
Ecclesiasticus I: Introducing Eastern Orthodoxy

Ecclesiasticus II: Orthodox Icons, Saints, Feasts and Prayer
|
In
the thoughts that follow I would like to look at a crucial subject that
needs to be faced. It is the great issue of secularism in church, theology
and pastoral care.
Secularism
is the loss of the true life of the Church, the alienation of Church members
from the genuine Church spirit. Secularism is the rejection of the ecclesiastic
ethos and the permeation of our life by the so called worldly spirit.
It
should be stressed that secularism of the Church members is a gravest
danger. The Church has several "enemies". The worst and most
dangerous one is secularization which eats up the marrow of the Church.
The Church itself, of course, is under no real danger, since it is the
blessed Body of Christ, but the threat exists for the members of the Church.
To
be accurate, we would say that secularism, which consists in the adulteration
of the way of life and of true faith, is related to the passions and,
naturally, has been lurking in the Church since the beginning of its existence.
In Paradise Adam attempted to rationally interpret God's commandments.
Even after Pentecost there were cases revealing some Christians' anthropocentric
way of thinking and living. Gnostics and others are the obvious proofs
of this.
But
secularism mostly started after the cessation of the persecutions. During
the persecutions, Christians believed and lived in truth. When Christianity
became the official State religion, there begun an adulteration of the
christian faith and way of living. Anachoreticism and later monasticism
developed as a reaction to this secularization. As the Holy Scripture
illustrates, especially in the Epistles of the holy Apostles, in the ancient
Church all Christians lived monastically. Secularism was a consequence
of people attracted to Christianity out of expediency. The development
of monasticism came as a response to that. Monasticism is not something
alien to the Church but rather life according to the Gospel, which some
Christians wanted to live in perfection and thus elected this way of living.
It can be argued that even the most eccentric monk is a healthy reaction
to the secular spirit that plagues Christians of our age.
Before
proceeding to see how we experience secularism in Church, theology, and
pastoral care, I would like to examine more closely the secular spirit
and the meaning of the world ("cosmos") in the Biblical-Patristic
tradition, since the word "Cosmos" constitutes the main concept
of the term "secularism".
1.
The double meaning of the word "Cosmos"
The
word cosmos (world) has two meanings in the Bible and the works of the
holy Fathers. The first is that cosmos is the creation of God, the entire
creation; the second is the passions and everything that characterizes
the spirit of the flesh which lacks the Holy Spirit.
To
start with, cosmos is the creation. It is called as such because it is
an ornament, a jewel ("cosmema" in Greek). In the Orthodox tradition
we say that the world is a positive work of God. It is not a copy of some
other real world, the world of ideas, it is not a downfall from the true
world nor a creation of a lesser God. The phrase in the Creed -- "I
believe in one God, Father Almighty, maker of heaven and earth, and of
everything visible and invisible" -- was articulated to counter a
heretical teaching of certain ancient heretics claiming that the world
is a creature of a lesser God.
So
the world is a creation of God, an ornament, a jewel. God created the
world with His uncreated energy, for God is creator by energy and not
by substance. It is characteristic that at the end of creation, the Bible
notes "and God saw that it was good".
God
not only created the world, He also maintains it with His uncreated providential
energies. Christ's saying which demonstrates God's love for the world
is significant: "for God has loved the world so that He gave His
only begotten Son in order that whoever believes in Him is not lost but
lives eternally" (John, 3,16). God's love for the world was expressed
mainly through Christ's incarnation and man's salvation. After all, man
is the microcosm within the macrocosm and is the summation of all creation.
The
word "world" in the sense of God's creation can be found in
several Biblical passages. John, talking about Christ and the incarnation
of the Son and Word of God, says: "He was in the world, and the world
was made through him, yet the world knew him not" (John, 1,10). It
is also said in several passages that while the world is God's creature,
it can become a deceit by the evil one, since the evil one deceived Adam
in Paradise through the world, through the creation. That is why the Lord
sums it up: "for what will it profit a man, if he gains the whole
world and forfeits his life? " (Matthew, 16,26).
The
second meaning of the word "world" is sin, passions of the flesh,
the spirit of the flesh, the spirit which is deprived of the Holy Spirit's
life and energy. We encounter the word "world" in this sense
several times in the Bible.
John
frequently uses the word "world" to denote God's creation, the
entire creation. In other cases he uses it to denote the passions of the
flesh, everything that keeps man away from God or man's life outside of
God. A typical passage is the following: "For all that is in the
world ... but is of the world" (1 John, 2,16). John does not ask
us us not to love the creation, God's creation, but rather the desire
of the flesh, the desire of the eyes, and the arrogance of life, which
constitute in reality what is called the world.
In
Saint Paul's Epistles there is a characteristic passage showing that the
world is, on one hand, the desire of the eyes and the arrogance of life,
all the external things that become the evil one's deceit and deceive
us; on the other hand, the world is the passions of the soul, that is,
the contrary to nature motion of the soul forces. Saint Paul says "But
far be it from me to glory except in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ,
by which the world has been crucified to me, and I to the world"
(Gal. 6,14). The Apostle is not taking pride in his origins, in his Roman
citizenship, in the fact that he saw Christ in His glory, but only in
the Cross of Christ through which he put the world to death. And this
happened in a double way. First, the world was crucified for him, then
he was crucified for the world. In the first instance, the devil could
no longer deceive him with external stimulation. In the second one, he
got completely rid of the world of passions and desires existing inside
him.
It
is in these two meanings that we encounter the word "world"
in patristic texts. St.Gregory Palamas teaches that the world as a creature
of God is neither to be held in contempt nor to be hated. In this meaning,
the world has to be used by man for his maintenance. There is a danger,
however, when someone views the world as a creature of God to also view
it as the devil's deception; for the devil really knows how to utilize
the world to deceive man.
In
the Holy Scripture it is said that the devil is king of the world. Interpreting
this term, St.Gregory Palamas points out that God, who created the world,
is the real king of the world. The devil is called such because he dominates
the world of injustice and sin. Indeed, "the abuse of beings, our
passionate ruling over the world, the world of injustice, the wicked desire
and arrogance", these condtitute the world whose king is the devil.
Here it is clear that "world" means sin and passions.
St.Basil
the Great discussing man's departure from the world says that it is not
an escape from the world, it is not the soul's exit from the body, as
argued by the ancient philosophers. It is rather the absence of attachment
by the soul to the body. Naturally, when the Fathers refer to the body
they do not mean the body as such but rather the carnal spirit, the passions
of the flesh and the adoration of the body.
It
is in this context that the Fathers discuss the world. Theoleptos of Philadelphia
says "I call `world' the love of material objects and of the flesh".
He who is liberated from these "becomes akin to Christ and acquires
His love". More generally, to quote St.Isaac the Syrian, "when
we want to name all passions, we call them world".
It
is this sense of the word "world" which is used in the term
"secularism" and which we will employ hereafter. Secularism
is man's distortion by the spirit of the flesh and the passions. When
our life is permeated by passions, by the world of injustice, and when
we pursue such a life within the Church, and think, and try to be theologians
in such a manner, than this is called secularism. Secularism is life's
estrangement from God, our not pursuing communion and unity with Him,
our attachment to earthly matters, and our viewing of all things and issues
in our life away from God's will. One could claim that secularism is a
synonym to anthropocentricism.
In
what follows we will analyze the term secularism in the above framework,
obviously extending its dimensions.
2.
Secularism in the Church life
It
should be stressed from the beginning that when we talk about secularism
in the Church, in theology and in pastoral care, we do not imply that
the Church, theology and pastoral care become secular and are destroyed.
That would imply that the true life and man's true way of therapy are
lost. Instead, it is the members of the Church that become secular and,
therefore, view the Church, theology, and pastoral care differently. However,
throughout the centuries, there are Church members who preserve the truth
regarding the Church, theology and orthodox pastoral care.
a)
Secularism in Church
In
the past we have had the opportunity to analyze the meaning of the term
Church. The main point is that the Church is Christ's body. It is not
a human organization but the God-man body of Christ. We have also said
that the Church is divinization. This means that its purpose is to guide
its members to divinization which is the principal objective of man's
creation.
An
important excerpt illustrating the objective of the shepherds of the Church
can be found in St.Paul's Epistle to the Christians of Ephessos. Says
the Apostle: "And his gifts were that some should be apostles, some
prophets, some evangelists, some pastors and teachers, to equip the saints
for the work of ministry, for building up the body of Christ, until we
all attain to the unity of the faith and the knowledge of the Son of God,
to mature manhood, to the measure of the stature of the fulness of Christ".
(Ephes. 4,11-13). According to St.Nikodemos of the Holy Mountain, in the
phrase "the knowledge of the Son of God" St.Paul does not mean
"the knowledge of God which is achieved through the viewing of created
things and the divine Scriptures; the impure can also possess such knowledge;
instead he refers to the supernatural knowledge of the Son of God, arrived
at through divine illumination and glorification, and granted solely to
the perfect ones, those purified from the passions of the flesh and of
the soul. It is this knowledge that he wishes all Christians to arrive
at". Also, the phrase "to mature manhood, to the measure of
the stature of the fulness of Christ" conveys the concept of divinization.
The
true Church's existence is demonstrated by its success in curing man.
We know from the teaching of the holy Fathers that Church is the spiritual
health center, the spiritual hospital that cures man. When we refer to
illness and cure we mean that the nous is ill and is cured. Nous' cure
is not independent of purification, illumination, and divinization. The
Church's goal is to cure this gnostic center so that man can acquire the
knowledge of God which constitutes his salvation. Therefore, the existence
of the true Church can be seen in the degree of success, in the results
of the therapy. If it cures man, if it makes a correct diagnosis of the
disease, and if it knows the way and method of therapy, then it is the
true not the secular Church.
There
are some tokens revealing that this particular Church preserves the knowledge
and the success of therapy. Man's right social relationships is one of
them. Indeed the disturbance of social, interpersonal relationships is
a product, a result of the illness of nous. Nous' therapy, which consists
in its purification and its illumination, has sociological consequences,
too. That is why what is relevant to nous' therapy ought to be studied
by today's so-called science of sociology. We, Orthodox, view the transformation
of society through such a perspective . That is why we are realists. It
is utopian to want to transform society by trying to find a suitable social
system. What is relevant is not a system but a way of life. This is not
to imply that we do not applaud every effort for the improvement of certain
bad conditions in the post-fall and sick societies which for the most
part do not accept God's word. But the most effective and realistic way
is through the therapy of the nous.
Another
example revealing a Church's degree of success in curing is the presence
and existence of holy relics. The holy relics are a proof of man's cure.
When the nous is purified and illumined and when man attains divinization,
then he is entirely divinized, because God's Grace is transported from
the soul to the body. The relics of the saints, which are everlasting,
fragrant and miraculous, are proof that the method and way of therapy
are preserved, that the Church leads man to divinization. That is why
it has been pointedly argued that the aim of the Church is to make relics,
in the sense that it seeks to guide man to divinization. A Church that
does not produce relics demonstrates that it does not lead man to divinization
and, hence, it does not possess the true method for man's therapy.
So,
the existence of the true Church is revealed in the degree of success.
In medicine it is said that a correct medical theory is distinguished
from a wrong one by its degree of success. Similarly, a doctor is good
depending on his healing rate. Likewise for the Church. An organised Church
is one that cures man. Its existence is demonstrated by success in the
therapy of the darkened nous.
Secularism
in the Church is directly related to the loss of Church's true objective.
A Church not inspired by what has been said above, that is a Church which
does not cure man but is concerned with other matters, is a secularised
Church. It is in this sense that we refer to secularism in Church. Now
we will turn to some cases illustrating the secularised Church.
We
can say that the Church becomes secular when it is considered to be a
religious organization. There is an enormous difference between Church
and religion. Religion speaks about an impersonal God who inhabits the
Heavens and manages the world from up there. Man, through various rituals,
has to appease God and establish communication with Him. But the Church
is the Body of Christ who assumed human nature and in this way there exists
a communion between man and God, in the Person of Christ. Of course, it
cannot be precluded that within the Church there are some Christians feeling
God in a religious perspective. This, however, occurs in the lower stages
of spiritual life, it constitutes spiritual immaturity and there is definitely
a willingness and tendency for man to go on maturing spiritually so that
he arrives at communion and unity with God. A secularised Church, though,
simply satisfies the so-called religious feelings of men and nothing more.
It is noted for its beautiful ceremonies and neglects the entire neptic
and therapeutic wealth owned by the Church.
Further,
the Church is secularised when it is viewed as an ideological field and
ideological system, unrelated to life. Ideological systems are inspired
by abstract ideas and are imbued by idealism which has the characteristics
of all anthropocentric systems that are based on philosophy and are against
materialism. Ideas do not have much of a relation to life, to man's transformation.
Idealism is created by man's rationality and is presented in the form
of arguments and ideas.
The
Church does not function as an ideological field. It does not simply have
some ideas, be it the best and most perfect ones, that it uses to counter
other ideas. The Church has the life, indeed the true life, which is a
fruit of man's communion with God. St.Gregory Palamas says: "every
saying is countered by another saying". Every argument is confronted
by a counter- argument. This can be clearly seen in many of the philosophical
ideas that have been developed. But who can confront true life, and in
particular, life that defeats death? The Church does not have ideas. It
has life, which is the transcendence of death.
It
is wrong, it is secularistic, to contrast the Church to old or modern
ideologies and to modern ideological socio- political systems. The Church
does not simply copy the methods and manners of other social and philosophical
systems. Instead, it possesses a life which is not identical to the purpose
of idealistic systems. Of course, when the Church cures man this has important
sociological consequences, but this is a product, a result, never the
cause, the principle.
The
secularised Church is occupied with human thought and abstract ideas.
The real and true Church, though, is like true medicine, and in particular
surgery. A surgeon can never engage in philosophy and culture, can never
meditate while performing a surgical operation. In front of him he has
a patient he wants to cure, to bring back to full health. Likewise the
Church, having in front of her a patient, can never meditate or philosophize.
The Church itself experiences the mystery of Christ's Cross and assists
man in experiencing the same in his personal life. The experience of the
Cross mystery is the deepest repentance through which the nous is transformed.
From the contrary to nature motion it acquires the movement according
to nature and above nature.
Furthermore,
the Church becomes secular when it is downgraded to a social organization
, like so many other organizations in society. It it often claimed that
Church is the Nation's supreme institution. But the Church cannot be considered
as an institution of the Nation, even the supreme one. It may be the substance
of the Nation, since the Nation's tradition is inextricably tied to the
Church tradition, and Nation members are simultaneously Church Members.
The Church, however, can never become an institution. When a revolution
ends up in a bureaucracy, it loses its value and this brings about its
downfall. The same is true of the Church. Being the spiritual Hospital
which cures man, the Church cannot be considered as an institution in
support of society, appropriate for citizen taming.
Unfortunately,
today some view the Church as a necessary organization, useful for society,
its role valued according to its social usefulness. For many the Church
is viewed as Prometheus, with police in the role of Epimetheus. That is,
the Church is good enough as society's assistant in order to avoid police
intervention. When the Church fails, the police step in. Certainly one
cannot dismiss Church benefaction in such matters. A cured Christian causes
no troubles to the police. But we should not see Church presence only
in this field because then we refer to a secularised Church.
There
are others, unfortunately, who do not look at the prophetic and sanctifying
role of the Church, which consists of the sanctification of man and of
the whole world. They rather accept the Church as a mere decorative element.
They need it to decorate various ceremonies and to brighten them with
its presence. Or they may believe that Church presence is required to
demonstrate a wide social consensus. But, as it has been pointedly observed,
not even the atheists reject such a church. I may add that such a secularised
church causes despair to the atheists, too. They may need it for the time
being, because it serves them well, but they are going to face a grave
disappointment when they, too, need the true presence of the Church.
Today
there is a general tendency to view a secular Church as more useful for
modern social needs. I may add that there is a growing tendency to adjust
sermons and Church teaching to these social needs, the needs of a society
functioning in anthropocentric ways, because we fear society's rejection.
Protestants and, generally, the Western "Churches" have succumbed
to this temptation and that is why they have spreaded much despair to
those seeking therapy, to those seeking the true Church for a cure.
Overall,
a Church which crucifies instead of being crucified, which experiences
worldly glory instead of the glory of the Cross, a Church which falls
to, instead of overcoming, Christ's three temptations in the desert, is
a secularised church. Such a Church is destined to accommodate a fallen
society to remain in its fallen state; it spreads disappointment and despair
to those who seek something deeper and more substantive.
b)
Secularism in theology
Since
theology is the voice and faith of the Church, it follows that what has
been said about the Church so far applies to theology too. We will attempt
to discuss this particular subject a little more in order to see the way
orthodox theology is secularised in more detail.
Theology
is the logos of God (theo-logia in Greek). It is assumed that someone
who talks about God must know God. In the Orthodox Church we say that
the knowledge of God is not intellectual but spiritual, that is, it is
connected to man's communion with God. In St.Gregory Palamas' teaching,
the vision of the uncreated Light is closely connected to man's divinization,
to man's communion with God and the knowledge of God. That is why theology
is identical to the vision of God and the theologian is identical to the
God-seer. Someone who talks about God, even reflectively can be called
theologian, and this is why the Fathers attribute the term theologian
to the philosophers too. Eventually, though, from an Orthodox standpoint
a theologian is someone who witnessed the glory of God or, at least, accepts
the experience of those who reached divinization.
In
this sense, theologians are the God-seers, those who achieved divinization
and received the Revelation of God. St.Paul is one such theologian. He
went up to the third heaven and on several occasions he describes and
reveals his apocalyptic experiences. This occurs to such an extent that
St.John Chrysostom, talking about St.Paul and about the fact that in his
Epistles there are greater mysteries than in the Gospels, argues that
"Christ declared more important and unspoken things through St.Paul
than through Himself".
St.Paul,
as he himself says in third person, was captured "up to the third
heaven" (2 Corinth. 12,2). At this point I would like to remind us
of St.Maximos the Confessor's interpretation, according to which the three
heavens are in reality the three stages of spiritual life. The first heaven
is the end of practical philosophy, which is the purification of the heart,
the expulsion of all thoughts from the heart. The second heaven is the
natural theoria, that is, the knowledge of the inner essences of beings;
when man through God's Grace becomes worthy of knowing the inner essences
of beings; to have ceaseless inner prayer. The third heaven is theoria,
theology, through which, and by divine Grace and the capture of the nous,
one reaches, as is possible, the knowledge of God's mysteries and knows
all the mysteries of the kingdom of heaven. This is "the ignorance
superior to knowledge", according to a characteristic saying by St.Isaac
the Syrian. This ignorance, relative to human knowledge, is the true knowledge
of God. Therefore, theology is the third heaven which is a fruit, an outcome
of the purification of the heart and the illumination of the nous.
All
these are related to another teaching by St.Maximos the Confessor. According
to it, all that is seen needs to be crucified and all the thoughts to
be buried, and then the logos rises within ourselves, man ascends to theoria
and becomes a true theologian. This means that orthodox theology is closely
tied to orthodox ascesis, it cannot be conceived of outside orthodox ascesis.
On
discussing true theology, I think it is worth reminding ourselves of the
holy Niketas Stathatos' discourse on the interpretation of Paradise. An
integral member of the Orthodox Tradition, hosios Niketas analyses thoroughly
how the Paradise created by God in Eden is "the great field of practical
philosophy". The tree of the knowledge of good and evil is natural
theoria, while the tree of life is mystical theology. When man's nous
is purified, he can approach the tree of the knowledge of good and evil
and from there acquire the gift of theology. This is the path followed
by all the holy Fathers, and this is why they proved to be unmistakable
theologians in Church and real Shepherds of the people of God. On the
contrary, the heretics tried and still try to make theology in other ways,
with impure heart and reflection, not through practical philosophy, natural
theoria and mystical theology. For this reason they failed and were expelled
from the Church of Christ.
When
theology is not a part of this framework, as presented by all the holy
Fathers, then it is not orthodox but secular. This secular theology is
encountered in the West, for there they analyze and interpret the Holy
Scripture through their own human and impure intellect, outside the correct
prerequisites presented by the holy Fathers. Unfortunately, in some cases
this has affected our own place, too.
A
typical example of secular theology, functioning outside the traditional
patristic framework, is the so-called scholastic theology, which
was developed in the West between the 11th and the 15th centuries. It
was termed scholastic from the various schools cultivating it. Its main
feature was that it relied a lot on philosophy, particularly that of Aristotle,
and it attempted to rationally explain everything related to God.
Scholastic
theology tried to rationally comprehend God's Revelation and to harmonize
theology and philosophy. It is characteristic that Anselm of Canterbury
used to say: "I believe in order to comprehend". The scholastics
started by a priori accepting God and then tried to prove His existence
by rational arguments and logical categories. In the Orthodox Church,
as expressed by the holy Fathers, we state that faith is God's Revelation
to man. We accept faith from hearsay not to comprehend it later, but to
purify the heart, achieve faith through theoria, and experience Revelation.
Scholastic theology, on the other hand, accepted something a priori and
then struggled to comprehend it by rational arguments.
Scholastic
theology attained its peak with Thomas Aquinas, who is considered a saint
by the Latin Church. He claimed that Christian truths are divided into
natural and supernatural. Natural truths, such as the truth of God's existence,
can be proved philosophically; supernatural truths, such as the trinity
of God, the incarnation of the Logos, the resurrection of bodies, cannot
be proved philosophically but can be shown to be not irrational. Scholasticism
tightly connected theology with philosophy, and in particular metaphysics;
as a result, faith was adulterated, and scholastic theology itself was
completely discredited when the model of metaphysics prevailing in the
West collapsed. Scholasticism should not be acquitted of the tragedy of
the West regarding faith in our days. The holy Fathers teach that there
is no distinction between natural and metaphysical -- only between created
and uncreated. The holy Fathers never accepted Aristotle's metaphysics.
But this is beyond our present topic and I am not going to develop it
any further.
Scholastic
theologians of the Middle Ages considered scholastic theology to be a
development and surpassing of Patristic theology. Frankish teaching on
the superiority of scholastic over Patristic theology originates from
this point. Thus, scholastics, who deal with reason, consider themselves
superior to the holy Fathers of the Church, and also consider human knowledge,
a product of reason, higher than Revelation and experience.
It
is from this angle that we should view the conflict between St.Gregory
Palamas and Varlaam. Varlaam was essentially a scholastic theologian who
attempted to bring scholastic theology to the Orthodox East. His views
were of the scholastic theology which in reality constitutes a secular
theology. Varlaam believed that we cannot exactly know what the Holy Spirit
is, thus ending in agnosticism; that ancient Greek philosophers were above
the Prophets and the Apostles, since reason is higher than the Apostles'
theoria; that the Light of the Transfiguration is something which is done
and undone; that the hesychastic way of life, that is, the purification
of the heart and the ceaseless noetic prayer are not necessary, etc. St.Gregory
Palamas foresaw this danger to Orhodoxy and with the power and energy
of the Holy Spirit, in addition to the experience he personally had obtained
as bearer and continuator of the holy Fathers, he confronted this grave
danger and preserved the unadulterated Orthodox faith and Orthodox Tradition.
Unfortunately,
Varlaamism, which is an expression of scholastic theology in the West
and definitely constitutes secular theology, has infiltrated the orthodox
East in other ways. We observe that scholasticism, varlaamism, permeates
manifestations of modern church and theological life. Of course, in recent
years there is an effort to cleanse our theology from its babylonian captivity
in Western scholasticism; there is a great effort to break the orthodox
theology's encirclement by the prison of scholastic theology. But we must
simultaneously move on to experiencing orthodox theology. Orthodox theology
is not an intellectual knowledge but rather an experience, life, and is
closely connected to the so-called hesychasm.
Secular
theology, which is a function of scholasticism, manifests itself in several
ways today, too. I would like to point out a few.
One
is the way we base the entire mode of theology on reason and thought.
We think about the orthodox faith, we rationalize about the truths of
faith or we simply form a history of theology. We have almost reached
the point of viewing theology as a philosophy about God, ignoring the
whole therapeutic method of our Church.
Another
way of experiencing varlaamism and scholasticism is the fact that we have
limited theology to esthetics. We have made it esthetics. We might write
several books and undertake long analyses on orthodox art, study the schools
of iconography, accept the great value of Byzantine art, while simultaneously
treating with contempt and overlooking ascesis, the hesychastic method
which is the foundation of every orthodox art. Purification, illumination,
and divinization is the basis of all the Orthodox Church's arts and acts
and mysteries.
Another
way is that we seek the rebirth of the Church liturgical life without
simultaneously discovering and living the ascetic life of the Church.
We discuss the continual communion of the Sacraments without simultaneously
relating this effort to the stages of spiritual perfection, which are
purification, illumination, and divinization. We undertake great efforts
so that people comprehend logically the Divine Liturgy, without making
a parallel effort to experience the spirit of Orthodox Worship. We seek
to abolish the iconostasis so that laymen can see the goings-on, without
asking for the reason the Church instituted the iconostasis and the secret
reading of prayers. These are not independent of the secularization of
ecclesiastical theology. St.Maximos the Confessor's teaching and historical
research are very revealing on this point. The catechumens cannot pray
with the same prayers as the baptized and vice versa. And if we study
the teaching of St.Simeon the New Theologian on who the catechoumens really
are, we will be able to understand why the Church has instituted the iconostasis
and the secret reading of prayers.
Overall,
when our theology is not tied to the so-called hesychastic life, when
it is not ascetic, then it is secular, it is scholastic theology, it is
varlaamist theology -- even if we seem to be fighting western theology
and struggle to be orthodox.
c)
Secularism in Pastoral care
Pastoral
care is not unrelated to and independent of the Church and theology. Pastoral
care is the work of the Church which aims at admitting man to her Body,
at making him her true member. Pastoral care is Church's method to guide
man to divinization. As we have said before, this is the Church's deeper
objective. Further, pastoral care is not unrelated to theology, for the
true theologians are true shepherds and those who shepherd in an orthodox
way do so theologically. Therefore, what we have said so far about the
Church and theology applies to pastoral care too. The true Shepherds of
the Church are the deified, those who partake, to various degrees, to
the deifying energy of God or those who accept the deified and follow
their teaching. Therefore, we either are deified or accept them and exercise
pastoral care by their aid.
Moses
reached divinization by Grace, he saw God in His glory, and then undertook
the heavy task of the pastoral guidance of the people. As St.Gregory of
Nyssa says, before seeing God he was unable to separate two Hebrews fighting
with each other; after the vision of God and His sending him to this task,
Moses guided a difficult and uncompromising people. It is indicative that
Moses passed the whole divinization experience on to the people through
his guidance and the laws.
The
same can be observed in all church life. St.Gregory the Theologian views
pastoral care as the most difficult science, and he definitely ties it
with man's divinization. For this reason he would like the shepherds to
be previously cured in order to be able to guide their spiritual children
to therapy and divinization.
The
Sacred Canons of the Church present the pastoral method. If we view the
Canons as legal schemes and structures, we fail to recognize their true
place within the Church. As we have said elsewhere, the Sacred Canons
are medicine to cure man. A careful examination of the Canons will lead
us to the conclusion that they presuppose man's illness, which is the
darkening of the nous, and they aim at man's health, which is the illumination
of the nous and divinization. According to St.Basil the Great there are
five stages for those who repent, namely, those who stay outside the Church,
crying and asking to be forgiven by the Christians; those who attend and
listen to the Divine Word but leave the Church at the time the catechumens
do; those who stay at the narthex of the Church and attend the Divine
Liturgy on their knees; those who stay within the main Church, remain
there and pray with the rest of the faithful without however partaking
in the holy Communion; and, finally, there are those who partake in the
Body and Blood of Christ; these stages manifest that every sin, which
constitutes the darkening of the nous, is a repetition of Adam's sin and
a degradation from true life. Then man is no longer a living member of
Christ's Church. They also show that repentance is but the struggle so
that man becomes a member of the Church.
As
stated before, the existence of the iconostasis should be viewed within
this perspective. In older times there were no iconostases just some veils
and everyone had a visual communion with the goings-on because the entire
holy Temple was a place for the believers, for the true Church members.
There was a substantial separation between the Narthex and the main Temple.
When someone sinned, he could not attend the Temple nor pray with the
believers. Thus there existed a class of repenters who were essentially
in the catechumens state. Later though, as a consequence of secularism
in faith, those in repentance were allowed in the Temple, but iconostases
were erected.
Of
course, we do not pay much attention to external manifestations such as
the iconostasis. I would like to stress that the Church's pastoral care
does not consist of external activities, of psychological rest and relaxation,
but rather of an effort to purify the heart and illumine the nous.
Unfortunately,
today things are presented on a different basis and we can talk about
secularism in pastoral care too. There is an attempt to use modern psychology,
among other methods, in the pastoral guidance of people. There are several
who employ psychology's results to help people. It is not such a bad thing
for someonne to know some psychological methods. I believe, though, that
someone who knows himself and by God's Grace monitors the way his inner
passions act, when he studies the Holy Scriptures and the holy Fathers,
when he is guided by a deified Spiritual Father, he can obtain real knowledge
about other people, for in essence the problems of all men are the same.
Employing modern psychology to guide people is a secularized view of pastoral
care and it is harmful for the following reasons.
It
is harmful when, at the same time, our Church's entire ascetic and hesychastic
method is ignored. We usually ignore the hesychastic tradition as expressed
in ascetic writings, such as the Ladder of St.John the Sinaite. It is
a pity for us to ignore a healthy tradition possessed by our Church which
aims not at psychoanalysis but at psychosynthesis. For our psyche, through
its fragmentation caused by the passions, experiences schizophrenia, its
scattering around.
It
is also harmful when we maintain an anthropocentric position and believe
that man's health can be brought about by the method of listening and
talking. For man's soul, which is created by God in order to attain divinization,
does not find rest at a set of moralistic advices and a humane external
support. As we have said, the illness lies deeper, in the nous. It does
not consist in certain supressed and traumatic experiences of the past,
but in the darkening and mortification of the nous. Therapy and illumination
of the nous cannot be achieved by anthropocentric methods, advices, and
psychoanalyses.
Furthermore,
the employment of modern psychology creates problems to the extent that
it is already considered a failure in the West. Many people discover that
psychology cannot cure man effectively. This can be seen in two cases.
The first is the development in the West of the so-called anti-psychiatry,
which reacts to psychiatry because it realizes that psychiatry follows
a wrong course, having set different assumptions about the illness. Anti-psychiatry
claims that classical psychiatry is a form of social violence on man.
The second case is psychiatrists' growing awareness of the failure of
psychiatry and psychology to cure, and their subsequent abandonment of
psychiatry and turning to neurology; for it is believed that many problems
originate in man's neurological system which has its center in the brain.
It is argued that several psychological abnormalities, like illusions,
hallucinations, etc., have their origin in the illness of brain centers.
Unfortunately, all new scientific discoveries come to Greece with a delay
of thirty or fifty years.
In
conclusion, we can say that secularism is the Church's gravest danger.
It is what adulterates her true spirit, her true atmosphere. Of course
we must repeat that it adulterates not the Church, for the Church is the
real and blessed Body of Christ, but the members of the church. Therefore,
we should more properly refer to the secularization of the members of
the Church.
The
Church is the jewel of the world, the charity of mankind. When, however,
this jewel of the world is permeated by the so-called secular spirit,
when Christians, the members of the church, instead of belonging to this
jewel, instead of becoming the light of the world, are inspired by the
world in the sense of passions and become the world, then they experience
secularism. This secularism does not lead to divinization. It is an anthropocentric
view of our life. The Church should enter the world to transform it rather
than the world entering the Church to secularize it.
A
secularized Church is completely unable and weak to transform the world.
And secularized Christians have failed at all levels.
|