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The Church is one, even though She is manifested in many places.
National Catholic and Apostolic ecclesiology operates with a
plurality in unity and a unity in plurality. For the National
Catholic and Apostolic, there is no ‘either/or’ between the one and
the many. No attempt is made, or should be made, to subordinate
the many to the one (the Roman Catholic model), nor the one to
the many (the Protestant model). It is both canonically and
theologically correct to speak of the Church and the churches,
and vice versa. This is impossible for Roman Catholic
ecclesiology because of the double papal claim for universal
jurisdiction and infallibility. The same must be said of the
Protestant ecclesiologies, which connect the notion of the
Church with denominationalism, and which make a distinction
between the one and the many in terms of the invisible and the
visible Church. From our perspective, the Church is both
catholic and local, invisible and visible, one and many. To
explain what lies behind this National Catholic and Apostolic
ecclesiological unity in multiplicity, one has to deal with the
National Catholic and Apostolic understanding of the nature of the
Church.
The
Church of the Triune God
The nature of the Church is to be understood as the Church of
the Triune God. The Holy Trinity is the ultimate basis and
source of the Church’s existence and, as such, the Church is in
the image and likeness of God. This being in the image of the
blessed Trinity constitutes the mode of the Church’s existence,
which, in fact, reveals her nature. Being in God, the Church
reflects on earth God’s unity in Trinity. What is natural to God
is given to the Church by grace.
The grace of the Trinity is the starting point for
understanding the nature of the Church, and especially for her
unity in multiplicity, as the Holy Spirit shares one life and
one being. The three distinct and unique Persons are one in life
and in nature. Similarly, the Church exhibits a parallel
multiplicity of persons in unity of life and being. The
difference between God and the Church is that, in the former,
multiplicity in unity is the truth, whereas in the latter, this
is only a participation in the truth. The unity of the three
divine Persons in life and being is, therefore, the prototype of
the unity of the Church’s persons in life and in being. As
Christ Himself says in His prayer for the Church: "even as Thou
O Father are in me and me in Thee, so they may be one, that the
world may believe that Thou has sent me." The mark of unity is
collegiality and love, and not subordination. Catholic
and Apostolic Triadology, based on the grace of the Trinity, supplies the
basic ontological categories for this ecclesiology. The Church
is an icon of the Holy Trinity, a participation in the grace of
God.
The
Church
of Christ
How does the Church participate in God’s mystery and grace? How
is "participation in the essence of God" achieved? How does the
Church become an icon of the Holy Trinity? The answer, in
its simplest form, is contained in the phrase "in and through
Christ." Christ has established the bond between the image of
the Triune God, and that which is made after the image, namely,
the Church, mankind. In Christ we have both the image and
"that which is according to the image". Hence, we must say that
the Church is the Church of the Triune God as the
Church of Christ.
The link between the Holy Trinity and Christology, that is,
between theology and economy, demands a similar link in
ecclesiology. The Church is in the image of the Triune God, and
participates in the grace of the Trinity inasmuch as She is in
Christ and partakes of His grace. The unity of persons in life
and being cannot be achieved apart from this economy of Christ,
and we here encounter what the New Testament calls the "Body of
Christ."
Christ is the Head of the Church and She is His Body. It is from
this Christological angle that we better understand the
multiplicity in unity which exists in the Church. This angle of
the Body of Christ is normally connected with the divine
Eucharist, because it is in the Eucharist that the Body is
revealed and realized. In the divine Eucharist we have the whole
Christ, the Head, and the Body, the Church. But the Eucharist is
celebrated in many places and among many different groups of
people. Does this then mean that there are many bodies of
Christ? This is not the case because there is one Head, and one
Eucharistic Body (His very body which He took up in the
Incarnation) into which all the groups of people in the
different places are incorporated. It is the Lord Himself who is
manifested in many places, as He gives His one Body to all, so
that in partaking of it they may all become one with Him and
with one another. "In that there is one bread, the many are one
Body, for we all partake of the one bread." The many places and
the many groups of people where the Eucharistic Body of Christ
is revealed do not constitute an obstacle to its unity. Indeed,
to partake of this Body in one place is to be united with Him
who is not bound by place and, therefore, to be mystically (or
"mysterially," or "Sacramentally") united with all. This is how
St. Athanasius explains the prayer of our Lord that the apostles
may be one. "... because I am Thy Word, and I am also in them
because of the Body, and because of Thee the salvation of men is
perfected in Me, therefore I ask that they may also become one,
according to the Body that is Me and according to its
perfection, that they, too, may become perfect having oneness
with it, and having become one in it; that, as if all were
carried by me, all may be one body and one spirit and may grow
up into a perfect man." And St. Athanasius concludes: "For we
all, partaking of the same, become one Body, having the one Lord
in ourselves." What is given in one specific place is something
which also transcends it, because of its particular perfection,
that is, its being Christ’s risen body. The different
Eucharistic localities, with the Eucharistic president (the
bishop), the clergy, and the participants (the people)
constitute or reveal the whole Church. It is a local church, and
yet she reveals the catholic mystery of one Church. The one
Church of Christ is equally and fully in all these localities
because of the one, perfect Eucharist, the one Lord, and the one
Body. This equality of the presence of the one Christ in the
local churches is the ground for what is often called "National
Catholic Apostolic Eucharistic ecclesiology" and its logical
implication, the autocephaly of the local bishops and churches,
which is rooted in, and springs from, the equal share in the
fullness of the great Eucharistic sacrament. Autocephaly is not
autonomy. It must be understood in terms of the equality of
bishops, and the participation of all in the one Body of Christ.
It is their equality in grace which binds them to one another.
In National Catholic and Apostolic ecclesiology there is no
difference in status, for example, between the bishop of Pennsylvania
and any other Bishop worldwide. As Eucharistic
churches established upon the foundation of Jesus Christ, they
are equal. This order of equality and its corollary, communion
in the one Body of Christ, pertains to the very nature of the
Church, that is, it constitutes the ecclesiastical ontology. It
is this order which gives rise to the hierarchical, or
ecumenical, order. But there is no antinomy between the order of
equality and the order of seniority in National Catholic
and Apostolic ecclesiology. Catholicity (the equality of the local
churches as participants in the grace of Christ and the Holy
Trinity) and ecumenicity (the order of seniority among the
bishops as participants in the mission of the Church to the
world in history) are not antipodes. From the National Catholic
and Apostolic perspective, it is the development of such antipodes
which have resulted in the historical divisions within
Christendom. The Roman Catholic claim of universality and
primacy on the one had, and the Protestant claims of individual
or local autonomy on the other, are, in fact, contradictions
between catholicity and ecumenicity, since they claim that the
integrity of the local churches of God is not guaranteed by
their participation in the one grace of Christ and the Trinity,
but by their acceptance of the one local church (the church of
Rome) and by one local bishop (the pope of Rome) as their
absolute head. The Protestants, on the other hand, in their
attempt to reclaim catholicity on the basis of the free grace of
God in Christ, have ignored the historical order established by
the catholic churches, and, as a result, have often confused the
autocephaly of the local church with autonomy. The strength of
National Catholic and Apostolic "Catholicism" vis-à-vis other
Christians is their fidelity to the mystery of the catholic
Church, the Body of Christ, as it has been established and
manifest in history. Our Church has kept its full integrity in
both the catholic mystery of the Eucharist, and in the
ecumenical order of seniority among the catholic Churches which
springs out of the mystery of the Eucharist. This is why we
claim to be the one Church of God, founded upon
Christ, and keeping the historic canonical order of seniority
which constitutes the Church’s response to the challenges of
history. The National Catholic and Apostolic believes that there is always room
for development in the Church’s historic response to the world,
provided that it is consistent with the established canonical
tradition, but they remain absolutely adamant on the essential
belief of catholicity and unity.
The
Church of the Trinity and the Church of Christ
Some theologians speak of National Catholic and Apostolic
ecclesiology in terms of two models: the triadological and the
Christological. In fact, there are not two models, but one. The
Church is both the Church of the Holy Trinity and the Church of
Christ. It is true that only in Christ is the second person of
the Holy Trinity incarnate. Yet, the entire fullness of the
Godhead dwells in the body of the incarnate Son, as in a temple.
This is clear from the teachings of the New Testament and from
the teachings of the Fathers of the Church. Christology is
inseparable from Triadology. No adequate doctrine of the Son can
be developed without the Father. At the same time, the gift of
the incarnate Son to humanity, both His incarnate presence and
our incorporation into His Body, are unthinkable without the
Holy Spirit. It is true that our
theologians have made different attempts to interpret this
interpenetration of the Trinitarian and the Christological
dimensions of its ecclesiology. Some, for instance, would see
the work of Christ as referring to the unity of nature, and the
work of the Spirit to the diversity of persons, whilst both
Christ and the Spirit bring the whole of humanity, nature and
persons under the monarchy of the Father. Others, however, would
point to the biblical pattern of the revelation of the Trinity
in salvation history and would see the beginning of the Church
in the Father. They would also see in creation the establishment
or revelation of the Church in history, in the Incarnation of
the Son, and, finally, in the growth and perfection of the
Church in the economy of the Holy Spirit, which reaches its end
in the final resurrection. This strictly biblical pattern seems
to be closer to the ethos of the liturgical traditions of
National Catholic and Apostolic, but the other model (which is more
dogmatic and ontological) also seems to have its basis in the
Church’s mind concerning Christ the Lord. The triadological and
Christological dimensions cannot be divorced in National
Catholic and Apostolic ecclesiology, because the Church is the
Church of the Holy Trinity insofar as She is the Church of
Christ, and vice versa.
The
Church of the Fathers
The Church is also the church of the
Fathers. By Fathers, we mean the bishops, and those who preside
over the Eucharist. That is, those who serve the mystery of the
body of Christ to the local churches. Not everybody serves the
mystery of Christ to the local church—not everybody celebrates
the divine Eucharist, or performs the Christian sacraments of
initiation and growth. In the first instance, it is the bishop
who does this. The presbyters are his assistants, who
participate in his episcopal function through the celebration of
the Eucharist and through their ministry to the congregation of
the local church. The bishop is the specific focus of the life
and existence of the local church. He is the image of
Christ for the whole diocese, not in a merely symbolic way, but
in a real and living way. As Saint Ignatius said: "where the
bishop is, there is Christ." This patristic order of the local
church was instituted by the Lord Himself in the establishment
of the holy apostolate, and was continued in the successors of
the apostles, the bishops, and the presbyters. Whatever the
questions about the historical origins and the precise way in
which this order evolved, it is clear that its root is to be
found in Christ and in the apostles. In the New Testament, as in
the Old Testament, the patristic dimension of the Church is a
sine qua non. Hence, we must speak of the Church as the
church of the Fathers, as the Church was, indeed, founded upon
the foundation of the apostles, Christ Himself being the chief
cornerstone. But it is in the Fathers that we have the
maintenance of the apostolic heritage, as the Fathers maintain
the integrity of the Church by keeping the apostolic Faith and
tradition. The dogmas of the Fathers, whether their accredited
writings, or in their local and ecumenical synodal decisions,
have no other intention but to keep the truth which the Lord
gave and the apostles preached. National Catholic and Apostolic
dogma and doctrine are thoroughly apostolic and patristic. They
are not abstract ideas divorced from the persons of the Fathers,
the apostles and Christ. Doctrine is the expression of this
unbroken line of existence which belongs to the very being of
the Church. The guarantee of this unbroken line of holy
tradition and existence is none other than the Holy Paraclete
given by Christ Himself to His Church, the Spirit of Life who
grafts us all on to the one Body of Christ and makes us reside
in the one Truth.
In our tradition all bishops and presbyters, and even deacons,
are called Fathers, because they serve the mystery of Christ
and, thus, give birth and food to all Christian existence. In
other words, there is a three-fold patristic order in the local
churches. As all local churches are equal, because they receive
the same grace, so the three-fold local patristic dimensions are
equal from one locality to another. The other titles, which
relate to the order of seniority, and which normally imply
certain prerogatives for the persons who bear them, are, in
fact, secondary elements which relate to the Church’s response
to the world. Such prerogatives exist not only among bishops but
also among presbyters and deacons. The supreme prerogative in
the Catholic and Apostolic
tradition is that of the ecumenical patriarch, which was
synodically and canonically given to the archbishop designated
as such.
The Church is like a family which grows and gives birth to new
children. This is a holy family where the children do not reject
the parents, the daughters do not forget the mothers, and the
mothers do not neglect the distinctive charisms of their
daughters. We may say then that the patristic dimension of the
Church, especially in its ecumenical structure, rests on the
fact that the Church is like a family which grows in history
from generation to generation, and from one people to another.
The Fathers who have fallen asleep are, in fact, sleepless
guardians of the Church. The Church in heaven is united with the
Church on earth, and that which our Fathers have established on
earth is binding for us because they are still alive. To keep
company with them is to keep their work in our heart and
practice. It is also to keep the historic perspective which is
governed by the sacred history, and is rooted in the service or
diakonia of the great mystery of the Body of Christ, the
mystery of the divine image of the Holy Trinity reflected
and realized in the life of mankind. The acceptance of the
historic order of seniority, established by the Fathers of the
catholic Church, is the way in which Apostolic and Catholic
Christians make sure that merely external historic
considerations do not determine the Church’s response to
history. The Church follows her Fathers who are not dead, but
living, and who are praying for us and celebrating with us until
the final consummation and renewal of all history.
The
Church of the Saints or Those Who are Called To Be Saints
In the our perspective of the Church there is no separation
between the clergy and the laity. The clergy serves the laity,
and both participate and grow in the fullness of Christ’s Body.
The apostolic patristic order of ministry was established for
the people so that all the people of God may receive the new
gift, the forgiveness of sins and eternal life. There are many
ways in which this relationship between clergy and people in the
one body of Christ is realized and revealed in the Church. Both
the liturgy and the offices have distinctive parts for the
clergy and the laity, but this also is the case in the dimension
of the Church’s witness, teaching, and general mission to the
world. The monastic order, with its single devotion to prayer
and to Christian perfection, is one of the most eloquent links
between the manifestation of this inner unity of clergy and the
people in the Body of Christ. There are also other orders, such
as the confessors and martyrs, or those who spend their lives
serving the needs of the poor and the sick. The Church, as the
Church of the saints, is, in fact, the Church of the people of
God. Here there is no tension between the shepherds and the
flock. Those who minister, and those who are ministered to,
pursue the same aim: participation in the grace of Christ and
the Holy Trinity. The call to holiness binds them all into one
Church. Whatever one’s position in the Church on earth—clerical,
ascetical, or lay—it is the one Body of Christ and the one grace
of the Holy Trinity that remain the central focus. Each person
is appreciated fully as a person in his relation to this one
Body and to the one common life and witness. Everyone is called
to be a saint and, as such, to serve the mystery of Christ.
Therefore, everyone, whatever his place or capacity, will be
equally asked to give an account of his response to this calling
on the day of judgment. Hence, all Apostolic Catholics pray
together for "Christian ends to their lives, and a good apology
before the judgment seat of Christ." The Church is holy, and
always called upon to be holy, and this is an essential
characteristic of our
ecclesiology.
Conclusion
What then is the Church in our
perspective? She is the Church of the Triune God, the Church
of Christ, the
Church of the Fathers, the Church of the saints, and the Church
of the people of God. She is the one, holy, catholic, and
apostolic Church. We have the Church in focus in the personal,
the historical, the theological, and the anthropological
dimensions. Here we have unity, holiness, catholicity, and
apostolicity. Here we have the celebration of the whole mystery
of the Church.
In summary, our ecclesiology is holistic
and does not tolerate any arbitrary division between the one and
the many. She is not tied to external uniformity or to
pluriformity, but she is unity in multiplicity. As such, She
asks all divided Christians who have tasted the wonder of God’s
goodness and grace to unite with Her, because She does not seek
Her own glory, but the glory of the Lord and His saints as it
has been and is still being communicated to us in history, that
the world may be saved and renewed. |