St. Ambrose of Optina 
Regarding the unjust glorying of the papists in the imaginary dignity of their Church
This letter was written by St. Ambrose of Optina at a time when the educated classes in Russia where reading more about religion in French than in their native Russian. Ties with people of other confessions often caused people to doubt their own Orthodox faith. The letter is no less useful today for those who grapple with the difference between the Roman Catholic Church and the Orthodox Church.
In vain do some of the Orthodox marvel at the current
 propaganda of the Roman Church, at the feigned
 selflessness and activity of her missionaries and at the
 zeal of the Latin sisters of mercy, and incorrectly
 ascribe to the Latin Church such importance, as if by her
 apostasy from the Orthodox Church, the latter remained
 longer such, and has the necessity to seek unification
 with the former. On rigorous examination, this opinion
 proves to be false; and the energetic Latin activity not
 only does not evoke surprise, but, on the contrary,
 arouses deep sorrow in the hearts of right-thinking
 people, who understand the truth.
 The Eastern Orthodox Church, from apostolic times until
 now, observes unchanged and unblemished by innovations
 both the Gospel and Apostolic teachings, as well as the
 Tradition of the Holy Fathers and resolutions of the
 Ecumenical Councils, at which God-bearing men, having
 gathered from throughout the entire world, in a conciliar
 manner composed the divine Symbol of the Orthodox Faith
 [the Creed], and having proclaimed it aloud to the whole
 universe, in all respects perfect and complete, forbade on
 pain of terrible punishments any addition to it, any
 abridging, alteration, or rearrangement of even one iota
 of it. The Roman Church departed long ago into heresy and
 innovation. As far back as Basil the Great, certain
 bishops of Rome were condemned by him in his letter to
 Eusebius of Samosata, "They do not know and do not
 wish to know the truth; they argue with those who proclaim
 the truth to them, and assert their heresy." 
 Apostle Paul commands us to separate ourselves from those
 damaged by heresy and not to seek union with them, saying,
 A man that is an heretic after the first and second
 admonition reject; knowing that he that is such is
 subverted, and sinneth, being condemned of himself
 (Tit. 3:10-11). The catholic [universal] Orthodox Church,
 not two times, but multiple times tried to bring to reason
 the local Roman Church; but, despite all the just attempts
 at persuading the former, the latter remained persistent
 in its erroneous manner of thinking and acting. 
 Already back in the seventh century, the false
 philosophizing that the Holy Spirit proceeds from the Son
 was conceived in the Western Church. At first, certain
 popes rose up against this new reasoning, calling it
 heretical. Pope Damasus proclaims in a Council resolution:
 "He who thinks rightly about the Father and the Son
 but improperly about the Holy Spirit is a heretic"
 (Encyclical § 5). Other popes, such as Leo II and
 John VIII, also affirmed the same thing. But most of their
 successors, having been carried away by rights of
 domination and finding many worldly benefits in this for
 themselves, dared to modify the Orthodox dogma about the
 procession of the Holy Spirit, contrary to the decisions
 of the seven Ecumenical Councils, and also contrary to the
 clear words of the Lord Himself in the Gospel: Which
 proceedeth from the Father (Jn. 15:26). 
 But just as one mistake--which is not considered a
 mistake--always brings another one in its train, and one
 evil begets another, so the same happened with the Roman
 Church. This incorrect philosophizing that the Holy Spirit
 proceeds also from the Son, having just barely appeared in
 the West, already then gave birth to other similar
 offspring, and instituted little by little other
 novelties, for the most part contradictory to the
 commandments of our Savior clearly portrayed in the
 Gospel, such as: sprinkling instead of immersion in the
 mystery of Baptism, exclusion of laypersons from the
 Divine Chalice and the use of unleavened bread instead of
 leavened bread in the Eucharist, and excluding from the
 Divine Liturgy the invocation of the All-Holy and
 Life-Giving and All-Effectuating Spirit. It also
 introduced novelties that violated the ancient Apostolic
 rites of the Catholic Church, such as: the exclusion of
 baptized infants from Chrismation and reception of the
 Most-Pure Mysteries, the exclusion of married men from the
 priesthood, the declaration of the Pope as infallible and
 as the locum tenens of Christ, and so on. In this way, it
 overturned the entire ancient Apostolic office that
 accomplishes almost all the Mysteries and all the
 ecclesiastical institutions--the office, which before had
 been preserved by the ancient holy and Orthodox Church of
 Rome, being at that time the most honored member of the
 Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church (Encyclical § 5,
 item 12). 
 Nevertheless, the main heresy of the Roman Church is not
 in subject matter, but in action; there is the fabricated
 dogma of supremacy, or rather, prideful striving for
 dominance of the bishops of Rome over the four other
 Eastern Patriarchs. For the sake of this dominance,
 supporters of the Roman Church placed their pope above the
 canons and foundations of the Ecumenical Councils,
 believing in his infallibility. But history truthfully
 testifies as to just what this papal infallibility is.
 About Pope John XXIII, it was stated in the decision of
 the Council of Constance, which deposed this pope:
 "It has been proved that Pope John is an inveterate
 and incorrigible sinner, and he was and is an unrighteous
 man, justly indicted for homicide, poisoning, and other
 serious crimes; a man who often and persistently before
 various dignitaries claimed and argued that the human soul
 dies and burns out together with the human body, like
 souls of animals and cattle, and that the dead will by no
 means resurrect in the last day." The lawless acts of
 Pope Alexander VI and his sons were so monstrous that, in
 the opinion of his contemporaries, this pope was trying to
 establish on Earth the kingdom of satan, and not the
 Kingdom of God. Pope Julius II reveled in the blood of
 Christians, constantly arming--for his own purposes--one
 Christian nation against another (Spiritual Conversation,
 No. 41, 1858). There are many other examples, testifying
 to the great falls and fallibility of popes, but there is
 no time to talk about them now. With such historical
 evidence of its impairment through heresy and of the falls
 of its popes, is it warranted for the papists to glory in
 the false dignity of the Roman Church? Is it just that
 they should abase the Orthodox Eastern Church, whose
 infallibility is based not on any one representative, but
 on the Gospel and Apostolic teachings and on the canons
 and decisions of the seven Ecumenical and nine Local
 Councils? At these Councils were God-inspired and holy
 men, gathered from the entire Christian world, and they
 established everything relating to the requirements and
 spiritual needs of the Church, according to the Holy
 Scriptures. So, do the papists behave soundly, who, for
 the sake of worldly goals, place the person of their pope
 above the canons of the Ecumenical Councils, considering
 their pope as more than infallible? 
 For all the stated reasons, the Catholic Eastern Church
 severed its communion with the local Church of Rome, which
 had fallen away from the truth and from the canons of the
 catholic Orthodox Church. Just as The Roman bishops had
 begun with pridefulness, they are also ending with
 pridefulness. They are intensifying their argument that
 allegedly the Orthodox Catholic Church fell away from
 their local Church. But that is wrong and even ridiculous.
 Truth testifies that the Roman Church fell away from the
 Orthodox Church. Although for the sake of imaginary
 rightness papists promote the view that during the time of
 union with the Catholic Orthodox Church, their patriarch
 was first and senior among the five patriarchs, this was
 true only for the sake of Imperial Rome, and not because
 of some spiritual merit or authority over the other
 patriarchs. It is wrong that they called their Church
 "Catholic", i.e. universal. A part can never be
 named the whole; the Roman Church before its fall from
 Orthodoxy, comprised only a fifth part of the one Catholic
 Church. Especially since it rejected the decisions of the
 Ecumenical Councils the Roman Church should not be called
 catholic, as it follows its own incorrect theorizing. 
 To some, the sheer numbers and widespread distribution of
 adherents to the Latin Church is eye-catching, and
 therefore those who unreliably understand truth
 deliberate: should it not be for this reason that the
 Latin Church be called Ecumenical or Catholic? But this
 view is extremely erroneous, because nowhere in Holy
 Scriptures are special spiritual rights ascribed to great
 numbers and large quantity. The Lord clearly showed that
 the sign of the true Catholic Church does not consist in
 great numbers and quantity when he spoke in the Gospels,
 Fear not, little flock; for it is your Father's good
 pleasure to give you the kingdom (Lk. 12:32). There is
 another example in Holy Scripture which does not favor
 quantity. Upon the death of Solomon, the kingdom of Israel
 was divided in the presence of his son, and Holy Scripture
 presents ten tribes as having fallen away; whereas two,
 having remained faithful to their duty, had not fallen
 away. Therefore, the Latin Church in vain tries to prove
 its correctness by its multitude, quantity, and widespread
 distribution. 
 At the Ecumenical Councils, a completely different
 indication of the Ecumenical Church was designated by the
 Holy Fathers, i.e. determined in council: to believe in
 the One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church, and not
 simply in a universal, or everywhere-present church.
 Although the Roman Church has followers everywhere in the
 world, since it did not maintain inviolate the catholic
 and apostolic decrees, but rather deviated towards
 innovation and incorrect philosophies, it does not at all
 belong to the One, Holy and Apostolic Church. 
 Those well-disposed towards the Latins likewise extremely
 erroneously reason that, firstly, upon the falling away of
 the West from Orthodoxy, something as if became lacking in
 the Catholic Church. This loss was replaced long ago by
 all-wise Providence--it was the foundation in the North of
 the Orthodox Church of Russia. Secondly, they think that
 allegedly for the sake of the former seniority and size of
 the Roman Church, the Orthodox Church has need of union
 with it. However, we are speaking not of a human judgment,
 but a judgment of God. Apostle Paul clearly says, What
 communion hath light with darkness? (2 Cor. 6:14)
 – i.e., the light of Christ’s truth can never
 be combined with the darkness of heresy. The Latins
 don’t want to leave their heresy, and they persist,
 as the words of Basil the Great testifies about them what
 has been proven over many centuries, "They do not
 know the truth and do not wish to know; they argue with
 those who proclaim the truth to them and assert their
 heresy," as stated above. 
 Instead of entertaining the above-mentioned thoughts,
 those supportive of the Latins, would be better off
 thinking about what’s said in the psalms, I have
 hated the congregation of evil-doers (Ps. 25:5), and
 to pity those who, for the sake of domination and avarice
 and other worldly aims and benefits, scandalized almost
 the entire world through the Inquisition and cunning
 Jesuit intrigues, and even now outrage and abuse the
 Orthodox in Turkey through their missionaries. Latin
 missionaries don’t care about converting to the
 Christian faith the native Turks, but they strive to
 pervert from the true path the Orthodox Greeks and
 Bulgarians, using for this purpose all sorts of unpleasant
 means and schemes. Is this not craftiness, and is this
 craftiness not malicious? Would it be prudent to seek
 unity with such people? For the same reason, should one be
 surprised at the feigned diligence and selflessness of
 such figures, i.e. the Latin missionaries and sisters of
 mercy? They are downright pitiable ascetics. They strive
 to convert and lead people, not to Christ, but to their
 pope. 
 What should we say in response to these questions: can the
 Latin Church and other religions be called the New Israel
 and ark of salvation? And how can one understand the
 Eucharist of this Church of Rome? Only the Church of the
 right-believing, undamaged by heretical philosophizing,
 can be called the New Israel. Holy Apostle John the
 Theologian says, They went out from us, but they were
 not of us; for if they had been of us, they would no doubt
 have continued with us: but they went out, that they might
 be made manifest that they all were not of us (1 Jn.
 2:19). And Holy Apostle Paul says, One Lord, one
 faith (Eph. 4:5), i.e. one is the true faith, and not
 every belief is good--as those having separated themselves
 from the one true Church recklessly think, about whom Holy
 Apostle Jude writes, How that they told you there
 should be mockers in the last time, who should walk after
 their own ungodly lusts. These be they who separate
 themselves, sensual, having not the Spirit (Jude
 1:18-19). Therefore, how can these, who are alien to the
 spirit of truth, be called the New Israel? Or, how can
 they be called a haven of salvation for anyone, when both
 one and the other cannot be effectuated without the grace
 of the Holy Spirit? 
 In the Orthodox Church, it is believed that the bread and
 wine in the mystery of the Eucharist are transubstantiated
 by the invocation and descent of the Holy Spirit. But the
 Latins, as mentioned above, considered this invocation
 unnecessary and excluded it from their Liturgy. Thus, he
 who understands--let him understand about the Eucharist of
 the Latins. 
 And another question: if, as it is said, except for the
 One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church, which is called
 the Orthodox Church, salvation in other religions is
 doubtful, then why is this truth not preached openly in
 Russia? To this question the answer is very simple and
 clear. In Russia religious tolerance is allowed, and the
 heterodox occupy important posts along with Orthodox:
 heads of educational institutions for the most part are
 heterodox; leaders of provinces and districts of cities
 are often heterodox; regimental and battalion commanders
 are not infrequently heterodox. Wherever a clergyman
 starts openly proclaiming that outside of the Orthodox
 Church there is no salvation, heterodox of religious rank
 take offense. From such a situation, Russian Orthodox
 clergy have acquired the habit and engrained
 characteristic of talking about this subject evasively.
 For this reason, and from continual interaction with
 heterodox, but more from reading their works, perhaps some
 began to be lax in their thoughts about the hope of
 salvation and other religions. 
 Despite the Orthodox Church’s spirit of meekness and
 the love of peace and patience of her pastors and
 followers, in the West there has been published during the
 preceding centuries by followers of different Christian
 creeds, and predominantly in our times, such a multitude
 of books against the teaching of the Eastern Church that
 not only would it be difficult to appraise their merit, it
 would be hard to enumerate them. And although such books
 in general are filled with slanders, fables, blame,
 obvious inventions and lies, and especially mental
 poison-creating cobwebs, with the obvious goal of forming
 in Europe a spirit hostile to the Eastern Church, and
 especially to our homeland, and, having shaken the faith
 of our Orthodox Church, to seduce her followers from the
 path of truth. But since they are published under tempting
 names, in agreeable forms, with such typographical
 neatness that they unconsciously lure the curiosity of
 readers, not a few of whom are found in our homeland,
 where these works penetrate by dark paths, and who, having
 a superficial understanding of the subjects of Christian
 doctrine, cannot help but be carried away by thoughts
 contrary to the truth. The writers of the Latin Church
 have now especially armed themselves against the Orthodox,
 proclaiming the supremacy of their pope and local Roman
 Church over all governments and local Churches and nations
 of the world. Predominantly at the current time those busy
 with this are the Jesuits in France, who, using the
 omnipresence of the French language, are intensifying some
 sort of feverish activity by means of works in that
 language to implant their manner of thought everywhere
 against the doctrine and hierarchical structure of the
 Eastern Church--not ashamed for this purpose to create the
 most heinous fictions, obvious lies and shameless
 distortion of historical truths. Many of the educated
 Orthodox, reading these works in the French language, and
 not reading their own in Russian about the Orthodox faith,
 can easily believe the fine-spun lies instead of the
 truth, which they do not know well. 
 For those who wish to know in detail the reasons why the
 papists have deviated so far from Orthodoxy, it’s
 useful to read a recently published work by Avdii Vostokov
 [late nineteenth century] about the Roman Church’s
 relationship with other churches. In the second part of
 this book are particularly striking passages about the
 oath of Latin bishops to their pope and about slanders of
 papists against the Orthodox (p. 49, 60 and 137). 
26 / 08 / 2013
Source- www.pravoslavie.ru/englis/63657.html

 
 

