MY
PRAYER TO JESUS CHRIST IS THAT ALL SOULS
IN
THE WORLD WILL FIND SALVATION
Dear
People,
I recently shared with you my
thoughts about the recent meeting of Patriarch Bartholomew with Pope Francis in
Jerusalem. The meeting was the fiftieth
anniversary of the meeting of Patriarch Athenagoras and Pope Pius the VI in
Jerusalem in 1964. At this meeting these
leaders of the Greek East and the Latin West lifted the excommunications that
East and West hurled at one another during the Great Schism of 1054. Since that time, the two Churches have
engaged in an ongoing dialogue to heal the spiritual rift between the Church of
the East and the Church of the West who for the first one thousand years of the
Christian made up the One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church. There are those of us in the Orthodox Church
who often takes a very dogmatic approach to issues of faith and tradition. We Orthodox Christians of the East feel that
we have kept inviolate the faith and traditions from apostolic times up to the
present day. In response to the recent
meeting of Patriarch Bartholomew and Pope Francis, I responded with a
commentary that was written by Saint Ambrose of Optina, Russia. This Saint takes a very dogmatic stance
toward the Roman Catholic Church using terminology that is often insulting to
our Christian brothers and sisters of the West.
In reviewing the statements by other Saints of the Eastern Orthodox
Church, I would like to share with you another approach to dialogue that is
espoused by a contemporary Saint of the Orthodox Church. I believe this is the spirit
that Jesus wants us to have who believes in His saving message.
ELDER
SILOUAN THE ATHONITE
Saint Silouan the Athonie has a
profound take on salvation of those who believe in the reality of Jesus
Christ. I am sure that most of our
fellow Christians in the Western world do not
know
anything about this 20th century Saint of the Orthodox Church. He was born in 1866 of devout parents who
came from the village of Sovsk in the Tambov region of Russia. His worldly name was Simeon Ivanovich
Antonov. At the age of 27 he received
the blessings of Saint John of Kronstadt and went to Mt. Athos where he became
a monk at the Russian Monastery of Saint Panteleimon. He received from the Mother of God the gift
of unceasing prayer and was given the vision of our Lord Jesus Christ in glory
while in the Church of the Prophet Elijah which adjoins the mill of the
Monastery. After this first grace from
God was withdrawn from him, he became oppressed by profound grief and great
temptations for fifteen years. His
struggle with grief was responded to by Jesus Christ when He said to him: “Keep
thy mind in hell, and despair not.”
It was fifteen years after the Lord
had appeared to him, and Silouan was engaged in one of those nocturnal
struggles with demons that so tormented him.
No matter how he tried, he could not pray with a pure mind. At last he rose from his prayer stool,
intending to bow down and worship the icon of Jesus, when he saw a gigantic
demon standing in front of the icon of Jesus waiting to be worshipped. Meanwhile, his monastic cell filled with
other evil spirits. Father Silouan sat down again, and with bowed head and aching heart he
prayed: “Lord you see that I desire to pray to you with a pure mind but the
demons will not let me. Instruct me what
must I do to stop them from hindering me?”
And in his soul he heard, “The
proud always suffer from demons.” “Lord, said Silouan, “teach me what I must do
that my soul may become humble.” Once
more his heart heard God’s answer, “Keep
thy mind in hell, and despair not.”
After many years of spiritual
trials, he acquired great humility and hesychia, inner stillness. He prayed and wept for the whole world as for
himself, and he put the highest value on love for enemies. Thomas Merton has described Silouan “as the
most authentic monk of the twentieth century”.
Saint Silouan reposed on September 24, 1938. He left behind his writings which were edited
by his disciple and pupil, the Elder Sophrony who lived with him for many years
on Mount Athos. Father Sophrony left
Mount Athos, went to England and established an Orthodox Monastery in Essex. Father Sophrony has written a complete life
of the Saint along with the record of Saint Silouan’s teachings in the book Saint Silouan the Athonite.
THE MONASTIC PENINSULAR OF MOUNT ATHOS
Saint Silouan is one of the most
beloved contemporary Saints of the Orthodox Church having been canonized in
1987. He was a simple monk who attracted
pilgrims from all over the world. His
teachings emphasized the absolute necessity of love and humility for authentic
Christian life. As is evident from the story
below, the Saint believed these virtues should guide all aspects of Christian
witness, including how we interact with and preach the truth to those in error
or heresy. Father Silouan’s attitude
towards those who differed from him was characterized by a sincere desire to
see what was good in them and not to offend them in anything they held
sacred. He always remained himself, he
was utterly convinced that salvation lays in Christ-like humility, and by
virtue of this humility he strove with his whole soul to interpret every man at
his best. He found his way to the heart
of everyone in his capacity for loving Christ.
SAINT
SILOUAN THE ATHONITE
I remember a conversation he had
with a certain archimandrite who was engaged in missionary work. This archimandrite thought highly of the Staretz
and went to see him many times during his visits to Mount Athos. The Staretz asked him what sort of sermons he
preached to people. The archimandrite,
who was still young and inexperienced, gesticulated with his hands and swayed
his whole body, and replied excitedly, “I tell them, your faith is all wrong,
perverted. There is nothing right and if you don’t repent, there will be no
salvation for you.” The Staretz heard
him out, then asked, “But please tell me, holy archimandrite, do
they believe in the Lord Jesus Christ—that He is the true God?” “Yes, they do
believe that.” “And do they honor the
Holy Mother?” “They honor her but they
teach erroneous things about her.” “And what about the saints—do they
acknowledge their existence?”
“Yes,
they do, but ever since they have severed themselves from the Church, what kind
of saints could they have?” “Do they perform
services in Churches? Do they read the Word of God?” “Yes, and they also have temples and
services, but if you could only see how inferior their services are to ours—how
cold, how soul-less they are!” “Holy
archimandrite, their souls obviously feel that they are acting correctly in
believing in Christ, in honoring the Holy Mother and the Saints—whom they
invoke in their prayers. That is why,
when you tell them that their faith is illegitimate, they will not listen to
you. But if you told the people that
they are right in believing in God, that they are right in honoring the Holy
Mother and the Saints, and in going to Church for services and praying at home,
that they are right reading the Word of God and all the rest, except that here
and there they have a few incorrect theories which should be corrected, then
everything will be just fine and pleasing to God, and by the Grace of God,
everyone will be saved. “God is love and that is why a sermon needs to always
spring from love. Only then will the
preacher and the listener both benefit.
But if you censure them, then the souls of the people
will not listen to you and no benefit will be achieved.”
As the Saint reveals in this passage
from Saint Silouan the Athonite, in
today’s context a polemical approach to those in theological error is not only
bound to fail, it is incongruous with the precepts of Christian love and
humility—and a detriment to spiritual growth.
Compiled
and edited by:
+Fr.
Constantine (Charles) J. Simones, Waterford, CT., USA, June 20, 2014
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