly, and derived from the will of God… They [the Apostles] preached in the country and town, and appointed their first fruits, after testing them by the Spirit, to be bishops and deacons of those who were going to believe. And this was no novelty… Our apostles also knew, through our Lord Jesus Christ, that there would be strife on the question of the bishop’s office. Therefore… they appointed the aforesaid persons and later made further provision, that if they should fall asleep, other tested men should succeed to their ministry”. - St. Clement of Rome
After reading this, I recalled the writings in the Gospels which show a clear passing of authority to the apostles from Christ Himself:
"He who hears you hears Me, he who rejects you rejects Me, and he who rejects Me rejects Him who sent Me.” (Luke 10:16)
So Jesus said to them again, “Peace to you! As the Father has sent Me, I also send you.” And when He had said this, He breathed on them, and said to them, “Receive the Holy Spirit. If you forgive the sins of any, they are forgiven them; if you retain the sins of any, they are retained.” John 20:21-23
But, I thought only God has the authority to forgive sins? Not according to Jesus, the Pharisees actually were the ones who said that (Mark 2:6-7). Jesus gave complete authority to His apostles to determine who would and who would not be forgiven.
The question is, however, whether this authority (if they accept you, they accept Me, if you forgive them they’re forgiven, if you don’t forgive them they’re not forgiven etc.), continued after the apostles were martyred and went to be with Christ.
I saw this line of thinking evidenced in the Gospels themselves, where Jesus opened the understanding of the apostles to comprehend the Scriptures and where Jesus unveiled to them all that was written in the Law, Psalms, and Prophets concerning Him (Luke 24:45). Following this logic, in the book of Acts, Peter quotes the Psalms in reference to appointing Matthias as a replacement for Judas, which when harmonizing these concepts together, appears to me to be something Peter didn’t invent of his own accord, but was in line with Jesus’ expository explanation of opening the Psalms for the apostles to understand (Luk. 24:45; Acts 1:15-20; Psa. 109:8). So, Matthias replacing Judas was actually a commandment of Christ Himself, before he ascended to be with the Father.
Since Christ was a fulfillment of Moses, Aaron, and King David (as prophet, king, and high priest), it doesn’t seem surprising to me now that Jesus actually commanded the apostles on how they should continue to worship and organize the future Church. For Moses went up to the mountain, and God commanded him exactly, down to the most minute detail, how to arrange the tabernacle for liturgical worship and what to deliver to the Israelites in the Ten Commandments, and the remainder of the Law (Heb 8:5). I began to think, why exactly would Jesus, who was much greater than Moses (Heb. 3:1-6), fail to tell the apostles every minute detail on how to arrange the Future Church and its liturgical worship, and how to continue the furtherance of the truth entrusted to them?
Jesus spent 40 days with his disciples after His resurrection, which appears to me to be plenty of time to reveal all of these things. Yet, not wanting to run with this train of thought without considering opposing views, I realized that there was probably much that Jesus did not reveal to His disciples, since Peter was unaware that Gentiles would be welcomed into the Church until he was surprised by this fact (Acts 9-10), and the first Ecumenical Council was necessary when Judaizers began to thwart the gospel forcing Gentiles to become Jewish in order to be Christian (Acts 15).
So, it appears that Jesus only gave them what was necessary, and allowed the Holy Spirit to lead them into all truth regarding the rest. But the question remains as to whether Christ passed down a form of liturgical worship as part of that “necessary bit”, and I now think it’s probably extremely unlikely that He did not include directions regarding this. We may rightly ask why these things were not written down, but much of the Church’s worship was not written down for fear of it being exploited by the ungodly (Matt. 7:6). Also, Jesus said that the Spirit would take of what was His and provide it to them (John 16:14). And this brings to mind my belief that if Christ promised the Holy Spirit to lead the apostles into all truth (John 16:13), then all of the conciliar and corporate decisions of the apostles together while they were alive would be just as good and authoritative as the Scriptures themselves. And if they intended on passing their office down to the next generation, then they would tell those remaining bishops that all the things Christ had entrusted to them, like the Spirit leading them into all truth, and the power to forgive or not forgive, would continue to the next generation as well.
The fact that the Church existed for decades before the first epistle or gospel were even written down was something that I had to come to terms with. The primitive Church didn't even have the New Testament officially until the 4th century. If the written New Testament is so essential to salvation, why did it take so long for the Church to officially compile it?
If St. Ignatius was operating of his own accord, outside of the will of the apostles, then the Protestant view may be correct. But after actually reading Ignatius, his humility oozes out of his words, and the fact that he died a martyr’s death, makes me believe that he was not lying but telling the truth. And since St. Paul commands us that love “believes all things” (1. Cor. 13:7), I have no footing with which to stand on to doubt that this man truly heard from the apostles what they had heard from the Spirit, and that the office of the apostles would continue on throughout the ages until Christ returns. On the account of two or three witnesses (Matt. 18:16; Deut. 17:6), I must accept this as gospel truth (one only has to read the Apostolic Fathers to come to this conclusion). To follow the opinions of church historians who developed ideas out of necessity for being excommunicated from the Church prior (or separating themselves from an ungodly, corrupt Roman papacy), that don’t even match with the Scriptures themselves, to me doesn’t seem safe. I had heard from a pastor once who used to say that deacons were “all the men and women who served and volunteered at the church”, even though the Scriptures paint a completely different picture and give specific requirements for deacons, that they must be married husbands of one wife, and describe them accordingly for an apparent other role, which has remained in effect in the Orthodox Church to this day (1 Tim. 3:8-13).
If Christ revealed all that was written concerning Him in the Old Testament (Luk. 24:45), I would find it odd that he would not reference the liturgical form of worship that the Orthodox Church follows (and has followed for 2000 years), since much of the Law that Christ would have revealed to them would have included the Jewish liturgical worship rites. For those who don’t know, the Eastern Orthodox Liturgy, like the one written by St. James the Apostle (the earliest known one, that was written down at a later date), is essentially a continuation of 2nd temple synagogue worship with Christian fulfillment terminology instead of Jewish terminology awaiting the Messiah. The worship service (or Divine Liturgy), was a corporate “work of all the Christian people” to join together in unison and worship the Holy Trinity and perform a bloodless sacrifice, which was not Christ dying again on the cross (for He died once for all, Heb. 9:12), but a mystical celebration (outside of time) of both the original Last Supper and crucifixion of Christ, and yet also the future Marriage Supper of the Lamb. The Eastern Orthodox believe, as far as I’m aware, that all true Christians are present at that mystical supper, with the body of Christ of future generations being present in Christ and the twelve apostles in the upper room at the Last Supper, and all of us being present in the final inaugurated kingdom at the end of time, and the present day Christians who celebrate each Divine Liturgy are participating in that ONE Christian celebration of the life, death, and resurrection of Christ, both in 33 AD in the upper room, and concurrently at the inauguration of Christ’s kingdom after the judgment of the world (simultaneously, in a mystical sense). When thinking of us Christians as the body of Christ (1 Cor. 12:27), it is not odd that the Orthodox Church has a liturgical calendar which follows the life of Christ through the sacred writings, because we believe we are participating in those events even now in the present day, and will again in the future inaugurated kingdom of God, for Christ’s words (and I might boldly add his “actions”) will never pass away, although this world will (Matt. 24:35). For although Christ was crucified at a specific point in human history, in a mystical sense, it also took place before the foundation of the world (Rev. 13:8).
Along this topic of the Divine Liturgy, this is not something that isn’t in the Bible, because in the book of Acts it says that Paul and Barnabas were “liturgizing” to the Lord (Many translations change this word to “ministering”, but it really means “as they performed the liturgy”), when the Holy Spirit spoke to them and said “Separate for Me Paul and Barnabas for the work that I have called them” (Acts 13:2). St. Paul said he was a steward of the mysteries of God (1 Cor. 4:1), which is the same Greek word (and later, Latin) translated “sacraments” in the Orthodox Church from the beginning. Even the prophet Malachi predicted that the Gentiles will worship with incense from the rising to the setting of the sun (Mal. 1:11), foreseeing the Divine Liturgy within the Church.
But regarding the Church, it appears to me there are several passages which do not leave any room for division. Many times I’ve thought in the past of the common Protestant saying, “In essentials, unity. In non-essentials, liberty. In all things, charity”. But these passages of Scripture seem to leave no room for non-essentials, and that separating from the body of Christ is something not to be done at any cost:
1 Cor. 1:10: Now I plead with you, brethren, by the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, that you all speak the same thing, and that there be no divisions among you, but that you be perfectly joined together in the same mind and in the same judgment.
2 Cor. 13:11: Finally, brethren, farewell. Become complete. Be of good comfort, be of one mind, live in peace; and the God of love and peace will be with you.
Phil. 1:27: Only let your conduct be worthy of the gospel of Christ, so that whether I come and see you or am absent, I may hear of your affairs, that you stand fast in one spirit, with one mind striving together for the faith of the gospel,
Phil. 2:2: fulfill my joy by being like-minded, having the same love, being of one accord, of one mind.
Phil. 3:16: Nevertheless, to the degree that we have already attained, let us walk by the same rule, let us be of the same mind.
1 Pet. 3:8: Finally, all of you be of one mind, having compassion for one another; love as brothers, be tenderhearted, be courteous;
Eph. 4:4-6: There is one body and one Spirit, just as you were called in one hope of your calling; one Lord, one faith, one baptism; one God and Father of all, who is above all, and through all, and in you all.
St. John Chrysostom once said (and I loosely paraphrase), “There is no unity unless we all believe the same things”. And I think he’s right!
If one sees these passages above and claims that these exhortations were only written for the individual churches that were being written too, do not be surprised if everything else in these epistles do not apply to you then, for with the same measure you use, will be meted back to you (Matt. 7:1-2). At least this is the conclusion I have come to, for I no longer want to participate in works of the flesh like divisions and schisms (Gal. 5:20), even if they began centuries before. To whom much is given, much is required (Luk. 12:48).
The Eastern Orthodox Church is the only one I’m aware of that hasn’t separated itself from the original One Church. Everyone else has either separated themselves by not adhering to an Ecumenical Council (like the Coptic Church after the 4th Ecumenical Council), or the Roman Church which “excommunicated” the rest of the Church outside Rome (which, essentially, was an excommunicating of itself since there was no Pope prior to this in 1054).
There is power in the Church, and despite my previous belief of thinking that the Bible was the foundation of truth, St. Paul actually didn’t say that (he said that the ‘Church was the foundation of truth’):
1 Tim. 3:15: but if I am delayed, I write so that you may know how you ought to conduct yourself in the house of God, which is the church of the living God, the pillar and ground [foundation] of the truth.
The question becomes, what is the Church, then? By necessity, Protestantism must believe that the Church is invisible, composed of anyone who loves and follows Jesus Christ in sincerity, despite what physical or visible body they are joined to. This is a necessity because there are over 33,000 denominations in the Protestant faith, and Protestants rightly assume that there are some true believers and some untrue believers in mostly every congregation. This, however, doesn’t mean that these congregations are in fellowship with the physical, visible Church on earth (connected to Christ and the apostles), because there must essentially be a line back to the original apostles, without a prior breaking of the Communion of the one Church. One might argue, whether from the Roman Catholic Church, or the Anglican Church, that they can trace their roots back to the original apostles (which is true). But the Catholics used to reject the Anglicans because of the Anglicans breaking fellowship with Rome, and the Catholics also formerly rejected the Eastern Orthodox (although now Catholicism has recently within the last few decades accepted the Eastern Orthodox and Protestants as they’ve become more liberal), and the Eastern Orthodox churches don’t commune with the Catholics or any churches that proceeded from the West after the Roman bishop changed the Nicene creed without an Ecumenical Council, which was a requirement for any major update to doctrine, especially Trinitarian doctrine.
Now, one may assume, that after further research, I may become Catholic (because I'm sure there's a lot more I don't know about... and since I was originally baptized in St. Matthias Roman Catholic Church in New Jersey, which I am eternally grateful for, by the way, I find it unlikely. There is a passage of Scripture I read once, which I felt spoke to me in a mystical sense:
"He said to him the third time, “Simon, son of Jonah, do you love Me?” Peter was grieved because He said to him the third time, “Do you love Me?”
And he said to Him, “Lord, You know all things; You know that I love You.”
Jesus said to him, “Feed My sheep. Most assuredly, I say to you, when you were younger, you girded yourself and walked where you wished; but when you are old, you will stretch out your hands, and another will gird you and carry you where you do not wish.”
This He spoke, signifying by what death he would glorify God. And when He had spoken this, He said to him, “Follow Me.”
Then Peter, turning around, saw the disciple whom Jesus loved following, who also had leaned on His breast at the supper, and said, “Lord, who is the one who betrays You?” Peter, seeing him, said to Jesus, “But Lord, what about this man?”
Jesus said to him, “If I will that he remain till I come, what is that to you? You follow Me.”
Then this saying went out among the brethren that this disciple would not die. Yet Jesus did not say to him that he would not die, but, “If I will that he remain till I come, what is that to you?”
John 21:17-23
Although this passage clearly denotes that Jesus is prophesying about Peter's martyrdom, in a mystical sense, I believe it is also a prophecy of their future apostolic offices. Peter, establishing the see of Rome, and John, establishing the see of the East. Peter's spiritual offspring would take the Roman office into territory he would have never wanted, but the East would remain as undivided until Christ's return. This is pure speculation, and I cannot say it dogmatically, but it rang true with me. Although the Eastern Orthodox Church has begun to have its own infightings, I think they have still maintained unity despite all of this, and I venture to think they will until the Second Advent.
Along this topic of various Christians with varying opinions regarding the nature of the true Church, we see a hint at God's heart in the Gospels where Christ does not condemn others who utilized His saving name, but rather saw them not as enemies, but as fellow workers, even though they currently weren't part of Christ’s closest disciples (Luke 9:49-50). Whether some of those believers remained separated from the Church post-Pentecost or not is unknown, but I would assume that they would require the laying on of hands from the true Church, since this was necessary for a group of John the Baptist’s disciples in Ephesus in Acts 19:1-7. So, it is my belief that Christ can be called upon for salvation, and the Holy Spirit can operate outside of the visible, physical Church on earth, yet the “fullness” of the Faith is found within the Eastern Orthodox’s unbreaking communion going back to the apostles without the tarnishing of false doctrine or falling away of the organized Church.
When I came in line with this reasoning, I began to play devil’s advocate and say, well clearly there must have been ungodly bishops at some point of the History of the Eastern Orthodox Church (since it was definitely the Case in the Roman Church); I think that is probably an accurate assessment. But just because there were good and evil kings who rose up in both the northern and southern kingdoms of Israel and Judah (1 and 2 Kings), did not make it that the entire nation was no longer God’s people (although it had a negative influence on the people of the kingdom).
The office of the bishop (along with the giftings given to the individuals within the office) remained pure and connected to its source (Christ Himself), even if the individual bishops were tares or ungodly themselves. The question is not whether it’s possible for a bishop to become ungodly, but rather if an entire subset of the body of the Church falls away from the original structure set up by Christ and the apostles, and this is the case I believe for any groups excommunicated or that fell away from the original structure over the last 2000 years (including the Arians and any others who were condemned from Canon council law, and the entire Roman Church which then separated itself by initiating a papacy– and hence, any that sprung forth from Rome in the future).
I find it ironic that the first Pope of the Roman Catholic Church in 1054, who thought he was making a stand for the future unity of the Church, actually set the stage for the largest schism in the history of Christianity, which is the Protestant Reformation and the consistent splinterings which have occurred since (I suppose you reap what you sow!). The splintering of the Protestant world has become so much worse even in the last 15 years. I do not claim to predict anything, but it may be possible that American Protestant Christianity will fizzle out, for if it’s not of God it will be made clear by coming to nothing (Acts 5:38-39), or doctrines and practice will continue to get stranger and stranger as we approach the end. As a Protestant, I always thought that unless I personally fell away or sinned or had a wrong understanding of the Bible, that only I would be affected. But throughout the Scriptures, God judges nations and peoples corporately. We praise a man for his godliness when he prays for the state of our country corporately and takes responsibility for the entire sins of the country, even though he may not have participated in them individually. In the same way, Protestant pastors and leaders may find they could be held accountable for other people within their camp, despite whatever brazen individuality they claim. One might see themselves as a finger in the body of Christ, but if the hand is cut off and thrown in the fire due to an infection, all the fingers on the hand suffer (Mark 9:43). This is mere speculation, but not something I feel is safe for me to be a part of. The Eastern Orthodox haven't changed their core views for centuries. I used to think that we should just wait for God to bring another revival, because it appears that after every revival, future generations fall away. But now being 500 years removed from the initial Reformation, much of the fruit of the Reformation is not good, while the Eastern Orthodox Church has continued to produce saints, wonderworkers, and miraculous deeds (if one is willing to research this) by maintaining the unity in the strictest sense (Matt. 7:15-20).
I came to the conclusion, for my own walk with God, that being joined to the Eastern Orthodox Church was a matter of spiritual survival for me. Others will have to decide for themselves, but I believe God will judge us based on what we know, not based on what we don’t know. The Church has been divided for over 900 years, and I believe that the Holy Spirit and Christ can operate outside the Church (Mat. 19:26; 1 Cor. 5:12), but I do not want to be outside of it any longer:
“The episcopate is one…The Church is one… So also, the Church, flooded with the light of the Lord, extends her rays all over the globe, yet it is one light which is diffused everywhere and the unity of the body is not broken up.
This sacrament of unity [the Church], this bond of peace inseparable and indivisible, is indicated when in the Gospel the robe of the Lord Jesus Christ was not divided at all or rent, but they cast lots for the raiment… so the raiment was received whole and the robe was taken unspoilt and undivided.
And the Church is made up of the people united to their priest, the flock cleaving to its shepherd. Hence you should know that the bishop is in the Church, and the Church in the bishop, and that if anyone is not with the bishop he is not with the Church… the Church is catholic (i.e., full) and one, and may not be sundered or divided but should assuredly be kept together and united by the glue which is the mutual adherence of the priest.”
-St. Cyprian of Carthage, On the Unity of the Catholic Church
I tend to speculate that when Rome broke off from the Eastern bishops, it was the beginning of the Great Falling Away. It was the beginning of massive division within the One Church, and then the Protestant Reformation was the reaping of what Rome sowed in 1054 with the East. Martin Luther approached the Eastern Orthodox to join their ranks when he was forced out of the Roman Church, but they rejected his false doctrines inherited by St. Augustine, whose theology was later condemned by the Church, yet while St. Augustine personally was still considered a saint due to his character and life.
Seeing the fruit of the Roman Catholic Church since 1054 is pretty clear for me to see, that it is not within the confines of the true Church. Yes, I must say, that although there are some Protestants and Catholics who have sincere faith and the Holy Spirit, the Protestant churches appear to be so splintered. Consider the fruit of Martin Luther’s life and ministry, in today’s day and age; Martin Luther wouldn’t even be accepted in most of his own churches today (because they have watered down his initial beliefs so much). It’s a shame, but it’s clear that the fruit of Rome and the Reformation has created a ripple effect of sin, division, confusion, and false doctrine.
I think most Christians in America operate in a schismatic form today probably unbeknownst to them, because it is a normative part of American culture to be radically independent, rebellious to authority, focusing on personal individual liberty, and not being yoked to any parent authority that demands its taxes or its religious conformity. When I researched the various churches or teachers that I have listened to or attended over the years, it appears that they all began with a schism of some kind, disagreeing over some matters that others deemed essential, and so the answer has always been to start a new fellowship over it!
I believe these schisms are a work of the flesh, for which I want no further part in:
Gal. 5:19-21:
Now the works of the flesh are evident, which are: adultery, fornication, uncleanness, lewdness, idolatry, sorcery, hatred, contentions, jealousies, outbursts of wrath, selfish ambitions, dissensions, heresies [or “schisms”], envy, murders, drunkenness, revelries, and the like; of which I tell you beforehand, just as I also told you in time past, that those who practice such things will not inherit the kingdom of God.
For me, it became apparent that joining the Eastern Orthodox Church was one way to repent of this. Even Martin Luther attempted to do this and approached the Eastern Orthodox patriarch before building his church in Germany, but he was rejected because of his many false doctrines held that were developed by St. Augustine which had formerly been condemned. Luther wanted to join the Church of the East, but he was too small-minded to correct some of his own baggage which was inherited by the Roman Church he was kicked out of, and he almost succeeded in removing the epistle of James from his German bibles as well. Many other facts of Martin Luther’s life are further investigated in the book "Rock and Sand: An Orthodox Appraisal of the Protestant Reformers and Their Teachings", by Fr. Josiah Trenham, including Martin Luther’s failure to rebuke the governmental leaders of Germany to repent for various misdeeds and public sins (even though he had the power to influence them). There are accounts of many Orthodox bishops or saints being excommunicated by an evil patriarch or Emperor, and then often they were either later welcomed back into the Church after the evil men dropped dead (or were recognized shortly after they themselves died as saints when Orthodoxy became the norm again). Martin Luther could have remained in exile humbly and quietly and waited on the sovereignty of God, but instead took matters into his own hands and (I believe) didn't follow God's counsel, thus beginning a progeny of rebellion which continued for centuries to come.
The crux of the matter for me is the nature of the fullness of the Holy Spirit. St. John rightly points out that there are multiple spirits and teachers, who appear to be Christian but have a different spirit (1 John 4:1). I am not claiming that the former churches I attended are in this camp, in fact, I think out of any of the Protestant churches or teachers I could have been affiliated with, I was affiliated with some of the best (and for that I am eternally grateful). But it is interesting to me that much of the Protestant view about the invisibility of the Church proper, or the heavy emphasis on spirituality (almost to where the physical body is considered evil in and of itself, for merely being physical in nature) seems to be more in line with Gnostic thinking, than the Orthodox view that humans are not inherently evil (nor is the body or physical matter). The Gnostics shifted so far on the pendulum to the point where all physical matter was evil, and that Christ had not come in the flesh at all, but I think the Orthodox view of the body and physical matter versus spirituality is probably the most balanced, whereas I think many in the Protestant camp think that we’re all going to be floating around like ghosts for all eternity, and that the body is inherently evil (due to the Augustinian view of original sin, which the Orthodox Church rejects). After all, physical objects can contain the power of the Holy Spirit, as evidenced in Paul’s handkerchief (Acts 19:12) (and even Peter’s shadow–Acts 5:15), and there are scores of testimonies of Orthodox Christian saints’ bones after death emitting healing properties or remaining incorrupt or exorcisms after they died and left their body to be with Christ in Paradise (as is the case with my patron saint,
St. Philaret the Merciful of Asia Minor). I am not aware of any of these things currently still happening outside of the Eastern Orthodox Church, hence why I believe the “fullness” of the Holy Spirit exists within its walls. I am simply not content with only dipping my toes or ankles in the water any longer, but I desire to be fully immersed in the living water of life, the eternal life that Christ promises to those who obey His commandments (Ezek. 47:1-12).