Metr. Saba Calls for a Living Patristic Tradition

Photo: Metropolitan Saba Esper / Facebook

ENGLEWOOD, NJ — Metr. Saba (Isper) has reflected on the role of the Church Fathers in contemporary Orthodox life, arguing that both rigid idealism and dismissal of the Fathers misunderstand the nature of the Church’s living tradition.

In a recent article, the hierarch described two opposing tendencies within modern Christianity. One insists that every patristic statement must be followed without adaptation and views any new theological engagement as a departure from Orthodoxy. The other sees the Fathers as relics of the past and places greater emphasis on modern ideas and contemporary theological developments. Metr. Saba contended that both positions are flawed because they reduce the Fathers to a historical phenomenon while overlooking the continuing work of the Holy Spirit in the Church.

The Metropolitan emphasized that the Fathers were not merely intellectuals or founders of philosophical systems but holy men who united prayer, asceticism, and theological teaching. While they expressed the faith using the language and concepts of their own eras, they remained united in the essentials of Christian doctrine. He argued that the Church must likewise explain the Gospel to each generation in language people can understand while remaining faithful to the same core faith.

Metr. Saba also rejected the notion that the age of the Church Fathers ended after the first eight centuries, insisting that God continues to raise up holy teachers in every era. He maintained that fidelity to the Fathers means acquiring a “patristic mind” rooted in holiness, prayer, and life within the Church community rather than selectively quoting isolated texts to support predetermined arguments.

Previously, the UOJ reported that Metr. Saba urged seminarians toward compassionate pastoral care.

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