Orthodox Outlet for Dogmatic Enquiries | Papacy |
---|
Related:
God as "Fire"
and "Light"
The Fire of PurgatoryFrom the homilies of Saint Mark of Ephesus at the 5th Ecumenical Council in Ferrara-Florence |
Saint Mark “the Noble”, Metropolitan of Ephesus, was one of the
protagonists at the Synod of Ferrara-Florence, as the exponent of the
Orthodox Patristic teaching in all of the subjects. On studying his
teaching, one will clearly recognize that he is indeed an exponent of
the Orthodox teaching and moreso an exponent of the theology of Saint
Gregory of Palamas, where the value of his theology will become evident.
It was only natural that he would deal with the purgatorial fire and
present the orthodox views on this subject.
Given that the things he says
are so interesting and relate to many theological matters that relate to
the subject, it is the reason we will provide an extensive analysis
herebelow.
The things we will analyze are found in two extant sermons by Saint Mark
which have been preserved (which of course are homilies that he had
submitted for the debates during the Synod in Ferrara), as well as
certain chapters that are a summary of his overall teaching, by which he
rejected the teaching of the Latins on the existence of a purgatorial
fire.
The first homily is titled: "The objection by the Very Reverend
Metropolitan of Ephesus, Markos the Noble, to the proposed Latin
chapters regarding the
pergatorial fire". It
appears that this is the homily Saint Mark had composed immediately
after the topic was submitted – naturally upon the command of the
emperor. The second homily is titled: "Of the most wise and scholarly
Fr. Mark the Noble, a second apology addressed to the Latins, in which
is also exposed the true glory of the Greeks’ Church".
The chapters are headed as
follows: "Ten reasonings
indicating that purgatory fire does not exist".
Of course, it is difficult for one to present in detail the overall
teaching by Saint Mark on this subject. A special diatribe would be
required to analyze all the views. I will, however, endeavor herebelow
to set forth his general placements regarding the purgatorial fire,
hopefully without distorting their content. I consider this to be
important because, unfortunately, we know very little about the topic of
the purgatorial fire, and whatever is presented, to a large extent does
not wholly express the orthodox view on the subject.
1. Dogmatic discussion is necessary
When commencing his second homily, Saint
Mark emphasizes the necessity of a proper investigation of the
doctrinal issues being disputed. He notes characteristically: “Those
things of the dogmas that are deemed doubtful – with reasons by both
sides that are considered strong
and bold – are in need of true research and discussion.”
Research on disputed dogmatic matters must be done truthfully, without
guile, using the strongest arguments each time. With such a discussion
there would be immense profit, as the truth would be revealed: “And
therefore immense will be the profit from such a discussion.”
Naturally - the saint asserts - the profit will be immense, as long as
both parties aspire to finding the truth and not to quarrelling - and
provided they do not ensure that they win through every possible means -
but instead be tolerant even if they are rightly defeated . With
whatever they were saying, the Latins were being checked, as they were
striving for the exact opposite: they were not seeking the truth
regarding the purgatorial fire, but quite simply, as in other matters,
they merely strove to impose their views.
In his reference to the apostolic Council that was convened to determine
whether the Gentile Christians should be circumcised - and in fact to
the discussion that took place among the Apostles, but also to the
consensus after the Council - he says that they themselves ought to
aspire to peace and unity during those discussions - even if the
discussion is extensive.
Therefore, dogmatic discussion is necessary when there are arguments and
when there is concern for peace and harmony. However, if strife and the
attempt to impose every opinion prevail, then there can be no benefit.
This measure is necessary for every dogmatic discussion; because, if the
Holy Spirit does not act, and if peace does not prevail during
discussions, then it will impossible to find the truth.
2. Heaven and Hell do exist
The Latins’ teaching regarding the purgatorial fire is linked to their
teaching regarding Heaven and Hell, which is why this is also being
examined.
Saint Mark rejects the existence of purgatorial fire, using as his
argument the parable of the wealthy man and Lazarus, as narrated by
Christ: Lazarus' soul ended up in the bosom of Abraham, whereas the
wealthy man's soul ended up in Hades. in this parable - Saint
Mark says – with His reference
to ‘Abraham's bosom’, the Lord was revealing ”the extreme state of
the blissful ending for God's friends”, and with His mention of
‘Hades’, He was describing “the final condemnation and eternal
judgment for sinners”. And of course with this parable, Christ was
making it clear that “He has left no other place between the two
(states:
Paradise-Hell),
which has any temporary torment”.
Consequently, Paradise
and Hades exist - but no other interim place of torment. Besides, there
is a huge chasm between Heaven and Hades, according to this parable.
Nowhere in the Bible do we see any mention that immediately after the
soul’s exit from the body, there is Heaven, Hell -
and Purgatory. The soul of man, when
rid of the body, is an incorporeal and immaterial item:
“it is not something that can
be tortured by a corporeal (physical)
fire”, given that the soul’s material body has been
disintegrated. However, after the general resurrection, when the soul
will have entered its (then
incorruptible) body and all of Creation will have been changed,
and the element of fire will have been divided – as illuminating and
caustic – that is when man will be savouring eternal hell - just like
the demons, for they too have a certain material state and are enveloped
by a density that gives them aerial and fiery bodies. Therefore only
Heaven and Hell are existent, and nothing else in between. The foretaste
of both those states begins upon the exit of the soul from the body.
Of course there is also mention of Hell in the Holy Bible, before the
Incarnation of Christ and before the abolition of death, through
Christ's sacrifice on the Cross. But even Hades, as described in the
Holy Bible, cannot be identified as the purgatorial fire of the Latins.
Hades is a noetic state, given that souls have no form. The souls of the
righteous were kept in Hades until the Coming of the Savior, but only
for the original sin - and “certainly not as if they are in fire and
torment, but as in a jail and a prison'. Thus, it is not about any
purgatorial fire, as the Latins teach.
The existence of a kind of temporary purgatorial fire between Paradise
and Hell is in some way linked to the teaching about the restoration of
everything, since it cultivates indolence in the indolent. The
restoration of everything and the end of eternal Hell, as taught by
Origen and passed on to several ancient ecclesiastic authors, was
renounced and anathematized by the 5th Ecumenical Council, because it
makes the indolent who hope for redemption from suffering even more
indolent. In the same way, the
teaching about purgatorial fire must be cast out by the Church, because
it cultivates the impression that they do not need to struggle in this
life, since they anticipate another catharsis (cleansing).
“For these reasons therefore, the present dogma of the purgative fire
is considered rejectable by the church, as they make people indolent
towards the important things and convince them to not struggle by any
means to purify themselves in the present life, in anticipation of
another catharsis (cleansing)”.
On analyzing the subject of Heaven and Hell, and expressing the teaching
of the Church, Saint Mark says that after death, neither do the
righteous fully attain that state of bliss, nor are sinners led to
eternal Hell where they will be eternally tormented; instead, both these
things - “...will necessarily take place after that final day of
judgment and the resurrection of everyone”. At present, both the
righteous and the sinners - are “each in their rightful place” –
except that the righteous are comfortably and freely together with the
angels in heaven with a foretaste of the Heavenly Realm that awaits
them, while the sinners are incarcerated in Hades, waiting in anguish
and inconsolable sorrow, like convicts, the final decision of the Judge,
but aware of the eternal suffering that awaits them.
It becomes apparent from the teaching of Saint
Mark that there is no middle
state for souls, as maintained by the Latins – i.e., that there is a
special place interposed between Heaven and Hell where the purgatory
fire exists; rather, there exists a middle state of souls, from the
viewpoint that after the soul exits the body, the righteous await the
perfect enjoyment of Paradise, while the sinners await the final
decision of the Judge and the final torment.
However, the relishing of the sight of God by the righteous - after the
departure of the soul from the body - is of a far larger degree than it
was during the present life. He characteristically writes that the
righteous after death enjoy the blessed ‘sighting’ of God, “and the
glory emanating from it, is both perfect and clearer than it was in the
previous life.” To support this view, Saint Mark uses many passages from the Holy Bible and the Church Fathers. At the final judgment, which will take place after the Second Coming of Christ, the righteous will hear the words: “Come, you the blessed ones of My Father, and inherit the kingdom prepared for you”. This signifies that they had not yet inherited it immediately after their soul left the body. Besides, if they had already inherited it, there would have been no need for the general resurrection of bodies, or the presence of the Judge and that terrible and universal court.
The Apostle Paul also writes: “For we all must appear before the
judgment seat of Christ, so that each one may receive the things he did
through his body - whether good or bad” (2 Cor. 5:10).
This means
prior to that Judgment Seat,
before we appear before Christ - and
especially because the soul is alive without the body - “no-one
receives that which he deserves for what he had done through the body”.
When Saint Athanasios the Great was asked if the righteous enjoy good
things after the soul’s exodus from the body and the sinners inherit
Hell, he replied: “Not so; however, the joy which the souls of the
saints now have, is just a partial taste of pleasure, just as the sorrow
that sinners have, is just a partial taste of torment.”
Saint Mark thus reaches the
conclusion that neither do the righteous completely enjoy those eternal
pleasures, nor do the sinners fully receive the condemnation and are
directed to Hell. After all, before the general resurrection of all
bodies, they are imperfect “that is, they are only half, and
incomplete of body”. Only after the souls enter imperishable bodies
will they receive the rewards and praises for their deeds.
Consequently, between the Paradise and the Hell that are foretasted by
the righteous and the sinners, immediately after the exit of the soul
from their body (their biological death),
there is no other created purgatorial
fire. This dogma of the Latins cannot be based on the ecclesiastic
tradition.
3. Purgative fire does not exist
What has been said is not the only argument for the nonexistence of
purgatorial fire. As bearer of the Orthodox Tradition, Saint Mark,
with unwavering arguments, demolishes the theories of the Latins and
presents the Orthodox view on the matter.
First of all, he argues that there is no mention anywhere in the Holy
Bible and the Patristic Tradition of any existence of purgatory fire.
Wherever there is a reference to this item, it implies the uncreated and
eternal fire that sinners will experience after the Second Coming of
Christ. However, we will
return to this further along. It should be noted here that the teaching
of the Latins about purgative fire prior to the Second Coming of Christ
is not supported, and in fact it is not possible to substantiate it from
the Bible.
The opinion that it is possible for souls to be freed from sin through
purgative punishments, which are caused by some temporary fire, "we
find nothing explicitly written, not in the prayers and chants made in
their favor, nor in the discourses of the teachers". Of course, in
some texts, which were used by the Latins, reference is made to this
subject, but they are misinterpreted, that is, they are part of another
interpretive tradition, as we will see in more detail below.
One may spot in patristic texts that the sinners and the unrepentant are
“being partially punished”, but not that they have ended up in
Hell. In the texts of the Holy Bible and of the Fathers, there is
mention of the sorrow by those who are in the interim state which
torments and punishes them, or of shame and torment in their conscience,
or of the afterlife, or of gathering and darkness, or of fear and the
uncertainty of the future, or merely of the postponement of the divine
theoria (“God-sighting”),
depending on what they had done in this life, but there is never any
mention of a “bodily (physical)
fire that torments and eliminates bodiless souls”. None of the
Fathers of the Church who had interpreted the relevant texts of the Holy
Bible had presumed that such a reference was to the purgatory fire as
taught by the Latins.
In His Sermon on the Mount, the Lord says that he who calls his brother
a moron (crazy),
“will be guilty during Judgment”. And Saint
Mark explains that the Lord was
not referring him “to purgatory, but to Gehenna (Hell)”.
Account will be given for every indolent word spoken “at the time of
Judgment most certainly, but they shall not be cleansed through fire”,
he teaches.
In the Holy Bible it is said that the sight of God is a perfect reward
for those who have cleansed their heart, according to the words of
Christ, “blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see God”
(Matthew 6:8). Of course, there are degrees to the theoria (sighting)
of God, depending on the degrees of catharsis (cleansing).
As such, not all people have the same degree of cleansing, nor, of
course, is there a need for a cleansing fire, if the cleansing in some
is incomplete. Throughout the Holy Bible it appears that “those who are
more cleansed shall see God more”. People will “see” God according to
their degree of catharsis. For this very reason, there is no need for
any further “cleansing” after exiting this life.
So, neither is anything explicitly said in the Holy Bible about the
existence of a purgatory fire immediately after the exit of the soul
from the body, but neither is this innovative teaching of the Latins in
harmony with the entire spirit of the Bible. There is no mention of
purgatory fire between the death of each person and the Second Coming of
Christ.
4. Theological reasons against the existence of purgatory fire
The homilies of Saint Mark the
Noble on the subject of purgatory contain a wealth of information –
something naturally difficult to present fully in this abridged analysis
of his teaching. We are brief and fragmentary, out of necessity. But, in
spite of the difficulties presenting the entire teaching of Saint
Mark, we strive to not alter it,
but only examine his general views on the topic that interests us.
At the end of his first homily, he presents as conclusions the reasons
it is not possible for purgatory fire to exist, the way that the Latins
present it – i.e., as a created thing, temporary, and interposed between
human death and the Second Coming of Christ.
The reasons are as follows:
1. Given that one’s passion - that very love
for the divine - cleanses living people and renders them godlike,
why can’t the same thing also occur post mortem?
Can’t that same passion cleanse them of their minor sins also,
instead of necessitating a purgatory fire?
2. It is up to God’s benevolence to not overlook the minor good or to
punish the minor sin. The thing is, a minor good amidst major sins does
not garner any reward. Nor is it
necessary for a minor sin by those who have accomplished great things to
be brought to trial. It is precisely for this reason that there is no
need for a purgatory fire to exist.
3. A minor good in sinners can’t garner any reward - only a difference
in their postmortem torment. The same applies with the saints. A minor
sin in their case does not garner any torment - only a difference in
their postmortem bliss. Consequently, given that there is a
differentiation in bliss for the righteous and a differentiation in
torment for the sinners, there is no reason for purgatory fire to exist.
4. Continuation of the previous notes is that the "sighting" of God is
achieved similarly by all people, but it will depend on the difference
and the degree of their cleansing. Therefore, for those who have
incomplete cleansing, there is no need for purgatory fire.
5. Saint Gregory the Theologian
in his homily on Easter expressly and clearly states that there is no
cleansing “after this night”; that is, there is no cleansing
whatsoever postmortem, where he characterizes this life as
“night”.
6. In another homily, Saint Gregory the Theologian says that it is
preferable to be cleansed here and not be led to the torment of hell,
because then “it will be time for torment, not cleansing”. So
it is clearly obvious that there is no purgatory purging after the soul
leaves the body. Only
eternal torment (“Hell”).
7. On the parable of the rich man and poor Lazarus who (after
their death)
ended up between Paradise and Hell: “Nor
again did He leave any other place which has some temporary torment;
instead, a vast and impassable chasm showing their extreme and direct
opposition" .
8. It is not feasible for the incorporeal
and immaterial soul -after being freed from the body- to be
tormented by a material fire. The
eternal fire will indeed exist, but only after the Second Coming of
Christ and after we have all obainined an incorruptible body.
9. Hades, into which the souls of the Old Testament saints used to
descend, was not of the
“fire and hell” kind, but rather of the “jail and incarceration” kind.
Similarly, for the souls of
those who have sinned moderately, “this is the kind of Hades that
will exist after death”. That is, those who had moderately sinned
will - until the Second Coming of Christ - live as if in a jail and
prison, awaiting the final trial, following which, “Hell” will begin.
This is the reason a purgative fire is not necessary.
10. The holy Fathers who had lived the equal-to-angels polity on earth
and were taught by apparitions and dreams and miracles in regard to the
life of eternal damnation for the irreverent and the sinners (as also
depicted by the parable of the rich man and Lazarus), “did not
specify anything anywhere about a purgative fire”.
11. The dogma on purgatorial fire must be expelled, because it leads
people to laziness and not striving to be spiritually cleansed in the
present life by expecting a future catharsis. This is exactly how the
dogma of restoration of everything was also expelled: because it leads
people to the same results.
He also expounds the same arguments in his reasoning about the
nonexistence of purgatory fire, making evident the reasons we cannot
accept the existence of such a (temporary and created) fire. In those
syllogisms, Saint Mark's arguments focus on three points.
The first
is that, as taught by the entire Holy Bible and the Tradition of the
Church, the “sight” of God differs, depending on a person’s
catharsis-cleansing during the present life: the more cleansed one can
see the glory of God more perfectly. Hence,
there is a greater and a lesser “sighting” of God, depending on one’s
catharsis. One who may have a few sins, “will also see God – without
invoking the purgatorial fire”, this being dependent on God's
philanthropy - and to an analogous degree, of course.
However, the teaching of purgatory fire negates this difference in
savouring the glory of God. Because, if the people of this category pass
through the temporary purgatorial fire, it follows that all the souls of
the righteous “are at the same degree of seeing God, which is the
state of blessedness”. But this is a lie, because Christ had said
that in His Father's Kingdom “there are many monasteries” (John
14:2).
The second
argument is that it is not possible for man’s will to be changed by any
purgative fire after he has exited from this life. “Whether it be
movements of the will, or of things out of necessity, both are enclosed
in the present life”. The will can be changed while a person is in
this life; but wherever he may be found after death, the will remains
inert. “And this also applies to any struggle or trial, of not
passing through purgatory”. Given,
therefore, that the state of blessedness requires straighfowrwardness of
the will, and since purgatory cannot change the will from evil to good
(because this can take place only while man is living a biological
life), ergo, “purgatory
contributes nothing” towards blessedness. This also means that people
cannot be cleansed by any purgatory.
The third
argument is: just as there is a difference in the savouring of the
Heavenly Realm, there is likewise a difference in the savouring of
torment. And, as we said earlier, the minor good of sinners cannot
garner any reward, “only a difference in torment”. Thus, even a
minor sin of the righteous “does not garner torment, only a
difference in savouring bliss”. For this reason it is not possible
for there to be a purgatory fire, as the Latins claim.
5. Interpretation of apostolic passages
In seeking to support the purgatorial fire, the Latins used various
Scriptural passages. For this very reason, Saint Mark the Noble in the
homilies that he used at the Synod of Ferrara - Florence to disprove the
Latin arguments, had interpreted those hagiographical passages in the
Orthodox light, proving that the Latins had actually misinterpreted
them, in order to confirm their new doctrine.
The passage on which the discussion had mainly focused is the one that
comes from the 1st Epistle to Corinthians, in which there is the
reference to the testing of works “by fire”. Specifically there, the
Apostle Paul writes: “....
as a wise master builder I laid the foundation, and the other builds
upon it. But let each one take care how he builds upon it, for
no other foundation can anyone lay than the existing one, which is Jesus
Christ.
Now, if one builds upon this foundation with gold, silver, precious
stones, wood, grass, reeds, each one’s work will be revealed, for that
Day will declare it, when it shall be revealed by fire; and whatever
kind their work was, the fire shall test it. If one’s work which he
built has endured, he will receive wages; if one’s work is entirely
burned, he shall suffer loss, while he himself will remain intact, as
having passed through fire.
(1 Cor. 3:10-15).
This passage, as Saint Mark
says, while seemingly introducing the fire of purgatory, “in fact it
mostly negates everything”. The reasons that prove it are the
following.
Firstly,
the Apostle Paul called it a testing, not a purging fire.
Secondly,
all works, even the benevolent and precious ones, will pass through this
fire - which implies that not everything needs cleansing/purging.
Thirdly,
the Apostle clearly says that while the works of the wicked will be
completely consumed by fire, they will have only suffered losses;
however, according to the Latins’ interpretation, it means they
personally will be benefited.
Fourthly,
what was said by the Apostle will be taking place on the day of Judgment
and the coming Age, and was not about any purgatory fire wedged between
Paradise and Hell. Besides, nowhere is this mentioned in the Holy Bible.
In fact, Christ is categorical when he says: “These shall depart to
eternal torment, whereas
the righteous to eternal life” (Matth.25:46).
Consequently, it is all about the uncreated Grace of God, which
illuminates the righteous and burns the sinners. The passages of the
Holy Bible, which Saint Mark
cites, also agree with this. The Prophet-King David says: “Fire
burns before Him, and a fierce storm surrounds him' (Psalm 49: 3).
Similarly: “Fire shall move ahead of Him, and shall inflame His
enemies around Him” (Psalm 7: 3). And the Prophet Daniel writes: “A
river of fire flowed before Him" (Dan.7: 10). Of particular importance is the phrase in Apostle Paul: “if one’s work is entirely burned, he shall suffer loss while he himself will remain intact, as having passed through fire.” Interpreting this phrase, Saint Mark says that the works that the fire will consume and completely eliminate are the wicked disposition or energy. The words “shall suffer loss” refers to the wicked burdens that sinners had, and that they 'will remain intact” refers to their preservation. He writes characteristically: “...but to preserve them intact - that is, for eternity – He shall preserve and guard, so that they not be lost,along with their wickedness”.
This means God's Grace will also preserve sinners, restore their nature
and they too shall remain in Hell eternally.
Consequently, salvation is in
reference to preservation.
This interpretation by Saint Mark the Noble is not an arbitrary one; it
is a teaching of the Holy Fathers of the Church.
Saint
Mark cited the interpretation by
Saint John the Chrysostom and the teaching of Saint Basil the Great
regarding the fire of the Age to come.
The blessed Chrysostom - who is the mouth of Paul, just as the Apostle
Paul is the mouth of Christ - when interpreting this phrase by the
Apostle Paul, writes precisely: “he will remain intact, because the
sinner will burn as one who has passed through fire” - meaning that
he will remain intact in the fire of Hell, and not be consumed along
with his evil works and dispositions. This is not unrelated to the
orthodox teaching that man is a person; that he can never be led to
non-existence - to non-being - and that Christ with His resurrection
gave resurrection for all people -righteous and unjust- as His gift,
which will take place during His Second Coming, also that there will be
a restoration of Nature, but not of one’s will, and that while the
righteous will enjoy the “forever well”, the sinners will receive the
“forever hell”.
In his interpretation of the psalm excerpt “...a voice of the Lord
interrupting the flame of fire”, Saint Basil the Great says that,
because fire has two qualities, the illuminating and the caustic, the
voice of the Lord will interrupt this fire, “so that the fire of
hell becomes without luminescence, and the light of repose remains
non-caustic”.
When presenting this passage by Saint Basil, Saint
Mark says that the bright and
luminous works of the righteous appear much brighter, and the righteous
will become heirs of the light. But the sinners will suffer losses with
the expulsion of their works, while they themselves are “spared,
with things worse than the loss of salvation, by remaining perpetually
within the fire (for this means chiefly that their voice is also
spared), so that they will not believe they will be lost once and for
all because of the fire’s destructiveness”. At the same time, Saint
Mark says that if there is any
exegete, who by the word “salvation” understands it to mean “deliverance
from hell”, and by the “passing through fire” means “cleansing”, he has
“obviously misconstrued this completely”.
According to Saint Mark the Noble, Saint Chrysostom's interpretation is
the most noteworthy, and all the teachers of the Church agree with it.
Thus, Chrysostom's interpretation “is the more accurate and truer
than everything else”. Within these contexts he himself adds an
interpretation, which is connected to the events that took place in
Corinth and gave the Apostle Paul the occasion to give this speech.
Saint Mark asserts that the Apostle Paul in this case was referring to
the Christian of Corinth who had committed fornication. He was one of
the teachers who, albeit having fallen into a serious transgression, “continued
to teach, thus showing trust in his not-to-be-despised system of
external
wisdom and wealth”. Thus it appears that the Apostle had in mind a
certain teacher who, even though he had sinned, nevertheless continued
to teach, trusting in external wisdom and intellectual wealth. He
surmises this from what is said in the relevant chapter of Apostle
Paul's Epistle.
Therefore, according to Saint Mark,
this homily “is obviously addressing the fornicator”. A teacher
such as him not only would not receive any wages for his teaching, as
his work of teaching would be incinerated. He, however, would
stay on, to be eventually judged
for his actions. “For a teacher such as he shall not be consumed
along with his work, but shall remain intact, waiting to appear before
the Judge and give account of his actions, and to submit to an eternal
judgment, not burdened by that teaching which has been consumed... and
he shall remain intact, for things far worse than the loss of salvation;
for it would heve been better for him either to never have been, or to
have remained intact, carrying such material”.
It should be noted that Saint Mark
repeatedly uses the words of Saint Chrysostom,
that the term “remain” refers to salvation:
“...salvation is understood as this only: that to not be
co-incinerated with his work but to remain intact, after his work is
incinerated”. This man will appear before the Judge 'conflagrated'.
Besides, the fire that the Apostle Paul is speaking of is only a testing
one, “not the one that receives sinners eternally”. Clearly,
therefore, Saint Mark here distinguishes between the trial conflagration
during Judgment at the Second Coming of Christ, and the eventual eternal
fire of Hell. Of course, the fire of judgment is not a created thing,
but an uncreated one. I think
this distinction reveals, on the one hand, the trial of Judgment, which
is executed by Christ Himself, and on the other, the caustic quality of
God's energy, which is attributed to the person’s spiritual state.
In refuting the view that the word “salvation” is not used for the
evils, but only for the good, Saint Mark
quotes the relevant passage from Job. Following the disaster, the
messenger went to Job to announce what had taken place, telling him:
“Having myself been saved, I came to inform you” ('Job
1:15). The messenger was saved,
preserved from that destruction, and
thus went to announce the misfortune to Job.
Consequently the apostolic words cannot possibly be supporting any
purgatory fire, as the Latins claim. It clearly refers to the
forthcoming Judgment, the judging and the preservation of the sinner –
that is, his “passing through the fire” without being consumed
together with his wicked works.
6. Patristic passages during the dialogue
To support their innovative teaching about the purgatory fire, the
Latins also used patristic passages during the dialogue. And this was
because the Orthodox had asked to learn who supported their teaching,
which was foreign to the Orthodox Church. But we shall see further along
that the Latins had actually altered the texts of the Fathers, just as
they had done after all, to the Scriptural passages.
I am not going to do an extensive analysis of this aspect of the issue,
but will merely comment on it and draw the necessary conclusions.
The Latins had used “certain words of the fifth Ecumenical Council”,
which appear to have accepted the teaching of the blessed
Augustine and Saint
Ambrose. They then used passages
by Saint Gregory Dialogus, also prayers by Basil the Great, sayings by
the blessed Gregory of Nyssa, as well as sayings of the divine Dionysios
the Areopagite, the great Epiphanius and the God-worded Damascene.
Reference was also made to the blessed Theodoret.
By referencing all these patristic passages, the Latins had concluded
that divine justice leaves nothing unpunished, and therefore it is
necessary that there be another place for those who have not been
punished in this life (nor will be punished in either heaven or hell),
in which place they will be punished and cleansed. Following these
claims, the Latins had stated that: “there is missing another
dedicated place, where their cleansing must take place, through which
each one who is cleansed will instantly be taken to the heavenly bliss”.
Saint Mark the Noble, bearer of the Orthodox Tradition and authentic
interpreter of the Scriptures and the words of the Fathers, analyzes and
interprets all these passages orthodoxically, thus dismissing the views
of the Latins. He clearly proves that in none of those patristic
passages is there any clear mention of a so-called purgatory fire. As
such, nowhere is the existence of Purgatory justified, as the Latins
claimed. Quite simply, in their attempt to solidify its truth, they
altered and misinterpreted the patristic texts.
Saint Mark thus proved that
other passages than these do not speak clearly about the purgatory fire
- for example the passages from Augustine and Saint
Ambrose; they have been
misconstrued, just as the
passages by Saints Basil the Great, Dionysius the Areopagite, John of
Damascus, Gregory of Nyssa, etc. were misconstrued.
Of course, we need to note that Saint Gregory
of Nyssa does not speak about the restoration of all things in a
philosophical and heretical manner - as several modern scholars
influenced by the Western hermeneutical tradition want to present him -
but instead aligns himself with the ecclesiastic Orthodox Tradition. We
will examine this in another chapter.
Also, the fact that the Latins use passages from the Fifth Ecumenical
Council also became the objects of criticism and checking by Saint Mark,
who argues that it is not possible for this major Ecumenical Council to
establish such a teaching. Saint Mark then characteristically concludes:
“ for neither did Scripture deliver to us a double hell and a double
fire, nor did the fifth of the Ecumenical Councils”.
In his second homily, Saint Mark
analyzes this topic thoroughly, both by presenting various patristic
passages that refer to future events, without making any clear mention
to a purgatory fire, as well as the teaching of Saint
Gregory of Nyssa, and how the
Church deals with this serious issue. But this is not the suitable place
to expound it.
Generally speaking, Saint Mark
argues that the Latins misconstrue and falsify the patristic teaching on
this subject. The Latins do not have orthodox prerequisites for
comprehending the Orthodox Fathers of the Church, which is why they fail
in their interpretive presentation.
Of course, in Orthodox teaching there is mention of the forgiveness of
sins and the value of memorial services. These two events cannot be
truly comprehended by the Latins. A brief reference to the pertinent
teaching by the Church will be presented below:
The forgiveness of sins in the Orthodox Tradition is to be freed of hell
and punishment. And this absolution takes place in three ways and at
three different times. The first at the time of Baptism, the second
after Baptism, with one’s return and their repentant mourning during the
present life, and the third is after death, through the prayers and
blessings and everything else that the Church of Christ performs.
Absolution through Baptism is attained without requiring any labour and
is of equal status for all. It is a work of Grace and no work is
required on the part of the person - only faith. Post-Baptism absolution
is arduous and requires repentance and contrition by the person. The
postmortem absolution is also arduous, inasmuch as it is closely linked
to repentance “which attacks the conscience, and frets over the
failure of material goods”, but that is purely a punishment, since
it is not possible to have absolution and simultaneously punishment.
In the first and the third absolution, God's Grace is abundant, while
prayers also contribute, “as our contribution is small by far”.
The middle absolution is by the Grace of God, but more by our own toils:
“the middle one, quite the opposite, has a little by Grace, but is
mostly dependent on our labour”. Also, the first absolution,
through Holy Baptism, differs from the last absolution, after death,
because the first absolution is the forgiveness of all sins, whereas the
last one is the absolution only of the non-mortal sins, and in fact of
those for which the person had repented during their biological life.
This is the teaching of the Orthodox Church, as Saint
Mark says, which is why She
prays for the absolution of the reposed. She beseeches God to forgive
the sins of repentant Christians who have departed within the Faith,
without imposing any punishment, because She knows that in such sins “divine
goodness far outweighs the word of justice”.
Thus, in the Orthodox Church we
speak of the benevolence of God and not of the satisfaction of divine
justice.
Related to the forgiveness of sins is the issue of memorials. The
Orthodox Church holds memorial services for the reposed Christians and
prays to God for them, but in a different way and for a different reason
than the Latins. In other words, it is not possible to connect the
Latins’ purgatory fire with the memorial services held in the Orthodox
Church, given that the former presupposes cleansing through punishment,
whereas the latter presupposes cleansing during man's unending journey
towards deification (theosis). Saint Mark
provides interesting information on this subject.
The memorial services of the Orthodox Church are held for all people who
have reposed with the hope of resurrection and their faith in Jesus
Christ. Subsequently, the
memorial services and the prayers of the Church benefit all the deceased
- righteous and unrighteous, saints and sinners. Of course, the prayers
for each individual Christian differ. That is to say, memorial services
are held for the saints, and the symbolic, boiled wheat (“kollyva”)
offering is prepared in memoriam for them also; but, because they have
presented undeniable signs of holiness, and have been numbered in the
list and the choir of the saints, it is why the prayers for them are
different. We do not beseech God to “have mercy on them”, but instead,
our prayers are “in their honor and in memoriam”, and we ask them for
their blessings.
Saint Mark writes about the
benefits of memorial prayers: “For
all those who have fallen asleep in the faith we do the same things, and
we ask that these will act and contribute to strength and benefit for
all of them.” Hence we see
that prayers are offered for all who have reposed in the Orthodox faith.
To begin with, the Church prays for the sinners who are held in Hades, “that
they may find some small comfort, albeit not a complete relief.”
She mainly prays for those who
have fallen asleep in the faith, “even if they were major sinners”.
Of course, there are also cases of saints who have prayed for irreverent
people too, but “God's church does not pray at all for this kind”.
The incarcerated sinners do benefit after death in Hades from these
prayers; on the one hand, because they have not been finally condemned
nor have they heard the final decision of the Judge and on the other
hand, because they have not yet ended up in Hell, which will take place
after the Second Coming of Christ, If
this is what applies to sinners, memorials and prayers are far more
beneficial to those who have repented, but have not managed to be
completely cleansed and have attained illumination of the nous (mind).
If they have few or no hollow sins, they will be restored into the choir
of the righteous, or they remain where they are, that is, in Hades, and
“remain hollow among the difficulties, in anticipation of more
worthwhile hopes.”
However, the memorial services and the prayers of the Church benefit
both the righteous and those who have lived God-fearing lives. This is a
central teaching of our Church. Saint Mark claims that the prayers of
the Divine Liturgy are proof that “even to those already enjoying
the blessedness of God, the power of those prayers - and more so of the
Mystic Sacrifice -
passes on to them”. This is apparent in a related prayer during the
Divine Liturgy of Saint Chrysostom: “We also offer You this logical
worship for the reposed-in-faith forefathers, fathers, patriarchs,
prophets, apostles, martyrs, confessors, abstainers, and for every
spirit of the reposed-in-the-faith righteous ones”.
Even if, when praying for the
saints, we do not ask of God any good things for them but only
give God thanks for them, “doing this for their
glorification, thus somehow making this Sacrifice also for their sake,
and that it passes on to them also”.
Elsewhere, Saint Mark analyzes
more extensively what the
benefit of the saints is, when tested by the “fire” that is always found
with God – which is His uncreated energy. He writes: “For to the
saints, such a fire is not a work and a characteristic of an evil thing,
as it reveals them even more radiant, the way that gold is, when tested
in a furnace...”. It is clear in this passage, as well as in other
related ones by the holy Fathers, that saints become even more luminous
and are rendered even more capacitous when partaking of God's glory.
Saint Mark also uses a passage
from Saint Dionysios the
Areopagite, in which it appears that the hierarch also prays for those
who have passed away according to the divine way of life. By quoting
this passage, the saint says that the power of prayers, and especially
of the mystical Sacrifice, also
passes on “to those who lived justly and righteously”.
This is explained, because
compared to perfection, saints are also imperfect and, therefore can
become more capacitous of the divine Glory. Specifically, he writes: The
power of the prayers and the Divine Liturgy also passes through to those
who lived justly and righteously,”as they are also imperfect and
albeit in continuous reception of the good, are never enjoying perfect
blissfullness”.
Hence, the prayers of the Church pass on to everyone, both the sinners
and the righteous, but they act differently on each one, depending on
the spiritual state attained during this life. And the saint concludes:
Given that the prayers of the Church extend to everyone, that is why
there is no need for us to accept the fire of purgatory. Catharsis
(cleansing) and salvation are effected by the benevolence and the
philanthropy of God.
This teaching by Saint Mark is orthodox and is found in many texts of
the Fathers. We do not intend to expound it thoroughly here. What must
be underlined is that, according to orthodox teaching, there are three
stages of spiritual perfection, namely, the catharsis (cleansing) of the
heart, the illumination of the nous (mind) and the theosis (deification)
of man. The perfecting of man is imperfect. Man is always open to
improvement of his spiritual state. This trend will continue during the
Age to come, therefore when a person through repentance enters the stage
of cleansing-catharsis, but, on account of death, cannot complete it and
move on to illumination, it will be fulfilled through the prayers and
the memorial services by the Church. That is to say, there will be a
continuous development in the partaking of God's cathartic, illuminating
and deifying energy. This is how
we should understand many cases that we encounter in the lives of the
saints, in which their prayers justified their spiritual children. If we
pause to think that justification is the illumination of the nous-mind
(this of course being mainly and above all the forgiveness of sins),
then we can explain those cases.
7. Eternal fire is uncreated
Nowhere in the Fathers is there any mention of a purgatory place and a
punishing fire, through which people will pass after their death -
especially those who did not manage to fulfill their penance. In the
teaching of the Fathers, as we have seen, it is clearly stated that
Heaven and Hell exist, after the Second
Coming of Christ, and that after the soul leaves the body, there
is only a “foretaste” of Heaven and Hell. Until the Second Coming of
Christ, the Church will continue to perform the memorial services, the
power of which extends to all those who have fallen asleep in faith,
whether they are sinners or righteous and holy. Nowhere is it mentioned
that there is also a purgatory fire for the repentant Christians who
have not completed their repentance.
Saint Mark says that, wherever fire is mentioned in the Holy Bible and
the patristic texts, it is the eternal fire
of Hell that is implied - which of course is uncreated and not a created
item. In other words, it is not about something created = a certain
created reality - but about an energy of God, which is experienced by
the incurable ones as a burning fire.
At one point in his first homily, he asserts: “Even if there is
mention of fire in those chants and prayers, it is in reference – not to
any temporary one with a purgative power - but to that eternal fire and
boundless Hell, from which the saints ask God to release those who had
reposed in the faith...”
This fire that is referred to by the Church texts is not a temporary
fire, but the eternal fire. Citing a passage by Saint Gregory the
Theologian, he says: “That fire is not a temporary and passing one,
but much more more painful and enduring”.
Thus, the fire of hell is not corporeal, created, but uncreated. “Light”
to the worthy ones is the theoria (sight) of God, says Saint Mark. And
of course, that light is the uncreated glory of God. Saint Mark also
connects the uncreated light with the fire of hell. That is, he says
that the eternal fire is not physical, “as it is also light, for
those who are worthy of seeing Him”. Analyzing this aspect, he
maintains that the saints of the Church “had allegorically perceived"
the eternal fire and the endless Hell. It
is an allegory, because neither is the light of the righteous a
corporeal one, nor the fire of sinners a created and corporeal one. They
are actual facts and true situations, but they are not situations that
we are familiar with in this tangible world.
Of course, the Bible uses many images to portray the state of the
condemned – such as fire, worm, reptiles and the gnashing of teeth. All
these are expressions of other realities. “Fire”, according to the
saints implies an ignorance of God: “...so that neither will it be
thought as being physical fire, or any outer darkness, but will be
nothing more than ignorance of God”.
Of course, when he speaks of
ignorance of God, he means non-partaking of God, given that we know that
sinners will see God, that is, they will have the sight of God, but will
not partake of God – hence the “ignorance”.
After all, “knowledge of God” in the Orthodox Tradition is the partaking
of God. The “worm”, or some virulent and carnivorous genus of reptiles,
signifies the suffering of those untouched by conscience and any bitter
remorse. The “gnashing of teeth” means exactly the same; that is, it
denotes the sorrow, the bitter wailing and the mania of anger tantrums.
It is clear, therefore, that where “fire” is mentioned in the
ecclesiastic tradition, the eternal and uncreated fire is implied. This
means it is not about any temporary purging fire, but the experiencing
of God’s uncreated Grace as a burning fire, due to the uncleanliness of
man. It is precisely for this reason that there cannnot be any interim
purgative fire, as implied by the Latins. In general, we can say that the teaching of Saint Mark the Noble - as observed in his homilies during the Synod of Ferrara - Florence, is integrated organically within the Tradition of the Orthodox Church on the life of man after the soul leaves the body. Saint Mark is an authentic interpreter of the Orthodox teaching, because he is himself the bearer of the Orthodox Tradition. Thus, it is proven that the purgatory fire of the Latins is a hollow glory, a novel teaching, an unprecedented doctrine which cannot be adopted by the Orthodox Church. Saint Mark is proven to be an authentic interpreter of the Orthodox Tradition on this subject also.
Translaton: A.N. |
Article published in English on: 11-11-2023
Last update: 11-11-2023.