Orthodox Outlet for Dogmatic Enquiries | Orthodoxy - Mysteries |
by Fr Stephen Freeman
Source:
https://blogs.ancientfaith.com/ |
My Archbishop (Alexander
Golitzin) shares the story of a young
man whom he taught some years ago. He
was Orthodox from Estonia. He grew up in
the Soviet era and had come to hate all
things Russian, including the Orthodox
Church. Nevertheless, he saw an Orthodox
procession in the streets of his city
one year, a procession that included the
Russian bishop (whom he also hated and
believed to be a KGB agent). However, he
saw the bishop surrounded by light. It
was an experience that led him into the
Orthodox faith. You might hate the man,
and the Church as well. But the
undeniable glory of God revealed what
his hatred could not see.
My bishop’s point in sharing
the story was not to exonerate the
Russian Church from any wrong-doing, or
cooperation with wrong-doing. Nor was it
to exonerate the bishop involved and
declare him holy. It was a story about
the glory of God and its place and work
despite our faults and failures. The 12
apostles cast out demons, healed the
sick and cleansed lepers. We are nowhere
told that Judas did none of those
things. Doubtless, he did (which makes
his betrayal all the greater).
There was a heresy in the early
Church that denied the efficacy of the
sacraments if they were performed by
sinners. The debate was largely about
those who, under the pressure of
persecution, had in any way denied their
faith or yielded to the requirements of
the pagan state. It is an easy line of
thought to maintain. If we are commanded
to be holy, surely there are
consequences for failure to observe the
commandment. There are indeed
consequences within the canons of the
Church, but those consequences do not
include an inefficacy of the sacraments.
The scandal of the Incarnation,
God-becoming-man, is the seeming
contradiction of the utterly
transcendent God and the particularity
and limits of human existence. It is a
scandal whose errors run in two
directions.
First, there is an assumption
that God is so displeased with sin that
He can have nothing to do with it, or
that sin somehow nullifies the work of
God. Second, there is an equally odious
belief that human beings, in their
observance of the commandments, are
never righteous enough to actually be
compatible with true holiness. The first
is an error about God, the second an
error about human beings.
I’m always troubled to hear
“there is no grace outside the Church.”
I can’t fathom what such a statement
means. Since the entire universe is
sustained by the grace of God, I can
only assume a sort of heresy of
secularism by such a statement – the
notion that anything can exist apart
from God’s grace. For His own mysterious
reasons, God even sustains the fallen
angels by His grace. If it were not so,
they would cease to exist. Only God has
existence in and of Himself.
I can say “there is no grace
outside the Church” only if I also say
that everything in all of creation is inside the
Church. In fact, I believe this to be
true. The Church came into existence
when God said, “Let there be light.” The
sacraments do not make us to be what we
are not, but reveal us to be what we
truly are. Baptism and Chrismation are
indeed required of those coming to Holy
Communion, for they are fundamental
realities in the medicine of immortality
and the path of life God has given us.
But the person who is Baptized does not
somehow become other than what they are.
They become more fully human, more truly
what they were created to be. “The Holy
Spirit completes that which is lacking,”
it is said in our prayers.
There are boundaries which
we describe as “the Church,” but this
meaning is being used to specify that
which is identified with the fullness of
life in Christ. “Church”, in this usage,
is “that which is reconciled.” St. Paul
says that the end of all things is that
they be “gathered together in one in
Christ Jesus.” This is the Church, in
the end.
Too frequently we speak of the
Church in denominational terms, in which
we speak of people who are reconciled in
the fullness of Orthodoxy as though
their “membership” constituted the whole
of the Church. But St. Paul extends the
Church to “all things.” Thus, the grass
and the trees (and certainly the flour
and the wine) are being gathered
together into Christ. The Eucharist is
not a gathering meant to exclude
everything else. It is a gathering that
represents everything else. “Thine own
of Thine own we offer unto Thee.” What
is there within all of creation that is
not God’s own? Indeed, the members of
the Church who gather, are themselves
but the “first fruits” of
the whole
Adam.
And so we have the reality of
glowing bishops who might be hated in
Estonia (just as many other bishops
might be hated elsewhere). The
transfiguration (for such was the scene
in that procession) of God’s creation is
simply shocking to us. It is a
manifestation of the love of God that
ignores all scandal, except that which
does not love. It is a transfiguration
that gives light and that burns.
Many take a cold comfort in the
fact that the transfiguring light of God
burns some. However, it most often burns
the eyes of those who judge the fitness
of those transfigured. They become blind
in this very manner.
The Transfiguration of Christ
would generally be deemed to be free of
scandal. He appeared on the Holy Mount
with Moses and Elijah – how could the
disciples not rejoice. But the text
describes a scandal.
As He prayed, the
áppearance of His
face was altered, and His robe became white and glistening.
And behold, two men talked with Him, who
were Moses and Elijah, who appeared in
glory and spoke of His decease which He
was about to accomplish at Jerusalem.
(Luke 9:29-31)
Christ, in turn, spoke to the
disciples about His decease which He was
about to accomplish at Jerusalem, and
Peter rebuked Him! The great scandal is
always the scandal of the Cross. There
is no path to true union with God that
does not go through the Cross. This is
true finally of all those who are
transfigured as well as for all who hope
to ever see a transfiguration.
It is of note that the Greek
beneath this translation does not say
that Christ was speaking with Moses and
Elijah about His “decease.” The text
calls it His “exodus.” It is not a
casual word choice. His journey into
death is the Great Exodus, the path
through the Red Sea that drowns the
mystical Pharaoh. It is the Lord’s
Passover.
That Passover is the path to
transfiguration. Moses himself, after
the Passover, leads the people to a
different holy mountain. There he
received the Law written by the very
finger of God. When he came down from
the mountain his face was transfigured
and the people were afraid to look at
him – and asked him to please wear a
veil.
In Christ the veil is removed,
except for those who wear a veil
covering their heart (2Cor. 3). But God
is so merciful, He sometimes removes the
veil so that angry young men on the
streets of Estonia (which is everywhere)
may see His glory and live.
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Article published in English on: 3-4-2018.
Last update: 3-4-2018.