FLOROVSKY Primitive Tradition and Traditions
FLOROVSKY Primitive Tradition and Traditions
FLOROVSKY Primitive Tradition and Traditions
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f.
Edited by
WiJllam s. Morris
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PRIMITIVE TRADITION AND THE TRADITIONS
GEORGES FLOROVSKY
they all derive their existence. This kind of ecumenical endeavour can
be properly denoted as Ecumenism in Time. The Report of the Faith
and Order Commission itself mentions ''agreement with all ages'' as
one of the normative prerequisites of unity. The Orthodox theologians
suggest this new method of ecumenical inquiry, and this new criterion
of ecu.menical evaluation, as a kingly road, with the hope that unity
may be recovered by the divided denominations by their return to
the common past. By this way divergent denominations may meet
each other in the unity of common tradition. The Orthodox Church is
willing to participate in this common work as a witness which had
preserved continuously the deposit of Apostolic faith and tradition.
No static restoration of old forms is envisaged, but rather a dynamic
recovery of the perennial ethos, which only can secure the true agree-
ment with ''all ages.'' Nor should there be a rigid uniformity, since
the same faith, mysterious in its essence and unfathomable adequately
in the formulas of human reason, can be expressed accurately enough
in different manners. The immediate objective of the ecumenical
quest is, according to the Orthodox understanding, reintegration of
Christian mind, the recovery of Apostolic tradition, the furness of
Christian vision and belief, in agreement with all ages.
a very general sense. At this point one has to recall that immediately
after the Evanston assembly the Faith and Order Commission insti-
tuted two special commissions, again one in Europe and the other in
America, to study the whole problem of tradition in the church under
the title "Tradition and Traditions." These commissions also will
report at Montreal. The crucial question in this area of research is
whether there is any overarching and common normative tradition
which can serve as a base or pattern of evaluation in the ecumenical
search. The topic is delicate and complex, and it is hardly possible to
expect a speedy solution of controversial issues in this field. But the
inclusion of a historical subject in the programme of ecumenical study
is in itself an achievement, controversial and divisive as the matter
inevitably is in divided Christendom. The Orthodox can but whole-
heartedly welcome this widening of the perspective. It is interesting
to note that a similar project of study and discussion in the early
period of the Reformation has already been suggested. The famous
formula of the consensus quinquesaecularis (consensus of the first
five centuries) was one of the first formulas of the "eirenic theology."
Of course this formula, like that of the "Seven Ecumenical Councils,''
is anti-historical and narrow if taken in a statically restrictive sense.
But it is still much broader than imprisonment in the present. Indeed
ecumenism, in order to be really "ecumenical," must acquire or
recover the historical dimension. The phrase "in all ages" is ambigu-
ous and all too simple, just as the great Vincentian Canon is not just
a call for a democratic plebiscite. History must be studied critically,
and a simplified appeal to Christian antiquity may lead to confusion:
antiquitas sine verutate vetustas erroris est, in the elegant phrase of
St. Cyprian. The reference to "all ages" is no more than a pointer,
but it is a pointer in the right direction, The present state of divided
Christendom must be seen in the perspe~tive of the common Christian
history.
The modern ecumenical search, begun in a mood of hope and
expectation, is now continued in a temper of impatience. Immediate
"intercommunion" on a large scale is still regarded in certain
quarters as a speedy solution of the problem. On the other hand, there
is in wider circles a growing despair that sometimes leads to a radical
change in aims and objectives. The new formula "unity without
union," whatever that may mean, is gaining support and popularity.
38 THE UNITY WE SEEK