From
"Remember thy First Love" by
Archimandrite Zacharias Zacharou.
Question: In
taking the steps which you have presented W to us, the most difficult thing, I
think, is to overcome the rear of shame. This is what I try to do in my parish.
People will not come to confession although their souls are burdened and things
are driving them crazy, because they cannot overcome the shame to admit their
sins. How do you lead people in this direction?
Answer: I
think that the strength to bear shame is a gift from God. When I was a young
and inexperienced spiritual father, Elder Sophrony told me to encourage the
young people to confess precisely the things of which they are ashamed, for if
they learn to do so, shame is transformed into strength against the passions,
and they will overcome sin. This is precisely what occurred in the person of
Zacchaeus. He bore shame voluntarily, and the Lord, Who was on His was to
Jerusalem in order to suffer the Cross of shame, saw Zacchaeus bearing shame
for His sake and recognized in him a kindred spirit. Zacchaeus had put himself
prophetically in the way of the Christ, in the way of the Cross, and in a
prophetic way the mystery of the Cross and Resurrection of Christ was activated
in the heart of Zacchaeus. His heart was enlarged and he was able to enter into
the power of faith. Christ has saved us through the Cross of shame, so when we
suffer shame for His sake He considers this as gratitude, and in return He
transmits to us His grace which regenerates our life.
This is
exactly what happens in confession. Those who confess sincerely and take upon
themselves the shame for their sins are regenerated. But those who shrug their
shoulders and say, 'Nothing special, the usual things...' they do not bear any
shame, their heart remains unmoved, and they hardly receive any benefit. But
those who, with shame and a contrite heart, strip their souls naked before God
and before another mortal, 'of like passions' (Acts 14:15) with them—that shame
of theirs really finds the heart, humbles it and brings it to the surface. This
then, opens the heart to receive the grace of regeneration, of consolation. We
see this in the life of many that come to us: the greater the shame they bear
with contrition, accusing themselves before God, the greater the grace they
receive to amend their lives and make a new beginning.
Orthodox
Heritage Vol. 10, Issue 11-12
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