Especially since, as the poster noted, ROCOR at that time was not on good terms with the other Orthodox churches, and was not recognized as being Orthodox by most. It only makes sense that they would feel likewise. The poster is basically saying that if there is one break away group that doesn’t recognize the main body, they both must be wrong. By this logic the Catholic Church is also wrong.
Still, ROCOR had good relations with the following Churches:
-the Russian Catacomb Church, i.e. the fraction that has not gone into apostasy like the Moscow Patriarch did, by making statements supportive of Communism
-with the MP, their only beef was that the Patriarch came out in 1927 with a public statement supporting the Bolshevik, Communist regime. Other than that, they still appreciated that the MP did not adopt the New Calendar, pews in the church buildings (something present in Greek and Antiochian EO churches), and musical instruments (some Greek EO churches have musical instruments).
-they had a good relation with the monasteries on Mount Athos. These monasteries, and their monks, are Old Calendar, and stopped remembering the EP in protest for his involvement in ecumenism.
-they would heartily approve of the Old Calendar fractions in Greece (Churches established by Bishops Matthew and Florin, i.e. Matthewites and Florinists)
-they regarded the Serbian EO Church as having stayed true to the Old Calendar.
Having learned about the Calendar issue, my problem was that 90-150 million Russian Orthodox, as well as millions of Serbian Orthodox and the very important monks of Athos, use the Old Calendar, and many of them regard the New Calendar Churches, accounting for other tens of millions under the EP, in Romania, and elsewhere, as heretics. According to the Old Calendar Churches, the Gregorian calendar was condemned three times by pan-Orthodox councils, starting with the 16th century. The date of Pascha was set by an Ecumenical Council (probably Nicaea, but I’m not sure), and could only be changed by an Ecumenical Council, according to them. Thus when the EP of Constantinople changed the calendar, on his own authority, without an Ecumenical Council, that was regarded by millions of Orthodox, in Russia, Greece, Mount Athos, Serbia, Bulgaria, and Romania, as illegitimate. Eventually the Metropolitan of the Church of Greece, and Patriarchs of Bulgaria and Romania adopted the New Calendar, and that lead to schisms in Greece, Bulgaria, and Romania. The EO Bishops in Greece, Bulgaria, and Romania, who went into schism, and the faithful laity rejecting the New Calendar, regarded their Metropolitans and Patriarchs as heretics. Under the EO ecclesiological model, i.e. “all Bishops are equal”, I can see how it’s perfectly reasonable for a Bishop to reject the authority of his Patriarch/Metropolitan, if he thinks that the latter has fallen into heresy. Moreover, the Orthodox ecclesiological model allows the laity to reject the decisions of their Patriarchs, Metropolitans, and Bishops, see the widespread rejection of the Unions of Florence and Brest, by the laity. Thus, when the laity in Greece, Bulgaria, and Romania rejected the New Calendar, they acted in accord with this Orthodox model of ecclesiology. Moreover, the present-day Russian Orthodox laypeople I know would not accept the New Calendar. They celebrate Christmas on January 7, and they wouldn’t want to move that to December 25. This is part of their Russian identity, and you could travel from Karelia and St. Petersburg in the West, all the way to Siberia, the Kamchatka Peninsula and the Kuryl Islands in the East, accross the great Russian fatherland, and it’s all Old Calendar, and they celebrate Christmas on January 7. Not only do they stick to their own Calendar, the majority of Russian laypeople I knew regarded the New Calendar as un-Orthodox. If the MP wanted the change the calendar, the laypeople would riot. Like they rioted after the Unions of Florence and Brest.
The clergy’s and laypeople’s role in Orthodox and Catholic ecclesiology seems different. When Pope Paul VI wrote the encyclical Humanae Vitae in 1968, there was open revolt among the Catholic clergy (Bishops, Priests), and laity, against his condemnation of artificial birth control. Yet this is of no consequence to the clarity of Catholic teaching. All clergy and laity must agree with Peter’s successor, according to Catholic ecclesiology. There’s no doubt as to what’s the Catholic teaching, even if there are still dissenting priests who refuse to address the issue of ABC from the pulpits. Even if there are many Catholic laypeople who disobey the Chuch and use ABC, the teaching of the Catholic Church is clear, and those who want to obey, will not be left among doubts, without guidance.
When I was considering Orthodoxy, I fealt very much among doubts, without guidance, regarding the Calendar issue. I grew up in New Calendar Romania, I never met a Romanian who celebrated according to the Old Calendar (there is an Old Calendar Romanian Church, and Old Calendar Romanian Bishops not in communion with the Romanian Patriarch, I learned later. But I haven’t met them in my life). I knew millions of Romanians celebrated according to the New Calendar, but then I started dating a Russian woman, and alas, the Russians I met regarded the New Calendar as a heresy. And the monks of Mount Athos, and others, agreed with them.
I bolded the following in Nine_Two’s post: [ROCOR]** “was not recognized as being Orthodox by most”**. Yet, ROCOR and the monks of Mt. Athos would turn the table, and would not recognize the New Calendar Churches as Orthodox. I never found a solution to this dilemma, under the Orthodox model of ecclesiology.