“Attempts to negotiate with the Heterodox have caused serious harm to the Church,” – a hierarch of the Greek Church on the results of the Crete Council

Metropolitan Nikolaos of Mesogaia and Lavreotiki, a hierarch of the Church of Greece, has shared his thoughts on the results of the Crete Council and on the future of inter-Orthodox dialogue, reports Agionoros citing Orthodoxia.info

Some are trying to convince everyone that the Council was a great event, “but when you try to convince people of the greatness of something, it means in reality it was not so great,” said the hierarch.

“I was expecting the Pan-Orthodox Council to become a great event; I hoped it would become something unadulterated and not crumpled,” Vladyka said, sharing his expectations.

However, he also believes it is incorrect to completely subvert the council and place it under complete doubt: “An attempt was made. Yes, mistakes were made, there were deficiencies, but the aspirations were pure.”

Met. Nikolaos also stressed the need “to gather and to understand where we stand. [As the Crete Council showed], we are not in the best condition. We need pan-Orthodox efforts. Attempts to negotiate with the heterodox have caused serious harm to the Orthodox Church.”

Read also

UOC House Church Set Ablaze in Khmelnytskyi Region

Police have identified the arsonist.

World's Most Premature Baby Celebrates First Birthday

Iowa NICU defies “impossible” odds to save boy born at 21 weeks.

Court Extends Detention of Metropolitan Arseny by Two Months — Again

Defense Prepares Appeal as Legal Irregularities Surround Continued Imprisonment of UOC Hierarch

Holy Martyrs of Alapaevsk Honored in Russian Gethsemane

The liturgy was attended by the monastery’s clergy, Arabic-speaking clergy from the Jerusalem Patriarchate, Hieromonk Peter (Borodulin) of the Russian Ecclesiastical Mission, and pilgrims in holy orders.

Diocese of Alaska Announces Annual St. Herman Pilgrimage

The pilgrimage will take place from August 7 to 9.

First LGBT Archbishopess Elected in Anglican Church

Sixty-six-year-old Cherry Vann lives with her civil partner and two dogs.