Fr.
Seraphim (Rose) Speaks
Excerpts from His Writings
A Man Not of
This World
Hieromonk Seraphim Rose, co-founder and co-editor of The Orthodox
Word and co-founder of the St. Herman of Alaska Brotherhood and Monastery at Platina,
California, reposed in the Lord on September 2, 1982 n.s. Born in 1934 in California,
he was raised in a typical American Protestant family. He graduated from Pomona
College in the Los Angeles area, and later received his M.A. in Chinese (Mandarin)
from the University of California at Berkeley.
He first encountered true Orthodoxy as a result of the lecture
of newly-graduated Jordanville seminarian Gleb (Abbot Herman) Podmoshensky in
1961. By 1963 the establishment of the St. Herman of Alaska Brotherhood, as a
missionary endeavor toward the conversion of English-speaking people, under the
aegis of Blessed Archbishop John (Maximovitch) (+1966) had been decided upon.
The Brotherhood began with headquarters on Geary Boulevard in San Francisco next
door to the Cathedral, which was then in process of construction. The Orthodox
Word began publication with the January-February issue of 1965. The first issues
were handset and printed on hand-operated and hand-powered press. In addition
to the publication of the magazine, an icon and book store was operated. Father
Seraphim, with his modest smile and meek manner, was there to greet customers
and answer questions, and let his “light shine.”
By 1967, in pursuance of long-range and long-standing plans,
search began for a suitable location for a skete, so that full-fledged monasticism
could be undertaken. Vladika John having reposed in 1966, the Brotherhood now
had a heavenly patron to assist them in all their righteous endeavors. After considerable
searching throughout northern California, the present location of the St. Herman
of Alaska Monastery was decided upon. Living quarters and the printing shop were
made ready so that the two-hundred and-fifty-mile move northward from San Francisco
was accomplished by Dormition of 1969. For one year the two members of the brotherhood
labored in solitude and silence before they received tonsure to the Small Schema
in October of l970. In the previous August of 1970, St. Herman of Alaska had been
glorified in the Cathedral of the Holy Virgin the Joy of All Who Sorrow, in San
Francisco. The Brotherhood had labored long and tirelessly to bring this about,
and to make known the wonders worked by St. Herman, and his importance for the
Orthodox Church, especially in America.
Father Seraphim belonged to that rare species, the ascetics.
His labors, who can tell? Perhaps only Abbot Herman. But others have been witnesses.
Many were the nights when his attention could be had only with difficulty, because
he was so enrapt in the Jesus Prayer even while at table. He demonstrated the
virtues as few people in our time are capable of doing. He believed implicitly
in the teaching of the Fathers that obedience to one’s spiritual father and director
must be given without question. He seldom ever allowed himself to become aroused
enough for one to call it anger.
He built a small hut, approximately 6 x 10 feet, on the mountainside,
so that he had a refuge from ever-increasing numbers of visitors. For seven years
he was blessed to enjoy this refuge, where he prepared many articles for publication,
where he prayed and prepared himself to leave this world, where he was indeed
a stranger and a pilgrim, and to enter his heavenly homeland. He was ordained
hierodeacon in January 1977 and was raised to the rank of hieromonk on the Sunday
of the Myrrh-bearers the same year, so that after eight years of desert-dwelling
he and Abbot Herman were able to celebrate the Holy Mysteries.
Father Seraphim was an inspiration for thousands of people.
He gave some of the most inspiring sermons ever uttered in the English language.
His constant counsel was: “Censure yourself. Never excuse yourself. If you must,
or think you must, give way to a weakness, then be certain that you recognize
it as a weakness, and a sin. But see your own faults and condemn not your brother!”
During the latter portion of his life, Father Seraphim continually emphasized
the need for spiritual attentiveness in preparation for struggles to come. He
seemed to have an awareness, a foreknowledge, of apocalyptic times ahead. His
message was conveyed in the well-known phrase: “It is later than you think.”
Writing both in Russian and English, Fr. Seraphim was able
to produce a torrent of articles and books in a relatively short span of time—only
17 years—covering every conceivable subject of interest and importance to the
Orthodox reader, including lives of saints, Divine services, contemporary problems,
and theology. He also translated many works, making them available in English
for the first time—incomparable service to English-speaking Orthodox Christians.
Father Seraphim accomplished more for the glory of God and
the spread of true Orthodox Christianity than any other person born on the American
continent. May God grant him rest with His saints, where the light of His countenance
shall visit him. And may his memory be eternal!
Rassophore-monk, Reader Laurence
(Fr. Seraphim’s first godchild)
* * *
The following
letter was written by Hieromonk Seraphim in response to a question concerning
spiritual guidance.
Dear brother in Christ:
Greetings in our Lord Jesus Christ! Thank you for your
letter. I appreciate the seriousness of what you have written, and I will
reply with the same seriousness.
I must tell you first of all that, to the best of our knowledge,
there are no “startsi” today—that is, truly God-bearing elders (in the spirit
of the Optina elders) who could guide you not by their own wisdom and understanding
of the Holy Fathers, but by the enlightenment of the Holy Spirit. This kind
of guidance is not given to our times—and frankly, we in our weakness and corruption
and sins do not deserve it.
To our times is given a more humble kind of spiritual life,
which Bishop Ignatius Brianchaninov in his excellent book The Arena (do you have
it?) calls “life by counsel”—that is, life according to the commandments of God
as learned in the Holy Scriptures and Holy Fathers and helped by those who are
elder and more experienced. A “starets” can give commands; but a “counsellor”
gives advice, which you must test in experience.
We do not know of anyone in particular who would be especially
able to counsel you in the English language. If this is really needful for
you, God will send it to you in His time, according to your faith and need, and
without your making too deliberate a search for it.
Since you have written me, I will venture to give you a word
or two of general advice, based upon what you have said in your letters, as derived
from the experience of our small monastic community and our reading of the Holy
Fathers.
1) Learn first of all to be at peace with the spiritual situation
which has been given you, and to make the most of it. If your situation
is spiritually barren, do not let this discourage you, but work all the harder
at what you yourself can do for your spiritual life. It is already something
very important to have access to the Sacraments and regular church services.
Beyond this you should have regular morning and evening prayers with your family,
and spiritual reading—all according to your strength and the possibilities afforded
by your circumstances.
2) Among spiritual writings you should read especially those
addressed to people living in the world, or which give the “ABC’s” of spiritual
life—such as St. John of Kronstadt’s My Life in Christ, St. Nikodemos’ Unseen
Warfare, the Lives of Saints in general, and Bishop Ignatius Brianchaninov’s The
Arena (this book, while addressed to novices, is suitable for laymen insofar as
it gives in general the “ABC’s” of spiritual life as applied to modern times).
3) To help your spiritual growth and remind you of spiritual
truths, it would be good to keep a journal (the hardbound “record” books sold
in stationery stores are good), which would include excerpts from the writings
of spiritual books which you find especially valuable or applicable to you, and
perhaps comments of your own inspired by reading and reflection, including brief
comments on your own shortcomings which you need to correct. St. John of
Kronstadt found this especially valuable, as can be seen in his My Life in Christ.
4) Don’t criticize or judge other people—regard everyone else
as an angel, justify their mistakes and weaknesses, and condemn only yourself
as the worst sinner. This is step one in any kind of spiritual life.
I offer this for whatever help it may be to you. I would
be glad to try to answer any specific questions you might have, especially on
the teaching of the Holy Fathers, almost all of which we have access to in Russian-language
editions.
Asking your prayers,
With love in Christ,
Seraphim, monk
Reprinted from
Living Orthodoxy, Jan.-Feb., 1984.
* * *
— The life of self-centeredness and self-satisfaction lived
by most of today’s “Christians” is so all-pervading that it effectively seals
them off from any understanding at all of spiritual life; and when such people
do undertake “spiritual life,” it is only as another form of self-satisfaction.
This can be seen quite clearly in the totally false religious ideal both of the
“charismatic” movement and the various forms of “Christian meditation”: all of
them promise (and give very quickly) an experience of contentment and peace. But
this is not the Christian ideal at all, which, if anything, may be summed up as
a fierce battle and struggle.
— Orthodox Christians! Hold fast to the grace which you have;
never let it become a matter of habit; never measure it by merely human standards
or expect it to be logical or comprehensible to those who understand nothing higher
than what is human… Let all true Orthodox Christians strengthen themselves for
the battle ahead, never forgetting that in Christ the victory is already ours.
Orthodoxy and the Religion of the Future, St Herman of Alaska
Brotherhood, Platina, CA, 1979.
* * *
— ...Orthodox Christians of these latter times are indeed spiritually
sleeping and desperately need to be awakened by a trumpet of the Spirit like Saint
Symeon [the New Theologian]. Those who are Orthodox by birth and habit are not
those who will inherit the eternal Kingdom of Heaven; they must be awakened to
the conscious fulfillment of Christ’s commandments and a conscious reception of
God’s Holy Spirit, as Saint Symeon so eloquently taught.
— ...For Saint Symeon, as for all true Orthodox Christians,
theology is life; the true “words of God” which speak to the Christian heart,
raise it from its sloth and negligence, and inspire it to struggle for the eternal
Kingdom, which may be tasted in advance even now in the life of grace which God
sends down upon His faithful through His sanctifying Holy Spirit.
Preface
to
The Sin of Adam and our Redemption: Seven Homilies by Saint
Symeon the New Theologian; St Herman of Alaska Brotherhood, Platina, CA, 1979.
* * *
— We must not deceive ourselves: the life of the desert-dwellers
of the Northern Thebaid is far beyond us in our time of unparalleled spiritual
emptiness. In any epoch the monastic life is limited by the kind of life which
is being led in the world. At a time when daily Orthodox life in Russia was both
extremely difficult and very sober, monasticism could flourish; but in our time
when ordinary life has become abnormally “comfortable” and the world-view of even
the best religious and intellectual leaders is shockingly frivolous, what more
is to be expected than that luke-warm “spirituality with comfort” with which bold
voices from inside Soviet Russia even now are reproaching the free West?
— Everywhere today the disease of disbelief has entered deeply
into the minds, and most of all the hearts, of men. Our Orthodoxy, even when it
is outwardly still correct, is the poorest, the feeblest Christianity there has
ever been … And still the voice of the Northern Thebaid calls us—not, it may be,
to go to the desert…but at least to keep alive the fragrance of the desert in
our hearts: to dwell in mind and heart with these angel-like men and women and
have them as our truest friends, conversing with them in prayer; to be always
aloof from the attachments and passions of this life, even when they center about
some institution or leader of the church organization; to be first of all a citizen
of the Heavenly Jerusalem, the City on high towards which all our Christian labors
are directed, and only secondarily a member of this world below which perishes.
Epilogue
to
The Northern Thebaid, St Herman of Alaska Brotherhood,
Platina, CA, 1975.
* * *
— The time of the end, though it seems to be near, we do not
know. However close, it is still future, and in the present we have only the same
age-old fight against the unseen powers, against the world, and against our own
passions, upon the outcome of which our eternal fate will be decided. Let us then
struggle while it is still day, with the time and the weapons which our All-merciful
God has given us!
— Truly, we are far more in need today of a return to the sources
of genuine Orthodoxy than Blessed Paisius was! Our situation is hopeless! And
yet God’s mercy does not leave us, and even today one may say that there is a
movement of genuine Orthodoxy, which consciously rejects the indifference, renovationism,
and outright apostasy which are preached by the world-famous Orthodox “theologians”
and “hierarchs,” and also hungers for more than the “customary” Orthodoxy which
is powerless before the onslaughts of a world refined in destroying souls.
— Many young people today are seeking gurus and are ready to
enslave themselves to any likely candidate; but woe to those who take advantage
of this climate of the times to proclaim themselves “God-bearing elders” in the
ancient tradition—they only deceive themselves and others.
— Our times, above all, call for humble and quiet labors, with
love and sympathy for other strugglers on the path of the Orthodox spiritual life
and a deep resolve that does not become discouraged because the atmosphere is
unfavorable. We Christians of the latter times are still called to work persistently
on ourselves, to be obedient to spiritual fathers and authorities, to lead an
orderly life with at least a minimum of spiritual discipline and with regular
reading of the Orthodox spiritual literature which Blessed Paisius was chiefly
responsible for handing down to our times, to watch over our own sins and failings
and not judge others. If we do this, even in our terrible times, we may have hope—in
God’s mercy—of the salvation of our souls.
Introduction to Blessed Paisius Velichkovsky,
by Schema-monk Metrophanes; St Herman of Alaska Brotherhood, Platina, CA, 1976.
* * *
— As to the fatalism of those who believe that man must be
a slave to the “spirit of the age,” it is disproved by the experience of every
Christian worthy of the name, for the Christian life is nothing if it is not a
struggle against the spirit of every age for the sake of eternity.
— Man’s freedom has been given him to choose between the true
God and himself, between the true path to deification whereon the self is humbled
and crucified in this life to be resurrected and exalted in God and eternity,
and the false path of self-deification which promises exaltation in this life
but ends in the Abyss. These are the only two choices, ultimately, open to the
freedom of man; and upon them have been founded the two Kingdoms, the Kingdom
of God and the Kingdom of Man, which may be discriminated only by the eye of faith
in this life, but which shall be separated in the future life as Heaven and Hell.
It is clear to which of them modern civilization belongs…The old commandment of
“Thou shalt,” says [Nietzsche’s] Zarathustra, has become outmoded; the new commandment
is “I will.”
— … In the Christian life, the old self with its constant “I
will” must be done away with and a new self, centered in Christ and His will,
be born.
— Christian compromise in thought and word and negligence in
deed have opened the way to the triumph of the forces of the absurd, of Satan,
of Antichrist. The present age of absurdity is the just reward of Christians who
have failed to be Christians.
— It is futile, in fact it is precisely absurd, to speak of
reforming society, of changing the path of history, of emerging into an age beyond
absurdity, if we have not Christ in our hearts; and if we do have Christ in our
hearts, nothing else matters.
“Subhumanity:
The Philosophy of the Absurd” in The Orthodox Word, Platina,
Sept.-Oct. 1982.
* * *
— Looking at Orthodoxy, at its present state and its prospects
in the period before us, we may see two opposed aspects. First of all, there is
the spirit of worldliness which is so present in the Orthodox Churches today,
leading to a watering-down of Orthodoxy, a loss of the difference between Orthodoxy
and heterodoxy. This worldliness has produced the Ecumenical movement, which is
leading to the approaching Unia with Rome and the Western confessions—something
that may well occur in the 1980’s. In itself, this will probably not be a spectacular
event: most Orthodox people have become so unaware of their faith, and so indifferent
to it, that they will only welcome the opportunity to receive communion in a Roman
or Anglican church. This spirit of worldliness is what is “in the air” and seems
natural today; it is the religious equivalent of the atheist-agnostic atmosphere
that prevails in the world.
—
What should be our response to this worldly “ecumenical” movement? Fortunately,
our bishops of the Russian Church Outside of Russia have given us a sound policy
to follow: we do not participate in the Ecumenical Movement, and our Metropolitan [Philaret] has warned
other Orthodox Christians of the disastrous results of their ecumenical course
if they continue; but at the same time our bishops have refused to cut off all
contact and communion with Orthodox Churches involved in the Ecumenical Movement,
recognizing that it is still a tendency that has not yet come to its conclusion
(the Unia with Rome) and that (at least in the case of the Moscow Patriarchate
and other churches behind the Iron Curtain) it is a political policy forced upon
the Church by secular authorities. But because of this policy, our Church suffers
attacks both from the left side (from ecumenists who accuse us of being “uncharitable,”
“behind the times,”and the like) and from the right side (by groups in Greece
that demand that we break communion with all Orthodox Churches and declare them
to be without grace).
— Indeed, if one looks at the state of the Orthodox Church
in Greece, we can see that the Ecumenical Movement has produced a reaction that
has often become excessive, and sometimes is almost as bad as the disease it seeks
to cure. The more moderate of the Old Calendarist groups in Greece has a position
similar to that of our Russian Church Abroad; but schism after schism has occurred
among the Old Calendarists over the question of “strictness.” A few years ago
one of these groups cut off communion with our Russian Church Abroad because our
bishops refused to declare that all other Orthodox Churches are without grace;
this group now declares that it alone has grace, only it is Orthodox. Recently
this group has attracted some converts from our Russian Church Abroad, and we
should be aware that this attitude is a danger to some of our American and European
converts: with our calculating, rationalistic minds it is very easy to think we
are being zealous and strict, when actually we are chiefly indulging our passion
for self-righteousness.
— One Old Calendarist bishop in Greece has written to us that
incalculable harm has been done to the Orthodox Church in Greece by what he calls
the “correctness disease,” when people quote canons, Fathers, the typicon in order
to prove they are “correct” and everyone else is wrong. Correctness can truly
become a “disease” when it is administered without love and tolerance and awareness
of one’s own imperfect understanding. Such a “correctness” only produces continual
schisms, and in the end only helps the Ecumenical Movement by reducing the witness
of sound Orthodoxy.
— Conspicuous among Orthodox today—certain to be with us into
the 1980’s—is the worldly spirit by which Orthodoxy is losing its savor, expressed
in the Ecumenical Movement, together with the reaction against it, which is often
excessive precisely because the same worldly spirit is present in it. …
— There will undoubtedly be an increasing number of Orthodox
converts in America and Europe in the coming decade, and we must strive that our
missionary witness to them will help to produce, not cold, calculating, “correct”
experts in the letter of the law, but warm, loving, simple Christians—at least
as far as our haughty Western temperament will allow.
— Once Fr. Dimitri [Dudko] was asked about how much better
off religion was in the free world than in Russia, and he answered: Yes, they
have freedom and many churches, but theirs is a “spirituality with comfort.” We
in Russia have a different path, a path of suffering that can produce real fruit.
— We should remember this phrase when we look at our own feeble
Orthodoxy in the free world: are we content to have beautiful churches and chanting;
do we perhaps boast that we keep the fasts and the church calendar, have “good”
icons and congregational singing, that we give to the poor and perhaps tithe to
the Church? Do we delight in exalted patristic teachings and theological conferences
without having the simplicity of Christ in our hearts? Then ours is a “spirituality
with comfort,” and we will not have the spiritual fruits that will be exhibited
by those without all these “comforts,” who deeply suffer and struggle for Christ.
In this sense we should take our tone from the suffering Church in Russia and
place the externals of the Church’s worship in their proper place.
— Our most important task, perhaps, is the Christian enlightenment
of ourselves and others. We must go deeper into our faith—not by studying the
canons of Ecumenical Councils or the typicon (although they also have their place),
but by knowing how God acts in our lives; by reading the lives of God-pleasers
in the Old and New Testaments (we read the Old Testament far too little; it is
very instructive); by reading the lives of Saints and the writings of the Holy
Fathers on practical spiritual life; by reading about the suffering of Christians
today and in recent years. In all of this learning our eyes must be on heaven
above, the goal we strive for, not on the problems and disasters of earth below.
— Our Christian life and learning must be such that it will
enable us to know the true Christ and to recognize the false Christ (Antichrist)
when he comes. It is not theoretical knowledge or “correctness” that will give
this knowledge to us. Vladimir Soloviev in his parable of Antichrist has a valuable
insight when he notes that Antichrist will build a museum of all possible Byzantine
antiquities for the Orthodox, if only they accept him. So, too, mere “correctness”
in Orthodoxy without a loving Christian heart will not be able to resist Antichrist;
one will recognize him and be firm to stand against him chiefly by the heart and
not the head. We must develop in ourselves the right Christian feelings and instincts,
and put off all fascination with the “spiritual comforts” of the Orthodox way
of life, or else we will be—as one discerning observer of present-day converts
has observed—Orthodox but not Christian.
“Orthodox Christians
Facing the 1980’s,” A lecture given at the St. Herman Summer Pilgrimage, Platina,
CA, August 9, 1979.
* * *
— The significance of the Catacomb Church does not lie in its
“correctness”; it lies in its preservation of the true spirit of Orthodoxy, the
spirit of freedom in Christ. Sergianism was not merely “wrong” in its choice of
church policy, it was something far worse: it was a betrayal of Christ based on
agreement with the spirit of this world. It is the inevitable result when church
policy is guided by earthly logic and not by the mind of Christ.
Introduction to Russia’s Catacomb Saints,
by I.M. Andreyev, Platina, 1982.
* * *
— The Orthodox Christian of today is overwhelmed to open Saint
Gregory’s Book of Miracles and find there just what his soul is craving in this
soulless, mechanistic modern world; he finds that very Christian path of salvation
which he knows in the Orthodox services, Lives of the Saints, the Patristic writings,
but which is so absent today, even among the best of modern “Christians,” that
one begins to wonder whether one is not really insane, or some literal fossil
of history, for continuing to believe and feel as the Church has always believed
and felt. It is one thing to recognize the intellectual truth of Orthodox Christianity;
but how is one to live it when it is so out of harmony with the times? And then
one reads Saint Gregory and finds that all of this Orthodox truth is also profoundly
normal, that whole societies were once based on it, that it is unbelief and “renovated”
Christianity which are profoundly abnormal and not Orthodox Christianity, that
this is the heritage and birthright of the West itself which it deserted so long
ago when it separated from the one and only Church of Christ, thereby losing the
key to the “secret” which so baffles the modern scholar—the “secret” of true Christianity,
which must be approached with a fervent, believing heart, and not with the cold
aloofness of modern unbelief, which is not natural to man but is an anomaly of
history.
Introduction
to Vita Patrum, by Saint
Gregory of Tours, Platina, 1988.
* * *
— We must not artificially isolate ourselves from the reality
of today’s world; rather, we must learn to use the best things the world has to
offer, for everything good in the world—if we are only wise enough to see it—points
to God, and we must make use of it. Too many people make the mistake of limiting
Orthodoxy to church services, set prayers, and the occasional reading of a spiritual
book. True Orthodoxy, however, requires a commitment that involves every aspect
of our lives. One is Orthodox all the time every day, in every situation of life—or
one is not really Orthodox at all. For this reason we must develop an Orthodox
worldview and live it.
“Living an Orthodox World-View,” a lecture given at the St Herman Summer Pilgrimage,
Platina, CA, August 1980; Orthodox America, Aug.-Sept. 1982.
* * *
— Do not trust your mind too much; thinking must be refined
by suffering, or it will not stand the test of these cruel times.
— Of course, one can always act “wrong” even on a clear conscience!
But even that is not a fatal mistake as long as one’s mind and heart remain open
and one keeps first things first.
— How much our American Orthodoxy needs more heart and not
so much mind! I don’t know any answer for it, except more prayer and basic education
in Orthodox sources.
— Orthodox Christians, surrounded by and already swimming in
a sea of humanist-worldly philosophy and practice, must do everything possible
to create their own islands, in that sea, of other-worldly, God-oriented thought
and practice.
— Above all, may we all grow in spiritual understanding, not
“rational” understanding—which I fear is the constant plague of all us poor converts!
— …the two sides quote canons back and forth, when what is
needed is love and understanding—and that statement, I realize, could have come
straight from the lips of some ecumenist, which only shows how difficult the path
of true Orthodoxy has become in our days.
— Good heavens! What is happening to people? How easily one
gets dragged off the path of serving God into all kinds of factions and jealousies
and attempts at revenge.
— How much hope there is for those who do not trust in themselves
too much and are not overly-critical of others! And how little hope for those
whose orientation is the opposite!
— …psychological trials of dwellers in the last times will
equal the physical trials of the martyrs. But in order to face these trials we
must be living in a different world.
— I think about…that older generation that is now almost gone,
and I want to weep for the young know-it-alls who have missed the point. But the
understanding comes only through real suffering, and how many can do that?
— We must be open rather than closed with regard to the Moscow
Patriarchate. The whole question of ecumenism and apostasy cannot be placed simply
on the canonical-dogmatic-formal level, but must be viewed first spiritually!
— It’s obvious that the “zeal not according to knowledge” is
becoming a matter of some concern to [Metropolitan Philaret] and for many of our
bishops, and I’m afraid the solution to it, if any, won’t be easy… I think the
quality needed is a certain deep humility of mind that enables one to accept other
ways of looking at things, other emphases, as equally Orthodox with one’s own.
— Try to remember that all real Christian work is local—right
here and now, between myself and God and my neighbor.
— Do you have a notebook for taking down quotes from Holy Fathers
in your reading? Do you always have a book of Holy Fathers that you are reading
and can turn to in a moment of gloom? Start now—this is essential!
— Now one cannot be a half-hearted Christian, but only entirely
or not at all.
Letters
from Father Seraphim, Nikodemos Orthodox Publication Society,
Richfield Springs, NY, 2001.
Many thanks to Mary Mansur, editor of Orthodox America, for permission to post these excerpts.
A Letter to Thomas Merton, 1962
by Eugene [Fr. Seraphim] Rose
I am a young American convert to Russian Orthodoxy—not the
vague "liberal" spirituality of too many modern Russian "religious thinkers,"
but the full ascetic and contemplative Orthodoxy of the Fathers and Saints—who
have for some years been studying the spiritual "crisis" of our time, and am at
present writing a book on the subject. [1] In the course of my study I have had
occasion to read the works of a great number of Roman Catholic authors, some of
which (those, for example, of Pieper, Picard, Gilson, P. Danielou, P. de Lubac)
I have found quite helpful and not, after all, too distant from the Orthodox perspective,
but others of which I have found quite disturbing in the light of what seems to
me the plain teaching of the universal Church. I have read several of your works,
and especially in some recent articles of yours I seem to find signs of one of
the tendencies in contemporary Roman thought (it exists in Orthodoxy too, to be
sure) that has most disturbed me. Since you are a Roman monk, I turn to you as
to someone likely to clarify the ambiguities I have found in this trend of thought.
What I would like to discuss chiefly concerns what might be called the "social
mission" of the Church.
In an essay entitled Christian Action in World Crisis [2] you
devote yourself especially to the question of "peace." In an age when war has
become virtually "impossible," this is, of course, of central concern to any Christian,
but your remarks particularly on this subject have left me troubled.
What, first of all, are the real antagonists of the spiritual
warfare of our age? To say "Russia and America" is, of course, trivial; the enemy,
as you say, "is in all of us." But you further say, "The enemy is war itself"
and its roots, "hatred, fear, selfishness, lust."
Now I can quite agree with you that war today, at least "total
war," is quite unjustifiable by any Christian standard, for the simple reason
that its "unlimited" nature escapes measure of any sort. The point in your argument
that disturbs me is your statement that the only alternative to such war is "peace."
The alternative to "total war" would seem to be "total peace;"
but what does such a "peace" imply? You say, "we must try as best we can to work
for the eventual abolition" of war; and that is indeed what "total peace" must
be: abolition of war. Not the kind of peace men have known before this, but an
entirely new and "permanent" peace.
Such a goal, of course, is quite comprehensible to the modern
mentality; modern political idealism, Marxist and "democratic" alike has long
cherished it. But what of Christianity?—and I mean full uncompromising Christianity,
not the humanist idealism that calls itself Christian. Is not Christianity supremely
hostile to all forms of idealism, to all reduction of its quite "realistic" end
and means to mere lofty ideas? Is the ideal of the "abolition of war" really different
in kind from such other lofty aims as the "abolition" of disease, of suffering,
of sin, of death? All of these ideals have enlisted the enthusiasm of some modern
idealist or other, but it is quite clear to the Christian that they are secularizations
and so perversions of genuine Christian hopes. They can be realized only in Christ,
only in His Kingdom that is not of this world; when faith in Christ and hope in
His Kingdom are wanting, when the attempt is made to realize Christian "ideals"
in this world—then there is idolatry, the spirit of Antichrist. Disease, suffering,
sin, and death are an unavoidable part of the world we know as a result of the
Fall. They can only be eliminated by a radical transformation of human nature,
a transformation possible only in Christ and fully only after death.
I personally think that "total peace" is, at bottom, a utopian
ideal; but the very fact that it seems practical today raises a profounder question.
For, to my mind, the profoundest enemy of the Church today is not its obvious
enemies—war, hatred, atheism, materialism, all the forces of the impersonal that
lead to inhuman "collectivism," tyranny and misery—these have been with us since
the Fall, though to be sure they take an extreme form today. But the apostasy
that has led to this obvious and extreme worldliness seems to me but the prelude
to something much worse; and this is the chief subject of my letter.
The hope for "peace" is a part of a larger context of renewed
idealism that has come out of the Second World War and the tensions of the post-war
world, an idealism that has, especially in the last five or ten years, captured
the minds of men—particularly the young—all over the world, and inspired them
with an enthusiasm that has expressed itself concretely—and, often, quite selflessly—in
action. The hope that underlies this idealism is the hope that men can, after
all, live together in peace and brotherhood in a just social order, and that this
end can be realized through "non-violent" means that are not incompatible with
that end. This goal seems like the virtual revelation of a "new world" to all
those weary of the misery and chaos that have marked the end of the "old" world,
that hollow "modern" world that seems now to have finally—or almost—played out
its awful possibilities; and at the same time it seems like something quite attainable
by moral means—something previous modern idealisms have not been.
You yourself, indeed, speak of a possible "birth agony of a
new world," of the duty of Christians today "to perform the patient, heroic task
of building a world that will thrive in unity and peace, " even, in this connection,
of "Christ the Prince of Peace." The question that sorely troubles me about all
this is, is it really Christianity, or is it still only idealism? And can it be
both-is a "Christian idealism" possible?
You speak of "Christian action," "the Christian who manifests
the truth of the Gospel in social action," "not only in prayer and penance, but
also in his political commitments and in all his social responsibilities." Well,
I certainly will say nothing against that; if Christian truth does not shine through
in all that one does, to that extent one is failing to be a Christian, and if
one is called to a political vocation, one's action in that area too must be Christian.
But, if I am not mistaken, your words imply something more than that; namely,
that now more than ever before we need Christians working in the social and political
sphere, to realize there the truth of the Gospel. But why, if Christ's Kingdom
is not of this world? Is there really a Christian "social message," or is not
that rather a result of the one Christian activity—working out one's salvation
with diligence? I by no means advocate a practice of Christianity in isolation;
all Christianity—even that of the hermit—is a "social Christianity," but that
is only as context, not as end. The Church is in society because men are in society,
but the end of the Church is the transformation of men, not society. It is a good
thing if a society and government profess genuine Christianity, if its institutions
are informed by Christianity, because an example is given thereby to the men who
are a part of that society; but a Christian society is not an end in itself, but
simply a result of the fact that Christian men live in society.
I do not, of course, deny that there is such a thing as a Christian
"social action"; what I question is its nature. When I feed my hungry brother,
this is a Christian act and a preaching of the Kingdom that needs no words; it
is done for the personal reason that my brother—he who stands before me at this
moment—is hungry, and it is a Christian act because my brother is, in some sense,
Christ. But if I generalize from this case and embark on a political crusade to
abolish the "evil of hunger," that is something entirely different; though individuals
who participate in such a crusade may act in a perfectly Christian way, the whole
project—and precisely because it is a "project," a thing of human planning—has
become wrapped in a kind of cloak of "idealism."
A few more examples: The efficiency of modern medicines adds
nothing to the fulfillment of the commandment to comfort the sick; if they are
available, fine—but it is not Christian to think our act is better because more
"efficient" or because it benefits more people. That, again, is idealism. (I need
hardly mention the fact that medicines can become, indeed, a substitute for Christian
"comfort" when the mind of the practitioner becomes too engrossed in efficiency;
and the research scientist searching for a "cure for cancer" is not doing anything
specifically "Christian" at all, but something technical and "neutral."
"Brotherhood" is something that happens, right here and now,
in whatever circumstances God places me, between me and my brother; but when I
begin to preach the "ideal" of brotherhood and go out deliberately to practice
it, I am in danger of losing it altogether. Even if—especially if—I make use of
a seemingly Christian "non-violence" and "passive resistance" in this or any other
cause, let me before I call it a Christian act—carefully ask myself whether its
end is merely a lofty worldly ideal, or something greater. (St. Paul, to take
a pretty clear example, did not tell slaves to revolt "non-violently;" he told
them not to revolt at all, but to concern themselves with something much more
important.)
The "Peace of Christ," being in the heart, does not necessarily,
in our fallen world, bring about outward peace, and I would wonder if it has any
connection at all with the ideal of the "abolition of war."
The difference between organized "charity" and Christian charity
needs no comment. [3]
There may be—I would not have written this letter if I did
not hope there was—a kind of true, though so to speak subterranean, "ecumenism"
between separated Christians, especially in times of persecution; but that has
nothing remotely to do with the activities of any "World Council of Churches."
[4]
You may from these examples, I hope, understand the doubts
I entertain about the resurgence of seemingly "Christian" ideals in our time.
I say "doubts," for there is nothing intrinsically evil about any of these "crusades,"
and there are involved in them all quite sincere and fervent Christians who are
really preaching the Gospel; but, as I say, there is a kind of cloak of "idealism"
wrapped about them all, a cloak that seems to be drawing them into its own quite
independent service (without thereby negating, of course, the personal Christian
acts performed under their auspices). What "service" is this?—the placating of
the modern sense of "idealism" by translating inward and Christian truths into
outward and—at best—semi-Christian ideals. And we must be realistic enough to
see that the general effect on the minds of people both inside and outside these
movements, both inside and outside the Church, is precisely to place emphasis
upon the realization of outward ideals, thus obscuring inward truths; and since
this emphasis has been made, the path is all too short to the palpable falsehood
that "doing good is the real purpose of Christianity anyway, and the only basis
in which all Christians can unite, while dogma and liturgy and the like are purely
personal matters which tend more to separate than unite." How many of those indeed,
even Catholic and Orthodox, who are participating in the world of "social Christianity"
today, do not believe that this is really a more "perfect" and even "inward" Christianity
than a dogmatic, ascetic, and contemplative Christianity that doesn't get such
obvious "results"?
I have, before this, been reproached by Catholics for lack
of interest in the social mission of the Church, for holding to a one-sided "ascetic"
and "apocalyptic" Christianity; and some Catholic philosophers and theologians
have made such accusations against the Orthodox Church itself—accompanied, sometimes,
if I am not mistaken, by a somewhat patronizing tone that assumes the Church is
rather "backward" or "out-of-date" about such things, having always been "repressed"
by the State and used to looking at the world through the all-too-unworldly eyes
of the monk. Far be it from me to presume to speak for the Church; but I can at
least speak of some of the things I think I have learned from Her.
You may legitimately ask me what, if I am sceptical of "social
Christianity "—though of course I do not wish it abolished or given to the devil,
I am merely pointing out its ambivalence—what I advocate as "Christian action"
in the midst of the "crisis" of the age with its urgent alternatives.
First and foremost I radically question the emphasis upon "action"
itself, upon "projects" and "planning," upon concern with the "social" and what
man can do about it—all of which acts to the detriment of acceptance of the given,
of what God gives us at this moment, as well as of allowing His will to be done,
not ours. I do not propose a total withdrawal from politics and social work by
all Christians; no arbitrary rule can govern that, it is up to the individual
conscience. But in any case, if many may still be called to work for "justice,"
"peace," "unity," "brotherhood" in the world—and these are all, in this generalized,
ideal form, external and worldly goals—is it not at least as good a thing to be
called to the totally unequivocal work of the Kingdom, to challenge all worldly
ideals and preach the only needful Gospel: repent, for the Kingdom is at hand?
You yourself quite rightly say of America and Russia, "the enemy is not just on
one side or the other.... The enemy is on both sides." Is it not possible to deepen
this perception and apply it to those other seemingly ultimate alternatives, "war"
and "peace"? Is one really any more possible for a Christian than the other, if
the "peace" is a "total (i.e. idealistic) peace"? And does not the recognition
of these two equally unacceptable alternatives lead us back to a genuine "third
way"—one that will never be popular because it is not "new," not "modern," above
all not "idealistic "—a Christianity that has as its end neither worldly "peace"
nor "war," but a Kingdom not of this world?
This is nothing "new," as you say, and a world that imagines
itself "post-Christian" is tired of it. It is true that when we, as Christians,
speak to our brothers we often seem to be faced with a blank wall of unwillingness
even to listen; and, being human, we may be made somewhat "desperate" by this
lack of response. But what can be done about this? Shall we give up speaking about
what our contemporaries do not want to hear, and join them in the pursuit of social
goals which, since they are not specifically Christian, can be sought by non-Christians
too? That seems to me an abdication of our responsibility as Christians. I think
the central need of our time is not in the least different from what it has always
been since Christ came; it lies, not in the area of "political commitments" and
"social responsibilities," but precisely in "prayer and penance" and fasting and
preaching of the true Kingdom. The only "social responsibility" of a Christian
is to live, wherever and with whomever he may be, the life of faith, for his own
salvation and as an example to others. If, in so doing, we help to ameliorate
or abolish a social evil, that is a good thing—but that is not our goal. If we
become desperate when our life and our words fail to convert others to the true
Kingdom, that comes from lack of faith. If we would live our faith more deeply,
we would need to speak of it less.
You speak of the necessity, not just to speak the truth of
Christianity, but "to embody Christian truth in action." To me, this means precisely
the life I have just described, a life infused with faith in Christ and hope in
His Kingdom not of this world. But the life you seem to describe is one very much
involved in the things of this world; I cannot help but regard it as an "outward"
adaptation of true Christian inwardness.
Modern idealism, which is devoted to the realization of the
idolatrous "Kingdom of Man," has long been making its influence felt in Christian
circles; but only in quite recent years has this influence begun to bear real
fruit within the womb of the Church itself. I think there can be no question but
that we are witnessing the birth pangs of something that, to the true Christian,
is indeed pregnant with frightful possibilities: a "new Christianity," a Christianity
that claims to be "inward," but is entirely too concerned with outward result;
a Christianity, even, that cannot really believe in "peace" and "brotherhood"
unless it sees them generalized and universally applied, not in some seemingly
remote "other world," but "here and now." This kind of Christianity says that
"private virtue" is not enough—obviously relying on a Protestantized understanding
of virtue, since everything the true Christian does is felt by all in the Mystical
Body; nothing done in Christ is done for oneself alone—but not enough for what?
The answer to that, I think, is clear: for the transformation of the world, the
definitive "realization" of Christianity in the social and political order. And
this is idolatry. The Kingdom is not of this world; to think or hope that Christianity
can be outwardly "successful" in the world is a denial of all that Christ and
His prophets have said of the future of the Church. Christianity can be "successful"
on one condition: that of renouncing (or conveniently forgetting) the true Kingdom
and seeking to build up a Kingdom in the world. The "Earthly Kingdom" is precisely
the goal of the modern mentality; the building of it is the meaning of the modern
age. It is not Christian; as Christians, we know whose Kingdom it is. And what
so greatly troubles me is that today Christians—Catholic and Orthodox alike—are
themselves joining, often quite unaware of the fact, often with the best possible
intentions, in the building of this new Babel....
The modern idealism that hopes for "heaven on earth" hopes
likewise for the vague "transformation" of man—the ideal of the "superman" (in
diverse forms, conscious or not), which, however absurd, has a great appeal to
a mentality that has been trained to believe in "evolution" and "progress." And
let not contemporary despair make us think that hope in the worldly future is
dead; despair over the future is only possible for someone who still wants to
believe in it; and indeed, mingled with contemporary despair is a great sense
of expectation, a will to believe, that the future ideal can, somehow, be realized.
The power of the impersonal and inhuman has ruled the first
part of our century of "crisis"; a vague "existential" spirit, semi- or pseudo-religious,
idealistic and practical at the same time (but never otherworldly), seems destined
to rule the last part of this century. They are two stages of the same disease,
modern "humanism," the disease caused by trusting in the world and in man, while
ignoring Christ—except to borrow His name as a convenient "symbol" for men who,
after all, cannot quite forget Him, as well as to seduce those who still wish
to serve Him. Christianity become a "crusade," Christ become an "idea," both in
the service of a world "transformed" by scientific and social techniques and a
man virtually "deified" by the awakening of a "new consciousness": this lies before
us. Communism, it seems clear, is nearing a transformation itself, a "humanizing,"
a "spiritualizing," and of this Boris Pasternak [5] is a sign given in advance;
he does not reject the Revolution, he only wants it "humanized." The "democracies,"
by a different path, are approaching the same goal. Everywhere "prophets "—semi-
or pseudo-Christians like Berdyaev and Tolstoy, more explicit pagans like D. H.
Lawrence, Henry Miller, Kazanzakis, as well as the legions of occultists, astrologers,
spiritualists and millenialists—all herald the birth of a "new age." Protestants,
and then more and more Catholics and Orthodox, are caught up in this enthusiasm
and envisage their own age of ecumenical unity and harmony, some being so bold—and
so blasphemous—as to call it a "third age" of the "descent of the Holy Spirit"
(a la D. H. Lawrence, Berdyaev, and ultimately, Joachim of Floris).
An age of "peace" may come to weary, yet apocalyptically anxious,
man; but what can the Christian say of such "peace"? It will not be the Peace
of Christ; it is but fantasy to imagine a sudden, universal conversion of men
to full Christian faith, and without such faith His Peace cannot come. And any
human "peace" will only be the prelude to the outburst of the only and real "war"
of our age, the war of Christ against all the powers of Satan, the war of Christians
who look only for the Kingdom not of this world, against all those, pagan or pseudo-Christian,
who look only for a worldly Kingdom, a Kingdom of Man.
*
*
*
It was only after I had completed the preceding pages that
I saw your article in Commonweal, "Nuclear War and Christian Responsibility."
[6] There you bring up the topic to which I was planning to devote the rest of
this letter: the Apocalypse.
There is, of course, nothing of which it is more dangerous
to speak. Futile and overliteral speculation on apocalyptic events is an only
too obvious cause of spiritual harm; and no less so, I think, is the facile way
in which many of our contemporaries refer to the "apocalyptic" character of the
times, and in so doing raise in others deep fears and hopes which their own vague
pronouncements are far from satisfying. If a Christian is going to speak of the
Apocalypse at all, it is quite clear that in this as in everything else his words
must be sober, as precise as possible, and fully in accord with the universal
teaching of the Church. In this case I can see no reason why Latin and Orthodox
testimony should be substantially different. The prophetic texts are the possession
alike of East and West; the commentaries and statements of the Fathers, both Greek
and Latin, on these texts are explicit, detailed, and in mutual agreement; and
the tradition of the Fathers has been affirmed, after the schism, by both the
Orthodox and Latin Churches—in the latter most authoritatively, I would presume,
in the person of Thomas Aquinas. [7] The recent book of Josef Pieper, The End
of Time, basing itself almost entirely on Western sources, is, so far as I know,
in no essential point at variance with Orthodox tradition. It is rather a shock,
in fact, to read in Fr. D'Arcy's Meaning and Matter of History that "not all Christian
scholars would accept such a literal acceptance" of apocalyptic literature. Perhaps
not, indeed, but that is to say no more than that, just as many Jews did not recognize
the Christ of their prophecies, so will many Christians fail to discern the signs
of the times with regard to the Antichrist and the end of time. (Many Christians
have departed so far from tradition as to believe that the Antichrist will be
no actual man, but a vague "spirit" only, much as many modern Jews have transformed
their messianic hope into belief in a mere "messianic age.")
But this failure of many Christians is itself part of the prophecies
concerning the "falling away," even within the Church itself; as Blessed Jerome
said, "Many esteemed as the Patriarch shall fall." For the Antichrist is a deceiver,
and too few Christians are prepared for his deceptions. It is thus dangerous to
speak of "apocalyptic" things without speaking of the Antichrist and his spirit.
It is easy for the weakest understanding today to see something "apocalyptic"
in the fantastic destructive powers man now possesses; but worldly power is only
one aspect of the reign of the Antichrist—great deceptiveness, such as to deceive,
if possible, even the elect, is another and less obvious one. You speak, like
many today, of the possible "destruction of the human race"; is this not a rather
strong phrase for a Christian to use? Does it not, again, place too much emphasis
on the power of man? Does it not, above all, overlook the prophecies of what must
come to pass before God (Who, of course, alone can "destroy the human race" He
has created) calls men into His Kingdom?
In no uncertain words you affirm, once more, "War must be abolished.
A world government must be established." Is not "must" a rather strong word? It
is indeed a symptom of the apocalyptic character of the age that the only "practical"
solution to the present crisis—the abolition of war—should at the same time be
(as I think) totally idealistic. To some this situation gives rise to thoughts
of a "new age" or a "new world"; to me, it suggests the possibility that we are,
in actual fact, on the threshhold of the last days, when all courses of worldly
action begin to become impossible.
A "new world"—this is a phrase, I have noticed, that you yourself
use. In The Living Bread you even suggest that "we are witnessing the dawn of
a light that has never before been seen.... We live, perhaps, on the threshhold
of the greatest eucharistic era of the world—the era that may well witness the
final union of mankind." You ask, to be sure (but without giving an answer), "Will
this visible union be a political one?" And you even suggest that "perhaps the
last age of all will be 'eucharistic' in the sense that the Church herself will
give the glory and praise to God by being put to the Cross."
To Christians, who possess the word of Christ and His Prophets
and Saints concerning the last days, I do not see how there can be any "perhaps"
in the matter. The political union of mankind, however legitimate it may be as
a political goal, can only end in the reign of Antichrist; the Church, beyond
all doubt, will be crucified after a good many of the faithful have betrayed Her
through the deceptions of the Antichrist.
I by no means preach an imminent "reign of Antichrist" and
apocalypse that is possible, of course, and Christians at all times must be prepared
for it; but no one knows the hour.... What I do wish to emphasize is the fact—I
take it so—that, spiritually speaking, contemporary man in his despair of the
present and still-present hope in the future, confronted with "ultimate" alternatives
and seemingly "apocalyptic" social and scientific transformations (and evolutionary
hope), has never been more receptive to the advent of a pseudo-Messiah, a supreme
"problem-solver" and inspirer of the bright human "idealism."
In times like these, I think, the Christian should be wary
of involving himself in the tangled web of political activity, lest in striving
for too much he lose all; boldness in faith and in preaching the Kingdom (above
all by the example of one's life), to be sure there is not nearly enough of that
today—but caution in worldly "planning," of which we have a superfluity, even
(in fact, most of all) in the interest of "high ideals."
Above all, the Christian in the contemporary world must show
his brothers that all the "problems of the age" are of no consequence beside the
single central "problem of man": death, and its answer, Christ. Despite what you
have said about the "staleness" of Christianity to contemporary men, I think that
Christians who speak of this problem, and in their lives show that they actually
believe all that "superstition" about the "other world"—I think they have something
"new" to say to contemporary man. It has been my own experience that serious young
people are "tired" of Christianity precisely because they think it is an "idealism"
that hypocritically doesn't live up to its "ideals"; of course, they don't believe
in the other world either—but for all they know, neither do "Christians."
I think Christians have of late become entirely too "sophisticated,"
too anxious to feel at home in the world by accommodating their faith to passing
fashions of thought; so contemporary Christians become "existential," speak of
the "here and now" of faith and spiritual things. Well, that is fine, as far as
it goes—but it doesn't go far enough. Our hope as Christians cannot be reduced
to the abstract, but neither can it be reduced to the concrete; we believe and
hope in a Kingdom no one living has ever seen, our faith and hope are totally
impossible in the eyes of the world. Well then, let us tell the world that we
believe the "impossible." It has been my experience that contemporary men want
to believe, not little, but much; having abandoned Christian faith, nothing can
seem too fantastic to them, nothing can seem too much to hope for—hence the "idealism"
of today's youth. For myself, my own faith grew rather gradually, as a more or
less "existential" thing, until the stunning experience of meeting a Christian
(a young Russian monk) for whom nothing mattered but the Kingdom of the world
to come. Let the contemporary sophisticate prattle of the childishness of seeking
"future rewards" and all the rest—life after death is all that matters. And hope
in it so fires the true believer—he who knows that the way to it is through the
hard discipline of the Church, not through mere "enthusiasm"—that he is all the
more in the present (both in himself and as an example) than the "existentialist"
who renounces the future to live in the present.
The future Kingdom has not been abandoned by modern Christians,
but it has been so "toned down" that one wonders how strong the faith of Christians
is. Particularly all the involvement of Christians in the projects of social idealism,
seems to me a way of saying: "You, the worldly, are right. Our Kingdom 'not of
this world' is so distant and we can't seem to get it across to you; so we will
join you in building something we can actually see, something better than Christ
and His Kingdom—a reign of peace, justice, brotherhood on earth." This is a "new
Christianity," a refinement, it seems to me, of the Christianity of the "Grand
Inquisitor" of Dostoyevsky.
And what of the "old" Christianity of "private virtue"? Why
has it become so stale? Because, I think, Christians have lost their faith. The
outward Gospel of social idealism is a symptom of this loss of faith. What is
needed is not more busyness but a deeper penetration within. Not less fasting,
but more; not more action, but prayer and penance. If Christians really lived
the Christian hope and the full path of unification that looks to its fulfillment,
instead of the easy compromise that most laymen today think sufficient—and doesn't
the "new Christianity" tell them that working for social ideals is really more
important than following the Christian discipline?—; if Christians in their daily
life were really on fire with love of God and zeal for His Kingdom not of this
world—then everything else needful would follow of itself.
We can hardly hope that such a life will be too widespread
in our time, or even, perhaps, that its example will make many converts—surely
not as many as will the "new" Gospel; for social idealism is a part of the spirit
of the age, while genuine Christian otherworldliness is most emphatically not.
Too, it is more difficult and often less certain of itself—so weak is our faith;
altogether, in short, an unappealing goal for outwardly-minded modern man. All
of this is inconsequential: ours it is to live the full Christian life—the fruit
of it is in God's hands.
Well, I have said what I wanted to say. I should be very grateful
to receive a reply from you, if you think my remarks worth replying to. And if
you do reply, I hope you will be as frank as I have tried to be. This is the only
kind of ecumenical "dialogue" of which I am capable; and if it seems more like
a challenge to "combat," I hope that will not deter you. My criticisms, I am sure
you know, are directed not at you but at your words (or at what I have made of
them).
Yours in Christ,
Eugene Rose
Endnotes
1. The Kingdom of Man and the Kingdom of God.
2. First published in Black Friars, June, 1962, pp. 266-268.
Republished in Thomas Merton on Peace, McCall Publishing, 1971.
3. See Part III above. [This Letter was Part IV of a larger
work that is not on this website—webmaster].
4. Eugene here alludes to an idea articulated in a work that
highly influenced him at this time: A Short History of Antichrist by Vladimir
Soloviev. Although this work clearly contains some un-Orthodox teachings, it is
valuable in that it presents a striking contrast between the true unity of catacomb
Christians in the last times and the false unity of the "official" church under
Antichrist. For a more qualified and thorough discussion of what Eugene hints
at, see Before the Face of Antichrist by Archimandrite Constantine in The Orthodox
Word, no. 121.
5. Merton had recently written an article entitled Pasternak
and the People with Watch Chains (published in Jubilee, July, 1959). In response
to this article, Eugene wrote to Merton:
"The 'religion' of Pasternak, the author of Dr. Zhivago, is
that 'new spirituality' that wants something more than the 'small' and 'limited'
Christ the Church worships, rather a 'new' Christ more in keeping with the 'free
human spirit' of the age. This is the spirit of the man-god, the superman, no
longer crude as in Nietzsche, but refined, spiritualized, made plausible as the
logical and historical continuation, even the messianic successor, of the bankrupt
'humanist' tradition: a 'new humanism.' This spirit is no friend of true Christianity,
but its mortal enemy.
"The language you use in describing the 'spirituality' of Pasternak,
though it might seem to have the excuse of being addressed to a 'popular' audience,
cannot but cause sorrow to an Orthodox reader. To speak of a 'liturgical and sacramental
character' that has little or nothing to do with 'established ritual form' or
'ritualistic routine,' but instead 'unstrained by formal or hieratic rigidities';
of the 'world of God-manhood' and 'the transfigured cosmos' as seen by someone
whom you admit to be rather 'pagan' and perhaps 'agnostic,' and who is only in
the vaguest sense 'Christian'; of a 'symbolic richness' akin to that of the Greek
Fathers, yet 'without their dogmatic and ascetic preoccupations'; of a 'freedom'
and 'life' totally outside the Church—none of this can make any sense to a right-believing
Orthodox (nor, I should think to a Catholic); at best vague and rather 'Protestant,'
it too easily lends itself to the service of the 'new Christianity,' born of Protestantism,
Humanism, and natural human idealism, that is now sweeping over the world. My
own faith has been nurtured precisely by the spirituality that has emerged from
the fires of Soviet persecution; but this spirituality is by no means the 'simple,'
'primitive,' and romantic 'spontaneity' you find in Pasternak....
"The faith of Pasternak is a vague and impotent faith that
will not accept Christ, that believes only in 'life,' in the world, dressed up
(no doubt from a quite genuine aesthetic interest) in some shreds of the outward
garb of Orthodoxy, and hoping, against hope that its idealism can be realized
in this world...."
6. Commonweal, vol. 75, Feb. 9, 1962.
7. In the manuscript notes of Eugene's letter to Merton are
found other comments relating to Thomas Aquinas, and more particularly to the
results of his philosophy. When Eugene commented on "realism" in modern Roman
Catholic thought, this was in a context different from the Christian realism mentioned
in Part II above [This Letter was Part IV of a larger work that is not on this
website—webmaster].. "Thomist philosophy and Catholic realism in general," he
wrote, "inspires us [i.e. , Orthodox Christians—ed.] with a certain uneasiness.
Why? In a word, because it is too much concerned with the things of this world.
It overestimates the worth of the 'natural' in underestimating the corruption
of the natural order and of the human intellect, by the Fall; the 'natural' we
know is no longer fully natural. But more essential than this, it aspires to a
knowledge and 'wisdom' that are 'heavy' with all the weight of the 'world,' that
act as though—for all practical purposes—the world is eternal. The time of the
Kingdom has come: in the light of this truth, which is central to Christianity,
all the worldly preoccupations of Catholic realism seem almost a mockery. Does
not this 'realism' say: Let man fulfill his 'natural' self, let him seek worldly
knowledge and happiness and temporal improvement, and then look to the knowledge
and happiness that lie above these, proceeding from what is humbler and more accessible
to what is nobler and more hidden. But if the time of the Kingdom has come, is
it not too late to be pursuing these worldly aims? And is it not inevitable that
many who begin with the humble will never leave it? Seek ye first the Kingdom
of God. The imperative to Christians seems all too obvious: put away all worldly
things, and seek the Kingdom. The Kingdom has been 'delayed'; do we then return
to our original path, that worldly wisdom to which Christ's message is folly?
Alas, with 'Christian philosophy,' and how much more so with modern 'science,'
we do just that. Christ is our wisdom, not the world; and in the end these two
cannot be reconciled. A 'natural wisdom' subordinated to Christian Truth; a 'natural
science' devoted to Christian uses (horror of horrors!)—these, in a 'normal' time,
might be legitimate. But the fact that Christ has come marks our time as an extraordinary
time, a time in which 'normal' concerns, wisdom and worldly knowledge, must be
put aside, and we too must be crucified and made a scandal and folly to the world.
Christianity stands opposed to the world. True, there is too the 'world' that
is to be saved—but not by descending to its level. Christianity must teach art
to paint Christ, not to paint the world in a Christian 'spirit'; science must
place Christ in the center of the universe, though it crucify all its formulas
to do so (it is in that case that the formulas, not Christ, are wanting)"
On the same theme of Catholic "realism," Fr. Seraphim stated:
"It is not surprising that many modern Catholic 'realists' find the traditional
teaching of the reign of Antichrist shocking—too 'literal' at any rate. For one
cannot believe that everything 'natural' is good and at the same time see a reign
of evil as its historical outcome."
Life After Death
Photos - Elders - Hermits from Mount Athos
Father Cleopa: The Elder of Romanian Orthodoxy
The Life and Works of PROTOSINGELOS IOANICHIE MOROI of Sihãstria Monastery
Glossologia (speaking in tongues) - Elder Cleopa
About Holy Scripture by Elder Cleopa of Romania
About Holy Tradition by Elder Cleopa of Romania
Magic and Occultism - by Elder Cleopa
On the Presuppositions of our Personal Salvation - by Elder Cleopa
The Second Coming of Christ - by Elder Cleopa
On the Thousand Year Reign (Chiliasm) - by Elder Cleopa
Movies for children - The Phenomenon Harry Potter - Resemblance to the occult activity
The mysteries of music - THE TRUTH ABOUT ROCK MUSIC
"CHRISTIAN" INTEREST IN UFO ( aliens )
Charismatic Revival As a Sign of the Times - by Fr. Seraphim Rose
About Evolutionism - SCIENCE AND RELIGION
How to Read the Holy Scriptures - Fr. Seraphim Rose
Orthodoxy in America - by Blessed Hieromonk Seraphim (Rose)
Signs of the Times - by Blessed Hieromonk Seraphim Rose
THE FUTURE OF RUSSIA AND THE END OF THE WORLD - by Blessed Hieromonk Seraphim Rose
THE HOLY FATHERS SURE GUIDE TO TRUE CHRISTIANITY - by Fr. Seraphim Rose
The Orthodox World-View - by Blessed Father Seraphim Rose
Fr. Seraphim (Rose) Speaks - Excerpts from His Writings
The Orthodox Revival in Russia AS AN INSPIRATION FOR AMERICAN ORTHODOXY - by Fr. Seraphim Rose
Buddism and orthodoxy - Through The Eastern Gate - By Nilus Stryker
Orthodox Catechism
GREAT MIRACLE GIVEN BY GOD ONLY TO THE ORTHODOX CHURCH
About Holy Angels
The Saints speak out on abortion
Hieromonk Savatie Bastovoi:
About pornography, pollutions and monasticism - A reply for a stranger who could be just anyone of us
THE FIRST LOVE
Between Christ and Freud
What I Intended to Understanding while Watching “The English Patient”
About the movie “The Last Temptation of Christ” (From the Byzantine Icon to the TV Set)
WHY DO THEY KILL THE LIGHTS IN DISCO CLUBS?
FREEDOM MEANS PUTTING NO BREAKS ON LOVE
WHO IS AFRAID OF SAINTS?
Fast and freedom
The scandalous commandment
Fatigue and love
The unborn people
Zodiacs, horoscopes …
The holiday of undeification
Among posters and stands
Hierarchy or church dictatorship ?
With a kiss closer to death
Defeated people
Postmodernism in frock
SINGING UNDER WATER
Why Is Flood a Gentle in Pain Scene
About the contradictory opinions regarding the obedience