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		<title>Pietism as an ecclesiological heresy</title>
		<link>http://silouanthompson.net/2008/08/pietism-as-heresy/</link>
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		<description><![CDATA[Pietism made its appearance as a distinct historical movement within Protestantism, at the end of the seventeenth and beginning of the eighteenth centuries, around 1690-1730. 1 Its aim was to stress "practical piety," as distinct from the polemical dogmatic theology to which the Reformation had initially given a certain priority. Under different forms and in various "movements," it has not ceased to influence Protestantism, and indeed also the spiritual life of other churches, to this day...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p style="font-size:80%; color:#333333;">by Christos Yannaras<br />
From <em>The Freedom of Morality</em>, Chapter Eight. (St. Vladimir&#8217;s Seminary Press, Crestwood, NY: 1984), pp. 119-136</p>
<h4>1. The historical coordinates</h4>
<p>We give the name &#8220;pietism&#8221; to a phenomenon in church life which certainly has a particular historical and &#8220;confessional&#8221; starting point, but also has much wider ramifications in the spiritual life of all the Christian Churches.</p>
<p>Pietism made its appearance as a distinct historical movement within Protestantism, at the end of the seventeenth and beginning of the eighteenth centuries, around 1690-1730. <sup><a id="1" name="1" href="#fn1">1</a></sup> Its aim was to stress &#8220;practical piety,&#8221; as distinct from the polemical dogmatic theology to which the Reformation had initially given a certain priority.<sup><a id="2" name="2" href="#fn2">2</a></sup> Against the intellectualist and abstract understanding of God and of dogmatic truth, pietism set a practical, active piety (<em>praxis pietatis</em>): good works, daily self-examination for progress in virtues according to objective criteria, daily study of the Bible and practical application of its moral teaching, intense emotionalism in prayer, a clear break with the &#8220;world&#8221; and worldly practices (dancing, the theatre, non-religious reading); and tendencies towards separatism, with the movement holding private meetings and distinguishing itself from the &#8220;official&#8221; Church.<sup><a id="3" name="3" href="#fn3">3</a></sup></p>
<p>For pietism, knowledge of God presupposes the &#8220;rebirth&#8221; of man, and this rebirth is understood as living up to the moral law of the Gospel and as an emotional experience of authoritative truths.<sup><a id="4" name="4" href="#fn4">4</a></sup> Pietism presents itself as a mystical piety, and ultimately as a form of opposition to knowledge; as &#8220;adogmatism,&#8221; in the sense that it ignores or belittles theological truth, or even as pure agnosticism cloaked in morality.<sup><a id="5" name="5" href="#fn5">5</a></sup></p>
<p>Under different forms and in various &#8220;movements,&#8221; it has not ceased to influence Protestantism, and indeed also the spiritual life of other churches, to this day. In combination with humanism, the Enlightenment and the &#8220;practical&#8221; spirit of the modern era — the spirit of &#8220;productivity&#8221; and &#8220;efficiency&#8221; — pietism has cultivated throughout Europe a largely &#8220;social&#8221; understanding of the Church, involving practical activities of public benefit, and it has presented the message of salvation primarily as a necessity for individual and collective morality.</p>
<h4>2. The theological coordinates</h4>
<p>Pietism undermines the ontological truth of Church unity and personal communion, if it does not deny it completely; it approaches man&#8217;s salvation in Christ as an individual event, an individual possibility of life. It is individual piety and the subjective process of &#8220;appropriating salvation&#8221; made absolute and autonomous, and it transfers the possibility of man&#8217;s salvation to the realm of individual moral endeavor.<sup><a id="6" name="6" href="#fn6">6</a></sup></p>
<p>For pietism, salvation is not primarily the <em>fact</em> of the Church, the theanthropic &#8220;new creation&#8221; of the body of Christ, the mode of existence of its trinitarian prototype and the unity of the communion of persons. It is not man&#8217;s dynamic, personal participation in the body of the Church&#8217;s communion which saves him despite his individual unworthiness, restoring him <em>safe</em> and <em>whole</em> to the existential possibility of personal universality, and transforming even his sin, through repentance, into the possibility of receiving God&#8217;s grace and love. Rather it is primarily man&#8217;s individual attainments, the way he as an individual lives up to religious duties and moral commandments and imitates the &#8220;virtues&#8221; of Christ, that ensure him a justification which can be objectively veri. fied. For pietism, the Church is a phenomenon dependent upon individual justification; it is the assembly of morally &#8220;reborn&#8221; individuals, a gathering of the &#8220;pure,&#8221; a complement and an aid to individual religious feeling.<sup><a id="7" name="7" href="#fn7">7</a></sup></p>
<p>By this route pietism reached a result opposite to its original intent. Seeking to reject the one extreme of intellectual religion, it ended up at the other extreme, separating practical piety from the truth and revelation of the Church. Thus piety loses its ontological content and ceases to be an existential event — the realization and manifestation of man&#8217;s existential truth, of the &#8220;image&#8221; of God in man. It turns into an individual achievement which certainly improves character and behavior and perhaps social mores as well, but which cannot possibly transfigure our mode of existence and change corruption into incorruption, and death into life and resurrection.</p>
<p>Piety loses its ontological content; and, in addition, the truth and faith of the Church is divorced from life and action, and left as a set of &#8220;principles&#8221; and &#8220;axioms&#8221; which one accepts like any other ideology. The distinction between contemplation and action, between truth and life or between dogma and morality, turns into a schizophrenic severence. The life of the Church is confined to moral obedience, religious duties and the serving of social ends. One might venture to express the situation with the paradox that, in the case of pietism, ethics corrupts the Church: it turns the criteria of the Church into worldly and conventional criteria, distorting the &#8220;great mystery of godliness&#8221; into a rationalistic social necessity. Pietistic ethics distort the liturgical and eucharistic reality of the Church, the unity in life and communion of the penitent and the perfect, sinners and saints, the first and the last; they turn the Church into an inevitably conventional, institutional corporation of people who are individually religious.</p>
<p>A host of people today, perhaps the majority in western societies, evaluate the Church&#8217;s work by the yardstick of its social usefulness as compared with the social work of education, penitentiary systems or even the police. The natural result is that the Church is preserved as an institution essential for morals and organized like a worldly establishment in an increasingly bureaucratic fashion. The most obvious form of secularization in the Church is the pietistic falsification of her mind and experience, the adulteration of her own criteria with moralistic considerations. Once the Church denies her ontological identity — what she really, essentially is as an existential event whereby individual survival is changed into a personal life of love and communion — then from that very moment she is reduced to a conventional form under which individuals are grouped together into an institution; she becomes an expression of man&#8217;s fall, albeit a religious one. She begins to serve the &#8220;religious needs&#8221; of the people, the individualistic emotional and psychological needs of fallen man.</p>
<p>The utilitarian institutional mentality, a typical product of pietism, has led many churches and Christian confessions to a fever of anxiety lest they should be proved out-dated and useless in the modern technocratic, rationalistically organized society, and should appear to lag behind in keeping up to date with the world. Frequently they try to offer contemporary man a message as convenient and well-fitted as possible to his utilitarian demands for prosperity. &#8220;Humanistic&#8221; ethics — the principle of keeping up appearances — takes precedence over truth, over the salvation of existence from the anonymity of death. The miracle of repentance, the transfiguration of sin into loving desire for personal communion with God, the way mortality is swallowed up by life-these are truths incomprehensible to the pietistic spirit of our age. The Gospel message is &#8220;made void,&#8221; emptied of its ontological content; the Church&#8217;s faith in the resurrection of man is made to appear vacuous.</p>
<h4>3. The moral alienation of salvation</h4>
<p>When the piety of the Church is transferred to the plane of individual ethics and separated from her truth, this inevitably results in a blurring of the difference between the truth of salvation and -the illusion of salvation, between the Church and heresy. The idea of heresy or schism loses all real content, and is confined to abstract, theoretical differences understood only by &#8220;experts&#8221; who discuss them at meetings and conferences, exchanging the thrust and parry of confessional articles and formulations which fail to correspond in any way to the life of human beings.</p>
<p>Increasingly pietism equates the spirituality and piety of the various churches and confessions, taking them on the level of individual, or socially useful and efficacious, ethics, while disregarding even fundamental dogmatic differences. The piety of a Roman Catholic, a Protestant and frequently even an &#8220;enlightened&#8221; Orthodox, do not present substantial differences; practical piety no longer reveals whether the truth one lives is real or distorted. Dogma does not appear as a &#8220;definition,&#8221; laying down the limits within which the Church&#8217;s experience is to be expressed and safeguarded. Christian piety appears unrelated to the way we experience the truth of God in Trinity, the incarnation of the Word, and the energies of the Holy Spirit which give substance to the life of the members of the Church.</p>
<p>The model of Christian piety in the different churches and confessions is increasingly equated with that of a more &#8220;perfect&#8221; utilitarian ethic, with an individual morality which takes precedence over the fact of the Church. The only distinctions in piety are variations in religious customs and religious &#8220;duties.&#8221; Even the liturgical act is incidental to individual piety, a complement, aid or fruit; it is thought of as an opportunity for &#8220;edification&#8221; or a religious duty. The eucharist, the original embodiment of the fact of salvation, is distorted by the pietistic spirit; it is construed as a narrowly &#8220;religious&#8221; obligation, a duty to pray together and perhaps to listen to a sermon which usually confines itself to prescribing how the individual should behave. The eucharist is not the event which constitutes and manifests the Church, the changing of our mode of existence and the realization of the ethos of the &#8220;new man.&#8221;</p>
<p>Ultimately, even participation in the sacraments takes on a conventional, ethical character. Confession turns into a psychological means of setting individual guilt-feelings at rest, and participation in holy communion becomes a moral reward for good behavior-when it is not a scarcely conscious individual or family custom bordering on magic. Baptism becomes a self-evident social obligation, and marriage a legitimization of sexual relations without regard to any ascetic transfiguration of the conjugal union into an ecclesial event of <em>personal</em> intercourse or communion.</p>
<h4>4. The moral assimilation of heresies</h4>
<p>A typical and entirely consistent extension of all this blurring and alienation of the ontological character of the Church&#8217;s truth is the modern movement towards the so-called &#8220;union&#8221; of the churches, and the much-vaunted priority of the &#8220;love&#8221; which unites the churches over the &#8220;dogma&#8221; which divides them. One could say that this movement was historically justified, since it often looks as if union has been accomplished on the level of, a common, non-dogmatic piety — on the level of pietism. What, used to divide the Church from heresy was not abstract differences in academic formulations; it was the radical break and the distance between the universality of life and illusions of life, between realizing the true life of our trinitarian prototype and subjugating this truth to fallen man&#8217;s fragmentary mode of existence. Dogma &#8220;defined,&#8221; or showed the limits, while the Church&#8217;s asceticism secured participation in that truth of life which defeats corruption and death and realizes the image of God in the human being.</p>
<p>When piety ceases to be an <em>ecclesial</em> event and turns into an individual moral attainment, then a heretic or even a non-Christian can be just as virtuous as a &#8220;Christian.&#8221; Piety loses its connection with truth and its ontological content; it ceases to be related to man&#8217;s full, bodily participation in the life of God — to the resurrection of the body, the change of matter into &#8220;word,&#8221; and the transfiguration of time and space into the immediacy of communion. Piety is transformed into an entirely uniform manner of being religious which inevitably makes differences of &#8220;confession&#8221; or tradition relative, or even assimilates the different traditions, since they all end in the same result — the moral &#8220;improvement&#8221; of human life.</p>
<p>Thus the differences which separate heresy from truth remain empty verbal formulations irrelevant to the reality of life and death, irrelevant even to piety. They are preserved simply as variations in religious customs and traditional beliefs, with a purely historical interest. It is therefore natural for the distinct Christian confessions to seek formal union — respecting, of course, the pluralism in religious customs and theoretical formulations — since they are already substantially assimilated in the sphere of &#8220;practical life.&#8221; This is the obvious basis for the unity movement in our times — when, of course, it is not guided by much more stark socio-political considerations.</p>
<p>Socio-political considerations, however, have influenced church.life in every age; they are the sins of our human nature which has been taken into the Church. And they are not a real danger so long as we are aware that they are sins; they do not succeed in distorting the truth and the f act of the Church. The danger of real distortion lies in heresy: when we take fortruth and salvation some &#8220;improved&#8221; version of the fragmented mode of existence of fallen man. And the great heresy of our age is pietism. Pietism is a heresy in the realm of ecclesiology: it undermines or actually denies the very truth of the Church, transferring the event of salvation from the ecclesial to the individual ethos, to piety divorced from the trinitarian mode of existence, from Christ&#8217;s way of obedience. Pietism denies the ontological fact of salvationthe Church, life as personal coinherence and communion in love, and the transfiguration of mortal individuality into a hypostasis of eternal life.</p>
<p>Pietism undermines the ontological truth of the Church or totally rejects it, but without questioning the formulations of that truth. It simply disregards them, taking them as intellectual forms unrelated to man&#8217;s salvation, and abandons them to the jurisdiction of an autonomous academic theology. Pietism preserves a formal faithfulness to the letter of dogmatic formulation, but this is a dead letter, irrelevant to life and existential experience.</p>
<p>In that particular, this real denial of the truth of salvation differs from previous heresies. It does not reject the &#8220;definitions,&#8221; the limits of the Church&#8217;s truth; it simply disconnects this truth from the life and salvation of man. And this disconnection covers a vast range of distinctions and nuances, so that it is exceptionally difficult to &#8220;excommunicate&#8221; pietism, to place it beyond the bounds within which the Church&#8217;s truth and unity are experienced. But this is precisely why it is perhaps the most dangerous assault on this truth and unity.</p>
<h4>5. The individualistic &#8220;culture&#8221; of pietism</h4>
<p>Pietism is definitely not an autonomous phenomenon, independent of the historical and cultural conditions which have shaped western civilization over the last three centuries. The spirit of individualism, rationalism and utilitarianism, the priority given to rationalization, the myth of &#8220;objectivity&#8221; and the &#8220;values&#8221; it imposes, the connection of truth with usefulness and of knowledge with turning things to &#8220;practical&#8221; account — all these are factors which have influenced and shaped the phenomenon of pietism, and have equally been influenced and shaped by it. Corresponding currents and tendencies, like the Enlightenment, humanism, romanticism or positivism, are part of the web of interdependence formed by these same factors which ultimately make up the mentality and the standards of our modern culture, setting an imperceptible yet decisive seal on people&#8217;s character and temperament.</p>
<p>This assertion poses an exceptionally difficult problem for Christian theology. If the way of life in western civilization, the only civilization which can really claim to be called worldwide, presupposes and imposes the cult of the individual, what place remains for the experience and realization of <em>ecclesial</em> truth and life? If the technocratic consumer society throughout the world presupposes and develops the primacy of intellectual ability in the subject, the autonomy of his will, the rationalistic regulation of individual rights and duties, &#8220;objective&#8221; backing for individual choices and for the economic safeguards assured for the individual by trade unions, and a rationalistic linkage of the individual with the group then the individualistic religion of pietism is the inevitable consequence. Indeed, it is the only possibility for religious expression in western culture — the necessary and sufficient condition for religious life. There seems little or no scope for experience and historical realization of the Church&#8217;s truth, the trinitarian mode of existence: no room to live our salvation through a practical subjection of the individual to the experience of communion which belongs to the Church as a body, and to realize the ethos or morality of the Gospel through self-transcendence on the part of the individual and through the freedom and distinctiveness of persons within the communion of saints.<sup><a id="8" name="8" href="#fn8">8</a></sup></p>
<p>It is no accident that the first pioneers of pietist ideals consciously envisaged an ecumenical movement which was to restore &#8220;genuine Christianity&#8221; throughout the world.<sup><a id="9" name="9" href="#fn9">9</a></sup> Pietism spread with exceptional speed over a remarkably wide area. From Germany it passed at once to England, where the ground had been prepared by Puritanism, and to the Netherlands and Scandinavia; it spread eastwards as far as Russia, and took hold in America with the first generations of settlers, as also in the missionary churches of Africa and Asia. But the factual details of how pietism spread so rapidly and the ecumenical ambitions of its founders are only a part of its far more general and organic identification with the tendency towards expansionism and universality innate in western civilization.</p>
<p>It is certain that pietism holds a central place in the web of mutual influence between the factors which have shaped the peculiar character of western culture. However much this might seem both a generalization and a paradox, it could be maintained that pietism has played one of the most significant roles in the historical development of &#8220;western type&#8221; societies. This assertion becomes more comprehensible if we accept the view of scholars who attribute to pietism the birth and development of the system of the autonomous economy, or <em>capitalism</em><sup><a id="10" name="10" href="#fn10">10</a></sup> — a system which today is decisive in determining the economic, political and social lives of people all over the world.</p>
<p>The initial historical link between pietism and capitalism is well known. The linchpin of the capitalist ideology may be identified with the pietistic demand for direct, quantifiable and judicially recompensed results from individual piety and morality — in this case, from hard work, honesty, thrift, rationalistic exploitation of &#8220;talents,&#8221; etc. Work acquires an autonomy: it is divorced from actual needs and becomes a religious obligation, finding its visible justification and &#8220;just deserts&#8221; in the accumulation of wealth. The management of wealth similarly becomes autonomous: it is divorced from social need and becomes part of the individual&#8217;s relationship with God, a relationship of quantitative deserts and rewards.<sup><a id="11" name="11" href="#fn11">11</a></sup></p>
<p>Confirmation of the conclusions thus formulated could be based not only on the inevitably relative agreement among students of the phenomenon of capitalism, but also on reference to direct historical examples. Perhaps the most representative example is that of the birth and development of the United States of America. This superpower of our times, which is also the most powerful and important factor in the operation of the world capitalist system, has its roots in the principles and the spirit of pietism. The successive waves of Anglo-Saxon Puritans and pietists who first emigrated to America with the millenarian vision<sup><a id="12" name="12" href="#fn12">12</a></sup> of a Puritan &#8220;promised land&#8221;<sup><a id="13" name="13" href="#fn13">13</a></sup> identified trust in God with the power of money,<sup><a id="14" name="14" href="#fn14">14</a></sup> and religious feeling with the economic efficiency of work (work ethics) I and ultimately hallowed as ethics whatever ensured individual security and social prosperity.<sup><a id="15" name="15" href="#fn15">15</a></sup> By the very fact of their existence, the two hundred and fifty or so different Christian confessions in that country make the truth of the Church body take second place; in defining the quality of a Christian, priority is given to the peculiarly American idea of individual ethics (civil religion).</p>
<p>Going by the example of America and the pietistic basis of the &#8220;gospel of wealth&#8221; which took shape there,<sup><a id="16" name="16" href="#fn16">16</a></sup> one might venture to make a further assertion. The whole of mankind lives today in the trap of a lethal threat created by the polarization of two provenly immoral moralistic systems, and the constant expectation of a confrontation between them in war, perhaps nuclear war. On the one side is the pietistic individualism of the capitalist camp, and on the other the moralistic collectivism of the marxist dreams of &#8220;universal happiness.&#8221; At least the latter refuses to cloak its aims under the forged title of Christian, while the name of Christianity continues to be blackened in the sloganizing of even the foulest dictatorships which support the workings of the capitalist system, upholding the pietistic ideal of individual merit.&#8221;</p>
<p>If the witness of an ecumenical council of the Church were to have any meaning in our day, its chief purpose would be to denounce this torture of man, this imprisonment in an adulterated and falsified idea of Christian piety: the corrosion and destruction of the truth of salvation and the reality of the Church by generalized pietism.</p>
<p><a id="17" name="17" href="#fn17">Additional Note</a></p>
<h3>Footnotes</h3>
<p><a id="fn1" name="fn1" href="#1">1</a> There is a rich bibliography on pietism, chiefly in the form of monographs dealing with the numerous local pietistic movements and the personalities of their leaders. Although not very systematic, the fullest study of the phenomenon as a whole is still A. Ritschl&#8217;s three-volume work <em>Geschichle des Pietismus</em> (Bonn, 1880-1886). A recent work, exceptionally informative and well-documented, is Martin Schmidt&#8217;s <em>Pietismus</em> (1972). The Roman Catholic approach, with a concise, objective and reasonably full description of the phenomenon and history of pietism, may be found in Louis Bouyer, <em>Orthodox Spirituality and Protestant and Anglican Spirituality</em> (History of Christian Spirituality 111, London, 1969), p. 169ff. As for the rest of the bibliography, we note here some basic aids: W. Mahrholz, <em>Der deutsche Pietismus</em> (Berlin, 1921); H. Bornkamm, <em>Mystik, Spiritualismus und die Anfange des Pietismus im Luthertum</em> (Giessen, 1926); M. Beyer-Frohlich, <em>Pietismus und Rationalismus</em> (Leipzig, 1933); K. Reinhardt, <em>Mystik und Pietismus</em> (Berlin, 1925); 0. S6hngen, ed., <em>Die bleibende Bedeutung des Pietismus</em> (Berlin, 1960) ; E. Sachsse, <em>Ursprung und Wesen des Pietismus</em> (1884) ; F. E. Stoeffler, <em>The Rise of Evangelical Pietism</em> (Studies in the History of Religions IX, 1965), pp. 180-246.</p>
<p><a id="fn2" name="fn2" href="#2">2</a> &#8220;The picture one gets from the relevant bibliography would justify the view that the historical roots of pietism are spread throughout the religious and theological tradition of western Christianity, both Roman Catholic and Protestant. There is, nevertheless, a particularly direct historical link between this phenomenon and certain Dutch offshoots of Protestantism, English Puritanism and above all Roman Catholic mysticism. Jansenism in seventeenth century France, the Port-Royal movement, Quietism, Thomas i Kempis&#8217; Imitation of Christ, Teresa of Avila, John of the Cross, Francis of Sales and F6n6lon are considered by most scholars to be immediate forerunners of Protestant pietism. It is typical that Lutheran &#8220;orthodoxy&#8221; always condemned pietism as pro-Catholic. See M. Schmidt, <em>Pietismus</em>, p. 26; L. Bouyer, <em>Orthodox Spirituality&#8230;,</em> pp. 169-170 and 193.</p>
<p><a id="fn3" name="fn3" href="#3">3</a> See Karl Heussi and Eric Peter, <em>Precis d&#8217;Histoire de l&#8217;Eglise</em> (Neuchatel, 1967), § 106; M. Schmidt, <em>Pietismus</em>, p. 140. The first of the founders of the pietist movement, Philip-Jacob Spener (1635-1705), a Lutheran pastor from Alsace, created the blueprint for this moralistic campaign by organizing the zealous faithful into Bible study circles (<em>Bibelkreise</em>) independent of the Church&#8217;s gatherings for worship. Study of Scripture was meant to lead to practical moral conclusions affecting the individual lives of the members of the movement. Any of the faithful could be in charge of such a &#8220;circle.&#8221; Spener and the other pioneers of the pietist movement (A. H. Francke, 16631727, G. Arnold, 1666-1714, N. L. Graf von Zinzendorf, 1700-1760, J. A. Bengel, 1697-1752, F. C. Oetinger, 1702-1782) laid particular emphasis on the universal priesthood of the laity, and were sharply critical of the clergy of their time and the &#8220;institutional Church, compromised with the world.&#8221; See L. Bouyer, <em>Orthodox Spirituality&#8230;</em>, pp. 170-17 1; M. Schmidt, <em>Pietismus</em>, pp. 12-42; <em>Nouvelle Hisloire de l&#8217;Eglise</em> vol. 4 (Paris, 1966), pp. 35-36.</p>
<p><a id="fn4" name="fn4" href="#4">4</a> See L. Bouyer, <em>Orthodox Spirituality</em> p. 174: &#8220;&#8230;the dissolution of all defined dogmatic faith and its substitution by unverifiable sentiment&#8230;&#8221;</p>
<p><a id="fn5" name="fn5" href="#5">5</a> &#8220;&#8216;[Pietism] considers the practice of piety as the essential element of religion&#8230; but is accompanied more often by a growing indifference with regard to dogma&#8221;: <em>Nouvelle Histoire de I&#8217;Eglise</em>, p. 35. &#8220;Whenever the Church started dogmatizing, so he held, it fell into decadence, and the only way out lay in the fact that each generation produced simple-minded men whose instinctive reaction (bullied by authority) constituted a prophetic reaffirmation of the one pure Christianity, primitive and free from all ratiocination&#8221;: L. Bouyer, <em>Orthodox Spirituality</em>, p. 175.</p>
<p><a id="fn6" name="fn6" href="#6">6</a> &#8220;At the center stands the individual person: the early Christian image of &#8216;building up&#8217; is transformed in an individualistic direction (building up of the inner person)&#8221;: M. Schmidt, &#8220;Pietismus,&#8221; in <em>Religion in Geschichte und Gegenwart,</em> vol. 5, Col. 370. Idem, <em>Pietismus</em>, pp. 90 and 123.</p>
<p><a id="fn7" name="fn7" href="#7">7</a> &#8220;&#8216;The new type of community&#8230; is the formation of groups of reborn individuals, not the community of those called by word and sacrament. The initiative lies with the subject&#8230; Individualism and subjectivism undermine the sacramental perpective&#8221;: M. Schmidt, &#8220;Pietismus,&#8221; Col. 371. &#8220;In the confusion between faith and sense experience and the tendency to replace the objective data of faith and the sacraments by an emotional subjective event, he discerns at least latent indifference regarding all established doctrine, and, in a more general way, loss of sight of the Church and its ministry as institutions&#8221;: L. Bouyer, <em>Ortbodox Spirituality</em>, p. 174.</p>
<p><a id="fn8" name="fn8" href="#8">8</a> &#8216;Precisely because the Church is not a religious ideology but the continuous assumption of the flesh of the world and the transformation of it into the theanthropic flesh of Christ, it is impossible for the ontological truth of the Church&#8217;s unity and communion to &#8220;coexist&#8221; passively with a culture centered on the individual, a culture of objectification. The Church lives and functions only so long as she is continuously and dynamically assuming individualistic, objectified existences in order to transfigure them into unity of life, into personal relationship and communion. But this means that on the historical and social level, the life and unity of the Church operates as a radical and direct rejection or subversion of the cultural &#8220;system&#8221; of individualism and objectification. Otherwise, the rck would be subject to the way of life imposed by the &#8220;system,&#8221; so that she herself would be alienated both as a reality of truth and salvation, and as an institutional expression of this reality.</p>
<p><a id="fn9" name="fn9" href="#9">9</a> &#8220;Pietism originally was an ecumenical, world-wide phenomenon&#8230; Above all it understood itself to be of ecumenical scope, the representation of true Christendom over all the earth&#8221;: M. Schmidt, <em>Pietismus</em>, p. 11.</p>
<p><a id="fn10" name="fn10" href="#10">10</a> See R. H. Tawney, <em>Religion and the Rise of Capitalism</em> (Penguin Books, 197511)- Max Weber, <em>Die Protestantische Ethik und der Geist des Kapitalismus</em>, in <em>Die protesiantische Ethik,</em> I (Hamburg, 19733) ; E. Troeltsch, <em>Die Soziallehren der christlichen Kirchen und Gruppen</em> (Tubingen, 1965); H. Hauser, <em>Les debuts du Capitalisme</em> (Paris, 1927); A. Fanfani, <em>Catholicism, Protestantism and Capitalism</em> (London, 1935); H. M. Robertson, <em>Aspects of the Rise of Economic Individualism</em> (Cambridge, 1933).</p>
<p><a id="fn11" name="fn11" href="#11">11</a> &#8220;Convinced that character is all and circumstances nothing [the morally self-sufficient] see in the poverty of those who fall by the way, not a misfortune to be pitied and relieved, but a moral failing to be condemned, and in riches not an object of suspicion-though like other gifts they may be abused-but the blessing which rewards the triumph of energy and will&#8221;: Tawney, <em>Religion and the Rise of Capitalism</em>, pp. 229-230.</p>
<p><a id="fn12" name="fn12" href="#12">12</a> &#8220;Millenarist tendencies and expectation of the Messiah are characteristic of pietism, &#8220;&#8230; a sort of renewed &#8216;chiliasm,&#8217; that is to say the immediate expectation of a kingdom of God on earth which it would be within our power to produce&#8221;: L. Bouyer, <em>Orthodox Spirituality</em>, p. 174. See also M. Schmidt, <em>Pietismus</em>, pp. 130-132 and 160; and Charles L. Sanford, <em>The Quest of Paradise: Europe and the American Moral Imagination</em> (Urbana, Ill., 1961).</p>
<p><a id="fn13" name="fn13" href="#13">13</a> See Robert Bellah, <em>The Broken Covenant — American Civil Religion in Time of Trial</em> (New York, 1975), especially pp. 7-8 and the chapter &#8220;America as a Chosen People&#8221; (P. 36ff.); Conrad Cherry, <em>God&#8217;s New Israel: Religious Interpretations of American Destiny</em> (Prentice-Hall, 1971); H. Richard Niebuhr, <em>The Kingdom of God in America</em> (New York, 1937).</p>
<p><a id="fn14" name="fn14" href="#14">14</a> &#8220;In God we trust&#8221; is the inscription on every coin and dollar note. See also Moses Rischin, ed., <em>The American Gospel of Success</em> (Quadrangle Books, 1965); Howard Mumford Jones, <em>The Pursuit of Happiness</em> (Ithaca, N.Y., 1966).</p>
<p><a id="fn15" name="fn15" href="#15">15</a> See Robert Handy, <em>A Christian America</em> (New York and Oxford, 197&#8243; especially the chapter: &#8220;Components of the New Christian Civilization: Religion, Morality, Education,&#8221; especially pp. 33-40; William McLoughlin, <em>Isaac Backus and the American Pietistic Tradition</em> (Boston, 1967); Irvin G. Wyllie, <em>The Self-made Man in America</em> (Free Press, 1966).</p>
<p><a id="fn16" name="fn16" href="#16">16</a> See Andrew Carnegie&#8217;s famous essay &#8220;The Gospel of Wealth,&#8221; reprinted from The American Review 148 (1889), pp. 653-664, in Gail Kennedy, ed., <em>Democracy and the Gospel of Wealth</em> (Boston, 1949).</p>
<h4><a id="fn17" name="fn17" href="#17">Additional Note</a>:</h4>
<p>Some specific products of pietism are the Halle movement (founded by August-Hermann Francke), the Moravian Brethren (Herrnhuter BrUidergemeine-founded by N. L. von Zinzendorf), the Methodists (founded by John Wesley, 1703-1791), the Quakers (founded by George Fox, 1624-1691), and in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries a host of &#8220;Free Churches,&#8221; missionary societies, schools of preaching, &#8220;inner mission&#8221; movements, Protestant monastic brotherhoods, etc. See M. Schmidt, <em>Pietismus</em>, pp. 243-60.</p>
<p>In Roman Catholicism we rarely bear of autonomous groups or moveInents of pietists, perhaps because pietistic tendencies and initiatives were Officially adopted by the Roman Catholic Church in the form of orders, societies, sacred confraternities, etc. In Roman Catholic mysticism, certainly, Pietism has always found the conditions for its natural generation. The in dividual approach to virtue, anthropocentric sentimentality and the transference of religious feeling to the &#8220;interior&#8221; of the individual are all hall. marks of Roman Catholic mystics, whether as individuals or in organized and officially recognized groups. The link with the body of the Church is of secondary importance and sometimes of purely legal and formal sig. nificance. &#8220;Bei ihnen kam alles auf die inneren Menschen, nichts auf die aussere Form der Kirchlichkeit an&#8221;: M. Schmidt, <em>Pietismms</em>, p. 26.</p>
<p>Of the Orthodox churches, the Russian Church was the first to be invaded by the spirit of pietism. Early in the eighteenth century, Bishop Feofan Prokopovich (1681-1736), professor and later rector of the Theological Academy in Kiev, represented in Russia the pietistic Halle movement (see Schmidt, &#8220;Pietismus,&#8221; article in <em>Die Religion in Geschichte and Gegenwart</em>, vol. 5, col. 372; R. Stupperich, &#8220;Protestantismus in Russland,&#8221; in the same volume, col. 1248). Prokopovich&#8217;s influence was very widespread and left a distinct mark on the Church and spiritual life of Russia, from the moment when Peter the Great (1672-1725) took him on as a close collaborator, after promoting him to the archbishopric of Novgorod, and let him fundamentally shape his religious reform. (See Igor Smolitsch, <em>Geschichte der russiscben Kirche</em>, 1700-1917 [Leiden, 19641, p. 94ff; and Reinhard Wittram, <em>Peter I — Czar and Kaisar</em>, vol. 2 (Gottingen, 1964], p. 189ff.) The religious reform of Peter the Great had as its aim the systematic westernization of the Russian Church both in structure and in spiritual life. And under the influence of Feofan Prokopovich, many areas of Russian church and spiritual life were shaped precisely in accordance with the spirit and the criteria of Protestant pietism. At the same time, his theological &#8220;system&#8221; and his writings imposed on the academic study of theology in Russia what Florovsky calls &#8220;the domination of Latino-protestant scholasticism&#8221; (<em>Puti russhogo bogosloviia</em> [Paris, 19371, P. 104; the reference is from 1. Smolitsch, <em>Geschichte der russischen Kirche</em>, p. 577. See also H. Koch, <em>Die russische Orthodoxie im Petrinischen Zeitalter</em> (Breslau, 19291; Cyprien Kern, "L'enseignement theologique superieur dans la Russie du XlXe siecle," <em>Istina</em>, 1960; Igor Smolitsch, <em>Russische Monchtum</em>, 988-1917 [Wiirzburg, 1953]. p. 383ff.) The influence of Feofan Prokopovich&#8217;s theology reached even as far as Greece, at least through Theoklitos Fafmakidis, &#8220;the first to teach dogmatic theology at the Ionian Academy on Kerkyra in 1824, following the text of the Russian Feofan Prokopovich&#8221;: Manuel Gedeon, <em>The Cultural Progress of the Nation in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries</em> [in Greek — Athens, 1976), p. 206.</p>
<p>Actual pietistic movements in Russia were probably very few; the best knawn is the Moravian Brethren, from 1740 in Sarepta on the Volga (R. Stupperich, "Protestantismus in Russland," col. 1250). What is more striking is the way in which the Church's mentality as a whole was undermined. In combination with the stress on sentiment introduced into Russia by the religious romanticism of the nineteenth century, and the corresponding prevalence of baroque in church art which distorted basic theological presuppositions in Russian Orthodox worship, a general climate of pietism often shapes the atmosphere and complexion of Russian church life.</p>
<p>Pietistic influence is apparent even in the figures most representative of Russian spiritual life. The most important spiritual figure in eighteenth century Russia, St Tikhon Zadonsky (1724-1783), is also a typical representative of pietistic and Roman Catholic influences. "He was strongly influenced by contemporary western piety, both Counter-Reformation Catholic piety and Protestant piety with an emphasis on pietism... We find in [his works] a direct echo of St Augustine and the <em>Imitation of Christ</em>, as of Lutheran works such as Arndt&#8217;s True Christianity&#8230; and Anglican ones such as the <em>Meditatiunculae subitaneae</em> by the Puritan Bishop Hall&#8221;: L. Bouyer, <em>Orthodox Spirituality</em>, pp. 37-38.</p>
<p>In the form of an organized movement, pietism appeared in the Romanian Orthodox Church just on the eve of World War II, under the name of &#8220;the Army of the Lord&#8221; and with the priest Joseph Trifa at its head. There, however, the Church reacted swiftly; she excommunicated the founders and excised from her body this danger which threatened to alienate her tradition and her life.</p>
<p>In Greece, pietism made its appearance as a symptom of a more general &#8220;europeanization&#8221; of the country. Quite early, around the eighteenth century, Humanism and the principles of the Renaissance and the Enlightenment exerted an obvious influence on Greek scholars and church writers who turned to the West for their higher education. Rationalism and moralism, as direct results of European thinking and theology, reached the Orthodox Greek East through the writing and teaching of the &#8220;enlightened Teachers of the Nation,&#8221; learned preachers and writers from the period of Turkish domination. At least in the works of Vikentios Damodos (16791752), Elias Miniatis (1669-1714), Evgenios Voulgaris (1716-1806), Nikeforos Theotokis (1730-1800), Theoklitos Farmakidis (1754-1860) and Neofytos Vamvas (1770-1855), there is manifest influence from western theological positions of their day: moral eudaemonism, the &#8220;religion of sentiment&#8221; (Schleiermacher), the connection of Church and 11 culture&#8221; (<em>Kulturchristentum</em>), the identification of spiritual regeneration with moral regeneration, the juridical understanding of morality (see Ch. Yannaras, <em>Orthodoxy and the West — Theology in Greece Today</em> [in Greek-Athens, 19721, especially pp. 57-95, with bibliography).</p>
<p>With the establishment of the independent Greek state and the imposition of German and Protestant models on the organization of the Church of Greece (which became &#8220;autocephalous&#8221; in 1833) and of theological education, western influences prevailed in Greek academic theology and in &#8220;official&#8221; church life — though not without exceptions and reactions. The phenomenon could perhaps have been contained there, since popular spirituality and piety remained untainted by western alienation. But from the very first decades of our own century, pietism made its appearance in Greece in the form of a specific movement whose intention was to bring in the broad masses of the people. Initially it seemed that the aim of the &#8220;movement&#8221; was the renewal of church life, with the systematic organization of sermons, catechism classes, religious publications and confession. But it very soon separated itself and its activity from the life of the Church, the life of the parishes and the jurisdiction of the local bishops. It was organized as an independent effort, with a system of administration and organization independent of the church hierarchy, and with its own spiritual and theological direction.</p>
<p>It is quite extraordinary how closely the modern Greek pietist movement copied its German and Anglo-Saxon prototypes. Preaching and teaching were based on exactly the same premises: the theological truth of dogmas was ignored or passed over in silence and replaced with the teaching of ethics, a rationalist apologetic, utilitarian rationalism and moral eudaemonism, and stress on individual virtue and the cultural necessity of religion. Following Spener&#8217;s method to the letter, the &#8220;movement&#8221; organized a vast number of Bible study circles meeting in houses all over Greece. This led to the formation of a kind of private worship outside church — in imitation of the Protestant &#8220;service of the word&#8221; (<em>Wortgottesdienst</em>) — with the lay element alone. It consisted of reading from the Bible, always with a moral conclusion, ex tempore prayers and sentimental songs, usually from Protestant collections of hymns. The Greek pietist movement, exactly like the Protestant ones, came to be dominated by a strongly military discipline: its members were forbidden to go to public spectacles or recreation centers, to smoke, or to read books or other material of their own choosing. They have developed more or less a common style of dress, and cultivate a militant missionary spirit to gain followers.</p>
<p>To the general public, the pietistic movement in Greece is known as the Zoe movement, after the first &#8220;Brotherhood of Theologians&#8221; which began its organized efforts in 1911. Later, however, there emerged offshoots of this same organization (the Fellowship of Academics &#8220;Aktines,&#8221; the Student Christian Union, the Christian Union of Working Youth, the Women&#8217;s Fellowship &#8220;Evseveia,&#8221; the Fellowship of Nursing Sisters &#8220;Evniki,&#8221; the Christian schools &#8220;Elliniki Pedeia,&#8221; etc.). There were also parallel movements which copied the Zoe model in principles and structure (the Brotherhood of Theologians &#8220;O Sotir,&#8221; the organizations of Metropolitan Avgoustinos Kandiotis of Florina, etc.).</p>
<p>Making their moralistic criteria into absolutes, these movements in Greece turned into complete religious units, divorced from the life of the Church, and society. They developed into closed, autonomous religious groups, entry to which could be secured only by objectively recognized &#8220;suitabilie and moral rectitude. Divorced from the life of the parishes and from local bishops, these pietistic groups consolidated their independence by taking the form of secular &#8220;associations&#8221; with recognition from the state. They were thus able to control the numbers and the morals of their members, and organize a kind of &#8220;para-ecclesial&#8221; life in open opposition to the official Church. They acquired buildings of their own for catechism meetings and, where possible, their own churches. They have their own clergy who are formally attached to the local bishop but are in reality directed, down to the last detail by the administration of the organizations. They thus have their own confessors and separate confession, in the buildings belonging to the organizations rather than in the churches — own separate liturgies, where entry is controlled and only organizations are allowed in.</p>
<p>It may perhaps be useful to add some mention of the position taken up by the pietistic organizations in Greece on the question of ecumenism, a position which contradicts their principles. The organizations came out in fanatical opposition to the idea of church unity, although the idea of union had to a great extent been embodied by these same pietistic movements. It was they who had been exclusively responsible for transferring to Greek Orthodox territory both the practice of western piety and also, on many points, such western dogmatic teaching as was essential for their moralism. Such points of doctrine include the legalistic theory of the satisfaction of divine justice through Christ&#8217;s death on the Cross, denial of distinction between God&#8217;s essence and energies, rejection of hesychasm and the neptic tradition, an apologetic devised with utilitarian ends, the general priesthood of the laity as an autonomous absolute, a legal understanding of the transmission of original sin, etc. We are bound to conclude that their stance against church unity is simply the result of a tragic confusion in spiritual criteria, and shows the movements&#8217; lack of theological selfawareness, or else is nothing but a conventional attempt to outdo everyone else in conservatism. Either way, it cannot be a matter of deliberately upholding Orthodox spirituality and the Orthodox tradition, since the organizations could be said to ignore these quite provocatively and to distort them systematically.</p>
<p>It would require a separate study to analyze the various forms these distortions take: the abolition of the holy icons, which are replaced with Renaissance art (both in their catechetical work and in the buildings belonging to the organizations), the almost exclusive use of Roman Catholic and Protestant manuals and religious literature for the spiritual nourishment of the faithful, the polemics against monasticism and the Holy Mountain, the institution of &#8220;lay brotherhoods&#8221; (like the western &#8220;orders&#8221;), neglect and erosion of the authority of the episcopate, etc. See further Christoph Maczewski, <em>Die Zoi-Bewegung Griechenlands</em> (Gottingen, 1970); V. Yioultsis, &#8220;A Sociological View of the Religious Brotherhoods&#8221; (in Greek), in <em>Sociological questions in Orthodoxy</em>, ed. Prof. G. Mantzaridis (Thessaloniki, 1975), pp. 169-203; A. Alexandridis, &#8220;A Phenomenon of Modern Greek Religious Life: The Christian Organizations&#8221; (in Greek), in <em>Synoro</em> 39 (1966), pp. 193-204; Ch. Yannaras, <em>Orthodoxy and the West-Theology in Greece Today</em> (in Greek), p. 95ff.; idem, <em>The Privilege of Despair</em> (in Greek-Athens, 1973), pp. 80-92; idem, <em>Chapters on Political Theology</em> (in Greek-Athens, 1976), p. 114ff.; idem, <em>Honest to Orthodoxy</em> (in GreekAthens, 1968), pp. 68-73.</p>
<p>Nevertheless, the most positive sign in the history of Orthodoxy in Greece over the last century must surely be the progressive weakening and ultimate disintegration of the pietistic movements. It is extremely encouraging how the Orthodox consciousness has reacted to this foreign intervention in its living body. Over approximately the last two decades, the pietistic movements have undergone a relentless series of internal problems; they have suffered splits and lost their followers, and have really ceased to be a substantial presence in the spiritual life of the country. At the same time, there has been an awakening of theological consciousness in the Church in Greece, and the initial fascination which pietism exerted over a majority of lay theologians and clergy has been significantly curtailed.</p>
<p>This awakening is summed up and expressed in a truly unique manner, and in organic continuity with the Orthodox patristic tradition, in a text which is among the most important products of modern Greek theology and spirituality. This is the declaration of the &#8220;Holy Community&#8221; of the Holy Mountain on the academic approach to theology independent of the Church&#8217;s experience, and the pietism of the religious organizations which corresponds to it. This memorable Athonite text was published in the Periodical <em>Athonitikoi Dialogoi</em> (1975, pp. 20-27) a propos of Prof. P. N. Trembelas&#8217; work <em>Mysticism — Apophatism — Cataphatic Theology</em>, vols. 1-2 (Athens, 1974):</p>
<blockquote><p>The help of the logic and language of Western theologians and the spiritual opinions that spring from the experience of a closed, Pietistic mentality, are both things that leave no place for the mystery of the mystagogic coinherence of Orthodox theology and living experience&#8230;</p>
<p>The tragic state of our times does not allow us to concern ourselves with pietism and the obsolete theology of the workshops of scholasticism, that characteristic curse of the West which is effectively nourished by the Western tradition and which suffers from its divisions and passes on its sickness&#8230; Especially today, when young people all over the world, in their barren journey through the desert wilderness of modern so-called civilization remain dissatisfied with a dry scientific approach, with the paltry productions of an insipid pietism&#8230;</p>
<p>The theology of the universities and the various Christian movements needs to be rebaptized into the mystery of our living church tradition; this will give them new strength and new methods of work and evangelism&#8230;</p>
<p>A scholastic and spiritually jejune theology is useless for the salvation of man. And a dogmatically spineless pietism which thinks that deification is an improvement in character should by its very nature be rejected. Such a theology is at its last breath; and such a way of life is powerless to withstand the general crisis of our era. The two together, theology and pietism, form one of the causes and the consequences of the spiritual decadence of our times.</p>
<p>If the theology of the Church were like this, it would create not fathers and confessors who spoke the words of God, but cold academic researchers and disputants of the present age. And if the spirituality of our tradition were like this, it would not create the neptic fathers as &#8220;gods by grace&#8221; and &#8220;lamps of discernment,&#8221; but morbid sentimentalists who were prey to psychic hallucinations.</p>
<p>Why should we wander pointlessly in sterile concern with a cerebral and superfluous theology and an unreal, insipid pietistic way of life? Both of these are unknown to our holy tradition, alien to the wishes and needs of man and unworthy of them.</p>
<p>Our pietistic ideas about sanctity as -improvement in character&#8221; are shocked and rendered powerless when set side-by-side with the holy experience of our saints, who received Christ in their hearts .. as light, in a real and substantial way; seen invisibly and comprehended incomprehensibly, with formless form and appearance beyond appearance.&#8221;</p>
<p>We feel as Orthodox that we do not simply belong to the East geographically, nor do we fight the West in a geographical sense. We belong to the Church of the uncreated divine Light that knows no evening, which saves both East and West.</p>
<p>From henceforth, then, &#8220;let no profane hand touch&#8221; the mystery of Orthodox theology, but &#8220;let the lips of the faithful&#8221; sing without ceasing in praise of the Church, the Mother of God which brings forth gods according to grace; for only in her and through her saints are we led unfailingly to life and knowledge.</p></blockquote>
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		<title>Call no man &#8220;Father&#8221;</title>
		<link>http://silouanthompson.net/2008/08/call-no-man-father/</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 05 Aug 2008 17:02:31 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Silouan</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Certain statements made by Jesus have often been the basis of great controversy, both inside and outside the Church. His saying, "Do not call anyone on earth your father; for One is your Father, He who is in heaven", has proven to be no exception...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><em>By Fr. Richard Ballew</em></p>
<p>Several decades have passed since Bing Crosby donned clerical garb and portrayed on the screen a role which would endear him to many even to this day — Father O&#8217;Malley. Somewhat earlier in our century, one of the great humanitarians of our time, Father Flanagan, founded Boys Town in Nebraska. The home became a nationally known refuge for homeless boys. In many ways, Mother Teresa of India is his contemporary female counterpart in caring for the poor and downtrodden of her adopted land. But what are we to make of these titles? We admire the work and character of these people, but does not the Bible issue the command to call no man &#8220;father&#8221;? Certain statements made by Jesus have often been the basis of great controversy, both inside and outside the Church. His saying, &#8220;Do not call anyone on earth your father; for One is your Father, He who is in heaven&#8221;,<sup>1</sup> has proven to be no exception.</p>
<h4>AT ISSUE IS INTERPRETATION</h4>
<p>Some Protestant interpreters are sure that Jesus is warning here against addressing Church leaders as &#8220;father&#8221;. They, of course, are interpreting &#8220;father&#8221; in this Scripture to mean, &#8220;spiritual father&#8221;. Therefore, they refuse to call their clergymen &#8220;father&#8221;, preferring instead such titles as &#8220;pastor&#8221;, &#8220;reverend&#8221;, or perhaps even &#8220;brother&#8221;. At the outset, therefore, let me point out that &#8220;spiritual father&#8221; is an interpretation of the Lord&#8217;s statement rather than what He actually said. Mind you, I am not denying the need for interpretation of Scripture. Instead, I am pointing out that the Lord said &#8220;father&#8221;, not &#8220;spiritual father&#8221;. What is at issue here? Simply this: taken at face value, Jesus&#8217; warning against calling any man &#8220;father&#8221; would not only seem to rule out calling a clergyman &#8220;father&#8221; , it would also keep us from using that title for earthly fathers and grandfathers, ancient Church fathers, or even city fathers, would it not? For in reality, the Lord&#8217;s statement, as it appears in the text, is that only one Person is ever to be called &#8220;father&#8221;, namely, our Father who is in heaven. But is Christ&#8217;s saying to be taken at face value? If so, several other passages in the Bible are immediately in conflict, including some statements by the Apostle Paul in the New Testament. To the church at Corinth he wrote, &#8220;For if you were to have countless tutors in Christ, yet you would not have many fathers; for in Christ Jesus I became your father through the gospel&#8221;.<sup>2</sup> Does not Paul claim to be the spiritual father of the Corinthians — &#8220;Father Paul&#8221;, if you please? Furthermore, he boldly refers to his spiritual ancestry as &#8220;our fathers&#8221;.<sup>3</sup> And he did address earthly fathers in Colosse in this way: &#8220;Fathers, do not provoke your children, lest they become discouraged&#8221;.<sup>4</sup> It would appear the Apostle Paul certainly did not interpret the Lord Jesus Christ&#8217;s words to mean only One was to be called &#8220;father&#8221;, that is, the heavenly Father. In addition to this, when the rich man saw Abraham in heaven with Lazarus in his bosom, and addressed him as &#8220;Father Abraham&#8221;, Abraham&#8217;s response was not, &#8220;Do you not realize that only God the Father is to be called `father?&#8221; Rather, he replied, &#8220;Son, remember&#8230;&#8221;<sup>5</sup> Instances like the above could be multiplied from Scripture to show that a great many people are acknowledged to be &#8220;fathers&#8221;.</p>
<h4>OTHER TITLES</h4>
<p>But let us not stop here. For after saying only &#8220;One is your Father&#8221;, Jesus proceeded to declare, &#8220;And do not be called teachers; for One is your Teacher, the Christ&#8221;.<sup>6</sup> Yet He Himself acknowledged Nicodemus to be a &#8220;teacher of Israel&#8221;.<sup>7</sup> And in the church at Antioch certain men were called &#8220;prophets and teachers&#8221;.<sup>8</sup> Then again, the Apostle Paul not only recognized teachers as gifts of God to the Church,<sup>9</sup> but he also did not hesitate to call himself &#8220;a teacher of the Gentiles&#8221;.<sup>10</sup> Furthermore, in this present day, almost all of us have at one time or another called certain people Sunday School teachers. The discussion thus goes far beyond any Protestant-Catholic lines. Therefore, in saying we should call no one &#8220;father&#8221; and &#8220;teacher&#8221;, except God the Father and Christ Himself, the Lord Jesus appears not to be taking issue with the use of these particular titles in and of themselves. The context of the passage gives us the interpretive key we are looking for. In this &#8220;call no man father&#8221; passage, our Lord is contending with certain rabbis of His day who were using these specific titles to accomplish their own ends. And had these same apostate rabbis been using other titles, such as &#8220;reverend&#8221; and &#8220;pastor&#8221;, Jesus, it seems to me, would have said of these as well, &#8220;Call no one reverend or pastor&#8221;.</p>
<h4>WHAT DID THE RABBIS MEAN?</h4>
<p>To what ends, therefore, were the rabbis using the titles &#8220;father&#8221; and &#8220;teacher&#8221;? The answer revolves around at least two critical areas of leadership: teaching and personal character. Consider first the teaching of these particular rabbis. They had begun their teaching at the right place, the Law of Moses. Said Jesus, &#8220;The scribes and the Pharisees sit in Moses&#8217; seat&#8221;.<sup>11</sup> Moses&#8217; Law was the true tradition. God had given it to Israel through Moses. The rabbis&#8217; responsibility was to preserve that tradition and faithfully pass it on to the next generation. All too often, however, a rabbi would add his own grain of wisdom to the true tradition, thereby clouding it. Instead of passing down the sacred deposit along with the true interpretations of that deposit, he would add his own private interpretation. In turn his disciples, like their teacher, would, after becoming rabbis, do the same thing. (Some things never change, do they!) The final outcome of all this was a tradition of men that made the true Mosaic tradition of no effect. To these very rabbis Jesus said, &#8220;For laying aside the commandment of God, you hold the tradition of men&#8221;,<sup>12</sup> and again, &#8220;All too well you reject the commandment of God, that you may keep your tradition . . . making the word of God of no effect through your tradition which you have handed down&#8221;.<sup>13</sup> The summation of their private interpretations did in fact &#8220;shut up the kingdom of heaven against men&#8221;.<sup>14</sup></p>
<h4>JESUS&#8217; CASE FOR TRUE TRADITION</h4>
<p>In order to cut through all this tradition of men that had made the Mosaic tradition of no effect, and to bring people back to the truth, Jesus told His disciples, &#8220;But you, do not be called &#8216;Rabbi.&#8217;&#8221;<sup>15</sup> In other words, He was telling them not to use their positions as fathers and teachers as an opportunity to build disciples around their own private opinions. For to do so would only serve to &#8220;shut up the kingdom of heaven against men&#8221;.<sup>16</sup> Instead, with the coming of Christ, these rabbis — and indeed all who would teach God&#8217;s Word  —  are to hand down faithfully the true tradition of only one Rabbi: Christ Himself. The Bible, through the pen of the Apostle John, calls this particular tradition &#8220;the doctrine of Christ&#8221;.<sup>17</sup> In fact, this is why the specific teaching of the Twelve became known as &#8220;the apostles&#8217; doctrine&#8221;.<sup>18</sup> Since their time, successive generations of fathers and teachers in the Church have handed down and guarded the apostolic doctrine concerning Christ very carefully, for it represents the true interpretation of Holy Scripture. This faithfulness to true Christian doctrine, by the way, can especially be seen in the Seven Ecumenical Councils of the Church, held between the fourth and eighth centuries. It behooves anyone who claims to be a teacher of Christ&#8217;s doctrine to be faithful to the apostles&#8217; doctrine handed down in those Councils. Otherwise he runs the risk of inserting his own &#8220;private interpretation&#8221;.<sup>19</sup> While it is true that all teachers of Christ&#8217;s doctrine must begin at the right place, namely, the Holy Scriptures, it is also true that they should give the correct and true interpretation of Holy Scripture as passed down by holy and godly teachers and fathers of the Church, especially in the Seven Councils. Why are the Seven Ecumenical Councils so important? Because they point out what the Church universally held to be the true teaching concerning the Person of the Lord Jesus Christ and the Holy Trinity. They are faithful to what the Holy Scriptures teach concerning the one true Rabbi and Teacher, Jesus Christ. Teachers and fathers who teach private interpretations contrary to the doctrine of Christ as taught in the Seven Ecumenical Councils should not, I believe, be recognized as true teachers and fathers.</p>
<h4>THE RABBIS AND PERSONAL CHARACTER</h4>
<p>A second critical area of rabbinic leadership with which Jesus was concerned was personal character. He had detected a major flaw in the character of the scribes and Pharisees, a sin that might be called self-exaltation. They were using their position as fathers and teachers among God&#8217;s people to exalt themselves. They wanted to be sure they received appropriate recognition. In light of this lack of character, Jesus said, &#8220;But he who is greatest among you shall be your servant. And whoever exalts himself will be humbled, and he who humbles himself will be exalted&#8221;.<sup>20</sup> Their self-exalting spirit had manifested itself in several ways. First, in hypocrisy: &#8220;for they say&#8221;, said Jesus, &#8220;and do not do.&#8221;<sup>21</sup> All talk and no walk. Their talk was cheap because it was totally contradicted by their behavior. In pretense they would make long prayers, but in behavior devour widows&#8217; houses.<sup>22</sup> They would make oaths, swearing by the gold of the temple rather than by the temple that sanctified the gold, thereby revealing their secret love of money.<sup>23</sup> Although they paid tithes of mint, anise, and cumin, which they should have done gladly, they neglected the weightier matters of the law: justice, mercy, and faith.<sup>24</sup> Because they were hypocrites in these and numerous other ways, the Lord summed up His critique by saying, &#8220;Even so you also outwardly appear righteous to men, but inside you are full of hypocrisy and lawlessness.<sup>25</sup> Plainly, their &#8220;insides&#8221; did not match their &#8220;outsides&#8221; because they were filled up with a self-exalting and self-serving spirit. A second manifestation of their selfexalting spirit was the noticeable lack of actual service on their part. &#8220;For&#8221;, said Jesus, &#8220;they bind heavy burdens, hard to bear, and lay them on men&#8217;s shoulders; but they themselves will not move them with one of their fingers.&#8221;<sup>26</sup> No dirt was to be found under their fingernails. They were simply a group of lazy leaders who wanted to be served rather than to serve. No wonder, then, Jesus said not to be like them, for from God&#8217;s standpoint, &#8220;he who is greatest among you shall be your servant.&#8221;<sup>27</sup> A third manifestation of their self-exalting spirit was self-love, demonstrated by a desire to be seen by men,<sup>28</sup> by their love for the best seats at the feasts and in the synagogues,<sup>29</sup> and by their love of greetings in the marketplaces, being called by men, &#8220;Rabbi, Rabbi.&#8221;<sup>30</sup> This self-love was a clear transgression of the Mosaic Law, which they professed to be keeping. For Moses&#8217; entire law could be summed up in the two great commandments, the greatest of which is, &#8220;You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your soul, and with all your mind.&#8221;<sup>31</sup> The second greatest is, &#8220;You shall love your neighbor as yourself.&#8221;<sup>32</sup> Thus, these fathers and teachers were not leading their people into the love of God and neighbor. Quite to the contrary, they were exhibiting a self-exalting, self-serving spirit, filled up with a love for self.</p>
<h4>THE VERDICT OF CHRIST</h4>
<p>In the face of the stench and shame of the apostasy of these religious leaders, therefore, Jesus commanded His disciples, &#8220;Do not call anyone on earth your father; for One is your Father, He who is in heaven.&#8221;<sup>33</sup> While Father Abraham by his faithfulness deserved the title, as did others of Israel&#8217;s greats in history, these men had forfeited their role as fathers. They were to cease and desist in their use of the term and, in turn, bow to God Himself as the fountainhead of all fatherhood. And in issuing His warning, Jesus addresses us today with the greatest of all commandments, pointing the fathers and teachers in His Church and those they lead to a primacy of love for God the Father and His Son, Jesus Christ, and to a love for one&#8217;s neighbor.</p>
<h4>AND WHAT ARE WE TO DO?</h4>
<p>From the beginning of Church history, as was true throughout Israel, those anointed by God for service were called by certain names: &#8220;prophet&#8221;, &#8220;teacher&#8221; <em>(rabbi </em>in Israel), and &#8220;father.&#8221; In that same spirit, other titles have emerged, such as &#8220;reverend&#8221;, &#8220;pastor&#8221;, &#8220;professor&#8221; (teacher), or &#8220;brother&#8221; (for some evangelical pastors and Catholic monks). These designations speak of both warmth and dignity. Just as in our family units there is one who with love is called &#8220;father&#8221;, so in God&#8217;s household we have honored and will continue to honor those who have brought us to the new birth through our Lord Jesus Christ. Indeed, what better term for them than &#8220;father&#8221;? Jesus warned against calling men &#8220;father&#8221; or &#8220;teacher&#8221; in order that the leadership of His holy nation would remain pure. Whether bishop, father, teacher, deacon, or pastor, all leaders must remain faithful to the true doctrine of Christ and manifest a personal character befitting godly humility, a humility that leads the Church into the love of God the Holy Trinity and of one&#8217;s neighbor.</p>
<p>May the Lord have mercy on all of us who lead the flock, regardless of the title we are given.</p>
<h4>FOOTNOTES</h4>
<p>(All Scripture references, unless otherwise noted, are taken from the New King James Version.)</p>
<ol>
<li> Matthew 23:9</li>
<li> 1 Corinthians 4:15 (New American Standard Version)</li>
<li> 1 Corinthians 10:1</li>
<li> Colossians 3:21</li>
<li> Luke 16:24, 25</li>
<li> Matthew 23:10</li>
<li> John 3:10</li>
<li> Acts 13:1</li>
<li> 1 Corinthians 12:28 and Ephesians 4:11</li>
<li> 2 Timothy 1:11</li>
<li> Matthew 23:2</li>
<li> Mark 7:8</li>
<li> Mark 7:9, 13</li>
<li> Matthew 23:13</li>
<li> Matthew 23:8</li>
<li> Matthew 23:13</li>
<li> 2 John 9</li>
<li> Acts 2:42</li>
<li> 2 Peter 1:20</li>
<li> Matthew 23:11, 12</li>
<li> Matthew 23:3</li>
<li> Matthew 23:14</li>
<li> Matthew 23:16, 17</li>
<li> Matthew 23:23</li>
<li> Matthew 23:28</li>
<li> Matthew 23:4</li>
<li> Matthew 23:11</li>
<li> Matthew 23:5</li>
<li> Matthew 23:6</li>
<li> Matthew 23:7</li>
<li> Matthew 22:37</li>
<li> Matthew 22:39</li>
<li> Matthew 23:9</li>
</ol>
<p>© Conciliar Press. Used by permission.</p>
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		<title>Sola Scriptura</title>
		<link>http://silouanthompson.net/2008/07/sola-scriptura/</link>
		<comments>http://silouanthompson.net/2008/07/sola-scriptura/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 29 Jul 2008 21:29:12 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Silouan</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Feature Articles]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Highlights]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[John Whiteford]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Protestantism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[scripture]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[sola scriptura]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://silouanthompson.net/?p=143</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Why, if the Bible is sufficient apart from Holy Tradition, can a Baptist, a Jehovah’s Witness, a Charismatic, and a Methodist all claim to believe what the Bible says and yet no two of them agree what it is that the Bible says? Unfortunately, most Protestants are willing to blame this state of affairs on almost anything except the root problem...]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>In the Vanity of their Minds</strong><br />
<em>by Father John Whiteford</em></p>
<h3>An Orthodox Examination of the Protestant Teaching</h3>
<h4>Introduction: Are Protestants Beyond Hope?</h4>
<p>Since my conversion from Evangelical Protestantism to the Orthodox Faith, I have noted a general amazement among many of those who have been raised Orthodox that a Protestant could be converted. This is not because they are uncertain about their own faith, usually they are just amazed that anything could break through a Protestant’s stubborn insistence on being wrong! What I have come to understand is that most Orthodox people have a confused and limited grasp of what Protestantism is, and where its adherents are coming from. Thus when &#8220;cradle Orthodox&#8221; believers have their run-ins with Protestants, even though they often use the same words, they do not generally communicate because they do not speak the same theological language — in other words, they have no common theological basis to discuss their differences. Of course when one considers the some twenty thousand plus differing Protestant groups that now exist (with only the one constant trait of each group claiming that it rightly understands the Bible), one must certainly sympathize with those that are a bit confused by them.</p>
<p>Despite all that stands in their way, there definitely is hope for Protestants. Protestants in search of theological sanity, of true worship, and of the ancient Christian Faith are practically beating on our Church doors (of course to those who are not paying attention, this may sound like a strange claim). They are no longer satisfied with the contradictions and the faddishness of contemporary Protestant America, but when we open the door to these inquirers we must be prepared. These people have questions! Many of these inquirers are Protestant ministers, or are among the better informed laymen; they are sincere seekers of Truth, but they have much to unlearn and it will require informed Orthodox Christians to help them work through these issues — Orthodox Christians who know where Protestants are coming from, but even more importantly, who know what they believe themselves!</p>
<p>Ironically (or providentially) this surge in interest in Orthodoxy among Americans from Protestant backgrounds has come even as the opening of the doors of the former Communist-block has brought upon its Orthodox people an unprecedented onslaught from every religious sect and cult. At the spearhead, American Evangelicals and Charismatics have been stumbling over each other — with each of its sects seeking to gain the prestigious boast that they too have established themselves even among the Godless Russians! So we Orthodox are now presented with a double urgency — on the one hand, there is the missionary task of presenting the Faith to Protestants here in the West; but on the other hand we must earnestly combat the spread of heresies among the Orthodox, both here and in traditionally Orthodox lands. In either case, the task at hand is to equip ourselves with sufficient knowledge and understanding of the issues that confront us.</p>
<p>Perhaps the most daunting feature of Protestantism -the feature which has given it a reputation of stubborn resiliency is its numerous differences and contradictions. Like the the mythical Hydra, its many heads only multiply, and though it is a worthy task to seek to understand and confront these heresies individually, this is not the key to their defeat. In order for one to understand the unique beliefs of each individual sect, it requires a knowledge of the history and development of Protestantism in general, a great deal of research into each major stripe of Protestant theology, worship, etc., as well as a lot of contemporary reading in order to understand some of the more important cross-trends that are currently at work (such as liberalism, or emotionalism). Even with all this, one could not hope to keep up with the new groups that spring up almost daily. Yet for all their differences there is one basic underlying assumption that unites the amorphous blob of these thousands of disparate groups into the general category of &#8220;Protestant.&#8221; All Protestant groups (with some minor qualifications) believe that their group has rightly understood the Bible, and though they all disagree as to what the Bible says, they generally do agree on how one is to interpret the Bible — on your own! -apart from Church Tradition. If one can come to understand this belief, why it is wrong, and how one is rightly to approach the Scriptures, then any Protestant of any stripe may be engaged with understanding. Even groups as differing as the Baptists and the Jehovah’s Witnesses are really not as different as they outwardly appear once you have understood this essential point — indeed if you ever have an opportunity to see a Baptist and a Jehovah’s Witness argue over the Bible, you will notice that in the final analysis they simply quote different Scriptures back and forth at each other. If they are equally matched intellectually, neither will get anywhere in the discussion because they both essentially agree on their approach to the Bible, and because neither questions this underlying common assumption neither can see that their mutually flawed approach to the Scriptures is the problem. Herein lies the heart of this Hydra of heresies &#8211; pierce its heart and its many heads at once fall lifelessly to the ground.</p>
<h3>Why Scripture Alone?</h3>
<p>If we are to understand what Protestants think, we will have to first know why they believe what they believe. In fact if we try to put ourselves in the place of those early reformers, such as Martin Luther, we must certainly have some appreciation for their reasons for championing the Doctrine of Sola Scriptura (or &#8220;Scripture alone&#8221;). When one considers the corruption in the Roman Church at that time, the degenerate teachings that it promoted, and the distorted understanding of tradition that it used to defend itself -along with the fact that the West was several centuries removed from any significant contact with their former Orthodox heritage — it is difficult to imagine within those limitations how one such as Luther might have responded with significantly better results. How could Luther have appealed to tradition to fight these abuses, when tradition (as all in the Roman West were lead to believe) was personified by the very papacy that was responsible for those abuses. To Luther, it was tradition that had erred, and if he were to reform the Church he would have to do so with the sure undergirding of the Scriptures. However, Luther never really sought to eliminate tradition altogether, and he never used the Scriptures truly &#8220;alone,&#8221; what he really attempted to do was to use Scripture to get rid of those parts of the Roman tradition that were corrupt. Unfortunately his rhetoric far outstripped his own practice, and more radical reformers took the idea of Sola Scriptura to its logical conclusions.</p>
<h3>Problems with the Doctrine of Sola Scriptura</h3>
<h4>A. It is a doctrine based on a number of faulty assumptions</h4>
<p>An assumption is something that we take for granted from the outset, usually quite unconsciously. As long as an assumption is a valid one, all is fine and well; but a false assumption inevitably leads to false conclusions. One would hope that even when one has made an unconscious assumption that when his conclusions are proven faulty he would then ask himself where his underlying error lay. Protestants who are willing to honestly assess the current state of the Protestant world, must ask themselves why, if Protestantism and its foundational teaching of Sola Scriptura are of God, has it resulted in over twenty-thousand differing groups that can’t agree on basic aspects of what the Bible says, or what it even means to be a Christian? Why (if the Bible is sufficient apart from Holy Tradition) can a Baptist, a Jehovah’s Witness, a Charismatic, and a Methodist all claim to believe what the Bible says and yet no two of them agree what it is that the Bible says? Obviously, here is a situation in which Protestants have found themselves that is wrong by any stretch or measure. Unfortunately, most Protestants are willing to blame this sad state of affairs on almost anything &#8211; anything except the root problem. The idea of Sola Scriptura is so foundational to Protestantism that to them it is tantamount to denying God to question it, but as our Lord said, &#8220;every good tree bringeth forth good fruit; but a bad tree bringeth forth evil fruit&#8221; (Matthew 7:17). If we judge Sola Scriptura by its fruit then we are left with no other conclusion than that this tree needs to be &#8220;hewn down, and cast into the fire&#8221; (Matthew 7:19).</p>
<p><em><strong>False Assumption # 1: The Bible was intended to be the last word on faith, piety, and worship.</strong></em></p>
<p><strong><em>a). Does the Scripture teach that it is &#8220;all sufficient?&#8221;</em></strong></p>
<p>The most obvious assumption that underlies the doctrine of &#8220;Scripture alone&#8221; is that the Bible has within it all that is needed for everything that concerns the Christian’s life — all that would be needed for true faith, practice, piety, and worship. The Scripture that is most usually cited to support this notion is:</p>
<blockquote><p>…from a child thou hast known the Holy Scriptures, which are able to make thee wise unto salvation through faith which is in Christ Jesus. All scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness: that the man of God may be perfect, thoroughly furnished unto all good works (II Timothy 3:15-17).</p></blockquote>
<p>Those who would use this passage to advocate Sola Scriptura argue that this passage teaches the &#8220;all sufficiency&#8221; of Scripture — because, &#8220;If, indeed, the Holy Scriptures are able to make the pious man perfect… then, indeed to attain completeness and perfection, there is no need of tradition.&#8221;<sup>1</sup> But what can really be said based on this passage?</p>
<p>For starters, we should ask what Paul is talking about when he speaks of the Scriptures that Timothy has known since he was a child. We can be sure that Paul is not referring to the New Testament, because the New Testament had not yet been written when Timothy was a child — in fact it was not nearly finished when Paul wrote this epistle to Timothy, much less collected together into the canon of the New Testament as we now know it. Obviously here, and in most references to &#8220;the Scriptures&#8221; that we find in the New Testament, Paul is speaking of the Old Testament; so if this passage is going to be used to set the limits on inspired authority, not only will Tradition be excluded but this passage itself and the entire New Testament.</p>
<p>In the second place, if Paul meant to exclude tradition as not also being profitable, then we should wonder why Paul uses non-biblical oral tradition in this very same chapter. The names Jannes and Jambres are not found in the Old Testament, yet in II Timothy 3:8 Paul refers to them as opposing Moses. Paul is drawing upon the oral tradition that the names of the two most prominent Egyptian Magicians in the Exodus account (Ch. 7-8) were &#8220;Jannes&#8221; and &#8220;Jambres.&#8221;<sup>2</sup> And this is by no means the only time that a non-biblical source is used in the New Testament — the best known instance is in the Epistle of St. Jude, which quotes from the Book of Enoch (Jude 14,15 cf. Enoch 1:9).</p>
<p>When the Church officially canonized the books of Scripture, the primary purpose in establishing an authoritative list of books which were to be received as Sacred Scripture was to protect the Church from spurious books which claimed apostolic authorship but were in fact the work of heretics (e.g. the gospel of Thomas). Heretical groups could not base their teachings on Holy Tradition because their teachings originated from outside the Church, so the only way that they could claim any authoritative basis for their heresies was to twist the meaning of the Scriptures and to forge new books in the names of apostles or Old Testament saints. The Church defended itself against heretical teachings by appealing to the apostolic origins of Holy Tradition (proven by Apostolic Succession, i.e. the fact that the bishops and teachers of the Church can historically demonstrate their direct descendence from the Apostles), and by appealing to the universality of the Orthodox Faith (i.e. that the Orthodox faith is that same faith that Orthodox Christians have always accepted throughout its history and throughout the world). The Church defended itself against spurious and heretical books by establishing an authoritative list of sacred books that were received throughout the Church as being divinely inspired and of genuine Old Testament or apostolic origin.</p>
<p>By establishing the canonical list of Sacred Scripture the Church did not intend to imply that all of the Christian Faith and all information necessary for worship and good order in the Church was contained in them.<sup>3</sup> One thing that is beyond serious dispute is that by the time the Church settled the Canon of Scripture it was in its faith and worship essentially indistinguishable from the Church of later periods &#8211; this is an historical certainty. As far as the structure of Church authority, it was Orthodox bishops together in various councils who settled the question of the Canon — and so it is to this day in the Orthodox Church when any question of doctrine or discipline has to be settled.</p>
<p><strong><em>b). What was the purpose of the New Testament Writings?</em></strong></p>
<p>In Protestant biblical studies it is taught (and I think correctly taught in this instance) that when you study the Bible, among many other considerations, you must consider the genre (or literary type) of literature that you are reading in a particular passage, because different genres have different uses. Another consideration is of course the subject and purpose of the book or passage you are dealing with. In the New Testament we have four broad categories of literary genres: gospel, historical narrative (Acts), epistle, and the apocalyptic/prophetic book, Revelation. Gospels were written to testify of Christ’s life, death, and resurrection. Biblical historical narratives recount the history of God’s people and also the lives of significant figures in that history, and show God’s providence in the midst of it all. Epistles were written primarily to answer specific problems that arose in various Churches; thus, things that were assumed and understood by all, and not considered problems were not generally touched upon in any detail. Doctrinal issues that were addressed were generally disputed or misunderstood doctrines,<sup>4</sup> matters of worship were only dealt with when there were related problems (e.g. I Corinthians 11-14). Apocalyptic writings (such as Revelation) were written to show God’s ultimate triumph in history.</p>
<p>Let us first note that none of these literary types present in the New Testament have worship as a primary subject, or were meant to give details about how to worship in Church. In the Old Testament there are detailed (though by no means exhaustive) treatments of the worship of the people of Israel (e.g. Leviticus, Psalms) — in the New Testament there are only meager hints of the worship of the Early Christians. Why is this? Certainly not because they had no order in their services — liturgical historians have established the fact that the early Christians continued to worship in a manner firmly based upon the patterns of Jewish worship which it inherited from the Apostles.<sup>5</sup> However, even the few references in the New Testament that touch upon the worship of the early Church show that, far from being a wild group of free-spirited &#8220;Charismatics,&#8221; the Christians in the New Testament worshiped liturgically as did their fathers before them: they observed hours of prayer (Acts 3:1); they worshiped in the Temple (Acts 2:46, 3:1, 21:26); and they worshiped in Synagogues (Acts 18:4).</p>
<p>We need also to note that none of the types of literature present in the New Testament have as their purpose comprehensive doctrinal instruction — it does not contain a catechism or a systematic theology. If all that we need as Christians is the Bible by itself, why is there not some sort of a comprehensive doctrinal statement? Imagine how easily all the many controversies could have been settled if the Bible clearly answered every doctrinal question. But as convenient as it might otherwise have been, such things are not found among the books of the Bible.</p>
<p>Let no one misunderstand the point that is being made. None of this is meant to belittle the importance of the Holy Scriptures — God forbid! In the Orthodox Church the Scriptures are believed to be fully inspired, inerrant, and authoritative; but the fact is that the Bible does not contain within it teaching on every subject of importance to the Church. As already stated, the New Testament gives little detail about how to worship — but this is certainly no small matter. Furthermore, the same Church that handed down to us the Holy Scriptures, and preserved them, was the very same Church from which we have received our patterns of worship. If we mistrust this Church’s faithfulness in preserving Apostolic worship, then we must also mistrust her fidelity in preserving the Scriptures.<sup>6</sup></p>
<p><strong><em>c). Is the Bible, in practice, really &#8220;all sufficient&#8221; for Protestants?</em></strong></p>
<p>Protestants frequently claim they &#8220;just believe the Bible,&#8221; but a number of questions arise when one examines their actual use of the Bible. For instance, why do Protestants write so many books on doctrine and the Christian life in general, if indeed all that is necessary is the Bible? If the Bible by itself were sufficient for one to understand it, then why don’t Protestants simply hand out Bibles? And if it is &#8220;all sufficient,&#8221; why does it not produce consistent results, i.e. why do Protestants not all believe the same? What is the purpose of the many Protestant study Bibles, if all that is needed is the Bible itself? Why do they hand out tracts and other material? Why do they even teach or preach at all -why not just read the Bible to people? The answer is though they usually will not admit it, Protestants instinctively know that the Bible cannot be understood alone. And in fact every Protestant sect has its own body of traditions, though again they generally will not call them what they are. It is not an accident that Jehovah’s Witnesses all believe the same things, and Southern Baptists generally believe the same things, but Jehovah’s Witnesses and Southern Baptists emphatically do not believe the same things. Jehovah’s Witnesses and Southern Baptists do not each individually come up with their own ideas from an independent study of the Bible; rather, those in each group are all taught to believe in a certain way — from a common tradition. So then the question is not really whether we will just believe the Bible or whether we will also use tradition — the real question is which tradition will we use to interpret the Bible? Which tradition can be trusted, the Apostolic Tradition of the Orthodox Church, or the muddled, and modern, traditions of Protestantism that have no roots beyond the advent of the Protestant Reformation.</p>
<p><strong><em>False Assumption # 2: The Scriptures were the basis of the early Church, whereas Tradition is simply a &#8220;human corruption&#8221; that came much later.</em></strong></p>
<p>Especially among Evangelicals and so-called Charismatics you will find that the word &#8220;tradition&#8221; is a derogatory term, and to label something as a &#8220;tradition&#8221; is roughly equivalent to saying that it is &#8220;fleshly,&#8221; &#8220;spiritually dead,&#8221; &#8220;destructive,&#8221;</p>
<p>and/or &#8220;legalistic.&#8221; As Protestants read the New Testament, it seems clear to them that the Bible roundly condemns tradition as being opposed to Scripture. The image of early Christians that they generally have is essentially that the early Christians were pretty much like 20th Century Evangelicals or Charismatics! That the First Century Christians would have had liturgical worship, or would have adhered to any tradition is inconceivable — only later, &#8220;when the Church became corrupted,&#8221; is it imagined that such things entered the Church. It comes as quite a blow to such Protestants (as it did to me) when they actually study the early Church and the writings of the early Fathers and begin to see a distinctly different picture than that which they were always led to envision. One finds that, for example, the early Christians did not tote their Bibles with them to Church each Sunday for a Bible study — in fact it was so difficult to acquire a copy of even portions of Scripture, due to the time and resources involved in making a copy, that very few individuals owned their own copies. Instead, the copies of the Scriptures were kept by designated persons in the Church, or kept at the place where the Church gathered for worship. Furthermore, most Churches did not have complete copies of all the books of the Old Testament, much less the New Testament (which was not finished until almost the end of the First Century, and not in its final canonical form until the Fourth Century). This is not to say that the early Christians did not study the Scriptures — they did in earnest, but as a group, not as individuals. And for most of the First Century, Christians were limited in study to the Old Testament. So how did they know the Gospel, the life and teachings of Christ, how to worship, what to believe about the nature of Christ, etc? They had only the Oral Tradition handed down from the Apostles. Sure, many in the early Church heard these things directly from the Apostles themselves, but many more did not, especially with the passing of the First Century and the Apostles with it. Later generations had access to the writings of the Apostles through the New Testament, but the early Church depended on Oral Tradition almost entirely for its knowledge of the Christian faith.</p>
<p>This dependence upon tradition is evident in the New Testament writings themselves. For example, Saint Paul exhorts the Thessalonians:</p>
<blockquote><p>Therefore, brethren, stand fast and hold the traditions which ye have been taught, whether by word [i.e. oral tradition] or our epistle (II Thessalonians 2:15).</p></blockquote>
<p>The word here translated &#8220;traditions&#8221; is the Greek word paradosis — which, though translated differently in some Protestant versions, is the same word that the Greek Orthodox use when speaking of Tradition, and few competent Bible scholars would dispute this meaning. The word itself literally means &#8220;what is transmitted.&#8221; It is the same word used when referring negatively to the false teachings of the Pharisees (Mark 7:3, 5, 8), and also when referring to authoritative Christian teaching (I Corinthians 11:2, Second Thessalonians 2:15). So what makes the tradition of the Pharisees false and that of the Church true? The source! Christ made clear what was the source of the traditions of the Pharisees when He called them &#8220;the traditions of men&#8221; (Mark 7:8). Saint Paul on the other hand, in reference to Christian Tradition states,</p>
<p>&#8220;I praise you brethren, that you remember me in all things and hold fast to the traditions [paradoseis] just as I delivered [paredoka, a verbal form of paradosis] them to you&#8221; (First Corinthians 11:2), but where did he get these traditions in the first place? &#8220;I received from the Lord that which I delivered [paredoka] to you&#8221; (first Corinthians 11:23). This is what the Orthodox Church refers to when it speaks of the Apostolic Tradition — &#8220;the Faith once delivered [paradotheise] unto the saints&#8221; (Jude 3). Its source is Christ, it was delivered personally by Him to the Apostles through all that He said and did, which if it all were all written down, &#8220;the world itself could not contain the books that should be written&#8221; (John 21:25). The Apostles delivered this knowldge to the entire Church, and the Church, being the repository of this treasure thus became &#8220;the pillar and ground of the Truth&#8221; (I Timothy 3:15).</p>
<p>The testimony of the New Testament is clear on this point: the early Christians had both oral and written traditions which they received from Christ through the Apostles. For written tradition they at first had only fragments — one local church had an Epistle, another perhaps a Gospel. Gradually these writings were gathered together into collections and ultimately they became the New Testament. And how did these early Christians know which books were authentic and which were not — for (as already noted) there were numerous spurious epistles and gospels claimed by heretics to have been written by Apostles? It was the oral Apostolic Tradition that aided the Church in making this determination.</p>
<p>Protestants react violently to the idea of Holy Tradition simply because the only form of it that they have generally encountered is the concept of Tradition found in Roman Catholicism. Contrary to the Roman view of Tradition, which is personified by the Papacy, and develops new dogmas previously unknown to the Church (such as Papal Infallibility, to cite just one of the more odious examples) -the Orthodox do not believe that Tradition grows or changes. Certainly when the Church is faced with a heresy, it is forced to define more precisely the difference between truth and error, but the Truth does not change. It may be said that Tradition expands in the sense that as the Church moves through history it does not forget its experiences along the way, it remembers the saints that arise in it, and it preserves the writings of those who have accurately stated its faith; but the Faith itself was &#8220;once delivered unto the saints&#8221; (Jude 3).</p>
<p>But how can we know that the Church has preserved the Apostolic Tradition in its purity? The short answer is that God has preserved it in the Church because He has promised to do so. Christ said that He would build His Church and that the gates of Hell would not prevail against it (Matthew 16:18). Christ Himself is the head of the Church (Ephesians 4:16), and the Church is His Body (Ephesians 1:22-23). If the Church lost the pure Apostolic Tradition, then the Truth would have to cease being the Truth — for the Church is the pillar and foundation of the Truth (I Timothy 3:15). The common Protestant conception of Church history, that the Church fell into apostasy from the time of Constantine until the Reformation certainly makes these and many other Scriptures meaningless. If the Church ceased to be, for even one day, then the gates of Hell prevailed against it on that day. If this were the case, when Christ described the growth of the Church in His parable of the mustard seed (Matthew 13:31-32), He should have spoken of a plant that started to grow but was squashed, and in its place a new seed sprouted later on &#8211; but instead He used the imagery of a mustard seed that begins small but steadily grows into the largest of garden plants.</p>
<p>As to those who would posit that there was some group of true-believing Protestants living in caves somewhere for a thousand years, where is the evidence? The Waldensians<sup>7</sup> that are claimed as forebearers by every sect from the Pentecostals to the Jehovah’s Witnesses, did not exist prior to the 12th Century. It is, to say the least, a bit of a stretch to believe that these true-believers suffered courageously under the fierce persecutions of the Romans, and yet would have headed for the hills as soon as Christianity became a legal religion. And yet even this seems possible when compared with the notion that such a group could have survived for a thousand years without leaving a trace of historical evidence to substantiate that it had ever existed.</p>
<p>At this point one might object that there were in fact examples of people in Church history who taught things contrary to what others taught, so who is to say what the Apostolic Tradition is? And further more, what if a corrupt practice arose, how could it later be distinguished from Apostolic Tradition? Protestants ask these questions because, in the Roman Catholic Church there did arise new and corrupt &#8220;traditions,&#8221; but this is because the Latin West first corrupted its understanding of the nature of Tradition. The Orthodox understanding which earlier prevailed in the West and was preserved in the Orthodox Church, is basically that Tradition is in essence unchanging and is known by its universality or catholicity. True Apostolic Tradition is found in the historic consensus of Church teaching. Find that which the Church has believed always, throughout history, and everywhere in the Church, and then you will have found the Truth. If any belief can be shown to have not been received by the Church in its history, then this is heresy. Mind you, however, we are speaking of the Church, not schismatic groups. There were schismatics and heretics who broke away from the Church during the New Testament period, and there has been a continual supply of them since, for as the Apostle says, &#8220;there must be also heresies among you, that they which are approved may be made manifest&#8221; (ICorinthians 11:19)</p>
<p><strong><em>False Assumption # 3: Anyone can interpret the Scriptures for himself or herself without the aid of the Church.</em></strong></p>
<p>Though many Protestants would take issue with the way this assumption is worded, this is essentially the assumption that prevailed when the Reformers first advocated the doctrine of Sola Scriptura. The line of reasoning was essentially that the meaning of Scripture is clear enough that anyone could understand it by simply reading it for oneself, and thus they rejected the idea that one needed the Church’s help in the process. This position is clearly stated by the Tubingen Lutheran Scholars who exchanged letters with Patriarch Jeremias II of Constantinople about thirty years after Luther’s death:</p>
<p>Perhaps, someone will say that on the one hand, the Scriptures are absolutely free from error; but on the other hand, they have been concealed by much obscurity, so that without the interpretations of the Spirit-bearing Fathers they could not be clearly understood…. But meanwhile this, too, is very true that what has been said in a scarcely perceptible manner in some places in the Scriptures, has been stated in another place in them explicitly and most clearly so that even the most simple person can understand them.<sup>8</sup></p>
<p>Though these Lutheran scholars claimed to use the writings of the Holy Fathers, they argued that they were unnecessary, and that, where they believed the Scriptures and the Holy Fathers conflicted, the Fathers were to be disregarded. What they were actually arguing, however, was that when the teachings of the Holy fathers conflict with their private opinions on the Scriptures, their private opinions were to be considered more authoritative than the Fathers of the Church. Rather than listening to the Fathers, who had shown themselves righteous and saintly, priority should be given to the human reasonings of the individual. The same human reason that has led the majority of modern Lutheran scholars to reject almost every teaching of Scripture (including the deity of Christ, the Resurrection, etc.), and even to reject the inspiration of the Scriptures themselves — on which the early Lutherans claimed to base their entire faith. In reply, Patriarch Jeremias II clearly exposed the true character of the Lutheran teachings:</p>
<p>Let us accept, then, the traditions of the Church with a sincere heart and not a multitude of rationalizations. For God created man to be upright; instead they sought after diverse ways of rationalizing (Ecclesiastes 7:29). Let us not allow ourselves to learn a new kind of faith which is condemned by the tradition of the Holy Fathers. For the Divine apostle says, &#8220;if anyone is preaching to you a Gospel contrary to that which you received, let him be accursed&#8221; (Galatians 1:9).<sup>9</sup></p>
<h4>B. The doctrine of Sola Scriptura does not meet its own criteria</h4>
<p>You might imagine that such a belief system as Protestantism, which has as its cardinal doctrine that Scripture alone is authoritative in matters of faith, would first seek to prove that this cardinal doctrine met its own criteria. One would probably expect that Protestants could brandish hundreds of proof-texts from the Scriptures to support this doctrine — upon which all else that they believe is based. At the very least one would hope that two or three solid text which clearly taught this doctrine could be found — since the Scriptures themselves say, &#8220;In the mouth of two or three witnesses shall every word be established&#8221; (II Corinthians 13:1). Yet, like the boy in the fable who had to point out that the Emperor had no clothes on, I must point out that there is not one single verse in the entirety of Holy Scripture that teaches the doctrine of Sola Scriptura. There is not even one that comes close. Oh yes, there are innumerable places in the Bible that speak of its inspiration, of its authority, and of its profitability — but there is no place in the Bible that teaches that only Scripture is authoritative for believers. If such a teaching were even implicit, then surely the early Fathers of the Church would have taught this doctrine also, but which of the Holy Fathers ever taught such a thing? Thus Protestantism’s most basic teaching self-destructs, being contrary to itself. But not only is the Protestant doctrine of Sola Scriptura not taught in the Scriptures — it is in fact specifically contradicted by the Scriptures (which we have already discussed) that teach that Holy Tradition is also binding to Christians (II Thessalonians 2:15; I Corinthians 11:2).</p>
<h4>C. Protestant interpretive approaches that don&#8217;t work</h4>
<p>Even from the very earliest days of the Reformation, Protestants have been forced to deal with the fact that, given the Bible and the reason of the individual alone, people could not agree upon the meaning of many of the most basic questions of doctrine. Within Martin Luther’s own life dozens of competing groups had arisen, all claiming to &#8220;just believe the Bible,&#8221; but none agreeing on what the Bible said. Though Luther had courageously stood before the Diet of Worms and said that unless he were persuaded by Scripture, or by plain reason, he would not retract anything that he had been teaching; later, when Anabaptists, who disagreed with the Lutherans on a number of points, simply asked for the same indulgence, the Lutherans butchered them by the thousands — so much for the rhetoric about the &#8220;right of an individual to read the Scriptures for himself.&#8221; Despite the obvious problems that the rapid splintering of Protestantism presented to the doctrine of Sola Scriptura, not willing to concede defeat to the Pope, Protestants instead concluded that the real problem must be that those with whom they disagree, in other words every other sect but their own, must not be reading the Bible correctly. Thus a number of approaches have been set forth as solutions to this problem. Of course there has yet to be the approach that could reverse the endless multiplications of schisms, and yet Protestants still search for the elusive methodological &#8220;key&#8221; that will solve their problem. Let us examine the most popular approaches that have been tried thus far, each of which are still set forth by one group or another</p>
<p><em><strong>Approach # 1: Just take the Bible literally — the meaning is clear.</strong></em></p>
<p>This approach was no doubt the first approach used by the Reformers, though very early on they came to realize that by itself this was an insufficient solution to the problems presented by the doctrine of Sola Scriptura. Although this one was a failure from the start, this approach still is the most common one to be found among the less educated Fundamentalists, Evangelicals and Charismatics — &#8220;The Bible says what it means and means what it says,&#8221; is an oft heard phrase. But when it comes to Scriptural texts that Protestants generally do not agree with, such as when Christ gave the Apostles the power to forgive sins (John 20:23), or when He said of the Eucharist &#8220;this is my body…. this is my blood&#8221;</p>
<p>(Matthew 26:26,28), or when Paul taught that women should cover their heads in Church (I Corinthians 11:1-16), then all of a sudden the Bible doesn’t say what it means any more — &#8220;Why, those verses aren’t literal…&#8221;</p>
<p><strong><em>Approach #2: The Holy Spirit provides the correct understanding.</em></strong></p>
<p>When presented with the numerous groups that arose under the banner of the Reformation that could not agree on their interpretations of the Scriptures, no doubt the second solution to the problem was the assertion that the Holy Spirit would guide the pious Protestant to interpret the Scriptures rightly. Of course everyone who disagreed with you could not possibly be guided by the same Spirit. The result was that each Protestant group de-Christianized all those that differed from them. Now if this approach were a valid one, that would only leave history with one group of Protestants that had rightly interpreted the Scriptures. But which of the thousands of denominations could it be? Of course the answer depends on which Protestant you are speaking to. One thing we can be sure of — he or she probably thinks his or her group is it.</p>
<p>Today, however, (depending on what stripe of Protestant you come into contact with) you are more likely to run into Protestants who have relativized the Truth to some degree or another than to find those who still maintain that their sect or splinter group is the &#8220;only one&#8221; which is &#8220;right.&#8221; As denominations stacked upon denominations it became a correspondingly greater stretch for any of them to say, with a straight face, that only they had rightly understood the Scriptures, though there still are some who do. It has become increasingly common for each Protestant group to minimize the differences between denominations and simply conclude that in the name of &#8220;love&#8221; those differences &#8220;do not matter.&#8221; Perhaps each group has &#8220;a piece of the Truth,&#8221; but none has the whole Truth (so the reasoning goes). Thus the pan-heresy of Ecumenism had its birth. Now many &#8220;Christians&#8221; will not even stop their ecumenical efforts at allowing only Christian groups to have a piece of the Truth. Many &#8220;Christians&#8221; now also believe that all religions have &#8220;pieces of the Truth.&#8221; The obvious conclusion that modern Protestants have made is that to find all the Truth each group will have to shed their &#8220;differences,&#8221; pitch their &#8220;piece of Truth&#8221;</p>
<p>into the pot, and presto-chango -the whole Truth will be found at last!</p>
<p><strong><em>Approach #3: Let the clear passages interpret the unclear.</em></strong></p>
<p>This must have seemed the perfect solution to the problem of how to interpret the Bible by itself — let the easily understood passages &#8220;interpret&#8221; those which are not clear. The logic of this approach is simple, though one passage may state a truth obscurely, surely the same truth would be clearly stated elsewhere in Scripture. Simply use these &#8220;clear passages&#8221; as the key and you will have unlocked the meaning of the &#8220;obscure passage.&#8221; As the Tubingen Lutheran scholars argued in their first exchange of letters with Patriarch Jeremias II:</p>
<blockquote><p>Therefore, no better way could ever be found to interpret the Scriptures, other than that Scripture be interpreted by Scripture, that is to say, through itself. For the entire Scripture has been dictated by the one and the same Spirit, who best understands his own will and is best able to state His own meaning.<sup>10</sup></p></blockquote>
<p>As promising as this method seemed, it soon proved an insufficient solution to the problem of Protestant chaos and divisions. The point at which this approach disintegrates is in determining which passages are &#8220;clear&#8221; and which are &#8220;obscure.&#8221; Baptists, who believe that it is impossible for a Christian to lose his salvation once he is &#8220;saved,&#8221; see a number of passages which they maintain quite clearly teach their doctrine of &#8220;Eternal Security&#8221; — for example, &#8220;For the gifts and callings of God are without repentance&#8221; (Romans 11:29), and &#8220;My sheep hear my voice, and I know them, and they follow me: and I give unto them eternal life; and they shall never perish, neither shall any man pluck them out of my hand&#8221; (John 10:27-28). But when Baptists come across verses which seem to teach that salvation can be lost, such as &#8220;The righteousness of the righteous shall not deliver him in the day of his transgression&#8221; (Ezekiel 33:12), then they use the passages that are &#8220;clear&#8221; to explain away the passages that are &#8220;unclear.&#8221; Methodists, who believe that believers may lose their salvation if they turn their backs on God, find no such obscurity in such passages, and on the contrary, view the above mentioned Baptist</p>
<p>&#8220;proof-texts&#8221; in the light of the passages that they see as &#8220;clear.&#8221; And so Methodists and Baptists throw verses of the Bible back and forth at each other, each wondering why the other can’t &#8220;see&#8221; what seems very &#8220;clear&#8221; to them.</p>
<p><strong><em>Approach #4: Historical-Critical Exegesis</em></strong></p>
<p>Drowning in a sea of subjective opinion and division, Protestants quickly began grasping for any intellectual method with a fig leaf of objectivity. As time went by and divisions multiplied, science and reason increasingly became the standard by which Protestant theologians hoped to bring about consistency in their biblical interpretations. This &#8220;scientific&#8221; approach, which has come to predominate Protestant Scholarship, and in this century has even begun to predominate Roman Catholic Scholarship, is generaly referred to as</p>
<p>&#8220;Historical-Critical Exegesis.&#8221; With the dawn of the so-called &#8220;Enlightenment,&#8221; science seemed to be capable of solving all the world’s problems. Protestant Scholarship began applying the philosophy and methodology of the sciences to theology and the Bible. Since the Enlightenment, Protestant scholars have analyzed every aspect of the Bible: its history, its manuscripts, the biblical languages, etc. As if the Holy Scriptures were an archaeological dig, these scholars sought to analyze each fragment and bone with the best and latest that science had to offer. To be fair, it must be stated that much useful knowledge was produced by such scholarship. Unfortunately this methodology has erred also, grievously and fundamentally, but it has been portrayed with such an aura of scientific objectivity that holds many under its spell.</p>
<p>Like all the other approaches used by Protestants, this method also seeks to understand the Bible while ignoring Church Tradition. Though there is no singular Protestant method of exegesis, they all have as their supposed goal to &#8220;let the Scripture speak for itself.&#8221; Of course no one claiming to be Christian could be against what the Scripture would &#8220;say&#8221; if it were indeed &#8220;speaking for itself&#8221; through these methods. The problem is that those who appoint themselves as tongues for the Scripture filter it through their own Protestant assumptions. While claiming to be objective, they rather interpret the Scriptures according to their own sets of traditions and dogmas (be they fundamentalists or liberal rationalists). What Protestant scholars have done (if I may loosely borrow a line from Albert Schweitzer) is looked into the well of history to find the meaning of the Bible. They have written volume upon volume on the subject, but unfortunately they have only seen their own reflections.</p>
<p>Protestant scholars (both &#8220;liberals&#8221; and &#8220;conservatives&#8221; have erred in that they have misapplied empirical methodologies to the realm of theology and biblical studies. I use the term &#8220;Empiricism&#8221; to describe these efforts. I am using this term broadly to refer to the rationalistic and materialistic worldview that has possessed the Western mind, and is continuing to spread throughout the world. Positivist systems of thought (of which Empiricism is one) attempt to anchor themselves on some basis of &#8220;certain&#8221; knowledge.<sup>11</sup> Empiricism, strictly speaking, is the belief that all knowledge is based on experience, and that only things which can be established by means of scientific observation can be known with certainty. Hand in hand with the methods of observation and experience, came the principle of methodological doubt, the prime example of this being the philosophy of Rene Descartes who began his discussion of philosophy by showing that everything in the universe can be doubted except one’s own existence, and so with the firm basis of this one undoubtable truth (&#8220;I think, therefore I am&#8221;) he sought to build his system of philosophy. Now the Reformers, at first, were content with the assumption that the Bible was the basis of certainty upon which theology and philosophy could rest. But as the humanistic spirit of the Enlightenment gained in ascendancy, Protestant scholars turned their rationalistic methods on the Bible itself-seeking to discover what could be known with &#8220;certainty&#8221;</p>
<p>from it. Liberal Protestant scholars have already finished this endeavor, and having &#8220;peeled back the onion&#8221; they now are left only with their own opinions and sentimentality as the basis for whatever faith they have left.</p>
<p>Conservative Protestants have been much less consistent in their rationalistic approach. Thus they have preserved among themselves a reverence for the Scriptures and a belief in their inspiration. Nevertheless, their approach (even among the most dogged Fundamentalists) is still essentially rooted in the same spirit of rationalism as the Liberals. A prime example of this is to be found among so-called Dispensational Fundamentalists, who hold to an elaborate theory which posits that at various stages in history God has dealt with man according to different &#8220;dispensations,&#8221; such as the &#8220;Adamic dispensation,&#8221; the &#8220;Noaic dispensation,&#8221; the &#8220;Mosaic dispensation,&#8221; the</p>
<p>&#8220;Davidic dispensation,&#8221; and so on. One can see that there is a degree of truth in this theory, but beyond these Old Testament dispensations they teach that currently we are under a different &#8220;dispensation&#8221; than were the Christians of the first century. Though miracles continued through the &#8220;New Testament period,&#8221; they no longer occur today. This is very interesting, because (in addition to lacking any Scriptural basis) this theory allows these Fundamentalists to affirm the miracles of the Bible, while at the same time allowing them to be Empiricists in their everyday life. Thus, though the discussion of this approach may at first glance seem to be only of academic interest and far removed from the reality of dealing with the average Protestant, in fact, even the average, piously &#8220;conservative&#8221; Protestant laymen is not unaffected by this sort of rationalism.</p>
<p>The great fallacy in this so called &#8220;scientific&#8221; approach to the Scriptures lies in the fallacious application of empirical assumptions to the study of history, Scripture, and theology. Empirical methods work reasonably well when they are correctly applied to the natural sciences, but when they are applied where they cannot possibly work, such as in unique moments in history (which cannot be repeated or experimented upon), they cannot produce either consistent or accurate results.<sup>12</sup> Scientists have yet to invent a telescope capable of peering into the spirit world, and yet many Protestant scholars assert that in the light of science the idea of the existence of demons or of the Devil has been disproved. Were the Devil to appear before an Empiricist with pitch fork in hand and clad in bright red underwear, it would be explained in some manner that would easily comport to the scientist’s worldview. Although such Empiricists pride themselves on their &#8220;openness&#8221;, they are blinded by their assumptions to such an extent that they cannot see anything that does not fit their vision of reality. If the methods of empiricism were consistently applied it would discredit all knowledge (including itself), but empiricism is conveniently permitted to be inconsistent by those who hold to it &#8220;because its ruthless mutilation of human experience lends it such a high reputation for scientific severity that its prestige overrides the defectiveness of its own foundations.&#8221;<sup>13</sup></p>
<p>The connections between the extreme conclusions that modern liberal Protestant scholars have come to, and the more conservative or Fundamentalist Protestants will not seem clear to many — least of all to conservative Fundamentalists! Though these conservatives see themselves as being in almost complete opposition to Protestant liberalism, they nonetheless use essentially the same kinds of methods in their study of the Scriptures as do the liberals, and along with these methodologies come their underlying philosophical assumptions. Thus the difference between the &#8220;liberals&#8221; and the &#8220;conservatives&#8221; is not in reality a difference of basic assumptions, but rather a difference in how far they have taken them to their inherent conclusions</p>
<p>If Protestant exegesis were truly &#8220;scientific,&#8221; as it presents itself to be, its results would show consistency. If its methods were merely unbiased &#8220;technologies&#8221; (as many view them) then it would not matter who used them, they would &#8220;work&#8221; the same for everyone. But what do we find when we examine current status of Protestant biblical studies? In the estimation of the &#8220;experts&#8221; themselves, Protestant biblical scholarship is in a crisis.<sup>14</sup> In fact this crisis is perhaps best illustrated by the admission of a recognized Protestant Old Testament scholar, Gerhad Hasel [in his survey of the history and current status of the discipline of Old Testament theology, Old Testament Theology: Issues in the Current Debate], that during the 1970’s five new Old Testament theologies had been produced &#8220;but not one agrees in approach and method with any of the others.&#8221;<sup>15</sup> In fact, it is amazing, considering the self-proclaimed high standard of scholarship in Protestant biblical studies, that you can take your pick of limitless conclusions on almost any issue and find &#8220;good scholarship&#8221; to back it up. In other words, you can just about come to any conclusion that suits you on a particular day or issue, and you can find a Ph.D. who will advocate it. This is certainly not science in the same sense as mathematics or chemistry! What we are dealing with is a field of learning that presents itself as &#8220;objective science,&#8221;</p>
<p>but which in fact is a pseudo-science, concealing a variety of competing philosophical and theological perspectives. It is pseudoscience because until scientists develop instruments capable of examining and understanding God, objective scientific theology or biblical interpretation is an impossibility. This is not to say that there is nothing that is genuinely scholarly or useful within it; but this is to say that, camouflaged with these legitimate aspects of historical and linguistic learning, and hidden by the fog machines and mirrors of pseudo-science, we discover in reality that Protestant methods of biblical interpretation are both the product and the servant of Protestant theological and philosophical assumptions.<sup>16</sup></p>
<p>With subjectivity that surpasses the most speculative Freudian psychoanalysts, Protestant scholars selectively choose the &#8220;facts&#8221; and &#8220;evidence&#8221; that suits their agenda and then proceed, with their conclusions essentially predetermined by their basic assumptions, to apply their methods to the Holy Scriptures. All the while, the Protestant scholars, both &#8220;liberal&#8221; and &#8220;conservative,&#8221; describe themselves as dispassionate &#8220;scientists.&#8221;<sup>17</sup> And since modern universities do not give out Ph.D.’s to those who merely pass on the unadulterated Truth, these scholars seek to out-do each other by coming up with new &#8220;creative&#8221; theories. This is the very essence of heresy: novelty, arrogant personal opinion, and self-deception.</p>
<p><strong><em>The Orthodox approach to truth</em></strong></p>
<p>When, by God’s mercy, I found the Orthodox Faith, I had no desire to give Protestantism and its &#8220;methods&#8221; of Bible study a second look. Unfortunately, I have found that Protestant methods and assumptions have managed to infect even some circles within the Orthodox Church. The reason for this is, as stated above, that the Protestant approach to Scripture has been portrayed as &#8220;science.&#8221; Some in the Orthodox Church feel they do the Church a great favor by introducing this error into our seminaries and parishes. But this is nothing new; this is how heresy has always sought to deceive the faithful. As Saint Irenaeus said, as he began his attack on the heresies current in his day:</p>
<blockquote><p>By means of specious and plausible words, they cunningly allure the simple-minded to inquire into their system; but they nevertheless clumsily destroy them, while they initiate them into their blasphemous opinions….</p>
<p>Error, indeed, is never set forth in its naked deformity, lest, being thus exposed, it should at once be detected. But it is craftily decked out in an attractive dress, so as, by its outward form, to make it appear to the inexperienced (ridiculous as the expression may seem) more true than truth itself.<sup>18</sup></p></blockquote>
<p>Lest any be mistaken or confused, let me be clear: the Orthodox approach to the Scriptures is not based upon &#8220;scientific&#8221; research into the Holy Scriptures. Its claim to understand the Scriptures does not reside in its claiming superior archaeological data, but rather in its unique relationship with the Author of the Scriptures. The Orthodox Church is the body of Christ, the pillar and ground of the Truth, and it is both the means by which God wrote the Scriptures (through its members) and the means by which God has preserved the Scriptures. The Orthodox Church understands the Bible because it is the inheritor of one living tradition that begins with Adam and stretches through time to all its members today. That this is true cannot be &#8220;proven&#8221; in a lab. One must be convinced by the Holy Spirit and experience the life of God in the Church.</p>
<p>The question Protestants will ask at this point is who is to say that the Orthodox Tradition is the correct tradition, or that there even is a correct tradition? First, Protestants need to study the history of the Church. They will find that there is only one Church. This has always been the faith of the Church from its beginning. The Nicene Creed makes this point clearly, &#8220;I believe in… one Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church.&#8221; This statement, which almost every Protestant denomination still claims to accept as true, was never interpreted to refer to some fuzzy, pluralistic invisible &#8220;church&#8221; that cannot agree on anything doctrinally. The councils that canonized the Creed (as well as the Scriptures) also anathematized those who were outside the Church, whether they were heretics, such as the Montanists, or schismatics like the Donatists. They did not say, &#8220;well we can’t agree with the Montanists doctrinally but they are just as much a part of the Church as we are.&#8221; Rather they were excluded from the communion of the Church until they returned to the Church and were received into the Church through Holy Baptism and Chrismation (in the case of heretics) or simply Chrismation (in the case of schismatics) [Second Ecumenical Council, Canon VII]. To even join in prayer with those outside the Church was, and still is, forbidden [Canons of the Holy Apostles, canons XLV, XLVI]. Unlike Protestants, who make heros of those who break away from another group and start their own, in the early Church this was considered among the most damnable sins. As St. Ignatius of Antioch [a disciple of the Apostle John] warned, &#8220;Make no mistake brethren, no one who follows another into a schism will inherit the Kingdom of God, no one who follows heretical doctrines is on the side of the passion&#8221; [to the Philadelphians 5:3].</p>
<p>The very reason there arose a Protestant movement was that they were protesting Papal abuses, but prior to the Roman West breaking away from the Orthodox East these abuses did not exist. Many modern Protestant theologians have recently begun to take a second look at this first millennium of undivided Christendom, and are beginning to discover the great treasure that the West has lost (and not a few are becoming Orthodox as a result).<sup>19</sup></p>
<p>Obviously, one of three statements is true: either (1) there is no correct Tradition and the gates of hell did prevail against the Church, and thus both the Gospels and the Nicene Creed are in error; or (2) the true Faith is to be found in Papism, with its ever-growing and changing dogmas defined by the infallible &#8220;vicar of Christ;&#8221; or (3) the Orthodox Church is the one Church founded by Christ and has faithfully preserved the Apostolic Tradition. So the choice for Protestants is clear: relativism, Romanism, or Orthodoxy.</p>
<p>Most Protestants, because their theological basis of Sola Scriptura could only yield disunity and argument, have long ago given up on the idea of true Christian unity and considered it a ridiculous hypothesis that there might be only one Faith. When faced with such strong affirmations concerning Church unity as those cited above, they often react in horror, charging that such attitudes are contrary to Christian love. Finding themselves without true unity they have striven to create a false unity, by developing the relativistic philosophy of ecumenism, in which the only belief to be condemned is any belief that makes exclusive claims about the Truth. However, this is not the love of the historical Church, but humanistic sentimentality. Love is the essence of the Church. Christ did not come to establish a new school of thought, but rather, He, Himself said that He came to build His Church, against which the gates of hell would not prevail (Matthew 16:17). This new community of the Church created &#8220;an organic unity rather than a mechanical unification of internally divided persons.&#8221;<sup>20</sup> This unity is only possible through the new life brought by the Holy Spirit, and mystically experienced in the life of the Church.</p>
<p>Christian faith joins the faithful with Christ and thus it composes one harmonious body from separate individuals. Christ fashions this body by communicating Himself to each member and by supplying to them the Spirit of Grace in an effectual, tangible manner…. If the bond with the body of the Church becomes severed then the personality which is thereby isolated and enclosed in its own egoism will be deprived of the beneficial and abundant influence of the Holy Spirit which dwells within the Church.<sup>21</sup></p>
<p>The Church is one because it is the body of Christ, and it is an ontological impossibility that it could be divided. The Church is one, even as Christ and the Father are one. Though this concept of unity may seem incredible, it does not seems so to those who have gone beyond the concept and entered into its reality. Though this may be one of those &#8220;hard sayings&#8221; that many cannot accept, it is a reality in the Orthodox Church, though it demands from everyone much self-denial, humility and love.<sup>22</sup></p>
<p>Our faith in the unity of the Church has two aspects, it is both an historic and present unity. That is to say that when the Apostles, for example, departed this life they did not depart from the unity of the Church. They are as much a part of the Church now as when they were present in the flesh. When we celebrate the Eucharist in any local Church, we do not celebrate it alone, but with the entire Church, both on earth and in heaven. The Saints in heaven are even closer to us than those we can see or touch. Thus, in the Orthodox Church we are not only taught by those people in the flesh whom God has appointed to teach us, but by all those teachers of the Church in heaven and on earth. We are just as much under the teaching today of Saint John Chrysostom as we are of our own Bishop. The way this impacts our approach to Scripture is that we do not interpret it privately (II Peter 1:20), but as a Church. This approach to Scripture was given its classic definition by St. Vincent of Lerins:</p>
<p>Here, perhaps, someone may ask: Since the canon of the Scripture is complete and more than sufficient in itself, why is it necessary to add to it the authority of ecclesiastical interpretation? As a matter of fact, [we must answer,] Holy Scripture, because of its depth, is not universally accepted in one and the same sense. The same text is interpreted differently by different people, so that one may almost gain the impression that it can yield as many different meanings as there are men…. Thus it is because of the great many distortions caused by various errors, that it is, indeed, necessary that the trend of the interpretation of the prophetic and apostolic writings be directed in accordance with the rule of the ecclesiastical and Catholic meaning.</p>
<p>In the Catholic Church itself, every care should be taken to hold fast to what has been believed everywhere, always, and by all. This is truly and properly ‘Catholic,’ as indicated by the force and etymology of the name itself, which comprises everything truly universal. This general rule will be truly applied if we follow the principles of universality, antiquity, and consent. We do so in regard to universality if we confess that faith alone to be true which the entire Church confesses all over the world. [We do so] in regard to antiquity if we in no way deviate from those interpretations which our ancestors and fathers have manifestly proclaimed as inviolable. [We do so] in regard to consent if, in this very antiquity, we adopt the definitions and propositions of all, or almost all, of the Bishops.<sup>23</sup></p>
<p>In this approach to Scriptures, it is not the job of the individual to strive for originality, but rather to understand what is already present in the traditions of the Church. We are obliged not to go beyond the boundary set by the Fathers of the Church, but to faithfully pass on the tradition we received. To do this requires a great deal of study and thought, but even more, if we are to truly understand the Scriptures, we must enter deeply into the mystical life of the Church. This is why when St. Augustine expounds on how one should interpret the Scriptures [On Christian Doctrine, Books i-iv], he spends much more time talking about the kind of person the study of the Scripture requires than about the intellectual knowledge he should possess:<sup>24</sup></p>
<ol>
<li> One who loves God with his whole heart, and is empty of pride,</li>
<li> Is motivated to seek the Knowledge of God’s will by faith and reverence, rather than pride or greed,</li>
<li> Has a heart subdued by piety, a purified mind, dead to the world; and who neither fears, nor seeks to please men,</li>
<li> Who seeks nothing but knowledge of and union with Christ,</li>
<li> Who hungers and thirsts after righteousness, And is diligently engaged in works of mercy and love.</li>
</ol>
<p>With such a high standard as this, we should even more humbly lean upon the guidance of holy Fathers who have evidenced these virtues, and not delude ourselves by thinking that we are more capable or clever interpreters of God’s Holy Word than they.</p>
<p>But what of the work that has been done by Protestant Biblical scholars? To the degree that it helps us understand the history behind and meaning of obscurities, to this degree it is in line with the Holy Tradition and can be used.</p>
<p>As Saint Gregory Nazianzen put it when speaking of pagan literature: &#8220;As we have compounded healthful drugs from certain of the reptiles, so from secular literature we have received principles of enquiry and speculation, while we have rejected their idolatry…&#8221;<sup>25</sup> Thus as long as we refrain from worshiping the false gods of Individualism, Modernity, and Academic Vainglory, and as long as we recognize the assumptions at work and use those things that truly shed historical or linguistic light upon the Scriptures, then we will understand the Tradition more perfectly. But to the degree that Protestant scholarship speculates beyond the canonical texts, and projects foreign ideas upon the Scriptures — to the degree that they disagree with the Holy Tradition, the &#8220;always and everywhere&#8221; faith of the Church, they are wrong.</p>
<p>If Protestants should think this arrogant or naive, let them first consider the arrogance and naivete of those scholars who think that they are qualified to override (and more usually, totally ignore) two thousand years of Christian teaching. Does the acquisition of a Ph.D. give one greater insight into the mysteries of God than the total wisdom of millions upon millions of faithful believers and the Fathers and Mothers of the Church who faithfully served God, who endured horrible tortures and martyrdom, mockings, and imprisonments, for the faith? Is Christianity learned in the comfort of one’s study, or as one carries his cross to be killed on it? The arrogance lies in those who, without even taking the time to learn what the Holy Tradition really is, decide that they know better, that only now has someone come along who has rightly understood what the Scriptures really mean.</p>
<h3>Conclusion</h3>
<p>The Holy Scriptures are perhaps the summit of the Holy Tradition of the Church, but the greatness of the heights to which the Scriptures ascend is due to the great mountain upon which it rests. Taken from its context, within the Holy Tradition, the solid rock of Scripture becomes a mere ball of clay, to be molded into whatever shape its handlers wish to mold it. It is no honor to the Scriptures to misuse and twist them, even if this is done in the name of exalting their authority. We must read the Bible; it is God’s Holy Word. But to understand its message let us humbly sit at the feet of the saints who have shown themselves &#8220;doers of the Word and not hearers only&#8221; (James 1:22), and have been proven by their lives worthy interpreters of the Scriptures. Let us go to those who knew the Apostles, such as Saints Ignatius of Antioch and Polycarp, if we have a question about the writings of the Apostles. Let us inquire of the Church, and not fall into self-deluded arrogance.</p>
<h2>Footnotes</h2>
<ol>
<li>George Mastrantonis, trans., Augsburg and Constantinople: the Correspondence between the Tubingen Theologians and Patriarch Jeremiah II of Constantinople on the Augsburg Confession (Brookline, Mass.: Holy Cross Orthodox Press, 1982), 114.</li>
<li> The Illustrated Bible Dictionary, vol. 2 (Wheaton: Tyndale House Publishers, 1980), &#8220;Jannes and Jambres,&#8221; by A. F. Walls, 733 -734.</li>
<li> Indeed this list did not even intend to comprise all the books which the Church has preserved from antiquity and considers part of the larger Tradition. For example, the book of Enoch, though quoted in the canonical books, was not itself included in the canon. I will not pretend to know why this is so, but for whatever reasons the Church has chosen to preserve this book, and yet has not appointed it to be read in Church or to be set along side the canonical books.</li>
<li> For example, there is no place where the question of the inerrancy of the Scriptures is dealt with in detail, precisely because this was not an issue of dispute. In our present day, with the rise of religious skepticism, this is very much an issue, and if the epistles were being written today, this would certainly be dealt with at some point. It would thus be foolish to conclude that since this issue is not dealt with specifically, that the early Christians did not think it was important or did not believe in it.</li>
<li> Alexander Schmemann, Introduction to Liturgical Theology (Crestwood NY: St Vladimir’s Seminary Press, 1986), 51 ff.</li>
<li> And in fact, this is what Protestant scholarship has done. Though Protestantism was founded on its claim of believing the Bible to be the only authority for faith and practice, modern Protestant scholarship is now dominated by modernists who no longer believe in the inspiration or inerrancy of the Scriptures. They now stand above the Bible and only choose to use those parts that suit them and discard the rest as &#8220;primitive mythology and legend.&#8221; The only authority left for such as these is themselves.</li>
<li> The Waldensians were a sect that was founded in the 12th century founded by Peter Waldo which in some ways anticipated the Protestant Reformation. Due to persecution by the Roman Catholic Church this sect survived primarily in the mountainous regions of northwestern Italy. With the advent of the Protestant Reformation, the Waldensians came under the influence of the Reformed movement and essentially joined forces with it. Many early Protestant historians claimed that the Waldensians represented a remnant of &#8220;true&#8221; Christians that had existed prior to Constantine. Though today no credible historian would make such an unsubstantiated claim, many fundamentalists and cults like the Jehovah’s Witnesses continue to claim descent from the early church through the Waldensians — despite the fact that the Waldensians still exist to this day, and they certainly do not claim the Jehovah’s Witnesses.</li>
<li> Mastrantonis, 115.</li>
<li> Ibid., 198.</li>
<li> Ibid., 115.</li>
<li> The term ‘positivism’ comes from the French word positif, which means ‘sure,’ or ‘certain.’ This term was first used by Auguste Comte. Positivistic systems are built upon the assumption that some fact or institution is the ultimate basis of knowledge — in Comte’s philosophy, experience or sense-perception constituted that basis and thus he was the forerunner of modern Empiricism [See Encyclopaedia of Religion and Ethics, 1914 ed., s.v. "Positivism," by S.H. Swinny; and Wolfhart Pannenburg, Theology and Philosophy of Science, trans. Francis McDonagh (Philadelphia: Westminster Press, 1976), p. 29].</li>
<li> For example, one method for determining the reality of past events, among empirically minded scholars, is the principle of analogy. Since knowledge is based on experience, then the way one understands what is unfamiliar is by relating it to something that is familiar. Under the guise of historical analysis they judge the probability of a supposed past event (e.g. the resurrection of Jesus) based upon what we know to take place in our experience. And since these historians have never observed anything which they would consider supernatural they determine that when the Bible speaks of a miraculous event in history that it merely is recounting a myth or a legend. But since to the Empiricist, a ‘miracle’ entails a violation of a natural law, then there can be no miracles (by definition) because natural laws are determined by our observation of what we experience, so were such an Empiricist to be confronted with a modern analogy of a miracle it would no longer be considered a miracle because it would no longer constitute a violation of natural law. Thus empiricists do not produce results that falsify transcendent reality, or miracles; rather their presuppositions, from the very outset, deny the possibility of such things. [see G. E. Michalson, Jr., "Pannenburg on the Resurrection and Historical Method," Scottish Journal of Theology 33 (April 1980): 345-359.]</li>
<li> Rev. Robert T. Osborn, &#8220;Faith as Personal Knowledge,&#8221; Scottish Journal of Theology 28 (February 1975): 101-126.</li>
<li> Gerhard Hasel, Old Testament Theology: Basic Issues in the Current Debate (Grand Rapids: Eerdman’s Publishing Company, 1982), p. 9.</li>
<li> Ibid., p. 7.</li>
<li> I have discussed Liberal Protestantism only to demonstrate the fallacies of &#8220;Historical&#8221; exegesis. An Orthodox Christian is much more likely to be confronted by a conservative Fundamentalist or a Charismatic, simply because they take their faith seriously enough to seek to convert others to it. Liberal Protestant denominations have their hands full trying to keep their own parishioners, and are not noted for their evangelistic zeal.</li>
<li> For a more in-depth critique of the excesses of the Historical-Critical Method, see Thomas Oden, Agenda for Theology: After Modernity What? (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1990) pp 103-147.</li>
<li> A Cleveland Coxe, trans., Ante-Nicene Fathers, vol. i, The Apostolic Fathers with Justin Martyr and Irenaeus (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans Publishing Company, 1989), p 315.</li>
<li> In fact a recent three volume systematic theology, by Thomas Oden, is based on the premise that the &#8220;ecumenical consensus&#8221; of the first millennium should be normative for theology [see, The Living God: Systematic Theology Volume One, (New York: Harper &amp; Row, 1987), pp ix — xiv.]. If only Oden takes his own methodology all the way, he too will become Orthodox.</li>
<li> The Holy New Martyr Archbishop Ilarion (Troitsky), Christianity or the Church?, (Jordanville: Holy Trinity Monastery, 1985), p. 11.</li>
<li> Ibid., p. 16.</li>
<li> Ibid., p. 40.</li>
<li> St. Vincent of Lerins, trans. Rudolph Morris, The Fathers of the Church vol.7, (Washington D.C.: Catholic University of America Press, 1949), pp. 269-271.</li>
<li> St. Augustine, &#8220;On Christian Doctrine,&#8221; A Selected Library of the Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers. series 1, vol. ii, eds. Henry Wace and Philip Schaff, (New York: Christian, 1887-1900), pp. 534-537.</li>
<li> St. Gregory Nazianzen, &#8220;Oration 43, Panegyric on Saint Basil,&#8221; A Selected Library of the Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers of the Christian Church, series 2, vol. vii, eds. Henry Wace and Philip Schaff (New York: Christian, 18871900), p. 398f.</li>
</ol>
<p><em><a href="http://fatherjohn.blogspot.com/">Father John Whiteford</a> is rector of <a href="http://www.saintjonah.org/">Saint Jonah of Manchuria Orthodox Church</a> in Spring, Texas.</em></p>
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		<title>The River of Fire</title>
		<link>http://silouanthompson.net/2008/06/river-of-fire-kalomiros/</link>
		<comments>http://silouanthompson.net/2008/06/river-of-fire-kalomiros/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 11 Jun 2008 22:53:04 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Silouan</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Journal]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Protestantism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[salvation]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[worldview]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://silouanthompson.net/?p=707</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The devil managed to make men believe that God does not really love us, that He really only loves Himself, and that He accepts us only if we behave as He wants us to behave; that He hates us if we do not behave as He ordered us to behave, and is offended by our insubordination to such a degree that we must pay for it by eternal tortures, created by Him for that purpose. Who can love a torturer? Even those who try hard to save themselves from the wrath of God cannot really love Him. They love only themselves, trying to escape God's vengeance and to achieve eternal bliss by managing to please this fearsome and extremely dangerous Creator.]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div style="margin: 20px 0px 5px 20px; float: right; width: 175px;">© 1980 <a href="http://www.stnectariospress.com" target="_blank">St. Nectarios Press</a>,<br />
Seattle, WA<br />
Used by permission</div>
<p><em>By Dr. Alexander Kalomiros<br />
</em></p>
<p><strong><em>A reply to the questions: Is God really good? Did God create hell?</em></strong></p>
<p>In the Name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit.</p>
<p>There is no doubt that we are living in the age of apostasy predicted for the last days. In practice, most people are atheists, although many of them theoretically still believe. Indifference and the spirit of this world prevail everywhere.</p>
<p>What is the reason for this state?</p>
<p>The reason is the cooling of love. Love for God no more burns in human hearts, and in consequence, love between us is dead, too.</p>
<p>What is the cause of this waning of men&#8217;s love for God? The answer, certainly, is sin. Sin is the dark cloud which does not permit God&#8217;s light to reach our eyes.</p>
<p>But sin always did exist. So how did we arrive at the point of not simply ignoring God, but of actually hating Him? Man&#8217;s attitude toward God today is not really ignorance, or really indifference. If you examine men carefully you will notice that their ignorance or indifference is tainted by a deep hate. But nobody hates anything that does not exist.</p>
<p>I have the suspicion that men today believe in God more than at any other time in human history. Men know the gospel, the teaching of the Church, and God&#8217;s creation better than at any other time. They have a profound consciousness of His existence. Their atheism is not a real disbelief. It is rather an aversion toward somebody we know very well but whom we hate with all our heart, exactly as the demons do.</p>
<p>We hate God, that is why we ignore Him, overlooking Him as if we did not see Him, and pretending to be atheists. In reality we consider Him our enemy par excellence. Our negation is our vengeance, our atheism is our revenge.</p>
<p>But why do men hate God? They hate Him not only because their deeds are dark while God is light, but also because they consider Him as a menace, as an imminent and eternal danger, as an adversary in court, as an opponent at law, as a public prosecutor and an eternal persecutor. To them, God is no more the almighty physician who came to save them from illness and death, but rather a cruel judge and a vengeful inquisitor.</p>
<p>You see, the devil managed to make men believe that God does not really love us, that He really only loves Himself, and that He accepts us only if we behave as He wants us to behave; that He hates us if we do not behave as He ordered us to behave, and is offended by our insubordination to such a degree that we must pay for it by eternal tortures, created by Him for that purpose.</p>
<p>Who can love a torturer? Even those who try hard to save themselves from the wrath of God cannot really love Him. They love only themselves, trying to escape God&#8217;s vengeance and to achieve eternal bliss by managing to please this fearsome and extremely dangerous Creator.</p>
<p>Do you perceive the devil&#8217;s slander of our all-loving, all-kind, and absolutely good God? That is why in Greek the devil was given the name of <em>diabolos,</em> &#8220;the slanderer.&#8221;</p>
<p align="center"><strong>II</strong></p>
<p>But what was the instrument of the devil&#8217;s slandering of God? What means did he use in order to convince humanity, in order to pervert human thought?</p>
<p>He used &#8220;theology.&#8221; He first introduced a slight alteration in theology which, once it was accepted, he managed to increase more and more to the degree that Christianity became completely unrecognizable. This is what we call &#8220;Western theology.&#8221;</p>
<p>Did you ever try to pinpoint what is the principal characteristic of Western theology? Well, its principal characteristic is that it considers God as the real cause of all evil.</p>
<p>What is evil? Is it not the estrangement from God Who is Life?1 Is it not death? What does Western theology teach about death? All Roman Catholics and most Protestants consider death as a punishment from God. God considered all men guilty of Adam&#8217;s sin and punished them by death, that is by cutting them away from Himself; depriving them of His live-giving energy, and so killing them spiritually at first and later bodily, by some sort of spiritual starvation. Augustine interprets the passage in Genesis &#8220;If you eat of the fruit of this tree, you will die the death&#8221; as &#8220;If you eat of the fruit of this tree, I will kill you.&#8221;</p>
<p>Some Protestants consider death not as a punishment but as something natural. But is not God the creator of all natural things? So in both cases, God – for them – is the real cause of death.</p>
<p>And this is true not only for the death of the body. It is equally true for the death of the soul. Do not Western theologians consider hell, the eternal spiritual death of man, as a punishment from God? And do they not consider the devil as a minister of God for the eternal punishment of men in hell?</p>
<p>The &#8220;God&#8221; of the West is an offended and angry God, full of wrath for the disobedience of men, who desires in His destructive passion to torment all humanity unto eternity for their sins, unless He receives an infinite satisfaction for His offended pride.</p>
<p>What is the Western dogma of salvation? Did not God kill God in order to satisfy His pride, which the Westerners euphemistically call justice? And is it not by this infinite satisfaction that He deigns to accept the salvation of some of us?</p>
<p>What is salvation for Western theology? Is it not salvation from the wrath of God?2</p>
<p>Do you see, then, that Western theology teaches that our real danger and our real enemy is our Creator and God? Salvation, for Westerners, is to be saved from the hands of God!</p>
<p>How can one love such a God? How can we have faith in someone we detest? Faith in its deeper essence is a product of love, therefore, it would be our desire that one who threatens us not even exist, especially when this threat is eternal.</p>
<p>Even if there exists a means of escaping the eternal wrath of this omnipotent but wicked Being (the death of His Son in our stead), it would be much better if this Being did not exist. This was the most logical conclusion of the mind and of the heart of the Western peoples, because even eternal Paradise would be abhorrent with such a cruel God. Thus was atheism born, and this is why the West was its birthplace. Atheism was unknown in Eastern Christianity until Western theology was introduced there, too. Atheism is the consequence of Western theology.3 Atheism is the denial, the negation of an evil God. Men became atheists in order to be saved from God, hiding their head and closing their eyes like an ostrich. Atheism, my brothers, is the negation of the Roman Catholic and Protestant God. Atheism is not our real enemy. The real enemy is that falsified and distorted &#8220;Christianity.&#8221;</p>
<p align="center"><strong>III</strong></p>
<p>Westerners speak frequently of the &#8220;Good God&#8221; (e.g. in France &#8216;<em>le bon dieu</em>&#8216; is almost always used when speaking of God). Western Europe and America, however, were never convinced that such a Good God existed. On the contrary, they were calling God good in the way Greeks called the curse and malediction of smallpox, <em>eulogia</em> that is, a blessing, a benediction, in order to exorcise it and charm it away. For the same reason, the Black Sea was called <em>Euxeinos Pontos</em> –  the hospitable sea  –  although it was, in fact, a dreadful and treacherous sea. Deep inside the Western soul, God was felt to be the wicked Judge, Who never forgot even the smallest offense done to Him in our transgressions of His laws.</p>
<p>This juridical conception of God, this completely distorted interpretation of God&#8217;s justice, was nothing else than the projection of human passions on theology. It was a return to the pagan process of humanizing God and deifying man. Men are vexed and angered when not taken seriously and consider it a humiliation which only vengeance can remove, whether it is by crime or by duel. This was the worldly, passionate conception of justice prevailing in the minds of a so-called &#8220;Christian&#8221; society.</p>
<p>Western Christians thought about God&#8217;s justice in the same way also; God, the infinite Being, was infinitely insulted by Adam&#8217;s disobedience. He decided that the guilt of Adam&#8217;s disobedience descended equally to all His children, and that all were to be sentenced to death for Adam&#8217;s sin, which they did not commit. God&#8217;s justice for Westerners operated like a vendetta. Not only the man who insulted you, but also all his family must die. And what was tragic for men, to the point of hopelessness, was that no man, nor even all humanity, could appease God&#8217;s insulted dignity, even if all men in history were to be sacrificed. God&#8217;s dignity could be saved only if He could punish someone of the same dignity as He. So in order to save both God&#8217;s dignity and mankind, there was no other solution than the incarnation of His Son, so that a man of godly dignity could be sacrificed to save God&#8217;s honor.</p>
<p align="center"><strong>IV</strong></p>
<p>This paganistic conception of God&#8217;s justice which demands infinite sacrifices in order to be appeased clearly makes God our real enemy and the cause of all our misfortunes. Moreover, it is a justice which is not at all just since it punishes and demands satisfaction from persons which were not at all responsible for the sin of their forefathers.4 In other words, what Westerners call justice ought rather to be called resentment and vengeance of the worst kind. Even Christ&#8217;s love and sacrifice loses its significance and logic in this schizoid notion of a God who kills God in order to satisfy the so-called justice of God.</p>
<p>Does this conception of justice have anything to do with the justice that God revealed to us? Does the phrase &#8220;justice of God&#8221; have this meaning in the Old and New Testaments?</p>
<p>Perhaps the beginning of the mistaken interpretation of the word justice in the Holy Scriptures was its translation by the Greek word dikaiosyne. Not that it is a mistaken translation, but because this word, being a word of the pagan, humanistic, Greek civilization, was charged with human notions which could easily lead to misunderstandings.</p>
<p>First of all, the word dikaiosyne brings to mind an equal distribution. This is why it is represented by a balance. The good are rewarded and the bad are punished by human society in a fair way. This is human justice, the one which takes place in court.</p>
<p>Is this the meaning of God&#8217;s justice, however?</p>
<p>The word dikaiosyne, &#8220;justice,&#8221; is a translation of the Hebraic word tsedakav. This word means &#8220;the divine energy which accomplishes man&#8217;s salvation.&#8221; It is parallel and almost synonymous to the other Hebraic word, hese&#8217;d which means &#8220;mercy,&#8221; &#8220;compassion,&#8221; &#8220;love,&#8221; and to the word, eméth which means &#8220;fidelity,&#8221; &#8220;truth.&#8221; This, as you see, gives a completely other dimension to what we usually conceive as justice.5 This is how the Church understood God&#8217;s justice. This is what the Fathers of the Church taught of it. &#8220;How can you call God just,&#8221; writes Saint Isaac the Syrian, &#8220;when you read the passage on the wage given to the workers? &#8216;Friend, I do thee no wrong; I will give unto this last even as unto thee who worked for me from the first hour. Is thine eye evil, because I am good?&#8217;&#8221; &#8220;How can a man call God just,&#8221; continues Saint Isaac, &#8220;when he comes across the passage on the prodigal son, who wasted his wealth in riotous living, and yet only for the contrition which he showed, the father ran and fell upon his neck, and gave him authority over all his wealth? None other but His very Son said these things concerning Him lest we doubt it, and thus He bare witness concerning Him. Where, then, is God&#8217;s justice, for whilst we were sinners, Christ died for us!&#8221;6</p>
<p>So we see that God is not just, with the human meaning of this word, but we see that His justice means His goodness and love, which are given in an unjust manner, that is, God always gives without taking anything in return, and He gives to persons like us who are not worthy of receiving. That is why Saint Isaac teaches us &#8220;Do not call God just, for His justice is not manifest in the things concerning you. And if David calls Him just and upright, His Son revealed to us that He is good and kind. &#8216;He is good,&#8217; He says, &#8216;to the evil and impious.&#8217;&#8221;7</p>
<p>God is good, loving, and kind toward those who disregard, disobey, and ignore Him.8 He never returns evil for evil, He never takes vengeance.9 His punishments are loving means of correction, as long as anything can be corrected and healed in this life.l0 They never extend to eternity. He created everything good..ll The wild beasts recognize as their master the Christian who through humility has gained the likeness of God. They draw near to him, not with fear, but with joy, in grateful and loving submission; they wag their heads and lick his hands and serve him with gratitude. The irrational beasts know that their Master and God is not evil and wicked and vengeful, but rather full of love. (See also St. Isaac of Syria, Ozomena Asketika [Athens, 1871], pp. 95-96.) He protected and saved us when we fell. The eternally evil has nothing to do with God. It comes rather from the will of His free, logical creatures, and this will He respects.l2</p>
<p>Death was not inflicted upon us by God.l3 We fell into it by our revolt. God is Life and Life is God. We revolted against God, we closed our gates to His life-giving grace.l4 &#8220;For as much as he departed from life,&#8221; wrote Saint Basil, &#8220;by so much did he draw nearer to death. For God is Life, deprivation of life is death.&#8221;15 &#8220;God did not create death,&#8221; continues Saint Basil, &#8220;but we brought it upon ourselves.&#8221; &#8220;Not at all, however, did He hinder the dissolution… so that He would not make the infirmity immortal in us.&#8221;l6 As Saint Irenaeus puts it: &#8220;Separation from God is death, separation from light is darkness… and it is not the light which brings upon them the punishment of blindness.&#8221;l7</p>
<p>&#8220;Death,&#8221; says Saint Maximus the Confessor, &#8220;is principally the separation from God, from which followed necessarily the death of the body. Life is principally He who said, &#8216;I am the Life.&#8217;&#8221;18</p>
<p>And why did death come upon the whole of humanity? Why did those who did not sin with Adam die as did Adam? Here is the reply of Saint Anastasius the Sinaite: &#8220;We became the inheritors of the curse in Adam. We were not punished as if we had disobeyed that divine commandment along with Adam; but because Adam became mortal, he transmitted sin to his posterity. We became mortal since we were born from a mortal.&#8221;l9</p>
<p>And Saint Gregory Palamas makes this point: &#8220;[God] did not say to Adam: return to whence thou wast taken; but He said to him: Earth thou art and unto the earth thou shalt return…. He did not say: &#8216;in whatsoever day ye shall eat of it, die!&#8217; but, &#8216;in whatsoever day ye shall eat of it, ye shall surely die.&#8217; Nor did He afterwards say: &#8216;return now unto the earth,&#8217; but He said, &#8216;thou shalt return,&#8217; in this manner forewarning, justly permitting and not obstructing what shall come to pass.&#8221;20 We see that death did not come at the behest of God but as a consequence of Adam&#8217;s severing his relations with the source of Life, by his disobedience; and God in His kindness did only warn him of it.</p>
<p>&#8220;The tree of knowledge itself,&#8221; says Theophilus of Antioch, &#8220;was good, and its fruit was good. For it was not the tree, as some think, that had death in it, but the disobedience which had death in it; for there was nothing else in the fruit but knowledge alone, and knowledge is good when one uses it properly.&#8221;2l The Fathers teach us that the prohibition to taste the tree of knowledge was not absolute but temporary. Adam was a spiritual infant. Not all foods are good for infants. Some foods may even kill them although adults would find them wholesome. The tree of knowledge was planted by God for man. It was good and and nourishing. But it was solid food, while Adam was able to digest only milk.</p>
<p align="center"><strong>V</strong></p>
<p>So in the language of the Holy Scriptures, &#8220;just&#8221; means good and loving. We speak of the just men of the Old Testament. That does not mean that they were good judges but that they were kind and God-loving people. When we say that God is just, we do not mean that He is a good judge Who knows how to punish men equitably according to the gravity of their crimes, but on the contrary, we mean that He is kind and loving, forgiving all transgressions and disobediences, and that He wants to save us by all means, and never requites evil for evil.22 In the first volume of the Philokalia there is a magnificent text of Saint Anthony which I must read to you here:</p>
<p>God is good, dispassionate, and immutable. Now someone who thinks it reasonable and true to affirm that God does not change, may well ask how, in that case, it is possible to speak of God as rejoicing over those who are good and showing mercy to those who honor Him, and as turning away from the wicked and being angry with sinners. To this it must be answered that God neither rejoices nor grows angry, for to rejoice and to be offended are passions; nor is He won over by the gifts of those who honor Him, for that would mean He is swayed by pleasure. It is not right that the Divinity feel pleasure or displeasure from human conditions.</p>
<p>He is good, and He only bestows blessings and never does harm, remaining always the same. We men, on the other hand, if we remain good through resembling God, are united to Him, but if we become evil through not resembling God, we are separated from Him. By living in holiness we cleave to God; but by becoming wicked we make Him our enemy. It is not that He grows angry with us in an arbitrary way, but it is our own sins that prevent God from shining within us and expose us to demons who torture us. And if through prayer and acts of compassion we gain release from our sins, this does not mean that we have won God over and made Him to change, but that through our actions and our turning to the Divinity, we have cured our wickedness and so once more have enjoyment of God&#8217;s goodness. Thus to say that God turns away from the wicked is like saying that the sun hides itself from the blind.23 [Chap. 150]</p>
<p align="center"><strong>VI</strong></p>
<p>You see now, I hope, how God was slandered by Western theology. Augustine, Anselm, Thomas Aquinas and all their pupils contributed to this &#8220;theological&#8221; calumny. And they are the foundations of Western theology, whether Papist or Protestant. Certainly these theologians do not say expressly and clearly that God is a wicked and passionate being. They rather consider God as being chained by a superior force, by a gloomy and implacable Necessity like the one which governed the pagan gods. This Necessity obliges Him to return evil for evil and does not permit Him to pardon and to forget the evil done against His will, unless an infinite satisfaction is offered to Him.</p>
<p>We open here the great question of pagan, Greek influence on Christianity.</p>
<p>The pagan mentality was in the foundation of all heresies. It was very strong in the East, because the East was the crossroad of all philosophical and religious currents. But as we read in the New Testament, &#8220;where sin abounded, grace did much more abound.&#8221; So when heresies flourished, Orthodoxy flourished also, and although it was persecuted by the mighty of this world, it always survived victorious. In the West, on the contrary, the pagan Greek mentality entered in unobtrusively, without taking the aspect of heresy. It entered in through the multitude of Latin texts dictated by Augustine, Bishop of Hippo. Saint John Cassian who was living then in the West understood the poison that was in Augustine&#8217;s teachings, and fought against it. But the fact that Augustine&#8217;s books were written in Latin and the fact that they were extremely lengthy did not permit their study by the other Fathers of the Church, and so they were never condemned as Origen&#8217;s works were condemned in the East. This fact permitted them to exercise a strong influence later in Western thought and theology. In the West, little by little knowledge of the Greek language vanished, and Augustine&#8217;s texts were the only books available dating from ancient times in a language understood there. So the West received as Christian a teaching which was in many of its aspects pagan. Caesaro-papist developments in Rome did not permit any healthy reaction to this state of affairs, and so the West was drowned in the humanistic, pagan thought which prevails to this day.24</p>
<p>So we have the East on the one side which, speaking and writing Greek, remained essentially the New Israel with Israelitic thought and sacred tradition, and the West on the other side which having forgotten the Greek language and having been cut off from the Eastern state, inherited pagan Greek thought and its mentality, and formed with it an adulterated Christian teaching.</p>
<p>In reality, the opposition between Orthodoxy and Western Christianity is nothing else but the perpetuation of the opposition between Israel and Hellas.</p>
<p>We must never forget that the Fathers of the Church considered themselves to be the true spiritual children of Abraham, that the Church considered itself to be the New Israel, and that the Orthodox peoples, whether Greek, Russian, Bulgarian, Serbian, Romanian, etc., were conscious of being like Nathaniel, true Israelites, the People of God. And while this was the real consciousness of Eastern Christianity, the West became more and more a child of pagan, humanistic Greece and Rome.</p>
<p align="center"><strong>VII</strong></p>
<p>What were the principal characteristics of this difference of thought between Israel and paganism? I call your attention to this very important matter. Israel believes in God. Paganism believes in creation. That is to say, in paganism creation is deified. For the pagans, God and creation are one and the same thing. God is impersonal, personified in a multitude of gods.</p>
<p>Israel (and when we speak of Israel we mean the true Israel, the spiritual sons of Abraham, those who have the faith given by God to His chosen people, not those who have abandoned this faith. The real sons of Abraham are the Church of Christ, and not those carnal descendants, the Jewish race), Israel knows that God and creation are two radically different kinds of existence. God is self-existent, personal, eternal, immortal, Life and the Source of life, Existence and the Source of existence; God is the only real Existence: O Wn the Existing, the <span style="text-decoration: underline;">Only</span> Existing; this is the meaning of the article &#8220;&#8216;O&#8221;.25</p>
<p>Creation, on the contrary, has no self-existence. It is totally dependent on the will of God. It exists only so long as God wants it to exist. It is not eternal. It had no existence. It was null, it was completely nothing. It was created out of nothingness.26 By itself it has no force of existence; it is kept in existence by God&#8217;s Energy. If this loving Energy of God ever stops, creation and all created beings, intellectual or non-intellectual, rational or irrational will vanish into non-existence. We know that God&#8217;s love for His creation is eternal. We know from Him that He will never let us fall into non-existence, from which He brought us into being. This is our hope and God is true in His promises. We, created beings, angels, and men, will live in eternity, not because we have in us the power of eternity, but because this is the will of God Who loves us. By ourselves we are nothing. We have not the least energy of life and of existence in our nature; that which we have comes entirely from God; nothing is ours. We are dirt of the earth, and when we forgot it, God in His mercy permitted that we return to what we are, in order that we remain humble and have exact knowledge of our nothingness.27 &#8220;God,&#8221; says Saint John Damascene elsewhere, &#8220;can do all that He wills, even though He does not will all things that He can do – for He can destroy creation, but He does not will to do so.&#8221; (Ibid. 1, 14)28</p>
<p>In the Great Euchologion, a fundamental liturgical book of the Church, we read:</p>
<p style="margin-bottom: 0cm">&#8220;O God, the great and most high, Thou Who alone hast immortality&#8221;</p>
<p><em>[7th prayer of Vespers, p. 15]</em></p>
<table border="0">
<col width="1"></col>
</table>
<p style="margin-bottom: 0cm">&#8220;Thou Who alone art life-giving by nature… O only immortal&#8221;</p>
<p><em>[Ode 5, Funeral Canon for Laymen, p. 410]</em></p>
<p style="margin-bottom: 0cm">&#8220;Thou art the only immortal&#8221;</p>
<p><em>[P. 410]</em></p>
<p>&#8220;The only One Who is immortal because of His godly nature&#8221;</p>
<p><em>[Ode 1, Funeral Canon for Laymen, p. 471]</em></p>
<p>This is the faith of Israel.</p>
<p>What is the teaching of paganism? Paganism is the consequence of the loss of contact with God. The multitude of the sins of humanity made men incapable of receiving the divine light and of having any union with the Living God. The consequence was to consider as something divine the creation which they saw before them every day.</p>
<p>Paganism considers creation as being something self-existent and immortal, something that always existed and will always exist. In paganism the gods are part of creation. They did not create it from nothingness, they only formed the existing matter. Matter can take different forms. Forms come into existence and vanish, but matter itself is eternal. Angels, demons, and the souls of men are the real gods. Eternal by their nature, as is matter itself, they are, however, higher than matter. They might take different material forms in a sequence of material existences but they remain essentially spiritual.</p>
<p>So in paganism we see two fundamental characteristics: (l) An attributing of the characteristics of godhood to the whole of creation, that is eternity, immortality, self-existence. (2) A distinction between the spiritual and the material and an antagonism between the two as between something higher and something lower.</p>
<p>Paganism and humanism are one and the same thing. In paganism, man is god because he is eternal by nature. This is why paganism is always haughty. It is narcissism. It is self adoration. In Greece, the gods had human characteristics. Greek religion was the pagan adoration of man. The soul of man was considered his real being, and was immortal by nature .</p>
<p>So we see that in paganism the devil succeeded in creating a universal belief that men were gods and so did not need God. This is why pride was so high in Greece and why humility was inconceivable. In his work The Nichomachean Ethics, Aristotle writes the following words: &#8220;Not to resent offenses is the mark of a base and slavish man.&#8221; The man who is convinced by the devil to believe in the error that his soul is eternal by nature, can never be humble and can never really believe in God, because he does not need God, being God himself, as his error makes him believe.</p>
<p>This is why, from the very first, the Fathers of the Church, understanding the danger of this stupid error, warned the Christians of the fact that, as Saint Irenaeus puts it &#8220;The teaching that the human soul is naturally immortal is from the devil&#8221; (Proof of the Apostolic Preaching, 111, 20. 1). We find the same warning in Saint Justin (Dialogue with Trypho 6. 1-2), in Theophilus of Antioch (To Autolycus 2. 97), in Tatian (To the Greeks 13), etc.</p>
<p>Saint Justin explains the fundamental atheism which exists in the belief of the natural eternity and immortality of the human soul. He writes: &#8220;There are some others who, having supposed that the soul is immortal and immaterial, believe though they have committed evil they will not suffer punishment (for that which is immaterial is also insensible), and that the soul, in consequence of its immorality needs nothing from God&#8221; (Dialogue with Trypho 1).</p>
<p>Paganism is ignorance of the true God, an erroneous belief that His creation is divine, really a god. This god, however, who is Nature, is impersonal, a blind force, above all personal gods, and is called Necessity (Ananke). In reality, this Necessity is the projection of human reason, as a mathematical necessity governing the world. It is a projection of rationalism upon nature. This rationalistic Necessity is the true, supreme blind god of the pagans. The pagan gods are parts of the world, and they are immortal because of the immortality of nature which is their essence. In this pagan mentality, man is also god like the others, because for the pagans the real man is only his soul,29 and they believe that man&#8217;s soul is immortal in itself, since it is part of the essence of the universe, which is considered immortal in itself and self-existent. So man also is god and a measure of all things.</p>
<p>But the gods are not free. They are governed by Necessity which is impersonal.</p>
<p align="center"><strong>VIII</strong></p>
<p>It is this pagan way of thought that was mixed with the Christian teaching by the various heresies. This is what happened in the West, too. They began to distinguish not between God and His creation, but between spirit and matter.30 They began to think of the soul of man as of something eternal in itself, and began to consider the condition of man after death not as asleep in the hands of God, but as the real life of man,3l to which the resurrection of the dead had nothing to add and even the need of the resurrection was doubtful. The feast of the Resurrection of our Lord, which is the culmination of all feasts in Orthodoxy, began to fall into second place, because its need was as incomprehensible to the Western Christians as it was to the Athenians who heard the sermon of the Apostle Paul.</p>
<p>But what is more important for our subject, they began to feel that God was subject to Necessity, to this rationalistic Necessity which was nothing else but human logic. They declared Him incapable of coming into contact with inferior beings like men, because their rationalistic, philosophical conceptions did not permit it, and it was this belief which was the foundation of the hesychast disputes; it had already begun with Augustine who taught that it was not God Who spoke to Moses but an angel instead.</p>
<p>It is in this context of Necessity, which even gods obey, that we must understand the Western juridical conception of God&#8217;s justice. It was necessary for God to punish man&#8217;s disobedience. It was impossible for Him to pardon; a superior Necessity demanded vengeance. Even if God was in reality good and loving, He was not able to act lovingly. He was obliged to act contrary to His love; the only thing He could do, in order to save humanity, was to punish His Son in the place of men, and by this means was Necessity satisfied.</p>
<p align="center"><strong>IX</strong></p>
<p>This is the triumph of Hellenistic thought in Christianity. As a Hellenist, Origen had arrived at the same conclusions. God was a judge by necessity. He was obliged to punish, to avenge, to send people to hell. Hell was God&#8217;s creation. It was a punishment demanded by justice. This demand of justice was a necessity. God was obliged to submit to it. He was not permitted to forgive. There was a superior force, a Necessity which did not permit Him to love unconditionally.</p>
<p>However, Origen was also a Christian and he knew that God was full of love. How is it possible to acknowledge a loving God Who keeps people in torment eternally? If God is the cause of hell, by necessity then there must be an end to it, otherwise we cannot concede that God is good and loving. This juridical conception of God as an instrument of a superior, impersonal force or deity named Necessity, leads logically to apokatastasis, &#8220;the restoration of all things and the destruction of hell,&#8221; otherwise we must admit that God is cruel.</p>
<p>The pagan Greek mentality could not comprehend that the cause of hell was not God but His logical creatures. If God was not really free, since He was governed by Necessity, how could His creatures be free? God could not give something which He did not possess Himself. Moreover, the pagan Greek mentality could not conceive of disinterested love. Freedom, however, is the highest gift that God could give to a creature, because freedom makes the logical creatures like God. This was an inconceivable gift for pagan Greeks. They could not imagine a creature which could say &#8220;no&#8221; to an almighty God. If God was almighty, creatures could not say &#8220;no&#8221; to Him. So if God gave men His grace, men could not reject it. Otherwise God would not be almighty. If we admit that God is almighty, then His grace must be irresistible. Men cannot escape from it. That means that those men who are deprived of God&#8217;s grace are deprived because God did not give His grace to them. So the loss of God&#8217;s grace, which is eternal, spiritual death, in other words, hell, is in reality an act totally dependent on God. It is God Who is punishing these people by depriving them of His grace, by not permitting it to shine upon them. So God is the cause of the eternal spiritual death of those who are damned. Damnation is an act of God, an act of God&#8217;s justice, an act of necessity or cruelty. As a result, Origen thought that if we are to remain Christians, if we are to continue to believe that God is really good, we must believe that hell is not eternal, but will have an end, in spite of all that is written in the Holy Scripture and of what the Church believes. This is the fatal, perfectly logical conclusion. If God is the cause of hell, hell must have an end, or else God is an evil God.</p>
<p>Origen, and all rationalists who are like him, was not able to understand that the acceptance or the rejection of God&#8217;s grace depends entirely on the rational creatures; that God, like the sun, never stops shining on good or wicked alike; that rational creatures are, however, entirely free to accept or reject this grace and love; and that God in His genuine love does not force His creatures to accept Him, but respects absolutely their free decision.32 He does not withdraw His grace and love, but the attitude of the logical creatures toward this unceasing grace and love is the difference between paradise and hell. Those who love God are happy with Him, those who hate Him are extremely miserable by being obliged to live in His presence, and there is no place where one can escape the loving omnipresence of God.</p>
<p>Paradise or hell depends on how we will accept God&#8217;s love. Will we return love for love. or will we respond to His love with hate? This is the critical difference. And this difference depends entirely on us, on our freedom, on our innermost free choice, on a perfectly free attitude which is not influenced by external conditions or internal factors of our material and psychological nature, because it is not an external act but an interior attitude coming from the bottom of our heart, conditioning not our sins, but the way we think about our sins, as it is clearly seen in the case of the publican and the Pharisee and in the case of the two robbers crucified with Christ. This freedom, this choice, this inner attitude toward our Creator is the innermost core of our eternal personality, it is the most profound of our characteristics, it is what makes us that which we are, it is our eternal face – bright or dark, loving or hating.</p>
<p>No, my brothers, unhappily for us, paradise or hell does not depend on God. If it depended on God, we would have nothing to fear. We have nothing to fear from Love. But it does not depend on God. It depends entirely upon us, and this is the whole tragedy. God wants us to be in His image, eternally free. He respects us absolutely. This is love. Without respect, we cannot speak of love. We are men because we are free. If we were not free, we would be clever animals, not men. God will never take back this gift of freedom which renders us what we are. This means that we will always be what we want to be, friends or enemies of God, and there is no changing in this our deepest self. In this life, there are profound or superficial changes in our life, in our character, in our beliefs, but all these changes are only the expression in time of our deepest eternal self. This deep eternal self is eternal, with all the meaning of the word. This is why paradise and hell are also eternal. There is no changing in what we really are. Our temporal characteristics and our history in life depend on many superficial things which vanish with death, but our real personality is not superficial and does not depend on changing and vanishing things. It is our real self. It remains with us when we sleep in the grave, and will be our real face in the resurrection. It is eternal.</p>
<p align="center"><strong>XI</strong></p>
<p>Saint John of the Ladder says somewhere in his work that &#8220;before our fall the demons say to us that God is a friend of man; but after our fall, they say that He is inexorable.&#8221; This is the cunning lie of the devil: to convince us that any harm in our life has as its cause God&#8217;s disposition; that it is God Who will forgive us or Who will punish us. Wishing to throw us into sin and then to make us lose any hope of freeing ourselves from it, they seek to present God as sometimes forgiving all sins, and sometimes as inexorable. Most Christians, even Orthodox Christians, have fallen into this pit. They consider God responsible for our being pardoned or our being punished. This, my brothers, is a terrible falsehood which makes most men lose eternal life, principally because in considering God&#8217;s love, they convince themselves that God, in His love, will pardon them. God is always loving, He is always pardoning, He is always a friend of man. However, that which never pardons, that which never is a friend of man, is sin, and we never think of it as we ought to. Sin destroys our soul independently of the love of God, because sin is precisely the road which leads away from God, because sin erects a wall which separates us from God, because sin destroys our spiritual eyes and makes us unable to see God&#8217;s light. The demons want to make us always think of our salvation or our eternal spiritual death in juridical terms. They want us to think that either salvation or eternal death is a question of God&#8217;s decision. No, my brothers, we must awaken in order not to be lost. Our salvation or our eternal death is not a question of God&#8217;s decision, but it is a question of our decision, it is a question of the decision of our free will which God respects absolutely. Let us not fool ourselves with confidence in God&#8217;s love. The danger does not come from God; it comes from our own self.</p>
<p align="center"><strong>XII</strong></p>
<p>Many will say &#8220;Does not Holy Scripture itself often speak about the anger of God? Is it not God Himself who says that He will punish us or that He will pardon us? Is it not written that &#8216;He is a rewarder of them that diligently seek Him&#8217; (Heb. 11:6)?33 Does He not say that vengeance is His and that He will requite the wickedness done to us? Is it not written that it is fearful to fall into the hands of the living God?&#8221;34</p>
<p>In his discourse entitled That God is not the Cause of Evil, Saint Basil the Great writes the following: &#8220;But one may say, if God is not responsible for evil things, why is it said in the book of Esaias, &#8216;I am He that prepared light and Who formed darkness, Who makes peace and Who creates evils&#8217; (45 7).&#8221; And again, &#8220;There came down evils from the Lord upon the gates of Jerusalem&#8221; (Mich. 1:12). And, &#8220;Shall there be evil in the city which the Lord hath not wrought?&#8221; (Amos 3:6). And in the great Ode of Moses, &#8220;Behold, I am and there is no god beside Me. I will slay, and I will make to live; I will smite, and I will heal&#8221; (Deut. 32:39). But none of these citations, to him who understands the deeper meaning of the Holy Scriptures, casts any blame on God, as if He were the cause of evils and their creator, for He Who said, &#8220;I am the One Who makes light and darkness,&#8221; shows Himself as the Creator of the universe, not that He is the creator of any evil…. &#8220;He creates evils,&#8221; that means, &#8220;He fashions them again and brings them to a betterment, so that they leave their evilness, to take on the nature of good.&#8221;35</p>
<p>As Saint Isaac the Syrian writes, &#8220;Very often many things are said by the Holy Scriptures and in it many names are used not in a literal sense… those who have a mind understand this&#8221; (Homily 83, p. 317).</p>
<p>Saint Basil in the same discourse 36 gives the explanation of these expressions of the Holy Scriptures: &#8220;It is because fear,&#8221; says he, &#8220;edifies simpler people,&#8221; and this is true not only for simple people but for all of us. After our fall, we need fear in order to do any profitable thing and any good to ourselves or to others. In order to understand the Holy Scriptures, say the Fathers, we must have in mind their purpose which is to save us, and to bring us little by little to an understanding of our Creator God and of our wretched condition.</p>
<p>But the same Holy Scriptures in other places explain to us more accurately who is the real cause of our evils. In Jeremias 2:17, 19 we read &#8220;Hath not thy forsaking Me brought these things upon thee? saith the Lord thy God…. Thine apostasy shall chastise thee and thy wickedness shall reprove thee; know then, and see that thy forsaking Me hath been bitter to thee, saith the Lord thy God.&#8221;</p>
<p>The Holy Scriptures speak our language, the language which we understand in our fallen state. As Saint Gregory the Theologian says, &#8220;For according to our own comprehension, we have given names from our own attributes to those of God.&#8221;37 And Saint John Damascene explains further that what in the Holy Scriptures &#8220;is said of God as if He had a body, is said symbolically… [it contains] some hidden meaning, which through things corresponding to our nature, teaches us things which exceed our nature.&#8221;38</p>
<p align="center"><strong>XIII</strong></p>
<p>However, there are punishments imposed upon us by God, or rather evils done to us by the devil and permitted by God. But these punishments are what we call pedagogical punishments. They have as their aim our correction in this life, or at least the correction of others who would take a lesson from our example and correct themselves by fear. There are also punishments which do not have the purpose of correcting anybody but simply put an end to evil by putting an end to those who are propagating it, so that the earth may be saved from perpetual corruption and total destruction; such was the case in the flood during Noah&#8217;s time, and in Sodom&#8217;s destruction.39</p>
<p>All these punishments operate and have their purpose in this corrupted state of things; they do not extend beyond this corrupted life. Their purpose is to correct what can be corrected, and to change things toward a better condition, while things can still change in this changing world. After the Common Resurrection no change whatever can take place. Eternity and incorruptibility are the state of unchangeable things; no alterations whatever happen then, only developments in the state chosen by free personalities; eternal and infinite developments but no changing, no alteration of direction, no going back. The changing world we see around us is changing because it is corruptible. The eternal New Heavens and New Earth which God will bring about in His Second Coming are incorruptible, that means, not changing. So in this New World there can be no correction whatever; therefore, pedagogical punishments are no longer necessary. Any punishment from God in this New World of Resurrection would be clearly and without a doubt a revengeful act, inappropriate and motivated by hate, without any good intention or purpose.</p>
<p>If we consider hell as a punishment from God, we must admit that it is a senseless punishment, unless we admit that God is an infinitely wicked being.</p>
<p>As Saint Isaac the Syrian says: &#8220;He who applies pedagogical punishments in order to give health, is punishing with love, but he who is looking for vengeance, is devoid of love. God punishes with love, not defending Himself – far be it – but He wants to heal His image, and He does not keep His wrath for long. This way of love is the way of uprightness, and it does not change with passion to a defense. A man who is just and wise is like God because he never chastises a man in revenge for wickedness, but only in order to correct him or that others be afraid&#8221; (Homily 73).</p>
<p>So we see that God punishes as long as there is hope for correction. After the Common Resurrection there is no question of any punishment from God. Hell is not a punishment from God but a self condemnation. As Saint Basil the Great says, &#8220;The evils in hell do not have God as their cause, but ourselves.&#8221;40</p>
<p align="center"><strong>XIV</strong></p>
<p>One could insist, however, that the Sacred Scriptures and the Fathers always speak of God as the Great Judge who will reward those who were obedient to Him and will punish those who were disobedient, in the day of the Great Judgment (11 Tim. 4:6-8). How are we to understand this judgment if we are to understand the divine words not in a human but in a divine manner? What is God&#8217;s judgment?</p>
<p>God is Truth and Light. God&#8217;s judgment is nothing else than our coming into contact with truth and light. In the day of the Great Judgment all men will appear naked before this penetrating light of truth. The &#8220;books&#8221; will be opened. What are these &#8220;books&#8221;? They are our hearts. Our hearts will be opened by the penetrating light of God, and what is in these hearts will be revealed. If in those hearts there is love for God, those hearts will rejoice seeing God&#8217;s light. If, on the contrary, there is hatred for God in those hearts, these men will suffer by receiving on their opened hearts this penetrating light of truth which they detested all their life.</p>
<p>So that which will differentiate between one man and another will not be a decision of God, a reward or a punishment from Him, but that which was in each one&#8217;s heart; what was there during all our life will be revealed in the Day of Judgment. If there is a reward and a punishment in this revelation – and there really is – it does not come from God but from the love or hate which reigns in our heart. Love has bliss in it, hatred has despair, bitterness, grief, affliction, wickedness, agitation, confusion, darkness, and all the other interior conditions which compose hell (I Cor. 4:6).</p>
<p>The Light of Truth, God&#8217;s Energy, God&#8217;s grace which will fall on men unhindered by corrupt conditions in the Day of Judgment, will be the same to all men. There will be no distinction whatever. All the difference lies in those who receive, not in Him Who gives. The sun shines on healthy and diseased eyes alike, without any distinction. Healthy eyes enjoy light and because of it see clearly the beauty which surrounds them. Diseased eyes feel pain, they hurt, suffer, and want to hide from this same light which brings such great happiness to those who have healthy eyes.</p>
<p>But alas, there is no longer any possibility of escaping God&#8217;s light. During this life there was. In the New Creation of the Resurrection, God will be everywhere and in everything. His light and love will embrace all. There will be no place hidden from God, as was the case during our corrupt life in the kingdom of the prince of this world.4l The devil&#8217;s kingdom will be despoiled by the Common Resurrection and God will take possession again of His creation.42 Love will enrobe everything with its sacred Fire which will flow like a river from the throne of God and will irrigate paradise. But this same river of Love – for those who have hate in their hearts – will suffocate and burn.</p>
<p>&#8220;For our God is a consuming fire&#8221; (Heb. 12:29). The very fire which purifies gold, also consumes wood. Precious metals shine in it like the sun, rubbish burns with black smoke. All are in the same fire of Love. Some shine and others become black and dark. In the same furnace steel shines like the sun, whereas clay turns dark and is hardened like stone.</p>
<p>The difference is in man, not in God. The difference is conditioned by the free choice of man, which God respects absolutely. God&#8217;s judgment is the revelation of the reality which is in man.</p>
<p align="center"><strong>XV</strong></p>
<p>Thus Saint Macarius writes, &#8220;And as the kingdom of darkness, and sin, are hidden in the soul until the Day of Resurrection, when the bodies also of sinners shall be covered with the darkness that is now hidden in the soul, so also the Kingdom of Light, and the Heavenly Image, Jesus Christ, now mystically enlighten the soul, and reign in the soul of the saints, but are hidden from the eyes of men… until the Day of Resurrection; but then the body also shall be covered and glorified with the Light of the Lord, which is now in the man&#8217;s soul [from this earthly life], that the body also may reign with the soul which from now receives the Kingdom of Christ and rests and is enlightened with eternal light&#8221; (Homily 2).</p>
<p>Saint Symeon the New Theologian says that it is not what man does which counts in eternal life but what he is, whether he is like Jesus Christ our Lord, or whether he is different and unlike Him. He says, &#8220;In the future life the Christian is not examined if he has renounced the whole world for Christ&#8217;s love, or if he has distributed his riches to the poor or if he fasted or kept vigil or prayed, or if he wept and lamented for his sins, or if he has done any other good in this life, but he is examined attentively if he has any similitude with Christ, as a son does with his father.&#8221;</p>
<p align="center"><strong>XVI</strong></p>
<p>Saint Peter the Damascene writes: &#8220;We all receive God&#8217;s blessings equally. But some of us, receiving God&#8217;s fire, that is, His word, become soft like beeswax, while the others like clay become hard as stone. And if we do not want Him, He does not force any of us, but like the sun He sends His rays and illuminates the whole world, and he who wants to see Him, sees Him, whereas the one who does not want to see Him, is not forced by Him. And no one is responsible for this privation of light except the one who does not want to have it.</p>
<p>God created the sun and the eye. Man is free to receive the sun&#8217;s light or not. The same is true here. God sends the light of knowledge like rays to all, but He also gave us faith like an eye. The one who wants to receive knowledge through faith, keeps it by his works, and so God gives him more willingness, knowledge, and power&#8221; (Philokalia, vol. 3, p. 8).</p>
<p align="center"><strong>XVII</strong></p>
<p>I think that by now we have reached the point of understanding correctly what eternal hell and eternal paradise really are, and who is in reality responsible for the difference.</p>
<p>In the icon of the Last Judgment we see Our Lord Jesus Christ seated on a throne. On His right we see His friends, the blessed men and women who lived by His love. On His left we see His enemies, all those who passed their life hating Him, even if they appeared to be pious and reverent. And there, in the midst of the two, springing from Christ&#8217;s throne, we see a river of fire coming toward us. What is this river of fire? Is it an instrument of torture? Is it an energy of vengeance coming out from God in order to vanquish His enemies?</p>
<p>No, nothing of the sort. This river of fire is the river which &#8220;came out from Eden to water the paradise&#8221; of old (Gen. 2:10). It is the river of the grace of God which irrigated God&#8217;s saints from the beginning. In a word, it is the out-pouring of God&#8217;s love for His creatures. Love is fire. Anyone who loves knows this. God is Love, so God is Fire. And fire consumes all those who are not fire themselves, and renders bright and shining all those who are fire themselves (Heb. 12:29).</p>
<p>God many times appeared as fire: To Abraham, to Moses in the burning bush, to the people of Israel showing them the way in the desert as a column of fire by night and as a shining cloud by day when He covered the tabernacle with His glory (Exod. 40:28, 32), and when He rained fire on the summit of Mount Sinai. God was revealed as fire on the mountain of Transfiguration, and He said that He came &#8220;to put fire upon the earth&#8221; (Luke 12:49), that is to say, love, because as Saint John of the Ladder says, &#8220;Love is the source of fire&#8221; (Step 30, 18).</p>
<p>The Greek writer, Fotis Kontoglou said somewhere that &#8220;Faith is fire, and gives warmth to the heart. The Holy Spirit came down upon the heads of the apostles in the form of tongues of fire. The two disciples, when the Lord was revealed to them, said &#8216;Did not our heart burn within us, while He talked with us in the way?&#8217; Christ compares faith to a &#8216;burning candle.&#8217; Saint John the Forerunner said in his sermons that Christ will baptize men &#8216;in the Holy Spirit and fire.&#8217; And truly, the Lord said, &#8216;I am come to send fire on the earth and what will I if it be already kindled?&#8217; Well, the most tangible characteristic of faith is warmth; this is why they speak about &#8216;warm faith,&#8217; or &#8216;faith provoking warmth.&#8217; And even as the distinctive mark of faith is warmth, the sure mark of unbelief is coldness.</p>
<p>&#8220;Do you want to know how to understand if a man has faith or unbelief? If you feel warmth coming out of him – from his eyes, from his words, from his manners – be certain that he has faith in his heart. If again you feel cold coming out of his whole being, that means that he has not faith, whatever he may say. He may kneel down, he may bend his head humbly, he may utter all sorts of moral teachings with a humble voice, but all these will breathe forth a chilling breath which falls upon you to numb you with cold&#8221;43</p>
<p>Saint Isaac the Syrian says that &#8220;Paradise is the love of God, in which the bliss of all the beatitudes is contained,&#8221; and that &#8220;the tree of life is the love of God&#8221; (Homily 72).</p>
<p>&#8220;Do not deceive yourself,&#8221; says Saint Symeon the New Theologian, &#8220;God is fire and when He came into the world, and became man, He sent fire on the earth, as He Himself says; this fire turns about searching to find material – that is a disposition and an intention that is good – to fall into and to kindle; and for those in whom this fire will ignite, it becomes a great flame, which reaches Heaven…. this flame at first purifies us from the pollution of passions and then it becomes in us food and drink and light and joy, and renders us light ourselves because we participate in His light&#8221; (Discourse 78).</p>
<p>God is a loving fire, and He is a loving fire for all: good or bad. There is, however, a great difference in the way people receive this loving fire of God. Saint Basil says that &#8220;the sword of fire was placed at the gate of paradise to guard the approach to the tree of life; it was terrible and burning toward infidels, but kindly accessible toward the faithful, bringing to them the light of day.&#8221;44 The same loving fire brings the day to those who respond to love with love, and burns those who respond to love with hatred.</p>
<p>Paradise and hell are one and the same River of God, a loving fire which embraces and covers all with the same beneficial will, without any difference or discrimination. The same vivifying water is life eternal for the faithful and death eternal for the infidels; for the first it is their element of life, for the second it is the instrument of their eternal suffocation; paradise for the one is hell for the other. Do not consider this strange. The son who loves his father will feel happy in his father&#8217;s arms, but if he does not love him, his father&#8217;s loving embrace will be a torment to him. This also is why when we love the man who hates us, it is likened to pouring lighted coals and hot embers on his head.</p>
<p>&#8220;I say,&#8221; writes Saint Isaac the Syrian, &#8220;that those who are suffering in hell, are suffering in being scourged by love…. It is totally false to think that the sinners in hell are deprived of God&#8217;s love. Love is a child of the knowledge of truth, and is unquestionably given commonly to all. But love&#8217;s power acts in two ways: it torments sinners, while at the same time it delights those who have lived in accord with it&#8221; (Homily 84).</p>
<p>God is love. If we really believe this truth, we know that God never hates, never punishes, never takes vengeance. As Abba Ammonas says, &#8220;Love never hates anyone, never reproves anyone, never condemns anyone, never grieves anyone, never abhors anyone, neither faithful nor infidel nor stranger nor sinner nor fornicator, nor anyone impure, but instead it is precisely sinners, and weak and negligent souls that it loves more, and feels pain for them and grieves and laments, and it feels sympathy for the wicked and sinners, more than for the good, imitating Christ Who called sinners, and ate and drank with them. For this reason, showing what real love is, He taught saying, &#8216;Become good and merciful like your Father in Heaven,&#8217; and as He rains on bad and good and makes the sun to rise on just and unjust alike, so also is the one who has real love, and has compassion, and prays for all.&#8221;45</p>
<p align="center"><strong>XVIII</strong></p>
<p>Now if anyone is perplexed and does not understand how it is possible for God&#8217;s love to render anyone pitifully wretched and miserable and even burning as it were in flames, let him consider the elder brother of the prodigal son. Was he not in his father&#8217;s estate? Did not everything in it belong to him? Did he not have his father&#8217;s love? Did his father not come himself to entreat and beseech him to come and take part in the joyous banquet? What rendered him miserable and burned him with inner bitterness and hate? Who refused him anything? Why was he not joyous at his brother&#8217;s return? Why did he not have love either toward his father or toward his brother? Was it not because of his wicked, inner disposition? Did he not remain in hell because of that? And what was this hell? Was it any separate place? Were there any instruments of torture? Did he not continue to live in his father&#8217;s house? What separated him from all the joyous people in the house if not his own hate and his own bitterness? Did his father, or even his brother, stop loving him? Was it not precisely this very love which hardened his heart more and more? Was it not the joy that made him sad? Was not hatred burning in his heart, hatred for his father and his brother, hatred for the love of his father toward his brother and for the love of his brother toward his father? This is hell: the negation of love; the return of hate for love; bitterness at seeing innocent joy; to be surrounded by love and to have hate in one&#8217;s heart. This is the eternal condition of all the damned. They are all dearly loved. They are all invited to the joyous banquet. They are all living in God&#8217;s Kingdom, in the New Earth and the New Heavens. No one expels them. Even if they wanted to go away they could not flee from God&#8217;s New Creation, nor hide from God&#8217;s tenderly loving omnipresence. Their only alternative would be, perhaps, to go away from their brothers and search for a bitter isolation from them, but they could never depart from God and His love. And what is more terrible is that in this eternal life, in this New Creation, God is everything to His creatures. As Saint Gregory of Nyssa says, &#8220;In the present life the things we have relations with are numerous, for instance time, air, locality, food and drink, clothing, sunlight, lamplight, and other necessities of life, none of which, many though they be, are God; that blessed state which we hope for is in need of none of these things, but the Divine Being will become all, and in the stead of all to us, distributing Himself proportionately to every need of that existence. It is plain, too, from the Holy Scriptures that God becomes to those who deserve it, locality and home and clothing and food and drink and light and riches and kingdom, and everything that can be thought of and named that goes to make our life happy&#8221; (On the Soul and the Resurrection).46</p>
<p>In the new eternal life, God will be everything to His creatures, not only to the good but also to the wicked, not only to those who love Him, but likewise to those who hate Him. But how will those who hate Him endure to have everything from the hands of Him Whom they detest? Oh, what an eternal torment is this, what an eternal fire, what a gnashing of teeth!</p>
<p>Depart from Me, ye cursed, into the everlasting inner fire of hatred,47 saith the Lord, because I was thirsty for your love and you did not give it to Me, I was hungry for your blessedness and you did not offer it to Me, I was imprisoned in My human nature and you did not come to visit Me in My church; you are free to go where your wicked desire wishes, away from Me, in the torturing hatred of your hearts which is foreign to My loving heart which knows no hatred for anyone. Depart freely from love to the everlasting torture of hate, unknown and foreign to Me and to those who are with Me, but prepared by freedom for the devil, from the days I created My free, rational creatures. But wherever you go in the darkness of your hating hearts, My love will follow you like a river of fire, because no matter what your heart has chosen, you are and you will eternally continue to be, My children. Amen.</p>
<hr />
<p align="center"><strong>Notes:</strong></p>
<p><strong>CHAPTER II</strong></p>
<p>1 &#8220;This is evil: estrangement from God.&#8221; St. Basil the Great, That God is Not the Cause of Evils, {Ellhnes Pateres ths Ekklhsias [Greek Fathers of the Church] 7, 112 (hereafter cited as EPE). &#8220;As many… as stand apart in their will from God, He brings upon them separation from Himself; and separation from God is death.&#8221; St. Irenaeus Against Heresies 5. 27.2. &#8220;Men, rejecting eternal things and through the counsel of the devil turning toward the things of corruption, became the cause to themselves of the corruption in death.&#8221; St. Athanasius the Great On the Incarnation 5 (Migne, PG 25.104-105).&#8221;For as much as he departed from life, just so much did he draw nearer to death. For life is God; deprivation of life is death. So Adam was the author of death to himself through his departure from God.&#8221; St. Basil the Great (PG 31. 345 ) .</p>
<p>2 &#8220;The redemptive sacrifice…was accomplished in order to reestablish the formerly harmonious relation between heaven and earth which sin had overturned, to atone for the flounted moral law, to satisfy the affronted justice of God.&#8221; Encyclical Letter for Pascha 1980 of Ecumenical Patriarch Demetrios, Episkepsis (in Greek), no. 229, 15 April 1980.</p>
<p>3 &#8220;Truly foolish, therefore, and lacking all understanding and mind is he who says there is no God. Alongside him no less in this madness is he who says that God is the cause of evils. I consider their sins to be of equal gravity because each one similarly denies the good; the former denies that He exists at all, while the latter defines Him as not being good; for if he is the cause of evils, He is clearly not good; so from both sides there is a denial of God.&#8221; St. Basil the Great, EPE, op. cit., 7, 90.</p>
<p><strong>CHAPTER IV</strong></p>
<p>4 &#8220;But someone will say, verily Adam fell, and by disregarding the divine commandment he was condemned to corruption and death, but how were the many made sinful on his account? What do his transgressions have to do with us? How is it that we who were not even born were condemned along with him, and yet God says, &#8216;The fathers shall not be put to death for the children and the sons shall not be put to death for the fathers; everyone shall die in his own sin&#8217;? (Deut. 24:18). Surely, then, that soul that sins shall die; but we became sinners through the disobedience of Adam in this way: For Adam was created for incorruption and life, and his life in the Paradise of delight was holy, his whole mind was continually caught up in divine visions, and his body was tranquil and serene, since every shameful pleasure was calmed, for there was no disturbance of intemperate emotions in him. However, since he fell under sin and sank into corruption, thence pleasures and pollutions penetrated into the nature of the flesh, and so there was planted in our members a savage law. Nature became diseased with sin through the disobedience of the one, i.e, Adam; thus the many also became sinners, not as transgressing together with Adam – for they did not exist at all – but as being from his nature which had fallen under the law of sin… because of disobedience, human nature in Adam became infirm with corruption, and so the passions were introduced into it…. &#8221; St. Cyril of Alexandria Interpretation of the Epistle to the Romans (PG 74. 788-789). &#8220;And furthermore, if they who were born from Adam became sinners on account of his sinning, in all justice, they are not liable, for they did not become sinners of themselves; therefore the term &#8220;sinners&#8221; is used instead of &#8220;mortals&#8221; because death is the penalty of sin. Since in the first-fashioned man nature became mortal, all they who share in the nature of the forefather consequently share mortality also.&#8221; Euthymios Zigabenos, Interpretation of the Epistle to the Romans, 5:19.</p>
<p>5 It means something totally different from what we customarily mean by the term &#8220;justice.&#8221; This ignorance has caused us to consider as touchstones of Orthodoxy some very strange theories, most particularly the juridical conception of salvation which is based upon a justice that resembles the Necessity (Ananke) of the ancients, and oppresses not only man but God also, and gives a gloomy aspect to Christianity. See the relevant study of S. Lynonnett &#8220;La Soteriologie Paulienne,&#8221; Introduction a la Bible 11, (Belgium: Desclées &amp; Bower), p. 840.</p>
<p>6 &#8220;If a man readily and joyfully accepts a loss for the sake of God, he is inwardly pure. And if he does not look down upon any man because of his defects, in very truth he is free. If a man is not pleased with someone who honors him, nor displeased with someone who dishonors him, he is dead to the world and to this life. The watchfulness of discernment is superior to every discipline of men accomplished in any way to any degree.</p>
<p>&#8220;Do not hate the sinner. For we are all laden with guilt. If for the sake of God you are moved to oppose him, weep over him. Why do you hate him? Hate his sins and pray for him, that you may imitate Christ Who was not wroth with sinners, but interceded for them. Do you not see how He wept over Jerusalem? We are mocked by the devil in many instances, so why should we hate the man who is mocked by him who mocks us also? Why, O man, do you hate the sinner? Could it be because he is not so righteous as you? But where is your righteousness when you have no love? Why do you not shed tears over him? But you persecute him. In ignorance some are moved with anger, presuming themselves to be discerners of the works of sinners.</p>
<p>&#8220;Be a herald of God&#8217;s goodness, for God rules over you, unworthy though you are; for although your debt to Him is so great, yet He is not seen exacting payment from you, and from the small works you do, He bestows great rewards upon you. Do not call God just, for His justice is not manifest in the things concerning you. And if David calls Him just and upright (cf. Ps. 24:8, 144:17), His Son revealed to us that He is good and kind. &#8216;He is good,&#8217; He says, &#8216;to the evil and to the impious&#8217; (cf. Luke 6:35). How can you call God just when you come across the Scriptural passage on the wage given to the workers? &#8216;Friend, I do thee no wrong I will give unto this last even as unto thee. Is thine eye evil because I am good?&#8217; (Matt. 20:12-15). How can a man call God just when he comes across the passage on the prodigal son who wasted his wealth with riotous living, how for the compunction alone which he showed, the father ran and fell upon his neck and gave him authority over all his wealth? (Luke 15:11 ff.). None other but His very Son said these things concerning Him, lest we doubt it; and thus He bare witness concerning Him. Where, then, is God&#8217;s justice, for whilst we are sinners Christ died for us! (cf. Rom. 5:8). But if here He is merciful, we may believe that He will not change [i.e., as regards the state after death, which St. Isaac mentions again a little below] .</p>
<p>&#8220;Far be it that we should ever think such an iniquity that God could become unmerciful! For the property of Divinity does not change as do mortals. God does not acquire something which He does not have, nor lose what He has, nor supplement what He does have, as do created beings. But what God has from the beginning, He will have and has until the [unending] end, as the blest Cyril wrote in his commentary on Genesis. Fear God, he says, out of love for Him, and not for the austere name that He has been given. Love Him as you ought to love Him; not for what He will give you in the future, but for what we have received, and for this world alone which He has created for us. Who is the man that can repay Him? Where is His repayment to be found in our works? Who persuaded Him in the beginning to bring us into being? Who intercedes for us before Him, when we shall possess no [faculty of] memory, as though we never existed? Who will awake this our body [Syriac: our corruption] for that life? Again, whence descends the notion of knowledge into dust? O the wondrous mercy of God! O the astonishment at the bounty of our God and Creator! O might for which all is possible! O the immeasurable goodness that brings our nature again, sinners though we be, to His regeneration and rest! Who is sufficient to glorify Him? He raises up the transgressor and blasphemer, he renews dust unendowed with reason, making it rational and comprehending and the scattered and insensible dust and the scattered senses He makes a rational nature worthy of thought. The sinner is unable to comprehend the grace of His resurrection. Where is gehenna, that can afflict us? Where is perdition, that terrifies us in many ways and quenches the joy of His love? And what is gehenna as compared with the grace of His resurrection, when He will raise us from hades and cause our corruptible nature to be clad in incorruption, and raise up in glory him that has fallen into Hades?</p>
<p>&#8220;Come, men of discernment, and be filled with wonder! Whose mind is sufficiently wise and marvelous to wonder worthily at the bounty of our Creator? His recompense of sinners is, that instead of a just recompense, He rewards them with resurrection, and instead of those bodies with which they trampled upon His law, He enrobes them with perfect glory and incorruption [St. Isaac speaks here of those who have repented, as is evident from other similar passages in his book.] That grace whereby we are resurrected after we have sinned is greater than the grace which brought us into being when we were not. Glory be to Thine immeasurable grace, O Lord! Behold, Lord, the waves of Thy grace close my mouth with silence, and there is not a thought left in me before the face of Thy thanksgiving. What mouths can confess Thy praise, O good King, Thou Who lovest our life? Glory be to Thee for the two worlds which Thou hast created for our growth and delight, leading us by all things which Thou didst fashion to the knowledge of Thy glory, from now and unto the ages. Amen.&#8221; St. Isaac the Syrian, Homily 60.</p>
<p>7 Ibid.</p>
<p>8 &#8220;&#8216;For God so loved the world as to give His Only-begotten Son unto death for it.&#8217; Not that He could not have redeemed us by another means, but He wished to manifest to us His boundless love, and to draw us near Him through the death of His Only-begotten Son. Indeed, if He had anything more precious than His Son, He would have given it for our sakes, in order that through it our race would be found nigh to Him. Out of His abundant love, He was not pleased to do violence to our freedom, although it was possible for Him to do so; but He let it be in order that we would draw nigh to Him with the love and volition of our own will.&#8221; St. Isaac the Syrian, Homily 81.</p>
<p>9 &#8220;In times of despondency, never fail to bear in mind the Lord&#8217;s commandment to Peter, to forgive a person who sins seventy times seven. For He who gave this command to another will Himself do far more.&#8221; St. John Climacus, Ladder of Divine Ascent, Step 26, (Boston: Holy Transfiguration Monastery, 1978), p. 147.</p>
<p>10 &#8220;A man who is just and wise is like God because he never chastises a man in revenge for wickedness, but only in order to correct him, or that others be afraid.&#8221; St. Isaac the Syrian, Homily 73. &#8220;God granted this great benefit to man: that he not abide in sin unto eternity.&#8221; Theophilus of Antioch To Autolycus 2.26.</p>
<p>11 &#8220;And God saw all the things that He had made, and behold, they were very good.&#8221; Genesis 1:31 &#8221; [God] created everything whIch has good qualities, but the profligacy of the demons has made use of the productions of nature for evil purposes, and the appearance of evil which these wear is from them and not from the perfect God.&#8221; Tatian Address to the Greeks 17. &#8220;The construction of the world is good, but the life men live in it is bad.&#8221; Ibid. 19. &#8220;For nothing from the first was made evil by God, but things good, yea, very good.&#8221; Theophilus of Antioch To Autolycus 2.17. &#8220;Pour l&#8217;hebreau, le sensible n&#8217;est pas mauvais, ni fautif. Le mal ne vient pas de la matiere. Le monde est tres bon.&#8221; ["For the Hebrew, perceptible things are not evil, nor are they deceptive lit., erroneous). Evil does not come from matter. The world is 'very good,'"] C. Tresmontant, Essai sur la Pensee Hebraique Paris 1953). &#8220;There is nothing that exist which does not partake of the beautiful and the good.&#8221; St. Dionysius the Areopagite On The Divine Names ( Pg 3. 704). &#8220;For even if the reasons why some things come about escape us, let that dogma be certain in our souls that nothing evil is done by the good.&#8221; St. Basil the Great, ElIE 7, 112. &#8220;For it is not the part of a god to incite to things against nature… But God, being perfectly good, is eternally doing good.&#8221; Athenagoras, Embassy, 26.</p>
<p>I2 &#8220;The devil is evil in such wise that he is evil in disposition, but not that his nature is opposed to good.&#8221; St. Basil the Great, EPE, 7, 112. &#8220;Since God is good, whatever he does, He does for man&#8217;s sake. But whatever man does, he does for his own sake, both what is good and what is evil.&#8221;Philokalia, vol. 1, chapter 121, St. Anthony the Great.</p>
<p>l3 &#8220;For God made not death, neither hath He pleasure in the destruction of the living, for he created all things that they might have their being, and the generations of the world were healthful, and there is no poison of destruction in them, nor the kingdom of Hades upon the earth.&#8221; Wisdom of Solomon 1:13-14. &#8220;For God created man to be immortal and made him to be in an image of his own eternity. Nevertheless, through envy of the devil came death into the world.&#8221; Wisdom of Solomon 2:23-24.</p>
<p>14 &#8220;And so he who was made in the likeness of God, since the more powerful spirit [the Holy Spirit] is separated from him, becomes mortal.&#8221; Tatian Address to the Greeks 7.</p>
<p>15 &#8220;For as much as he departed from life, just so much did he draw nearer to death. For God is life; deprivation of life is death. So Adam was the author of death to himself through his departure from God, in accordance with the scripture which says &#8216;For behold, they that remove themselves from Thee shall perish.&#8217;&#8221; Psalm 72:27.</p>
<p>16 &#8220;Thus God did not create death, but we brought it upon ourselves out of an evil disposition. Nevertheless, He did not hinder the dissolution on account of the aforementioned causes, so that He would not make the infirmity immortal in us.&#8221; St. Basil the Great (PG 31. 345).</p>
<p>17 &#8220;But as many as depart from God by their own choice, He inflicts that separation from Himself which they have chosen of their own accord. But separation from God is death, and separation from light is darkness…. It is not, however, that the light has inflicted upon them the penalty of darkness.&#8221; St. Irenaeus Against Heresies 5. 27:2. &#8220;But others shun the light and separate themselves from God….&#8221; Ibid., 5. 28:1.</p>
<p>18 Philokalia, vol. 2, p. 27 (Greek edition), St. Maximus the Confessor.</p>
<p>19 &#8220;We became the inheritors of the curse in Adam. Certainly we were not punished as though we had disobeyed that command along with him, but because he became mortal, he transmitted the sin to his seed; we were born mortals from a mortal.&#8221; St. Anastasius the Sinaite, 19. Vide I. N. Karmire, Sunoyis Dofmatikes Didaskalias tes Orthodoxou Katholikes Ekklesias, p. 38.</p>
<p>20 &#8220;Man&#8217;s transgression against the Creator&#8217;s righteousness brought the soul&#8217;s death sentence into effect; for when our forefathers forsook God and chose to do their own will, He abandoned them, not subjecting them to constraint. And for the reasons we have stated above, God lovingly forewarned them of this sentence. But he forbore and delayed in executing the sentence of death upon the body; and while He pronounced it, He relegated its fruition to the future in the abyss of His wisdom and the superabundance of His love for man. He did not say to Adam &#8216;return to whence thou wast taken,&#8217; but &#8216;earth thou art, and unto earth thou shalt return&#8217; (Gen. 3:19). Those who hear this with understanding can also comprehend from these words that God &#8216;did not make death&#8217; (Wisdom 1:13), either the soul&#8217;s or the body&#8217;s. For when He first gave the command, He did not say &#8216;in whatsoever day ye shall eat of it, die!,&#8217; but &#8216;In whatsoever day ye shall eat of it, ye shall surely die&#8217; (Gen. 2:17). Nor did He afterwards say &#8216;return now unto earth,&#8217; but &#8216;Thou shalt return&#8217; (Gen. 3:19), in this manner forewarning, justly permitting and not obstructing what should come to pass.&#8221; St. Gregory Palamas Physical Theological Moral and Practical Chapters 51 (PG 1157-1160).</p>
<p>21 &#8220;The tree of knowledge itself was good, and its fruit was good. For it was not the tree that had death in it, as some think, but the disobedience which had death in it; for there was nothing else in the fruit but knowledge alone; but knowledge is good when one uses it properly.&#8221; Theophilus of Antioch To Autolycus 2. 25. &#8220;The tree did not engender death, for God did not create death; but death was the consequence of disobedience.&#8221; St. John Damascene Homily on Holy Saturday 10 (PG 96. 612a).</p>
<p><strong>CHAPTER V</strong></p>
<p>22 &#8220;&#8216;And what is a merciful heart?&#8217; It is the heart&#8217;s burning for the sake of the entire creation, for men, for birds, for animals, for demons and for every created thing; and by the recollection and sight of them the eyes of a merciful man pour forth abundant tears. From the strong and vehement mercy which grips his heart and from his great compassion, his heart is humbled and he cannot bear to hear or to see any injury or slight sorrow in creation. For this reason he continually offers up tearful prayer, even for irrational beasts, for the enemies of the truth and for those who harm him, that they be protected and receive mercy. And in like manner he even prays for the family of reptiles because of the great compassion that burns in his heart without measure in the likeness of God.&#8221; St. Isaac the Syrian, Homily 81.</p>
<p>23 &#8220;It is not God who is hostile, but we; for God is never hostile.&#8221; St. John Chrysostom (PG 61. 478).</p>
<p><strong>CHAPTER Vl</strong></p>
<p>24 See J. S. Romanides, Ton Propatorikon Amartema (Athens, 1957).</p>
<p><strong>CHAPTER Vll</strong></p>
<p>25 &#8220;Therefore, we believe in one God one principle, without beginning, uncreated, unbegotten, indestructible and immortal, eternal, unlimited, uncircumscribed, unbounded, infinite in power, simple, uncompounded, incorporeal, unchanging, unaffected, unchangeable, inalterate, invisible, source of goodness and justice, light intellectual and inaccessible; power which no measure can give any idea of but which is measured only by His own will, for He can do all things whatsoever He pleases; Maker of all things both visible and invisible, holding together all things and conserving them, Provider for all, governing and dominating and ruling over all in unending and immortal reign; without contradiction, filling all things, contained by nothing, but Himself containing all things, being their Conserver and first Possessor; pervading all substances without being defiled, removed far beyond all things and every substance as being supersubstantial and surpassing all, super-eminently divine and good and replete; appointing all the principalities and orders, set above every principality and order, above essence and life and speech and concept; light itself and goodness and being insofar as having neither being, nor anything else that is derived from any other; the very source of being for all things that are, of life to the living, of speech to the articulate, and the cause of all good things for all; knowing all things before they begin to be; one substance, one godhead, one virtue, one will, one operation, one principality, one power, one domination, one kingdom; known in three perfect Persons and adored with one adoration, believed in and worshipped by every rational creature, united without confusion and distinct without separation, which is beyond understanding. We believe in Father and Son and Holy Spirit in Whom we have been baptized. For it is thus that the Lord enjoined the apostles &#8216;Baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit.&#8217;&#8221; St. John Damascene Exact Exposition of the Orthodox Faith 1. 8.</p>
<p>26 &#8220;He created without matter.&#8221; St. John Chrysostom (PG 59. 308).</p>
<p>27 St. John Damascene, op. cit. 1.14.</p>
<p>28 St. John Damascene, op. cit. 1. 8.</p>
<p>29 &#8220;The soul without the body can do nothing, whether good or evil. The visions which some see concerning those things that are yonder are shown to them by God as a dispensation for their profit. Just as the lyre remains useless and silent if there is no one to play, so the soul and body, when they are separated, can do nothing.&#8221; St. Athanasius the Great.</p>
<p><strong>CHAPTER Vlll</strong></p>
<p>30 &#8220;For each of these, after its kind, is a body, be it angel, or soul, or devil. Subtle though they are, still in substance, character, and image according to the subtlety of their respective natures they are subtle bodies.&#8221; St. Macarius the Great, Fifty Spiritual Homilies, 4, 9.</p>
<p>31 &#8220;Let us go and behold in the tombs that man is bare bones, food for worms and a stench.&#8221; Great Euchologion, (Venice, 1862), p. 415. &#8220;For just as the light when it sets in the evening is not lost, so man also is given over to the grave as if setting; yet he is preserved for the dawn of the resurrection.&#8221; St. John Chrysostom .</p>
<p><strong>CHAPTER X</strong></p>
<p>32 &#8220;He who berates the Creator for not making us sinless by nature, does naught but esteem the irrational nature above the rational.&#8221; St. Basil the Great, EPE, 7, 110.</p>
<p><strong>CHAPTER Xll</strong></p>
<p>33 Also, &#8220;Cast not away therefore your confidence, which hath great recompense of reward.&#8221; Hebrews l0:35 .</p>
<p>34 &#8220;For if we sin willfully after that we have received the knowledge of the truth, there remaineth no more sacrifice for sins, but a certain fearful looking for of judgment and fiery indignation, which shall devour the adversaries. He that despised Moses&#8217; law died without mercy under two or three witnesses. Of how much sorer punishment, suppose ye, shall he be thought worthy, who hath trodden under foot the Son of God, and hath counted the blood of the covenant, wherewith he was sanctified, an unholy thing, and hath done despite unto the Spirit of grace? For we know him that hath said, Vengeance belongeth unto me, I will recompense, saith the Lord. And again, The Lord shall judge his people. It is a fearful thing to fall into the hands of the living God.&#8221; Hebrews 10:26-31.</p>
<p>35 St. Basil the Great, op. cit. 7, 94-96. In this particular passage, St. Basil carefully makes a distinction between the Greek verbs ktizw and dhmiourgew both of which are generally translated into English as &#8220;create.&#8221; However, ktizw has a long history, beginning with the Sanskrit kshi, which, as in early Greek, meant &#8220;to people a country,&#8221; &#8220;to build houses and cities,&#8221; &#8220;to colonize.&#8221; Later, in Greek, the word came to mean &#8220;to establish,&#8221; &#8220;to build up and develop,&#8221; and finally, &#8220;to produce,&#8221; &#8220;create,&#8221; &#8220;bring about.&#8221; Having in mind these other connotations of the verb ktizw St. Basil discerned the proper implication of the word in this context and hence made a point of emphasizing this distinction.</p>
<p>36 Ibid. 7.98.</p>
<p>37 St. Gregory the Theologian Fifth Theological Oration 22 (PG 36. 157).</p>
<p>38 St. John Damascene, op. cit. 1.11.</p>
<p><strong>CHAPTER Xlll</strong></p>
<p>39 &#8220;Famines and droughts and floods are common plagues of cities and nations which check the excess of evil. Therefore, just as the physician is a benefactor even if he should cause pain or suffering to the body (for he strives with the disease, and not with the sufferer), so in the same manner God is good Who administers salvation to everyone through the means of particular chastisements. But you, not only do you not speak evilly of the physician who cuts some members, cauterizes others, and excises others again completely from the body, but you even give him money and address him as saviour because he confines the disease to a small area before the infirmity can claim the whole body. However, when you see a city crushing its inhabitants in an earthquake, or a ship going down at sea with all hands, you do not shrink from wagging a blasphemous tongue against the true Physician and Saviour.&#8221; St. Basil the Great, op. cit. 7, 94. &#8220;And you may accept the phrase &#8216;I kill and I will make to live&#8217; (Deut. 32:39) literally, if you wish, since fear edifies the more simple. &#8216;I will smite and I will heal&#8217; (Deut. 32:39). It is profitable to also understand this phrase literally; for the smiting engenders fear, while the healing incites to love. It is permitted you, nonetheless, to attain to a loftier understanding of the utterance. I will slay through sin and make to live through righteousness. &#8216;But though our outward man perish, yet the inward man is renewed day by day&#8217; (11 Cor. 4:16). Therefore, He does not slay one, and give life to another, but through the means which He slays, He gives life to a man, and He heals a man with that which He smites him, according to the proverb which says, &#8216;For thou shalt beat him with the rod, and shalt deliver his soul from death&#8217; (Prov. 23:14). So the flesh is chastised for the soul to be healed, and sin is put to death for righteousness to live…. When you hear &#8216;There shall be no evil in a city which the Lord hath not wrought&#8217; (cf. Amos 3:6), understand by the noun &#8216;evil&#8217; that the word intimates the tribulation brought upon sinners for the correction of offenses. For Scripture says, &#8216;For I afflicted thee and straitened thee, to do good to thee&#8217; (cf. Deut. 8:3); so too is evil terminated before it spills out unhindered, as a strong dike or wall holds back a river.</p>
<p>&#8220;For these reasons, diseases of cities and nations, droughts, barrenness of the earth, and the more difficult conditions in the life of each, cut off the increase of wickedness. Thus, such evils come from God so as to uproot the true evils, for the tribulations of the body and all painful things from without have been devised for the restraining of sin. God, therefore, excises evil; never is evil from God…. The razing of cities, earthquakes and floods, the destruction of armies, shipwrecks and all catastrophes with many casualties which occur from earth or sea or air or fire or whatever cause, happen for the sobering of the survivors, because God chastises public evil with general scourges.</p>
<p>&#8220;The principal evil, therefore, which is sin, and which is especially worthy of the appellation of evil, depends upon our disposition; it depends upon us either to abstain from evil or to be in misery.</p>
<p>&#8220;Of the other evils, some are shown to be struggles for the proving of courage… while some are for the healing of sins… and some are for an example to make other men sober.&#8221; St. Basil the Great, op. cit. 7, 98-102.</p>
<p>40 1bid. 7, 92.</p>
<p><strong>CHAPTER XIV</strong></p>
<p>41 &#8220;The devil became the &#8216;Prince of matter.&#8221;&#8216; Athenagoras, Embassy, 24, 25. &#8220;They [the demons] afterwards subdued the human race to themselves… and… sowed all wickedness. Whence also the poets and mythologists, not knowing that it was the angels and those demons who had been begotten by them that did these things to men, and women, and cities, and nations which they related, ascribed them to God Himself.&#8221; St. Justin Martyr Second Apology 5 .</p>
<p>42 &#8220;For this purpose the Son of God was manifested, that He might destroy the works of the devil.&#8221; I John 3:8.</p>
<p><strong>CHAPTER XVII</strong></p>
<p>43 Fotis Kontoglou, &#8220;Church Calendars,&#8221; Orthodoxos Typos 131 (Athens), 1 January 1971.</p>
<p>44 St. Basil the Great, Homily 13 . 2, Exhortation to Holy Baptism (PG 31. 428 and 95, 1272).</p>
<p>45 Library of Greek Fathers, vol. 40, pp. 60-61.</p>
<p><strong>CHAPTER XVIII</strong></p>
<p>46 &#8220;&#8216;I am father, I am brother, I am bridegroom, I am dwelling place, I am food, I am raiment, I am root, I am foundation, all whatsoever thou willest, I am.&#8217; &#8216;Be thou in need of nothing, I will be even a servant, for I came to minister, not to be ministered unto; I am friend, and member, and head, and brother, and sister, and mother; I am all; only cling thou closely to me. I was poor for thee, and a wanderer for thee, on the Cross for thee, in the tomb for thee, above I intercede for thee to the Father; on earth I am come for thy sake an ambassador from my Father. Thou art all things to me, brother, and joint heir, and friend, and member.&#8217; What wouldest thou more?&#8221; St. John Chrysostom, Homily 76 on the Gospel of Matthew (PG 58. 700).</p>
<p>47 &#8220;&#8216;The end of the world&#8217; signifies not the annihilation of the world, but its transformation. Everything will be transformed suddenly, in the twinkling of an eye…. And the Lord will appear in glory on the clouds. Trumpets will sound, and loud, with power! They will sound in the soul and conscience! All will become clear to the human conscience. The Prophet Daniel, speaking of the Last Judgement, relates how the Ancient of Days, the Judge, sits on His throne, and before Him is a fiery stream (Dan. 7:9-10). Fire is a purifying element; it burns sins. Woe to a man if sin has become a part of his nature: then the fire will burn the man himself.</p>
<p>&#8220;This fire will be kindled within a man: seeing the Cross, some will rejoice, but others will fall into confusion, terror, and despair. Thus will men be divided instantly. The very state of a man&#8217;s soul casts him to one side or the other, to right or to left.</p>
<p>&#8220;The more consciously and persistently a man strives toward God in his life, the greater will be his joy when he hears &#8216;Come unto Me, ye blessed.&#8217; And conversely the same words will call the fire of horror and torture on those who did not desire Him, who fled and fought or blasphemed Him during their lifetime!</p>
<p>&#8220;The Last Judgement knows of no witnesses or written protocols! Everything is inscribed in the souls of men and these records, these &#8216;books&#8217;, are opened at the Judgement. Everything becomes clear to all and to oneself.</p>
<p>&#8220;And some will go to joy, while others – to horror.</p>
<p>&#8220;When &#8216;the books are opened,&#8217; it will become clear that the roots of all vices lie in the human soul. Here is a drunkard or a lecher: when the body has died, some may think that sin is dead too. No! There was an inclination to sin in the soul, and that sin was sweet to the soul, and if the soul has not repented of the sin and has not freed itself from it, it will come to the Last Judgement also with the same desire for sin. It will never safisty that desire and in that soul there will be the suffering of hatred. It will accuse everyone and everything in its tortured condition, it will hate everyone and everything. &#8216;There will be gnashing of teeth&#8217; of powerless malice and the unquenchable fire of hatred.</p>
<p>&#8220;A &#8216;fiery gehenna&#8217; – such is the inner fire. &#8216;Here there will be wailing and gnashing of teeth.&#8217; Such is the state of hell.&#8221; Archbishop John Maximovitch, &#8220;The Last Judgement,&#8221; Orthodox Word (November December, 1966) 177-78.</p>
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