Orthodox Outlet for Dogmatic Enquiries | Church Fathers |
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Source: https://www.paratiritis-news.gr
During apocalyptic times and eras of friendlessness,
lack of brotherly love and fellowship, of the war-thirsty and the
bellicose, the anti-peace individuals and the peace-thwarters, the Church of Christ- as the Lord’s
mouth and voice that speaks in defiance of these times and the
prevailing gloomy situation - offers up prayers and petitions every
single day (or rather, night-and day) to the Godman Jesus Christ -
the Lord of Peace - asking for the “Peace that comes from above”
and for the sake of “Peace to the entire world...”.
When the drums of war resound everywhere and when all
the ominous predictions and analyses by “experts” have become
bewildering and are clouding the minds of people, then is revealed
the tragically great lack of true
(not professional or
commissioned) peacemakers, while at the same time, “all of Creation”
has been flooded with puffed-up pacifists touting Peace
(or
more like
a pseudo-peace)
for this world, behind whom are hidden
assorted
interests, illegalities and misdeeds at the expense of the innocent
peoples of the earth,
who are
brutally violating Peace itself with actions
and omissions, both obvious and latent, while simultaneously
demeaning the value of the term “Peace”, which has been rendered merely
fashionable or popular, in use by even those who are anything but
peacemakers, but more like peace-thwarters and peace-mongers,
peace-deceivers and peace-fakers.
We are therefore in need of peace-makers and not
peace-talkers and peace-mongers, who, inside the “treasury of their
soul” do not possess the slightest trace of the “Peace from above”
that the Church of Christ prays for, given that this “Peace
from above” is not of this world, but is offered as a
benefit of spiritual and transformative power by the Lord of Peace,
the Gift-giver of all good things: the Godman Jesus Christ. This
“Peace from above” must be born within the “inner man”,
to render
him spiritually at peace according to God, so that, by being
peaceful, through his actions and his words he will be at peace with
the life-giving peacemaker Christ and with his fellow man, and thus
actualize “the works of Peace”, for
"the peace of the
entire world.”
Inspired by the Lord's Beatitude:
“Blessed are the peacemakers, for
they shall be called sons of God”, the God-bearer of
the Church - Saint Gregory of Nyssa - interpretively highlights the
more
profound, ontological content of the terms “Peace” and
“Peacemaker”, thus offering his theological teaching as spiritual
sustenance for every well-meaning person
who craves the Peace
according to God.
In a masterful expressive way, the God-moved and
God-illuminated Saint Gregory of Nyssa conceptually defines the
words “Peace” and “Peacemaker”, while simultaneously setting the
prerequisites - the spiritual requirements - in order for the
peacemaker to be truly peaceful in the inner treasury of his soul
and towards his fellow men, by writing: “A peacemaker is
whoever imparts peace to another, and will not give to others what
he himself does not have”
It is therefore necessary that you first be filled with
the goods of peace, and only then to
impart those goods to those
who are lacking. But let's not go into the details to find the
deeper explanation. For the acquisition of the good, the existing
words are enough for us: “Blessed are the peacemakers.”
This quote with its brevity bestows healing of many
diseases, by containing within it all the pertinent details, with
its epigrammatic and general expression. Let us first consider what
“Peace” is. What
other than a mutual stance of love towards our
fellow human beings? And what is the opposite of love?
Hatred, rage, anger, envy,
grudging, retribution, hypocrisy, and the calamity of war.
“Can you see how a single word becomes an antidote for
so many diseases? It is
because Peace is equally opposed to each of the evils we just
mentioned, and with its presence, causes the elimination of evil.
Likewise, when health is restored diseases will disappear, and when
light appears, darkness recedes, thus also, when Peace appears, all
the opposing passions dissipate.
Just how beneficial this is, I don't think needs to be
proven by me. Think for yourself, how the life of those is, who
suspect and hate each other, so
much so,that a meeting between them is
unbearable, with each abhorring the other in everything. Their
mouths are mute and their eyes look away, and their ears are
blocked, on hearing the voice of the one who hates and who is hated.
Dear to each of them is whatever is not dear to the
other; on the contrary, whatever is desired by the enemy is hated
and hostile. So, just as very
fragrant perfumes fill the air around them with their pleasant
fragrance, that is how you too must have an abundant surplus of the
gift of Peace, so that your life may become therapy for every foreign
disease…”.
At another point in his divinely inspired
interpretive speech, the divinely inspired author Saint Gregory of
Nyssa links the definition of the term “Peacemaker” in relation and
reference to the long-suffering philanthropy of the God-man Jesus
Christ, by pointing out that a true peacemaker must emulate the
example of the Lord of Peace and the Giver of “Peace from above”
Lord, Who authentically defines the content and spiritual
prerequisites of the term.
On all of the above, the Holy
Father of the Church writes:
“So, ‘blessed are the
peacemakers’...And who might they be? They are the ones who emulate
the divine philanthropy; they who display the characteristics of the
divine energy in their own lives. The Giver of every good – our Lord
- completely erases and annihilates everything that is beyond the
nature of the good and foreign to it. This is what He legislates,
and what you must also do: that is, to discard hatred, to stop war,
to eliminate envy, to divert strife, to quash hypocrisy, to
extinguish the fire of grudges that burns inside your heart, and in
their place insert everything that takes their place after the
extrication of their opposites. In other words, just as with the
retreat of darkness comes light, likewise the place of each of the
above will be occupied by the fruits of the Spirit: love, joy,
peace, kindness, long-suffering... the entire list of good that the
Apostle has provided for you”.
Saint Gregory of Nyssa
characterizes peacemaking as a “supreme exercise”, for
which the Gift-giver Jesus Christ has determined that the
peacemakers’ prize will be their adoption as “sons of God”.
He even underlines with emphatic words that peace in
people's lives is “the sweetest thing”, which “sweetens”
our entire human life - whereas war is the source of all pain - by
characteristically mentioning the following:
“So, the prize is indeed superb; but for which
feat is it? It is
for when
you contribute towards the restoration of peace” - he says –
“that you will be crowned with the Grace of adoption.
I think that the labour for which He promises such wages is yet
another gift. Because, which of the things we humans seek in our
lives is sweeter than a peaceful life? Whichever of the pleasures of
life that you may mention needs peace to be pleasant. If all that we
value in life: riches, health, wife, children, houses, parents,
servants, friends, land, sea do exist,
each with its own abundance of
goods - orchards, hunting, baths, palaces, gymnasiums, places of
entertainment for the young and all else that comprise inventions
for pleasures (including the pleasant spectacles and musical
hearings and whatever else contributes to pleasure in the life of
those who entertain themselves) - if then all these are present, but
the good of peace is absent, what is their benefit, if a war hinders
the enjoyment of those goods?
Hence, Peace itself is pleasant to those who live it,
making everything that we honor in our lives as pleasant. But if, as
humans, calamity befalls us personally in times of peace, the evil
that becomes mingled with the good is made
somewhat
easier to bear for those
who had suffered it. But when our lives are shaken by a general war,
we feel no relief whatsoever during such sad incidents. This is
because the common calamity surpasses personal calamities as regards
the pain involved.
And just as doctors teach about physical pains - that
when two pains occur in the same body, only the stronger one is
felt, while the smaller pain passes somewhat unnoticed, pushed aside
by the more dominant one - so also are the sufferings of war,
because they are superior in pain, making an individual not pay
attention to his personal calamities”.
But when the “Peace from above” as a divine gift and a
good thing is lacking in man, then he is not peaceful, but instead
is immersed in the personal hell of his passions, torturing himself
and his fellow humans as well,
hence experiencing the passions of
rage and anger, envy and jealousy, hatred and malice, cunning
hypocrisy and the slandering of one's neighbor.
The non-peaceloving and belligerent in spirit person is
a person sick in spirit and soul; it is somehow as if he is
possessed and dominated by the passions of rage and anger (which are
the gloomy offspring of a noetically pro-war and hostile
predilection where such terrible and scary things are observed), and
also very revealing of the ailing, passionate human soul’s
manifestations and tragic symptoms, which the God-fearing Father of
the Church Saint Gregory of Nyssa describes as follows:
“How great a good this is, you will understand better,
if you think about the calamities caused to the soul by the feeling
of a hostile predisposition.
Who will deservedly expose the passions of rage? What
words will describe the indecency of this disease? You see, the
passions of those who are demon-possessed are manifest in those who are
dominated by anger. Consider as parallel the manifestations of the
demon and of anger, and what the difference is between them...
That is to say, when passion dominates and the blood of
“black bile”
(blood poisoned by hatred etc.)
surrounding the heart becomes overheated (as they say)
- which the passion of anger then distributes to every part of the
body - then, because of the vapours that are compressed inside one’s
head, all the senses pertaining to the head are aggravated; the eyes
bulge outward with a blood-red gaze, the way that a snake reacts
when someone disturbs it. Bowels rise and fall because of heavy
breathing, the veins of the neck are distended, the tongue thickens
and the voice shrieks as the artery narrows, the lips harden and
blacken as that cold bile passes through them, rendering it
difficult for their natural opening and closing, so that not even
the superfluous saliva can be confined in the mouth, as it is spat
out of the mouth together with their words, and with their final,
distorted word they spit out the froth... and if during an
altercation one's mouth comes close to the other's body, the teeth
don’t remain idle; they may even bite those who approach them, like
wild beasts...”.
Particular is
the mention by the god-bearing Father, Saint Gregory of Nyssa, in
his interpretive homily on the terrible passion of envy, which the
person who is not at peace spiritually and in soul will conceal
under the horrible veil of hypocrisy. The passion of envy corrodes
and consumes the non-peaceful person,
whom it will render inhuman and bestial.
In this regard, Saint Gregory writes: “While hatred lurks in the depths of the heart like an invisible fire, outwardly it hypocritically looks friendly.
And just as
a fire that is covered
by straw does
not emit a flame visibly
and
only thick smoke billows out from the
straw that pressures it,
and if
a wind happens to
rise it causes a
bright flame
to
spring forth into the open,
likewise is
envy.
It consumes the heart from within, like fire in a barn
full of straw. And of course the envious person hides his illness
out of shame,
however he is not able to hide it completely. Like a thick
smoke, the hostility of envy is discernible in the manifestation of
its
displays. And if calamity happens to find the envied one,
then
that illness manifests itself by making that envied person’s grief
the envying one's
satisfaction and joy.
No matter if we
imagine that a hidden passion is not
evident; it is
inevitably
betrayed by visible proof on
one's face.
In the desperate person,
the signs of death often appear on the one who is melting with
envy, drying up their eyes and sinking them into their retracted
eyelids, with eyebrows falling out... where there was flesh, bones
are now
visible...
And what is the cause of evil? To want a brother or
relative or neighbour to experience sorrow in their life. What a new
perception of crime! To regard as a crime that the other is not
suffering any misfortune; whose happiness makes
the envious one sad; without
judging as unfair any harm that he may have suffered by the other,
but simply because the envied one, without being unjust
in
anything,
has what he desires...”.
All of the above - which are impassioned manifestations
of the non-peaceful man - Saint Gregory of Nyssa rates as
“ugliness”... as the extreme degradation of human existence... while
he praises the peacemaker who resists and obstructs that human
degradation -
by
writing that:
“Whoever hinders degradation is worthy of the beatitude
and of honour for this immense benefaction that he offers. For,if
the one who rids a person of a certain bodily indecency is worthy of
honor for his act, how much more should he be considered a
benefactor of life, who rids the soul of this disease?
Inasmuch as the soul is
superior to the body, even worthier of honour than the one who heals
bodies is the one who frees souls from their disease... Isn’t the
one therefore who removes from a human life that disease - who
connects people with friendship and peace and leads his fellow men
to a friendly consensus - doing the work of divine power, by
limiting the defects of human nature and replacing them with a
communing of good things? This is why
He calls the peacemaker “son
of God”: because he becomes an emulator of the true God, Who bestows
gifts in people's lives”.
The God-man Jesus Christ - as Prince of Peace -
lavishly and richly bestows the “peace from above”, by which the
hard-hearted human is transformed into a peaceful person, into a
true peacemaker, who eventually, through words and deeds, transmits
the goods of peace to the the rest of his fellow men.
On all the above, the God-illuminated Saint Gregory of
Nyssa writes and teaches:
“This is therefore how we can comprehend the surplus of
philanthropy - that the good gifts were not bestowed on us by Him as
toil and sweat, but as delights and pleasures of sorts - provided
that the crowning of whatever pleases us is peace, which each one
wants to have in a measure that will not be limited to them alone,
but with plentiful abundance to impart to those who do not have
it...
How, then, is the distributor of divine gifts not
blessed? The emulator of God's charismas? The one who equates all
the good he does, to God's great gift? Perhaps that beatitude does
not pertain only to the benefaction of others, but - I think - a
peacemaker is chiefly one who brings to an agreement of peace the
dimension of flesh and of spirit; to the civil war of human nature,
when the physical law of the body (which opposes the spiritual law)
ceases to function - and having accepted the yoke of the loftier
Kingdom becomes a servant of the divine decrees ...
It is when the dividing wall of malice – one’s inner barrier
- is eliminated within us, that such people are literally called
sons of God...”.
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Article created: 29-9-2023.
Updated on: 29-9-2023.