The following is a guide for
properly addressing Orthodox clergy. Most of the
titles do not exactly correspond to the terms used
in Greek, Russian, or the other native languages of
the National Orthodox Churches, but they have been
widely accepted as standard English usages.
Greeting Clergy in
Person. When we address Deacons or Priests,
we should use the title "Father." Bishops we should
address as "Your Grace." Though all Bishops
(including Patriarchs) are equal in the Orthodox
Church, they do have different administrative duties
and honors that accrue to their rank in this sense.
Thus, "Your Eminence" is the proper title for
Bishops with suffragans or assistant Bishops,
Metropolitans, and most Archbishops (among the
exceptions to this rule is the Archbishop of Athens,
who is addressed as "Your Beatitude"). "Your
Beatitude" is the proper title for Patriarchs
(except for the Œcumenical Patriarch in
Constantinople, who is addressed as "Your
All—Holiness"). When we approach an Orthodox
Presbyter or Bishop (but not a Deacon), we make a
bow by reaching down and touching the floor with our
right hand, place our right hand over the left
(palms upward), and say: "Bless, Father" (or "Bless,
Your Grace," or "Bless, Your Eminence," etc.). The
Priest or Bishop then answers, "May the Lord bless
you," blesses us with the Sign of the Cross, and
places his right hand in our hands. We kiss then his
hand.
We should understand that
when the Priest or Bishop blesses us, he forms his
fingers to represent the Christogram "ICXC"
a traditional abbreviation of the Greek words for
"Jesus Christ" This Christogram is
composed of the first and last letters of each of
the words "IHCOYC XRICTOC". Thus, the
Priest's blessing is in the Name of Christ, as he
emphasizes in his response to the believer's request
for a blessing. Other responses to this request are
used by many clergy, but the antiquity and symbolism
of the tradition which we have presented are
compelling arguments for its use. We should also
note that the reason that a lay person kisses the
hand of a Priest or Bishop is to show respect to his
Apostolic office. More importantly, however, since
both hold the Holy Mysteries in their hands during
the Divine Liturgy, we show respect to the Holy
Eucharist when we kiss their hands. In fact, Saint
John Chrysostom once said that if one were to meet
an Orthodox Priest walking along with an Angel, that
he should greet the Priest first and kiss his hand,
since that hand has touched the Body and Blood of
our Lord. For this latter reason, we do not normally
kiss the hand of a Deacon. [98] While a Deacon in
the Orthodox Church holds the first level of the
Priesthood (Deacon, Presbyter, Bishop), his service
does not entail blessing the Mysteries. When we take
leave of a Priest or Bishop, we should again ask for
a blessing, just as we did when we first greeted
him.
In the case of married
clergy, the wife of a Priest or Deacon is also
informally addressed with a title. Since the Mystery
of Marriage binds a Priest and his wife together as
"one flesh," [99] the wife shares in a sense her
husband's Priesthood. This does not, of course, mean
that she has the very Grace of the Priesthood or its
office, but the dignity of her husband's service
certainly accrues to her. [100] The various titles
used by the national Churches are listed below. The
Greek titles, since they have English
correspondents, are perhaps the easiest to use in
the West:
Greek: Presbytera
(Pres—vee—té—ra)
Russian: Matushka (Má—toosh—ka)
Serbian: Papadiya (Pa—pá—dee—ya)
Ukrainian: Panimatushka (Pa—nee—má—toosh—ka),
or Panimatka (Pa—nee—mát—ka)
The wife of a Deacon is
called "Diakonissa [Thee—a—kó—nees—sa]" in
Greek. The Slavic Churches commonly use the same
title for the wife of a Deacon as they do for the
wife of a Priest. In any case, the wife of a Priest
should normally be addressed with both her title and
her name in informal situations (e.g., "Presbytera
Mary," "Diakonissa Sophia," etc.).
Greeting Clergy on the
Telephone. Whenever you speak to Orthodox
clergy of Priestly rank on the telephone, you should
always begin your conversation by asking for a
blessing: "Father, bless." When speaking with a
Bishop, you should say "Bless, Despota [Thés—po—ta]"
(or "Vladika [Vlá—dee—ka]" in Slavonic,
"Master" in English). It is also appropriate to say,
"Bless, Your Grace" (or "Your Eminence," etc.). You
should end your conversation by asking for a
blessing again.
Addressing Clergy in a
Letter. When we write to a clergyman (and, by
custom, monastics), we should open our letter with
the greeting, "Bless, Father." At the end of the
letter, it is customary to close with the following
line: "Kissing your right hand...." It is not
appropriate to invoke a blessing on a clergyman, as
many do: "May God bless you." Not only does this
show a certain spiritual arrogance before the image
of the cleric, but laymen do not have the Grace of
the Priesthood and the prerogative to bless in their
stead. Even a Priest properly introduces his letters
with the words, "The blessing of the Lord" or "May
God bless you," rather than offering his own
blessing. Though he can do the latter, humility
prevails in his behavior, too. Needless to say, when
a clergyman writes to his ecclesiastical superior,
he should ask for a blessing and not bestow one.
Formal Address.
Deacons in the Orthodox Church are addressed as "The
Reverend Deacon," if they are married Deacons. If
they are Deacons who are also monks, they are
addressed as "The Reverend Hierodeacon." If a Deacon
holds the honor of Archdeacon or Protodeacon, he is
addressed as "The Reverend Archdeacon" or "The
Reverend Protodeacon." Deacons hold a rank in the
Priesthood and are, therefore, not laymen. This is
an important point to remember, since so many
Orthodox here in America have come to think of the
Deacon as a kind of "quasi—Priest." This is the
result of Latin influence and poor teaching. As
members of the Priesthood, Deacons must be
addressed, as we noted above, as "Father" (or
"Deacon Father").
Orthodox Priests
are addressed as "The Reverend Father,"
if they are married Priests. If they are
Hieromonks (monks who are also Priests),
they are addressed as "The Reverend
Hieromonk." Priests with special honors are
addressed in this manner: an Archimandrite (the
highest monastic rank below that of Bishop), "The
Very Reverend Archimandrite" (or, in the Slavic
jurisdictions, "The Right Reverend Archimandrite");
and Proto-presbyters, "The Very Reverend
Protopresbyter." In personal address, as we
noted above, all Priests are called "Father,"
usually followed by their first names (e.g., "Father
John").
Bishops in the Orthodox
Church are addressed as "The Right Reverend Bishop,"
followed by their first name (e.g., "The Right
Reverend Bishop John"). Archbishops, Metropolitans,
and Patriarchs are addressed as "The Most Reverend
Archbishop" ("Metropolitan," or "Patriarch").
Because they are also monastics, all ranks of
Archpastors (Bishops, Archbishops, Metropolitans, or
Patriarchs) are addressed by their first names or
first names and sees (e.g., "Bishop John of San
Francisco"). It is not correct to use the family
name of a Bishop—or any monastic for that matter.
Though many monastics and Bishops use their family
names, even in Orthodox countries like Russia and
Greece, this is absolutely improper and a violation
of an ancient Church custom.
All male monastics in
the Orthodox Church are called "Father," whether
they hold the Priesthood or not, and are formally
addressed as "Monk (name)," if they
do not have a Priestly rank. If they are of
Priestly rank, they are formally addressed as
"Hieromonk" or "Hierodeacon" (see above). Monastics
are some-times addressed according to their monastic
rank; for example, "Rasophore—monk (name),"
"Stavrophore—monk (name)," or "Schemamonk (name)."
The Abbot of a monastery is addressed as "The Very
Reverend Abbot," whether he holds Priestly rank or
not and whether or not he is an Archimandrite by
rank. Under no circumstances whatsoever is an
Orthodox monk addressed by laymen as "Brother." This
is a Latin custom. The term "Brother" is used in
Orthodox monasteries in two instances only: first,
to designate beginners in the monastic life (novices
or, in Greek, dokimoi ["those being
tested"]), who are given a blessing, in the
strictest tradition, to wear only the inner cassock
and a monastic cap; and second, as an occasional,
informal form of address between monastics
themselves (including Bishops).
Again, as we noted above, a
monk should never use his last name. This reflects
the Orthodox understanding of monasticism, in which
the monastic dies to his former self and abandons
all that identified him in the world. Lay people are
also called to respect a monk's death to his past.
(In Greek practice, a monk sometimes forms a new
last name from the name of his monastery. Thus a
monk from the Saint Gregory Palamas Monastery [Mone
Agiou Gregoriou Palama, in Greek] might take
the name Agiogregorites.)
The titles which we have
used for male monastics also apply to female
monastics. In fact, a community of female monastics
is often called a "monastery" rather than a convent
(though there is nothing improper, as some wrongly
claim, in calling a monastery for women a
"convent"), just as the word "convent," in its
strictest meaning, can apply to a monastic community
of males, too. Women monastics are formally
addressed as "Nun (name)" or "Rasophore—nun
(name)," etc., and the Abbess of a convent
is addressed as "The Very Reverend Abbess." Though
traditions for informal address vary, in most
places, Rasophore nuns are called "Sister," while
any monastic above the rank of Rasophore is called
"Mother." Novices are addressed as "Sister."
There are, as we have
noted, some differences in the way that Orthodox
religious are addressed. What we have given above
corresponds to a reasonably standardized vocabulary
as one would find it in more traditional
English—language Orthodox writings and among
English—speaking Orthodox monastics. The influx of
Latin converts into Orthodox monasticism and the
phenomenon of "monasticism by convenient rule,
instant tradition, and fabrication," as Archbishop
Chrysostomos of Etna has called it, are things that
have also led to great confusion in the use of
English terminology that corresponds more correctly
to the vocabulary of traditional Orthodox monastics.
From Father
David Cownie and Presbytera Juliana Cownie, A
Guide to Orthodox Life (Etna, CA: Center for
Traditionalist Orthodox Studies, 1996), pp. 90-96.
How to Greet a Monk or Nun
In the Russian
Church: Only tonsured nuns are addressed as
"Mother"—the others are addressed as "Sister." This
is exactly the same as the practice regarding monks,
who are called "Father" only if tonsured. The clue
is whether they wear the "klobuk"—the cylindrical
black hat with the veil—if they wear a klobuk, they
are called "Father" or "Mother." The problem with
this clue is that the klobuk is worn only in church
or at formal occasions—the rest of the time monks
and nuns wear "skufias"—soft, usually velvet, pointy
hats. Abbesses, of course, are always addressed as
"Mother"—in Russian, the greeting is usually the
diminutive "Matushka" [pronounced with accent on the
first syllable—webmaster].
Only Abbesses (or in rare
cases their chief assistants) can wear a pectoral
cross. Laypeople should approach an Abbess for a
blessing the same as they would a Priest—they bow
and hold their hands, palms up, right over left—and
after receiving the blessing (which the Abbess makes
holding her fingers the same as when one makes the
sign of the cross—not the "Name of the Lord"
configuration of fingers used by priests when
blessing)—they kiss the Abbess's hand.
When a Priest greets an
Abbess, he blesses her as usual, but they kiss each
other's hand, exactly as two Priests meeting (or two
Bishops) do. Abbesses stand in a throne and hold
their staff, which looks like a Bishop's staff,
except it is made of wood.
In her convent, the Abbess
is the Rector. The Priests who serve in the convent
do nothing without her knowledge and blessing. The
serving Priest bows to the Abbess when beginning the
services, and he censes her before anyone else. The
Abbess is commemorated by name at all the major
litanies and at the Great Entrance. In many ways,
the Abbess is given respect by the serving clergy
similar to that given to Bishops present at the
service, except that she is censed only three times,
not three-times-three.
Abbesses can enter the
altar at any time. In larger convents, certain nuns
are appointed by the Abbess (with the approval of
the Bishop) to enter the altar to maintain it and
the vestments of the clergy, and even to assist the
serving priest if no male altar servers are
available—but it should be known that other nuns
cannot enter the altar. Nuns appointed to help in
the altar are usually chosen from those who have
been in the convent from a young age.
The Russian approach is
usually rather easy: if they're wearing a pectoral
cross, you can get a blessing from them. Unless, of
course, they're outside of the church and not
wearing their cross. . .
With love in Christ,
by Protopresbyter Alexander Lebedeff
Is there a
proper way to address and sign letters to
clergy/fellow Orthodox?
When one writes a
clergyman, he should begin his letter in this way:
"Bless!" or "I ask for your blessing." The letter
may be signed: "In Christ," "Asking for your
prayers," etc. Lay people should refrain from
blessing a Priest (i.e., "God bless you"), and
Priests should greet each other with a simple
request for a blessing. Lay people may greet each
other with a simple request for prayers and close
their letters in the same way. The flowery
exhortations that were especially popular in the
nineteenth-century Russian Church ("Christ is in our
midst," "Glory be to God," inter alia), and
usually taken from the Liturgy, are not traditional
forms of greeting for clergy or for lay people. Nor
are the greetings exchanged between great Church
Fathers and the Saints. Though these high-sounding
exhortations are very popular now, since they appeal
to the Protestant evangelical piety which has
invaded the Church, when used by the poor Christians
that we are today, they are at odds with the
humility which derives from a piety engendered by
submission to Christ and to the traditions of His
Church.