Pre-Conciliar Epistle of Metropolitan Vitaly
To all the Most Reverend Bishops, the clergy of all degrees,
and pious laypeople
By the mercy of God our Church has already lived for eighty years beyond the
borders of Russia, with our episcopate, clergy and laypeople being dispersed
throughout the whole world. Our dioceses with their churches and
parishioners exist in every country of the free world. Proper ecclesiastical
order reigns everywhere, manifested in the regular prayerful life of our
Divine Services. That most lawful Patriarch of Russia, Tikhon, who was
lawfully and freely elected to this highest office in the hierarchy of
Russia, blessed all of us who left the borders of our fatherland and gave a
directive (No. 362) on the basis of which a new Church administration was
established outside Russia. Patriarch Tikhon himself, for his disobedience
to the Communist Party at that time, was condemned to die a martyr's death.
Metropolitan Anthony Khrapovitsky became the first leader of this Church. He
was succeeded by Metropolitan Anastassy and then by Metropolitan Philaret,
and now I, Metropolitan Vitaly, despite my unworthiness, am the fourth
Metropolitan. Thus the Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia possesses a
canonical Apostolic succession or, to put it more simply, the Divine Grace
of the Holy Spirit, flowing throughout the centuries from Our Saviour, the
Lord Jesus Christ Himself, and the Holy Apostles, to our own hierarchy; and
this will continue until this world ends with the dread Second Coming of the
Great Judge, Our Lord Jesus Christ.
In order to live this short earthly life of ours correctly and righteously,
we must be in the True Church of Christ. Here and here alone are imparted to
all of us the Divine Grace of the Holy Spirit through the Holy Sacraments -
Baptism, Chrismation, Repentance, and Communion of the Holy Body and Blood
of our very Saviour, Jesus Christ. And to the true Church of Christ it was
promised by her Saviour Himself that she would be invincible and
indestructible to the very last day of the existence of the earth and of the
whole human race.
We must ourselves understand, and also declare for all to hear, that since
1927, when Metropolitan Sergius signed his lamentable "declaration," and up
to the present day, our Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia has not had
and does not have any communion in prayer with the Moscow Patriachate, which
is nothing other than the uncanonical creation of the former Soviet regime.
By the same token we do not have spiritual communion with a single other
autocephalous Orthodox Church which lives its spiritual and liturgical life
according to the new calendar. What liturgical communion can we have, when
we are still fasting, but they are celebrating the Nativity of Christ by the
new calendar? According to our calendar we are praying to one saint, while
the new calendarists in their way are praying to a completely different
saint. In other words, any kind of communion has been destroyed, both in
prayer and also even in the sacraments.
And so I, as First Hierarch, am calling upon all of you to remain forever
faithful to our Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia and not to be
confused by those appeals which we are all hearing more and more often that
we should unite and concelebrate with others in the name of a loudly
proclaimed "brotherly love." Where is our "brotherly love" when we are
living, in that which is most important to us - our Divine Services -
according to different calendars, and living a different spiritual life? Let
us ponder the meaning of that most important phrase "Divine Service," which
is to say, "serving God" and then we will understand that in fact we are
serving God Himself in different ways.
Throughout the eighty years of the existence of our Russian Orthodox Church
Outside Russia we have not made one step into any dubious spiritual byways.
No doubtful "teachings" or errors have come from our Church and our
"Credo" - "I believe in One God ..." - which is sung at each Divine
Liturgy, remains our unsullied faith, by which we live, and through which we
dare to hope to share in the "life of the age to come." Amen.
Metropolitan Vitaly
1/14 August, 2000
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