FR Metallinos - The Way - Introduction To Orthodox Faith
FR Metallinos - The Way - Introduction To Orthodox Faith
FR Metallinos - The Way - Introduction To Orthodox Faith
INTRODUCTION :
CHRISTIANITY AS A CHURCH THROUGHOUT HISTORY
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CHAPTER 2
JESUS CHRIST : THE LIGHT AND THE HOPE OF THE WORLD
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With the year 2000, Christianity completed two millennia of historical presence and
witness. However, the term “Christianity” contains the reference to Jesus Christ,
given that the Divine-Human was the One who salvifically “invaded” the world during
a historical point in Time, changing the very course and the meaning of History.
The completion of Christianity’s second millennium is not only an opportunity to
celebrate it, but more importantly, an appropriate time to review the course of the
Christian world and the relations of contemporary Christians with the Founder of
the Church. More than anyone else, we Orthodox, who despite our sins have remained
faithful to the Tradition of our Saints (who are the only authentic Christians),
are called upon to confess to the world what Christ means to us, and with what
conscience we have embarked upon the third millennium A.D.
Naturally, for us Orthodox, the “Year 2000” chronologically speaking can only be a
date of a conventional nature, given that it has been scientifically proven that
our dating is 6 or 7 years behind the actual one, given that this was nothing more
than another year added to the natural flow of Time. Nor, again, will the
celebration of the Birth of Christ during this year differ in any way from any
other year, in the thanksgiving and the glorification that we extend to His most
holy Person for the occasion. The piety of our holy Fathers has supplied us with
incomparable homilies and texts, which penetrate deep within the mystery of the
divine Incarnation, thus composing a pious confession of faith and hope for every
Christian heart. It is with these same texts, that we confessed once again our
thanks and our glorification to our Lord Jesus Christ, “lauding Him as God,
throughout time”. What, then, is Christ, for us Orthodox?
3. A “self-appointed” Saviour
The enlightened poet of the Akathest Hymn highlights an amazing aspect of the
Incarnation: “Desirous of saving creation, the Creator of all creation went to it,
as one self-appointed”. Christ, the Creator of the world, also becomes the Saviour
of the world, but specifically “self-appointed”! He ‘invaded’ History and Time in
a salvific manner, in order to provide the potential for salvation. The sole
motive behind this God-begotten move was His Love. “For thus did God love the
world, that He gave His only-born Son, so that everyone who believed in Him would
not be lost, but will have eternal life” (John 3:16). “Proof of God’s love for us,
was that even though we are still sinful, Christ died for our sake” (Romans 5:8).
The Incarnation was God’s loving response to mankind’s yearning for redemption.
Christ is the measure of Divine Love. The Incarnation and the Sacrifice of the
Divine-Human Christ is the greatest proof that God loves the world. The Orthodox
Patristic Tradition did not need to resort to any juridical theories in order to
interpret the “Vacating” of the God-Logos (i.e., to “satisfy a divine sense of
justice”, according to Anselm of Canterbury); it merely remained faithful to the
words of the Apostles. In the Person of the Divine-Human, God offers Himself, “for
us people, and for our salvation”; “He accepts everything, to save mankind”. What
weighs most in the event of the Divine Incarnation is the term “through Him”: “so
that the world may be saved, through Him”! This constitutes a truly majestic
display of Divine Love; not only for the realization of salvation, but also because
God knew that salvation could only be realized “through Him”. “For there is no
other name under the heavens, which has been given to mankind, through which we can
(it is possible for us to) be saved” (Acts 4:12). Salvation is possible, only in
Christ, the only Divine-Human! Christ can save, because He is Divine-Human. What
does this mean?
Christ’s divine-human characteristic is denoted by His name: the “Christ”. His
full and proper name for us Orthodox is “Jesus Christ”. Christ is also referred to
as the God-Human, because His divine and His human natures are never separated.
They were “distinctly and inseparably” joined in the Person of the God-Logos, Who
“hypostatically” unites His two perfect natures. The term “Christ” means “the
anointed one”. With the Incarnation, Man was anointed by God; human nature by the
divine one. It is therefore a heresy and a delusion, for one to regard Christ only
as God, by disregarding His Incarnation, or, only as a man – albeit a sage and a
model of morality – forgetting that He continued to be the true God, even after His
incarnation. Without the God-Human Christ, there can be no Christianity, nor the
possibility for salvation. According to Basil the Great, “the name ‘Christ’ is a
confession of everything: for it signifies God as the anointer, the Son as the
anointed, and the Spirit as the anointment….” (PG 32, 116). When accepting Christ
as the Divine Human, we are expressing our belief in the Holy Trinity; otherwise,
we are denying it.
In the Divine Human Christ, man was joined to God in a perfect and unique manner.
The created thus acquired a unique potential for theosis/deification – to be united
with the Uncreated – because this could only be attained through its union with the
Divine Human. That was the purpose of the Incarnation: not simply the improvement
of human matters, but the deification of Man and the sanctification of the material
world. In the person of the Divine Human Christ we become familiarized with God,
but not in an abstract, contemplative or intellectual sense. Christ, as the God-
Human, revealed the God of our Fathers: of Abraham, of Isaac, of Jacob. The
historical God-Human Christ is the essence of God’s revelation - the essence of
Christianity. The God-Human Christ is the entirety of Revelation, Who leads us to
the true cognizance/knowledge of God. Knowledge of God outside the God-Human
Christ is nonexistent. And this is where we find the element that differentiates
Christianity from every other form of religion (belief), but also the
“transcendence” of religion “in Christ”. Every leader and founder of a religion
(beliefs) refers his followers to a certain deity. Only Christ referred the people
to His Person (“…I am...”, “…I say to you…”). Religious sects presuppose a
movement from below upwards, in search of God. The God-Human Christ is the One Who
“descended from heaven” (John 3:13). This is why He was entitled to say “No-one
recognizes the Son, except for the Father, and no-one recognizes the Father, except
for the Son” (Matthew 11:27). Christ, as the God-Human, is the Triadic God’s act
of love towards the world. The Triadic God is One, and the God-Human Saviour of
the world is One. In the words of Saint Gregory Palamas, “if the Logos of God had
not been incarnated, the Father would not have been demonstrated as truly being the
Father; the Son would not have been demonstrated as being His Son, and the Holy
Spirit would not have been demonstrated as also coming from the Father.” (Hellenic
Fathers 151,204).
By choosing for Himself (more than 80 times, as seen in the Gospels) the title
stated by Daniel (“Son of Man” – Daniel 7:13), Christ was thus revealing His
Messianic self-awareness as the anticipated God-Human. This is precisely what He
had straightforwardly declared to the Samaritan woman (and later Saint Fotini) a
somewhat misconstrued person (who was however illuminated by His Grace), when He
said to her: “It is I, the one who is talking to you” (John 4:26), when she asked
Him about the arrival of the Messiah.
When referring to His salvific mission, Christ characterizes Himself as “the Way,
the Truth, and the Life”: “I am the Way, and the Truth, and the Life” (John
14:6), He had said to Thomas, when the latter had expressed the query: “Lord, we do
not know where You are going, so how are we able to see the way?” (v.5) Being “the
Way”, Christ is the only road to salvation-deification – to Man’s eternal
fulfillment. He is the sole “mediator” (1 Timothy 2:5) Who bridges the gap that
separates the sinner from God and reconciles man with Him (“reprieves”, Romans
5:10) - and naturally, not because it is God Who changes His disposition. “It is
not He Who feels enmity, but we; for God never feels enmity” (John Chrysostom, PG
61, 470). This is why Christ proclaims “I am the gate; if one should enter, he
shall be saved.” (John 10:9). It is worth noting that, after Christ had
characterized Himself as “the Road” to God and Salvation, Christianity was
correspondingly named “the road” (Acts 9:2), inasmuch as it was the road (way of
life) that led to salvation. This was the first known name for the new faith, up
until the faithful in Christ were eventually named “Christians” (Acts 11:25).
Christ as “the Truth” is the One Who brought to the world the authentic manner of
existence, which can lead to the real life – the true life. Naturally, when Pilate
asked Christ “what is the truth?” (John 18:30), he was not being accurate. He
should have asked: “Who is the truth?”; because, as we mentioned earlier, Christ
relates the Truth to His Person. He is the incarnate personification of the All-
Truth! The Way and the Truth are inseparably connected, in Christ. The Way to God
passes through the Truth. If the Christ who is being offered by a “Christian”
community that seeks to call itself a “church” is not the true Christ – the one and
only God-Human Christ – then that community is a “heresy” and cannot lead anyone to
salvation. This is the drama of the heresies and the pseudo-messiahs of the world.
However, it is also the criterion of the Christian “dogma” - the faith/teaching of
the Church. A dogma is not a sum of abstract “truths” that are imposed on Man
“from above”. It is the recorded experience of the theumens – the Saints – and it
has a therapeutic character. It helps the faithful to seek salvation in the
correct manner and to be led to it. Christ admitted about Himself that: “for this
did I come to the world: to testify the truth” (John 18:37). Christ’s overall
redemptive opus is the multi-faceted revealing of the redemptive personal Truth of
Christ Himself. And that, precisely, is the Orthodoxy of our Fathers. Christ is
Orthodoxy in the flesh.
As the living Truth, Christ not only reveals God – since “within Him resides the
fullness of godhood, bodily” (Colossians 2:9) and is a complete God – as is the
Father and the Holy Spirit – but He also reveals the true and authentic man. This
was declared (unwittingly, and moved by the Grace of God) by Pilate, when he had
pointed out to the crowds: “Behold, the Man” (John 19:5), because Christ is indeed
a man – the complete/perfect Man - and the salvific model for every man.
Christ, as the Self-Truth, was also the content of His teaching – His prophetic
preaching. That is why “all of the people hung from His lips” (Luke 19:48), and
this, because “he taught, as one who had authority and not like the Scribes”
(Matthew 7:29). The spies sent out by the potentates to spy on Him had confessed
that: “never has a man ever spoken the way that this man has” (John 7:46). The
search, therefore, for common points of reference in Christ’s teaching is a futile
one. His teaching cannot be compared to any other teacher, religious leader or
philosopher. The claim that “this was also said by the philosopher so-and-so”, for
the purpose of demoting Christ, indicates a persistence in focusing on the words
that were said, and an ignorance of the “Logos”-Christ. Phrasal coincidences are
not proofs of an overall coincidence. Overall, Christ’s teaching is the revelation
of His unique identity, which will lead either to one’s acceptance of Him as
Savior, or one’s rejection. After all, His teaching is linked to His Person. He
is the one who dared to state: “…for I tell ye…”. His word is the “seed” of divine
Grace, which seeks the “benevolent soil”, the pure heart, so that it may bring
forth fruits (Luke 8:15). The words of Christ do not save in the sense of moral
persuasions, but because they are replete with uncreated divine Grace. They are
words spoken by God. “Within Him is life, and life is the light of mankind” (John
1:4).
Everything that exists in Christ is life. With all His redemptive means, Christ
transmits-offers Himself. He is “the offerer and the offering” of the Divine
Liturgy and the Eucharist. The three terms “road-truth-life” as characterizations
of Christ are the expressions of a natural continuance. Christ leads to God, by
revealing Himself as the incarnate All-Truth, thus introducing us into eternal
life, which is the inner-cardiac cognizance of God (John 17:3) – our union with
Him.
8. “A mark of contradiction”
Symeon the Elder, when holding the infant Christ in his arms in the Temple and
enlightened by the Holy Spirit, said the following words to the Holy Mother:
“Behold, He is to be the fall and the uplifting of many in Israel, and a mark of
contradiction” (Luke 2:34). Even from the moment of His Birth, both friends and
enemies had surrounded Him - not only the meek shepherds or the wise and reverent
Magi, but also the ferocious Herod; not only the Angels, but Satan also. Mankind’s
History is continuously arrayed around the Person of Christ. Christ became the
magnet that attracts everyone, whether with the intent to accept Him and follow
Him, or to reject Him and fight Him. This is because some see salvation in His
Person and others see their downfall, depending on the content of their hearts.
Every dark and inhuman existence is bound to hate Christ, because His light
inevitably reveals and checks its works (see John 3:20). “He who enacts the truth
approaches towards the Light, so that his works might be revealed that they have
been enacted in God” (21).
However, behind the polemics against Christ is the pre-eternal enemy of Man: the
Devil. Christ was incarnated, in order to “dissolve (abolish) the works of the
devil” (1 John 3:8), thus liberating Man from the devil’s power. He did not come
into the world, simply to introduce one more religion, even the most perfect one –
the “religion of love” as some romantically believe – but to renovate man’s entire
life, as well as the world’s: from the Holy Bema of the Temple to the marketplace,
the place of one’s profession, the School, Parliament… If Christ had confined
Himself (and us) within the four walls of a Temple, He would not have provoked the
ungodly powers of the world, because society is their realm of domination, and this
realm – their kingdom – would have remained intact and free, at their disposal
only. If Herod had learnt that another religious leader had been born, he would
not have been in the least disturbed. A religious leader, regardless of his
magnitude, was not an irreparable threat to secular authority. Herod, however,
confronted Christ as a newborn king, and in His person, he saw a usurper to his
authority. And, albeit Christ never usurps the authority of any Herod, given that
“His kingdom is not of this world” (John 18:36), it is, nevertheless a fact, that
the spiritual authority of Christ disintegrated the Devil’s reign. This is the
reason He is hated.
With Herod commenced the long line of enemies of Christ historically; they are the
ones who “hated the soul of the child” (Matthew 2:20), who will forever be planting
the Crucifix of Torture next to His Manger: the Scribes and the Pharisees, the
roman Emperors, the armies of Christ’s persecutors throughout the ages; all the
ungodly and antichrist powers, who with their various glamorous names act in a
decomposing way on societies. The portion of the world, which has chosen the devil
as its king, cannot tolerate another king; thus, Christ the King is sent away. And
the persecution of Chris is not focused on Him exclusively either, but it includes
all those who are “His”, that is, the martyrs and the confessors of His Truth. This
is why Christ prepared His Disciples psychologically: “If the world should hate
you, you must know that it hated Me first…if they persecuted Me, they will
persecute you too…” (John 15: 18-20). Consequently, this is an irreversible
certainty, which is why Christians should not overlook it. In fact, it is a
criterion of their mentality and their lifestyle, when “the (antichrist) world
hates them”.
In the past, one of the mechanisms of “persecuting” Christ was to doubt His
historicity. Specifically, “historical materialism” had formulated the view that
Christ never actually existed, and that He was merely a fictitious creation by
religious nostalgics and the mythical fantasizing of His era. Others maintained
that Christianity was a “communistic movement” of the financially oppressed masses
or the personification of the idea of “kingdom of God” by the “proletariat” masses.
However, contemporary testimonies regarding the historical existence of Christ are
sufficient and significant. They also do not originate solely from within the
realm of the Church (New Testament – Gospels mainly), but also from the non-
Christian world (Tacitus, Suetonius, Pliny, Jospehus, rabbinic literature etc.), so
that this problem has now been scientifically settled. “‘Christianity’ implies
Christ Himself, it is the incarnation in His Person of His teaching, the self-
truth, and self-perfection” (Gr. Papamichael). The interpreting of the miracle of
Christianity’s propagation on the basis of a nonexistent person would have been an
even greater miracle than the Person of Christ Himself! One can, for personal
reasons, reject the divinity of Christ, but one cannot deny His historicity.
However, the worst case of “persecuting” Christ and His Faith is the one that
originates from within – from the Christians themselves. These are the heretics of
all time, who have denied the divinity or the humanity of Christ; those who
distorted His word, adulterated His Truth and who “thus teach the people” (Matthew
9:19). These may not be able to “kill off” Christ, but by “demoting” Him, they are
killing mankind, because they are offering it a mock Christ – one that is incapable
of saving. Furthermore, the confining of Christ to a certain aspect of Him only (a
great teacher, a miracle-worker, a social reformer, etc.) also constitutes a
refuting of Christ as well as a clear denial of Him. Christ saves, when He is
accepted in His fullness, the way He revealed Himself, as “the Son of the living
God” (Matthew 16:17). This was the way that the Apostles and the Disciple accepted
Christ, and this is the way that the saved ones will be accepting Him, throughout
the ages. This is why:
CHAPTER 4
“FROM WATER AND SPIRIT” - (The Theology of the Holy Baptism)
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1. The major interpreter of the Divine Liturgy, Saint John Kavasilas (14th century)
links the existence of the Church to Her sacraments. “The Church is denoted
(revealed) by the sacraments” he underlines, implying chiefly with this the par
excellence sacrament of the Church: the Divine Eucharist. There can be no
ecclesiastic reality without sacraments; in other words, possibilities for
partaking of uncreated Divine Grace and at the same time, the means for
experiencing its Spiritual character. The Church is demarcated, revealed,
manifested and realized in Her sacraments and more especially, in the Divine
Eucharist. According to the same theologian,: “This is the road that the Lord
carved out when coming to us, and this is the gate that He opened up when entering
the world, which, when returning to the Father, He did not wish to close, but by
Him and through it, does He contact the people […] For these are the things by
which we live in Him, and move, and are…” (Acts 17:28) (PG 150, 304, 501-524).
The Church “exists and is continually shaped in the sacraments and through the
sacraments”. Her boundaries are designated, at local levels, only in compliance
with the sacramental life of the ecclesiastic body. “Those living outside the
sacramental life are outside the body of Christ”. Outside of this way of existence,
Satan and his powers dominate. (Fr. John Romanides)
Each sacrament is a possibility for becoming incorporated into the ecclesiastic
body; into the divine-human reality of the Church, and for the transformation of
the “contra-natural” way of our fallen existence to the “natural” life and
existence that renders Man receptive of Divine Grace. It is within the sacraments
that the nature of the faithful is “made new”, it is renovated and deified.
Besides, according to Saint Makarios, “It is for this reason that our Lord came; so
that he might change the nature of and renovate and reconstruct this living being,
which was destroyed by passions on account of the Fall […] and He came to forge
into new people, once and for all, all those who believe in Him.”
2. The first sacrament in this process of rebirth, but also the beginning and the
prerequisite of all the others, is the holy Baptism, “the first of His gifts” (PG
155, 185). The theology of the Baptism is extensively expounded by he holy Fathers,
from the so-called Apostolic ones to the Major Fathers of the 4th and 5th
centuries, and pursuant to them, up to Saint Nicholas Kavasilas and Saint Simeon of
Thessaloniki († 1429). This teaching was summarized by Saint Basil the Great, who
defined the two basic purposes and the dynamics of the Baptism: (a) to abolish “the
body of sin, so that it may never again bear fruits of death” and (b) provide for
the baptized to “live in the Spirit and bear fruits in sanctification” (Galatians
5:22). This is the spiritual birth or rebirth of man, which takes place, according
to the word of Christ to Nicodemus, “by water and Spirit” (John 3:5). According to
the same Father, “the water provides a representation of death, receiving the body
into it as though in burial, while the Spirit inserts life-giving force into it,
thus renovating souls, from the deadness of sin to the commencement of life from
the beginning.” (PG 32, 129 and PG 31, 429-433). This is also touched on by Saint
Gregory of Nyssa: “If one is not born –it is said- out of water and Spirit, he is
not able to enter the kingdom of God (=the communion and partaking of Grace). Why
were the two –he continues- and not just the Spirit, considered sufficient for the
completion (fulfillment) of the Baptism?” To this question, he replies: “Man is
complex, not simple, as we can accurately observe, and it was on account of this
two-fold and joint status that he was allocated the related and similar medications
for therapy: for the visible body, palpable water, and for the invisible soul, the
invisible Spirit, which is invoked in faith, and comes inexplicably.” (PG 46, 581B)
Faith, of course, in the Patristic linguistic code, is not a simple intellectual
admission thereof, given that even “the demons believe (sic) and shudder” (James
2:19), but the opening of one’s heart to Grace, and Man’s self-abandonment in God’s
Love.
Baptism, with the Grace provided by the Holy Spirit, sets in motion the Christian’s
entire spiritual course towards salvation. “If you do not become joined to the
simulation of His death, how can you become a communicant of the Resurrection? asks
Saint Basil the Great.” Given that “Baptism is a force towards the resurrection”
(PG 31, 428A ). And according to Saint Simeon of Thessaloniki, the baptized “comes
forth, to cast off the pollution of sin and faithlessness (=the absence of
spiritual relations with God), and to become new in whole, and to don te form of
the new Adam”. (PG 155, 216B) Rebirth is when Man becomes “of the same form” as
Christ (see Romans 8:29), by donning the “image of the celestial” (1 Corinthians
15:49).
The supernatural results of the Baptism are pointed out by Saint Gregory of Nyssa:
“Baptism, therefore, is the cleansing of sins, the remission of delinquencies, the
cause of renovation and rebirth; ‘Rebirth’ must be understood as a meaning that is
seen noetically, and not by the eyes […] He that is spotted overall by sins and
worn out by evil occupations, we, through a royal grace, bring him back to the
irresponsible state of an infant” (PG 46, 580D) in other words, back to the
innocence of a baby. Patristic theologizing persists on the regenerative work of
baptism. The blessed Chrysostom thus poses the question: “If baptism ‘pardons all
of our sins’, why isn’t it called ‘the bath of sin pardoning’ and instead is called
‘the bath of regeneration’?” To which he replies: “It is called thus, because ‘it
does not simply cleanse us of our misdemeanors, but instead (per John 3:7): it re-
creates and re-composes us, not shaping us out of earth once again […], but
(re)creating us out of another element: the nature of water” (PG 49, 227), hence
the reason for referring to a re-generation, a re-creation; in other words, a new
and a once-again creation. Which is exactly the significance of the Paulian
expression “new creation” (2 Cor. 5:17), which presupposes the union of Man with
Christ: “if one is in Christ, (he is/has become) a new creation”.
The Christ-centered character of Baptism is therefore very obvious. This is
pointed out by Symeon of Thessaloniki: “The Logos of God firstly acted
philanthropically within Himself (=implying the Sacraments), so that, by being the
commencement of all good things, all of us might receive from Him as though from a
spring of His. For this is also why He was incarnated; so that we might join
ourselves to Him and be sanctified by Him, because He, the Logos of God who created
us from the beginning, He once again shall re-create us, with the condescension of
the Father and the collaboration of the Holy Spirit”. (PG 155, 181A) The
Christological basis leads to the triadological dimension. The stations of Christ’s
redemptive opus act redemptively on Man. Just as the Incarnation of the Logos of
God potentially re-creates the deteriorated image of Man, thus likewise –according
to Saint Gregory Palamas- the Baptism of Christ in the Jordan prepares for our own
baptism, with all its salvific benefits. “It is for this reason that He Himself
simulated this by being baptized before us – He, who is also the physician of our
souls, the savior of our spirits, Who has taken away the sins of the world – that
is, Christ, Whom we are celebrating today. Because along with Him, He permeates
the water with the grace of the Holy Spirit, which He has drawn from above, for
those who are pursuantly baptized the way He was, by being immerged in the water,
where He will be in Himself, and, enveloped by His Spirit, will secretly be joined
to them, repleting all logical spirits with the cleansing and enlightening grace.”
To recap, therefore, “….having received (the sacrament of) Baptism in emulation of
our Lord and Teacher and Leader, we do not bury ourselves in the soil (=the way He
was buried after His death); instead, by going to the element that is related to
the soil –the water- we immerse ourselves therein, the way that our Savior immersed
Himself in the earth, and by doing this three times, we depict on ourselves the
third-day grace of the Resurrection…” (PG 46, 585 AB ) This Patristic excerpt is a
memorandum of the baptismal act of Orthodoxy/Church; that is, our co-burial with
Christ in the element of water (with a triple immersion, as mentioned in the
troparion “….co-entombed with You, through Baptism…”; repeated in Romans 6:4), and
our partaking in His Resurrection, with the triple emergence from the element of
water.
3. Baptism simultaneously has a direct ecclesiastic reference. Through it, the
“saved ones” (Romans 6:3-5, Acts 2:27) become “one with Christ” (Romans 6:3),
attaining the potential to partake of the life in Christ - the ecclesiastic manner
of existence - which leads to the renovation of deteriorated nature. In practice,
this means they are introduced into a new way of life – one that can preserve the
rejuvenating grace – which cannot otherwise occur magically and automatically. This
is possible, however, wherever the Church’s way of life has been preserved (for
example, in the orthodox monastic commune, or, in the similarly functioning
Parishes in the world) and not in the superficial-conventional parish reality to
which worship has been limited – or perhaps limited – while the rest of one’s life
is surrendered to the world (secularization). Association with the Parish, as well
as the structure itself of the Parish, both usually function within a religious
framework, and in this context, Christianity can be perceived as a religion, its
sacraments as the “ritual magic” and the clergymen as the “witch-doctor of the
tribe” – community! However, in the life of the Church, nothing is without
presuppositions.
To confine ourselves to Baptism, we should point out that in the New Testament,
this Sacrament is linked to sacrifice and martyrdom (Mark 10:39, Luke 12:50), but
also to death (Romans 6:4, Cols.2:12). These events of course do not have a
metaphorical-symbolic meaning, but are understood literally. Baptism is the actual
entry into a life of martyrdom and sacrifice. In Patristic Tradition (Dionysios
Areopagite, Cappadocians, Maximus) one finds references to the stage of those
“undergoing cleansing”, which refers to one’s preparation for “enlightenment”
(baptism) and the period of catechesis. As proved by the “exorcisms” that are
nowadays attached to the Sacrament of Baptism, the stage of “Catechesis”
constituted the “initiation” of the new Christian into the spiritual labor that
will free him from “the snare of Satan, through the cleansing of his heart from
every selfishness and egocentricity that obscures the mind and distorts the
candidate’s perception regarding the true union in the Church” Besides, the
preparatory stage for baptism is referred to as a “rite” (μυσταγωγία), which means
a gradual initiation into the mysteries of the Church. The relevant ecclesiastic
act has been recorded in the 7th Canon of the 2nd Ecumenical Synod (381). From the
first day of his attendance in Church, one would be called a “Christian”, and, as a
catechumen, from the second day, he would be acknowledged as being one of the
“faithful”. However, this stage had to be followed by death “in the waters” of
baptism, in order to enter into the life of the corpus of the Church, of “selfless
love, within the Sacraments”. These are expressed in the Benediction cited on the
“first day”, in which benediction the course of the faithful is clearly described:
“Upon Your name, o Lord, the God of Truth, and of Your only-begotten Son and of
Your Holy Spirit, I place my hand upon your servant (……..), who has been made
worthy of seeking refuge in Your holy name and of being protected under the shelter
of Your wings. Take away from him that ancient deception and replete him with faith
and hope and love in You, so that he will know that You alone are God, the true
God, and Your Only-begotten Son and Your Holy Spirit. Grant him for all his days to
walk the path of Your commandments and to safeguard whatever is to Your liking.
Write him in Your book of life and add him to the flock of Your inheritance…”. This
means: entering upon the commencement of his new life.
4. The mystery of the “in Christ” new existence is ministered and annotated by the
entire officiating (ritual) of the Baptism; the incorporation of the “Catechesis”
together with the “Exorcisms” in the Service of the Sacrament somewhat diminishes
their place in the pre-baptismal act of the Church. However, the course towards
Baptism is linked to the procedure –as mentioned- of freeing Man from the power of
the Devil, thus rendering possible his accession into the “in Christ” communion.
“The way, by which Man is freed of the devil, is a difficult one and demands a
lengthy stage of prayer, fasting and studentship in the teachings of Christ and of
the Prophets.” (Fr. John Romanides) A realistic verification of the ancient
Church’s practice is possible nowadays, in the life of a communal Monastery, in
which, despite the imperfections of the persons, the liturgical declaration
“ourselves and each other and our entire life let us appose to Christ the Lord”
continues to apply – a declaration that from the beginning has comprised the
purpose of ecclesiastic monasticism.
The reinstatement of the faithful’s partaking of the life “in Christ” is made
possible by the cleansing of fallen Creation, which “grieves and sighs together”
with him in its simultaneous fall with Man (Romans 8:22). Given that Man “is a
part of creation, his communion with God can be restored, only through Creation.
Man and Creation are saved together. It is for this reason that the water of
Baptism must be exorcised and cleansed of demonic powers prior to one’s entry into
Baptism.” Besides, the immersion in the water renders Baptism a true “likeness” of
the faithful’s death “in Christ”. (Romans 6:5). The “water” becomes the image of
the new life (Romans 6:4); the new “in Christ” reality. According to Dionysios
Areopagite, baptism is a “ritual of theogenesis" – that is, a person’s rebirth in
God. Furthermore, Saint Gregory of Nyssa also speaks of a “birth” at this point:
“This birth is gestated through faith; through the rebirth of baptism it is led to
the light; its “wet-nurse” becomes the Church.” (PG 46, 604) Baptism is,
precisely, a immersion into the life of the Church, who “grafts into Her body, into
Her divine-human nature, a new human person; She incorporates it into the oneness
of the life and the personal communion of the Saints.” With Baptism and Man’s true
partaking of the new, “in Christ” life, the faithful is inoculated into the ethos
and the manner of existence of the ecclesiastic corpus. Because Baptism is,
precisely, not the end, but the beginning of a course, which reaches its apex with
the perfection of the faithful – that is, his deification – which is the complete
and fulfilled incorporation in the body of Christ. This is what is expressed by a
benediction of the Service: “Disrobe him of the oldness, and renovate him in the
eternal life, and replete him with the power of Your Holy Spirit, for union with
Your Christ, so that he is no longer a child of a body, but a child of Your Rule.”
5. Precedent to the Baptismal Service benedictions are: the “Canons of the Holy
Apostles and divine Fathers” (Apostles 47th, 49th, 50th; 7th of the 2nd
Ecum.Council, Laodicea 48th; Neocaesaria 6th, Timoth.Alex. 1st, 2nd, 3rd and 6th
and 111th Carthage), who, in response to heretic provocations, determined the true
Baptism of the Church (triple immersion and emersion) and its ecclesiological
prerequisites, rejecting all the heretic cacodoxies that had been linked to it.
Orthodoxy, wherever it may exist, reverently persists in the immersion of a person;
in other words, the true and literal baptism (Greek: baptise=to dip, to plunge).
The contemporary baptismal font, which is the continuation of the ancient
baptistery, functions as the “womb” of re-creation: “…just as the womb is to the
embryo, so the water is to the faithful; he is shaped and fashioned within the
water…”(Saint John Chrysostom, PG 59, 153). “The triple immersion into and emersion
from the water of the Baptism is not a tutorial model or an allegory; it is a
perceptible experience of an actual event. With Baptism, the human existence ceases
to be the result of a biological necessity. Contrary to natural birth, which
comprises a biological unit that is subject to natural data, Baptism re-erects the
existence, into a freedom from natural necessity; into a personal otherness which
exists only as an ecclesiological hypostasis of communion and a loving
association.”
The death of the former person and the rebirth of the faithful is, thus, not a mere
“moral” event, but a “sacramental” and “liturgical” one, because the one who dies
and is resurrected “in Christ” is reborn spiritually within the body of the Lord
and receives the seal of eternal life, by donning Christ. This is the
eschatological aspect of the sacrament. Baptism –for the one being baptized- is a
“pre-engraving” and a “prelude” of the eschatological life of the heavenly kingdom.
That is why it is referred to as the “first resurrection”: because it is the power
that leads “to the final resurrection”.
The observation is correct, that during the entire Service of the Baptism, no
mention is made regarding the forgiveness of any ancestral guilt. In the
“exorcisms” also, no reference is made to the “catechumen’s” personal sins.
Liturgically, the sacrament is not bound to any sense of “legal” absolution of
sins. The Service itself revolves around everything that pertains to the induction
of the one baptized into the communion of the Church – his release from “slavery to
the devil” will lead him to his entrance into “the heavenly kingdom” and his
“coupling” with “a radiant angel, who will deliver him from every scheming of the
opposing one” (Fr. John Romanides). The prayer of the ecclesiastic body at this
point is: “….and make him(her) a logical sheep of your Christ’s holy flock; a
precious member of your Church; a sanctified vessel; a son(daughter) of light and
inheritor of your kingdom”, the ultimate goal being the partaking of the uncreated
kingdom and glory of the Triadic Divinity (“…so that by living according to your
commandments and keeping the seal unbroken and the robe unpolluted, he/she will be
bestowed the blessedness of the Saints (=deification), in Your Kingdom.”
6. A significant aspect of the Sacrament is the “Anadochos” (=godparent,
sponsor). A theological expounding of the subject is provided by Saint Simeon of
Thessaloniki (PG, 155, 213f), where he details the function of the godparent. One
note at the end of the ritual of the Sacrament is extremely noteworthy: “…after
which, he (the officiator) places it (the infant) by the doors of the sanctum.
Thus, after having thrice prostrated himself, the Godparent receives it in his arms
and exits from there”, having thus “re-accepted” the new member of the Church. In
this way, the mission of the godparent is expressed in practice. According to Saint
Simeon, the godparent is the (baptized child’s) “guarantor in Christ”, “that it
will preserve everything of the Faith and live in the Christian manner”. It also
gives the godparent his/her ecclesiastic identity: “where one should be careful to
make pious godparents and almost teachers of the faith”. Let us remember here the
case of political marriages and the (rightful) refusal of many of our Bishops to
allow the politically married person to perform the duties of godparent, because,
as a denier of a Sacrament of the Church, he is rendered “guilty of everything”
(James 2:10). Saint Simeon even defines the dysfunctions that are noted: “But to
me, it sounds –he says- extremely inappropriate and heavy. Because some invite
persecutors and slanderers of the faith, atheists and heretics, (woe!) to be
godparents of their children, as if for something human, and they violate the
sacrament; these not only enlighten the children; rather, they lead them into
darkness!”
It is in this context that the matter of infant baptism arises, thus causing
untimely discussions. Infant baptism – which was already known in the ancient
Church (see for example I Corinthians 1:16) – prevailed because the infant is open
to Grace, but also for a most powerful anthropological reason: The absolute need
for infant baptism springs from the fact that “children are born under the power of
the devil on account of the powerlessness of nature, of body and of soul, which are
governed by death and deterioration that are inherited from their parents, and also
because of their union with fallen creation and everything dependent on it.”
Needless to say, of course, that respect for the spirit of the Church demands that
infant baptism apply in cases of pious parents and godparents, who keep alive their
association with the ecclesiastic body, just as no-one dares to baptize children of
non-Christians, since they will not have the opportunity for Christian upbringing.
7. Besides, it must be underlined that one is baptized, not in the sense of a
conventional entry into the ecclesiastic community and the acquisition of certain
“legal” rights, but for one’s securing his partaking of Grace that is transmitted
through the sacrament, which opens the way to “in Christ” perfection (Matthew 5:48,
Ephesians 5:1), expressed by selfless love (Romans 14:7, I Corinthians 10:24,
13:1e, Galatians 5:13; 6:1 etc.). Basil the Great links Baptism – under strictly
ecclesiastic prerequisites – with holy-patristic enlightenment, which leads – again
under prerequisites – to theosis/deification: “..for the unbaptized shall not be
enlightened. And without light, neither can the eye see its own, nor will the soul
be able to tolerate the sight of God”. (PG 31, 428A )
Furthermore, with Baptism the door opens for the faithful to enter the “in Christ”
communion with the other members of the Lord’s Body. As fr. Alex. Schmemann
observes: “It is with Baptism and through Baptism […] that we encounter the first
and fundamental significance of the Church”. Through Baptism, the entrance of the
neophyte into a certain community is achieved – the Church, as a body in which he
will incessantly battle for the final victory over the devil and sin; for his
authentic incorporation into the community of “God’s children” (John 1:12).
Consequently, Baptism becomes the entrance to the life of a specific local
community, and not to a general – universal – notion of Christianity. Furthermore,
it is only natural for all these things to have disappeared in our day, with the
activity that distinguishes the members of the Church. Essentially, the idea of the
local Church-Parish is disappearing, especially when “churchgoing” is directed by
other motives, not ecclesiastic ones (i.e., the search for priests or cantors with
good voices, choirs and the suchlike), for the personal “enjoyment” of the Liturgy.
But this is where the words of the Chrysostom apply: “The Church is not a theatre,
to listen to it for our pleasure”! (PG 49, 58). At Baptism however, as already
mentioned, that which must die is “our self-centeredness and our self-sufficiency”,
in order to make communion with the other members possible. Individuality is the
inevitable outcome of the Fall, as well as the mortifying of selflessness, which is
sacrificed to the instinctive search for self-gratification and bliss. Hence,
Baptism – under the proper presuppositions – leads to Man’s “churchification” and
“ecclesiasticism”; in other words, to the transformation of his individuality into
an ecclesiastic existence. But this is not something self-understood and without
prerequisites. Everything in the Church is the fruit of collaboration with Divine
Grace. And this requires predisposition and struggle on the part of Man. There can
be no automation in the Church, since Divine Grace does not abolish human freedom
as a potential choice, either to accept or to reject (see John 5:6).
8. This becomes especially perceptible in the case where the one freed from the
power of the devil needs to remain within the limits of his “in Christ” freedom
(Hebrew 6:4). “For, having died as sinners through divine baptism – observes Saint
Gregory Palamas – we are obliged to live virtuously for God, so that even the lord
of darkness, when he comes seeking, shall not find anything in us that is to his
liking. And just as Christ, having risen from the dead, “death no longer conquers
Him”, so must we, after our resurrection from the downfall of sin through divine
baptism, must strive to no longer hold on to sin”. This is described even more
intensely by Saint Gregory of Nyssa, in expressing the same conscience and act:
“For this reason, and even after the acquisition of the status of adoption, the
devil conspires even more fiercely, envying with a malignant eye whenever he sees
the beauty of a newly-made man hurrying towards the heavenly city - from whence he
had lapsed - arousing fiery temptations within us with the intent to sully the
second decoration, just as he had with the former world. But whenever we sense his
attacks, it behoves us to say to ourselves the apostolic saying: “whomsoever of us
are baptized in Christ, are baptized unto His death’. If therefore we become
conformant to His death, most assuredly will sin be dead inside us, having been
destroyed by the spear of baptism, just as that fornicator was, by the zealot
Fineas..” (PG 46, 597)
The above signify that according to the conscience and the experience of the
Saints, “baptism itself does not secure salvation, but rather, it introduces and
leads Man to the beginning of the path that leads to the life in Chris and
therefore to salvation in Christ”. According to John the Chrysostom, Man’s
continuous partaking of the vivifying energy of the Holy Spirit is not a “once-
only” guaranteed thing that is guaranteed by baptism. “Let us therefore not be
encouraged to believe that we have once and for all become members of the Body of
Christ” (PG 60, 23). Life in Christ demands a constant spiritual struggle, in order
to make possible the activation of the Grace acquired through Baptism. But also
according to saint Gregory Palamas, “……even though the Lord has revived us through
holy baptism, and sealed us through the grace of the Holy Spirit for the day of
redemption, while still having a mortal and impassioned body, and having cast out
the cause that filled the treasuries of our soul with evil, yet He allows external
offensives, so that the reborn person (……..), when living charitably and in
repentance, disdaining the pleasures of life and suffering the afflictions and
being exercised by the attacks of the opposing one, will prepare himself for the
reception of incorruptibility.” (PG 151, 213B) This is the way that the great
hesychast defines the course of the faithful after Baptism, as a course leading
towards incorruptibility (=deification): as a constant struggle against the devil
and sin.
This is why catechism after Baptism was instituted from the very first centuries,
along with the sacrament of repentance as a second kind of baptism, which would
serve as a toning of the faithful’s spiritual struggle so that he might remain
receptive of Divine Grace. As saint Gregory Palamas teaches: “Which is why, after
holy Baptism, deeds of contrition are required; in the absence of which, the reason
for one’s promise to God is not only non-beneficial, but also condemns man.” (see
Peter II, 2:21). And he continues: “For God is living and true, and He asks from us
true promises and a living faith, not a dead one; otherwise, without works, it is a
dead faith.” (see James 2:18)
9. In this context, it becomes necessary to mention that the linking of Baptism
and the Divine Eucharist is not self-understood, if it lacks a spiritual
continuity. The oft-said statement that a prerequisite for participation in the
Divine Eucharist is that one must be baptized a Christian denotes that the person
has entered into the life - the manner of existence - of the Church and that he is
engaged in a spiritual struggle in order to remain receptive of Grace. This means
that the one entering the ecclesiastic body through Baptism is simultaneously
‘enlisted’ in a permanent and incessant struggle for repentance, in order to remain
within the body (to be “one with the body”).
Christianity means a way of life different to the worldly one (John 17:9-19).
“Faithful” means to be crucified “along with one’s passions and desires” and having
become “of Christ” (Galatians 5:24). He lives “in the Spirit” and therefore “is
aligned (behaves accordingly) to the Spirit” (Galatians 5:25). The “fruit of the
Spirit” (Galatians 5:25) is the Spirit’s presence being revealed in the heart that
has been cleansed of its passions. Catharsis is what one strives for in his
spiritual struggle, so that Man may remain open to Divine Grace.
A pure example of this course – but also a historical model – of authentic
ecclesiastic living is provided by monastic living. The monastic coenobium, within
its Patristic boundaries, is the authentic manner of ecclesiastic existence and the
permanent standard for the secular Parish. Already by the 4th century, at the
beginning of the course and the development of organized monastic living, the
blessed Chrysostom made the following, most important observation: “Thus do the
inhabitants of monasteries live nowadays (=at the end of the 4th century!), as did
the faithful (=of Jerusalem) then (in the 1st century). (PG 60, 98) Monasticism
appeared as a continuation of the genuine ecclesiastic way of life, when the
dangers of secularization had begun to loom threateningly. The familiar expression
found in ecclesiastic history, that the desert is “turning into a city” means
precisely that; i.e., that the city has been transferred to the remote desert,
away from the others, in order to facilitate the “in Christ” way of life – for the
completion of Baptism with their course towards deification. Monastic repentance –
the second baptism – is the renewal of the Baptism. Monks remain the “light of the
people”, as a permanent model of eccliasticity.
That is why we, the others, as members of our parishes, forever orient our gaze
towards the coenobitic monastery – the parish of the desert – having it as a
steadfast indicator of our course and our way of life that can preserve the gifts
of the Baptism, and the course towards deification.
CHAPTER 5
ORTHODOXY’S WORSHIP
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1. Christian Worship
Ever since its founding on the Day of the Pentecost, Christianity (as the Church of
Christ), was expressed not only as a teaching but also as worship, which held a
centremost place in its life. Worship proved to be not only the means by which the
Church expressed Her most profound self, but also the “par excellence” means that
shaped the faith and Her life overall. Without being limited to worship alone, the
life of the Church is transformed overall into a worship of the Triune God, Who is
Her absolute centre and its head.
Ecclesiastic worship is comprehended in Christ only, in Whom God is made known
(John 1:18). Faith in Christ as our God and Saviour is precedent to worship of Him.
Christ is the One Who differentiates the Christian faith from every other worship.
The Christ-centred character of ecclesiastic worship differentiated it radically,
not only from the Gentile faith, but also from the Jewish one. (see Hebrews,
chapter 9). Whatever Gentile or Jewish ritualistic elements the Church may have
assumed, are only secondary in importance and peripheral, and they do not affect
Her worship.
An essential element of Christian worship is the esoteric one, i.e., the
thanksgiving and glorification of God for His gifts, from the heart. That is why
Christian worship was founded on what God did for Man and not what Man can do to
please God and placate Him. It is not intended as a religious ritual, but it is
through it, that we have the manifestation of the Church as the “Body of Christ”.
The sole, true officiator of the Church is Jesus Christ (Hebrews 8:2), Who, by His
Person, introduced into History a different kind of priesthood. The terms “priest”,
“sacrifice”, “priesthood” in the Epistle to Hebrews – the first liturgical text of
the Church – are linked exclusively to Christ, the only authentic High Priest, Who
offered and still offers the perfect sacrifice – Himself. His sacrifice in the
worship of the Church is bloodless and spiritual, and Christ is, after all, the
“offerer and the offered and the recipient” of the sacrifice. It is not the priests
of the Church who perform the sacrifice (as is the case in the various religions of
the world); priests merely “lend” their hands to Christ, so that He may perform
everything (Chrysostom). All of the faithful – with their Baptism and their Chrism
– partake of Christ’s priesthood, inasmuch as they “present their bodies as a
living sacrifice – a holy one, which is pleasing to God.” (Romans 12:1)
The Worship of the Church constitutes a revelation of the triple mystery of life:
the mystery of God, the mystery of Man and the mystery of Creation, as well as the
association between the three. In Orthodox Worship, one experiences the “new Era”
that “assaulted” History with the Incarnation of the Logos of God, and one is now
also equipped with the potential for victory over sin, over deterioration and
death. Human existence overall places itself under Christ’s authority and it
glorifies the Triune God, the way He is glorified by the angelic Powers in the
heavens. (Isaiah 6:1)
In Christian worship, a two-fold movement takes place: Man’s towards God (Who
receives our thanksgiving and glorification) and God’s towards Man (who is
sanctified by Divine Grace). This is a dialogue between the Creator and His
creation; a meeting between Man and “the True One” (John I, 5:20); an offering by
an existence to its source, according to the words of the Liturgy: «Ourselves and
each other and all of our life let us submit unto Christ the Lord”. The faithful
offers thanks to God for his salvation and for God’s continuous gifts, which are
“more bounteous than what we asked for”. Man offers God “bread and wine” and he
receives “Body and Blood of Christ” in return; he offers up incense, and receives
uncreated Grace. The Church’s worship is not offered to God because He is in need
of it; this worship is actually a necessity for Man, who receives far more (and far
more important things) than whatever he may have to offer.
Worship is ecclesiastic, when it preserves its supernatural and spiritual character
and when it liberates Man, thence leading him into the perfect knowledge
(“cognition”) of God (Ephesians 4:13, Revelation 4:10, 5:6, etc.); however, its
purpose is not to bring heaven down to earth, but to elevate Man and the world,
towards the heavens. It gives Man (and Creation overall) the potential to become
“baptized” (to die and be resurrected) within Divine Grace.
2. Liturgical Order and Historical Evolution
Ecclesiastic worship has its own order, i.e., the sum of ritual formalities that
govern it. “Typikon” (Ritual) is the name of the special liturgical manual which
provides the outline and the structure of the Church’s worship, according to how
the holy Fathers had formulated it over the centuries. With its established
“order” and liturgical unity, the Orthodox conscience was preserved successfully -
despite all the circumstantial readjustments and local particularities, i.e., the
natural flow of events that were observed in the past - thus enriching the
liturgical act, also fending off various cacodoxies and confronting the various
heresies. However, the development of ecclesiastic worship took place organically,
with an inner order and consistency, without its unity being disrupted. New
elements resemble the branches of a tree, which may spread out but still allow for
its unimpeded growth. So it is with Orthodoxy, where the Slav-speaking Churches
observe the order of the “Holy Monastery of Jerusalem” (of Saint Savvas), while the
Hellenic-speaking ones are based –mainly- on the order of the Great Church of
Christ (in Constantinople), of the Holy Studite Monastery. This difference in the
order observed does not disrupt the unity of Orthodox worship. The liturgical
structure is specific, and is common to all Orthodox Churches, as one can discern
in an inter-Orthodox Divine Liturgy.
Various liturgical forms had already appeared, as early as ancient Christian times
(the “Eastern” form: Alexandrian, Antiochian or Syrian and Byzantine; the “Western”
form: African, Roman, Paleo-Hispanic or Mozarabian, Ambrosian, Paleo-Gallic,
Celtic, etc.). The expulsion of all the heresies that had arisen during the
Church’s historical course had also contributed towards the appearance of local
differences, but in a spirit of freedom. This is why the various liturgical forms
are useful for discovering and verifying the liturgical evolution of the local
Churches, as well as their interaction within the framework of the unity of the
Orthodox Faith.
One landmark in the evolution of ecclesiastic worship was the era of Constantine
the Great, with the inauguration of Constantinople-New Rome (in 330 A.D.) which
opened up new, cosmogonic perspectives. The development of every area of
ecclesiastic life (=the work of the holy Fathers) had an organic continuance,
without this meaning in the slightest a “falling away from primeval Christianity”.
The post-313 victory over idolatry gave birth to a universal feeling and theology
of “victory” and triumph, which permeated even the very structures of worship. Its
development went hand-in-hand with the Synodic formulation of the Triadic Dogma,
the cultivation of theological letters, the organizing of monasticism, the erecting
of a multitude of temples etc. With a slow but steady pace, the particularities of
worship were minimized and ecumenical forms appeared, based on a stable and
unchanging core, which assimilated and united all local particularities. The
fruits of these developments are the varying architectural forms of temples, the
development of liturgical cycles (daily, weekly, annual), the addition of new
feast-days and services. These developments are chronologically classified as
follows: the 4th and 5th centuries are discerned for the vast liturgical
flourishing and the profound changes in worship; in the 6th and 7th centuries, the
various forms are stabilized; in the 8th and 9th centuries, the final, “Byzantine
form”, is established, which, after the 14th and 15th centuries (Hesychasm, Symeon
of Thessaloniki), led to the liturgical order that continues to apply to this day.
The “Byzantine form” of Ecclesiastic Worship was reached through Monasticism, which
comprises the authentic continuation of the ecclesiastic community and the
permanent safeguarding of the purity and the witness of ecclesiastic living.
Throughout the ages, it was Monasticism that preserved the eschatological
conscience, by fending off secularization. This is why its impact on the Church’s
course has proven to be not only definitive, but also beneficial.
Monasticism incorporated worship into its ascetic labors, putting a special
emphasis on prayer and, through the “Prayer”, turned its entire life into worship.
Monasticism cultivated and enriched the liturgical act, by offering the Church Her
liturgical “order” and practically all of Her hymnographical, musical and artistic
wealth.
Following Monasticism’s victory and the end of the Iconomachy issue (9th century),
the monastic “form” was passed on to the secular dioceses as well, and this “form”
was to eventually prevail throughout the Orthodox Church. The monasteries
cultivated the main structural elements of Orthodox worship; also its hymnography
(poetry) and its music, and it is in them, that the truth is preserved to this day
- that worship is not just “something” in the life of Orthodoxy, but that it is the
center and the source of renovation and sanctification of every aspect of our life.
3. The worshipping community
The Orthodox Church manifests Herself historically as a worshipping community. Even
heterodox such as Erich Seeberg (a major Protestant theologian) have called Her
“the religion of worship on the ground of Christianity”. During worship, the
faithful partakes of his Church’s way of existence, which is referred to as “a
feast of the first-born”, “a house of celebrants” who are “eternally jubilating” in
an eschatological foretasting of the heavenly kingdom. The Church’s worship was,
from the very beginning, a community act; it was an act of the local Church, and
not of the faithful as individuals. During worship, the individual becomes a member
of the “community in Christ” (in which he enters with his Baptism) and then
partakes of the life of a specific, local community, and not some universal and
generalized notion of Christianity. In worship, the ecclesiastic body becomes
evident with its local assembly. Even “private” prayer is understood
Orthodoxically as something within the ecclesiastic community - as an extension if
it. The Divine Eucharist in particular is the Mystery of the Church as a body, and
is also the scope of the liturgical act.
The Church’s worship unites the faithful, across Time, with all the Saints and the
foregone faithful, contemporaneously with the brethren who are presently living “in
Christ”. The Church is thus proven in Her worship as “one flock, comprised of
people and angels, and one kingdom” (Saint John the Chrysostom). This unity of the
Church, with Christ at the center as Her Head, is portrayed during the “withdrawal”
of the “Precious Gifts”, when the distribution of Holy Communion is completed. The
Officiator “withdraws” (collects) inside the Holy Chalice the “Lamb Christ” (of
Whom both clergy and laity have just partaken), the “portion” dedicated to the
Theotokos, the Angels and all the Saints, and the portion for the living and the
deceased - this rite normally being performed by the head officiator, the Bishop,
who comprises the visible center of the Sacrament (the invisible center being
Christ). Thus, the “personal” Body of Christ is joined in a “discernible and
indivisible” manner to His “communal” (collective) Body – His faithful. Inside the
Holy Chalice is “assembled” the community of Faithful, together with Christ and one
another. Christ is thus manifested as the absolute center and the Head of the
Church; the Church as the Body of Christ, and the faithful – both living and
deceased – as members of that Body.
4. “Churchifying” the means
During worship, the Church transforms the elements of this century into realities
of the heavenly kingdom, thus giving a new meaning to their function and their
point of reference. One of these elements is: (a) the place. The Church’s worship
quickly disengaged itself from the Judean Temple and the Synagogue. The Divine
Eucharist was initially performed in private quarters - “in the household” (κατ’
οίκον) - and a congregation of the faithful was called “the household church”.
Having developed in a Hellenistic environment, the Church assumed the Hellenic term
“ecclesia” (=the summoned ones), which was now used to likewise refer to the
congregating of the public (the people), but with Christ now as its centre and its
Head. The term for “temple” (ecclesia) was originally assigned to mean the
congregating of the faithful in Christ (John 4:21). Stephen the Deacon would
proclaim that: “the Lord on high does not reside in handmade temples” (Acts 7:48).
After 313 A.D., the temple would acquire a special meaning “Christianically” also.
The Temple, as the sacred place of a congregation, was linked to the notion of
“heaven on earth”, since the Church’s liturgy is an “ascension” of the faithful to
the hyper-celestial Altar. This is what is expressed by a hymn that says: “while
standing in the temple of Your glory, in heaven do we think we stand”.
There is a special service dedicated to the consecration of a Temple (The
Consecration Service), which expresses the Church’s theology regarding the Temple.
The Saints throughout the ages have never ceased to preserve Stephen’s awareness;
for example, according to the blessed Chrysostom (†407): “Christ with His coming
cleansed all the universe; every place became a place of prayer…”. In other words,
the temple may facilitate congregating, but the congregation never loses sight of
its celestial perspective.
In a “Byzantine” temple, the icon of the Pantocrator (=the “all-governing”) Christ
that is positioned inside the central dome, gives the faithful the feeling of being
under the paternal supervision of God. One thus becomes aware of certain liturgical
contrasts: below-above, earth-heaven, secular-Saintly, death-life, endo-cosmic -
exo-cosmic, etc. Through the eyes of the Saints - the “theumens” (=those who have
attained theosis) - we too can see the uncreated Light of the celestial kingdom,
during the liturgy of our Church. During the “inauguration” of a Temple, fragments
of holy relics are embedded inside the holy Altar, so that the Church’s worship
will forever be referred to the uncreated Divine Grace, which is resident in the
relics of the Saints. Thus, all the sacraments and sanctifying acts of the Church
have their foundations in the Grace of God, without being dependent on the moral
cleanliness of the officiator. Everything linked to the function of the temple is
“consecrated” and sanctified: the holy vessels, the holy vestments, the liturgical
books, the icons, all of them being rendered “channels” of Divine Grace.
(b) In the Church’s worship, Time is also given a new meaning. The Church’s new
perception of Time is confined to the boundaries of Christian soteriology. Time is
“churchified”, with the transcending of its “cyclical” self (in Hellenism) and its
“linear” self (in Judaism). “Salvation” in the Christian sense is not an escape
from Time and the world; it is a victory over the fiendishness and the evil of this
world, and the sin dwelling inside it (John 17:15). History and Time are not
abolished; they are innovated.
The Church’s liturgical Time does not lose its linearity, because it has a
beginning and an end - the “fulfilment of Time” (Galatians 6:4), which was realized
with the incarnation of the God Logos. Time was given a beginning by God during
Creation, and its “end” is Christ, Who gives a soteriological significance to every
moment of Time (“Behold, now is a welcome Time; behold, now is a day of salvation”
(Corinthians II, 6:2). With the incarnation of the Logos of God, History now heads
towards Eschatological Times, because the “End” (Eschaton) is Christ, after Whose
incarnation “nothing new” is expected historically, except only the fulfilment of
the “end”, with His Second Coming. In worship, Christ is “the One Who will
Return”; He is “Emmanuel”, He is “God amongst us” (Matthew 1:23).
Liturgical Time also has a vertical dimension, since Christ and His uncreated
Kingdom come “from above”, thus showing us our eternal destination (“let us lift up
our hearts”). The Church’s liturgical time is experienced as the continuous
presence of salvation. In the Church’s worship, all three temporal dimensions
(Past-Present-Future) are contracted into one, perpetual “Present” of the Divine
Presence. This is why we have so many references to the Present in our liturgical
language: “Christ is born today…”, “today Christ is baptized in the Jordan…”,
“today is Christ suspended on a piece of wood…”. This is not an ordinary,
historical remembrance. Liturgically speaking, “remembrance” does not imply any
intellectual recall or historical repetition, because the events that are linked to
our salvation took place “once”; soteriologically, however, they also apply “for
all eternity”. During worship, these events are extended spiritually and are
rendered events of the Present, so that every generation of faithful may partake
equally of the redemptive Grace that exudes from them. Our worship does not aspire
to provoking a Platonic sort of nostalgia, but to generating an awareness of our
extending into the Future - into the kingdom of God.
Thus, the worshipping Church re-constitutes the dimensions of Time, incorporating
them into the eternal “now” of the Divine Presence. The remembrance of the Past
becomes a memory “in Christ”, and the hope for the Future a hope “in Christ”. The
Future acquires a hypostasis, just like the “life of the aeon to come” (Hebrews
11:1), when the faithful has reached Sainthood – the union with uncreated divine
Grace. Liturgically, we refer to a remembrance of the Future, since everything
moves in that direction. Every moment of Time is transformed into a “time” (καιρός)
for Salvation. A par excellence “time” is a Feast day, a liturgical “remembrance”
of God’s gifts and His philanthropy. A Feast day is an expression of Man’s
nostalgia for the eternal, as substantiated in the Saints and the soteriological
events being commemorated. The Feasts of the Church are linked, not to some myth
(as is the case in idolatrous sacraments), but to actual, historical persons and
events. Already by the 1st century, the Feast of Sunday was established as the
first day of Creation’s restoration, i.e. the Day of the Resurrection. The Divine
Eucharist is the culmination of the Church’s celebration, and every day is an
ecclesiastic Feast day, inasmuch as the Divine Liturgy can be performed therein.
(c) Furthermore, ecclesiastic worship also ministers to the mystery of the Logos,
in all its aspects. The ecclesiastic and liturgical logos is expressed as
benediction-prayer; as the recital of Scriptures; as hymn-singing; as sermons; as
the divine Eucharist (the “breaking of bread” – Acts 2:42). These are but different
aspects of the same mystery. In each one of these liturgical expressions, it is the
same Logos of God being offered, in a special way each time. The Logos of God
summons the members of His Body, so that He can dwell inside it. Without the divine
Logos, the sacrament is perceived as a magical medium; without the sacrament, the
Logos is transformed into a fleshless dogmatism or a religious ideology.
The Scriptural readings - with the Book of Psalms first – is the offering of the
recorded Holy-Spiritual experience of the Prophets and the Apostles, which
presupposes the revelation of God (=the Logos of God) within the heart of His
Saints. Both the Old and the New Testaments are recited during the ecclesiastic
gathering, based on an “order” that was determined by our Holy Fathers. The entire
ecclesiastic assembly participates in the liturgical recital of the Scripture: the
Apostolic tract is read by one of the laity, while the Gospel tract is read by the
Deacon and the sermon is delivered by the Bishop or the Presbyter (Elder). The
Scripture is recited ecclesiastically; not in the usual prosaic or artistic,
theatrical manner, but in a “verbodal” (spoken-singing) manner, or in other words,
half-chanted. This testifies that the Holy Bible is not just any man-written book;
it is God’s perpetual message through His Saints, during the congregation of His
faithful. In the Church, the Gospel is sacred and is bestowed special honour; it
is placed atop the holy Altar, it is honoured with prostrations, it is incensed,
and the people are blessed with it. The priests’ “entry” into the Sanctum with the
Gospel is a declaration of the resurrected Christ’s presence among us. The sermon,
as the interpretation and the consolidation of the Scriptural word, renders the
Scriptural message a contemporary one to the liturgical congregation. The
liturgical sermon focuses not on “how the gospel events happened”, but “where they
lead us”. The Holy Bible is interpreted by the Church in the Church, in direct
association with Christ and the Saints, because it is only with the enlightenment
of the Holy Spirit that it can be comprehended and interpreted.
However, the liturgical logos-word is also articulated as the congregation’s
response to God, in the form of benedictions and hymns; “Euchography” and
“Hymnography” are not only the heart of ecclesiastic worship; they are also
Byzantium/Romania’s most significant literary creation. The hymnals’ poetic form
provides immense potential, inasmuch as it is the most effective medium for the
ritual requirements of the ecclesiastic body, which experiences and confesses its
faith “by weaving words (logos) out of melody, for the Logos”. The Church’s
hymnography becomes Her “unsilencable voice”, which confesses Her faith in a
continuous and blessed song of Orthodoxy.
(d) In ecclesiastic worship, Art is also “churchified”, in all its forms. The only
art form that the Church did not accept was sculpture, because of its obviously
terrestrial character. In worship, art becomes a theological language, ministering
to the Eucharist experience of divine-human communion. Liturgical art has beauty,
order, rhythm, melody... however, these elements are rendered functional-
beneficial, in the service of the body. The aesthetics of liturgical art are
spiritual and do not aspire to impress, given that they are not directed at the
physical senses, since this art form strives to reveal “the divine and uncreated
beauty of Christ’s virtues”. This is why products of ecclesiastic art are known to
be miracle-working (for example the holy Icons); it is because they too partake of
the uncreated divine glory (Grace), thus proving their participation in the
Uncreated. Ecclesiastic worship’s art is so “beauteous”, that it in fact fulfils
its spiritual purpose: the ministering to the faith. This is why it is Orthodoxy’s
steadfast requirement, that liturgical art preserve its “sameness in essence” with
the dogma, with the faith that it ministers to: so that the uninterrupted
fulfilment of its spiritual mission may be attained.
There is a difference between ecclesiastic-liturgical art and religious art. The
former portrays the event of Salvation, the way it historically took place, as well
as the collective acceptance of it by the ecclesiastic body. Religious art, on the
other hand, is an expression of the artist’s personal approach to the mystery. That
is why it is not liturgical. A certain correlation to this would be a comparison
between “demotic” (colloquial) poetry and its classical form. As in everything else
in worship, the stamp of the monastic world – the more traditional part of the
ecclesiastic community – is also very apparent in all the creations of ecclesiastic
art.
5. Liturgical theology
Faith - not only as the ecclesiastic conscience and one’s fidelity to the Saviour
Christ but as a teaching also - is a fundamental and inviolable prerequisite of
ecclesiastic worship. It is the motive power of the worshipping faithful, expressed
by external acts and moves that constitute its ritual. Worship materializes faith
and renders it a group event, while it simultaneously preserves and augments it,
thus helping one to delve deeper into it.
Orthodox worship is Trinity-centred in its topics and its structure. Its strength
and its hope spring from the Triadic God. The Church liturgically offers up “glory
to the Father, and the Son, and to the Holy Spirit”.
The Eucharist “anaphora” is addressed to God the Father. The Son is also the
recipient of the offered sacrifice, given that He is “of the same essence” and co-
enthroned with the Father, and He is the central axis of that sacrifice as well.
He is “the offerer and the offered and the One Who receives and is distributed”
during the Divine Eucharist. Ecclesiastic worship is the continuation of Christ’s
redemptive work, and it incorporates the Mystery of Divine Providence. Christ is
the “ecclesiast” (“churchifier”) Who gathers us unto His Body and the faithful are
the “churchified” who participate in His worship and are recipients of His glory.
Those who receive Holy Communion “worthily” (Corinthians II, 3:16) prove to be a
temple of Christ, and the mystery of Faith is officiated inside their hearts.
But ecclesiastic worship is just as equally Spirit-centred, because the Holy Spirit
is also present during worship, the way that the luminous mist was present when it
“overshadowed” the Disciples and the entire Mount during the Transfiguration
(Matthew 17:5). Orthodoxy’s true worship is the Holy Spirit’s prayer-rousing
energy inside the heart of the faithful, as is the case with the Saints, who are
the true worshippers of God because they participate in the celestial worship. The
entireness of worship is the work of the Holy Spirit, Who “holds together the
entire establishment of the Church”. The prayer: “Thou Heavenly King, the
Paraclete, the Spirit of Truth….” is the one that inducts us into every Service.
In divine worship, a “communion with the Holy Spirit” takes place. Everything is
governed by the sanctifying power of the Paraclete. At the peak moment of the
Sacrament, we beseech the Holy Spirit to “come upon us” (the officiators) and upon
the “holy gifts” (the bread and the wine), but also upon “all of the people”, and
to perform the “spiritual sacrifice”, by transforming the offered gifts into Body
and Blood of Christ and uniting all the participants into one body.
The Church’s worship stands out for its “traditionality”. This is the most dynamic
carrier of ecclesiastic tradition. “Tradition” in the Church is the perpetuation of
the Christian way of existence; it is life in the Holy Spirit, which can lead to
the Church’s true purpose: Man’s theosis and the sanctification of Creation. The
truly faithful one will persist in those elements that comprise the genuine
ecclesiastic stance. That is what Faith is basically all about: for one to remain
faithful and unswerving towards the will of God and the Tradition of the Saints.
The criterion for the genuineness of ecclesiastic worship is its degree of
“traditionality”. This also contributes towards the unity of local churches, both
contemporaneously and across time.
The liturgical texts provide the liturgical theology, which constitutes a
primordial expression of the ecclesiastic dogma. That is why worship becomes “a
school for piety” that teaches the faith, with the support of the media of art, and
especially iconography - that “most eloquent book” of the Church, as Saint John the
Damascene had said. Orthodox worship throughout the ages has shaped the mentality
of the faithful, as one can see from certain church-loving personalities such as
the Russian author Feodor Dostoevsky or the Greek author Alexandros Papadiamantis.
A person’s association with worship is an indicator of his ecclesiastic demeanour.
It therefore stands to reason that one can speak of an Orthodox and a non-Orthodox
worship, because the Orthodox element underlying worship is not composed of
faceless structures; it is the faith that these structures materialize. Ever since
ancient times, one’s confession of faith was linked directly to worship. Worship
remains the sermon of truth throughout the ages, as personified by the Saints and
the “remembrance” of the redemptive events found in the Old and the New Testaments.
However, beyond being the sermon of faith, ecclesiastic worship also contributes
towards its own defence, by fending off heretic fallacies. It is already a known
fact that ecclesiastic theology is usually formulated as a response to heretic
provocations. This is evidenced by the feast-days and the special church services
dedicated to Holy Fathers and Ecumenical Synods. Vespers and Matins provide us
with the theology of every single feast-day, in lieu of a theological arsenal for
the faithful. The pious faithful becomes, for all intents and purposes, a
theologian of the Church.
6. The Liturgy
The Divine Liturgy is the centre of ecclesiastic worship in whole, culminating in
the Divine Eucharist, the centre of Orthodox life, experience and conscience.
According to fr. Al. Schmemann, a major liturgiologist of our time, “the Divine
Liturgy can be regarded as a journey or a course that eventually leads us to our
final destination, during which course every stage is equally important.” This
course begins, from the moment that the faithful leave their homes to go to the
liturgical assembly. The assembling of the body is the first and fundamental act
that introduces the faithful into the new world that God instituted in History,
i.e., the Church. The faithful assemble inside the temple, in order to participate
in the Liturgy, along with all of the Saints and their brethren in Christ – both
the living and the departed. This act culminates in the “Minor Entrance”, during
which all of the assembly, along with the Bishop, journey towards the celestial
sacrificial altar.
One cannot be perceived a Christian, outside the liturgical assembly. In times of
persecutions, the Christians placed themselves in great danger in order to
participate in the assemblies of the local communities. The expression “I belong to
the Church” means: I participate in Her liturgical assemblies; because it is
through them, that the “here and now” of the ecclesiastic body manifests itself.
It is the synagogé (=the gathering together) of the people of God - in which even
the catechumens and the repentant also participate to a certain extent - and not
just an “elite” of chosen ones. The faithful constantly deposit their sinfulness
before the Divine Love, so that it may be transformed, through repentance, into
sanctity. That is why the Holy Fathers recommend frequent participation in the
liturgical assemblies; because that is how “the powers of Satan are undone ..... in
the congruence of the faith” (Saint Ignatius the ‘God-bearer’, †107).
In the first part of the Liturgy, up to the end of the Scriptural recitations, it
was the custom for the catechumens to also participate, which is why it was called
the “Liturgy of the Catechumens”. The remaining part is called the “Liturgy of the
Faithful”, and it contains the Sacrament of the Divine Eucharist, whose main
characteristic is the sacrifice. The Eucharist is a “theophany” (a “manifestation”
of God), and as such, it transforms all of Creation into a theophany. With the
Divine Eucharist, the Church offers Her “bloodless” sacrifice. The faithful offer
God’s gifts (Thine own, of Thine own, do we offer Thee), confessing their
unworthiness and their spiritual poverty ( “..... for we have done nothing good on
earth .....”). The only reciprocation to God’s gifts that we can offer is to
consciously subject ourselves to Divine Love.
The Divine Eucharist is not a prayer or a ritual like other services. It is the
mystery of Christ’s actual presence in the midst of His praying Church. It is
firstly Christ’s Eucharist (=thanksgiving), then it becomes ours also, because,
without ceasing to be “co-seated on high with the Father”, Christ is also
simultaneously “here below, invisibly, with us”. According to Saint John the
Chrysostom, “Whensoever (the faithful) receives Holy Communion with a clean
conscience, he is performing Pascha (Easter) ... There is nothing more in the
Sacrament performed for Pascha, than in the Sacrament now being performed”. By
partaking of Christ’s “humanity” (=human nature), which is distinctly and
indivisibly joined to His Godhood, the faithful receives inside him all of Christ
and becomes joined to Him in this way.
In the Divine Eucharist, the ecclesiastic body experiences a perpetuated Pentecost.
Pentecost, Eucharist and Synod in the life of the Church are all linked to the
actual presence of Christ in the Holy Spirit. This is what our liturgical language
also expresses; we speak of “spiritual mysteries”, “spiritual sacrifice”, “worship
in the spirit”, “spiritual table”, “spiritual body”, “spiritual food and drink”,
etc. Everything becomes spiritual during the Divine Liturgy, not in the sense of a
certain idealizing or immaterializing on our part, but on account of the presence
of the Holy Spirit therein.
Above all, however, the Divine Eucharist becomes the sacrament of unification of
the Church. Those participating in it become “ONE” in Christ (Galatians 3:28),
through the unity of their hearts (“in one voice and one heart ....”). That is what
the Apostle Paul teaches in his Epistle I to Corinthians (10:15-17). The one
ecclesiastic body relates therein to the Eucharist bread: “For we, the many, are
one bread, one body”. This is why it is such a contradiction, when all of the
faithful do not receive Holy Communion, even though all of them have heard the
Eucharist-thanksgiving prayers in preparation of Holy Communion...
Holy Communion transmits Christ’s life into each member, so that it may live in
Christ, together with all the other members. Saint Simeon the New Theologian sees
this union with Christ as a lifting of Man’s solitude: “For the one participating
in the divine and deifying graces is in no way alone, but with You, my Christ, the
three-sunned light, which lights the entire world ...” . With Holy Communion, the
individuals become members of the Lord’s Body and thereafter, individual survival
“mutates” into a communion of life. Ever since the first centuries, the very
existence of the Liturgy of the Pre-Sanctified (Gifts) verifies the need to
participate in the Divine Eucharist. Naturally, none of the above occurs through
any kind of automation, but only when the participants live the life of an
ecclesiastic corpus. That is why “he who eats and drinks unworthily, is eating and
drinking of a damnation unto himself” (Corinthians I, 11:29).
During the Divine Liturgy, the Church is literally lifted to the heavens, partaking
of the death, the Resurrection and the Ascension of Christ and living Her own
“ascension” into the heavenly realm. “And You did not cease doing everything,
until You led us all to heaven and granted us Your kingdom to come ...”, we confess
during the Liturgy. The Liturgy becomes the Paschal gathering of all those who
encounter the Lord and enter His kingdom. We do not move along Platonic forms, by
seeking perfection in a certain “beginning”, but we seek it in the eschatological,
in the fulfillment of that which is evolving within Time, through to the final
outcome of the existence of the faithful-to-Christ person. The worship of the
Church is thus directed by the historical past of Divine Providence, to the
confirmed-in-Christ future. During the Divine Liturgy, even Christ’s Second Coming
is referred to as an event of the past!! “Remembering this, Thy saving commandment
and all that has been done for us: the Cross, the Grave, the Resurrection on the
third day, the Ascension into heaven, the Enthronement at the right hand and Thy
Second and Glorious Coming…” is what we confess, prior to the sanctification of the
Precious Gifts.
To underrate the liturgical congregation is to cloud its eschatological character.
Besides, with the proliferation of Eucharist congregations in a multitude of
parishes, in chapels, in monasteries, etc. and the absence of the Bishop – the head
of the gathering of every local Church – the term “congregation” has lost its true
meaning. Only the joyous character of the Liturgy now testifies towards its
eschatological atmosphere, to the point where it could even be regarded as
inconsistent with fasting. During the period of Great Lent, a period of strict
fasting, no Divine Liturgies are performed on weekdays; only the Liturgy of the
pre-sanctified Gifts. The Divine Liturgy is not one of the many means of
sanctification for the “fortification” of Man; it is the Sacrament of the Church,
which transposes the faithful into the future age. Church and Eucharist are inter-
embraced.
7. The sanctification of the entire world
The objective of ecclesiastic worship is the sanctification of the entire world.
Man’s life is sanctified, but so is the environment that surrounds him. Within the
boundaries of worship, Man is projected in Christ as the master and the king of
Creation, who is called upon to refer himself, along with Creation, to the Creator
– the source of their existence and sanctification.
a) The sanctification of Time: The liturgical year is the transcending “in Christ”
of the “calendar year” and the transformation of the calendar into a feast-day
almanac. With Her celebrations and Her services, the Church sanctifies and
transforms the year of our daily lives, by unifying and orienting it towards the
kingdom of God. Liturgically speaking, Time ceases to be a simple, natural
framework, inasmuch as it is transformed into a point of reference used for
determining the content of worship. This is evidenced by the terminology used:
“Matins” (=morning), “Vespers” (=evening), “Midnight”, “Hours”, etc.. From the
liturgiological aspect, the organizing of the annual cycle on the basis of time
periods (day, week, year), with an analogous organizing of one’s very life, is
called the “Liturgy of Time”.
The liturgical year “baptizes” Man’s entire life into the worship of the Church.
The repetition of the feast-days every year renews the catechesis of the faithful
and it gives a special meaning to the customary (Greek) wishes “and next year,
also”, or, “for many more years” – wishes that refer to new opportunities for
learning. The liturgical year is linked to the Church’s cycle of feast-days, whose
basic structural element is festivity. There is a cycle of “mobile” feast-days
with Easter at its centre, and a cycle of “immobile” feast days, with the Epiphany
and Christmas at its centre. The periods of the “Triodion” and the
“Pentecostarion” belong to the former cycle, having received their names from the
respective liturgical books that predominate therein.
The Triodion period is a sectioned one, just as the human body is sectioned: the
first four weeks can be regarded as the body’s extremes; the body itself is the
Great Lenten period, and the Holy Week of Easter is the head. Hymns, readings and
rituals all comprise a spiritual preparation for one’s participation in the Holy
Week and the Resurrection. From Easter Day, the period of the Pentecostarion
begins. Easter and Pentecost were already feast-days of the pre-Constantine order,
and albeit Hebrew in origin, they now had a Christian content. Christ and His
Passion are what differentiated the Christian from the Jewish Passover-Pascha,
which had now become a symbol of the new life; of the divine kingdom. The coming
of the Holy Spirit during the Pentecost inaugurated the new century.
The cycle of immobile feast-days was organized with the day of the Epiphany at its
centre (6th January), a date that originally also commemorated the Birth of Christ.
The separation of the two celebrations for historical and theological reasons was
effected around the middle of the 4th century. With Christmas as basis, the other,
feast-days of Christ (Circumcision, Baptism, Reception, Transfiguration) were put
in place. But the Theotokos also comprises a “liturgical mystery”. The feast-days
relating to the Holy Mother (Birth, Reception, Annunciation, Dormition, etc.) are
all linked to the feast-days of Christ, expressing the same mystery. The
celebrating of the memory of Saints is an extension of the liturgical honour
bestowed on the Theotokos. What seems odd for some people however is that the
Church “celebrates” by honouring the memory – that is, the Dormition – of Her
children and not their birth. We Orthodox Christians do not celebrate our
birthdays; we celebrate on the day of commemoration of the Saint whose name we
bear. In Christian terms, a “birthday” is the day of one’s ‘dormition’, i.e., the
day that one is born into eternal life. The Saints embody the “common life” and
are projected as the leaders of mankind, in its course for making man real. Our
nation’s association with the Saints – with the Most Holy Mother at the head – is
apparent in the two-fold festivity that is performed in their memory, both inside
the temple with the Holy Altar at the centre, and outside the temple, with the
secular table at the centre. The book of the lives of Saints is a cherished article
for the people, as it is seen as a “hoarding” of the Church’s historical memory and
a guideline for the faithful. The course of the faithful is shaped, “along with all
the Saints”.
The liturgical organizing of Time in its micro-temporal dimension is analyzed in
the weekly cycle of services and the day-to-evening services. The weekly cycle is
composed of two parts: the Saturday-Sunday cycle and the five-day cycle. Each day
of the week is dedicated to the memory of a certain soteriological event or a
certain Saint; Sunday is dedicated to the Resurrection of Christ; Monday to the
Angels; Tuesday to Saint John the Baptist; Wednesday and Friday are respectively
linked to Judas’ betrayal and Christ’s Crucifixion (which is why these are two days
of fasting); on Friday, the Church also commemorates the presence of the Holy
Mother by the Cross; Thursday is dedicated to the Apostles and Saint Nicholas; and
Saturday is dedicated to the deceased.
The weekly cycle was organized on the basis of Sunday (Greek=Kyriakée), the first
celebration –historically- to be set down by the Church. Being directly related to
the Lord (Greek=Kyrios) Jesus Christ (Cor.I, 12:3), it represents a confession of
faith unto Him. Being also related to the “eighth day”, it was linked to the Divine
Eucharist as a permanent and immobile day for its commemoration. The Sunday “day
of rest” – which was imposed by Constantine the Great in 324 A.D. – did not relate
to the Sabbath, but instead portrayed itself as the transcending of the Sabbath.
Sunday is “the first of the Sabbaths (=the first day of every week), the Queen and
the Mistress”, we chant. The Sabbath reflects the natural life of the world,
whereas Sunday represents the eschatological day of entry into the new aeon.
The day-to-evening services include the following: The 24-hour cycle begins with
Vespers (see Genesis 1: “and it became evening, and it became morning….”) and its
services coincide with the ancient division of Time (evening, midnight, dawn,
third, sixth, ninth hours). The services are: the “Esperinos” (Vespers = of the
day’s end) or “Lychnikon” (=of the lamp), the Major and Minor “Apodeipnon” (=after
the evening meal); the “Mesonyktikon” (=of midnight); the “Orthros” (=of dawn) –
the most extensive and theologically wealthy service - and the “Ores” (=Hours),
which are the 1st, the 3rd, the 6th and the 9th, in commemoration of the major
moments affecting our salvation (the Crucifixion, the Death of Christ, the descent
of the Holy Spirit).
But, while all of ecclesiastic worship was indissolubly interwoven with natural
Time, the Divine Liturgy remained beyond Time and its confinements. Thus, it does
not belong to the cycle of day-to-evening services, nor are any of the other
services regarded as a preparation for it. That is why it can be performed at any
time – morning, noon or night – as the par excellence celebration and festivity of
the Church.
b) The sanctification of life: The epicenter of the sanctifying function of the
Church is Man. From the moment of his birth into this world and his spiritual re-
birth in the Church, through to the last moment of his presence in this lifetime,
ecclesiastic worship constantly provides Man with opportunities for “ecclesiasm”
and continuous rebirth. The catholicity of the spiritual and everyday caring of the
Church for Her faithful is evident in the liturgical book “Euchologion” (=Major
Book of Prayers). Its very structure and its texts embody the objective of the
Church, which is the “full” incorporation of Man in the ecclesiastic body, the
struggle for victory over the devil, the demonic powers of the world and sin, and
the confronting of everyday problems and needs. The wealth and the variety of
benedictions and Services in the “Euchologion” is indicative of the love and the
concern of Orthodoxy for the personal and the social life of the faithful; for the
cycles of their life, and the more common and mundane labours.
The Church sanctifies Man from the moment of his birth, by giving Her blessing to
the new mother and the newborn child, preparing the latter to be eventually
received into Her bosom. Besides, the sanctification of the family begins from the
Sacrament of Marriage. On the 8th day, the infant receives its name with a special
liturgical act, and its personal “otherness” is thus confirmed – something that is
afterwards proven by its incorporation in the ecclesiastic body. On the 40th day,
the infant is “led to” the temple to be “churchified”, to begin its ecclesiastic
life, which corresponds to the commencement of adult catechesis.
After this spiritual preparation, Baptism follows; this is the entry into the body
of Christ, which gives Man the possibility of living the life of Christ and
constantly receiving His Grace. Infant baptism, familiar since ancient Christian
times, can be comprehended only in the cases of pious parents and godparents - in
other words, of those with a Christian background – and cannot be imposed by any
legislation. Through Baptism, the “neophyte” is inducted into a specific community
– the local Church – by participating in the ethos and the way of existence of the
Church. The more perfect this induction is, the more consistently will his
Christian status evolve.
But the faithful is called upon to augment the gift that he received through his
baptism, by orientating his life in a Christ-centered manner. Thus, after “nature”
(=soul and body) has died and risen in the baptismal font, the human person is then
sanctified through the sacrament of Chrismation, which functions as the personal
Pentecost of the faithful, so that through his spiritual labors, he will become a
“temple” of God and his life a veritable Liturgy. The sacrament of Repentance
(confession) provides the opportunity for a continuous transcending of sin and the
transforming of death into life.
Furthermore, the Church blesses the “paths” that the faithful voluntarily choose
for their perfection: either marriage (in Christ), or monastic living. Both are
“sacraments of love”, with a direct referral to Christ. Marriage, when preserved
within the framework of a life in Christ, leads to the transcendence of the flesh
and to one’s perfect delivery unto Christ, thenceforth coinciding with monastic
ascesis. In this way, the sacrament of marriage reveals the truth of the Church
without being used to serve conventional expediencies of everyday living. Wherever
marriage is perceived simply as a moralistic adjustment or a “legal transaction”,
the “political” marriage is selected, perhaps legalistically, but it is a marriage
that is not spiritually “equivalent” to the ecclesiastic one, which is a sacrament
of Grace.
Furthermore, ecclesiastic worship provides sanctifying acts for every moment of
one’s life. In fact, through them, it proves that it is not a “spiritualist”
(abstractly spiritual) affair, or a “religious” affair, because the sanctification
it provides also constitutes a proposal for confronting the everyday problems of
each person. In one of the Matins Prayers, we ask God to grant man His “terrestrial
and celestial gifts”.
There are blessings even for instances in life that seem trite and insignificant,
such as (for example) “for a child’s haircut”, “for when a child leaves to learn
the sacred texts”, “for ill-natured children”, etc.. Other blessings refer to the
intake of food, the various “vocations” and works of the faithful (e.g. travels) as
well as “professions”; inter-personal relations are blessed, so that there will be
justice, peace and love; God’s Grace is requested for man’s tribulations, for his
illnesses, his mental health and his psychosomatic passions. An important place in
the worship of the Church is given to death - the cessation of the body’s
collaboration with the soul, until the moment of the “common resurrection”. The
Church does not overlook this supreme existential event of life; in fact, She
stands near the person from the moment that death makes its appearance. She
confesses the near-death person and offers him Holy Communion; She inters his body,
which has now been delivered to mortification and corruption, sending off the soul
to its last journey and beseeching Christ to receive His child, who has abandoned
the world with the hope for “eternal life”. The funeral service is one of the
tenderest and most touching texts in ecclesiastic worship….
In parallel to the above, the church offers prayers for various moments of public
life: serious circumstances and disasters, dangers, malfunctions in public life,
both in the micro-society of the village or the town, as well as the macro-
community of the homeland and the nation. The relative prayer material refers to
national anniversaries, the structures of civil life, education, the armed forces,
public health… This incomparable liturgical wealth remains broadly unknown and so
we remain ignorant of all those elements that can give meaning to our lives.
c) The sanctification of material creation: Creation, both liturgically and
theologically, is the broader territory provided for man’s fulfillment; it is the
frame of his everyday life – especially in rural communities, where this is
perceived more profoundly. Man’s association with Creation constitutes a special
theme of ecclesiastic worship and it unfolds during special services that prove the
ecclesiastic acknowledgement of material creation (bread), which was assumed by
Christ’s human nature and is constantly transformed into the “flesh” of Christ
during the Divine Eucharist.
Our liturgical act blesses and sanctifies water, wine, sustenance, living and
working quarters, flora, fauna, natural phenomena (wind, thunder, rain, earthquake,
etc.), for the protection, finally, and the salvation of man. During worship, the
faithful offers the Creator’s gifts - in lieu of his giving thanks - so that they
might be “baptized” in Divine Grace and be returned to the offerers, for their own
sanctification and preservation. During the Divine Liturgy, “one could say that a
march, a parade of the whole world towards the Holy Altar is taking place” (Prof.
John Zizioulas, Metropolitan of Pergamon). This negates every notion of an
opposition between the natural and the supernatural, since the creation which is
being offered to God (bread and wine) becomes the carrier of the Uncreated (Grace)
and sanctifies the participants.
The God-centeredness of existence is inspired by the theology of such texts.
Through nature, man is referred to the Creator, comprehending the world as a gift
of the Creator, learning to use Creation ‘eucharistically’ (as in the Divine
Eucharist) and acquiring the empirical certainty that the issue is not “what does
man eat”, but with what presuppositions he eats something, given that sanctified
nature co-sanctifies man also. Thus, the faithful learns to become an “officiator”
of Creation, in a “cosmic liturgy” that is officiated by the Saints. The Saints,
with their imperishable and miracle-working relics, reveal the destination of
Creation, which is its sanctification and its incorruptibility. Each faithful is
invited to our worship, so that he can be wholly sanctified; so that he might be
enabled to co-sanctify Creation along with him, through his association with it.
8. Worship and spiritual life
The course towards theosis (deification) is attained through the induction of one’s
whole existence into the body of Christ, with a lifestyle that will allow the
uninterrupted collaboration of Man with the Grace of God. The main constituent of
this lifestyle is ascesis, as a permanent fight of man. This is what is meant by
the words of Christ, that: “the realm of heaven is violable, and violators take it
by force” (Matthew 11:12). Ascesis is a continuous course of repentance, by which
the faithful recipient of the Grace of God, without which, his existence is
deadened. On the contrary, with ascesis, our revolutionary nature is deadened, only
to regain its God-centeredness.
However, the ascetic endeavors of the faithful do not have a moralistic character;
that is, they do not aspire to improving one’s character and behavior; but to the
possibility of participating in the celebration and the rejoicing of the
ecclesiastic body. That is why it generates in the faithful a sense of unspoken
joy, refuting every artificial (pharisaic) frowning and faked gloom, which are
nothing more than a manneristic pietism. Christian ascesis is a voluntary
participating in obedience to Christ and the Saints, for the mortification of our
personal will and its eventual alignment with the will of Christ (Philip. 2:5).
Orthodoxy’s piety, however, is liturgical in nature. This is why ascesis is
perceived as being supplementary to liturgical life. Ecclesiastic worship is
festive in its ethos. Ascesis is the foretasting of joy through partaking of the
Church’s festivity, but it is also a preparation of the faithful for their entry
into this spiritual celebration. It is the path for one’s return to the “natural
condition” (the authenticity of human existence), so that the passage to the
“hyper-natural” (where Worship elevates us to) may be made possible. Besides, that
which is sought in worship –according to the blessed Chrysostom – is “a sedate
soul, an aroused intellect, a humble heart, a strengthened mind, a cleansed
conscience”.
The spiritual progress, which the faithful attains through his personal ascesis, is
“churchified” during worship; it is incorporated in the body of Christ, and from
being a “personal” event, it becomes an ecclesiastic one – in other words, a social
one. If individuality does not become “churchified”, it cannot be saved. Outside
the body of Christ, not only can there be no salvation, but even the most perfect
of virtues remains nothing more than a “woman’s dirty rag” (Isaiah 64:6), in other
words, something chokingly filthy. Worship renders the faithful’s life a life “in
Christ”. Ascesis provides this possibility, since the person who is governed by his
passions cannot truly glorify God. In ascesis, a “cleansed heart” is the objective.
(Psalm 50:12), because it is only ‘in a cleansed heart” that man can possibly see
God (Matthew 5:8), thus attaining the purpose of his existence.
This is what the resurrectional hymn by Saint John the Damascene expresses: “Let us
cleanse ourselves of our senses, and we shall have sight of the inapproachable
light of the Resurrection: Christ Himself, ablaze…” Through the Divine Eucharist,
worship leads us into theosis (deification), provided however that there is a
cleanliness of heart and a transformation of our senses, from physical to spiritual
ones. If worship, therefore, is the entrance to the heavenly kingdom, ascesis is
the road to the kingdom. Worship defines and reveals the purpose of our existence;
ascesis collaborates towards the realization of this purpose.
9. The Liturgy after the Liturgy
Ecclesiastic worship is the “Time-Space” in which the Christian ethos is shaped.
During worship, the faithful rediscovers the proper meaning of a moral lifestyle,
which cannot be shaped on the basis of a certain juridical relationship with God,
but through the metamorphosis and the renovation of Creation and Man, in Christ.
The Christian ethos is a liturgical one and it springs from one’s personal
relationship with the Lord of the Church, Who offers Himself voluntarily “for the
nourishment of the entire world”. This relationship, with its triple reference
(Man-God-World) is realized during worship, according to the words of the Apostle
Paul: “For, if you have also risen in Christ […] make dead your limbs on earth […]
divesting yourselves of the old self […] and putting on the new …” (i.e.: So, if
you have been resurrected along with Christ….then deaden everything earthen that is
inside you…. rejecting the old person and donning the new one) (Colossians 3:1).
This is the continuous “baptism” of the faithful within the new life of the mystery
of faith.
In the Church’s worship, a person’s entire life is re-defined, now becoming Christ-
centered. “Now everything is filled with light…” The faithful, having been flooded
by this light, are invited to become a spiritual river – one that flows from the
Holy Altar to irrigate the world salvifically. Ecclesiastic worship thus
substantiates that which constitutes the Church’s offer in History. It does not
provide any code of moral behavior or a system of moral rules; only a life and a
society that can function as “yeast” that will leaven the world with its
sanctifying presence, beginning from the micro-society. Participation in worship –
if it is genuine – is a participation in the death of self-seeking and
individualistic demands and a resurrection into the “in-Christ” reality, which is
the purpose of the Church. The eschatological conscience that is inspired by
Orthodox worship is oriented towards eschatological behaviors, by transcending the
danger of secularization and any other compromises and configurations.
It is therefore understood that any alienation from the liturgical experience will,
beyond other things, alter one’s beliefs and decompose one’s life, by transforming
the ecclesiastic BEING into various anti-Christian substitutes (moralism, pietism,
ritualism, etc.). Besides, we must not forget that the community ethos of
Hellenism’s Orthodoxy and the free-spirited stance during the oppressive period of
slavery had been shaped within Church worship: the only assembling of the
population that never fell into decline. And this is a real blessing, thanks to
which, by the Grace of God, in our difficult times, both our People and our Youth
are once again finding the path that leads to the Church and Her worship.
At the end of the Divine Liturgy (according to its ancient ending), the Officiator
would say to the laity: “Let us go forth in peace”. This was not merely a formal
announcement of the ending of a “religious duty”, but a motivational expression to
relay the light of divine peace into the darkness of our world. The Church and Her
Worship exist for the world – for its salvation. The Liturgy of the Church prepares
the exit of the faithful into the world, both for their testimony of the “Grandeurs
of God”, as well as for the missionary calling for salvation in Christ. Christ’s
sacrifice and His Resurrection, mysteries that are perpetually ever-present and
experienced during worship, perpetually irrigate the world in a salvific manner.
The faithful are those channels of Divine Grace that lead to the parched land of
our societies, through which channels the “Light of Christ” can “shine on everyone”
and shed its light on everything!
CHAPTER 6
THE IMPORTANCE OF HESYCHASM IN THE HISTORY OF ORTHODOXY
________________
1.
Hesychasm* constitutes the quintessence of Orthodox tradition, having related
itself to everything that the term “Orthodoxy” embodies and expresses. Orthodoxy
outside the Hesychastic tradition is unthinkable and nonexistent. Besides,
Hesychasm itself is the “philosopher’s stone” by which one can recognize the
genuine Christian image. In the Orthodox tradition, the “divine charismas” are
acquired through fasting, vigils and prayer. And it should be clarified, that
Hesychasm is understood first of all as the course towards theosis and the
experience of theosis, and only secondly, as a (theological) recording of this
method of experience. In Christianity (the authentic Christian conscience), we
know that textual recordings are basically pursuant to practice and that they
comprise descriptions of that practice; they do not however comprise a substitute.
Saint Gregory Palamas’ “successors” are not located in academic theology; they can
only be found in the continuance of his ascetic lifestyle.
«Hesychasm, as an ascetic therapeutic treatment, was at the core of Orthodoxy, even
from the time of the Apostles, and it prevailed throughout the entire Roman
kingdom, in the East and in the West» (Fr. John Romanides). This was the
responsible verification of one of the most reliable researchers of Hesychasm and
of Saint Gregory Palamas, i.e., father John Romanides. In the framework of a
tradition that was spiritually uplifted by Hesychasm, it is easy to understand and
to interpret the national, social and (even) political history of Romanity (Fr.
John Romanides). It is precisely within this framework that one can also properly
evaluate the contribution of Saint Gregory Palamas. “Being a continuation of the
ancient Fathers”, of the united and indivisible patristic tradition, he “expressed
–according to the venerable Geron, father Theocletos Dionysiatis- the eternal
spirit of the Orthodox Church, by reviving its experiences, its practices, its
teachings and its promises.» He contributed decisively in this way, towards the
preservation of the Church’s overall identity.
2.
It is –of course- a fact, that the consequences of the various ideological disputes
of the 14th century, both spiritual and social, had visibly weakened the (Eastern
Roman) Empire, which was already reduced in size as of the 13th century, leaving it
unshielded from the expansionist dispositions of its neighbors, and mainly the
Ottomans. In 1354, the Ottoman Turks seized Callipolis, planting themselves firmly
on its European side. The Empire was heading towards a predetermined decline, and
it did gradually end up a pitiful relic of its former self.
However, while the frequent civil uprisings, the social dissents and the enemy
assaults were progressively weakening the Empire, the spiritual powers of the
Nation, being perpetually re-baptized in the Hesychast patristic tradition, averted
the danger of Romanity (“Byzantium”, see: http://www.romanity.org/ ) being
transformed into a Frankish protectorate, at the same time preserving the
inexhaustible fountain of mental prowess, stalwartness and spiritual vigor,
throughout the prolonged period of slavery. And yet, even after the Latin (1204)
and the Ottoman (1453) sieges, the thing affected most of all was only the
political aspect of the Nation, not its spirituality. The absolute center of
Romanity continued to be those who had attained theosis; they were the ones who
could attain theosis «at any point in history, in any situation, whether social or
political» (Fr. John Romanides).
The Saints of the period of slavery, and all the sacred relics like those of Saints
Gerasimos and Dionysios -especially in the Venetian-occupied regions- are the most
powerful reassurances, even according to Eugene Bulgaris, that the spiritual acme
of the Nation was not extinguished during its enslavement, nor did anyone succeed
in alienating it; not even in those territories that were strongly inclined in this
direction, as were the Latin-occupied ones. Hesychast spirituality, with the Holy
Mountain at its center, permeated the collective conscience of the Nation, and it
deposited here and there the wholesome fruits of its presence, its efficacy and its
power. «The Hesychast patristic tradition remained [...] the most powerful force of
the Nation». «The Hesychast Fathers, according to the Metropolitan Hierotheos of
Nafpaktos, were Romans who […] with their efforts had preserved the essence of
Romanity. The anti-hesychasts were strangers to Romanity». I fully agree with him,
when he asserts that «the Hesychast discourse (he meant during the 14th century)
and the victory of the Orthodox Tradition were blessings from God, for the oncoming
enslavement of our Nation […]. That Hesychast way of life was what had sustained
the Nation, by preserving it with an ethnic and orthodox conscience, and it had
also brought forth the martyrs and the confessors of the faith; furthermore, it was
that same Hesychast way of life that created the organized communities and
associations; it preserved the inner freedom of the soul, and it gave rise to the
1821 Revolution. As verified by researchers, we know that all the heroes of the
Revolution were shaped by this Orthodox Roman tradition and were not in the least
driven by Western Enlightenment. In the tradition of our Nation, we had our own
Enlightenment –the illumination of the Intellect (called “nous”, the `eye of the
spiritual heart') – as declared and described by Saint Nicodemus of the Holy
Mountain, by General Makryannis (one of the “founding fathers” of the modern Greek
state, in 1821) and others.»
We have allowed the voice of the learned Hierarch to be heard, and not a
professional historian’s, who nevertheless unreservedly agrees with these
observations. Hesychasm, as the existential form of Orthodoxy, shaped the
conscience of the Orthodox Nations and their ideology, which were both realized
creatively, throughout its historical duration.
The enslaved Orthodox nations survived, thanks to the preservation of the patristic
therapeutic method, which, having being preserved in its fullness in the person of
the Saints, drew constantly from the collective conscience of the broader basis of
the laity, through its collectively accepted (albeit sometimes inadequate)
practices. The centrifugal trends continued of course, and were located mainly in
the realm of intellect that was influenced by the West. This trend has been
contributing towards the gradual estrangement from the Orthodox Tradition, a
phenomenon that is reaching its climax in our day, with a steadily widening gap
between Patricity and the boom in anti-Patricity observed in the entire spectrum of
daily life (for example, the western perception of a “dual” spirituality : monastic
and secular).
3.
But it was the persistence in Hesychast tradition that also defined the stances
opposite the Christian –but no longer Orthodox– West, as well as opposite ancient
Hellenism, or, more specifically, opposite the unsettling phenomena observed in the
monistic turn towards antiquity, in the guise of worship of the ancient Greek
ideals. By comparing eastern tradition with the western one, it became apparent
that the West was not only no longer unanimous with the East, but it had actually
become a threat to the very historical existence of the East.
In the 14th century, the first in-depth confrontation between East and West took
place, in the field of ecclesiastic-theological tradition. For the first time, the
opportunity had presented itself in the East to document the radical
differentiation and the lack of coincidence between East and West, in the person of
an authentic “western” theologian; a bearer of Augustinian theological tradition
and method.
It became evident that in the West, another kind of Christianity had formed,
hypostatized as a civilization at the antipodes of the Roman East. The mentality
embraced by Barlaam later reached its apex with the English historian, Gibbon
(1737-1794), who expressed in a classical manner the West’s perception of the Roman
East, and who, together with the rationalist ecclesiastic historian Mosheim (18th
century), prepared Adamantios Korais (: one of the “founding fathers” of the modern
Greek state, at 1821 ) accordingly, as the patriarch of “Westernizers”.
The inner light of the Hesychasts was, in Gibbon’s opinion, “the product of a
capriciousness that is in bad taste; it is the product of an empty stomach and a
vacant brain”. To him, Hesychasm was the culmination of “the religious nonsense of
the Greeks”. These prejudices, embedded in the European collective conscience
through their education, have from that time onwards been shaping the Western
stance towards the Orthodox East -and especially towards Hellenism- even up to this
day. Consequently, the “astonishment” over the stance of western Leaderships
towards Greece and the Balkan countries in general is –among other things- a
display of their ignorance of history.
On the other hand, the “Hellenicity” that was embodied in the scholastics of
“Byzantium” (=Romanity) such as Nikeforos Gregoras who proclaimed unreservedly
that he was a “Hellene”, diametrically differentiated itself from the “Hellenicity”
which had been assimilated by the Patristic lifestyle, and it comprised the natural
continuation of Hellenic antiquity, except that it was only the Patristic synthesis
of “Hellenicity”-Christianity that led to the cultural reality of Romanity.
4.
Hesychasm however had also played an important, unifying role during the culturally
disturbed and disintegrated (due to their adventures) Balkans; The Hesychasts
moved freely throughout the Orthodox East, from land to land, transcending
whichever ethnic differences.
Mention was made by a major theologian, Fr. Halkin, of an “Hesychasm
International”; nowadays, when one makes mention of an “Orthodox arc” in the sense
of a rampart against Islam, one should not omit to keep Hesychast spirituality in
mind, which is the only element that can ensure a genuine unity within the
boundaries of the supra-national and hyper-racial Roman unanimity. Our inter-Balkan
unity is founded in just that Hesychast tradition.
The unity of our Nation, in its Balkan diffraction, has been threatened, but it had
also been broken up at times, by the party of anti-hesychasts, called “Latin-
Hellenes” (according to Saint Gregory Palamas) and “Graeco-Latins” (according to
Saint Mark of Ephesus), who had aligned themselves with Franko-Latin metaphysics
and had continued the spiritual dualism of the “Byzantine” (Eastern Roman)
intellect that was embodied programmatically by Psellos and Italos. To the
“Westernizing” anti-hesychasts, the fact that the East had no scholastic theology
was looked upon as a form of decadence, so they made sure that it was introduced
into the life and the education of our Nation.
The abandoning of Hesychasm, and the turn towards metaphysical theologizing
gradually altered the identity of the Orthodox nations, which, after the founding
of the Hellenic State, may have been liberated from “Turkish” slavery, but were not
freed of “Frankish” slavery. According to father Romanides, “with the expulsion of
the Hesychasts from Neo-Hellenic ideology, and with the prevalence of Koraism,
catharsis was replaced by ethics, and enlightenment was replaced by catechesis.
Thus, the Hesychast spiritual Fathers were replaced by moralizing organizers of
catechist schools, who burdened the young with a system of morals that only a
hypocrite can give the impression that it is being implemented. As a result, even
the bios of the Saints ended up mostly as a kind of mythology» (Fr. John
Romanides). Hesychasm was displaced by metaphysical pondering and dogmatism in the
field of theologizing, but also by pietism, in place of lay religiousness. Thus,
monasteries began to lose their true therapeutic calling, now being substituted by
secular missionary formations and an attempt to further transform them, into
activity centers destined for public benefit services.
The publishing of the works of Saint Gregory Palamas under the supervision of a
memorable professor, the late Mr. Panagiotis Christou, but also the profoundly
traditional approach towards Hesychasm by monks of the Holy Mountain (such as the
reverend father Theocletos Dionysiates) as well as by theologians (with father John
Romanides at the lead), all contributed towards the re-discovery of the Hesychast
tradition; in other words, our patristic foundations.
«Today, more than ever before, we are coming to realize the true worth of the
Roman-Hesychast tradition». Contemporary man is seeking to be cured of his
psychological and existential problems. The presence however of an
“ideologicalized” or “religionized” Orthodoxy rather complicates these problems
instead of solving them, thus rendering Orthodoxy a seemingly repulsive and useless
thing. The reverend Metropolitan of Nafpaktos and myself saw this for ourselves
recently, in the United States. Our Hesychast tradition however, can most assuredly
cure “the core of man’s existence”.
In conclusion therefore, and in concurrence with His Eminence the Metropolitan of
Nafpaktos: «Hesychasm, as expressed by Saint Gregory Palamas and preserved by the
Orthodox Church as “the apple of Her eye”, is truly the life of the contemporary
world. » (Metropolitan Hierotheos of Nafpaktos) and the only means of salvation, or
in other words, theosis.
CHAPTER 7
IN PRAYER AND FASTING - (Worship and Ascesis as the coordinates of Orthodox
spiritual living)
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CHAPTER 8
PHILOKALIAN DISTINCTION BETWEEN ORTHODOXY AND HERESY
________________
1. Introduction
It is a known fact that a precise definition of Orthodoxy as a Church is
impossible, because “Orthodoxy-Church” is a Divine-human magnitude and, as far as
its divine element is concerned, it supersedes every intellectual-logical
conception. So, if we wished to somehow define Orthodoxy, we could say the
following: Orthodoxy is the presence of the Uncreated in the world and in History,
and the potential of the created to become sanctified and attain theosis. A
(Christian) Deismus: “Deus Creator, sed non Gubernator” (A God Creator, but not
Governor) – is a pure delusion, orthodoxically speaking. The Time-less and supra-
Time element is constantly within the world and within Time, so that it may
sanctify Time and transform it into the Time of the divine Kingdom, into eternity
(see the words of the Apostle Paul: “It is necessary for this perishable thing to
clothe itself with imperishability, and this mortal thing to clothe itself with
immortality” – Cor.I, 15:53).
2. Faith
It is understood that Orthodoxy is always closely linked to faith. Thus, we speak
of the “right and true faith”, in order to distinguish it from the “adulterated
faith”. Orthodoxy is the true glory and glorification of God - the genuine notion
of God – while a heresy is a manufactured glory, a morbid glorification of God.
Orthodoxy and heresy thus confront each other in the area of Faith, and that is
exactly where they diversify. What, therefore, is “faith” and how is it perceived
in the life of the Church as the Body of Christ?
First of all, “faith” in the language of theology signifies divine revelation; it
is that which is revealed to Man, by God – it is the content of the revealed,
Divine Truth (Fides quae creditur). However, Divine Revelation is not an abstract
thing, that is to say, a collection of intellectually conceived truths, ideas and
basic positions that Man is called upon to accept, in order to be saved. Such is
the Scholastic view of faith, which has infiltrated our Dogmatics also. The Truth
of the Church is a Person; it is the incarnated Son and Logos of God; it is the
incarnate All-Truth. It is the Person of our Lord Jesus Christ. The unknown and
inapproachable God became (and continues to become) known, ever since the beginning
of Creation, in Christ. In other words, God discloses Himself; He is self-revealed,
“in multilateral and resourceful ways” (Hebrews 1:1), the culmination being His
self-revelation “in the Son” - the incarnation of His Son - which was the
prerequisite for the event of the Pentecost, for the sake of which Creation
(according to the Saints) was “composed”. The Pentecost is God’s supreme revelation
in the Holy Spirit, and Man’s experience within History.
Christ, as a God-Human, is in a certain way the “objective” faith, which is offered
“from above”, so that we may come to know God “in Himself” (see John 14:9 –
‘whomsoever has seen Me, has seen the Father’). He is our “hypostatic” (=personal)
faith, according to Saint Maximus the Confessor. We become “faithful”, by
participating in that personal and incarnated Faith (=Christ). Only in Christ can
there be a possibility to know the true God. And that is what establishes
Orthodoxy’s uniqueness and exclusivity, in the event known as “Salvation”. (Acts,
4:12)
To the revealed Faith, which is “accredited” to Man for his salvation, Man
reciprocates with his own (subjective) Faith (Fides qua creditur). Man’s faith is
absolutely essential, in order for God’s power to function inside Man; to lead him
to salvation. Its significance is stressed by Christ Himself: “Whosoever believes
and is baptized shall be saved; whosoever disbelieves shall be reproached.” (Mark
16:16). The “objective” Faith must necessarily be transformed into Man’s
“subjective” Faith, for his salvation. And that is effected, through the
“indwelling” (Rom.8:9 ‘…if the Spirit of God dwells within you …’) of the
“objective” Faith; in other words, the indwelling of the Uncreated inside the
created; of God inside Man. Man is invited by Christ to become “faithful”, to be
receptive of the revealed-in-Christ Truth as a “life in Christ”, and to live that
Truth, so that he too may become “true”, just as Christ is “the true One” (John I,
5:20). Man’s salvation is when he is rendered “true”, and the prerequisite for
this, is his union with the true God.
A faith that is Orthodox is the one that acts soteriologically. And that is the
precise point where heresy differentiates itself from Orthodoxy. “Heresy” is the
adulteration of the faith and its retraction at the same time, because it is
adulterating the faith in two directions: on the one hand, with regard to the
“believed” (Christ) and on the other, with regard to its manner of accepting
Christ. In a heresy, Christ is segmented and is accepted, not in whole but
segmentally, by a segmented - not whole – person, because He is approached only by
Man’s intellect and his lips, while the heart and Man’s entire existence is “a long
way off” from God (Matthew 15:8). A heresy (every heresy) is not only a false
teaching; it is literally a non-Orthodoxy and a non-Christianity. By approaching
the matter in this way, we disentangle ourselves from the confessional
disagreements of the past and their scholastic terminology. After all, what is of
primary concern is not how false a teaching might be, but whether it is capable of
healing Man (as fr. Romanides used to teach); whether it is capable of saving him.
Thus, one could say in conclusion - with regard to the process of the event called
“faith” – that faith begins as a logical-intellectual process, in the sense of an
external affirmation by Man, progressing as an acceptance of God’s offer and a
loyalty towards Him, to be fulfilled however, with an internal certainty and
cognizance of God, in Christ. These are the exact basic meanings –linguistically –
contained in the term “faith” (pistis) in the Greek language, the language of the
Gospels: em-pisto-syni (trust), pisto-tita (fidelity, faithfulness), vevaiotita
(certainty, confidence). Further along, we shall attempt – from within our
Philokalian (ascetic-neptic) tradition – to elucidate these meanings, in order to
comprehend as much as we can the function of faith as a factor of salvation.
3. The “first” faith – the “simple” faith – or, the “faith through hearing”
Jesus Christ - the eternal Logos of God - teaches mankind throughout all the ages,
revealing through His teaching the path to Salvation. This was already taking place
in the Old Testament, through His “mouths” – the Prophets. But it also took place
after His incarnation, through His own most holy mouth, and continues to take place
historically, with His Apostles and the Saintly Fathers and Mothers, through “to
the end of Time” (Matthew, 28:20).
Man’s stance, which is characterized by his reply/response to God’s calling, is, in
the worst case a denial-rejection of God’s offer, and in the best case it is our
trust in Him. Given that Christ acts in History as “the Physician of our souls and
our bodies” (from the Divine Liturgy), we could say that this applies in the case
of every Physician: either one shows trust in him and obeys the doctor’s orders and
is cured, or, he violates his orders and dies. This first “faith”, in the form of
trust, is the trust that originates “through hearing” of a sermon and is a
necessary prerequisite for the cognizance of God (see Romans 10:17: ‘…faith through
hearing, and hearing, through the word of God’).
This first faith of Man is linked to his natural knowledge, which has intellect/
logic as its instrument. There are two kinds of faith, but also two kinds of
knowledge/cognizance; at the same time, there are two instruments for each type of
knowledge; i.e., for the cognizance of God and the cognizance of the world. That is
what was stated by Saint Isaac the Syrian, a major ascetic of the Church: “It is
one knowledge, which has faith as its prerequisite, and another, which is born of
faith. The former is a natural knowledge, while the latter is a spiritual
knowledge.” With natural-logical knowledge (albeit it, too, is a gift of God), we
can discern between good and evil. But how doe natural knowledge lead us to Faith?
According to the Apostle Paul, it turns Man towards God, through Creation (Romans
1:20). The divine path, however, is the one of teaching and of miracles – the
“divine signs”. The teaching and the miracles of Christ orientated Man’s natural
knowledge, in order to arouse the “first” faith. For instance, when Christ fed the
“five thousand” in the desert, the people, on seeing the miracle that Christ
performed, exclaimed: “this man is truly the prophet who was to come into the
world” (John 6:14). In another place, John the Evangelist observes: “Thus, Jesus
had performed many and other signs before His disciples, which are not recorded in
this book. These however have been recorded, so that you may believe that Jesus is
the Christ (the anointed One), the Son of God, and in believing, you shall have
eternal life in His name” (John 20:30-31). But even Christ Himself would say to the
Judeans: “and even if you do not believe me, then believe through (my) Labors, so
that you might know and discover that the Father is in Me and I am in the Father”
(John 10:38). And: “They told you, and you did not believe. The acts that I do in
the name of my Father, they testify about me”. (John 10:25)
Christ’s words and actions are being repeated, by His Saints, during every moment
of History, and they are what arouses Man’s faith. Only the “rough-necked and
uncircumcised in the heart and ears” (Acts 7:51) – the Pharisees of every era –
reject God’s calling for salvation. The toughening and the callousness of the heart
is the spiritual death of Man. In a situation such as that, Man is rendered
incapable of accepting God’s Grace.
The “simple” faith alone, as a logical acceptance of the divine truth, is naturally
insufficient for salvation; the devil and the demons also possess a similar kind of
faith. According to Saint James, the “brother” of Christ, “Where is the benefit, if
one says he has faith, but shows no Labors? Can his faith save him? (he is
referring here to the “first” faith; i.e., if he were to stop there). Even the
demons believe, and they shudder.” (James 2:14-19) The first faith contributes
towards salvation, when, according to the same Apostle, it has “Labors” to show for
it. Labors of faith constitute the enacted sequel of a person’s belief in Christ;
in other words, they represent his trust and his obedience in Christ – his
recognition of Christ as Saviour.
But what are those Labors that the first faith gives birth to? Saint Simeon the
Theologian (10th–11th- century) speaks of the “virtues” that are born of the first
faith: “Faith in God gives birth to the desire for good things and the fear of
condemnation. The desire for good and the fear of condemnation lead to a precise
observation of the commandments. The observation of commandments on the other hand,
will reveal the human weaknesses. The awareness of one’s weaknesses will give birth
to the remembrance of death. However, he who has reached the stage of having that
remembrance of death as his living companion will hasten to discover what his
situation will be, after death. But whoever does concern himself with learning
something about what happens after death, abstains from the pleasures of this life.
Because if he becomes attached to even one of them, he will be incapable of
attaining complete knowledge.” Virtues that are born of the first faith are in an
inter-dependent relationship between themselves, because the one produces the
other. According to Saint Maximus the Confessor: “Whoever has the Lord in his
thoughts, maintains a fear of Hell. By remaining afraid of Hell, he keeps himself
at a distance from passions. Whoever keeps himself away from passions, will
tolerate the ordeals of life. By tolerating the ordeals of life, he acquires a
hope in God. He who has his hope in God, distracts his mind from everything
terrestrial, in other words, he attains apathy (a-pathos = passion-less). And when
Man distracts his mind from everything terrestrial, he acquires divine love.”
We must point out here that the confusion that ensued in the West regarding the
relationship between faith and labors, is, in the Patristic tradition, nonexistent.
In the New Testament, James speaks of the first faith, which must be complemented
by labors of salvation. But Paul speaks mainly of the second faith, which we shall
talk about, further on. This faith is the fruit of the Holy Spirit, inside the
heart. Let us return to the first faith for now:
The labors of the first faith are of a therapeutic character, and they act as
spiritual medicines for the healing/restoration of the human existence, in its
communion with God. The “labors of the law” – which is essentially Paul’s sermon to
the Romans – cannot, on their own, earn any recompense (reward: Luke 17:10), nor
can they save Man. For example, the Pharisees had labors of the law to show, but
they could not be saved, because they were not “pure of heart”. The catharsis
(cleansing) of the heart is a prerequisite for the cognizance of God. “Blessed are
the pure in heart, for they shall look upon God” (Matthew 5:8). The criterion,
therefore, that evaluates the first faith, is that it leads to the cleansing of the
heart. That is why faith is subjected to monitoring, exactly like a therapeutic,
medical method is proven correct, when it leads a person to being cured. And here,
again, the difference between Orthodoxy and non-Orthodoxy is evident. Non-
Orthodoxy (heresy) does not lead – cannot lead – Man to becoming cured, because it
does not possess the “medicines” required for salvation. These “medicines” are the
proper teaching of the Bible and the dogmas (decisions) of the Ecumenical Synods,
which are nothing more than the recording of the experiences of the Saints on the
matter of salvation. The dogmas of the Church provide the faith that saves, and
they determine the course of the faithful person towards salvation. That is why the
Saints throughout the ages struggled to the death for the preservation of the
purity of the dogmas, just like genuine Physicians struggle for the preservation of
a therapeutic method. Adulterated dogmas do not save, and this, again, is where
the tragedy of heresies becomes apparent. Their dogmas are adulterated medicines
that are lethal for Man, and lead to eternal destruction. And that is the reason
the Saints are afraid, not of sin, but of heresy.
This also explains a historical practice, which is often misconstrued. Heresy, as
maintained by fr. John Romanides, was regarded by the Christian State (in
“Byzantium”) as an adulterated medication, as it contains poisonous teaching. That
is why heretics’ books (but not the heretics themselves!) were often burnt (that
is, destroyed) in the Orthodox East… the way that any justly governed State is
obliged to destroy any medication that endangers the lives of its citizens, and
obstruct the activities of pseudo-physicians. In this matter, it is not about
restricting the free movement of ideas, because Man’s very eternal existence is
threatened.
These are the prerequisites, with which our Church to this day is struggling to
protect its flock from heretical groups of the East and the West, which are
employing (especially in our homeland) an open and provocative proselytism. Which
is why we need the prayers and the support of everyone.
5. Points of conclusion
1) Orthodoxy exists, only where the method for the perfect faith is familiar and
is applied. Wherever the path to theosis is unknown - even if the ground is
characterized as “Orthodox” – that is where a heretic way of existence is pursued
and is consequently non-Orthodox. Heresy, as a heretic way of existence, is
oblivious to the experience of theosis. Instead, it “religionizes” the faith (it
seeks to bridge the gap between man and God with the external-ritual media of a
religion). The religionizing of the faith refutes the faith, as does its
ideologicalizing. Heretics theologize intellectually, academically, and they cannot
discern between truth and fallacy. Thus, “Orthodox” is the one who does not
formulate heretical views, but the one who purifies himself, in order to attain
Holy-Spiritual enlightenment. According to Saint Gregory of Nyssa, heretics show
up, wherever “theumens” (enlightened ones) are absent.
2) The ecumenical dialogue would have acquired a certain meaning, if it dealt with
these problems and not with “scientific” compromises for the purpose of seeking
solutions.
3) Heresy is repulsed, not with violence or with legal or police measures, but
with the experience of Theosis. Wherever this experience exists, there the Church
exists. Unfortunately, in contemporary Christian societies, the seeking of Grace
is tending to vanish altogether, and only monasticism is the area in which this
seeking of the “perfect faith” has been preserved. This is why only monasticism is
left as the continuance of Apostolic-Patristic spirituality.
4) The seeking of the perfect faith is the criterion for the genuineness of the
ecclesiastic Mission; because with regard to the Missionary matter, certain basic
questions are raised: What is the meaning of the term “Mission”? What is preached
by it? Where are non-Christians invited? To which church? Which Christ? Are they
invited so that they might be saved, or merely to become the followers of a certain
authoritative circle?
5) Orthodoxy is not afraid of persecutions, but only heresy, because only heresy
can irrevocably harm the Faith.
Orthodoxy, as Orthodoxy, gives birth to Saints and thus remains in the world a
place of sanctification and sanctity.
CHAPTER 9
PARADISE AND HELL ACCORDING TO ORTHODOX TRADITION
________________
On the Last Sunday of Lent “we commemorate the Second and Incorruptible Coming of
our Lord Jesus Christ”. The expression “we commemorate” of the Book of Saints
confirms that our Church, as the Body of Christ, re-enacts in its worship the
Second Coming of Christ as an “event” and not just something that is historically
expected. The reason is, that through the Divine Eucharist, we are transported to
the celestial kingdom, to meta-history. It is in this orthodox perspective, that
the subject of paradise and hell is approached.
In the Gospels (Matthew, ch.5), mention is made of “kingdom” and “eternal fire”. In
this excerpt, which is cited during the Liturgy of this Sunday, the “kingdom” is
the divine destination of mankind. The “fire” is “prepared” for the devil and his
angels (demons), not because God desired it, but because they are impenitent. The
“kingdom” is “prepared” for those who remain faithful to the will of God. “Kingdom”
(the uncreated glory) is Paradise. “Fire” (eternal) is hell (eternal hell, v.46).
At the beginning of history, God invites man into paradise, into a communion with
His uncreated Grace. At the end of history, man has to face paradise and hell.
What this means, we shall see, further down. We do however stress that it is one
of the central subjects of our faith – it is Orthodox Christianity’s philosopher’s
stone.
1. Mention of paradise and hell in the New Testament is frequent. In Luke 23, 43
Christ says to the robber on the cross: “Today you will be with me in paradise”.
However, the robber also refers to paradise, when he says: “Remember me, Lord…in
Your kingdom”. According to Theofylaktos of Bulgaria (PG 123, 1106), “for the
robber is in paradise, in other words, the kingdom”. The Apostle Paul (Corinthians
II, 12: 3-4) confesses that, while still in this lifetime, he was “swept up to
paradise and heard unspoken words, which are inappropriate for man to repeat.” In
the Book of Revelations, we read: “To the victor, I shall give him to eat of the
tree of life, which is in the paradise of my God” (2,7). And Arethas of Caesaria
interprets: “paradise is understood to be the blessed and eternal life” (PG 106,
529). Paradise-eternal life-kingdom of God, are all related.
References on hell: Matthew 25, 46 (“to eternal damnation”), 25, 41 (“eternal
fire”), 25, 30 (“the outermost darkness”), 5, 22 (“the place of fire”). John I, 4,
18 (“…for fear contains hell”). These are ways that express what we mean by “hell”.
2. Paradise and hell are not two different places. (This version is an
idolatrous concept.) They signify two different situations (ways), which originate
from the same uncreated source, and are perceived by man as two, different
experiences. Or, more precisely, they are the same experience, except that they are
perceived differently by man, depending on man’s internal state. This experience
is: the sight of Christ inside the uncreated light of His divinity, of His “glory”.
From the moment of His Second Coming, through to all eternity, all people will be
seeing Christ in His uncreated light. That is when “those who worked good deeds in
their lifetime will go towards the resurrection of their life, while those who
worked evil in their lifetime will go towards the resurrection of judgment” (John
5, 29). In the presence of Christ, mankind will be separated (“sheep” and “goats”,
to His right and His left). In other words, they will be discerned in two separate
groups: those who will be looking upon Christ as paradise (the “exceeding good, the
radiant”) and those who will be looking upon Christ as hell (“the all-consuming
fire”, Hebrews 12,29).
Paradise and hell are the same reality. This is what is depicted in the portrayal
of the Second Coming. From Christ a river flows forth: it is radiant like a golden
light at the upper end of it, where the Saints are. At its lower end, the same
river is fiery, and it is in that part of the river that the demons and the
unrepentant (“the never repentant” according to a hymn) are depicted. This is why
in Luke 2, 34 we read that Christ stands “as the fall and the resurrection of
many”. Christ becomes the resurrection into eternal life, for those who accepted
Him and who followed the suggested means of healing the heart; and to those who
rejected Him, He becomes their demise and their hell.
Patristic testimonies: Saint John of Sinai (of the Ladder) says that the uncreated
light of Christ is “an all-consuming fire and an illuminating light”. Saint
Gregory Palamas (PG II, 498) observes: “Thus, it is said, He will baptize you by
the Holy Spirit and by fire: in other words, by illumination and punishment,
depending on each person’s predisposition, which will bring upon him that which he
deserves.” Elsewhere, (Essays, P. Christou Publications, vol.2, page 145): The
light of Christ, “albeit one and accessible to all, is not partaken of uniformly,
but differently”.
Consequently, paradise and hell are not a reward or a punishment (condemnation),
but the way that we individually experience the ‘sighting’ of Christ, depending on
the condition of our heart. God does not punish in essence, although, for
educative purposes, the Scripture does mention ‘punishment’. The more spiritual
that one becomes, the better he can comprehend the language of the Scripture and
our traditions. Man’s condition (clean-unclean, repentant-unrepentant) is the
factor that determines the acceptance of the Light as “paradise” or “hell”.
3. The anthropological issue in Orthodoxy is that man will eternally look upon
Christ as paradise and not as hell; that man will partake of His heavenly and
eternal “kingdom”. And this is where we see the difference between Christianity as
Orthodoxy and the various other religions. The other religions promise a certain
“blissful” state, even after death. Orthodoxy however is not a quest for bliss,
but a cure from the illness of religion, as the late father John Romanides so
patristically teaches. Orthodoxy is an open hospital within history (“spiritual
infirmary” according to Saint John the Chrysostom), which offers the healing
(catharsis) of the heart, in order to finally attain “theosis”- the only
destination of man. This is the course that has been so comprehensively described
by father John Romanides and the Rev. Metropolitan of Nafpaktos, Hierotheos
(Vlachos); it is the healing of mankind, as experienced by all of our Saints.
This is the meaning of life in the body of Christ (the Church). This is the
Church’s reason for existence. This is what Christ’s whole redemptory work aspired
to. Saint Gregory Palamas (4th Homily on the Second Coming) says that the pre-
eternal will of God for man is “to find a place in the majesty of the divine
kingdom”- to reach theosis. That was the purpose of creation. And he continues:
“But even His divine and secret kenosis, His god-human conduct, His redemptory
passions, and every single mystery (in other words, all of Christ’s opus on earth)
were all providentially and omnisciently pre-determined for this very end
(purpose)”.
4. The important thing, however, is that not all people respond to this invitation
of Christ, and that is why not everyone partakes in the same way of His uncreated
glory. This is taught by Christ, in the parable of the rich and the poor Lazarus
(Luke, ch.16). Man refuses Christ’s offer, he becomes God’s enemy and rejects the
redemption offered by Christ (which is a blasphemy against the Holy Spirit, because
it is within the Holy Spirit that we accept the calling of Christ). This is the
“never repentant” person referred to in the hymn. God “never bears enmity”, the
blessed Chrysostom observes; it is we who become His enemies; we are the ones who
reject Him. The unrepentant man becomes demonized, because he has chosen to. God
doesn’t want this. Saint Gregory Palamas says: “…for this was not My pre-existing
will; I did not create you for this purpose; I did not prepare the pyre for you.
This undying pyre was pre-fired for the demons who bear the unchanging trait of
evil, to whom your own unrepentant opinion attracted you.” “The co-habitation with
mischievous angels is arbitrary (voluntary).” (same as prev.) In other words, it is
something that is freely chosen by man.
Both the rich man and Lazarus were looking upon the same reality, i.e., God in His
uncreated light. The rich man reached the Truth, the sight of Christ, but could not
partake of it, as Lazarus did. The poor Lazarus received “consolation”, whereas
the rich man received “anguish”. Christ’s words, that they: “have Moses and the
prophets” –for those still in the world- signifies that we are all inexcusable.
Because we have the Saints, who have experienced theosis and who call upon us to
accede to their way of life so that we too might reach theosis like they did. We
therefore conclude that those who have chosen evil ways – like the rich man - are
inexcusable.
Our stance towards our fellow man is indicative of our inner state, and that is why
this will be the criterion of Judgment Day during Christ’s Second Coming (Matthew,
ch.25). This doesn’t imply that faith, or man’s faithfulness to Christ is
disregarded; faith is naturally a prerequisite, because our stance towards each
other will show whether or not we have God inside us. The first Sundays of the
Triodion preceding Lent revolve around fellow man. On the first of these Sundays,
the (seemingly pious) Pharisee justifies (sanctifies) himself and rejects
(derogates) the Tax-collector. On the second Sunday, the “elder” brother (a
repetition of the seemingly pious Pharisee) is sorrowed by the return (salvation)
of his brother. Likewise seemingly pious, he too had false piety, which did not
produce love. On the third (carnival) Sunday, this stance reaches Christ’s seat of
judgment, and is evidenced as the criterion for our eternal life.
5. The experience of paradise or hell is beyond words or the senses. It is an
uncreated reality, and not a created one. The Franks created the myth that paradise
and hell are both created realities. It is a myth, that the damned will not be
looking upon God; just as the “absence of God” is equally a myth. The Franks had
also perceived the fires of hell as something created (e.g. Dante’s Inferno).
Orthodox tradition has remained faithful to the Scriptural claim that the damned
shall see God (like the rich man of the parable), but will perceive Him only as “an
all-consuming fire”. The Frankish scholastics accepted hell as punishment and the
deprivation of a tangible vision of the divine essence. Biblically and
patristically however, “hell” is understood as man’s failure to collaborate with
Divine Grace, in order to reach the “illuminating” view of God (paradise) and
selfless love (per Corinthians I, 13:8): “love….. does not demand any
reciprocation”). Consequently, there is no such thing as “God’s absence”, only His
presence. That is why His Second Coming is dire (“o, what an hour it will be then”,
we chant in the Laudatory hymns). It is an irrefutable reality, toward which
Orthodoxy is permanently oriented (“I anticipate resurrection of the dead…”)
The damned - those who are depraved at heart, just like the Pharisees (Mark 3:5:
“in the callousness of their hearts”) - eternally perceive the pyre of hell as
their salvation! It is because their condition is not susceptible to any other
form of salvation. They too are “finalized” – they reach the end of their road –
but only the righteous reach the end of the road as saved persons. The others
finish as damned. “Salvation” to them is hell, since in their lifetime, they
pursued only pleasure. The rich man of the parable had “enjoyed all of his riches”.
The poor Lazarus uncomplainingly endured “every suffering”. The Apostle Paul
expresses this (Corinthians I, 3 :13-15): “Each person’s work, whatever it is, will
be tested by fire. If their work survives the test, then whatever they built, will
be rewarded accordingly. If one’s work is burnt by the fire, then he will suffer
losses; he shall be saved, thus, as though by fire.” The righteous and the
unrepentant shall both pass through the uncreated “fire” of divine presence;
however, the one shall pass through unscathed, while the other shall be burnt. He
too is “saved”, but only in the way that one passes through a fire. Efthimios
Zigavinos the theologian (12th century) observes in this respect: “God as fire that
illuminates and brightens the pure, and burns and obscures the unclean.” And
Theodoretos Kyrou (4th century) regarding this “saving” writes: “One is also saved
by fire, by being tested by it”, just as when one passes through fire. If he has
an appropriate protective cover, he will not be burnt, otherwise, he may be
“saved”, but he will be charred!
Consequently, the fire of hell has nothing in common with the Frankish “purgatory”,
nor is it created, nor is it punishment, or an intermediate stage. A viewpoint
such as this is virtually a transferal of one’s accountability to God. But the
accountability is entirely our own, whether we choose to accept or to reject the
salvation (healing) that is offered by God. “Spiritual death” is the viewing of
the uncreated light, of divine glory, as a pyre, as fire. Saint John the
Chrysostom in his 9th homily on Corinthians I, notes: “Hell is never-
ending…...sinners shall be judged into a never-ending suffering. As for the “being
burnt altogether”, it means this: that he does not withstand the strength of the
fire.” And he continues: “And he (Paul) says, it means this: that he shall not be
thus burnt also - like his works – into nothingness, but he shall continue to
exist, only inside that fire. He therefore considers this as his “salvation”. For
it is customary for us to say “saved in the fire”, when referring to materials that
are not totally burnt away”.
Scholastic perceptions-interpretations, which, through Dante’s work (Inferno) have
permeated our world, have consequences that amount to idolatrous views. An example
is the separation of paradise and hell as two different places. This has happened,
because they did not distinguish between the created and the uncreated. There is
also their denial of hell’s eternity, with their idea of the “restoration” of
everything, or the concept of a “good God” (Bon Dieu). God is indeed “benevolent:
(Matthew 8,17), since He offers salvation to everyone. (“He wants all to be
saved…..” Timothy I, 2,4) However, the words of our Lord as heard during the
funeral service are formidable: “I cannot do anything on my own; just as I hear,
thus I judge, and my judgment is fair”.(John 5,30). Equally manufactured is the
concept of “theodicy”, which applies in this case. Everything is finally attributed
to God alone (i.e., if He intends to redeem or condemn), without taking into
consideration man’s “collaboration” as a factor of redemption. Salvation is
possible, only within the framework of collaboration between man and Divine Grace.
According to the blessed Chrysostom, “the utmost, almost everything, is God’s; He
did however leave something little to us”. That “little something” is our
acceptance of God’s invitation. The robber on the cross was saved, “by using the
key request of ‘remember me’…”! Also idolatrous is the perception of a God
becoming outraged against a sinner, whereas we mentioned earlier that God “never
shows enmity”. This is a juridical perception of God, which also leads to the
prospect of “penances” in confessions as forms of punishment, and not as
medications (means of healing).
6. The mystery of paradise-hell is also experienced in the life of the Church in
the world. During the sacraments, there is a participation of the faithful in
Grace, so that Grace may be activated in our lives, by our course towards Christ.
Especially during the Divine Eucharist, the uncreated –holy communion- becomes
inside us either paradise or hell, depending on our condition. But mostly, our
participation in Holy Communion is a participation in paradise or hell, throughout
history. That is why we beseech God, prior to receiving Holy Communion, to render
the Precious Gifts inside us “not as judgment or condemnation”, or “as eternal
damnation”. This is why participation in Holy Communion is linked to the overall
spiritual course of the faithful. When we approach Holy Communion uncleansed and
unrepentant, we are condemned (burnt). Holy Communion inside us becomes the
“inferno” and “spiritual death”. Not because it is transformed into those things
of course, but because our own uncleanliness cannot accept Holy Communion as
“paradise”. Given that Holy Communion is called “medication for immortality”
(Saint Ignatius the God-bearer, 2nd century), the same thing exactly occurs as with
any medication. If our organism does not have the prerequisites to absorb the
medication, then the medication will produce side-effects and will kill instead of
heal. It is not the medication that is responsible, but the condition of our
organism. It must be stressed, that if we do not accept Christianity as a
therapeutic process, and its sacraments as spiritual medication, then we are led to
a “religionizing” of Christianity; in other words, we “idolatrize” it. And
unfortunately, this is a frequent occurrence, when we perceive Christianity as a
“religion”.
Besides, this lifetime is evaluated in the light of the twin criterion of paradise-
hell. “Ask first for the kingdom of God and His righteousness”, our Christ
recommends (Matthew 6,33). Basil the Great tells the Young (ch.3) “Everything we do
is in preparation of another life”. Our life must be a continuous preparation for
our participation in “paradise” – our community with the Uncreated John 17,3). And
everything begins from this lifetime. That is why the Apostle Paul says: “Behold,
now is the opportune time. Behold, now is the day of redemption.” (Corinthians II,
6:2) Every moment of our lives is of redemptive importance. Either we gain
eternity, the eternal community with God, or we lose it. This is why oriental
religions and cults that preach reincarnations are injuring mankind: they are
virtually transferring the problem to other, (nonexistent of course) lifetimes. The
thing is, however, that only one life corresponds to each of us, whether we are
saved or condemned. This is why Basil the Great continues: “those things therefore
that lead us towards that life, we need to say should be cherished and pursued with
all our might; and those that do not lead us there, we should disregard, as
something of no value”. This is the criterion of Christian living. A Christian
continuously chooses whatever favors his salvation. We gain paradise or lose it
and end up in hell, in this lifetime. That is why John the Evangelist says:
“Whosoever believes in Him shall not be judged; whosoever does not believe in Him,
has already been judged, for not having believed in the name of the only-begotten
Son of God.” (3, 18)
Consequently, the work of the church is not to “send” people to paradise or to
hell, but to prepare them for the final judgment. The work of the Clergy is
therapeutic and not moralistic or character-shaping, in the temporal sense of the
word. The essence of life in Christ is preserved in monasteries – naturally
wherever they are Orthodox and of course patristic. The purpose of the Church’s
offered therapy is not to create “useful” citizens and essentially “usable” ones,
but citizens of the celestial (uncreated) kingdom. Such citizens are the
Confessors and the Martyrs - the true faithful, the Saints.
However, this is also the way that our mission is supervised: What are we inviting
people to? To the Church as a Hospital/Therapy Center, or just an ideology that is
labelled “Christian”? More often than not, we strive to secure a place in
“paradise”, instead of striving to be healed. That is why we focus on rituals and
not on therapy. This of course does not signify a rejection of worship. But,
without ascesis (spiritual exercise, ascetic lifestyle, act of therapy), worship
cannot hallow us. The Grace that pours forth from it remains inert inside us.
Orthodoxy doesn’t make any promises to send mankind to any sort of paradise or
hell; but it does have the power – as evidenced by the incorruptible and miracle-
working relics of our Saints (incorruptibility=theosis) – to prepare man, so that
he may forever look upon the Uncreated Grace and the Kingdom of Christ as Paradise,
and not as Hell.
CHAPTER 10
ORTHODOXY AND SOCIOPOLITICAL “DEACONSHIP”
________________
Introduction
The argument is often stated that Orthodoxy does not provide the solutions one
might expect for the structuring and organization of life in society; that it is
merely “a religion of the hereafter”, with exclusively meta-historical aims,
outside of the solid, historical reality – of “here and now”; that it is limited
exclusively to the spiritual life, to spirituality, because it is interested only
in the soul and not in regulating earthly matters, i.e. in organizing society.
Also, it is not seldom that certain “Orthodox” -with an overdose of the
“Monophysitic” spirit- assert that Orthodoxy “does not save bodies, but only
immortal souls”. This of course betrays latent Platonic or Manichaean and Brahman
tendencies.
The fact that such affirmations reveal a “false religion of angels” and a super-
eschatological disposition is quite clear. The opposite case, however, also exists;
i.e., by resorting to non-Orthodox premises, others promote the Church’s role in
the world as being exclusively “social”, with social activism and social offering
(activities for the common good); the result being a hyper-historicism, an over-
emphasis on the present and entrapment in the mundane - in History. In both cases,
it has been overlooked that from the very beginning, the Church made Her appearance
as an organized society, a theandric-Theanthropic reality, which, however, provided
Her own particular solution to the problems within society. It is this solution
for society, as provided by the Church, in the form of Apostolic and Patristic
Orthodoxy, that we shall attempt to broadly outline herebelow.
4. Everything in common!
It is absolutely certain that it will be difficult for the man in our society to
believe that this pronouncement is absolutely Christian and Orthodox! Ignorance of
our faith due to the absence of any experience of the Christian society – which has
been confined to the monasteries, and even then, not to all of them – has weakened
our criteria and our reflexes to such a hopeless degree that we are no longer able
to discern what is “ours” from what is “foreign”; what is of the Church, from what
is not; the truth from falsehood. And yet the above saying is a genuine confession
of the Church, which was transformed into action over the course of History. It is
the fruit of the very life of the Saints; for Orthodoxy is not limited to mottoes
alone. Its word is always based on practice. “I hate words that life contradicts”,
says St. Gregory the Theologian. The life of the “deified” – of those truly
faithful to Christ’s word – becomes the Church’s perpetual message, but also Her
hymn and doxology, as we experience them in our worship.
Behold what we read in one of the earliest Christian texts, written at the
beginning of the second century; the “Didache” (=teaching) of the Apostles – so
named, not because it was written by the Apostles, but because it expressed the
Apostolic spirit, the Apostolic teaching: “Never turn away the needy, SHARE ALL
your possessions with your brother (fellow-man), and do not claim that anything
(you have) is your own. If you and he are joint participants in things immortal,
how much more so, in things that are mortal?” (4,8)
The Didache takes us back to the life of the Christians at the end of the first
century; however, this message - as a determining principle of the Christian ethos
- is much older. Already in the Acts of the Apostles, Luke the Evangelist, when
describing the life of the first Christian community in Jerusalem, informs us that
“all who believed were together and had ALL THINGS IN COMMON.” (Acts 2:44). And
further down he says again: “Now the company of those who believed were of one
heart and soul and no-one said that any of the things which he possessed was his
own (=personal property), but they had EVERYTHING IN COMMON.”(Acts 4:32)
It is thus clear that the first Christian society was founded on the principle of
common ownership of goods and property, which is one reason why people looked upon
the Church with amazement, because of the love and fraternity that marked Christian
life. This is the true (authentic) Christian, social co-existence that is preached
by our holy fathers as being the genuine way of Christian living in the world.
But how was this message lived and practiced by the Christians? Does this social
principle of the Church have anything in common with known social theories? No, of
course not. This demand of the Church hides no proletarian conscience. It is not
simply a slogan, or some law that must be enforced. On the contrary, it is the
natural offspring of one’s communion with God’s Grace, which enables him to show
this love to his fellow men, his brothers. Outside of Christ’s Body, His Grace,
and His Sacraments, it is impossible to apply it; and wherever it is heard as a
solely social demand, without the Church’s Holy-Spiritual presuppositions, it will
remain mere talk – empty and inert.
The message of Acts and the “Didache” is as follows: At some point in time, rich
and poor become Christians. They come together, in the new society of Grace, in
the Lord’s body, and they continuously receive uncreated Grace, so that over time,
they are able to defeat the constraint of Time, death and corruption. God’s Grace
is a spiritual shower that unceasingly “irrigates” everyone and everything, without
discrimination and exception (Matth. 5:45) From the moment of Baptism, we all –
men, women, famous and obscure – become equals in the face of the salvation that is
granted by the Triune God (Gal. 3:28). The Holy Spirit distributes His gifts to
all, according to the receptiveness of each, without exception (1 Cor.12). Within
the Body of Christ, we all become brethren to each other. The power that joins us
all together, in the one, unbroken communal unity, is the Grace of God – which is
expressed in our life as Love.
However, within the family of the Church we do not have the right to misappropriate
the spiritual gifts and regard them as our own. In fact, if we do not activate this
immediately - by transforming them into ministering to our brethren - we are
burying our gift (the “talent” – Matthew 25, 25). It would be like refusing divine
Grace.
Whatever is done with the use of spiritual commodities must also be done with
material commodities, which we likewise do not have the right to misappropriate,
and regard them as “belonging” to us, because they too are gifts of God’s love –
provided of course that we have acquired them in accordance to His will. Thus, a
Christian will not seize another’s material property, just as he will never
consider seizing his spiritual property. But, regardless whose hands that property
is in – whether material or spiritual – it is still COMMON. Without continuously
changing proprietor, it belongs to everyone, because in the hour of a brother’s
(spiritual or material) need, it will become his also, so that his needs may also
be served. This is where the freedom of those who have truly been reborn in the
Church can be found – a freedom that culminates in the status of monasticism’s
abandonment of all personal properties, along with its willed poverty. In fact,
if willed poverty is not a precedent act, communal property cannot be accomplished.
From the moment that one dissociates himself from “his” possessions, he becomes
truly free; and, from that moment, those possessions essentially remain without a
proprietor and become common to all. The willed resignation from every kind of
demand pertaining to any kind of commodity is the most basic prerequisite for the
Eucharist-style utilization of the world-Creation, within the practice of love and
brotherhood.
The manner in which the first Church became an ecclesiastic tradition can be
discerned when studying the holy Fathers, for example, the blessed Chrysostom: “…
because we have received everything from Christ; even that very existence of ours,
and our breath, and the light, and the air. And if He were to deprive us of even
one of these commodities, we would immediately be lost and destroyed. In other
words, we are merely strangers and passers-by on this earth. As for the terms that
we tend to use, such as “mine” and “yours”, these are mere words, which do not
correspond to reality; quite simply because, if you were to assert that your house
is “your house”, your statement would be a mere expression, because both the air
and the earth (=the plot of land) and the other materials are the Creator’s – even
you the builder, and all the rest. And if its use belongs to you, yet even that is
doubtful, not only because of death, but even before, it is because of the
instability in general of the conditions of terrestrial life… If your soul isn’t
truly yours, how can money be “yours”? Thus, therefore, if that too (money) is not
“ours”, but it belongs to God, we should be spending it for the sake of our fellow-
man…. Do not therefore ever insist that “I am spending my money, and I am
entertaining myself with my fortune”. You are not entertaining yourself with your
fortune, but with commodities that belong to others… They (commodities) become
truly “yours”, if you spend them for the sake of others. But if you spend them
lavishly on yourself, then “yours” will become another’s…. But if you regard them
as common, then they will be both yours and your fellow-man’s, exactly as the sun
is, and the air, and the earth, and all the other natural commodities…” (Ε.Π. 61,
86-87)
Thus we can see why Orthodoxy does not need any social revolution to bring about
justice. Because the revolution takes place in the hearts of the Saints and is
called “purification of the heart from one’s passions”, so that the heart might
attain (selfless) love and righteousness. This is Orthodoxy’s revolution in the
world. But it is accomplished throughout the course of History, only by those who
accept Christ in all His fullness, as “the physician of our souls and bodies”, Who
does not “kill and destroy” (John 10:10) like the rulers of the world do, but heals
our souls and bodies, and leads us to an inner health (a theoretic mindset) and an
external health (a loving society).
CHAPTER 11
FAITH AND SCIENCE AS A THEOLOGICAL PROBLEM
________________
Introduction
We shall now attempt to approach this topic, from within the perspective of the
Orthodox Patristic Tradition. In this way, a historical-spiritual perspective is
opened up, which simultaneously reveals the variation and the difference between
the world that we have voluntarily incorporated ourselves in, with the world of our
Romanian (Hellenic-Orthodox) tradition.
1. Problem, or pseudo-problem?
The antithesis and consequently the “a priori” conflict between faith and science
constitute a problem for Western (Franco-Latin) thought and a pseudo-problem for
the Orthodox Patristic tradition. This observation is based on the historical data
of these two realms.
The (supposedly) problematic choice between “faith, or science” appears in Western
Europe in the 17th century, at the same time as the development of the positive
sciences. It is a fact that all the developments in Western Europe during the last
centuries were taking place in absentia of the ancient, unified Europe and
Orthodoxy. The “de-Orthodoxing” and “de-Ecclesiasticizing” of the Western European
world was achieved through the “philosophization” and “legalization” of the Faith
and its eventual “religionization” (for these developments, see Chr. Yannaras,
“Orthodoxy and the West”, Athens 1992).
Landmarks in the alienating course of Western Europe include: Scholasticism (13th
century), Nominalism (14th century), Humanism/Renaissance (15th century),
Reformation (16th century) and the Enlightenment (17th century). This was a series
of revolutions and simultaneously rifts in the fabric of the Western European
civilization, which was born of the dialectic relationship between these trends.
Nominalism (i.e., “dualism” philosophically and “individualism”/ “utilitarianism”
socially) was the foundation of scientific development of the European world and
its socio-political evolution.
The Orthodox East had a different spiritual course, by remaining faithful, in the
persons of its Saints naturally, to the Apostolic-Patristic Tradition, which is at
the antipodes of scholasticism and all the other historical-spiritual developments
of the European sphere. In the East, that which survived was the ascetic-neptic
and empirical participation in the Truth, as a communion with the Uncreated. It was
in this framework that the sciences developed in Romania (“Byzantium”). On the
contrary, the scientific revolution in the West in the 17th century contributed
towards the distancing between faith and knowledge, which resulted in the following
axiomatic principle: of this new, positive philosophy, the only truths that are
accepted are those verified by logical explanation – that now absolutized self-
centeredness of Western thought (rationalism). These truths are the existence of
God, soul, virtue, immortality, judgment etc. Their acceptance of course can find
a place, only in deist enlightenment, given that Enlightenment’s atheism exists in
parallel, as a structural element of this latter-day thought. However, basic
ecclesiastic dogmas are rejected by the Enlightenment’s logic (for example the
triadicity of God, the Incarnation, Christian soteriology and the like); this is
actually the “natural” religion, which, from the Patristic aspect, not only does
not differ from atheism; it is in fact the worst form of it.
2. Two-fold Gnosiology
But why is it, that in the Orthodox East the antithesis between faith and science
is a pseudo-problem? Because gnosiology in the East is determined by the “object”
being recognized, which is twofold: the Uncreated and the created. Only the Triunal
God is Uncreated, Who “is beyond everything” (Gregory the Theologian); He is the
entirely “Other”, incommunable and inaccessible. The universe (or universes) are
the “created”, in which our existence is actualised. “Faith” is the knowledge of
the Uncreated and “Science” is the knowledge of the created. We are therefore
looking at two different kinds of knowledge, each possessing its own method and
instrument.
The believer, who moves within the territory of supernatural knowledge, or the
“knowledge” of the Uncreated, is not called upon to learn something metaphysically,
or to accept it logically, but to “undergo” something, by communing with it. It is
at this point that the Church’s mission as the body of Christ is substantiated, as
is Her reason for existence in the world: to render Man receptive of that
knowledge, which is simultaneously his salvation.
Supernatural-theological knowledge is understood Orthodoxically as “pathos” or an
experiencing; as a participation and communion with the transcendental personal
Truth, and not as a mere lesson. Thus, the Christian faith is not a theoretical
(abstract) acceptance of “metaphysical” truths, but is rather an empirical
communion with the Uncreated God, through one’s spiritual labours.
This makes it evident why, in Orthodoxy, authority is acknowledged as being the
experiencing of participation in the Uncreated – as the “sighting” the Uncreated -
and not any texts or Scriptures. The dogma of SOLA SCRIPTURA (only the Scripture)
is a Protestant one; the Pope was substituted in this manner by a “paper pope”, as
they themselves derisively proclaim. The pre-eminence of texts – proof of the
“religionizing” of the Faith – led to its ideologizing and idolizing
(fundamentalism) , with all the consequences this obviously entails.
A prerequisite for the functioning of one’s “knowing” the Uncreated is, in
Orthodoxy, the rejecting of every “analogy” (Entis: of being and Fidei: of faith),
during the encounter and the association between the created and the Uncreated. The
blessed John the Damascene (†750) summarizes at this point a previous Patristic
tradition as follows: “It is impossible to find in Creation an image that reflects
in itself the manner of the Holy Trinity; For how can the created, which is both
complex and changeable and describable, with form and perishable, clearly denote
the “beyond-essence” Divine Essence, which is exempt of all these (aforementioned
attributes)?” (P.G. 94,821/24).
Following the above, it becomes obvious why school education and philosophy more
specifically, do not constitute prerequisites - according to the patristic
tradition – for “knowledge” of God (theognosy). We, in our non-Patristic
arrogance, are filled with self-admiration for the scientific titles we acquire,
when they have no power whatsoever for the attainment of divine knowledge and
salvation. In our Orthodox-Patristic tradition, alongside the major academician
Saint Basil (†379) - who is honoured as “Great” - we also honour the unwise in the
worldly manner yet “possessing” the ”upper” or divine wisdom (the knowledge of the
Uncreated), Saint Anthony (†350). A deviation from this point is the blessed
Augustine (†430), who disregarded Patristic and Scriptural gnosiology and was
essentially neo-Platonic. With his axiom of: “credo ut intelligam” (I believe,
therefore I understand), he introduced the principle that man is led to a logical
conception of Revelation through faith (an external consent). But in this way,
priority is given to logic (intellect), which is recognized as a Gnostic instrument
- both in natural as well as supernatural knowledge. God is understood as a Gnostic
“object” that is “perceived” by man’s intellect, in the same manner that it
perceives natural objects. The completion of Augustine’s principle, through Thomas
Aquinas (†1274), will be effected by DesCartes (†1650), whose principle of “cogito,
ergo sum” (I cogitate, therefore I exist) exalts the intellect as the main
constituent of human existence.
3. The two types of knowledge
The rescinding of the (apparent) contradiction in the field of gnosiology is
achieved theologically, with the clear distinction between the two kinds of
knowledge/wisdom: the “divine” or “upper” one and the “lower” or “secular” one
(James 3:12). This was the distinction that Saint Gregory Palamas had counter-
posed before Barlaam the Calabrian in the 14th century.
The first kind of knowledge is the supernatural kind, and it is bestowed by God;
the second kind of knowledge is the natural kind, which is attained through
scientific research. These two Gnostic functions correspond to the clear
distinction of Uncreated and created; of God and creation. However, these two
types of knowledge also require two gnostic methods. The method required for
attaining divine wisdom-knowledge is the “neptic” method, otherwise known as
catharsis of the heart (Psalm 50:12, Matthew 5:8), which leads to the indwelling
and the manifestation of the uncreated energy of the Triadic God within the heart.
God bridges the gap between Him and the world, with His uncreated energy.
The method required for attaining secular wisdom-knowledge is science, which is the
exercising of man’s intellectual/logical power. Orthodoxically speaking, both
kinds of knowledge and their methods are gradated according to their carriers
( e.g., Basil the Great, Gregory the Theologian, Photios the Great etc.) The
method required for supernatural gnosiology is referred to in the Orthodox
tradition as “Hesychasm” and it identifies with “nepsis” (alertness) and
“catharsis” (cleansing) of the heart (Psalm 50,12; Matth. 5:8). Hesychasm is the
quintessence of Orthodoxy. Orthodoxy - outside of hesychastic practice - is
patristically inconceivable. Hesychasm, in its essence, is an ascetic-therapeutic
treatment; a cleansing of the heart of its passions for the rekindling of the
noetic faculty, the function of the “nous” (not the mind) within the heart. The
noetic faculty is a mnemonic system parallel to the cellular and encephalic ones,
which preserves the “memory of God” within the heart, as extensively expounded by
the memorable fr. John Romanides from within the Philokalian tradition.
It must however be noted that the method of Hesychasm as a curative treatment is
purely a “scientific” one. In this method, an “observation” is a “sighting” of the
Uncreated Light (divine energy); an “experiment” is a repetition of that experience
among theumens-Saints. Consider what a telescope is for a physicist; for a
hesychast, its equivalent is a cleansed heart (necessary for “theoscopy” – the
observing of God). That is why – according to fr. John Romanides – theology is a
positive science; not in a university version thereof, but as a knowledge and a
wording that pertains to God. Its classification among the “theoretical” academic
sciences presupposes its changing into a “metaphysical”, that is a speculative kind
of theology. The scientist-theologian - who is qualified regarding the Uncreated -
is, in the Patristic tradition, the Spiritual Father – the “Geron” or Elder (note
the characterizing of major ascetics as “professors of the desert”). The recording
of knowledge in both cases presupposes an empirical knowledge of the phenomenon.
This is precisely where Orthodox-Patristic hermeneutics are founded. The Saints
(men and women) become authentic interpreters of the Scripture (=the experiences of
the Prophets and the Apostles therein), because they are equally “divinely-
inspired”; equally participants of the same experiences as them. However, the same
thing applies in the field of science. Only a specialist can comprehend the
research performed by others in the same field. The non-specialists, who cannot
verify with experiments the research of the specialists, must necessarily accept
their findings, based on the trust that they have in the credibility of the
specialists. Science would otherwise not have shown any progress.
Something analogous takes place in the “science” of Faith; that is, the same kind
of trust is displayed by its own “specialists”, towards the “knowledge of God
(“theognosy”) of the Saints – of those who have reached the state of “theopty-
theosis” (the sighting of God – deification). It is on the basis of this provable
experience that Patristic tradition and the (Ecumenical) Synods of the Church
function. Without theumens (“theoptics” – scientists with knowledge of the
Uncreated), there cannot be an ecumenical synod; and that is the main problem
nowadays, when convening an ecumenical synod, because it must either be composed of
theumens-Fathers, or, it must move faithfully along the teaching of older theumens.
In other words, it is not possible for Saint Mark of Ephesus (15th century) to
have said one thing, and for us to say other things. Needless to clarify what this
implies….
The Orthodox significance of the dogma also arises from this association. The
dogma-teaching on Faith is not an intellectual invention; it presupposes the
experiences of the theumens on God (Prophets, Apostles, Church Fathers). Thus,
Patristic faith is just as dogmatic as science. The “dogmas” of science are its
“axioms”. This is why Mac Bloch had said that those who speak of “prejudice” in
Faith are forgetting that scientific research is also prejudiced, otherwise
progress in research would not have been possible.
In making this distinction between the two kinds of knowledge, their methods and
their instruments, Patristic Orthodoxy avoids every possible confusion between the
two, but also every conflict. Conflict can arise, when the findings of the one
knowledge are monitored by the other one’s method; in other words, when science
theologizes and theology judges secular science. If God does or does not exist is
not a problem that pertains to science, because science can neither prove it, nor
reject it, with the means that it possesses. The natural scientist who
theologizes, using the means that belong to his area of knowledge, transforms his
science into a metaphysical one; that is, he alters it altogether. In this way, the
coast remains clear, for both comparison and conflict.
The theumen (the “theoptic” who has attained divine knowledge) reveals
“faultlessly” that which pertains to God, as well as the association between God
and creation, because the theumen-Saint is one who is aware of the “logos (reason)
of beings”, although not aware of their nature or their cause, which are undertaken
by scientific research. The “logos of beings” refers to the cause of their
existence and their associations within the world, which are attributed to God. A
theumen can be unfamiliar with scientific knowledge, which is why he can make
scientific mistakes when talking about scientific matters. From an Orthodox point
of view, certain “paradoxical” analogies can be observed, such as –for example- the
possibility for someone to be a scientific genius but spiritually infantile (in
divine knowledge). Reversely, one can be superior in divine knowledge and entirely
ignorant in school knowledge (for example Anthony the Great) .
However, nothing can preclude the possibility of possessing both kinds of wisdom-
knowledge, as one can observe in certain of the major Fathers and Mothers of the
Church. This is what the Church chants on the 25th of November, in praise of the
great mathematician of the 3rd century, Saint Catherine – the wise bearer of both
kinds of knowledge: “Having acquired the knowledge from God since childhood, the
Martyr also learnt the exterior knowledge full well….”. A congruence such as this
is also found for example in Saint Gregory of Nyssa – the younger brother of Basil
the Great – one of the greatest Saints and sages of mankind. When referring to the
beginning of the universe, he somehow prepares the ground for the formulation of
the “Big Bang” theory (Lemaitre, 1927). According to this theory, the “big
explosion” took place in a “microscopic, homogenous and super-condensed mass”;
Saint Gregory said that the beginning of the universe was a “seminal power, set
down (by God) towards the genesis of all things” (PG 44,77 D). This “seminal power”
can be comprehended as the “super-condensed mass” that Physicists refer to.
Gregory’s use of the preposition “towards” (the genesis of all things) is
indicative of the dynamics of an explosion and a movement, from “potentially”
something to “actively” something. Gregory’s theological status and his heart-
centred association with Uncreated Grace are what permit him to speak of a God-
Creator, Who created everything “out of nil” and Who places everything into motion
“in the beginning”.
4. God-human dialectic
Thus, from within this interrelation of the two kinds of knowledge-wisdom, the
Orthodox faithful experiences a divine-human dialectic. However, every kind of
knowledge (should) remain and move within its own bounds. This means there is an
issue, whereby each kind of knowledge has its limits. The power of proof that each
kind of knowledge possesses applies only in its own area. Consequently, the
existence of God is not a problem for physical science to handle, because would
involve crossing over its own boundaries. When Natural Science preoccupies itself
with the issue of God, it becomes metaphysical and when Faith (theology) monitors
science on the basis of the Scripture, it is warping the meanings of the Scripture,
and is converting it into a scientific manual. Although the Holy Bible may contain
scientific misstatements (for example the age of the universe, of mankind, etc.),
it does not, however, contain any theological errors. In the Bible, God reveals
His association to the world and the purpose of the world and of mankind. Thus,
regardless when mankind was created, the important point for a theologian is that
Man is a creation of God and that albeit an “animal”, it is nevertheless an animal
with the potential to become a “theumen” (deified) according to Gregory of Nyssa,
or “a god by calling” (he has the inbuilt command-potential inside him to become
deified) according to Basil the Great. To overstep the boundaries of the two kinds
of knowledge will lead to the confusion of their functions and finally to a
conflict between the two.
With his “Hexaemeron” (PG 29,3-208), Basil the Great provides a classic example of
Orthodox use and utilization of various examples of scientific knowledge. He
manages to conjoin biblical and scientific data by means of a continuous
transcendence of science. He debunks materialistic theories and heretic fallacies
and passes over to a theological (but not metaphysical) interpretation. The
central message of his opus is the impossibility of logically supporting the dogma,
because the dogma belongs to a different sphere – as something “scientific” within
the bounds of another kind of knowledge. Consequently, the notion of “believe, and
do not search” cannot exist in the Christian sense – and neither does it apply.
Even Basil the Great, in consenting to science – being versed as he was in all
sciences – concedes to the God-centeredness of science. God sheds light on matters
of revelation, leaving scientific research to Man. As the great Father says: “Many
things have been silenced (in the Bible), thus exercising our mind towards deeper
study”. The penetration and in-depth study of Creation is left to Science, which
God bestowed on Man.
The tragic case of Galileo (whose pardon was rightly asked – albeit belated) shows
us where the confusion and the overstepping of boundaries of knowledge can lead.
But in the West (as well as in our own, mostly Westernized science) something even
worse occurred: intellect (logic) was promoted to instrument of both divine and
human wisdom. Thus, in the field of science, intellect rejects everything
supernatural as being incomprehensible, while in the area of Faith, the findings of
Natural Science are rejected, because they are often regarded to contradict the
Bible (fundamentalism). This is the mentality that the rejection of the Copernican
system in the East (1774-1821) also betrays, as well as the same loss of criteria
(ref. Vas. Makrides: „Die Religiöse Kritik am Kopernikeniscchen “ Weltbild in
Griechenland zwischen 1794 und 1821, Frankfurt am Main, 1995). Science took its
revenge for the condemnation of Galilee in the West, with Darwin’s “Theory of
evolution”.
5. Conclusion
The supposed conflict between Faith and Science, along with Korais’ theory of
“metakenosis” (trans-vacating), infiltrated to “our East”, when and where the
hesychastic-Patristic tradition had indeed begun to wane. From an Orthodox point
of view however, a conflict between the two is not something self-evident. Nothing
can preclude their co-existence. Besides, contemporary scientific terminology is a
significant aid in a mutual understanding between the two. For example, theology’s
apophatism – as Man’s inability to define (and essentially to confine) God on the
principle of indeterminism, was accepted by science also (see Chr. Yannaras,
“Contents and Works of Apologetics Today”, Athens 1975). The return, consequently,
to the Patristic outlook does help to transcend any conflicts.
CHAPTER 12
SYNODS OF THE ORTHODOX CHURCH
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Questions for those who believe there are only 7 Ecumenical Synods
Pursuant to the above, all those who believe that the Ecumenical Synods of the
Orthodox Church are only 7, must necessarily give their comprehensive and
documented replies to the following questions:
1. What is incorrect about the criteria of Ecumenicity stated above, and why?
2. With what other criteria should they be replaced, and on what Ecclesiological,
Historical and Theological basis?
3. Based on what logic is it possible for a non-ecumenical (as the 8th is referred
to by many) Synod to presume to validate an Ecumenical Synod (the 7th)? Is it
possible for the 8th NOT to be Ecumenical, and yet, we resort to it, for its ruling
on the Ecumenicity of the 7th? If therefore the 8th was non-existent, would the
7th then in turn not be acknowledged as Ecumenical? Wouldn’t we be going headlong
into an absurd logic here?
4. Why should we reject the positions of major theologians of the Church –like the
ones we mentioned above- and in their place, accept the positions of others, who do
not accept the two last Ecumenical Synods?
5. What more important evidence is there, that could justify the rejection
of the signing of the Holy Synods of the Patriarchates in the letter of 1848
mentioned above, and furthermore, where does one find a ruling of all these
Patriarchates, which condemns this admission of more than 7 Ecumenical Synods?
If all the above questions are provided with documented replies and arguments
possessing an authority equivalent to that which is analyzed in this article, we
can further discuss the matter of how many the Ecumenical Synods are.