The aesthetic feeling which we examined in the
preceding chapter is but one of the emotions of the human heart. Understandably,
many other emotions have a greater significance for the Christian. For example,
the elevated feelings of sympathy, mercy, compassion, etc. must be developed in
the heart of the Orthodox Christian - if possible, from the very earliest
years.
Alas, all too often this does not happen.
Unfortunately, in many good Orthodox Christian families, life is arranged in
such a way that the parents consciously guard their children from contact with
human need, sorrow, heavy difficulties and trials. Such an excessive protection
of children from sober reality brings only negative results. Children who have
grown up under greenhouse conditions, separated from life, grow up soft,
spoiled and not well adjusted for life, often thick-skinned egoists, accustomed
only to demanding and receiving and not knowing how to yield, to serve or to be
useful to others. Life can break such people cruelly and sometimes punishes
them unbearably, often from their early school years. It is necessary,
therefore, for those who love their children to temper them. Above all, there
must always be one definite Orthodox Christian aim set before both parents and
children: that children, while growing and developing physically, must also
grow and develop spiritually, that they become better, kinder, more pious and
more sympathetic.
In order to accomplish this, it is necessary to
allow children to come into contact with people's needs and wants, and to give
them the opportunity to help. Then children themselves will strive for goodness
and truth, for everything that is pure, good and bright is especially near to
the soul of the unspoiled child.
These emotions about which we
have spoken, including the highest of them - mercy and compassion - are met
within all people. Speaking
now of feelings of a purely Christian kind, we pause on the feeling of
Christian hope. Christian hope can be defined as a sincere, vivid
remembrance of God, inseparably tied with the assurance of His Fatherly love
and help. A man who has such hope always and everywhere feels himself under the
Father's protection just as he everywhere and always sees the infinite vault of
heaven above him in the physical world. Therefore, an Orthodox Christian having
hope in God will never come to despair, will never feel himself
hopelessly alone.
A situation can seem hopeless only to an
unbeliever. A believer, one who hopes in God, knows His nearness to the
sorrowing human heart and will find comfort, courage and help in Him.
Of course, the crown and summit of Christian hope
is in the future. We Orthodox Christians know that our Symbol of Faith, in
which all the basic truths of Christianity are gathered, ends with the words,
"I await (expect and earnestly long for) the
resurrection of the dead and the life of the age to come. Amen."
So a full realization of the bright Christian hope
will arrive when life finally triumphs over death and God's truth over worldly
untruth. Then every woe will be healed, for "God will wipe away every
tear from their eyes and death shall be no more, neither shall there be anguish nor grief nor pain anymore..." "And
eternal joy will be in their hands" (Rev. 21:4; Is. 35:10).
Here is the summit, crown and full realization of
Orthodox Christian hope and the triumph of those, who in this earthly life,
were persecuted and oppressed and banished for Christ's truth.
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