Total Pageviews

Search This Blog

Monday, April 17, 2017

Concerning Women’s Ordination ~ Protopresbyter Alexander Schmemann






Protopresbyter Alexander Schmemann
 
Concerning Women’s Ordination
 
A Letter to an Episcopal Friend
 
St. Vladimir’s Theological Quarterly,
 
 
Vol. 17, No. 3, 1973, pp. 239-243.
 
Dear Friend:

When you asked me to outline the Orthodox reaction to the idea of women’s ordination

to the priesthood, I thought at first that to do so would not be too difficult. It is not difficult

indeed simply to state that the Orthodox Church is against women’s priesthood, and to

enumerate as fully as possible the dogmatical, canonical, and spiritual reasons for that

opposition. At a second thought, however, I became convinced that such an answer

would be not only useless but even harmful. Useless because all such “formal”

reasons—scriptural, traditional, canonical—are well known to the advocates of women’s

ordination, as is also our general ecclesiological stand which, depending on their mood

and current priorities, our Western brothers either hail as Orthodoxy’s “main ecumenical

contribution” or dismiss as archaic, narrow-minded and irrelevant. Harmful because, true

formally, this answer would still vitiate the real Orthodox position by reducing it to a

theological context and perspective alien to the Orthodox mind. For the Orthodox Church

has never faced this question; it is for us totally extrinsic, a casus irrealis for which we

find no basis, no terms of reference in our Tradition, in the very experience of the

Church, and for the discussion of which we are therefore simply not prepared.

Such then is my difficulty. I cannot discuss the problem itself because to do so would

necessitate the elucidation of our approach, not to women and to priesthood only, but

above all to God in His Triune Life, to Creation, Fall and Redemption, to the Church and

the mystery of her life, to the deification of man and the consummation of all things in

Christ. Short of all this, it would remain incomprehensible, I am sure, why the ordination

of women to priesthood for us is tantamount to a radical and irreparable mutilation of the

entire faith, the rejection of the whole Scripture—and needless to say, the end of all

“dialogues”.... Short of all this, my answer will sound like another “conservative” and

“traditional” defense of the status quo, of precisely that which many Christians today,

having heard it too many times, reject as hypocrisy, lack of openness to God’s will,

blindness to the world, etc. Obviously enough, those who reject Tradition will not listen

once more to an argument ex traditione....

But to what will they listen? Our amazement—and the Orthodox reaction is above all that

of amazement -is precisely about the strange and to us incomprehensible hastiness with

which the question of women’s ordination was first accepted as an issue, then quickly

reduced to the level of a “disciplinary matter,” and finally identified as an issue of policy

to be dealt with by vote! In this strange situation all I can do is to try to convey to you this

amazement by briefly enumerating its main “components” as I see and understand them.

The first dimension of our amazement can be termed “ecumenical.” The debate on

women’s ordination reveals something which we suspected for a long time but which

now is confirmed beyond any doubt: the truly built-in indifference of the Christian West to

anything beyond the sphere of its own problematics, of its own experience. I can only

repeat here what I have said before: even the so-called “ecumenical movement,”

notwithstanding its claims to the contrary, has always been and still is a purely Western

phenomenon, based on Western presuppositions and determined by a specifically

Western “agenda.” This is not “pride” or “arrogance.” On the contrary, the Christian West

is almost obsessed with a guilt complex and enjoys nothing better than self-criticism and

self-condemnation. It is plagued with a total inability to transcend itself, to accept the

simple idea that its own experience, problems, thought forms and priorities may not be

universal, that it may need to be evaluated and judged in the light of a truly universal,

truly “catholic” experience. Western Christians almost enthusiastically judge and

condemn themselves— but on their own terms, within their own hopelessly “Western”

perspective. Thus when they decide— on the basis of their own, possibly limited and

fragmented, specifically Western “cultural situation”— that they must “repair” injustices

made to women, they plan to do it immediately and without even asking what the

“others” may think about it, and are sincerely amazed and even saddened by the lack,

on the part of these “others,” of ecumenical spirit, sympathy and comprehension.

Personally I have often enough criticized the historical limitations of the Orthodox

mentality not to have the right to say in all sincerity that to me the debate on women’s

ordination seems to be provincial, deeply marked and even determined by Western selfcenteredness

and self-sufficiency, by a naive, almost childish conviction that every

“trend” in Western culture justifies a radical rethinking of the entire Christian Tradition.

How many such “trends” we have witnessed during the last decades of our troubled

century! How many corresponding “theologies”! The difference this time however is that

one deals in this particular debate not with a passing intellectual and academic “fad”—

like the “death of God,” “secular city,” “celebration of life,” etc.—which, after it has

produced a couple of ephemeral best-sellers simply disappears, but with the threat of an

irreversible and irreparable act which, if it becomes reality, will produce a new, and this

time I am convinced final, division among Christians, will signify, at least for the

Orthodox, the end of all dialogues....

It is well known that the advocates of women’s ordination explain the scriptural and the

traditional exclusion of women from the ministry by cultural “conditioning.” If Christ did

not include women into the twelve, if the Church for centuries did not include them into

its priesthood, it is because of the “culture” which would have made it impossible and

unthinkable then. It is not my purpose to discuss here the theological and exegetical

implications of this view as well as its purely historical basis which, incidentally, seems to

me extremely weak and shaky. What is truly amazing is that, while absolutely convinced

that they understand past “cultures,” the advocates of women’s ordination seem to be so

totally unaware of their own cultural “conditioning,” of their own surrender to “culture.”

How else can one explain their readiness to accept what may prove to be a passing

phenomenon, and what at any rate is a phenomenon barely at its beginning (not to

speak of the womenÕs liberation movement which at present is nothing but search and

experimentation), as a sufficient justification for a radical change in the very structure of

the Church? How else, furthermore, are we to explain that this movement is accepted on

its own terms, i.e., within the perspective of “rights,” “justice,” “equality,” etc., all

categories whose ability adequately to express Christian faith and to be applied as such

within the Church is, to say the least, questionable?

The sad truth is that the very idea of women’s ordination as it is present and discussed

today is the result of too many confusions and reductions. If its root is surrender to

“culture,” its pattern of development is shaped by a surrender to “clericalism.” It is indeed

almost entirely dominated by the old “clerical” view of the Church and the double

“reduction” inherent in it: the reduction on the one hand of the Church to a “power

structure”; the reduction on the other hand of that power structure to clergy. To the

alleged “inferiority” of women within the secular power structure corresponds their

“inferiority,” i.e., their exclusion from the clergy, within the ecclesiastical power structure.

To their “liberation” in the secular society must therefore correspond their “liberation,”

i.e., ordination, in the Church.

But the Church simply cannot be reduced to these categories. As long as we try to

measure the ineffable mystery of her life by concepts and ideas a priory alien to her very

essence, we literally mutilate her, and her real power, her glory and beauty, her

transcendent truth simply escape us.

This is why in concluding this letter I can only confess, without explaining and justifying

this confession by any “proofs,” that the non-ordination of women to the priesthood has

nothing, absolutely nothing to do with whatever “inferiority” we can invent or imagine. In

the essential reality which alone constitutes he content of our faith and shapes the entire

life of the Church, in the reality of the Kingdom of God which is perfect communion,

perfect knowledge, perfect love and ultimately the “deification” of man, there is truly

“neither male nor female.” More than that, in this reality of which we are made partakers

here and now, we all—men and women, without any distinction—are “kings and priests,”

for it is essential priesthood of the human nature and vocation that the Christ has

restored to us.

It is of this priestly life, it is of this ultimate reality that the Church is both gift and

acceptance. And that she may be this, that she may always and everywhere be the gift

of the Spirit without any measure or limitations, the Son of God offered Himself in a

unique sacrifice, and made this unique sacrifice and this unique priesthood the very

foundation, indeed the very “form” of the Church. This priesthood is Christ’s, not ours.

Not only have none of us, men or women, any “right” to it, but it is emphatically not one

of the human vocations analogous, even if superior, to all others. The priest in the

Church is not “another” priest, and the sacrifice he offers is not “another” sacrifice. It is

forever and only Christ’s priesthood and Christ’s sacrifice, for in the words of our Prayer

of Offertory, “it is Thou who offerest and Thou who art offered, it is Thou who receivest

and Thou who distributest.... “And thus the “institutional” priesthood in the Church has no

“ontology” of its own. It exists only to make Christ Himself present, to make His unique

Priesthood and His unique Sacrifice the source of the Church’s life and the “acquisition”

by men of the Holy Spirit. And if the bearer, the icon, and the fulfiller of that unique

priesthood is man and not woman, it is because Christ is man and not woman....

Why? This of course is the only important, the only relevant question, the one that no

“culture,” no “sociology,” no “history,” and even no “exegesis” can answer. For it can be

answered only by theology in the primordial and essential meaning of that word in the

Church, as the contemplation and vision of the Truth itself, as communion with the

uncreated Divine Light. It is only here, in this purified and restored vision, that we might

begin to understand why the ineffable mystery of the relationship between God and His

creation, between God and His chosen people, between God and His Church is

“essentially” revealed to us as a nuptial mystery, as the fulfillment of a mystical marriage;

why, in other terms, creation itself, the Church herself, man and the world themselves,

when contemplated in their ultimate truth and destiny, are revealed to us as a Bride, as a

Woman clothed in the sun; why in the very depth of her love and knowledge, of her joy

and communion, the Church identifies herself with one Woman whom she exalts as

“more honorable than the Cherubim, and beyond compare more glorious than the

Seraphim.”

Is it this mystery that has to be “understood” by means of our broken and fallen world

which knows and experiences itself only in its brokenness and fragmentation, in its

tensions and dichotomies, and which as such is incapable of the ultimate vision? Or is it

this vision and this unique experience that must again become for us the “means” of our

understanding of the world, the starting point and the very possibility of a truly divine

victory over all that in this world is but human, historical, and cultural?


source:

http://jbburnett.com/resources/schmemann/schmemann-ord-women.pdf

 

No comments:

Post a Comment