St Photios the Great is venerated formally by the Ruthenian Byzantine Catholic Church and is on their calendar.
Fr. Francis Dvornik’s work on Photios has revealed to us so much of what we didn’t know before about Photios, such as that he died in union with Rome, that the Pope of his day received him with equal honours to himself, (i.e. Old Rome and New Rome, even though Elder Rome has the primacy) and the like. Photios was a man of the widest possible education and spirituality and he was in constant prayer and communion with God. The addition of the Filioque to the universal Creed at the time was something that many in the West would have agreed with him on (apart from the theological considerations). It was also St Photios who sent Sts. Cyril and Methodius to evangelize the Slavs at the time of Prince Nicholas Askold in Kyiv.
St Mark of Ephesus, it is true, refused to sign the instrument of union at the Council of Florence. However, he was never condemned as a heretic or anything by Rome. St Mark attended the Council enthusiastically as a . . . unionist. He actually wanted union with Rome but he represented the perspective of his Church when he insisted that the minimum requirement to effect such union was that the Latin Church drop the Filioque (he didn’t even raise the question of the Latin Church’s Trinitarian theology, just the issue of the inclusion of the Filioque in the Creed). Today, I don’t see how anyone can fault him for maintaining the position of his Church. The other Greek bishops who signed the union with Rome did so to placate their Emperor who needed Western military aid against the Turks. Most of them later recanted their signatures due to popular opposition from the Orthodox people, save for some like Metropolitan Isidore of Kyiv (who was imprisoned by the Russians when he returned home and then escaped to the West where he spent the rest of his life saving as many of his Greek countrymen from Turkish enslavement as possible). Even upon a hoped for reunion of the Churches in future, St Mark of Ephesus will continue to be honoured by the East (although not right now by EC’s).
St Gregory Palamas is acknowledged now as a saint by Rome, and this occurred in 1973. The other saints mentioned who expressed opposition to the Latin West - many Orthodox saints did the same at one time or another. It would be, however, like the East denying the sanctity of a Roman Catholic saint because he said something disparaging about the Orthodox Church in his lifetime - again, people repeat the prejudices of their environments. The fact that St Theophane the Recluse did this did not prevent Pope John Paul II from privately venerating him for his vast teachings on the spirituality of the Jesus Prayer. Pope John Paul II was also very devoted to St Seraphim of Sarov - another teacher and practitioner of the Jesus Prayer and the Hail Mary rosary.
St Alexander Nevsky wanted to preserve his nation’s Orthodox traditions and he certainly fought against the RC Teutonic knights who invaded Russia. But according to Fr. Holweck in his “Dictionary of the Saints” 1924, he later was in “at least personal union with Rome.” While I doubt that, it does show that he had very good relations with Rome.
What this ultimately points to is the issue of local Saints. Union of the Churches will not mean that all the saints of each must be in everyone else’s calendar. When the Eastern Orthodox and Oriental Orthodox commission met, they discussed this matter and established that upon reunion both sides will continue to honour the Saints they have always honoured without requiring the other side to adopt them (such “saint adoption” does occur, but it happens over time and is up to the local Churches).
As for Pontius Pilate, that is a local devotion by the Ethiopian Orthodox Church. In fact, they have the “Acts of Pilate” upon which they base their veneration of Pilate as a saint. Are the Acts of Pilate spurious? They don’t believe they are and they have honoured Pilate as a saint from ancient times. My own view is that we should leave that alone.
FYI, the Acts of Pilate depict him being called to meet the resurrected Christ by his wife and the believing centurion. He put on sack-cloth and saw Christ standing in a field preaching to about 500 people. Christ noticed him and walked up to him. Pilate was overcome with emotion and felt the earth quake under his feet. He fell down on his face before the Lord. Christ placed His Hands on Pilate and Pilate quickly glanced at our Lord’s Wounds. Our Lord then said to him, “Blessed are you Gaius Pontius Pilate for in the days of your administration were fulfilled the prophecies about Me as foretold.”
Pilate was then recalled to Rome after writing to the Emperor about what had happened at Jerusalem. The Emperor demanded of Pilate an answer as to why he allowed Christ to be crucified - he should have enlisted our Lord into the Roman civil service to benefit the empire! The Emperor sentenced Pilate to death - and he was already baptized by then. As he knelt to receive the blow from the sword, Pilate prayed, “Lord Jesus, receive my spirit.” As his head came off, his wife, Claudia Procula, saw an angel take hold of it - and she died right there and then from joy that her husband, like her, had come to the Lord.
On the basis of this, the Ethiopian Church honours Pilate as a saint. If we were going to cancel saints from the calendar on the basis of “fantastic” stories, we would have to remove a lot of saints.
I respect my Ethiopian friends for their traditions which includes the veneration of St Pontius Pilate. I once asked an Ethiopian priest, “Is it true, Father, that you honour Pilate as a saint?” He smiled eagerly and said, “Yes, of course, don’t you?”
Alex