The True Church in The Last Times
The True Church in The Last Times
The True Church in The Last Times
Vladimir Moss
INTRODUCTION........................................................................................................3
1. A DIALOGUE BETWEEN AN ORTHODOX CHRISTIAN AND A
GENUINE SEEKER ON THE ORTHODOX FAITH.............................................4
2. CATHOLIC AND ORTHODOX ECUMENISM ...............................................15
3. MEMORY AND THE MOSCOW PATRIARCHATE......................................31
4. TEN REASONS WHY THE ECUMENICAL PATRIARCHATE IS NOT
ORTHODOX..............................................................................................................45
5. A LETTER TO AN ANGLICAN FRIEND ON HERESY ................................71
6. ON MYSTERY AND MYSTIFICATION...........................................................77
7. BORN-AGAIN CHRISTIANS .............................................................................82
8. A REVIEW OF THE STRUGGLE AGAINST ECUMENISM ....................86
9. FR. SERAPHIM ROSE: A MODERN ST. AUGUSTINE.................................90
10. QUO VADIS, SCIENCE? ...................................................................................96
11. ABORTION, PERSONHOOD AND THE ORIGIN OF THE SOUL ..........132
12. ORTHODOXY, FEMINISM AND THE NEW SCIENCE OF MAN ..........139
13. A DIALOGUE BETWEEN AND ORTHODOX CHRISTIAN AND A
RATIONALIST ON THE BODY AND BLOOD OF CHRIST ..........................150
14. A REPLY TO DAVID BERCOT ON THE MOTHER OF GOD .................157
15. AN ORTHODOX APPROACH TO ART .......................................................167
16. A REPLY TO DAVID BERCOT ON THE HOLY ICONS ..........................190
17. THE ICON OF THE HOLY TRINITY...........................................................197
18. ON CHRISTIAN MARRIAGE ........................................................................205
19. DEATH AND THE TOLL-HOUSES ..............................................................215
21. THE PHENOMENON OF FALSE ELDERSHIP ..........................................257
22. THE SEAL OF THE ANTICHRIST IN SOVIET AND POST-SOVIET
RUSSIA.....................................................................................................................264
23. THE DIANA MYTH AND THE ANTICHRIST ............................................290
24. IS HELL JUST?.................................................................................................309
25. GOD AND TSUNAMIS.....................................................................................327
26. THE POWER OF ANATHEMAS ...................................................................336
27. USA BEWARE: PUNK-TRUE-ORTHODOXY IS HERE! ..........................344
28. SERMON IN PRAISE OF THE BRITISH SAINTS......................................356
29. THE UNITY OF THE TRUE ORTHODOX CHURCH ...............................360
30. HAS THE REIGN OF THE ANTICHRIST BEGUN? ..................................375
31. THE RIVER OF FIRE REVISITED ...........................................................383
32. TO JUDGE OR NOT TO JUDGE ...................................................................396
33. FLEE FORNICATION .................................................................................408
34. THE SACRIFICE FOR SIN .............................................................................418
35. ON FREQUENCY OF COMMUNION...........................................................438
36. TO BIND AND TO LOOSE .............................................................................450
INTRODUCTION
This book consists of a collection of articles and dialogues written in the
last twelve years or so on various themes relating to Orthodox Christianity.
Most of them reflect controversies that have divided Orthodox Christians in
this period, such as: ecumenism, sergianism, the icon of the Holy Trinity, the
relationship between faith, science and art, eldership in the Church, the
sacrament of the Eucharist, frequency of Communion, the Sacrifice of Christ,
feminism, cloning, marriage and sexuality, abortion and the soul, the seal of
the Antichrist, the soul after death, the Last Judgement and the problem of
evil. It is hoped that they will show that the Orthodox world-view based on
the teaching of the Holy Fathers is consistent and able in principle to answer
all the perplexities posed by modern life.
Through the prayers of our Holy Fathers, Lord Jesus Christ, our God, have
mercy on us! Amen.
June 10/23, 2010.
East House, Beech Hill, Mayford, Woking, Surrey. United Kingdom.
only Good One, God. And this union is possible only through keeping the
commandments, of which the first is the command to repent and be baptized.
Unless a man has repented and been baptized through the One Baptism of the
One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church, thereby receiving Gods goodness
within himself, he cannot be said to be good in any real sense. For the
goodness of the fallen, unbaptized man is not good in Gods eyes, but
filthy rags, in the words of the Prophet Isaiah (64.6).
Seeker. So the Orthodox are good, and all the rest are bad? A pretty selfrighteous religion, I should say, just the kind of Pharisaical faith the Lord
condemned!
Orthodox. No, we do not say that all the Orthodox are good, because it is a
sad fact that many, very many Orthodox Christians do not use the goodness,
the grace that is given to them in Holy Baptism to do truly good works. And
their condemnation will be greater than those who have never received
Baptism. For it had been better for them not to have known the way of
righteousness, than, after they have known it, to turn from the holy
commandment delivered unto them (II Peter 2.21). For if we sin deliberately
after receiving the knowledge of the truth, there no longer remains a sacrifice
for sins, but a fearful prospect of judgement, and a fury of fire which will
consume the adversaries. (Hebrews 10.26).
Seeker. What a bleak picture you paint! The unbaptized cannot do good, and
those who sin after baptism are destined for even worse condemnation!
Orthodox. Not quite. Although we cannot be baptized again for the remission
of sins, we can receive remission of sins in other ways: through prayer and
tears, through fasting and almsgiving, above all through the sacraments of
Confession and Holy Communion. God does not reject those who repent with
all their heart. As David says: A heart that is broken and humbled God will
not despise (Psalm 50.17).
Seeker. But is not such repentance possible for all men? Did not David repent
in the Psalm you have cited, and receive forgiveness from God?
Orthodox. Yes, but salvation does not consist only in the forgiveness of sins,
but also in acquiring holiness, that holiness without which no man shall see
the Lord (Hebrews 12.14), that holiness which is given only in the
sacraments of the Church and which can be lost unless we conduct an
unremitting ascetic struggle against sin. Moreover, original sin can only be
remitted in the baptismal font.
Seeker. So not even David was saved?
Orthodox. Not even David was saved before the Coming of Christ. Even the
Patriarch Jacob anticipated going to Hades (Sheol) after his death together
with his righteous son Joseph: I shall go mourning down to my son in
Hades (Genesis 37.35). For all these [Old Testament righteous], though well
attested by their faith, did not receive what was promised, since God had
foreseen something better for us [the New Testament Christians], that apart
from us [outside the New Testament Church] they should not be made
perfect (Hebrews 11.39-40).
Seeker. What is original sin?
Massoretic text says: Who can bring a clean thing out of an unclean? Not one.
Gregory of Nyssa, On the Beatitudes, 6, PG. 44, 1273.
the just and on the unjust (Matthew 5.45). And when St. John forbade a man
who was casting out demons in Christs name because he followeth not us,
Christ did not approve of his action. Forbid him not, he said; for there is
no man that shall do a miracle in My name that can lightly speak evil of Me.
For he that is not against us is on our side (Mark 9.38-40).
On the other hand, the Lord also said: Many will say to Me in that day,
Lord, Lord, have we not prophesied in Thy name? And in Thy name cast out
demons? And in Thy name done many wonderful works? And then will I
profess unto them: I never knew you, Depart from Me, ye workers of
iniquity! (Matthew 7.22-23). So it is possible to work a miracle in Christs
name, and yet be an evil man. And God may work the miracle through the
evil man, not in order to testify to the mans (non-existent) goodness, but
purely out of compassion for the miracles recipient. After all, Judas worked
miracles but St. John the Baptist, the greatest born of woman, worked no
miracles
Nor must we forget that Christian-looking miracles and prophecies can be
done through the evil one. Thus a girl spoke the truth about the Apostle Paul,
exhorting people to follow him but she spoke through a pythonic spirit
which Paul exorcised (Acts 16.16-18). I believe that the vast majority of
miracles worked in pagan religions such as Hinduism are from the evil one;
for all the gods of the heathen are demons (Psalm 95.5).
Seeker. If even miracle-workers can be of the evil one, who can be saved?
Orthodox. One must always distinguish between the possession of spiritual
gifts and salvation. Do not rejoice in this, that the spirits are subject to you;
said the Lord, but rejoice that your names are written in heaven (Luke
10.20). If I have prophetic powers, and understand all mysteries and all
knowledge, and if I have all faith, so as to remove mountains, but have not
love, I am nothing (I Corinthians 13.2).
Seeker. Ah now thats where I agree with you! Love is the essential mark of
the Christian. And I have to say thats just what I find distinctly lacking in
your exposition. Such pride to think that you Orthodox, and you alone,
belong to the True Church! And such hatred to think that everyone except
you is going to be damned!
Orthodox. But I didnt say that!
Seeker. You did!
Orthodox. I said that the Church of Christ, by which I mean exclusively the
Orthodox Church, is the only Ark of salvation. And if, as St. Nektary of
Optina said, there were people outside Noahs Ark who were saved, then
there are people outside the Church who can be saved. But I did not say that
all those in the Ark will be saved, for they may cast themselves out of it by
their evil deeds. And I did not say that those who are swimming towards the
Ark but who were cut off from entering it before their death, cannot be saved.
Who knows whether the Sovereign God, Who knows the hearts of all men,
may not choose to stretch out His hand to those who, through ignorance or
adverse circumstances, were not able to enter the Ark before the darkness of
death descended upon them, but who in their hearts and minds were striving
for the truth? Charity hopeth all things (I Corinthians 13.7).
Seeker. [ironically] How charitable of you! But this is more a pious hope than
an article of faith for you, isnt it?
Orthodox. Of course. From the point of dogmatic faith, we can and must
assert that, as St. Cyprian of Carthage said, there is no salvation outside the
Church.3 For the Lord Himself says, with great emphasis: Verily, verily, I
say unto you, unless a man is born of water and the Spirit, he cannot enter the
Kingdom of God (John 3.5). And again: Verily, verily, I say unto you, unless
you eat of the Flesh of the Son of Man, and drink His Blood, you have no life
in you (John 6.53). And the Apostle Peter says: If the righteous man is
scarcely saved, where will the impious and sinner appear? (I Peter 4.18).
Moreover, if we, arrogantly presuming to be more merciful than the
Merciful Lord Himself, take it upon ourselves to absolve those living in
false religions or heresies, we sin not only against dogmatic faith, but also
against love. For then we make ourselves guilty of leading them further into
error by giving them the false hope that they can stay in their falsehood
without danger to their immortal souls. We take away from them the fear of
God and the spur to search out the truth, which alone can save them.
Seeker. And yet you spoke earlier about ignorance and adverse
circumstances. Surely God takes that into account!
Orthodox. Of course He does. But taking into account is not the same as
absolving of all guilt. Remember the parable of the negligent servants:
That servant who knew His masters will, but did not make ready or act
according to His will, shall receive a severe beating. But he who did not know,
and did what deserved a beating, shall receive a light beating (Luke 12.47-48).
In other words, ignorance of the Lords will and of His truth can mitigate His
sentence, but it cannot remove it altogether.
Seeker. Why? Did not the same Lord say: If ye were blind, ye would have no
sin (John 9.41)?
Orthodox. Because we are never totally blind, and, being rational sheep made
in the image of the Good Shepherd, always have some access to that Light
that enlighteneth every man that cometh into the world (John 1.9). Thus the
Apostle Paul says plainly that pagans who do not believe in the One Creator
of the universe are without excuse; for what can be known about God is
plain to them, because God has shown it to them. Ever since the creation of
the world His invisible nature, namely, His eternal power and divinity, has
been clearly perceived in the things that have been made (Romans 1.19-20).
God did not leave Himself without witness even among the pagans (Acts
14.17).
St. John Chrysostom says that every man has creation outside him and
conscience within to lead him away from falsehood and towards the Church,
which is the third great witness to the truth, the pillar and ground of the
truth, as St. Paul calls it (I Timothy 3.15).4 Creation and conscience alone
3 St.
4 St.
cannot reveal the whole truth to him; but if he follows that partial revelation
which creation and conscience provide, God will help him to find the fullness
of truth in the Church. Nor is there any situation in life, however remote from,
and opposed to, the Church, from which the Lord, Who wishes that all be
saved and come to a knowledge of the truth, cannot rescue the genuine seeker.
So the question, Why are the ignorant punished?, the answer, according to
St. Theophylact of Ochrid, is: Because when he might have known he did not
wish to do so, but was the cause of his own ignorance through sloth."5
Seeker. But what if the pagan or the heretic has never met the truth in the
Church, or has met only very sinful or ignorant representatives of the Church?
Can he not then be said to be blind and ignorant, and therefore not sinning?
Orthodox. Everything depends on the nature and degree of the ignorance.
There is voluntary ignorance and involuntary ignorance. If there were not
such a thing as involuntary ignorance, the Lord would not have said on the
Cross: Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do (Luke 23.34).
And His prayer was answered, for on the Day of Pentecost, Peter called on
the Jews to repent, saying, I know that you acted in ignorance (Acts 3.17),
after which thousands repented and were baptized. Again, the Apostle Paul
received mercy because I had acted ignorantly in unbelief (I Timothy 1.13).
But note that all these people responded to the truth when it was presented to
them. This showed that their ignorance had been involuntary, and therefore
excusable.
On the other hand, there is a hardness of heart that refuses to respond to
the signs God gives of His truth, the signs from without and the promptings
from within. This is voluntary ignorance. People who are hardened in this way
do not know the truth because they do not want to know it. This stubborn
refusal to accept the truth is what the Lord calls the blasphemy against the
Holy Spirit (Matthew 12.32), which will not be forgiven in this world or the
next.
Seeker. Why can it not be forgiven?
Orthodox. Because forgiveness is given only to the penitent, and penitence is
a recognition of the truth about oneself. However, if a man refuses to face the
truth, and actively fights against it in his soul, he cannot repent, and so cannot
be forgiven. In fighting against truth, he is fighting against the Holy Spirit of
truth, Who leads into all truth (John 16.13). It is possible for a man to be
sincerely mistaken about Christ for a while, and this can be forgiven him, as it
was forgiven to the Apostle Paul. But if such ignorance is compounded by a
rejection of the promptings to truth placed in the soul by the Spirit of truth,
there is no hope. So the pagan who stubbornly remains in His paganism in
spite of the evidence of creation and conscience, and the heretic who
stubbornly remains in his heresy in spite of the teaching of the One, Holy,
Catholic and Apostolic Church, are both blaspheming against the Spirit of
truth, and cannot be saved.
Seeker. So is there really no hope for the heretic?
5 St.
Orthodox. While there is life there is hope. And there are many examples of
people who have remained in heresy all their lives but have been converted to
the truth just before their death. There is no hope only for those who do not
love the truth. Such people the Lord will not lead to His truth, because they
do not desire it. Rather, He will allow them to be deceived by the Antichrist
because they refused to love the truth and so be saved. Therefore God
sendeth upon them a strong delusion, to make them believe what is false, so
that all may be condemned who did not believe the truth but had pleasure in
unrighteousness (II Thessalonians 2.10-12).
Seeker. Alright. But I am still not convinced that only your Church is the True
Church. In fact, I am not happy with the concept of the One True Church in
general. It smacks of bigotry and intolerance to me.
Orthodox. You know, tolerance is not a Christian virtue. Love is.
Seeker. You amaze me! Is not tolerance a form of love? And is not all hatred
forbidden for the Christian?
Orthodox. No. The Lord our God is a zealous God, and He expects zeal from
us zeal for the good, and hatred for the evil. Ye that love the Lord, see to it
that ye hate evil (Psalm 96.11). What He hates most of all is lukewarmness: I
know your works: ye are neither cold nor hot. Would that ye were cold or hot!
So, because ye are lukewarm, and neither cold nor hot, I will spew you out of
My mouth So be zealous and repent (Revelation 3.15-16, 19). St. Gregory of
Nyssa wrote: The Lawgiver of our life has enjoined upon us one single
hatred. I mean that of the serpent, for no other purpose has He bidden us
exercise this faculty of hatred, but as a resource against wickedness.6
Seeker. But that still means we are not allowed to hate human beings. Are we
not meant to hate the sin and love the sinner? This is the kind of teaching that
leads to burning heretics at the stake!
Orthodox. No. Neither St. Gregory nor any other saint of the Orthodox
Church that I know of advocated persecuting people for their religious
convictions. Christian love abhors using violence as a means of persuading
people. But it does not go to the other extreme and ceases trying to persuade
them. Nor, if they persist in their false teachings, does it hold back from
protecting others from their influence! If we love the sinner and hate his sin,
then we must do everything in our power both to deliver him from that sin
and protect others from being contaminated by it.
Seeker. I think this is the kind of bigotry that comes from believing that one is
in the One True Church. It is the source of religious persecution, the
Inquisition, etc.
Orthodox. The cause of religious persecution is not the claim to possess the
truth, which all rational people who have thought out their beliefs claim, but
human passions.
Seeker. What about Ivan the Terrible? What about most of the Orthodox
emperors? Did they not discriminate against heresy?
Orthodox. Ivan was excommunicated by the Church, and was rather a
persecutor of the Orthodox than an instrument of their persecuting others. As
6 St.
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the children of Abraham (Galatians 3.7). The God of Abraham is the God of
our Lord Jesus Christ; Abraham himself looked forward to the Coming of
Christ in the flesh Abraham saw My day and was glad (John 8.56).
Seeker. Alright. But do not the Jews and Muslims also believe in the God of
the Old Testament, Jehovah, Who is the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ?
Orthodox. We believe that the great majority of the Old Testament
Theophanies were in fact appearances of God the Son, not God the Father.
Contrary to the belief of the Jehovahs witnesses, the Jehovah of the Old
Testament is Christ Himself; Moses and Elijah appeared with Christ at the
Transfiguration to show that it is He Who appeared to them in the cloud and
the fire and the still, small voice; it is He Who is the God of the Law and the
Prophets.
In any case, since God is a Trinity of Persons, it is impossible rightly to
believe in One of the Persons and not in the Others. For whosoever denieth
the Son, the same hath not the Father (I John 2.23).
Seeker. But do not the Muslims believe in Christ after their fashion?
Orthodox. They believe that He is a prophet who is coming again to judge the
world. But they do not believe in His Divinity, nor in His Cross and
Resurrection the central dogmas of our Faith. Moreover, they believe in the
false prophet Mohammed, who contradicts Christs teaching in many respects.
If they truly believed in Christ, they would not follow Mohammeds teaching
instead of Christs.
Seeker. But the Jews are the chosen people, are they not?
Orthodox. They were the chosen people, but then God rejected them for their
unbelief and scattered them across the face of the earth, choosing the
believing Gentiles in their place.
Seeker. But the religion of the Old Testament was the true religion, was it not?
And insofar as they practise that religion, they are true believers, are they not?
Orthodox. The religion of the Old Testament was a true foreshadowing of,
and preparation for, the full revelation of the Truth in Jesus Christ. But once
the fullness of the Truth has appeared, it is impious to remain with the
shadow; indeed, to mistake the shadow of the Truth for the Truth Himself is a
grievous delusion. In any case, the Jews do not practise the Old Testament
religion.
Seeker. What are you talking about?! Of course they do!
Orthodox. Since the destruction of the Temple in 70 A.D., it has been
impossible for the Jews to practise the main commandment of their religion,
which was to worship God with sacrifices in the Temple three times a year
at Pascha, Pentecost and the Feast of Tabernacles. Thus has the prophecy of
the Prophet Hosea been fulfilled: The children of Israel shall dwell many
days without king or prince, without sacrifice or pillar, without ephod or
teraphim (Hosea 3.4).
Seeker. What is their present religion then?
Orthodox. Not the religion of the Old Testament, but the religion of the
Pharisees, which Christ rejected as being merely the traditions of men. Its
relationship to the Old Testament is tenuous. Its real holy book is not the Holy
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Scriptures of the Old Testament, but the Talmud, a collection of the teachings
of the Pharisees.
Seeker. And what does that teach?
Orthodox. The most extreme hatred of Christ and Christians. Not only does
the Talmud deny the Divinity and Resurrection of Christ: it reviles Him as a
sorcerer and a bastard, the son of a Roman soldier called Panthera and an
unclean woman. Moreover, it teaches a double standard of morality: one for
fellow Jews, quite another for the goyim, the Gentiles, who are not even
accorded the dignity of fully human beings.
Seeker. But is this not anti-semitism?
Orthodox. Anti-semitism as a racist attitude of hatred for all Jews as such is of
course contrary to the Christian Gospel. Nor can Christians approve of those
cruelties that have been perpetrated against them (not the discrimination
against their teaching, but the physical violence against their persons) down
the centuries. But this in no way implies that Christians must participate in
the campaign of whitewashing the Jews that has been continuing for nearly a
century in both religious and non-religious circles. As the Gospels clearly
indicate, the Jews killed Christ and brought His Blood upon themselves and
upon their children. Nor has their hatred of Christ and Christians lessened
down the centuries: anti-semitism is in large measure the reaction of
Christians and Gentiles to the anti-Gentilism of the Talmud, which approves
of all manner of crimes against Gentiles, including murder and extortion. And
the constant tradition of the Church has been that the Antichrist will be a Jew
ruling from Jerusalem in a reclaimed State of Israel
Seeker. But must we not love the Jews, even if they are our enemies?
Orthodox. Indeed, we must love our enemies and pray for them, as Christ
commanded. In particular, we must pray that they will be converted and
return to Christ, as St. Paul prophesied would happen in the last times. For if
the casting away of them be the reconciling of the world, what shall the
receiving of them be, but life from the dead? (Romans 11.15).
Seeker. What you say makes sense, but I have one fundamental objection to
everything you say.
Orthodox. What is that?
Seeker. You claim that this is Orthodoxy, but I know that it is not.
Orthodox. What do you mean?
Seeker. Your hierarchs participate in the ecumenical movement, which is
based on principles completely contrary to the Orthodoxy you preach.
Orthodox. Actually, my hierarchs do not participate in the ecumenical
movement. However, your mistake is understandable, because those large
organizations and patriarchates which are associated in the public eye with
Orthodoxy, such as the Ecumenical Patriarchate, the Moscow Patriarchate, the
Serbian Patriarchate, etc., do take part in the ecumenical movement. But we
have no communion with them, because they have betrayed Orthodoxy.
Seeker. How can the leaders of Orthodoxy be said to have betrayed
Orthodoxy?! Its like saying that the Pope has betrayed Catholicism!
13
Orthodox. But he did! It was the Popes who in the second half of the eleventh
century betrayed Orthodox Catholicism and the Orthodox Catholic Church,
making it or rather, that part of it which submitted it to them into
something quite different: the Roman (pseudo-) Catholic Church. In the same
way, in the twentieth century, it is the leaders of the official Orthodox
Churches who have betrayed Orthodoxy, making it into something quite
different: World Orthodoxy or Ecumenist Orthodoxy.
You must remember that just as he is not a Jew who is one outwardly
(Romans 2.28), but only he who belongs to the Israel of God (Galatians 6.16),
that is, the Church of Christ, so he is not an Orthodox Christian who is one
outwardly, but only he who confesses his Orthodoxy in word and deed.
Fortunately, there are still Orthodox Christians who are so in truth, and not
merely in appearance, and who have separated from the prevailing apostasy.
And these, however few they are or will become, remain that Church against
which the gates of hell will not prevail (Matthew 16.18), and of whom the
Lord of the Church said: Fear not, little flock; for it is your Fathers good
pleasure to give you the Kingdom (Luke 12.32).
Seeker. Well, I am relieved to hear that. For I was convinced by your words,
but was beginning to think that nobody practised that truth which I have
come to believe in.
Orthodox. Welcome to the true Faith of Christ, brother! And do not fear:
however small the Church on earth becomes, the Church in heaven is
growing all the time, until the very end of the world. For you have come to
Mount Zion and to the City of the Living God, the Heavenly Jerusalem, and
to innumerable Angels in festal gathering, and to the Assembly of the
Firstborn who are enrolled in heaven, and to a Judge Who is God of all, and to
the spirits of just men made perfect, and to Jesus, the Mediator of the New
Covenant, and to the sprinkled Blood that speaks more graciously than the
blood of Abel (Hebrews 12.22-24).
May 21 / June 3, 2004; revised April 24 / May 7, 2009.
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15
revolution of 1917? Can an Orthodox Serb forgive the deaths of 750,000 Serbs
at the hands of Catholic persecutors in Croatia in 1941?
This is a more complicated question, which demands a more detailed reply.
On the one hand, insofar as it was our ancestors who perished first of all, it is
up to them to forgive, not to us. And if amidst those who suffered there were
some who died without forgiving their enemies, we can only pray for the
forgiveness both of them and of their persecutors.
On the other hand, there is a definite sense in which we, being bound to
our ancestors by bonds not only of blood but also of spiritual kinship, suffer
together with them even to the present day. If the sins of the fathers affect
their children, then exactly the same applies to their sufferings and offences:
The fathers have eaten a sour grape, and the childrens teeth are set on edge
(Jeremiah 31.29). In this sense, actions directed at the redemption of the guilt
on the part of the heirs of the persecutors can significantly lighten the
bitterness felt by the descendants of those who suffered.
But, leaving psychological considerations to one side, can we demand
repentance for sins committed against our ancestors? The answer to this
question depends on the answer to the following: what is the motive eliciting
this demand for repentance? If it is a desire to humiliate an opponent or in
some way take revenge on him, then the answer will be negative, for
Vengeance is Mine, I will repay, says the Lord (Romans 12.19).
But if we are moved by love for justice, then the answer must be positive,
for the love of justice is natural for man, created as he is in the image of the
righteous God. Indeed, according to St. John of the Ladder, God is called
love, and also justice.7 Thus the desire for justice, if it is not mixed with any
sinful passion, is good and worthy of honour. This is evident from the words
which may at first sight appear a bloodthirsty cry from the souls under the
altar depicted in the Apocalypse: How long, O Lord, holy and true, will you
not judge and be avenged for our blood on those living on the earth?
(Revelation 6.10). For they cry out these words, according to the English
Orthodox Father, the Venerable Bede, not out of hatred for enemies, but out
of love of justice.8
Moreover, if the heirs of the persecutors come to recognize the sins of their
fathers, then they thereby come closer to the truth and to their own salvation.
And this is precisely the aspect that should interest Orthodox Christians first
of all in the Popes declaration. Are we witnessing the return, albeit partial
and not completely conscious, of the western papist church to the faith of our
fathers?
7 St.
8 St.
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I would also like to repent of the fact that I have drawn the Orthodox
patriarchs of our century into the new heresy of ecumenism.
From all the above examples it is evident that I have fallen away from
True Christianity, and therefore both my actions and those of my
predecessors are like the actions of the pagans, like whom I in the name of
Christianity killed, burned and destroyed everything that I could and
everyone that I could for the sake of spreading my false teachings.
The list of such evil works includes the Inquisition, when innocent people
were burned at the pillar of shame, which witnesses to my unchristian
attitude to people; and the crusades, which ravaged the capital of Orthodox
Byzantium, Constantinople; the invasion and conquest of America, as a result
of which with my blessing the two main indigenous civilizations there were
annihilated; the murder by dismemberment of the holy Martyr Peter the
Aleut, an Orthodox Christian who suffered in San Francisco at the hands of
my Jesuit monks because he did not want to convert to my disgusting faith;
and in our century, my predecessor Pius XIIs blessing of forcible conversion
in Croatia, during which 800,000 Orthodox were killed because they did not
want to convert and be subject to my papal authority.
From all the above it follows that I am in a wretched condition, and I
intend to ask forgiveness. I intend to renounce this heretical teaching and
accept Orthodox baptism
Approximately some such list of sins would be demanded from the Pope if
his request for forgiveness were to correspond to the Orthodox world-view.
But insofar as the present declaration of the Pope is far from this, it is difficult
to quarrel with those who see in this act a purely political trap, yet another
move in the ecumenical game, a new tactic in the papacys age-old attempts to
draw the Orthodox into a false union with itself.
Some may object: but have not Pope Paul VI and Patriarch Athenagoras of
Constantinople already forgiven each other by means of the lifting of the
anathemas in 1965? If the Pope and the Patriarch no longer have anything
against each other, why should we renew the quarrel between them? Can an
act of mutual lifting of anathemas really be invalid, when anathematising
someone is so obviously an act of hatred?
No: an anathematisation of that which is truly false is an act of love, not
hatred. How can it be otherwise when the Apostle Paul himself anathematises
(I Corinthians 16.22, Galatians 1.8,9), and when the Church herself in her
Seven Ecumenical Councils and on the Sunday of Orthodoxy anathematises
all heretics?
18
19
20
similarity with Pilate, who washed his hands after committing the greatest of
all injustices, while claiming to carry out the duties of an impartial judge.
The most important value for the ecumenist is peace not peace with God
or with the true people of God, but peace with the world and the rulers of this
world. And if truth and justice have to be sacrificed for the sake of this
worldly peace, then so be it. Thus Pilate betrayed Truth and Justice for the
sake of peace with, and out of fear of, the Jews. And thus do the present-day
leaders of the ecumenical movement, for fear of the non-ecumenical
confessions (primarily, Judaism and Islam), strive first of all to establish peace
amongst themselves so as to be able to present a united front in their pursuit
of a general peace with or rather, capitulation before their enemies, whom
they fear because of their secular power. But there have they feared where
there is no fear (Psalm 13.6); for it is not fitting to fear the enemies of God,
friendship with whom is enmity with God (James 4.4), Whom alone they have
to fear as being able to destroy both soul and body in gehenna (Matthew
10.28).
Where there is no consciousness of sin, or a distorted understanding of sin,
a request for forgiveness is seen to be in essence a request for something else
perhaps the conclusion of a non-aggression pact, or an agreement on
cooperation for the attainment of some common goal. And the same day
Pilate and Herod were made friends together; for before they were at enmity
between themselves (Luke 23.12). Why? Because their mutual rivalry was
less important than their mutual desire to placate the Jewish religious
establishment, to whom Christ was to be thrown like meat to a hungry animal.
In the same way the dogmatic differences between the Pope of Rome and the
Orthodox ecumenists are less important to them than their retention of a
place at the table of the worlds rulers who are once again, as in the time of
Christ, mainly Jewish.
4. Orthodox Herods and Catholic Pilates.
Let us continue for a time to draw out the parallels between Pilate and
Herod, on the one hand, and Catholic and Orthodox ecumenism, on the other.
Were Pilate and Herod equally guilty in the eyes of God? Not at all. Christ
spoke with Pilate, but refused to speak to Herod (Luke 23.9). Herod mocked
Christ and arrayed Him in a gorgeous robe, thereby mocking His assertion
that he was the king of the Jews (Luke 23.11). But Pilate wanted to know more
about Christs claims to a kingdom, and, bringing Him out to the Jews, said,
not without some genuine admiration: Behold your King! (John 19.14). And
again he asked, not without some genuine fear: Shall I crucify your King?
(John 19.15). Moreover, overcoming for once his fear of the Jews, he refused to
remove the inscription on the Cross: Jesus of Nazareth, King of the Jews.
We have no evidence that Herod had any gnawings of conscience in handing
21
over Christ, Who was in Herods jurisdiction and Whom he could have
released. But Pilate found no fault in Him and was searching for a way of
releasing Him. To the end he retained a definite consciousness of his sin, and
God had given him a further impulse to stand firm through his wifes
exhortation. And even after he had betrayed Him, his guilty conscience
revealed itself in his washing his hands and saying: I am innocent of the
blood of this Righteous Man (Matthew 27.24).
Just as Herods sin was greater than Pilates, so the crime of the Orthodox
ecumenists is greater than that of the Catholic ecumenists. This assertion may
shock many Orthodox zealots who are accustomed to see in Catholicism and
the apostate West the root of all evil. But after some thought it becomes
obvious that, in accordance with the principle: to whom much is given,
much is required, greater responsibility is undoubtedly borne by those to
whom the treasures of Orthodox Tradition have been entrusted than by those
who have never been Orthodox.
The Orthodox ecumenists are like the Pharisees, who, having the keys to
the Kingdom of Heaven, shut up that Kingdom against men; for they neither
go in themselves, nor suffer those that are entering to go in (Matthew 23.13).
One of the most shameful documents in the history of Christianity is the
resolution accepted by the heads of the Local Orthodox Churches in
Constantinople on the Sunday of Orthodoxy, 1992. On that day the Orthodox
triumphantly declare about their faith: This is the Apostolic Faith! This is the
Orthodox Faith! This is the Faith that supports the world!, and anathematize
all the heresies, including those of the Catholics and Protestants. And yet in
their 1992 council these so-called Orthodox leaders officially renounced
proselytism among the heretical Christians of the West! It was as if they said
to the westerners Yes, ours is the Apostolic Faith, and yes, we have just
anathematized your heresies. But these are only words. The world does not
need our faith. And the world need not fear our anathematisms. Remain
where you are. Remain in your heresy. We will not try and convert you.
Nine years later, the Moscow Patriarchates Metropolitan Cyril (Gundiaev)
of Smolensk put it as follows: In practice we forbid our priests to seek to
convert people. Of course it happens that people arrive and say: You know, I
would like, simply out of my own convictions, to become Orthodox. Well,
please do. But there is no strategy to convert people.10
And this at a time when the Christians of the West are undergoing the
deepest crisis in their history, when thousands of Western Christians, and
especially Catholics, are turning their eyes to the Orthodox in the hope that
they will extract them from the terrible dead-end in which they find
themselves. Thus traditional Catholics brought up in accordance with the
decrees of their infallible first bishop, that their Church is the one saving
10
22
Church, and that their faith is the one saving faith, were profoundly shaken,
in some cases even to the extent of mental disorder, to learn, during the
Second Vatican Council in the 1960s, that not only the Catholics, but also the
Orthodox and even Protestants, Jews and Muslims belong to the People of
God and can be saved, and that that which they considered to be heresy was
no longer heresy, and that which they consider to be mortal sin was no longer
mortal sin
Is there a way out of this situation? One possibility is to declare, with the
Swiss Cardinal Lefbvre, that the Pope of Rome has fallen into heresy, that he
is an anti-pope, and that the true Catholic Church is another place, among the
Catholics who do not recognize the present Pope. But if the Pope is infallible,
how can he fall into heresy? Of course, there were Popes who fell into heresy
even before the rise of the papist heresy itself Pope Honorius, for example,
who was condemned by the Sixth Ecumenical Council. But the papists have
always tried to explain away such examples because the idea of a heretical
Pope actually undermines their faith at its very base. For if the Pope falls
away from the truth, he is no longer Peter, no longer the rock on which the
Church is built. And then the Catholics will have to look for their Catholic
faith outside the (pseudo-) Catholic Church, which is an absurdity for them.
For according to their papist faith, there can be no true faith, and no true
Church, without the Pope. If the Pope falls, then the Universal Church falls
with him11 , and the gates of hell, contrary to the promise of the Saviour, have
prevailed against her (Matthew 16.18).
Another possibility is to declare that the Roman see is temporarily vacant.
But again: can the Church exist without Peter according to papist doctrine? If
the Church is founded on the rock, and that rock is Peter and his successors,
the Popes of Rome, how can the Church continue to exist without the rock?
A third possibility is to declare, together with the True Orthodox
Christians, that the Roman Catholic Church is not only in heresy, but has been
in heresy ever since she fell away from her true Mother, the Orthodox Church,
to which her children must return if they want to receive the grace and truth
that is in Christ. And, glory to God, many in the West, both Catholics and
Protestant, are doing just that to the extent that the Orthodox ecumenists are
allowing them.12 In England, for example, Orthodoxy has doubled in size
during the last decade.
It was for this reason that the Orthodox Pope Gregory I (known as the Dialogist in the
East, and the Great in the West) refused the title of universal or ecumenical. See his
Epistle 33.
12 And sometimes they have not only not allowed them, but have expelled them. Thus in 1975
a group of Sardinian parishes, who had been received into the Moscow Patriarchate from
Roman Catholicism, were ordered by their archpastor, Metropolitan Anthony of Sourozh
(who was himself ordered to do this by Metropolitan Juvenaly of Tula), to leave his Church.
The reason, as the present writer was able to ascertain from Anthony himself, was: the Pope
had laid it down as a condition of the success of his negotiations with the MP on the
11
23
But this growth in converts to Orthodoxy from the Western confessions has
taken place not thanks to, but in spite of, the preaching of the official Orthodox
Churches. For how often have potential converts to Orthodoxy been
dissuaded from joining by the Orthodox hierarchs themselves! Even when
already Orthodox, these neophytes from the West have often been made to
feel like second-class citizens who cannot really know the mystery of
Orthodoxy because of their western mentality.
Thus one English Orthodox Christian, on arriving at a Greek church one
Sunday morning, was politely but firmly directed to an Anglican church, in
spite of his protests that he was Orthodox. The explanation: Orthodoxy is for
Greeks and Russians: for the English there is Anglicanism In this way do
the heresies of ecumenism and phyletism grow into each other, combining to
shut the door on those searching for, and even those who have already found,
the truth!
Something similar to the present crisis in the Roman Catholic church took
place in the 14th-15th centuries, when for many years there were two popes,
and once even three! In reaction to this crisis there arose the conciliar
movement, which strove to return to the Orthodox teaching on authority in
the Church, declaring that the highest authority in the earthly Church was not
the Pope, but the Ecumenical Councils. Here was a wonderful opportunity for
the Orthodox to support this beginning of a return to Orthodoxy, if not in the
papacy itself, at least in a large portion of its (former) followers), and direct it
to its consummation in the bosom of the Orthodox Church.
But this opportunity was missed largely for the same reason as it is being
missed today: because the Orthodox leaders of the time, having lost the salt
of True Orthodoxy themselves, were seeking a union with Roman
Catholicism for political motives. Thus in 1438-1439, when the most
representative council of the Western Church was convening in Basle in
Switzerland, so as to resolve the problems of the Western Church on the basis
of conciliarity, the Orthodox leaders preferred to meet the Pope in Florence
and conclude a false union with him, betraying the purity of the Orthodox
Faith for a mess of pottage. The victory of the Pope signified not only the fall
of the Patriarchate of Constantinople (fortunately, only temporarily), and of
Constantinople itself a few years later, but also the crushing of the hopes of
the conciliarists in Basle
Of course, it could be argued that the conciliarists were not really ready for
Orthodoxy, not really seeking it, which is why the Lord did not allow them to
be united to it. That may be true. But it does not remove the responsibility of
those Orthodox hierarchs then and now who put obstacles in the way of
Ukrainian uniate question that these parishes return to him. After various adventures, these
parishes were later admitted into communion with the Greek Old Calendar Church.
24
potential converts to the faith through their own lukewarmness about that
faith.
Thus the Orthodox uniates of the fifteenth century, like the Orthodox
ecumenists of the twentieth century, betrayed not only their Orthodox flock
but also the potential flock to be gathered from those outside Orthodoxy.
Through their refusal to carry out missionary work among the heterodox, in
accordance with the Lords command to go out and make converts of all the
nations (Matthew 28.19), they have in effect denied themselves the right to
call themselves Orthodox. For as St. Theodosius of the Kiev Caves (+1054)
said, he who honours the faith of another dishonours his own
Since the Orthodox ecumenists refuse to carry out missionary work in
view of their ecumenist convictions, why should they object if the True
Orthodox take this burden upon themselves? But this is where the ecumenists
show their true face. For while serving with and flatter the heretics, whose
faith is far from Orthodoxy, they actively persecute the True Orthodox whose
faith they supposedly share. They secretly kill their priests, send the secular
powers to take away their churches and in the West deny their very existence.
Like Herod, they claim that they, too, worship Christ in the true faith, but will
not accompany the true seekers, the Magi, to Bethlehem, but will rather kill
the innocents who bear witness to the existence of the True Body of Christ.
Thus in the 1970s, as reported in Church Times, an Australian journalist
once asked Metropolitan Nicodemus of Leningrad about the existence of the
Russian Catacomb Church. Have they got a bank account? asked the
metropolitan (now exposed as KGB Agent Sviatoslav and a secret Catholic
bishop!). The journalist had difficulty in replying. Nicodemus triumphantly
concluded: If it doesnt have a bank account, then it doesnt exist!
Actually, from the point of view of the Orthodox Herods, this was a
completely adequate answer. For to them the significance of a Church is
defined, not by the strength of its Orthodox faith, but by its worldly strength
and worldly strength in the contemporary world is measured by the size of
ones bank account. From their point of view, a Church without a bank
account is truly of no significance and can be swept off the face of the earth
without the slightest torments of conscience.
On the other hand, if an unbeliever has a large bank account, then he is
worthy of every honour and even of Orthodox baptism as was granted, for
example, to the mayor of Moscow Luzhkov. And what business is it of
anyones that the mayor happens to be an unbeliever? For the sergianist
concept of economy, this is a trivial problem. Did not Metropolitan Pitirim
of Volokolamsk say, towards the end of the 1980s, that true ecumenism is the
gathering together into one Church or religion of all people of good will,
including even atheists?
25
26
27
28
to do so. Because of his laziness, he was the cause of his own ignorance, and
he deserves punishment for this very reason, that of his own will he did not
learn.17 And St. Cyril of Alexandria writes: How can he who knew it not be
guilty? The reason is, because he would not know it, although it was in his
power to learn.18
And to whom does this distinction between different degrees of ignorance
apply? According to St. Cyril, to false teachers and parents, on the one hand,
and those who follow them, on the other. In other words, the blind leaders are
subjected to a greater punishment than the blind who are led by them, but
both the leaders and followers fall into a pit (Matthew 15.4).
In the light of this teaching, the greatest and least forgivable sinners in the
present-day ecumenical movement are the Orthodox hierarchs. They know
the truth; they know that the Orthodox Church, and only the Orthodox
Church, is the One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church, the pillar and
ground of the truth (I Tim. 3.15) and the only ark of salvation. Those who
follow these false hierarchs are also guilty, albeit to a lesser degree, because
although, in many cases, they may not know the truth as clearly and fully as
their leaders, they can easily take steps to learn the truth, by more attentively
studying the Holy Scriptures and Divine Services of the Church.
As for the Western heretics who partake in the ecumenical movement,
some may know as much as their Orthodox colleagues and are therefore as
guilty as they. But generally speaking, the western heretics must be
considered to be less guilty than the Orthodox ecumenists. For while they
have the Holy Scriptures, they do not have the God-inspired interpretation of
the Scriptures that is to be found in the Holy Fathers and Divine services of
the Orthodox Church. Moreover, their striving for union with the Orthodox is
natural insofar as they feel themselves spiritually unfulfilled in their own
churches and seek to satisfy that hunger in union with Orthodoxy. The
tragedy and it is a great tragedy for all concerned is that when they seek
the truth from the Orthodox, the Orthodox usually push them back to their
own spiritual desert, saying that they are already in the truth. They seek
bread, but are given a stone
And so when we seek the causes of the present-day ecumenical catastrophe,
let us not accuse the western heretics first of all. Paradoxical as it may seem,
the further away a person is from the truth, the more forgivable and his blind
wanderings in the sphere of theology. That who sit on Moses seat, and call
themselves Orthodox and successors of the Holy Fathers they are the ones
who bear the greatest responsibility. They build the tombs of the prophets,
the holy elders and hierarchs of Orthodoxy, and adorn the monuments of the
righteous, the shrines of the new martyrs and confessors, and say that they
17
18
29
would not have taken part in the shedding of their blood. And yet by their
betrayal of Holy Orthodoxy they witness against themselves that they are the
sons of those who killed the martyrs (Matthew 23.29-31).
March 6/19, 2000; revised June 17/30, 2004.
Holy Monk-Martyr Nectan of Hartland.
30
31
But of course, Patriarch Alexis did not reach his lofty rank by being
stupid. And so after this gaffe he quickly recovered his balance, his sense of
which way the wind was blowing; and there was no further overt support of
the communists. True, he did attach his signature, in December, 1990, to a
letter by 53 well-known political, academic and literary figures who urged
Gorbachev to take urgent measures to deal with the state of crisis in the
country, speaking of the destructive dictatorship of people who are
shameless in their striving to take ownership of territory, resources, the
intellectual wealth and labour forces of the country whose name is the
USSR.19 But the patriarch quickly disavowed his signature; and a few weeks
later, after the deaths in Vilnius, he declared that the killings were a great
political mistake in church language a sin.
Then, in May, 1991, he publicly disagreed with a member of the hardline
Soiuz bloc, who had said that the resources of the army and the clergy should
be drawn on extensively to save the people and the homeland. In Alexis view,
these words could be perceived as a statement of preparedness to use the
Church for political purposes. The patriarch recalled his words of the
previous autumn: the Church and the Faith should not be used as a
truncheon. 20 By June, the patriarch had completed his remarkable
transformation from dyed-in-the-wool communist to enthusiastic democrat,
saying to Yeltsin: May God help you win the election.
Still more striking was his apparent rejection of Sergianism. Thus in an
interview granted to Izvestia on June 6 he said: This year has freed us from
the states supervision. Now we have the moral right to say that the
Declaration of Metropolitan Sergius has disappeared into the past and no
longer guides us The metropolitan cooperated with criminal usurpers. This
was his tragedy. Today we can say that falsehood is interspersed in his
Declaration, which stated as its goal placing the Church in a proper
relationship with the Soviet government. But this relationship and in the
Declaration it is clearly defined as being the submission of the Church to the
interests of governmental politics is exactly that which is incorrect from the
point of view of the Church Of the people, then, to whom these
compromises, silence, forced passivity or expressions of loyalty that were
permitted by the Church leadership in those days, have caused pain of these
people, not only before God, but also before them, I ask forgiveness,
understanding and prayers.21
32
33
It was not until Wednesday morning that the patriarch sent his
representative, Deacon Andrew Kurayev, to the Russian parliament building,
by which time several dissident priests were already established there. And it
was two priests of the Russian Church Abroad who celebrated the first
supplicatory service to the New Martyrs of Russia on the balcony of the White
House. Not to be outdone, the patriarchate immediately responded with its
own prayer service, and at some time during the same day the patriarch
anathematized all those who had taken part in organizing the coup.
By these actions the patriarch appeared to have secured his position vis-vis Yeltsins government, and on August 27, Yeltsin attended a memorial
service in the Assumption cathedral of the Kremlin, at which the patriarch
hailed the failure of the coup, saying that the wrath of God falls upon the
children of disobedience.26 So in the space of thirteen months, the patriarch
had passed from a pro-communist, anti-democratic to an anti-communist,
pro-democratic stance. This lack of principle should have surprised nobody;
for the essence of sergianism, the root heresy of the Moscow Patriarchate, is
adaptation to the world, and to whatever the world believes and praises.
But the patriarch still remained a sergianist only in a more subtle way,
appearing to distance himself from sergianism while still insisting that it had
to be done. Thus in 1991 he said: A church that has millions of faithful
cannot go into the catacombs. The hierarchy of the church has taken the sin on
their souls: the sin of silence and of lying for the good of the people in order
that they not be completely removed from real life. In the government of the
diocese and as head of the negotiations for the patriarchate of Moscow, I also
had to cede one point in order to defend another. I ask pardon of God, I ask
pardon, understanding and prayers of all those whom I harmed through the
concessions, the silence, the forced passivity or the expressions of loyalty that
the hierarchy may have manifested during that period.27
This is similar to the statement of Metropolitan Nicholas (Corneanu) of
Banat of the Romanian Patriarchate, who confessed that he had collaborated
with the Securitate and had defrocked the priest Fr. Calciu for false political
reasons, but nevertheless declared that if he had not made such compromises
he would have been forced to abandon his post, which in the conditions of
the time would not have been good for the Church. In other words, as
Vladimir Kozyrev writes: It means: I dishonoured the Church and my
Episcopal responsibility, I betrayed those whom I had to protect, I
scandalized my flock. But all this I had to do for the good of the Church!28
He said that the Church had not supported the coup (although there is clear evidence that
Metropolitans Philaret of Kiev and Pitirim of Volokolamsk supported it), but had "taken the
side of law and liberty" (Report on the USSR, vol. 3, 36, September 6, 1991, p. 82).
27 30 Dias, Rome/Sao Paolo, August-September, 1991, p. 23.
28 Kozyrev, [orthodox-synod] Re: The Orthodox Episcopate of the Russian persecuted
Church, [email protected]. 28 November, 2002.
26
34
35
Pope of Rome on the question of further relations between the Vatican and
the Russian Orthodox Church, and in particular regarding the problems of the
uniates (1989).32
The parliamentary commission also discovered that Alexis himself was an
agent with the codename Drozdov. It is now known that Alexis was
recruited by the Estonian KGB on February 28, 195833; and in the 1974 Furov
report to the Central Committee of the USSR he (together with his
predecessor Patriarch Pimen) was placed in the category of those bishops who
affirm both in words and deeds not only loyalty but also patriotism towards
the socialist society; strictly observe the laws on cults, and educate the parish
clergy and believers in the same spirit; realistically understand that our state
is not interested in proclaiming the role of religion and the church in society;
and, realizing this, do not display any particular activeness in extending the
influence of Orthodoxy among the population.34
Moreover, according to a KGB document of 1988, an order was drafted by
the USSR KGB chairman to award an honorary citation to agent DROZDOV
for unspecified services to state security.35 But these facts were not made
public because, according to Fen Montaigne, members of the parliamentary
commission had told the patriarch that they would not name him as an agent
if he began cleaning house in the church and acknowledging the breadth of
cooperation between the church and the KGB. So far, we have kept the
silence because we wanted to give the patriarch a chance, said Alexander
Nezhny, a journalist who said his comparison of the archives and church
bulletins convinced him that Alexis II is indeed Drozdov36
For more details of the parliamentary commission's revelations, see Praymoj Put' (Straight
Path), 1-2, January, 1992, p. 1; 3, February, 1992, p. 1; Spetsialnij vypusk, February,
1992; Alexander Nezhny, "Trete Imia (The Third Name)", Ogonek, 4 (3366), January 25 February 1, 1992; Iain Walker and Chester Stern, "Holy Agents of the KGB", The Mail on
Sunday, March 29, 1992; John Dunlop, "KGB Subversion of Russian Orthodox Church",
RFE/RL Research Report, vol. 1, 12, March 20, 1992, pp. 51-53; Protodeacon Herman IvanovTrinadtsaty, "A ne nachalo li eto kontsa? (Is this not the beginning of the end?)", Pravoslavnaia
Rus (Orthodox Rus)', 9 (1462), May 1/14, 1992, pp. 609; "Ne bo vragom Tvoim povem...",
Vestnik Germanskoj Eparkhii Russkoj Pravoslavnoj Tservki za Granitsei (Herald of the German
Diocese of the Russian Orthodox Church Abroad), 1, 1992, pp. 16-22; Fr. Victor Potapov,
"Molchaniem preda
tsa Bog" (God is Betrayed by Silence), Moscow: Isikhia, 1992, pp. 36-39;
Joseph Harriss, "The Gospel according to Marx", Reader's Digest, February, 1993, pp. 59-63.
33 Estonian State Archive, record group 131, file 393, pp. 125-126; James Meek, File links
church leader to KGB, The Sydney Morning Herald, February 13, 1999; Seamus Martin,
Russian Patriarch was (is?) a KGB agent, files say Patriarch Alexeij II received KGB
Certificate of Honour, Irish Times, September 23, 2000; Arnold Beichman, Patriarch with a
KGB Past, The Washington Times, September 29, 2000.
34 Andrew and Mitrokhin, op. cit., pp. 639-640.
35 Andrew and Mitrokhin, op. cit., p. 650.
36 The Philadelphia Inquirer on May 3, 1992; quoted in "The Church of the KGB", Living
Orthodoxy, vol. XIV, 2, March-April, 1992, pp. 22-23.
32
36
37
Memory Loss
At the same Council, a commission of eight MP bishops headed by Bishop
Alexander of Kostroma was formed to investigate the charges of collaboration
with the KGB. This commission has so far (12 years later) produced absolutely
nothing!40 In view of the lack of a clear-out (chistka) of KGB hierarchs, it
remains true that, as the saying went, the MP is the last surviving
department of the KGB or the second administration of the Soviet state.
As the memory loss in church and society became greater and greater in
the later 1990s, Patriarch Alexis felt ready to return to the theme of
sergianism. In 1997, referring to the Church in the time of Patriarch Tikhon,
he said: The Church could not, did not have the right, to go into the
catacombs. She remained together with the people and drank to the dregs the
cup of sufferings that fell to its lot.41 Patriarch Alexis here forgot to mention
that Patriarch Tikhon specifically blessed Michael Zhizhilenko, the future
Hieromartyr Maximus of Serpukhov, to become a secret catacomb bishop if
the pressure on the Church from the State became too great. As for his claim
that the sergianists shared the cup of the peoples suffering, this must be
counted as conscious hypocrisy. It is well known that the Soviet hierarchs
lived a life of considerable luxury, while lifting not a finger for the Catacomb
Christians and dissidents sent to torments and death in KGB prisons!
On November 9, 2001, the patriarch threw off the mask of repentance
completely, stating in defence of Sergius declaration: This was a clever step
by which Metropolitan Sergius tried to save the church and clergy. In
declaring that the members of the Church want to see themselves as part of
the motherland and want to share her joys and sorrows, he tried to show to
those who were persecuting the church and who were destroying it that we,
the children of the church, want to be loyal citizens so that the affiliation of
people with the church would not place them outside the law. So this is a farfetched accusation42
But it is not enough to justify betrayal: the traitor himself has to be canonized.
And it is the canonization of Patriarch Sergius, the author of the notorious
declaration, that is the goal of the MP. For such an act would complete the
38
selective loss of memory that has been taking place since 1990 and complete
the justification of the Soviet church and its cooperation with the KGB.
However, such an act needs a lengthy preparation. The opponents those
whose memory is not completely gone have to be neutralised. A first step
was taken by the patriarch already in 1991, when he wrote: I believe that our
martyrs and righteous ones, regardless of whether they followed
Metropolitan Sergius or did not agree with his position, pray together for
us.43 Then, in 1993, he said: Through the host of martyrs the Church of
Russia bore witness to her faith and sowed the seed of her future rebirth.
Among the confessors of Christ we can in full measure name his Holiness
Patriarch Sergius.44
It is as if he was contemplating a trade-off: if we recognize your martyrs,
then you must recognize ours including Sergius himself. Of course, Alexis
still regarded the Catacomb martyrs as uncanonical.45 But he was prepared
to canonize them, thus introducing the concept of uncanonical martyrs into
the Church (!), so long as Sergius himself, their betrayer and persecutor, could
also be canonized eventually. However, by the time of the MPs hierarchical
council in 2000, at which many Catacomb martyrs were canonized, the
patriarchate still did not feel able to canonise Sergius probably because it
feared that it would prevent a union with ROCOR. But neither did it canonise
the leader of the Catacomb Church, Metropolitan Joseph of Petrograd. This
suggested that a canonisation of the two leaders the leader of the True
Church, and the leader of the false - was in the offing, but depended on the
success of the negotiations between the MP and ROCOR.
Those negotiations were officially launched in May, 2004, during the visit
of the leader of ROCOR, Metropolitan Lavr, to Russia. And the manner in
which they were launched is extremely significant. On May 15, the
anniversary of Patriarch Sergius death, Alexis demonstratively served a
panikhida for Sergius, and then, during a liturgy at Butovo, where thousands
of Catacomb Christians were martyred and sergianists killed in 1937, he had
this to say to his foreign guests: Today is the 60th anniversary since the death
of the ever-memorable Patriarch Sergius. The time of the service of this
archpastor coincided with the most terrible years of the struggle against God,
when it was necessary to preserve the Russian Church. In those terrible years
of repression and persecutions there were more sorrows. In 1937 both those
who shared the position of Metropolitan Sergius and those who did not agree
with him suffered for the faith of Christ, for belonging to the Russian
43
"In the Catacombs", Sovershenno Sekretno (Completely Secret), 7, 1991; quoted by Fr. Peter
Perekrestov, "Why Now?" Orthodox Life, vol. 44, 6, November-December, 1994, p. 44.
44 Quoted by Fr. Peter Perekrestov, The Schism in the Heart of Russia (Concerning
Sergianism), Canadian Orthodox Herald, 1999, 4.
45
Equally uncanonical[that is, equally with the Russian Church Outside Russia] is the socalled Catacomb Church. (Nedelia (The Week), 2, 1, 1992; quoted by Fr. Peter Perekrestov,
"Why Now?" Orthodox Life, vol. 44, 6, November-December, 1994, p. 44).
39
40
identifiable. In the early 1990s, one of the men who carried out the Katyn
massacres of Polish officers was still alive. Before he died, the KGB conducted
an interview with him, asking him to explain from a technical point of view
how the murders were carried out. As a gesture of goodwill, a tape of the
interview was handed to the Polish cultural attach in Moscow. No one
suggested at any time that the man be put on trial, in Moscow, Warsaw, or
anywhere else.
It is true, of course, that trials may not always be the best way to come to
terms with the past. In the years after the Second World War, West Germany
brought 85,000 Nazis to trial, but obtained fewer than 7,000 convictions. The
tribunals were notoriously corrupt, and easily swayed by personal jealousies
and disputes. The Nuremberg Trial itself was an example of victors justice
marred by dubious legality and oddities, not the least of which was the
presence of Soviet judges who knew perfectly well that their own side was
responsible for mass murder too.
But there are other methods, aside from trials, of doing public justice to
the crimes of the past. There are truth commissions, for example, of the sort
implemented in South Africa, which allow victims to tell their stories in an
official, public place, and make the crimes of the past a part of the public
debate. There are official investigations, like the British Parliaments 2002
inquiry into the Northern Irish Bloody Sunday massacre, which had taken
place thirty years earlier. There are government inquiries, government
commission, public apologies yet the Russian government has never
considered any of these options. Other than the brief, inconclusive trial of
the Communist Party, there have in fact been no public truth-telling sessions
in Russia, no parliamentary hearings, no official investigations of any kind
into the murders or the massacres or the camps of the USSR.
The result: half a century after the wars end, the Germans still conduct
regular public disputes about victims compensation, about memorials, about
new interpretations of Nazi history, even about whether a younger generation
of Germans ought to go on shouldering the guilt about the crimes of the Nazis.
Half a century after Stalins death, there were no equivalent arguments taking
place in Russia, because the memory of the past was not a living part of public
discourse.
The rehabilitation process did continue, very quietly, throughout the
1990s. By the end of 2001, about 4.5 million political prisoners had been
rehabilitated in Russia, and the national rehabilitation commission reckoned it
had a further half-million cases to examine. Those victims hundreds of
thousands, perhaps millions more who were never sentenced will of course
be exempt from the process. But while the commission itself is serious and
well-intentioned, and while it is composed of camp survivors as well as
bureaucrats, no one associated with it really feels that the politicians who
41
created it were motivated by a real drive for truth and reconciliation, in the
words of the British historian Catherine Merridale. Rather, the goal has been
to end discussion of the past, to pacify the victims by throwing them a few
extra roubles and free bus tickets, and to avoid any deeper examination of the
causes of Stalinism and its legacy.
There are some good, or at least some forgivable, explanations for this
public silence. Most Russians really do spend all of their time coping with the
complete transformation of their economy and society. The Stalinist era was a
long time ago, and a great deal has happened since it ended. Post-communist
Russia is not post-war Germany, where the memories of the worst atrocities
were still fresh in peoples minds. In the twenty-first century, the events of the
middle of the twentieth century seem like ancient history to much of the
population.
Perhaps more to the point, many Russians also feel that they have had
their discussion of the past already, and that it produced very little. When one
asks older Russians, at least, why the subject of the Gulag is so rarely
mentioned nowadays, they wave away the issue: In 1990 that was all we
could talk about, now we dont need to talk about it any more. To further
complicate things, talk of the Gulag and of Stalinist repression has become
confused, in the minds of many, with the democratic reformers who
originally promoted the debate about the Soviet past. Because that generation
of political leaders is now seen to have failed their rule is remembered for
corruption and chaos all talk of the Gulag is somehow tainted by association.
The question of remembering or commemorating political repression is
also confused. by the presence of so many other victims of so many other
Soviet tragedies. To make matters more complicated, writes Catherine
Merridale, a great many people suffered repeatedly; they can describe
themselves as war veterans, victims of repression, the children of the
repressed and even as survivors of famine with equal facility. There are
plenty of memorials to the wartime dead, some Russians seem to feel: Will
that not suffice?
But there are other reasons, less forgivable, for the profound silence.
Many Russians experienced the collapse of the Soviet Union as a profound
blow to their personal pride. Perhaps the old system was bad, they now feel
but at least we were powerful. And now that we are not powerful, we do not
want to hear that it was bad. It is too painful, like speaking ill of the dead.
Some still also fear what they might find out about the past, if they
were to inquire too closely. In 1998, the Russian American journalist Masha
Gessen described what it felt like to discover that one of her grandmothers, a
nice old Jewish lady, had been a censor, responsible for altering the reports of
foreign correspondents based in Moscow. She also discovered that her other
42
grandmother, another nice old Jewish lady, had once applied for a job with
the secret police. Both had made their choices out of desperation, not
conviction. Now, she wrote, she knows why her generation had refrained
from condemning their grandparents generation too harshly: We did not
expose them, we did not try them, we did not judge them merely by asking
such questions each one of us risks betraying someone we love.
Aleksandr Yakovlev, chairman of the Russian rehabilitation commission,
put this problem somewhat more bluntly. Society is indifferent to the crimes
of the past, he told me, because so many people participated in them. The
Soviet system dragged millions and millions of its citizens into many forms of
collaboration and compromise. Although many willingly participated,
otherwise decent people were also forced to do terrible things. They, their
children, and their grandchildren do not always want to remember that now.
But the most important explanation for the lack of public debate does not
involve the fears of the younger generation, or the inferiority complexes and
leftover guilt of those now ruling not only Russia, but also most of the other
ex-Soviet states and satellite states. In December 2001, on the tenth
anniversary of the dissolution of the Soviet Union, thirteen of the fifteen
former Soviet republics were run by former communists, as were many of the
former satellite states, including Poland, the country which supplied so many
hundreds of thousands of prisoners for Soviet camps and exile villages. Even
the Communist Party, former communists and their children or fellow
travellers also continued to figure largely in the intellectual, media and
business elites. The President of Russia, Vladimir Putin, was a former KGB
agent, who proudly identified himself as a Chekist. Earlier, when serving as
the Russian Prime Minister, Putin had made a point of visiting the KGB
headquarters at Lubyanka, on the anniversary of the Chekas founding, where
he dedicated a plaque to the memory of Yuri Andropov.
The dominance of former communists and the insufficient discussion of
the past in the post-communist world is not coincidental. To put it bluntly,
former communists have a clear interest in concealing the past: it tarnishes
them, undermines them, hurts their claims to be carrying out reforms, even
when they personally had nothing to do with past crimes. In Hungary, the exCommunist Party, renamed the Socialist Party, fought bitterly against
opening the museum to the victims of terror. When the ex-Communist Party,
renamed the Social Democrats, was elected to power in Poland in 2001, it
immediately cut the budget of the Polish Institute of National Memory, set up
by its centre-right predecessors. Many, many excuses have been given for
Russias failure to build a national monument to its millions of victims, but
Aleksandr Yakovlev, again, gave me the most succint explanation, The
monument will be built, he said, when we the older generation are all
dead.48
48
43
Conclusion
This last quotation is long because every point it makes about the loss of
memory and the corruption of memory in Russia as a whole can be paralleled
in that microcosm of Russia today that is the Moscow Patriarchate.
If the Russian state and people want to keep silent about the past, then so
does the MP and for very similar reasons. If Putin the Chekist places a
plaque to the memory of Yuri Andropov at the Lubyanka, then Alexis the
Chekist goes one better by building a church inside the Lubyanka for the
spiritual needs of the KGB agents who work in it. If Putin now raises a toast
to Stalin, then priests of the MP write articles glorifying him (and Ivan the
Terrible and Rasputin!). If Lenin still lies in his mausoleum, an object of
veneration as before, the same is true of the founder of the Moscow
Patriarchate, Patriarch Sergius. If a true and adequate monument to the
victims of the Gulag will not be built until the older generation is dead, then
the same is probably true about the holy martyrs and confessors of the
Catacomb Church: not until the present rulers of the Church and State in
Russia are dead or removed will they be given a fitting memorial...
A man is to a large extent constituted by his memory. If he forgets his past,
he has to a large extent lost himself. The same applies to a nation. And to a
Church. Therefore, lest the sleep of forgetfulness overtake us completely
before that glorious day of the full restoration of memory comes, let us
remember the words of the Lord: Take heed to thyself, and keep thy soul
diligently, lest thou forget the things which thine eyes have seen, and lest they
depart from thy heart all the days of thy life: but teach them thy sons, and thy
sons sons (Deuteronomy 4.9).
For the sin of forgetfulness - both of the great deeds of God and His saints,
and of the great iniquities of the devil and his followers - is indeed the sin
unto death. And the path to life for those sitting by the waters of the Babylon
of this world is the path of constant vigilance and memory: If I forget thee, O
Jerusalem
July 13 / August 13, 2004.
Forefeast of the Procession of the Honourable and Life-Giving Cross.
Hieromartyr Benjamin, Metropolitan of Petrograd, and those with him.
44
45
46
47
48
49
jurisdiction of the Ecumenical Patriarchate and the most modernist of all the
Orthodox Churches.
3. Estonia. In February, 1921 Patriarch Tikhon granted a broad measure of
autonomy to the parts of the former Pskov and Revel dioceses that entered
into the boundaries of the newly formed Estonian state. On August 28, 1922,
Meletius uncanonically received this Estonian diocese of the Russian Church
into his jurisdiction, under Metropolitan Alexander. The recent renewal of
this unlawful decision by the present Ecumenical Patriarch, Bartholomew,
nearly led to a schism between the Ecumenical and Russian patriarchates.
4. Latvia. In June, 1921 Patriarch Tikhon granted the Latvian Church a large
measure of autonomy under its Latvian archpastor, Archbishop John of Riga,
who was burned to death by the communists in 1934. In March, 1936, the
Ecumenical Patriarch accepted the Church of Latvia within his own
jurisdiction.
5. Poland. In 1921 Patriarch Tikhon appointed Archbishop Seraphim
(Chichagov) to the see of Warsaw, but the Poles, whose armies had defeated
the Red Army the year before, did not grant him entry into the country. So the
patriarch was forced to bow to the Poles suggestion that Archbishop George
(Yaroshevsky) of Minsk be made metropolitan of Warsaw. However, he
refused Archbishop Georges request for autocephaly on the grounds that
very few members of the Polish Church were Poles and the Polish dioceses
were historically indivisible parts of the Russian Church. 55
Lyudmilla Koeller writes: The Polish authorities restricted the Orthodox
Church, which numbered more than 3 million believers (mainly Ukrainians
and Byelorussians). 56 In 1922 a council was convoked in Pochayev which was
to have declared autocephaly, but as the result of a protest by Bishop
Eleutherius [Bogoyavlensky, of Vilnius] and Bishop Vladimir (Tikhonitsky),
this decision was not made. But at the next council of bishops, which gathered
in Warsaw in June, 1922, the majority voted for autocephaly, with only
Bishops Eleutherius and Vladimir voting against. A council convoked in
September of the same year deprived Bishops Eleutherius and Vladimir of
their sees. In December, 1922, Bishop Eleutherius was arrested and
imprisoned in a strict regime prison in the monastery of the Camaldul Fathers
near Krakow, from where he was transferred to Kovno in spring, 1923. 57
M.B. Danilushkin (ed.), Istoria Russkoj Pravoslavnoj Tserkvi (A History of the Russian Orthodox
Church), vol. I, St. Petersburg, 1997, p. 197 (in Russian).
56 For example, on October 22, 1919 the Poles ordered 497 Orthodox churches and chapels,
which had supposedly been seized from the Catholics in the past, to be returned to the
Catholic Church. See Danilushkin, op. cit., p. 586.
57 Koeller, "Kommentarii k pis'mu Arkhiepiskopa Rizhskago i Latvijskago Ioanna
Arkhiepiskopu Vilyenskomu i Litovskomu Elevferiu ot 2 noiabria 1927 g. (Commentary on
the letter of Archbishop John of Riga and Latvia to Archbishop Eleutherius of Vilnius and
55
50
Latvia)", Tserkovnaia Zhizn (Church Life), 3-4, May-June-July-August, 1992, pp. 56-57 (in
Russian).
58 Gubonin, op. cit., pp. 320-321.
51
52
sincere best wishes the moral support which Your Beatitude showed us while
you were yet Patriarch of Constantinople by entering into communion with
us as the only rightfully ruling organ of the Russian Orthodox Church.61
Moreover, his successors Gregory VII and Constantine VI remained in
communion with the Living Church.
Patriarch Gregory first called for Patriarch Tikhons resignation, and then
demanded that the Russian Metropolitan Anthony and Archbishop
Anastasius, who were residing Constantinople at the time, cease their
activities against the Soviet regime and stop commemorating Patriarch
Tikhon. Receiving no compliance from them, Patriarch Gregory organized an
investigation and suspended the two bishops from serving. He asked
Patriarch Demetrius [of Serbia] to close down the Russian Council of Bishops
in Sremsky-Karlovtsy, but Demetrius refused62
Gregory then decided to send a special mission to Russia to investigate the
church situation there.
Patriarch Tikhon wrote to Gregory: Attached to the letter of your
Holiness representative in Russia, Archimandrite Basil Dimopoulo, of June 6,
1924, no. 226, I received the protocols of four sessions of the Holy
Constantinopolitan Synod of January 1, April 17, April 30 and May 6 of this
year, from which it is evident that your Holiness, wishing to provide help
from the Mother Great Church of Christ of Constantinople, and having
exactly studied the course of Russian Church life and the differences and
divisions that have taken place in order to bring peace and end the present
anomalies, .. having taken into consideration the exceptional circumstances
and examples from the past, have decided to send us a special Commission,
which is authorized to study and act on the spot on the basis and within the
bounds of definite orders which are in agreement with the spirit and tradition
of the Church.
In your Holiness instructions to the members of the Mission one of the
main points is your desire that I, as the All-Russian Patriarch, for the sake of
the unification of those who have cut themselves off and for the sake of the
flock, should sacrifice myself and immediately resign from the administration
of the Church, as befits a true and love-filled pastor who cares for the
salvation of many, and that at the same time the Patriarchate should be
abolished, albeit temporarily, because it came into being in completely
abnormal circumstances at the beginning of the civil war and because it is
considered a major obstacle to the reestablishment of peace and unity.
Definite instructions are also given to the Commission regarding which
tendencies [factions] they should rely on in their work.
61
62
53
54
pleases the Lord God to give peace to the Church by the voice of an AllRussian Local Council. 63
Relations between Constantinople and the Russian Church continued to be
very frosty. Constantines successor, Basil III, broke communion with the
Living Church in 1929 but then entered into communion with the Sovietized
Moscow Patriarchate of Metropolitan Sergius! When Metropolitan Peter came
to power in Russia in April, 1925, he was presented a letter from Patriarch
Basil III which called on the Old Churchmen to unite with the
renovationists. His comment was: We still have to check whether this
Patriarch is Orthodox Metropolitan Sergius was also sceptical; he reacted
to Constantinoples recognition of the renovationists as follows: Let them
recognize them; the renovationists have not become Orthodox from this, only
the Patriarchs have become renovationists! 64
V. The EPs false Pan-Orthodox Council of 1923 and acceptance of the
uncanonical papist calendar in 1924.
At the beginning of 1923, a Commission was set up on the initiative of the
Greek government to see whether the Autocephalous Church of Greece could
accept the new calendar the first step towards union with the West in prayer.
The Commission reported that although the Church of Greece, like the other
Autocephalous Orthodox Churches, is inherently independent, they are
nevertheless firmly united and bound to each other through the principle of
the spiritual unity of the Church, composing one and one only Church, the
Orthodox Church. Consequently none of them can separate itself from the
others and accept the new calendar without becoming schismatic in relation
to them.
On February 3, Meletius Metaxakis wrote to the Church of Greece, arguing
for the change of calendar at his forthcoming Pan-Orthodox Council so as to
further the cause, in this part of the Pan-Christian unity, of the celebration of
the Nativity and Resurrection of Christ on the same day by all those who are
called by the name of the Lord.65
Shortly afterwards, on February 25, Archimandrite Chrysostom
Papadopoulos, was elected Archbishop of Athens by three out of a specially
chosen Synod of only five hierarchs another ecclesiastical coup dtat.
During his enthronement speech, Chrysostom said that for collaboration with
55
56
on the 34th Apostolic Canon, which ordains: It behoves the Bishops of every
nation to know among them who is the first or chief, and to recognize him as
their head, and to refrain from doing anything superfluous without his advice
and approval But let not even such a one do anything without the advice
and consent and approval of all. For thus will there be concord, and God will
be glorified through the Lord in the Holy Spirit: the Father, the Son and the
Holy Spirit. He replaced the Julian calendar with the Gregorian in spite of all
the prohibitions relating to it; he decided to supersede the Paschalion which
had been eternally ordained for the Orthodox Church by the decision of the
First Ecumenical Council, turning to the creation of an astronomically more
perfect one in the observatories of Bucharest, Belgrade and Athens; he
allowed clerics hair to be cut and their venerable dress to be replaced by that
of the Anglican Pastors; he introduced the anticanonical marriage and second
marriage of priests; he entrusted the shortening of the days of the fast and the
manner of their observance to the judgement of the local Churches, thereby
destroying the order and unity that prevailed in the Autocephalous Orthodox
Churches of the East. Acting in this way, he opened wide the gates to every
innovation, abolishing the distinctive characteristic of the Eastern Orthodox
Church, which is its preservation, perfectly and without innovation, of
everything that was handed down by the Lord, the Apostles, the Fathers, and
the Local and Ecumenical Councils. 70
What made the councils decisions still less acceptable was the reason it
gave for its innovations, viz., that changing the Paschalion would make a
great moral impression on the whole civilized world by bringing the two
Christian worlds of the East and West closer through the unforced initiative
of this Orthodox Church71
The council was rejected by the Alexandrian, Antiochian and Jerusalem
Churches, and by the Russian Church Abroad and the Serbian Church.
Metropolitan Anthony (Khrapovitsky) called the calendar innovation this
senseless and pointless concession to Masonry and Papism.
That the adoption of the new calendar was an abomination in the sight of
God was clearly indicated by the great miracle of the sign of the cross in the
sky over the Old Calendarist monastery of St. John the Theologian in Athens
in September, 1925. In fact the new calendar had been anathematised by the
Eastern Patriarchs in three Councils, in 1583, 1587 and 1593, and synodically
condemned again in 1722, 1827, 1848, 1895 and 1904. By adopting it, the EP, as
the Commission of the Greek Church had rightly declared, became schismatic
in relation to the Churches keeping the Church calendar.
57
58
Among the rules of the WCC which bind every member is the following:
A church must recognize the essential interdependence of the churches,
particularly those of the same confession, and must practise constructive
ecumenical relations with other churches within its country or region. This
will normally mean that the church is a member of the national council of
churches or similar body and of the regional ecumenical organisation."
Article I of the WCC Constitution reads: "The World Council of Churches
is a fellowship of churches which confess the Lord Jesus Christ as God and
Saviour according to the scriptures (sic) and therefore seek to fulfil together
their common calling to the glory of the one God, Father, Son and Holy
Spirit." And the Constitution also declares that the primary purpose of the
fellowship of churches in the World Council of Churches is to call one another
to visible unity in one faith and in one eucharistic fellowship, expressed in
worship and common life in Christ, through witness and service to the world,
and to advance towards that unity in order that the world may believe.
Further, according to Section II of the WCC Rules, entitled Responsibilities of
Membership, "Membership in the World Council of Churches signifies
faithfulness to the Basis of the Council, fellowship in the Council,
participation in the life and work of the Council and commitment to the
ecumenical movement as integral to the mission of the church.
In accepting these terms the Orthodox churches that entered the WCC
clearly accepted a Protestant ecclesiology.
VII. The Apostasy of Ecumenical Patriarch Athenagoras.
In 1949 there flew into Constantinople on US President Trumans plane
the second Meletius Metaxakis, the former Archbishop of North and South
America Athenagoras, who in 1919 had been appointed secretary of the Holy
Synod of the Church of Greece by Metaxakis himself. 73 By an extraordinary
coincidence Athenagoras was a former spiritual son of Metropolitan
Chrysostom of Florina, leader of the Greek Old Calendarists, so that the
leaders of the opposing sides in the Church struggle in the early 1950s were,
like David and Absalom, a holy father and his apostate son.
Patriarch Maximus was forced into retirement on grounds of mental illness
and the 33rd degree Mason Athenagoras took his place. In his enthronement
speech he went far beyond the bounds of the impious masonic encyclical of
1920 and proclaimed the dogma of Pan-religion, declaring: We are in error
and sin if we think that the Orthodox Faith came down from heaven and that
the other dogmas [i.e. religions] are unworthy. Three hundred million men
have chosen Mohammedanism as the way to God and further hundreds of
73
59
millions are Protestants, Catholics and Buddhists. The aim of every religion is
to make man better.74
In 1960 the Orthodox Churches in the WCC met on Rhodes to establish a
catalogue of topics to be discussed at a future Pan-Orthodox Council. In the
course of the debate on the catalogue, write Gordienko and Novikov, the
Moscow Patriarchates delegation suggested the removal of some of the
subjects (The Development of Internal and External Missionary Work, The
Methods of Fighting Atheism and False Doctrines Like Theosophy, Spiritism,
Freemasonry, etc.) and the addition of some others (Cooperation between the
Local Orthodox Churches in the Realisation of the Christian Ideas of Peace,
Fraternity and Love among Peoples, Orthodoxy and Racial Discrimination,
Orthodoxy and the Tasks of Christians in Regions of Rapid Social Change)
Besides working out the topics for the future Pre-Council, the First
Conference passed the decision On the Study of Ways for Achieving Closer
Contacts and Unity of Churches in a Pan-Orthodox Perspective, envisaging
the search for contacts with Ancient Eastern (non-Chalcedonian) Churches
(Monophysites), the Old Catholic, Anglican, Catholic, and Protestant
Churches, as well as the World Council of Churches. 75
In other words, the Orthodox henceforth were to abandon the struggle
against Atheism, Freemasonry and other false religions, and were to engage
in dialogue towards union with all the Christian heretics while at the same
time persecuting the True Orthodox and using ecumenical forums to further
the ends of Soviet foreign policy in its struggle with the Capitalist West!
It is not recorded that the EP objected to this programme
Athenagoras apostate course received a boost from the WCCs General
Assembly in New Delhi in 1961, which marked the decisive dogmatic break
between World Orthodoxy and True Orthodoxy. If, until then, it could be
argued, albeit unconvincingly, that the new calendarists had not apostasised,
and that only a few of their leaders were ecumenist heretics, this could no
longer be maintained after the summary statement signed by all the delegates
at New Delhi, which declared, among other things: we consider that the
work of creating the One, Universal Church must unfailingly be accompanied
by the destruction and disappearance of certain outmoded, traditional forms
of worship.
This was an outright challenge delivered to the Holy Tradition of the One,
Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church! And, having delivered it, the Orthodox
delegates seemed to lose all restraint. After the New Delhi congress, convened,
The newspapers Khronos (20 March, 1949) and Orthodoxos Typos (December, 1968), cited in
Hieromonk Theodoretus (Mavros), Palaion kai Neon (The Old and the New), p. 21.
75 "The Russian Orthodox Church in the System of Contemporary Christianity", in A.
Preobrazhensky (ed.), The Russian Orthodox Church, Moscow: Progress, 1988, p. 387.
74
60
Ulrich Duckrow, Conflict over the Ecumenical Movement, Geneva: The World Council of
Churches, 1981, pp. 31, 310.
76
61
Full text in Eastern Churches Review, vol. I, 1, Spring, 1966, pp. 49-50.
Eastern Churches Review, vol. I, 1, Spring, 1966, p. 50.
62
Full text in Ivan Ostroumoff, The History of the Council of Florence, pp. 193-199.
63
spirit and in truth. Even The Journal of the Moscow Patriarchate, which is
completely subject to the censorship of the communist party, in citing the
words of the prayer in its account of this conference, did not dare to translate
the English truth by the word istina, but translated it as pravda
[righteousness]. Of course, everyone very well understood that in the given
case the text of the prayer was speaking without the slightest ambiguity about
the Truth. Perhaps the Orthodox hierarchs have resorted, in the conference, to
the old Jesuit practice of reservatio mentalis, but in that case if all these
delegates do not repent of the sin of communion in prayer with heretics, then
we must consider them to be on the completely false path of apostasy from
the Truth of Orthodoxy Ecumenism is the heresy of heresies because until
now each heresy in the history of the Church has striven to take the place of
the true Church, but the ecumenical movement, in uniting all the heresies,
invites all of them together to consider themselves the one true Church.80
In 1975, Archbishop Athenagoras of Thyateira and Great Britain published,
with the blessing of Patriarch Demetrius, his Thyateira Confession, which
declared that the Church is a house without walls which anyone can enter
freely and receive eucharistic hospitality. And he wrote: Orthodox
Christians believe that the following Churches have valid and true Priesthood
or Orders. The Orthodox, the Roman Catholic, the Ethiopian, the CoptoArmenian and the Anglican. The Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople,
the Patriarchate of Alexandria, the Patriarchate of Jerusalem, the Patriarchate
of Romania and the Church of Cyprus half a century ago declared officially
that the Anglican Church has valid Orders by dispensation and that means
that Anglican Bishops, Priests and Deacons can perform valid sacraments as
can those of the Roman Catholic Church.81 This heretical confession was
condemned by Metropolitan Philaret and his Synod.
Also in 1975, at the WCCs General Assembly in Nairobi, the Orthodox
delegates, having signed an agreement to recognize the sacraments of the
non-Orthodox delegates, had declared that the Orthodox do not expect the
other Christians to be converted to Orthodoxy in its historic and cultural
reality of the past and the present and to become members of the Orthodox
Church which gave the lie to their excuse that they were participating in
the ecumenical movement to witness to the non-Orthodox.82
Again, in 1980, the Ecumenical Press Service declared that the WCC was
working on plans to unify all Christian denominations into a single new
religion.83
Vitaly, "Ekumenizm (Ecumenism)", Pravoslavnij Vestnik (The Orthodox Herald), June, 1969,
pp. 14-30; Moskva (Moscow), 1991, 9, p. 149 (in Russian).
81 Athenagoras (Kokkinakis), The Thyateira Confession, London, 1975, p. 61.
82 Orthodoxy and the Ecumenical Movement, Orthodox Christian Witness, October 27 /
November 9, 1997, p. 2.
83 Newsletter of the Foreign Relations Department of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia,
January-March, 1981, p. 2.
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).
This is already completely unacceptable from an Orthodox point of view,
and represents a heretical, Monophysite formulation. The two natures and
wills of Christ are not distinguishable only in thought, but also in reality.
Paragraph Seven also speaks of the two natures being distinguishable only
in thought, which implies, as Ludmilla Perepiolkina points out an absence of
this distinction in reality.85
Paragraph Five states: The two families accept that the One Who wills and
acts is always the single Hypostasis of the incarnate Logos. However, as
Perepiolkina again correctly points out, according to the teaching of St.
Maximus the Confessor, the concept of energy (activity) of nature is
attributable only to nature as a whole, and not to the hypostasis. This teaching
was affirmed at the Sixth Ecumenical Council. In the Chambsy Declaration,
as it is evident from Paragraph Five, natural wills and energies in Jesus Christ
are attributed to His Hypostasis. In other words, this Paragraph is a purely
Monothelite formula.86
Paragraph Eight states: The two families accept the first three Ecumenical
Councils which form our common heritage. With regard to the four later
Councils of the Orthodox Church, the Orthodox affirm that, for them, points
one through seven are also the teaching of these four later Councils, whereas
the oriental Orthodox consider this affirmation of the Orthodox like their own
interpretation. In this sense the oriental Orthodox respond positively to this
affirmation.
See Archbishop Vitaly, "The 1983 Sobor of Bishops", Orthodox Christian Witness, August 20 /
September 2, 1984, p. 4.
85 Perepiolkina, Ecumenism A Path to Perdition, St. Petersburg, 1999, p. 251.
86 Perepiolkina, op. cit., p. 252.
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66
In essence, the Local Orthodox Churches, led by the EP, here placed
themselves under the anathemas against Monophysitism from the Fourth
Ecumenical Council onwards, and must be considered to be semiMonophysites.
The ROCOR and the Greek Old Calendarists quickly condemned the
Chambsy agreement. 87 Nevertheless, in 1992 the patriarchate of Antioch
entered into full, official communion with the Monophysites. There is every
indication that the Moscow Patriarchate wants to go along the same path. The
MPs relations with the Armenian Monophysites are especially close.
Chambsy was followed by the Seventh General Assembly of the WCC in
Canberra in 1991, in which the Orthodox delegates blasphemed against the
Faith still more blatantly. Thus aboriginal pagans invited the participants to
pass through a cleansing cloud of smoke uniting Aboriginal spirituality to
Christian spirituality!
In March, 1992, the heads of the Local Orthodox Churches met in
Constantinople and official renounced proselytism among Western Christians.
Of course, this renunciation had been implicit in the Ecumenical
Patriarchates statements since the encyclical of 1920. But it still came as a
shock to see the Church renounced the hope of conversion and therefore
salvation for hundreds of millions of westerners.
Union with the Monophysites proceeded in parallel with moves for union
with the Catholics. In 1994 the Local Orthodox churches signed the Balamand
agreement with the Catholics, in which the Orthodox and the Catholics were
declared to be sister-Churches in the full sense, two lungs of the same
organism (with the Monophysites as a third lung?). The Balamand
Agreement, which was signed on the Orthodox side by Moscow,
Constantinople, Alexandria, Antioch, Romania, Cyprus, Poland and Finland,
declared: Catholics and Orthodox are once again discovering each other as
sister churches and recognizing each other as sister churches. On each
side it is acknowledged that what Christ has entrusted to His Church the
profession of the apostolic faith, participation in the same sacraments, the
apostolic succession of bishops, and, above all, the one priesthood celebrating
the one Sacrifice of Christ cannot be considered to be the exclusive property
of one of our Churches. The baptism of penitent papists into the Orthodox
Metropolitan Calliopius of Pentapolis, Prodosia tis Orthodoxias (Betrayal of Orthodoxy),
Piraeus, 1991 (in Greek); O Pharos tis Orthodoxias (The Lighthouse of Orthodoxy), October, 1991,
66, p. 120 (in Greek); Monk Isaac, "Commenta ry on the latest recommendations of the Joint
Commission for theological dialogue between the Orthodox and Oriental Orthodox
Churches", Orthodox Life, vol. 42, 3, May-June, 1991; "Dossier sur les Accords de Chambsy
entre Monophysites et Orthodoxes (Dossier on the Agreements of Chambsy between the
Monophysites and the Orthodox)", La Lumire du Thabor (The Light of Tabor), 31, 1991 (in
French).
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heretics, but say that the baptism and eucharist of heretics is effectual for
salvation; therefore to those who knowingly have communion with these
aforementioned heretics or advocate, disseminate , or defend their new heresy
of Ecumenism under the pretext of brotherly love or the supposed unification
of separated Christians, Anathema.89
The implication of this anathema was clear: since the EP was a fully
participating member of the WCC, it was under anathema and deprived of
the grace of sacraments. As I.M. has written: There is no heresy without
heretics and their practical activity. The WCC in its declarations says: The
Church confesses, the Church teaches, the Church does this, the Church does
that. In this way the WCC witnesses that it does not recognize itself to be
simply a council of churches, but the one church. And all those who are
members of the WCC are members of this one false church, this synagogue of
satan. And by this participation in the WCC all the local Orthodox churches
fall under the anathema of the ROCA of 1983 and fall away from the True
Church. 90
In spite of this, the EP has continued to have close relations with nonChristian religions, particularly the Jews and the Muslims. In 1989 Patriarch
Parthenius of Alexandria declared that Mohammed was an Apostle of God
words that many thousands of New Martyrs under the Turkish yoke had
refused to utter even on pain of death. This apostasy from the Christian faith
drew no rebuke from the EP.
Most recently, Patriarch Bartholomew congratulated Muslims on the end
of the Ramadan fast. Fr. Steven Allen writes: If anyone asks you why the
Genuine Orthodox Christians do not commemorate the present Ecumenical
Patriarch, you could, among numerous other items, refer them to the story at
the link below. I pray that it will cause them to think.
http://news-nftu.blogspot.com/2009/09/ecumenical-patriarchbartholomew.html
Patriarch Bartholomew is here publicly teaching that the god of Islam is
the true God. This is an inescapable conclusion from his asking God
Almighty to reward the Hagarenes for keeping Ramadan. This by itself
makes him a heretic.
See "A Contemporary Patristic Document", Orthodox Christian Witness, November 14/27,
1983, p. 3; "Encyclical Letter of the Council of Bishops of the Russian Orthodox Church
Outside Russia", Orthodox Life, vol. 33, 6, November-December, 1983, p. 13; Bishop
Hilarion of Manhattan, "Answers to Questions Posed by the Faithful of the Orthodox Parish
in Somerville, South Carolina", Sunday of the Myrrhbearers, 1992.
90 Iskazhenie dogmata 'O edinstve Tserkvi' v ispovedaniakh very Sinodom i Soborom
Russkoj Pravoslavnoj Tserkvi Zagranitesj (The Distortion of the dogma on the Unity of the
Church in the confessions of faith by the Synod and Council of the Russian Orthodox Church
Abroad) (in Russian).
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The Mohammedans do not worship the Holy Trinity, and therefore their
god is a false god. There is no generic God Almighty whom all men - or all
monotheists - worship, of whom the Holy Trinity is merely a representation
or an optional conceptualization. The Holy Trinity is, simply and absolutely,
the only God.
If the Patriarch truly loved the Hagarenes and wanted the true God
Almighty to bless them, he would call upon them to convert to the Faith in
the Holy Trinity. If one objects that then he would die for the Faith, for the
Moslems would slay him...well, that's good, isn't it? Isn't that what we
believe in?91
X. The EPs Persecution of Confessing Orthodox Christians
In spite of the EPs supposedly universal love that embraces all heretics
and even non-Christian religions, it clearly hates one group of people the
truly confessing Orthodox Christians. Thus in 1992 it expelled the confessing
monks of the skete of the Holy Prophet Elijah (Russian Church Abroad) from
Mount Athos. Again, it has initiated an unprecedented campaign of slander
and harassment against the 104 monks of the Athonite monastery of
Esphigmenou. The monastery has been subjected to a military siege; its
property has been seized; a false monastery called Esphigmenou has been
created in order to take the place of the genuine monastery of that name; and
most recently it has succeeded in having jail sentences served by the Greek
courts on the monasterys Abbot Methodius and twelve of his monks. So the
EP today combines the broadest welcome to almost all contemporary heresies
while persecuting those who hold to the True Orthodox faith. To him and to
those with him the Church proclaims: Anathema!
July 28 / August 10, 2004; revised September 16/29, 2009.
Fr. Steven Allen, NFTU: True Orthodox and Ecumenism News: Ecumenical Patriarch
Bartholomew Blesses the End of Ramadan, September 29, 2009.
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Unfortunately, however, in the West since the rise of the Papacy, and
especially since the Reformation, the Ecumenical Councils have been
increasingly ignored, even despised. The result is that the West has not only
lost unity of faith and worship within itself: it has also lost it with the Church
of the Seven Ecumenical Councils that is, the Church of the first millenium
of Christian history. Now anyone can proclaim just about any kind of
teaching, however far removed from Christianity, label it Christian and
pass muster as a Christian and a member of the Church (you can be a
member of the Methodist Church in England, for example, without even
believing in God!).
Until the early twentieth century the Orthodox Church retained both its
internal unity and its unity with the Early Apostolic Church through its
faithfulness to the teachings of the Seven Ecumenical Councils, the seven
pillars of wisdom. However, under the twin hammer blows of Communism
and Ecumenism (Ecucommunism, as I have called it), the major part of the
Orthodox Church has also fallen away. This should not surprise us: the Lord
called His Church a little flock and put the rhetorical question: When I
come again, shall I find faith on the earth? (Luke 12.40, 18.8). (Answer: not
much.) But He also said that the gates of hell will not prevail against the
Church (Matthew 16.18). So even in the last, most terrible times, when the
vast majority of mankind will fall into the abyss, there will still be the
opportunity for the lover of truth to find the One True Church, Christs little
flock; and even in our terrible times there have been literally millions of
martyrs for the truth, and great wonderworkers whom God has glorified with
great signs and miracles on the earth. However, to those who did not receive
the love of the truth, that they might be saved, God will send a strong
delusion, that they should believe the lie (II Thessalonians 2.11-12). They will
include the believers of the last, Laodicean period of Church history, of
whom the Lord says: Because you are lukewarm, and neither cold nor hot, I
will vomit you out of My mouth (Revelation 3.16).
Now the modern, lukewarm believer trots out a number of standard
arguments against the view I have just propounded. I shall call them the
persecution argument, the linguistic argument, the doctrine doesnt
matter anyway argument and the God is merciful argument.
1. The Persecution Argument. This may be stated as follows: If we become
obsessed with doctrinal niceties, well only end up killing each other without
anyone coming any closer to the truth. This is the way to the Inquisition, to
Auschwitz, etc.
Needless to say, arguments about fundamental truth do not always end in
blood; and the fact that they do occasionally should not put us off from the
one thing necessary the search for the truth. In any case, as I have already
indicated, the Orthodox Church believes that peaceful persuasion, not
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Again, hold fast the form of sound words you have heard from me, he says
(II Timothy 1.13). What is he talking about if not about some verbally
expressed teaching of the faith? Again: With the heart one believes unto
righteousness, and with the mouth confession is made unto salvation (Romans
10.10). So our words matter: with them we confess the truth or heresy, unto
salvation or damnation. By what other way, besides the form of sound
words and confession with the mouth, do we distinguish truth from
falsehood?
If words are vitally important to scientists and writers and lawyers, why
should they be any the less important to theologians? To say that Christ is of
one substance with the Father is to express a radically different idea from
saying that Christ is of a similar substance to the Father, yet this enormous
difference in ideas is expressed by the difference of only one letter (iota) in
Greek (homoousios as opposed to homoiousios). As the Lord Himself
said, not one iota shall pass away In the fourth century, both learned
people and simple people, both Orthodox and heretics, understood both the
difference in these words and the enormous importance of the difference. Not
now! Why? The answer to this question brings me to:
3. The Doctrine Doesnt Matter Anyway Argument. For nearly nineteen
centuries, Christians and heretics argued about truth and heresy, but they had
this in common: they agreed that there was a difference, and that the
difference was vitally important. What distinguishes 20th-century heretics
from almost all previous ones is that they dont even believe in the existence
of heresy or, if they do, they dont believe its important. I once read a
review in Church Times of a book on the wars between Anglicans and
Catholics in sixteenth-century England. The reviewer said that both sides
were equally right, and the martyrs on both sides were martyrs, even
though they died for completely contradictory truths, because the only real
heresy is the idea that there is such a thing as heresy. This is essentially the
doctrine of ecumenism, which would unite every conceivable truth and
heresy in a pan-cosmic religious stew in which everyone can believe as they
like because all paths lead to God. But this is simply the abandonment of
reason and objectivity in favour of complete subjectivism. And the Orthodox
Church has officially defined it as the heresy of heresies because it
combines all heresies in itself while denying the very existence of objective
truth.
For if heresy doesnt exist, then truth doesnt exist either. And if the
difference between truth and heresy is unimportant, then Christianity and
religion in general are unimportant. Because if Christianity is anything at all,
it is TRUTH. Father, sanctify them by Thy truth, said the Lord. But if
anything goes, if anything is accepted as the truth, then where is the
possibility of sanctification?
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destruction of the flesh (I Corinthians 5.4-5). And St. Peter wasnt exactly
merciful to Ananias and Sapphira As David says in the Psalms: With the
holy man wilt Thou be holy, and with the innocent man wilt Thou be
innocent. And with the elect man wilt Thou be elect, and with the perverse
wilt Thou be perverse (Psalm 17.25-26 (LXX)).
Any careful reader of the Gospel will agree that it is both the most
comforting, and the most terrifying book ever written. Many are called, but
few are chosen. There will be weeping and gnashing of teeth. Depart
from Me, ye cursed, into the everlasting fire prepared for the devil and his
angels. Whoever speaks against the Holy Spirit, it will not be forgiven him,
either in this age or in the age to come. It is more difficult for a rich man to
enter the Kingdom of heaven than Depart from Me, I never knew you
You, Capernaum, will be brought down to hell. Better were it for that
man if he had never been born
Yes, God is merciful, because He gives us every opportunity to be saved,
and warns us in every way against the path that leads to damnation. But we
are unutterably foolish, because we want to rewrite the rules, as if we were
the Judge and not the man standing in the dock. Wait a minute, you cant
really mean that all who will be damned! Okay, let Hitler and Stalin rot
in hell, but were such nice people, Im such a nice person!
What a shock death will be for the vast majority of mankind! And all
because we do not want to believe what Christ has written with such clarity
in His Gospel. We want dispensations for our lusts and passions, for our
criminal indifference to the truth. We want to rewrite the Gospel, make it the
Gospel according to Luther, or John-Paul II, or George Carey, which absolves
all manner of heretics, all manner of evil perversions, all manner of betrayals
of the One Saviour of mankind. But St. Paul consigns all those who preach a
different Gospel to the terrible sentence of anathema. And what does the
Apostle of love and mercy say in the very last chapter of Gods Word? I
testify to anyone who hears the words of the prophecy of this book: If anyone
adds to these things, God will add to him the plagues that are written in this
book; and if anyone takes away from the words of the book of this prophecy,
God shall take away his part from the Book of Life, from the holy city, and
from the things which are written in this book. (Revelation 22.18).
With love,
Vladimir.
September 3/16, 1999.
St. Edward the Martyr, King of England.
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Fathers of the Church were so conscious of the mystery of the Eucharist that it
was the one doctrine of the Church which was not proclaimed from the
rooftops, and which was hidden even from catechumens until after they had
actually partaken of it. But this is no way preventing them, when necessity (in
the form of the appearance of heresy) presented itself, of proclaiming the
mystery clearly and unambiguously - and of making the acceptance of the
definitions of the Seven Ecumenical Councils the touchstone of true belief in,
and passport to participation of, the mysteries.
That is why the Orthodox Church chants: "The preaching of the Apostles
and the doctrines of the Fathers confirmed the one Faith of the Church. And
wearing the garment of truth woven from the theology on high, she rightly
divideth and glorifieth the great mystery of piety." And again: "The choir of
the holy Fathers, which hath gathered from the ends of the earth, hath taught
the single essence of the Father, Son and Holy Spirit, and hath carefully
committed to the Church the mystery of theology." The Church "rightly
divides" the great mystery of piety from the mystery of iniquity by uttering
God-inspired definitions of the faith which are immediately recognized by
those who truly believe as expressing their own faith. But those who are
outside the Church, to whom the mystery of theology has not been committed,
instinctively feel that this definition does not express what they believe; and
so, if they are honest, they openly reject it, and if they are dishonest, they
resort to mystification.
Mystification like the following, which is to be found in the theological
novel Mystical Paths by the Anglican writer Susan Howatch: "He paused again,
and in that silence I heard the sentence resonate as the footsteps of mysticism
and Gnosticism echoed and re-echoed in the classic Christian corridor. Then I
saw Truth as a multi-sided diamond with the themes of heresy and orthodoxy
all glittering facets of a single reality, and beyond the facets I glimpsed that
mysterious Christ of St. John's Gospel, not the Jesus of history but the Christ
of Eternity who is turn pointed beyond himself to the Truth no human mind
could wholly grasp..." As if Truth were on a par with heresy, or Gnosticism
could co-exist with "classic" Christianity, or "the Christ of Eternity" were not
at the same time "the Jesus of history"!
This passage comes in the middle of a "healing" session conducted by an
Anglican priest, which actually describes a psychic seance. And this leads us
to another important fact concerning the mystifiers: that in rejecting the
mystery of theology as defined by the Seven Ecumenical Councils, they lay
themselves open to a false and demonic mysticism. Hence the speaking in
tongues and emotional outpourings and "healings", the inter-faith services
and homosexual marriages and calling up of dead spirits by women "priests".
For just as Orthodox faith and obedience to all the teachings of the Orthodox
Church is the only entrance to true mysticism, so heresy and mystification is
the immediate passport to false mysticism, to spiritual deception and,
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made known by the Father to the Church, which in turn makes it known both
to men and to the ranks of the angels.
From this it should be clear that the mysteries of God are neither radically
unknowable, nor is it impossible to express them in words - although the
understanding of the words, and the communication of the mystery, is
impossible without grace, the sending of the Holy Spirit from the Father.
Without grace the mystery will remain hidden; for faith is a gift of grace
(Ephesians 2.8).
But words, too, are important; for they show us whether a man has truly
received the mystery or not. Just as Christ is called the Word of God because
He reveals to us the mystery of the Father, so the words of our confession of
faith reveal the presence of the mystery of Christ in us. For "I believed, and
therefore I spoke" (Psalm 115.1). And "with the heart man believeth unto
righteousness; and with the mouth confession is made unto salvation"
(Romans 10.10).
And that is why the words and definitions of the Seven Ecumenical
Councils must be accepted by all true Christians. For they are not foolish
attempts to express the inexpressible, as the mystifiers would have it, but
living words from the Word, "the garment of truth woven from the theology
on high." Therefore St. Paul says: "Hold fast the form of sound words which
thou hast heard of me, in faith and love which is in Christ Jesus" (II Timothy
1.13).
It follows that those who refuse to give a clear and unambiguous
confession of faith, but rather resort to mystification on the basis of a
supposed reverence for "the mystery", are in fact strangers to the mystery of
Christ and partakers of the mystery of iniquity (II Thessalonians 2.7). They
will not express the right confession because they do not have it - although
they are not slow to express their judgement of those who do have it. To them,
therefore, we can with justice say: whereof you cannot speak - because you do
not believe it - thereof you should keep silent...
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7. BORN-AGAIN CHRISTIANS
The very beginning and foundation of the Christian life is the mystery of
Holy Baptism. The Christian enters the Church through Baptism, and without
Baptism it is impossible to be saved. As the Lord Himself said: "Verily, verily
I say unto thee, Except a man be born again of water and the Spirit, he cannot
enter the Kingdom of God" (John 3.6). Again: "He that believeth and is
baptized shall be saved" (Mark 16.16). And again: "Go ye therefore, and teach
all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of
the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all things whatsoever I have
commanded you" (Matthew 28.19-20).
If Christ Himself has laid it down as a condition of our salvation that we
follow His teachings, and especially the teaching on Baptism, how foolish are
we if we ignore His words! And if Christ Himself, Who alone was sinless and
did not need Baptism, consented to be baptised at the hands of St. John the
Forerunner, saying: "thus it becometh us to fulfil all righteousness" (Matthew
3.15), of what condemnation shall we not be found worthy if we ignore His
example and introduce a righteousness of our own making?! And yet in the
Christian world today we are witnessing a radical corruption of both the
doctrine and the practice of Holy Baptism.
This corruption comes from different historical sources: the rejection of full
triune immersion - from Catholicism, the rejection of water baptism in favour
of a so-called "baptism of the Spirit" - from Protestantism, the rejection of the
very necessity and efficacy of baptism - from Ecumenism. Let us consider
each of these in turn.
1. How is Baptism performed? The Greek word
means "to
immerse repeatedly".92 Therefore a baptism which is performed with only one
immersion (as is done by the Baptists) or with no immersions but only
sprinkling or pouring (as is done by the Catholics, the Anglicans and many
Protestant sects) is not Baptism in the proper meaning of the word. The 50th
Canon of the Holy Apostles declares: "If any bishop or priest does not form
three immersions, but a single immersion, that given into the death of the
Lord, let him be deposed. For the Lord did not say, 'Baptize ye into My death',
but, 'Go ye and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of
the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit'."
Threefold immersion represents both the Triune Divinity and the three-day
Death, Burial and Resurrection of the Lord. To be immersed only once
signifies to die in the Lord's Death, but not to rise in His Resurrection. It is as
if the rebirth which is to be accomplished by Holy Baptism were aborted, or - a
stillbirth.
Archbishop Nikifor of Slavensk and Cherson, "Encyclical Epistle against Baptism by
Pouring", 1754; reprinted in Sviataia Rus', N 2, 1993, pp. 55-57 (in Russian).
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"A Baptismal Mystagogy", Orthodox Life, vol. 31, no. 2, March-April, 1981, p. 31.
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Lord tell him to do? To go to Ananias. And what does Ananias do at the
Lord's command? Baptize him (Acts 9.18).
Other examples could be multiplied. Thus when the eunuch receives his
"conversion experience" through the Apostle Philip, he says: "See, here is
water! What is to prevent my being baptised?" And he was baptized - by
immersion; for "they both went down into the water" (Acts 8.36-38). Again,
although Apollos was "fervent in the Spirit, and spake and taught diligently
the things of the Lord" (Acts 18.26), he had only had the baptism of John, and
so had to be baptized "by water and the Spirit". Again, when the centurion
Cornelius and his household had been converted, the Apostle Peter said: "Can
anyone forbid water for baptizing these people who have received the Holy
Spirit as we have?" (Acts 10.47). Now at first sight this might seem to prove
the Protestants' point in that Cornelius received the Holy Spirit before baptism.
But it in fact proves just the opposite; it proves that the gift of the Holy Spirit
which is given in faith (and, in this case, the speaking of tongues), far from
making the still greater gift of Baptism unnecessary, rather makes it mandatory.
3. What does Baptism do? Baptism is the participation of the individual
Christian in the Death and Resurrection of Christ (Romans 6.3-11). The
baptized person receives the forgiveness of all his sins, both personal and
generic; he is reborn to a new and holy life; he has put off the old Adam and
put on the new Adam, Christ; he is a new creature. This rebirth is absolutely
necessary for salvation because "flesh and blood", i.e. the "old nature which is
corrupt through deceitful lusts" (Ephesians 4.22), "cannot enter the Kingdom
of heaven" (I Corinthians 15.50).
The gift of faith alone without Baptism cannot, as the Protestants claim,
lead us into the Kingdom of heaven; for the man with faith alone can see the
goal of the Kingdom and can strive for it, but is prevented from entering
because he has not received the redeemed and regenerated human nature
which is given through the sacraments, and especially the sacraments of
Baptism, Chrismation and the Eucharist. Faith without works is dead, and the
first work of faith is the reception of the sacraments in accordance with
Christ's command. Baptism washes the believer clean, clothing him in a robe
of light; Chrismation gives him a new spirit, sealing him with the gift of the
Holy Spirit; and the Eucharist gives him the Body and Blood of Christ, of
which the Lord said: "Verily, verily I say unto you, unless you eat the Flesh of
the Son of man and drink His Blood, you have no life in you" (John 6.53).
In the Life of St. Martin of Tours by Sulpicius Severus we read of a certain
catechumen who died without baptism while the saint was away. On his
return, the saint, fearful concerning the lot of his spiritual son, resurrected
him so as to baptize him. In reply to those who questioned him about his
experiences after death, the catechumen said that he had been taken to a dark
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and gloomy dungeon - he had not been granted to enter Paradise because of
his unbaptized state.
Now the ecumenists like to talk about rebirth, enlightenment, resurrection
- all those images and symbols that we associate with Baptism. But they give
them a meaning which is quite contrary to Orthodox Christianity. For there is
no question, for the ecumenists, of crucifying the old man with all his lusts
and fallen desires, and putting on the new man who is "created after the
likeness of God in true righteousness and holiness" (Ephesians 4.24). Rather,
the goal of life for them is to give the fullest possible freedom and expression
to the old man in his fallen nature, oriented as it is entirely to this-worldly
pleasures and pursuits. Holiness as an ideal is completely foreign to them;
they recognize no saints, and no ascetic struggle, unless it be the purely
secular "sanctity" and struggles of such figures as Che Guevara or Martin
Luther King.
Again, the World Council of Churches recognizes the baptisms of all its
constituent churches. But what can this mean if, on the one hand, baptism for
its "born-again" members, as we have seen, does not even involve water or a
rite of any kind, and, on the other hand, it is proclaimed that all religions lead
to God? For if Jews and Muslims and Buddhists, who do not have baptism
and do not even believe in Christ, are equally on the way to God with the
Christians, the only conclusion must be that neither Baptism nor Christ
Himself are necessary for salvation. The Apostle proclaims "one Lord, one
Faith, one Baptism" (Ephesians 4.5). But the new ecumenist gospel is: many
lords, any kind of faith, and no baptism...
St. Paul teaches that before Baptism "we all lived in the passions of our
flesh, following the desires of body and mind, and so we were by nature
children of wrath" (Ephesians 2.3). But in the Spirit-filled water of Baptism we
received mercy instead of wrath, light out of darkness, life after death. For
those, however, who attempt to separate the water from the Spirit in a purely
"spiritual" baptism, the living water of the Spirit, too, has run dry (John 7.3839). For, as the Lord said to the prophet, "they have forsaken Me, the fountain
of living waters, and have hewed them out cisterns, broken cisterns, that can
hold no water" (Jeremiah 2.13). And those who attempt to deny the need for
real rebirth, for a new Spirit of holiness that cannot abide with the spirit of
this world, have fallen victim to a quite different, unholy and lying spirit, like
those false prophets of whom the Prophet Michaeas said: "Lo, the Lord has
allowed a lying spirit to enter the mouths of all these your prophets..." (III
Kings 22.23)
February 5/18, 1997.
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In spite of this error the schism between the Florinites and the Matthewites
is in general treated with admirable fairness by the authors of The Struggle
against Ecumenism. This is important, not only because the schism still exists
(and has now been transposed onto Russian, American and West European
soil), but also because existing accounts in English are heavily biassed in
favour of the Florinites. But the Boston authors, while in general inclining
towards the Florinites (as does the present writer), not only note that Bishop
Matthews integrity, personal virtue, and asceticism were admitted by all
(his relics are very fragrant, and he was a wonderworker both before and after
his death in 1950), but also give reasons for supposing that a union between
Chrysostomos and Matthew could have been effected if it had not been for
the zeal without knowledge of certain of Matthews supporters. They also do
not conceal the fact that in 1950 Metropolitan Chrysostomos repented of his
confession of 1937 and returned to his confession of 1935, declaring that the
new calendarists were deprived of sacraments. In fact, this remained the
official confession of faith of all factions of the Greek Old Calendarist Church
until the appearance of the Synod of Resistors led by Metropolitan Cyprian
of Fili and Oropos in 1984
The Boston authors continue their history of the Old Calendarist
movement by relating how the Florinites, after the death of Metropolitan
Chrysostomos in 1955, eventually received a renewal of their hierarchy
through the Russian Church Abroad in the 1960s, and how the Matthewites
also achieved recognition by the Russian Church Abroad in 1971. Again, the
treatment of this phase in the history is objective and fair. Especially valuable
is the translation of all the relevant documents in full and with a helpful
commentary.
The rest of the book is mainly devoted to a defence of the Florinite
Archbishop Auxentius of Athens, who was defrocked by a Synod composed
of the majority of the Florinite bishops in 1985. The Boston authors do not
hide the fact that Auxentius made many mistakes; but their account of these
mistakes, and especially of his trial in 1985, is sketchy and biassed. They write:
Some of His Beatitudes mistakes were notable, while others were
debatable His errors were often mistakes made in good faith, often on the
advice of clergy who wittingly or unwittingly misled him. (pp. 125, 129).
However, it is one thing for the Boston authors to try and see extenuating
factors alleviating the guilt of their archpastor charity (and the canonicity of
their own ecclesiastical position) demanded that. But it is another to slander
those other Orthodox bishops who tried to introduce canonical order into the
Church in the only canonical way open to them by a hierarchical trial
conducted according to the holy canons. Whatever the personal virtues of
Auxentius, in the opinion of the present reviewer the Boston authors have not
succeeded in demonstrating that his defrocking in 1985 was not canonical and
just.
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This is an instructive and moving book, big both in its length (over 1000
pages) and in its significance. The subject is the life of the American-born
member of the Russian Church Abroad, Hieromonk Seraphim Rose, who died
in 1982 at the age of 48 after an amazingly productive life as a missionary and
church writer. A man of Fr. Seraphims stature would be worthy of a
biography whatever age he lived in or country he came from. But his life is of
particular significance for our particular age and our particular culture.
First, he represents one of the few, very few westerners who, having
brought up in our spiritual Babylon, have not only converted to the True
Faith of Orthodoxy, but have brought forth much spiritual fruit. This should
lead us westerners to study his life with particular attention; for, as Fr.
Damascene points out, Fr. Seraphim vaulted many of the hurdles that present
such difficulties to the Orthodox western convert, and his life and writings
offer many valuable tips for the convert. Coming from a typically
Protestant background, he seemed set for a brilliant academic career as a
Chinese expert. But his agonized striving for the truth led him to reject the
vanities of academe, and after a brief descent into the hell of nihilism and the
self-indulgent life-style of the San Francisco hippy culture, his soul was
resurrected in the light of Orthodox Christianity.
Secondly, Fr. Seraphims brilliant and cultured mind, illumined by true
faith and honed on the writings of the Holy Fathers, produced book-length
studies of various theological topics that have deservedly acquired classic
status. Fr. Damascene quotes at length from his works on the soul after death,
the western saints, eastern religions, Blessed Augustine, evolution and other
topics, in which Fr. Seraphims contribution is second to none. However, on
one topic the jurisdictional issue and the Soviet Moscow Patriarchate in
particular Fr. Seraphims opinions do not reflect the consensus of the Holy
Fathers of our time, and Fr. Damascenes uncritical acceptance of Fr.
Seraphims position here shows a certain bias.
Thirdly, Fr. Seraphim did not only speak and write about the faith: he also
put it into practice: as a monk and co-founder of the Brotherhood of St.
Herman of Alaska in Platina, California, as a missionary, and as a priest and
spiritual father. Much of the value of this book resides in the accounts given
by his spiritual children and his co-struggler, Fr. Herman, that witness to his
quiet wisdom and warm charity. And this reviewer, for one, has no difficulty
in believing the accounts at the end of this book of his appearances to, and
intercession for, his spiritual children after his death.
*
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So in turning now to the opinions of Fr. Seraphim which are likely to prove
less enduring and solidly based, we are in no way disputing his reputation as
one of the truly righteous men of his century. Like Blessed Augustine, whom
he so ably defended, he made errors while remaining Orthodox. And so of
him we say, as St. Photius said of St. Augustine: We embrace the man, while
rejecting his errors.
The one major question on which, in the reviewers opinion, Fr. Seraphim
was wrong was the jurisdictional issue, or, if we accept that there are no such
things as jurisdictions, only the Church, the question: Where is the True
Church? While accepting that inter-faith and inter-Christian ecumenism were
heresies, as also the policy of submitting to atheist political power that is
called sergianism, Fr. Seraphim did not accept that the Orthodox Churches
which practiced these heresies officially were heretical and deprived of the
grace of true sacraments. Again, there is a remarkable similarity here to St.
Augustine, who rejected the Donatists as schismatics while accepting their
sacraments.
Fr. Seraphim had not always been a liberal on this question, as early
issues of his monasterys publication, The Orthodox Word, demonstrate.
However, from the mid-1970s another influence began to bear on his views on
the subject: the zealot rejection of the sacraments of the ecumenist Orthodox
on the part of the Hartford monastery, a pseudonym for the GreekAmerican Monastery of the Holy Transfiguration in Boston. Finding the
Boston monastery and its super-correct followers lacking in charity and the
true warmth of Orthodox piety, and quite rightly rejecting their views on
other subjects such as the soul after death, Fr. Seraphim over-reacted, in the
present reviewers opinion, by adopting the liberal position rejected by
Boston.
Another factor that influenced his conversion to the liberal position on this
matter was the so-called rebaptism controversy. Boston, with the blessing
of Metropolitan Philaret, first-hierarch of the Russian Church Abroad, had
baptized several converts to Orthodoxy who had been received into the
Russian Church Abroad without baptism. Fr. Seraphim considered this
practice over-zealous and harmful (he himself had been received from
Protestantism by chrismation only).
Now since the rebaptism controversy started, as Fr. Damascene says, in
England in 1976, and since the present reviewer was the first to be
rebaptised there, it may not be out of place for him to correct Fr. Damascene
on certain points of fact in this connection.
First, the English converts were not rebaptised since they had never
received baptism in any Orthodox jurisdiction (Anglican sprinkling is not
baptism in any sense). Secondly, in asking for baptism, they had not acted at
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the instigation of the Boston monastery, but at the promptings of their own
conscience; nor, contrary to what Fr. Damascene writes, was Archbishop
Nicodemus of Great Britain, who granted the converts request, in any way
influenced by Boston. Thirdly, neither Archbishop Nicodemus nor the
converts insisted that everyone else in a similar situation to theirs should be
baptized, or that they had been outside the Church before their baptism (for
they had previously been received into the ROCOR by confession). Now it
may be that Fr. Seraphim felt that he and others who had been received into
the ROCOR by economy, i.e. without baptism, would now be forced to
accept rebaptism, which would explain Fr. Damascenes vehemence against
the rebaptism in England. However, we can only reaffirm that neither
Archbishop Nicodemus nor the priest who baptized us nor we ourselves had
any such ideas.
What is true is that we asserted that when we moved from the Moscow
Patriarchate to the ROCOR, we moved from a heretical church into a true
one, and that the chrismation we received in the MP was graceless. This
opinion Fr. Seraphim contested on several grounds: (1) Hieromartyr Cyril of
Kazan had accepted the sacraments of the MP in 1934; (2) the ROCOR had not
made any declaration on the subject, and (3) there were still supposedly great
confessors in the MP for example, Fr. Demetrius Dudko.
Let us look briefly at each of these arguments.
1. Metropolitan Cyril expressed his opinion with great caution and
admitted that he might be being over-cautious. Moreover, he asserted this is
an important point always passed over by the liberal tendency that those
who partook of the sacraments of the MP knowing of its evil partook to their
condemnation. In any case, Metropolitan Cyrils opinion was expressed in 1934,
when the schism of the MP was incomplete, since both sides still
commemorated Metropolitan Peter of Krutitsa. It is extremely unlikely that
Metropolitan Cyril would have continued to maintain what he admitted
might be an over-cautious position after the death of Metropolitan Peter and
the completion of the schism in October, 1937. Moreover, already in March,
1937 he wrote a letter in which, while not expressly saying that the MP was
graceless, he noted that it was renovationist in essence and that enough
time had passed for people to evaluate its nature and leave it. And by his
death in November, 1937, according to Catacomb sources, he had come to full
agreement with the zealot position of Metropolitan Joseph of Petrograd on
this point before they were shot together in Chimkent. Can there be any doubt
what his opinion would be now, when the MP has added, among many other
crimes, the heresy of heresies, ecumenism, to its original sin of sergianism?
2. It is true that the whole ROCOR Synod made no declaration on this
subject. But individual leaders did and they were not speaking only for
themselves. For example, in his encyclical of 1928 Metropolitan Anthony
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(Khrapovitsky) of Kiev declared in the name of his whole Synod that the leaders
of the MP were schismatics and apostates. This declaration was quoted by
Metropolitan Philaret in his 1969 encyclical on the American Metropolia, and
in 1977 the same Metropolitan Philaret told the present writer in the presence
of witnesses that he should remain faithful to the anathema of the Catacomb
Church against the MP. Other members of the ROCOR Synod who adopted
this zealot position were Archbishop Averky of Jordanville, Archbishop
Nicodemus of Great Britain, Archbishop Anthony of Los Angeles, Archbishop
Andrew of Rockland, Protopresbyter Michael Polsky and Professor Andreyev,
the last three of whom had all been members of the Catacomb Church. Even
Fr. Seraphim himself once compared the sergianists and ecumenists to the
iconoclasts, who were graceless heretics.
The position of the Catacomb confessors on this question is critical, since
they knew the MP at first-hand and were in the best position, canonically
speaking, to judge it. Among the martyr-hierarchs about whose zealot views
there can be no doubt we can mention Bishop Maximus of Serpukhov (who
said that the Catacomb Church had formally anathematized the MP),
Archbishop Demetrius of Gdov, Metropolitan Joseph of Petrograd,
Archbishop Andrew of Ufa, Archbishop Theodore of Volokolamsk and the
four bishops who attended the Ust-Kut Council of 1937. Again, Fr. Ishmael
Rozhdestvensky, whose life was translated by Fr. Seraphim, forbade his
spiritual children even to look at churches of the MP.
3. Fr. Seraphim defended Fr. Demetrius out of a sense of deep compassion.
Now compassion, when purified, is a great virtue. But it should not be
allowed to hinder sober and dispassionate judgement, and there is no doubt
that Fr. Seraphim allowed his heart (the heart is deceitful above all things
(Jeremiah 17.9)) to cloud his judgement in this matter.
Let us consider the facts. Fr. Demetrius was a priest of the Soviet church
who refused the invitation of the Catacomb Church to join it. He was an
ecumenist he revered the Pope and asked his blessing on his work, and
those who published the English edition of Our Hope told the present
reviewer that they had had to edit out large amounts of ecumenist material
from the work. And he was a sergianist under pressure from the authorities,
he once told a 15-year-old spiritual son of his to return to the Komsomol. In
1980 he publicly recanted of his anti-Soviet activities on Soviet television.
When the ROCOR first accepted parishes on Russian soil in 1990, he
stubbornly refused to join it, although there was now far less danger in doing
so. And towards the end of his life (he died in June, 2004) he became an
ardent advocate of the canonization of Stalin!
When speaking about Fr. Demetrius, Fr. Seraphims usual discernment
seems to have deserted him. Thus he wrote that Fr. Demetrius fiery, urgent
preaching hasnt been heard in Russia and probably the whole Orthodox
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world since the days of St. John of Kronstadt (p. 859) an amazing
exaggeration which placed Fr. Demetrius above Patriarch Tikhon and other
great preachers among the true martyrs and confessors of Russia. Again, he
often said that he was in the same Church as Fr. Demetrius, quoting his words:
The unity of the Church at the present time consists in division (p. 863), as if
to assert that the obvious division between the MP and the ROCOR either did
not exist or was of little significance.
When Fr. Demetrius repented before Soviet power in 1980, thereby
fulfilling the prediction of Metropolitan Philaret, who stated quite bluntly that
he would fall because he was not in the True Church, there was much talk
about the danger of gloating. But nobody gloated. Fr. Demetrius fall was
clearly a matter of profound sorrow, not triumphalism. But neither Fr.
Demetrius nor anyone else was served by denying that it was a fall which is
what many liberals tried to assert. The present reviewer heard from a spiritual
son of Fr. Demetrius, now a priest of the True Church inside Russia, that he
was never the same after his public recantation. And, as was noted above, in
his later years he actually became an ardent supporter of the worst aspect of
the MP, its worship of Stalin. For the fact is that his house was built on sand,
the sand of Soviet communism, and this alone is the reason why he fell
(Matthew 7.27).
However much compassion he felt for Fr. Demetrius, Fr. Seraphim was
wrong to hold him up as a role model and confessor. First, because he did
not belong to the True Church and did not confess the True Faith (which is
not to say, of course, that he did not sometimes write good things). And
secondly, because to glorify a priest of the Soviet church, however courageous,
is to undervalue the podvig of the true confessors of the Catacomb Church. If
it is possible to be a martyr and confessor while belonging to a false
church and confessing heresy, why should anyone take the trouble and
undergo the danger of joining the True Church? But many thousands, even
millions, did just that, preferring death to doing what Fr. Demetrius did; and
we must recognize that their position was not only canonically correct, but
the only Christian way.
To take just one example: in the 1970s, at precisely the time that Fr.
Demetrius was preaching his fiery sermons, the Catacomb hierarch
Gennadius (Sekach) was living near Novy Afon in the Caucasus. The Soviet
hierarch Ilia of Sukhumi (a KGB agent since 1962 and now patriarch of the
official Georgian church), hearing of his whereabouts through spies, offered
Gennadius a comfortable place in the Soviet church organization. Gennadius
refused, saying that if he accepted the offer he would lose everything. Ilia
then denounced him to the KGB, who put him prison in Georgia and tortured
him till the blood flowed
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98
Science became useful only with the fall of man; it is a method of reasoning
carried out by fallen men with fallen faculties and with strictly limited and
earthly aims. As we shall see in more detail later, it cannot give real
knowledge of the unfallen world, neither the world of unfallen spirits nor the
world that will be after the restoration at the Second Coming of Christ. It is of
limited use for limited men that is, men who use only their fallen faculties;
and when the true light of knowledge comes, as we see it come in the lives of
the saints, the truly enlightened ones, it ceases to have any use at all.
The holy Bishop Ignatius Brianchaninov, who had a thorough training in
physics, mathematics and engineering, writes: You ask what is my opinion
of the human sciences? After the fall men began to need clothing and
numerous other things that accompany our earthly wanderings; in a word,
they began to need material development, the striving for which has become
the distinguishing feature of our age. The sciences are the fruit of our fall, the
production of our damaged fallen reason. Scholarship is the acquisition and
retention of impressions and knowledge that have been stored up by men
during the time of the life of the fallen world. Scholarship is a lamp by which
the gloom of darkness is guarded to the ages. The Redeemer returned to
men that lamp which was given to them at creation by the Creator, of which
they were deprived because of their sinfulness. This lamp is the Holy Spirit,
He is the Spirit of Truth, who teaches every truth, searches out the deep
things of God, opens and explains mysteries, and also bestows material
knowledge when that is necessary for the spiritual benefit of man. Scholarship
is not properly speaking wisdom, but an opinion about wisdom. The
knowledge of the Truth that was revealed to men by the Lord, access to which
is only by faith, which is inaccessible for the fallen mind of man, is replaced in
scholarship by guesses and presuppositions. The wisdom of this world, in
which many pagans and atheists occupy honoured positions, is directly
contrary according to its very origins with spiritual, Divine wisdom: it is
impossible to be a follower of the one and the other at the same time; one
must unfailingly be renounced. The fallen man is falsehood, and from his
reasonings science falsely so-called is composed, that form and collection of
false concepts and knowledge that has only the appearance of reasons, but is
in essence vacillation, madness, the raving of the mind infected with the
deadly plague of sin and the fall. This infirmity of the mind is revealed in
special fullness in the philosophical sciences.98 And again he writes: The
holy faith at which the materialists laughed and laugh, is so subtle and
exalted that it can be attained and taught only by spiritual reason. The reason
of the world is opposed to it and rejects it. But when for some material
necessity it finds it necessary and tolerates it, then it understands it falsely
and interprets it wrongly; because the blindness ascribed by it to faith is its
own characteristic.99
98
99
99
St. Basil the Great said: At all events let us prefer the simplicity of faith to
the demonstrations of reason.100 These words should be our guide whenever
science or, as happens more often, philosophy clothed in half-scientific
arguments - appears to contradict faith. That science could ever really refute
faith is the opinion only of those who do not know what faith is, who have
not tasted of that knowledge which comes, not from the fallen faculties of
fallen men applied to the most limited and circumscribed of objects, but from
God Himself.
The scientific world-view proclaims that the only reliable way of attaining
non-mathematical truth is by inferences from the evidence of the senses. This
principle, the principle of empiricism, was first proclaimed by Francis Bacon
in his Advancement of Learning (1605). It rejects the witness of non-empirical
sources for example, God or intuition or so-called innate ideas. The
reverse process that is, inferences about God and other non-empirical
realities from the evidence of the senses was admitted by the early
empiricists, but rejected by most later ones.101
Thus in time empiricism became not only a methodological or
epistemological, but also an ontological principle, the principle, namely, that
reality not only is best discovered by empirical means, but also is, solely and
exclusively, that which can be investigated by empirical means, and that nonempirical reality simply does not exist.
By contrast, the Christian Faith makes no radical cleavage between
empirical and non-empirical truth, accepting evidence of the senses with
regard to the existence and activity of God and the witness of God Himself
with regard to the nature of empirically perceived events.
In accordance with this difference in the kinds of truth they seek, there is a
difference in spirit between science (in its more advanced, materialist form)
and faith. The spirit of true religion is the spirit of the humble receiving of the
truth by revelation from God; it does not preclude active seeking for truth,
but recognizes that it will never succeed in this search if God on His part does
not reveal it. For Wisdom goes about seeking those worthy of her, and She
graciously appears to them in their paths, and meets them in every thought
(Wisdom 6.16). Science, on the other hand, is supremely self-reliant
100
101
laughing grandly at them and their conjectures. For to prove that they have
good intelligence of nothing, this is a sufficient argument: they can never
explain why they disagree with each other on every subject. Thus knowing
nothing in general, they profess to know all things in particular; though they
are ignorant even of themselves, and on occasion do not see the ditch or the
stone lying across their path, because many of them are blear-eyed or absentminded; yet they proclaim that they perceive ideas, universals, forms without
matter, primary substances, quiddities, and ecceities things so tenuous, I
fear, that Lynceus himself could not see them. When they especially disdain
the vulgar crowd is when they bring out their triangles, quadrangles, circles,
and mathematical pictures of the sort, lay one upon the other, intertwine them
into a maze, then deploy and all to involve the uninitiated in darkness. Their
fraternity does not lack those who predict future events by consulting the
stars, and promise wonders even more magical; and these lucky scientists
find people to believe them.107
C.S. Lewis writes: There is something which unites magic and applied
science while separating both from the wisdom of earlier ages. For the wise
men of old the cardinal problem had been how to conform the soul to reality,
and the solution had been knowledge, self-discipline, and virtue. For magic
and applied science alike the problem is how to subdue reality to the wishes
of men: the solution is a technique; and both, in the practice of this technique,
are ready to do things hitherto regarded as disgusting and impious such as
digging up and mutilating the dead.108
Fr. Seraphim Rose writes: Modern science was born [in the Renaissance]
out of the experiments of the Platonic alchemists, the astrologers and
magicians. The underlying spirit of the new scientific world view was the
spirit of Faustianism, the spirit of magic, which is retained as a definite
undertone of contemporary science. The discovery, in fact, of atomic energy
would have delighted the Renaissance alchemists very much: they were
looking for just such power. The aim of modern science is power over nature.
Descartes, who formulated the mechanistic scientific world view, said that
man was to become the master and possessor of nature. It should be noted
that this is a religious faith that takes the place of Christian faith.109
Faith, on the other hand, does not seek power over nature, but obedience
to God. It relies on no other ultimate authority than the Word of God Himself
as communicated either directly to an individual or, collectively, to the
Church, the pillar and ground of the Truth (I Timothy 3.15), which
preserves and nurtures the individual revelations.
Erasmus, The Praise of Folly, in Charles H. George, 500 Years of Revolution: European Radicals
from Hus to Lenin, Chicago: Charles H. Kerr Co., 1998, p. 38.
108
Lewis, quoted in Fr. Seraphim Johnson, A Sane Family in an Insane World.
109 Rose, in Monk Damascene Christensen, Not of this World: The Life and Teachings of Fr.
Seraphim Rose, Forestville, CA: Fr. Seraphim Rose Foundation, 1993, p. 594.
107
102
103
advances, not by subjecting his faith to doubt, but by deepening that faith, by
ever deeper immersion in the undoubted truths of religion.
When the differences between science and faith are viewed from this
perspective, the perspective of Orthodox Christianity, there are seen to be
important differences between Catholicism and Protestantism. For from this
perspective, Catholicism is more religious, and Protestantism more
scientific. For Protestantism arose as a protest against, and a doubting of,
the revealed truths of the Catholic religion. From an Orthodox point of view,
some of these doubts were justified, and some not. But that is not the essential
point here. The essential point is that Protestantism arose out of doubt rather
than faith, out of negation rather than assertion, and, like Descartes in
philosophy, placed doubt at the head of the corner of its new theology.
How? First, by doubting that there is any organization that is the pillar
and ground of the truth, any collective vessel of Gods revelation. So where
is Gods revelation to be sought? In the visions and words of individual men,
the Prophets and Apostles, the Saints and Fathers? Yes; but and here the
corrosive power of doubt enters again not all that the Church has passed
down about these men can be trusted, according to the Protestants. In
particular, the inspiration of the post-apostolic Saints and Fathers is to be
doubted, as is much of what we are told of the lives even of the Prophets and
Apostles. In fact, we can only rely on the Bible Sola Scriptura. After all, the
Bible is objective; everybody can have access to it, can touch it and read it; can
analyse and interpret it. In other words, it corresponds to what we would call
scientific evidence.
But can we be sure even of the Bible? After all, the text comes to us from
the Church, that supposedly untrustworthy organization. Can we be sure that
Moses wrote Genesis, or Isaiah Isaiah, or John John, or Paul Hebrews? To
answer these questions we have to analyze the text, subject it to scientific
verification. Then we will find the real text, the text we can really trust,
because it is the text of the real author. But suppose we cannot find this real
text? Or the real author? And suppose we come to the conclusion that the
real text of a certain book was written by tens of authors, none of whom
was the inspired author, spread over hundreds of years? Can we then be
sure that it is the Word of God? But if we cannot be sure that the Bible is not
the Word of God, how can we be sure of anything?
Thus Protestantism, which begins with the doubting of authority, ends
with the loss of truth itself. Or rather, it ends with a scientific truth that
accepts religious truth only to the extent that it is confirmed by the findings
of science. It ends by being a branch of the scientific endeavour of systematic
doubt, and not a species of religious faith at all.
104
Trostnikov, The Role and Place of the Baptism of Rus in the European Spiritual Process of
the Second Millenium of Christian History, Orthodox Life, volume 39, 3, May-June, 1989,
p. 29.
112 Landes, The Wealth and Poverty of Nations, London: Abacus, 1999, p. 179.
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However, it is misleading to make too great a contrast between scienceloving, democratic religion and science-hating authoritarian religion. Much
confusion has been generated in this respect by Galileos trial, in which, so it
is said, a Pope who falsely believed that the earth was flat and that the sun
circled the earth persecuted Galileo, who believed on empirical evidence that
the earth circled the sun. Other scientists persecuted by the Catholics, it is said,
were Copernicus and Bruno. But the truth, as Jay Wesley Richards explains,
was different. First of all, some claim Copernicus was persecuted, but history
shows he wasnt; in fact, he died of natural causes the same year his ideas
were published. As for Galileo, his case cant be reduced to a simple conflict
between scientific truth and religious superstition. He insisted the church
immediately endorse his views rather than allow them to gradually gain
acceptance, he mocked the Pope, and so forth. Yes, he was censured, but the
church kept giving him his pension for the rest of his life.113
Indeed, writes Lee Strobel, historian William R. Shea said, Galileos
condemnation was the result of the complex interplay of untoward political
circumstances, political ambitions, and wounded prides. Historical
researcher Philip J. Sampson noted that Galileo himself was convinced that
the major cause of his troubles was that he had made fun of his Holiness
that is, Pope Urban VIII in a 1632 treatise. As for his punishment, Alfred
North Whitehead put it this way: Galileo suffered an honorable detention
and a mild reproof, before dying peacefully in his bed. 114
Richards continues. [Bruno] was executed in Rome in 1600. Certainly this
is a stain on [Roman Catholic] church history. But again, this was a
complicated case. His Copernican views were incidental. He defended
pantheism and was actually executed for his heretical views on the Trinity,
the Incarnation, and other doctrines that had nothing to do with
Copernicanism.115
In fact, neither Holy Scripture116, nor the Holy Fathers 117, nor even the
Roman church as a whole denied the idea of a spherical earth. The truth is,
writes David Lindberg, that its almost impossible to find an educated
person after Aristotle who doubts that the Earth is a sphere. In the Middle
Ages, you couldnt emerge from any kind of education, cathedral school or
university, without being perfectly clear about the Earths sphericity and even
its approximate circumference.118
Richards, in Lee Strobel, The Case for a Creator, Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 2004, pp. 162163.
114 Strobel, op. cit., p. 163.
115 Richards, in Strobel, op. cit., p. 163.
116 Cf. Isaiah 40.22: It is He Who sits above the circle of the earth.
117 St. Gregory of Nyssa calls the earth spherical in his On the Soul and the Resurrection,
chapter 4.
118 Lindberg, in Strobel, op. cit., p. 164. Cf. Peter De Rosa, Vicars of Christ, London: Bantam
Press, 1988, pp. 221-231.
113
106
107
But we are being too alarmist, we are told. These problems are simply
temporary inconsistencies in the scientific picture of the world that will
eventually be removed as science progresses and new theories are
constructed. Thus the problems relating to the nature of time, we are told, will
eventually be overcome in the unified field theory, the so-called TOE or
"Theory of Everything".
This touching faith in the new physics is reminiscent of those biologists
who say: although nobody has actually seen the evolution of a new species, it
is only a matter of time; eventually (perhaps in a few million years) we shall
see it. Thus time is the great healer of the wounds of modern science. And yet
that is simply to place a non-religious faith and hope (in the eventual
omniscience of science) in place of solid hypotheses based on firm evidence.
The problem is that physics, far from gradually removing all anomalies
and contradictions in our understanding of the world, seems to be throwing
up still more intractable ones. Thus quantum physics undermines not only the
category of time, but also the category of substance; in fact, it undermines the
very notion of objective reality. For the quantum wave function that is the
fundamental unit of the modern physicist's universe is not a thing or an event,
but a spectrum of possible things or events. Moreover, it exists as such only
while it is not being observed. When the wave function is observed (by a
physical screen or living being), it collapses into one and one only of the
possibilities that define it. Thus the price of the birth of reality in this way is
the destruction of the fundamental unity of reality!
This brings us to the famous Big Bang theory of the origin of the universe.
According to the most famous of contemporary scientists, Stephen Hawking,
the universe owes its origin to a chance quantum fluctuation. Thus David
Wilkinson, a physicist and Methodist minister, in a book on Stephen Hawking
writes that the universe arose by a chance quantum fluctuation from a state
of absolute nothing Quantum theory deals with events which do not have
deterministic causes. By applying quantum theory to the universe, Hawking
is saying that the event that triggered the Big Bang did not have a cause. In
this way, science is able not only to encompass the laws of evolution but also
the initial conditions.119
The idea that the whole, vast, infinitely varied universe should come from
a chance quantum fluctuation is unbelievable (and certainly undemonstrable).
But still more unbelievable is the idea that the quantum fluctuation itself
should come out of absolute nothing. Nothing comes from nothing. To say
that the quantum fluctuation is not deterministically caused does not resolve
the problem. Existing things can owe their existence only to He Who Is
(Exodus 3.14) essentially and from before all time, Who is the Beginning of
every beginning (I Chronicles 29.12).
119
Wilkinson, God, Time and Stephen Hawking, London: Monarch Books, 2001, p. 104.
108
However, scientists even Christian scientists still believe that one can
explain the emergence of something out of nothing without resort to God.
Thus Wilkinson writes: Many people find difficulty in imagining where the
matter of the universe comes from to begin with. Surely, they say, there must
be an amount of matter or a primeval atom with which to go bang? As
Einsteins famous equation E=mc implies that energy (E) is equivalent to
mass (m) multiplied by the square of the speed of light (c), the question can be
translated to where does the energy come from?
Now energy has the property that it can be either positive or negative.
Two objects attracted by the force of gravity need energy to pull them apart,
and therefore in that state we say that they have negative gravitational energy.
It turns out that the energy in matter in the universe is the same amount
as the negative energy in the gravitational field of the universe. Thus the total
energy of the universe is zero. In this way you can have something from
nothing in terms of the matter in the universe. No problem here for the Big
Bang120
But this is simply attempting to solve the problem by sleight of hand.
Positive energy is something, and negative energy is something. They are not
numbers that cancel each other out as in the equation: 1-1=0. They are things,
and the existence of things needs to be explained. And something cannot
come out of nothing except through the creative energy of God.
Actually, some of the most famous physicists of our time, while not
endorsing the idea that God created the heavens and the earth, nevertheless
admit that the concept of God is not entirely irrelevant. Thus Stephen
Hawking writes: It is difficult to discuss the beginning of the Universe
without mentioning the concept of God. My work on the origin of the
Universe is on the borderline between science and religion, but I try to stay on
the scientific side of the border. It is quite possible that God acts in ways that
cannot be described by scientific laws. But in that case one would just have to
go by personal belief.121
Another fact that has compelled scientists to accept the relevance of the
concept of God is the anthropic principle. This is based on the discovery that
there are about 10 constant physical and chemical values for example, the
distance of the earth from the sun which, if altered even to the slightest
degree, would immediately make life on earth impossible. The combination of
these 10 values in one place at one time would seem to be an enormous in
fact, unbelievable - coincidence.
120
121
109
122
Everett, in Coveney, P. & Highfield, R., The Arrow of Time, London: Flamingo, 1991, p. 133.
110
111
123
Zhitia prepodobnykh Startsev Optinoj Pustyni (The Lives of the Holy Elders of Optina Desert),
Holy Trinity Monastery, Jordanville, 1992 (in Russian). According to another version, the
elder said: "God not only allows, He demands that a man grow in knowledge. There is no
stopping place in God's creation, everything moves, and even the angels do not remain in one
rank, but ascend from step to step, receiving new revelations. And even if a man has studied
for a hundred years, he must still go on to ever new knowledge... You must work - years pass
unnoticed while you work." And as he spoke these words, "his face became unusually bright,
so that it was difficult to look at it." (Zhitia, op. cit., p. 337).
112
113
He could not or would not make His creation perfect from the beginning, but
had to go through billions of years of bloody experiments before He hit
upon the world as it is now! 127 Or perhaps they are seduced by the
perspective of infinite progress through unending evolution that Darwinism
offers - as one Masonic writer puts it: First a mollusc, then a fish then a bird,
then a mammal, then a man, then a Master, then a God.128 In any case, it
must be firmly understood: it is impossible to be a Christian and a Darwinist.
It is important to remind ourselves at this point that science is hypothetical
in essence; it proclaims no certainties; what is declared to be a self-evident law
of nature in one generation is denounced as false in the next. Moreover,
several of the major hypotheses of science appear to contradict each other, at
least in the opinion of significant sections of the scientific community - for
example, the time-reversible laws of quantum physics and the Second Law of
Thermodynamics. Darwinism also contradicts this latter law, since evolution
involves the build-up of complexity and information rather than its
inexorable loss, as the Second Law says.
In fact, Darwinism is essentially a fairy-tale dressed up in scientific
language. As A. N. Field writes: With oaks to be seen sprouting from acorns,
grubs turning into butterflies, and chickens pecking their way out of eggs, it is
not surprising that human fancy from an early date toyed with the notion of
one kind of living thing being transformed into some other kind. This idea
has been the stock-in-trade of folk-lore and fairy tales in all ages and all lands.
It was the achievement of Charles Darwin to make it the foundation of
modern biological science.129
However, as Field goes on to say, a major difficulty is encountered by the
Darwinists at the very outset of their argument: There is not a shred of
evidence of any living thing ever evolving into some different kind of living
thing capable of breeding but infertile with its parent stock. All that breeding
experiments have produced is mere varieties fertile with their parent stock, or
else sterile hybrids, incapable of breeding, such as the mule produced by a
cross between horse and donkey.
Darwin admitted as much in a private letter to Dr. Bentham on May 22,
1863: In fact belief in Natural Selection must at present be grounded entirely
on general considerations When we descend to details, we can prove that
no one species has changed (i.e. we cannot prove that a single species has
Thus Pope John Paul II believes in Darwinism, making an exception only for the soul of
man, which he believes was created directly by God.
128 J.D. Buck, The Genius of Freemasonry, p. 43; quoted in Vicomte Lon de Poncins, Freemasonry
and the Vatican, London and Chumleigh: Britons Publishing Company. Buck goes on: The
theologians who have made such a caricature or fetish of Jesus were ignorant of this normal,
progressive, higher evolution of man (p. 29).
129 Field, The Evolution Hoax Exposed, Hawthorne, Ca.: The Christian Book Club of America,
1971, p. 12.
127
114
changed); nor can we prove that the supposed changes are beneficial, which is
the groundwork of the theory. Nearly 150 years later, this statement is still
true. Moreover, developments in genetics and molecular biology have placed
further vast obstacles in the way of the possibility of natural selection.
It seems that the ignorant St. Basil was right after all: Nothing is truer
than that each plant produces its seed or contains some seminal virtue; this is
what is meant by after its kind. So that the shoot of a reed does not produce
an olive tree, but from a reed grows another reed, and from one sort of seed a
plant of the same sort always germinates. Thus all that has sprung from the
earth in its first bringing forth is kept the same to our time, thanks to the
constant reproduction of kind.130
Since this is the case, there is no need to concede to the scientific worldview more than it claims for itself (in the mouths of its more honest and
intelligent spokesmen). Otherwise we fall into the trap which so many nonscientific Christians have fallen into of immediately accepting the latest
scientific fashion and adapting one's faith to it, only to find that science has
moved on and left their "modernised faith" as an out-of-date relic. This has
been the fate of the "Christian Marxists" and "theist evolutionists", who in
trying slavishly to adapt Christianity to the latest and least credible fashion in
science show themselves to be neither Christians nor scientists. What we must
always remember is that, whatever its many and undoubted achievements,
science is a fallible enterprise conducted by sinful men. Therefore scientists
individually and collectively are not immune from deception, and we
Christians should not be cowed by their supposedly superior knowledge
from subjecting their conclusions to criticism. As A.S. Khomiakov writes, we
should accept, preserve and develop [science] in all the intellectual space that
it requires; but at the same time subject it constantly to our own criticism,
enlightened by those lofty principles that were passed down to us of old by
the Orthodoxy of our ancestors. Only in this way can we raise science itself,
giving it the wholeness and fullness that it does not yet have.131
This is especially the case with regard to the new biology, because in this
field, at any rate, there is a growing minority of fully qualified scientists who
reject the Darwinist myth. They point to a vast number of facts that contradict
Darwinism: not only the familiar one of the missing links in human evolution,
but such facts as the impossibility of generating even a single-cell organism
out of a primitive biochemical soup, the impossibility of assembling the
elements of a cell into working order one by one (they all have to be present
simultaneously and in exactly the right relationship to each other), the
impossibility of understanding the evolution of sexually differentiated species
from asexual ones (since the vastly complicated differences between the male
and the female of the new species have to emerge, in perfect working order, in
130
131
115
The transition between the old and the new concept of man may perhaps be seen best in
Hamlet, where the superiority of man to the natural world is indeed extolled, and man
himself is called a quintessence, but a quintessence of dust: What a piece of work is a man!
How noble in reason how infinite in faculty! In form, in moving, how express and admirable! In
action how like an angel! In apprehension how like a god! And yet, to me, what is this quintessence of
dust?
132
116
However, the philosopher John Searle has argued that however accurately
a machine could mimic the behaviour of an intelligent human being, it cannot
be said to understand what it is doing. And he proves his contention by
describing an imaginary "Chinese room" experiment. Suppose a person is
locked in a room and is given a large amount of Chinese writing. Suppose,
further, that he understands not a word of Chinese, but is given a set of
instructions in a language he does understand which teaches him to correlate
one set of Chinese symbols with another. If the rules correlating input and
output are sufficiently complex and sophisticated, and if the man becomes
sufficiently skilled in manipulating them, then it is possible to envisage a
situation in which, for any question given him in Chinese, the man will be
able to give an appropriate answer also in Chinese in such a way that no-one
would guess from his answers that he knows not a word of Chinese!133
Thus scientists will never be able to explain their own thought processes by
purely scientific means - by building a model of the brain on a computer. For
such functions as "understanding meaning" and "intending" cannot be
simulated on a machine, no matter how sophisticated. As Michael Polanyi
writes: "These personal powers include the capacity for understanding a
meaning, for believing a factual statement, for interpreting a mechanism in
relation to its purpose, and on a higher level, for reflecting on problems and
exercising originality in solving them. They include, indeed, every manner of
reaching convictions by an act of personal judgement. The neurologist
exercises these powers to the highest degree in constructing the neurological
model of a man - to whom he denies in this very act any similar powers." 134
This conclusion reached by philosophical thought is confirmed by the
findings of mathematicians. Thus the Oxford professor Roger Penrose, relying
on the work of other mathematicians such as Godel and Turing, has given
some excellent reasons for not believing that minds are algorithmic, i.e.
mechanistic entities. For example, there are certain necessary mathematical
truths which are seen to be true but cannot be logically deduced from the
axioms of the system to which they belong; that is, although we know that
they are true, we cannot prove them to be true. This suggests that the seeing
of mathematical truths is a spontaneous, uncaused, yet completely rational
act. Penrose believes that mathematical truths are like Platonic ideas, which
exist independently both of the mind and of the physical world. Whether or
not he is right in this, he has clearly demonstrated that mathematical thinking
cannot be described or explained in deterministic terms. And if mathematical
thinking, the most rigorous and logical of all kinds of thought, is free and not
determined, the same must be true of scientific thought in general.135
Searle, J., Intentionality: An Essay in the Philosophy of Mind, Cambridge University Press,
1983.
134 Polanyi, M., Personal Knowledge, London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1958, p. 262.
135 Penrose, R., The Emperors New Mind, London: Vintage, 1989.
133
117
It follows that if psychologists try to deny that thinking is free, they cut the
ground from under their own feet and deprive their own thought of any
credibility. For let us suppose that the thinking of psychologists is in fact
determined by certain natural laws. The question then arises: if that is so,
what reason do we have for believing that their reasoning is rational and
true? For if a man speaks under some kind of compulsion, we conclude either
that he does not understand what he is saying, or that he is lying, or that he is
telling the truth "by accident", as it were. In any case, we attach no
significance to his words; for free and rational men believe only the words of
free and rational men.
Now just as rational thought presupposes freedom, so does responsible
action. The whole of morality and law is based on the premise that the actions
of men can be free, although they are not always so. If a man is judged to have
committed a criminal offence freely, then he is blamed and punished
accordingly. If, on the other hand, he is judged to have been "not in his sound
mind", he is not blamed and is sent to a psychiatric hospital rather than a
prison. If we could not make such distinctions between various degrees of
freedom, civilized society would soon collapse.
Now, as we have seen, free will is a completely different kind of causality
from empirical causality. Unlike empirical causality, it is not inferred, but
directly perceived by the cause himself. As such, we can be certain about our
human causality, whereas empirical causality can never be more than a
subject of conjecture or hypothesis.
Free will is only faintly discerned at the subconscious level of human life,
where we feel that we are being pushed and pulled in a dark sea of desires
and aversions, of attractions and repulsions, over which we have little control.
In this context we can see that it was no accident that psychology should have
begun its section of the scientific enterprise at the beginning of the twentieth
century with the psychoanalytical study of the subconscious and of those
pathological states in which free will and rationality appear to be suspended.
For, with his freewill and rationality removed, man can be more easily treated
as if he were just a biological organism, subject to the same empirical laws as
other biological organisms.
However, even psychoanalysis was forced to introduce the concept of the
ego that is, the person, the seat of free will and rationality. For insofar as a
man feels himself to be the victim of subconscious forces that he cannot yet
conceptualize or control, he also feels himself to be distinct from them, and
therefore potentially able to resist them. Moreover, at the higher level of
consciousness, this feeling of passive "victimization" is translated into active
attention to objects and resistance to (some) desires; Prometheus bound
becomes Prometheus unbound, at least in relation to some elements of his
mental life.
118
Frank, Dusha Cheloveka (The Soul of Man), Paris: YMCA Press, 1917.
119
120
Thus two people in relation to each other as people are like two mirrors
placed opposite each other. That which is reflected in mirror A is mirror B,
and that which is reflected in mirror B is mirror A. The "knowledge" that each
has is therefore objective and subjective at the same time; in fact, the
objectivity and subjectivity of the vision or visions are logically and
chronologically inseparable. But this amounts to a radically different kind of
knowledge from that of scientific, empirical knowledge, which Frank calls
"object consciousness".140 For whereas object consciousness entails a radical
separation between a spaceless and timeless subject and a spatial (if material)
or temporal (if mental) object, person consciousness entails an equally radical
identity-in-diversity of subject and object which we may simply call
communion.
Frank describes communion as follows: "When we speak to a person, or
even when our eyes meet in silence, that person ceases to be an 'object' for us
and is no longer a 'he' but a 'thou'. That means he no longer fits into the
frame-work of 'the world of objects': he ceases to be a passive something upon
which our cognitive gaze is directed for the purposes of perception without in
any way affecting it. Such one-sided relation is replaced by a two-sided one,
by an interchange of spiritual activities. We attend to him and he to us, and
this attitude is different from - though it may co-exist with - the purely ideal
direction of attention which we call objective knowledge: it is real spiritual
interaction. Communion is both our link with that which is external to us, and
a part of our inner life, and indeed a most essential part of it. From an abstract
logical point of view this is a paradoxical case of something external not
merely coexisting with the 'inward' but of actually merging into it.
Communion is at one and the same time both something 'external' to us and
something 'inward' - in other words it cannot in the strict sense be called
either external or internal.
"This can still more clearly be seen from the fact that all communion
between 'I' and 'thou' leads to the formation of a new reality designated by the
word 'we' - or rather, coincides with it."141
The fact is that human beings can relate to themselves and each other not
only in the scientific, "I-it" mode, but also in the artistic "I-thou" mode, and in
what we may call the religious "I-we" mode.142 It follows that if psychologists
are to truly understand their subject, and not dehumanize man by pretending
that he exists only on the "I-it" mode of our limited scientific understanding,
then they must be prepared to ascend to the "I-thou" and "I-we" modes, and
understand him in these, more intimate and at the same time more
Frank, op. cit.
Frank, S.L., Reality and Man, London: Faber & Faber, 1965, p. 61.
142 John Macmurray, Interpreting the Universe, London: Faber, 1933; Reason and Emotion,
London: Faber, 1935; Persons in Relation, London: Faber, 1965.
140
141
121
123
One may object that the book of Genesis was not written as a scientific
textbook, so it is useless to cite anything from it as if it contradicted any
scientific hypothesis. Now it is, of course, true that Genesis is not a scientific
textbook as St. Basil himself points out. But at the same time, as the same
saint pointed out, it is not allegory, and it does describe facts. And if these
facts, whether expressed in scientific language or not, contradict the
hypotheses of modern science, such as the fact that the earth was created
before the sun, or that man was created separately from the other species, or
that there was once a universal flood which destroyed the old world and laid
down the fossils that we see now, then there is no way of getting round this
for the honest, truly believing Christian. We either believe the Word of God,
or we believe modern godless science.
The problem with trying to reconcile the Word of God with modern
godless science is that in our joy at finding certain points of concord, or
apparent concord, between the two, we may subconsciously accept certain
ideas of science which are definitely heretical. Thus the anthropic principle in
physics can be interpreted to imply that God created the universe in precisely
such a way that man should be able to study and understand it, which is
clearly what Christians believe. However, it may also be interpreted in a quite
different way more in accordance with Hindu ideas about the divinity of man;
for according to Marek Kohn, the principle "seems to be on the verge of
substituting man for God, by hinting that consciousness, unbound by time's
arrow, causes creation"!144 In fact, the eastern idea that every man is by nature
a god gains credence from both from the Darwinist idea that we are evolving
into gods, and from the physicists idea that our consciousness causes creation.
These parallels between ideas in modern science and eastern religions
suggest that the strange path that science is treading may be connected with
the general penetration of western civilisation by these religions. For centuries,
Christians have believed that there are clear and important differences
between the Creator and creation, matter and spirit, time and eternity,
freedom and determinism, man and animal, soul and body, life and death.
But in the twentieth century, the age of relativity and relativism, all these
terms have melted into each other; under the combined onslaught of modern
science and eastern religion, the distinctions which are so basic to our
understanding of ourselves and the world we live in have tended to
disappear in a pantheist, panpsychic or panmaterialist soup.
However, the recognition that all these alarming intellectual and spiritual
trends are related makes the task of resisting them only a little easier. For
even if we reject eastern religion as false and satanic, and suspect that the god
of this world has also had a hand in blinding some scientists, we cannot say
144
Kohn, Joyfully back to Church?, New Statesman and Society, May 1, 1992, p. 32.
124
the same about science in general. We have to explain both how science has
gone wrong and why it still manages to get so many things right...
One obvious way in which science has gone wrong is by drastically
narrowing a priori the range of data it examines, eliminating from its field of
observation the vast sphere of phenomena that we call religious. Concealment
of data which conflicts with one's hypothesis is usually considered dishonest
science. And yet in relation to religion it has been practised on a massive scale
by most of the scientific community for centuries. Even when scientists do
deign to study religion, their methods and conclusions are often blatantly
biassed and unscientific. This was obvious with regard to the "achievements"
of Soviet "scientists" as they tried to explain, for example, the incorruption of
the relics of the Russian saints: but western scientists have been hardly less
biassed, if usually more sophisticated than their Soviet counterparts.
Of course, some "miracles" are contrived, just as some religious beliefs are
superstitious; and science can do a genuine service to the truth by exposing
these frauds.145 But the existence of some frauds does not undermine religion
in general, any more than the existence of quack doctors undermines genuine
medicine. Moreover, science itself has not been immune from quackery of its
own in its eagerness to explain away the phenomena of religion. Particularly
useful to it in this respect has been the concept of psychosomatic illness and
psychology in general. But psychology is the least developed of the sciences;
and, as we have seen, there are strong reasons for disputing whether it can
ever be a genuinely empirical science.
We must also remember that, as Sir Peter Medawar writes, "it is logically
outside the competence of science to answer questions to do with first and last
things."146 For any such answers must be in principle unverifiable insofar as no
man observed the beginning of the universe and no man can see its end. As
the Lord said to Job: Where wast thou when I laid the foundations of the
earth? Declare, if thou hast understanding (Job 38.4). Science, however, - or
rather, false science - denies any such limits to its competence; and so, by the
just judgement of God, it proceeds further and further away from the
knowledge of the greater mysteries of the universe - of God, of the soul, of the
origins and destiny of creation, - while puffing itself up by its knowledge of
the lesser mystery of how to build a rocket to the moon.
Thus Professor I.M. Andreyev writes: "Only with a superficial knowledge do there arise
false contradictions between faith and knowledge, between religion and science. With a
deeper knowledge these false contradictions disappear without a trace... A broad, scientific
and philosophical education not only does not hinder faith in God, but makes it easier,
because the whole arsenal of scientific-philosophical thought is natural apologetic material
for religious faith. Moreover, honest knowledge often has a methodical opportunity to
uncover corruptions of faith and exposing superstitions, whether religious or scientificphilosophical." ("Christian Truth and Scientific Knowledge", The Orthodox Word, March-April,
1977)
146 Medawar, in John Tailor, When the Clock struck Zero, London: Picador, 1993, p. 5.
145
125
To understand the first and last things we have to resort to another method,
that of faith; for, as St. Paul says, "we walk by faith, not by sight" (II
Corinthians 5.7). In this sphere we cannot walk by sight, because, as Fr.
Seraphim Rose writes, the state of Adam and the first-created world has
been placed forever beyond the knowledge of science by the barrier of
Adams transgression, which changed the very nature of Adam and creation,
and indeed the very nature of knowledge itself. Modern science knows only
what it observes and what can be reasonably inferred from observation The
true knowledge of Adam and the first-created world as much as is useful for
us to know is accessible only in Gods revelation and in the Divine vision of
the saints.147
Walking by faith does not mean ignoring the evidence of our senses or the
methods of logical reasoning. Thus the central truth of our Faith, the
Resurrection of Christ, was verified by the Apostle Thomas in a simple
scientific experiment involving the sense of touch. And the main physical
evidence of the Resurrection, the Turin Shroud, has been subjected to analysis
by scientists from practically every discipline from botany to astrophysics and remains inexplicable by any other hypothesis (a recent carbon-14 analysis
of its age conducted with the aim of refuting its authenticity turned out to be
based on false presuppositions.148
And yet millions of people confronted by these "many infallible proofs" do
not believe; they cannot make the, for us, eminently logical deduction that the
man who fulfils so many prophecies in His own life must be "my Lord and my
God" (John 20.28). They cannot do this because, while science and logic
confirm the Resurrection of Christ, the Person they point to is an unseen
reality Who cannot be contained within the confines of the senses and logic
and therefore represents a challenge to their carnal nature. Thus their seeing
and reasoning are not mixed with faith, which is, in St. Paul's words, "the
reality (Greek hypostasis: literally "substance") of things hoped for, the proof of
things not seen" (Hebrews 11.1).
When a man, following the evidence of his senses and the reasoning of his
logical mind, penetrates, through faith, beyond the veil of the senses to the
Logos Himself, He receives further revelations about things not seen in
accordance with his spiritual level. He learns about the creation of the world
in the beginning, and its judgement at the end, about angels and demons, the
souls of men and the logoi of all created beings. Nature becomes for him, in
the words of St. Anthony the Great, "a book in which we read the thoughts of
God".
Rose, in Hieromonk Damascene (Christensen), Father Seraphim Rose: His Life and Works,
Platina, Ca.: St. Herman of Alaska Press, 2003, pp. 542-543.
148 Pravoslavnaia Rus (Orthodox Rus), 7, 1993, p. 16 (in Russian); Orthodoxie, 60,
September, 1994, pp. 33-34 (in French).
147
126
C.S. Lewis, Bulverism or the Foundation of 20th Century Thought, in God in the Dock,
Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1997, pp. 271-275, 276. Alvin Plantinga has recently produced a
similar argument to refute Darwinism. See Jim Holt, Divine Evolution, Prospect, May, 2002,
p. 13.
127
all, the spiritual. Without the intervention of the higher forces, the lower
forces would function in a homogeneous, immutable order. But the higher
forces alter, and sometimes even suspend the actions of the lower. In such a
natural subordination of the lower forces to the higher, not one of the laws of
nature is changed. Thus, for example, a physician changes the progression of
a disease, a man changes the face of the earth by digging of canals, and so on.
Cannot God cause the same thing to a boundlessly greater extent?150
Orthodox Christianity is not against science that stays humbly within its
limits, which recognises that the universe is not an isolated system, but one
that is open to the God Who created it, Who preserves it and all its parts in
existence, and Who sustains every one of its laws by His Providence until the
day when He will come to judge it, when "the heavens shall pass away with a
great noise, and the elements shall melt with fervent heat, the earth also and
the works that are therein shall be burned up" (II Peter 3.10).
Orthodoxy declares that there is nothing more real than God, that all
things "live and move and have their being in Him" (Acts 17.28), and that
things lose reality when they begin to move away from Him and cease to
reflect His light. Some things reflect God more fully and therefore partake in
more dimensions of His reality. Christ is His perfect, consubstantial Image
and Name; for He "reflects the glory of God and bears the very stamp of His
nature, upholding the universe by the word of His power" (Hebrews 1.3).
Men are also images of God, though not consubstantial ones; and their ability
to use the word in science, art and religion in order to describe and
understand the universe is a true reflection of the power of the Word of God.
Indeed, Adam's "naming" of the animals in Paradise may be seen as the
beginning of true, analogical science; for through it, in St. Ambrose's words,
"God granted [us] the power of being able to discern by the application of
sober logic the species of each and every object, in order that [we] may be
induced to form a judgement on all of them."151 Again, Nicetas Stethatos
writes, God made man king of creation, enabling him to possess within
himself the inward essences, the natures and the knowledge of all beings.152
Lower levels of being do not have the power of the word and can therefore
symbolise higher levels less fully and deeply. And yet in Christ and the
Church, "the fullness of Him that filleth all in all" (Ephesians 1.22), even the
lowliest wave-function acquires reality and meaning and the ability to
partake in some measure in the Providence of God.
Elder Barsanuphius of Optina, Kelejnye Zapiski (Cell Notes), Moscow, 1991, p. 16 (in
Russian).
151 St. Ambrose of Milan, On Paradise, 11.
152 Nicetas Stethatos, Century 3, 10; P.G. 120, 957D-980A; quoted in P. Nellas, Deification in
Christ, Crestwood: St. Vladimirs Seminary Press, 1987, p. 85.
150
128
The proof of the primordial unity of the universe, and the guarantee of its
eternal unity, is the Incarnation of Christ. For when the Word became flesh,
He that is absolutely immaterial and unquantifiable took on matter and was
as it were "quantised". Thus in His one and indivisible Person was united the
Godhead, mind, soul, body, atoms and quanta. We might call this the First
Law of Analogical Thermodynamics. It is the Law of the conservation of
matter and life and meaning in the Light and Life and Logos of the universe,
the Lord Jesus Christ.
However, the unity of the universe has been threatened by man, who,
misusing the freedom and rationality given him in the image of God's
absolute Freedom and Rationality, has turned away from God to the lower
levels of reality. Thus instead of contemplating all things in symbolic and
symbiotic relation to the Word and Wisdom of the universe, he has
considered them only in relation to himself, the observer and user; instead of
offering nature up to God in eucharistic thanksgiving, he has dragged it down
to the level of his own self-centred desires. As a result, both he and nature
have disintegrated, and not only abstractly, in the systems of scientists and
philosophers, but concretely, in history; for there has been a progressive
seepage or dissipation of reality and meaning from the universe separating
man from God, then man from woman, the soul from the body, and all the
elements of nature from their original moorings.
In scientific terms, this seepage or disintegration or expanding chaos is
expressed in the second law of thermodynamics, the best verified law in the
whole of science. We might call it the Second Law of Analogical
Thermodynamics. In theological language it is known as original sin or, in St.
Paul's words, "the bondage of corruption", under which the whole of creation
has been groaning to the present day (Romans 8.21-22).
We fell through partaking of the tree of knowledge prematurely, before
partaking of the tree of life. We began to analyse and reduce and kill and
consume before we had acquired real, stable life in Christ. God did not say
that knowledge was evil, nor that Adam and Eve would not acquire a certain
kind of knowledge by partaking of the forbidden tree; but since this
knowledge was not a knowledge of life grounded in life it became a
knowledge of death that brought in death.
The thesis of the First Law, and the antithesis of the Second Law, require a
Third Law which restores or recreates the order that was in the beginning.
This Third Law began to operate at the Incarnation of Christ, when human
nature was recreated in the image and likeness of God, but with a new energy
that took it onto a higher plane, the plane of deification. This Third Law is in
fact not a law in the sense of a constraint upon nature, but rather "the law of
liberty" (James 2.12), "the glorious liberty of the sons of God" (Romans 8.22),
the law of grace...
129
Conclusion
The original fall of man took place as the result of a desire for forbidden
knowledge forbidden because useless for the man who has the knowledge
of God and leading in the end to alienation from God. Why? Because this sin,
as St. Innocent of Kherson (+1857) writes, blinds and spoils even the greatest
abilities, and perverts and destroys even the widest knowledge. For its
ineradicable property is to predispose man to mental craziness. But shall we
then dispute that the sinner has any knowledge? No, we grant this to him,
even that he has a certain special kind of knowledge, bearing in mind the
experience and example of our unfortunate forbears. [For] they, after the fall,
truly had their eyes opened, as the tempter promised them. But what did they
see? That they were naked.153
Science has repeated the original fall of man, coming to the bitter and
senseless and deadly conclusion that all life has evolved through a struggle to
the death, being constructed out of ghostly spectra of possibilities that
disappear on encountering the first dawn of knowledge. The universe,
according to science, is indeed, in Macbeths words, "a tale told by an idiot,
full of sound and fury, signifying nothing". Science can only come to life again,
covering its shameful nakedness, by coming into contact with the true Light,
Christ, "in Whom are hidden all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge"
(Colossians 2.3).
Science and faith can come to a single, mutually consistent understanding
of the universe. But only if science takes the absolute truths revealed by faith.
and not the forever-provisional hypotheses of the fallen mind of man, as its
starting point. Scientific method that does not attempt to compete with faith,
but is grounded in faith and constantly united with, and informed by it, will
lead to the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth. Let us hope and
pray that science, grounded in this way in absolute truth, in certainty and not
in mere hypothesis, will undergo its own resurrection...
But in the meantime let us not be deceived by "antitheses of science falsely
so called" (I Timothy 6.20). Let us "continue in the faith grounded and settled",
taking care lest any man rob us "through philosophy and vain deceit,
according to the traditions of men, according to the elements of the world,
and not according to Christ" (Colossians 1.23, 2.8). For the words of St. Basil
the Great about the "half-scientists" of his day are no less relevant in our own:
"Have not those who give themselves up to vain science the eyes of owls? The
sight of the owl, piercing during the night time, is dazzled by the splendour
St. Innocent, O Grekhe (On Sin), in Zhitia i Tvorenia Russkikh Svyatykh (Lives and Works
of the Russian Saints), Moscow, 2001, pp. 724-725 (in Russian).
153
130
of the sun. Thus the intelligence of these men, so keen to contemplate vanities,
is blind in the presence of the true Light..."154
January 1/14, 2005; revised June 10/23, 2010.
(Revised and greatly expanded from the article, An Orthodox Approach to
Science, in English in Orthodox America, vol. XV, no. 5 (137), January, 1996,
pp. 6-7, 10, and in Russian in Pravoslavnaia Tver (Orthodox Tver), 5-6-7
(54-55-56), May-June-July, 1998, pp. 20-21)
154
131
132
133
134
135
eternity, and did not cease to be that Person when He Himself became a
foetus in the Virgins womb. Thus the encounter between the Lord and St.
John the Baptist in Elizabeths house was a fully personal meeting between
two whole persons, in spite of the fact that neither had yet been born
We may compare a foetus to a comatose or sleeping person, to whom we
do not refuse the status of personhood just because he is not exhibiting the
signs of sentient and/or conscious life at that moment. Thus a person who is
asleep or in a coma is still a person, and to kill a person in such a state is still
considered murder. Even in those cases when permission is given to kill a
person who is in an irreversible coma by turning off his life-support machine,
the usual justification given is not that the patient is no longer a person and
can therefore be disposed of as being sub-human, but that he cannot now
enjoy his personhood.
Of course, an adult who becomes comatose is different from a foetus in
that he has already shown signs of a fully personal life over a long period.
However, from the materialist point of view, leaving aside the differences in
levels of brain and autonomic nervous system activity between a foetus and a
comatose adult, it is difficult to see how a fundamental, qualitative distinction
between the two can be made. Both would appear again, from a materialist
point of view - to be lacking certain fundamental features of personhood, such
as consciousness and the ability to communicate with other persons.
And if the materialist says that the foetus is only a potential person,
whereas the comatose adult is an actual person who has temporarily lost, or
is failing to display, some elements of his nature, then we may justifiably
challenge him to give an operational definition of this distinction. How can
something be actual when it is not being actualized? Cannot we say that a
foetus, too, is an actual person who is temporarily failing to display certain
elements of his nature?
*
Another approach to the problem is from the direction of the soul/body
distinction. Now most pro-abortionists explicitly or implicitly deny the
existence of the soul except in the Aristotlean-Aquinean-evolutionist sense of
an emergent function of the body. This allows them to look on the unborn
as on people whose souls have not fully emerged, and so can be treated as
if they were just bodies, matter which has not reached its full degree of
development or evolution. The Orthodox, however, while not going to the
opposite, Platonist-Origenist extreme of identifying the person exclusively
with the soul, nevertheless assert that man is, in St. Maximus words, a
composite being made up of two separate and distinct natures from the
beginning.
136
Thus St. Basil the Great writes: I recognize two men, one of which is
invisible and one which is hidden within the same the inner, invisible man.
We have therefore an inner man, and we are of dual make-up. Indeed, it is
true to say that we exist inwardly. The self is the inner man. The outer parts
are not the self, but belongings of it. For the self not the hand, but rather the
rational faculty of the soul, while the hand is a part of man. Thus while the
body is an instrument of man, an instrument of the soul, man, strictly
speaking, is chiefly the soul.165
Again, St. John of Damascus writes: Every man is a combination of soul
and body The soul is a living substance, simple and without body, invisible
to the bodily eyes by virtue of its peculiar nature, immortal, rational, spiritual,
without form, making use of an organized body, and being the source of its
powers of life and growth and sensation and generation The soul is
independent, with a will and energy of its own.166
Since the soul is distinct from the body, the Orthodox have no difficulty
conceiving of it as existent, active and conscious even while the body is an
undeveloped foetus or showing few signs of life; for, as Solomon says, I
sleep, but my heart waketh (Song of Solomon 5.2). Moreover, since the soul
is not a function of the body, but the cause of its activity, the death or
comatose state of the body is no reason for believing that the soul, too, is
comatose or dead. For the dust shall return to the earth as it was, but the
spirit to God Who gave it (Ecclesiastes 12.7).
As for the question when the soul is joined to the body, this is answered by
St. Maximus the Confessor in the context of a discussion of Origenism as
follows: Neither [soul nor body] exists in separation from the other before
their joining together which is destined to create one form. They are, in effect,
simultaneously created and joined together, as is the realization of the form
created by their joining together.167 For if, he writes in another place, the
body and the soul are parts of man, and if the parts necessarily refer to
something (for it is the whole which has the full significance), and if the
things which are said to refer are everywhere perfectly simultaneous, in
conformity with their genesis for the parts by their reunion make up the
whole form, and the only thing that separates them is the thought which
seeks to discern the essence of each being, - then it is impossible that the soul
and the body, insofar as they are parts of man, should exist chronologically
St. Basil, On the Origin of Man, VII, 9-16; Paris: Sources Chrtiennes, 160, 1970, p. 182 (in
French).
166 St. John of Damascus, An Exact Exposition of the Orthodox Faith, II, 12.
167 St. Maximus, Letter 15, P.G. 91:552D6-13; translated from the French in M.-H.
Congourdeau, Lanimation de lembryon humain chez Maxime le Confesseur ( The
animation of the human embryo in Maximus the Confessor), Nouvelle Revue de Thologie (New
Review of Theology), 1989, pp. 693-709 (in French).
165
137
one before the other or one after the other, for then the logos (of man), in
relation to which each of them exists, would be destroyed.168
Another argument put forward by St. Maximus is that if nothing prevented
the soul and body from changing partners, one would be force to admit the
possibility of metempsychosis, or reincarnation. However, the fact of their
creation simultaneously and for each other, thereby forming a single logos,
rules out the possibility; for created beings cannot violate their logoi that is,
their essential nature in the creative plan of God. Even the separation of the
soul from the body at death, and the dissolution of the body into its
constituent elements, does not destroy this logical unity; for the soul is always
the soul of such-and-such a man, and the body is always the body of suchand-such a man.169
St. John of Damascus sums up the matter: Body and soul were formed at
the same time, not first the one and then the other, as Origen so senselessly
supposes.170
The above conclusion is not affected by the view one may take on the
traducianist versus creationist controversy. Whether the soul of an individual
man comes from the souls of his parents (the traducianist view), or is created
by God independently of his parents (the creationist view), it remains true
that it comes into existence as a new, independent soul at the same time as his
body, that is, at conception. And since the new soul is already in existence at
the time of conception, abortion is the killing of a complete human being
made up of both soul and body, and therefore must be called murder.
St. Maximus, Ambigua, II, 7, P.G. 91:1100C6-D2; quoted by Congourdeau, op. cit., p. 697.
St. Maximus, Ambigua, II, 7, P.G. 91:1101A10-C7.
170 St. John of Damascus, An Exact Exposition of the Orthodox Faith, II, 12.
168
169
138
139
This first, what we might call masculine phase of humanism ended in 1953
with the death of Stalin and the discovery of DNA by Watson and Crick. This
discovery meant that now not only the environment, but also the genes of man
could be in principle manipulated and controlled. However, neither science
nor the moral climate of the humanist world was yet prepared to see the path
to total control which, according to the humanist model of man, this discovery
opened up. For if man is the interaction of his genes and his environment,
with no "intervening variables" such as human freewill or Divine grace, then
the possibility of manipulating both genes and environment is equivalent to
the possibility of a control of man and society far more totalitarian in principle
even than the Soviet experiment that was just beginning to run out of steam.
The event which began to change the moral climate in the desired direction
was the discovery of the female contraceptive pill and the subsequent
revolution in the role of women in society, which is why we might call this
the feminine phase of humanism. If the driving force of the earlier, masculine
phase had been the will to power, then the driving force of this later, more
radical, feminine phase has been the lust for pleasure. For the discovery of the
pill opened up a new prospect - that of maximising sexual pleasure while
minimising any unpleasant consequences in the shape of pregnancies.
But democracy demanded that the fruits of this revolution should not be
enjoyed only by heterosexuals, and so homosexuals, too, won that recognition
of their activities as natural and moral which all monotheist, and even many
pagan societies have always refused them.
The feminization of western civilization continued apace with the rise of
feminism, and the appearance of women priests. Perhaps this was the
fulfilment of the vision of St. John of Kronstadt, which though considered by
some to be inauthentic, is nevertheless full of profoundly prophetic images:
"O Lord, how awful! Just then there jumped onto the altar some sort of
abominable, vile, disgusting black woman, all in red with a star on her
forehead. She spun round on the altar, then cried out in a terrible voice like a
night owl through the whole cathedral: 'Freedom!' and stood up. And the
people, as if out of their minds, began to run round the altar, rejoicing and
clapping and shouting and whistling."172
With the last vestiges of tradition in Christian thought and worship swept
aside, the stage was set for a really new, really radical stage in the revolution:
the abolition of sexuality. The Soviets, to the applause of western liberals, had
tried, and to a large extent succeeded, in abolishing religion, the nation, the
law and the family. But sexuality remained as one of the last bastions of
Son Otsa Ioann Kronshtadstskago (The Vision of John of Kronstadt), Pravoslavnaia
Rus (Orthodox Rus), 20, October 15/28, 1952; translated in V. Moss, The Imperishable Word,
Old Woking: Gresham Press, 1980.
172
140
141
142
the well-known Lutheran researcher into the occult, Dr. Kurt Koch, who in
the 1970s claimed that so-called "resurrections from the dead" in Indonesia
were in fact cases of demons entering into corpses and "resurrecting" them.
For true resurrection from the dead, and therefore also true cloning, can be
accomplished only by God, because while men have a certain power over
flesh alone, God is the Lord both of spirits and of flesh, and only He can either
send a spirit into a newly-formed body or reunite it with a dead one.
This point is well illustrated in one of the homilies of St. Ephraim the
Syrian on the last days, in which the one thing which the Antichrist is shown
to be incapable of doing is raising the dead: "And when 'the son of perdition'
has drawn to his purpose the whole world, Enoch and Elias shall be sent that
they may confute the evil one by a question filled with mildness. Coming to
him, these holy men, that they may expose 'the son of perdition' before the
multitudes round about him, will say: 'If you are God, show us what we now
ask of you. In what place do the men of old, Enoch and Elias, lie hidden?'
Then the evil one will at once answer the holy men: 'If I wish to seek for them
in heaven, in the depths of the sea, every abode lies open to me. There is no
other God but me; and I can do all things in heaven and on earth.' They shall
answer the son of perdition: 'If you are God, call the dead, and they will rise
up. For it is written in the books of the Prophets, and also by the Apostles,
that Christ, when He shall appear, will raise the dead from their tombs. If you
do not show us this, we shall conclude that He Who was crucified is greater
than you; for He raised the dead, and was Himself raised to heaven in great
glory.' In that moment the most abominable evil one, angered against the
saints, seizing the sword, will sever the heads of the just men."173
We may rest assured, therefore, that no man, not even the Antichrist, will
ever be able to create a new human being possessed of both soul and body
from one cell of another human being - although he may well be able to create
what seems to be a true clone; for in those days "by great signs and wonders
he will lead astray, if it were possible, even the elect" (Matt. 24.24).
(2) It is striking that so many of the "advances" in the modern science of
man have been made in connection with experiments on sexuality. We have
seen one reason for this - the sudden general slackening of morals in the
western world in the 1960s, which gave science the task of pandering to the
newly liberated desires of the people. But there is another and profounder
reason connected with the fact that, from an early age, sexuality is felt to be at
the deepest, most intimate core of the child's personality.
Thus the greatest, most wounding insult you can give to a young boy is to
say that he is a "sissy" or like a girl. A boy would rather be dead than be seen
St. Ephraim, III, col 188; sermon 2; translated by M.F. Toal, The Sunday Sermons of the Great
Fathers, London: Longmans, 1963, vol. 4, p. 357.
173
143
wearing pink or having a close friendship with a girl. And similarly with girls.
And although psychologists and educators have had some success in bringing
dating down to an unnatually early age, they have failed completely to make
boys play with dolls or make girls like typically boyish pursuits. For boys will
be boys, and girls - girls.
Why should this be? After all, is it not the case that in Christ there is
"neither male nor female" (Gal. 3.28), which would seem to imply that sexual
differentiation is not a fundamental, eternal category? And did the Lord not
say that there would be no marrying or giving in marriage in heaven, but that
the saved would be like the sexless angels?
On the other hand, is it conceivable that Christ should ever be anything
other than male in His humanity? Or the Mother of God female? And is not
the very idea of a change of sex repugnant to us, which implies that there is
something deeper to sexuality than meets the eye, something more than
merely a set of biological differences.
Let us then consider the question: what is the significance of sexual
differentiation?
Genetics tells us that the essential difference between men and women
consists in the possession by men of one X and one Y chromosome, whereas
women possess two X chromosomes. This might at first suggest that men
have something "extra" which women do not have. However, neither biology
nor theology has ever pinpointed what that something "extra" might be. Nor
is it at all clear that the interaction of one X and one Y chromosome makes for
a superior creature to the product of the interaction of two X chromosomes. In
any case, genetics, like all the sciences, studies nature after the Fall, and cannot
tell us anything directly about nature before the Fall, still less what the deeper
purpose of sexual differences might be in Divine Providence.
Nevertheless, it can provide some intriguing pointers; and the biological
evidence suggests that sexual differences are deep in some respects and
superficial in others. Thus chromosomal masculinity or femininity appears to
be present at birth and relatively immutable. On the other hand, many sexual
differences, including the external genitalia, can be changed and even
reversed from one gender to the other by hormone therapy and surgery - but
without changing the patient's feeling of who, sexually speaking, he or she
really is.174
Could this contrast between "deep" and "superficial" sexual differences
reflect a contrast between sexual differences before the Fall and sexual
differences after the Fall?
Cf. Dorothy Kimura, "Sex Differences in the Brain", Scientific American, vol. 267, September,
1992, pp. 80-87.
174
144
Before the Fall there was Adam and Eve, male and female; and this
difference was "deep" in the sense that it existed from the beginning and will
continue to exist, presumably, into eternity. But after the Fall further, more
"superficial" differences were added to enable mankind to reproduce in a
fallen world. In the same way, the eye was refashioned after the Fall,
according to St. John Chrysostom, to enable it to weep.
This means that sexuality was there from the beginning, and that the
essence of the relationship between the sexes is an essential part of human
nature, but that human reproductive anatomy and physiology as we them
know today - including the painfulness of childbirth itself - were
superimposed upon the unfallen image. This idea of the "superimposition" of
sexual differences upon the original image was developed by, among others,
St. Gregory of Nyssa and St. Maximus the Confessor. It may also be that some
of the particularities of women that Holy Scripture refers to - their domination
by men (Gen. 3.16) and their being "the weaker vessel" in terms of emotional
control (I Peter 3.7) - belong to these more superficial characteristics that were
added only after the Fall and can therefore be overcome in Christ.
This brings us to the complaints of the feminists. First, there is the
complaint that women are not treated as equal to men. Now Holy Scripture
and Tradition agrees with the feminists that women are essentially equal to
men, being made, like them, in the image of God, and to that extent should be
treated equally. However, if "equal treatment" means "same treatment", then
Orthodoxy disagrees. For men and women have always been different, both
before and after the Fall, and these differences entail that women should have
a different place in society from men.
The "deep", antelapsarian differences between men and women cannot be
changed, and the attempt to change them is disastrous, both for men and for
women. The "superficial", postlapsarian differences between men and women
can be changed, not in the sense that sex-change operations are permissible
(the Church forbids self-mutilation), but in the sense that the fallen character
of relationships between men and women can be overcome in Christ.
Marriage in Christ is one of the ways in which sexuality is stripped of its
superficiality, going from the Fall to Paradise: the other is monasticism, in
which a man becomes a eunuch, spiritually speaking, for the Kingdom of
heaven's sake (Matt. 19.12).
Let us try and define this "deeper", antelapsarian nature of sexuality.
St. Paul gives us the clue: "I want you to understand," he writes, "that the
head of every man is Christ, the head of a woman is her husband, and the
head of Christ is God... A man ought not to cover his head, since he is the
image and glory of God; but the woman is the glory of the man. For man was
145
not made from woman, but woman from man; neither was man created for
woman, but woman for man. That is why a woman ought to have a veil on
her head" (I Cor. 11.3.7-10).
In other words, the relationship between man and woman in some respect
reflects and symbolizes the relationship between God the Father and God the
Son, on the one hand, and God the Son and mankind, on the other. Each of
these is a hierarchical relationship, which is compared to that between the head
and the body. Thus while God the Father is equal to God the Son in essence,
which is why He says: "The Father and I are one" (John 10.30), the Son
nevertheless obeys the Father, the Origin of the Godhead, in all things, which
is why He says: "My Father is greater than all" (John 10.29). In the same way,
man and woman are equal in essence, but the woman must "be subject to her
husband in all things" (Eph. 5.24). By contrast, the relationship between God
the Son and mankind would at first sight appear to be different from these
insofar as the Divinity is not equal in essence to humanity. However, the
Incarnation of the Son and the Descent of the Holy Spirit has effected an
"interchange of qualities", whereby God the Son has assumed humanity, and
humanity has become "a partaker of the Divine nature" (II Peter 1.4) - as the
Fathers put it, "God became man so that men should become gods". Therefore
the originally unequal relationship between God and man has been in a
certain sense levelled by its transformation into the new relationship between
Christ and the Church, which can now be described, similarly, in terms of the
relationship between head and body.
Now we can see that the very "primitive", very human relationship
between head and body, or between male and female, has within itself the
capacity to mirror and illumine for us, not only the supremely important, and
more-than-merely-human, relationship between Christ and the Church, but
also - albeit faintly, "as through a glass darkly" - the more-than-Divine, intraTrinitarian relationship between the Father and the Son. Thus the male-female
relationship, and even the basic structure of the human body, is an icon, a
material likeness, of the most spiritual and ineffable mysteries of the universe.
For just as the head (the man) is lifted above the body (the woman) and rules
her, but is completely devoted to caring for her, so does Christ love the
Church, His Body, and give His life for her - all in obedience to His Head, the
Father, Who "so loved the world that He gave His only Son, that whoever
believeth on Him should not perish but have eternal life" (John 3.16). That is
why the relationship between man and woman is not accidental or superficial,
still less fallen, but holy - and the entrance into the Holy of Holies. And that is
why, according to the holy canons, the sacrament of marriage can only be
celebrated on a Sunday, the eighth day, which symbolizes eternity; for even if
there will be no marrying or giving in marriage in eternity, marriage will
forever symbolize that eternal relationship of love between Christ and the
Church which underpins the whole of reality, both temporal and eternal.
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147
148
although often negative in their opinion of the female sex, were on the whole
absolutely clear about the basic human equality of man and woman. Both
alike are created in God's image; the subordination of woman to man and her
exploitation reflect not the order of nature created by God, but the contranatural conditions resulting from original sin. Equal yet different according to
the order of nature, man and woman complete each other through their free
co-operation; and this complementarity is to be respected on every level when at home in the circle of the family, when out at work, and not least in
the life of the Church, which blesses and transforms the natural order but
does not obliterate it...
"Men and women are not interchangeable, like counters, or identical
machines. The difference between them extends far more deeply than the
physical act of procreation. The sexuality of human beings is not an accident,
but affects them in their very identity and in their deepest mystery. Unlike the
differentiation between Jew and Greek or between slave and free - which
reflects man's fallen state and are due to social convention, not to nature - the
differentiation between male and female is an aspect of humanity's natural
state before the Fall. The life of grace in the Church is not bound by social
convention or the conditions produced by the Fall; but it does conform to the
order of nature, in the sense of the unfallen nature as created by God. Thus
the distinction between male and female is not abolished in the Church." 176
The perverseness of female "priesthood" is somewhat similar to the
perverseness of homosexual "marriage". In both cases, the "innate preaching"
of Christ's Incarnation that is implanted in our sexual nature, instead of being
reinforced and deepened by the sacraments of the Church, is contradicted and
in effect destroyed by a blasphemous parody of them.
That is why such things are felt to be unnatural by men and condemned as
abominations by God. And if scientific humanism seeks to redefine what is
natural, let us recall that such humanism, according to Fr. Seraphim Rose, is
subhumanism. It is "a rebellion against the true nature of man and the world, a
flight from God the center of man's existence, clothed in the language of the
opposite of all these."177
176
177
149
150
Orthodox. St. John of Damascus did not agree with you. I do not worship
matter, he said, but I worship the Creator of matter Who became matter for
my sake and Who, through matter, accomplished my salvation!179
Rationalist. But flesh and blood cannot inherit the Kingdom of God (I Cor.
15.50).
Orthodox. Fallen flesh and blood is what the Apostle means. But if our fallen
flesh and blood is purified and transfigured by the incorrupt Body and Blood
of Christ, then our bodies will be raised in glory at the Second Coming and
we will be able to enter the Kingdom in our bodies. Indeed, the Lord makes
precisely this link between eating His Flesh and the resurrection of the body:
He who eats My Flesh and drinks My Blood has eternal life, and I will raise
him up at the last day (John 6.54).
Rationalist. Nevertheless, the Lords Body in the Sacrament is different from
ours
Orthodox. In purity yes, in essence no. For, as St. John of the Ladder says,
The blood of God and the blood of His servants are quite different but I am
thinking here of the dignity and not of the actual physical substance.180 But
let me understand precisely what you mean. Are you saying that when we
speak of the Body and Blood of Christ in the Eucharist, we are speaking not
literally, but metaphorically or symbolically?
Rationalist. No, of course not! I believe that the Consecrated Gifts are the
True Body and Blood of Christ!
Orthodox. I am glad to hear that. For you know, of course, that the
metaphorical or symbolical understanding of the Mystery is a Protestant
doctrine that has been condemned by the One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic
Church. Thus St. John of Damascus writes that the Lord has said, This is My
Body, not this is a figure of My Body; and My Blood, not a figure of My
Blood.181 So are you saying that the bread and wine are in some sense
transfigured or spiritualized at the consecration through their union with
the Divine Spirit of Christ, penetrated by the Spirit, as it were, so that we
can then call them the Body and Blood of Christ, although they do not cease
to be bread and wine?
Rationalist. Er, let me think about that
Orthodox. Well, while youre thinking let me remind you that the Eastern
Patriarchs in their Encyclical of 1848 also condemned this teaching, which is
essentially that of the Lutherans. It is also very close to the Anglican idea of
the Real Presence of Christ in the Eucharist although it is notoriously
difficult to say precisely what the Anglicans believe. And you will remember
that the Anglicans and Catholics killed each other during the Anglican
Reformation precisely because the Catholics had a realistic understanding of
the sacrament, whereas the Anglicans, being Protestants, did not. A recent
Anglican biography of the first Anglican archbishop, Cranmer, has
demonstrated that he was a Zwinglian in his eucharistic theology.
St. John of Damascus, First Apology against those who Attack the Divine Images, 16.
St. John of the Ladder, The Ladder of Divine Ascent, 23.20.
181 St. John of Damascus, Exact Exposition of the Orthodox Faith, IV, 13.
179
180
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Rationalist. You know, I think that you are misrepresenting the Anglican
position. Fr. X of the Moscow Theological Academy has told me that the
Orthodox teaching coincides with that of the Anglicans, but not with that of
the Catholics.
Orthodox. Really, you do surprise me! I knew that your Moscow theologians
were close to the Anglicans, the spiritual fathers of the ecumenical movement
and masters of doctrinal double-think, but I did not know that they had
actually embraced their doctrines! As for the Catholics what do you find
wrong with their eucharistic theology?
Rationalist. Dont you know? The Orthodox reject the Catholic doctrine of
transubstantiation!
Orthodox. I do not believe that the Orthodox reject transubstantiation. We
dislike the word transubstantiation because of its connotations of
Aristotlean philosophy and medieval scholasticism, but very few people
today even Catholics use the word in the technically Aristotlean sense.
Most people mean by transubstantiation simply the doctrine that the
substances of bread and wine are changed into the substances of Body and
Blood in the Eucharist, which is Orthodox. The Eastern Patriarchs in their
Encyclical write that the bread is changed, transubstantiated, converted,
transformed, into the actual Body of the Lord. They use four words here,
including transubstantiated, to show that they are equivalent in meaning.
In any case, is not the Russian word presuschestvlenie a translation of
transubstantiation? It is important not to quarrel over words if the doctrine
the words express is the same.
Rationalist. Nevertheless, the doctrine of transubstantiation is Catholic and
heretical.
Orthodox. If that is so, why has the Orthodox Church never condemned it as
heretical? The Orthodox Church has on many occasions condemned the
Catholic heresies of the Filioque, papal infallibility, created grace, etc., but
never the Catholic doctrine of the Eucharist.
Rationalist. Its still heretical. And I have to say that I find your thinking very
western, scholastic, primitive and materialist!
Orthodox. Perhaps youll find these words of the Lord also primitive and
materialist: Unless you eat of My Flesh and drink of My Blood, you have no
life in you (John 6.53). And these words of St. John Chrysostom written in his
commentary on the Lords words: He hath given to those who desire Him
not only to see Him, but even to touch, and eat Him, and fix their teeth in His
Flesh, and to embrace Him, and satisfy their love 182 Was St. John
Chrysostom, the composer of our Liturgy, a western Catholic in his thinking?
Rationalist. Dont be absurd!
Orthodox. Well then Lets leave the Catholics and Protestants and get back
to the Orthodox position. And let me put my understanding of the Orthodox
doctrine as concisely as possible: at the moment of consecration the bread and
wine are changed into the Body and Blood of Christ in such a way that there
is no longer the substances of bread and wine, but only of Body and Blood.
182
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Rationalist. I accept that so long as you do not mean that there is a physicochemical change in the constitution of the bread and wine?
Orthodox. But can there not be a physico-chemical change?! Are not bread
and wine physical substances?
Rationalist. Yes.
Orthodox. And are not human flesh and blood physico-chemical substances?
Rationalist. Yes
Orthodox. And is not a change from one physico-chemical substance into
another physico-chemical substance a physico-chemical change?
Rationalist. Here you are demonstrating your western, legalistic, primitive
mentality! All Aristotlean syllogisms and empty logic! The Orthodox mind is
quite different: it is mystical. You forget that we are talking about a Mystery!
Orthodox. Forgive me for offending you. I quite accept that we are talking
about a Mystery. But there is a difference between mystery and mystification.
If we are going to speak at all, we must speak clearly, with as precise a
definition of terms as human speech will allow. The Fathers were not opposed
to logic or clarity. Illogicality is no virtue!
Rationalist. Alright But the fact remains that the change is not a physicochemical one, but a supernatural one. It says so in the Liturgy itself!
Orthodox. I agree that the change is supernatural in two senses. First, the
instantaneous change of one physical substance into another is obviously not
something that we find in the ordinary course of nature. Of course, bread and
wine are naturally changed into flesh and blood through the process of eating
and digestion. But in this case the change is effected, not by eating, but by the
word of prayer and its instantaneous. For, as St. Gregory of Nyssa points
out, it is not a matter of the bread becoming the Body of the Word through
the natural process of eating: rather it is transmuted immediately into the Body
of the Word.183 Secondly, the change is effected by a supernatural Agent
God. So what we have is the change of one physico-chemical substance into
another through a non-physical, supernatural Agent, the Spirit of God.
Rationalist. But if I were to accept your western logic, I should have to
believe that the Body of Christ is composed of proteins and enzymes and such
things, and that the Blood of Christ contains haemoglobin!
Orthodox. Well, and what is impious about that?
Rationalist. It is the height of impiety! My faith is not based on scientific
molecular analysis!
Orthodox. Nor is mine.
Rationalist. But you have just admitted that the Body and Blood of Christ
contain proteins and enzymes and haemoglobin!
Orthodox. Well, does not human flesh and blood contain such elements?
Rationalist. Yes, but these words are scientific terms that were unknown to
the Fathers. You dont seriously think that in order to understand the Mystery,
you have to have a degree in biology?!
Orthodox. Not at all.
183
153
Rationalist. So you accept that the Blood of Christ does not contain
haemoglobin
Orthodox. No I dont. Your argument is a non-sequitur. I believe by faith alone
not by molecular analysis, nor by any evidence of the senses that the
consecrated Gifts are human Flesh and Blood united to the Divine Spirit.
Biologists tell me and no one, as far as I know, disputes this that human
blood contains haemoglobin. So it seems eminently reasonable to believe that
the Blood of Christ also contains haemoglobin. Of course, this fact was
discovered, not by faith, but by scientific research, so it does not have the
certainty or the importance attaching to revelations of faith. But if we
suppose that human blood contains haemoglobin, and if we accept that
Christs Blood is human, then it follows that Christs Blood also contains
haemoglobin. Or do you think that Christ is not fully human and does not
have fully human flesh and blood like ours?
Rationalist. There you go with your syllogisms and empty logic again!
Always trying to catch me out! I never said that Christs Blood was not
human!
Orthodox. Nevertheless, you seem to have great trouble accepting the
consequences of that statement.
Rationalist. They are consequences for you, but not for me. Thus you, but not
I, are committed to the consequence that a molecular analysis of the Blood of
Christ would reveal haemoglobin.
Orthodox. Not so I think it was Vladimir Lossky who said that hypothetical
situations are not a fitting subject of theological discourse, which deals only in
absolute realities. However, let us follow your thought experiment through
for a moment. I do not know, of course, what would happen if anyone God
forbid! were so blasphemous as to perform such a molecular analysis.
Nevertheless, if God allowed him to do it, and to analyze the results, I expect
that they would indicate that the consecrated Gifts are bread and wine, not
flesh and blood, and so contain no haemoglobin.
Rationalist. Now youre the one whos being illogical! One moment you say
that Christs Blood contains haemoglobin, and the next you say that a
physico-chemical analysis would reveal no haemoglobin!
Orthodox. Precisely, because the reality revealed by faith is not the
appearance revealed to the fallen senses, of which science is simply the
organized extension. Faith, as St. Paul says, is the certainty of things unseen
(Heb. 11.1); science is an uncertain apprehension of things seen. In the case of
the Mystery we see and taste one thing; but the reality is something quite
different. God veils the reality from our senses; and no amount of scientific
observation can discern the reality if God chooses to hide it.
Rationalist. Why should he do that?
Orthodox. He does this in order that we should not be repelled by the sight
and taste of human flesh and so refrain from partaking of the Saving Mystery.
As Blessed Theophylact says, Since we are weak and could not endure raw
meat, much less human flesh, it appears as bread to us although it is in fact
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Orthodox. Second question: Was the Blood which the Lord Jesus Christ
receive from the Virgin blood with haemoglobin in it?
Rationalist. If the Virgin had that blood, then the Lord had the same blood.
Orthodox. Good. Now the third question: Did the Lord on the Cross shed
human Blood with haemoglobin in it?
Rationalist. I think I see what youre leading to
Orthodox. Please answer the question: yes or no?
Rationalist. Yes, of course.
Orthodox. Fourth question: Bearing in mind that, as St. John Chrysostom says,
that which is in the chalice is the same as that which flowed from Christs
side185, is that which is in the chalice human blood with haemoglobin in it?
Rationalist. You have convinced me! I did see them as different, but now I
agree with you!
Orthodox. Not just with me, brother: with the Church, which is the Body of
Christ insofar as it is composed of members who have partaken of the Body of
Christ. For, as a recently canonized saint of the Church, St. John Maximovich,
wrote: Bread and wine are made into the Body and Blood of Christ during
the Divine Liturgy How is the Body and Blood of Christ at the same time
both the Church and the Holy Mystery? Are the faithful both members of the
Body of Christ, the Church, and also communicants of the Body of Christ in
the Holy Mystery? In neither instance is this name Body of Christ used
metaphorically, but rather in the most basic sense of the word. We believe that
the Holy Mysteries which keep the form of bread and wine are the very Body
and the very Blood of Christ Christ, invisible to the bodily eye, manifests
Himself on earth clearly through His Church, just as the unseen human spirit
manifests itself through the body. The Church is the Body of Christ both
because its parts are united to Christ through His Divine Mysteries and
because through her Christ works in the world. We partake of the Body and
Blood of Christ, in the Holy Mysteries, so that we ourselves may be members of
Christs Body, the Church.186
Rationalist. Yes, I agree with the Body about the Body, I agree with the
Church!
Orthodox. Glory to God! What is so good or so joyous as for brethren to
dwell together in unity! (Psalm 132.1).
(Pentecost, 1998; revised Pentecost, 2004)
156
Louth, Greek East and Latin West, Crestwood, N.Y.: St. Vladimirs Seminary Press, 2007, p.
198.
187
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The question is: why did it take so long for the cult of the Mother of God to
develop? Bercot offers a typically modernist, psychologising explanation: the
post-Nicene Christians felt a need for a more feminine, less wrathful God, so
they elevated Mary to divine status on the analogy of the Great Earth Mother.
I find this explanation absurd. Does he mean to say that in the middle of the
fifth century the whole Church, from the Celts of Britain to the Copts of Egypt,
suddenly and without external pressure, abandoned its belief in the
Trinitarian God and went back to paganism?! Let us remember that, to my
knowledge, nobody throughout the whole Christian world objected to the
veneration of Mary except a few western heretics who denied the virginity of
Mary and were refuted in Blessed Jeromes two books against Jovinian
already in the fourth century. It follows that if Bercot is right, the Saviours
promise that the Church would prevail against the gates of hell even to the
end of the world is wrong, and the whole Church fell away from the truth in
the fifth century, only to be recreated by a few continuing Anglicans 1500
years later!
I offer another explanation. It is only a hypothesis, and I may well be
wrong. But I think it fits the fact much better than Bercots explanation, while
removing the necessity of concluding that the whole Church apostasised in
the fifth century a conclusion that Bercot does not draw explicitly, but which
must be drawn if his argument is correct.
The explanation consists in noting that the Third Ecumenical Council in
Ephesus in 431, which established, as we have seen, that Mary was the
Mother of God, decreed that henceforth hymns to Christ and the Saints
should always conclude with a hymn to the Mother of God, a rule that is
followed to this day in the liturgical practice of the Orthodox Church. The
Councils decree naturally stimulated a great deal of hymnography and
iconography glorifying the Mother of God. This does not mean that the cult of
Mary became more important than that of Christ, as Bercot quite wrongly
asserts a cursory examination of the liturgical texts of the Orthodox Church
demonstrates that all services begin with prayers to one or other of the
Persons of the Holy Trinity (Vespers and Mattins, for example, begin with a
prayer to the Holy Spirit), and that prayers to God are far more frequent than
prayers to the Mother of God and the Saints, especially in the central service
of the Divine Liturgy. But it is certainly true that the veneration of the Mother
of God became more prominent, in the sense of more public, after the Third
Ecumenical Council.
However, the decrees of the Third Council provide only a partial
explanation of the facts. We still need to explain why the pre-Nicene Fathers
said so little about the Mother of God, and in language that was so restrained
by comparison with what came later. I think that the explanation is to be
found in a principle that we find exemplified throughout the history of Divine
Revelation: the principle, namely, that while the whole truth has been
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committed to Gods people from the time of the apostles, certain aspects of
that truth are concealed from the outside world at certain times because a
premature revelation of them would be harmful to the acceptance of the
Christian Gospel as a whole.
Let us take as an example the most cardinal doctrine of the Church, the
doctrine of the Holy Trinity. The doctrine of the Trinity is implicit even in the
first chapter of Genesis, where we read of the Father creating the material and
noetic worlds through His Son, the Word of God, and with the cooperation of
the Holy Spirit, Who broods like a bird over the waters of the abyss. And in
the creation of man the multi-Personed nature of God is clearly hinted at in
the words: Let Us make man in Our image (Genesis 1.27). And yet the
mystery is only gradually revealed in the course of the Old Testament, and
becomes fully explicit only on the Day of Pentecost in the New.
Let us take another example: the doctrine of the Divinity of Christ. In the
Synoptic Gospels this mystery is only partially revealed, more emphasis being
attach to the full Humanity of Christ. In the Gospel of John, however, the veil
is lifted with the words: In the beginning was the Word. And the Word was
with God. And the Word was God And the Word was made flesh (John
1.1, 14), and it is clearly explicit in the Epistles and in Revelation. So why did
the Synoptic Evangelists not declare the mystery openly? Because they did
not know it, as the Arians and modern heretics such as the Jehovahs
Witnesses would have us believe? Of course not! The mystery is there, in
Matthew, Mark and Luke, for all those with ears to hear and eyes to see. So
why is it not made explicit in them as it is in John?
As always, the Holy Fathers provide us with the answer. They explain that
John wrote his Gospel later, after the fall of Jerusalem in 70 A.D., not in order
to correct the earlier Gospels, which were flawless in themselves, but in order
to fill in the gaps which they had left unfilled under the influence of the
Holy Spirit. The first three Evangelists faithfully reflect the general sequence
of Christs teaching in not immediately and explicitly proclaiming His
Divinity, for which the people (and even the apostles themselves) were not
yet ready. Another reason was that, as St. Paul says, none of the princes of
this world knew [this], for had they known [it], they would not have crucified
the Lord of glory (I Corinthians 2.8). This is confirmed by St. Ignatius the
God-bearer, a disciple of St. John, who says that certain facts were concealed
from the devil, such as the virginity of Mary188 , because, had he known them,
he would not have stirred up the Jews to kill Christ and so bring about the
salvation of the world. Moreover, we see from Acts that the earliest sermons
of St. Peter and St. Stephen also did not emphasize the Divinity of Christ, but
rather concentrated on His being the Messiah. One step at a time: for the Jews,
it was necessary to demonstrate that Christ was the Messiah before going on
(in private, perhaps) to the deeper mystery of His Divinity. St. Matthew, who
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wrote in Hebrew for the Jews, undoubtedly followed this method under the
inspiration of the Holy Spirit. And the same applies to Saints Mark and Luke,
who, though not writing exclusively for the Jews, had to take the Jewish
religious education of many of their readers into account. After the fall of
Jerusalem, however, when the power of the Jews had been broken, and when
Christian heretics such as Cerinthus arose, openly denying the Divinity of
Christ, a more explicit affirmation of the mystery became necessary. And that
was what St. John who fled from a bath-house in which he was washing in
order not to remain under the same roof as Cerinthus - provided in his
writings.
Now let us turn to the mystery of Mary, the Mother of God. As St. John of
Damascus points out, the mystery of Mary is the mystery of the Incarnation,
and the glory of Mary derives wholly from the glory of her being chosen to be
the Mother of God.189 All the titles and honour we ascribe to her do not add to,
but express that original glory; they are a direct consequence of her being, in
the words of St. Photius the Great, the minister of the mystery.190 For only a
being of surpassing holiness could have given her flesh to the All-Holy Word
of God, becoming the new Eve, as Saints Justin and Irenaeus point out, to
Christs new Adam.
But just as the glory of Christ Himself was temporarily concealed for the
sake of the more effective long-term propagation of the Gospel, so the glory of
Mary was concealed from the world, but not from the Church until the
time when it was safe to reveal it, that is, when idolatry had been destroyed
and the dogmas of the Divinity of Christ and of the Mother of God had been
defined in theologically precise terms. Until that time, however, such a
revelation would have been dangerous, for in a world in which paganism was
still strong, and female goddesses, as Bercot points out, were common, many
would have seen Christ and His Mother as two gods the Christian
equivalent of Jupiter and Juno. And indeed, as Bercot again rightly points out
on the basis of the writings of St. Epiphanius of Cyprus, in the fourth century
there existed a heresy which consisted in the worship of the Mother of God
and the offering of sacrifices to her. That is why the apostles and their
successors preached to the truths of the faith to the pagan world in a definite
order, with each successive stage beginning only when the previous stage was
firmly established in the minds of their hearers. First came the teaching about
God, then about the Incarnation of the Word and the Redemption through
Christ; then about the Church and the sacraments; and then about the Mother
of God.
The Church displayed a similar reticence with regard to another of her
cardinal doctrines that of the Body and Blood of Christ in the Eucharist.
When the Lord first expounded this mystery, many even of His disciples left
189
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Him (John 6.66). It is not surprising, therefore, that the Church should have
refrained from preaching this doctrine from the roof-tops, and kept it even
from the catechumens, or learners, until after they had actually partaken of
the sacrament. And as with the Divinity of Christ, so with the sacraments, the
Churchs teaching is only sketchily outlined in the Synoptic Evangelists, but
more fully expounded later, in the Gospel of John. And it is only in the Gospel
of John that we find certain events in which the Mother of God played a
prominent part: the marriage in Cana, for example, or Christs entrusting the
care of His Mother to John himself at the Cross.
In all these cases, the Churchs early reticence was not the product of some
kind of esotericism in the Gnostic sense, but a prudent desire to give her
children the meat of the Word only after they have been strengthened on the
milk, the rudiments of the Gospel. For to entrust people with the holy
mysteries before they are ready for them is like giving pearls to swine
they will trample on them by interpreting them in their own swinish, carnal
way. Thus the doctrine of the Mother of God, while always known to the
Church, was not preached openly until the world had become solidly
Christian.
An illustration of the wisdom of this principle is found in the life of St.
Dionysius the Areopagite, the disciple of St. Paul and first bishop of Athens.
When he first met the Mother of God, as he confesses in a letter, he was so
struck by her extraordinary, other-worldly beauty, that he was tempted to
think that she was in fact a goddess. It was not until the apostles took him
aside and explained that she was not herself Divine by nature, but the created
Mother of the pre-eternal Creator, that he abandoned his error. If such a holy
man as Dionysius was tempted to make such an error, we can imagine what
would have been the consequences if the apostles had openly preached the
Mother of God to the pagan world! And we see in modern Roman Catholic
Mariolatry what happens to the understanding of Mary even among
Christians when those Christians have lost the salt of the grace of God.
If the Catholics have become like the pagan Greeks in their Mariolatry, the
Protestants have embraced the opposite, Jewish error in refusing to see
anything special in the Holy Virgin, even denying her holiness and virginity.
To be fair to Bercot, he never descends to such blasphemy, and is willing to
accept both her virginity and her exceptional blessedness. He does not even
object to the term Theotokos, or Mother of God, although, revealingly, he
never uses it himself.
But Bercot displays a definite Protestant bias and superficiality in his
interpretation of those passages in the Gospel in which Christ speaks to or
about His Mother. In all these passages (Matthew 12.46-50; Luke 2.48-49, 8.1921; John 2.4, 19.26-27), Bercot sees Christ as putting down His Mother, as if
He needed to suppress an incipient rebellion on her part, an attempt to
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impose her will upon Him. Nothing could be further from the truth.
Although the Orthodox do not believe in the absolute sinlessness of the
Mother of God, at any rate before Pentecost, and admit that she may have had
moments of doubt, hesitation or imperfect comprehension, there can be no
question of any conflict between her and her Son. Christ was not so much
rebuking His Mother in these passages, as teaching a general truth which the
carnally and racially-minded Jews very much needed to absorb: the truth,
namely, that closeness to God depends, not on racial affiliation, but on
spiritual kinship. Moreover, when He said, My Mother and My brethren are
those who hear the word of God and keep it (Luke 8.21), He was not
excluding His physical Mother from the category of those close to Him. On
the contrary, it was precisely because she, more than anyone, knew the word
of God and kept it, thereby acquiring spiritual kinship with God, that Mary
was counted worthy to give birth to God in the flesh.
That is also why Christ entrusted the Holy Virgin to St. John at the foot of
the Cross. This was actually a very surprising thing for the Lord to do, for the
Virgin did have a family the sons of Joseph referred to above and the
normal custom in the East would have been for them to take her into their
care. But here again, as often in the Gospel, the Lord indicates that spiritual
kinship, kinship in the Church, is higher and deeper than kinship after the
flesh or in law.
Bercot makes another error of interpretation when he says that Mary was
not one of the first witnesses of the Resurrection. The oral tradition of the
Church, confirmed in the writings of St. Gregory Palamas191 , affirms that
Mary was in fact the very first person to see the Risen Christ, being none other
than the person whom the Evangelists call Mary, the mother of James and
Joses (Matthew 27.56) and the other Mary (Matthew 27.81, 28.1). For the
sons of Joseph, the Betrothed of Mary, were James, the first bishop of
Jerusalem, Simon, the second bishop of Jerusalem, Jude, one of the twelve
apostles, and Joses; which meant that Mary was in law, if not by blood, their
mother, the mother of James and Joses. St. Matthew conceals her identity in
this way for the same reason that the inner greatness Mother of God is
concealed throughout the first centuries of the Christian preaching: because it
was dangerous to reveal her great glory and pre-eminent closeness to Christ
before the doctrine of Christ Himself, perfect God and perfect Man, had been
firmly established in the world through the Ecumenical Councils. Moreover,
if it had been said that the first witness of Christs Resurrection had been His
Mother, the Jews would have seized on this to pour scorn on the fact, saying:
What trust can we place in the visions of an hysterical woman, crazed with
grief over the death of her only son?
Bercot is again wrong in asserting that the Lord was rebuking Mary at the
marriage of Cana, when He said: Woman, what have I to do with thee?
191
162
(John 2.4). If Mary was really sinning by asking the Lord to intercede for the
married couple, why did He then fulfil her request and change the water into
wine? According to St. Gaudentius of Breschia, the Lord was not rebuking the
Virgin, but drawing her mind forward to the mystery of the Cross: This
answer of His does not seem to me to accord with Marys suggestion, if we
take it literally in its first apparent sense, and do not suppose our Lord to
have spoken in a mystery, meaning thereby that the wine of the Holy Spirit
could not be given to the Gentiles before His Passion and Resurrection, as the
Evangelist attests: As yet the Spirit was not yet given, because Jesus was not
yet glorified (John 7.39). With reason, then, at the beginning of His miracles,
did He thus answer His Mother, as though He said: Why this thy hasty
suggestion, O Woman? Since the hour of My Passion and Resurrection is not
yet come, when, - all powers whether of teaching or of divine operations
being then completed I have determined to die for the life of believers. After
My Passion and Resurrection, when I shall return to My Father, there shall be
given to them the wine of the Holy Spirit. Whereupon she too, that most
blessed one, knowing the profound mystery of this answer, understood that
the suggestion she had just made was not slighted or spurned, but, in
accordance with that spiritual reason, was for a time delayed. Otherwise, she
would never have said to the waiters, Whatsoever He saith unto you, do it.192
Bercot displays a similar obtuseness when discussing the fact that Mary
was not present at the Last Supper. Since the Passover meal was a family
occasion, he says, Marys absence shows that the Lord was putting her in her
place and placing his bonds with the apostles above all carnal bonds. Well, it
is true, as we have seen, that the Lord often emphasizes the superiority of
spiritual bonds to carnal ones. But Mary was most closely related to Him, as
has already been said, both spiritually and by blood.
In any case, the Last Supper did not require the presence of Mary for a
quite different reason. At this Supper the Lord introduced the fundamental
sacrament of the New Testament Church, the Eucharist, and Himself
performed the sacrament as the eternal High Priest of the New Testament,
being a priest not after the order of Levi, but of Melchizedek. He as the Priest
offered Himself as the Victim to Himself and the Father and the Holy Spirit as
the Receivers of the Sacrifice. And He wished the apostles to be present
because they also were to be priests according to this new and higher order,
and would themselves offer the same Sacrifice of Christs Body and Blood,
saying: Thine own of Thine own we offer unto Thee But Mary, being a
woman, was not and could not be a priest.
St. Gaudentius, Sermon 9; P.L. 20, p. 900; in Thomas Livius, The Blessed Virgin in the Fathers
of the First Six Centuries, London: Burns & Oates, 1893, p. 173. And in another place the same
saint says that Christ, after the hour of His Passion, so far consummated the reality of the
mystery which had gone before that the water of the Incarnation became the wine of the
Divinity. (Sermon 19; P.L. 20, p. 990; Livius, op. cit., p. 174).
192
163
Not that Marys ministry was any less important than the apostles. On the
contrary: without the ministry of the Virgin at the Incarnation neither Christs
ministry at the Cross and Resurrection, nor that of the apostles after Pentecost,
would have been possible. For if the apostles, through the priestly gift
bestowed on them, multiplied the Church to the ends of the earth, the Virgin,
having given birth to the High Priest Himself, and having been made the
Mother of His closest disciple at the Cross, may be said to have given birth to
the Church as a whole, to be the Mother of the Body of which He is the Head
to all generations. Indeed, in a deeper sense the Virgin is not only the Mother
of the Church but the Church herself; for if Christ is the New Adam and the
Head of the Church, and Mary is the New Eve and flesh of His flesh, then
through the mystery of marriage the Virgin (i.e. the New Eve or the Church)
is the Body and Bride of Christ
It is in the context of this mystical relationship between Christ and the
Holy Virgin that we must understand the extraordinary epithets that the
Church bestows on her, such as mediatress and Queen of Heaven.
At this point, however, it is important to distinguish the Orthodox position
from that of the Roman Catholics and from that of certain Orthodox who have
been infected by the Romanist point of view. Contrary to the Romanist
teaching, the Holy Virgin was conceived in original sin, and therefore was as
much in need of salvation as any other mortal. Moreover, as St. John
Chrysostom says, it is possible that she committed some actual sins, although
these could only have been minor ones resulting from her less that perfect
knowledge of the ministry of her Son before she received complete
enlightenment at Pentecost. The salvation of the world was effected by Christ
alone, the only Mediator between God and man, for He alone is both God and
man. At the same time, Christ could not have become man without the
cooperation of a human being who was both humble enough to receive the
Word of God into her flesh without being destroyed by Him, and believing
enough to consent to the mystery without doubting: Be it unto me according
to they word (Luke 1.38). For, as Metropolitan Philaret of Moscow says, In
the days of the creation of the world, when God was uttering His living and
mighty Let there be, the word of the Creator brought creatures into the
world. But on that day, unparalleled in the life of the world, when divine
Miriam uttered her brief and obedient: Be it unto me, I hardly dare to say
what happened then the word of the creature brought the Creator into the
world. In this sense, the Virgin, too, can be called a mediatress insofar as she
mediated our salvation. To say, as Bercot does, that Christ could have effected
the salvation of the world in some other way if the Virgin had refused is to
indulge in idle hypothesizing which illumines nothing. For the fact is that the
Virgin did not refuse and God did not choose another person or another
method.
164
Now, having entered into such an extraordinarily intimate union with God,
and with such enormous consequences for the whole of created being, who
can doubt that the Virgin has become deified, a partaker of the Divine
nature, as St. Peter puts it (II Peter 1.4), on the border between the created
and uncreated natures, as St. Gregory Palamas puts it?193 And, this being so,
who can doubt that all her petitions are granted by God, that her mediation
before God, in the sense of intercession for mankind, is always heard? It is not
that what she demands she always gets, as the Romanists blasphemously say;
for that would imply that the creature can dictate to the Creator, the pot to the
Potter. No: the Virgin is always heard by God because, being in complete
harmony with His will, she never asks for anything that is contrary to His will.
Like the perfect wife, she both knows the will of her Husband and wills it
herself, so that she neither compels Him nor is herself compelled by Him
Whose service is perfect freedom. For where the Spirit of the Lord is, there
is liberty (II Corinthians 3.17).
Where there is such perfect spiritual union and freedom, the distinctions
between Master and servant, even Creator and creature, become, if not less
real than before, at any rate less prominent. The Protestants are very jealous to
preserve Gods rights and sovereignty; but they forget that God Himself
emptied Himself of His Divine rights, and became a servant to His own
creatures, so that they should acquire His rights and privileges. As the Fathers
say: God became man, so that men should become gods. And the word
gods means what it says the saints truly become gods by grace: I said: ye
are gods, and all of your sons of the Most High (Psalm 81.6; John 10.34). For
if the Holy Scripture calls Christians now, before they have become
completely freed from sin, brothers and friends and sons of God, of
what great weight of glory will they not be accounted worthy when they
are completely freed from sin, in the life of the age to come? And if this is true
of all the saints, how can it be denied of the Virgin Mother of God, she who
even at the beginning of her ministry was already full of grace, and who by
offering herself as the minister of the mystery made it possible for all men
to become gods? And if, as St. Paul says, the saints shall judge angels (I
Corinthians 6.3), how can it be hyperbole to say that she, the mother of all the
saints in the spiritual sense, is more honourable than the Cherubim and
beyond compare more glorious than the Seraphim? Indeed, if Christ, the
New Adam, is the King of Heaven, how can she, the New Eve, be denied her
rightful side at His side as the Queen of Heaven? For it is of her that the
Prophet David spoke: At Thy right hand stood the queen, arrayed in a
vesture of inwoven gold, adorned in varied colours (Psalm 45.8).
The mystery of Mary is the mystery of the deification of man. The path she
traversed from humility on earth to glory in the heavens is the path that all
Christians hope to traverse. And while it was Gods will that she should
remain in the background until the ministry of her Son should be completed
193
165
and firmly established in the world through the teaching of the Fathers, so it
is Gods will now that her glory should be revealed and all generations call
her blessed (Luke 1.48); that all men should see the hope that is set before
them and strive for it with redoubled zeal. And to that end God has bestowed
on her the grace of miracles and the fulfillment of all the godly petitions that
men address to her, as is witnessed by thousands upon thousands of
Christians in all countries and generations. Only the blindest bigot could deny
all these witnesses, or ascribe them all to the workings of Satan. Or rather,
only one who is blind to the true depth of the mystery of which she was the
minister, would seek to detract from the glory of the Virgin...
Let me end, then, with a witness from the Early, Pre-Nicene Church, that of
St. Gregory the Wonderworker: Thy praise, O most holy Virgin, surpasses all
laudation, be reason of the God Who took flesh and was born of three. To thee
every creature, of things in heaven, and things on earth, and things under the
earth, offers the meet offering of honour. For thou has indeed been shown
forth to be the true cherubic throne, thou shinest as the very brightness of
light in the high places of the kingdoms of intelligence, where the Father,
Who is without beginning, and Whose power thou hadst overshadowing thee,
is glorified; where also the Son is worshipped, Whom thou didst bear
according to the flesh; and where the Holy Spirit is praised, Who effected in
thy womb the generation of the Mighty King. Though thee, O thou who art
full of grace, is the Holy and Consubstantial Trinity known in the world.
Together with thyself deem us also worthy to be made partakers of thy
perfect grace in Jesus Christ, our Lord, with Whom and with the Holy Spirit,
be glory to the Father, now and ever and unto the ages of ages. Amen.194
(Published in Living Orthodoxy, May-June, 1996, pp. 8-14; revised June 18 /
July 1, 2004, March 9/22, 2008 and May 13/26, 2010)
194
166
167
195
196
168
Using this analogy we may say that man is, as it were, Gods lyric
creation in which He wants to express Himself, while the rest of creation,
though involuntarily bearing the impress of its Creator, is the expression of
Gods special objective ideas, of His creative will to produce entities other
than Himself. The fundamental point of difference is the presence or absence
of the personal principle with all that it involves, i.e. self-consciousness,
autonomy, and the power of controlling and directing ones actions in
accordance with the supreme principle of the Good or Holiness197
Man as a work of art is like an unfinished symphony. All the essential
elements or content are there, implanted by God at conception; but the
development and elucidation of that content into a perfect form remains
incomplete and God calls on us to complete it. Without that development
and completion man is a still-born embryo. But man as an artist works on this
unfinished material and brings it to perfection, to a true likeness of God,
unto a perfect man, unto the measure of the stature of the fullness of Christ
(Ephesians 4.13). Thus man as artist works on himself as work of art in order
to reveal the harmony latent in Gods original design.
The Motives of the Artist
Why do artists create? There are broadly three answers to this question: the
classical, the romantic and the pornographic. The classical answer is: to
create a thing of beauty and, if the artist is religious, he will add: to the
glory of God. The romantic answer is: to express myself. It is highly
unlikely that he will add: to the glory of God, because it is not at all
obvious, whether he is religious or not, how expressing himself will
contribute to the glory of God. The pornographic artist works for
commercial gain, and nothing else. His aim is neither to create a work of
beauty, nor to express himself, but to elicit certain reactions in his clientle
reactions for which they are prepared to pay him.
The classical artist is the least self-centred, the least influenced by fallen
emotions and purposes, and the most open to the workings of grace; which is
why the works of classical artists such as Bach and Handel are recommended
by spiritual fathers for people living in the world. It is a different matter with
what we may loosely call the romantic artist. The question arises: is the
romantic artist condemned to express either his own fallen self or even the
demonic forces that express themselves in his fallen nature? Regrettably, the
answer must be: yes, to the extent that he subscribes to the romantic ideology
of self-expression. After all, "a fool has no delight in understanding, but in
expressing his own heart" (Proverbs 18:2) - and is not the romantic artist
concerned above all to express his own heart? Some romantic artists, such
as late Beethoven or Bruckner, were able to classicise their work, making it
capable of glorifying God and not the artist himself; but they were exceptions.
197
Frank, Reality and Man, London: Faber & Faber, 1965, pp. 219-220.
169
For if the artist is honestly expressing his own nature, since that nature is
fallen, he will undoubtedly be expressing its fallenness. As Metropolitan
Anastasy (Gribanovsky) of New York writes: If you want to look deeper into
the soul of this or that writer, read his works more attentively. In them, as in a
mirror, is clearly reflected his own spiritual character. He almost always
creates his heroes according to his own image and likeness, often putting into
their mouths the confession of his heart.198 But since even the best impulses
of the fallen man are more or less corrupted, such corruption cannot fail to be
perceived by the sensitive listener, viewer or reader.
That is why romantic art is so much better at expressing evil in all its forms
than good. Out of the abundance of the heart, the mouth speaketh and the
heart is corrupt in man from his youth, being deceitful above all things. As
Bishop Ignatius Brianchaninov wrote, speaking of the romantic artists of his
day: People who are endowed with talent by nature do not understand why
they have been given this gift, and there is nobody who can explain this to
them. Evil in nature, and especially in man, is so masked that the morbid
enjoyment of it entices the young man, and with the whole warmth of his
heart he gives himself to lies hidden by a mask of truth Most talents have
striven to represent human passions extravagantly. Evil in every possible
variation is represented by singers, by painters, by music. Human talent in all
its power and unfortunate beauty has developed in the representation of evil;
in the representation of good it is generally weak, pale, strained 199
Nevertheless, the exact expression of ones inner life has a moral value in
itself, because it is telling the truth about oneself. Moreover, the process of
expressing an emotion in art changes it, objectivising and in a sense
transfiguring it. And truth is always to be honoured.
Metropolitan Anastasy writes, the word has its ethics: the latter demands
that it be pure, honourable and chaste. Where this rule is not observed, where
language is the plaything of passions or chance moods, where it is bought or
sold or people simply lightmindedly take their pleasure in it, there begins the
adultery of the word, that is, the betrayal of its direct and lofty purpose.200
But where the rule is observed, it follows that the verbal expression even of
ones fallen emotions has value if it is done precisely and honestly, without
any attempt to embellish or glorify them.
Gribanovsky, Besedy s sobstvennym serdtsem (Discussions with my own heart), in Troitskij
Pravoslavnij Russkij Kalendar na 1998 g. (Trinity Russian Orthodox Calendar for 1998),
Jordanville: Holy Trinity Monastery, 1998, p. 77 (in Russian).
199 Brianchaninov, Khristianskij Pastyr i Khristianin Khudozhnik (The Christian Pastor and
the Christian Artist), Moscow, 1993, 9, p. 169; quoted in A.M. Liubomudrov, Sviatitel
Ignatij (Brianchaninov) i Problema Tvorchestva (The Holy Hierarch Ignatius Brianchaninov
and the Problem of Creativity), in Kotelnikov, V.A. (ed). Khristianstvo i Russkaia Literatura
(Christianity and Russian Literature), St. Petersburg, 1996, p. 27 (in Russian).
200 Metropolitan Anastasy, op. cit., p. 30.
198
170
For example: if I feel angry, and then write a poem about my anger, the
process of trying to analyze and express my anger in words actually changes
the nature of that anger, masters or controls it in a certain sense. As
Shakespeare put it in Sonnet 77:
Look what thy memory cannot contain
Commit to these waste blanks, and thou shalt find
Those children nurs'd, deliver'd from thy brain,
To take a new acquaintance of thy mind.
In this sense the process of artistic creation is a little like the confession of sins.
Only in confession we do not simply express or control our sins; confession is
not just psychotherapy. We also sorrow over them and judge them in the sight
of God, so that He may destroy them and therefore change the content of our
souls.
Thus one can create good, if not great art from base materials. By
objectifying that baseness and conveying it exactly to his audience, the artist
to a certain degree takes the sting out of the baseness. It is in this context
that we can see how the imaginative faculty, which in the ascetic life is
invariably associated with deception, can be used in the service of truth.
Shakespeare described this process in A Midsummer Nights Dream as
follows:
The poet's eye, in a fine frenzy rolling,
Doth glance from heaven to earth, from earth to heaven;
And as imagination bodies forth
The forms of things unknown, the poet's pen
Turns them to shapes, and gives to airy nothing
A local habitation and a name.
Before the imagination has produced its work, the content of the artists mind
is unknown. But as his work comes into being, so does the content of his
mind become known to him, for now it has shape and a local habitation
and a name. Thus by giving an objective, sensual correlate to his emotions,
the artist is enabled to know them and judge them.
This is the paradox of good art, that in creating images that do not exist in
nature it puts up a mirror to nature, in Hamlets words. But such good,
truthful art can become great only if the fallen content of the art is not only
accurately expressed but also correct judged, so that a revulsion from it and a
striving for something higher is also conveyed to the listener. If that is
achieved, then the material is no longer base and the work is like Davids 50th
Psalm, being not merely the expression of emotion, and not even
psychotherapy, but confession and repentance.
171
Victor Afanasyev, Elder Barsanuphius of Optina, Platina, Ca.: St. Herman of Alaska
Brotherhood, 2000, p. 500.
201
172
Zhitia Prepodobnykh Startsev Optinoj Pustyni (The Lives of the Holy Elders of Optina Desert),
Jordanville: Holy Trinity Monastery, 1992 (in Russian).
203 Sveshnikov, Blessed Augustines View of Self, Orthodox Life, May-June, 2010, p. 47.
173
174
Feodore regretted the way that Gogol, who had once unconsciously
followed Christ in his powerful and free creative work, had fallen under the
influence of the slavish fearfulness and mercilessness of Father Matvei
Konstantinovsky, who rejected everything that did not openly bear the
imprint of Christ. Writing of his own appreciation of the irreligious Belinsky,
Archimandrite Feodor wrote: He gave to these texts his own thought, and I
understood them in the proper way, and in accordance with this I understood
his entire discourse. And therefore it turned out that, by following the system
of his thoughts, which distorted Christs truth, I in my own mind developed a
living system of Christs truth itself. Summing up this hermeneutic model,
Archimandrite Feodor noted that he no longer stopped at the mere letter of
the texts which are studied in theological scholarship, but rather sought to
engage their theological spirit in dialogue with non-religious authors. From
this general premise Bukharev concluded that any genuine literary or
intellectual work can inspire a Christian: another tendency of thought and
discourse, without explicitly recognizing Christ as its leading principle,
nonetheless can be under His invisible leadership and be led by Him to be of
direct use to faith and love for Christs truth. Significantly, Archimandrite
Feodors work was not approved for publication by Metropolitan Philaret.
Philaret alleged that Bukharev saw the mere flickering of the light.207
Gogol came to believe that his work would be harmful because of the
imperfection of its creator; as he put it, One should not write about a holy
shrine without first having consecrated ones soul; and in 1845 he burned the
second half of his masterpiece, Dead Souls.
But he could not keep away from writing, which was his life, and in 1851
he began again the second part of Dead Souls, which was highly praised by
those friends to whom he read it However, on the night of 11th to 12th
February, 1852, he burned the manuscript of the second part of Dead Souls for
the second time. Then he made the sign of the cross, lay down on the sofa and
wept The next day he wrote to Count A.N. Tolstoy: Imagine, how
powerful the evil spirit is! I wanted to burn some papers which had already
long ago been marked out for that, but I burned the chapters of Dead Souls
which I wanted to leave to my friends as a keepsake after my death.
What were the true motives, asks Andreev, for the burning of the
completed work which Gogol had carefully kept, accurately putting together
the written notebooks and lovingly rebinding them with ribbon? Why did
Gogol burn this work, with which he was himself satisfied, and which
received an objective and very high evaluation from very competent people
Bird, op. cit., pp. 31-32. Sushkov speaks of Philarets strict rejection of non-classical
comedies, immoral operas, non-historical novels, bloodthirsty dramas [] There is no need to
mention stories, vaudevilles, erotic, mythological and other poems without inner content,
without thought, without feeling (Bird, op. cit., pp. 34-35).
207
175
who had great artistic taste? Let us try to answer this complex and difficult
question.
In his fourth letter with regard to Dead Souls, which was dated 1846 and
published in his Correspondence, Gogol gives an explanation why he for the
first time (in 1845) burned the chapters of the second part of his poem that he
had written.
The second volume of Dead Souls was burned because it was necessary.
That will not come alive again which does not die, says the Apostle. It is
necessary first of all to die in order to rise again. It was not easy to burn the
work of five years, which had been produced with some painful tension, in
which every line was obtained only with a shudder, in which there was much
that constituted my best thoughts and occupied my soul. But all this was
burned, and moreover at that moment when, seeing death before me, I very
much wanted to leave at any rate something after me which would remind
people of me. I thank God that He gave me strength to do this. Immediately the
flame bore away the last pages of my book, its content was suddenly
resurrected in a purified and radiant form, like a phoenix from the ashes, and
I suddenly saw in what a mess was everything that I had previously
considered to be in good order. The appearance of the second volume in that
form in which it was would have been harmful rather than useful. I was
not born in order to create an epoch in the sphere of literature. My work is
simpler and closer: my work is that about which every person must think first
of all, and not only I. My work is my soul and the firm work of life.
Such was the motivation for the first burning of Dead Souls in 1845.
But this motivation also lay at the root of the second burning of the
already completed work but now much deeper, depending on the spiritual
growth of Gogol.
In his Confession of an Author written after Correspondence, Gogol for the
first time seriously began to speak about the possibility of rejecting his
writers path in the name of a higher exploit. With striking sincerity he writes
(how much it would have cost him!): It was probably harder for me than for
anybody else to reject writing, for this constituted the single object of all my
thoughts, I had abandoned everything else, all the best enticements of life,
and, like a monk, had broken my ties with everything that is dear to man on
earth, in order to think of nothing except my work. It was not easy for me to
renounce writing: some of the best minutes in my life were those when I
finally put on paper that which had been flying around for a long time in my
thoughts; when I am certain to this day that almost the highest of all pleasures
is the pleasure of creation. But, I repeat again, as an honourable man, I would
have to lay down my pen even then, if I felt the impulse to do so.
176
I dont know whether I have had enough honour to do it, if I were not
deprived of the ability to write: because I say this sincerely life would then
have lost for me all value, and not to write for me would have meant precisely
the same as not to live. But there are no deprivations that are not followed by
the sending of a substitute to us, as a witness to the fact that the Creator does
not leave man even for the smallest moment.
From the last thought, as from a small seed, during the years of Gogols
unswerving spiritual growth, there grew the decision to burn his last finish
work and fall silent.
The burning before his death of the second part of Dead Souls was Gogols
greatest exploit, which he wanted to hide not only from men, but also from
himself.
Three weeks before his death Gogol wrote to his friend Zhukovsky: Pray
for me, that my work may be truly virtuous and that I may be counted worthy,
albeit to some degree, to sing a hymn to the heavenly Beauty. The heavenly
Beauty cannot be compared with earthly beauty and is inexpressible in
earthly words. That is why silence is the mystery of the age to come.
Before his death Gogol understood this to the end: he burned what he had
written and fell silent, and then died.208
Shortly before he died, Gogol wrote in a letter to Optina: For Christs sake,
pray for me. Ask your respected Abbot and all the brothers, and ask all who
pray more diligently there, to pray for me. My path is hard. My work is of
such a kind that without the obvious help of God every minute and every
hour, my pen cannot move. My power is not only minimal but it does not
even exist without refreshment from Above209
Andreev, op. cit., pp. 180-182. St. Barsanuphius of Optina expressed a similar view.
Gogol, he said, wanted to depict Russian life in all of its multifaceted fullness. With this
goal he began his poem, Dead Souls, and wrote the first part. We know in what light Russian
life was reflected: the Plyushkins, the Sobakevitches, the Nosdrevs and the Chichikovs; the
whole book constitutes a stifling and dark cellar of commonness and baseness of interests.
Gogol himself was frightened at what he had written, but consoled himself that this was only
scum, only foam, which he had taken from the waves of the sea of life. He hoped that in the
second volume he would succeed in portraying a Russian Orthodox man in all his beauty and
all his purity.
How was he to do this? Gogol did not know. It was at about this time that his
acquaintance with Elder Macarius [of Optina] took place. Gogol left Optina with a renewed
soul, but he did not abandon the thought of writing the second volume of Dead Souls, and he
worked on it.
Later, feeling that it was beyond his power to embody in images that Christian ideal
which lived in his soul in all its fullness, he became disappointed with his work. And this is
the reason for his burning of the second volume of Dead Souls (Victor Afanasyev, Elder
Barsanuphius of Optina, Platina, Ca.: St. Herman of Alaska Brotherhood, 2000, pp. 483-484).
209 Kavelin, op. cit., p. 286.
208
177
178
Ekonomtsev is here reiterating the false dogma of the Romantic era the
moral and spiritual superiority of the artist. Imagination for the Romantics
was much more than the ability to fantasise, as Jacques Barzun writes: Out of
the known or knowable, Imagination connects the remote, interprets the
familiar, or discovers hidden realities. Being a means of discovery, it must be
called Imagination of the real. Scientific hypotheses perform that same office;
they are products of imagination.
This view of the matter explains why to the Romanticists the arts no
longer figured as a refined pleasure of the senses, an ornament of civilized
existence, but as one form of the deepest possible reflection on life. Shelley,
defending his art, declares poets to be the unacknowledged legislators of the
world. The arts convey truths; they are imagination crystallized; and as they
transport the soul they reshape the perceptions and possibly the life of the
beholder. To perform this feat requires genius, because it is not a mechanical
act. To be sure, all art makes use of conventions, but to obey traditional rules
and follow set patterns will not achieve that fusion of idea and form which is
properly creation. It was Romanticist discussion that made the word creation
regularly apply to works of art
Those Romanticist words, recharged with meaning, helped to establish
the religion of art. That faith served those who could and those could not
partake of the revived creeds. To call the passion for art a religion is not a
figure of speech or a way of praise. Since the beginning of the 19C, art has
been defined again and again by its devotees as the highest spiritual
expression of man. The dictum leaves no room for anything higher and this
highest level is that which, for other human beings, is occupied by religion. To
19C worshippers the arts form a treasury of revelations, a body of scriptures,
the makers of this spiritual testament are prophets and seers. And to this day
the fortunate among them are treated as demigods213
The word creation was understood by the Romantics almost literally, as
the activity of God creating ex nihilo. This meant, however, that Romantic art
was not only a path to truth: it created truth. Thus, as Sir Isaiah Berlin writes,
whatever the differences between the leading romantic thinkers the early
Schiller and the later Fichte, Schelling and Jacobi, Tieck and the Schlegels
when they were young, Chateaubriand and Byron, Coleridge and Carlyle,
Kierkegaard, Stirner, Nietzsche, Baudelaire there runs through their
writings a common notion, held with varying degrees of consciousness and
depth, that truth is not an objective structure, independent of those who seek
it, the hidden treasure waiting to be found, but is itself in all its guises created
by the seeker. It is not to be brought into being necessarily by the finite
individual: according to some it is created by a greater power, a universal
spirit, personal or impersonal, in which the individual is an element, or of
which he is an aspect, an emanation, an imperfect reflection. But the common
213
Barzun, From Dawn to Decadence, New York: Perennial, 2001, pp. 473-474.
179
180
mankind, and the artist was one who had been called to interpret this truth, a
kind of seer. In Russia, Pushkin solemnly declared the poets status as a
prophet uttering the burning words of truth. The American Ralph Waldo
Emerson saw poets as liberating gods because they had achieved freedom
themselves, and could therefore free others. The pianist and composer Franz
Liszt wanted to recapture the political, philosophical and religious power
that he believed music had in ancient times. William Blake claimed that Jesus
and his disciples were all artists, and that he himself was following Jesus
through his art. God was, perhaps only the first poet of the universe,
Thophile Gauthier reflected. By the 1820s artists regularly referred to their
craft as a religion, and Victor Hugo represented himself alternately as
Zoroaster, Moses and Christ, somewhere between prophet and God.215
The close affinity of romantic art with the revolution permits us to
speculate whether some of the more famous and powerful works of romantic
art were actually inspired by the devil.
For example, let us take the operas of Wagner, or Stravinsky's The Rite of
Spring. Very fine music, the products of real genius - of that there can be no
doubt. But extremely dangerous spiritually. Speaking very schematically, we
could say that Wagners Ring cycle is Nazism in music (which is why Hitler
loved it so), just as The Rite of Spring is Bolshevism in music.216
The identification of art and demonism can be still closer. Thus the
decadent artists of the Symbolist movement in Russia wanted to capture the
Divinity in artistic symbols. For them, symbolism took the place of religion; it
was a new kind of religion. In the Symbolist aesthetic, as J.W. Burrow
writes, the intense focusing on the thing taken as a symbol, the perception of
its numinous aura, gave access to another, as it were, parallel, invisible world
of light and ecstasy.217
This parallel, invisible world of light and ecstasy was demonic. Thus the
Symbolist painter Michael Vrubel achieved fame with a large mosaic-like
canvas called Seated Demon (1890), and went mad while working on the
dynamic and sinister Demon Downcast (1902).218
Symbolist ideas are most vividly expressed in the music and thought of the
composer Alexander Scriabin, who in his First Symphony praised art as a kind
Zamoyski, Holy Madness: Romantics, Patriots and Revolutionaries, 1776-1871, London:
Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1999, p. 255.
216 I cant listen to music too often, said Lenin after hearing Beethovens Appassionata
Sonata. It makes me want to say kind stupid things and pat the heads of people. But now
you have to beat them on the head, beat them without mercy (in Simon Sebag Montefiore,
Young Stalin, London: Phoenix, 2007, p. 330).
217 Burrow, The Crisis of Reason: European Thought, 1848-1914, Yale University Press, 2000, p.
223.
218 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russian_Symbolism.
215
181
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russian_Symbolism.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexander_Scriabin.
221 Thomas Schipperges, Prokofiev, London: Haus Publishing, 2003, p. 8.
219
220
182
183
These examples demonstrate that art can truly be infused with grace; it
expresses not simply the contents of a fallen soul, but a soul striving for God
and placing everything under Gods gaze. For, as St. Nectarius of Optina
said: "One can practise art like anything else, but everything must be done as
under God's gaze.225
Now this would seem to contradict the word of St. Barsanuphius of Optina:
Some say that science and art, especially music, regenerate a man, granting
him lofty aesthetic delight, but this is not true. Under the influence of art,
music, singing, etc., a man does indeed experience delight, but it is powerless
to regenerate him.226 Again, replying to the composer Paschalov who said
that music tore him away from everything earthly and he experienced great
sweetness listening to the great classical composers, the elder said:
Nevertheless, this aesthetic sweetness cannot take the place of religion.227
But there is no real contradiction here. Art in and of itself, as simply the
expression in words or colours or sounds of a mental content that produces
aesthetic delight, cannot regenerate the soul, and cannot take the place of
religion. But if that art is the expression of confession and praise, of prayer and
thanksgiving, then it is no longer merely art, but religious art, and partakes of
the regenerative grace of God.
Even in the writings of secular poets we find inspired works whose
inspiration is godly.
Consider, for example, Shakespeares famous Sonnet 116:
Let me not to the marriage of true minds
Admit impediments. Love is not love
Which alters when it alteration finds,
Or bends with the remover to remove:
O, no! it is an ever-fixed mark,
That looks on tempests and is never shaken;
It is the star to every wandering bark,
Whose worths unknown, although his height be taken.
Loves not Times fool, though rosy lips and cheeks
Within his bending sickles compass come;
Love alters not with his brief hours and weeks,
But bears it out even to the edge of doom.
If this be error, and upon me proved,
I never writ, nor no man ever loved.
184
186
majestic ecclesiastical art of Byzantium. Both in the church singing, and in the
iconography, and in the architecture of the Orthodox Church there is a special
rhythm which serves to reflect the eternal heavenly harmony. The Church
masters not only had to sharpen their work, but also their very spirit, in order
rise to the heights, to hear there the heavenly music and bring it down to
earth. Impressed upon all of our ecclesiastical splendour, to this day it serves
as an immediate revelation of the truth of Orthodoxy. Its language is much
more understandable for everyone than the language of abstract theological
concepts, and through it first of all the Orthodox Church realizes her mission
in the world.230
Conclusion: The Music of the Soul
Only God is a true Creator, in that only He can create out of nothing. Man
is a creator only derivatively, in that he creates out of something already
there, rearranging and reforming elements that have already been created by
God. And yet in that rearranging and reforming of his nature, a nature
distorted and disturbed by sin, lies the whole meaning of his existence. For to
the extent that he succeeds in reforming his created nature in accordance with
the Divine Archetype, man allows the Uncreated Light of God Himself to
shine through his nature. Man the artist becomes man the supreme work of
art, man the likeness of God.
The purpose of art in its original, true context and designation is to help
man in the work of harmonising the warring elements of his soul, to find the
music of the soul. For rest for the soul, says St. Barsanuphius of Optina,
equals blessedness, which equals music, the harmony of all the powers of the
soul. The instrument [of the soul] is there, the piano is open and ready, a
row of white keys is before us, but there is no piano player. Who is the
Player? God. We must labor ascetically, and the Lord will act according to His
promise: We will come unto him, and make Our abode with him (John
14.23). He will come unto us and play our instrument (Batiushka tapped me
lightly on the chest).231
Since the Renaissance, and especially since the Romantic movement in the
late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, art has been abstracted from its
original function and context in religion. This has allowed a new, often
demonic content to enter into it. Nevertheless, insofar as secular art strives
towards harmony (which, unfortunately, cannot be said of much modern art),
it can help the soul that is sunk in disharmony to a limited extent.
Thus Archpriest Lev Lebedev compares the phenomena of culture to a
ladder, on the steps of which it is possible to go down and up For those
who live in the Church and are nourished by its very rich spiritual food, being
230
231
187
drawn by the secular works of art is a movement down the ladder. But for
those who are torn away from faith and the Church, who often know almost
nothing about the Church, but are accustomed to look on writers, poets,
artists and composers as their teachers, the works of secular art which directly
or indirectly speak in a good spirit about God and the Divine can become
steps upward to faith and the Church.232
At a certain point, when the soul is already beginning to hear the sounds of
the Divine Harmony consistently, it will lose its need and taste for the
harmonies of secular art. Thus St. Brendan the Navigator was once seen
putting cotton into his ears at a concert of the Irish bards. When asked why he
did this, he said: If you had heard the music of the angels, you would not
delight in this music.
Again, St. Barsanuphius said of himself: When I was in the world, I loved
opera. Good, serious music gave me pleasure and I always had a subscription
a seat in the orchestra. Later on, when I learned of different, spiritual
consolations, the opera ceased to interest me. When a valve of the heart closes
the receptivity of worldly enjoyments, another valve opens for the reception
of spiritual joys...233
For the man for whom this other valve has opened, only the art of the
Orthodox Church, and the music of prayer, will be delightful. This music [of
prayer], says St. Barsanuphius of Optina, is often spoken of in the Psalms:
The Lord is my strength and my song (Ps. 117.14); I will sing and I will
chant unto the Lord (Ps. 26.7); I will chant to my God as long as I have my
being (Ps. 103.35). This singing is inexpressible. In order to receive it people
go to monasteries, and they do receive it: one after five years, another after
ten, a third after fifteen, and a fourth after forty. May God grant you, too, to
receive it; at least youre on the road to it. 234
However, on the path to this consistent dwelling in the music of the soul,
there will be days when even the music and words of the Orthodox Church
fail to move us. For, as Shakespeare put it in The Merchant of Venice:
Such harmony is in immortal souls,
But whilst this muddy vesture of decay
Doth grossly close it in, we cannot hear it.
Lebedev, Velikorossia (Great Russia), St. Petersburg, 1999, p. 414 (in Russian).
Afanasyev, op. cit., pp. 440-441.
234 Afanasyev, op. cit., p. 712. Cf. The Six Psalms is a spiritual symphony, the life of the soul,
which embraces the whole soul and grants it the most sublime delight. People dont
understand this. Their hearts are stony. But music helps them feel all the beauty of the Six
Psalms. (p. 110).
232
233
188
189
190
word latreia to indicate the absolute worship of which only God is worthy.
He describes the relative veneration given to the Theotokos, saints, or sacred
objects (the Cross, relics, icons, books) by the word proskynesis. At the
writing of the Septuagint such distinctions were not strictly observed. Latreia
was seldom used and proskynesis was used to describe everything from
worship of God to paying respect to a friend. Although modern usage of
these terms (worship and veneration, etc.) are often interchanged as
synonyms, it has been critical to maintain their exact Orthodox use, consistent
with the explanation of St. John of Damascus, since the iconoclast controversy.
Although St. John the Theologian freely uses both worship (latreia) and
make obeisance (proskynesis) with relation to God, he never speaks of
offering worship (latreia) for anyone or anything outside of the Deity (cf.
Rev. 7.15, 22.3). Note that the KJV translates the Greek word prokynesis with
worship and latreia with serve. (Cf. St. John of Damascus, On the Divine
Images, 9-11). 235
It quite often takes time for real theological distinctions to acquire precise
verbal equivalents. Thus the early Fathers made little distinction between
ousia (essence) and hypostasis (person); but from the later fourth century
such a distinction became essential to the development of precision in
Trinitarian and Christological theology. In the same way, the Fathers of the
Seventh Ecumenical Council made use of the clear distinction made by St.
John of Damascus between proskynesis and latreia in order to expose the
falsehood of the iconoclast heresy. Unfortunately, this distinction was not
made clear in the translation into Latin of the Acts of the Seventh Council,
which led to Charlemagne rejecting the Council.236
As Bercot rightly says, we must not become prisoners of words, but
penetrate to the realities behind the words. And the fact is that, whatever
imprecisions of terminology may have existed at that time, the Old Testament
Holy Apostles Convent, Buena Vista, Colorado, The Orthodox New Testament, vol. 2, 1999,
p. 557.
236 Andrew Louth writes: The Frankish court received a Latin version of the decrees of
Nicaea II in which a central point was misrepresented: instead of an assertion that icons are
not venerated with the worship owed to God, the Latin version seems to have asserted
exactly the opposite, that icons are indeed venerated with the worship due to God alone.
There is certainly scope for misunderstanding here, especially when dealing with a translated
text, for the distinction that the iconodules had painstakingly drawn between a form of
veneration expressing honour and a form of veneration expressing worship has no natural
lexical equivalent. Proskynesis, which in Greek at this time probably carried a primary
connotation of bowing down, prostration a physical act and latreia, the word used for
worship exclusively due to God a matter of intention are derived from roots, which in
their verbal forms are used as a hendiadys in the Greek version of the second commandment
in the Septuagint (
:
you shall not bow down you sha ll not
worship: Exod. 20.5). Latin equivalents add further confusion, not least because the Latin
calque of proskynesis, adoratio, was the word that came to be used for latreia. But whatever
the potential confusion, the distinction explicitly made by the Nicene synod simply collapsed
into identity by the faulty translation that made its way to the Frankish court (Greek East and
Latin West, Crestwood, N.Y.: St. Vladimirs Seminary Press, 2007, pp. 86-87).
235
191
Jews most certainly did make a practical distinction between veneration and
worship. They venerated and bowed down to certain physical objects and
people, while worshipping God alone. And they neither venerated nor
worshipped the idols of the pagans.
The Jews veneration of certain holy objects was central to their spiritual
life, and was never at any time confused with idolatry. Was not the ark
considered to be holy and the dwelling-place of God? And did not God
confirm the veneration in which it was held by striking dead Uzzah, who had
handled it without sufficient reverence? Again, did not Abraham and David
bow down to men and angels? And did not God command Solomon to build
a temple with images in it, so that he overlaid the cherubim with gold and
carved all the walls of the house round about with carved figures of cherubim
and palm trees and open flowers, in the inner and outer rooms (I Kings 6.2829)? And yet, if Bercot is right, and we cannot make any distinction between
worship and veneration, this must be counted as impious idol-worship!
God not only blessed sacred art that is, art whose products were deemed
to be sacred in the Old Testament. He clearly attached great importance to it
by sending down grace upon the artist. Thus of Belzalel He said: I have filled
him with the Spirit of God with ability and intelligence, with knowledge and
all craftsmanship to devise artistic designs, to work in gold, silver and bronze,
in cutting stones for setting and in carving wood, for work in every craft
(Exodus 31.2-4). According to tradition, Christ Himself sent an image of
Himself to King Abgar of Edessa, who treated it with great reverence. In the
early Church, grace was given to specially commissioned artists, such as the
Evangelist Luke, who painted several icons that have survived to the present
day. According to British tradition, St. Joseph of Arimathaea brought an icon
of the Mother of God to Glastonbury, where it remained until it was
destroyed by Protestant iconoclasts in the 1520s. We know from Eusebius
History of the Church that the woman with an issue of blood whom Christ
healed built a statue of Him which worked miracles for many years and was
never condemned as idolatry by the Church. Archaeological excavations have
unearthed Christian iconography from very early times. And of course the
Roman catacombs are full of icons.
This evidence shows that in the early Church the tradition of iconography
was present in embryo. What prevented the embryo from growing quickly
into the fully mature adult of later Byzantine iconography was not any
theological objection to sacred art as such, but, as we have said, the still living
tradition of pagan idolatry. If we read the Wisdom of Solomon, chapters 12 to
15, we see that pagan idolatry involved: (i) the worship of inanimate objects
as gods; (ii) the rejection of the true and living God; and (iii) various kinds of
immorality (child sacrifice, temple prostitution) associated with the cult of the
false gods. On all three counts, the veneration of icons must be sharply
distinguished from pagan idolatry: (i) icons are neither gods, nor worshipped.
192
(ii) they lead us closer to, rather than away from, the true God; and (iii) they
have no connection with immoral practices, but rather stimulate purity and
chastity. And yet there is no doubt that if the iconoclasts of the 8th and 9 th
centuries, and the Protestants of the 16th century, failed to understand the
distinction between icon-veneration and idol-worship, there must have been a
similar temptation for pagan converts to the Faith in the early centuries.
Just because the pagans used [images] in a foul way, writes St. John of
Damascus, that is no reason to object to our pious practices. Sorcerers and
magicians use incantations and the Church prays over catechumens, the
former conjure up demons while the Church calls upon God to exorcise the
demons. Pagans make images of demons which they address as gods, but we
make images of God incarnate, and of His servants and friends, and with
them we drive away the demonic hosts.237
On one point, however, the Orthodox Christians and the pagans are,
paradoxically, closer to each other than either are to the iconoclasts and
Protestants. For both agree, contrary to the latter, that matter can become spiritbearing. An image can become a channel of the Holy Spirit, as in Christian
iconography, or a channel of the evil spirit, as in witchcraft. The spittle of
Christ, the shadow of Peter and the handkerchief of Paul all worked miracles
because the Holy Spirit was in them; and all the sacraments involve material
objects water, oil, bread and wine. Similarly, the objects used by Satanists
and witches also work miracles through the evil spirit that is in them; and
their sacraments, too, always have a material element.
The Protestants, on the other hand, while not rejecting sacraments
altogether, diminish their significance and the material element in them. Thus
whereas the Lord clearly decrees that baptism is through water and the
spirit, born again Christians usually dispense with the water part
altogether, thinking they can receive the Spirit without it.
Since we are made of soul and body, the Word took on a soul and a body
in order to save the whole of us soul and body. Therefore the flesh and
matter are no barrier to worship in the Spirit: rather, flesh and matter must
become spiritualized, filled with the Spirit, in order to commune with the
immaterial. And to this end the Flesh of the incarnate of God is given to us in
the Eucharist.
It follows that it is not the materiality of icons as such that is critical, but
the use to which they are put. The pagans, as St. John of Damascus said, use
material images for evil uses, to commune with evil spirits. The Orthodox,
however, use them for good uses, to commune with the One True God.
237
193
194
the Muslims and the iconoclasts, the Bogomils and the Albigensians, the
Protestants and the Masons and the Soviets, to destroy icons and crosses and
relics and churches. And that is why the Church anathematizes the
iconoclasts and iconoclasm as a most dangerous heresy. For let us not think
that we do God service while destroying those things in which God dwells
and through which He helps us to come close to Him. If we think that God
cannot dwell in material things, or work miracles through holy icons and
relics, then by implication we are denying the reality of the Incarnation, in
which God not only worked through matter, but became flesh. That is why the
main argument in defence of icons is based on the reality of the Incarnation. If
the immaterial Word was made flesh, and seen and touched, why cannot we
make images of His human body, and touch and kiss them? And if the
burning of the national flag is considered treason by those who love their
country, why should not the destroying or dishonouring of the holy icons be
considered blasphemy by those who love their Lord?
As St. Basil the Great says, the honour accorded to the image passes to its
prototype, so that the icon is a kind of door (St. Stephen the Younger)
opening up into the world of the Spirit. This is not a pagan principle, as
Bercot claims; and if the pagans have something analogous, it only goes to
show that in this, as in many other ways, false religion simply apes the true.
To put it in a more philosophical way, we may say that this is the principle of
the symbolical or analogical nature of reality, whereby lower-order realities
reflect and participate in higher-order realities, as the light of the moon
reflects and participates in the light of the sun. The Catholic West began to
lose this symbolical understanding of reality when Charlemagne rejected the
veneration of icons at the council of Frankfurt in 794; and the Protestant West
lost it entirely when it replaced symbolic truth with scientific truth, the
appreciation of qualities with the analysis of quantities. In this respect, the
Protestant-scientific revolution represents not so much the triumph of reason
over superstition as the beginning of a descent into something even lower
than paganism, as Dostoyevsky pointed out - the descent into atheism, the
complete loss of faith in spiritual reality. Correspondingly, the return to iconveneration in the West would represent the beginning of a return to true faith,
the faith that ascends in and through material things to the immaterial God.
I end with a quotation from a holy Father of the Pre-Nicene Church,
Hieromartyr Methodius, Bishop of Patara: Even though the images of the
emperor are not all made from gold or silver or precious metals, they are
always honoured by everyone. Men are not honouring the materials from
which they are made; they do not choose to honour one image more than
another because it is made from a more valuable substance; they honour the
image whether it is made of cement or bronze. If you should mock any of
them, you will not be judged differently for mocking plaster or gold, but for
195
showing contempt to your king and lord. We make golden images of Gods
angels, principalities and powers, to give glory and honour to Him.239
June 20 / July 3, 2004; revised May 13/26, 2010.
239
196
197
The icon is a portrayal, not of the Divine Nature of the Father, but of His
Divine Person. Moreover, it depicts Him, not realistically, but symbolically,
not as He really is, in His Divine Nature, which is forever unattainable and
undepictable, but only as He appeared to the prophet in a symbolic form or
image for the sake of our understanding. The Son really became a man, so the
depiction of the Son as a man in icons is a realistic depiction. The Father never
became a man, so the depiction of Him as a man in icons is a symbolic, not a
realistic depiction. In exactly the same way, the Holy Spirit never became a
dove, so the depiction of Him as a dove in icons is not a realistic, but a
symbolic depiction of Him, being a depiction of Him as He appeared in a
symbolic form or image to St. John the Forerunner in the Baptism of Christ in
the Jordan.
Two critical distinctions are implicit here: (a) between nature and person,
and (b) between the Divine Nature (or Essence) and Energies.
(a) Icons, as St. Theodore the Studite teaches are representations, not of
natures, but of persons existing in natures. Act 6 of the Seventh Ecumenical
Council states: "An icon is not like the original with respect to essence, but
with respect to hypostasis". St. Theodore put it as follows: The image is
always dissimilar to the prototype with regard to essence (
), but it
is similar to it with regard to hypostasis (
) and name (
240
).
Thus an icon of Christ is an image of a Divine Person in His human nature,
which is visible to the bodily eye; and the icons of the angels are images of the
persons of the angels in their angelic nature, which is invisible to the bodily
eye. Nevertheless, God has condescended to allow the prophets and the saints
to see the angels in bodily form, and it is these visions that we depict in the
icons of the angels. For, as Vladimir Lossky writes, it is not nature which
sees nature, but person who sees person. 241
(b) The distinction between the Divine Nature (or Essence) and Energies
was clearly worked out by St. Gregory Palamas. Both the Nature and the
Energies of God are common to all Three Persons. Only the Divine Nature is
forever inaccessible to man (like the centre of the sun), while the Energies are
God coming out of Himself, as it were, and making Himself communicable to
men (like the rays of the sun).
The visions of God by the Old Testament Prophets are visions of the Divine
Energies of God, not of His Essence. Thus St. Gregory Palamas, commenting
on the Patriarch Jacob's words: "I have seen God face to face [or person to
person], and my soul has been saved", writes: "Let [the cacodox] hear that
St. Theodore the Studite, Antirrheticus, P.G. 99:405B; in V. Lossky, The Vision of God,
Leighton Buzzard: Faith Press, 1963, p. 112.
241 Lossky, op. cit., p. 111.
240
198
Jacob saw the face of God, and not only was his life not taken away, but as he
himself says, it was saved, in spite of the fact that God says: 'None shall see
My face and live'. Are there then two Gods, one having His face accessible to
the vision of the saints, and the other having His face beyond all vision?
Perish the impiety! The face of God which is seen is the Energy and Grace of
God condescending to appear to those who are worthy; while the face of God
that is never seen, which is beyond all appearance and vision let us call the
Nature of God."
Abraham's vision at the oak of Mamre was likewise a vision of God, not in
His Essence, but in His Energies. Thus St. John Chrysostom writes: How is it
that elsewhere Scripture says, No one will see God and live (Exodus 33.20)?
How, then, would we interpret the words of Scripture, He appeared? How
did He appear to the just man? Surely he didnt see His true being? No God
forbid. What, then? He was seen in the way He alone knows and in the
manner possible for Abram to see. In His inventiveness, you see, our wise and
loving Lord, showing considerateness for our human nature, reveals Himself
to those who worthily prepare themselves in advance. He explains this
through the sacred author in the words, I gave many visions and took shape
in the works of the inspired authors (Hosea 12.2). Isaiah in his time saw him
seated, something that is inapplicable to God, since He doesnt sit down
how could He, after all, with His unique nature being incorporeal and
indefectible? Daniel too saw Him, as the Ancient of Days. Zechariah had a
different vision of Him, and Ezekiel in turn a different one. This is the reason,
therefore, that He said, I gave many visions, that is, I appeared in a way
suited to each one. 242
Again, St. John of Damascus, the great defender of the icons, writes:
"Abraham did not see the Nature of God, for no one has seen God at any time,
but an icon of God, and falling down he venerated it."
As the True Orthodox Fathers of Katounakia aptly put it: "There is no icon
representing the Nature or Essence of God, but there is an icon of the 'icon' of
God." (p. 30).
As for whether we can call it an icon of the Holy Trinity, Saints Justin the
Martyr, Irenaeus and John Chrysostom say that Abraham saw Christ and two
angels. But St. Ambrose says say that he saw the Holy Trinity in the form of
three young men or angels. St. Philaret of Moscow writes: It is the custom of
the Church to represent the mystery of the Holy Trinity in the form of three
Angels appearing to Abraham, which shows that pious antiquity saw a
symbol of the Holy Trinity in the number of these Angels; for symbolic icons
are more ancient than historical ones in the Church.243
St. John Chrysostom, Homily 32 on Genesis, 4.
St. Philaret, Zapiski rukovodstvuiuschia k osnovatelnomu razumeniu Knigi Bytia (Notes
leading to a Basic Understanding of the Book of Genesis), Moscow, 1867, p. 122 (in Russian).
242
243
199
2. The term "Ancient of Days", like "God", is applicable to all Three Persons
of the Holy Trinity. Therefore there is no contradiction between allowing that
Christ can be called "the Ancient of Days", as in the hymnology for the Feast
of the Meeting of the Lord, and believing that "the Ancient of Days" in the
vision of Daniel is God the Father. Hieromartyr Hippolytus of Rome (P.G. 10,
37), St. Athanasius the Great (V.E.P. 35, 121), St. John Chrysostom (P.G. 57, 133;
E.P.E. 8, 640-2), St. Gregory Palamas (Homilies 14, E.P.E. 9, 390), St. Cyril of
Alexandria (P.G. 70, 1461), St. Symeon of Thessalonica (Interpretation of the
Sacred Symbol, p. 412), and St. Nicodemus the Hagiorite (The Rudder,
Zakynthos, 1864, p. 320; Chicago, 1957, p. 420) all agree in identifying the
Ancient of Days in the vision of Daniel with God the Father. They interpret
the vision as portraying the Ascension of Christ ("the Son of Man") to God the
Father ("the Ancient of Days"), from Whom He receives the Kingdom and the
Glory, together with the power to judge the living and the dead. Thus St.
Cyril of Alexandria writes: Behold, again Emmanuel is manifestly and
clearly seen ascending to God the Father in heaven The Son of Man has
appeared in the flesh and reached the Ancient of Days, that is, He has
ascended to the throne of His eternal Father and has been given honor and
worship (Letter 55, in The Fathers of the Church, vol. 77, Washington: CUA
Press, 1987, pp. 28, 29). There are some Holy Fathers who speak in favour of
the Ancient of Days being Christ in this vision (see The Lives of the Holy
Prophets, Holy Apostles Convent, Buena Vista, 1998, pp. 407-408).
Nevertheless, Gabriel's interpretation of this vision as a prophecy of the
Incarnation, "the Son of Man" being the human nature of Christ and "the
Ancient of Days" His Divine Nature, is difficult to support in that the two
figures in the vision clearly represent Persons, not Natures, and the attempt to
represent the two natures of Christ in separation, as if they each had an
independent enhypostatic existence, smacks of Nestorianism. That is why we
prefer the interpretation that the Ancient of Days in this vision is the Father.
The fact that in Revelation 1 Christ is portrayed with white hair does not
undermine this interpretation. Christ as an old man symbolically signifies His
antiquity, the fact that He has existed from the beginning. Christ as a young
man is a realistic image of His Incarnation as a man and a symbolic image of
His agelessness as God. These images together teach us that Christ God
passes unchanging through all ages from the beginning to the end. Revelation
also portrays Christ as a lamb, which signifies that He was slain for the sins of
the world. The Father and the Spirit also have different symbolical
representations. The Father is represented visually as a man (in Isaiah, Daniel,
Stephen's vision in Acts and in Revelation) and aurally as a voice from heaven
(at the Baptism of Christ and in John 12.28). Similarly the Spirit is represented
as a bird (in Genesis 1 and at the Baptism of Christ) and as a wind and
tongues of fire (at Pentecost).
200
201
Then again, if it be considered that even the Holy Spirit ought to be painted in
the shape of a dove, just as it actually appeared, we say that, in view of the
fact that a certain Persian by the name of Xanaeus used to assert, among other
things, that it is a matter of infantile knowledge (i.e., that it is a piece of
infantile mentality or an act of childishness) for the Holy Spirit to be painted
in a picture just as It appeared in the semblance of a
dove, whereas, on the other hand, the holy and Ecumenical Seventh
Council (Act 5, p. 819 of the second volume of the Conciliar Records)
anathematized him along with other iconoclasts, it may be concluded as a
logical inference that according to the Seventh Ecumenical Council It ought to
be painted or depicted in icons and other pictures in the shape of a dove, as it
appeared As for the fact that the Holy Spirit is to be painted in the shape of
a dove, that is proven even by this, to wit, the fact that the Fathers of this
Council admitted the doves hung over baptismal founts and sacrificial altars
to be all right to serve as a type of the Holy Spirit (Act 5, p. 830). As for the
assertion made in the Sacred Trumpet (the Encomium of the Three Hierarchs)
to the effect that the Father ought not to be depicted in paintings, according to
Acts 4, 5, and 6 of the Seventh Ecumenical Council, we have read these
particular Acts searchingly, but have found nothing of the kind, except only
the statement that the nature of the Holy Trinity cannot be exhibited
pictorially because It is shapeless and invisible".244
As regards the councils of 1666 and 1780, even if they were without
reproach in every other respect, they cannot be accepted as expressing the
Tradition of the Church if they contradict the decrees of the Seventh
Ecumenical Council as well as the constant practice of the Church since
Roman times.
However, there are other strong reasons for not accepting these councils.
The Moscow council of 1666 was convened by the Tsar in order to defrock the
righteous Patriarch Nikon; but only 16 years later, in 1682, this decision of the
Moscow council was annulled by the Eastern Patriarchs. In any case, the
prime force at the council, "Metropolitan" Paisios Ligarides, had already been
defrocked by the Patriarch of Jerusalem for his crypto-papism. Thus far from
expressing the Holy Tradition of the Orthodox Church against westernizing
influences, the "Pan-Orthodox" council of Moscow actually represented a
victory for westernism! Which is probably why Russia was flooded with the
supposedly illegal icons of the Holy Trinity precisely after this council!
As for the Constantinopolitan council of 1780, it was convened by the same
Patriarch, Sophronios II, who four years earlier had unjustly condemned
Athanasios of Paros for following the laws of the Church in refusing to carry
out memorials for the dead on Sunday instead of Saturday.
St. Nicodemus, (The Rudder, Chicago: Orthodox Christian Educational Society, 1957, pp.
420-421).
244
202
Another important historical point is the fact that the famous "Reigning"
icon of the Mother of God, which went before the Russian armies fighting
against Napoleon in 1812, and was miraculously discovered and renewed in
Moscow at the precise moment that Tsar Nicolas II abdicated, on March 2,
1917, clearly portrays the Father as an old man at the top of the icon. Is it
possible that God should have worked miracles through an icon that is
heretical and blasphemous? Nor is this the only icon portraying the Father
that has worked miracles. Another wonderworking icon of the Holy Trinity
has been found in recent times in the possession of True Orthodox Christians
in the region of Thessaloniki. This timing and location is significant, because
perhaps the first opponent of the icon in the recent controversy, Dr.
Alexander Kalomiros, was once in the True Orthodox Church in Thessaloniki,
but left it and died while speaking against the holy icon.
*
In conclusion, let us consider an icon which everyone accepts to be
canonical and in accordance with Orthodox Tradition - the icon of the
Transfiguration of Christ. Who or what is represented in this icon?
Clearly, the icon represents the Divine Person of Christ, Who exists
inseparably in His Divine and human natures.
Now the particular significance of this icon of Christ is that we see in it not
only the visible part of His human nature - His body, but also the Divine
Energies that flow from His Divine Essence - the Divine Light.
And yet, as St. Gregory Palamas writes, "the Light of the Transfiguration of
the Lord has no beginning and no end; it remains uncircumscribed (in time
and space) and imperceptible to the senses, although it was contemplated...
But the disciples of the Lord passed here from the flesh into the spirit by a
transmutation of their senses." And again he writes: "The Divine Light is not
material, there was nothing perceptible about the Light which illuminated the
apostles on Mount Tabor."
Now if we follow Gabriel's argument through to its logical conclusion,
iconographers who depict the Divine Light of the Transfiguration are falling
into the heresy of circumscribing the uncircumscribable. For unlike the body
of Christ, the Divine Light that flowed from His body is uncircumscribable
and imperceptible to the senses. But this conclusion is obviously absurd and
against Tradition.
The correct conclusion which needs to be drawn is that iconographers are
permitted to depict, not only realities that are accessible to our bodily senses,
such as the bodies of Christ and the saints, but also those invisible realities,
203
204
See, for example, St. Photius the Great's Homily on the Nativity of the Virgin.
Blessed Augustine, On Marriage as a Good, 6.
247 Sermons and Addresses of the Metropolitan Philaret, Moscow, 1844, part II, p. 87; quoted in
Vladimir Lossky, The Mystical Theology of the Eastern Church, London: James Clarke, 1957, p. 8.
245
246
205
206
my bones, and flesh of my flesh; she shall be called woman, because she was
taken out of her man. Therefore shall a man leave his father and his mother
and shall cleave to his wife, and they two shall be one flesh" (2.23).
The Lord Himself quoted these words in the context of His discussion of
divorce (Matthew 19.4-5), so their authority is great. Divorce is wrong,
because marriage was constituted from the beginning, in Paradise, as an
unbreakable bond creating a single new unit. A unit, moreover, not only of
spirit, but also of flesh.
The holy new Russian confessor Bishop Gregory (Lebedev) has
commented on these words in an illuminating way: "'And they two shall be
one flesh, so that they are no longer two, but one flesh', that is, the people
have ceased to exist separately even in the physical sense. They have become
one physical body, 'one flesh'. That is what the fulfilment of the will of God
has done... It has not only completed and broadened their souls in a mutual
intermingling, it has changed their physical nature and out of two physical
existences it has made one whole existence. That is the mystery of marriage.
Having explained it, the Lord concludes with a mild reproach to the Pharisees:
'Well, what do you want? What are you asking about? How after this can a
man leave his wife? That would be unnatural! In marriage we have a mutual
completion of life! But you want Me to approve the destruction of this
completion?! And in marriage we have a creative act, an act of God, Who
creates one life... How can you want Me to destroy life created by God? This is
unnatural... Don't think of encroaching on marriage! What God has joined
together, let man not put asunder'."250
It follows that it is not enough to define the purpose of marriage as
procreation alone. Marriage is not procreation, but creation, the creation of one
new life out of two; and this new life has value in itself, quite apart from the
fact that it is the means towards the procreation of further life. Otherwise the
union of childless couples would be without value.
That the marriage of childless couples can be blessed by God is clearly seen,
for example, in the lives of Saints Joachim and Anna. Although society
condemned them for their childlessness, they were righteous in the eyes of
God. And eventually they were rewarded by the birth of the Mother of God,
who appeared, not as the justification of their marriage, but as the natural
fruit of its manifest righteousness.
(b) "It is not good for man to be alone, let Us make for him a help suitable
to him" (2.18 - the Septuagint text literally translated is: "according to him",
just as man was made "according to the image of God"). In Tobit this passage
207
is paraphrased as: "Thou madest Adam, and gavest him Eve his wife for an
helper and support" (8.6). What kind of support is meant here?
St. Augustine, followed by most of the Western Fathers, replies: "for the
sake of the procreation of sons, just as a support to the seed in the earth is that
a thicket should grow on either side".251
However, St. Basil the Great takes a more spiritual view in his treatise, On
Virginity; the support which is meant here, he says, is the general support
that a woman gives to her husband in passing through life.
And Blessed Theodoret of Cyrus writes: "He bade her satisfy the man's
desire, not a passion for pleasure, but by showing him the rational need of her
society".252
Again, the holy new Martyr-Patriarch Tikhon writes: "Without a helpmate
the very bliss of paradise was not perfect for Adam: endowed with the gift of
thought, speech, and love, the first man seeks with his thought another
thinking being; his speech sounds lonely and the dead echo alone answers
him; his heart, full of love, seeks another heart that would be close and equal
to him; all his being longs for another being analogous to him, but there is
none; the creatures of the visible world around him are below him and are not
fit to be his mates; and as to the beings of the invisible spiritual world they are
above. Then the bountiful God, anxious for the happiness of man, satisfies his
wants and creates a mate for him - a wife. But if a mate was necessary for man
in paradise, in the region of bliss, the mate became much more necessary for
him after the fall, in the vale of tears and sorrow. The wise man of antiquity
spoke justly: 'two are better than one, for if they fall, the one will lift up his
fellow: but woe to him that is alone when he falleth; for he hath not another to
help him up' (Sirach 4.9-10). But few people are capable of enduring the strain
of moral loneliness, it can be accomplished only by effort, and truly 'all men
cannot receive this saying, save they to whom it is given' (Matthew 19.11),
and as for the rest - 'it is not good for a man to be alone', without a mate."253
Marriage in the Fall. Like everything else that was created good by God in
the beginning, marriage has been corrupted by the Fall. Unbelief ("ye shall not
surely die" (3.15)), pride ("ye shall be as gods" (3.6)) and sensuality ("the tree
was good for food, and pleasant to the eyes to look upon, and beautiful to
contemplate" (3.7)) invaded the nature, first of the woman, and then of the
man. The Fall did not completely destroy the joyful, paradisiac image of
marriage; but, as Vladimir Lossky points out, "this paradisiac 'eros' would
have been as different from our fallen and devouring sexuality as the
Blessed Augustine, On Marriage as a Good, 6.
Blessed Theodoret, Commentary on Deuteronomy 21.13.
253 "An Address of the Right Reverend Tikhon", Orthodox Life, vol. 37, 4, July-August, 1987,
pp. 3-4.
251
252
208
sacerdotal royalty of man over created being is from their actual devouring of
each other. For the Fall has changed the very meaning of the words.
Sexuality, this 'multiplication' which God ordains and blesses, appears in our
universe as irremediably bound to separation and death. The human
condition has experienced a catastrophic mutation right down to its biological
reality. But human love would not be pregnant with such a paradisiac
nostalgia if there did not remain in it the sad memory of an original condition
in which the other and the world was experienced from within, when death
did not exist..."254
Both Adam and Eve failed to fulfil the law of marriage as God had
ordained it. Thus Eve failed in her task of spiritually supporting Adam by
offering him the forbidden fruit. But Adam, too, failed in his responsibility
towards her. Instead of enlightening her about the devil's deception, and
leading her back to obedience to God, he weakly followed her example. And
instead of taking the blame for the whole affair upon himself, as befitted the
head of the family, he bitterly put the blame on his wife - and indirectly on
God Who had created her for him (3.13).
Thus they both felt guilty, and their shame took on a specifically physical
form: "And the eyes of both were opened, and they perceived that they were
naked" (3.8).
Blessed Augustine sees in this consciousness of nakedness the first stirrings
of lust. For "the rational soul blushed at the bestial movements in the
members of the flesh and inspired it with shame, not only because it felt this
there where it had never sensed anything similar, but also because that
shameful
movement
came
from
the
transgression
of
the
255
commandment". Thus the passionless delight in the other became the
passionate desire for the other; "flesh of my flesh" was now "flesh for my flesh".
Against this new, devouring force in human nature, protection was needed;
and a first protection was provided by God in the "coats of skin" - modesty is
the first step towards chastity. There is another, more spiritual interpretation
of the "coats of skin", according to which they signify the fallen passions in
which man was now clothed.
However, modesty alone cannot control this passion in fallen man. A
stronger restraint is required - and marriage provides that restraint. "For
marriage," says St. John Chrysostom, "was not instituted for debauchery and
fornication, but to prevent the one and the other: 'on account of fornications,'
says St. Paul, 'let each man have his wife, and each woman her husband' (I
Lossky, "Theologie Dogmatique (1)" Messager de l'Exarchat du Patriarchat Russe en Europe
Occidentale ((Dogmatic Theology (1), Messenger of the Exarchate of the Patriarchate of Russia in
Western Europe), 48, October-December, 1964, pp. 224-225 (in French).
255 Blessed Augustine, On Genesis according to the Letter, XI, xxxxii.
254
209
Corinthians 7.2). There are two reasons for which marriage was instituted: to
regulate our lust and to give us children: but the first is the principal one. The
day on which lust was introduced was the day on which marriage was
introduced to regulate it by leading the man to be content with one woman.
"As for the procreation of children, marriage does not absolutely enjoin it.
That responds rather to this word of God in Genesis: 'Increase and multiply
and fill the earth' (1.28). The proof of this is the large number of marriages
which cannot have children.
"That is why the first reason for marriage is to regulate lust, and especially
now that the human race has filled the whole earth". 256
An important consequence of this view is that sexual pleasure in marriage,
far from being an evil or inessential by-product of marriage, is to be
welcomed - and this not for hedonistic, but for moral reasons. For if the man
does not obtain sexual pleasure in marriage, he is likely to seek it elsewhere,
thus destroying the one-flesh relationship and endangering both his and his
wife's salvation. Hence the forthright exhortation of St. Ignatius the Godbearer: "Speak to my sisters that they love the Lord, and be satisfied with their
husbands in flesh and in spirit".257
The doctrine of the majority of the Eastern Fathers on this point may be
summed up in words from a poem by St. Gregory the Theologian:
For man and wife the union of wedlock is a bolted door securing chastity and
restraining desire,
And it is a seal of natural affection,
They possess the loving colt which cheers the heart by gamboling,
And a single drink from their private fountain untasted by strangers,
Which neither flows outwards, nor gathers its waters from without.
Wholly united in the flesh, concordant in spirit, by love
They sharpen in one another a like spur to piety.258
But marriage in the Fall restrains more than lust alone. The pride and
pleasure-seeking that led to the Fall are also corrected, and God achieves this
through their opposites - pain and humiliation. Thus "to the woman He said, I
will greatly multiply thy pains and thy groanings; in pain thou shalt bring
forth children, and thy turning shall be to thy husband, and he shall rule over
thee" (Genesis 3.17). Having turned to the devil in disobedience to God, the
woman must learn obedience to God in turning to her husband. And having
spoken to him to his ruin, she must now listen to him to her gain.
St. John Chrysostom, First Discourse on Marriage
St. Ignatius, To Polycarp, 5.
258 St. Gregory the Theologian, In Praise of Virginity, 11.263-75, translated in Orthodox Life,
November-December, 1981.
256
257
210
St. Paul develops the theme: "Let the woman learn in silence with all
subjection. But I suffer not a woman to teach, nor to usurp authority over the
man, but to be in silence. For Adam was first formed, then Eve. And Adam
was not deceived, but the woman being deceived was in the transgression.
Notwithstanding, she shall be saved in childbearing, if they continue in faith
and charity and holiness with sobriety" (I Timothy 2.11-15). Wives are to be
"discreet, chaste, keepers at home, good, obedient to their own husbands, that
the word of God be not blasphemed" (Titus 2.5). Nor is this obedience only for
their own sake: "Likewise, ye wives, be in subjection to your own husbands;
that, if any obey not the word, they also may without the word be won by the
conduct of the wives; while they behold your chaste conduct coupled with
fear" (I Peter 3.1-2).
"And to Adam He said, Because thou hast hearkened to the voice of thy
wife, and eaten of the tree concerning which I charged thee of it only not to
eat - of that thou hast eaten, cursed is the ground in thy labours, in pain thou
shalt eat of it all the days of thy life. Thorns and thistles shall it bring forth to
thee, and thou shalt eat the herb of the field. In the sweat of thy face shalt
thou eat thy bread until thou shalt return" (Genesis 3.18-20). Thus for his
weakness of will and lack of true love for his wife, the man is condemned to
work to support her and his family for the rest of his life, groaning not only
under the physical burden but also in anxiety of spirit. For "if any provide not
for his own, and specially for those of his own house, he hath denied the Faith,
and is worse than an infidel" (I Timothy 5.8). But in thus having to care for her,
he will learn more truly to love her, subduing his anger and bitterness:
"Husbands, love your wives, and be not bitter against them" (Colossians 3.19).
"Likewise, ye husbands, dwell with them according to knowledge, giving
honour unto the wife, as unto the weaker vessel, and as being heirs together
of the grace of life; that your prayers be not hindered" (I Peter 3.7).
Whereas obedience in marriage is one-way, exhortation must be mutual.
Thus St. Tikhon of Zadonsk writes: "The husband and wife must lay virtue,
and not passion, as the foundation of their love, that is, when the husband
sees any fault in his wife, he must nudge her meekly, and the wife must
submit to her husband in this. Likewise when a wife sees some fault in her
husband, she must exhort him, and he is obliged to hear her."259
Marriage in Christ. Marriage in the Fall restrains sin and lust, but it cannot
extirpate them entirely. But Christ, writes Clement of Alexandria "condemns
more than just imagining having sex with a woman. For to fantasize is
already to commit an act of lust. Rather, Jesus goes further. He condemns any
man who looks on the beauty of a woman with carnal and sinful admiration.
It is a different matter, however, to look on beauty with chaste love. Chaste
love does not admire the beauty of the flesh. It admires the beauty of the spirit.
259
St. Tikhon, Journey to Heaven, Holy Trinity Monastery, Jordanville, 1991. p. 117
211
With such love, a person sees the body only as an image. His admiration
carries him through to the Artist himself - to true beauty."260
However, a completely chaste love of beauty is unattainable to fallen man.
The spirit is willing - for "I loved Her, and sought Her out from my youth; I
desired to make Her my spouse, and I was a lover of Her beauty" (Wisdom
8.2; Proverbs 4.6). But the flesh is weak - for "the corruptible body presses
down on the soul, and the earthly tabernacle weighs down the mind that
muses upon many things" (Wisdom 9.15). That is why God became man and
united His Spirit to our flesh, so as to purify our flesh and make it in all things
conformed to His Spirit. "For what the law could not do, in that it was weak
through the flesh, God sending His own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh,
and for sin, condemned sin in the flesh: that the righteousness of the law
might be fulfilled in us, who walk not after the flesh, but after the Spirit"
(Romans 8.3-4).
Through the grace communicated to our flesh in the mystery of the Body
and Blood of Christ, the disordered passions of our fallen nature are first
crucified and then resurrected to new life. Sexuality is not destroyed
completely; for it was there, as we have seen, in the beginning, before the Fall.
Rather, it is resurrected in a new form.
Thus St. John of the Ladder writes: "Someone told me of an extraordinarily
high degree of purity. He said: 'A certain man, on seeing a beautiful woman,
thereupon glorified the Creator; and from that one look, he was moved to the
love of God and a fountain of tears. And it was wonderful to see how what
would have been a cause of destruction for one was for another the
supernatural cause of a crown.' If such a person always feels and behaves in
the same way on similar occasions, then he has risen immortal before the
general resurrection."261
For fallen man, marriage is a virtual necessity; and even in Christ it is the
best path to chastity for most. However, Christ by His Coming and Example
has opened up another path to the same end - that of virginity or monasticism.
For He is the New Adam, just as His Mother is the New Eve - and both, of
course, are Virgins.
Monasticism is the more direct, more arduous way to the summit; and to
reach it by this path brings a special reward. True monastics attain in this life
to the condition of the life to come, in which "they neither marry nor are given
in marriage... for they are equal to the angels" (Luke 20.35, 36). Marriage is the
less direct route, with many stops on the way and with the consequent danger
of becoming distracted by the scenery along the way (I Corinthians 7.31-33).
Clement of Alexandria, The One Who Knows God, Tyler, Texas: Scroll Publishing, 1990, pp.
90-91.
261 St. John of the Ladder, The Ladder of Divine Ascent, Step 15:60.
260
212
That is why St. Paul says: "I would that all men were even as myself [i.e.
virgins]... But every man hath his proper charisma, one after this manner, and
another after that" (I Corinthians 7.7).
Marriage in Christ recreates the image of Adam and Eve in Paradise, when
there was no pride or lust or jealousy. Thus, as Alexis Khomiakov says, "for
the husband, his companion is not just one of many women, but the woman;
and her mate is not one of many men, but the man. For both of them the rest of
the race has no sex."262 Monasticism, on the other hand, recreates the image of
Adam not only before the Fall, but also before the creation of Eve, when he
had eyes for God alone. In this sense, as St. Ambrose of Milan points out,
monasticism, the state of being a "monad", alone with God, is even more
primordially natural than marriage.263
However, there is no contradiction between the perfection of the monastic
monad and the perfection of the marital dyad, just as there is no contradiction
between the commandment to love God with all one's heart and the
commandment to love one's neighbour as oneself. Just as the first
commandment is greater than the second, so is the virginal state greater than
the marital. But they are both holy, both pure.
Archbishop Theophanes of Poltava sums up the question well: "It is
necessary, first of all, to establish a correct understanding of marriage in
principle, and then to examine the question from a practical point of view.
There are two extreme viewpoints with regard to this question which are in
principle incorrect: both that which considers marriage to be an evil and that
which completely abolishes the difference in inner merit between marriage
and virginity. The first extreme is seen in many mystical sects, the second is a
generally accepted opinion in the Protestant West, from where it has
succeeded in penetrating Orthodox literature also. According to the latter
viewpoint, both the married and the virginal ways of life are simply defined
as individual characteristics of a man, and nothing special or exalted is seen in
the virginal way by comparison with the married state. In his time Blessed
Jerome thoroughly refuted this viewpoint in his work: 'Two Books against
Jovinian'. While the positive teaching of the Church was beautifully expressed
by St. Seraphim in the words: 'Marriage is a good, but virginity is a better
than good good!' True Christian marriage is the union of the souls of those
being married that is sanctified by the grace of God. It gives them happiness
and serves as the foundation of the Christian family, that 'house church'. That
is what it is in principle; but unfortunately it is not like that in our time for the
Khomiakov, in Orthodox Life, November-December, 1983, p. 22.
St. Ambrose, On Paradise 4.25. St. Ephraim the Syrian expresses the tradition that Adam
was androgynous before the creation of Eve when he writes: "Adam was both one and two;
one in that he was man [adam], two in that he was created male and female" (Commentary on
Genesis 2.12; quoted in Robert Murray, Symbols of Church and Kingdom, Cambridge University
Press, 1975, p. 302).
262
263
213
most part. The general decline in Christian life has wounded marriage, too.
Generally speaking, people in recent times have forgotten that the grace of
God is communicated in the sacrament of marriage. One must always
remember this grace, stir it up and live in its spirit. Then the love of the man
for the woman and of the woman for the man will be pure, deep and a source
of happiness for them. For this love, too, is a blessed gift of God. Only people
do not know how to make use of this gift in a fitting manner! And it is for this
simple reason that they forget the grace of God! 'The first thing in the spiritual
life,' says St. Macarius the Great, 'is love for God, and the second - love for
one's neighbour. When we apply ourselves to the first and great task, then the
second, being lesser, follows after the first with very little labour. But without
the first the second cannot be pure. For can he who does not love God with all
his soul and all his heart apply himself correctly and without flattery to love
for his brothers?' That which has been said about love generally applies also
to married love. Of all the kinds of earthly love it is the strongest and for that
reason it is represented in Holy Scripture as an image of the ideal love of the
human soul for God: 'The Song of Songs,' says Blessed Jerome, 'is a nuptial
song of spiritual wedlock,' that is, of the union of the human soul with God.
However, with the blessedness of the virgins nothing can be compared,
neither in heaven nor on earth..."264
Virginity is not only higher than marriage, but the only viewpoint from
which marriage can be correctly evaluated, and the apparently contradictory
scriptural texts on marriage understood. For whereas a perfect marriage is the
end of most men's dreams, "paradise on earth", the ideal of virginity points to
a still higher end - not paradise on earth, but the Kingdom of heaven, an end
which can be attained only by rejecting all thought of earthly delights,
however lawful, an end in which marriage will exist neither as an arena in
which to struggle with the fallen passions, nor as a passionless contemplation
of each other's beauty, like Adam and Eve in Paradise. Rather, both the
virgins and those who have been married will be "like the angels, who always
behold the face of the Father in heaven" (Matthew 18.11). For when the
Supreme Object of desire is present, lesser objects are necessarily eclipsed, not
because they are lacking in true beauty, but simply because they are lesser.
Which is why the holy Apostle Simon the Zealot, the bridegroom at the
marriage in Cana of Galilee, abandoned not only the water of a fallen
marriage, but even the wine of a marriage transformed and sanctified by
Christ, for love of the Divine Bridegroom Himself...
214
215
271
272
St. Athanasius, The Life of Saint Anthony, London: Longmans, Green and Co., pp. 75-76.
The Letters of Ammonas, Oxford: SLG Press, 1979, p. 3.
216
The theologian Nikolaos P. Vasileiades writes: After his death poor man
Lazarus was received up by the angels (Luke 16.22). Angels, however,
accompany not only the souls of the just, but also those of evil men, as the
divine Chrysostom comments, basing his words on what God said to the
foolish rich man: Fool, this night will they require thy soul from thee (Luke
12.20). So while good angels accompanied the soul of Lazarus, the soul of the
foolish rich man was required by certain terrible powers who had probably
been sent for this reason. And the one (the rich man) they led away as a
prisoner from the present life, but Lazarus they escorted as one who had
been crowned. St. Justin the philosopher and martyr, interpreting the word of
the psalm, Rescue my soul from the sword, and this only-begotten one of
mine from the hand of the dog; save me from the mouth of the lion (Psalm
21.21-22), comments: By this we are taught how we also should seek the same
from God when we approach our departure from this life. For God alone can
turn away every evil angel so that he may not seize our soul.
Basil the Great relates that the holy martyr Gordius (whose memory is
celebrated on January 3rd) went to martyrdom not as if he was about to meet
the public, but as if he was about to hand himself over into the hands of
angels who immediately, since they received him as newly slaughtered,
would convey him to the blessed life like the poor man Lazarus. In another
place, the holy Father, with reasons (at that time men used to be baptized at a
great age), said: Let no one deceive himself with lying and empty words
(Ephesians 5.6); for the catastrophe will come suddenly upon him (I
Thessalonians 5.3); it will come like a tempest. There will come a sullen
angel who will lead away your soul which will have been bound by its sins;
and your soul will then turn within itself and groan silently, for the further
reason, moreover, that the organ of lamentation (the body) will have been cut
off from it. O how you will wail for yourself at that hour of death! How you
will groan!
The Lords words: The ruler of the world cometh, and has nothing in Me
(John 14.3) are interpreted by St. Basil as follows: Satan comes, who has power
over men who live far from God. But in Me he will find nothing of his own
that might give him power or any right over Me. And the luminary of
Caesarea adds: The sinless Lord said that the devil would not find anything in
Him which would give him power over Him; for man, however, it is
sufficient if he can be so bold as to say at the hour of his death that the ruler of
this world comes and will in me only a few and small sins. The same Father
says in another place that the evil spirits watch the departure of the soul more
vigilantly and attentively than ever enemies have watched a besieged city or
thieves a treasury. St. Chrysostom calls customs-officers those threatening
angels and abusive powers of terrible appearance, meeting whom the soul is
seized with trembling; and in another place he says that these persecutors are
called customs-officials and tax-collectors by the Divine Scripture.
217
In that temporary state [between the death of the body and the Last
Judgement] the just live under different conditions from the sinners.
According to St. Gregory the Theologian, every beautiful and God-loving
soul has scarcely been parted from the body when it experiences a
wonderful inner happiness because of all the good things that await it in
endless eternity. For this reason it rejoices and goes forward redeemed,
forgiven and purified to its Master since it has left the present life which was
like an unbearable prison. On the other hand, the souls of the sinners are
drawn to the left by avenging angels by force in a bound state until they are
near gehenna. From there, as they face the terrible sight of the fire of
punishment, they tremble in expectation of the coming judgement and are
already punished in effect (St. Hippolytus). For the whole time that they are
separated from their bodies they are not separated from the passions which
had dominion over them on earth, but they bear with them their tendency to
sin. For that reason their suffering is the more painful (St. Gregory of
Nyssa).273
Visions of the passage through the toll-houses are common also in the Lives
of the Celtic saints. Thus we read about St. Columba of Iona that one day he
suddenly looked up towards heaven and said: Happy woman, happy and
virtuous, whose soul the angels of God now take to paradise! One of the
brothers was a devout man called Genereus, the Englishman, who was the
baker. He was at work in the bakery where he heard St. Columba say this. A
year later, on the same day, the saint again spoke to Genereus the Englishman,
saying: I see a marvelous thing. The woman of whom I spoke in your
presence a year ago today look! she is not meeting in the air the soul of a
devout layman, her husband, and is fighting for him together with the holy
angels against the power of the enemy. With their help and because the man
himself was always righteous, his soul is rescued from the devils assaults and
is brought to the place of eternal refreshment.274
Vasileiades, The Mystery of Death, Athens: Sotir, 1980, pp. 368, 371-372, 189 in the Greek
edition, 382-382, 386 and 404-405 in the English edition. St. John Chrysostom, Homily 2 on the
Rich Man and Lazarus, 2, P.G. 48:984; St. Justin the Martyr, Dialogue with Trypho, 105, 3-5; St.
Basil the Great, Homily on Gordius the Martyr, 8, P.G. 321:505C; Exhortation to Holy Baptism, 8,
P.G. 31:444D-444A; On Psalm 7.2, P.G. 29:232C-233A; St. John Chrysostom, Homily 53 on
Matthew, 5, P.G. 58:532; On Patience, P.G. 60:727; St. Gregory the Theologian, Homily 7, to
Caesarius, 21, P.G. 35:781; St. Hippolytus, To the Greeks, 1; St. Gregory of Nyssa, On the Soul and
Resurrection, P.G. 46:88.
274 Adomnan, Life of St. Columba, III, 10. When St. Brendan the Navigator was dying, his sister
said to him: Father, what dost thou fear? I fear, said he, my lonely passing: I fear the
darkness of the way: I fear the untravelled road, the presence of the King, the sentence of the
Judge (Rev. Francis Browne, Saints and Shrine of Lough Corrib, pp. 4-5). And when St. Ciaran
of Clonmacnoise came to die, and said, Dreadful is the way upwards his disciples said:
But surely not for you? Och, said St. Ciaran, indeed my conscience is clear of offence,
but yet, even David and Paul dreaded this road (D.D.C. Pochin Mould, Ireland of the Saints,
London: Batsford, 1953, p. 79).
273
218
Coming to our own age, we have mentioned the witness of the holy
Bishops Ignatius Brianchaninov and Elder Barsanuphius of Optina. Still closer
to our time is St. John Maximovich (+1966), who writes: Many appearances
of the dead have given us to know in part what happens with the soul when it
leaves the body. When it no longer sees with its bodily eyes, its spiritual
vision is opened. This frequently occurs even before actual death; while
seeing and even conversing with those around them, the dying see that which
others do not. Leaving the body, the soul finds itself among other spirits,
good and evil. Usually it strives towards those which are more akin to it, but
if while still in the body it was under the influence of certain spirits, it remains
dependent upon them when it leaves the body, no matter how unpleasant
they might prove to be at the encounter.
For two days the soul enjoys relative freedom and can visit its favourite
places on earth, but on the third day it makes its way towards other realms.
At this time it passes through a horde of wicked spirits, who obstruct its path
and accuse the soul of various sins by which they themselves had deceived it.
According to revelations, there are twenty such barriers, so-called tollhouses. At each stop the soul is tested as to a particular sin. Passing through
one, the soul comes upon the next, and only after successfully passing
through them all can the soul continue its way, and not be thrown
straightway into hell. These demons and their trials are so horrendous that
the Mother of God herself, when informed by Archangel Gabriel of her
imminent repose, entreated her Son to deliver her from those demons and, in
fulfillment of her prayer, the Lord Jesus Christ Himself appeared from
Heaven to take the soul of His Most Pure Mother and carry it up to Heaven.
The third day is terrifying for the soul, and it is especially in need of prayer.
Once having safely passed through the toll-houses and having bowed
down before God, the soul spends the next thirty-seven days visiting the
heavenly habitations and the chasms of hades, not knowing where it will find
itself, and only on the fortieth day is it assigned its place of waiting until the
resurrection of the dead. Some souls find themselves with a foretaste of
eternal joy and blessedness, while others in fear of eternal torments, which
will begin in earnest after the Dread Judgement. Until that time, changes in
the state of the soul are still possible, especially through offering for their sake
the Bloodless Sacrifice (commemoration at the Divine Liturgy), and likewise
through other prayers.275
Descriptions of the passage of souls through the toll-houses are to be found
in the Orthodox literature of many ages and nations. Such universality is in
itself a witness against the idea that the toll-house tradition is Gnostic.
St. John Maximovich, I Believe in the Resurrection of the Dead, in Man of God: Saint John
of Shanghai and San Francisco, Redding, Ca.: Nikodemos Orthodox Publication Society, 1991,
pp. 143-144.
275
219
220
Moreover, in His mercy God often tips the balance in favour of the
sinner when the demons appear to have won the case. Thus in the Life of St.
Niphon, Bishop of Constantia in Cyprus, we read: With his clairvoyant eyes
the Saint saw also the souls of men after their departure from the body. Once,
standing at prayer in the church of St. Anastasia, he raised his eyes to heaven
and saw the heavens opened and many angels, of whom some were
descending to earth, and others were ascending bearing to heaven many
human souls. And he saw two angels ascending, carrying someones soul.
And when they came near the toll-house of fornication, the demonic taxcollectors came out and said with anger: This is our soul; how do you dare to
carry him past us? The angels replied: What kind of sign do you have on this
soul, that you consider it yours? The demons said: It defiled itself before
death with sin, not only natural ones but even unnatural ones; besides that, it
judged its neighbour and died without repentance. What do you say to that?
We will not believe, said the angels, either you or your father the devil, until
we ask the guardian angel of this soul. And when they asked him, he said: It
is true that this soul sinned much, but when it got sick it began to weep and
confess its sin before God; and if God has forgiven it, He knows why: He has
the authority. Glory be to His righteous judgement! Then the angels, having
put the demons to shame, entered the heavenly gates with that soul. Then the
blessed one saw the angels carrying yet another soul, and the demons ran out
to them and cried out: Why are you carrying souls without knowing them?
For example, you are carrying this one, who is a lover of money, a bearer of
malice, and an outlaw. The angels replied: We well know that it did all these
things, but it wept and lamented, confessed its sins, and gave alms; for this
God has forgiven it. But the demons began to say: If even this soul is worthy
of Gods mercy, then take and carry away the sinners from the whole world.
Why should we be labouring? To this the angels replied: All sinners who
confess their sins with humility and tears receive forgiveness by Gods mercy;
but he who dies without repentance is judged by God.277
This shows, on the one hand, that the demons are essentially powerless,
and on the other, that such authority as they possess over souls is ceded to
them by the souls themselves when they willingly follow their enticements.
For the Lord said: He who sins is the servant of sin (John 8.34), and
therefore of him who is the origin and instigator of sin, the devil. If the
demons have power even in this life over those who willingly follow their
suggestions, what reason have we for believing that these souls do not
continue in bondage after their departure from the body? However, if we
resist sin and the devil in this life, they will have no power over us in the next.
For, as St. Anthony says: If the demons had no power even over the swine,
much less have they any over men formed in the image of God. So then we
ought to fear God only, and despise the demons, and be in no fear of them.278
277
278
221
222
be cleansed in the very departure from the body, thanks only to fear, as St.
Gregory the Dialogist literally shows; while others must be cleansed after the
departure from the body, either while remaining in the same earthly place,
before they come to worship God and are honoured with the lot of the blessed,
or if their sins were more serious and bind them for a longer duration they
are kept in hell, but not in order to remain forever in fire and torment, but as
it were in prison and confinement under guard.
All such ones, we affirm, are helped by the prayers and Liturgies
performed for them, with the cooperation of the Divine goodness and love for
mankind. This Divine cooperation immediately disdains and remits some sins,
those committed out of human weakness, as Dionysius the Great (the
Areopagite) says in Reflections on the Mystery of those Reposed in the Faith (in The
Ecclesiastical Hierarchy, VII, 7); while other sins, after a certain time, by
righteous judgements it either likewise releases and forgives and that
completely or lightens the responsibility for them until that final Judgement.
And therefore we see not necessity whatever for any other punishment or for
a cleansing fire; for some are cleansed by fear, while others are devoured by
the gnawings of conscience with more torment than any fire, and still others
are cleansed by the very terror before the Divine glory and the uncertainty as
to what the future will be. And that this is much more tormenting and
punishing than anything else, experience itself shows279
Thus while St. Mark rejected the idea of a purging by fire as the cardinals
understood it, he definitely accepted the notion of a purging by fear and the
gnawings of conscience. Now the experience of the soul after death which
Orthodox writers describe by means of the toll-house metaphor is certainly an
experience which includes fear and the gnawings of conscience. We may
therefore conclude that there is nothing heretical in the notion of the tollhouses provided we remember that it is a metaphor and not a literal
description of events.
Soul-Sleep?
A third set of objections raised by Puhalo is based on the teaching that the
soul when separated from the body cannot, by its nature, have such
experiences as are attributed to it by the Orthodox teaching. For the notion
that the soul can exit the body, move about, have experiences, receive visions,
revelations, wander from place to place, make progress or be examined and
judged without the body, is essentially Origenistic, and is derived from the
philosophies of the pagan religions of Greece and elsewhere Old Testament
anthropology, like that of the New Testament, never conceived of an
immortal soul inhabiting a moral body from which it might be liberated, but
always conceived a simple, non-dualistic anthropology of a single,
St. Mark of Ephesus, First Homily on Purgatorial Fire, The Orthodox Word, March-April,
1978.
279
223
224
uncleanness. Then, after he had spoken unto them many things out of the
Divine Books, and the season of the ninth hour had drawn nigh meanwhile,
they rose up that they might come to their own place, and Rabba entreated
them to partake of some food there but they did not accept [his petition,
saying] that they were in duty bound to arrive home before sunset; so they
prayed, and they saluted us, and then they departed.
And Abba, in order to learn the cause of the uncleanness of these men,
went into his cell, and prayed to God; and he knew straightway that it was
the doctrine of wickedness which arose from their souls and pursued these
men, and having overtaken them, he said unto them, Do ye call that which is
written in the works of Origen heresy? And when they had heard the
question they denied and said that they did not. Then the holy man said unto
them, Behold, I take you to witness before God, that every man who readeth
and accepteth the work of Origen, shall certainly arrive in the fire of Sheol,
and his inheritance shall be everlasting darkness. That which I know from
God I have made you to be witnesses of, and I am therefore not condemned
by God on this account, and ye yourselves know about it. Behold, I have
made you hear the truth. And if ye believe me, and if ye wish to gratify God,
take all the writings of Origen and cast them into the fire; and never seek to
read them again. And when Abba Pachomius had said these things he left
them.283
Spiritual beings not only smell the spiritual condition of souls: they also see
them and their appearance depends on their spiritual state. Thus St. John
the Baptist once appeared to St. Diadochus of Photike, and said that neither
the angels nor the soul can be seen by the bodily senses insofar as they are
beings which do not have a shape. However, he went on, one must know
that they have a visible aspect, a beauty and a spiritual limitation, so that the
splendour of their thoughts is their form and their beauty. That is why, when
the soul has beautiful thoughts, it is all illumined and visible in all its parts,
but if bad ones, then it has no luster and nothing to be admired284
When the soul is separated from the body, it loses the use of its bodily
senses, but by no means the use of its spiritual senses. On the contrary, they
revive. For, as St. John Maximovich says, When it [the soul] no longer sees
with its bodily eyes, its spiritual vision is opened. Again, St. John
Chrysostom writes: Do not say to me, He who has died does not hear, does
not speak, does not see, does not feel, since neither does a man who sleeps. If
it is necessary to say something wondrous, the soul of a sleeping man
somehow sleeps, but not so with him who has died, for [his soul] has
283
225
awakened.285 Again, St. John Cassian writes: The souls of the dead not only
do not lose consciousness, they do not even lose their dispositions that is,
hope and fear, joy and grief, and something of that which they expect for
themselves at the Universal Judgement they begin already to foretaste They
become yet more alive and more zealously cling to the glorification of God.
And truly, if we were to reason on the basis of the testimony of the Sacred
Scripture concerning the nature of the soul, in the measure of our
understanding, would it not be, I will not say extreme stupidity, but at least
folly, to suspect even in the least that the most precious part of man (that is,
the soul), in which, according to the blessed Apostle, the image and likeness
of God is contained, after putting off this fleshly coarseness in which it finds
itself in this present life, should become unconscious that part which,
containing in itself the power of reason, makes sensitive by its presence even
the dumb and unconscious matter of the flesh?286
Not only is the soul the opposite of unconscious and unfeeling when it
departs from the body: its sinful passions reveal themselves in all their hidden
strength. For the soul, writes St. Dorotheus of Gaza, wars against this body
with the passions and is comforted, eats, drinks, sleeps, talks to and meets up
with friends. But when it leaves the body it is left alone with the passions. It is
tormented by them, at odds with them, incensed at being troubled by them
and savaged by them Do you want an example of what I am saying to you?
Let one of you come and let me lock him up in a dark cell, and for no more
than three days let him not eat nor drink, nor sleep, not meet anyone, not
singing hymns or praying, not even desiring God, and you will see what the
passions make of him. And that while he is still in this life. How much more
so when the soul has left the body and is delivered to the passions and will
remain all along with them287
It follows that the ancient heresy of soul-sleep, which is here revived in a
modern form by Puhalo in his polemic against the toll-houses, is false: the
soul in its disincarnate form can indeed spiritually perceive angels and
demons and feel hope and fear, joy and grief in their presence.
Conclusion
The doctrine of the toll-houses, of the particular judgement of souls after
death, is indeed a fearful doctrine. But it is a true and salutary and Orthodox
one. Let us therefore gather this saving fear into our souls, in accordance with
the word: Remember thine end, and thou shalt never sin (Sirach 7.36).
(February 8/21, 1981; revised July 9/22, 2004 and November 14/27, 2007)
St. John Chrysostom, Homily on Lazarus and the Rich Man.
St. John Cassian, First Conference of Abba Moses.
287 St. Dorotheus, Kataniktikoi Logoi, in Archimandrite Vasilios Bakogiannis, After Death,
Katerini, 2001, p. 123.
285
286
226
227
course not forbidden to have a wife; it was not incompatible with his gracefilled ministry of the New Testament. True, he did not in fact take a wife; for
all things are lawful to me, but all things are not expedient (I Corinthians
6.12; cf. 10.23). But he could have and there is no indication whatsoever that
for St. Paul, who polemicised more than any apostle with those who would
confuse the grace of the New Testament with the law of the Old, the married
state was incompatible with the life of grace.
Manichaean. There are many things which were good in Old Testament times,
but which have been superseded in the New: circumcision, sabbaths
Orthodox. And marriage?
Manichaeian. Marriage has not been superseded, of course, but it is an Old
Testament sacrament, as it were, and appropriate only for those living under
the law. For those living in the grace of the New Testament it is sinful.
Orthodox. But this is the heresy of Manichaeism. And Manichaeism is
specifically declared by St. John Chrysostom to have been the target of St.
Pauls prophecy: Now the Spirit speaketh expressly, that in the latter times
some shall depart from the faith, giving heed to seducing spirits, and
doctrines of demons; speaking lies in hypocrisy; having their conscience
seared with a hot iron; forbidding to marry, and commanding to abstain from
meats, which God hath created to be received with thanksgiving of them
which believe and know the truth. For every creature of God is good, and
nothing to be refused, if it be received with thanksgiving (I Timothy 4.1-4).
Manichaeism and its related teachings are demonic, explains St. John,
because they condemn as evil those things, such as marriage and certain
foods, which are not evil in themselves, but only if taken in excess. For good
things are created to be received But if it is good, why is it sanctified by the
word of God and prayers? For it must be unclean, if it is to be sanctified? Not
so, here he is speaking to those who thought that some of these things were
common; therefore he lays down two positions: first, that no creature of God
is unclean; and secondly, that if it has become so, you have a remedy: seal it
[with the sign of the cross], give thanks, and glorify God, and all the
uncleanness passes away.288
Manichaean. I hope you are not accusing me of heresy!
Orthodox. Not if you accept the Orthodox teaching on marriage But let me
ask: what, according to you, is the purpose of marriage?
Manichaean. The aim of hristian marriage is to cure us of the desire to live
the married life.
Orthodox. A most paradoxical aim! Please explain.
Manichaean. With pleasure, and you mark my words carefully I have said,
following the apostle, that the ideal is virginity, abstinence. But if (for the time
being) a Christian cannot (or will not) abstain, then he must necessarily, as a
kind of penance, bear the burden of bearing and bringing up many children.
But if he does not want to have children, he must abstain from marital relations.
There is simply no other way. If a man does not want children, but does want
to have marital relations, then this is simply fornication, albeit in marriage
288
228
V. Moss, The Saints of Anglo-Saxon England, volume III, Seattle: St. Nectarios Press, 1997, p.
7.
229
Manichaean. [pause] Er
Orthodox. Well, while youre thinking about the answer to that question, let
us consider an episode from the Life of perhaps the greatest woman saint of
the West, the fifth-century St. Brigit of Ireland: A certain man of Kells
whom his wife hated, came to Brigit for help. Brigit blessed some water. He
took it with him and, his wife having been sprinkled [therewith], she
straightway loved him passionately.290
Again, from the Life of St. Columba, Apostle of Scotland (+597): Another
time, when the saint was living on the Rechrena island, a certain man of
humble birth came to him and complained of his wife, who, as he said, so
hated him, that she would on no account allow him to come near her for
marriage rights. The saint on hearing this, sent for the wife, and, so far as he
could, began to reprove her on that account, saying: Why, O woman, dost
thou endeavour to withdraw thy flesh from thyself, while the Lord says,
They shall be two in one flesh? Wherefore the flesh of thy husband is they
flesh. She answered and said, Whatever thou shalt require of me I am ready
to do, however hard it may be, with this single exception, that thou dost not
urge me in any way to sleep in one bed with Lugne. I do not refuse to perform
every duty at home, or, if thou dost command me, even to pass over the seas,
or to live in some monastery for women. The saint then said, What thou dost
propose cannot lawfully be done, for thou art bound by the law of the
husband as long as thy husband liveth, for it would be impious to separate
those whom God has lawfully joined together. Immediately after these words
he added: This day let us three, namely, the husband and his wife and myself,
join in prayer to the Lord and in fasting. But the woman replied: I know it is
not impossible for thee to obtain from God, when thou askest them, those
things that seem to us either difficult, or even impossible. It is unnecessary to
say more. The husband and wife agreed to fast with the saint that day, and
the following night the saint spent sleepless in prayer for them. Next day he
thus addressed the wife in presence of her husband, and said to her: O
woman, art thou still ready today, as thou saidst yesterday, to go away to a
convent of women? I know now, she answered, that thy prayer to God for
me hath been heard; for that man whom I hated yesterday, I love today; for
my heart hath been changed last night in some unknown way from hatred
to love. Why need we linger over it? From that day to the hour of death, the
soul of the wife was firmly cemented in affection to her husband, so that she
no longer refused those mutual matrimonial rights which she was formerly
unwilling to allow.291
Manichaean. You make the saints sound like sex-therapists!
Orthodox. Love-therapists, perhaps, not sex-therapists.
Manichaean. I am very suspicious of your examples from the lives of littleknown British and Irish saints. I insist on a return to the Holy Scriptures and
the Eastern Fathers of the Holy Orthodox Church!
Bethu Brigte, edited by Donncha O hAodha, Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies, 1978,
45, p. 32.
291 St. Adamnan, Life of St. Columba, II, 42.
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230
Orthodox. Well, I do not object, so long as you accept that the lives of the
Western Fathers of the Orthodox Church, who died many centuries before the
West fell into heresy, are also part of Holy Tradition So let us return to the
Holy Scriptures. For example: If you marry you do not sin (I Corinthians
7.28), and marriage is honourable in all, and the bed undefiled (Hebrews
13.4).
Manichaean. I think that the apostle meant only that the marriage bed is not
adultery or fornication.
Orthodox. The Fathers are more positive than you. In his commentary on this
passage, St. John Chrysostom writes: Marriage is pure.292 Again, Blessed
Theophylact comments on the same verse: By in all he means in every
way and in every season.293
Manichaean. The apostle knew that the majority of people would not be able
to accept the ideal of virginity. And since marriage is better than fornication,
he wanted to encourage marriage in the weaker brethren.
Orthodox. I see So marriage is the legal permission to sin in a small way in
order to avoid sinning in a big way!
Manichaean. Yes, though I wouldnt have put it so crudely
Orthodox. Crude or not, that is what you believe. And if you are right, then
the Orthodox Church is wrong to treat marriage as a holy sacrament, and
hypocritical in its prayers for the married couple, since there is no trace in
them of the idea that they are in any way sinning.
Manichaean. Fr. G. says that marriage is a sacrament in the way that the
sacrament of confession is a sacrament. The Church in the sacrament of
confession does not bless further sin, but by means of this sacrament helps the
restoration of the unity of the person with the Body of Christ that has been
violated by sin. The meaning of crowning is analogous: it forgives the sin of
sensual pleasure that is inevitably incurred in marriage.
Orthodox. Fr. G. is a very original theologian! Too original, Im afraid. The
sacrament of confession absolves sin after it has been committed, not before,
and only on condition that a firm resolve is made not to repeat the sin. The
sacrament of marriage, on the other hand, neither speaks of any sin in
marriage, nor, a fortiori, absolves one from it. If Fr. Gregory were right, then it
would be necessary for the married couple to seek forgiveness from God
every time they made love, and every such act would have to be considered,
not as an expression of the bond created in marriage, but as a violation of it!
Manichaean. You know, several of the Fathers for example, Blessed
Augustine in The Good of Marriage, - indicated that the pleasure of intimate
relations in marriage is sinful, but is covered, as it were, by the good
intention of bearing children.
Orthodox. [smiles] I thought you didnt want to return to the Western
Fathers
Manichaean. Blessed Augustine is a Father well-known in the East.
292
293
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Orthodox. And one who, as St. Photius the Great testified, did not in all
respects reflect the Tradition of the Eastern Church. Much as I respect Blessed
Augustine, I do not believe that he was expressing the consensus of the
Fathers on this point. He was, after all, a Manichaean in his youth, and traces
of that doctrine may have persisted in him, tempting him not to accept the
words of the apostle on the purity of the marriage bed in their full simplicity.
St. John Chrysostom, as we have seen, had a different point of view.
Manichaean. Alright then, leaving aside the question of the sinfulness or
otherwise of the sexual act, can you deny that it has no value except in the
producing of children?
Orthodox. I do deny that, and consider it to be a typically Latin idea. The
Latins, - not the Celtic saints whose lives I quoted earlier, but those who fell
into the heresy of Papism - followed Augustines thought to its logical
conclusion and ceased to treat marriage as a sacrament. According to Roman
Catholic theology, marriage is a contract performed, not by God through the
priest, but by the couple themselves. The fruits of this sombre, nonsacramental view of marriage have been unequivocably bad. Thus the idea
that a married couple can achieve sexual stability while believing that the
very means to this end, marital relations, is inherently sinful, has led, directly
or indirectly, to a large proportion of the heresies and perversions that have
bedevilled the history of Western Christianity: the enforced celibacy of
Catholic priests, the "immaculate conception" of the Virgin by her parents
Joachim and Anna, the profoundly adulterous "chastity" of the troubadors,
the definitely sensual "mysticism" of Teresa of Avila and other Latin "saints",
the ban on all marriage by the Shakers and other Protestant sects, the sexual
hypocrisy of the Victorians, and, as a long-delayed and therefore enormously
exaggerated reaction to all this blasphemy against the goodness of Gods
original creation, the general permissiveness towards almost all kinds of truly
sinful acts in the twentieth century.
Manichaean. So what, according to you, is the positive value of sexual
relations in marriage apart from the procreation of children?
Orthodox. Its value, apart from the procreation of children and the gradual
quenching of the passion of lust, lies in the fact that it is the natural expression
of the love between the husband and wife. A certain Orthodox Christian put it
rather well: Physical relations may be elicited by lust, but they may [also] be
elicited by love. The spouses enter into physical relations not with the aim of
removing over-excitement and quenching the ragings of the flesh, but because
they love each other, because they are striving for unity. The unity which
marital relations gives to the spouses is not comparable with unity in the
Body of Christ, but it is an image of it and is accepted into the Church. The
aim of marriage is to lessen the element of lust in physical relations and
increase the element of love.294 And again: The unity of spouses, on being
accepted into the Church is liberated in the Church from its limitedness. Love
for ones spouse becomes a school of love for all.
Oleg
VM,
O
lyubvi.
Kak
govoril
ministr-administrator,
st
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Manichaean. Are you saying that it is possible for there to be no lust in the
sexual act?
Orthodox. In practice, because of our fallen state, it is almost impossible to
clearly separate the elements of love and lust in the sexual act, just as it is
almost impossible to separate greed from restoration of the organism in the
act of eating, or sinful anger from righteous anger in the disciplining of
children and subordinates. Absolute purity is unattainable in our fallen state in
any significant action, and not only in marital relations. The important thing is
that the dominant motive in any particular act should be pure.
Manichaean. If love were the dominant motive in marriage, then the spouses
would not enter into sexual relations.
Orthodox. So if I understand you rightly, you believe that love cannot be the
motive for entering into sexual relations, but only lust?
Manichaean. Thats right.
Orthodox. Thats what I was afraid of I, however, believe, with the
Orthodox Christian quoted above, that the motive for entering into sexual
relations may be both lust, that is, the egocentric desire to satisfy the whim of
ones flesh with the help of a partner, and love for ones spouse, the desire for
both spiritual and bodily union with him or her295
In fact, I believe that love must be the main motive for entering into sexual
relations. I do not exclude the desire for children or the desire to avoid
fornication as secondary motives. But neither of these secondary motives can
or should be pursued without love or outside the context of the sexual act as
an expression of love. Without love, the other person in sexual relations is not
an end in him or herself, but purely an instrument for attaining some other
goal. And that, in my view, is immoral.
Manichaean. Alright, as regards high-sounding abstract principles and
general contexts I agree. However, when we come down to concrete actions,
and in particular to the sexual act itself, then you must admit: here we are
simply talking about animality. It is not love, but naked, fallen passion, pure
lust.
Orthodox. Just that? Are you sure? All lust and no love?
Manichaean. If there is any love, then it is overwhelmed by lust at the climax
of the act.
Orthodox. I think you are wrong about that. I think that the quality of sexual
relations between couples is as varied as the quality of the couples themselves.
In the one couple, lust can indeed dominate to such an extent that each is
simply using the other as a vehicle for sensual indulgence or some other
passion (most rapes, as is well-known, are in fact expressions of hatred, not
love or lust). But in others, sexual feeling is transmuted into tenderness, in
which the lover strives above all to give, and not to take, to show love, not to
receive pleasure. Thus Tobias on his wedding-night specifically denied that
his feeling for his wife was lust: "Thou madest Adam, and gavest him Eve as
his wife for an helper and stay of them came mankind: Thou hast said, It is
Oleg
VM,
Protokol
raznoglasij,
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not good that man should be alone; let us make unto him an aid like unto
himself. And now, O Lord, I take not this my sister for lust, but uprightly:
therefore mercifully ordain that we may become aged together..." (Tobit 8.6-7).
Sex can be animality when human beings choose to live like animals. But
sex can also in very closely defined circumstances (lawful, Christian
marriage between spouses who truly love each other) be the expression of
love. Sexuality within the one-flesh relationship of marriage is not simply a
means to another end, procreation (although it is that), and not simply a
concession to weakness (although it is that, too), but the completely natural
and lawful expression of that relationship of unity as such.
Manichaean. You speak about love and unity. And yet is not love and unity
attainable without physical relations? Is not the love and unity of the Church
a non-physical unity? And is not this, as you have just admitted, higher than
the love and unity of a married couple?
Orthodox. Of course. But there is a physical element in the love and unity of
the Church the participation of all members of the Church in the Body and
Blood of Christ.
Manichaean. But there is no physical pleasure in the relations between
members of the Church (outside marriage), nor, of course, in the reception of
the sacraments.
Orthodox. I think that the presence of absence of pleasure is irrelevant to our
discussion. Love is good, and lust is evil. But pleasure is neither good nor evil
as such. Everything depends on the context in which it is experienced, on the
motives and aims of the individual. There is spiritual pleasure, intellectual
pleasure, aesthetic pleasure, physical pleasure....
Manichaean. I could accept that there was no sin in sexual relations if there
was no pleasure in them either.
Orthodox. So pleasure is sin, and even the essence of sin, according to you!
And the only truly happy i.e. sinless marriage is that in which there is no
pleasure at all!
Manichaean. Well, you must remember that, according to St. Maximus the
Confessor, pleasure and pain were introduced into the world as a result of the
fall.
Orthodox. But that is not the same as to say that pleasure - or pain, of course is necessarily sinful. Thus St. Photius the Great explicitly states that sexual
pleasure in marriage is lawful, while at the same time explaining why there
could be no pleasure (or pain) at the conception and nativity of Christ: "It was
needful that a mother should be prepared down below for the Creator, for the
recreation of shattered humanity, and she a virgin, in order that, just as the
first man had been formed of virgin earth, so the re-creation, too, should be
carried out through a virgin womb, and that no transitory pleasure, even
lawful, should be so much as imagined in the Creator's birth: since a captive
of pleasure was he, for whose deliverance the Lord suffered to be born."296
St. Photius, Homily on the Birth of the Virgin, 9. Translated by Cyril Mango in The Homilies of
Photius, Patriarch of Constantinople, Harvard University Press, 1958.
296
234
Again, St. John of Damascus divides pleasures into three categories: (1)
natural and necessary, (2) natural and unnecessary, and (3) unnatural and
unnecessary. Some pleasures are true, others false. And the exclusively
intellectual pleasures consist in knowledge and contemplation, while the
pleasures of the body depend upon sensation. Further, of bodily pleasures,
some are both natural and necessary, in the absence of which life is
impossible, for example the pleasures of food which replenishes waste, and
the pleasures of necessary clothing. Others are natural but not necessary, as
the pleasures of natural and lawful intercourse (Greek:
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life is united in him with the spiritual experience of boundless gratitude to the
One Who knows all our needs. The Christian is not a stranger to earthly joys,
but does not make them the aim of his life; he does not fight against his
neighbour for their sake, and does not seek them. Therefore he receives them
pure, and they do not darken his spirit.299
Also, much depends on the individual here: a measure of indulgence that
is harmful for one person may cause no harm to another. It is right sometimes
to indulge in some innocent pleasure, for example, on church feast-days,
when fasting is forbidden and a measure of pleasure for the body contributes
to the joy in the soul, in accordance with the word: wine maketh glad the
heart of man (Psalm 103.16).
Manichaean. But this is just a concession to weakness. Some of the hermits
fasted all year round.
Orthodox. St. Antony the Great said that even ascetics have to relax at times.
Manichaean. But relaxation for the hermits did not go as far as marrying.
Orthodox. Of course not! But neither do the Orthodox hermits abhor
marriage in the way you do. Indeed, the canons of the Council of Gangra
anathematise those who abhor marriage.
Manichaean. I have my private opinion about the Council of Gangra. The
conciliar canons are a juridical document, and so it is always dangerous to
allow too much leeway for their interpretation. From the literal meaning of
the canons one could form the impression that marriage and virginity were
equal in honour.
Orthodox. Private opinions which contradict the mind of the Church should
not be expressed in public. The Church accepts the Canons of the Council of
Gangra; evidently you do not. In any case, we do not need the witness of
hermits and councils when we have the unambiguous witness of the highest
authority of all. The Lord Jesus Christ, Who is perfect man and perfect God,
came to the marriage in Cana of Galilee and turned the water into wine. He
actually increased the pleasure and the joy of the wedding-feast. Was He
wrong?
Manichaean. No, of course not, but.
Orthodox. Not only was He not wrong, but He demonstrated thereby a most
important truth about marriage: that He came, not to deny the pleasures and
joys of marriage, but to infuse them with the sober intoxication of the Holy
Spirit, as St. Gaudentius of Brescia points out.300 For the gift of the Holy Spirit
that is given in the sacrament of Christian marriage both purifies the pleasure
and elevates the joy of the married couple. Thus the priest in the marriage
service prays that they should have concord of soul and of body. Exalt them
like the cedars of Lebanon, exalt them like a luxurious vine. Give them seed in
number like unto the full ears of grain; that having sufficiency in all things,
Hieromartyr John, in Igumen Damaskin (Orlovsky), Mucheniki, ispovedniki podvizhniki
blagochestia Russkoj Pravoslavnoj Tserkvi XX stoletia (Martyrs, Confessors and Ascetics of Piety of
the Russian Orthodox Church in the 20th Century), Tver: Bulat, 2000, vol. 4, p. 247 (in Russian).
300 See St. Gaudentius of Brescia, Sermon 8, P.L. 20. Translated in M.F. Toal, Patristic Homilies
on the Gospels, Cork: The Mercier Press, 1955, vol. I, p. 313.
299
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they may abound in every good work which is well-pleasing unto thee. And
let them behold their childrens children, like a newly-planted olive-orchard
round about their table
So I repeat: Love is good, and lust is evil. But pleasure is neither good nor
evil as such. Do you agree?
Manichaean. Yes, I agree.
Orthodox. So with your permission I would like to return to what I consider
to be the more important theme, the theme of love and unity, and to the
analogy between the love and unity that reigns in the Church and the love
and unity that reigns in the little church, as St. John Chrysostom calls it, of
the Christian marriage.301
A married couple form one unit through their spiritual and physical
relationship sanctified by the grace of God. This unit then enters into the
wider and deeper unity of the Church, which wider unity is both the
foundation and the seal of their married unity. It is the foundation, because
true unity in marriage is impossible without unity in Christ, which is why the
canon law of the Church allows only Orthodox spouses to be married in the
Orthodox Church. And it is the seal, because without the grace of constant
participation in Christ their own union would fall apart, which is why
marriage in the early Church formed part of the Divine Liturgy, at which both
spouses communicated of the Body and Blood of Christ.
Manichaean. I need to see patristic authority for this view of yours.
Orthodox. And you shall have it. St. Cyril of Alexandria writes: "Christ,
having taken as an example and image of that indivisible love, accord and
unity which is conceivable only in unanimity, the unity of essence which the
Father has with Him and which He, in turn, has with the Father, desires that
we too should unite with each other; evidently in the same way as the
Consubstantial, Holy Trinity is united so that the whole body of the Church is
conceived as one, ascending in Christ through the fusion and union of two
peoples into the composition of the new perfect whole. The image of Divine
unity and the consubstantial nature of the Holy Trinity as a most perfect
interpenetration must be reflected in the unity of the believers who are of one
heart and mind" - and body, he adds, for this "natural unity" is "perhaps not
without bodily unity".302
Manichaean. Still, it seems to me that you exaggerate the element of physical
union in marriage, as if it was that, and not spiritual union, that constituted
marriage.
Orthodox. But it is precisely the physical union that constitutes marriage. Did
not the Lord Himself define marriage in this way, saying that they are no
longer two, but one flesh (Matthew 19.6)? And that is why the only reason He
allows for divorce is adultery (Matthew 5.32); for it is precisely adultery
which destroys the one-flesh relationship through the joining of the flesh of
one of the spouses to a third person. Very apt in this connection are the words
St. John Chrysostom, Homily 20 on Ephesians.
St. Cyril of Alexandria, On John 17.21; quoted in Archbishop Ilarion Troitsky, Christianity or
the Church? Holy Trinity Monastery, Jordanville, 1971, p. 9. Italics mine (V.M.).
301
302
237
303
Hieromartyr Gregory, Interpretation of the Gospel of Mark, Moscow, 1991, p. 106 (in Russian).
238
been overcome by his stomach, he would not have known what a wife
was.304
Orthodox. There are two questions here. First, the nature and purpose of the
differentiation of the sexes. And secondly, the nature of our first parents
sexual relationship, if any such existed, before the fall.
I would agree that there were no sexual relations as we know them in
Paradise. But I do not accept that there was no sexuality of any kind there.
Men and women were created from the beginning, before the fall, with a
natural, unfallen need for each other.
Manichaean. What is your evidence for that statement?
Orthodox. The Holy Scriptures. God said: it is not good that man should be
alone; I will make him a helper like unto him (Genesis 2.18). In other words,
Adam, though sinless and unfallen, was nevertheless incomplete on his own.
Nor was this incompleteness due simply to a lack of rational (non-animal)
company, otherwise God could simply have sent him an angel, or another
man, to supply his lack. No: Adam needed a companion who would help him,
and who would be like him without being too similar to him.
Manichaean. It is obvious that Eve was created in order to help Adam in the
procreation of children.
Orthodox. I dont think that was the only reason. And there is no hint of that
at this stage in the Biblical discourse. In any case, procreation could have been
through a process of sexless cloning, or, as St. Gregory of Nyssa suggests, in
the same manner as the angels multiplied305 , rather than sexual reproduction.
No: Adam needed a deeper kind of help, a help linked, not to his incapacity to
reproduce on his own, but to some incompleteness in his inner nature. He
needed not a physical mate, but a soulmate.
This is confirmed by St. John Chrysostom, who writes: How great the
power of God, the master craftsman, making a likeness of those limbs from
that tiny part [the rib of Adam], creating such wonderful senses and
preparing a creature complete, entire and perfect, capable both of speaking
and of providing much comfort to man by a sharing of her being. For it was
for the consolation of this man that this woman was created. Hence Paul also
said, Man was not created for the woman, but woman for the man (I
Corinthians 11.9).306
Again, the holy new Martyr-Patriarch Tikhon of Moscow writes: "Without
a helpmate the very bliss of paradise was not perfect for Adam: endowed
with the gift of thought, speech, and love, the first man seeks with his thought
another thinking being; his speech sounds lonely and the dead echo alone
answers him; his heart, full of love, seeks another heart that would be close
and equal to him; all his being longs for another being analogous to him, but
there is none; the creatures of the visible world around him are below him
and are not fit to be his mates; and as to the beings of the invisible spiritual
world they are above. Then the bountiful God, anxious for the happiness of
St. John, The Ladder, 15: foreword.
St. Gregory of Nyssa, On the Making of Man, XVII, 2.
306 St. John Chrysostom, Homily 15 on Genesis, 11.
304
305
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man, satisfies his wants and creates a mate for him - a wife. But if a mate was
necessary for man in paradise, in the region of bliss, the mate became much
more necessary for him after the fall, in the vale of tears and sorrow. The wise
man of antiquity spoke justly: 'two are better than one, for if they fall, the one
will lift up his fellow: but woe to him that is alone when he falleth; for he hath
not another to help him up' (Ecclesiastes 4.9-10). But few people are capable of
enduring the strain of moral loneliness, it can be accomplished only by effort,
and truly 'all men cannot receive this saying, save they to whom it is given'
(Matthew 19.11), and as for the rest - 'it is not good for a man to be alone',
without a mate."307
Manichaean. But monks and nuns live as monads even while contending
with a fallen nature that Adam did not have.
Orthodox. This is indeed a paradox: that Adam, though unfallen, needed a
mate, whereas fallen monks and nuns can do without one. But this indicates,
not the illusoriness of Adams need (for the Word of God is quite specific
about it), but rather the supernatural, charismatic quality of virginity. For
virginity is a gift of God that carries human nature, not only above the fallen
state, but even higher than the original, unfallen state of Adam in Paradise. So
great is this gift that it is revealed only in very few of the righteous of the Old
Testament (the Prophets Elijah and Jeremiah, St. John the Baptist), and is
revealed in its full glory only in the New Testament.
Manichaean. Alright. But I want you to specify more clearly what you mean
by this need that Adam had for Eve. Surely you dont mean a sexual need?!
The need for sex is fallen.
Orthodox. There is a difference between fallen need and unfallen need. Fallen
need tyrannises; unfallen need does not tyrannise, and should therefore
properly not be called need (for that implies a certain compulsion), but
attraction or appetite. Thus St. Cyril of Alexandria writes of Adam's body
before the fall: "It had indeed innate appetites, appetites for food and
procreation, but his mind was not tyrannised by these tendencies."308
Manichaean. This is a new idea to me! And I need more than one patristic
testimony to believe it! You make it sound as if Adam was fallen before the
fall!
Orthodox. Perhaps you have a wrong idea about what is fallen Heres
another patristic testimony. St. Gregory Palamas writes that the natural
motions related to the begetting of children can be detected in infants that are
still at the breast The passions to which it [carnal desire] give birth belong
to us by nature; and natural things are not indictable; for they were created by
God Who is good, so that through them we can act in ways that are also good.
Hence in themselves they do not indicate sickness of soul, but they become
evidence of such sickness when we misuse them.309 Are you satisfied?
Manichaean. Conditionally. Go on.
"An Address of the Right Reverend Tikhon", Orthodox Life, vol. 37, 4, July-August, 1987,
pp. 3-4.
308 St. Cyril, Against Julian, 3, P.G. 76, 637.
309 St. Gregory Palamas, To Xenia, 41; The Philokalia, vol. IV, p. 309.
307
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Orthodox. There can be no doubt that the closeness of Adam and Eve in
Paradise had certain forms of expression more perfect than what we now
recognise as the sexual act. It was expressed primarily on the psychological
level, but there is no reason to suppose that there was not also a physical
element in it.
Manichaean. I hope you are not talking about sexual union!
Orthodox. No. I have already agreed that there were no sexual relations as we
know them between Adam and Eve in Paradise. However, they were of one
flesh. Thus "the Lord God brought a deep sleep (Greek:
, literally
ecstasy) on Adam; and while he was asleep, he took one of his ribs, and
closed up its place with flesh. And the rib which the Lord God had taken from
the man He made into a woman and brought her to the man" (Genesis 2.2122). The great Serbian Bishop Nikolai Velimirovich writes about this event:
This is the foundation of, and the reason for, the mysterious and attraction
and union between man and woman310 a foundation laid, it should be
noted once more, already in Paradise.
Manichaean. I dont see how Velimirovich can draw this conclusion.
Orthodox. The conclusion is justified because the account of the creation of
Eve from the flesh of Adam is linked directly, by the word therefore, with
the following passage, which is the foundation charter, as it were, for the
sacrament of marriage: Therefore shall a man leave his father and his mother,
and shall cleave unto his wife; and they shall be one (2.24). These words,
whose authority was confirmed by Christ Himself (Matthew 19.6), as well as
by the Apostle Paul (Ephesians 5.31), make clear that the physical union of
man and woman was in the original plan of God for mankind; for there can
be no other interpretation of the word cleave (or cling).311 And yet this
law of physical attraction and union is described by St. Paul as a great
mystery (Ephesians 5.31).
Manichaean. I think it is a mistake to consider that the law of the physical
and attraction of man and woman is a great mystery. St. Paul was talking
about the union between Christ and the Church, which is a virginal union.
Orthodox. The union between Christ and the Church, like the union between
Adam and Eve in Paradise, is both virginal and one-flesh, the flesh being that
of Christ Himself, which He took from the Virgin and then gives to all
believers in the sacrament of the Eucharist. Moreover, it is clear that St. Paul
was identifying the two mysteries that of human marriage, and that of the
union between Christ and the Church.
Or perhaps we can put it another way: the mystery of human marriage is
an icon of the mystery of the marriage between Christ and the Church. And
the lower mystery derives its holiness from the higher mystery, just as an icon
derives its holiness from its archetype. Thus the marriage of male and female
is a great mystery because it was created to symbolise a still greater mystery,
the mystery of the union of Christ and the Church. And this is the explanation
Velimirovich, The Prologue from Ochrid, Birmingham: Lazarica Press, 1986, volume IV, p.
241, November 25.
311 St. John Chrysostom, Homily 20 on Ephesians.
310
241
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then He reunited these two into one, so that their children would be produced
from a single source. Likewise, husband and wife are not two, but one; if he is
the head and she is the body, how can they be two? She was made from his
side; so they are two halves of one organism. God calls her a helper to
demonstrate their unity, and He honors the unity of husband and wife above
that of child and parents. A father rejoices to see his son or daughter marry; it
is as if his childs body is becoming complete. Even though he spends so
much money for his daughters wedding, he would rather do that than see
her remain unmarried, since then she would seem to be deprived of her own
flesh. We are not sufficient unto ourselves in this life. How do they become
one flesh? As if she were gold receiving the purest of gold, the woman
receives the mans seed with rich pleasure, and within her it is nourished,
cherished, and refined. It is mingled with her own substance and she then
returns it as a child! The child is a bridge connecting mother to father, so the
three become one flesh That is why the Scripture does not say, They shall
be one flesh, but that they shall be joined together into one flesh, namely the
child. But supposing there is no child, do they then remain two and not one?
No, their intercourse effects the joining of their bodies and they are made one,
just as when perfume is mixed with ointment.314 Thus the mystery of the
union of man and woman in marriage, which reflects the union of God and
man in the God-man, gives birth to the mystery of the union of father, mother
and child in the family, which in turn reflects the Holy Trinity-in-Unity of
God - Father, Son and Holy Spirit. Both mysteries may be said to be aspects of
the image of God in man. For the image is imprinted not only on man and
woman as individuals, but also on their union with each other, and on the
whole family of men they were called to create through this union. Thus St.
Gregory of Nyssa writes: Adam, not having a created cause and being
unbegotten, is an example and image of the uncaused God the Father, the
Almighty and Cause of all things; while Eve, who proceeded from Adam (but
is not born from him) signifies the Hypostasis of the Holy Spirit
proceeding.315 And St. Anastasius of Sinai writes: "Adam is the type and
image of the Unoriginate Almighty God, the Cause of all; the son born of him
manifests the image of the Begotten Son and Word of God; and Eve, who
proceeded from Adam, signifies the proceeding Hypostasis of the Holy Spirit.
This is why God did not breathe in her the breath of life: she was already the
type of the breathing and life of the Holy Spirit."316
Manichaean. There you go again! Exalting earthly love far beyond its true
worth!
Orthodox. The theology of the icon entails both a great distance between the
icon and the archetype, and a great closeness. On the one hand, just as a
St. John Chrysostom, Homily 12 on Colossians; translated in Roth & Anderson, op. cit., pp.
75-76.
315 St. Gregory of Nyssa, quoted in Archimandrite Cyprian (Kern), Antropologia sv. Grigoria
Palamy (The Anthropology of St. Gregory Palamas), Paris, 1950, p. 157 (in Russian).
316 St. Anastasius, On the image and likeness, P.G. 89, 1145BC; in John Meyendorff, Catholicity
and the Church, Crestwood, N.Y.: St. Vladimir's Seminary Press, 1983, pp. 24-25.
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wooden icon and its archetype are of different natures, so the love between a
husband and his wife and its archetype in the love between Christ and the
Church are different in nature as different as heaven is from the earth. On
the other hand, just as the grace of the archetype is communicated to the icon
because of the likeness between the two, according to the Seventh Council, so
the grace of the love between Christ and the Church is communicated to those
who are truly married in Christ, and who have been made partakers of His
Divine nature (II Peter 1.4) in Baptism and Chrismation, and in His deified
human nature in the Eucharist.
Thus the holiness of marriage between two believers in Christ follows, in a
sense, from the holiness of the marriage between each believer with Christ. Of
course, the vertical marriage of each believer with Christ is higher and
infinitely more important. However, the horizontal marriage fits into the
structure with no fissure or schism.
In this vision, while due preference is given to the supreme glory of
virginity, no dishonour is given to the lesser glory of marriage, but both
virgins and married people, both monads and dyads, are harmoniously
integrated as shining and perfectly sculpted stones into the building of the
Church, so that as one body they may be presented as a bride prepared for
her husband (Revelation 21.2).
Manichaean. Nevertheless, I think we should have less mysticism and more
realism. Instead of speculating about the relationship between Adam and Eve,
and building vast, insubstantial clouds of sexual metaphysics on that basis,
we should concentrate on the realities of our fallen condition.
Orthodox. In my opinion, it is impossible accurately to define the nature of
our fall unless we first understand what we have fallen from. However, I am
quite happy to turn to our fallen condition if you want. Where shall we start?
3. Fall and Resurrection
Manichaean. From the Holy Scriptures, and in particular from the verse: In
sins did my mother conceive me (Psalm 50.7). This shows that even in lawful
sexual relations there is an element of sin.
Orthodox. The Scriptures should always be interpreted in the light of the
whole body of the Holy Scriptures, and of the Holy Fathers. Thus the best
interpretation on this verse is provided by Job: Who can bring a clean thing
out of an unclean? (Job 14.4). And by St. John Chrysostom, who interprets
this verse to refer to original sin, adding: therefore he [David] does not
condemn marriage, as some have thoughtlessly supposed.317 Thus it is not a
question of the sexual act being sinful in itself, but of it being the vehicle for
the transmission of sinful human nature from generation to generation.
Manichaean. As a result of original sin, all our faculties are diseased and have
become passionate. To submit to passion is sin. Therefore to submit to fallen
sexual passion inside marriage, while less sinful than outside marriage, is still
sin.
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Orthodox. First, we have to be clear about the passions. There are two kinds
of passion, according to the Holy Fathers: innocent and sinful. The Eastern
Fathers make a distinction between lawful or natural and unlawful or
unnatural pleasures and desires or passions. A natural passion is an
impulse that is in accordance with nature as God originally created it; while a
culpable passion is, in St. Maximus' words, "an impulse of the soul that is
contrary to nature."318 Culpable passions feed on natural ones like parasites:
the culpable passion of gluttony - on the natural passion to satisfy hunger, the
culpable passion of indolence - on the natural desire to rest weary limbs, the
culpable passion of lust - on the natural passion of sexual desire. Some
culpable passions have no natural counterpart, like avarice, which St. John
Chrysostom contrasts with sexual passion in this respect.319
Manichaean. That is all very well, but the fact remains that since the fall all
our faculties are fallen and passionate.
Orthodox. So we must never use any of our faculties?
Manichaean. I didnt say that.
Orthodox. No, but it follows logically from what you are saying. I accept that
our faculties are fallen, but I do not accept that every expression of our
faculties is necessarily sinful. If that were so, then in order to avoid sin, we
would have to stop thinking altogether, since the thinking faculty of our soul
is fallen, and we would have to stop being angry in all circumstances, even
against sin and heresy, since the incensive faculty of our soul is fallen, and we
would have to abstain from all sexual activity, even in marriage, since our
desiring faculty is fallen. But that would mean that we would have to become
like logs, neither thinking nor feeling in any way. That is not Christianity, but
Buddhism. Our faculties are not bad in themselves; they were created very
good. It is the use we make of them which is bad. Thus St. Dionysius the
Areopagite writes: The depraved sinner, though bereft of the Good by his
brutish desire, is in this respect unreal and desires unrealities; but still he has
a share in the Good insofar as there is in him a distorted reflection of true love
and communion. And anger has a share in the Good insofar as it is a
movement which seeks to remedy apparent evils, converting them to that
which appears to be fair. And even he that desires the basest life, yet insofar
as he feels desire at all and feels desire for life, and intends what he think the
best kind of life, to that extent he participates in the Good. And if you wholly
destroy the good, there will be neither being, life, desire, nor motion, or any
other thing.320
Manichaean. But how can a fallen faculty bring forth unfallen fruits?
Orthodox. By being brought out from under the dominion of the devil, and
being placed under the dominion of the Holy Spirit, Who can transform the
fallen impulses of the soul, resurrecting them to their former, unfallen state.
And this is done through prayer, fasting and good works, and especially by
St. Maximus, First Century on Love, 35; The Philokalia, translated by Palmer, Sherrard &
Ware, London: Faber, 1979, vol. II, p. 56.
319 St. John Chrysostom, Homilies on Titus, V, 2.
320 St. Dionysius, On the Divine Names, IV, 20.
318
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) of her
beauty (Wisdom 8.2). Thus, purified of all unnatural, sinful elements, sexual
passion can aid the love of the good, the good being perceived as beauty.
Again, St. John of the Ladder writes: I have seen impure souls raving
madly about physical love; but making their experience of such love a reason
for repentance, they transferred the same love to the Lord; and overcoming all
fear, they spurred themselves insatiably on to the love of God. That is why the
Lord does not say of that chaste harlot: Because she feared, but: Because she
loved much, and could easily expel love by love.326 And again: Someone
told me of an extraordinarily high degree of purity. He said: A certain man,
on seeing a beautiful body, thereupon glorified the Creator, and from that one
look he was moved to the love of God and to a fountain of tears. And it was
wonderful to see how what would have been a cause of destruction for one
was for another the supernatural cause of a crown. If such a person always
feels and behaves in the same way on similar occasions, then he has rise
immortal before the general resurrection.327
Do you see how the fallen faculty is not destroyed in its essence (for it is
impossible to destroy human nature), but is resurrected by a redirection of its
innate energy in a different, God-pleasing direction, and that these faculties
are the very means by which we may be raised towards union with the
heavenly, in St. Gregory of Nyssas words?328
Manichaean. This sounds dangerously like the Freudian idea of sublimation
to me. Or rather, its worse than that: you seem to regard sexual relations as a
path to the knowledge of God! As if sex has anything to do with the Holy
Trinity! This is Gnosticism! This is Tantrism!
Orthodox. But Father, Ive been quoting from the Holy Fathers!
St. Theodore the Great Ascetic, A Century of Spiritual Texts, no. 24.
St. Gregory of Nyssa, On the Making of Man, XVIII, 5.
325 St. Isaiah, On Guarding the Intellect: Twenty-Seven Texts, 1.
326 St. John, The Ladder, 5:26.
327 St. John, The Ladder, 15:60.
328 St. Gregory of Nyssa, On the Soul and the Resurrection, P.G. 46:61.
323
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) of this
faculty and do not make it die; they do not suck it into themselves without
letting it move, but they show it to be active in love towards God and
neighbour.331
4. Marriage and Monasticism
Manichaean. Alright, you have a point. Nevertheless, marriage remains an
earthly institution. Monasticism calls us to a higher mystery which is above
and beyond all the good things of this life.
Orthodox. Undoubtedly. But we are talking about the good of marriage here,
not the still higher good of monasticism. Remember: monasticism is not made
St. Gregory Palamas, Triads, I, ii, 1.
St. Gregory Palamas, Triads, II, ii, 5.
331 St. Gregory Palamas, Triads, III, iii, 15.
329
330
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332
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whereas the weaker vessels He leads towards marriage, since the purpose of
marriage is to prevent fornication (I Corinthians 7.2).
Orthodox. I have already agreed that one of the purposes of marriage is to
avoid fornication. But it is only one purpose. And I think that Gods gifts are
distributed for much deeper and more mysterious reasons than simply the
greater or lesser sexual temperance of this or that person. What of those
monks who fell into fornication, but repented and later became saints? Are we
to conclude that they should really have married first?
Manichaean. Not necessarily. Perhaps all the temptations of married life the
everyday cares, the looking after children would have quenched their zeal
for God. St. Paul gives this as one of the main reasons for the superiority of
monasticism over marriage (I Corinthians 7.34).
Orthodox. Yes indeed, that is just my point! In fact, I believe it is the main
reason. The main reason why monasticism is superior to marriage is that it
creates better conditions for the struggle against the passions, less distractions
of every kind. It is not a question of sexuality in the first place, still less of
avoiding the supposed sinfulness of sexual relations in marriage.
Manichaean. And yet even the married are called to abstain from sexual
relations if possible. For the apostle writes: The time is short; so let those
who have wives live as though they had none, and those involved in worldly
affairs as though they were not involved (I Corinthians 7.29,31).
Orthodox. The apostle is talking about non-attachment to material things here,
not total sexual abstinence. For St. Gregory Palamas, immediately after citing
this verse, writes: This, I think, is harder to accomplish than the keeping of
ones virginity. For experience shows that total abstinence is easier than selfcontrol in food and drink.333
Manichaean. My friend Fr. G. says that a man can separate from his wife for
the sake of abstinence, even without his wifes permission. One of Justinians
novellas permits it.
Orthodox. There is another of Justinians novellas which says that any
legislation of the Church which contradicts the Canons of the Church is ipso
facto illegal. The canons specifically forbid clergy to put away their wives
under pretext of religion (Apostolic Canon 5), lest we should affect
injuriously marriage constituted by God and blessed by His presence, as the
Gospel saith: What God hath joined together, let no man put asunder; and
the Apostle saith, Marriage is honourable and the bed undefiled; and again,
Art thou bound to a wife? Seek not to be loosed (Sixth Ecumenical Council,
Canon 13).
Manichaean. But I know of cases from the lives of the saints in which the
saint has left his wife without her permission.
Orthodox. There are exceptions to every rule. But the rule must still be
maintained as the norm, and nobody is permitted to deny the norm set by
God. This point is well illustrated by the Life of the British saint, Monk-Martyr
Nectan of Hartland (+c. 500). St. Nectans father, Brychan, was a local prince
who left his wife to practise the ascetic life in Ireland. After several years of
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250
asceticism, he returned to his native land, and there, finding his wife still alive,
although he had not proposed any such thing himself, he had relations with
her and begat several sons and daughters one for each year of his unlawful
abstinence. Brychan recognised his fault, saying: Now has God punished me
for vainly intending to act contrary to His will.334 Brychan and his children,
all of whom became monastic missionaries in south-west England, are
counted among the saints of the British Church a happy ending which
would not have come to pass if he had continued his unlawful asceticism to
the end of his life
Manichaean. You promised not to quote from any more lives of the Celtic
saints!
Orthodox. Yes, forgive me
Manichaean. So let us return to the real Tradition The Lord Himself says:
If any man come to Me, and hate not his father, and mother, and wife, and
children, and brethren, and sisters, yea, and his own life also, he cannot be My
disciple (Luke 14.26).
Orthodox. However, Blessed Theophylact interprets this verse as follows:
The Lover of man does not teach hatred for man, nor does He counsel us to
take our own lives. But He desires His true disciples to hate his own kin when
they prevent him from giving reverence to God and when he is hindered from
doing good by his relationship to them. If they do not hinder us in these
things, then He teaches us to honor them until our last breath.335
Manichaean. Still, you have to admit: the highest level of sanctity is
unattainable for married people.
Orthodox. I would agree that a married person cannot hope to achieve all the
crowns, because there is a special crown for virginity. The Church teaches that
a special reward is reserved for the great feat of monasticism. And
Archbishop Theophan of Poltava writes: With the blessedness of virginity
there is no comparison, neither in heaven, nor on earth.336
Manichaean. So you agree with me
Orthodox. Not completely. St. John Chrysostom writes: Use marriage
temperately, and you will be the first in the Kingdom of heaven and be
counted worthy of all its blessings.337 And again: If any marry thus, with
these views, he will be but little inferior to monks; the married are only a little
below the unmarried.338
Manichaean. The question here is: what is the meaning of temperately? My
friend Fr. G. argues that temperately means virginally, insofar as the
meaning and aim of Christian marriage does not differ in any way from the
celibate life.
Orthodox. I think you should pay more attention to the actual words of the
Holy Fathers, and less to Fr. G.s interpretation of them! What does the saint
Gilbert Noble, The Saints of Cornwall, Oxford: Holywell Press, volume V, 1970, pp. 65-66.
Blessed Theophylact, The Explanation of the Holy Gospel according to St. Luke, 14.26.
336 Archbishop Theophan, Letters, op. cit., p. 37.
337 St. John Chrysostom, Homily 7 on Hebrews, 4.
338 St. John Chrysostom, Homily 20 on Ephesians.
334
335
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actually say? It is possible, very possible, also for those who have wives to be
virtuous, if they wish. How? If they, while having wives, shall be as though
they had them not, if they will not rejoice in acquisitions, if they will use the
world as if not using it (I Corinthians 7.29-31). But if some have found
marriage an obstacle, let them know that it is not marriage that serves as an
obstacle, but self-indulgence ill-using marriage, just as wine does not produce
drunkenness, but evil self-indulgence and its intemperate use. Use marriage
in a temperate way, and you will be the first in the Heavenly Kingdom and
will taste all its blessings, which may we all be worthy of through the grace
and love for man of our Lord Jesus Christ.
The critical comparison here is between wine and sexual relations. Just as it
is possible to drink wine sparingly without getting drunk, so it is possible to
have sexual relations in marriage in a temperate manner, without it serving
as an impediment to the spiritual life. Complete abstinence from sexual
relations is definitely not indicated. If it were, then the saint would have said
that one must not drink wine even in small quantities because even the
smallest consumption leads to drunkenness. But the whole point of the
comparison is that in wine-drinking, as in marital relations, small,
measured use is not harmful. For, as St. John Chrysostom writes,
commenting on St. Paul's phrase "sold under sin": "Desire is not sin; but when
it becomes extravagant, and breaks the bonds of lawful marriage, and springs
even upon other men's wives, it becomes thereafter adultery - not, however,
because of the desire, but because of the lack of moderation."339 So there is no
evidence that St. Chrysostom meant by temperance complete abstinence.
Manichaean. Alright. But the majority of the saints were monastics.
Orthodox. If you count all the martyrs, then I am not at all sure that the
majority are monastics. However, I would agree that the majority of the most
famous saints, including the very greatest such as the Mother of God and St.
John the Baptist, were virgins or monastics. And this is a clear witness to the
general superiority of monasticism over marriage as a Christian path in life.
But that is a point I have never disputed. What I dispute is your contention
that marriage necessarily involves sin because of the element of sexual
relations. And that marriage in itself prevents men from reaching the highest
levels of sanctity.
Manichaean. I think you will find that the married saints were saints, not
because of their marriage, but in spite of it. They either ceased from marital
relations, and were therefore purified of sexual stain, or they suffered
martyrdom, which removes all stains.
Orthodox. The Martyr Thomais of Alexandria was martyred for her
faithfulness to her husband, with whom, as far as we know, she led a normal
married life. St. Daniel of Skete recommended that monks suffering from
sexual temptations should pray to her for relief, which would appear to
indicate that her virtue lay precisely in her refusal to succumb to sexual sin.
Her martyrdom did not remove sexual sin, but was the culmination of her
successful struggle against sexual sin.
339
252
Furmanov, Russkij Pastyr (Russian Pastor), 36, 1, 2000, p. 34. Italics mine (V.M.).
Khomyakov, quoted in Orthodox Life (Jordanville), November-December, 1983, p. 22.
253
342
254
St. Gregory the Theologian, In Praise of Virginity, 11.263-75, translated in Orthodox Life,
November-December, 1981.
344 St. Ignatius, To Polycarp, 5.
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Orthodox. No, it does not. The Scriptures cannot contradict each other. We
have already seen that Hebrews 13.4, as interpreted by the Holy Fathers,
clearly indicates that marriage and sexual relations in marriage are pure. So
the passage from Revelation that you quote cannot have a meaning
contradictory to that. I think the resolution of the problem is simple. For those
who have made a vow of virginity relations with women are a defilement,
which also explains why so many monastic texts speak about marriage as if it
were a defilement. In the context of the monastic struggle, this is perfectly
understandable and right. For, as Origen says, to think that marital life leads
to destruction is useful, since it elicits a striving for perfection.345 But in the
broader context of Christian theology as a whole, and for those who have not
made a vow of virginity, there is no defilement in entering into lawful
marriage. Thus St. Gregory the Theologian says to those preparing to be
baptised: Are you not yet married to the flesh? Fear not this consecration;
you are pure even after marriage. I will take the risk of that. I will join you in
marriage. I will dress the bride. We do not dishonour marriage because we
give a higher honour to virginity. I will imitate Christ, the pure Bridegroom
and Leader of the Bride, as He both worked a miracle at a wedding, and
honours marriage with His Presence.346
Former Manichaean. Alright. I am convinced
Orthodox. Glory to God! So, Father, will you marry us?
Former Manichaean. With the greatest pleasure!
Orthodox. [smiles] Youre not against pleasure any more, then?
Former Manichaean. Not this kind of pleasure! And I must thank you for
enabling me now for the first time to utter the prayer of the marriage service
with conviction: O Holy God, Who didst create man out of dust, and didst
fashion his wife out of his rib, and didst unite her unto him as a helpmeet; for
it seemed good to Thy majesty that man should not be alone upon the earth:
Do thou even now, O Master, stretch out Thy hand from Thy holy dwellingplace and unite this Thy servant, and this Thy handmaid; for by Thee is the
husband united unto the wife. Join them in one mind; crown them into one
flesh, granting unto them the fruit of the womb, and the enjoyment of fair
children
Dedicated to the servants of God Alexei and Olga, on their marriage.
March 1/14, 2002.
256
A Rejoinder to the Response to Fr. Alexey Youngs Article Cults Within and
Without (Orthodox America, March-April, 1996)
The phenomenon of false eldership is well-known in monastic circles.
However, in our times it has become rampant even in parishes in the world
especially in the Moscow Patriarchate, but also in True Orthodox Church. Fr.
Alexey Young has justly criticised the practice whereby lay parishioners are
given monastic-style obediences by parish priests who arrogate to themselves
authority over them that is appropriate only to a true, Spirit bearing elder.
And he is surely right to say that you should be wary "if you are a layman in a
parish situation [and] are expected to get permission (a blessing) from the
priest before you change jobs, buy a new car, etc. Under normal
circumstances these are not the proper purview of a parish priest, however
wise and pious he may otherwise be. One may -- and should -- ask for prayers
and advice about these and other non-controversial aspects of practical life,
but asking for permission is quite a different thing." Since such demands for
monastic-style obedience are often encountered by laymen, Fr. Alexey, as a
pastor of laymen, has every right to express an opinion on the subject, basing
himself, of course, on the Tradition of the Orthodox Church as revealed in the
Holy Scriptures and the writings of the Holy Fathers.
One of the Fathers who spoke most urgently about the dangers of false
elders was Bishop Ignatius Brianchaninov, who wrote: "What has been said of
solitude and seclusion must also be said of obedience to elders in the form in
which it was practiced in ancient monasticism -- such obedience is not given in
our time.347 Fr. Alexey does not mention Bishop Ignatius, but he follows in
the same tradition when he asserts: "... in this country, at least, there are NO
true elders today whose voice can he the voice of heaven for a disciple or
spiritual child" (emphasis his).
The Response disputes this opinion, pointing out that the Optina elders
flourished during the time of Bishop Ignatius, and that "in this century, many
Holy Elders in Russia, Romania Bulgaria, Greece, Mt Athos, Mt. Sinai and
elsewhere have led countless souls to salvation."
However, disputes about the number of elders in Russia or America in the
19th or 20th century are beside the point. The point is that the grace of true
eldership has +grown exceedingly scarce (how could it be otherwise in the era
of the Antichrist?), and that great care must therefore be exercised before
entering into a relationship of strict obedience to a supposed elder, insofar as
obedience to a false elder, according to the Holy Fathers, can lead to the loss
of one's soul.
Bishop Ignatius Brianchaninov, The Arena, Jordanville: Holy Trinity Monastery, 1991,
chapter 12, p. 43, emphasis mine
347
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351
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Many converts are tempted to submit to a false elder for another reason that he led them to Orthodoxy and may well be the only Orthodox leader in
the vicinity. Then a mixture of gratitude and the fear of becoming completely
isolated may lead the convert to conclude that Divine Providence must have
led him to submit his whole life to this man for the salvation of his soul. The
false elder, who is often a cunning psychologist, can exploit this situation to
gain complete control over his disciples, adding, in the case of disobedience,
the threat of fearsome sanctions, including very strict penances, curses and
even anathematization and expulsion (supposedly) from the Orthodox
Church! - a tragic situation which may lead to the convert's abandoning the
Orthodox Church altogether, and which the present writer has personally
observed in True Orthodox communities in England, Russia, Bulgaria and
Greece.
Many who have fallen into the trap of false eldership and begin to see
their real situation, are deterred from breaking free by false feelings of guilt,
as if there were no circumstances in which a disciple can disobey an elder. But,
even apart from heresy, there are certain conditions in which it is right to
disobey and leave one's elder, as we read in the Sayings of the Desert Fathers:
A brother questioned Abba Poemen, saying, "I am losing my soul through
living near my abba; should I go on living with him?" The old man knew that
he was finding this harmful and he was surprised that he even asked if he
should stay there. So he said to him, "Stay if you want to." The brother left
him and stayed there. He came back again and said, 'I am losing my soul." But
the old man did not tell him to leave. He came a third time and said, "I really
cannot stay there any longer." Then Abba Poemen said, "Now you are saving
yourself; go away and do not stay with him any longer. And he added,
"When someone sees that he is in danger of losing his soul, he does not need
to ask advice."355
Perhaps the most characteristic mark of the last times is the spiritual
isolation of the individual believer. As David says: I am alone until I pass
by Flight hath failed me, and there is none that watcheth out for my soul
(Psalm 140.12, 141.6).356 Of course, no true Christian is ever really alone: he
always has with him God and the Mother of God and all the saints and angels
of the Heavenly Church. But in the last times the support of the Heavenly
Church may be the only real support that the conscientious believer has, as
the Earthly Church grows weak and small, and even such leaders as are left
become ensnared in uncanonical situations or suspect in some other way.
Abba Poemen, The Alphabetical Series, Pi, Poemen, 189, London: Mowbrays, 1975.
In the Septuagint, the phrase watcheth out could also be translated superviseth or
acts as a bishop(
).
355
356
261
This has been the experience of many thousands of believers of the Russian
Catacomb Church, and it is therefore from the Catacomb Church that we hear
the most urgent admonitions to preserve our spiritual freedom, "lest
imperceptibly and little by little we lose the freedom which our Lord Jesus
Christ, the Liberator of all men, has 'given us as a free gift by His Own
Blood".357
Thus Hieromartyr Bishop Damascene, Bishop of Glukhov, said, "Perhaps
the time has come when the Lord does not wish that the Church should stand
as an intermediary between Himself and the believers, but that everyone is
called to stand directly before the Lord and himself answer as it was with the
forefathers!" 358 Again, Hieromartyr Joseph, Metropolitan of Petrograd,
emphasized the possibility that the true Christians of the last times will have
to leave all the recognized spiritual guides; for "perhaps the last 'rebels'
against the betrayers of the Church and the accomplices of Her ruin will be
not only bishops and not protopriests, but the simplest mortals, just as at the
Cross of Christ His last gasp of suffering was heard by a few simple souls
who were close to Him..."359
Thus we may be moving into the last period of the Church's history, when
the wheel has come round full circle and the Church has returned to the
molecular structure of Abraham's Family Church, when true bishops are few
and far between, when charismatic spiritual guides have more or less
disappeared, and when the individual believer has to seek the answers to his
spiritual problems from God and God's word alone, remembering David's
words: It is better to trust in the Lord than to trust in man. It is better to hope
in the Lord than to hope in princes (Psalm 118:8-9).
If even the Apostle Peter was rebuked for making damaging concessions
to the Jews (Galatians 2:11-12), how can we expect never to be in conflict with
our spiritual leaders? And if even the Apostle Paul feared lest after preaching
to others he himself should be disqualified (I Corinthians 9:27), how can we
deny the possibility that our spiritual guides may also lose grace,
necessitating our departure from them? Those who point out these facts are
not inciting to rebellion -far from it! They are calling men to a sober
understanding of the nature of the times we live in, They are warning that
those who, unlike the true apostles and holy fathers and God-bearing elders
of all ages, attempt to lord it over our faith (II Corinthians 1:24) must be
rejected for the sake of that same faith, out of obedience to the one and only
infallible authority, God Himself.
262
(Orthodox America, vol. XVI , 1 (141), July, 1996; revised June 22 / July 5,
2004)
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sponsorship of Britain and the Soviet Union, and to Israels allies (or
colonies, as some asserted) in the West, especially America, the only
remaining superpower. In particular, alarm was aroused by the spread
throughout the West, and thence into the East, of new forms of identification
and money exchange credit cards, bar-codes, 18-figure identity cards, etc.
which appeared to contain the number of the beast, 666. The question raised
in many minds, and addressed in the present article, is: could this be the seal
of the Antichrist?
1. Authorities and anti-authorities
Let us begin by studying the reign of the Antichrist since 1917. In what
does it consist? What are its essential characteristics?
According to the holy apostles and fathers of the Church, the reign of the
Antichrist will be characterised by an extreme form of anarchy that is, the
absence of law and order. Now the origin of all law and order is God, so all
law and order, all true authority, is established by God. That is the meaning of
the apostles famous saying: There is no power that is not of God; the powers
that be are established by God (Romans 13.1). Christians honour the king
and pray for the powers that be precisely in order to avoid the great evil of
anarchy, that we may lead a quiet and peaceable life in all godliness and
reverence (I Timothy 2.2). Since anarchy is opposed to God-established
authority, it is opposed to God, and must therefore itself be opposed by all
those who fear God and obey His holy will.
A ruler may be unjust and cruel, but as long as he prevents anarchy
Christians must obey him. Thus St. Irenaeus of Lyons writes: Some rulers are
given by God with a view to the improvement and benefit of their subjects
and the preservation of justice; others are given with a view to producing fear,
punishment and reproof; yet others are given with a view to displaying
mockery, insult and pride in each case in accordance with the deserts of the
subjects. Thus Gods judgement falls equally on all men. 360 Again, St.
Isidore of Pelusium writes that the evil ruler has been allowed to spew out
this evil, like Pharaoh, and, in such an instance, to carry out extreme
punishment or to chastise those for whom great cruelty is required, as when
the king of Babylon chastised the Jews.361
But there is line beyond which an evil ruler ceases to be a ruler and
becomes an anti-ruler, an unlawful tyrant, who is not to be obeyed. Thus the
Jews were commanded by God through the Prophet Jeremiah to submit to the
king of Babylon, evil though he was; whereas they were commanded through
St. Irenaeus, Against Heresies, v, 24, 3; translated in Maurice Wiles & Mark Santer,
Documents in Early Christian Thought, Cambridge University Press, 1977, p. 226.
361 St. Isidore, Letter 6, quoted in Selected Letters of Archbishop Theophan of Poltava, Liberty, TN:
St. John of Kronstadt Press, 1989, p. 36.
360
265
another prophet, Moses, to resist and flee from the Egyptian Pharaoh, and
rebelled again, with Gods blessing, under Antiochus Epiphanes. For in the
one case the authority, though evil, was still an authority, which it was
beneficial to obey; whereas in the other cases the authority was in fact an antiauthority, obedience to which would have taken the people further away
from God.
Anarchy, the absence of true authority, can be of two kinds: organised and
disorganised. When a true authority collapses, there usually follows a period
of disorganised anarchy, which is characterised by individual crimes of all
kinds murder, robbery, rape, sacrilege, - that go unchecked and unpunished
because of the absence of a true power. Such was the period of Russian
history that followed the collapse of the Orthodox empire in February, 1917.
The Provisional government, having itself contributed to the collapse of the
empire, and having received its authority neither (through holy anointing)
from God nor (by means of a popular vote) from men, was unable to check
the rising tide of anarchy and collapsed ignominiously. The disorganised
anarchy of the Provisional government was followed by the organised
anarchy of the Bolshevik government
This was foreseen by many prophets. And it was revealed that the coming
period would be the beginning of the last times when it would be necessary to
suffer in order not to receive the seal of the Antichrist. Thus on February 21,
1917, a 14-year-old Kievan novice, Olga Zosimovna Boiko, fell into a deep
trance which lasted for exactly forty days and during which many mysteries
were revealed to her. One of these was the coming abdication of the Tsar. And
she saw the following: In blinding light on an indescribably wonderful
throne sat the Saviour, and next to Him on His right hand our sovereign,
surrounded by angels. His Majesty was in full royal regalia: a radiant white
robe, a crown, with a sceptre in his hand. And I heard the martyrs talking
amongst themselves, rejoicing that the last times had come and that their
number would be increased.
They said that they would be tormented for the name of Christ and for
refusing to accept the seal [of the Antichrist], and that the churches and
monasteries would soon be destroyed, and those living in the monasteries
would be driven out, and that not only the clergy and monastics would be
tortured, but also all those who did not want to receive the seal and would
stand for the name of Christ, for the Faith and the Church.362
Now Christians are obliged to recognise every power that is in fact a
power in the apostolic meaning of the word that is, which at least tries to
prevent anarchy by rewarding the good and punishing the bad (Romans 13.3;
Letter of Sergius Nilus to Hierodeacon Zosimas, 6 August, 1917; in Vladimir Gubanov,
Tsar Nikolai II-ij i Novie Mucheniki (Tsar Nicholas II and the New Martyrs), St. Petersburg, 2000,
p. 121
362
266
I Peter 2.14). Such a power does not have to be Christian: although only the
Orthodox anointed kings, working together with the Orthodox hierarchs, are
able to establish Gods order in anything approaching fullness, even pagan,
heretical and Muslim states punish those crimes that are recognised as such
by the vast majority of mankind, and are therefore recognised as legitimate by
the Church. However, such recognition can only be relative relative, that is,
to the degree to which the government does in fact establish order, - and in
extreme cases can be refused altogether.
Thus in the fourth century, the Persian King Sapor proposed to
Hieromartyr Simeon, Bishop of Seleucia and Ctesiphon, that he worship the
sun, in exchange for which he would receive every possible honour and gift.
But if he refused, this would bring about the complete destruction of
Christianity in Persia. Now already before he had made this proposal to
Simeon, King Sapor had started to kill the clergy, confiscate church property
and raze the churches to the ground. So when he was brought before the king
for his reply, St. Simeon not only refused to worship the sun but also, upon
entering, refused to recognise the king by bowing. This omission of his
previous respect for the kings authority was noticed and questioned by the
King. St. Simeon replied: "Before I bowed down to you, giving you honour as
a king, but now I come being brought to deny my God and Faith. It is not
good for me to bow before an enemy of my God!"363
Again, when Julian the Apostate (361-363) came to the throne, the Church
refused to recognize him. Thus St. Basil the Great prayed for the defeat of
Julian in his wars against the Persians; and it was through his prayers that the
apostate was in fact killed, as was revealed by God to the holy hermit Julian
of Mesopotamia.364 At this, St. Basils friend, St. Gregory the Theologian wrote:
I call to spiritual rejoicing all those who constantly remained in fasting, in
mourning and prayer, and by day and by night besought deliverance from
the sorrows that surrounded us and found a reliable healing from the evils in
unshakeable hope What hoards of weapons, what myriads of men could
have produced what our prayers and the will of God produced? Gregory
called Julian not only an apostate, but also universal enemy and general
murderer, a traitor to Romanity (
267
Again, when the Norman Duke William invaded England in 1066 with the
blessing of the Pope, and was crowned as the first Catholic king of England in
the following year, the brother-bishops and hieromartyrs Ethelric and
Ethelwine solemnly anathematized both him and the Pope, and called on the
people to rise up against the false authority (they did, and 20% of the English
population was killed by the papists). Again, in 1611 St. Hermogen, patriarch
of Moscow, called on the Russian people to rise up against the cryptoCatholic false Demetrius, although the latter had been anointed by a
supposedly Orthodox patriarch.
The state that is refused recognition by the Church is the state of organized
anarchy that is, the state in which crime is not only not punished, as in
disorganized anarchy, but is confirmed and recognized as lawful. Thus the
essence of antichristian power is not simply the doing of evil all states, even
the most Orthodox, at times do evil but the systematic recognition of evil as
good, of lawlessness as the law, of the abnormal as the norm and even the aim
of society. Such a state is the mystery of lawlessness (II Thessalonians 2.7).
Such a state was the Bolshevik regime, which, taking advantage of the
disorganized anarchy prevailing under the Provisional government, not only
did not restore order, but consolidated, intensified and organized the chaos,
made it the norm, made it lawful. Church tradition calls unlawful councils,
councils that preach heresy instead of truth, robber councils. In the same
way, unlawful states such as the Bolshevik regime can be called robber
states, insofar as murder, robbery and sacrilege become the norm under
them indeed, are committed primarily by the state itself. Robber states
cannot command the obedience of God-fearing Christians, for they are not
authorities in the apostolic sense of the word, but anti-authorities. Rather,
such states must be rebuked and rejected by them.
That is why, on November 11, 1917, the Local Council of the Russian
Orthodox Church addressed a letter to the faithful calling the revolution
descended from the Antichrist and declaring: Open combat is fought
against the Christian Faith, in opposition to all that is sacred, arrogantly
abasing all that bears the name of God (II Thessalonians 2.4) But no earthly
kingdom founded on ungodliness can ever survive: it will perish from
internal strife and party dissension. Thus, because of its frenzy of atheism, the
State of Russia will fall For those who use the sole foundation of their
power in the coercion of the whole people by one class, no motherland or
holy place exists. They have become traitors to the motherland and instigated
an appalling betrayal of Russia and her true allies. But, to our grief, as yet no
government has arisen which is sufficiently one with the people to deserve
the blessing of the Orthodox Church. And such will not appear on Russian
soil until we turn with agonizing prayer and tears of repentance to Him,
without Whom we labour in vain to lay foundations
268
269
270
way so long as they showed loyalty to the state (which, as we have seen, the
Christians were very eager to do), the Bolsheviks insisted in imposing their
own ways upon the Christians in every sphere: in family life (civil marriage
only, divorce on demand, children spying on parents), in education
(compulsory Marxism), in economics (dekulakization, collectivization), in
military service (the oath of allegiance to Lenin), in science (Darwinism,
Lysenkoism), in art (socialist realism), and in religion (the requisitioning of
valuables, registration, commemoration of the authorities at the Liturgy,
reporting of confessions by the priests). Resistance to any one of these
demands was counted as "anti-Soviet behaviour", i.e. political disloyalty.
Therefore it was no use protesting one's political loyalty to the regime if one
refused to accept just one of these demands. According to the Soviet
interpretation of the word: "Whoever keeps the whole law but fails in one has
become guilty of all of it" (James 2.10), such a person was an enemy of the people.
In view of this, it is not surprising that many Christians came to the
conclusion that it was less morally debilitating to reject the whole regime that
made such impossible demands, since the penalty would be the same whether
one asserted one's loyalty to it or not. And if this meant living as an outlaw, so
be it. Such a rejection of, or flight from the state had precedents in Russian
history; and we find some priests, such as Hieromartyr Timothy Strelkov of
Mikhailovka (+1930) and even some bishops, such as Hieroconfessor
Amphilochius of Yeniseisk (+1946), adopting this course.370
Nevertheless, the path of total rejection of the Soviet state required
enormous courage, strength and self-sacrifice, not only for oneself but also
(which was more difficult) for one's family or flock. It is therefore not
surprising that, already during the Civil War, the Church began to soften her
anti-Soviet rhetoric and try once more to draw the line between politics and
religion. This is what Patriarch Tikhon tried to do in the later years of his
patriarchate with the best of motives (to save Christian lives), but, it must be
said, only mixed results. Thus his decision to allow some, but not all of the
Church's valuables to be requisitioned by the Bolsheviks in 1922 not only did
not bring help to the starving of the Volga, as was the intention, but led to
many clashes between believers and the authorities and many deaths of
believers. For, as the holy Elder Nectarius of Optina said: "You see now, the
patriarch gave the order to give up all valuables from the churches, but they
belonged to the Church!"371
The decision to negotiate and compromise with the Bolsheviks - in
transgression of the decrees of the 1917-18 Council - only brought confusion
and division to the Church. Thus on the right wing of the Church there were
See Schema-Monk Epiphanius (Chernov), Tserkov Katakombnaia na Zemlye Rossijskoj (The
Catacomb Church on the Russian Land), 1980 (Woking, England, 1980, typescript, in Russian).
371 Matushka
Evgenia Grigorievna Rymarenko, "Remembrances of Optina Staretz
Hieroschemamonk Nektary", Orthodox Life, vol. 36, 3, May-June, 1986, p. 39.
370
271
those who thought that the patriarch had already gone too far; while on the
left wing there were those who wanted to go further. However, neither
Patriarch Tikhon nor his successor, Metropolitan Peter, crossed the line which
would have involved surrendering the spiritual freedom of the Church into
the hands of the authorities.
That line was crossed only with the coming to power, in 1927, of
Metropolitan Peters deputy, Metropolitan Sergius. He sought and obtained
legalization for his church organization, the present-day Moscow
Patriarchate. And then introduced the commemoration of the God-hating
anti-authorities at the Divine Liturgy.
This was a fateful step, because to seek legalisation from a state
inescapably implies recognition of that state to a greater or lesser degree; at a
minimum, it implies recognition of that state as God-established and the
majority of its laws as binding on Christians. But how can a state that openly
and systematically wars against God be God-established? And how can a
state that legalizes all manner of crimes be considered to be legal in itself and
the fount of legality?! Rather, such a state is not an authority at all, but the
beast of the Apocalypse, of whom it is written that it receives its authority, not
from God, but from the devil (Revelation 13.2).
Moreover, by declaring, in his famous Declaration, that the Soviet
regime's joys were the Church's joys, and its sorrows the Church's sorrows,
Sergius in effect declared an identity of aims between the Church and the State.
And this was not just a lie, but a lie against the faith, a concession to the
communist ideology. For it implied that communism as such was good, and its
victory to be welcomed.
Thus Sergius Nilus quoted Izvestia, which said that Metropolitan Sergius
Declaration was an attempt to construct a cross in such a way that it
would look like a hammer to a worker, and like a sickle to a peasant. In
other words, said Nilus, to exchange the cross for the Soviet seal, the seal of
the beast (Rev. 13.16).372
In order to protect the flock of Christ from Sergius' apostasy, the leaders of
the True Church had to draw once more the line between politics and religion.
One approach was to distinguish between physical opposition to the regime
and spiritual opposition to it. Thus Hieromartyr Archbishop Barlaam of Perm
wrote that physical opposition was not permitted, but spiritual opposition
was obligatory.373 Again, Hieromartyr Bishop Mark (Novoselov) wrote: I am
an enemy of Soviet power and what is more, by dint of my religious
Nilus, Pismo o Sergianstve (Letter on Sergianism), Russkij Pastyr (Russian Pastor), 28-29,
II/III, 1997, p. 180 .
373 Cited in William Fletcher, The Russian Orthodox Church Underground, 1917-1970, Oxford
University Press, 1971, p. 64.
372
272
273
274
were stricter, others less strict. Thus some non-commemorators took jobs in
Soviet institutions and restricted their abstinence from Soviet life to nonmembership of the communist party and the Soviet church. Others not only
refused to work for the Antichrist in any way, but even refused to have
electricity in their homes, since this, too, came to them from the Antichrist. As
Soviet power weakened, some Catacomb Christians felt able to practise
economy and temper the strictness of their rule, Thus the Catacomb
hieromonk Gury (Pavlov) was a passportless, but took a Soviet passport in
1990 in order to receive consecration to the episcopate in the U.S.A.
The question of Soviet passports needs to be examined in a little more
detail. Passportisation had been introduced into the Soviet Union only in 1932,
and only for the most urbanized areas. Already then it was used as a means of
winkling out Catacomb Christians. Thus M.V. Shkvarovsky writes:
Completing their liquidation of the Josephites, there was a meeting of
regional inspectors for cultic matters on March 16, 1933, at a time when
passportisation was being introduced. The meeting decided, on the orders of
the OGPU, not to give passports to servants of the cult of the Josephite
confession of faith, which meant automatic expulsion from Leningrad.
Similar things happened in other major cities of the USSR.378
Catacomb hierarchs did not bless their spiritual children to take passports
because in filling in the forms the social origins and record of Christians was
revealed, making them liable to persecution. Also Catacomb Christians did
not want to receive what they considered to be the seal of the Antichrist, or to
declare themselves citizens of the antichristian kingdom.
In the 1930s the peasants had not been given passports but were chained to
the land which they worked. They were herded into the collective farms and
forced to do various things against their conscience, such as vote for the
communist officials who had destroyed their way of life and their churches.
Those who refused to do this refusals were particularly common in the
Lipetsk, Tambov and Voronezh areas were rigorously persecuted, and often
left to die of hunger.
On May 4, 1961, however, the Soviet government issued its decree on
parasitism and introduced its campaign for general passportisation. In local
papers throughout the country it was announced that, in order to receive a
Soviet passport, a citizen of the USSR would have to recognize all the laws of
Soviet power, past and present, beginning from Lenins decrees. Since this
involved, in effect, a recognition of all the crimes of Soviet power, a
movement arose to reject Soviet passports, a movement which was centred
mainly in the country areas among those peasants and their families who had
rejected collectivization in the 1930s.
378
275
276
that destroyed the Russian empire! 381 Rome, even in its pagan phase, had
protected the Christians from the fury of the Jews: the Soviet Union was, in its
early phase, the instrument of the Jews against the Christians. Rome, even in
its pagan phase, guaranteed a framework of law and order within which the
apostles could rapidly spread the faith from one end of the world to the other:
the Soviet Union forced a population that was already Orthodox in its great
majority to renounce their faith or hide it in deserts and mountains, in dens
and caves of the earth (Hebrews 11.38).
Still more recently, an anonymous publication has accused the Catacomb
Christians of premature flight from the world, analogous to the flight of the
Old Believers from Russian society. On this path of premature flight from the
world, writes the anonymous author, set out the schismatic Old Ritualists
under Peter. In our century, the Catacomb Christians decisively refused to
accept any state documents, seeing in them the seal of the Antichrist. Of
course, in Peters reign, and still more in Stalins regime, elements of an
antichristian kingdom were evident. But such terrible rebellions against the
God-established order were not yet the end, this is only the beginning of
sorrows, as the Gospel says (Luke 21.9).382
So what is the anonymous author asserting? That the Catacomb Christians
are schismatics on a par with the Old Ritualists?! This not only constitutes a
serious slander against the Catacomb Church, but also betrays a blindness
with regard to the eschatological significance of the Russian-Jewish
revolution, which, if only the beginning of sorrows, was nevertheless also
the beginning of the reign of the Antichrist, when the relationship between
the Church and the State changed from one of cooperation and mutual
recognition to one of mutual non-recognition and the most fundamental
incompatibility.
There can be no doubt that Peter the Great inflicted great damage on the
Church (and thereby indirectly also on the State, for which it paid in 1917)
through his westernizing reforms. However, the conscience of the Church,
while rejecting his errors, has always recognized that he died as a Christian
and God-anointed tsar (see the Life of St. Metrophanes of Voronezh, who
appeared to one of his venerators after his death and told him: If you want to
be pleasing to me, pray for the repose of the soul of Emperor Peter the
Great383). No saint of the Church ever counselled rebellion against Peter or
his successors, as opposed to resistance to certain of their decrees.384
Petrova, op. cit.
Kreditnie kartochki ili pechat antikhrista? (Credit cards or the seal of the antichrist?), St.
Petersburg: Tsentr Pravoslavnogo prosveshcheniya, 2000, pp. 8-9 .
383 Zhitia Sviatykh (The Lives of the Saints0, Moscow, 1908; first supplementary book. Quoted in
Svecha Pokaiania (Candle of Repentance), 1, March, 1998, p. 7 .
384 As Hieromonk Dionysius points out, the service of him that restraineth, although
undermined, was preserved by Russian monarchical power even after Peter and it is
necessary to emphasize this. It was preserved because neither the people nor the Church
381
382
277
As for the Old Ritualists, their rebellion was not in the first place against
Peter and his reforms, but against Patriarch Nicon and his reforms, which was
quickly followed by rebellion against Peters father, Tsar Alexis Mikhailovich
also. Later, they seized on Peters reforms as an excuse for widening and
deepening their rebellion against the God-established order, making them the
forerunners, not of the True Orthodox Christians of the Soviet catacombs,
who always recognized that which the Old Ritualists rejected, but of the
revolutionaries of 1905 and 1917. As Archbishop Anthony (Khrapovitsky)
wrote in 1912, in his encyclical to the Old Ritualists: The spirit of this
world winks at real revolutionaries and sent the money of your rich men to
create the Moscow rebellion of 1905.385
Another, more moderate objection is sometimes raised: that the exploit
(podvig) of the Catacomb Christians, while admirable and justified in view of
the ferocity of the Soviet regime, was nevertheless not necessary, for one
could be saved without resorting to such extreme measures.
The present writer is not aware of any decision by any competent Church
authority that would clarify the question whether the rejection of Soviet
passports was necessary for the salvation of Christians in the Soviet period. It
may be that such a question cannot be answered in a clear and categorical
manner in view of the great complexity and diversity of the relations between
individual believers and the Soviet state. Only God knows whether any
particular degree of involvement in Soviet life constituted apostasy or an
acceptable level of accommodation to circumstances.
However, the question whether the podvig of the Catacomb Christians was
necessary is much easier to answer. It is as easy to answer as the question:
Is it necessary to keep as far away from sin as possible, or: Is it necessary to
take every possible precaution against sin? The answer, of course, is: yes, it is
absolutely necessary!
The English have a parable: when you have supper with the devil, take a
very long spoon. The Catacomb Christians took not even very long spoons to
the marriage feast of the devil and the citizens of the Soviet state. In their
completely laudable zeal to keep their bridal garments spotless for the
marriage feast of Christ and His Church, they chose not even to step over the
threshold of the Soviet madhouse. They chose rather to go hungry than eat of
the devils food, the communion of heretics and apostates.
renounced the very ideal of the Orthodox kingdom, and, as even V. Klyuchevsky noted,
continued to consider as law that which corresponded to this ideal, and not Peters decrees.
(Priest Timothy and Hieromonk Dionysius Alferov, O Tserkvi, pravoslavnom Tsarstve i
poslednem vremeni (On the Church, the Orthodox Kingdom and the Last Times) , Moscow:
Russkaia Idea, 1998, p. 66 ).
385 Quoted in Otnoshenia s Staroobriadchestvom (Relations with Old Believerism),
Vozdvizhenie, (Exaltation), Winter, 2000, p. 76 .
278
And not only did they save their own souls thereby: they also provided an
absolutely necessary warning to those Christians who, thinking that they
could take coals into their breast and not be burned, were being tempted into
closer relations with the Antichrist. For as the beasts ferocity gradually
lessened from the 1956 amnesty onwards, and the Soviet state began to
acquire some (but never all) of the external characteristics of the normal
state, it was indeed tempting to think that the leopard was changing its spots,
that the lion was becoming a vegetarian, that Pharaoh was becoming Caesar
so that it was now time to give to Caesar what was Caesars
Against this terribly dangerous temptation, the movement of the
Passportless, which exploded at precisely this time, came as a powerful
warning. No, they said, the beast has not changed its nature. If its
persecution is less widespread now than before, this is because the opposition
to him has been largely destroyed. The persecution now is no less fierce than
before, only it is more subtle, for it now mixes rewards the comforts of the
Soviet paradise with punishments. But here we have no continuing city;
and if this was true even under the God-loving tsars, how can it not be even
more so now, under the God-hating Antichrist? If Christ suffered outside the
walls of the city in order to sanctify us by His Blood, then we, too, must go
out to Him outside the walls of the antichristian state (Hebrews 13.12-14).
Now, having said all this, it must be admitted that the seal of the Antichrist
in Soviet Russia could not have been the same seal that is mentioned in
Revelation 13, if only because it was not a mark placed on the right hand and
forehead.386 However, we are fully justified in calling it a seal (of the collective
Antichrist), if not the seal (of the personal Antichrist); for its acceptance, at
least in certain contexts (for example, the context of the 1961 law), entailed
acceptance of the whole lawless legislation and ideology of the Soviet state.
To that extent it was not just a neutral act of registration; it was an act of
registration in Satans kingdom, the kingdom of the Antichrist, and as such
was not only the forerunner of the seal, but in a sense the beginning of that
seal, in that it had the same apocalyptic significance for the life of Christians.
3. The Enigmatic 1990s
If we do not understand the period of Church history immediately
preceding our own, then we shall not be able to understand or perceive the
signs of our own times. Thus a correct understanding of the seal of the
Antichrist in the Soviet period is a necessary prerequisite to understanding
the seal in the post-Soviet period.
Only in this sense could the Soviet seal be said to be on the forehead and right hand: in
that it prevented people, from fear of the Jews, from making the sign of the cross with their
right hand on their forehead.
386
279
280
See Mikhail Nazarov, Tajna Rossii (The Mystery of Russia), Moscow: Russkaia Idea, 1999
281
282
393
283
should consist of 18 digits, in three groups, which means... six digits in each
group, forming the image of the number 666.394
Now a number or equivalent mark imprinted in some such way into the
body (and scanned, perhaps, by satellites in space) could indeed be
interpreted as a mark given by the beast.
Again, Tim Willard, editor of the Futurist magazine, writes of the
biochip: The technology behind such a biochip implant is fairly
uncomplicated and with a little refinement could be used in a variety of
human applications. Conceivably a number could be assigned at birth and
follow that person throughout life. Most likely it would be implanted on the
back of the right or the left hand so that it would be easy to scan at stores.
Then you would simply scan your hand to automatically debit your bank
account395
In this context, the following observation by George Spruksts is important:
Usually, when you want to contact someone on the internet, you type the
three letters www [for worldwide web]... It is fascinating that in the
international alphabet, w is used to translate the Hebrew letter vav into
the standard Roman alphabet. Vav, the sixth letter of the Hebrew alphabet,
represents the number 6. So, in a sense, when you type the three letters
www, you are entering the Hebrew equivalent of 666. We have all known
for a long time that the Antichrist will need a global communications system
to carry out his evil schemes. Now, we have one with his initials on it.396
It should be remembered that in technologically advanced countries the
internet is already widely used for buying and selling various things At the
same time, no means of communication is in itself evil. It is the message,
rather than the medium, which may be evil.
Also important in this context is the observation by the confessor Sergius
Nilus that the Star of David, the symbol of Jewish state power, has a structure
which can be described in terms of six sixes.
"The symbol or seal of the mystery of iniquity - of the God-fighting devil,
as well as its significance and power (albeit illusory), must be known to every
Jew - to the whole of the Jewish people and through it to Masonry, as the ally
of Jewry. Their seal will also be the seal of their king and antichrist-god, who
is not yet, but who will be in the nearest future.
Novij Mirovoj Poriadok v 2000-em godu? (The New World Order in the year 2000?)
Pravoslavnaia Rus (Orthodox Rus), 9 (1582), May 1/14, 1997, p. 5 .
395 Light for the Last Days, January-March, 1997, pp. 4-5.
396 Spruksts, 666 & the World Wide Web, [email protected], 15 September,
1997.
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"But does such a symbol, such a seal, really exist among the Jews and
Masons?...
"The six-pointed star, composed of two interlocking, equal-sided similar
triangles... Each of the triangles has three sides, three corners and three apexes.
Consequently, in the two triangles there will be 6 sides, 6 corners and 6
apexes...
"In the seal of the Antichrist, therefore, the number 6 is repeated three
times, that is: 666, which for fear of the Jews (John 19.38), for the reader who
understands (Matthew 24.15) the symbolism of the mystery, could also be
represented by the seer of mysteries in writing, as six hundred and sixty-six...
"... This star is truly just as sacred a symbol for the Jew (and therefore for
the Mason) as the sign of the life-giving Cross is for the Christian
"This seal which is sacred for Jewry bears the name in the ritual of the
Jewish services of 'Mochin-Dovid', which means 'Shield of David'. They put it
into the grave of every right-believing Jews, as an earnest of his communion
with his 'god' beyond the grave...
"The Masons and the offshoots of the Masonic tree - the theosophists, the
occultists, the spiritualists, the gnostic, etc. - attach just as sacred a significance
to this seal, but it has another name. It is called: "The Seal of Solomon" or the
Cabbalistic "Tetragramma".
"And so the symbol or seal of Judaeo-Masonry, the "synagogue of Satan" of
the apostates from Christ and Jewish kahal is the "tetragramma" of the
Cabbala.
"If the seal of those who are preparing a kingdom for the antichrist is the
"tetragramma of Solomon" or "Mochin Dovid", then is it not clear that it will
also be the seal of the Antichrist himself?
"Will any of those who believe in Christ renounce the Cross of the Lord?
Will he agree to replace it with another symbol?
"No way.
"Nor will the Jews and the Masons renounce their seal, until Israel is
converted and they shall look on Him Whom they have pierced..."397
So the combination of 666 on biochips inserted into our foreheads and
right hands, with 666 (www) on the internet, with 666 as the symbol of
Jewish political power (the Star of David), constitutes undoubtedly the closest
397
Nilus, It is Near, at the Very Door, Sergiev Posad, 1917, pp. 262-263, 248-250 .
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Antichrist that much greater. As Fr. Seraphim Rose used to say: it is later than
we think
The Jordanville Monk Vsevolod, in an article quoted at length by our
anonymous author, considers that while the new identity cards are probably
not the seal of the Antichrist, they may well be a preparation for it. This
conclusion is less comforting than it sounds; in fact, it implies that we have
every reason to approach these identity cards and similar objects with great
caution. For who knows at what time the preparation for the seal will turn
into the seal itself, especially since the trial seal will be very close to the final,
real seal in form?
The question is: how will we know when a certain technology has ceased
to be a mere preparation for the seal, and is the seal itself? At this point it
must be emphasized, as St. Gregory Palamas reminds us, that no number of
itself is evil, for the whole creation, and therefore all numbers, were created
good by God.398 An external mark or number only becomes evil in this we
can fully agree with our anonymous author - when its reception is bound up
with inner apostasy from Christ. In other words, it is not the number 666 as
such which destroys the soul, but the apostasy from Christ which is the
condition of receiving the seal of that number and the material benefits that
go with it.
Thus, as Monk Sergius writes, as long as we do not deny Christ with
knowledge, we should not be afraid of various technologies, not even if they
should inject 666 into our blood system!399
At some point, therefore, the use of this technology will be bound up with
certain conditions, conditions which it will be impossible for an Orthodox
Christian to accept. As far as the present writer knows, no such conditions are
attached yet to the use of any of the technologies in question; and it is idle
to speculate precisely what these conditions will be. Of one thing, however,
we can be certain in advance: that the revelation that the conditions attached
to the use of this technology are unacceptable will be more likely to be given
to those who have always treated it with the greatest suspicion and have kept
away from it even when it was not strictly necessary (because no conditions
were attached to its use) than to those who have looked down on their more
cautious brothers with scarcely concealed disdain, and who may therefore
have ceased to notice that, little by little and in the most clever and insidious
way, an originally neutral, even beneficial technology has become the
instrument of their damnation.
St. Gregory Palamas, Migne, P.G. 151, 224; E.P.E. 9, 492. Quoted in Archimandrite
Emmanuel Kalyva, The Seal of the Antichrist, Athens, 1989, p. 86 (in Greek).
399 Monk Sergius of Holy Transfiguration Monastery, Boston, to Subdeacon Paul Inglesby,
July 28 / August 10, 2000.
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Conclusion
In 1917 the world entered the era of the Antichrist. He who restrains,
Orthodox monarchical power, was removed, the great apostasy began and
Jewish antichristian power emerged from the underground into the
foreground of world history. Since then, the possibility has been ever present
that, together with the Antichrist, his seal, too, would appear not tomorrow,
not in generations to come, but today. This fact does not exclude the further
possibility that the onslaught of the Antichrist may be temporarily weakened,
even turned back, for a period before the end, and that, as some prophecies
indicate, there will be a resurrection of the Orthodox empire for a short
time. But in general the spiritual condition of mankind in the era of the
Antichrist will sharply deteriorate, according to the holy fathers, which must
make us especially vigilant with regard to the fulfilment of the prophecies
contained in the Apocalypse.
The Soviet era was the first era in history in which the majority of
Orthodox Christians have had to live for an extended period in a state not
established by God and not recognized, but rather anathematized, by the
Church that is, in a state of anarchy which the Apocalypse calls the beast. As
such, it is called the era of the collective Antichrist, in contrast to the era of the
personal Antichrist, which is yet to come and which will spread over the
whole earth. Being the Antichrist, Soviet power had its seal those forms of
legalization and commemoration which entailed the individual Christians or
church organizations recognition of the state as God-established and lawful.
The decade since the fall of Soviet power has been an enigmatic period full
of conflicting signs whose overall interpretation is not yet clear. On the one
hand, an opportunity has been presented to the broad masses of the Russian
people to learn the truth and join the True Church. On the other hand, this
opportunity has been seized so far by only a small minority, there has been no
return to Orthodox forms of official ecclesiastical and political life, and the
indications are that the advent of the personal Antichrist, the false king of the
Jews, is being prepared. These indications include: the establishment of the
state of Israel in 1948; the spread of American-Western-Jewish civilization
throughout the world; and the rise in influence of Talmudic Judaism and the
bowing before it of most of the worlds religions. Now again, as in the
generation before the First Coming of Christ, the land of Israel is at the centre
of world history, and the world as a whole is filled with the tense expectation
of a coming saviour only that saviour will be the Antichrist rather than
Christ.
In view of this, it is only natural that the appearance of the apocalyptic
number 666 in a series of technologies spread and controlled by the dominant
American-Western-Jewish civilization should have led many God-fearing
Christians to conclude that the end is near, even at the doors (Matthew
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24.23), and that those who are in Judaea that is, within the sphere of
influence of the New World Order and its seals should flee to the
mountains (Matthew 24.16) that is, have nothing to do with these
technologies or with the mysterious international powers that issue them.
Nevertheless, in the very tentative and humble opinion of the present
writer, these technologies are not the seal of the Antichrist itself, but a
preparation for it.
This conclusion is based on the following considerations: (1) so far no
conditions unacceptable to the Christian conscience have been attached to the
use of these technologies; (2) the American-Western-Jewish civilization that
uses them is in fact much weaker than may appear and is on the point of
collapse (cf. the prophecy of Elder Aristocles of Moscow and Mount Athos:
America will feed the world, but will finally collapse); (3) in consequence,
the possibility of a recovery of a truly Orthodox empire and civilization, as
indicated by many prophecies, is in fact much stronger than may appear;
which (4) accords with the possibility, indicated by certain other prophecies,
that the Antichrist, though a Jew, will in fact come, not from a pagan, heretical
or Jewish background, but from an Orthodox Christian environment (Russia)
and will try to imitate Orthodoxy in both his religion and his statehood.
However, in view of the uncertainty of the above conclusion, and of the
abundant exhortations to watchfulness contained in the writings of the holy
apostles and fathers, it is safer to draw the following, somewhat different
conclusion: that whether or not we believe that the modern forms of
identification are the seal of the Antichrist, the opinion of those zealots of
Orthodoxy who believe that they are should be respected and in no way
rejected or ignored. After all, it was these same zealots who refused to take
Soviet passports as being the seal of the collective Antichrist, who kept the
flame of the true understanding of the Soviet beast alive in the last years of
Soviet power, who were that salt which kept the last remnants of True
Orthodoxy in Russia from being corrupted. And if their watchfulness was so
vital in the past, it may well be so again in the future. For blessed is he who
reads and those who hear the words of this prophecy, and keep those things
which are written in it; for the time is near (Revelation 1.3).
Suzdal.
September 14/27, 2000.
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Because of the way she publicised the stigmata of her eating disorder, her
self-laceration, her semi-suicide attempts, she had somehow cured them of
their sense of estrangement.
Like apparently miraculous statues, marble Pietas, holy pictures, her
image seemed to tell them: I have suffered and I will redeem you.
In a country with the highest divorce rate in Europe, Dianas broken
marriage made those whose relationships had collapsed in bitterness and
pain feel that perhaps they were not such failures after all.
If even Diana, with her beauty and wealth, couldnt make her husband
love her, then countless of others couldnt be blamed for failing in exactly the
same way.
And those whose ethnicity and religion made them feel excluded felt
through the power of the Diana myth included at last.
As one Moslem said: She fell in love with a Moslem, a man from the
Middle East. If someone like Diana could love a Moslem, perhaps ordinary
people in Britain wont look at us as if we were enemies any more.
That is the role of myth. A powerful myth tells us more about our needs
than the reality upon which it is founded; it not only rises above reality, but
transforms it.400
There is much perceptive psychology in these words; but from an
Orthodox Christian perspective they are morally and spiritually misleading.
First, the people may have needs which express themselves in the creation
of myths, but if the needs are fallen, their expression needs to be suppressed
or rather, confessed. This may not accord with the tenets of modern
psychology (although Freud, for one, was by no means in favour of the
completely free expression of passion), but it agrees completely with
Orthodox Christian psychology, which favours self-knowledge but not
uncontrolled self-expression. In any case, if a myth is false, there is no way it
can heal us; for we can rise above our pettiness, our banality, our
ordinariness only through the truth, which alone, as the Lord said, can make
us free (John 8.32).
Secondly, it is misleading to oppose the head and the heart in such a stark
and categorical manner, still more to infer (as Leslie appears to do) that where
they are in conflict one must follow ones heart, even if this seems totally
irrational to the head. The wise Solomon says: He that trusteth in his own
heart is a fool (Proverbs 28.26), and the Prophet Jeremiah says: The heart is
400
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deceitful above all things (17.9). Both the head and the heart are fallen. They
can be healed only by a fervent pursuit of truth in all spheres dogmatic truth,
moral truth, psychological truth, scientific truth, artistic truth. And truth can
be attained only by the head and the heart working together under the
guidance of the Spirit of truth.
Diana said that she wanted to be a Queen of hearts; she lad claim to the
virtues of love and sincerity combined with royal charisma and the world
has taken her at her word. But love of the poor sits badly with great wealth
and luxurious living, and sincerity with public humiliation of ones
husband and family and betrayal of his marriage bed. For just as love can
so often be a cover for sentimentality at best, and self-indulgence at worst, so
sincerity can be a mask for unconscious hypocrisy and cruelty.
Diana may well be an icon, in the sense of a likeness and exemplar, of
many elements of popular culture, from her love of pop music and
psychotherapy to her eating disorders and religious ecumenism. People
identify with her in the faults they share with her, while vicariously enjoying
the things they do not share with her her beauty, her glamour, he popularity.
But the saints depicted in Orthodox icons are God-like rather than manlike; they depict the unfallen image of God in man rather than the image of
the beast to which we have fallen. We venerate them precisely because they
are not like us in our fallenness, but like God in His holiness.
If Diana is made into an icon in the sense of an object of veneration, then
there is a real danger of idolatry. Such an icon will not heal our infirmities,
because it will in fact confirm us in them, justify them, make them look good.
It will tell us that we do not have to change, to repent. Like the gods and
goddesses of the pagans, against whom the apostles fought, the veneration of
the new goddess Diana the hunted goddess rather than the hunter goddess,
as her brother said at her funeral service (although in fact she was both hunter
and hunted) will become a form of national self-worship and selfjustification, the deification of the nations fallen passions.
One constitutional expert has said of the Diana myth: Man invented
God, and man invented Diana. It would be truer to say: Man, having lost
faith in the true God, has invented a false goddess. Diana acquired this
ascendancy over the hearts of many millions of people without having any
formal political or ecclesiastical power, and without having provided any
great service to mankind. By a combination of Hollywood glamour, media
hype and an iconic likeness to everymans image of himself, she invented
the worlds longest-running and most popular soap-opera a show that is
destined to continue running long after her death, and whose popularity
democratic politicians will have to take into account for many years to come.
292
And yet the myth of Diana could never have come into being without her
being a real princess. For, for all Dianas personal gifts, and, as one American
commentator has written, for all the opprobrium heaped last week by
Dianas admirers on the chilly Windsors, she would have been invisible
without them.401 It is not simply that her royal marriage made her wellknown. Without the charisma attaching to her marriage in the purple, she
would have been just another high-born socialite.
This raises interesting questions concerning the enduring appeal of the
monarchy in our ultra-democratic society. Even such a convinced democrat as
C.S. Lewis could write of the monarchy as the channel through which all the
vital elements of citizenship - loyalty, the consecration of secular life, the
hierarchical principle, splendour, ceremony, continuity - still trickle down to
irrigate the dustbowl of modern economic Statecraft".402 Even in republican
America, whose whole national myth is built on its cult of individual freedom
and anti-monarchism, Diana-mania has reached extraordinary proportions, as
if she represented the queen the Americans never had and would so like to
have had
Thus to take just one example from many, a 51-year-old professor from
Chicago made a 8000-mile round trip just to lay lowers at Dianas grave,
saying: I absolutely had to come. You dont have to ask yourself why. If I
didnt, I just wouldnt have been able to forgive myself for the rest of my
life.403
And yet, how can this be so, when the whole of western education teaches
people to believe that monarchy is an outdated institution, when the
monarchies that survive have been deprived of all real power, when the
royals themselves often behave in an exceedingly unroyal manner, and when
Diana herself never ruled in reality, and by her death was an ex-royal, having
been divorced from her prince and deprived of her royal title?
Being made in the image of the Heavenly King, men instinctively venerate
the image of the Heavenly King in the earthly monarchies, even if some of
those images bear very little likeness to the Archetype. Just as those who do
not know the true God will nevertheless construct images of false gods, so
those who have never known a true king, and have been taught to despise the
true kings of the past, are still not protected from falling in love with pseudokings and queens. For even in democratic society the urge to love and
sacrifice oneself for someone higher that oneself can never be discounted. In
Orthodox monarchies such an urge can be directed to sustain Orthodoxy, the
293
Metropolitan Macarius, Love: the Foundation of Existence in our World, Orthodox Life,
vol. 47, 3, May-June, 1997, p. 3.
404
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billows for their souls. There is need therefore of great diligence, that we may
arrive at the have of rest, at the perfect world, at the eternal life and pleasure,
at the city of the saints, at the heavenly Jerusalem, at the church of the
firstborn (Hebrews 12.23).408
The Orthodox tradition on the judgement of the soul after death, which is
known in the West as the particular judgement and is often now called the
toll-house teaching, was summarised by St. Macarius the Great as follows:
When the soul of man departs out of the body, a great mystery is there
accomplished. If it is under the guilt of sins, there come bands of demons, and
angels of the left hand, and powers of darkness take over that soul, and hold
it fast on their side. No one ought to be surprised at this. If, while alive and in
this world, the man was subject and compliant to them, and made himself
their bondsman, how much more, when he departs out of this world, is he
kept down and held fast by them. That this is the case, you ought to
understand from what happens on the good side. Gods holy servants even
now have angels continually beside them, and holy spirits encompassing and
protecting them; and when they depart out of the body, the bands of angels
take over their souls to their own side, into the pure world, and so they bring
them to the Lord
Like tax-collectors sitting in the narrow ways, and laying hold upon the
passers-by, so do the demons spy upon souls and lay hold of them; and when
they pass out of the body, if they are not perfectly cleansed, they do not suffer
them to mount up to the mansions of heaven and to meet their Lord, and they
are driven down by the demons of the air. But if whilst they are yet in the
flesh, they shall with much labour and effort obtain from the Lord the grace
from on high, assuredly these, together with those who through virtuous
living are at rest, shall go to the Lord409
The first major exposition of this tradition in modern times was Bishop
Ignatius Brianchaninovs Essay on Death in the third volume of his Collected
Works. Later, he added a Reply to the objections of a certain priest called
Matveevsky. 410 St. Barsanuphius of Optina called Bishop Ignatius Essay
indispensable in its genre.411
In recent years this teaching was again challenged by the Orthodox deacon
Lev Puhalo (now OCA Bishop Lazar). 412 Although Puhalos thesis was
successfully challenged by Hieromonk Seraphim Rose413, who was in turn
St. Macarius the Great, Homilies, XLIII, 4, Eastern Orthodox Books, 1974, p. 271.
St. Macarius the Great, Homilies, XXII, XLIII, 9.
410 See Polnoe Zhizneopisanie Sviatitelia Ignatia Kavkazskogo, Moscow, 2002, pp. 450-488 (in
Russian).
411 Victor Afanasiev, Elder Barsanuphius of Optina, Platina: St. Herman of Alaska Brotherhood,
2000, p. 736.
412 Puhalo, The Soul, the Body and Death, Orthodoxy Canada, vols. 6-7 (1979-80).
413 Rose, The Soul after Death, Platina: St. Herman of Alaska Brotherhood, 1980, 2004.
408
409
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would convey him to the blessed life like the poor man Lazarus. In another
place, the holy Father, with the aim of turning to holy Baptism as many as
procrastinated for the wrong reasons (at that time men used to be baptized at
a great age), said: Let no one deceive himself with lying and empty words
(Ephesians 5.6); for the catastrophe will come suddenly upon him (I
Thessalonians 5.3); it will come like a tempest. There will come a sullen
angel who will lead away your soul which will have been bound by its sins;
and your soul will then turn within itself and groan silently, for the further
reason, moreover, that the organ of lamentation (the body) will have been cut
off from it. O how you will wail for yourself at that hour of death! How you
will groan!
The Lords words: The ruler of the world cometh, and has nothing in Me
(John 14.30) are interpreted by St. Basil as follows: Satan comes, who has
power over men who live far from God. But in Me he will find nothing of his
own that might give him power or any right over Me. And the luminary of
Caesarea adds: The sinless Lord said that the devil would not find anything in
Him which would give him power over Him; for man, however, it is
sufficient if he can be so bold as to say at the hour of his death that the ruler of
this world comes and will find in me only a few and small sins. The same
Father says in another place that the evil spirits watch the departure of the
soul more vigilantly and attentively than ever enemies have watched a
besieged city or thieves a treasury. St. Chrysostom calls customs-officers
those threatening angels and abusive powers of terrible appearance, meeting
whom the soul is seized with trembling; and in another place he says that
these persecutors are called customs-officials and tax-collectors by the Divine
Scripture.
In that temporary state [between the death of the body and the Last
Judgement] the just live under different conditions from the sinners.
According to St. Gregory the Theologian, every beautiful and God-loving
soul has scarcely been parted from the body when it experiences a
wonderful inner happiness because of all the good things that await it in
endless eternity. For this reason it rejoices and goes forward redeemed,
forgiven and purified to its Master since it has left the present life which was
like an unbearable prison. On the other hand, the souls of the sinners are
drawn to the left by avenging angels by force in a bound state until they are
near gehenna. From there, as they face the terrible sight of the fire of
punishment, they tremble in expectation of the coming judgement and are
already being punished in effect (St. Hippolytus). For the whole time that
they are separated from their bodies they are not separated from the passions
which had dominion over them on earth, but they bear with them their
tendency to sin. For that reason their suffering is the more painful (St.
Gregory of Nyssa).415
Vasileiades, The Mystery of Death, Athens: Sotir, 1980, pp. 368, 371-372, 389 in the Greek
edition, 382-383, 386, 404-405 in the English edition. St. John Chrysostom, Homily 2 on the Rich
415
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299
of God now take to paradise! One of the brothers was a devout man called
Genereus the Englishman, who was the baker. He was at work in the bakery
where he heard St. Columba say this. A year later, on the same day, the saint
again spoke to Genereus the Englishman, saying: I see a marvellous thing.
The woman of whom I spoke in your presence a year ago today look! she
is now meeting in the air the soul of a devout layman, her husband, and is
fighting for him together with holy angels against the powers of the enemy.
With their help and because the man himself was always righteous, his soul is
rescued from the devils assaults and is brought to the place of eternal
refreshment.418
In fact, descriptions of the passage of souls through the toll-houses are to
be found in Orthodox literature of all ages and cultures. Such universality is
in itself a witness against the idea that the toll-house tradition is Gnostic or
heretical.
To Whom Belongs the Judgement?
Puhalo also argues that the toll-house tradition is in fact heterodox because
it implies that the judgement of souls is not Gods but the demons. Moreover,
it is very close, he claims, to the papist doctrine of purgatory. For the
difference between the purgatory myth and that of the aerial toll-houses is
that the one gives God satisfaction by means of physical torment, while the
other gives Him His needed satisfaction by means of mental torture.419
In answer to this objection, it is necessary to point out that while all
judgement of souls is in the hands of God, He often uses created beings as the
instruments of His justice, just as a judge might use lawyers for the
prosecution and defence, or a king might use an executioner. Thus we think
of the avenging Angel who slew all the first-born of Egypt but passed over
the house of the Israelites; and of the Archangel Michaels destruction of the
185,000 warriors of Sennacherib. And it is not only good angels who carry out
His will in this way: the other plagues of Egypt were a mission performed by
evil angels (Psalm 77.53). We are not tempted to think, in these cases, that
God has lost control: He is simply executing His will through created
instruments.
Adomnan, Life of St. Columba, III, 10. When St. Brendan the Navigator was dying, his sister
said to him: Father, what dost thou fear? I fear, said he, my lonely passing: I fear the
darkness of the way: I fear the untravelled road, the presence of the King, the sentence of the
Judge (Rev. Francis Browne, Saints and Shrines of Lough Corrib, pp. 4-5). And when St. Ciaran
of Clonmacnoise came to die, and said, Dreadful is the way upwards, his disciples said:
But surely not for you? Och, said St. Ciaran, indeed my conscience is clear of offence,
but yet, even David and Paul dreaded this road (D.D.C. Pochin Mould, Ireland of the Saints,
London: Batsford, 1953, p. 79).
419 Puhalo, Orthodoxy Canada, vol. 6, 12, 1979, p. 23.
418
300
Similarly, we should not think that God is not carrying out His own
judgement when a soul passes through the toll-houses. Here God is revealing
His judgement of a soul through the agency, on the one hand, of demons,
who, like counsel for the prosecution, bring up all the evil things that the soul
has thought or done, and, on the other hand, of the good angels, who, like
counsel for the defence, bring up its good deeds. Moreover, insofar as it is the
good angels who encourage men to good deeds, and the demons who incite
them to the evil, this procedure actually reveals to the soul the hidden springs
of his actions on earth.
Thus there is no contradiction, as Puhalo asserts, between the idea of the
toll-houses and the teaching that the real judgement of sinners is that at
death they are cut off from the Holy Spirit. Of course, God has no need for a
detailed examination of our thoughts and deeds: it is we who are required to
come to a full consciousness of them, in accordance with the Lords word:
Every idle word that men shall speak, they shall give an account of in the
day of judgement (Matthew 12.36). Sinners who fail the searching test of
their conscience are indeed cut off from the Holy Spirit, and their souls are
cast into prison (Matthew 5.25), the prison of Hades, of spiritual darkness
and excommunication from God, until the final judgement of soul and body
together on the last day.
Thus if angels accuse and excuse, it is God alone Who judges in the sense
of delivers the final verdict; He alone decides the souls destiny, and often, in
His great mercy, decisively tips the balance in its favour. Thus in the Life of
St. Niphon Bishop of Constantia in Cyprus we read: With his clairvoyant
eyes the Saint saw also the souls of men after their departure from the body.
Once, standing at prayer in the church of St. Anastasia, he raised his eyes to
heaven and saw the heavens opened and many angels, of whom some were
descending to earth, and others were ascending, bearing heaven human souls.
And he saw two angels ascending, carrying someones soul. And when they
came near the toll-house of fornication, the demonic tax-collectors came out
and said with anger: This is our soul; how do you dare to carry him past us?
The angels replied: What kind of sign do you have on this soul, that you
consider it yours? The demons said: It defiled itself before death with sins,
not only natural ones but even unnatural ones; besides that, it judged its
neighbour and died without repentance. What do you say to that?
We will not believe, said the angels, either you or your father the devil,
until we ask the guardian angel of this soul. And when they asked him, he
said: It is true that this soul sinned much, but when it got sick it began to
weep and confess its sin before God; and if God has forgiven it, He knows
why: He has the authority. Glory be to His righteous judgement! Then the
angels, having put the demons to shame, entered the heavenly gates with that
soul.
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Then the blessed on saw the angels carrying yet another soul, and the
demons ran out to them and cried out: Why are you carrying souls without
knowing them? For example, you are carrying this one, who is a lover of
money, a bearer of malice, and an outlaw. The angels replied: We well know
that it did all these things, but it wept and lamented, confessed its sins, and
gave alms; for this God has forgiven it. But the demons began to say: If even
this soul is worthy of Gods mercy, then take and carry away the sinners from
the whole world. Why should we be labouring? To this the angels replied:
All sinners who confess their sins with humility and tears receive forgiveness
by Gods mercy; but he who dies without repentance is judged by God.420
This shows, on the one hand, that the demons are essentially powerless,
and on the other, that such authority as they possess over souls is ceded to
them by the souls themselves when they willingly follow their enticements.
For the Lord said: He who sins is the servant of sin (John 8.34), and
therefore of him who is the origin and instigator of sin, the devil. If the
demons have power even in this life over those who willingly follow their
suggestions, and the Lord allows even the baptized to be possessed by
demons, what reason have we for believing that these souls do not continue
in bondage after their departure from the body? However, if we resist sin and
the devil in this life, they will have no power over us in the next. For, as St.
Anthony says in his Life, if the demons had no power even over the swine,
much less have they any over men formed in the image of God. So then we
ought to fear God only, and despise the demons, and be in no fear of them.421
The Toll-houses and Purgatory
But if the judgement of souls after death is not in any real sense a
judgement by the devil on souls, much less is it a purging of souls in the
papist sense. At most, the experience of fear can to some extent purify the soul
as it passes through the toll-houses and before it comes to worship at the
Throne of God. That this is admitted by the Orthodox Church is shown by the
following reply of St. Mark of Ephesus to the Roman cardinals on purgatory:
At the beginning of your report you speak thus: If those who truly repent
have departed this life in love (towards God) before they were able to give
satisfaction by means of worthy fruits for their transgressions or offences,
their souls are cleansed after death by means of purgatorial sufferings; but for
the easing (or deliverance) of them from these sufferings they are aided by
the help which is shown them on the part of the faithful who are alive, as for
example: prayers, Liturgies, almsgiving, and other works of piety.
To this we answer the following: of the fact that those reposed in faith are
without doubt helped by the Liturgies and prayers and almsgiving performed
for them, and that this custom has been in force since antiquity, there is the
420
421
302
testimony of many and various utterances of the Teachers, both Latin and
Greek, spoken and written at various times and in various places. But that
souls are delivered thanks to a certain purgatorial suffering and temporal fire
which possesses such (a purgatorial) power and has the character of a help
this we do not find either in the Scriptures or in the prayers and hymns for the
dead, or in the words of the Teachers. But we have received that even the
souls which are held in hell and are already given over to eternal torments,
whether in actual fact and experience or in hopeless expectation of such, can
be aided and given a certain small help, although not in the sense of
completely loosing them from torment or giving hope for a final deliverance.
And this is shown from the words of the great Macarius the Egyptian ascetic
who, finding a skull in the desert, was instructed by it concerning this by the
action of Divine power. And Basil the Great, in the prayers read at Pentecost
writes literally the following: Who also, on this all-perfect and saving feast,
art graciously pleased to accept propitiatory prayers for those who are
imprisoned in hell, granting us a great hope of improvement for those who
are imprisoned from the defilements which have imprisoned them, and that
Thou wilt send down Thy consolation (Third Kneeling Prayer at Vespers).
But if souls have departed this life in faith and love, while nevertheless
carrying away with themselves certain faults, whether small ones over which
they have not repented at all, or great ones for which even though they have
repented over them they did not undertake to show fruits of repentance:
such souls, we believe, must be cleansed from this kind of sins, but not by
means of some purgatorial fire or a definite punishment in some place (for
this, as we have said, has not at all been handed down to us). But some must
be cleansed in the very departure from the body, thanks only to fear, as St.
Gregory the Dialogist literally shows; while others must be cleansed after the
departure from the body, either while remaining in the same earthly place,
before they come to worship God and are honoured with the lot of the blessed,
or if their sins were more serious and bind them for a longer duration they
are kept in hell, but not in order to remain forever in fire and torment, but as
it were in prison and confinement under guard.
All such ones, we affirm, are helped by the prayers and Liturgies
performed for them, with the cooperation of the Divine goodness and love for
mankind. This Divine cooperation immediately disdains and remits some sins,
those committed out of human weakness, as Dionysius the Great (the
Areopagite) says in Reflections on the Mystery of those Reposed in the Faith (in The
Ecclesiastical Hierarchy, VII, 7); while other sins, after a certain time, by
righteous judgements it either likewise releases and forgives and that
completely or lightens the responsibility for them until that final Judgement.
And therefore we see no necessity whatever for any other punishment or for a
cleansing fire; for some are cleansed by fear, while others are devouted by the
gnawings of conscience with more torment than any fire, and still others are
cleansed only by the very terror before the Divine glory and the uncertainty
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as to what the future will be. And that this is much more tormenting and
punishing than anything else, experience itself shows422
Thus while St. Mark reject the idea of a purging by fire as the papists
understand it, he definitely accepts the notion of a purging (of at any rate
certain sins) by fear and the gnawings of conscience. Now the experience of
the soul after death which Orthodox writers describe by means of the tollhouse metaphor is certain an experience which includes fear and the pangs of
conscience; and there is nothing in St. Marks words to suggest that he is
speaking about some different experience. We may therefore conclude that
there is nothing inherently heterodox in the notion of the toll-houses
provided we remember that this is a metaphor and not a literal description of
events.
Soul-Sleep?
A third set of objections raised by Puhalo is based on the teaching that the
soul when separated from the body cannot, by its nature, have such
experiences as are attributed to it by the Orthodox doctrine. For the notion
that the soul can exit the body, move about, have experiences, receive visions,
revelations, wander from place to place, make progress or be examined and
judged without the body, or, indeed, function in any sensual manner without
the body, is essentially Origenistic, and is derived from the philosophies of
the pagan religions of Greece and elsewhere Old Testament anthropology,
like that of the New Testament, never conceived of an immortal soul
inhabiting a mortal body from which it might be liberated, but always
conceived a simple, non-dualistic anthropology of a single, psychophysical
organism. And active, intellectual life or functioning of the soul alone could
never be conceived in either Old or New Testament thought. For the soul to
function, its restoration with the body as the whole person would be
absolutely necessary.423 At the same time, Puhalo accepts that the soul has
some consciousness of future destiny, some hope, and is neither dead nor
devoid of spiritual sensations.424
The question arises: why should not the experiences that the Orthodox
doctrine attributes to the soul after death be accounted as spiritual
sensations? We have seen, for example, that according to St. Basil the
indolent soul after death groans silently because the organ of lamentation
(the body) will have been cut off from it. It would be consistent with this
manner of speaking to say that the soul sees unseeingly and hears
unhearingly. In such cases we are trying to describe in the only language
that available or comprehensible to us the language of incarnate, bodily
St. Mark of Ephesus, First Homily on Purgatorial Fire, in The Orthodox Word, March-April,
1978.
423 Puhalo, op. cit., pp. 31, 33.
424 Puhalo, op. cit., p. 33.
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experience, - experiences that are disincarnate and spiritual but none the
less real and vivid for all that.
The difference between the sensual and the spiritual senses is well
illustrated by the following: They used to tell a story of a certain great old
man, and say that when he was travelling along a road two angels cleaved to
him and journeyed with him, one on his right hand and the other on his left.
And as they were going along they found lying on the road a dead body
which stank, and the old man closed his nostrils because of the evil smell, and
the angels did the same. Now after they had gone on a little farther, the old
man said unto them, Do ye also smell as we do? And they said unto him,
No, but because of thee we closed our nostrils. For it is not for us to smell the
rottenness of this world, but we do smell the souls which stink of sin, because
the breath of such is night unto us.425
Spiritual beings not only smell souls: they also see them and their
appearance depends on their spiritual state. Thus St. John the Baptist
appeared to St. Diadochus of Photike, and said that neither the angels nor
the soul can be seen insofar as they are beings which do not have a shape.
Palladius, The Paradise of the Fathers, vol. 2, p. 200.
It is not only angels who have these
senses; to the degree that a man is purified he may also see, hear and smell spiritually even
while in the body: It came to pass that when the old man [St. Pachomius the Great] had said
these things to the brethren, the door-keeper came to him and said: Certain travellers, who
are men of importance, have come hither, and they wish to meet thee. And he said: Call
them hither. And when they had entered into the monastery, he saluted them with the
brethren. And after they had seen all the brotherhood, and had gone round all the cells of the
brethren they wanted to hold converse with him by themselves. Now when they had taken
their seats in a secluded chamber, there came unto the old man a strong smell of uncleanness,
though he thought that it must arise from them because he was speaking with them face to
face; and he was not able to learn the cause of the same by the supplication which [he made]
to God, for he perceived that their speech was fruitful [of thought], and that their minds were
familiar with the Scriptures, but he was not acquainted with their intellectual uncleanness.
Then, after he had spoken unto them many things out of the Divine Books, and the season of
the ninth hour had drawn nigh meanwhile, they rose up that they might come to their own
place, and Rabba entreated them to partake of some food there, but they did not accept [his
petition, saying] that they were in duty bound to arrive home before sunset; so they prayed,
and they saluted us, and then they departed.
And Abba, in order to learn the cause of the uncleanness of these men, went into his cell,
and prayed to God, and he knew straightway that it was the doctrine of wickedness which
arose from their souls that sent forth such an unclean smell. Thereupon he went forth from
his cell immediately and pursued those men, and having overtaken them, he said unto them,
Do ye call that which is written in the works of Origen heresy? And when they had heard
the question they denied and said that they did not. Then the holy man said unto them,
Behold, I take you to witness before God, that every man who readeth and accepteth the
work of Origen, shall certainly arrive in the fire of Sheol, and his inheritance shall be
everlasting darkness. That which I know from God I have made you to be witnesses of, and I
am therefore not to be condemned by God on this account, and ye yourselves know about it.
Behold, I have made you hear the truth. And if ye believe me, and if ye wish truly to gratify
God, take all the writings of Origen and cast them into the fire; and never seek to read them
again. And when Abba Pachomius had said these things he left them. (The Paradise of the
Fathers, vol. 1, pp. 292-293).
425
305
However, he went on, one must know that they have a visible aspect, a
beauty and a spiritual limitation, so that the splendour of their thoughts is
their form and their beauty. That is why, when the soul has beautiful
thoughts, it is all illuminated and visible in all its parts, but if bad ones, then it
has no lustre and nothing to be admired426
When the soul is separated from the body, it loses the use of its sensual
senses, but by no means loses the use of his spiritual senses. On the contrary,
they revive, as it were. Thus St. John Chrysostom says: Do not say to me, He
who has died does not hear, does not speak, does not see, does not feel, since
neither does a man who sleeps. If it is necessary to say something wondrous,
the soul of a sleeping man somehow sleeps, but not so with him who has died,
for [his soul] has awakened.427 And, as St. Chrysostoms disciple, St. John
Cassian, writes, the souls of the dead not only do not lose consciousness,
they do not even lose their dispositions that is, hope and fear, joy and grief,
and something of that which they expect for themselves at the Universal
Judgement they begin already to foretaste They become yet more alive and
more zealously cling to the glorification of God. And truly, if we were to
reason on the basis of the testimony of the Sacred Scripture concerning the
nature of the soul, in the measure of our understanding, would it not be, I will
not say extreme stupidity, but at least folly, to suspect even in the least that
the most precious part of man (that is, the soul), in which, according to the
blessed Apostle, the image and likeness of God is contained, after putting off
this fleshly coarseness in which it finds itself in this present life, should
become unconscious that part which, containing in itself the power of
reason, makes sensitive by its presence even the dumb and unconscious
matter of the flesh?428
Not only is the soul the opposite of unconscious and unfeeling when it
departs from the body: its sinful passions reveal themselves in all their hidden
strength. For the soul, writes St. Dorotheus of Gaza, wars against this body
with the passions and is comforted, eats, drinks, sleeps, talks to and meets up
with friends. But when it leaves the body it is left alone with the passions. It is
tormented by them, at odds with them, incensed at being troubled by them
and savaged by them Do you want an example of what I am saying to you?
Let one of you come and let me lock him up in a dark cell, and for no more
than three days let him not eat nor drink, nor sleep, not meeting anyone, not
singing hymns nor praying, not even desiring God, and you will see what the
passions make of him. And that while he is still in this life. How much more
St. Diadochus, in Orthodoxie: Bulletin des Vrais Chrtiens Orthodoxes des pays francophones
(Orthodox Bulletin of the True Orthodox Christians of the French-speaking Countries), 13,
January, 1981, p. 5 (in French).
427 St. John Chrysostom, Homily on Lazarus and the Rich Man.
428 St. John Cassian, First Conference of Abba Moses, in The Orthodox Word, NovemberDecember, 1978.
426
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so when the soul has left the body and is delivered to the passions and will
remain all alone with them429
It follows that the ancient heresy of soul sleep, which is here revived by
Puhalo in his polemic against the doctrine of the toll-houses, is false: the soul
in its disincarnate form can indeed spiritual perceive angels and demons and
feel hope and fear, joy and grief in their presence.
The Faculties of Demons
Puhalo also asserts that the demons can see neither the grace of God (St.
Diadochus of Photike) nor angels (St. Isaac the Syrian) nor human souls (St.
Isaac the Syrian, St. John the Solitary) nor thoughts coming from deep within
the soul (St. John Cassian).430 However, we may admit this without rejecting
the toll-houses. For a careful study of the accounts of passages through the
toll-houses in the Lives of the Saints reveals that the demons accusations relate
to what they have deduced from a careful study of the external behaviour of
men; so their apparent ability to know the inner thoughts and feelings of men
is actually the result simply of good psychological analysis acquired over
centuries of observation.
In any case, it cannot be true that the demons cannot perceive the grace of
God in any sense whatsoever. For when the Lord approached the demonpossessed, and when His pure soul entered Hades, did not the demons
tremble, sensing the approach of Divine grace as a blind man senses the
nearness of fire? And does not the grace residing in the relics of the saints
even now cause demons to flee?
But it is best not to peer too closely into these difficult and subtle matters.
Suffice it to say that there is no contradiction between what the Fathers say on
the nature of souls and angels and the doctrine of the toll-houses. Above all, it
is necessary to heed the words of Metropolitan Macarius of Moscow: One
must note that, just as in general in the depictions of the objects of the
spiritual world for us who are clothed in flesh, certain features that are more
or less sensuous and anthropomorphic are unavoidable so in particular
these features are unavoidably present also in the detailed teaching of the tollhouses which the human soul passes through after the separation from the
body. And therefore one must firmly remember the instruction which the
angel made to St. Macarius of Alexandria when he had just begun telling him
of the toll-houses: Accept earthly things here as the weakest kind of depiction
of heavenly things. One must picture the toll-houses not in a sense that is
crude and sensuous, but as far as possible for us in a spiritual sense, and
not be tied down to details which, in the various writers and various accounts
St. Dorotheus, Kataniktikoi Logoi, in Archimandrite Vasilios Bakogiannis, After Death,
Katerini: Tertios, 2001, p. 123.
430 Puhalo, Orthodoxy Canada, vol. 7, 4, 1980, p. 29.
429
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of the Church herself, are presented in various ways, even though the basic
idea of the toll-houses is one and the same.431
The doctrine of the toll-houses, of the particular judgement of souls after
death, is indeed a fearful doctrine. But it is a true and salutary and Orthodox
one. Let us therefore gather this saving fear into our souls, in accordance with
the word: Whatsoever thou takest in hand, remember thine end, and thou
shalt never sin (Sirach 7.36).
Metropolitan Macarius, quoted in The Orthodox Word, November-December, 1978, pp. 247248.
431
308
309
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this case the One Who was the sole source of his existence, Who is God, Who
endowed him with a soul, Who gave him countless other gifts and purposed
to bring him to heaven? If after so many favours, he not only insults Him but
insults Him daily by his conduct, can there be any question of deserving
pardon?
"Do you not see how He punished Adam for a single sin? 'Yes', you will
say, 'but He had given him paradise and made him the recipient of very great
kindness.' And I reply that it is not at all the same thing for a man in the
tranquil possession of security to commit a sin and for a man in the midst of
affliction to do so. The really terrible thing is that you sin when you are not in
paradise but set amidst the countless evils of this present life, and that all this
misery has not made you any more sensible. It is like a man who continues
his criminal behaviour in prison. Moreover you have the promise of
something even greater than paradise. He has not given it to you yet, so as not
to make you soft at a time when there is a struggle to be fought, but neither
has He been silent about it, lest you be cast down by all your labours.
"Adam committed one sin, and brought on total death. We commit a
thousand sins every day. If by committing a single sin he brought such
terrible evil on himself and introduced death into the world, what should we,
who live continually in sin, expect to suffer - we who in place of paradise
have the expectation of heaven? This is a burdensome message; it does upset
the man who hears it. I know, because I feel it myself. I am disturbed by it; it
makes me quake. The clearer the proofs I find of this message of hell, the
more I tremble and melt with fear. But I have to proclaim it so that we may
not fall into hell. What you received was not paradise or trees and plants, but
heaven and the good things in the heavens. He who had received the lesser
gift was punished and no consideration exempted him; we have been given a
greater calling and we sin more. Are we not bound to suffer things beyond all
remedy?
"Consider how long our race has been subject to death on account of a
single sin. More than five thousand years have passed and the death due to a
single sin has not yet been ended. In Adam's case we cannot say that he had
heard prophets or that he had seen others being punished for their sins so that
he might reasonably have been afraid and learnt prudence if only from the
example of others. He was the first and at that time the only one; yet he was
still punished. But you cannot claim any of these things. You have had
numerous examples, but you only grow worse; you have been granted the
great gift of the Spirit, but you go on producing not one or two or three but
countless sins. Do not think that because the sins are committed in one brief
moment the punishment therefore will also be a matter of a moment. You can
see how it is often the case that men who have committed a single theft or a
single act of adultery which has been done in a brief moment of time have
had to spend all their lives in prison or in the mines, continually battling with
311
hunger and every kind of death. No one lets them off, or says that since the
crime was committed in a brief moment the punishment should match the
crime in the length of time it takes.
"'People do act like that,' you may say, 'but they are men, whereas God is
loving towards mankind.' Yes, but even the men who act in this way do not
do so out of cruelty but out of love for mankind. So since God is loving to
mankind He too will deal with sin in this way. 'As great as is His mercy, so
great also is His reproof' (Sirach 16.12). So when you speak of God as loving
towards mankind, you are actually supplying me with a further reason for
punishment, in the fact that the One against Whom we sin is such as this. That
is the point of Paul's words: 'It is a fearful thing to fall into the hands of the
living God' (Hebrews 10.31). I ask you to bear with these words of fire.
Perhaps, yes, perhaps they may bring you some consolation. What man can
punish as God has been known to punish? He caused a flood and the total
destruction of the human race; a little later He rained down fire from on high
and utterly destroyed them all. What human retribution can compare with
that? Do you not recognise that even this case of punishment is virtually
endless? Four thousand years have passed and the punishment of the
Sodomites is still in full force. As His loving kindness is great, so also is His
punishment..."433
St. Barsanuphius of Optina said: We think too abstractly about the
torments of hell, as a result of which we forget about them. In the world they
have totally forgotten about them. The devil convinces everyone there that
neither he himself nor the torments of hell exist. But the Holy Fathers teach
that ones betrothal to Gehenna, just as to blessedness, begins while one is still
on earth that is, sinners while still on earth begin to experience the torments
of hell, while the righteous experience blessedness, only with this difference
that in the future age both the one and the other will be incomparably more
powerful
At the present time, not only among lay people, but even among the
young clergy the following conviction is beginning to spread: eternal torment
is incompatible with the boundless mercy of God; consequently, the torments
are not eternal. Such a misconception proceeds from a lack of understanding
of the matter. Eternal torments, and eternal blessedness, are not things which
proceed from without, but exist first and foremost within a man himself. The
Kingdom of God is within you (Luke 17.21). With whatever feelings a man
instills within himself during his life, he departs into eternal life. A diseased
body torments one on earth, and the more severe the disease is, the greater
the torment is. So also a soul infected with various diseases begins to be
cruelly tormented at its passage into eternal life. An incurable physical
ailment ends with death, but how can a sickness of the soul end, when there is
St. Chrysostom, Homily IX on Corinthians, 1-3. Translated in Maurice Wiles & Mark Santer
(eds.) Documents in Early Christian Thought, Cambridge University Press, 1977.
433
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no death for the soul? Malice, anger, irritability, lust, and other infirmities of
the soul are vermin which will creep after a man even into eternal life. Hence,
it follows that the aim of life consists in crushing these vermin here on earth,
so as to purify ones soul entirely, and before death to say with our Savior,
The prince of this world cometh, and hath nothing in Me (John 14.30). A
sinful soul, not purified by repentance, cannot be in the company of the saints.
Even if it were placed in Paradise, it would itself find it unbearable to remain
there, and would try to get out.434
Even the bodies of sinners will experience torment. The fire will be
material; there will not only be pangs of conscience, and so forth. No, this will
really be perceptible fire. Both the one and the other will be real. Only, just
like the body, the fire will be far more subtle, and everything will bear only a
certain resemblance to earthly things.435
2. The Argument from the Saints Compassion. According to this argument,
heaven would not be heaven for the righteous as long as they knew that the
sinners were being tortured in hell. Being filled with compassion, their bliss
would be spoiled as long as there was even one sinner still suffering torment.
So God in His compassion, and so as to give His chosen ones a perfect and
unspoiled reward, will forgive all men eventually.
However, the Fathers teach that that feeling of compassion which is so
necessary while there is still life and hope will be taken away by God when
there is no more use for it. For if, as St. John of Damascus says, "in hades [i.e.
after death but before the Last Judgement] there is no confession or
repentance"436 , then much less will there be confession and repentance after
the Last Judgement in gehenna. And if there is no repentance how can there
be forgiveness?
Thus St. Gregory the Great writes, in his commentary on the parable of
Lazarus and the Rich Man: "We must ponder these words: 'They who would
pass from hence to you cannot' (Luke 16.26). For there is no doubt that those
who are in hell long to enjoy the lot of the blessed. But since the latter have
been received into eternal happiness, how can it be said that they desire to
pass over to those in hell? It must be that, as the damned desire to go to the
dwelling of the elect, to escape from that place of suffering, so the just wish to
cross over in mercy to that place of torments, to bring them the freedom they
desire. But those who wish to cross from heaven to hell can never do so; for
although the souls of the just are aflame with mercy, nevertheless they are so
united to the divine justice and guided always by rectitude, that they are not
moved by any compassion towards the reprobate. They are in complete
Victor Afanasiev, Elder Barsanuphius of Optina, Platina: St. Herman of Alaska Brotherhood,
2000, pp. 283, 309.
435 Afanasiev, op. cit., pp. 735-736.
436 St. John of Damascus, P.G. 96, 1084B. Cf. Psalm 6.4.
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conformity with that judge to whom they are united, and so they cannot have
compassion for those whom they cannot free from hell. They consider them as
strangers, remote from themselves, since they have seen them repelled by
their Maker who is the object of their love. So neither the wicked can cross
over to the felicity of the blessed: because they are shackled by an irrevocable
condemnation, nor the just go to the unjust: because they cannot feel
compassion for those whom the divine justice has rejected..."437
3. The Argument from Ignorance. This argument can be summarised as
follows: "Neither are the works of faith necessary for salvation, nor even faith.
For most men have never had the Gospel preached to them, and so belong to
other faiths simply out of ignorance, because they were born into nonChristian societies or families. The All-loving and All-just God will certainly
not judge them for that. Indeed (continues the argument in some of its forms),
all that is necessary for salvation is good faith, by which we do not mean the
one true faith (for there is no such thing), but sincerity, even if that sincerity is
manifested in non-Christian beliefs and actions: blessed are the sincere, for
they shall inherit the Kingdom of Heaven."
However, Divine Revelation attaches little value to sincerity per se: "The
way of a fool is right in his own eyes" (Proverbs 12.15), says Solomon, and:
"There is a way which seemeth right unto a man, but the end thereof is the
ways of death" (Proverbs 14.12). In any case, if true faith in Christ were not
absolutely necessary for salvation, and one could be saved without knowing
Him, then it would not have been necessary for the Martyrs to confess Him,
for the Apostles to preach Him, or for Christ Himself to become incarnate for
our sakes.
"Are you saying, then retort the ecumenists, that all the Hindus and
Buddhists will be damned?!"
We neither assert this nor deny it, preferring to "judge nothing before the
time" (I Corinthians 4.5), and to follow St. Paul's rule: "what have I to do to
judge them that are without? Them that are without God judgeth" (I
Corinthians 5.12-13). We know with complete certainly about the perdition of
only a few men (Judas, Arius, etc.), just as we have complete certainty about
the salvation of only a few men (those whom the Church has glorified as
saints). As Archbishop Theophanes of Poltava wrote, when asked about the
salvation of the Jews: "When St. Anthony the Great was thinking about
questions of this kind, nothing concerning the essence of these questions was
revealed to him, but it was only told him from on high: 'Anthony, pay
attention to yourself!', that is, worry about your own salvation, but leave the
salvation of others to the Providence of God, for it is not useful for you to
St. Gregory, translated by Nora Burke, Parables of the Gospel, Dublin: Scepter Publishers, pp.
155-56.
437
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know this at the present time. We must restrict ourselves to this revelation in
the limits of our earthly life."438
Nevertheless, when compassion for unbelievers is taken as a cloak from
under which to overthrow the foundations of the Christian Faith, it is
necessary to say something more, not as if we could say anything about the
salvation or otherwise of specific people (for that, as Archbishop Theophanes
says, has been hidden from us), but in order to re-establish those basic
principles of the Faith, ignorance of which will undoubtedly place us in
danger of damnation.
Ignorance - real, involuntary ignorance - is certainly grounds for clemency
according to God's justice, as it is according to man's. The Lord cried out on
the Cross: "Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do" (Luke 23.24);
and one of those who were forgiven declared: "I obtained mercy because I
acted in ignorance (I Timothy 1.13; cf. Acts 3.17, 17.30). For our Great High
Priest is truly One "Who can have compassion on the ignorant, and on them
that are out of the way" (Hebrew 5.2).
However, there is also such a thing as wilful, voluntary ignorance. Thus St.
Paul says of those who do not believe in the one God, the Creator of heaven
and earth, that "they are without excuse" (Romans 1.20), for they deny the
evidence from creation which is accessible to everyone. Again, St. Peter says:
"This they are willingly ignorant of, that by the word of God the heavens were
of old, and the earth standing out of the water and in the water: Whereby the
world that then was, being overflowed with water, perished: But the heavens
and the earth, which are now, by the same word are kept in store, reserved
unto fire against the day of judgement and perdition of ungodly men" (II
Peter 3.5-7). Again, claiming knowledge when one has none counts as wilful
ignorance. For, as Christ said to the Pharisees: "If ye were blind, ye should
have no sin: but now ye say, We see; therefore your sin remaineth" (John 9.41).
Wilful ignorance is very close to conscious resistance to the truth, which
receives the greatest condemnation according to the Word of God. Thus those
who accept the Antichrist will do so "because they received not the love of the
truth, that they might be saved. And for this cause God shall send them
strong delusion, that they should believe a lie: That they all might be damned
who believed not the truth, but had pleasure in unrighteousness" (II
Thessalonians 2.10-12). And if it seems improbable that God should send
anyone a strong delusion, let us remember the lying spirits who, with God's
permission, deceived the prophets of King Ahab because they only
prophesied what he wanted to hear (I Kings 22.19-24).
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condemnation than the blind followers - which is not to say, however, that
they will not both fall into the pit (Matthew 15.14). For, as Bishop Nicholas
Velimirovich writes: "Are the people at fault if godless elders and false
prophets lead them onto foreign paths? The people are not at fault to as great
an extent as their elders and the false prophets, but they are at fault to some
extent. For God gave to the people also to know the right path, both through
their conscience and through the preaching of the word of God, so that people
should not blindly have followed their blind guides, who led them by false
paths that alienated them from God and His Laws."443
Are Hindus and Buddhists who have lived their whole lives in nonChristian communities wilfully ignorant of the truth? Of course, only God
knows the degree of ignorance in any particular case. However, even if the
heathen have more excuse than the Christians who deny Christ, they cannot
be said to be completely innocent; for no one is completely deprived of the
knowledge of the One God. Thus St. Jerome writes: "Ours and every other
race of men knows God naturally. There are no peoples who do not recognise
their Creator naturally. 444 And St. John Chrysostom writes: "From the
beginning God placed the knowledge of Himself in men, but the pagans
awarded this knowledge to sticks and stones, doing wrong to the truth to the
extent that they were able." 445 And the same Father writes: "One way of
coming to the knowledge of God is that which is provided by the whole of
creation; and another, no less significant, is that which is offered by
conscience, the whole of which we have expounded upon at greater length,
showing how you have a self-taught knowledge of what is good and what is
not so good, and how conscience urges all this upon you from within. Two
teachers, then, are given you from the beginning: creation and conscience.
Neither of them has a voice to speak out; yet they teach men in silence."446
Many have abandoned the darkness of idolatry by following the voices of
creation and conscience alone. Such, for example, was St. Barbara, who even
before she had heard of Christ rejected her father's idols and believed in the
One Creator of heaven and earth. For she heeded the voice of creation: "The
heavens declare the glory of God, and the firmament proclaimeth the work of
His hands" (Psalm 18.1). And the voice of her conscience, which recoiled from
those "most odious works of witchcrafts, and wicked sacrifices; and also those
merciless murderers of children and devourers of man's flesh, and the feasts
of blood, with their priests out of the midst of their idolatrous crew, and the
parents, that killed with their own hands souls destitute of help" (Wisdom of
Solomon 12.4-6). But her father, who had the same witnesses to the truth as
she, rejected it - to the extent of killing his own daughter.447
Bishop Nicholas, The Prologue from Ochrid, Birmingham: Lazarica Press, 1986, vol. II, p. 149.
St. Jerome, Treatise on Psalm 95.
445 St. Chrysostom, Homily 3 on Romans, 2.
446 St. Chrysostom, First Homily on Hannah, 3.
447 The Lives of the Women Martyrs, Buena Vista: Holy Apostles Convent, 1991, pp. 528-542.
443
444
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Thus there is a light that "enlightens every man who comes into the world"
(John 1.9). And if there are some who reject that light, abusing that freewill
which God will never deprive them of, this is not His fault, but theirs. As St.
John Chrysostom says, "If there are some who choose to close the eyes of their
mind and do not want to receive the rays of that light, their darkness comes
not from the nature of the light, but from their own darkness in voluntarily
depriving themselves of that gift."448
This mystery of the voluntary rejection of the light was revealed in a vision
to a nun, the sister of the famous novelist Lev Nikolayevich Tolstoy, who
rejected the teaching of the Orthodox Church and died under anathema:
"When I returned from the burial of my brother Sergius to my home in the
monastery, I had some kind of dream or vision which shook me to the depths
of my soul. After I had completed my usual cell rule, I began to doze off, or
fell into some kind of special condition between sleep and waking, which we
monastics call a light sleep. I dropped off, and beheld... It was night. There
was the study of Lev Nikolayevich. On the writing desk stood a lamp with a
dark lampshade. Behind the desk, and leaning with his elbows on it, sat Lev
Nikolayevich, and on his face there was the mark of such serious thought, and
such despair, as I had never seen in him before... The room was filled with a
thick, impenetrable darkness; the only illumination was of that place on the
table and on the face of Lev Nikolayevich on which the light of the lamp was
falling. The darkness in the room was so thick, so impenetrable, that it even
seemed as if it were filled, saturated with some materialisation... And
suddenly I saw the ceiling of the study open, and from somewhere in the
heights there began to pour such a blindingly wonderful light, the like of
which cannot be seen on earth; and in this light there appeared the Lord Jesus
Christ, in that form in which He is portrayed in Rome, in the picture of the
holy Martyr and Archdeacon Laurence: the all-pure hands of the Saviour
were spread out in the air above Lev Nikolayevich, as if removing from
invisible executioners the instruments of torture. It looks just like that in the
picture. And this ineffable light poured and poured onto Lev Nikolayevich.
But it was as if he didn't see it... And I wanted to shout to my brother:
Levushka, look, look up!... And suddenly, behind Lev Nikolayevich, - I saw it
with terror, - from the very thickness of the darkness I began to make out
another figure, a terrifying, cruel figure that made me tremble: and this figure,
placing both its hands from behind over the eyes of Lev Nikolayevich, shut
out that wonderful light from him. And I saw that my Levushka was making
despairing efforts to push away those cruel, merciless hands... At this point I
came to, and, as I came to, I heard a voice speaking as it were inside me: 'The
Light of Christ enlightens everyone!"449
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If the Light of Christ enlightens everyone, then there is no one who cannot
come to the True Faith, however unpromising his situation. If a man follows
the teachers that are given to everyone, creation and conscience, then the
Providence of God, with Whom "all things are possible" (Matthew 19.26), will
lead him to the teacher that is given at the beginning only to a few - "the
Church of the living God, the pillar and ground of the Truth" (I Timothy 3.15).
For "it is not possible," writes St. John Chrysostom, "that one who is living
rightly and freed from the passions should ever be overlooked. But even if he
happens to be in error, God will quickly draw him over to the truth."450 Again,
as Chrysostom's disciple, St. John Cassian, says: "When God sees in us some
beginnings of good will, He at once enlightens it, urging it on towards
salvation."451
This point was developed in an illuminating manner by Cassian's French
contemporary, Prosper of Aquitaine: "The very armies that exhaust the world
help on the work of Christian grace. How many indeed who in the quiet of
peacetime delayed to receive the sacrament of baptism, were compelled by
fear of close danger to hasten to the water of regeneration, and were suddenly
forced by threatening terror to fulfil a duty which a peaceful exhortation
failed to bring home to their slow and tepid souls? Some sons of the Church,
made prisoners by the enemy, changed their masters into servants of the
Gospel, and by teaching them the faith they became the superiors of their own
wartime lords. Again, some foreign pagans, whilst serving in the Roman
armies, were able to learn the faith in our country, when in their own lands
they could not have known it; they returned to their homes instructed in the
Christian religion. Thus nothing can prevent God's grace from accomplishing
His will... For all who at any time will be called and will enter into the
Kingdom of God, have been marked out in the adoption which preceded all
times. And just as none of the infidels is counted among the elect, so none of
the God-fearing is excluded from the blessed. For in fact God's prescience,
which is infallible, cannot lose any of the members that make up the fullness
of the Body of Christ."452
However, there are few today who have a living faith in God's ability to
bring anyone to the faith, whatever his situation. It may therefore be useful to
cite the famous example of God's favour to the Aleuts of Alaska, to whom He
sent angels to teach them the Orthodox Faith in the absence of any human
instructor. Fr. John Veniaminov (later St. Innocent, metropolitan of Moscow
(+1879)) relates how, on his first missionary journey to Akun island, he found
all the islanders lined up on the shore waiting for him. It turned out that they
had been warned by their former shaman, John Smirennikov, who in turn had
been warned by two "white men", who looked like the angels on icons.
Smirennikov told his story to Fr. John, who wrote: "Soon after he was
St. Chrysostom, Homily 24 on Matthew, 1.
St. Cassian, Conferences, XIII, 8.
452 Prosper, The Call of the Nations, II, 33.
450
451
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baptised by Hieromonk Macarius, first one and later two spirits appeared to
him but were visible to no one else... They told him that they were sent by
God to edify, teach and guard him. For the next thirty years they appeared to
him almost every day, either during daylight hours or early in the evening but never at night. On these occasions: (1) They taught him in its totality
Christian theology and the mysteries of the faith... (2) In time of sickness and
famine they brought help to him and - though more rarely - to others at his
request. (When agreeing to his requests that they help others, they always
responded by saying that they would first have to ask God, and if it was His
will, then they would do it.) (3) Occasionally they told him of thing occurring
in another place or (very rarely) at some time in the future - but then only if
God willed such a revelation; in such cases they would persuade him that
they did so not by their own power, but by the power of Almighty God.
"Their doctrine is that of the Orthodox Church. I, however, knowing that
even demons believe - and tremble with fear [James 3.19], wondered whether
or not this might be the crafty and subtle snare of him who from time
immemorial has been Evil. 'How do they teach you to pray, to themselves or
to God? And how do they teach you to live with others?' He answered that
they taught him to pray not to them but to the Creator of all, and to pray in
spirit, with the heart; occasionally they would even pray along with him for
long periods of time.
"They taught him to exercise all pure Christian virtues (which he related to
me in detail), and recommended, furthermore, that he remain faithful and
pure, both within and outside of marriage (this perhaps because the locals are
quite given to such impurity). Furthermore, they taught him all the outward
virtues..."453
Very apt was the comment of one of the first who read this story: "It is
comforting to read about such miraculous Divine Providence towards
savages, sons of Adam who, though forgotten by the world, were not forgotten by
Providence."454
These cases lead us to draw the following conclusions: (1) The Providence
of God is able to save anyone in any situation, providing he loves the truth.
Therefore (2), although we cannot declare with categorical certainty that those
who die in unbelief or heresy will be damned, neither can we declare that
they will be saved because of their ignorance; for they may be alienated from
God "through the ignorance that is in them, because of the blindness of their
heart" (Ephesians 4.18), and not simply through the ignorance that is caused
by external circumstances. And (3) if we, who know the truth, say that such
people do not need to become Christians in order to be saved, then we shall
Paul Garrett, St. Innocent, Apostle to America, Crestwood, N.Y.: St. Vladimir's Seminary
Press, 1979, pp. 80-81.
454 Garrett, op. cit., p. 85, footnote.
453
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natural dispositions, will unfailingly enter into the Kingdom of Heaven and
into the joy of the Lord. Moreover, regarding all those who are running on the
path of God according to the order I have indicated, if it happens that natural
death should cut off their course in the midst of this, they will not be banished
from the doors of the Kingdom of God, and these doors will not be closed
before them, according to the limitless mercy of God. But regarding those
who do not run in such a way, their faith also in Christ the Lord is vain, if
they have such..."456
4. The Argument from the Supremacy of Love over Justice. Another
argument goes as follows. "Let us suppose that most men are not worthy to
enter the Kingdom of heaven, if only because they will find nothing akin to
their own corrupted nature there. Nevertheless, God is love, and he would
never cast the creatures He has created and still continues to love into the
unimaginably terrible torments of hell, whose purpose, since they are
unending, cannot be the rehabilitation of the sinner, nor deterrence of future
evil. We do not deny that the Scriptures speak in many places of the existence
of just such a hell, and of a great multitude entering into it. But we cannot but
hope and believe (for 'love believeth all things, hopeth all things' (I
Corinthians 13.7) that these images are placed before us simply as a deterrent,
and that in the end hell will be an empty place, not only spiritually but also
physically. God has shown, by His Death on the Cross, that His love for us is
greater than His love for the abstract principle of justice. Is it possible that he
would finally deny that, admit that His Sacrifice had been in vain (for the
great majority of people, at any rate), and allow cold justice to triumph over
love?"
In attempting to answer this objection, we must first arm ourselves with
the most basic weapon of the Christian life: the fear of God. The fear of God is
not an abject trembling before a despotic tyrant. It is a rational, heartfelt
awareness that we all, and every part of our lives, are in the hands of a Being
Who infinitely transcends everything that we can say about Him, and even
the very categories of our discourse. This applies not only to clearly
inexplicable and unimaginable acts of His such as the creation of the world
out of nothing. It also applies to those definitions of His nature which seem to
correspond to something in our experience, such as: "God is love".
If human love can sometimes seem to be incompatible with justice, this is
not so with Divine love. For what is the whole economy of Gods incarnation,
life on earth and death on the Cross if not perfect love in pursuit of perfect justice
- an extraordinary, humanly speaking paradoxical justice, it is true, but for
that very reason characteristically Divine justice? For He, the Just One, Who
committed no sin and had done everything to deter us from it, out of love for
man died to blot out all the sins and injustices of the whole world. When we
St. Symeon, The Sin of Adam and our Redemption, Platina, Ca.: St. Herman of Alaska Press,
1979, pp. 57-8.
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could not pay the price, He paid it for us; when we were dead in sin, He died
to give us life; "for Christ hath once suffered for sins, the just for the unjust" (I
Peter 3.18).
The Church has expressed the paradoxicality of Gods justice with great
eloquence: "Come, all ye peoples, and let us venerate the blessed Wood,
through which the eternal justice has been brought to pass. For he who by a
tree deceived our forefather Adam, is by the Cross himself deceived; and he
who by tyranny gained possession of the creature endowed by God with
royal dignity, is overthrown in headlong fall. By the Blood of God the poison
of the serpent is washed away; and the curse of a just condemnation is loosed
by the just punishment inflicted on the Just. For it was fitting that wood
should be healed by wood, and that through the Passion of One Who knew
not passion should be remitted all the sufferings of him who was condemned
because of wood. But glory to Thee, O Christ our King, for Thy dread
dispensation towards us, whereby Thou hast saved us all, for Thou art good
and lovest mankind."457
Here there is no contradiction between love and justice. And if there is no
contradiction between them in the Redeeming Passion of Christ on the Cross,
then there is likewise no contradiction between them in His Coming again to
judge men in accordance with their response to His Passion. But in order to
understand this it is necessary, first, to rid ourselves of the idea that Gods just
wrath against impenitent sinners is comparable to the sinful human passion
of vengefulness. Such vengefulness is condemned by the Word of God
(Romans 12.17-21), and cannot possibly be attributed to the Divine Nature,
which is alien to all fallen human passion. We must at all times hate the sin
and not the sinner; we must wish for the destruction of sin and not of sinners.
If we wish to identify our will with the Will of God, then our first desire must
be for the salvation of all sinners, including our enemies, paying special
attention (lest we become hypocrites) to those sinners we know best and for
whom we are primarily responsible - ourselves.
"The wrath of God, writes Archbishop Theophanes of Poltava, is one of the
manifestations of the love of God, but of the love of God in its relationship to the
moral evil in the heart of rational creatures in general, and of man in
particular."458 That is why the martyrs under the heavenly altar, filled as they
are with the love of God to the highest degree, are at the same time filled with
a holy wrath: How long, O Lord, holy and true, dost Thou not judge and
avenge our blood on them that dwell on the earth? (Revelation 6.10). And yet,
Menaion, September 14, Great Vespers of the Exaltation of the Cross, "Lord, I have cried",
"Glory... Both now..."
458 Archbishop Theophanes, "On the Redemption"; quoted in Fr. Anthony Chernov,
Archevque Theophane de Poltave (Archbishop Theophanes of Poltava), Lavardac: Monastre de St.
Michel, 1988, p. 146 (in French).
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as the Venerable Bede writes, "the souls of the righteous cry out these words,
not out of hatred for enemies, but out of love for justice".459
This love of justice is natural to man, for it is made in the image of Gods
own love of justice. The love of justice proceeds naturally from the Nature of
God, like heat from the sun. Thus to say that God should be loving but not
just is like saying that the sun should give light but not heat. It is simply not
in the nature of things. What is in accordance with the nature of God is that
He should divide the light of His grace from its fiery heat at the Last
Judgement, giving the light only to the blessed and the heat only to the
damned.
As St. Basil the Great writes, commenting on the verse: The voice of the
Lord divideth the flame of fire (Psalm 28.6), writes: The fire prepared in
punishment for the devil and his angels is divided by the voice of the Lord.
Thus, since there are two capacities in fire, one of burning and the other of
illuminating, the fierce and punitive property of the fire may await those who
deserve to burn, while its illuminating and radiant part may be reserved for
the enjoyment of those who are rejoicing. 460
The Lord placed justice on a par with mercy and faith (Matthew 23.23), and
it was the Ephesian Churchs hatred of injustice that redeemed it in His eyes;
for this thou hast, that thou hatest the deeds of the Nicolaitans, which I also
hate (Revelation 2.6). This lesson is particularly important for our century,
when the Orthodox Church has been persecuted by the ecumenists with their
indifference to the truth, on the one hand, and the sergianists with their
indifference to justice, on the other. We have to kindle in ourselves a holy and
dispassionate zeal for the truth and hatred of injustice.
Thus, as Archbishop Theophanes writes in reply to the question Can one
have a negative feeling in relation to the enemies of the Russian people and
the Orthodox Church or must one suppress in oneself this feeling, repeating
the words: Vengeance is Mine, I will repay?: To have a negative feeling
towards the enemies of God and of the Russian people is natural. And on the
contrary not to have a negative feeling is unnatural. Only this feeling must be
correct. And it will be correct when it has a principled, not personal character,
that is, when we 'hate' the enemies of God and of the Russian people not for
their personal offences against us, but for their hostile attitude towards God
and the Church and for their inhuman attitude towards Russian people.
Therefore it is also necessary to fight with these enemies. Whereas if we do
not fight, we will be punished by God for our lukewarmness. He will then
take His vengeance not only on them, but also on us..."461
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The whole burden of the Old Testament Prophets was an impassioned, yet
holy lament against the injustice of man against God and against his fellow
man. And if anything to the Prophets was proof of the corruption of Israel, it
was that, instead of repenting of their own injustice, they accused the Just One
of injustice. Thus the holy Prophet Ezekiel laments: The house of Israel saith,
The way of the Lord is not equal. O house of Israel, are not My ways equal?
Are not your ways unequal? Therefore I will judge you, O house of Israel,
every one according to his ways, saith the Lord God. (Ezekiel 18.29-30). And
the holy Prophet Malachi laments: Ye have wearied the Lord with your
words. Yet ye say, Wherein have we wearied Him? When ye say, Every one
that doeth evil is good in the sight of the Lord, and He delighteth in them; or,
Where is the God of judgement? (Malachi 2.17).
The God of judgement is within us, manifest in that extraordinarily
powerful love of justice that is created in the image of Gods love of justice.
Faith teaches, and human nature cries out for, a last and most glorious
Judgement in which all tears will wiped away from every innocent face
(Revelation 21.4), and every apparently meaningless suffering will find its
meaning and reward. Again, faith teaches, and human nature cries out for, a
last and most terrible Judgement in which those who laughed over the
sufferings of others will weep (Luke 6.25), and those who feasted on human
flesh will gnash their teeth in eternal frustration. "Be not deceived; God is not
mocked; for whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap. For he that
soweth to his flesh shall of the flesh reap corruption; but he that soweth to the
Spirit shall of the Spirit reap life everlasting." (Galatians 6.7,8)
Thus the Last, Most Terrible Judgement is a mystery proclaimed by the
Word of God and grounded in the deepest reality of things. It both proceeds
from the nature of God Himself, and is an innate demand of our human
nature created in the image of God. It is the essential foundation for the
practice of virtue and the abhorrence of vice, and the ultimate goal to which
the whole of created nature strives, willingly or unwillingly, as to its natural
fulfilment. Without it all particular judgements would have a partial and
unsatisfactory character, and the reproaches of Job against God, and of all
unbelievers against faith, would be justified. And if the Last Judgement is
different from all preceding ones in that in it love seems to be separated from
justice, love being distributed exclusively to the righteous and justice to the
sinners, then this is because human nature itself will have divided itself in
two, one part having responded to love with love, to justice with justice, while
the other, having rejected both the love and the justice of God, will merit to
experience His justice alone...
And if, like Ivan in Dostoyevskys novel, The Brothers Karamazov, we still
cannot come to terms with the tears of an innocent child, this is not because
our love is too great, but because our faith in God's justice is too small. Gods
ways are not our ways, His thoughts are not our thoughts, and His justice, we
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must humbly accept, is not our justice. At some times we cannot understand
why the innocent suffer; at others why the guilty get away with it. At some
times we cannot understand why great sinners are forgiven in a moment; at
others why those who seem to us to be less guilty appear destined for the
eternal fire. The only right way to respond to this is to recognise humbly that
the creature cannot and must not argue with his Creator, and to say with the
Psalmist: Righteous art Thou, O Lord, and upright are Thy judgements
(Psalm 118.137)
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327
462
Is God to Blame?: Keith Ward vs. A.C. Grayling, Prospect, February, 2004, pp. 17-19.
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as much as possible, we see from Scripture and our personal experiences that
the Lord sends sicknesses, sorrows, deprivation, droughts, wars, and
revolutions, either as punishment for our sins, or in anticipation, so that we
do not fall into sins, or sometimes to test our faith. And so, we must bow in
reverence before His all-wise Providence and give thanks for His ineffable
mercy towards us.463
Does God Play with Dice?
But this is all nonsense, say the atheists and our modern theologians.
Being Darwinists to a man, they do not believe in Paradise or in Adam and
Eve; they believe that death was there from the beginning, as the engine of
evolution. God just couldnt help it, they say: the world He created came into
being through death and destruction mutation and natural selection. It is a
paradox, of course, that life should come into being through death but
science has proved it! God wasnt capable of getting it right first time: He had
gradually to perfect the species through an incredibly costly process of trial
and error involving the suffering and deaths of millions and millions of
creatures over millions and millions of years. And even now He hasnt got it
right: foreseen, regretted yet inevitable disasters keep interfering with the
world He supposedly created. God is really in the dock before our
contemporary theistic evolutionists. However, they are generously prepared
to acquit Him - on the grounds of diminished responsibility
According to this enlightened thinking, man is in the privileged position
of being able, through science and reason, to correct the mistakes God made
in creation. God gets things wrong, sending thousands of innocent creatures
to their deaths, but man puts things right - through earth science (how clever
we are!) and tsunami appeals (how generous we are!), through the American
Fleet and the United Nations and the Kyoto Protocols, etc., etc., etc.
Eventually, perhaps, man will even be able to help God out in recreating man
himself through stem cell research and gene therapy, through social
engineering, free trade and democracy. No need, then, for a New Adam: the
old Adam can put himself right, thank you! In truth, then, the real god of
creation is not God but man!
All this rests on the premise that God is as limited by the laws of nature as
we are. At best, the picture that the modern theologians present us with is the
Deist-Masonic one of the eighteenth-century philosophers. The Deists god
may have created the universe in the beginning, but he certainly has no
control over it now; he is like the child who winds up a toy and then cannot
keep up with it as it jumps all over the room. He is allowed to perform a
miracle occasionally, but only as a special exception for those who believe in
such things. But there can be no question of God having any real control over
St. Macarius of Optina, in Spiritual Teachings of the Optina Elders, Part IX, Orthodox Life,
vol. 53, 5, September-October, 2004, pp. 25, 26.
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nature as a whole or in detail after all, that would leave no room for the
creativity of man, whose calling is to alter the workings of the bouncing toy
and return it, like a benevolent father, to the distraught child!
The Orthodox Christian philosophy argues quite differently. He who
believes in chance, says St. Basil the Great, is an atheist he does not really
believe in God at all. There is no such thing as chance, says St. Ignatius
Brianchaninov. Nothing is impossible for God, because He controls the
workings of the universe down to the last detail, down to the tiniest wavefunction. When we say that A causes B, what we mean is that God causes A
and then causes B. As David Hume pointed out already in the eighteenth
century, nobody has actually seen a cause: the only thing we ever see is events
of class A being followed by events of class B, a regular sequence; we never
see a third entity, C, causing A to be followed by B. The only true Cause of
every single event in the history of the universe except, as we shall see, the
free decisions of men and angels is God.
The only limitations God allows to be placed on his sovereign will are the
workings of the wills of men and angels and that only for a time, and only
within severe limits. Everything that is not willed by men or angels is willed
by God. And so the South Asian tsunami, if it was not caused by men, was
caused by God or the devil. Actually, it could have been caused by God and
the devil, in that God sometimes uses the evil will of demons as an instrument
to the fulfilling of His own good and perfect will. And so all things are either
actively willed by God, or, if it not actively willed, are allowed by Him.
Who is Innocent?
The arrogance of the Christian theologians is most clearly revealed in
their attitude to the victims of the tsunami: all of them, they agree, are
innocent. This truth is reeled out by almost every commentator as if it
were a dogma. As if they could see and weigh up the thoughts of all of the
150,000 victims, and declare them all: not guilty!
But on what basis can they acquit the pagans and Muslims who died? And
on what basis can they acquit the Christian victims, most of whom were
sunning themselves on the day after Western Christmas far from a Christian
church? It was left to some Muslims who know the region better than the
Christian theologians, and who also appear to believe more in the justice of
God than they, to point out that immoral practices such as child kidnapping
and paedophilia are rife in the region
Are you then saying that all the victims were killed as Gods punishment
for their sins? No, we are not. We do not know the victims, and would not
have the right to judge them, even if we knew them. Only God can judge,
because only He knows the hearts and reins of every man. We know neither
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the heart of each man, nor the reason why God sends this or that man this or
that form of suffering.
For there are many possible reasons why a man should die or be injured in
a disaster such as the South Asian tsunami. It may be the final punishment of
a sinner who will not repent. Or the timely chastisement of a sinner who will
repent. It may be the deliverance of a good but vulnerable soul from mortal
sin in the future (while living among sinners he was taken up, lest evil
should change his understanding or guile deceive his soul (Wisdom 4.10-11)).
Or the crown of a just life (St. Athanasius of Mount Athos was killed by a
falling bell).
Herod and Ahab and Judas died as a punishment of their sins, of which
they did not repent; and their punishment continued after their deaths. But
David and Peter and Paul suffered as a chastisement for their sins, repented
and were forgiven. The children who mocked the Prophet Elisha died because
of their mockery. But Job did not suffer because of his sins, but in order to
serve as an example of long-suffering, and even as a type of Christ. And the
14,000 innocents of Bethlehem suffered in order to receive a crown of glory in
the heavens
It is important to realize that when speaking of fallen human beings, - that
is, all human beings except Christ the Lord, - we use the term innocent only
relatively speaking. The sentence of death falls on all the sons of Adam. For
all have sinned, and fallen short of the glory of God (Romans 3.23).
Nor are children and even new-born babies exempt from this rule; for
even from the womb, sinners are estranged (Psalm 57.3). As Job says: Who
shall be pure from uncleanness? Not even one, even if his life should be but
one day upon the earth (Job 14.4 (LXX)). That is why we baptise children
unto the remission of sins.
Modern theologians try to absolve God of responsibility for the suffering
and deaths of millions whom they the theologians in their infinite wisdom
declare to be innocent. And yet God does not deny that He sends death
upon these millions and says that we are to blame! Consider His verdict on
the destruction of Jerusalem by Nebuchadnezzar: The Lord, the God of their
fathers, constantly sent to them by His messengers, because He had
compassion on His people and on His dwelling place. But they kept mocking
the messengers of God, despising His words, and scoffing at His prophets,
until the wrath of the Lord rose against His people, until there was no remedy.
Therefore He brought up against them the king of the Chaldeans, who slew
their young men with the sword in the house of their sanctuary, and had no
compassion on young man or virgin, old man or aged: He gave them all into
his hand (II Chronicles 36.15-16).
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There is no question about it: the disaster was willed by God, as a just
punishment for sin. And even if the instruments of His wrath, the Chaldeans,
were themselves evil, God used the evil as an instrument for His good ends.
In the same way, the ten plagues of Egypt which killed many innocent
babes were willed by the good God, but carried out by evil demons: And
He sent forth against them the wrath of His anger, anger and wrath and
affliction, a mission performed by evil angels (Psalm 77.53). Not that the evil
executioners of Gods wrath are justified for that; for shall the axe vaunt
itself over him who hews with it, or the saw magnify itself against him who
wields it? (Isaiah 10.15).
Of course, Gods primary or active will is that we should do good, and
should be rewarded for it. But if we frustrate his primary will, then He allows
evil to be punished: this is His secondary will, as it were. For He is just as well
as merciful; He is the God of justice as well as the God of love.
Metropolitan Anastasy (Gribanovsky) of New York writes: The Lord
sometimes waits for evil to reveal itself utterly, so that, having exposed its real
nature, it might by itself be rejected by the hearts of men; and He subjects the
righteous man to a sevenfold trial, so as to reveal his spiritual beauty before
the whole world and increase his reward. Thus, for a time, He allows things
to remain as they are: He that is filthy, let him be filthy still; and he that is
righteous, let him be righteous still (Revelation 22.11).
If, with a righteous man, the least sinful obstacles characteristic of fallen
human nature are burned up in the fire of trials, so also does God allow the
ungodly one to enjoy prosperity for a time, so that he might receive his
reward for those crumbs of good which he might at any time do during his
life. The just Judge does not wish to remain in debt either to the righteous or
to the sinful. The latter, of course, do not realize that He is dealing with them
in this instance as a physician does with the hopelessly ill, deciding at the last
moment to let them have anything they want, only because they have no hope
for a future. With great eloquence and persuasiveness the blessed Augustine
reveals this latter idea in his famous work On the City of God, which is, as is
well known, the first attempt at a philosophy of history, when he speaks of
the fall of Rome. The very prosperity of those condemned to destruction is no
more than a phantom, like smoke, and therefore it should elicit no sense of
envy in anyone, but only a sad pity for their lot, for the divine Word is
immutable: Vengeance is Mine; I will repay (Romans 9.13; Deuteronomy
32.35). When I am given the appointed time, I will judge uprightly (Psalm
74.3); I will begin, and I will make an end (I Kings 3.12).
Fret not thyself because of evil-doers, King David the prophet urges us,
nor envy them that work iniquity. For like grass quickly shall they be
withered, and like green herbs quickly shall they fall away (Psalm 36.1-2).
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Weep for the sinner who succeeds at everything, one of the Fathers of the
Church teaches us, for the sword of divine justice is hanging over him.
When the Lord deems it necessary, He reveals His judgement over
ungodliness even here on earth, answering, as it were, the entreaty of
mankind: Let me see Thy vengeance taken upon them, for to Thee I have
declared my cause (Jeremiah 11.2).464
Conclusion
The Apostle Paul writes: All things happen for the best for those who love
God, and who are called according to His purpose (Romans 8.28). So even
the most terrible disasters are for the best for those who love God, and for
those who, though they do not love God now, are called to love Him in the
future and enjoy His eternal good things. For those who do not love God,
however, they express the righteous wrath of God in punishing evil.
The love and justice of Divine Providence is based on the omnipotence of
God: if God were not the pantocrator, the almighty, the words of the apostle
would make no sense. It is therefore the height of impiety, exhibiting clear
disbelief in the truth of the Holy Scriptures, to attempt to limit His
omnipotence. For as the Lord said to Abraham: Is anything too hard for the
Lord? (Genesis 18.14). For I form light and create darkness, I make
prosperity and create woe. I am the Lord, Who does all these things (Isaiah
45.7).
And if it is the height of impiety equivalent, as St. Basil says, to atheism
to attempt to limit the omnipotence of God, and make Him helpless before
chance or the supposed iron laws of nature, what are we to say of those who
impugn His justice, and who take it upon themselves to declare all the victims
of His judgements innocent?
God is justified in His words and prevails when He is judged by those evil
men who accuse Him of injustice. As He says through the Prophet Ezekiel:
Yet saith the house of Israel, The way of the Lord is not equal. O house of
Israel, are not My ways equal? Are not your ways unequal? Therefore I will
judge you, O house of Israel, every one according to his ways (Ezekiel 18.2930). Again, the Prophet Malachi says: Ye have wearied the Lord with your
words. Yet ye say, Wherein have we wearied Him? When ye say, Every one
that doeth evil is good in the sight of the Lord, and He delighteth in them; or,
Where is the God of judgement? (Malachi 2.17). But God is not unequal in
His ways, and He is always the God of judgement.
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For who will say, What hast Thou done? Or who will resist Thy
judgement? Who will accuse Thee for the destruction of the nations which
Thou didst make? Or who will come before Thee to plead as an advocate for
unrighteous men? For neither is there any god besides Thee, Whose care is for
all men, to whom Thou shouldest prove that Thou hast not judged unjustly;
nor can any king or monarch confront Thee about those whom Thou hast
punished. (Wisdom 12.12-14).
January 21 / February 3, 2005.
St. Maximus the Confessor.
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Now Fr. John says that this anathema, which was confirmed by the Local
Council of the Russian Church, has no validity because the patriarch repented
of it!!! The historical fact to which he is referring is the following. On June 16
and again on July 1, 1923, Patriarch Tikhon issued from prison a confession,
in which he repented of all his anti-Soviet acts, including his
anathematisation of Soviet power, and finally and decisively set himself
apart from both the foreign and the internal monarchist White-guard
counter-revolutionaries.
Even supposing that this confession was meant to lift the anathema on
Soviet power, the anathema was confirmed by the All-Russian Council, and
the patriarch had no right unilaterally to annul an act of the Council. But in
any case the confession was by no means meant to be such an annulment.
Let us consider the witness of Archbishop Nicon (Rklitsky), with whom Fr.
John was closely associated and whom he evidently greatly respects.
However we evaluate Patriarch Tikhons declaration, writes Archbishop
Nicon, we must recognise: 1) it did not annul the anathema in the name of the
Russian Orthodox Church on Soviet power, 2) he did not declare himself a friend
of Soviet power and its co-worker, 3) it did not invoke Gods blessing on it, 4)
it did not call on the Russian people to obey this power as God-established, 5)
it did not condemn the movement for the re-establishment of the monarchy in
Russia, and 6) it did not condemn the Whites struggle to overthrow Soviet
power. By his declaration Patriarch Tikhon only pointed to the way of acting
which he had chosen for the further defence and preservation of the Russian
Orthodox Church. How expedient this way of acting was is another
question, but in any case Patriarch Tikhon did not cross that boundary
which had to separate him, as head of the Russian Orthodox Church, from the
godless power.465
Moreover, as reported in Izvestia on June 12, 1924, the Patriarch wrote to
Metropolitan Anthony (Khrapovitsky): I wrote this for the authorities, but
you sit and work466
So we, the Orthodox Christians, are not meant to pay attention to the
patriarchs confession, which was intended only for the Bolsheviks.
Unfortunately, however, Fr. John prefers to take the patriarchs confession
seriously, as if he were a Bolshevik... This is not only a slander on the
patriarch, making him out to be a sergianist before Sergius, but raises the
questions: Does not Fr. John believe that Soviet power was (is) under
anathema? If he does not, then does he not believe that the communist State
was (is) a legitimate State?
Nikon, Zhizneopisanie Blazhennejshago Mitropolita Antonia, New York, 1960, vol. VI, pp. 151152.
466 Archpriest Lev Lebedev, Velikorossia, St. Petersburg, 1999, p. 577.
465
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Fr. John says many blatant lies in defence of his thesis. For example: There
were no pagan services, or pagan groups represented at the WCC. Or again:
The ROCOR withdrew [from the WCC] because the Moscow Patriarchate
became involved (the ROCOR was never in the WCC). And worst of all: In
reality, none of the Orthodox participants in the ecumenical movement have
said that Orthodoxy was not the true faith, or any of the other things referred
to in the anathema (they have all signed up to the branch theory of the
Church, which is the main object of the anathema).
However, rather than spending time on these obvious lies, I should like to
draw attention to a more subtle one. Fr. John writes: In his message, the
future Metropolitan Vitaly expressed the hope that such an anathema might
be enacted by the other Orthodox Churches. He thus shows that he did not
see it as changing our relationship with them, or as anathematizing other
jurisdictions.
What Metropolitan Vitaly actually meant he himself is in the best position
to explain. But the idea that inviting other jurisdictions to enact the anathema
somehow invalidates its power, or shows that it has no real power, is a very
strange argument. Why invite someone to do something that is ineffectual
and/or invalid?
There is perfectly reasonable way of justifying such an appeal to other
Churches. The meaning of the appeal could be as follows: We have
anathematised the branch theory of the Church. We invite you also to
anathematise the branch theory of the Church. In this way you will proclaim
your Orthodoxy and be freed from the power of this anathema. If, on the
other hand, you do not join with us in anathematising this heresy, this shows
that you in fact confess the heresy, and fall under the anathemas power.
The Heresy of Universal Jurisdiction
The attack on the validity of the 1983 anathema has been waged by others,
notably Fr. John Shaws comrade-in-betrayal, Fr. Alexander Lebedev, who
some years ago called the idea that the anathema strikes down all ecumenists
the heresy of universal jurisdiction. Who the anathema actually strikes
down was never made clear. The only inference must be: ecumenists in the
ROCORs own fold (Frs. John Shaw and Alexander Lebedev perhaps?)
Readers will forgive me if I quote my own reply to Fr. Alexander in 2000:
Thinking about your heresy of universal jurisdiction, it seems to me that
you confuse two things: the Church as an external organisation, and the
Church as a mystical organism, to use the terminology of Hieromartyr
Catacomb Bishop Mark (Novoselov) (+1938). It seems to me that you are right
as regards the Church as an external organisation, but wrong as regards the
Church as a mystical organism. Let me explain.
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In the same way, in 1983 the Sobor of Bishops of the Russian Church
Abroad, using the power to bind and to loose given them by the Bishop of
bishops, the Lord Jesus Christ, translated onto earth, into space and time, the
completely binding and universally applicable decision already arrived at
from all eternity by the Council of the Holy Trinity, the Father, the Son and
the Holy Spirit. Ecumenism is, was and always will be a heresy, indeed the
heresy of heresies, and the ecumenist heretics are, were and always will be
outside the Church, the mystical Body of Christ. The decision of the ROCOR
Sobor in 1983, confirmed with no change to its universal wording in 1998,
expelled these already self-condemned and Divinely condemned heretics also
from the external organization of the Church - and woe to any man, of
whatever Church, who despises that decision, for he will then surely fall
under the same anathema468
Conclusion
Just as there is no deadlier weapon in the armoury of the Church than the
weapon of anathema, which casts heretics out of the Church and places them,
unprotected by the Churchs blessing, before the throne of Gods fearsome
justice, so there is no more serious sin than to deny, mock, misinterpret or in
some other way diminish the seriousness and significance of the Churchs
anathemas, thereby diminishing the fear of God among the faithful and
aiding and abetting the spread of heresy. The anathemas of 1918 against
Bolshevism and of 1983 against ecumenism constitute the two most important
doctrinal declarations of the One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church in the
twentieth century. Between them they cast the proponents of
ecucommunism469 out of the Church, and guaranteed the survival of True
Orthodoxy into the twenty-first century.
In July, 1937 a secret Council of the Russian Catacomb Church took place
in Ust-Kut, Siberia. Although the existence of this Council is not well-known,
its existence is vouched for by three independent sources. Fr. John would do
well to take note of the first three canons of this Council:1. The Sacred Council forbids the faithful to receive communion from the
clergy legalized by the anti-Christian State.
2. It has been revealed to the Sacred Council by the Spirit that the
anathema-curse hurled by his Holiness Patriarch Tikhon is valid, and all
priests and Church-servers who have dared to consider it as an ecclesiastical
mistake or political tactic are placed under its power and bound by it.
V. Moss, Re: [paradosis} The Heresy of Universal Jurisdiction, [email protected], October 12, 2000.
469 V. Moss, "Ecucommunism", Living Orthodoxy, September-October, 1989, vol. XI, 5, pp.
13-18.
468
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3. To all those who discredit and separate themselves from the Sacred
Council of 1917-18 Anathema!
What was said here in relation to the anathema of 1918 will undoubtedly
one day be said by another True Orthodox Council about the anathema of
1983. Those who discredit and separate themselves from it will be under
anathema. For whosoever shall fall on this stone shall be broken: but on
whomsoever it shall fall, it will grind him to powder (Matthew 21.44).
August 19 / September 1, 2005; revised September 6/19.
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One of the first True Orthodox thinkers to study these phenomena and
write about them was Hieromonk Seraphim Rose. Having drunk deeply of
the delights of hippy-nihilist culture before converting to Orthodoxy, he
was in a good position to analyze it and anticipate the ways in which it might
invade the culture of True Orthodoxy. His book, Orthodoxy and the Religion of
the Future, touched a chord in the hearts of many, not only in America but also
in Russia.
One of Roses Russian admirers is Igumen Gregory Lourie. Scion of a
famous Jewish family (the Russian Jewish Encyclopaedia calls them aristocrats
among the Jews470), and a direct descendant of the foremost Kabbalist in
Europe in the sixteenth century, Issak Lourie Levi (a link of which he is
reported to be very proud), he is a product of the Leningrad rock
underground as Rose was of San Francisco hippydom. Like Rose, he has set
himself the task of interpreting the nihilist culture of his youth for a True
Orthodox readership, and, vice-versa, of bringing True Orthodoxy to the
down and outs of the Russian cities. Unlike Rose, however, he has not fully
broken with that culture The result is a horrific hybrid, a mixture of True
Orthodoxy and nihilist art and philosophy Punk-True-Orthodoxy
which has already created havoc in the ranks of the True Orthodox in Russia,
and which he is threatening to bring to America through a union with
HOCNA (see my Open Letter to Fr. Gregory Lourie471).
Lourie's Punk Orthodoxy
In order that we may better understand the essence of this horrific hybrid,
here is an extensive quotation from an article on it by N.D. Nedashkovskaya,
former Director of the Centre of Orthodox Enlightenment in St. Petersburg
entitled "Taking Inspiration from Emptiness, or: The Theology of the Gutter":"First: blasphemy against God as the Creator of a perfect and beautiful
world that has not finally lost these qualities even after the fall of Satan and
man. As it is written in [Lourie's] "Swiss Time": "You want to be a good
person? I do not, whatever this 'goodness' may consist in. But if after all I
have to be a man, then I would do better to try and become the kind of man I
myself want to be, and not the kind that someone here (even God) would
consider to be 'good'. But if I were to set about thinking even harder, then I
would not find in the idea of 'man' (any man, 'man generally speaking')
anything for the sake of which it would be worth living, even on the condition
of immortality: the senseless does not acquire sense if it becomes infinitely
long... Such a picture of Paradise - in the form of an infinitely long and
infinitely happy human existence - begins very much to smack of
Quoted in A.I. Solzhenitsyn, Dvesti Let Vmeste (Two Hundred Years Together), 1795-1995,
Moscow, 2001, volume I, pp. 216-217 (in Russian).
470
471
www.romanitas.ru/eng/OPEN%20LETTER%20TO%20FR.%20GREGORY%20LOURIE.htm.
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persecutors. After all, if, as he says, Bulgakov and Pasternak "should not have
been left alive" by the "great" Stalin, what mercy can we, the True Orthodox
Christians expect from him in time of trouble? Already, he has powerful
protectors in high places, such as the Kremlin "polittechnologist" and betrayer
of the dissidents, Gleb Pavlovsky, who provides him with money and lawyers
and makes visits with him to the bedside of Metropolitan Valentine
Some have speculated that Lourie is a KGB agent. I have no proof of this,
and just as we had to wait until 1992 for final proof that the leading hierarchs
of the MP were KGB agents, so we shall probably have to wait until the
arrival of a True Orthodox tsar before Louries true status is elucidated
beyond doubt. But his activities would seem to indicate that here is a new
type of agent not the crude Soviet mouth-pieces of the Brezhnev years, but a
much more "flexible" force (the word was used of Metropolitan Sergius), more
like an "agent of influence", that is probably given much more freedom to
choose his own strategy, more rope with which to hang others and himself.
Lourie is no atheist planted in an already Sovietized institution, but a sincere
"believer" an eccentric and heretical one, but a "believer" nonetheless, whose
ambition can be guaranteed to bring about the required results for the
government without any (or only very little) instructions or encouragement.
Lourie probably feels he is using the government rather than being used by it
(again the parallel is with Sergius): the important fact from our point of view
is that Satan is manipulating both of them.
3. Lourie and the MP
So what is Louries relationship to the MP? Just as Metropolitan Sergius, as
Hieromartyr Damascene pointed out, took a suspiciously long time to leave
the renovationists in 1924, so Lourie was remarkably late in leaving the MP in
1997. In the case of many, perhaps most, converts, this could be put down to
ignorance of the true state of affairs. Not Lourie. A patrologist and
Byzantinist, a former secretary of Metropolitan Ioann (Snychev) of St.
Petersburg, he must have been well aware long before he left the MP that it
was a thoroughly corrupt and heretical organisation. Certainly, the MPs
betrayal of the faith at Chambsy and Balamand in the early 1990s would
have made him think of leaving (he appears to be a sincere anti-ecumenist),
and he was prominent in the criticism of these unias within the MP. But
precisely because he could still have influence within the anti-ecumenist
movement in the MP, he was not going to leave it simply on anti-ecumenist
principle immediately heresy appeared. Lourie never acts on principle alone
This lack of principle is evident in his ambiguous attitude towards the
question of when the MP lost grace. There is an interesting parallel here (and
not the only one) with Fr. Panteleimon of Boston. The Bostonites are usually
considered very zealous anti-ecumenists, and I would not deny them that
title. But why does Fr. Panteleimon consider that the new calendarists lost
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grace only in 1965, when the official position of the Greek Old Calendarists
(and of Archbishop Auxentius, from whom Panteleimons bishops obtained
their orders) is 1935, a full thirty years later, and a full fifteen years after
Patriarch Athenagoras made his super-ecumenist declaration: We are in
error and sin if we think that the Orthodox Faith came down from heaven and
that the other dogmas [i.e. religions] are unworthy. Three hundred million
men have chosen Mohammedanism as the way to God and further hundreds
of millions are Protestants, Catholics and Buddhists. The aim of every religion
is to make man better? The probable answer is that since Fr. Panteleimon left
the new calendarists in 1965, to assert that the new calendarists lost grace
before that would imply that Panteleimon heaven forbid! was once a
heretic. Far better to say that the new calendarists lost grace precisely when
Panteleimon left them! Then he can claim he had never been in heresy or a
false church! Similarly, when the Bostonites left the ROCOR in 1986 (so as to
save Panteleimon from a court trial and defrocking for immorality), they
conveniently stated that the ROCOR had lost grace at that time. They could
not say that the ROCOR lost grace earlier, for then the Bostonites would have
been graceless at least for a time. But they could not say it remained Orthodox
after they left, because it had always been a cardinal doctrine of Boston that
one can leave a Church for no other reason than heresy, and leaving for any
other reason constitutes schism
Louries attitude to the question of grace is not so clearly defined, but no
less opportunistic. He has carefully not subscribed to the view that the MP
lost grace in the 30s or 40s, as the great majority of the New Hieromartyrs of
Russia declared, nor even when the MP entered the World Council of
Churches in the 1960s. In fact, it is not at all clear when, if at any time, he
considers the MP to have lost grace.
This makes sense in terms of his overall strategic plan, which is not to
replace or convert the MP he considers such an idea wildly unrealistic, even
undesirable but to keep it in place as the church for the uncultured masses. What,
then, should the relationship of ROAC be to the MP, in his opinion? A form of
alternative Orthodoxy. For, as he said in a press conference in 2001, he
regards the MP, the Old Ritualists and the ROAC as the three forms of
Orthodoxy in Russia. The ROAC is not a rival, but an alternative to the MP.
For whom? For those who are really serious about their Orthodoxy, for the
elite believers
4. Lourie and the Church of the Elite
Elitism runs like a silver thread through all of Louries writings. Now an
lite does not live in complete isolation from the common crowd: rather it is
like the leaven in the lump, working to transform the lump while not being
corrupted by it. It is useful to compare Louries Church of the Elite with
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two other forms of quasi-litist religious organisation: the Masonic lodge and
the monastery.
Lourie writes: The True Orthodox Church is distinguished from a
Masonic lodge by the fact that it is not an esoteric organization: on no level of
initiation do they communicate something that contradicts what is
communicated on lower levels. This reveals that for Lourie the TOC is in fact
rather like a lodge, only more open. And in fact the similarity, not of the
TOC as a whole, but of his own sect within the TOC, to Masonry is
remarkable. Like the lodges, the sect exists in order to subvert existing
ecclesiastical authority, to effect a revolution in the Church. The lite who are
privileged to be given access to this lodge are initiated into a series of secret
doctrines, which it would be as well not to proclaim too quickly or too openly.
For example, the doctrine that the Name of God is God, a heresy condemned
by the Greek and Russian Churches in 1913. (It was for preaching this heresy
that Lourie was defrocked by the Synod of the ROAC in September, 2005.)
Again, the doctrine of samobozhie, that all True Christians are gods, having
no beginning or end (see the second blasphemy in Nedashkovskaya,
above). Of course, pseudo-patristic arguments are cited in favour of these
doctrines. For without such arguments the doctrines would not be accepted
and it is the purpose of the sect to spread their doctrines in the wider world,
just as it was the purpose of the Masonic lodges to spread the revolution.
Lourie combines quasi-masonic litism with a strong emphasis on
monasticism. But not Orthodox monasticism. The first book of his that elicited
controversy within the True Orthodox Church, The Calling of Abraham, is a call
to monasticism of a special, Manichaean kind, in which the monastic or virgin
life is seen as the only possible way of life for the New Testament Christian,
while marriage is for Old Testament Christians, who live according to the
law, not grace. Lourie himself abandoned his wife against her will in order to
become a monk in the world a way of life that he recommends for his closest
followers (rock music is the preferred preparation for this kind of
monasticism!).
5. Lourie and Globalism
So far, Louries cult is comparatively small a few hundred people at most,
(but with thousands of sympathizers) - confined mainly to Russia. However,
cults, like malignant cancers, have an inexorable tendency to grow and
Louries influence is growing rapidly. In the present writers opinion, his
defrocking is likely to be only a temporary setback on his road to religious
superstardom, and may even be exploited by him to his advantage. For if he
succeeds in having that decision reversed under a new first-hierarch, he may
even gain complete control over ROAC after the diehard catacombniks have
fled in horror
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With the help of foreign missionaries from Ireland, France, Italy, Greece
and North Africa, the Anglo-Saxons were soon producing great saints of their
own: Cuthbert, Bede, Chad, Cedd, Guthlac, Aldhelm, Egwin, Wilfrid,
Eanswythe, Mildred, Etheldreda and many others. And in the eighth century,
a great wave of English missionaries led by St. Boniface, Archbishop of Mainz,
undertook the conversion of their kinsfolk in Holland and Germany. The
invasion of the Vikings in the ninth century produced a great number of
martyrs and the near-extinction of Anglo-Saxon Christian civilization. But
under King Alfred the Great and his successors, the Church recovered all the
ground she had lost to the pagans. By the time of King Edgar the Peaceable
(+975) and St. Dunstan, Archbishop of Canterbury (+988), the English
Orthodox kingdom embraced Saxons, Celts and Danes in a multi-ethnic state
that was a model of what a Christian kingdom can and should be.
However, the murder of St. Edward the Martyr in 979 signalled the
beginning of the end of English Orthodoxy: a second wave of Viking
invasions led to the conquest of the kingdom by the Danish King Canute in
1016. Although he and much of his Scandinavian empire embraced English
Christianity, and although King Edward the Confessor restored the native
English dynasty in 1042, corruption from within and the pressure of the nowheretical Roman papacy from without was undermining the foundations of
English piety. On October 14, 1066 the most tragic day in English history
the last English Orthodox king, Harold II Godwinson, was killed at Hastings
by Duke William the Bastard of Normandy, who had been blessed to
conquer schismatic England by Pope Alexander II. During the next four
years English Orthodoxy was destroyed by fire and sword: all the bishops
were removed and replaced by French papists, the cathedrals were destroyed
to make way for Norman ones, the relics of the English saints were abused,
and perhaps 20% of the population was killed. The cream of the aristocracy
fled to Constantinople and Kiev, where the daughter of King Harold married
Great Prince Vladimir Monomakh of Kiev.
And so the thousand-year history of English Orthodoxy came to an end.
The next thousand years were to see the rise of England to world power and
the most extensive empire the world has ever seen. But what does it profit a
man if he gain the whole world but lose his own soul? England had lost her
soul, her Orthodox faith. And now, at the beginning of the third millennium
of Christian history, she is morally and spiritually as low as she has ever been.
An illustration of how far we are from the traditions of our ancestors can
be found in todays newspapers, where it is reported that the Synod of the
Anglican Church has decided to demote St. George from his status as
patron saint of England because his existence is supposedly doubtful. Some
want to make St. Alban our patron saint instead. While St. Alban is a most
worthy candidate, the Anglicans appear to have forgotten that already in 758
Archbishop Cuthbert of Canterbury and his Synod appointed three patrons of
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I think that none of these principles can elicit objections on the part of any of
the True Orthodox Churches of the Russian tradition.
If that is so, then the difference in views regarding the presence of the
grace of sacraments in the Russian Orthodox Church of the Moscow
Patriarchate and in World Orthodoxy as a whole lies in the domain of
economy, and not dogmatics (where there can be no economy of any kind). In
other words, if anybody admits the presence of the grace of sacraments in the
Russian Orthodox Church of the Moscow Patriarchate, and this opinion is
unjust, it does not follow that this person is a heretic with whom there must
not be any ecclesiastical communion
On this basis Louri suggests: It is sufficient only to anathematize
ecumenism and define all the ecclesiastical organizations of World Orthodoxy
as heretical communities, ecclesiastical communion with whom is not possible
in any circumstances. As regards the question of the grace or lack of grace of
the sacraments of the ecumenists, this can be left to time to decide. In a
peaceful atmosphere undisturbed by unneeded polemics, the overwhelming
majority of the believers will themselves come to the correct conclusion.
But what about the anathema against ecumenism of 1983? Is that not valid?
Why introduce a new anathema when the old one passed under a leader,
Metropolitan Philaret, of undisputed authority stands? And if the old
anathema stands, does it not anathematize those very people who consider
that there is the grace of sacraments among the heretics, since they do not
distinguish the priesthood and mysteries of the Church from those of the
heretics, but say that the baptism and eucharist of heretics is effectual for
salvation? So would not the new anathema proposed by Louri have the
effect of contradicting the old anathema, or at any rate of weakening it?
Louri anticipates this objection in part when he writes: The anathema
against the heresy of ecumenism produced by the ROCOR Council in 1983
turned out to be powerless to guard against this Church from falling into
ecumenism because at that time, in 1983, the Council described the sickness,
but did not indicate who were the sick which left an open door to
unscrupulous re-interpretations that began immediately after the death of the
holy First-Hierarch Metropolitan Philaret (1985).
Fair enough: but what is Louris conclusion: that the anathema of 1983 did
in fact fall upon the heretics of World Orthodoxy, or not? If it did, then the
need for a new and weaker anathema falls away: in fact it becomes
harmful as casting a shadow on the validity and sufficiency of the 1983
anathema. If, on the other hand, it did not, then is not Louri a cryptoCyprianite in that, like the Cyprianites, those crypto-ecumenists, as Louri
calls them, he considers the heretics to be as yet uncondemned? The fact
that no specific heretics were named does not entail that no specific heretics
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The important point is that, however we understand the process of the loss
of grace in a Church, it is not possible that the imposition of an anathema on
the Church, if it is accepted as valid and canonical, can be understood in any
other way than that the Church in question has lost the grace of sacraments.
Before the imposition of the anathema, there is room for argument, for a
diversity of opinions: after the anathema, there can be no more arguing, the
Church has spoken, the candlestick has been removed (Revelation 2.5), for
that which the Church binds on earth is bound also in heaven. Dissenters may
argue that the anathema is not valid for one reason or another for example,
because the hierarchs have not understood the essence of the question, or
because they are too few in number, or because only Ecumenical Councils
have the authority to anathematize. What they cannot deny is that if the
anathema is valid, then those anathematized are outside the Church and
therefore deprived of the grace of sacraments; for there are no sacraments
outside the Church.
For the zealots of True Russian Orthodoxy, the question in relation to the
Moscow Patriarchate has already been decided, for the Church has already
spoken with sufficient clarity and authority: first in the early Catacomb
Councils that anathematized it because of sergianism (it was on the basis of
these anathemas that Metropolitan Philaret declared that the Moscow
Patriarchate was graceless already in 1980), and then in ROCORs 1983
Council, which anathematized it because of ecumenism. What is needed now
is not a new anathema that denies for itself the force of an anathema, but the
signatures of the new generation of hierarchs under the old anathemas. And if
further clarification is needed, that clarification should come only in the form
of specifying precisely those patriarchs who fall under the anathemas.
(c) Sergianism. Louri says nothing directly about Sergianism as a possible
source of dogmatic differences. The reason for that is simple: it is because
Louri himself is a Sergianist. (And a Stalinist: we remember his famous
thank you to Soviet power and his statements: I respect Stalin and
Comrade Stalin was completely correct in his treatment of the intelligentsia.)
Louris Sergianism is obvious from many of his articles, in which he
describes even the pre-revolutionary Church as Sergianist, thereby
depriving the term of its real force, and also from his Live Journal, where he
writes most recently: It is necessary to recognize in general any authority
whatever. It is wrong only to allow it [to enter] within Church affairs. 475
With such a statement not even Patriarch Sergius would have disagreed,
and it differs not at all from the Social Doctrine of the Sergianist Moscow
Patriarchate as approved in their Jubilee 2000 Council. But it was rejected by
all the confessing hierarchs of the Catacomb Church and ROCOR. For those
hierarchs refused to recognize Soviet power, considering it to be that
authority which is established, not by God, but by Satan (Revelation 13.2). It
was in recognition of this fact that the Local Council of the Russian Orthodox
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autonomous existence in the 1920s (although the ukaz almost certainly did
not envisage the creation of an extra-territorial Church on the global scale of
ROCOR), as did ROAC in the 1990s and RTOC in the 2000s. The problem is
that not only does the ukaz not provide any sanctions against schismatics: it
also fails to provide a criterion for determining who is schismatical - for the
simple reason that it in effect decentralizes the Church on the presupposition
that a central Church authority, in relation to which alone a church body
could be defined and judged as schismatical, no longer exists or cannot be
contacted. In 1990s the Synod of ROCOR in New York briefly tried to set itself
up as the central authority for the whole of the Russian Church, inside as well
as outside of Russia. But this attempt had a firm basis neither in the Holy
Canons of the Universal Church nor in the ukaz N 362, and therefore only
succeeded in creating schisms and weakening its own, already shaky
authority. In view of this, Louri comes to the conclusion that no decrees of
ecclestiastical authorities issued specially in order to regulate the life of the
True Orthodox Church of the Russian tradition can include any special rules
that the hierarchs are obliged to carry out. The only thing that is obligatory is
all that is decreed by the Canons of the Universal Church.
With this conclusion (to his surprise) the present writer is in broad
agreement. (It is an interesting question whether a similar conclusion can be
drawn with respect to the Greek Old Calendarist Church. But that question
goes beyond the bounds of this article.) De jure, there has been no central
authority in the Russian Church since the death of Metropolitan Peter in 1937.
De facto, depending on ones opinions, there has been no such authority since
1986, 1994, 2001 or 2006 and that only if we allow that the Russian Orthodox
Church Outside of Russia had the right to regulate Church life within Russia.
Now, with the fall of the New York Synod into heresy and the death of
Metropolitan Vitaly, no Church grouping or Synod can claim, whether de jure
or de facto, to be that unique Church centre in relation to which all other
independent groupings and Synods are schismatical. This is not to say that no
grouping or Synod has acted in a schismatic spirit or been guilty of the sin of
dividing the flock of Christ. What it does mean that there is at present no
grouping or Synod that can claim to be the judge of that, and impose
sanctions for it, from a strictly canonical point of view.
This might appear to be a dispiriting conclusion that can only lead to chaos.
However, chaos has existed in Russian Church life since at least 1937, if not
1927 or even 1922; and it can be argued that ukaz N 362 was composed in
anticipation of that chaos and in order to mimimize its effects to control it,
as it were, and stop it spreading and deepening. The tragedy of the last
twenty years has consisted not so much in the presence of chaos, which has
already existed for many decades, but in the misguided attempts to restore
order by unlawful means, by creating a Church centre that did not have the
sanction of a lawfully convened Church Council. The result, as pointed out
earlier, has been the creation of further chaos, as this artificial Church centre,
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ignoring not only the Holy Canons of the Universal Church, but also ukaz N
362 and even its own Statute, has expelled large groups of bishops and
parishes without even a trial or summons to a trial. This unlawful usurpation
of Church power has now received its just reward, as, suddenly feeling that
its own authority rested on sand, it surrendered itself and the flock that still
remained loyal to it to what it perceived to be the real Church centre the
Synod of the Moscow Patriarchate.
But there is a silver lining to this cloud: there has never been a more
opportune time in recent history to convene that lawful Church Council
which alone can create a lawful Church centre having the power finally to
resolve the chaos within the True Orthodox Church. On this, at any rate, we
can agree with Louri. The question is: is there the will to adopt this, the only
way?
III. Politico-Economic Differences. Louri points out that the economic
interests which have played such an important part in the MP-ROCOR unia
have played very little part in the differences between the True Orthodox
Churches for the simple reason that the True Orthodox Churches have very
little money or property.
The only real difference has consisted in the fact that, early in the 1990s, the
Suzdal diocese under Bishop Valentine tried to obtain a number of churches,
mainly in the Suzdal region, by legal representations to the authorities,
whereas the dioceses under Bishops Lazarus and Benjamin chose to continue
to serve, catacomb-style, in flats. Valentine had considerable success early on
in his drive, which was reflected in his larger number of priests and parishes;
but the cost, in terms of hassle and money, has been great; and in recent years
the MP has taken back several of the churches (the latest was the church of St.
Olga in Zheleznovodsk). In some minds this difference between the
possessors and non-possessors is connected with a more sinister political
difference, the inference being that Bishop Valentine was continuing to use
his continuing links with the (post-) Soviet authorities for base material ends,
whereas Bishop Lazarus was free of such contaminating links.
Not surprisingly (in view of his possession of an above-ground church),
Louri backs the possessors in this argument. He makes the valid point that it
is not dirty to try to acquire church property, and that many confessors
have died in defending the property of the Church (e.g. the thousands who
were imprisoned or killed in 1922 for resisting the Bolshevik campaign of
requisitioning church valuables). Many people who might otherwise be
drawn to the True Orthodox Church are put off by having to worship in flats,
so the Churchs material possessions and buildings have a direct spiritual
value in the gathering and saving of souls.
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the royal power is fearful to the priesthood. However, it is better to say, not
priesthood, but those who have the appearance of doing the priestly work,
while by their actions they insult the priesthood. That is why it seems to me
that the royal power is acting justly477
Such interference was justified, in St. Isidores view, because although
there is a very great difference between the priesthood and the kingdom (the
former is the soul, the latter the body), nevertheless they strive for one and
the same goal, that is, the salvation of citizens.478
So the dream of a True Orthodox tsar not a dream only, but a future
directly prophesied by several prophecies is not only one more factor
uniting the True Orthodox, but the one that may be decisive in making that
unity visible in one Church jurisdiction. This is not to say that we can simply
fold our hands and wait for the tsar. Rather we must raise our hands and
plead for his coming and later, perhaps, set about electing him ourselves.
For, as Archbishop Theophan of Poltava said: The Lord will have mercy on
Russia for the sake of the small remnant of true believers. In Russia, the elders
said, in accordance with the will of the people, the Monarchy, Autocratic
power, will be re-established
Through this tsar, continues the prophecy, the heretical hierarchs of the
Moscow Patriarchate will be removed and a united Russian Church will be
re-established. For, as St. John of Kronstadt said: I foresee the restoration of a
powerful Russia, still stronger and mightier than before. On the bones of these
martyrs, remember, as on a strong foundation, will the new Russia we built according to the old model; strong in her faith in Christ God and in the Holy
Trinity! And there will be, in accordance with the covenant of the holy Prince
Vladimir, a single Church!... The Church will remain unshaken to the end of
the age, and a Monarch of Russia, if he remains faithful to the Orthodox
Church, will be established on the Throne of Russia until the end of the age.
And so our present disunity will be overcome, difficult as it is to see the
path to that end now. As St. Anatolius the Younger of Optina said: A great
miracle of God will be revealed. And all the splinters and wreckage will, by
the will of God and His might, be gathered together and united, and the ship
will be recreated in its beauty and will go along the path foreordained for it
by God. That's how it will be, a miracle manifest to all...
Let us remind ourselves, finally, that we are talking about a true unity on
the basis of the True Orthodox faith, not the false ecumenist unity offered by
the Moscow Patriarchate. As Fr. Basil Redechkin writes: In these 70 years
there have been a large quantity of people who have been devoted in mind
and heart to Russia, but we can still not call them the regeneration of Russia.
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St. Isidore, Tvorenia (Works), Moscow, 1860, vol. 3, pp. 400, 410 (in Russian).
St. Isidore, quoted in Zyzykin, Patriarkh Nikon, Warsaw, 1931, vol. I, p. 244 (in Russian).
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For such a regeneration a real unity into a society is necessary. .Such a unity
in fulfilment of the prophecies is possible only on the basis of true Orthodoxy.
Otherwise it is in no way a regeneration. Thus even if a tsar is elected, he
must unfailingly belong to the true Orthodox Church. And to this Church
must belong all the people constituting a regenerated Russia479
October 4/17, 2006.
Hieromartyr Hierotheus, Bishop of Athens.
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These words were spoken by the souls of them that were slain for the
word of God (Revelation 6.9), and remind us of another fact that is too easily
forgotten: that our age has produced not only the greatest evil, but also the
greatest good in the form of the hundreds of thousands, perhaps millions of
martyrs that have shone forth, especially in Russia, but also in other lands.
Now in earlier ages periods of martyrdom have always been followed by
periods of missionary expansion, in accordance with the principle: The blood
of the martyrs is the seed of the Church. Thus the martyrs of the Roman
catacombs produced the vast expansion of the Church in the time of St.
Constantine the Great, and the martyrs of the iconoclast period produced the
conversion of the Slavic lands. Why should not the holy new martyrs and
confessors of Russia bring forth a still greater harvest of souls especially
since some of the prophecies say that this is precisely what will happen?
One harvest of souls that is clearly prophesied before the end is that of the
Jews. St. Paul writes: Blindness in part is come to Israel, until the fullness of
the Gentiles come in. And so shall all Israel be saved. As it is written: There
shall come out of Zion the deliverer, who will turn away impiety from Israel
(Romans 11.25-26). The fulfilment of this prophecy, the conversion of the Jews,
has certainly not taken place yet.
Some argue that this is impossible because it is precisely the Jews who
destroyed the Russian empire and who are controlling the present descent of
the world into the depths of depravity and antichristianity. But does not the
example of St. Paul himself persuade us that the Lord is capable of making
the greatest sinners into the greatest saints? And would not the conversion of
the Jews be the greatest demonstration of Gods long-suffering mercy?
Again, others argue that the Jews will be converted only during the reign
of the Antichrist. However, St. Paul says that the sign for the conversion of the
Jews will not be the reign of the Antichrist but the coming in of the fullness
of the Gentiles that is, the preaching of the Gospel throughout the world.
This spiritual resurrection of the Jews will not be total, and a large part of
them will again apostasize and follow the Antichrist; but the fact of the
resurrection cannot be denied and must modify our attitude towards this race,
which, though cursed by God, has nevertheless not been totally abandoned
by Him, and has been preserved in existence when many other nations have
perished.
And who will convert the Jews if not the Russians, who have suffered so
much from them, but whose history and culture has become the history and
culture of a large part of the Jewish race itself (one sixth of all Israelis are
Russian Jews)?
If this seems fantastic in view of the present collapse of Russian
civilization, let us remember the interpretation of a passage from the book of
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Novoselov, Pisma k Druziam (Letters to Friends), Moscow, 1994, p. 125 (in Russian).
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mean if we do not know who you is? It follows that before the actual
appearance of the Antichrist, and the peoples willing and conscious
acceptance of him as the true King of the Jews and God, the prophecy cannot
be fulfilled.
At the same time, the appearance of the technology is undoubtedly a sign of
the times (Matthew 16.3), a sign that we are approaching the end, and that we
must prepare ourselves spiritually for the coming of the Antichrist.
The world has probably been close to the end many times before for
example, in the time of Julian the Apostate, who tried to rebuild the temple at
Jerusalem. But each time the Lord has delivered the world from the Antichrist.
As L.A. Tikhomirov writes: In history there have been times when the
pressure of evil has been so strong that it seemed that there was no further
reason for the world to exist, and if the anti-God mood had become finally
entrenched then the end of the world would have come. The multitude of
small potential antichrists, of whom the Apostle John already spoke, would
immediately have promoted from their midst someone capable of growing
into the real Antichrist. Such epochs, of which ours is one, in their character
truly constitute the last times. But are they chronologically the last? We
cannot know that, because if the free will of men, amazed by the disgusting
sight of the abomination of desolation in the holy place, strives again towards
God, the Antichrist, already ready to enter the world, will again be cast into
the abyss until conditions more favourable for him arise, while the Lord will
again lengthen the term of life of the world so that new members should be
prepared for the Kingdom of God.483
One day, however, the Antichrist will indeed come, and we will have to be
prepared. And even if his coming is not at the doors, we must still be
prepared, because we can receive the seal of one of his forerunners. So the
appearance of signs of the times, and signs of the end, is Gods mercy to us, a
wake-up call, a call to vigilance which must not be ignored.
Let us recall the context of St. Pauls words on the Antichrist in the Second
Epistle to the Thessalonians. Many Thessalonians were so convinced that the
Second Coming of Christ was at hand that they had even stopped working. St.
Paul considered this harmful, and asked them not to be quickly shaken from
your mind, nor to be disturbed, neither through a spirit, nor through a word,
nor through a letter supposedly from us, that the Day of the Lord has come.
Let no man deceive you by any means; for that Day will not come unless there
is first the apostasy and the man of sin, the son of destruction, is revealed
(2.2-3).
These words are a warning also for us. Although we are, of course, much
closer to the reign of the Antichrist and the Second Coming of Christ than the
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, is, he
argues, pagan in origin and is charged with human notions which could
easily lead to misunderstandings. First of all, the word
brings to
mind an equal distribution. This is why it is represented by a balance. The
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good are rewarded and the bad are punished by human society in a fair way.
This is human justice, the one which takes place in court. Is this the meaning
of Gods justice, however? The word
, justice, is a translation of
the Hebraic word tsedaka. This word means the Divine energy that
accomplishes mans salvation. It is parallel and almost synonymous to the
other Hebraic word, hesed which means mercy, compassion, love, and to
the word emeth which means fidelity, truth. This, as you see, gives a
completely other dimension to what we usually conceive as justice. (p. 6).
Knowledge of the Hebrew may well give an extra dimension to the
understanding of justice, but it does not change its essential, root meaning,
which remains that of equity and balance. We see this very clearly in the
Kontakion of the Ninth Hour: In the midst of two thieves, Thy Cross was
found to be a balance of justice. Justice means nothing if it does not mean a
balancing of good against evil, so that evil is destroyed through its being
outweighed by the good. Thus the supremely good work that Christ did on
the Cross is balanced against all the evil committed by all men from the
beginning to the end of time and the good outweighs the evil. In that
consists our salvation and redemption, the propitiation for our sins, as St. John
the Theologian puts it, or our justification, as St. Paul puts it.
In any case, there is surely no contradiction in meaning between the two
words for justice - the Hebrew tsedaka and the Greek
. Justice as
the Divine energy that accomplishes the salvation of man is perfectly
compatible with justice as the restoration of a state of balance, that is,
righteousness or blamelessness in man's relationship with his fellow man and
with God. Sin upset the balance in this relationship, creating injustice. Justice
is restored through the destruction of sin: on the part of God, by His perfect
Sacrifice and propitiation for the sins of all men, and on the part of man by
true faith in that Sacrifice.
Paradoxically, there is something western and rationalist and Kalomiros
attempt to demote the supposedly pagan word
in favour of the
Hebrew tsedaka. God the Holy Spirit decreed that the Holy Scriptures of the
New Testament should be written in Greek, the language having the greatest
philosophical precision and sophistication in the ancient world. The Greek
text cannot therefore be said to be in any way a translation of, or derivation
from, a supposedly purer, more godly Hebrew original: it is the original.
Hebrew is the original text of the Old Testament. And yet we do not have the
original Hebrew text. We have the Massoretic text, which dates from many
centuries after Christ and has probably been corrupted by the rabbis. The text
that probably corresponds most closely to the original, but now lost Hebrew
is probably the early Greek translation by the Seventy, which remains to this
day the official text of the Old Testament in the Orthodox Church.
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Western scholars since Luther have loved trying to unearth the real
meaning of the Greek Scriptures by going to the Hebrew. Comparisons with
the Hebrew are not necessarily illegitimate, and can be genuinely illuminating
in the hands of truly Orthodox scholars such as Metropolitan Philaret of
Moscow (see his Notes on Genesis). But as often as not such comparisons are
illegitimate attempts to prove a false theological theory by getting round
the plain meaning of the text.
In Kalomiros case, he is clearly trying to prove that justice does not
mean what it quite plainly means in the writings of the apostles, but rather
mercy, love and truth, on the grounds that the Hebrew word for
justice is etymologically related to the words for mercy, love and
truth. Now nobody doubts that Gods justice is related in a profound way
to His mercy, love and truth. It could not be otherwise, since He is the fount
of all good, and of all true values. Nevertheless, it is obvious that justice is
not equivalent to mercy, love and truth, however closely these values
are related. And it is equally obvious, contrary to Kalomiros, that the root
meaning of justice has to do with equity, balance and compensation.
The question for the theologian is: how is Gods justice to be reconciled with
His mercy, love and truth? By simply redefining justice in terms of
mercy, love and truth, Kalomiros has not answered this question,
merely bypassed it through a verbal sleight of hand.
At this point Kalomiros brings in St. Isaac: How can you call God just,
when you read the passage on the wage given to the workers? Friends, I do
thee no wrong; I will give unto this last even as unto thee who worked for me
from the first hour. Is thine eye evil, because I am good? How can a man call
God just when he comes across the passage on the prodigal son, who wasted
his wealth in riotous living, and yet only for the contrition which he showed,
the father ran and fell upon his neck, and gave him authority over all his
wealth? None other but His very Son said these things concerning Him lest
we doubt it, and thus He bare witness concerning Him. Where, then, is Gods
justice, for whilst we were sinners, Christ died for us!
Kalomiros then comments on this: So we see that God is not just, with the
human meaning of this word, but we see that His justice means His goodness
and love, which are given in an unjust manner, that is, God always gives
without taking anything in return, and He gives to persons like us who are
not worthy of receiving. That is why Saint Isaac teaches us: Do not call God
just, for His justice is not manifest in the things concerning you. And if David
calls Him just and upright, His Son revealed to us that He is good and kind.
He is good, He says, to the evil and impious. (p. 6)
Now if we take St. Isaacs words literally and unintelligently, we will be
forced to say that he is in contradiction with a vast number of texts from the
Holy Scriptures and Fathers that clearly proclaim the justice of God, and that
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on this point, at any rate, he is not in accord with the consensus of the Fathers.
This is a possible conclusion, since several of the Fathers have been at one
time or another not in accord with the patristic consensus. However, I do not
think that we are forced to draw such a conclusion if only we try and put his
remarks in the context of the whole of Orthodox soteriology.
The main point St. Isaac is making is that God gives us abundantly more
than we deserve if we consider only our works. So if we consider only our
works, we must conclude that God is unjust. As the saint puts it: His justice
is not manifest in the things concerning you. No amount of good works by us
can merit the Kingdom of heaven. Even the righteousness of the righteous is
dust and ashes in Gods eyes. However, if we broaden our perspective to
include not only our works, the things concerning us alone, but also the Work of
Christ, we must come to a quite different conclusion. For the Work of Christ,
His Sacrifice on the Cross, abundantly makes up for the inadequacy of our
works. So the saints words are perfectly acceptable within the narrow context
of our sinful works. But there is no reason to believe that he rejected that
justice is nevertheless done through the Work of Christ on the Cross.
However, it is precisely this that Kalomiros denies. He rejects the idea that
justice is done by Christs Sacrifice on the Cross; that the inadequacy of our
own works is made up for by the Supreme Work of Christ. Similarly, he
rejects the idea that the human race was justly condemned to hell through the
original sin of Adam and Eve. Both these events offend his sense of justice.
But instead of confessing that his own sense of justice is probably narrow and
limited, he on the one hand unjustly caricatures the traditional theological
understanding of Divine justice as bloodthirsty, vengeful, etc., and on the
other hand decides to abolish the notion of justice altogether by redefining it
in such a way as to remove from it the idea of balance and equity.
Both the doctrine of original sin and the doctrine of redemption can be seen
to be expressions of the most perfect justice but only if we broaden our ideas
of justice to the most cosmic level and see each as only one part of the overall
scheme. The two doctrines must be seen together, the latter being the reversal
of the former, with the apparent injustice of the one cancelling out the
apparent injustice of the other. So let us go along with Kalomiros to this
extent: let us concede that the doctrine of original sin, whereby the sin of
Adam and Eve is passed on to their descendants, is unjust from a narrowly
human point of view. And let us further concede that Christs salvation of
mankind on the Cross when mankind took no part in His Sacrifice is similarly
unjust. We neither deserve the punishment of the original curse, nor the
salvation of the subsequent redemption. However, the injustice of our
salvation perfectly balances, matches, and blots out the injustice of our
original condemnation. And thereby justice is achieved in the most perfect
way. This balance, or parallelism, between our fall in the first Adam and our
resurrection in the second, is the central theme of St. Pauls Epistle to the
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]
of life. For as by one mans disobedience many were made sinners, so by the
obedience of One shall many be made righteous [
] (Romans 5.18-19).
There are further paradoxes here. Sin, that is, injustice, is completely
blotted out - but by the unjust death and Sacrifice of the Only Sinless and Just
One. Christ came "in the likeness of sinful flesh" (Romans 8.3) and died the
death of a sinner, though He was sinless. The innocent Head died that the
guilty Body should live. He, the Just One, Who committed no sin, took upon
Himself the sins of the whole world. When we could not pay the price, He
paid it for us; when we were dead in sin, He died to give us life. "For Christ
hath once suffered for sins, the Just for the unjust" (I Peter 3.18). And the
greatness of this Sacrifice was so great in the eyes of Divine justice that it
blotted out the sins of the whole world - of all men, that is, who respond to
this free gift with gratitude and repentance.
For only one work is required on our side the work of true faith, of
rightly believing in the Sacrifice precisely the work that Kalomiros would
have us deny, or at any rate reinterpret in such a way as to deny its true
nature. For as the Lord Himself says: This is the work of God that ye
believe on Him Whom He hath sent (John 6.29), that is, on Him Whom God
hath set forth to be a propitiation through faith in His blood that He might
be just and the justifier of him who believeth in Jesus (Romans 3.25, 26). If we
accept Gods Work of justice with true faith and gratitude, then this faith of
ours, like that of Abraham, is accounted to us for righteousness (Romans 4.3)
- that is, for our justification, our loosing from all injustice, or sin.
The Church has expressed this paradox of Divine Justice with great
eloquence: "Come, all ye peoples, and let us venerate the blessed Wood,
through which the eternal justice has been brought to pass. For he who by a
tree deceived our forefather Adam, is by the Cross himself deceived; and he
who by tyranny gained possession of the creature endowed by God with
royal dignity, is overthrown in headlong fall. By the Blood of God the poison
of the serpent is washed away; and the curse of a just condemnation is loosed
by the unjust punishment inflicted on the Just. For it was fitting that wood
should be healed by wood, and that through the Passion of One Who knew
not passion should be remitted all the sufferings of him who was condemned
because of wood. But glory to Thee, O Christ our King, for Thy dread
dispensation towards us, whereby Thou hast saved us all, for Thou art good
and lovest mankind."485
Menaion, September 14, Great Vespers of the Exaltation of the Cross, Lord, I have cried,
Glory Both now
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2. Does God Punish? Kalomiros writes: God never takes vengeance. His
punishments are loving means of correction, as long as anything can be
corrected and healed in this life. They never extend to eternity (p. 6)
But how can this be true?! What about the sentence of death passed on all
mankind, which is called a curse in so many church texts? Is that not a
punishment? What about the terrible deaths of various sinners, such as Ahab
and Jezabel, Ananias and Sapphira, Heliodorus and Herod and Simon Magus?
How can they be said to have been loving means of correction, since they
manifestly did not correct the sinners involved, who were incorrigible? And
what about the torments of gehenna? Do they not extend to eternity? Will not
the Lord Himself say to the condemned at the Last Judgement: Depart from
Me, ye cursed, into everlasting fire, prepared for the devil and his angels
(Matthew 25.41)?
Kalomiros writes: Death was not inflicted upon us by God. We fell into it
by our revolt. (p. 6). And he quotes St. Basil: God did not create death, but
we brought it upon ourselves.
Certainly God did not create death. And certainly we brought it upon
ourselves by our wilful transgression of His commandment. But does this
mean that God was completely inactive in His pronouncement of the sentence
on Adam and Eve, in their expulsion from Eden, in His placing the cherubim
with the sword of fire to prevent their return? Of course not! God did not will
our first parents to fall. Nor did He, being Life Itself, create death. However,
He allowed our first parents to fall, and He permitted death to enter into their
life. Why? Partly in order to correct them, to humble them and lead them to
repentance. Partly in order to cut off sin and allow the dissolution of the body
for the sake of its future resurrection. And partly because crime requires
punishment, because God is the just Judge Who cannot allow sin to go
unpunished.
This is confirmed by St. John of Damascus, who writes: "A judge justly
punishes one who is guilty of wrongdoing; and if he does not punish him he
is himself a wrongdoer. In punishing him the judge is not the cause either of
the wrongdoing or of the vengeance taken against the wrongdoer, the cause
being the wrongdoer's freely chosen actions. Thus too God, Who saw what
was going to happen as if it had already happened, judged it as if it had taken
place; and if it was evil, that was the cause of its being punished. It was God
Who created man, so of course he created him in goodness; but man did evil
of his own free choice, and is himself the cause of the vengeance that
overtakes him."486
So man is the ultimate cause of his own misery: but that by no means
implies that God does not actively punish him.
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Again, St. Photius the Great writes: Let us comprehend the depths of the
Masters clemency. He gave death as a punishment, but through His own
death He transformed it as a gate to immortality. It was a resolution of anger
and displeasure, but it announces the consummate goodness of the
Judge487
Thus the truth is more complex than Kalomiros would have it. Death is
both a punishment and, through Christs own Death, a deliverance from death.
It is both judgement and mercy. Nor could it be otherwise; for God is both love
and justice. As St. John of the Ladder says, He is called justice as well as
love.488
Turning now to the question of eternal torments, we note that Kalomiros
does not deny their existence, but denies that they are inflicted by God
because God never punishes (p. 19). Rather, they are self-inflicted. After
the Common Resurrection there is no question of any punishment from God.
Hell is not a punishment from God but a self-condemnation. As Saint Basil
the Great says, The evils in hell do not have God as their cause, but
ourselves. (p. 16).
Kalomiros here deliberately confuses two very different things: the crime
of the criminal, and the sentence of the judge. If the judge sentences the
criminal to prison for his crime, it is obvious that the primary cause of the
criminals being in prison is his own criminal actions: it is the criminal himself
who is ultimately responsible for his miserable condition this is clearly the
point that St. Basil is making. Nevertheless, it is equally obvious that the
judge, too, has a hand in the matter. It is he who decides whether the criminal
is guilty of innocent, and the gentleness or severity of the sentence. In other
words, there are two actors and two actions involved here, not one.
Kalomiros also deliberately confuses the free acts of the criminal and his
coerced, unfree submission to his sentence. Thus, corrupting the words of
Christ in Matthew 25.41, he writes: Depart freely from love to the everlasting
torture of hate (p. 20). But the sinners do not freely depart into the everlasting
fire! On the contrary, they gnash their teeth in the fire, witnessing, as the
Fathers explain, to their fierce anger and rejection of the justice of their
punishment. We may agree that they have been brought to this plight by their
own sinful acts, freely committed. But they do not freely and willingly accept
the punishment of those acts! The God-seer Moses and the Apostle Paul were
willing to be cast away from God for the sake of the salvation of their
brethren, the Jews here we see the free acceptance of torture and
punishment, but out of love. The condemned at the Last Judgement, however,
St. Photius, Letter 3, to Eusebia, nun and monastic superior, on the death of her sister;
translated by Despina Stratoudaki White.
488 St. John of the Ladder, The Ladder of Divine Ascent, 24.23.
487
390
will be quite unlike these saints, and will be cast against their will into the
eternal fire.
Again, Kalomiros distorts the nature of heaven and hell. In a thoroughly
modernist, rationalist manner he reduces them to psychological states: a state of
supreme joy and love enlightened by the fire of Gods grace, on the one hand,
and a state of the most abject misery and hatred, burned but not enlightened
by the fire of Gods grace, on the other. This is hell: the negation of love; the
return of hate for love; bitterness at seeing innocent joy; to be surrounded by
love and to have hate in ones heart. This is the eternal condition of all the
damned. They are all dearly loved. They are all invited to the joyous banquet.
They are all living in Gods Kingdom, in the New Earth and the New
Heavens. No one expels them. Even if they wanted to go away they could not
flee from Gods New Creation, nor hide from Gods tenderly loving
omnipresence (p. 20).
Like all heretics, Kalomiros mixes truth with falsehood. So let us first freely
admit what is true in his account. It is true that a large part of the torment of
hell will be the hatred and bitterness that continues to seethe in the sinners
heart together with remorse, shame and the most soul-destroying despair. It
is also true that that bitterness will be exarcebated by the thought of the
innocent joy of the blessed in Paradise. (This was an insight granted also to
the atheist Jean-Paul Sartre: Hell is other people, he said.) It is true,
furthermore, that in a certain sense it is precisely Gods love that torments the
sinners in hell. For, as Archbishop Theophan of Poltava writes: In essence
the wrath of God is one of the manifestations of the love of God, but of the
love of God in its relation to the moral evil in the heart of rational creatures in
general, and in the heart of man in particular.489
However, it is stretching traditional theological understanding far too far
to say that those condemned in the eternal fire of gehenna are at the same
time all living in Gods Kingdom, in the New Earth and the New Heavens!
There is no place for the damned in Gods Kingdom! As was revealed to St.
John in the last chapter of Revelation: Blessed are they that do His
commandments, that they may have right to the tree of life, and may enter in
through the gates into the city. For outside are dogs, and sorcerers, and
whoremongers, and murderers, and idolaters, and whosoever loveth and
maketh a lie (22.14-15). In other words, the New Earth and the New
Heavens, Paradise and the City of God, will not be accessible to the
condemned sinners; they will not be living there!
Nor is it true that even the damned will be invited to the joyful banquet
and that no-one will expel them. In this life, yes, even sinners are invited to
the joyful banquet of communion with God in His Holy Church. But on the
last Day, when the sinner is found to have no wedding garment, the King will
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say to His servants: Bind him hand and foot, and take him away, and cast
him into outer darkness: there will be weeping and gnashing of teeth
(Matthew 22.13).
God is not as passive as Kalomiros makes out. He acts and acts to expel
the unrepentant sinner from His presence. Thus to the inner darkness of the
sinners hate-filled, graceless soul will be added the outer darkness of the
place that is gehenna, where the river of fire will consume his body as well as
his soul. This outer aspect of the eternal torments appears to have been
ignored by Kalomiros in his over-psychological, over-abstract and oversophisticated understanding of the torments of hell. And if he were to object:
There is no space or time as we understand it in the life of the age to come, I
would reply: As we understand it, in our present fallen and limited state - yes.
And yet we cannot get rid of the categories of space and time altogether. Only
God is completely beyond space and time. The idea of a body burning in hell
is incomprehensible if it is not burning somewhere. Nor is the idea of our earth
being transfigured into Paradise comprehensible if it not located in any kind
of space
Kalomiros makes all these errors and distortions of Holy Scripture because
he refuses to admit that God punishes, not only pedagogically, to correct and
rehabilitate the sinner, but also retributively, as a pure expression of His
justice. Since retributive punishment does not lead to the rehabilitation of the
sinner, he considers it pointless and cruel, and therefore unworthy of God. In
other words, he sees no value in justice in itself, independently of its possible
pedagogical effect.
And yet Holy Scripture is full of the idea of retributive justice as being the
norm of existence, proceeding from the very nature of God. Thus: The Lord
is the God of vengeances; the God of vengeances hath spoken openly. Be
Thou exalted, O Thou that judgest the earth; render the proud their due
(Psalm 93.1-2). And again: They [the martyrs] cried with a loud voice,
saying: How long, O Lord, holy and true, doest Thou not judge and avenge
our blood on them that dwell on the earth? (Revelation 6.10). It goes without
saying that in neither of these quotations are God or the saints understood as
being vengeful in a crudely human and sinful manner, as if they were
possessed by a fallen passion of anger. As the Venerable Bede writes: "The
souls of the righteous cry these things, not from hatred of enemies, but from
love of justice."490
So the desire that justice should be done is not necessarily sinful; it may be
pure, proceeding not from the fallen passion of anger, but from the pure love
of justice. Indeed, when the Lord says: Vengeance is Mine, I will repay, He
is not saying that justice and clearly it is retributive justice that is meant here
- should not be desired, but rather that it should be sought, not through the
490
392
exercise of the fallen human passions, but through God, Who always acts
with the most perfect and passionless impartiality.
Even St. Basil the Great, upon whom Kalomiros relies so heavily, does not
deny the idea of retributive justice in God and precisely in the context of the
river of fire. As he writes, commenting on the verse: The voice of the Lord
divideth the flame of fire (Psalm 28.6): The fire prepared in punishment for
the devil and his angels is divided by the voice of the Lord. Thus, since there
are two capacities in fire, one of burning and the other of illuminating, the
fierce and punitive property of the fire may await those who deserve to burn,
while its illuminating and radiant part may be reserved for the enjoyment of
those who are rejoicing.491
So the river of fire is punitive for those who deserve to burn. And it is
punitive in a retributive sense, as expressing the pure love of justice that is
part of the nature of God. Of course, God longs to have mercy even on the
most inveterate sinner. But if that sinner does not wish to believe and repent,
thereby destroying his own sin, He wills that the sinner should be punished.
Even though the punishment can have no rehabilitative effect
3. Love and Justice. If we seek for a deeper cause of Kalomiros heresy, we
may find it in the very modernist error of disconnecting, as it were, the values
of love, truth and justice. Modern man believes in love, but it is a false,
sentimental of love because it is not linked to truth and justice. More precisely,
modern man thinks that it is possible to sacrifice truth and justice for the sake
of love. We are familiar with the sacrifice of truth for the sake of love in the
modern pan-heresy of ecumenism. Kalomiros heresy may be described as an
analogue to ecumenism; only the value that he wishes to sacrifice is justice.
However, love and justice, mercy and judgement, are inseparably related
in Gods economy. As we have seen, God condemned man to death in Eden
both because that was the just punishment of his sin and because through
death, paradoxically, the spread of sin would be cut short, man would be led
to repentance and Christ would descend into hades to save mankind. Again,
Christs Sacrifice on the Cross was both a supreme act of love for fallen
mankind and the restoration of justice in Gods relationship with man.
The obverse of Gods love for mankind is His wrath and hatred of the sin
that tears mankind away from eternal life in Him. St. John of Damascus writes:
By wrath and anger are understood [Gods] hatred and disgust in relation to
sin, since we also hate that which does not accord with our thought and are
angry with it.492 Now hatred of sin is the same as the love of justice, since
justice is the destruction of sin and the restoration of the state of sinlessness. It
follows that he who does not love justice for its own sake does not hate sin.
491
492
393
And he who does not hate sin does not love God, Who hates sin so much that
He gave His Only-Begotten Son to die in order that sin should be destroyed
and man restored to his original condition of sinlessness.
In conclusion, let us listen to the words of St. Gregory Palamas, who can in
no way be accused of scholasticism, but who emphasizes, as if anticipating
the debates of our time, the critical importance of justice: The pre-eternal,
uncircumscribed and almighty Word and omnipotent Son of God could
clearly have saved man from mortality and servitude to the devil without
Himself becoming man. He upholds all things by the word of His power and
everything is subject to His divine authority. According to Job, He can do
everything and nothing is impossible for Him. The strength of a created being
cannot withstand the power of the Creator, and nothing is more powerful
than the Almighty. But the incarnation of the Word of God was the method of
deliverance most in keeping with our nature and weakness, and most
appropriate for Him Who carried it out, for this method had justice on its side,
and God does not act without justice. As the Psalmist and Prophet says, God is
righteous and loveth righteousness (Psalm 11.7), and there is no
unrighteousness in Him (Psalm 92.15). Man was justly abandoned by God in
the beginning as he had first abandoned God. He had voluntarily approached
the originator of evil, obeyed him when he treacherously advised the opposite
of what God had commanded, and was justly given over to him. In this way,
through the evil ones envy and the good Lords just consent, death came into
the world. Because of the devils overwhelming evil, death became twofold,
for he brought about not just physical but also eternal death.
As we had been justly handed over to the devils service and subjection to
death, it was clearly necessary that the human races return to freedom and
life should be accomplished by God in a just way. Not only had man been
surrendered to the envious devil by divine righteousness, but the devil had
rejected righteousness and become wrongly enamoured of authority,
arbitrary power and, above all, tyranny. He took up arms against justice and
used his might against mankind. It pleased God that the devil be overcome
first by the justice against which he continuously fought, then afterwards by
power, through the Resurrection and the future Judgement. Justice before
power is the best order of events, and that force should come after justice is the
work of a truly divine and good Lord, not of a tyrant.
A sacrifice was needed to reconcile the Father on High with us and to
sanctify us, since we had been soiled by fellowship with the evil one. There
had to be a sacrifice which both cleansed and was clean, and a purified,
sinless priest It was clearly necessary for Christ to descend to Hades, but all
these things were done with justice, without which God does not act.493
St. Gregory Palamas, Homily 16, 1, 2, 21; in Christopher, The Homilies of Saint Gregory
Palamas, South Canaan, PA: Saint Tikhons Seminary Press, 2002, pp. 179-180, 194.
493
394
Justice before power, the Cross before the Resurrection. And all things
done with justice, without which God does not act. Clearly, justice is no
secondary aspect of the Divine economy, but its very heart and essence
For, as the Holy Church sings: When Thou comest, O God, upon the earth
with glory, the whole world will tremble. The river of fire will bring men
before Thy judgement-seat, the books will be opened and the secrets
disclosed. Then deliver me from the unquenchable fire, and count me worthy
to stand on Thy right hand, O Judge most righteous.494
September 21 / October 4, 2007; revised February 18 / March 3, 2008.
494
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397
Dont judge. The more extreme ecumenists say that everyone, even the
heretics, will be saved; while the more moderate ones, and even some
moderate traditionalists such as the Cyprianites, are simply agnostic,
saying that we do not know who will be saved, it is up to God alone to judge.
So the question arises: What do we know for certain? Can we make
judgements about the salvation or damnation of those outside the Church?
And if so in what sense of the word judge?
Before proceeding further, it is necessary to deal with the objection that we
should not even be discussing this question, because, as the Fathers say, we
must concentrate on our own sins rather than the sins of others.
In the context of personal asceticism, this is perfectly true. In that context, to
wonder whether our neighbour will be saved or not is at best a distraction, at
worst a serious temptation. However, the context of this discussion in not
personal, but dogmatic. As is well-known, the ecumenists often assert that it
would be unjust of God and contrary to His merciful loving-kindness to
condemn those outside the Church. And from this they deduce the idea that
there is salvation outside the Church and even, in more contemporary forms
of the heresy, that everybody will be saved. This false idea must be refuted for
the sake of the defence of Orthodoxy. And so it is legitimate to discuss the
question of the salvation of those outside the Church in this context.
Now two different meanings of the words salvation and hell in
English need to be distinguished. Sometimes we mean by salvation the
deliverance of the soul from hell that is, hades - immediately after death, at
the particular judgement of the individual soul. At other times, however,
we mean final salvation, that is, salvation from gehenna - at the Last
Judgement of all souls. Now it is obvious that a person who is delivered to
hades after his death is in very great danger of being cast into gehenna at the
Last Judgement. Nevertheless, there is a difference between being in hades
and being in gehenna. Thus we know from Holy Tradition and the Lives of
the Saints that some people in hades have been saved through the prayers of
the Church; but we also know that nobody who is cast into gehenna will ever
escape from it. Cases of deliverance from hades are doubtless rare; and in
themselves they are not enough to create a dogma of the faith. Nevertheless,
they indicate the possibility, if nothing more, that a person who is in hades will
not be cast into gehenna at the Last Judgement and the General Resurrection.
In this sense we can agree with the moderate traditionalists and indeed,
with all the Holy Fathers of the Church that we do not know who will be
saved. We know neither whether we who are in the Church will be saved, nor
even whether those who die outside the Church will be saved at the Last
Judgement. For it is possible even for one who is in hades to be saved from it
and therefore also from the eternal fire.
398
Therefore: 1. We cannot say with certainty that all those who die outside
the True Faith and the True Church will be condemned to the eternal fire of
gehenna.
We shall call this, not a dogma of faith, for faith apprehends only
certainties (Hebrews 11.1), but a postulate of hope and an object of love that
love which hopeth all things (I Corinthians 13.7)
However, this is not the end of the story. Some things about salvation we
do know for certain, including the following: 2. We can say with certainty
that all those who die outside the True Faith and the True Church will be sent
to hades after death.
The proof of this second statement is found in the completely categorical
words of the Lord Himself: Verily, verily, I say unto thee, Unless a man is
born again of water and the Spirit, he cannot enter into the Kingdom of God
(John 3.5). And again: Verily, verily, I say unto you, Unless ye eat the Flesh
of the Son of Man, and drink His Blood, ye have no life in you (John 6.53).
Here the Lord is emphasizing that the sacraments of Holy Baptism and the
Divine Eucharist are an absolutely necessary condition of entrance into the
Kingdom of God. It is impossible for a man who has not been baptized to
enter Paradise, because he remains in original sin, burdened with all his
personal sins and without the purification and enlightenment that comes
from baptism alone. He has not been born again in the womb of the Church;
he has not been buried with Christ, and so cannot be resurrected with Christ.
Another absolutely necessary condition of entrance into the Kingdom of
God is the true faith: He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved; but he
that believeth not shall be damned (Mark 16.16). So both true faith and true
baptism are necessary. But neither of these are possessed by heretics, pagans
and unbelievers. For heretics by definition do not have the true faith. And the
Holy Church teaches us that they do not have grace-filled sacraments either.
This point is proved by two canons. The first is the 46th of the Holy
Apostles: We order that a bishop or presbyter that recognized the baptism or
sacrifice of heretics be defrocked. For what accord has Christ with Belial? Or
what has a believer in common with an unbeliever? The second is the 1st of
the Council of Carthage (of St. Cyprian): We declare that no one can possibly
be baptized outside the Catholic (i.e. the Orthodox) Church, there being but
one baptism, and this existing only in the Catholic Church.
To these scriptural and canonical witnesses we may add the witness of
Holy Tradition, in the form of the experience of Blessed Theodora, who, after
passing through the toll-houses and being returned to her body, was told by
the angels: "Those who believe in the Holy Trinity and take as frequently as
399
possible the Holy Communion of the Holy Mysteries of Christ, our Saviour's
body and Blood - such people can rise to heaven directly, with no hindrances,
and the holy angels defend them, and the holy saints of God pray for their
salvation, since they have lived righteously. No one, however, takes care of
wicked and depraved heretics, who do nothing useful during their lives, and
live in disbelief and heresy. The angels can say nothing in their defence...
[Only those] enlightened by the faith and holy baptism can rise and be tested
in the stations of torment [that is, the toll-houses]. The unbelievers do not
come here. Their souls belong to hell even before they part from their bodies.
When they die, the devils take their souls with no need to test them. Such
souls are their proper prey, and they take them down to the abyss."497
Someone may argue: Even if an unbaptized person cannot enter the
Kingdom of heaven, that does not mean that he is in hell. To this we reply:
There are only two places a soul can go to after death: heaven or hell (hades).
So if he is not in heaven, he must be in hell. There is no third possibility, since
the Orthodox do not believe like the Latins in purgatory or any such place.
*
It will be useful to test these conclusions by reference to an article by
Archimandrite (Metropolitan) Philaret of blessed memory entitled Will the
Heterodox be Saved? 498 There is nothing in this article that contradicts the
two propositions asserted above. However, the metropolitan introduces some
valuable nuances into the argument, as follows:
1. The metropolitan writes: What should one say of those outside the
Church, who do not belong to her? Another apostle provides us with an idea:
For what have I to do to judge them that are without? Do ye not judge them
that are without? Do not ye judge them that are within? But then that are
without God judgeth (I Corinthians 5.12-13). God will have mercy on whom
He will have mercy (Romans 9.18). It is necessary to mention only one thing:
that to lead a perfectly righteous life, as the questioner expressed it, means to
live according to the commandments of the Beatitudes which is beyond the
power of one, outside the Orthodox Church, without the help of grace which
is concealed within it.
It is not quite clear what the metropolitan is saying precisely here. One
possible interpretation is: rather than say that the heterodox will not be saved,
which is beyond our knowledge, for those who are outside [the Church] God
will judge, it is better to say essentially the same thing in a more positive,
Quoted by David Ritchie, "The 'Near-Death Experience'", Orthodox Life, vol. 45, no. 4, JulyAugust, 1995, pp. 22-23.
498 Metropolitan Philaret, Will the Heterodox be Saved?, Orthodox Life, vol. 34, no. 6,
November-December, 1984, pp. 33-36.
497
400
less judgemental way: that the grace which enables us to fulfil the
commandments of God is given to people only in the Orthodox Church.
Whether or not this is a correct interpretation of the metropolitans words,
it will be useful to examine more closely what the passage from I Corinthians
5 that he quotes really means by looking at it in its wider context.
It is reported continuously, writes the apostle, that there is fornication
among you, and such fornication as is not so much as named among the
Gentiles, that one should have his fathers wife. And ye are puffed up, and
have not rather mourned, that he that hath done this deed might be taken
away from among you (5. 1-2).
We can draw two immediate conclusions: (1) this was not a matter of faith,
but of morality, and (2) the Corinthians were looking through their fingers,
as the Russian expression goes, at the fornication of their brother; they neither
rebuked him nor excommunicated him, as the canons required. The apostle,
far from praising them for their refusal to judge, reproved them for being
puffed up that is, proud. This again shows that the refusal to judge may
proceed, not from humility, but from its opposite
For I verily, continues the apostle, although absent in body, but present
in spirit, have judged already, as though I were present, concerning him that
hath so done this deed. In the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, when ye are
gathered together, and my spirit, with the power of our Lord Jesus Christ, to
deliver such an one unto Satan for the destruction of the flesh, that the spirit
may be saved in the day of the Lord Jesus. Your glorying is not good. Know
ye not that a little leaven leaveneth the whole lump? Purge out therefore the
old leaven, that ye may be a new lump, as ye are unleavened. For even Christ
our Passover is sacrificed for us. (5. 3-7).
We can now draw a third conclusion: (3) the context of this passage is not
the rightness or wrongness of judging sinners in the sense of censuring or
criticizing them, but rather the rightness or wrongness of judging them in
the sense of bringing them to trial. In the case of a sinner within the Church, the
apostle declares that it is necessary to excommunicate him and deliver him to
bodily punishment at the hands of Satan for the sake of his salvation through
Christ in the Day of Judgement. The setting is a parish or diocesan assembly
at which the apostle is not present but at which he presides in spirit. The
Corinthians are rebuked once again for pride, glorying, because they
complacently considered that they could not be infected by the bad example
of their sinning brother. But the leaven of sin infects the whole lump, the
whole church community, if it is not cast out by the judgement of the
community that is, through the judgement of a properly convened
ecclesiastical court. Christ our Passover was sacrificed for us in order to cast
401
out sin from our souls and bodies, and do we then with such vainglorious
complacency allow sin to come back into our lives?!
The importance of this passage is shown, as Archbishop Averky points out,
by its being placed in the liturgy of Holy and Great Saturday. It teaches that
we who are about to receive the Sacrifice of the Body and Blood of Christ for
the remission of our sins must take special care to cleanse ourselves of all sin,
not only personally, but in the community as a whole. It also shows the
danger that comes if we do not judge the sinners within our own ranks the
word judge being used here in the triple sense of discern their sin,
reprove their sin, and pass judgement formally on their sin.
However, continues the apostle, it is quite a different matter with people
who sin against us from outside the Church. For what have I to do with
judging those who are outside? Do ye not judge those that are inside? (5.1213). Or, as Bishop Theophan puts it: We ourselves judge our own sinners
here, and through that, by disposing them to repentance, deliver them from
the judgement of God. But the pagans do not have a mediating corrective
court: what awaits them without mediation is the judgement of God.499
Nor, says the apostle, should we take such sinners to a civil court. For
does any of you dare, if he has something against another person, to go to
law before the unjust, and not before the saints [the Christians]? Do ye not
know that the saints shall judge the world? And if the world shall be judged
by you, are ye unworthy to judge the smallest matters? (6.1-2). Or, as Bishop
Theophan puts it: Having spoken about the inner Church court in spiritual
matters, the apostle wishes that everyday matters also should be examined by
the Christians themselves without taking them to pagan courts If court
justice is necessary, then they must seek it before righteous people the holy
Christians The Christians are holy, and by their example of faith and love
they will be the accusers of the impious world at the Judgement of Christ, so
are they really unworthy now to examine their own affairs that are of little
importance? (p. 146)
We may conclude that this passage is not relevant to the question whether
it is right or wrong to say that heretics go to hell. For the context is not sins
against the faith, but moral sins, and the judging in question is not
passionate condemnation, but the taking of a sinner to trial in an ecclesiastical
or civil court. Moreover, the only kind of judging that the apostle is
explicitly condemning is the taking of pagans to trial in a civil court.
2. The metropolitan continues: In attempting to answer this question [can
the heterodox be saved?], it is necessary, first of all, to recall that in His
Gospel the Lord Jesus Christ Himself mentions but one state of the human
soul which unfailingly leads to perdition i.e. blasphemy against the Holy
499
Bishop Theophan, Tolkovanie Poslanij Sv. Apostola Pavla, Moscow, 1911, 2002, pp. 145-146.
402
Spirit (Matthew 12.1-32). The same text makes it clear that even blasphemy
against the Son of Man i.e. the Lord Jesus Christ, the incarnate Son of God
Himself may be forgiven men, as it may be uttered in error or in ignorance
and, subsequently may be covered by conversion and repentance (an example
of such a converted and repentant blasphemer is the Apostle Paul. (See Acts
26.11 and I Timothy 1.13.) If, however, a man opposes the Truth which he
clearly apprehends by his reason and conscience, he becomes blind and
commits spiritual suicide, for he thereby likens himself to the devil, who
believes in God and dreads Him, yet hates, blasphemes and opposes Him.
Thus, mans refusal to accept the Divine Truth and his opposition thereto
makes him a son of damnation. Accordingly, in sending His disciples to
preach, the Lord told them: He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved,
but he that believeth not shall be damned (Mark 16.16), for the latter heard
the Lords Truth and was called upon to accept it, yet refused, thereby
inheriting the damnation of those who believed not the truth, but had
pleasure in unrighteousness (II Thessalonians 2.12).
The Holy Orthodox Church is the repository of the divinely revealed
Truth in all its fullness and fidelity to apostolic Tradition. Hence, he who
leaves the Church, who intentionally and consciously falls away from it, joins
the ranks of its opponents and becomes a renegade as regards apostolic
Tradition. The Church dreadfully anathematized such renegades, in
accordance with the words of the Saviour Himself (Matthew 18.17) and of the
Apostle Paul (Galatians 1.8-9), threatening them with eternal damnation and
calling them to return to the Orthodox fold. It is self-evident, however, that
sincere Christians who are Roman Catholics, or Lutherans, or members of
other non-Orthodox confessions, cannot be considered renegades or heretics
i.e. those who knowingly pervert the truth They have been born and raised
and are living according to the creed which they have inherited, just as do the
majority of you who are Orthodox; in their lives there has not been a moment
of personal and conscious renunciation of Orthodoxy. The Lord Who will have all
men to be saved (I Timothy 2.4), and Who enlightens every man born into
the world (John 1.43), undoubtedly is leading them also towards salvation in
His own way.
Confusion may be caused by the holy metropolitans unusual and
somewhat paradoxical definition of the word heretic, which is much
narrower than the usual definition. The usual definition is very simple: a
heretic is a person who believes a heretical teaching, that is, a teaching
contrary to the Orthodox Faith regardless of whether he was brought up in
the truth or not, or has consciously renounced Orthodoxy or not. Sincere
Christians who are Roman Catholics, or Lutherans, or members of other nonOrthodox confessions are heretics, according to this definition. They are not
as guilty as those who have known the truth but have personally and
consciously renounced it, who are not only heretics but also apostates
403
404
evidence from creation which is accessible to everyone. Again, St. Peter says:
"This they are willingly ignorant of, that by the word of God the heavens were
of old, and the earth standing out of the water and in the water: Whereby the
world that then was, being overflowed with water, perished: But the heavens
and the earth, which are now, by the same word are kept in store, reserved
unto fire against the day of judgement and perdition of ungodly men" (II
Peter 3.5-7). Again, claiming knowledge when one has none counts as wilful
ignorance. For, as Christ said to the Pharisees: "If ye were blind, ye should
have no sin: but now ye say, We see; therefore your sin remaineth" (John 9.41).
Wilful ignorance is very close to conscious resistance to the truth, which
receives the greatest condemnation according to the Word of God. Thus those
who accept the Antichrist will do so "because they received not the love of the
truth, that they might be saved. (II Thessalonians 2.10). Wilful ignorance is
therefore the same as the blasphemy against the Holy Spirit, which we have
already discussed. Metropolitan Philarets definition of this sin is essentially
the same as that of Metropolitan Anthony (Khrapovitsky), who in turn
follows the definition of the Seventh Ecumenical Council: Blasphemy against
the Holy Spirit, or 'sin unto death', according to the explanation of the
Seventh Ecumenical Council (VIII, 75), is a conscious, hardened opposition to
the truth, 'because the Spirit is truth' (I John 5.6).500 Another similar, but
somewhat broader definition is given by St. Ambrose of Milan: all heretics
and schismatics are blasphemers against the Holy Spirit insofar as they deny
the Spirit and Truth that is in the True Church.501
Wilful ignorance can be of various degrees. There is the wilful ignorance
that refuses to believe even when the truth is staring you in the face this is
the most serious kind, the kind practised by the Pharisees and the heresiarchs.
But a man can also be said to be wilfully ignorant if he does not take the steps
that are necessary in order to discover the truth this is less serious, but still
blameworthy, and is characteristic of many of those who followed the
Pharisees and the heresiarchs. Thus we read: "That servant who knew his
master's will, and prepared not himself, neither did according to his will, shall
be beaten with many stripes. But he that knew not, and did things worthy of
stripes, shall be beaten with few stripes. For unto whomsoever much is given,
of him shall much be required; and he to whom men have committed much,
of him they will ask the more" (Luke 12.47-48). To which the words of St.
Theophylact of Bulgaria are a fitting commentary: "Here some will object,
saying: 'He who knows the will of his Lord, but does not do it, is deservedly
punished. But why is the ignorant punished?' Because when he might have
known he did not wish to do so, but was the cause of his own ignorance
through sloth."502
Metropolitan Anthony, "The Church's Teaching about the Holy Spirit", Orthodox Life, vol.
27, no. 3, May-June, 1977, p. 23.
501 St. Ambrose, On Repentance, II, 24. Cf. St. Augustine, Homily 21 on the New Testament, 28.
502 St. Theophylact, Explanation of the Gospel according to St. Luke 12.47-48.
500
405
Or, as St. Cyril of Alexandria puts it: "How can he who did not know it be
guilty? The reason is, because he did not want to know it, although it was in
his power to learn."503 To whom does this distinction apply? St. Cyril applies
it to false teachers and parents, on the one hand, and those who follow them,
on the other. In other words, the blind leaders will receive a greater
condemnation than the blind followers - which is not to say, however, that
they will not both fall into the pit (Matthew 15.14). For, as Bishop Nicholas
Velimirovich writes: "Are the people at fault if godless elders and false
prophets lead them onto foreign paths? The people are not at fault to as great
an extent as their elders and the false prophets, but they are at fault to some
extent. For God gave to the people also to know the right path, both through
their conscience and through the preaching of the word of God, so that people
should not blindly have followed their blind guides, who led them by false
paths that alienated them from God and His Laws."504
The ecumenists often bring up the example of the Hindus and Buddhists
and others who have lived their whole lives in non-Christian communities.
Can they be said to be wilfully ignorant of the truth? Of course, only God
knows the degree of ignorance in any particular case. However, even if the
heathen have more excuse than the Christians who deny Christ, they cannot
be said to be completely innocent; for no one is completely deprived of the
knowledge of the One God. Thus St. Jerome writes: "Ours and every other
race of men knows God naturally. There are no peoples who do not recognise
their Creator naturally. 505 And St. John Chrysostom writes: "From the
beginning God placed the knowledge of Himself in men, but the pagans
awarded this knowledge to sticks and stones, doing wrong to the truth to the
extent that they were able." 506 And the same Father writes: "One way of
coming to the knowledge of God is that which is provided by the whole of
creation; and another, no less significant, is that which is offered by
conscience, the whole of which we have expounded upon at greater length,
showing how you have a self-taught knowledge of what is good and what is
not so good, and how conscience urges all this upon you from within. Two
teachers, then, are given you from the beginning: creation and conscience.
Neither of them has a voice to speak out; yet they teach men in silence."507
Many have abandoned the darkness of idolatry by following creation and
conscience alone. Thus St. Barbara heeded the voice of creation, rejected her
father's idols and believed in the One Creator of heaven and earth even before
she had heard of Christ. And she heeded the voice of her conscience, which
recoiled from those "most odious works of witchcrafts, and wicked sacrifices;
St. Cyril, Homily 93 on Luke. Translated by Payne Smith, Studion Publishers, 1983, p. 376.
Bishop Nicholas, The Prologue from Ochrid, Birmingham: Lazarica Press, 1986, vol. II, p. 149.
505 St. Jerome, Treatise on Psalm 95.
506 St. Chrysostom, Homily 3 on Romans, 2.
507 St. Chrysostom, First Homily on Hannah, 3.
503
504
406
and also those merciless murderers of children and devourers of man's flesh,
and the feasts of blood, with their priests out of the midst of their idolatrous
crew, and the parents, that killed with their own hands souls destitute of
help" (Wisdom of Solomon 12.4-6). But her father, who had the same
witnesses to the truth as she, rejected it and killed her.508
Thus there is a light that "enlightens every man who comes into the world"
(John 1.9). And if there are some who reject that light, abusing that freewill
which God will never deprive them of, this is not His fault, but theirs. As St.
John Chrysostom says, "If there are some who choose to close the eyes of their
mind and do not want to receive the rays of that light, their darkness comes
not from the nature of the light, but from their own darkness in voluntarily
depriving themselves of that gift."509 If the Light of Christ enlightens everyone,
then there is no one who cannot come to the True Faith, however
unpromising his situation. If a man follows the teachers that are given to
everyone, creation and conscience, then the Providence of God, with Whom
"all things are possible" (Matthew 19.26), will lead him to the teacher that is
given at the beginning only to a few - "the Church of the living God, the pillar
and ground of the Truth" (I Timothy 3.15). For "it is not possible," writes St.
John Chrysostom, "that one who is living rightly and freed from the passions
should ever be overlooked. But even if he happens to be in error, God will
quickly draw him over to the truth."510 Again, St. John Cassian says: "When
God sees in us some beginnings of good will, He at once enlightens it, urging
it on towards salvation."511
This leads us to draw the following further conclusions: 4. The Providence
of God is able to bring anyone in any situation to the True Faith and the True
Church, providing he loves the truth. Therefore 5. Although we cannot declare
with certainty that those who die in unbelief or heresy will be damned forever,
neither can we declare that they will be saved because of their ignorance; for
they may be alienated from God "through the ignorance that is in them,
because of the blindness of their heart" (Ephesians 4.18), and not simply
through the ignorance that is caused by external circumstances.
For the Orthodox do not believe in the Roman Catholic concept of
invincible ignorance. No ignorance that is truly ignorance is invincible
that is, cannot be conquered by the Almighty Providence of God. The only
ignorance that God cannot and will not conquer because to do so would be
to violate the free will of man is the ignorance that is wilful and artificial,
being created by man himself through his stubborn refusal to learn the truth.
November 1/14, 2007.
The Lives of the Women Martyrs, Buena Vista: Holy Apostles Convent, 1991, pp. 528-542.
St. Chrysostom, Homily 8 on John.
510 St. Chrysostom, Homily 24 on Matthew, 1.
511 St. Cassian, Conferences, XIII, 8.
508
509
407
408
Fr. Demetrius Kaplun gives a clear example of the moral approach: There
is an idea, he writes, that marriage and fornication are in no way different
from each other. Why go to church, why put a stamp in the passport that
is how some irresponsible people reason. But even if we ignore the mystical
aspect of the Churchs sacrament of marriage, even a marriage recognised by
society, marriage with a stamp, is different from fornication in exactly the
same way as a serious and strong friendship is distinguished from
companionship in some enterprise by the degree of mutual obligations.
When companions begin some enterprise, they act together only to the degree
that they are useful to each other, but friendship presupposes moral
obligations in addition. Just as bandits who get together only in order to carry
out a crime more easily (one slips through the ventilation pane well, while
another breaks the safe), so a couple living in fornication are only useful to
each other for this or that reason. For example, the woman cooks well, the
man has got money, they love each other but take no responsibility upon
themselves. If one companion decides tomorrow to find himself another
companion, there is nothing to keep them together and bind them any
longer. When a man easily changes friends and retains no obligations, he is
called a traitor. It is impossible to rely on such a man. Unfaithfulness and
inconstancy are bad qualities, they are condemned by God and man.
And so the first thing that is valued in marriage is faithfulness, holiness of
mutual obligations. The bonds of marriage are holy: they truly bind and limit
a man, place on him the burden of service. On entering into marriage, a man
can demonstrate his worthiness by the fact that he preserves his faithfulness,
his honour in a holy manner. Just as for a soldier there is no greater shame
than desertion, going under the flag of the other army, so for an honourable
spouse there is no greater baseness that to defile the holiness of the marital
bond. Spouses are to a definite degree like soldiers; they must preserve and
guard the honour of the family for the shame of lust, falling, inconstancy,
from the encroachment of sin.
In ancient Rome brave and faithful soldiers were crowned with the
wreath of a conqueror. Therefore the ecclesiastical sacrament of marriage, too,
is called the Sacrament of Crowning. The spouses are crowned as a sign of the
incorruption of their lives, as a sign of their faithfulness to each other, as a
sign of the fact that they are acquiring a royal, masterly dignity in the circle of
their descendants. During the Sacrament of Crowning rings are placed on the
hands as a sign of their mutual agreement, and those being married are led
three times around the analoy with the cross and the Gospel in the form of a
circle, signifying the inviolability and eternity of the marital union, since the
circle indicates eternity; the circle has no beginning or end. What God has
joined together, let no man put asunder (Matthew 19.6).512
409
Now this approach is certainly valid and useful as far as it goes. But the
suspicion remains that it does not go far enough, and fails to take into account
the idealism of the emotion of falling in love, especially first love. For no
young Romeo and Juliet will disagree with the idea that unfaithfulness and
inconstancy are bad qualities. In fact, they couldnt agree more, and often
swear undying constancy towards each other. Nothing could be further from
their minds than the thought that their love might die, and they might move
on to other partners. In fact, it is precisely the strength and intensity of their
love for each other that leads them, in many cases, to scorn the idea that this
profound feeling needs to be bolstered by a mere legal contract, a scrap of
paper. They feel that love is not love if it needs an external support.
Even if social, legal or moral considerations lead them to accept the
desirability of marriage, these are unlikely to deter them from sleeping
together before the marriage date. After all, they consider themselves already
married in each others eyes. Moreover, the considerations that deterred
lovelorn couples in earlier ages - the disapproval of parents and relatives, the
shame of the bride going to the altar with a prominent bump in her stomach,
the financial and legal disincentives are all largely irrelevant today when
parents are desperate to show that they are not behind the times, when
brides sometimes go to the altar, not merely with a bump in the stomach, but
with a whole bevy of already born children, and when the State goes out of its
way, as in Britain today, not only to remove all stigmas attached to single
mothers, but even to make the production of children out of wedlock a
financially attractive proposition.
There are some who argue that fornicating before marriage is actually a
sensible way of testing whether a proposed marriage is likely to be lasting.
After all, if a couple are about to commit themselves to lifelong unity and
fidelity, it is only prudent to make sure beforehand that they are physically
compatible with each other. If the experience proves to be a failure, then they
can abort the marriage before it takes place, thereby saving two people a
lifetime of misery and probable divorce. Of course, this argument is false: all
the evidence indicates that couples who sleep together before marriage are
less rather than more likely to be faithful to each other and remain together. In
any case, statistical arguments are a feeble rampart against fallen human
nature stirred up by the spirits of evil
So let us turn to the sacramental argument, as developed by the Holy
Apostle Paul, who defines fornication for a Christian as uniting the Body of
Christ for the body of every Christian is a part of the Body of Christ to a
body that is not Christs. Know ye not that your bodies are the members of
Christ? Shall I then take the members of Christ and make them the members
of an harlot? God forbid. What? Know ye not that he who is joined to an
harlot is one body [with her]? For two, saith He, shall be one flesh. But he that
is joined to the Lord is one spirit [with Him]. (I Corinthians 6. 15-17).
410
513
Bishop Nikolai Velimirovich, The Prologue of Ochrid, vol. II, p. 238, May 29.
411
Hieromartyr Gregory, Interpretation of the Gospel of Mark, Moscow, 1991, p. 106 (in Russian).
As Blessed Theophylact says, since they have become one flesh, joined together by means of
marital relations and physical affection, just as it is accursed to cut ones own flesh, so is it
accursed to separate husband and wife (Explanation of the Holy Gospel according to St. Matthew,
House Springs, Mo.: Chrysostom Press, 1992, p. 162).
515 St. Macarius the Great, Homily 38, 5.
516 Blessed Theophylact, Explanation of the Gospel according to Luke, 12.35.
517 St. Symeon the New Theologian, Hymns of Divine Love, 15.
514
412
413
3. Every Christian who has sexual relations with a woman is uniting, not
only his flesh with hers, but also her flesh with Christs. This takes place
within lawful marriage as well as in fornication. However, in lawful marriage
there is no scandal, because the wife as well as the husband already belong to
Christ in spirit and in flesh. The horror comes in the case of fornication, when,
as the apostle puts it, the believer takes the members of Christ and makes
them the members of an harlot?
4. Christ does not want to be united in the flesh with a person with
whom He is not united in the spirit, through faith. In the Old Testament the
lawgiver Ezra, with the consent of the leaders of Israel, dissolved all
marriages of the Israelites with pagans (Ezra 10). But the matter is still more
serious in the New, where the sacraments of Baptism, Chrismation and the
Eucharist have created a mystical union of spirit and flesh between Christ and
the Christians that is far higher and more intimate than the union between
God and the Old Israel. That is why mixed marriages with heretics,
schismatics or atheists are forbidden by the Holy Church. As the holy canons
declare: Let no Orthodox man be allowed to contract a marriage with a
heretical woman, nor moreover let any Orthodox woman be married to a
heretical man. But if it should be discovered that any such thing is done by
any one of the Christians, no matter who, let the marriage be deemed void,
and let the lawless marriage be dissolved. 521
Similar reasoning underlies the prohibition on the faithful receiving
communion in heretical churches. Since the mystery of the Eucharist is a
marital mystery, it is forbidden to the faithful to communicate anywhere else
than in the Church of Christ. Thus the Apostle Paul says: Ye cannot drink the
cup of the Lord and the cup of demons; ye cannot be partakers of the Lords
table and of the table of demons. Do we provoke the Lord to jealousy? (I
Corinthians 10.21-22).
Jealousy is the natural response of a lover at the sight of his beloveds
adultery, and adultery was what St. John the Almsgiver considered receiving
communion from heretics to be: Another thing the blessed man taught and
insisted upon with all was never on any occasion whatsoever to associate
with heretics and, above all, never to take the Holy Communion with them,
Heaven made a marriage for His son, but used the words nuptials in the plural? Because
whenever Christ, the Bridegroom of pure souls, is mystically united with each soul, He gives
the Father to rejoice over this as at a wedding (Homily 41, 9).
521 Sixth Ecumenical Council, Canon 72. Cf. 14th Canon of the Fourth Ecumenical Council; 10 th
and 31st Canons of the Council of Laodicea; 58th rule of the Nomocanon. Although Peter the
Great pressured the Russian Church into allowing marriages with Roman Catholics,
Lutherans and Presbyterians (but not Molokans, Baptists and Stundists), the Church in her
ukazes of August 18, 1821 and February 28, 1858 reminded the faithful that such unions could
not be allowed until the sectarians accepted Orthodoxy. See Bishop Nathaniel of Vienna, On
Marriage with the Heterodox, Orthodox Life, vol. 44, 3, May-June, 1994, pp. 42-45.
414
even if, the blessed man said, you remain without communicating all your
life, if through stress of circumstances you cannot find a community of the
Catholic Church. For if, having legally married a wife in this world of the
flesh, we are forbidden by God and by the laws to desert her and be united to
another woman, even though we have to spend a long time separated from
her in a distant country, and shall incur punishment if we violate our vows,
how then shall we, who have been joined to God through the Orthodox Faith
and the Catholic Church as the apostle says: I espoused you to one husband
that I might present you as a pure virgin to Christ (II Corinthians 11.2) how
shall we escape from sharing in that punishment which in the world to come
awaits heretics, if we defile the Orthodox and holy Faith by adulterous
communion with heretics?522
Christians can be crowned into one flesh, as the marriage rite puts it,
only if they have already been crowned into one flesh with Christ. That is
why joint participation in the Eucharist is both a necessary condition of a
valid marriage in the Church and the culminating point in the marriage
service itself (as it is meant to be celebrated). Indeed, according to St. Symeon
of Thessalonica, it is joint participation in the Eucharist that seals a couples
marriage, making it valid: (The priest) takes the holy chalice with the
Presanctified Gifts and exclaims: 'The Presanctified Holy things for the Holy'.
And all respond: 'One is Holy, One is Lord', because the Lord alone is the
sanctification, the peace and the union of His servants who are being married.
The priest then gives Communion to the bridal pair, if they are worthy.
Indeed, they must be ready to receive Communion, so that their crowning be
a worthy one and their marriage valid. For Holy Communion is the perfection
of every sacrament and the seal of every mystery. And the Church is right in
preparing the Divine Gifts for the redemption and blessing of the bridal pair;
for Christ Himself, Who gave us these Gifts and Who is the Gifts, came to the
marriage (in Cana of Galilee) to bring to it peaceful union and control. So that
those who get married must be worthy of Holy Communion; they must be
united before God in a church, which is the House of God, because they are
children of God, in a church where God is sacramentally present in the Gifts,
where He is being offered to us, and where He is seen in the midst of us. After
that the priest also gives them to drink from the common cup, and the hymn 'I
will take the cup of salvation' is sung because of the Most Holy Gifts and as a
sign of the joy which comes from divine union, and because the joy of the
bridal pair comes from the peace and concord which they have received. But
to those who are not worthy of communion - for example, those who are
being married for a second time, and others - the Divine Gifts are not given,
but only the common cup, as a partial sanctification, as a sign of good
fellowship and unity with God's blessing".523
Life of St. John the Almsgiver, in Elizabeth Dawes and Norman H. Baynes, Three Byzantine
Saints, London: Mowbrays, 1977, p. 251.
523
St. Symeon of Thessalonica, Against the Heresies and on the Divine Temple, 282, P.G. 155:5123.
522
415
416
and for its safety, but merely legal liabilities, which are not sufficient for
moral perfection."524
*
We are now in a position to understand the full force of St. Pauls words:
Flee fornication. Every sin that a man doeth is outside the body; but he that
committeth fornication sinneth against his own body. Know ye not that your
bodies are the temple of the Holy Spirit dwelling in you, Whom you have
from God, and you are not your own? For you are bought for a price.
Therefore glorify God both in your bodies and in your souls, which are
Gods. (I Corinthians 6.18-20).
Through the sacraments of Baptism, Chrismation and the Eucharist we are
temples of the Holy Spirit and brides of Christ. Therefore what we do with
our souls and bodies does not concern ourselves alone, but also God, Who
dwells in our bodies and has united His Body with ours. Moreover, this
indwelling of God in our souls and bodies was achieved at a most high price
the Incarnation and Death of the Son of God.
The body of a Christian is holy because it is united to the Body of Christ
and the Holy Spirit. Therefore it cannot be united with a body that is not also
Christ-bearing and Spirit-bearing. This fact makes a betrayal of that union
through fornication or adultery a greater sin; for in committing fornication, a
man not only unlawfully unites his own body with the body of another, but
unites the Body of Christ with the body of another who is not Christs.
All sin is committed with the help of the body (if only through the action of
the brain), but only one kind of sin is committed against the body as such:
fornication. And this not only because the consequences of this sin are often
felt in the body (I Corinthians 5.5; Romans 1.27), but also because it violates in
an especially intimate way the marriage in the flesh between Christ and the
individual Christian. All fornication is adultery from God insofar as the soul
and the body is married to God through the sacrament of the Eucharist.
November 11/24, 2007.
St. Theodore the Studite.
524
"An Address of the Right Reverend Tikhon", Orthodox Life, vol. 37, no. 4, July-August, 1987.
417
418
419
In view of this evidence, it is impossible to deny the centrality of bloodsacrifices in the worship of the Old Testament Church. But this immediately
raises the question: why? After all, did not the Lord say through the ProphetKing David: Shall I eat of the flesh of bulls? Or the blood of goats, shall I
drink it? Sacrifice unto God a sacrifice of praise, and pay unto the Most High
thy vows (Psalm 49. 14-15)? And again: If Thou hadst desired sacrifice, I
had given it; with whole-burnt offerings Thou shalt not be pleased. A sacrifice unto
God is a broken spirit; a heart that is broken and humbled God will not
despise (Psalm 50.16-17). In other words, the blood of innocent victims is not
what God wanted from the Jews and wants from us. What he wants is the
sacrifice of praise and a heart that is broken and humbled.
There are three possible ways of resolving the apparent contradiction
between Gods institution of animal-sacrifices in the Old Testament, and His
clear indication that in themselves these sacrifices are not pleasing to Him.
The first is that animal sacrifices were introduced by God in order precisely
to elicit in the Jews the feeling of compunction, of sorrow for sin, that is the
real sacrifice unto God. If, when one sins, one has to sacrifice the best lamb in
ones flock, one soon comes to realize the cost of sin - the cost to oneself, but
also the cost to others. Nor should this be difficult to understand even for
contemporary Americans or Europeans: if we had to sacrifice our favourite
pet dog or cat every time we sinned, we would undoubtedly begin to curb
our sinful impulses!
Thus animal-sacrifices elicit compassion or pity pity for the animal, pity for
oneself at being deprived of it, - and compassion elicits compunction. It was
precisely the method of eliciting King Davids compassion that the Prophet
Nathan used in order to elicit his compunction, his sorrow for the double sin of
sleeping with Bathsheba and killing her husband Uriah: There were two men
in one city, one rich and the other poor. And the rich man had very many
flocks and herds. But the poor man had only one little ewe lamb, which he
had purchased, and preserved, and reared; and it grew up with himself and
his children in common; it ate of his bread and drank of his cup, and slept in
his bosom. And a traveller came to the rich man, and he spared to take of his
own flocks and of his herds, to dress for the traveller that came to him; and he
took the poor mans lamb, and dressed it for the man that came to him. And
David was greatly moved with anger against the man. And David said to
Nathan, As the Lord lives, the man that did this thing shall surely die. And he
shall restore the lamb seven-fold, because he has not spared. And Nathan said
to David: Thou art the man that hath done this (II Kings 12.1-7).
reprinted in G.L. Shtrak, Krov v Verovaniakh i Suyeveriakh Chelovechestva (Blood in the Beliefs
and Superstitions of Mankind), Moscow, 1995, pp. 232-233 (in Russian).
420
Since we have sinned, we shall surely die that was the sentence of God
on Adam and Eve. But rarely do we feel the full horror of sin, its full
consequences. So God causes another, innocent victim to die in our place in
order to elicit our shame, our horror, our pity and our compunction
A second reason why God may have introduced animal sacrifices was to
divert the Jews from the pagan custom of sacrificing, not only animals, but
even human beings, to their false gods. David speaks of the sacrifices of
children that the Jews made to Baal-phegor during the exodus from Egypt
and in Canaan (Psalm 105.28, 35-36). And in Judges 11 we read the tragic
story of how Jephtha sacrificed his daughter in fulfilment of a vow made to
God but inspired by the devil, according to St. John Chrysostom.527 The Law
and the Prophets are full of admonitions to the Jews not to sacrifice their sons
and daughters to Baal or Moloch: Do not give your children to the service of
Moloch, and do not dishonour the name of your God. I am the Lord And
the Lord said to Moses: tell the sons of Israel: whoever of the sons of Israel or
of the proselytes who live among the Israelites shall give of his children to
Moloch, let him be put to death (Leviticus 18.21, 20.1). The Prophet Micah
sums up the sinfulness of all such sacrifices, saying: How shall I reach the
Lord, and lay hold of my God most high? Shall I reach Him by whole-burntofferings, by calves of a year old? Will the Lord accept thousands of rams, or
ten thousands of fat goats? Should I give my first-born for the sin of my soul?
Has it not been told you, O man, what is good? Or what does the Lord require
of you except to do justice, and love mercy, and be ready to walk with the
Lord your God? (Micah 6.6-8). And again the Lord says through Ezekiel:
You took of your sons and daughters, whom you bore, and sacrificed them
to be destroyed. You went a-whoring as if it were a little thing, and slew your
children, and gave them up in expiatory offerings. This is beyond all your
fornication (Ezekiel 16.20-22). Since these sacrifices were offered to
demons for all the gods of the pagans are demons (Psalm 95.5) they
counted as worse sins than all their previous spiritual fornication: they
counted as apostasy from the Lord God of Israel.
But by allowing the Jews to sacrifice, not their own children, but animals,
and not on the altars of the demons, but in the temple at Jerusalem, God
gradually weaned them from this vice. Thus St. John Chrysostom,
commenting on Isaiah 1.2, writes that the Lord instituted animal sacrifices
out of condescension to our weakness. God acted exactly like a doctor, who,
seeing that a person sick with a fever is self-willed and impatient, and wants
to drink a lot of cold water, and threatens that if they do not give it him he
will put a halter around his neck, or cast himself over a precipice, in order to
avert the greater evil, allows the lesser, only so as to divert the sick man from
a violent death [However,] having allowed them to offer sacrifices, He
allowed them to do this in no other place than Jerusalem. Then, when they
had offered sacrifices for some time, He destroyed this city so as to distract
527
421
them, albeit against their will, from this matter. If He had said: stop it, they
would not easily have agreed to abandon their passion for sacrifices. But now,
from the sheer necessity of their being (outside Jerusalem), He drew them
away from this passion528
Nevertheless, at the root of this horrific sin of child-sacrifice lay a true
thought, albeit one perverted by diabolic cunning. For, as Butkevich writes,
the belief that only the death of the most innocent human being is a true
sacrifice reconciling man with God runs like a red thread through all the
pages of the Old Testament Divine Revelation. Only the blood of a perfect
righteous man, according to the teaching of the Word of God, could wash
away the impurity of Adams fall into sin from man. Paganism wrapped this
idea in the crude form of offering infants at the breast, who had as yet no
personal sins, in sacrifice to God. Paganism found nobody on earth more
innocent, pure and sinless than infants at the breast. This crude form was
rejected by the boundless compassion of God, but the idea itself, as the
sentence of eternal and absolute Justice, was retained. It lies already at the
base of the Old Testament law on the consecration to God of all the first-born.
This law was given by God even before the exodus of the Jews from Egypt.
And the Lord said to Moses: sanctify to Me every first-born that opens the
womb from among the sons of Israel (Exodus 13.1, 2). And this law was
repeated more than once: compare Exodus 22.29, Numbers 3.13 and 8.17. But
what does to sanctify somebody to God mean? First of all (according to the
explanation of Moses himself), it means to slaughter the one who is sanctified
and offer him in sacrifice; and then already in a figurative sense to give him
to the Lord for all the days of his life to serve the Lord (I Kings 1.28). God
Himself announced through Moses to the Jewish people: Every dedicated
thing which a man shall dedicate to the Lord of all that he has, whether man
or beast, or of the field of his possession, he shall not sell it, nor redeem it:
every devoted thing shall be most holy to the Lord. And whatever shall be
dedicated of men, shall not be ransomed, but shall surely be put to death.
(Leviticus 27.28, 29).529
And yet there was an exception to the rule that that which was dedicated
to the Lord could not be ransomed. As Butkevich writes: Immediately after
declaring the law on the dedication of the first-born, the Lord commands the
Jewish people through Moses not to offer their first-born in sacrifice, but to
ransom them. This is what Moses told his people on this score: Redeem every
first-born of man. And when your son will ask you, saying, What is this?, then
you will say to him: with a strong hand the Lord brought us out of Egypt, out
of the house of slavery. For when Pharaoh was stubborn and would not let us
go, the Lord killed all the first-born in the land of Egypt, from the first-born of
man to the first-born of beast. Therefore do I sacrifice to the Lord everything
that opens the womb of the male sex, and every firstborn from my sons I
528
529
422
redeem (Exodus 13.13-15). The Lord repeated His command through Moses a
little later: Redeem all the first-born of your sons (Exodus 34.20). At first the
Jewish first-born to a significant extent were substituted by the Levites, who
were separated exclusively for the service of God (cf. Numbers 3.45). Then
they were ransomed with money: five shekels per person.530 But above all,
and exclusively later on, [they were ransomed] by sacrificial animals.
Prosperous and rich people had to offer for their son a one-year lamb for a
whole-burnt-offering and a young dove or pigeon as a sin offering; while
poor people who did not have enough to acquire a lamb had to offer two
pigeons or two young doves, one for a whole-burnt-offering and the other for
a sin offering (cf. Leviticus 12.6-8). In this way we already see clearly here that
the Old Testament Jewish blood sacrifices took the place of the sacrifice of
people themselves531
The Sacrifice of the First-Born
However, there is more to be said about the sacrifice of the first-born,
which will reveal to us both why it occupies such a pivotal place in the whole
system of sacrificial worship, and why - the third and most fundamental
reason why - God introduced animal-sacrifices in the Old Testament.
Let us recall the Exodus story that gave rise to it. God called the Jews to
make a journey of three days into the wilderness in order to offer sacrifices to
Himself (Exodus 4.18). Since Pharaoh refused to allow them to go, he and his
people were subjected to the ten plagues of Egypt, the last and most terrible of
which was the destruction of all the first-born of Egypt. However, since the
Jews, in accordance with Gods instructions, sacrificed a lamb and smeared
his blood on the lintel and door-posts of their houses, they were spared this
destruction, and the Angel of death passed over them. This lamb, the paschal
lamb, as we learn from the Scriptures of the New Testament, is a shadow and
a type of the Lamb of God, the Lord Jesus Christ, the Blood of Whose Sacrifice
on the Cross redeems us from sin and death, allowing us to pass over from
death to life. For Christ our Passover is sacrificed for us (I Corinthians 5.7).
And so the primary purpose of the very first animal sacrifice explicitly
commanded by the Lord (although the Patriarchs also practised animal
sacrifice, as we have seen, there is no record of their being explicitly
commanded to do so in the Holy Scriptures) cannot be said to have been to
elicit sorrow for sin among the Jews, nor to distract them from idol-worship,
but rather to save them from slavery and death. In the Old Testament story, the
blood of the lamb saved them from slavery to Pharaoh and physical death. In
its New Testament fulfilment in Christ, the Blood of the Lamb saves all
believers from slavery to Satan and spiritual death.
St. Demetrius of Rostov notes that the redemption money, five sacred shekels per child,
was the wages of the priests serving in the Temple of the Lord (op. cit., p. 19). (V.M.)
531 Butkevich, op. cit., pp. 243-244.
530
423
So fundamental is the Exodus story and its inner meaning to the true
worship of God that the Lord not only commanded its celebration and reenactment at the most important feast of the Jewish year, Pascha, but also
instituted the practice of dedicating the first-born sons of the Jews to the Lord
through the Temple priesthood.
This had two purposes. The first was to remind the Jews of how, through
the mercy of God, their first-born had been spared the fate of the first-born of
Egypt. The second, and more important, was to hint at the real identity of the
Lamb Who had delivered them, and at the context in which He would be
revealed to Israel
This is where the Gospel account of the Meeting of the Lord in the Temple
becomes so important. Christ is offered as the first-born of His Mother and
supposed father. But He is not one first-born among many. He is the only firstborn who literally fulfils the commandment of the Law. For, as Blessed
Theophylact writes, The law said, Every male that openeth the womb shall be
called holy to the Lord. Only with Christ did this literally occur. He Himself
opened the womb of the Virgin at His birth, while all other wombs which
have borne a child have been first opened by a man532
The virginity of Mary was known to the small band assembled in the
Temple that day. For, as St. Demetrius of Rostov writes, The Holy Fathers
[Gregory of Nyssa, Cyril of Alexandria and Andrew of Crete] relate that the
Prophet Zacharias, father of the Forerunner, entered the Temple to participate
in the rite of the Purification of the immaculate Virgin. He had the Theotokos
stand not in the place assigned to mothers waiting for cleansing, but in that
for maidens, where married women were not allowed. Seeing this, the scribes
and Pharisees murmured. Zacharias announced to them that Mary remained
a virgin after giving birth. As they did not believe him, the saint explained
that all creation serves its Master and is in His power, and that God is
perfectly capable of enabling a virgin to give birth and remain a virgin. Most
truly, she is a virgin, he insisted: wherefore, I have permitted her to stand in
the place appointed for virgins.533 So Christ was the First-Born in a special
and unique sense, both Divinely and humanly speaking. As the liturgical text
puts it: the firstborn Word and Son of the Father without beginning, the firstborn
Child of a Mother who had not known man.
Then the Elder Symeon, having been told by the Holy Spirit that he would
not see death until he had seen the Lords Christ, entered the Temple, and,
taking the Lord in his arms, uttered the famous words: Lord, now lettest
Thou Thy servant depart in peace, for mine eyes have seen Thy salvation, a
light to enlighten the Gentiles and the glory of Thy people Israel
Bl. Theophylact, Explanation of the Holy Gospel according to Luke, 2.21-24 , House Springs, Mo:
Chrysostom Press, 1997, pp. 33-34.
533 St. Demetrius, op. cit., p. 21.
532
424
According to Blessed Theophylact (op. cit., p. 34), Symeon was not a priest. If so, then it is
still easier to understand why he was not the real priest at this rite, but Christ.
535 St. Ephraim, Homily on the Lord, 48; in The Pre-Nicene Fathers, Eerdmans, volume XIII,
p. 327.
536 St. Ephraim, op. cit., 51, p. 328.
534
425
426
possible only through the supreme Sacrifice, the shedding of the Blood of the
most perfect creature
But since no man born of Adam could offer a perfect sacrifice, being
corrupted by sin, the sinless Creator Himself had to become man and offer
Himself in sacrifice, becoming the Lamb slain not only in time, but before
time, from the foundation of the world (Revelation 13.8). He could not be
ransomed, because He was an offering beyond price; but precisely for that
reason His Blood could be a ransom for many, for all those who believe in
Him. For the Son of Man came to give His life as a ransom for many
(Matthew 20.28), as a ransom for all (I Timothy 2.6), as a merciful and
faithful High Priest in things pertaining to God, to make propitiation for the
sins of the people (Hebrews 2.17).
At His Meeting with the Old Testament priesthood in the Temple, Christ as
the High Priest of the New Testament dedicated Himself as an offering to the
Lord. This was the beginning of the path to Golgotha, when He could say of
His Sacrifice: It is finished. It was the beginning of the path that led to His
offering the already-completed Sacrifice to His disciples in His Body and
Blood. For, as St. Gregory of Nyssa writes: He offered Himself for us, Victim
and Sacrifice, and Priest as well, and Lamb of God Who taketh away the sins
of the world. When did He do this? When He made His own Body food and
His own Blood drink for His disciples, for this much is clear to anyone, that a
sheep cannot be eaten by a man unless its being eaten is preceded by its being
slaughtered. This giving of His own Body to His disciples for eating clearly
indicates that the sacrifice of the Lamb has now been completed. 539
Again, St. John Chrysostom writes: Why does He say: This cup is the
New Testament? Because there was also a cup of the Old Testament: the
libations and blood of brute creatures. For after sacrificing, they used to
receive the blood in a chalice and bowl and so pour it out. Since that time,
instead of the blood of beasts, He brought in His own Blood. Lest any should
be troubled on hearing this, He reminds them of the ancient sacrifice540
So there is the old sacrifice, and there is the New Sacrifice, the Sacrifice of
the cup of the New Testament. The former prefigures the latter, and illumines
Its meaning, and the coming of the latter makes the former redundant. For
the priesthood being changed, there is made of necessity a change also of the
Law (Hebrews 7.12). For it is not possible that the blood of bulls and of
goats should take away sins. Wherefore when He cometh into the world, He
saith, Sacrifice and offering Thou wouldest not, but a Body hast Thou
prepared for Me (Hebrews 10.4-5).
St. Gregory of Nyssa, Sermon One on the Resurrection of Christ, Jaeger, vol. 9, p. 287. In
William A. Jurgens, The Faith of the Early Fathers, Collegeville, Minnesota: Liturgical Press,
1979, volume 2, p. 59.
540 St. John Chrysosom, Homily 27 on I Corinthians, 5.
539
427
An Objection Answered
The above understanding of the Sacrifice for sin is rejected by Metropolitan
Anthony (Khrapovitsky) in his well-known book, The Dogma of Redemption.541
He rejects the concept of Christs redemption as a sacrifice made to the Justice
of God, calling this the juridical theory of redemption and scholastic. In
reply to this objection, and in order to consolidate the traditional teaching, we
cite here an article by Archbishop Theophan of Poltava:[Metropolitan Anthony] gives a metaphorical, purely moral meaning to
the Sacrifice on Golgotha, interpreting it in the sense of his own world-view,
which he calls the world-view of moral monism.542 But he decisively rejects
the usual understanding of the Sacrifice on Golgotha, as a sacrifice in the
proper meaning of the word, offered out of love for us by our Saviour to the
justice of God, for the sin of the whole human race. He recognizes it to be the
invention of the juridical mind of the Catholic and Protestant theologians. It
goes without saying that with this understanding of the redemptive feat of
the Saviour the author had to establish a point of view with regard to the Old
Testament sacrifices, the teaching on which has up to now been a major
foundation for the teaching on the Saviours Sacrifice on Golgotha. And that is
what we see in fact. The author rejects the generally accepted view of the
sacrifices as the killing of an innocent being in exchange for a sinful person or
people that is subject to execution. In the eyes of the people of the Old
Testament, in the words of the author, a sacrifice meant only a contribution,
just as Christians now offer [candles, kutiya and eggs] in church But
nowhere [in the Old Testament] will one encounter the idea that the animal
being sacrificed was thought of as taking upon itself the punishment due to
man.543
Our author points to St. Gregory the Theologian as being one of the
Fathers of the Church who was a decisive opponent of the teaching on
sacrifice, in the general sense of the word. In the given case he has in mind the
following, truly remarkable (but not to the advantage of the author) words of
the great Theologian on the Sacrifice on Golgotha:
We were detained in bondage by the evil one, sold under sin, and
receiving pleasure in exchange for wickedness. Now, since a ransom belongs
only to him who holds in bondage, I ask to whom this was offered, and for
what cause? If to the evil one, fie upon the outrage! If the robber receives
ransom, not only from God, but a ransom which consists of God Himself, and
has such an illustrious payment for his tyranny, a payment for whose sake it
would have been right for him to have left us alone altogether. But if to the
Translated into English by Monastery Press, Montreal, 1979.
The Dogma of Redemption, p. 52.
543 The Dogma of Redemption, pp. 42-43.
541
542
428
Father, I ask first, how? For it was not by Him that we were being oppressed;
and next, on what principle did the Blood of His Only-begotten Son delight
the Father, Who would not receive even Isaac, when he was being offered up
by his father, but changed his sacrifice, putting a ram in the place of his
human victim?544545
However, St. Gregory, unlike Metropolitan Anthony, does not reject the
juridical model, but rather embraced its essence. If the metropolitan had
started quoting the saint a little earlier, then he would have read that the
blood shed for us is the precious and famous Blood of our God and Highpriest and Sacrifice. And if he had continued the quotation just one sentence
more, he would have read that the Father accepts the sacrifice, but neither
asked for it, nor felt any need of it, but on account of the oeconomy.
Evidently, writes Archbishop Theophan, the author understood that
this quotation in its fullness witnesses against his assertion and therefore in
the 1926 edition of The Dogma of Redemption he does not give a reference to St.
Gregory the Theologian546
The archbishop continues: From the cited words of St. Gregory it is
evident that he by no means rejects the teaching that the death of Christ the
Saviour on Golgotha was a sacrifice; he only rejects the theory created in
order to explain it that this sacrifice was to be seen as offered by Christ the
Saviour as a ransom for the sinful race of men to the devil547 . As is well
known, such a theory did exist and was developed by Origen and in part by
St. Gregory of Nyssa. St. Gregory the Theologian with complete justification
recognizes this theory to be without foundation, as did St. John of Damascus
later (Exact Exposition of the Orthodox Faith, book III, ch. 27). He thought it just
and well-founded to consider the sacrifice as offered to God the Father, but
not in the sense that the Father demanded or needed it, but according to the
economy of salvation, that is, because, in the plan of Divine Providence, it was
necessary for the salvation of the human race.548 Besides, although it is said
that the Father receives the Sacrifice, while the Son offers it, the thought
behind it is that the Son offers it as High Priest, that is, according to His
human nature, while the Father receives it indivisibly with the Son and the
Holy Spirit, as the Triune God, according to the oneness and indivisibility of
the Divine Essence.549
St. Gregory, Homily 45 on Pascha, 22, quoted by Protopresbyter George Grabbe in his
foreword to The Dogma of Redemption, pp. vi-vii.
545 Archbishop Theophan, On the Redemption.
546 Archbishop Theophan, On the Redemption.
547 My italics V.M.
548 Metropolitan Anthony wrote opposite this: True, but this contradicts [Metropolitan]
Philaret (HOCNA bishops resolution, p. 13). But does it? No proof is offered that
Metropolitan Philaret would have rejected Archbishop Theophans formulation.
549 Archbishop Theophan, On the Redemption.
544
429
Still further proof of St. Gregorys real views is provided by his writing
that Christ Himself offers Himself to God [the Father], so that He Himself
might snatch us from him who possessed us, and so that the Anointed One
should be received instead of the one who had fallen, because the Anointer
cannot be caught.550 And again: He is called Redemption because He set
us free from the bonds of sin and gives Himself in exchange for us as a
ransom sufficient to cleanse the world.551
Returning now to the question of the Old Testament sacrifices,
Metropolitan Anthony rejects their prefigurative significance. However, as
Archbishop Theophan writes, in the words of St. Gregory the Theologian,
these sacrifices were, on the one hand, concessions to Israels childishness,
and were designed to draw him away from pagan sacrifices; but on the other
hand, in these victims the Old Testament law prefigured the future Sacrifice
on Golgotha 552 . In particular, the Old Testament paschal Lamb had this
mystically prefigurative significance553.
Everything that took place in the time of the worship of God in the Old
Testament, says John Chrysostom, in the final analysis refers to the Saviour,
whether it is prophecy or the priesthood, or the royal dignity, or the temple,
or the altar of sacrifice, or the veil of the temple, or the ark, or the place of
purification, or the manna, or the rod, or anything else everything relates to
Him.
God from ancient times allowed the sons of Israel to carry out a sacrificial
service to Him not because He took pleasure in sacrifices, but because he
wanted to draw the Jews away from pagan vanities. Making a concession to
the will of the Jews, He, as One wise and great, by this very permission to
offer sacrifices prepared an image of future things, so that the victim, though
in itself useless, should nevertheless be useful as such an image. Pay attention,
because this is a deep thought. The sacrifices were not pleasing to God, as
having been carried out not in accordance with His will, but only in
accordance with His condescension. He gave to the sacrifices an image
corresponding to the future oeconomy of Christ, so that if in themselves they
were not worthy to be accepted, they at least became welcome by virtue of the
image they expressed. By all these sacrifices He expresses the image of Christ
and foreshadows future events554 555
St. Gregory the Theologian, Works, Russian edition, vol. V, p. 42. Cf. Homily 20 (P.G.
35.1068d).
551
St. Gregory the Theologian, Sermon 30 , 20.
552 St. Gregory the Theologian, Works, Russian edition, vol. I, pp. 179-180, Moscow, 1889 and
vol. I, St. Petersburg edition, p. 669.
553 St. Gregory the Theologian, Works, Russian edition, vol. IV, pp. 132-142, Moscow, 1889 and
vol. I, St. Petersburg edition, p. 675-680.
554 St. John Chrysostom, Works, Russian edition, vol. III, pp. 898-900.
555 Archbishop Theophan, On the Redemption.
550
430
After quoting from St. Athanasius the Great and St. Cyril of Alexandria to
similar effect, Archbishop Theophan continues: But if the Holy Fathers and
Teachers of the Church look at the Old Testament sacrifices in this way, then
still more significance must they give to the redemptive death of Christ the
Saviour for the human race on Golgotha. And this is indeed what we see.
They all recognize the death of Christ the Saviour on Golgotha to be a
sacrifice offered by Him as a propitiation for the human race - and that,
moreover, in the most literal, not at all metaphorical meaning of this word.
And from this point of view the death of Christ the Saviour on Golgotha is for
them the great mystery of the redemption of the human race from sin, the
curse and death and the great mystery of the reconciliation of sinful
humanity with God.
St. Gregory the Theologian, in expounding his view on the Old Testament
sacrifices as being prefigurations of the great New Testament Sacrifice, notes:
But in order that you should understand the depth of the wisdom and the
wealth of the unsearchable judgements of God, God did not leave even the
[Old Testament] sacrifices completely unsanctified, unperfected and limited
only to the shedding of blood, but to the sacrifices under the law is united the
great and in relation to the Primary Essence, so to speak, untempered Sacrifice
the purification not of a small part of the universe, and not for a short time,
but of the whole world for eternity.
By this great Sacrifice he understands the Saviour Jesus Christ Himself,
Who shed His blood for the salvation of the human race on Golgotha, which
is why he often calls Him God, High Priest and Victim. He gave Himself for
us for redemption, for a purifying sacrifice for the universe.556
For us He became man and took on the form of a servant, he was led to
death for our iniquities.557
He is God, High Priest and Victim.558
He was Victim, but also High Priest; Priest, but also God; He offered as a
gift to God [His own] blood, but [by It] He cleansed the whole world; He was
raised onto the Cross, but to the Cross was nailed the sin of all mankind.559
He redeems the world by His own blood.560
St. Gregory the Theologian, Word 30, Works, Russian edition, vol. III, p. 82 or vol. I (St.
Petersburg), p. 442.
557 St. Gregory the Theologian, Word 19, Works, Russian edition, vol. II, p. 129 or vol. I (St.
Petersburg), p. 296.
558 St. Gregory the Theologian, Word 3, Works, Russian edition, vol. I, pp. 58-59 or vol. I (St.
Petersburg), p. 58; Word 20, vol. II, p. 235 or vol. I (St. Petersburg), p. 299; Verses on himself, vol.
IV, p. 247 or vol. II (St. Petersburg), p. 66.
559 St. Gregory the Theologian, Verses on himself, vol. IV, p. 245 or vol. II (St. Petersburg), p. 22.
556
431
St. Gregory the Theologian, Word 29, Works, Russian edition, vol. III, p. 61 or vol. I (St.
Petersburg), p. 427.
561 St. Athanasius the Great, Tenth Paschal Epistle, 10; Works, Russian edition, vol. III, p. 464.
562 St. Athanasius the Great, On the Incarnation of God the Word, 37; Works, Russian edition (St.
Sergius Lavra, 1902), vol. I, p. 238.
563 St. Gregory of Nyssa, Against Eunomius, book VI, 2; Works, Russian edition, vol. VI, pp. 4344.
564 St. Gregory of Nyssa, To Olympius the Monk on Perfection; Works, Russian edition, vol. VII,
p. 237.
565 St. Gregory of Nyssa, Word on Holy Pascha; Works, Russian edition, vol. VIII, p. 38.
560
432
We find much material on the given question in the same spirit in the
works of St. John Chrysostom.
The oeconomy that was to be accomplished in the New Testament, says
this Holy Father in his interpretation on the Gospel of John, was
foreshadowed beforehand in prefigurative images; while Christ by His
Coming accomplished it. What then does the type say? Take ye a lamb for an
house, and kill it, and do as He commanded and ordained (Exodus 12). But
Christ did not do that; He did not command this, but Himself became as a
Lamb, offering Himself to the Father as a sacrifice and offering.566
When John the Forerunner saw Christ, he said to his disciples: Behold
the Lamb of God (John 1.35). By this he showed them all the gift which He
came to give, and the manner of purification. For the Lamb declares both
these things. And John did not say, Who shall take, or Who hath taken,
but Who taketh away the sins of the world, because Christ always does this.
In fact, he took them away not only then when He suffered, but from that
time even to the present He takes away sins, not as if He were always being
crucified (for He at one time offered sacrifice for sins), but since by that one
sacrifice He is continually purging them.567
This blood was ever typified of old in the altars and sacrifices determined
by the law. It is the price of the world, by it Christ redeemed the Church, by it
He adorned the whole of her.568 This blood in types cleansed sins. But if it
had such power in the types, if death so shuddered at the shadow, tell me
how would it not have dreaded the very reality?569
David after the words: Sacrifice and offering hast Thou not desired,
added: but a body hast Thou perfected for me (Psalm 39.9), understanding
by this the body of the Master, a sacrifice for the whole universe, which
cleansed our souls, absolved our sins, destroyed death, opened the heavens,
showed us many great hopes and ordered all the rest.570
St. John Chrysostoms reasoning on the mystery of the Sacrifice on
Golgotha is particularly remarkable in his discourse, On the Cross and the
Thief, which he delivered, as is evident from the discourse itself, on Great
Friday in Holy Week. Today our Lord Jesus Christ is on the Cross, and we
celebrate, so that you should know that the Cross is a feast and a spiritual
triumph. Formerly the Cross was the name of a punishment, but now it has
become an honourable work; before it was a symbol of condemnation, but
now it has become the sign of salvation It has enlightened those sitting in
St. John Chrysostom, Homilies on John, 13, 3; Works, Russian edition, vol. VIII, p. 95.
St. John Chrysostom, Homilies on John, 18, 2; Works, Russian edition, vol. VIII, p. 119-120.
568 St. John Chrysostom, Homilies on John, 46, 4; Works, Russian edition, vol. VIII, p. 306.
569 St. John Chrysostom, Homilies on John, 46, 3; Works, Russian edition, vol. VIII, p. 305.
570 St. John Chrysostom, Against the Jews; Works, Russian edition, vol. I, p. 722.
566
567
433
darkness, it has reconciled us, who were in enmity with God Thanks to the
Cross we do not tremble before the tyrant, because we are near the King. That
is why we celebrate in commemorating the Cross. In fact, one and the same
was both victim and priest: the victim was the flesh, and the priest was the
spirit. One and the same offers and was offered in the flesh. Listen to how
Paul explained both the one and the other. For every high priest, he says,
chosen from among men is appointed to act on behalf of men in relation to
God, to offer gifts and sacrifices for sins Hence it is necessary for this priest
also to have something to offer (Hebrews 5.1, 8.3). So He Himself offers
Himself. And in another place he says that Christ, having been offered once
to bear the sins of many, will appear a second time for salvation (Hebrews
9.28).571
St. Cyril of Alexandria reasons as follows with regard to the words of
John the Forerunner on the Saviour: Behold the Lamb of God that taketh
away the sins of the world (John 1.29). It was necessary to reveal Who was
the One Who came to us and why He descends from heaven to us. And so
Behold, he says, the Lamb of God that taketh away the sins of the world,
to Whom the Prophet Isaiah pointed in the words: As a sheep for the
slaughter is he led and as a lamb before the shearers is he silent (Isaiah 53.7)
and Who was prefigured in the law of Moses. But then He saved only in part,
without extending His mercy on all, for it was a figure and a shadow. But
now He Who once was depicted by means of enigmas, the True Lamb, the
Spotless Victim, is led to the slaughter for all, so as to expel the sin of the
world and cast down the destroyer of the universe, so that by His death for all
He might abolish death and lift the curse that was on us, so that, finally, the
punishment that was expressed in the words: Dust thou art, and unto dust
shalt thou return (Genesis 3.19) might cease and the second Adam might
appear not from the earth, but from the heaven (I Corinthians 15.47) and
become for human nature the beginning of a great good, the destruction of
the corruption wrought [by sin], the author of eternal life, the founder of the
transformation [of man] according to God, the beginning of piety and
righteousness, the way to the Heavenly Kingdom. One Lamb died for all,
saving for God and the Father a whole host of men, One for all so that all
might be subjected to God, One for all so as to acquire all, that those who
live might live no longer for themselves but from Him Who for their sake
died and was raised (II Corinthians 5.15). Insofar as we were in many sins
and therefore subject to death and corruption, the Father gave the son to
deliver us (I Timothy 2.6), One for all, since all are in Him and He is above all.
One died for all so that all should live in Him.572 St. Cyrils general view of
the death of Christ the Saviour on Golgotha is such that on Golgotha
Emmanuel offered Himself as a sacrifice to the Father not for Himself,
according to the irreproachable teaching, but for us who were under the yoke
St. John Chrysostom, Works, Russian edition, vol. II, pp. 437-438. Cf. vol. II, pp. 446-449.
St. Cyril of Alexandria, Interpretation of the Gospel of John; Works of the Holy Fathers, Sergiev
Posad, 1901, vol. 64, pp. 175-176 (in Russian).
571
572
434
and guilt of sin.573 He offered Himself as a holy sacrifice to God and the
Father, having bought by His own blood the salvation of all.574 For our sakes
he was subjected to death, and we were redeemed from our former sins by
reason of the slaughter which He suffered for us.575 In Him we have been
justified, freed from a great accusation and condemnation, our lawlessness
has been taken from us: for such was the aim of the oeconomy towards us of
Him Who because of us, for our sakes and in our place was subject to
death.576
St. Basil the Great in his epistle to Bishop Optimus writes: The Lord had
to taste death for each, and having become a propitiatory sacrifice for the
world, justify all by His blood.577 He develops his thought on the death on
the Cross of Christ the Saviour in more detail as a redeeming sacrifice for the
sins of the human race in his interpretation of Psalm 48, at the words: There
be some that trust in their strength, and boast themselves in the multitude of
their riches. A brother cannot redeem; shall a man redeem? He shall not give
to God a ransom [
435
sacrifices daily (as the other priests did), first for his own sins, and then for
the sins of the people (Hebrews 7.26-27).578
The Scriptures do not reject all sacrifices in general, writes St. Basil the
Great in his interpretation on the book of the Prophet Isaiah, but the Jewish
sacrifices. For he says: What to Me is the multitude of your sacrifices?
(Isaiah 1.11). He does not approve of the many, but demands the one sacrifice.
Every person offers himself as a sacrifice to God, presenting himself as a
living sacrifice, pleasing to God, through rational service he has offered to
God the sacrifice of praise (Romans 12.1). But insofar as the many sacrifices
under the law have been rejected as useless, the one sacrifice offered in the
last times is accepted. For the Lamb of God took upon Himself the sin of the
world, gave Himself up for us, a fragrant offering and sacrifice to God
(Ephesians 5.2) There are no longer the continual sacrifices (Exodus
29.42), there are no sacrifices on the day of atonement, no ashes of the heifer
cleansing the defiled persons (Hebrews 9.13). For there is one sacrifice of
Christ and the mortification of the saints in Christ; one sprinkling the
washing of regeneration (Titus 3.5); one propitiation for sin the Blood
poured out for the salvation of the world.579
Finally, St. John of Damascus says the following about the mystery of the
sacrifice on Golgotha: Every action and performance of miracles by Christ
are most great and divine and marvelous: but the most marvelous of all is His
precious Cross. For no other thing has subdued death, expiated the sin of the
first parent [
436
583
584
437
585
Especially St. Macarius of Corinth (1731-1805), St. Nicodemus of the Holy Mountain (17491809), St. Nicephorus of Chios (1750-1821) and St. Arsenius of Paros (1800-1877).
586
Constantine Cavarnos, St. Macarios of Corinth, Belmont, Mass. : Institute for Byzantine and
Modern Studies, 1972, p. 21.
438
St. Gregory here appears implicitly to rule out the extreme positions on
both sides: both the idea that it is wrong to receive Communion more than two
or three times a year (this is the extreme that the Kollyvades Fathers strongly,
and rightly, reacted against), and the idea that one must receive Communion
at every single Liturgy, whether one feels ready for it or not, and whether one
has done the necessary preparation or not (even the Kollyvades Fathers
agreed that preparation for Communion by fasting was necessary see the
book by St. Nicodemus the Hagiorite, On Frequent Communion).
However, in view of the fact that there are those who continue to deny that
any special fast before Communion is necessary, it will be worth examining
the early evidence for that. In the early fifth century, the Typicon of the
Monastery of St. Savvas of Jerusalem states: When one wishes to commune
of the Holy Mysteries of Christ, one must keep the entire week, from Monday,
in fasting, prayer and complete sobriety in every way, and then, with fear and
great compunction receive the All-Holy Mysteries. (chapter 32, Concerning
Communion of Christs Mysteries).
Stavros Markou comments on the evidence from the Jerusalem Typicon:
This required fast was later made easier, according to economia, and was
reduced to a fast of three days. In some cases, it can be reduced to one day.
Most clergy (those in sacred orders) and monastics only fast for one day, or
even half a day, before receiving Holy Communion. However, those among
the laymen must fast for one week, or for three days, or (if ones spiritual
father permits) at least one day. This is the historical practice of the Orthodox
Church.587
There is other early evidence for the fast before Communion. Thus St. John
Chrysostom (+407) recommends fasting before Communion and, if possible,
also after: You fast before Communion in order to be worthy of Communion.
But as soon as you receive Communion, instead of increasing prudence and
temperance, you let it all go, whereas you should be more temperate after
Communion. For before you received Communion you fasted in order to be
worthy to receive the Bridegroom, while after this you should be more
prudent and temperate in order not to seem unworthy of what you have
received. What, then? Should we fast after Communion as well? I dont say
this, and I dont force you. It would be good, but I dont force you to do this.
But I exhort you not to feast to excess.588
St. John Chrysostoms words are clear evidence that, whatever was the
practice in the very earliest period of the Church, by the late fourth century
fasting before Communion was the norm.
587
588
439
Most True Orthodox Churches today insist on a three-day fast for laymen.
The present writer has seen this practice in the Russian Church Abroad in the
1970s, in the Matthewite and Chrysostomite Greek Old Calendarists, and also
in Russia, Serbia and Bulgaria. The only major exception appears to be the
Holy Orthodox Church of North America (HOCNA) and those parishes
and monasteries in other jurisdictions influenced by their reasoning, and
perhaps also the Cyprianites.
Such near-unanimity about the three-day rule among the True Orthodox
Churches is a very strong indication that it was introduced into the Church by
the Holy Spirit. True, it does not seem to have been legislated in any
Ecumenical or Local Council. But this is understandable: since this is a pastoral,
rather than a dogmatic matter, the rule should be seen as a guideline rather
than a strict law, with allowance of considerable flexibility in view of
individual circumstances. The very young, the old and the sick may be
granted a relaxation of the rule by their spiritual fathers, while the more
ascetical may wish to fast longer or more strictly. But it appears that the
Church, guided by the Holy Spirit, has come to a near-unanimous conclusion
in several traditionally Orthodox countries that an average person in normal
circumstances should aim to prepare for Communion through a minimum of
three days fasting.
Moreover, there seem to be some clear pointers to the three-day rule in
Holy Scripture. Consider, for example, Exodus 19.10-19, which is appointed to
be read by the Holy Church on the Vespers-Liturgy of Holy Thursday. Here
God commands the people of Israel to sanctify themselves for three days
before they ascend the Mount. Be ready, says Moses; for three days come
not near to a woman (v. 15). Now ascending the Holy Mountain is a
figurative expression for entering into communion with God, as we see in
Psalm 23, which is appointed to be read during the preparatory prayers for
Holy Communion: Who will ascend the mountain of the Lord, or who will
stand in His holy place? He who has clean hands and a pure heart (vv. 3-4).
A still closer prefiguring of Holy Communion can be seen in the story of
the meeting between David and the priest Abimelech, when David asks
whether he and his men can eat of the showbread on the altar. Abimelech
replies that this bread was no common bread, but holy loaves: if the young
men have abstained from women, then they shall eat them. And David
answered the priest, and said to him, Yes, we have abstained from women for
three days: when I came forth for the journey all the young men were
purified (I Samuel 20.4-5). The holy loaves are clearly a type of the Eucharist,
which require a preparation of three days abstinence.
Let us turn now to certain objections raised against the three-day rule.
440
Archimandrite Lazarus (Moore), St. Seraphim of Sarov: A Spiritual Biography, Blanco, Texas:
New Sarov Press, 1994, pp. 67, 68.
441
is, ones humility, and some are clearly more worthy in this sense than
others. If this were not true, it would make no sense to pray: Count us not
unworthy to receive, or: We thank Thee that Thou hast counted us
worthy to receive The three-day rule of preparation, while making nobody
worthy in an absolute sense to receive Divine Communion, nevertheless, like
all ascetic practices, sharpens our sense of our weakness and unworthiness,
and therefore actually makes us less unworthy to receive, in accordance with
the spiritual law that he who humbles himself is exalted. But those who do
not prepare in the way the Church teaches run the danger of complacency
and routine, of seeing Communion as their right or their duty rather than
their salvation, even of not discerning the Body and Blood of the Lord and
so of receiving to their condemnation. For whosoever hath not, from him
shall be taken away even that which he hath (Matthew 13.12).
2. The Early Christians Communed at every Liturgy, and so should we. I
have never seen proof of this statement (Acts 2.42 is often quoted, but it is not
proof), but I do accept that Christians in the early centuries communed in
general more often than we do now. But what follows from that fact? That we
should receive more often in imitation of them? That would be true only if
our circumstances were very similar to theirs, and we ourselves similar to the
Early Christians.
Until the end of the first millennium, although practice varied, we still find
monastic saints practising very frequent Communion, such as St. Theodore
the Studite (+821) and St. Symeon the Theologian (+1022). However, St.
Symeon, while Communing every day himself, did so with tears and
stressed that if one did not have tears one should not Commune. This is a hard
saying, and in practice, the Church balances the need to Commune worthily
that is, with tears with the need not to fall into the hands of the spiritual
wolf through infrequent Communion.
As we come closer to our time, we find that the saints, without denying the
patristic teaching that frequent Communion is good, stress the importance of
adequate preparation, of which the most important component is true
contrition over our sins. Thus St. Theophan the Recluse writes: There is no
salvation without Communion, and no progress in life without frequent
Communion.
But the Lord, the Source of life that enlivens those who partake of Him, is
also fire to those who eat Him. Those who receive worthily taste of life, but
those who partake unworthily taste of death. Although this death does not
occur visibly, invisibly it always occurs in the spirit and heart of the man. The
unworthy communicant steps away like a charred log from the fire, or the
metal remnants of a conflagration. In the body itself either the seed of death is
sown, or death happens right away, as it was in the Corinthian church at the
442
590
St. Theophan, The Path to Salvation A Manual of Spiritual Transformation, part III, chapter 5,
section 9, pp. 269-272.
443
quite faint. And his spiritual father blessed him to prepare for
Communion.591
Now Optina Monastery, as is well-known, was probably the finest
monastery in Russia at the time. Fourteen of its elders were glorified by the
Russian Church Abroad, and many of its monks became martyrs under the
Soviet yoke. Note also that Optina under the holy elders towards the end of
the nineteenth century was more strict on this question (i.e. allowed
Communion less often) than Diveyevo under St. Seraphim at the beginning of
the century. This was almost certainly because conditions had changed: the
level of spiritual life in the country as a whole, and among monastics in
particular, had fallen; which was reflected in a stricter attitude towards the
reception of Communion.
And this is understandable. Modern life is much more complex and more
full of temptations, both crude and subtle, than earlier ages. It
correspondingly takes a Christian more time and more effort to drag himself
away from earthly cares, concentrate on his spiritual state and reach that state
of preparedness and compunction which is necessary before receiving
Communion. This is especially the case with married laypeople (see more on
that below). But monks, too, are affected by the increased worldliness of the
age they live in.
So the Church, while never abandoning her basic principles, changes her
practices to some degree in accordance with the spiritual condition of her
children. In earlier ages, when general conditions were more conducive to the
spiritual life, and Christians generally were in a higher state of spiritual
preparedness, there was less danger in the practice of very frequent
Communion. But in more recent times, spiritual Fathers, moved by the Holy
Spirit, have not blessed very frequent Communion except in special cases,
knowing that it is very difficult for their spiritual children to prepare
adequately for It.
This leads us to a general point on historical comparisons between
different Christian epochs. We call our Church Apostolic because we have
received the teachings of the Holy Apostles without addition or subtraction.
However, this refers to dogmatic teachings and to general norms of Christian
faith and morality. It does not mean that we, living in the twenty-first century,
are obliged to imitate the lives of the Early Christians in every particular. The
attempt to do that is a characteristically Protestant venture, and we all know
what is the result of their attempts to go back to the Early Church a
renunciation of the very concept of the Church! Our task is not to go back to
the Early Church, but to join the Apostolic Church as it exists now, having
maintained unbroken succession from the Apostles and their successors.
591
Victor Afanasiev, Elder Barsanuphius of Optina, Platina, Ca.: St. Herman of Alaska Press,
2000, pp. 565-566.
444
Not only are we quite simply not able to go back to the Early Church in a
literal sense: it would be very harmful for us to attempt to do so. Thus, for
example, standards of sexual morality in the Early Church were very high,
and very strictly enforced. A man who committed fornication was completely
cut off from any kind of fellowship with other Christians, and deprived of
Communion for a very long period, if not for the rest of his life (cf. I
Corinthians 5; Hebrews 6.4-6). If, in the Early Church, standards were so high,
and discipline so strict that of the rest no man dared to join himself to them
(Acts 5.13), what would happen to our Church if such strictness were
enforced today, when the general spiritual level is so much weaker?
3. The Only Point of going to the Divine Liturgy is to Receive Communion.
In defence of this statement, reference is made by some to the statement of St.
Symeon of Thessalonica: The Divine Liturgy is a rite for the purpose of
consecrating the All-Holy Body and Blood of Christ, that they may be given in
Communion to all the faithful, and it exists in and of itself for the sole
purpose of Communion.592
Now this statement raises no problems if it is understood as emphasising
the absolute centrality, in the rite of the Divine Liturgy, of the Consecration
and Communion. This in no way means that nothing else of value is done
during the Liturgy besides Consecration and Communion. The Divine
Liturgy accomplishes many things besides sanctifying individual
communicants through their receiving Communion. During the Liturgy we
listen to the Holy Scriptures; we pray for ourselves and the whole world; we
are present at the Awesome Sacrifice, and worship Christ Crucified. All this
strengthens us and the Church as a whole.
Therefore attendance at the Liturgy is valuable even if one does not
Communicate. Even the catechumens, and those under penance, are
encouraged to stay for the first part of the service, so this must be true for the
baptised as well. While it is true that the full benefit of attending the Liturgy is
gained only by those who Commune of the Holy Mysteries, attending only,
without Communicating, is highly beneficial. 593
4. Not to receive the Holy Mysteries at a Liturgy (unless one has a
canonical impediment) is an Insult to Christ. In defence of this statement,
reference is made by some to St. John Chrysostoms Homily 3 on Ephesians, in
which the saint, in the course of reproving those who come to Communion
592
445
only at certain set times such as Pascha, says that to refrain from receiving
Communion at the Liturgy is like being invited to a friend for dinner and
refusing to eat his food it is an insult to him. If one is not worthy of
receiving Communion, says the Saint, then one is not worthy of going to the
Liturgy at all.
Now the rule of truth in the Orthodox Church is not the opinion of one
Father, however distinguished, but the consensus of all the Fathers. And the
present writer has not found a similar statement in any other Holy Father
except St. Nicodemus, who quotes it in On Frequent Communion. In any case,
St. Johns highly rhetorical language must be understood in context his
desire to impress an important and valid point (that receiving Communion
should not be only at set times) on a particular kind of audience that he
knew much better than we. It would be unwise to take such language out of
context and create a general rule out of it applicable to all times and places.
And the Orthodox Church has never created such a general rule.
However, St. Nicodemus the Hagiorite claims that there is such a rule the
Ninth Apostolic Canon, which, in his interpretation, says that all those who
do not receive Communion at every Liturgy are excommunicated as creating
a disorder in the church. However, this interpretation of the Canon is not
generally accepted by the Orthodox Church. As Hieromonk Patapios and
Archbishop Chrysostomos of Etna write: St. Nikodemos is speaking very
strictly here. According to Balsamon [perhaps the best known canonist of the
Byzantine empire], some have argued, on the basis of the Ninth Apostolic
Canon, that those who do not communicate should be excommunicated.
However, as Balsamon point out, the Canon penalizes only those who create
disorder by leaving the Church before the end of the Liturgy [my italics VM].
What people are required to do is to stay until the dismissal has been
pronounced and they have received antidoron (the blessed bread distributed
to those who have, for whatever reason, been unable to communicate). They
cannot be compelled to communicate against their will, especially if their
conscience if bothering them.594
Commenting on the same Canon, the famous Serbian canonist, Bishop
Nicodemus (Milash) of Dalmatia, writes: In the first period of the Church the
communion of Christians was expressed mainly in the common participation
of all the faithful in the Lords Supper (I Corinthians 10.16, 17) and in
everyone remaining unanimously in the church (Acts 2.46, 20.7). Moreover,
this communion, expressed in this way, was laid at the base of the
composition of the rite of the Liturgy, so that the catechumens, who could
stay in the church with the faithful only until certain prayers, immediately the
rite of the Eucharist itself began were invited by the deacon to leave the
church, so that only the faithful remained in the church and became
participants in the Lords Supper. This was how the common thought of the
594
Manna from Athos, Bern, Oxford, New York: Peter Lang, 2006, p. 100.
446
Church concerning the spiritual union between the faithful was expressed, as
well as the fact that, for the sake of this spiritual union, every faithful could
and had the right to take part in church in all the prayers, both in the
Eucharist itself and in the common prayer after Holy Communion to thank
the Lord for His great gift. That is how it was at the beginning of the Church
of Christ, and all the faithful always came to church and not only listened to
the reading of Holy Scripture in church, but remained there until the priest,
having finished the Divine Liturgy, blessed them to leave the church.
However, this zeal began to cool among some, and many, having heard only
the reading of the Holy Scriptures, left the church. Because of this, without a
doubt, there was introduced into the rite of the Liturgy, as we read in the
Apostolic Constitutions (VIII, 9), the deacons exclamation, after reminding the
catechumens to leave the church, that not one of those having the right to
remain until the end of the service should leave it. In all probability this did
not help, and many even after the deacons exclamation still left the church
before the end of the service, thereby spoiling the reverent feeling of the true
faithful and producing disorder in the church itself. As a consequence the
present strict rule was published, which required the excommunication of
everyone who entered the church and did not remain until the end of the
service.
Some canonists understand this canon in such a way that the faithful not
only had to remain in church until the end of the Divine Liturgy, but also
were all obliged to commune of the Holy Mysteries. It is possible that this
interpretation is correct, since the places from Holy Scripture cited above in
explanation of this canon can serve to confirm it. However, it cannot be that
all the faithful were forced to commune each time they went to church, since
it could easily happen that that not everyone was prepared to commune,
either through the intimations of his own conscience, or by dint of some other
reasons from his personal or public life. In order that such people should be
counted worthy of at any rate some participation in the holy things, on the
one hand, and in order to avoid the heaviness of the punishment imposed by
this canon, on the other, and in order also to oblige those who could not
commune nevertheless to stay in church until the end of the Divine Liturgy,
there was introduced the distribution of antidoron, which everyone had to
receive from the hands of the priest or for his own sanctification.595
St. Nicodemus anticipates the possibility that someone, on reading
Chrysostoms word that those who do not receive Communion when they
have no canonical impediment are not worthy to go to the Liturgy, may reply:
Since this is how it is, I am not going to the Liturgy at all. Then he writes:
No, my brother, no. You are not permitted to do this, either, because you
excommunicate yourself, as the Holy Oecumenical Fifth-Sixth Synod of 692
decrees when it says: If anyone, while living in the city, does not go to
595
Bishop Nicodemus, Pravila Pravoslavnoj Tserkvi (The Canons of the Orthodox Church), St.
Petersburg, 1911, Moscow, 2001, volume 1, pp. 68-69 (in Russian).
447
448
But suppose that the three-day rule is observed together with the rule of
compulsory Communion at every Liturgy. In that case, two possible
consequences may be foreseen. Either laypeople, in order to preserve some
normality of family and marital life, will go less often to the Liturgy, and
perhaps leave the Church altogether. And that, of course, would be a
tragedy Or they will drastically curtail marital relations to a very few times
in the year and introduce a semi-monastic regime into the family.
Now the latter consequence might seem attractive and desirable to certain
Manichaean heretics who see sexual relations in marriage as sinful. But it does
not correspond to the Apostolic teaching. Thus St. Paul says to married
couples: Deprive ye not one another, unless it be with consent for a time in
order that ye may have time for prayer; and come together again, lest Satan
tempt you because of your lack of self-control (I Corinthians 7.3). So married
couples are exhorted to strike a balance. On the one hand, they must devote
certain periods to prayer and fasting and sexual abstention. These include the
Wednesday and Friday fasts, the four major fasts of the Church year and
additional three-day fasts before Communion in non-fasting periods provided both partners agree to them. But then they must come together
again. For married couples are not given the grace of complete abstinence,
and to force them to that, even under the pretext of piety, is to go against, not
only human nature, but also the will of God. In the worst cases, - and I have
seen one such worst case, - it will lead to the break-up of the family and the
falling away of all of the family members from the Church
To conclude: in this, as in many other Church questions, we have to take
account of the real while never losing sight of the ideal. The ideal, no doubt, is
frequent liturgies, the attendance of all parish members at all liturgies and the
communing of all members of the parish at all those liturgies. But it is
doubtful whether that ideal has ever been attained, even in the Early Church.
And by striving too inflexibly for the ideal without taking into account the
real we may actually make the reality worse. It is better to tread the Royal
Way between the extremes of excessive zeal and excessive slackness, striving
for the heights but humbly recognizing our weaknesses. St. Seraphim said
that virtue is not like a pear it cannot be swallowed all at once. The slow but
steady path of doing what we can in obedience to the Churchs rules, pushing
ourselves forward, but not beyond our personal strength and in full
consciousness of our weakness, is the way that will lead us to the heights in
the long run.
January 27 / February 9, 2008.
St. John Chrysostom.
449
598
450
At first it would seem that the Russian rite contradicts the Greek in giving
power to the priest himself, independently of God: May our Lord and God,
Jesus Christ, through the grace and bounties of His love for mankind, forgive
thee, my child N., all thy transgressions. And I, an unworthy priest, through the
power given unto me by Him, do forgive and absolve thee from all thy sins.600
However, there is reason for believing that the use of the personal pronoun
I here was introduced into the Slavonic rite of absolution in the Ukraine in
the seventeenth century under Catholic influence, and therefore does not
express the Apostolic tradition. Earlier, however, the Russian rite attributes to
the priest a much more modest role: Behold, my child, Christ standeth here
invisibly and receiveth thy confession I am but a witness, bearing testimony
before Him of all the things which thou hast said to me.601
That God alone forgives sins is also testified in the Lives of the Saints.
Thus in the Life of St. Peter, Archbishop of Alexandria we read that the priests
Achilles and Alexander, together with many believing and noble citizens,
went to St. Peter when he was in prison for the faith and asked him to receive
the heretic, Arius, whom he had excommunicated, back into the Church. Peter
replied: Beloved, you do not know for whom it is that you make this request.
You ask forgiveness for a man who rends and shall tear asunder the Church
of Christ. You know that I love all my sheep and do not wish that even one of
them should perish. Before all else I pray Gods compassion to grant salvation
to all and to forgive the sins of every man. But Arius I refuse to accept, for he
has been cast out of the Holy Church by God Himself and excommunicated
not so much in accordance with my judgement as with Gods602
Again, in the Life of St. Gregory, Bishop of Agrigentum (+6 th century) we
read: Then Eudocia threw herself at the feet of Saint Gregory, crying, Have
mercy on me, O servant of God, and forgive me, the wretch, who have sinned
against you!... It is not given us to forgive sins, said Gregory, but the most
merciful God. However, we are obliged to pray for the remission of mens sins, so I
will beseech His compassion to forgive your offenses.603
So the role of the priest is to pray and to witness; but it is God Who works
and Who forgives the sin. Thus St. John Chrysostom points out that the power
of the sacrament works even through unworthy priests precisely because the
power does not come from men, but from God, while the priest merely lends
his tongue and offers his hand: For the sake of you, the right-minded, will
He, though the priests be exceedingly vile, work all the things that are His,
and will send the Holy Spirit For the things which are placed in the hands
A Manual of Eastern Orthodox Prayers, p. 60.
A Manual of Eastern Orthodox Prayers, p. 59.
602
St. Demetrius of Rostov, The Great Collection of the Lives of the Saints, House Springs, Mo.:
Chrysostom Press, 2001, volume III: November, p. 592.
603 St. Demetrius of Rostov, The Great Collection of the Lives of the Saints, House Springs, Mo.:
Chrysostom Press, 2001, volume III: November, p. 537.
600
601
451
of the priests it is with God alone to give; and however far human wisdom
may reach, it will appear inferior to that grace But why speak I of priests?
Neither Angel nor Archangel can do anything with regard to what is given
from God; but the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit dispense all, while the
priest lends his tongue and offers his hand. For neither would it be just that
through the wickedness of another, those who come in faith to the symbols of
their salvation should be harmed.604
Again, Blessed Theophylact of Bulgaria writes: The power to forgive sins
is a divine power; hence, we must show honor to the priests as to God. Even if
they are unworthy, they are still ministers of divine gifts, and grace flows
through them just as it flowed through Balaams ass, enabling it to speak.
Human frailty does not hinder the working of grace. Therefore, since grace is
bestowed through the priests, let us honor them.605
So for the sake of Gods justice and mercy, the sincere believer will not be
deprived of the gifts of the Holy Spirit including the remission of sins that
are given through the priesthood, even if the priest is evil, because the power
is from God. But the reverse is also true: if the penitent does not in fact repent,
then he remains bound, whatever the priest says. As St. Innocent,
Metropolitan of Moscow, writes: He who does not think at all about
correcting himself confesses in vain, labors in vain, for even if the priest says,
I forgive and absolve, the Holy Spirit does not forgive and absolve him!606
So the power to bind and to loose is conditional - conditional on the priest
having true knowledge of Gods will in relation to the penitent, whether he
has been forgiven by God or not forgiven, and conditional on the penitent
truly repenting. It is not the priest who forgives or refuses to forgive, but God:
his task is to discern whether God has forgiven or not, and to act accordingly.
This leads us to the provisional conclusion that the priests power to bind
and to loose is not in fact a power in the conventional sense. It is not a power
to forgive sins in the active sense, but a power to discern whether sins have
already been forgiven. Thus according to the English Orthodox Father, the
Venerable Bede (+735), the power to bind and to loose consists precisely in
the power of discerning who is worthy to enter the Kingdom: The keys of the
Kingdom designate the actual knowledge and power of discerning who are
worthy to be received into the Kingdom, and who should be excluded from it
as unworthy.607
452
Again, St. John of Karpathos interprets the keys given to Peter in terms of
spiritual knowledge: Peter was first given the keys, but then he was allowed to
fall into sin by denying Christ, and so his pride was humbled by his fall. Do
not be surprised, then, if after receiving the keys of spiritual knowledge you fall
into various evil thoughts.
Again, St. Symeon the New Theologian speaks of the key of knowledge:
What shall I say to those who want to enjoy a reputation, and be made
priests and prelates and abbots, who want to receive the confidence of others
thoughts, and who say that they are worthy of the task of binding and loosing?
When I see that they know nothing of the necessary and divine things, nor
teach those things to others nor lead them to the light of knowledge, what else
is it but what Christ says to the Pharisees and lawyers: Woe to you lawyers!
For you have taken away the key of knowledge; you do not enter yourselves,
and you have hindered those who are entering (Luke 11.52). But what is the
key of knowledge other than the grace of the Holy Spirit given through
faith?608
The following incident from the Life of the Holy New Hieroconfessor
Theodore Rafanovich (+1975) shows the absolute sovereignty of God in this
matter. In 1923 Fr. Theodore was arrested and exiled to Chernigov, where he
served with New Hieromartyr Archbishop Pachomius of Chernigov (+1937).
However, some priests slandered him to Archbishop Pachomius, who banned
him from serving. Some time later, when Vladyka was beginning to celebrate
the liturgy, he felt himself as it were bound, and it was revealed to him that the
reason was his unjust punishment of Fr. Theodore. Vladyka stopped the
service and ordered Fr. Theodore to be brought to him in the altar. Bowing
down to him to the earth, Vladyka asked his forgiveness and blessed him to
serve with him609
*
Let us now approach the subject from a somewhat different point of view,
and ask whether the power of forgiving sins, however, we interpret it, is
given to priests alone.
And let us begin with the Holy Scriptures. In the Old Testament Nathan
the Prophet, although not a priest, as far as we know, received Davids
confession and then announced to him Gods forgiveness in a manner
reminiscent of the sacrament of Confession (II Kings 12.13). In the New
Testament, St. James the Brother of the Lord and first Bishop of Jerusalem,
urges Christians to confess to each other and thereby receive forgiveness.
608
453
Averky, Rukovodstvo k Izucheniu Sviaschennago Pisania Novago Zaveta (Guide to the Study of
the Sacred Scriptures of the New Testament), volume 2, Jordanville, 1987, p. 150 (in Russian).
610
454
not burst out against him. Do you see how mourning for sins wipes away
sins?611
In another passage, St. Ambrose indicates that a sinner needs above all an
intercessor to plead for him before God, but does not say that that intercessor
has to be of the priestly rank: It is written, If a man has sinned against God,
who shall entreat for Him? (I Kings 2.25). The writer implies, not an ordinary
man or one of the common sort, but only a man of excellent life and singular
merit. It must be such a one as Moses, who both merited and obtained that for
which he asked (Moses also asked for obtained forgiveness for his brother
Aaron. Moses and Aaron were of the priestly tribe of Levi, but it appears that
Moses role was not that of a priest, which belonged to his brother, but rather
that of a king, as we see in icons of Moses and Aaron.) Such intercessors,
then, must be sought for after very grievous sins Stephen prayed for his
persecutors who had not been able even to listen to the name of Christ, when
he said of those very men by whom he was being stoned, Lord, lay not this
sin to their charge. And we see the result of this prayer: Paul, who held the
garments of those who were stoning Stephen, not long after became an
apostle by the grace of God, having previously been a persecutor.612
According to the tradition of the Desert Fathers, unordained but holy
monks were put in charge of novices and had the boldness to say whether a
novice had received forgiveness from God independently, as it would seem,
of the sacrament of confession. St. Basil the Great writes: Confession of sins
is to be made to those who are able to heal From old times, the penitents
confessed to saints.613 The confessors of his days often included unordained
monks, such as St. Barsanuphius the Great.614
Nor could the priesthood make up for a lack of holiness. For, as St.
Dionysius the Areopagite writes, a priest who is unillumined (aphotistos) is
no priest, not at all, but an enemy, a trickster, one [who] fools himself and [is]
a wolf amidst the people of God. 615
Again, Golitzin points out that in the Eastern Church the sacrament of
confession by a priest did not enjoy any official status as a sacrament
(leitourgema) until the time of Symeon of Thessalonica in the fifteenth
century.616 This may be related to the fact that in the Greek Church then, as
now, permission is not immediately granted to a priest to carry out Confession
that is, to become a pnevmatikos, or spiritual father: only after a period of
St. Ambrose, Second Homily on Repentance; quoted in George S. Gabriel, On Confession and
the Power to Remit Sins, Dewdney, B.C.: Synaxis Press, 1994, p. 30.
612 St. Ambrose, Concerning Repentance, book 1; in Gabriel, op. cit., p. 28.
613 St. Basil, Ascetical Works; in Gabriel, op. cit., p. 26.
614 Gabriel, op. cit., p. 31.
615 St. Dionysius, Epistle VIII; quoted in Golitzin, St. Symeon the New Theologian: On the Mystical
Life; The Ethical Discourses, volume 3, Crestwood, N.Y.: St. Vladimirs Seminary Press, 1997.
616 Golitzin, op. cit.
611
455
testing is he granted this right. This would appear to indicate that the power
to bind and to loose is not automatically granted to all canonically ordained
priests, and is not inherent in the gift of the priesthood as such.
In the seventh century, St. Anastasius of Sinai was asked how many ways
there were of receiving the forgivness of sins. He answered this question as
follows: Three. The first is: to stop sinning. The second is: to repent worthily.
And there is a third way for sinners to be saved: through temptations and
sorrows and patience For there are times when God casts the sinner who
does not repent into temptations and through the temptations he comes to
humility, and through humility he is saved without asceticism. 617 It is
striking that the saint says nothing here about the sacrament of Confession.
Perhaps because neither the sacrament of Confession nor any other sacrament
in which the forgiveness of sins is given (e.g. Holy Communion and Holy
Unction) is of any use if there is no true repentance or humility in the soul of
the penitent. But in his next answer the saint does speak about confession, if
not to a priest, at any rate to another Christian. Thus in response to the
question: Is it good to confess ones sins? he answers: It is good and very
useful but not to all, for it will not only not benefit you [to confess to
anybody], but will also defile those who listen to you. Therefore find a
spiritual man, who is able to heal you and pray for you, and confess to him
alone.618 In his next answer, Anastasius replies to the question how a man
can know that God has forgiven him, not by referring to a priests prayer of
absolution, but to a more internal criterion: From his own conscience, and
from the boldness his soul has in prayer to God.619
Could it be accidental that the saint does not refer to the sacrament of
Confession as one of the ways of receiving the forgiveness of sins, nor to the
prayer of absolution as giving reassurance of forgiveness? It appears not,
because in an earlier and more extensive answer to the same question, while
warning against the danger of confessing to inexperienced and passionate
men, blind guides leading the blind, he writes: If you find an experienced
spiritual man who is able to heal you, confess to him without shame and with
faith, as to the Lord For John the Theologian says that if we confess our sins,
God is faithful and just to take away our sins and cleanse us from all iniquity
(I John 3.6) Again, the Brother of the Lord according to the flesh says:
Confess your sins one to another, and pray for each other that ye may be
healed. The effectual fervent prayer of a righteous man availeth much. (James
5.16) Again, the Apostle [Paul] says: Bear ye one anothers burdens and in
this way fulfil the law of Christ (Galatians 6.6) For it is Gods custom to
work the salvation of men not only through angels but also through holy men.
Of old it was through the prophets, and in the last times it was through
Himself and the Divine Apostles Therefore if it is a man who listens to the
St. Anastasius, Odigos (The Guide), Answer 104, Mount Athos, 1970, p. 171 (in Greek).
St. Anastasius, Odigos, Answer 105, p. 171.
619
St. Anastasius, Odigos, Answer 106, p. 171.
617
618
456
confession, it is God who through him converts and educates and forgives,
just as he forgave David through Nathan For the saints are the ministers of
God and co-workers and stewards unto the salvation of those who wish to be
saved 620 So the saint by no means undervalues the importance of
confession before others, but it must be to an experienced man a saint, in
fact. He does not say that confession must be to a priest, just as St. James in
the passage quoted does not refer to the necessity of confessing before a priest
(although in the previous verse he says that the elders of the Church have
to be called to carry out the sacrament of Holy Unction).
Why is it necessary to confess before an experienced and holy man? First,
because, as St. Anastasius points out, the penitent may involuntarily defile the
confessor by putting evil thoughts and desires into his mind. Secondly,
because in the case of serious, and even not so serious sins, a penance
(epitimia) is necessary in order to deepen the penitents consciousness of his
sin and help him to prevent a repetition of the sin in the future. 621 A
passionate confessor will not be able to do this. He will give inappropriate
penances and advice, either too strict or too lenient; and his whole attitude to
the penitents confession may be such as to discourage the penitent from
confessing to him again.
A most important witness to the patristic tradition in this question comes
from St. Symeon the New Theologian. In his Letter on Confession, he writes:
Let us see from when, and how, and to whom this power of celebrating
the sacraments [hierourgein] and of binding and loosing was given from the
beginning, and so proceed in due order just as you asked the question so that
the solution may be clear, not just for you but for everyone else. When our
Lord and God and Savior said to the man who had the withered hand, Yours
sins are forgiven you, the Hebrews in attendance were all saying: This man
is blaspheming. Who can forgive sins except God alone? (Matthew 9.3; Mark
2.7; Luke 5.21). Up to that time remission of sins had not yet been granted, not
to prophets, nor to priests, not to any of the patriarchs. The scribes were thus
making difficulties because, really, a kind of strange, new teaching and reality
was being proclaimed. And, because of this newness and strangeness, the
Lord did not find fault with them. Instead, He taught them what they were
ignorant of by proving that it was as God and not as man that He granted
remission of sins. For He says to them: But that you may know that the Son
of Man has authority to forgive sins (Matthew 9.6), He says to the man with
the withered hand, Stretch out your hand, and he stretched it out and it was
restored whole, healthy like the other (Matthew 12.13). By means of this
St. Anastasius, Odigos, Answer 6, pp. 16, 17.
As Bishop Hilarion Alfeyev writes: The sacrament of Confession is not limited to a mere
acknowledgement of sins. It also can offer advice on how to avoid particular sins in the
future. The sacrament of Confession is not limited to a mere acknowledgement of sins. It also
involves recommendations, or sometimes epitimia (penalties) on the part of the priest. It is
primarily in the sacrament of Confession that the priest acts in his capacity of spiritual
father. (The Mystery of Faith, London: Dartman, Longman & Todd, 2002, p. 145).
620
621
457
visible wonder He provided a guarantee of the greater and invisible one. The
same applies to Zacchaeus (Luke 19.1ff), to the harlot (Luke 7.36f), to Matthew
at his tax collectors post (Matthew 9.9f), to Peter after he had denied the Lord
three times (John 18.17), to the paralytic (John 5.5) to whom, after the Lord
had healed him, He said: See, you are well! Sin no more, that nothing worse
may befall you (John 5.14). By saying this He showed that the man had been
taken by illness because of his sins and that, in being freed from the former,
he had also received forgiveness of the latter, not because he had been
praying for it for a long time, not because of fasting, not due to his lying on
the ground, but instead and only because of his conversion and unhesitating
faith, his breaking-off with evil and true repentance and many tears, just as
the harlot (Luke 7.38 and 44) and Peter who wept bitterly (Matthew 26.75).
Here is the source of that great gift which is proper uniquely to God and
which the Lord alone possessed. Next, just as He was about to ascend into
heaven, He bequeathed this great charism to His disciples in His stead. How
did He imbue them with this dignity and authority? Let us find out the what,
and the how much, and the when. The chosen eleven disciples were gathered
together behind closed doors. He entered and stood in their midst and
breathed on them, saying: Receive ye the Holy Spirit, whosoever sins you
forgive, they are forgiven them; if you retain the sins of any, they are retained
(John 20.22-23). At that time He enjoined on them nothing about penances,
since they were going to be taught [about such things] by the Holy Spirit.
As we said, therefore, the holy Apostles summoned this authority in
succession for those who were to hold their thrones. Not one of the rest of the
disciples ever conceived of presuming upon it. The Lords disciples preserved
with all exactitude the rightness of this authority. But, as we said, when time
had gone by, the worthy grew mixed and mingled with the unworthy, with
one contending in order to have precedence over another and feigning virtue
for the sake of preferment. Thus, because those who were holding the
Apostles thrones were shown up as fleshly minded, as lovers of pleasure and
seekers of glory, and as inclining towards heresies, the divine grace
abandoned them and this authority was taken away from them. Therefore,
having abandoned as well everything else which is required of those who
celebrate the sacraments, this alone is demanded of them: that they be
Orthodox. But I do not myself think that they are even this. Someone is not
Orthodox just because he does not slip some new dogma into the Church of
God, but because he possesses a life which keeps harmony with true teaching.
Such a life and such a man contemporary patriarchs and metropolitans have
at different times either looked for and not found, or, if they find him, they
prefer [to ordain] the unworthy candidate instead. They ask only this of him,
that he put the symbol of the faith [the Creed] down in writing. They find this
alone acceptable, that the man be neither a zealot for the sake of what is good,
nor that he battle with anyone because of evil. In this way they pretend that
458
they keep peace here in the Church. This is worse than active hostility [to
God], and it is a cause of great unrest.
It is because of this that the priests have also grown worthless and no
better than the people. None of them are that salt of which the Lord spoke
(Matthew 5.13), able to constrain and reprove and keep the life of another
from wasting away. Instead, they are aware of and conceal each others faults,
and have become themselves inferior to the people, and the people in turn
still worse than before. Some of the latter, though, have been revealed as
superior to the priests. In the lightless gloom of the clergy these people appear
as burning coals. If the former were, according to the Lords word (Matthew
5.16), to shine in their lives like the sun, then these coals would seem radiant
but would be dark in comparison to the greater light. But, since only the
likeness and vesture of the priesthood is left among men, the gift of the Holy
Spirit has passed to the monks. It has been revealed through signs that they
have entered by their actions into the life of the Apostles. Here too, however,
the devil has been busy at his proper work. For when he saw that they had
been revealed as, in a way, the new disciples of Christ in the world, and that
they had shown forth in their lives and done miracles, he introduced false
brethren, his disciples, and when after a little while, these had multiplied (as
you can see for yourself!), the monks as well were rendered useless and
became altogether as if they were not monks at all.
Therefore it is neither to those in the habit of monks, nor to those
ordained and enrolled in the rank of the priesthood, nor yet to those who
have been honoured with the dignity of the episcopate I mean the patriarchs
and metropolitans and bishops that God has given the grace of forgiving
sins merely by virtue of their having been ordained. Perish the thought! For
these are allowed only to celebrate the sacraments (and I think myself that
even this does not apply to many of them, lest they be burned up entirely by
this service who are themselves but straw). Rather, this grace is given alone to
those, as many as there are among priests and bishops and monks, who have
been numbered with Christs disciples on account of their purity of life622
*
Now the authority of St. Symeon in the Orthodox Church is great. He is
one of only three saints to whom the title of theologian has been given. He
knew the mysteries of God, not through reading or instruction, but through
direct experience. Nevertheless, these words seem, at first sight, to be at
variance with the tradition of the Church as a whole. Can it be that a priest
who is correctly ordained, and Orthodox in his confession of faith, but not
Orthodox in his way of life, can lose the power to bind and to loose, while a
man who is not ordained according to the traditional order, as St. Symeon
puts it, can nevertheless receive that power because of the purity of his life?
622
459
460
461
3.1). It was only after the revolution (and not only in Russia) that this inner
spiritual death of the majority of Orthodox Christians was revealed, when
great numbers of them fell away into heresies or schisms or simply atheism.
In these conditions, the Holy Spirit that guides the Church and her leaders
laid special emphasis on the sacrament of confession as that vital link that was
still able to reunite the fallen Christian to the Church. For the Christian that
has fallen into mortal sin cannot be rebaptized: his only chance of salvation is
to confess his sins, to undergo that second baptism by tears. But only in very
few cases can he do that alone: he needs a helper, a mediator and that, in the
majority of cases, can only be the local priest. Moreover, for the Christian who
has just come to a realization of the terrible seriousness of his sins, there is the
danger of despair, of feeling that he cannot be forgiven. And here the formula
of absolution which the priest alone has the right to pronounce, absolving all
his sins with certainty in the name of the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit (as
long as the penitent truly repents), represents a vital assurance.
In the Russian Empire a minimum once-a-year confession before a priest
was mandatory according to State law. This measure has been frequently
criticized as being none of the States business; but if one reads the lives of
Russian saints who confessed large numbers of once-a-year laity, such as St.
John of Kronstadt, and notes the regularity with which they had to absolve
mortal sins, one can see this measure may well have saved many from eternal
damnation. And if the generally low spiritual level of the priesthood still
represented a real danger (priests of the quality of St. John or the Optina
elders were very rare), nevertheless the danger of despising the priesthood,
and not going to confession at all, represented a much greater danger
There is another reason why, in these conditions of steep spiritual decline,
the sacrament of confession should have acquired such importance. When
many Christians have committed mortal sins, but have not come to a full
realization of their seriousness, it becomes a necessity for the priest to be able
to refuse them Divine Communion, lest they partake to their condemnation
and he himself incur the wrath of God for communicating the unworthy. But
this is not possible if the priest does not know the Christian, as was often the
case in large city churches in Russia, and has not heard his confession.
As St. Innocent, Metropolitan of Moscow, said: It is necessary to reveal
your sins properly and without any concealment. Some say, For what reason
should I reveal my sins to Him Who knows all of our secrets? Certainly God
knows all of our sins; but the Church, which has the power from God to
forgive and absolve sins, cannot know them, and for this reason She cannot,
without confession, pronounce Her absolution627
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For unless he is clairvoyant, there is no way for the priest to know whether
a Christian should be admitted to the Holy Mysteries unless he has heard his
confession, or knows that he has confessed his sins to another spiritual father.
Thus St. John Chrysostom says: Let no-one communicate who is not of the
disciples. Let no Judas receive, lest he suffer the fate of Judas I would give
up my life rather than impart of the Lords Blood to the unworthy. And I will
shed my own blood rather than give such awful Blood contrary to what is
right.628
This reminds us that the final seal of the forgiveness of sins is the mystery
of Divine Communion, and that as being the stewards of the mysteries of
God (I Corinthians 4.1), it is exclusively the priests who have the power to
bind and to loose believers who desire to approach the Holy Chalice and
receive the remission of sins through the Blood of Christ. It is this power the
power to grant or withhold access to the Holy Mysteries, the power of
spiritual life and death that the Lord gave to the Apostles and their
successors to the end of time. Thus when St. Peter of Alexandria refused to
admit the heretic Arius to Communion, he demonstrated the power of
binding. And when the local priest of every Orthodox parish admits believers
to the Chalice who have been absolved from their sins in the sacrament of
confession, he demonstrates the power of loosing But if one, looking at the
degradation of the priesthood in the contemporary Church, laments that this
power of the keys is so often abused, he should remember that we have a
Great High Priest in the heavens Who is above all earthly bishops and priests,
and Whose supremely just sentence overrides all others; for He alone killeth
and maketh alive, bringeth down into hades and raiseth up again (I Kings
2.6), insofar as He alone has the keys of hades and death (Revelation 1.18).
December 11/24, 2008.
O God and Lord of all! Who hath power over every breath and soul, the only
One able to heal me, hearken unto the prayer of me, the wretched one, and,
having put him to death, destroy the serpent nestling within me by the
descent of the All-Holy and Life-Creating Spirit. And vouchsafe me, poor and
naked of all virtue, to fall with tears at the feet of my spiritual father, and call
his holy soul to mercy, to have mercy on me. And grant, O Lord, unto my
heart the humility and good thoughts that become a sinner who hath
consented to repent unto Thee, and do not abandon unto the end the soul that
hath united itself unto Thee and hath confessed Thee, and instead of all the
world hath chosen Thee and hath preferred Thee. For Thou knowest, O Lord,
that I want to save myself, and that my evil habit is an obstacle. But all things
are possible unto Thee, O Master, which are impossible for man. Amen.
Prayer before Confession of St. Symeon the New Theologian.
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