Times-Herald (Vallejo)

Orthodox Church’s top patriarch to visit US, meet with Biden

- By Peter Smith

The spiritual leader of the world’s 200 million Eastern Orthodox Christians brings an agenda spanning religious, political and environmen­tal issues to a 12-day U.S. visit beginning Saturday that includes a meeting with President Joe Biden and various ceremonial and interfaith gatherings.

Making the latest of several trips to the country during his 30 years in office, Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholome­w is expected to address concerns ranging from a pending restructur­ing of the American church to his church’s status in his homeland, Turkey.

Bartholome­w’s title, patriarch of Constantin­ople, reflects the ancient imperial name of the city now known as Istanbul in a country where Orthodox Christians, who are mostly ethnically Greek, are a small minority.

Archbishop Elpidophor­os of the Greek Orthodox Archdioces­e of America said the patriarch is expected to renew calls for the reopening of a school of theology closed by the Turkish government 50 years ago.

“Religious freedom in Turkey is vital for the ecumenical patriarcha­te in Turkey,” Elpidophor­os said.

Bartholome­w will receive an honorary degree from the University of Notre Dame on Oct. 28 in an event highlighti­ng efforts to improve Orthodox-Catholic ties, centuries after the two churches broke decisively in 1054 amid disputes over theology and papal claims of supremacy.

Repairing that breach has “been a longstandi­ng commitment of the patriarch,” said the Rev. Alexis Torrance, a professor of Byzantine theology at Notre Dame and an Orthodox priest.

The gathering will also include a talk on environmen­tal stewardshi­p, underscori­ng Bartholome­w’s reputation as the “green patriarch.”

The patriarch is considered first among equals in the Eastern Orthodox hierarchy, which gives him prominence but not the power of a Catholic pope.

Just as his influence is limited in Turkey, it is also limited in the Eastern Orthodox communion, rooted in Eastern Europe and the Middle East with a worldwide diaspora. Large portions of the communion are in national churches that are independen­tly governed, with the ecumenical patriarch having only symbolic prominence, though he does directly oversee Greek Orthodox and some other jurisdicti­ons.

The Russian Orthodox Church, with about 100 million adherents, has in particular asserted its independen­ce and influence and rejected Bartholome­w’s 2019 recognitio­n of the independen­ce of Orthodox churches in Ukraine, where Moscow’s patriarch still claims sovereignt­y.

For an ecumenical pa

triarch with primarily soft-power tools such as diplomacy at his disposal, the high profile of the U.S. visit has symbolic value for Bartholome­w, said Andrew Walsh, associate director of the Greenberg Center for the Study of Religion in Public Life at Trinity College in Connecticu­t.

It will “demonstrat­e that he’s a respected leader,” said Walsh, a layman who has long written about contempora­ry issues in Orthodoxy. “It is useful and desirable for him to show that presidents of the United States will talk with him.”

Bartholome­w is set to meet with Biden and other top U.S. officials in the coming days, though exact times have not been announced.

Bartholome­w will also hold a ceremonial dooropenin­g at St. Nicholas Greek Orthodox Church and National Shrine in New York City, built to replace a parish church destroyed during the 9/11 attacks, and to memorializ­e those killed at the nearby World Trade Center.

Bartholome­w will meet, too, with leaders of the Greek Orthodox Archdioces­e of America and various other Orthodox leaders.

Last year his office suspended the Greek Orthodox archdioces­e’s governing charter, and discussion­s are expected to yield a new one by 2022, according to Elpidophor­os.

“What Greek (Orthodox) are waiting for is what he says about the charter” during the visit, Walsh said, particular­ly on the patriarch’s vision for how much authority will be centralize­d or decentrali­zed in the American church.

The American Jewish Committee is recognizin­g Bartholome­w with its Human Dignity Award for his environmen­tal and interfaith work.

“He is not only the ‘green patriarch,’ but also he’s the patriarch of promoting dialogue,” Elpidophor­os said.

 ?? GREGORIO BORGIA — AP PHOTO ?? Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantin­ople Bartholome­w I delivers his speech at the interrelig­ious meeting ‘Brother peoples, future land” organized by the Sant’Egidio Community at ‘La Nuvola’ convention center in Rome.
GREGORIO BORGIA — AP PHOTO Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantin­ople Bartholome­w I delivers his speech at the interrelig­ious meeting ‘Brother peoples, future land” organized by the Sant’Egidio Community at ‘La Nuvola’ convention center in Rome.

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