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Παρασκευή 14 Νοεμβρίου 2014
Is there spiritual life and sanctity today? By Archimandrite Kyrillos, Abbot of the Holy Monastery of Essex
Is there spiritual life and sanctity today?
By Archimandrite Kyrillos, Abbot of the Holy Monastery
of Essex
My immediate answer to both parts of this question is
a very affirmative ‘Yes’. God does not change. Jesus Christ is the same,
yesterday, today, and for ever. And the nature of human beings has not changed
either. Since Adam, humans are dignified with such a power over their own
destiny that they can to a great degree turn their backs on God, on spiritual
life, on the quest for holiness. But until the end of the world, there will
always be people who, even if they are in the minority, will call down God’s grace
upon the earth and their fellow humans. That the world continues is proof that
there is holiness today. Saint Silouan said, ‘I tell you that when there are no
more men of prayer on earth, the world will come to an end.’
In other words, spiritual life, and holiness, which is
its fruit, do not exist only in the past. We can see holiness in our
predecessors and learn from them, but we are not examining spiritual life like
an exhibit in a historical museum. It is a living reality to which we are all
called. Every human being has a spiritual dimension. God is not partial: He
calls each one into existence with personal love, and endows each human with
the potential to share His own life. St. Peter using the terminology of his
time said that we are called to ‘become partakers of the divine nature’ [2
Peter 1:4]. And that is what holiness is: ‘Be holy, for I am Holy, and I will
that you have all that I have, unreservedly.’ This is God’s invitation to us
all, whatever our place in society, or our rank in the Church: the rank of the
laity, or that of the clergy. St. Silouan writes: ‘Everyone in this world has
his task to perform, be he king or patriarch, cook, blacksmith or teacher, but
the Lord Whose love extends to everyone of us will give greater reward to the man
whose love for God is greater.’ And again: ‘Not everyone can be an emperor or a
prince; not everyone can be a patriarch or an abbot, or a leader; but in every
walk of life we can love God and be pleasing to Him, and only this is
important.’
Spiritual life is life which takes into account the
spiritual dimension of human beings. Working at our relationship with God is
not like a hobby for a certain category of person, as people say, ‘He or she is
the religious type’. It is not an optional extra. It is what makes our life
really human. Biology and psychology, when they exclude the divine input into
the human make-up, give an incomplete picture. Secular man is merely a superior
animal, and actually sub-human. Without spiritual effort we will not cultivate our
spirit. It cannot be obliterated, but it can be stifled and atrophied, ignored
or denied. Only if we live a life which is spiritual will we ever be fully
ourselves, fully reintegrated as persons. Spiritual life includes our
psychological and our physical aspects. What I think and do on every level of
existence affects my soul. And when my soul is touched by God’s grace, my
thinking, my feeling and my body are also blessed.
Especially in Western countries, many people have
abandoned Christianity. An English author (G.K. Chesterton) wisely said that
where people stop believing in the truth, they do not start to believe in
nothing, they start to believe in anything. Thus although belief in God may
remain when Christ is abandoned, in every country nowadays one can meet all
kinds of spiritualities. This is not surprising, because ‘man cannot live on
bread alone’, and spiritual hunger exists even where ideas about the Absolute
Being are confused. Furthermore, many differing spiritual paths have features
in common. There is, for example, a core of ethical teaching common to the
major faiths. The radical differences between religions do not always show at
the beginning of the path: only when people go further do the divergences
become clear. Some of our contemporaries teach that the further you go in any
religion, the closer the paths converge: but actually the opposite is true. So
those who are seeking must seek for truth, and find the path which is based, on
right theology, on a true vision of God as He Himself has revealed Himself to
us.
Then our deepest intuition will confirm that indeed Jesus Christ is the
Way, the Truth and the Life. The fullness of life in God is only accessible in
the God-man, that is, in the One who shares our human nature as well as having
Divine Nature, as One of the Holy Trinity. The Orthodox Church gives us a true
Prototype: we can see, and hear, and touch, and taste, the Absolute Being; we
can experience the fragrance of God’s actual Being. Thus we can go to the end
of the Church’s path with confidence. No other path, however noble its
practices, its morals, and its aspirations, goes safely to the very end. Though
nobody is totally bereft of grace, fullness of sanctity presupposes orthodox
doctrine. Our teaching is unsurpassed; it is not out of date. It has borne
fruit in many different ages and circumstances and cultures. Orthodoxy is for
everyone; we can understand why Tertullian said that ‘every soul is innately
Christian’.
Thus spiritual life could be defined as ‘life in
Christ’. Let us dwell on this for a moment. This phrase has been used as the
title of a book by St. Nicholas Cabasilas about the Sacraments. Echoing him,
the great wonderworker, St. John of Kronstadt, who was a married priest living
in Russia and who reposed in 1905, gave a similar title to his ‘spiritual
diary’ when he was asked to publish it. An almost contemporary author called
one of the books where he shared his spiritual insights His – that is, Christ’s
– Life is Mine.
To be ‘in Christ’ means to be incorporated into His actual
Body, and to be anointed with His Spirit – Christ means ‘the Anointed One’ –
and adopted as a child of His Heavenly Father. Christian faith is not only
saying ‘yes’ to the Creed. It means ‘putting on Christ’ [Gal. 3:27]. How? By
Baptism, which, precisely, is preceded by a confession of faith. We easily take
this great gift for granted, but those who are converted in the mission field
or as adults can tell us from their experience that it is a passage from
darkness to light, from death to life. We sometimes forget that at Baptism the
priest said over us, ‘Thou art washed, thou art sanctified, thou art justified
in the name of the Lord Jesus, and by the Spirit of our God.’ These magnificent
words, borrowed from St. Paul’s letter to the Corinthians, can seem like a mere
ritual formula if we neglect to actualize the divine gift of grace in our life.
The seed of spiritual life has been sown in us. We ‘are sanctified in Christ
Jesus, called to be saints’ [1 Cor. 1:2]. That is our task.
If we are certain that we ‘have found the true faith’,
we have nothing to fear from the plethora of spiritual paths around us, even
though it seems confusing. ‘For God has not given us the spirit of fear; but of
power, and of love, and of a sound mind’ [2 Tim. 1:7]. If we remain faithful,
and continually enrich our experience and knowledge of the Church’s life and
teaching, we will be all the better fitted to help our contemporaries. The
basic question is always: What do you think of Christ? St. John reminded his
correspondents that ‘By this you know the Spirit of God: every spirit that
confesses that Jesus Christ is come in the flesh is of God. And every spirit
that does not confess that Jesus Christ is [the divine Lord] come in the flesh
is not of God: [1 John 4:2].
Of course, our exposition of what we think of the Lord
will be humble, not arrogant with self-assurance; it will be full of love and
gratitude. Saint Silouan says. ‘God is love, and therefore the preaching of His
word must always proceed from love. Then both preacher and listener will
profit. But if you do nothing but condemn, the soul of the people will not heed
you, and no good will come of it.’ Certainly, not everyone is called to be a
full-time preacher, but whoever witnesses to Christ will be speaking of one who
has made it possible for all humans to become true persons. Spiritual life is,
according to Orthodox doctrine, a collaboration between our free will and the
will of God. The best ambassadors of Christ will be those whose spiritual life
in Him has prepared them to speak prayerfully, so that others will want them to
explain their belief. ‘Sanctify the Lord God in your hearts: and be ready
always to give an answer to every man that asks you a reason of the hope that
is in you, with meekness and fear’ [1 Pet. 3:15].
If we conform to the path on which alone we can
acquire what St. Paul daringly calls the mind of Christ, it does not mean that
our individuality gets lost. Our God is One in Nature and Three in Persons. Our
Fathers teach us that we do not divide the Nature or confuse the Persons. And
so it is to be when humanity is one as God is one. If the world lived in
Christ, His commandments would be the first goal of each person: love for God
and for each other. Therefore each person would be, not dissolved, but affirmed
and fulfilled in loving relationships.
It is very instructive to read about holy people,
canonised saints and others, such as the twentieth century holy elders,
Iakovos, Porphyrios, and many more. I mention those from the last century
because it is almost ‘today’, and a century of great suffering. I have in mind
recognised holy men and women, because saints do not wear a self-advertising
label: ‘Look at me! I’m a saint.’ The path of Christ is one of humility, and
some were honoured as holy while on earth, while some were not. Our Church
wisely does not bestow official recognition on someone until they have passed
through the gates of death, and even then usually not quickly. So it is too
soon to speak of 21st century saints. But if we only look at the 20th century,
there is such a variety of personalities, educational levels, degrees of piety
in youth, religious backgrounds, and so on. Then there are many different life
paths that led to holiness. Mount Athos has given the world many great saints
such as Silouan, who reposed in 1938; but not all the 20th century saints were
in monasteries. There are the millions of martyrs and confessors – men, women
and children – from the Soviet Union; there is a parish priest such as St.
Nicholas Planas, and the new Parisian saints, Maria [Skobtsova] and Dimitri
[Klepinin]. There is St. Nectarios whose astounding miracles show that our God
is a living God and is at work until now. There are many who bore suffering
with faith, and even if they are not famous, they are now reaping their reward
and praying for the world. All of these holy people went to the same services
and accepted the same Creed. Yet they vary like a garden with many kinds of
flowers. They present us with proof that God is with us and accessible to us
all here and now.
Those with a scientific training know that proofs come
mainly through experiment. The best way for us all to answer the question posed
by His All-Holiness to us today is to experience for ourselves that ‘if you
live after the flesh, you shall die, but if through the Spirit you mortify the
deeds of the body, you shall live.’ ‘The flesh’, and ‘the deeds of the body’,
mean here the sinful energies such as hatred, pride, lust and other passions,
which cause disintegration and close the door against the Spirit of God.
Spiritual life will involve some ‘mortification’ for all of us. One example of
this is the Fasts that we undertake together at certain periods of the Church
year, precisely to help us to pray and to cleanse our heart of sinful passions.
St. Paul goes on to say that ‘As many as are led by the Spirit of God, they are
the sons of God. For you have not received the spirit of bondage again to fear;
but you have received the Spirit of adoption, whereby we cry, “Abba, Father”.
The Spirit itself bears witness with our spirit, that we are the children of
God [Rom. 8: 13-16]. When ‘the Spirit of glory and of God rests upon us’ [1
Pet. 4:14], then it will be evident that there is spiritual life and sanctity
today.
Source:
Tom Manakis
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