Rev. Dr. Demetrios Tonias
“Sunday as a Mark of Christian Unity”
by Rev. Dr. Demetrios E. Tonias – Dean, Annunciation Greek Orthodox Cathedral of New England
by Rev. Dr. Demetrios E. Tonias – Dean, Annunciation Greek Orthodox Cathedral of New England
The Christian Church, from its very beginning, has struggled with the
concept of unity. Indeed, within the Pauline corpus we see the many
ways in which the Apostle to the Gentiles struggled to keep together his
young and fragile network of communities. As the church grew, there
arose a variety of challenges, large and small, to threaten its unity.
The Orthodox Christian Divine Liturgy bears witness to these challenges
in the petitions and prayers, which are offered in the Eucharistic rite.
We pray for “the unity of all,” “the unity of the faith,” for Christ to
“reunite those separated” and to “unite us all to one another who
become partakers of the one Bread and the Cup in the communion of the
one Holy Spirit.” We recite the Nicene Creed with its portentous
closing phrases stating belief in “One Holy Catholic and Apostolic
Church,” its sacred claim to “confess one Baptism for the forgiveness of
sins”, and its exultation of Sunday as the Lord’s Day and the gift of
resurrection with the statement “I look for the resurrection of the dead
and the life of the ages to come.”
The Divine Liturgy is, most certainly, a fitting place to offer such
prayers and confessions of faith, for the preeminent celebration of the
Liturgy takes place on Sunday. From the moment the myrrh bearers found
Christ’s empty tomb, Sunday was known as ἡ Κυριακή ἡμέρα—the Lord’s Day.
By definition, each and every Sunday is a call to Christian unity since
it is on this day that we are called to communion with the Lord, by the
Lord. In spite of all of the challenges that have tugged at the threads
of Christian unity, the Lord’s Day remains the one, unassailable marker
of Christian unity since it is on this day that all of us, despite our
many differences, gather together as believers in Christ.
There were always differences about days and dates in the Christian
world. There were divisions surrounding the dating of Pascha from the
earliest years of Christianity. The Puritans rejected the commemoration
of the birth of Christ on December 25 as unscriptural. The Lord’s Day,
however, as a time of communal, Christian gathering has never been in
question. The commemoration of the Lord’s Day is an historical reality
that bears witness to the centrality of the Resurrection and all that
this event meant and signifies for the cosmos. Therefore, what better
marker of Christian unity can we have? Indeed, what stronger case can
one make for the significance of Sunday as a hallmark of Christian unity
than the understanding that Christians throughout the centuries have
conceived of this day as a day of new creation, an eighth day set apart
from all others.
For the Orthodox Christian mind, this historical relationship is
critical to our understanding of Christian unity. For the Orthodox
Christian, unity implies a transcendent ecumenicity—an ecumenicity that
exists throughout time and space. It is a communion of all believers, at
all times. Put simply, nothing in the calendar unites us like Sunday.
It is a day that changed the world on the very first Sunday and, I would
argue, every Sunday after the first. The world was transfigured through
a myriad of Sunday’s when Christians gathered in communion and heard
the Gospel message. It was on Sunday when Christians learned to love
their enemies and care for those in need. It was on Sunday when
Christians first met to share a meal of love they called by the Greek
word ἀγάπη. It was, is, and shall always be on Sunday when the best hope
for humanity shines forth from churches large and small and the
“Eucharist after the Eucharist” travels forth from the four walls of the
church and into the home and homeless shelter, the playground and the
hospital, the wedding feast and the wake.
It is human nature to think parochially—in terms of our own family,
our own exclusive church, our own unique religious entity. In this
historical light, however, Sunday takes on a new meaning. Sunday worship
is something more than simply what our parents and grandparents did.
Sunday worship is even more than what our local faith community has
done. Sunday worship is something that all Christians, at all
times have celebrated. When we gather on Sunday the unity we achieve
takes us back in time, across the ages to the earliest believer; it also
moves us forward in time to embrace generations not yet born. In this
way, the spiritual unity we have thus achieved possesses an
eschatological character. The unity to which we bear witness and which
we embody is a manifestation of the kingdom to which we all aspire.
In order to fully appreciate Sunday as a mark of Christian unity we
must expand our definition of unity. We must all strive for a Christian
community—one throughout the ages—for such a transcendent unity yields
many fruits. If we are in union with the earliest Christians then we
will share in their zeal. If we are in unity with the martyrs then we
partake of their devotion. If we are in unity with those compassionate
Christians then we feel and can bestow their healing touch. When we
assemble in faith on Sundays, we gather not simply with other
parishioners in a local place of worship, but with Christians throughout
every land and all the ages—and there is no greater evidence of unity
than this. In our century, as with its predecessors, challenges large
and small threaten Sunday. However, when we stand in faith, as members
of a Church beyond all churches, we reclaim Sunday for the God who gave
it to us. LDAUSA
No comments:
Post a Comment