Dear brother Jim Dandy,
Thank you for your honesty. I’m afraid that quick quip from the Institute does not in the least fully explain what
oikonomia is. “
Pastoral care” and “
understanding for weakness” are indeed foundational premises for the concept of
oikonomia, but that is not the full story. The missing part is in the practical application of those premises - i.e., how is this pastoral care effected? How does understanding for weakness influence the Church’s actions towards the sinner?
Here is how (by way of example):
As you know, stealing is a mortal sin. Suppose a man steals food to feed his hungry family. The man is caught. But when the the judge hears about the extenuating circumstances of the man, the judge cancels the punishment normally due for the sin of stealing, and lets the man go, being sure to reinforce in the man that it is wrong to steal.
THAT is what happens when
oikonomia is used in the Orthodox Churches. It is not permission to violate the divine law, nor a relaxation of the divine law. Ask any well-educated Orthodox Christian, and you will discover they will all admit that, in relation to this discussion, contraception and divorce/remarriage is
not the norm of the Orthodox Churches, but falls short of the mark. No Orthodox priest is saying “
it is OK for you to sin.” What the priest is saying is "
I understand the extenuating circumstances you are in, and will therefore forego the punishment normally associated with your sin.
GRANTED, you will find uneducated Orthodox Christians who will claim that contraception or divorce/remarriage is a norm in the Orthodox Churches, but they do not represent the true teaching of Orthodoxy on the matter.
As explained above,
oikonomia does not violate the divine law because
oikonomia is not attempting to change the divine law by making it more permissive. Rather, it is simply a mitigation of the normal punishment attached to a violation of the divine law because of the extenuating circumstances of the one who commits the violation.
That sounds like the calumny used by certain Protestants that the Sacrament of Confession gives one permission to sin.
Blessings,
Marduk