Vol. 18, Issue 07-08 Orthodox - Heritage
Αναζήτηση αυτού του ιστολογίου
Τετάρτη 10 Σεπτεμβρίου 2014
THE REALITY OF OUR CONTEM-PORARY WESTERN WORLD
THE REALITY OF OUR CONTEM-PORARY WESTERN WORLD
An excerpt from "Against False Union ” by Dr.
Alexander Kalomiros (published in 1990).
Contemporary Idolatry
And now let us see who are those Europeans with whom
they want us to be united as a state and as a Church?
A frightening antinomy characterizes the Europeans: it
is the antithesis between the inward and outward man. The European appears to
be one thing, but is really something else. He lives and moves in the falsehood
of compromises. His entire culture is a collection of conventional lies to
which he has adapted himself. He is extremely egocentric, but he conducts
himself with absolute and almost exaggerated courtesy.
In the “underdeveloped” countries where the people
still lack the finesse of European culture, everyone more or less expresses his
inner world with some freedom and simplicity which you cannot find in Europe.
Their manners are coarse, but the people are more genuine. In Europe this is
considered a lack of culture and spiritual development.
In this way, the constant game of hypocrisy has come
to be regarded as culture, where the white-washed tombs are full of stench, and
the outside of the cup always cleaned for the sake of the appearance to the
people.
But as it happens with Pharisees, that constant lie in
which they live does not humble them. On the contrary, their out-ward
perfection makes them certain of their superiority. The most characteristic
mark of the Europeans is their conceit. They look down upon all the people whom
they consider uncultured or underdeveloped.
A few of them might have a great concern for the needs
of others, of persons, of groups, or even of nations, and especially the
underdeveloped ones, towards whom they nurture compassionate sentiments, but
deep down they are concerned for others the way an entomologist is concerned
for insects. The sentiments they nurture for people are inferior to the love
they have for their dogs.
They have the same high idea of their civilization as
they have of themselves. Having critical minds, they do not accept anything
unquestioned, and are proud of it. They consider all values relative, even
those which they accept; and they discuss with apparent profundity all that
humanity has ever believed. Their customary position is that of well-disposed
agnostics who are willing to agree with whatever you tell them, but let you
understand that, of course, there is no way of proving anything you say, and
therefore, it leaves them neither hot nor cold.
One thing, though, which these agnostics never think
of doubting is the value of their own civilization. For them there never arose
a higher civilization than their own. There might be sharp criticism about
particular cultural problems and great disagreements over details, but the
soundness of their culture’s general direction has never been questioned.
The civilization of Europe is based upon a religion,
but upon a religion which no one wishes to name as such, because this religion
is not the worship of one or many gods, but the worship of man.
The religion of the ancient Greeks and their
civilization was nothing else than the worship of man. If the civilization of
ancient Greece found such a good reception in the hearts of Europeans, one can
attribute it exactly to this inward kinship.
Like the ancient Greeks, the Europeans deified man’s
reason, his passions, the powers and weaknesses of his soul; in a word, they
made man the center, measure, and purpose of all things. The culture of Europe
proceeds from man; it exists for man; and it receives its justification from
man. There might be disagreements about the ways in which the improvement of
man’s life may be attained; there might be differences in the manner of
worshipping man; there might be different conclusions drawn from man’s
measurement; but for all and always, man is the center around which they
revolve, the source of their inspiration and purpose of their actions.
This is the European. Whatever religion he thinks he
might have, deep down his religion is the worship of the idol “man.” The
European has ceased to see the image of God in man; he sees only the image of
himself. In other words, the religion of Europe is the old religion of
humanity, the one which separated man from God. God’s purpose is to deify man.
But man, deceived by the devil, thought that he could become god without the
grace of his Creator, on his own initiative and with only his own powers. He
rushed to eat of the tree of knowledge before he was mature enough for such
food.
The result was that his eyes were opened to know good
and evil, to see his bodily and spiritual nakedness, and he was shocked. He
could no longer bear to face his Lord and God, and he ran to hide from His
face. He realized that a great chasm had been opened between him and his
Creator. Then, his merciful Father cursed the first cause of his destruction,
the devil—“that old serpent”—and in His infinite love even promised salvation:
And I will put enmity between thee [the serpent] and the woman [the all-holy
Virgin], and between thy seed and her seed [Christ]; and he shall bruise thy
head, and thou shalt bruise his heel. (Gen 3:15).
And in order that man should
not live eternally in that condition of spiritual death, He cast him out of
Paradise, that he should not extend his hand and take from the tree of life and
eat and live unto the ages. (Gen 3:22). Thus, out of His compassion and love,
God permitted bodily death and corruption, which, like spiritual death, was the
result of the broken communion with the Source of life, so that man would not
carry about through the ages his spiritual death, misfortune, and nakedness.
And man, being separated from God and living in the constant reality of death,
became a slave to the devil.
It was, therefore, as a reaction to the experience of
his own nothingness that man worshipped man, proclaiming him god. In fact, the
ancients taught that the human soul is a part of the divine nature, in other
words, that it is divine in essence and therefore has no need of God.
This inward will of man to believe in his own
divinity, together with the fact of his submission to the demonic powers, is
the basis of every form of idolatry. The religion of Europe, then, is none
other than that primordial idolatry in modern form. Papacy, Protestantism, humanism,
atheism, democracy, fascism, capitalism, communism, and anything else European,
are expressions of the same humanistic spirit.
The civilization of Europe is nothing but the result
of man’s agonized and persistent effort to place his throne above the throne of
God. It is nothing but the erection of a new tower of Babel; confusion about
the method of erection may prevail, but the goal remains common for all
concerned. The ideal of the European is identical with the ideal of Lucifer.
Deep down, it is the same contempt for the goodness of God, the same insult
against His love, the same revolt and estrangement from His providence, the
same ingratitude, the same desolate path which, instead of leading upward as
man thinks he is going, leads to the abyss of death.
With the Cross As Banner
But the real religion of Europe is concealed and
appears formally with a Christian mask. For all the world, Europe is a
“Christian land.’ The devil is truly the clever one par excellence, and his
jests have the most tragic consequences for humanity.
The greatest evil which ever befell the world had the
Cross as a banner.
The Aristotelianism of Western theologians and their
discipleship to the idolatrous rationalistic thought of ancient Greece, the
transformation of theology into philosophy, the adulteration of the Faith, the
Papacy, the thirst for power and worldly authority, the Crusades, the mixing of
religion with politics, the Inquisition, the missions which proved to be
advance guards for colonizing powers, conquests, wars, the systematic
blood-sucking of nations, orgies, frauds, humiliations, and tyranny took place
in the name of the Crucified One.
In the face of this tragic deterioration of religion,
it was natural that atheism and Protestantism should spring up as an aspiration
for deliverance and health. One should note that the atheism which appeared in
Europe was not just an indifference, or agnosticism, or a simple epicurean
disposition. The atheism of Europe was not an academic denial. It was a strong
hate for the God of the Christians as they had come to know Him in Europe; it
was a strong passion, a blasphemy, an indignation of the human soul.
In the Orthodox Christian East, from the time of
Constantine the Great until the Greek Revolution, such epidemics never
appeared. The people of the East had come to know a God completely different
from the god which the people of the West had known; that is why they never
came to deny Him, no matter how sinful they were. The first atheists in Greece
came from Europe. Their denial, without their even knowing it, was against the
religion which they had come to know in Europe. Their atheism was nourished by
the faults of the Christians and the adulteration of the Christian truth which
had taken place in the West.
Similarly, Protestantism might appear to be a separate
heresy. But in actuality, it originated as a rejection of Catholicism.
Protestantism never had a religious position. On the contrary, it was and is a
religious denial. What justifies it is the presence of Catholicism. If
Catholicism would disappear, then Protestantism would have no reason for
existence.
The Way of Knowledge
Today, atheism as well as Protestantism might be
turned against Orthodoxy. But this assault is based on a deception. They detest
Orthodoxy because they see her with their own criteria, with their own
mentality. They see her as a variant of Catholicism. This is not due to an ill
disposition on their part, but to a total inability to judge by other standards
and to think with another mentality.
Catholicism, Protestantism, and atheism are on the
same level. They are offsprings of the same mentality. All three are
philosophical systems, offsprings of rationalism, that is, of the notion that
human reason is the foundation of certainty, the measure of truth, and the way
of knowledge.
Orthodoxy is on a completely different level. The
Orthodox have a different mentality. They regard philosophy as a dead end which
never led man to certainty, truth, and knowledge. They respect human reason as
no one else, and they never violate it. They regard it as one of the useful
factors in detecting falsehood and uncovering error. But they do not accept it
as capable of giving man certainty, of enlightening him to see the truth, or
guiding him to knowledge.
Knowledge is the vision of God and of His creation in
a heart purified by divine grace and the struggles and prayers of man. Blessed
are the pure in heart, for they shall see God. Truth is not a series of
definitions, but God Himself, Who appeared concretely in the person of Christ,
Who said: I am the Truth.
Certainty is not a matter of intellectual harmony; it
is a deep assurance of the heart. It comes to man after inner vision and is
accompanied by the warmth of divine grace. Intellectual harmony, which is the
outcome of a logical ordering of things, is never accompanied by this
assurance.
Philosophy is characterized by conceptualization. The
human intellect cannot accept reality as it is. It transposes it first into
symbols and then elaborates upon the symbols. But the symbols are counterfeit
figures of reality. The concepts are as distant from reality as a picture of a
fish from a live fish. The truth of the philosopher is a series of figures and
images. These symbols present one great advantage; they are comprehensible.
They are cut to man’s measurements and satisfy the intellect. But they also
present a great disadvantage; they have no relation to living reality.
Living feality does not fit into the categories of the
human intellect. It is a condition above reason. Philosophy is an attempt to
transpose the suprarational into rational. But this is counterfeit and
fraudulent. That is why Orthodoxy rejects philosophy and does not accept it as
a way to knowledge.
The only way to knowledge is purity of heart. It alone
permits the indwelling of the Holy Trinity in man. In this way alone is God and
His whole creation known, without being conceptualized. He is known as He
really is, without becoming comprehensible and without being diminished in
order to fit into the stifling limits of the human intellect. Thus, the nous of
man, living and uncomprehending, comes into union with the living and
incomprehensible God. Knowledge is the living contact of man with the Creator
and His creation, in mutual love.
The experience of knowledge is something which cannot
be expressed in human words. When the Apostle Paul came to know, he said that
he had heard unspeakable words—something which is impossible for man to
express.
Such is the deeper Christian theology—inexpressible.
Dogmas are helpful formulations. But they are not actual knowledge; they simply
guide and protect from error. A man can have knowledge without knowing the
dogmas, and he can know all the dogmas and accept them without having
knowledge. This is why, beyond the affirmative theology of dogmas, the Fathers
placed the deep mystery of negative theology where no definition is acceptable,
where the mind is silent and ceases to move, where the heart opens its door to
receive the Great Visitor Who stands at the door and blocks, where the mind
sees Him Who Is. And let no one think that these things are true only in regard
to the suprarational knowledge which is a movement of God towards man. Man can
know nothing with his reason, and he can be certain of nothing—neither of himself,
of the world, nor even of the most ordinary and common things.
Who honestly waited to hear Descartes’ syllogism “I
think, therefore I am” to be certain that he truly exists? And who waited for
the philosophers to prove that the world around him is real in order to believe
that it is? Besides, such a proof has never existed and will never exist, and
they who are engaged in philosophy well know it. No one has ever been able to
actually prove by his reason that our thoughts and our own selves, as well as
the world around us, are not fantasies. But even if someone were to prove it
logically, which is impossible, that logical proof would not be able to assure
anyone.
If we are certain that we exist and that our friends
are not figments of our imagination, this is not due to the proofs of the
philosophers, but to an inward knowledge and an inward consciousness which
gives us certainty of everything without syllogisms and proofs.
This is natural knowledge. It is the knowledge of the
heart and not of the brain. It is the sure foundation for every thought. Reason
can build upon it without fear of toppling. But without it, reason builds upon
sand. It is this natural knowledge which guides man in the way of the Gospel
and enables him to separate truth from falsehood, good from evil. It is the
first step which raises man to the throne of God. When man with his free will
ascends the first steps of natural knowledge, then God Himself leans over and
covers him with that heavenly knowledge of the mysteries which are not
permittedfor man to utter.
The preaching of the Apostles and Fathers, the
Prophets, and the Gospel, the words of Christ Himself, are directed to man’s
natural knowledge.
This is the province of dogmas and affirmative theology. It
is the manger where faith is born. The beginning of faith is the heart’s
ability to grasp that the truth speaks in the small book called the Gospel,
that in that commonplace church of poor and faithful people, God descends and
dwells. When fear takes hold of one because he steps on the earth which the
hand of God laid out, because he gazes at the great and broad sea, because he
walks and breathes, then his eyes will begin to shed tears—tears of repentance,
tears of love, tears of joy—and he will feel the first caresses of unspeakable
mysteries.
Natural knowledge exists in all men, but it is not of
the same purity in all. Love of pleasure has the power to darken it. The
passions are like a fog, and that is why few men find the road to truth. How
many people have been lost in the maze of philosophy, seeking a little light
which they shall never see?
In this maze it is not important if one is a Christian
or atheist, Protestant or Catholic, Platonist or Aristotelian. There is one
common identifying mark on them all—darkness. Whoever enters the cave of
rationalism ceases to see. And whatever garments he is wearing, they take on
the same dark color. In their discussions they understand each other very well
because they have the same presuppositions, the presuppositions of darkness.
But it is impossible for them to understand those who are not in the maze and
who see the light. And no matter what those on the outside tell them, they
understand everything with their own presuppositions and cannot see in what way
the others might be superior.
Vol. 18, Issue 07-08 Orthodox - Heritage
Vol. 18, Issue 07-08 Orthodox - Heritage
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