Orthodox Outlet for Dogmatic Enquiries | Eschatology and Salvation |
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Related: God as “fire” and “light”
Artwork: “What Our Lord Saw From the Cross”
–
James Joseph Jacques Tissot (1836-1902)
Source: https://glory2godforallthings.com/2024/02/23/before-the-judgment-seat-of-christ/
"For
a Christian ending to our life: painless, unashamed, and
peaceful; and a good defense before the dread judgment seat
of Christ, let us ask of the Lord.
From my childhood, I have memories of the phrase, “Great
White Throne of Judgment.” It comes complete with an
abundance of frightening images and threats. It is the last
possible moment before all hell breaks loose and the
preachers at long last get one right. Of course, that same
childhood heard lots of predictions about troop movements in
the Middle East, explanations of Gog and Magog, and warnings
about where everything was leading. The future was not a
happy place. At this point in my life as an Orthodox
Christian, it is hard not to hear echoes of these frightful
threats in the prayer regarding the “dread judgment seat of
Christ.”
I’ve only been in front of a judge twice in my life: for a
speeding ticket and to testify in a child custody case
(worse than a speeding ticket). It was dreadful.
But what is this dread judgment seat? Do we have any
examples? The answer is actually quite clear, and it is not
what the preachers imagined (based on their misreading of
Revelation).
The dread judgment seat of Christ is actually something
quite familiar, something that enters our life any number of
times and on a regular basis. I suggest that you rid
yourself of what you think a “throne” is, for the throne of
Christ is nothing other than His Cross.
From the Feast of the Elevation of the Cross:
Today the Cross is lifted up,
The irony of this identification (Cross and Throne) is
revealed on the very day of the crucifixion. Kings are
normally crowned while sitting on a throne. This King is
crowned as He “sits” upon the Cross. It is proclaimed for
all to see: “King of the Jews.” Orthodox iconography makes
the irony yet more clear, by changing the description
hanging above the crucified Christ into the “King of Glory.”
The Cross is His throne and the Cross reveals His glory.
My childhood Christianity made a huge distinction between
the Jesus of the Cross and the Jesus of Judgment Day. For
all intents and purposes, they were two different entities.
Jesus on the Cross was meek and mild. This, however, was
treated like a temporary feint. The “real” Jesus was the one
who was coming again and there was to be nothing meek or
mild about that coming. The Cross was past
tense. The coming throne
could be seen in Revelation 20, and this was taken to be the
true and permanent revelation of Christ.
There is so much lost in this modern mis-reading of
Revelation. The champion of that book is the “Lamb who was
slain,” and it is this Lamb who is most closely associated
with “Him who sits upon the throne.” The Great Irony of the
Christian gospel, is that all of these images of power are
most clearly manifest in the Crucified Christ. Thus St. Paul
says that he is determined to know only “Christ Crucified.”
(1 Cor. 2:2) St. Paul does not treat this as a temporary,
passing image, but the very image of God: “Christ
crucified…the power of God and the wisdom of God.” (1 Cor.
2:2-3). This is not a momentary diversion. The Lamb is slain from
the foundation of the world. It is an eternal image and
revelation.
It is Christ Crucified that reveals all things to be what
they truly are. It unmasks every pretense of uprightness and
self-justification. It welcomes the thief while the
hypocrisy of others drives them away. This is the judgment
that we avoid. Think back to the last argument you had.
Perhaps you were in the right. Take that argument and stand
before Christ on the Cross. For myself, I cannot imagine any
such argument that I’ve had that isn’t revealed in its
absurdity and emptiness in that context. Presently, we live
in a world of arguments. Enslaved to our own shame and
anger, we are slowly pulling each other down towards an
abyss of meaninglessness. All of this is taking place in the
presence of the Crucified Christ. It takes place before the
dread judgment seat.
Understanding the nature of the judgment seat reveals why it
is rightly called “dread.” It is not some fearful
pronouncement we need fear so much as the truth of ourselves
that is revealed in that place. The image of judgment in
Matthew 25 (the sheep and the goats) is often drawn on by
the imagination. Interestingly, the parable combines both
the concept of “ontology” (our being) as well as “character”
(our actions). It begins with sheep and goats – that is,
what we actually are (ontology).
And that description is revealed in the character of our
actions: what did we do to the least of these in our
lifetime? This is revealed to have been nothing other than
the treatment of Christ Himself. We can say that we moment
by moment stand before the dread judgment seat of the
Crucified Christ. He is present in every opportunity of love
and sacrifice, of mercy and generosity. With every embrace
of Christ, our path moves more steadily to the right,
becoming the path of a sheep. With every rejection, the path
moves towards the left, the path of a goat. And with every
opportunity, we not only move on that path, we become what
the path reveals.
There are some who treat the parable as a reference to the
heart of each individual – of the “sheep” or “goat” within.
Very few of us are all goat, even fewer all sheep. It is
similar to Solzhenitsyn’s reflection: "If only it were all so simple! If only there were evil people somewhere insidiously committing evil deeds, and it were necessary only to separate them from the rest of us and destroy them. But the line dividing good and evil cuts through the heart of every human being. And who is willing to destroy a piece of his own heart? "
– The
Gulag Archipelago
At the first revelation of the judgment seat, outside
Jerusalem in 33 AD, most fled like frightened goats. The
Beloved Disciple and the Mother of God remained steadfast,
having long before settled the matter in their hearts. She
was enduring the sword that would “pierce her own soul,”
while St. John refused to abandon the One who loved him. He
is given paradise that day in becoming the new son of that
Holy Mother. That reality would later win him the footrace
with Peter to the empty tomb.
Peter had encountered the Crucified Christ three times in
the evening before (in the guise of those who accused him of
being a follower of Jesus). With each challenge he bleated
(like a goat), “I don’t know Him.” Such is the mercy of the
Crucified Savior that Peter was not given over to the
judgment of his own fear. A final question is put to him
three times on the shore of the Galilee: “Peter, do you love
me?” His answer impels him on the path of a sheep, one that
will ultimately lead to his own crucifixion some 40 years
later.
It is essential, I think, that we acknowledge that this
judgment begins within our hearts. As we meet Christ in the
disguise of shame (poor, hungry, naked, in prison) we are
brought face to face with our own shame. It is invariably
the case that those who are the kindest and most generous to
the poor, hungry, naked and in prison, are those who
themselves are poor, hungry, naked and in prison. I have
witnessed this countless times. We should fear our
excellence and our competence above all things.
Humility alone stands unashamed before the dread judgment
seat of the Cross. And this is the greatest irony. For
humility is nothing other than the voluntary bearing of a
little shame. It has nothing in common with the modesty of
the excellent. Be careful not to remove Christ from the
Cross as you stand there. Many Christians have done
frightful, angry and boastful things under the sign of a
naked Cross.
The Elder Sophrony once said, “God never judges twice.” That
which we bring before Christ now, we will never hear about
again. Without shame or fear, those who willingly bear a
little shame in this life will have none in the next.
Peter’s judgment is instructive: The one who had denied
Christ is not upbraided about that three-fold incident. He
is asked, “Do you love me?” It was doubtless the most
searching question that could have been spoken. It is the
likeliest form that the judgment will take for us all.
Many times each day.
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Article published in English on: 23-2-2024
Last update: 23-2-2024.