Wednesday, June 9, 2010

Lay aside all earthly cares


So much of what I see in Orthodox Christian blogdom and general communication is devoted to countering mistaken opinions and heresies ancient and modern, comparing our faith to that of other Christians not recognized by us for whatever reason. So much effort and toil, not to build up the welcoming Temple of the living God where all are treated as first-born sons and citizens of heaven, but instead to build higher walls and towers from which to grimly defend or sit in judgment on our brothers.

When I first encountered Orthodoxy, I too was astonished by its otherworldly beauty, I too was emboldened by its apparently reckless audacity in proclaiming the Gospel and affirming the whole Word of God. I too appreciated its various claims to be what it says it is, the original and true Church. And I too had my share of books like “Are You Saved?” and others sitting on my shelf, that dealt with telling Catholics and Protestants of every stripe how and why they are wrong. They are sitting there still.

There are ‘givens’ with the life in Christ which we have no right to trample, as we witness for Him to others both outside and inside the Christian faith. These ‘givens’ are found in the following of Jesus, and in company with His holy apostles. One of the greatest of these, and the one most commonly overlooked, is that we do not argue the faith we hold, or subject it even to comparison with that of others. Orthodoxy cannot be compared to other confessions of Christianity. Why? Because it includes them.

I used to have a sign hanging over my desk at work (yes, even in the professional world one is a witness) that said in Greek ‘We are Christ-bearers,’ and in English below it, ‘We accept no proselytes.’ That was my way of saying, “There is no division between you and me, in Christ, who loves us equally, shed His precious Blood for us equally, welcomes us equally into His presence, and intercedes for us equally as He stands before His Father. Let us love one another, and learn of Him together.”

Rather than a spirit of contention and controversy, the Christ-bearer has the Spirit of pleading unity, calling outsiders ‘brother’ before they have even realized yet, how much the Father has loved them in the Son. We welcoming them as if welcoming Christ, they are given a glimpse of a Kingdom so great that it has no real enemies, only souls waiting patiently in line for their own awakening. They are given a foretaste of a Banquet so rich that none is ever turned empty away. Why? Because they see us.

Enmity, that is what is already in place between the servants of the living God and those who follow their own lusts, in blindness, in nakedness, in deafness, while boasting of their possessions and authority real or imagined. All whose lives are still a mixture of willful sin and a yearning for righteousness, all who still try to hide from God, or without acknowledging Him or His unrepentant Law still seek to justify themselves in their own and others’ eyes, declare that we are at enmity with them.

But I am not speaking of these others, but of Christians like ourselves, who say they believe in the Word of God and all that proceeds from that belief. Do we ourselves believe in the prayer of Christ that we should all be one, as He and the Father are in each other and are One? Do we not believe that what Christ prays is answered by His Father with “Yes,” with “Amen”? We are the Church, there is no doubt about that. If we do believe, how could we think that the Church can ever really be divided?

Brothers, I am not talking church politics. I am not an ecumenist. All the meetings that church leaders ever put together will never bring about the unity that Christ prays us to have with one another. They are pushing not the will of the Father, Son and Holy Spirit. They think they have sundered, and so they think to mend, the Body of Christ. But no. There is only One Body, and there is only One Christ, is, was, and to come. Let us finally lay aside all earthly cares, as we sing in every divine liturgy, that we may receive the King of all.

Let us lay aside all earthly cares, that we may receive the King of all, escorted by the angelic hosts, and welcoming Him and them in one another, let us follow Jesus, who never argued with, never scorned, even those who made themselves His enemies. His correction and teaching was His presence among them, betraying a greater love than they had ever thought possible. And in us, his living ikons, He is still walking the world, seeking, finding and gathering His lost sheep, welcoming them all into the Kingdom of His Father, not holding their faults against them, cleansing them of their sins by love, by His unflagging love, welcoming them in us.

If it is Orthodoxy you seek,
if it is Orthodoxy you proclaim,
it is only this…
Greater love hath no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his friends.
John 15:13 KJV

4 comments:

  1. I've been reading and rereading 2Cor6&7. St Paul starts with our bodies as the temple of God and goes into this beautiful exhortation that mirrors your own post. Then strangely he tells us not to be unequally yoked to an unbeliever. This isn't merely a side comment about marriage. There's something connected here, but I don't know what it is. And I cannot keep both thoughts in my head at the same time.

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  2. Romanos:

    Amen, amen, amen! Perhaps the best thing I've heard recently:

    "They think they have sundered, and so they think to mend, the Body of Christ. But no. There is only One Body, and there is only One Christ, is, was, and to come. Let us finally lay aside all earthly cares, as we sing in every divine liturgy, that we may receive the King of all."

    While I think we must remain watchful, and not be deceived, and to this extent we must follow what is going on in the Orthodox communities, this does not mean that we should despair about the Church - for we have the promise of Christ and the effective prayer of Christ that they may all be One.

    As a practical matter, I think generally it is good to also follow Jesus' instructions to the Jews listening in the Temple to obey what the elders tell you, but not to necessarily be like them at heart. I should tithe my mint and cumin, but not neglect the weightier things of justice and mercy - I should do both.

    Alas too often I do neither. But there is today to begin again.

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  3. I have heard it said that even the charge of heresy by the Church in a great council is a pastoral response, a corrective designed to provide a means of reconciliation, not a writ of damnation. And as that is the greatest charge of "disunity".

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  4. Probably my favorite modern Greek father, Archimandrite Vasileios, has said in his book Hymn of Entry (also one of my favorite books of all time), that we don't need to fight or controvert heresy, because heresies kill themselves, because they are not real and therefore can only maintain themselves for a short time. I believe he is right, with a single corrective: If a heresy is combined with a form of coercion, then it can be maintained, sometimes for centuries, for example, Islam. Another example, Roman Catholicism, is at present very attenuated and manifoldly splintered internally (this is one of the subjects discussed in Hymn of Entry), partly due to the fact that its violent acts have been tempered by humanism. When there was an Inquisition which really was trying to kill you, or Crusades against folks like the Albigensians and Eastern Orthodox, then Roman Catholicism too, like Islam today, used coercive force to prop up a dead or dying idol.

    Heresy, if I am guilty of it, will in the end cause my disintegration. That is one of the aspects of Truth: even without violence it erodes and overcomes falsehood. But if by cunning, by trickery, by magic, by enchantment, by intimidation, or by sheer bullying and terror I maintain myself in heresy, I might last a little longer, but not much. Even the evil impulse in man wears out before it finishes the job of total annihilation. In desperation, it may try to take a shortcut to victory, but that always guarantees its defeat.

    Thanks always for your comments. You are always appreciated.

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