Papers Session Online June Annual Meeting 2025

The Future of Nicaea: New Developments from Conciliarism to Hermeneutics

Abstract for Online Program Book (maximum 150 words)

Noting the 1700th anniversary of the First Ecumenical Council of Nicaea, this session explores new developments in the conciliar structure of Orthodoxy, including new approaches to the relationship between Nicaea and scriptural hermeneutics and the crisis of conciliar unity caused by the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Papers in this session will explore such topics as a Christology that combines the boundaries established by the Nicene Creed with the narrative and theological symbols of Israel’s Scriptures; an analysis of the relationship between the epistemology of modern physics, Orthodox mysticism, and the nature of revelation; and the establishment of the Ecumenical Patriarchate’s Orthodox Church in Lithuania in 2024 as a response to the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

Papers

This paper proposes a complementary Christology that integrates the traditional Nicene framework with the rich narrative, vocabulary, and symbols of the Scriptures. While the Nicene Creed defines the divinity and humanity of Christ using Hellenistic philosophical categories, it does not fully convey the scriptural narrative from which early Christian understanding emerged. Drawing on Second Temple Jewish theology and apostolic writings, this paper explores how early followers of Jesus articulated a Christology embedded in Israel’s story. By recovering this biblical vocabulary, the article presents a Christological framework that resonates with both Jewish and non-Chalcedonian Christian traditions. This approach offers a path toward theological rapprochement by reaffirming a shared monotheistic heritage while enriching Orthodox faith expressions through scripturally grounded language.

Chaos theory in physics shows that systems with nearly identical initial conditions can diverge exponentially, revealing the sensitivity of complex dynamical systems. This intrinsic unpredictability challenges strict determinism and has profound implications for epistemology and theology. Similarly, human knowledge evolves along divergent trajectories, as individual experiences shape unique interpretations even when the same text is encountered. This paper examines how these insights challenge the notion of absolute linguistic revelation in sacred texts such as the Bible and the Quran. Since language is inherently interpretive, subject to cultural drift, and reliant on personal experiences, the idea of an unchanging divine message is problematic. By integrating insights from physics, information theory, and hermeneutics, this study critically investigates whether a fixed divine message can persist amid the dynamic evolution of human language, lending support to mystical traditions that prioritize experiential knowledge. 

The Russian invasion of Ukraine has intensified scrutiny of the Russian Orthodox Church (ROC) as both an ideological force and a tool of Russian expansionism. Lithuania illustrates the securitization of religion, as the government facilitated an alternative Orthodox jurisdiction under the Ecumenical Patriarchate. In June 2022, five Russian Orthodox priests were dismissed from the Lithuanian Orthodox Church (Moscow Patriarchate) for supporting Ukraine. They appealed to the Ecumenical Patriarch, who reinstated them in 2023 with Lithuanian government support. In February 2024, the Ecumenical Patriarchate’s Orthodox Church in Lithuania was officially registered. This paper examines Lithuania as a case of religion’s securitization, analyzing how church-state relations shift in geopolitical crises. It further explores how securitization intersects with postcolonial trauma and reshapes religious and political authority in Eastern Europe.

Audiovisual Requirements
LCD Projector and Screen
Comments
First choice for time slot: 3-4:30
Second choice: 11-12:30 | For the Online June Annual Meeting 2025 - Eastern Orthodox Studies Unit
Tags
#Christology
#Nicene Creed
#Second Temple Judaism
#Scriptural Narrative
#Two Powers in Heaven
#Apostolic Theology
#Biblical Vocabulary
#Orthodoxy #Physics #Chaos #Scriptures #Mysticism
#securitizationofreligion #Russanorthodoxchurch #stateandchurchrelations