ON HAPPINESS
From “And
they shall be one flesh", by Priest Pavel Gumerov
Archpriest
Nicholai Guryanov
There are
conflicting ideas about happiness; some think it is a sum of earthly good
things, a kind of social welfare package that makes a person’s life comfortable
and carefree. Each to his own, but nevertheless, in this case you either got
lucky and are happy, or you are left to drag out the pitiful existence of the
luckless. This idea of happiness is primitive and over-simplified.
Happiness is
immaterial—it is a state of the soul. Of course, people understand happiness in
various ways. Some find it in their family, others go to a monastery to
dedicate their whole lives to God; for a monk, that is happiness. Some have no
family but find happiness in laboring for the good of people, because this
labor brings joy to himself and others. Another may have nothing at all, but he
is still happy. He is happy because the weather outside is good and he has no
sickness at the moment. There are all different kids of people. And to the
contrary, a person may have everything: health, material wealth, a good family…
He has only to live and rejoice, but he is still unhappy, does not appreciate
it all, and is always discontented with one thing or another.
Thus,
happiness does not depend on material conditions of life—it is within a person,
in his own soul: The kingdom of God cometh not with observation… behold, the
kingdom of God is within you (Lk. 17:20-21). This, as we have said, is a state
of the soul: the ability to appreciate everything given to us, and to thank God
for it.
Every day can
give us happiness; we must only be able to see it.
One priest
used to counsel his spiritual children to end every day by writing down no
fewer than fifty things, “that you should thank God for.” Without the ability
to see something joyful and bright in every day, not only can we not be happy,
we cannot even live a normal life. Alexander Solzhenitsyn wrote a story called
One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich. In it is described an ordinary day of a
prisoner in a strict-regime concentration camp. However, this story is not
about the horrors of camp life, but about how one man, in what would seem to be
utter darkness, manages to see something good and positive.
He receives
an extra piece of bread and he can almost taste it, he thinks about how he is
going to eat it; suddenly he unexpectedly finds a piece of a saw and is able to
make from it a cobbler’s knife and earn a little money. He is able to avoid
solitary confinement—that is a great joy. Ivan Denisovich even finds pleasure
in work. First of all, he can warm himself by work and the frost doesn’t get to
him so badly, and secondly, as a former peasant he loves labor, he likes doing
what he know how to do well. The hero of the story always tries to see good
human qualities in everyone around him. He greatly appreciates the help and
support of his comrade prisoners. Even in prison, in solitary confinement this
person does not fall out of life, and every day brings him joy.
Once a
certain priest went to visit the now reposed elder Archpriest Nicholai Guryanov
and told him about the sorrows and problems he was having. Fr. Nicholai heard
him out and said, “Rejoice!” “What is there to rejoice about?” The priest
thought to himself. But the elder went on, “Rejoice that you were born, rejoice
that you are baptized, rejoice that you are in the Orthodox faith, rejoice that
you are still alive!” And perhaps the words of the Apostle Paul: Rejoice
evermore. Pray without ceasing. In every thing give thanks: for this is the
will of God in Christ Jesus concerning you (1 Thess. 5:16-18) is the formula
for happiness? It is the ability to be joyful about life, to always be with God
and to thank Him for all that he sends us.
St. John
Chrysostom says, “If something good happens, bless God, and it will remain
good. If something bad happens, bless God, and the bad will cease. Glory be to
God for all things!”
We not only
have to know how to see happiness in our lives, but we also have to be careful
with regard to it, and not spill it. There is an oriental fable on this theme.
A certain youth asked his father, “What is happiness?” And his father sent him
to a well-known wise man. So, the young man went to the famous teacher
expecting to see an ascetic, but the man turned out to be rather wealthy,
possessing a fine palace filled with works of art. The youth came to the palace
and asked the wise man, “Teacher, tell me what happiness is.” The teacher gave
him a small spoon filled it with olive oil, and said, “Walk around my palace,
look at all the treasures and beautiful works of art inside it, and when you
return tell me what you saw. But in doing so, make sure that you do not spill
the oil from the spoon.” In a little while the youth returned and told the man
all about that he had seen, adding that as he looked around at the treasures,
all the oil spilled out of his spoon. Then the wise man filled the spoon again
with oil and repeated the request. When the youth returned and the teacher
asked him what he had seen, the boy said, “I couldn’t see anything in your
palace because I was making sure not to spill any oil.” And truly, he brought
the spoon back without spilling a drop. “Happiness is in this,” said the wise
man. “In being able to preserve the gift that you have, and not waste it.” This
parable tells us that by looking at all the wealth and beauty that does not belong
to us, that was not given to us, we are not only unable to see them clearly,
but we also loose what we do have.
Some people
(and there are many) chase all their lives after the bird of happiness, the
unreachable ideal, seeking happiness in one marriage, then in another, a third,
getting disappointed and then falling in love again. They are passing by their
own happiness, and life passes them by. Such people are deeply unhappy. The
English author and thinker G. K. Chesterton has a wonderful saying about this:
“Faithfulness to one woman is a small price to pay for seeing at least one
woman. Complaining that you can only marry once is like complaining that you
can only be born once. This is incompatible with the great experience that we
are talking about, and reveals not exaggerated sensuality, but a strange
insensibility. Only a fool would be dissatisfied that he cannot enter Eden
through five gates. Polygamy is a lack of love, it’s like distractedly grabbing
up ten priceless pearls.”[1]
In speaking
of happiness in general and about family happiness in part, it is impossible
not to touch upon the subject of love, for love and happiness are two sisters;
these concepts are closely related to each other. One wise man said, “Happiness
does not mean being happy yourself, but making other people happy.” This
thought could be expanded: “Whoever makes others happy is happy himself.” After
all, the possibility to love, to give others happiness, is the manifestation of
God’s image in us. In this we make ourselves like unto God Himself. The Lord
creates the world and man precisely out of love. God cannot but pour out His
love and care for people, for He Himself is Love.
And of
course, the only person who is truly happy is the person who knows how to love
and to give love and happiness to others.
There used to
be a slogan here that went, “Man is the forger of his own happiness.” At first
glance this sounds a little haughty, but if you think about it, there is no
contradiction with Christianity in it. After all, happiness directly depends on
our relationship to reality; on how we build our lives, relate to others, and
appreciate all that God sends us.
Priest Pavel
Gumerov
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