†
In the Name of the Lord Jesus Christ, the Son of God, the Almighty.
I have entitled
this paper Orthodoxy
and the Conversion of
England.
First,
I would ask you to keep
in mind throughout that
there is no conversion
save to the utter
simplicity of the Christ—in
whom dwelleth all the
fulness of the Godhead
bodily.
But
this is no plea for
false simplification—a
simpliste
solution—in
the true simplicity, all
the intricate details of
all universes can find
the reason of their
being.
Two days ago, my brother-in-law, Mr. Kitson Clark, ended his paper on the note of the Daphni Pantokrator (image below).
I would begin with another ikon akin to it—that ivory relief in the Cabinet des Medailles in Paris (image below) which shows the Emperor and Empress, Romanus and Eudocia, in all the jewelled trappings of Byzantine Royalty: between and above them stands the Lord Jesus of Nazareth, the King of All, in the meek robes of His humanity, with no splendour save that of the Uncreated Light: His hands are upon their heads in blessing.
To be converted is not
just to gaze upon Him,
or to imitate Him as
from outside, but to
have our life taken into
His Sonship, by the
Spirit of Adoption
whereby we cry Abba,
Father.
Is it necessary to press
the urgency of the need,
for the world, for this
country, and for
ourselves? What I do
urge is that we have no
time to-day for things
that are inessential. If
we have not, in that
which has brought us
here, the key to the
treasure which is above
all treasures, let us go
away at once and seek
for it elsewhere. If we
can get on without each
other, let us do so. But
I say we cannot. Beware
lest the Lord’s words
thunder against us—Woe
unto you, for ye have
taken away the key of
knowledge: ye entered
not in yourselves, and
those that were entering
in ye hindered.
Perhaps this is, in the first instance, a challenge to the Church of England Council of Foreign Relations, which may seem to be concerned mainly with diplomatic relations with foreign Churches. Surely what is required of it is an all-out drive to give to world-wide Christendom, as already in being, at least as important a place in the mind of the ordinary Englishman as is occupied to-day by the foreign missions of our own Church. Too long we of the Church of England have been concerned, in an ominously self-conscious manner, with asserting that our Church is all that any other Church is. And, in consequence, the habit has grown on us of thinking and acting as if we could afford to stand alone. Problems of India are thought of in terms of England, and it does not appear to us incongruous that the Cingalese or the South-Sea-Islander should be expected to find their spiritual home in Canterbury.
So long as we are confined to a West-European view of History, this is inevitable. Within this view, we must either submit to Rome or claim that we are as good as she is. And within this view, Rome is historically the centre. Those who cannot stomach this at any price are left without any true centre, perhaps without any faith at all in history since Christ. I suppose the Church of England has tried to hold a balance, neither accepting nor rejecting Rome completely. I would like to suggest that herein she has given evidence of her vocation—her appeal is to history: but she has been awaiting a world-view of History for which she has not hitherto been ready.
Actually, the only heart of the Church on Earth, the only heart of the world and of all History, is neither Canterbury nor Rome—nor Constantinople or Moscow—but Jerusalem. When that is properly understood, the seat or seats of government of the Church become of secondary importance.
This is the context in which I believe we are to see the great vocation of our Fellowship.
For several generations
now there have been men
whose names we honour,
working for friendship
between our Churches.
But in that friendship,
while I know not how
much we have wished the
Orthodox to learn from
us, it has been too
commonly assumed that
all we have to gain from
Russian or Greek, apart
from support for our
determination to be
Catholic without being
Papist, was in the
nature of caviare or
rose-petal jam—a
spiritual luxury
delightful in its place,
and even salutary, but
not to be indulged in to
excess—for we
must remain Western
—and
not indispensable. Even
Birkbeck seems to miss
the point of
Khomiakoff’s reply to
the Magdalen
tractarian’s question
how to arrest the
pernicious effects of
Protestantism—Shake
off your Roman
Catholicism.
And
for a more recent
example, I would refer
you to a passage in
Brother George Every’s
new book on the
Byzantine Patriarchate,
in which I am not at all
convinced that the
writer expresses his
real mind.
The Fellowship also has
been guilty in this
matter, too often
slipping through the
fingers of any attempt
to concentrate it on
real dogmatic study.
When it was our duty to
proclaim to the world an
Orthodoxy that was not
peculiar to any one
country, we have sought
to find in the Russian
word "Sobornost"
some
idea not contained
(though really it is
contained) in the
original Catholicity
—while
protecting ourselves
with the bizarre,
Russian sound of the
word, from any idea that
it was binding on us
English. Or, instead of
turning our minds to the
classic teaching of the
Fathers, we have
fastened on the Holy
Wisdom
philosophy
of some outstanding
Russian thinkers,
classing in our minds as
typical of Eastern
Orthodoxy just those
elements which other
Orthodox themselves feel
to be exotic, and
perhaps due to Western
influence. It is greatly
to be hoped that
Vladimir Lossky’s book
on the Mystical Theology
of the Eastern Church
will appear in English
as soon as possible as a
counterblast to this.
Perhaps it is not fair
to describe all this as fiddling
while Rome burns.
Perhaps
it was inevitable that
we should not be ready
until now for a greater
work. But perhaps we are
ready to-day. At least I
know that I am no longer
by any means alone in
the point of view which
I intend to sketch for
you. Others, perhaps
many more than I know,
have come to it quite
independently of me.
Twenty years ago I found myself in Jerusalem with, as it were, scales falling from my eyes. I had been there for the best part of two years, as an Anglican student enjoying the genial hospitality and admirable teaching of the French Dominicans of the Ecole Biblique of St. Stephen. But almost imperceptibly, through what I saw in the Holy City of the Church Universal, and through the influence of one close Russian friendship, and the warmth of Russian Church Life to which that admitted me so freely, I found my view of life revolutionized:
I slept, methinks, and woke,
And, slowly gazing, found me stripped in sleep.
It was as if I had, without noticing it, unlearned everything that I had known before, and started as a child to learn it all over again. The truths I now saw were the same truths: but a new light bound them together and interpreted them differently, explaining apparent contradictions, and leading in many ways to implications hitherto unnoticed. At the same time I had a deep conviction that herein the simpler faith of my country-rectory boyhood was somehow being vindicated against the siren voices with which Oxford had, to some extent, confused it.
I returned to Cuddesdon to find myself reading between the lines of all ordinary books of history and theology, testing this new view, and finding that it seemed to fit the facts. I went to the St. Alban’s Conference at which our Fellowship was founded, to see whether Orthodox theologians would actually interpret their Faith in the way which seemed to me implicit in the somewhat general impressions I had so far gained of their worship. Again I found I had not been mistaken. So the process of growth went on.
Of course a new question presently arose. Orthodoxy now appeared to show me the true vocation of the Church of England. But, having once seen the fuller, freer truth, could I personally remain tied up in the knots of our chequered history? Back in Palestine in 1929, I was very near, or so it seemed, to taking the bull by the horns—to becoming a member of the Eastern Orthodox Church in a land where it was native, and serving it there, leaving aside as not to concern me personally the question of the validity of the Anglican Church. But then I became painfully aware of an attitude all too common among Anglicans—fortunately never universal—an attitude which, as it seemed to me, however polite and friendly on the surface, fundamentally despised Orthodoxy, and had no room for it either inside or outside our Communion. My combativeness was roused. I might not be a very good Anglican, but at least I represented the true heart of our Church better than these—and if I could remain, I must, to prove that. And here I should say that I am never so sorely tempted to doubt the validity of our Church as when I hear people arguing that she is the best Church. What need of that? Knowing that she has her faults, we must not presume to compare her with other empirical Churches, but only with that perfect heavenly Church, the Church of the First born in which is no spot or wrinkle. For all her faults, it was here that Christ first called me, and there is only one Christ.
So, after another two years, I found myself in my country parish, convinced that we must follow Christ and build from the bottom if we are to attain true unity, and to save the world. I have not been a great success, either as a country parson or as a Naval chaplain—but I am convinced that that experience of the wider mind of the Church which has sometimes made me appear exotic to men of my own type of English training, has brought me closer to the ordinary people of England and not separated me further from them.
A warning for Anglican ecclesiastics, whose task it should be to know and understand foreign Churches, and to interpret them to their people:—again and again I have found non-conformists, and Anglican laymen of no specially ecclesiastical interests, who have met the Orthodox Church, in Greece or elsewhere, and have understood her and appreciated her better, it would seem, than they have appreciated our Church, or than our ecclesiastics have appreciated the Greek. We have started with too many presuppositions, and our knowledge, incomplete and in a different framework of thought, has been a hindrance rather than a help to the understanding of Eastern Orthodoxy. Such an understanding is not possible for a Western unless he is ready to start again as a child from the very simplest beginnings—or rather, it is not possible for any man, Eastern or Western, unless he learns to be doing this continually.
Moreover, this Church,
which at first sight
appears so highly
hierarchical, is much
more of a layman’s
Church than either ours
or the Roman. I had
already long surmised
what I found clearly
before my eyes when I
went to Greece for the
first eight months of
her liberation in
1944—Here is a Church
from which we may
perhaps learn the secret
for bridging the gulf
between our clergy and
laity. Here also Church
and community remain
identical with a lack of
self consciousness which
makes it possible to
find room for free
expression within one
undivided Church of very
many varied movements of
the Spirit which have
with us usually resulted
in multiplication of
sects. Let us lay aside,
for the moment at least,
the assumption that we
of the Church of England
are called to be the
bridge between Catholic
and Protestant
or Reformed,
and
face the possibility
that there may be points
on which Orthodox and Free-Churchmen
(Methodist,
Presbyterian, or
Congregationalist) may
be better fitted in the
first instance to
understand and be
understood by each other
than is the Anglican or
the Roman Catholic to
understand either. I
will not now elaborate
this point—what Fr.
Edward Every will have
to say about the Church
in Greece will, I think,
have a bearing on it.
Meanwhile, I would
already suggest to you
that our task may be to
discover in Orthodoxy
that miraculous glue
which alone is capable
of reuniting the
shattered fragments of
Western Christendom. I
should like to call this
possibility urgently to
the attention of all
whose impatience for
unity with other
Churches of their own
country may otherwise
lead them to wreck their
cause on the rocks of
betrayal of principle.
But this brings me back to my main contention. I do not ask you to accept it in a hurry, lock, stock and barrel. But I do ask you not to rule out of court, as most of us appear to have done in the past, the possibility that in the 11th Century Schism between East and West there were fundamental issues involved, and that in these the East was right and the West wrong; and that this breach was but one aspect of a disastrous, tyrannical revolution within the Western Church itself. In the light of this possibility, I would suggest as a fruitful field of research for a Mediævalist, the hints in the Spiritual Franciscans, Wycliff, the Moravians, and perhaps elsewhere, of an underground tradition in the West—or was it only a wistfulness?—that the pure Faith, lost or obscured in Rome, had remained with the Greeks. And I would urge on your notice the fact that on every issue on which the Reformers of the 16th Century broke from Rome, Roman faith and practice were deeply, if subtly, different from the Greek. I would suggest that, both then and subsequently, all the divisions of Western Christendom have been rooted in the search for some elements of Christian Life which would have been found in Orthodoxy.
Do not think that I am
asking the Western to
become Eastern. I can,
in some measure, consent
to Michæl Ramsey when he
says that East
and West sorely needed
each other, and ever
since they went their
separate ways, neither
has been able to present
the wholeness of
Christian and Church
life.
Only
I would remind you that
it is not less true that
the apostasy of the old
Isræl, the defection of
the Arab to a false
prophet, the refusal of
the Indian to see those
elements in Christianity
which are not to be
found in his own
religions, have also
thwarted our
presentation of the
wholeness of Christ. But
we do not, therefore,
say that Judaism, Islam,
Hinduism and Buddhism,
are on the same level as
the Christian Church.
Moreover, the Easternism
of
Orthodoxy is apt to be
exaggerated, as if it
expressed only one
national or racial
culture. Here the
Fellowship has suffered
in the past by seeing
too little of anything
but Russian
Orthodoxy—and, at that,
of one element within
Russian Orthodoxy.
Anyone who has become
used to the Orthodox
Liturgy at home in
several different
milieux—say Russian,
Greek and Syrian—will
know what vast
differences of culture
and racial character can
express themselves fully
and freely through the
medium of what remains
clearly the same Liturgy
and the same
Faith—differences at
least as great, in the
first instance, as any
which distinguish
Eastern and Western
Europe. In fact, one
begins to wonder
whether, in practice,
any Christian Liturgy is
so well fitted for
naturalization into the
mind and language of
every people in the
whole world, as that of
St. John Chrysostom. And
yet the Orthodox Church
has never in theory
denied that, for
instance, the Roman Mass
was, in its purity, an
Orthodox Liturgy. And
Fr. Evgraph Kovalevsky
is showing us to-day the
practical possibility of
a Western Orthodoxy.
Furthermore, we must
beware, lest our desire
to remain
Western
should
be a mere cloak for our
clinging to those
restrictions of
Christian outlook which
nine centuries of
separation have planted
upon us. Everyone of us
does, in fact, shrink
from the task of this
return to the simplicity
of the Christ which must
involve for us, not a
rejection, but, as it
were, a divesting
ourselves, without
passing judgment, alike
on Newman and Pusey,
Laud and Cromwell,
Loyola and Luther,
Thomas a Kempis and
Richard Rolle, Francis
and Aquinas, Bernard and
Anselm; Rafæl and
Botticelli and Leonardo;
King’s College Chapel,
Chamber Court at
Winchester, Salisbury
Spire, and the wonder of
Chartres:—even further
back, as we seek towards
the roots of the
trouble, Jerome and
Augustine must be called
in question. For most of
us, the process seems
far too like being
flayed alive—this
putting off of our coats
of skins. But when we do
get back behind the
division, is it not true
that the comparatively
unformed architecture of
our fragmentary
Anglo-Saxon survivals
seems to have links with
Byzantine and Universal
Christendom which are
lost as soon as the
Saxon sets into the
Norman. I put it to
you—were Jerome and
Augustine themselves,
Patrick and Columba,
Gregory of Rome and
Benedict, Wilfrid and
Chad, to return to earth
to-day, may it not be
that they would all
alike find in modern
Eastern Orthodoxy
something more
recognizably identical
with the Church they had
known in their own
countries than anything
they would find now in
the Western Churches?
I am not suggesting that there have not been Saints in the West, whose holiness has penetrated behind the middle wall of division to the simplicity of Christ our God. But I do know how, especially in Jerusalem, one could feel even in the least satisfactory representative of the Orthodox Church an unhindered continuity with the Church of the Fathers such as one could not feel in any Western Church there.
Why do I not ask the
Orthodox to divest
themselves
of
Gregory Palamas or
Seraphim of Sarov? In a
sense I do: but in
another sense it is not
necessary for me to do
so: for the Saints
themselves, and the
heart of accepted
Orthodox Theology, have
always called us to such
a divesting, saying Not
I, but Christ living in
me; forgetting those
things which are behind,
and reaching forth unto
those things which are
before, I press toward
the mark for the prize
of the high calling of
God in Christ Jesus.
Is
not this the secret of
the survival power of
the Byzantine Church,
cleansed through the
loss of so much that was
once its highest outward
expression—Haghia
Sophia, that Heaven
on earth
which
converted Vladimir’s
envoys: the Christian
empires of Old and New
Rome, of Serbia, and of
Russia—so that a Syrian
village, without art or
learning, perhaps
without even a priest,
and surrounded by Islam,
can in some ways reveal
to us more of Orthodoxy
than the Byzantine
Court? The apophatic
or negative
mystical
way rules over all
Orthodox theology. It is
the way of humility,
which cannot fall
because it sets itself
from the beginning in
the lowest place; the
way by which the Mother
of God was prepared for
the Incarnation—for he
that humbleth himself
shall be exalted.
If we cannot approach
the Western Church of
the last nine centuries
with the same
confidence, is it not
precisely because, since
the clerical revolution
of the 11th Century, she
has not dared to submit
herself or her theology
to the primacy of this
path? Desiring an
assurance of salvation
which her reasoning
could apprehend, she has
not dared to throw
herself entirely on the
mercy of a God whose
Essence remains
unknowable. Where her
Saints have penetrated
to this, she has been
tempted to explain them
away—to treat their path
as an extra, to which
some few mystics
are
called concerning
devotion rather than
theology—whereas, for
Orthodoxy, devotion and
theology are more
clearly inseparable. The
inner bond which bound
the Saints together is
thus gradually lost from
view, until the
Reformers thought it
necessary to call for a
turning from saints seen
in practice as separate
individuals to the one
Christ. But the true
Fathers, and the True
Church, are taken into
the Tabor-light of the
Christ Himself just
because they are at
every moment submitted
to the touchstone of the
God who is beyond all
knowledge and all
essence.
I know little of the "Palamite" controversy of the 14th Century: and in England it has been either overlooked completely or assumed to be of no real importance. But I strongly suspect that if we studied it closer we should find it to have been a real seeking out of the spiritual and theological meaning of the breach between East and West. Until we have studied it, we have no right to assume that these differences are of a superficial character. I do suggest that just because of this clear distinction between the unknowable Essence of God and His Activities—the Uncreated Light—the Orthodox are able to develop a teaching of Deification bolder than is ever found in the West, and at the same time to be preserved from the danger of Creature-worship. As soon as the Doctrine of the Church as the Body of Christ is in any way watered down into a metaphor, the justification for worship of the Saints is lost—and no theoretical distinction between veneration and adoration will be felt to be a sufficient safeguard: each saint stands like a solid image, self contained, whatever light he may reflect. But when each is seen but as a star keeping his place in the firmament of the Church—a window through which the light of the Christ shines in upon us—one ikon among all which cover the walls of a Church—then we can fearlessly offer through each all our devotion to God.
There cannot be within
the Heaven of the Church
any gnostic descending
hierarchy, each level
one stage further from
the purity of the
Godhead. Even the
historical earthly life
of Jesus of Nazareth,
the Incarnate Son of
God, cannot without
idolatry be treated in
isolation from His
continued Incarnation in
the Church. Hence the
not unimportant fact
that Orthodox instinct,
believing fully in the
reality of the
Eucharistic Body and
Blood of Christ, does
not in practice isolate
the Sacred Elements for
any special veneration
outside their place in
the Liturgy. This
mystery is part, albeit
a central part, of the
whole mystery of the
Church as the Body of
Christ: nor can it be
understood or have any
meaning outside that
universal mystery. I
know next to nothing of
the Schoolmen, but
wonder if they did not
fall into the error of
allowing the profane,
the unconverted or
imperfectly converted
regions of their minds,
to pry into matters
which should have been
reserved for their minds
fully converted—;I
will not tell Thy secret
to Thine enemies.
In this context it
surely becomes
impossible to speak
either of the Pope or of
the Hierarchy as the
earthly Vicars
of
Christ: for He, being
truly present in His
Church, needs no vicar
Here we do feel that the
Hildebrandine Revolution
set the seal upon a
false tendency in the
West which had already
been encouraged by the
failure to translate the
Liturgy into the
vernaculars (connected,
we cannot help
suspecting, with a
certain intellectual
laziness in the Latin
language itself), and by
the position in which
the clergy found
themselves as purveyors
of Roman Civilization to
the Western Barbarians.
The clergy tended to
become the purveyors of
Christ in doctrine and
sacraments, rather than
the essential organs of
a living body which is
all equally Christ. This
is an error from which
we did not at the
Reformation really
succeed in freeing
ourselves. It is
doubtful whether the
Presbyterians succeeded
either. Possibly at a
later date the
Methodists may have been
nearer success. But it
is worth considering
whether, in the face of
what appeared as an Apostasy
of the Hierarchy,
the
method of amputation (if
thine eye offend thee,
pluck it out
) may
not have had gains, in
approach to Orthodoxy
which is the Simplicity
of the Christ, to
counterbalance in part
our retention of the
outward form and
succession at the price,
perhaps, of our
continuing to be in some
measure a Church in
which the Faith is
imposed rather than
elicited.
Here we come to another
fundamental point. As in
standards of personal
righteousness, so in
doctrine of the Church,
there is for Orthodoxy
no such distinction of esse and bene
esse as
is sometimes made among
Protestants—the only
righteousness is the
perfection of the
Christ, the only true
Church the perfect
Church of the
Consummation: and no
Saint save the Lord
Jesus Himself, and no
actual empirical Church
on earth, has attained
to the full measure of
this. The lower
standards which we
tolerate, and employ economically
as
stages in our working
towards the higher, are
in no sense substitutes
for it— both we and the
Orthodox look askance at
doctrines of Merit, and
Works of Supererogation.
Yet, in so far as we are
truly aiming at the
Perfection of the
Christ, His Grace is
with us and we have
attained it. I t may be
that the Papacy,
purified of error, will
be found to be as much
of the esse of
that perfect Church as
is the Episcopate (Thou,
when thou art converted,
strengthen thy brethren
).
And yet the Orthodox
Church does, I believe,
represent on earth
to-day that perfect
Church in a truer sense
than does the Roman. I,
as an Anglican, must
believe that the one
Spirit did and does
continue, however
imprisoned, in the Roman
Church, if I am to
believe that the same
Spirit has been handed
down through History to
us. Only, may it be that
in some sense the Faith
has remained in the West
like the Sleeping Beauty
needing the kiss of
Orthodoxy to raise it
back to full life? And
remember, that kiss
might come too late.
Here again we seem to be
approaching, as near the
root of the issue, a
difference in conception
of Nature and
Grace—wherein the
Reformers, seeking
blindly, only stumbled
further into the mire—
witness the
preconceptions which
made the translators of
the Authorized Version
able to spoil the
contrast of I
Corinthians—animal
man
and spiritual
man
—by translating [psychikon]
as natural
—a
mistake (retained in the
Revised Version) which
must surely be due to
their inadvertently
reading [physikon] as a
result of their
preoccupation with
Augustine. To the
Orthodox, Nature and
Grace are complementary
rather than contrasted.
Natural man is Adam
before the Fall, or the
New Adam. What the West
calls natural man is
unnatural man—[para
physin]. Certainly Grace
also introduces what is
supernatural. But
remember that St. John
Climacus argues that the
highest gifts of
Grace—Faith, Hope and
Charity—are among the
natural virtues, and are
found even among the
animals—although no
supernatural gift can be
as important as these.
Man’s true nature is
neither altered in its
fundamental essence nor
obliterated, but
imprisoned and
corrupted, by the Fall.
Its penitence and its
prayer go up through the
thousands of years
before Christ, until at
last it is enabled in
Mary to see the Angel
visitor, and to submit
itself to God’s Will. It
is here that both we and
the Orthodox are
suspicious of the
doctrine of the
Immaculate Conception of
the Holy Mother of God,
lest in reducing a
mystery to the
definitions of human
logic, we should obscure
our whole conception of
Human Nature, bound up
with the fact that she
is one of us, needing
her Son to be her
Redeemer too, though she
be fore-cleansed
by the Spirit
[prokathartheisa to
pneumati]—a phrase used
also in the Menæa in
reference to Jeremiah
and other prophets) to
become His Mother. The
freewill of a woman set
right the disobedience
of the first Eve.
Undisturbed, as it were,
by all the ages of the
fallen creature, God
takes the creature
itself to be the means
of His own redeeming
Epiphany. We are not to
be saved from our
Nature—our Nature is to
be saved by union with
His Divine Nature. If we
pay special honour to
the God-Bearer, it is to
safeguard this double
truth—that He truly took
Manhood of Her, and that
He makes her and us (and
here, too, she is our
prototype) truly
partakers of His Divine
Nature.
His Grace is such that
His Creation,
transfigured by Him,
shall show a rightly
balanced outshining of
the Divine Nature. Here,
I believe, at its
simplest, is the reason
why we feel the Filioque
clause to be impossible
for Orthodox
Theology—The Trinity is
primarily revealed in
Jordan, where the Holy
Ghost is seen proceeding
from the Father and
resting on the Son.
Surely
this is more than the
consecration of His
Manhood, and embodies an
eternal truth of the
Godhead Itself. And even
in the temporal mission,
though He with the
Father sends His Spirit
to prepare the way for
Him, and to extend His
Incarnation in the
Church, yet at every
point He Himself, in the
unity of His Incarnate
Person, remains the goal
of the Spirit’s work. Is
it fanciful to suppose
that the Filioque clause
has in fact either
represented or been
responsible for the
general Western failure
to treat the doctrine of
the Church as the Body
of Christ as other than
a metaphor—the Son
remaining aloof upon His
Father’s throne, sends
the Spirit as a kind of
deputy to do His work
for Him, through earthly
vicars? So, in effect,
it may seem that the
Papal tyranny stultified
for us the Doctrine of
the Holy Spirit and the
Doctrine of the
Trinity—took away that
key of Faith which is
the deification in
Christ of the human
understanding, to leave
us only a faith of blind
obedience, a logic
over-confident in itself
because it must not
question its own
premises, and too often,
as a result, a
liturgical worship
becoming the formal
execution of a duty, and
private prayer entrusted
to the emotions at the
expense of the
intellect. It is a
significant tragedy that
there is no proper
translation for [nous]
and its derivatives in
Latin or its daughter
languages, or in
English—the Schoolmen
were forced to borrow
the Greek word—I should
like to know whether
there was a word in
Anglo-Saxon: certainly
there are Greek
distinctions which could
be made in Anglo-Saxon,
but not in Latin, and
can no longer be made
satisfactorily in
English.
The picture I am drawing of the Western Church may be something of a caricature. Much of it would be outrageously unjust if applied to the Roman Church at its best. But any account of error and distortion in a Church is bound to stress that error in a manner disproportionate to the great body of truth retained. The indictment is not against the Roman Church alone. Nor would I suggest that, in the fragmentation of Western Christendom, Rome did not retain faithfully against the Reformers elements as necessary for the fullness of Orthodoxy as any after which the Reformers were striving against Rome. It remains, however, true that it was the Papal Revolution of the 11th Century—itself following on the Cluniac departmentalizing of the Church—which necessitated the fragmentation in the process of recovery of the fuller freedom of Orthodoxy. If the view I am trying to present, of the West as she might be seen through Eastern eyes, is unfamiliar, it is all the more necessary that we should realize what that view may be. Having done so, you can examine for yourselves how far it is justified.
What, then, is that distortion of the Faith towards which the West was being led—against which it kept no sufficient safeguard—and to which, in some points at least, it might seem to have become committed?
Organization here takes
the place of organism.
Dogma, liturgy and
personal devotion are
pigeon-holed into
separate compartments of
life, and their organic
bond is obscured. Faith
becomes imposed and not
elicited—a blind
acceptance of what you
are told. The Mother of
God loses her solidarity
with mankind. The Spirit
(whom God giveth not by
measure) is dispensed by
measure through the
earthly vicars of a
Christ aloof. Worship is
conducted for you in a
foreign language by a
clergy who even in
Heaven or hell retain a
higher dignity. Even the
parish priest, by reason
of his enforced
celibacy, or his special
education, ceases in
some measure to
represent his people,
and becomes the agent
among them of a foreign
power or of a strange
class. A legalistic God
and a feudalized
Redemption are partly
imposed by fear, partly
made acceptable by the
sentimental appeal of
the Child Jesus, or by
pity for the sufferings
of the Crucified (as if
we should presume to
pity the brave man in
his fight, let alone the
victorious Son of God).
The heavenly
ratification promised by
Christ to the decisions
of the Church (Whatsoever
ye shall bind on earth
shall be bound in Heaven
)
is narrowed and twisted
to a right (in some
measure at least) to
decree the fate of souls
even after death. A
legal minimum, which
comes short of the Glory
of God, is accounted for
righteousness, and merit
attributed to what goes
beyond it in prayer or
good works—and where are
Our Lord’s words, Say,
we are unprofitable
servants
? The Cup of
which Our Lord said Drink
ye all of this
is
denied to the laity. The
simple bread over which
He gave thanks,
hallowing the every-day
food of life (wherefore
Greeks and Russians
treat all bread as holy)
gives way to the
unfamiliar Azymes
(contrary even to the
earlier Western
practice, and, if the
Greeks are right,
against the necessary
meaning of the Greek
word, [artos], used in
the Scriptural
accounts). Rebellious
against its tedious
vocation to convert the
kingdoms of this world,
the Papal Church sets
itself up impatiently as
an earthly kingdom. Holy
Scripture, the free, the
living word, becomes
once again the deadening
letter of old law—and
what does it matter,
then, whether that
letter be defined still
further by Jerome’s
translation, and the
interpretations of
Councils and Popes, or
whether it be limited to
the Hebrew Old Testament
and the Greek New? In
either case it is
reduced to little better
than a Our’an, imposed
from a heavenly throne
to which we cannot in
the full sense attain.
The Holy Mysteries of
the Church, wherein all
life is hallowed, become
the isolated points at
which an extraneous God
breaks in—and what does
it matter, then, whether
they be two or seven?
The Reformers failed to escape from the prison of Western categories of thought; for the real issue was not the limits, but the character, of infallibility; not the number, but the nature, of the Sacraments. But it is at least arguable that, in narrowing the limits of the infallible text, they were groping after a right instinct of human freedom, and that their concentration on Baptism and the Eucharist represented a sincere seeking to recover the simplicity of the Christ. Through all their errors, their rejections, losses, and neglectings of Christian Tradition, have not the Churches of the Reformation still in the last resort been anchored to this appeal?
But old habits of mind die hard. It has taken all the force of modern science to knock us off our fundamentalist pedestal—and still we do not realize that the process has only been restoring to us the possibility of true, Orthodox Christian Faith.
For nine hundred years,
the West has not dared
to have full faith in
God Himself, but has
sought for an infallible
earthly rock on which to
build. There was more
than a flutter when
Luther set about
dethroning the earthly
Church, and Copernicus
the Earth itself, from a
false fixity and
centrality. But neither
had gone far enough: for
Luther had but put the
Bible in place of the
Church, and Copernicus
the Sun in place of the
Earth. With modern
development of
historical and physical
science, Scripture and
Sun alike are gone the
way of Earth and earthly
Church, and we find
ourselves, from the
unredeemed point of
view, without any rock
or fixed point,
afloat—if indeed we are
afloat—on a boundless
and bottomless Ocean.
And then at last we have
our eyes opened to see
the only true centrality
of Earth, the only
unshakeable fixity of
the Church, as we
interpret the texts
about the Rock in the
light of others—Thou
hast founded the Earth
upon the waters: An
anchor of the soul, sure
and steadfast, and which
entereth in to that
within the veil.
Or
we turn to St. Gregory
of Nazianzus—For He
hath in Himself gathered
up all that to be can
mean, which neither had
beginning nor shall have
an end, like some Ocean
of Being, endless and
illimitable, falling
outside and beyond every
thought both of time and
of nature; by the mind
alone sketched in, and
that all too dimly and
in a measure, not from
the things on His level
but from the things
about Him, with fancies
gathered one from here
and one from there into
a single image of the
Truth, which frees us
before we have a hold
upon it, and escapes us
before our mind has
grasped it, shining just
so much about our
master-faculty, even
when that is cleansed,
as the speed of
lightning which stays
not shines about our
sight; as it seems to
me, that by its
apprehensibility it may
draw us to itself (for
that which is completely
inapprehensible cannot
be hoped for nor
attempted), but for its
inapprehensibility it
may be wondered at, and
being wondered at may be
longed for the more, and
being. longed for may
cleanse us, and
cleansing may make us
God-like, and, when we
are become so, may hold
converse with us as its
own—my word here dares
some youthful
boldness—God unto gods
united and made
known—and even so much,
perhaps, as He knows
already those that are
known.
This is a different paper from what I had intended to write. Perhaps my pen has run away with me. I meant to be practical: but perhaps it was necessary first to set forth something of the Vision. I must content myself now with urging the Orthodox to realize to the full their vocation—that in their tradition they have the answer to modern science and social theory, the way of union for the Church, and the key to the world’s Salvation: and with urging my brother English, of whatever party or denomination they may now be, to use this light to rediscover the same treasure hidden in our own past, in the days when the One Christ first came to our forefathers. I am not urging this as a means to outward unity. That would be a joy and a strong weapon: but even when we have attained explicit unity of Faith sufficient for it, it is not unlikely that international politics would still, in one way or another, long hinder its attainment. No—it is simply for the conversion of ourselves, of our country, and of the world, that we must act upon what we have discovered.
Here I must bring you to
earth. For such action
must, among other
things, involve our
seriously considering a
revision, in several
respects, of our
teaching, and our
liturgical and
devotional practice. n
some cases, this may
mean a return from
modern Anglo-Catholic
practice
to something more like
the older ways of the
Church of England. n
others, points may need
to be stressed which
have been much longer
forgotten. ere are a few
examples. Perhaps you
can add others.
THE FILIOQUE
Has long been recognized by historians to be an addition to the Creed made without the authority of the whole Church, and retained in the face of Eastern protest. Even the Pope at first disallowed it. It may well be that the clause has had a disastrous effect on our doctrine of the Holy Spirit: at least we cannot deny that it is precisely on the point of the nature of the Holy Spirit’s work in the Church that both we and the Orthodox believe Rome to have erred. Surely it cannot be mere chance that the only point of credal divergence should concern the Holy Spirit. The natural supposition is that there lurks in the clause something expressive of Rome’s error. To Dollinger, I believe, it appeared quite incomprehensible that any Church should accept it save on Papal authority. It is not in the Nicene Creed, and it is not in the Scripture. I cannot, therefore, believe that I am acting contrary to the true mind of the Church of England in omitting it. Surely the time has come for us to act. History, honesty, and humility alike demand that it should go.
Azymes Here (small point though it may seem) is one of many examples of the disastrous haste of our fathers. Commonly to-day the first sign in an Anglican Church of movement in a Catholic direction is the use of wafers in the Eucharist. This was not the primitive practice in Rome or in the West any more than in the East. It came in in the West not earlier than the 9th Century, if as early. Its reintroduction has added an extra, quite unnecessary difference between us and the Orthodox. The Greeks (through whose language we have all our knowledge of the Institution of the Eucharist) agree with the naive Englishman in saying It is not bread. The Scriptural evidence, itself uncertain, must be interpreted in the light of Church tradition. We have no right to defend a sacramental practice on grounds of mere convenience. Azymes, too, surely must go.
The Consecration of the Eucharist Whatever may have been written of late, I believe the Eastern rite as we now have it to sum up within itself in a true balance the primitive practice and belief. Where the principle of organic growth allows it, the Scottish Liturgy provides a good pattern for us. And were I quite sure that the 1928 Canon had the unquestioned authority of the Church behind it, I should certainly use it—without being personally satisfied with it at all points. Meanwhile, I very tentatively suggest that, provided the people are taught what is happening, it may provide a better balance and an easier organic development for us if, after reciting the Words of Institution aloud, without elevation or genuflection, we kneel, with the people’s Amen, and make the Anamnesis and Epiclesis silently (as they are made to-day in the Orthodox Liturgy), then proceed with the Prayer of Oblation and the Lord’s Prayer. This gives the Words of Institution the same centrality that they have in the Orthodox Liturgy—a pleading of the One Sacrifice by right of which we act—while its application to our particular Mass in the Epiclesis would be clearly subordinated thereto.—The placing of the Prayer of Oblation and the Lord’s Prayer in their more historical position, before Communion, does seem to me to be required—partly on the ground that I do not believe that Cranmer’s theory at the moment when he produced the present order has ever won acceptance in the mind of the Church: at any rate, I doubt if anyone holds it today: and to continue using one form and meaning another can only result in inconsequence of mind a condition not uncommon in the Church of England!
The separation, within the last two generations, of Communion as a semi-private act from the Mass as corporate worship is a disaster from which we must seek an escape. So also, in general, we should aspire towards the Orthodox ideal of one Mass of each Church, and of each Christian, in the day. Something is involved here of far more primary importance than the ancient and pious practice of fasting before Communion, for the sake of which the disaster has been allowed to occur. Once the liturgical and dogmatic balance has been recovered, we may expect that practice, where it has been lost, to grow up again inevitably: and then, fasting until midday may not after all appear an excessive demand (in any case, whatever spiritual value there is in early rising, there is none in fasting until 8 a.m.!) Until then, let us concentrate on inculcating that sacramental Faith from which the outward reverence will arise, and not trouble the consciences of others over a secondary practice.
Herein, too, we need to learn again from the Orthodox what our fathers knew of the importance of both Matins and Evensong, and their organic connection with the Mass. For the Orthodox they are not, as they may appear in Western tradition, mere monastic and priestly offices, but are shared in fully by the people, and are an essential part of the liturgical whole. It is absurd that we should have allowed the natural order to be inverted as it has been—8.00 Mass; 1l.00 Matins; 6.00 Evensong—whereas clearly the right order, psychologically and liturgically, is Saturday Evensong (the Scriptural beginning of Sunday, as Sabbatarians have failed to observe), Sunday Morning Matins, Litany, and Mass. Duplication of the Mass, and virtual obliteration of Matins, is no remedy. Spiritual valetudinarianism, and the memories some of us have of those Sunday mornings of our boyhood when Matins was followed by both Litany and Ante-Communion, have robbed us of a great liturgical tradition, which we should aim at recovering—though we might well copy the Orthodox in making it easier for people to slip in and out in the course of the service! In any case, there should be no isolation of the central act of Divine Service ([theia leitourgia]) from the rest of the worship of the Church. However incomplete their worship, it is not true that people have not been to Church if they have not been to Mass.
Then as to the veneration of the Holy Mother of God and the Saints—you will have realized, I hope, how very important I believe this to be. Its absence in our Church leaves a void which must be filled. But I do not think—I wish I could—that Anglo-Catholic preaching has often succeeded in really making this a practice of the mind and heart of the Englishman—too often it appears as a sentimental trapping of devotion, in shallow imitation of Roman methods. This is far too serious a matter to be played with. There is a Christian obligation upon us. But it can only be fulfilled by devotion welling up sincerely from the mind and heart. And there is only one way to this—the way by which the Church gradually learnt it in the first centuries of her history. Turn first to the fullness of the Christ’s simplicity, and as you begin to realize the need of it for the right understanding and worship of Him, you will find the right veneration of His Mother and of His Saints taking its place in your mind’s devotion. I think the Orthodox will understand this quiet way, of development to be the right way for us.
The same principles apply to images and pictures—we have been too ready, in our reaction against bareness, to accept anything in the way of Church Art—be it Italian peasant women posing as the Mother of God, or members of the Girls’ Diocesan Association dressed up as angels, or fairies pretending to be the Child Jesus. Perhaps the next Oecumenical Council might well be concerned with anathemas, not on verbal heresy, but on the heresies implied in some types of Church Art. Here we must try to be rigorous. I do not in the least mean that we should reject all Western art, or accept all Eastern. But we should search, in the light of Orthodoxy, for true principles of discrimination—remembering that æsthetics may be conditioned by dogma just as much as metaphysics or ethics—the Good, the Beautiful, and the True, are equally ultimate. Rightly or wrongly, I confess to a feeling in favour of Fra Angelico, perhaps of Botticelli, while I would reject utterly much of Rafæl—including the ikon of the Mothers’ Union. In Eastern Art, as against many ikons which, whatever beauty and truth they have, are marked also with a local and temporal character which makes it too easy for them to be preserved, at least in England at present, as mere curiosities, I would urge the speedy publication of a series of coloured reproductions of the great classic, universal types of Byzantine ikonography—;the mosaics of Agia Sophia as soon as that is possible: the Daphni and Cefalu Pantokrators; the Daphni Crucifixion, the St. Mark’s Anastasis; the Blachernæ, Vladimir and Kazan ikons of the Mother of God; and so on—these to help to restore the balance in our country’s knowledge of Christian Art, and mould our minds towards our own Christian Art of the future. Probably we should, from henceforth, accept the Orthodox distinction, and give up tile making of solid images for Churches—psychologically they err by being either more (as if containing what they represent) or less (as mere statues) than the flat ikon which is a window onto Heaven: and they are more apt to stand out in isolation from their place in the whole ikonography of a Church. We should also feel that a series of ikons of the Great Feasts of Our Lord would be a better first step in introducing ikonography into our Churches than the Stations of the Cross, which are typical of the Western tendency not to pass beyond the Cross to the fullness of Resurrection. In any case, we must do nothing to spoil Orthodox balance in our Churches—better no pictures than the wrong pictures.
Perhaps I should remind Anglo-Catholics of the fact that, very often, Orthodox people actually seem to find themselves more at home in Evangelical English Churches—just as also Evangelicals and other Anglicans have been known to find themselves more at home in the Orthodox Liturgy than in some of our Masses. This cannot be treated as insignificant.
Hymns, again, are a matter onto which we shall have to turn the light of Orthodoxy—and the resultant sifting may have some surprising results, both in rigorous exclusiveness and in inclusiveness. It is surprising how thoroughly in place I found on one occasion, in Greece, a child-like English (or American) revival hymn sung, at home after a baptism, among a whole series of Byzantine troparia. And in another direction, the poetry of Francis Thompson has certain qualities which are perhaps nearer than anything else to the best style of Byzantine Church poetry—a style which we are not accustomed to expect in hymns.
In regard to the Church’s year—we must feel a great loss in the fact that our Church has no feast of Our Lord’s Baptism—and may even have a suspicion that this was at some time purposely obscured in the West, because of its possible implications in regard to the doctrine of the Holy Spirit. While it may appear out of the question for us now to adopt the Orthodox use of Epiphany for this purpose, at least we could, on a basis of Western practice, restore thc commemoration of the Baptism on the Octave of Epiphany, and stress this as a major Feast of the Church. Then, we may doubt if it is possible now for us to take Trinity back into Whitsun, and use its Octave, as in the last, for the Sunday of All Saints. But we should at least take note how forcibly, coming so as the culmination of the Gospel Feasts, this brings home the doctrine of the Church as the Body of Christ.
In regard to Scripture—we need to realize that neither Authorized nor Revised Version can be regarded as an infallible translation of the Infallible Book. We should also recognize that, once a truer, more historical, and more Orthodox conception of inspiration is attained, the Septuagintine books which we call Apocrypha (a term which, if only because it is open to gross misunderstanding, could well be changed) are seen—whatever distinction may rightly be drawn between them and the other books—to have an organic place in the unfolding of the whole body of Scripture. We must also face the fact that, if you do not want to treat the lost original documents—JEDP, etc.—as the only really inspired works, there is a great deal to be said for the view that the Greek translation of the Old Testament, as being on the line of development by which the Holy Spirit led up to Our Lord’s coming, is perhaps more authoritative for Christians than the Hebrew original—apart from the fact of its probably preserving in some cases a text closer to this latter than is the Masoretic.
In regard to Confirmation—there is a lot to be said for having some service wherein the child, on coming towards full growth, openly accepts his obligations in the Church. But it is probable that this ought not to be Confirmation—apart from the difficulty of explaining theologically the halfway position of the baptized and unconfirmed child. It is probable that the organic conception of the Church is better inculcated when, as with the Orthodox, the child is confirmed and admitted to Communion immediately after Baptism, and from the first learns the Faith by sharing to the full in the Life.
But these are details, though not such as can be neglected. More important is it that we should learn, in the light of Orthodoxy, to look at exact Trinitarian and Christological Dogma, not as the outworn relics of old councils, but as the living test of a true Christian response to God—Hallowed be Thy Name: to develop a new sense of the Christian Society, and of the Unity of all Life—Thy Kingdom Come: and that we should make a new scrutiny of our methods in the Spiritual Life (hitherto taken somewhat uncritically from the Mediæval and Post-mediæval West) in the light of greater knowledge of the Greek Fathers and of the Eastern tradition (and in particular, of the ancient Jesus Prayer of humility)—Thy Will be done.
In all these matters there is an urgent duty, after prayer, for deeper study, and more general translation and publication of sources.
Oh, for an Orthodox monastery in England to bring to our service not books, but the living tradition of Orthodox Spiritual Life!
I am suggesting matters which we, as English Churchmen, must examine in the light of our experience of Eastern Orthodoxy, with a view to the conversion of ourselves, of our country, and of the world. I believe we are on an organic path for the fulfilment of our Church’s vocation. At the same time we must seek first, not England, but the Kingdom of God. So for years the words have been ringing in my ears—Hearken, O daughter, and consider, incline thine ear: forget also thine own people and thy father’s house. So shall the King have pleasure in thy beauty: for He is thy Lord God, and worship thou Him…In stead of thy fathers, thou shalt have children: whom thou mayest make princes in all lands.
(Many thanks to Project Canterbury for the text of this article.)