We have seen so far that
Creation - as something that came from nil –
contains both deterioration and death within
it. We clarified the Why and the How.
The fact that it originated from nil
inevitably meant that it was subject to
death, because “death” is the disintegration
and the division of beings. We also saw how
the only way to avert death, to transcend
it, is for the created to be in constant
communion and association with the
Uncreated. Man was therefore created for
this precise role, and this is why he was
created towards the end of Creation, when
everything else was completed: so that he
might become precisely the link between the
material world and God. We examined the
privilege given to Man, as compared to the
other logical and free beings, such as the
Angels. The privilege was that Man also
partakes of the material world and as such,
he has the potential to unite the created to
the uncreated, and to also unite the
material world. Consequently, death, of all
Creation, could only be overcome through Man
alone. Because, I will repeat, the very
important point that we tend to forget is
that death is not something that concerns
Mankind only. Man does not die alone. He
dies, because death permeates all of
Creation. Therefore, for Man to overcome
death, it is imperative that all of Creation
overcome death. A Creation that undergoes
death in
all
of its material beings with......the
exception of Man, is inconceivable. Unless
Creation as a whole is transformed so
that nothing dies, Man’s immortality
cannot be realized.
Two
mistakes must be noted here, which began
from the West with Augustine and gradually
infiltrated us Orthodox. The one mistake is
to believe that death entered the scene as a
punishment for Man’s Fall; as something that
God imposed, in order to punish Man for his
Fall, without death previously existing in
Creation. This is wrong. God did NOT
introduce death as a punishment. “Death”
was a natural condition for a created
being. Because, as we already clarified this
extremely difficult topic, a creation from
Nil entails the infiltration of Nil amongst
beings. Thus, even prior to the
arrival and the Fall of Man, death was
already a reality for Creation. Death
WAS NOT introduced upon the Fall of Mankind;
that which was introduced, was Man’s
incapacity to thereafter TRANSCEND death,
i.e., Creation was eventually rendered
incapable of averting death. This is why
death became a permanent characteristic of
Creation. This was the one mistake. And
this mistaken concept was introduced by
Augustine in one of his interpretations of
the Old Testament (which of course allows us
to interpret it, however, the Old Testament
was never interpreted in such a way at this
point, by any of the Hellenic Fathers).
The other mistake is that
Augustine (once again), being influenced by
Platonism, had accepted immortality (which
is bestowed as the salvation of Creation and
Mankind) as a matter that relates to Man’s
soul. In other words, at the End of Time,
when death will be abolished altogether, it
will mean that the people’s souls will live
on, and that the people’s bodies may
possibly live on, but as for the rest of the
world, Nature will be subjected to death.
This too is wrong. We need to see death –
as we have already said – as a uniform
phenomenon, throughout all of Creation. In
this way, Theology can converse with
Biology, otherwise, Theology would be
turning Biology into Mythology, given that
Biology also sees death as a uniform
phenomenon; just as a cat dies, so does a
person. Both
of them die for the same reasons.
And as we said, the process called “death”
is inherent with birth. So, we see that
death is a general, biological phenomenon
and in order for it to be transcended, it
must be transcended by all of Creation;
Creation must be transformed in general.
Well, Man’s Fall rendered this
transformation of Creation impossible, for
the reasons that we already mentioned and
will briefly outline once again.
Man, as the link between God
and Creation, would have united all of
Creation to God, and since Creation would
thenceforth be in a communion with God, the
world would have acquired eternal life. Man
rejected this mission. Instead of relating
Creation to the Creator in order to unite it
with God, he made himself a god, and thus
related Creation to his own person. But,
being himself a creation, he in effect
related Creation to a created being. Death,
therefore,
was inevitable for Creation.
Death could not be overcome, because it is
inherent in everything created. Thus, with
the Fall of Man, the incapability to
overcome death was brought on, as well as a
fake “life”; in other words, this biological
life was created, which, from its very first
cell contains death. If we bear in mind all
this pathology of Creation that brings on
death - this sickness of Creation - we come
to realize that the cure for this condition
must be analogous to the sickness. You
cannot give medicine to a sick person,
without previously making a diagnosis of his
ailment. Diagnosis, therefore, is very
important; it must be performed correctly. I
am hoping that from our last lessons, the
diagnosis will have been adequate, so that
we may proceed to the matter of therapy.
Therapy is, precisely, the
salvation of the world. A few general
observations here first. When dealing with a
sick person who has a problem, according to
our diagnosis we shall not focus on anything
else except the curing of his problem. In
this case, the problem is, as we mentioned,
death: the par excellence issue.
“Salvation”, therefore, cannot be referring
to anything else, except the transcendence
of death. I
am stressing this,
because there is quite some confusion as to
what “salvation” is, and what we are being
saved from. The confusion arose from the
fact that we did not observe this diagnosis;
instead, we focused on moral and juridical
presuppositions. In other words, we saw the
Fall of Man as a delinquency, a disobedience
(and when I say “we saw”, again these things
began with Augustine) and we were given the
impression that the cause of evil – the root
of evil – was this delinquency, this
disobedience, when in fact this was not
the cause or the root of evil. This evil
(death) existed as a possibility even
before. What
Man’s
disobedience accomplished,
was to render impossible the
curing of the evil, the transcending of the
evil that already existed.
Nevertheless, the problem cannot
automatically be solved with obedience. The
Hellenic Fathers were especially sensitive
in this area. Athanasius the Great clearly stresses
that if the problem of Adam’s delinquency
was a problem of absolving sins, God could
have forgiven him. Adam could have repented
and wept, as indeed he wept - he departed
from Paradise and wept bitterly: he
regretted what he had done. And God could
have forgiven him, and all would have been
well. But Athanasius
wrote an entire book, to show that the
problem did not lie there. It wasn’t
enough. What was necessary was for the
Logos to come - to become incarnate - in
order for the created to become re-united
with the Uncreated. In other words, the
problem was not obedience, nor was it
disobedience; the problem was not a moral
one – it was an ontological one.
This union of the created with the Uncreated
had to take place, in order for death to be
overcome.
Consequently,
“Salvation”
is not a moral issue. It is not a matter of
doing or not doing something. Salvation has
to do with a relationship, a personal union,
and –as we said– man alone was given the
privilege of a bodily, material union. It
is imperative that the body (=matter) also
partake of this union (i.e., the entire
psycho-somatic being) and naturally through
this, all of Creation, because we are linked
psycho-somatically to all of Creation.
(I
would like to insert a parenthesis here, to
reiterate on a topic that we have already
touched on. We have isolated Science, into
Botanical and Zoological, inasmuch as
declaring that Botany deals with flowers and
Zoology with the bees. That was a mistake,
and it is only recently that Science has
begun to acknowledge this mistake, because a
bee visits a flower and obtains its
nourishment from the pollen, therefore
between the bee and the flower there exists
an organic bond; if this factor is not taken
into account, then you will not comprehend
any of the things that take place: you will
not comprehend the bee, if you don’t
comprehend the flower, nor the flower, if
you don’t comprehend the bee. In other
words, Botany and Zoology comprise a unity.
We need to abandon this segregated view of
beings. We have lost the unity of beings,
with this scientific method that we have
been pursuing.)
I mentioned this, in order
for you to understand that a Man (and not an
Angel) was the one who would unite all of
Creation. Why? Because it is Man who has a
psycho-somatic union with God and
who, thanks to this union, can ensure that
all of Nature will be saved. I will
therefore repeat that the issue is neither a
juridical one, nor a moral one. “Salvation”
is not a salvation from the sins and the
trespasses of Adam – of every Adam – but a
salvation from this sickness called “death”;
a salvation that is achieved through the
union of the created with the Uncreated. A
union that will include all of material
creation and all material, somatic energies.
The conclusion from all the
above is: Firstly, in order for the world
to be saved, Man definitely had to mediate.
No
other
being
could
save
the
world.
Not
even
God
on
His
own.
There was no way for God to
say from afar: “Be saved!” For God to
forgive Man from afar, it would have to be a
moral or a juridical issue; an issue of
trespassing. Nor could an Angel save the
world, as angels are not corporeal entities;
they could not interface with material
Creation. Thus, the need for God to become
a Man for the requirements of salvation, and
the fact that things could not be otherwise,
is the result of logic such as the one we
have expounded. And it is not simply a
matter whereby Man fell and he must be saved
through Man, and even if Man didn’t fall,
again the transcendence of death would be
achieved through him. On this point, Saint
Maximus for
example is very clear, when he states that
the incarnation would have taken place,
even if Man hadn’t fallen. It was
inconceivable for this world to overcome the
(inherent to its nature) elements of death
and deterioration - the inherent
deterioration that was not attributed
to the Fall of Man. This element would have
been impossible to overcome, if Man –in his
person– did not unite material Creation
with the Uncreated God. Therefore, the
first basic conclusion or observation is
that Man is the key point, upon which
salvation is consummated.
Thus, the first prerequisite,
the first element necessary for salvation,
is Man’s mediation. The second element is
the fact that with his Fall – and even
before his Fall – Man was incapable of
transcending death on his own, on account of
his being a creation. The transcendence of
death could not be accomplished by a
creation; especially when Man fell and
thereafter became a prisoner of this false
“life” (given that this biological life –as
we mentioned earlier- is a false life
permeated by death). From the moment
therefore that Man became trapped in this
cycle of life-death, it was impossible for
him to free himself; hence, an initiative
had to be taken – an intervention by the
Uncreated, Who is not entangled in this
whole process of “false life”.
Two, therefore, are the
elements that lead us to the mystery of
Christ, or the incarnation of the Logos:
the initiative taken by the Uncreated, and
the need for a union (not a mere
submission or forgiveness) between the
created and the Uncreated. That the
salvation of the created, of the world – the
salvation from death – can be attained only
through Christ, is attributed to the fact
that only in Him do the aforementioned
prerequisites exist. Christ
is
a
human.
He
did
not
become
an
Angel.
He did not become anything else; only a
human. Christ is God,
and He must be God
in His
hypostasis,
so that He doesn’t have to be
entangled in this vicious circle of life and
death from the start. Given these
prerequisites, there could be no other
solution to the created’s problem, than the
incarnation of the Logos.
The
incarnation of the Logos,
or
“Christology”
as we call it, must also comply with these
prerequisites. One prerequisite is that it
must be an incarnation into a human, who
must not have the personal hypostasis of a
creation, but must have the hypostasis of an
uncreated. The second prerequisite –as a
consequence of the first one- is for this
Saviour not to be born in the manner
that a created man is born. Thus, the
dogma on Christ’s conception in a
non-biological manner – as described in the
Gospel, i.e.: by the Holy Spirit and the
Virgin Mary – is an essential element in
this faith, because if Christ had been born
in the biological manner that we are born,
then He would have likewise been confined by
this recycling – this false “life” which has
engulfed death – and He would have been
unable to provide the solution to the
problem. The conception therefore of Christ
by a Virgin is an essential element in
Dogmatics; we cannot disregard it. Having
this in mind, the question that is now posed
is why the Lord’s conception by a Virgin
occurred in the manner that it did, i.e., by
the Holy Spirit and the Virgin Mary. The
reason is that not only was it imperative
for the Uncreated to take the
initiative (and Christ was uncreated in His
hypostasis), but also that it was necessary
for this procedure to take place freely.
Freely on the part of the Logos, Who became
incarnate, and freely on the part of created humanity (the Virgin). Because
it would have been unthinkable, at the stage
where God wished to mend the situation
(given that God had given Adam the freedom
to materialize the plan for salvation and he
freely denied to materialize it), to
withdraw Man’s freedom and to personally
intervene in an illiberal manner Himself. In
other words, for God to say “Adam doesn’t
want to save it, Man does and doesn’t want
to save it, therefore I shall intervene and
save the world Myself.”
We can see how the rule – the
condition– of freedom was respected, by the
manner in which the Incarnation was
effected, and moreso by the role that the
Holy Virgin undertook. We need to persist
here; we need to stress the significance of
the Virgin’s role; a
significance comprised of a voluntary
“Yes” with which She responded to God’s
calling for the realization of this mystery
of Christ. The Virgin’s “Yes” was Man’s
expression of freedom: the freedom of Man’s
acceptance, of his consenting to this
initiative by God. This is of extreme
importance, because the Virgin Mary could
have responded with a “No”. This invitation
on God’s part for Mary to offer Herself for
such a plan naturally conflicts with human
logic to such a degree, that one would have
expected the normal, the logical response by
the Virgin to have been a “No”, as it would
not have been logical, without a
transcendence of logic, without faith as we
defined it earlier, for the Virgin to have
assented to this calling by God.
In this way, Adam in his free
state survives, in the case of Christ.
Christ has now become Man – an “Adam” –
whose very biological composition is not a
compulsory one; who labours if the need
arises but is nevertheless a free being; a
being that has sprung from a freely willed
consent by Man. That Christ is born in this
manner is consequently another prerequisite,
in order for everything that we have said in
Dogmatics so far to apply; in other words, a
personal relationship between God and the
world. Christ’s incarnation is consequently
different to the various other incarnations
that we observe in other religions and
different to the various births and rebirths
of gods through natural phenomena, as all of
those births, every “Theogony”
and whichever other births in religions are
compulsory births – are births that are not
based on a free, personal consent on the
part of Man. They are all dependent on
natural laws.
Christ is born in this
manner, without the intervention of natural
laws, not only to demonstrate His power,
that He is indeed God (because many people
interpret His birth in this way), but
because a non-miraculous birth of Christ
would have signified a conforming to the
compulsory biological laws of Nature. The
birth of Christ would not have been a
product of freedom, nor would the Person of
Christ. We would thus have deviated from
that initial condition, in which God had
left everything in freedom, to the point
that Adam overthrew all of His plans.
Everything that God had thought of was
overthrown, because of Adam’s freedom. This
freedom of the Virgin giving Her consent is
a freedom which continues to permeate the
entire mystery of Christ; the entire mystery
of salvation. And we shall now observe it,
in close association with what is
accomplished by the incarnation of Christ,
after His conception, after His birth –His
biological birth- through to His
Resurrection, as well as what happens in
this mystery of Salvation, even after the
Resurrection of Christ. We shall see that
the factor “freedom” is strictly respected,
in all the major phases of the mystery of
Salvation.