The Papacy
The Council of Florence
At the council of Florence
the Eastern representatives accepted a strong doctrine of papal power -
although the issue was not deeply discussed - and the doctrines of
filioque and purgatory. The Byzantine emperor pressed to stop
theological discussions in the hopes of completing the union. All the
Orthodox bishops signed the union statement except Mark Eugenikos, the
bishop of Ephesus.
The union of Florence was not
publicly proclaimed until 1452 in Hagia Sophia in Constantinople. On May
29, 1453, the Turks under Mohammed II took the city which was renamed
Istanbul, marking the end of the Byzantine Empire. The first act of the
patriarch Gennadios Scholarios after the fall of Constantinople was to
repudiate the union of Florence. The patriarch was under strong pressure
of St. Mark of Ephesus in this action. Saint Mark, the firm defender of
Orthodoxy against what has come to be called through him the
"unrighteous union," was canonized a saint for his actions.
Russia
Just as the Byzantine empire
was falling to the Moslems, the seeds of the coming Russian empire were
beginning to take root in Moscow. Ivan III the Great (1462-1505), the
Muscovite prince, succeeded in extending his role in the Russian north
by defeating and annexing Novgorod. He married the Byzantine princess
Sophia Paleologos in 1472, and accepted the title of Tsar (the Slav form
of the old Russian imperial title of Caesar) and the symbol of the
double-headed eagle. The ideology of Moscow as the "third Rome" after
Constantinople was being born.
In fifteenth-century Russia a
great controversy was waged over the role which the Church should play
relative to the political and social life of the nation. The two leaders
of the controversy - both of whom shared the legacy of Saint Sergius,
and both of whom are canonized saints of the Church - were Nilus of the
Sora (Nil Sorsky, 1433-1508) and Joseph of Volotsk (1439-1515).
Saint Nilus led the party of
the "non-possessors" who lived beyond the Volga River. They are
sometimes called the "transvolgans." The "non-possessors" held that the
Church, particularly the monasteries, should be free from owning and
ruling over large properties. They held that the Church should be free
from the direct influence and control of the state. They defended
poverty as the chief virtue, with humility and spiritual freedom
dominating the contemplative, silent life for monks. They were the
inheritors of the mystical, hesychastic, and kenotic tradition of Saint
Sergius and early Kievan spirituality.
The "possessors" were led by
Saint Joseph. Hence, they are sometimes called the "Josephites." They
held that the Church and state should be in the closest possible
relationship, and that the Church should serve the social and political
needs of the emerging Russian nation. The ideal of the "possessors" was
that the Church, particularly the monasteries, should control vast
properties. The Church should foster a life of ascetic discipline and
social service among the people which would be rooted in the strict
observance of liturgical and cultic rituals. In this tendency the
"possessors" also followed the tradition of Saint Sergius. Both Saint
Sergius and Metropolitan Alexius played a very prominent role in Russian
social and political life of the fourteenth century, as well as
continuing the original Byzantine legacy of the Russian Church and
nation which was present in the land from its earliest Kievan
beginnings.
Although the spirit of the
"non-possessors" always remained in Russian Orthodoxy, it was the way of
the "possessors" which dominated Russian ecclesiastical and national
development in subsequent centuries.
The Fall of Byzantium
Serbia fell to the Turks in
1459, Greece in 1459-60, Bosnia in 1463, and Egypt finally in 1517. For
the next four hundred years the Moslem Turks held sway over the Orthodox
Christians in the former Byzantine empire in the East.
The West
From: Bible and
Church History by Fr. Thomas Hopko, Dept. of Religous Education -
Orthodox Church in America, Crestwood, New York