Q: If Irenaeus and other early fathers believed in the millennium on earth and taught this doctrine, why is this not taught by the Orthodox Church (since its position is amillennialism)?
A: Yes, it is true that some of the early
Fathers were millenialists (St. Justin the Martyr, for example); Orthodox
Christians are well aware of this and of the fact that St Justin acknowledges
disagreements on this point of doctrine.
However,
we do not see these fathers as being anything but witnesses of the faith of the
specific churches they served or interacted with. In this case, it seems that
the millenarist school was localized in Asia Minor and connected with the
teachings of St Papias. This view was certainly not “taught everywhere, always
and by all” to paraphrase the criteria of St Vincent. It is well-established
that the churches of Egypt and Cappadocia did not universally accept this
interpretation, as Eusebius documents.
- the broader consensus of the churches did not
support it;
- sound hermeneutics of Revelation did not
actually support the literal view;
- great excess were (and continue to be)
connected with millenarism which discredited it.
The
Council of Constantinople did address the fact that the Kingdom of Christ would
have no end (Luke 1), to correct the erroneous view that it would last 1000
years.
However,
it does not seem that millenarism is – from an historic Orthodox perspective –
strictly speaking a condemned heresy (on account of these venerable fathers who
taught it) but rather a tolerable private opinion that should not be taught or
promoted because of its overall rejection by generations of Orthodox bishops as
a viable interpretation of the text.
Source: https://www.orthodoxanswers.org/if-irenaeus-and-other-early-fathers-believed-in-the-millennium-on-earth-and-taught-this-doctrine-why-is-this-not-taught-by-the-orthodox-church-since-its-position-is-amillenialism/
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