
Ecclesiasticus I: Introducing Eastern Orthodoxy

Ecclesiasticus II: Orthodox Icons, Saints, Feasts and Prayer
|
Recently,
in a conversation with someone who attends a "non-denominational"
church, the question was asked: "Why are priests called 'Father'
in your Church? This is not what the Bible teaches! Doesn't Jesus Himself
say, 'Call no man on earth your father, for you have one Father who is
in heaven.' (Matthew 23:9)."
This is simply another example of what can only be called the "fundamentalist
gridlock" of some Christian groups in understanding and interpreting
the Scriptures: the taking of this or that biblical passage out of context
and applying it to whatever you want. St. Athanasios, the 4th century
patriarch of Alexandria in Egypt, was the first person in Christian history
to definitively list those 27 books that we today call the New Testament.
A pivotal person in the formation of the New Testament canon, St. Athanasios
says that when Christians read the Bible, they are not to take passages
out of context but rather to keep the "skopos", the scope or
"big picture" in mind. Let's examine this question keeping the
full scope - or "big picture" - of the Scriptures in mind.
First: the question asked seems to presuppose that this passage
of Scripture should be taken literally as an absolute prohibition ie,
that we should call no man father. In other words, if we were to interpret
Matthew 23:9 literally, no one could be called father, not even our biological
fathers. Christians could not, for example, celebrate Fathers Day. Nor
could George Washington be called "the father of our country."
Is this what Jesus intended? Of course not! Doesn't Jesus Himself tell
the rich young man to "keep the commandments" including the
one to "honor your father and mother" (Matthew 19:19)? And when
the Jews questioned Jesus about His teaching that He is "the bread
of life," doesn't He respond to them by saying: " I am the bread
of life. Your fathers (ie the ancestors of the Jewish people who took
part in the Exodus from Egypt with Moses and are therefore called the
"fathers" of Israel) ate the manna in the wilderness and they
died" (John 6:48-49)?
Second: What would we do with the apostle Paul? When St. Paul discusses
the Exodus, doesn't he - like Christ Himself - refer to the ancestors
of the Israel of his day as "our fathers" (1 Corinthians 10:1)?
When discussing discipline in the Christian family, doesn't he say "Fathers,
do not provoke your children or they may lose heart" (Colossians
3:21).
Furthermore, with regards to spiritual fatherhood in the Christian
community, to the Church in Corinth he wrote: "I do not write this
to make you ashamed but to admonish you as my beloved children. For though
you might have 10,000 guardians in Christ, you do not have many fathers.
Indeed, in Christ Jesus I became your father through the Gospel"
(1 Corinthians 4:14-15). And he describes his relationship with the Christians
of the Church in Thessalonica as being "like a father with his children"
(1 Thessalonians 2:11). Doesn't St. Paul, in the above passages, claim
to be the spiritual father of the Corinthian and Thessalonian Churches,
their father in the Gospel - Father Paul, if you will?
Third: When interpreting Matthew 23:9, it would be helpful to read
the entire 23rd chapter of Matthew in order to get a proper understanding
of the context of this passage. This 23rd chapter of Matthew contains
the Lord's indictment of the scribes and pharisees for their hypocrisy,
their focus on the externals of religion without genuine repentance and
a corresponding conversion of heart. So, not only does Jesus condemn the
scribes and pharisees for their use of the address "Father"
in a vain and empty way, but in the very next verse says: "Nor are
you to be called teachers, for you have one teacher, the Christ"
(Matthew 23:10). Yet, many contemporary non-denominational TV preachers
describe themselves as "Bible teachers" and no one has ever
argued that the Church should not have Sunday school teachers on the basis
of this passage. Indeed, Jesus Himself acknowledged Nicodemus to be a
"teacher of Israel" (John 3:10) and in the Book of Acts we read
that certain men in Antioch were called "teachers" (Acts 13:1),
to give only two examples. Therefore, as can be clearly understood when
one reads the 23rd chapter of Matthew in its entirety, Jesus takes issue
not with these titles and roles in and of themselves, but rather with
their self-aggrandizing abuse by the scribes and pharisees.
Fourth: The term "father" when used to address a priest
is not merely an assertion of his "higher" status in the community
of believers; rather, it is a term of endearment, of intimacy and love,
as the apostle Paul uses it in 1 Corinthians and 1 Thessalonians, already
mentioned above. In Greek, a priest in his village is addressed as "Papa"
and in Russian as "Batiushka" - both being terms of endearment
and intimacy. The spiritual fatherhood of the priest is intended to be
a sign of the depth of intimacy and relationship which those in the life
of the Church have with their leaders, a relationship based on the priest's
role in our second birth, our birth in the Gospel - our baptism. Just
as our biological father has an important role in our birth and continuing
nurture, so the priest - as the one who baptizes us - has an important
role in our second birth, our birth "from above…of water and the
Spirit" (John 3:3-5).
Finally: This kind of attempt to interpret the Scriptures literally
and then apply a passage taken out of context in a polemical way, usually
towards Roman Catholics - but by extension often towards us as Orthodox
Christians as well - is, unfortunately, all too typical of much "non-denominational"
Christianity. At best, it is a misreading and misunderstanding of the
Scriptures; at worst, it can be an expression of religious bigotry. Nonetheless,
it remains a simple fact that the overwhelming majority of Christians
in the world today (Orthodox, Roman Catholics, Anglicans, etc.) - and
across the 20 centuries of Church history - have addressed and continue
to address their clergy as 'Father."
If anyone wishes to be contentious about this, we have no
other practice - nor do the churches of God. - 1 Corinthians 11:16
|