Orthodox Heritage.MARCH-APRIL 2018
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Κυριακή 18 Μαρτίου 2018
MAN AND HIS FALL By Metropolitan Hierotheos of Nafpaktos, from "Entering the Orthodox Church—the Catechism and Baptism of Adults. ”
MAN AND HIS FALL
By Metropolitan Hierotheos of Nafpaktos, from
"Entering the Orthodox Church—the Catechism and Baptism of Adults. ”
As we analyze the Parable of the Prodigal Son, let us
go on to make a man-centered analysis of this parable. It will show us the true
value of man and what true life is.
The father in the parable had two sons. Both sons
lived at home and enjoyed their father’s goods.
God is called Father both in relation to His
only-begotten Son and in relation to man. However, there is a vast difference
between the two. The Father gave birth to the Son before all ages, whereas He
created man within time. Man is also a child of God, but by grace, whereas the
Second Person of the Holy Trinity is a Son by nature.
We can use an example to make this more
comprehensible. An artist constructs a painting, which is his own spiritual
creation, his own work. In a way, you could call it “his child,” because it
expresses his thoughts and his gifts. At the same time, he begets children.
Thus, he makes the painting, but begets the child. The same thing, with
appropriate analogy, happens with God the Father in relationship to the Logos
and men.
God created the whole world. In the beginning, He
created the angels, what is known as the noetic realm. He then went on, within
the space of five days, to create all the sensible world, nature, birds, fish,
animals, plants and so on. Then, on the sixth day He created man, who was both
noetic and sensible [sensory], i.e., he had a soul and body. As the Fathers of
the Church say, first He created the Kingdom, the palaces, and then He created
the King, man. From his very creation, man was called to be king of the world.
The Holy Scriptures say that man was made by God in
His Image and Likeness. The Image refers to the noetic faculty and his
free-will, i.e., he has a nous and freedom. Whereas the Likeness refers to the
fact that he was created to become by grace what God is by nature. That is to
say, he was created to become a “god” through grace. Of course, according to
the Holy Fathers, the Image refers to the triune nature of the soul. Just as
God is Nous, Logos and Spirit man also has a nous, logos and spirit. The nous
is the center of his personality. The logos or reason is the articulated and
spoken word that is formulated with reason. Finally, the spirit, which is man’s
noetic eros, his intense longing, the power he has within him to achieve
theosis.
This means that the archetype of his creation, we
could say the model of man’s creation is God, and more especially the Logos of
God, the Second Person [Hypostasis] of the Holy Trinity. Man did not happen
alone; he had a model. We can compare man to having a film and printing off
many photographs. In this case, the film is Christ, and man is in the image of
the Logos, a photograph of the Logos. This is why he should be like its
original archetype. He must keep his photograph clean; otherwise, it does not
correspond to its original creation, and, therefore, loses its value
completely.
The term the image demonstrates his ontology, that is,
the reality of his nature. Whereas the likeness demonstrates where he should go
and what his objective is. This means that man must always bear his noble
lineage in mind. He is a prince and noble. He comes from an important and
elevated family. He should also know that he ought to strive to live up to this
great mission. Man’s objectives are not exhausted on himself. That is to say,
he should not only consider his food, drink, clothing and recreation, instead
he should have high targets. Nor yet is it man’s goal to study, work get married,
etc. He will do these things to provide for and serve his life here.
Ultimately, however, the deeper aim of his life is to become “god” by grace.
St. Gregory the Theologian would make an amazing definition of man’s purpose.
Man, he said, is a living creature sustained here, but transferred elsewhere,
and, the completion of the mystery, is deification through its inclination
towards God. That is to say, man lives and is provided for in this earthly
existence, but he is journeying to the other life. This journey from biological
life to spiritual life is called a mystery. Furthermore, the end of the mystery
is to become deified, by God’s grace.
In the Parable of the Prodigal Son, the two sons are
shown living in their Father’s house. According to the interpretation of the
Holy Fathers, this shows that immediately following his creation, man lived in
the house of God, i.e., in Paradise and he had true communion with God.
Paradise was both sensible and noetic. That is to say, it was a special place,
be also a personal relationship with God. In the Old Testament in the book of
Genesis in particular, we see that Adam hac grace from God immediately
following the Creation. This why both he and Eve lived just like the angels in
heaven.
The younger son in the parable sought his own share c:
his inheritance: “Give me the portion of goods that falls : me. ” So he divided
them his livelihood. And not many da after, the younger son gathered all
together, journeyed to a fa country, and there wasted his possessions with
prodigal liviry But when he had spent all, there arose a severe famine in tha
land, and he began to be in want. Then he went and join, himself to a citizen
of that country, and he sent him into < fields to feed swine. And he would
gladly have filled his ste* ach with the pods that the swine ate, and no one
gave h anything. (Lk 15:12-16)
At this point, the parable is fully compatible with
the ri. of man and his detachment from God. We will look a: more central
points.
According to St. Gregory Palamas, the younger son SOL
- his corresponding property from his father, which mtc that sin comes later,
whereas virtue is first-born. God crec-: man pure, with the capacity to attain
theosis. Whereas. :“younger,” a “discovery born later.” It is the result of
man’s bad choice. Man used his freedom to choose abandonment of God and his
detachment from Him. Man’s sin was that he sought to appropriate God’s work and
he attempted to continue his life according to his own will, and not according
to the will of God. As can be seen in the Old Testament, man wanted to be
obedient to himself and his own reason, and not to the will of God. He made
himself and his desires the center of everything, instead of God. This is the
essence of the tragedy of ancestral sin, and, indeed, of all sin.
In reading the Parable of the Prodigal Son, we observe
the stages of the Fall, as well as the tragic figure of the younger son. We can
delineate it as follows: appropriation of the property, emigration, squandering
of the essentials, deprivation and subjugation. Within this framework, we can
see the tragedy of the sin of the forefathers, as well as the tragedy of every
other sin that man commits.
When one tries to expend all his life within the
bounds of his biological life, interpreting it rationally, this constitutes a
departure from God. Man emigrates to a far country. He loses his communion and
unity with God. From the moment of his creation, man has a body and soul
inseparably joined together. The soul is the life of the body, whereas the life
of the soul is the Holy Spirit. Thus, without the Holy Spirit, man is
spiritually dead. It is characteristic that, when his son returns, the father
in the parable says, for this my son was dead and is alive again. (Lk 15:24).
This means that departure from God creates this death. Indeed, without God, man
is spiritually dead. He may move, work, have a high place in society, yet,
without God, everything is dead and life is insipid.
St. John the Damascene, in mentioning the Fall of Adam
and Eve, says through sin man lost divine grace, his image was darkened and he
[willingly through beguilement] was stripped of divine grace, resulting in the
feeling of nakedness in the body, too. The consequences were horrific. Having
lost divine grace, death came. First, spiritual death and then bodily death, sicknesses, mortality and finally, later, the
separation of the soul from the body.
The life of a man without the God Who created him is true
deprivation. In that case, nothing has meaning in his life. He is completely
discontented, because he has lost his archetype, God. He loses true love; he is
even deprived of real freedom. This means that he is subjugated to the citizens
of that country, far away from his father’s house. These citizens of Hell are,
in fact, the devil. He becomes the devil’s minion. This is true deprivation and
subjugation of man. He was made to be a prince, to live in the royal palace and
he preferred to be naked, in rags, a swineherd. That is to say, he preferred to
expend himself solely on his biological strengths and the indulgence of his
senses.
It is an absolute truth that, without the Holy Spirit,
man is spiritually dead. St.
Makarios the Egyptian uses two images to make this
reality comprehensible. The first image is of unsalted meat. In this case, it
quickly goes off and gives off a terrible stench. The other image is of a coin
that does not have the King’s image upon it. Such a coin would be a counterfeit
and would be worthless. The same thing is true of a man who does not have the
energy of the All-Holy Spirit within him. He is not a natural man, and he does
not have the true life.
St. Gregory of Nyssa would say something quite
characteristic: The person who does not live truly, does not have a true life;
the life of sinners is not a life, as such, it is merely labelled as one. This
means that God is man’s life. Besides, Christ Himself said, lam the Way, the
Truth and the Life. (Jn 14:6). Whoever lives apart from
God does not have
actual life. This is why the life of sinners is simply called life, in name
only, but in fact, it is not a life at all. This means that it is tragic. He is
locked up within the prison of his senses, of mortality and of corruption. He cannot
reach out to the clear skies of freedom. He is tormented by all life’s tragic
problems. He can find no escape. He is exiled to a desert island and there is
no hope of salvation, unless he returns to God, through his own free will.
Far from God, man is a prodigal. He loses his beauty
and his worth. He has no father. He has no house. He does not have love. He has
no friends. Everybody takes advantage of him. This is why, sometimes, from
within his bitterness and tragedy, he seeks for God. The desire for Baptism can
be seen in precisely this perspective. He wants to obtain life, which is God,
and he wants to have a personal relationship with God, who is his archetype.
The quest for Baptism does not have a social character; it should not be
inspired by external, human questions. Rather, it must be placed within this
perspective. Someone wants to be baptized so that they can return from death to
life, from that far country to his father’s house, from deprivation to
abundance, from being an orphan to having a father.
Orthodox Heritage.MARCH-APRIL 2018
Orthodox Heritage.MARCH-APRIL 2018
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