"The Place of Women in the Orthodox Church": A Conference at Intercession Church
0 Comments Published by georgy on Thursday, July 10 at 10:44 PM.The Conference opened with a greeting from His Eminence Metropolitan Hilarion, in which the Primate of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia pointed to the importance of appreciating the role and service of women in the Orthodox Church. Women were the ones who historically, beginning with the Holy Myrrh-bearers and Equal-to-the-Apostles, bore a significant burden of service to the Church, whether on the kliros, the sisterhood, parish councils and schools, hospitals, nursing homes or scholarly conferences.
Professor Vera Shevtsoff of
Professor Marina V Ledkovsky of
Eugenia Temidis, a researcher of Orthodox liturgical singing, read a lecture on St Cassia (9th century), a defender of the veneration of icons, whose spiritual life is forever remembered during the divine services of Passion Week and the Nativity of Christ. Elaborating on the "liturgical" image of St Cassia through her poetical works, written in the classical style, the speaker painted a convincing, living image of a person who lived an intense spiritual and intellectual life.
The central event of the conference was the speech of Archimandrite Robert Taft, Professor of Eastern Liturgy at the Pontifical Oriental Institute, the world's leading specialist in the Orthodox liturgy. Reconstructing the place of women in the church life of
A more mixed reaction was elicited by a serious theological examination by Nun Vassa (Larin), a student of Prof. Taft, on ecclesiastical rules on the "impure" times in a woman's life. Sister Vassa's bold presentation posed the question: "is a person morally responsible for the period of cleansing, and to what extent does the corresponding prohibition from participation in liturgical life draw one closer to God?"
Professor Nadieszda Kizenko of SUNY Albany spoke on the concept of confession for women in Tsarist Russia, painting a picture of harsh social injustice, helping to grasp a sober, Orthodox attitude towards repentance, and also to understand that one's way of life's inseparable from one's sinfulness.
Natalia Ermolaev, doctoral candidate at
Each day of the gathering began with morning and ended with evening prayers. The Diocesan Holy Myrrh-bearer's Women's Choir, under the direction of Eugenia Temidis, sang all-night vigil and Divine Liturgy on the feast day of All Saints in English for the first time. It is important to note the efforts of the organizers of the Conference: Fr Alexander Antchoutine, the Rector of Intercession Church; Catherine Straut; Catherine Mickle; and Natalia Fekula, along with all the parishioners, who warmly welcomed the conferees.
The most valuable part of the Conference were the fruitful discussions on uncomfortable matters such as the ordination of women, the degree of their participation in the conciliar life of the Church, the relevance of the 16th-century compendium "Domostroy," etc. The Conference's two days showed that in addition to the fifty-percent that the organizers' enthusiasm contributed to its success, another 45 percent or so was attributable to the participation of the conferees. The Conference, without reaching a final conclusion on the questions, still illuminated the problems addressed, which began a dialog. This was a clear example of the striving of the people of God towards conciliarity, and was a sign of a new period in the life of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia, which moves from the preservation of Holy Tradition as its main goal to developing its meaning.
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