Metropolitan Chrysostomos's first posting placed first
and then his answers to questions about it
following the original - to make it easer ...
and then his answers to questions about it
following the original - to make it easer ...
God bless you. An
interesting and short commentary
by Metropolitan Chrysostomos on a newspaper article
that was sent to him by a friend.
† Bp. Auxentios
by Metropolitan Chrysostomos on a newspaper article
that was sent to him by a friend.
† Bp. Auxentios
On Jun 5, 2017, at
12:39 PM, xxx wrote
Innovative Orthodoxy
meets
frightful sectarianism.
meets
frightful sectarianism.
Well, as usual, I am
not on neither side. Nor am I in the middle. I am with the “otherly”:
exactitude in tradition bound to moderate freedom in the Christian yoke of
love.
The reception of the
man into a new and innovative kind of Orthodoxy was by an extreme form of
economy (as pictured in the photograph, a ritual unknown to us!), rather than a
proper Orthodox Baptism, which is not only a Mystery specific to Orthodoxy, but
one that represents something quite different than the western sacrament. Most
Orthodox are so unaware of their own Faith that they cannot explain that fact,
usually for fear of appearing sectarian or, again, because they lack a basic
understanding of the ritual to begin with. Neither is sectarianism involved in
our view of Baptism (“enlightenment”) nor, were it so, can I imagine ignorance
and bigotry as its valid antidote.
The reaction to his
conversion with ignorant and sectarian ideas about graven images (these poor
people cannot distinguish veneration from worship?) and other backwater bigotry
appalls me. The babble about cancer and linking it to conversion speaks of an
irrational understanding of God’s “wrath” that would place me in opposition to
whatever vision of God these people entertain. What an awful conception of God.
Cult-like notions of “wrath” unwashed by mercy and Christ’s ministry of love
are not worthy of our attention.
I remain astounded, at
times, at what passes as the God of the universe which gives Christianity its
force: an ontological force formed in love, bathed in mercy, conveyed in pious
action inseparable from inner faith, and surely higher than the lowliness of a
sectarian narrow-mindedness that ares not ultimately leave to Christ, Who is
the Church, the judging of another man’s heart.
A “lose-lose”
situation is all that I see. On all sides, I walk away from a sour taste in my
mouth: “Ye have changed judgment into gall, and righteousness into hemlock.”
In Christ, † Bp. C.
/further replies:/
From: Bishop Chrysostomos
The “Otherly,”
Innovation,
Baptism, and
God’s Wrath
Innovation,
Baptism, and
God’s Wrath
Feast of the Holy Spirit, 2017
Dear Diocesan Clergy, Faithful, and Friends:
Evlogia Kyriou. Gospod’ blagoslovit!
Evlogia Kyriou. Gospod’ blagoslovit!
Bishop Auxentios sent me a letter from someone
who responded to the mailing which he asked me to allow him to distribute
earlier today. (See all of that material below, after my comments and four
questions and answers.) He asked me to answer some questions that were
contained in this response to his mailing. Quite frankly, I am desperately
trying to complete my translation of the Spiritual
Instructions of Abba
Dorotheos of Gaza this summer, and my declining energy and the weight of my
overwhelming correspondence have collided. I have spent well over a year on my
translation, which I had hoped to complete much earlier than this. I am, I
admit, not therefore inclined to invite the endless responses that I receive
when I write something that those who love controversy and debate (and who
therefore badly need to read what I hope is a much clearer rendering of the
Saint’s very practical and wonderful treatise) take as an opportunity to inform
me of their opinions.
However, I have agreed to write a few short
responses, with the hope that any who agree or benefit from my responses will
understand and accept my silence as gratitude, and that those who have
disagreements will simply realize that I have enough useless opinions of my own
and am consequently not in need of those of others. I can then get back to the
tedious but rewarding task of providing answers to many questions by
translating the works of someone whose teachings are based on deep spiritual
insight and experience, far exceeding my meagre opinions and the opinions of
those in my limited state of spiritual development.
Thus, please see, immediately below, the
questions posed to His Eminence, Bishop Auxentios, and my short responses.
With warm wishes for the upcoming Fast of the Apostles next
week,
Least Among Monks,
† Bishop Chrysostomos
† Bishop Chrysostomos
1) What does [Bp. Chrysostomos] mean by what he calls
the ‘otherly' and that he connects to "exactitude in tradition
bound to moderate freedom in the Christian yoke of love”? I am at lost to
find any meaning in this.
|
I mean that Orthodox traditionalists, who follow St. Paul in
holding firmly to the traditions passed down to us and who cling to an Orthodox
way of life found in the Canons of the Church and the teachings of the Fathers,
take on this yoke as freedom in Christ. By our fidelity to our Orthodox
traditions — in how we act, eat, dress, and worship — we gain the freedom of
obedience. Obedience is a path to freedom, in that we trust that all things
done in obedience to Holy Tradition will ultimately be for our good and,
following the natural path set out by the Church for living in a world that has
deviated from the standards of Christianity, we will be freed from the
enslavement of an imperfect world. Our freedom is reinforced by seeing what
such a life brings us, in terms of a modicum of relief from the woes of the
world and an abiding vision of the wonderful path towards spiritual evolution and
union, by the Grace of the Holy Spirit, with Christ: i.e., human deification.
By moderation, I mean that we do not foolishly impose our path,
even if we may consider it correct, on others. Nor do we employ abusive, nasty,
and ill-intentioned words, or engage in offensive actions, in relating to those
who do not accept our path. Our path, the royal way, is always paved with
toleration and respect for others, even when we disagree with them or regret
the path they take. They have free will, the hallmark of those created in the
Image of God, and we must respect them even when we disagree with them or
politely chastise them for their errors. Nor can we consider ourselves somehow
better than they. Such arrogance impedes any spiritual progress. We must simply
pray for them and accept them where they are, unless they ask us for help in
moving elsewhere.
The “otherly,” the cataphatic “unknowing” and the mystical life
of the Church, wherein we encounter spiritual things in silence and in the
mystery of inner transformation, is simply something that our tradition,
moderation, and love make possible to us. The “otherly” is the goal of
spiritual life, which is given to those who observe Holy Tradition as a “means
to an end.” To state it ironically, obedience affords us a certain freedom in
this life and, at the same time, opens up to us, when we embrace it, to
something wholly beyond our expectations.
2) What does he mean by a new and
innovative Orthodoxy?
|
I mean by that the Orthodoxy of “officialdom,” which is bestowed
on whole jurisdictions either by virtue of their association with some
political or national entity that sponsors one of the ancient Patriarchates, or
the Orthodoxy of the ecumenical movement, which rejects Orthodox claims to
spiritual and historical primacy and which, confusing “officialdom” with
canonical authenticity, still calls itself “canonical.” There is, of course, no
such thing as an “official” Orthodoxy, and the administrative authority of the
Church is based on spiritual principles: Apostolic
Succession, confessional purity, and, indeed, a life led according to Holy Tradition, the teachings of the
Church Fathers, and adherence to the Canons of the Church, the rudders by which
it is guided. Official Churches have canonical authenticity when they follow
the Canons.
The new and innovative Orthodoxy of our day believes that
Orthodoxy is not the criterion of Christianity, often teaches that it holds no
primacy in the array of Christian bodies, and does not hold that all should be
measured by it. Holy Tradition is at times dismissed as medieval (or openly
mocked), and such inanities as a post-Patristic age and freedom from the search
for the True Church or the criterion of the Faith is a matter of folly or
simple-mindedness. As a result, the new and innovative Orthodoxy that we see so
triumphantly raising its voice in the contemporary world today has succumbed to
foibles and true follies that disfigure the Faith and give clear evidence that
Orthodoxy as they present it is nothing special, but is slowly walking the path
of irrelevancy that marks so many religious institutions today. While sincere
people would like to believe that this is still the ancient Faith of Orthodoxy,
they are foolishly ignoring the fact that it is teetering on the verge of
losing what makes Orthodoxy what it is.
Nor is Orthodox traditionalism without it betrayals and
weaknesses, though at least it has not succumbed to an institutional vision of
the essence of Orthodoxy. It understands that genuine Orthodoxy lies in the
cultivation of Saints, the transformation of human life, and a tenacious
dedication to the principle that Christ founded the Church, the Apostles and
Fathers preached and preserved it, and that the clear sign of its presence is
found where sinners repent, where humans participate in the Energies of God and unite with
Christ, and true guides /holy people/ guide us to that end.
3. How does Orthodox baptism differ
from baptism in other churches and are non-Orthodox baptisms useless?
|
Baptism in the Early Church was often called “enlightenment,”
since by threefold immersion in the sanctified waters of the Baptismal font the
“ancestral curse,” the “sickness unto death” of fallen man, is washed away and
our faculty for spiritual understanding (the nous, or spiritual mind) is
activated. Our path to the restoration of our “Godlike” qualities is restored
by Baptism. The Mystery and the form of the ritual are preserved in Orthodoxy
as they were in early times, and that Mystery includes not just a washing away
of sin and enlightenment, but a oneness, as Scripture expresses it, of
confession and mind in the Orthodox Faith. The Church can, when those baptized
in another confession by threefold immersion convert, and especially if
immersion in water is physically impossible on account of age or health,
receive believers by “economy,” that is, by endowing the Grace of one of the
Church’s Mysteries on a ritual foreign to Orthodoxy. This is an elaborate
service in and of itself and involves the profession of a clear belief in the
primacy of Orthodoxy, even if Orthodox ecumenists ignore that provision in many
cases. In fact, the wholly proper and acceptable manner of reception into
Orthodoxy is by Baptism, whatever a convert’s Faith.
As for what Baptism in outside Orthodoxy, that is not our
concern. Our concern is to preserve the integrity of the Church as a
community of those with a common Baptism, a common confession, and a common
mind in Christ.
Dismissing other Christians and their confessions as nothing,
however, is impolite and crude, violates the ethos of the Church and the Church
Fathers, and is, in my personal opinion, as much an assault against the
integrity of Orthodoxy as receiving converts by economy, as though the Orthodox
Mystery of Baptism were not unique and singular.
Knowing where Grace is does not give us license to assume that
we are God and can judge the hearts, intentions, and human virtues of others,
whatever their religion. Those who disagree with me have every right to do so.
But my assessment of deficiencies among the heterodox does not include ugly,
loud, sectarian, and vulgar condemnations of anyone. I cannot imagine how
people living a spiritual life could do such a thing, even if I do not believe
that there is no criterion of truth or that all religions are the same (a
belief that common sense, even a slight bit of logic and intelligence, and
human decency cannot countenance).
4. Does he really think that God
does not punish people and that His wrath is not going to destroy the earth?
Can a Christian deny God's wrath?
|
I do not pretend to understand fully the Old Testamental vision
of God, if taken alone, but I do know that it is a vision that is turned from
fear to love, wrath to loving sacrifice, and violence to peace in the Light of
Jesus Christ, Who is God revealed on earth and in human form and time. If God
had to seek man within man's own fallen passions and through his primitive,
sinful nature in Old Testamental times, in the New Testament the God Who was
looking for man man in the Old Testament is revealed as the God that man
(including the Old Testamental Fathers and Prophets) was all the while seeking
in his heart. In the mystery of His Providence, God revealed
Himself in full as what He always was, even if He mysteriously tried to reach
man in ways that I, at least, do not, again, fully understand. In any event,
taking on our nature, communing with the tarnished image of His Light within
us, and sacrificing Himself for us, He proved that He is certainly not a God
Who wishes by His wrath to destroy us.
God does not wish to destroy sinners, whom He loves and
forgives, and has no desire to destroy His own creation. He by nature withdraws
from our world and from us when we indulge in and perpetuate sin; but He wills
none of this. We will it, ultimately. And what happens when we destroy our
world and lose our souls? God renews the world, restores us, and frees us from
sin and death, if we freely desire that and voluntary accept Him. As for those
who reject him and earn damnation, what about them? Even in Hell His love is
present, though it serves to torment sinners for their choices and for having
distanced themselves from Him.
What I said before, as a closing remark, I quote again from the
Prophet Amos, whose prophecies are filled with the language of wrath and retribution,
to find words that, wholly independently of their provenance, speak to me about
the Old Testamental view of God: "Ye have changed judgment into gall, and
righteousness into hemlock.”
These are simply my very fallible thoughts, and should they be
wrong, discard them at first evidence of that.
Least Among Monks,
† Bishop Chrysostomos
† Bishop Chrysostomos