TWO KINDS OF
FAITH
By Rev. John
S. Romanides (+2001).
FT. John
Romanides is one of the most important Orthodox theo-logians of the Twentieth
Century. He has been responsible for a renaissance of traditional (Hesychastic)
understanding of salvation and Christianity in the Greek Orthodox Church and
beyond.
Human beings
can have two kinds of faith. The first kind of faith, which has its seat in the
mind, is the reasonable faith of acceptance. In this case, a person rationally
accepts something and believes in what he has accepted, but this faith does not
justify him. When Holy Scripture says, man is saved by faith alone (Eph 2:8),
it does not mean that he is saved merely by the faith of acceptance.
There is,
however, another kind of faith, the faith of the heart. It is referred to in
this way because this kind of faith is not found in the human reason or
intellect, but in the region of the heart. This faith of the heart is a gift of
God that you will not receive unless God decides to grant it. It is also called
inner faith, which is the kind of faith that the father of the young lunaric in
the Gospel asked Christ to give him when he said. Lord, help my unbelief. (Mk
9:24). Naturally, the father already believed with his reason, but he did not
have that deep inner faith that is a gift of God.
Inner faith
is rooted in an (empirical) experience of grace. And since it is an experience
of grace, what would this make inner faith as far as an Orthodox Christian is
concerned? Inner faith is noetic prayer. When someone has noetic prayer in his
heart, which means the prayer of the Holy Spirit in his heart, then he has
inner faith. Through this kind of faith and by means of prayer, he beholds
things that are invisible. When someone has this kind of vision, it is called
theoria. Theoria, in fact, means vision.
As a rule,
there are two ways for vision to take place.
When a person
has not yet attained to theosis, it is still possible for him to see by means
of the prayer what the Holy Spirit is saying within his heart. After attaining
to theosis, however, he can see by means of theosis, in which both this inner
faith (i.e., prayer of the heart) and hope are set aside, and only love for God
remains (as a gift of God).
This is what
St. Paul means when he savs, But when that which is perfect is come, then that
which is in part shall be done away. [iCor 13:10 and 13:13; since faith and
hope have fulfilled their purpose and man has reached the point of seeing God,
the source of his faith and hope, he now simply knows and loves the One Who is
Love]. When the perfect is come, faith and hope are done away, and only love
remains. And this love is theosis. In theosis, knowledge comes to an end;
prophecy is set aside; tongues, which are noetic prayer, cease; and only love
remains. St. Paul says this in passages of great clarity and beauty. The Church
Fathers in turn offer interpretations of these subjects that are indisputably
correct. These interpretations are found throughout the entire Philokolia.
ORTHODOX
HERITAGE. VOL 11 ISSUE 01/02
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