Enthronement Speech by the Archbishop of America Demetrios
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HOLY TRINITY CATHEDRAL,
NEW YORK, SEPTEMBER 18, 1999
Blessing and glory and wisdom and thanksgiving and honor
and power and might be to our God forever and ever. Amen
( Revelation of John 7,12).
This beautiful Biblical hymn from the book of the Revelation
of John expresses my feelings at this solemn hour: feelings
of fervent worship and adoration offered to the Triune God,
and, at the same time, intense prayer to have His mercy,
love, and power supporting me in the sacred task in which
He has called me, to serve as Archbishop His selected and
beloved people of the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America.
My adoring reference to God, is accompanied by feelings
of the warmest thanks to His All Holiness the Ecumenical
Patriarch Bartholomaios and to the Holy and Sacred Synod
of the Ecumenical Patriarcate for the supreme honor of bestowing
upon me the awesome responsibility of tending the bright
and high promising flock of the Greek Orthodox faithful
in this great country.
1 am thinking, also very thankfully, of my distinguished
and holy predecessors, the Archbishops Alexander, Athenagoras
and Michael of blessed memory, and the Archbishops lakovos
and Spyridon. They have served with all their power the
very same people whom I am going to serve, thus continuing
their work. I extend my particular thanks to His Eminence
Archbishop lakovos for the very gracious words he offered
me as representative of the Ecumenical Patriarch and for
his truly inspiring and edifying address.
I should like to extend my sincere thanks to my precious
Brothers the Metropolitans and Bishops, the pious clergy
and the faithful lay people for the warm reception and the
plentiful of love they showed me. My wholehearted thanks
also extend to the Church of Greece and to the Greek Government
for their support and their presence here through distinguished
representatives. Last but not least, I am expressing my
warm thanks to the honorable representatives of the U. S.
A. governmental and political leadership and to all the
distinguished friends, religious, civil, academic, and business
leaders, who were kind enough to participate in this ceremony.
On this solemn occasion, please allow me, in the spirit
of love and honor for all of you, to bring to our attention
a few basic issues which are significant for our work in
the years to follow. I will limit myself to three of them
which seem to be the most significant and which constitute
fundamental priorities in the life of the Church.
The first, is the issue of the cultivation and growth of
our Orthodox faith which our Ecumenical Patriarchate has
preserved intact and immaculate. This is a faith by which
our Church lives and functions for twenty centuries. A faith
which gave to the world millions of true Christians faithful
to the Gospel of Christ. millions of saints and martyrs.
A faith which the great and genius Fathers and Ecumenical
Teachers of the Church defended, safeguarded and delivered
to us whole, clear, and undistorted. A faith which created
a wonderful tradition in which with utter discretion and
control have been used and incorporated elements from the
Greek cultural heritage.
This Orthodox faith has been always and is still today a
basic priority for us. This is the reason why a number of
serious questions is raised at this crucial moment: How
much intense and deep is our consciousness of this Orthodox
faith? How much we feel bound as individuals and as a community
to our Orthodox Christian beliefs? How much do we know the
substance of this faith as power and knowledge? As a power
capable of changing the human beings and the world, as capable
of Moving even the mountains and of rendering the impossible
possible ( Matthew 17, 20-21 )? As a knowledge which offers
the saving truth about God. humanity and the entire creation.
Finally, how much our Orthodox faith constitutes our real
and genuine identity within the pluralistic and multidimensional
world of the contemporary American society?
The questions are many and so are the answers, as we contemplate
the past and look towards the future which the love of God
has granted to us. Regardless of the answers, however, one
thing is certain: Here, a remarkably wide field of a truly
great work is open to us. A work with immense possibilities
and huge perspectives. A work aiming at the invigoration,
cultivation and growth of a dynamic and illumined faith
within the clergy and the lay people of the blessed Omogeneia
which constitute the flock of our Holy Archdiocese.
To this superb work, to this wonderful effort I should like
to invite today all the beloved brothers and sisters. We
have to be the Church which should give whole, powerful
and Genuine the witness of faith to this great country of
America where God has planted us in. All of us, without
exception have been called by the Lord to become conscious,
true, dynamic and illumined people of faith, who, as Apostle
Peter underlines, are ready and prepared to make a defense
to any one who calls us to accountfor the hope that is in
us ( I Peter 3, 15 ).
There is no doubt, that such a work, such an orientation,
necessitates an emphasis and an intensification of the didactic,
educational and cultural activities and programs of our
Church. Within this perspective, it becomes imperative that
we revitalize and further develop our theological and educational
centers, like our Holy Cross School of Theology and our
Hellenic College so that they could increase to its most
and best their educational dynamism and become brilliant
centers of cultivation and promotion of the values of the
Orthodox faith and the Greek paideia and culture.
Within the same perspective, all the Dioceses and the Communities
of our Holy Archdiocese are called to make the work of the
cultivation and development of the Orthodox faith a substantive
part of their activities and programs, by using all possible
available means, from the traditional educational processes
to the advanced communication technologies. Our target is
the growth and preservation of a robust and illumined Orthodox
identity as a basic characteristic of the members of our
Greek Orthodox Church, particularly of our young generation,
of 8ur beloved and very promising children. This Greek Orthodox
identity will enable our Greek-American faithful to stand
with dignity and pride in the midst of our American fellow-citizens,
respecting their religious and political beliefs within
the large scheme of pluralism and globalization but, at
the same time, insisting in the effort to safeguard the
unique treasure which is our Orthodox faith, and to cherish
our precious asset which we all acknowledge to be our Greek
heritage.
The second major issue which deserves special attention
is the issue of love, charity, and care for the human being.
Our Orthodox Church, faithful to the Gospel of her Founder,
is the Church which loves each and every human person without
any limitation , discrimination or reservation, especially
when he or she is in a condition of need, pain and ordeal.
Center of our faith is a God, Who is love, is the Son of
God who became man in order to serve man, in order to redeem
humanity and the whole of creation from evil, decay and
death. Our Church following the steps of this God who is
a serving God, is permanently dedicated to the care of man,
serves man not only within the limits of the possible but
beyond any limit. Simply, she loves beyond any measure.
All of our communities in the Archdiocese are invited to
intensify and to continually optimize this excellent spirit
of love and diakonia, service. Let the living mutual love
and the eagerness to transcend ourselves for the sake of
the other who is in need, be the distinctive sign of our
Orthodox ethos. Here we are not talking only about philanthropy
or offering of material help to the suffering brothers and
sisters. Here we are talking about an attitude of life which
encompasses our whole existence, and which means initiative
and dynamism and avant-guard programs which cover conditions
of sorrow, isolation and loneliness. sickness, despair,
poverty, and all sorts of ordeals. Of course, our Church
in America has given for many years plenty of palpable evidence
for her philanthropic ethos and disposition. Today, however,
we emphasize the need to intensify such an offering towards
all directions. Here, there is an outstanding human dynamic
and in addition tremendous possibilities due to the astonishing
progress and the very impressive growth of the Omogeneia
on all levels. Here, there appears the bright opportunity
for the Greek Orthodox Church in America to be, with the
blessings and the grace of God who is love, a truly model
Church in terms of offering love to man. A Church which
embraces every human being, especially the suffering ones,
and offers, on a continuous basis , love, care , and tenderness
to a world tormented by cruelty, violence, alienation and
selfishness.
Limitless love translated into service of the suffering
human being, is a basic priority, which we have as members
of the Church of Christ, especially in view of the dawning
third millennium. A millennium, which, in all probability,
may have in store serious ordeals for humanity. It seems
that the people will need strong support in order to survive
and progress in the midst of huge changes in the environment,
the economy, the social
transformations, the biotechnology, the population explosion,
the ideological confusion and the continuous technological
revolution. Our Church here in the United States, as a Church
of limitless love and philanthropy, as a Church destined
to serve and to ,give. can play a significant role in the
sacred effort to support man and the right to life and to
contribute in the task of resolving the pressing problems
which humanity will face in the years to come. Here, the
limitless, wise and inexhaustible love of the Church becomes
a strong element in the confrontation with the future, no
matter what this future might be.
At this point, please allow me to indicate, and close with
it, a third important issue, which in addition to the two
previous ones, constitutes a basic priority for us. This
is the issue of unity, concord, and unanimity of our ecclesiastical
body, and of our Greek Orthodox Community in general.
Let us remember what the Lord immediately before his passion,
has requested from the Father concerning the believers:
keep them in your name, which you have given me, so that
they may be one like us (John 17, 11)… that may they
all be one; even as you, Father, are in me and I in you,
that they may also be one in us, so that the world bay believe
that you have sent me (John 17, 21). And Paul, the Apostle
to the nations, pleads with the believers to live forbearing
one another in love, eager to maintain the unity of the
Spirit in the bond of peace. Why? Because we are one body
and one
Spirit, just as we are called to the one hope that belongs
to our call, one Lord, one faith, one baptism one God and
Father of us all, who is above all and through all and in
all of us (Ephes. 4, 1-6).
This is precisely the reason why, we feel our duty to stress
the need for unity and peace among us. Without fear or hesitation
we are invited, beloved brothers and sisters, to set aside
difference, misunderstanding or conflict that could create
distances among us. Distances that shake the unity and drive
away the peace of God. Nothing should jeopardize the great
and divine gifts of unity and harmony, of unanimity and
communal accord. We have all the presuppositions, as people
and as Church to build in the highest and
strongest possible degree, a unity dynamic and unbreakable
so that we could be and stay one body, one soul, one mind,
one will. In our case the continuation and intensification
of the task for unity and peace, is the wonderful work into
which God calls us today. He calls us in view of the great
objectives which are being set in front of us. The future
is our superb destination, and the future cannot be built
but only on the basis of our unity.
A unity and harmony which must be cultivated and pursued
on many levels and in many forms within our Greek Orthodox
Archdiocese and our Greek-American community inn general.
It must be cultivated as unity and mutual understanding
among the generations, that is the young, the middle aged
and the old. It must be cultivated as unity and harmonic
cooperation between the clergy and the laity. It must be
cultivated between the newcomers Greek-American immigrants
and the Greek-Americans of the third or fourth generation.
It must be cultivated as unity and unbreakable bond between
the people of the Omogeneia and the people of Mother Greece.
Such multidimensional unity and concord is not exhausted
within the area of our Archdiocese, but is supported and
treasured as a unity integrally connected to the Mother
Church, our Ecumenical Patriarcate. A unity which through
our Ecumenical Patriarcate is extended to the larger circle
of the Orthodox Churches in the United States, in order
to embrace, finally. the world.
Today, all of us then under the wings of God, we are called
to continue our creative march. To continue it, in the bright
avenues in which the love and the wisdom of our God lead
us. This is a march of a dynamic faith, of an unlimited
love and of an unbreakable unity, a march in every step
of which we will feel the need to repeat the beautiful hymn
from the Book of Revelation with which we started : Blessing
and glory and wisdom and thanksgiving and honor and power
and might be to our God for ever and ever. Amen
(Revelation of John 7, 2).