፠ GUIDELINES FOR AN ORTHODOX MARRIAGE ፠
Orthodoxy pertains to the proper/upright (ortho-) faith or belief (doxa) which was revealed to the disciples of Christ at Pentecost. Part of this faith has been preserved in written form through the Holy Scriptures. However, in Orthodox tradition the unwritten Holy Tradition which was perpetuated through the life of the Church and embodied in the experience of the saints has been equally important and complementary to the written revelations. The Holy Scriptures validate the importance of the Holy Tradition, while the Holy Tradition confirms and reinforces the revelations of the Holy Scriptures. This Holy Tradition was not altered, but has been preserved in its essence as inherited by Christ. It includes the teachings of Orthodox Church Fathers, the Synodical decisions of the Church Councils[1] and other elements that have defined the liturgical life of the ancient Orthodox Church. The implication of this ‘noetic’ Soteriology and theology is that women had no reasons to be excluded from this Holy Tradition. In fact, women were as much involved in the preservation and embodiment of apostolic teachings as were men. Readers should not be led to believe that theology was gender-exclusive on the premise that the actual articulation of theology was dominated by males, which has ecclesiastical and socio-cultural explanations.[4] It is undisputed that the Orthodox Church has historically venerated both female and male prophets and saints, with the Virgin Mary being considered the Holiest of all the Holy. In addition, there have been instances where female saints have explicated divine mysteries to male saints with extraordinary theological clarity,[5] and have been considered authoritative to settle doctrinal Church positions among male clergies.[6] Chrysostom’s homilies should be assessed within this comprehensive Orthodox cosmology, which he echoed and enforced through his commentaries. In accordance with apostolic teachings, Chrysostom taught the full spiritual equality of men and women and seemed to grant women a higher capacity to create an environment of spiritual renewal and growth in their homes for their husbands and their families.[7] Simultaneously, as it was cautioned, his commentaries should not be isolated from the context in which he lived and the conditions of the faithful and especially of women in the times during which he spoke his homilies.[8] It is to be apprehended that his pastoral concern led to some concessions or adaptations in the expression and rhetorical strategies of the saint to make himself relevant and convincing to his audience.[9]
[1]
This is best exemplified in the Church’s Patristic tradition and in the
Ecumenical Synods of the Church. The Synodical decisions were considered valid
because of the Holy Fathers who participated in them, who were proven to be holy
due to being steady in their faith and echoing apostolic teachings. Therefore,
Chrysostom’s commentaries have been considered Orthodox not because he was a
convincing homilist, but because he echoed apostolic teachings through the grace
of the Holy Spirit who dwelled in him.
[3]
‘νοῦς’; might be thought of as the
rational core of the human soul, as differentiated from the intellect. It has
also been called the ‘eye of the soul.’
[4]
This is probably explained by the fact that males already held more prominence
in the early societies and women were generally dedicated to the life of the
household and child-rearing. In addition, in the Orthodox traditions only men
could serve in the role of priests and this provided an additional platform for
prolific teaching, such as in the case of Chrysostom. However, it should be
noted that while the Orthodox Church has traditionally preserved the priestly
order for men, this has been explained in reference to theological reasons that
do not suggest an ontological male superiority. This is one issue that has
attracted attention in contemporary debates among some strands of Orthodox
scholars.
[5]
As exemplified in the dialogue that bedridden St Macrina had with her brother
Gregory Nyssa on the state of the soul which enforced his steadiness in the
faith. Notably, Gregory of Nyssa considered St. Macrina his ‘teacher’.
[6]
As exemplified at the fourth Ecumenical Council at Chalcedon in Bithynia (AD
451) when the final decision about Christology was made by a miracle of the
deceased local saint Euthemia.
[7]
David C. Ford, Women and Men in the Early
Church: The Full Views of St. Chrysostom (South Canaan, Pennsylvania: St.
Tikhon’s Seminary Press, 1996).
[8]
See for example, Deborah F. Sawyer, Women and Religion in the First Christian Centuries (New York:
Routledge, 1996).
[9]
It is thus not denied that Chrysostom seemed inclined to believe that the female
sex was inherently more delicate or weaker, such as in instances where he said
that the woman needs more understanding and condescension. (In
Epistulam ad Ephesios, Homily 20). He also seemed to suggest at various
occasions that women could be more talkative, frivolous or superficial (De
Virginitate, Paragraph 40). These comments should be appraised in
consideration of women’s realities in the early centuries. Since females in the
pre-Christian times had been generally treated as lesser than men, it is
understood that they had consistently lacked opportunities for education and
refinement of thought, which could have made them susceptible to such
proclivities, as well as enforced the general idea of them being less
intellectual. However, while Chrysostom showed these proclivities, he attributed
to men their own share of negative tendencies, such as irascibility, arrogance
and abusiveness (De Virginitate,
Paragraph 40). In speaking this way, Chrysostom was ultimately trying to help
females and males recognise commonplace spousal defects and cultivate a
Christian ethos in their marriage, which he considered essential to achieve the
soteriological ends of the union. (See
“Ο Άγιος Ιωάννης ο Χρυσόστομος και η Οικογενειακή Ζωή του Αρχιμ. Εφραίμ,
Καθηγούμενου Ιεράς Μεγίστης Μονής Βατοπαιδίου. Πηγή: Περιοδικό ‘Πεμπτουσία’ Νο
25,” republished
by
OODE,
18/4/2008,
www.oodegr.com/oode/koinwnia/oikogeneia/xrysost_oikog_zwi1.htm).
[10]
‘διάκρισις’; translates as
‘discernment’.’ It is understood that one cultivates this through prayer and
Orthodox ascesis.
[11]
The author was born in the Republic of Moldova and was raised and educated in
Greece. Both countries have been traditionally Orthodox, albeit socio-cultural
specificities.
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