The
following is the text of the sermonette given by Fr. Stephen Fraser
at the 26th Archdiocese Convention in 1971 in Boston, Mass. Fr.
Stephen has just completed his theological studies at St. Vladimir’s
Orthodox Theological Seminary and is the pastor of St. John of Damascus
Church in Boston.
God, in His infinite goodness and love willed existence, or being,
from out of nothing or non-being. By an act of His almighty will,
He created entities, distinct from Himself, capable of knowing and
sharing in His existence and goodness. He endowed them with His
image and likeness. This existence which was brought from “non-being,”
this “entity” created in the Creator’s image and
likeness is called Man.
Now, it can be learned from the “Book of Genesis,” especially
the first two chapters, that man was the final act of God’s
will in the creation of the universe. The Cosmos was created from
nothing and man’s existence was effected by this creation.
The Church teaches that: Creation was God’s free act and that
it occurred in time; the cosmos has an aim and an end; God orders
and guides His creation according to His almighty will and wisdom.
It is quite correct to say that creation of the cosmos effected
man’s creation, for, man, when he existed in potentiality,
was conceived by his creator as being both material and spiritual.
As such he needed, of necessity, a material environment in which
to exist. He is, therefore, the link joining the material and the
spiritual orders of creation. In body, man belongs to the physical
order of matter, while in soul or spirit he belongs to the spiritual.
Yet man is not two, he is not divided. He does not have two natures.
If we say that ordinary man has two natures, then we have to say
that Christ has three—the two necessary for His manhood and
the divine one. Of course to believe such a teaching would plunge
us into the deepest heresy. The fifth Ecumenical Council of the
Church (Chalcedon), as well as her conscience, proclaims only two
natures in Christ—human and divine.
There is no “dualistic antagonism” between a man’s
soul and body as though he were also endowed with intrinsic schizophrenia.
To overemphasize either aspect would lead to a denial of the truth.
The body does not imprison the spirit as was taught by Platonism,
but is meant to be forever united with it. Spirit and matter in
man are not in opposition to each other. Man has one nature —human.
He is a unity of body and soul, the latter being called “spirit”
in its higher aspect.
In Genesis, first and second chapters, we are told that mankind
is derived from a single pair, our first parents. This fact is born
out not only from scripture which tells us that all men share in
a common state of sinfulness and in a common need of redemption,
but also through the study of Psychology, History, and Philology.
All men, for example, regard the family as the unit of human life:
also, there is a sense of corporate unity with the rest of mankind.
Furthermore, in his relationship with God, each man shares a certain
consciousness of the necessity of religion and the worship of God.
Whether or not man evolved from a lower species is of no consequence,
for, even if he did, there would still have to be a certain period
in time when the lower species became infused with the image and
likeness of God and given the gift of an immortal soul. The Church,
as a wise mother, has made no formal pronouncement for or against
the theory of evolution.
Holy Scripture and the Ecumenical Councils of the Church teach that
the soul has its direct origin from God. While the fifth Ecumenical
Council did not define any particular theory of the soul’s
origin as being “DE FIDE”, it did condemn the doctrine
of the preexistence of the soul. Neither can the Orthodox Catholic
entertain the “Pantheistic theory,” i.e., the human
soul is a part of the very essence of the divine nature. The Church
believes that the origin of the soul lies in a combination of Divine
and human activity, with God’s creative power involved and
exercised in the generation of each individual.
Of the immortality of the soul, the Church teaches that man’s
soul is not immortal by nature. The gift of immortality was given
by God as a free expression of His love for man, so that man, if
he so chooses, may be able to share in the bliss of his creator.
In all of creation, only man, as far as we are able to know, was
endowed with this most sublime gift.
All of creation has an aim and an end, and so, man was created with
all the physical and spiritual endowments necessary for the fulfillment
of the end for which God has foreordained him.
Psalm 8, verse 6, tells us that man was made “a little less
than the angels.” He therefore stands second in the order
of the creation of spiritual beings. The Church and Scripture also
teach that some of the first order fell by disobedience, and became
evil spirits.
The Bible says “Let us make man in our own image, after our
likeness” (Gen. 1:26) . . . “in the image of God he
created him; male and female he created them” (Gen. 1:27).
Now, while Orthodox theologians differ as to the meaning of image
and likeness, perhaps the closest explanation would be that “image”
indicates the mind and the will as innate powers, and “likeness”
expresses the desire and the impulse which the first man would need
in order to use his mind and will to become like God, and develop
as much as lay in him, actual perfection. It does not refer to the
bi-sexuality of God, or to the divinity of man.
The original state of man was one of harmony in a three-fold relationship—towards
himself, towards nature, and towards God. However, the first man
(according to I Cor. 15:45-47, and Eph. 4:24) had to develop his
own powers. The original state of man was, therefore, one of potential
perfection. Had man been absolutely and completely perfect, the
fall would have been impossible. This view is in contrast with the
Roman Catholic and Protestant views. Protestantism teaches that
man was created with complete and perfect holiness and righteousness
and that this was a natural endowment independent of Grace. The
Roman Church teaches the same except that man’s perfection
was attained by means of a special super-added gift, or grace, of
God.
But there occurred in the history of mankind a most unfortunate
transgression against obedience toward God. The first man fell away
from original righteousness because of this “and with him
fell the whole human race which descended from him.” He committed
a grievous sin in disobeying the will of God and fell away from
his own true end foreordained by his creator. The Evil One appeared
to him and man easily succumbed to temptation.
Adam in his original state had need of trial and testing, so God
gave man a free will which enabled him to make choices. Therefore,
man is not a slave of God but can freely choose to either obey or
disobey him. Had Adam chosen to resist evil and maintain obedience
to God, this one free exercise of his free will would have firmly
rooted mankind in perpetual obedience and the vision of God. But
alas, Adam sinned by disobeying God and he and his entire progeny
were estranged from God and suffered a diminishing of wisdom and
knowledge. It became more and more difficult for man to discern
and practice what was good. Sin darkened his spiritual eyes and
the truth was made difficult in attainment and understanding. Man
was cursed with “Original Sin.”
Here we must use caution when speaking of Original Sin. The non-Orthodox
teach that Original Sin is the Personal sin and guilt of Adam transmitted
from him to all mankind. The Church does not agree with this teaching.
Original sin is the “sinful state” of our nature with
which we are born. Because of the fall, human nature is disposed
toward sinfulness: human nature is corrupt and that which we refer
to as man, is really less than man: human nature has been weakened,
therefore, the ability to resist every temptation (without the special
Graces of God) has been taken away.
The Church teaches that when man fell he did not receive Adam’s
sin and guilt — but his punishment, which is corrupt human
nature. He also lost physical immortality. And since the bond between
the individual soul and God was broken, there occurred an eternal
separation between God and man.
Yet, man was not abandoned to the penalties and consequences of
Original Sin, for, there was promised to him a Saviour, a redeemer,
the Son of God and the second person of the Blessed Trinity.
As redeemer and Saviour, Christ came to make salvation possible.
He bridged the gap between man and God. He was Himself the atonement
for sin, and the means of our salvation.
It was impossible that a finite created being could offer atonement
and thereby achieve salvation for all of mankind. We needed a being
who was God and man. As man he had to be perfectly obedient to the
will of God. In these ways Christ brought salvation through his
incarnation, crucifixion, and resurrection, and through his mystical
body — the Church.
One of the greatest single mysteries to man is that he is. To be,
and to contemplate the truth of being, is to approach the Royal
Doors that lead to the answer to the secret of life itself. On this
earth only man stands consciously and subconsciously in this vessel
of truth. The way which leads assuredly to the source of truth and
consequently to its possession is Christ and the Church. Only in
the Church and by living according to her teachings can man arrive
at the true concept of himself.