pplpod

How the 1923 Calendar Update Fractured Orthodoxy


Listen Later

Imagine putting off a software update for over three centuries, only to have the eventually forced installation break your entire operating system. In this episode of pplpod, we conduct a structural archaeology of the Council of Constantinople of 1923, an event that attempted a massive "system update" for the Eastern Orthodox Church. We unpack the ambitious but contested leadership of Meletius IV, who sought to align the East with the globalized rhythms of post-war diplomacy and trade. We explore the mechanical brilliance of the New Julian Calendar, a mathematical band-aid designed to sync with the West while maintaining an expiration date in the year 2800 to save theological face. However, by pushing this Calendar Reform without the presence of key patriarchates like Alexandria and Jerusalem, the council triggered a devastating Ecclesiastical Schism that continues to define the Old Calendarists today. By examining the 83-year translation delay that kept these primary acts hidden from the English-speaking world until Patrick Viscuso's 2006 release, we reveal how a lack of information access can create profound historical blind spots. Join us as we navigate the collision between ancient tradition and the relentless march of synchronized global time.

Key Topics Covered:

  • The 400-Year Lag: Analyzing the unsustainable friction caused by the East remaining on the Julian calendar while the West utilized the Gregorian standard for trade, post, and rail.
  • The Face-Saving Loophole: Deconstructing the "New Julian" technicality—a calendar that meticulously mimics the Gregorian dates until the 29th century to avoid the appearance of capitulation to Rome.
  • The Institutional Risk: Exploring the structural flaws of a "Pan-Orthodox" gathering where representatives from Alexandria, Antioch, and Jerusalem actively boycotted the proceedings.
  • Disrupting the Fasting Rhythm: How shifting the calendar fundamentally altered the lived experience of faith, disrupting feast days and fasting periods that form the heartbeat of the religion.
  • The 83-Year Silence: A look at the monumental efforts of Patrick Viscuso, whose 2006 translation finally opened the primary acts of the Council to English-speaking scholars after eight decades of blackout.

Source credit: Research for this episode included Wikipedia articles accessed 3/16/2026. Wikipedia text is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0; content here is summarized/adapted in original wording for commentary and educational use.

...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

pplpodBy pplpod