Why Patriarch Bartholomew Cannot Afford to Lose the Case of Tychikos
Patriarch Bartholomew of Constantinople has unexpectedly found himself in a strategically advantageous position due to the ongoing controversy surrounding Metropolitan Tychikos of Paphos. Dismissed from his post by the Synod of the Church of Cyprus in May 2025, Tychikos’s appeal to Constantinople could mark a pivotal moment in redefining the role of Istanbul within the Orthodox world.
How It All Began
The conflict erupted when Metropolitan Tychikos refused to host a Catholic delegation transporting the relic of the Apostle Paul through Cypriot dioceses. This initiative had been arranged by the late Cypriot Archbishop Chrysostomos in agreement with the now-deceased Pope Francis. The current primate, Archbishop Georgios of Cyprus, supported the initiative, viewing Tychikos’s refusal as a serious affront.
Further accusations against Tychikos included his opposition to mixed confessional marriages, consecrating a church in honor of an uncanonized ascetic, and ordaining a priest who had rejected spiritual guidance from a Greek bishop. However, many of these charges appear flimsy or even factually incorrect. For instance, there exists a video in which Tychikos clearly states one should not venerate uncanonized figures.
Archbishop Georgios claimed that Patriarch Bartholomew was informed and deeply concerned, quoting from a personal letter in which Bartholomew expressed “surprise and sorrow” over Tychikos’s “conservative and outdated views” and disrespect toward the "Ecumenical See."
The letter included the Greek phrase “ανακαλέσητε εις την τάξιν”, meaning “to restore order” or “bring into discipline”—a term often used in ecclesiastical contexts. Importantly, it did not call for Tychikos’s removal. Greek theologian Fr. Evangelos Papanikolaou emphasized that the Patriarch’s language suggested correction, not deposition—prompting Tychikos to appeal directly to Constantinople.
A Critical Appeal
On June 5, 2025, Metropolitan Tychikos submitted a formal appeal to Patriarch Bartholomew. This move transferred the final decision from the Cypriot Synod to the Patriarch himself, thus reviving a largely theoretical prerogative: Constantinople’s right to arbitrate inter-Orthodox disputes.
Should Bartholomew uphold the appeal, he gains several advantages:
- Proof of Jurisdiction: The appeal could validate Constantinople’s contested right to intervene in local Church affairs—particularly disputed by Moscow and other Churches.
- Confirmation of Global Role: Successfully resolving the issue would demonstrate that “Ecumenical Patriarch” is more than an honorary title—it reflects real capacity to mediate and ensure justice in the Orthodox world.
- Canonical Integrity: Defending Tychikos—criticized for adhering to traditional Orthodoxy—would counter accusations that Bartholomew is too ecumenically liberal or politically motivated.
- Rebuilding Trust: Amid criticism over his support for the Ukrainian Orthodox schism and alignment with Western powers, Bartholomew’s defense of a bishop censured for opposing papal involvement would send a strong signal of Orthodox fidelity.
- Symbol of Unity: The Orthodox Church is deeply fragmented. A just resolution could establish Bartholomew as a unifying moral authority rather than a political actor.
Conclusion
For Patriarch Bartholomew, the Tychikos affair is more than a local controversy—it is a defining moment. By defending traditional ecclesiology and applying canonical justice, he could reshape perceptions of the Ecumenical Patriarchate, silence critics, and reassert Constantinople’s leadership role in world Orthodoxy.
Will he seize this historic opportunity? The entire Orthodox world is watching.
Originally published by the Union of Orthodox Journalists (SPZh)
Read also
Is Lying a Sin?
Why was the Ninth Commandment not expressed directly, Thou shall not lie ? Because a lie is not something that comes out of the mouth. It’s what comes out of the heart.
The Kyiv Post Proves Our Point
How media narratives about UOJ-USA and the Ukrainian Orthodox Church collapse under their own citations
Christian Zionism Is a Heresy
Last week, the Patriarchs and Heads of the Churches in Jerusalem condemned Christian Zionism. This is long overdue. Christian Zionism is a dangerous and heretical ideology. It distorts the clear teaching of Scripture and the Fathers: that the Church, not the Zionist state, is the true Israel of God. Worse yet, it leads Christians in the West to ignore—or even cheer on—the eradication of indigenous Christian communities in the Holy Land.
Vatican I Debunks Itself: A Response to Erick Ybarra
While converting from Catholicism to Orthodoxy, I realized the strongest argument against papal infallibility isn’t buried in obscure patristic quotes. It’s screaming from the plain text of Vatican I itself: the papacy it promises simply doesn’t exist.
Sorin vs. Yasi: The Curse of Infallibility
Papal infallibility, intended as a gift to clarify doctrine, has instead become "Schrödinger's Pope"—a source of profound confusion because Catholics cannot agree on when or how often it has been exercised, rendering it practically useless for defining the boundaries of faith and causing more doctrinal chaos than it resolves.
Smoke, Mirrors, and Bad Faith: A Response to John Jackson’s “Analysis”
A detailed rebuttal of false claims, selective evidence, and activist framing presented as journalism