http://classicalchristianity.com/2012/06/27/on-zealotry-and-narrow-orthodoxy
Hieromonk Seraphim Rose 1934-1982
Even when it is not fanatical, this spirit of “correctness” for its own sake turns out to be fruitless. As an example, I can tell you of a very good friend of ours, one of the zealot fathers of Mt. Athos. He is a “moderate” zealot, in that he recognizes the grace of New Calendar sacraments, accepts the blessings of priests of our Church, and the like; but he is absolutely strict when it comes to applying the basic Zealot principle, not to have communion not only with bishops whose teaching departs from Orthodox truth, such as the Patriarch of Constantinople, and not only with anyone who has communion with him, but with anyone who has communion with anyone who in any remote way has communion with him. Such “purity” is so difficult to attain in our days (our whole Russian Church Abroad, for example, is “tainted” in his eyes by some measure of communion with the other Orthodox Churches) that he is in communion with only his own priest and ten other monks in his group on the Holy Mountain; all of the rest of the Orthodox Church is not “pure.”
Perhaps there are only ten or twelve people left in the world who
are perfectly “strict” and “pure” in their Orthodoxy — this I really
don’t know; but it simply cannot be that there are really only ten or
twelve Orthodox Christians left in the world with whom one can have true
oneness of faith, expressed in common communion. I think that you can
see that there is some kind of spiritual dead-end here; even if we had
to believe such a narrow view of Orthodoxy according to the letter, our
believing Christian heart would rebel against it. We cannot really live
by such strictness; we must somehow be less “correct” and closer to the
heart of Orthodox Christianity. (excerpted from the talk “Orthodoxy in America”)
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