Remember your
instructors, who have spoken
the word of God to you; whose faith follow,
considering the end of their life… Be not led
away with various and strange doctrines.
Hebrews 13:7, 9
NEVER HAS
THERE BEEN such an age of false teachers as this pitiful 20th century, so rich
in material gadgets and so poor in mind and soul. Every conceivable opinion,
even the most absurd, even those hitherto rejected by the universal consent of
all civilized peoples—now has its platform and its own "teacher." A
few of these teachers come with demonstration or promise of "spiritual
power" and false miracles, as do some occultists and
"charismatics;" but most of the contemporary teachers offer no more
than a weak concoction of undigested ideas which they received "out of the
air," is it were, or from some modern self-appointed "wise man"
(or woman) who knows more than all the ancients merely by living in our
"enlightened" modern times. As a result, philosophy has a thousand
schools, and "Christianity" a thousand sects. Where is the truth to
be found in all this, if indeed it is to be found at all in our most misguided
times?
In only one place is there to be found the fount of true
teaching, coming from God Himself, not diminished over the centuries but ever
fresh, being one and the same in all those who truly teach it, leading those
who follow it to eternal salvation. This place is the Orthodox Church of
Christ, the fount is the grace of the All-Holy Spirit, and the true teachers of
the Divine doctrine that issues forth from this fount are the Holy Fathers of
the Orthodox Church.
Alas! How few Orthodox Christians know this, and know enough
to drink from this fount! How many contemporary hierarchs lead their flocks,
not on the true pastures of the soul, the Holy Fathers, but along the ruinous
paths of modern wise men who promise something "new" and strive only
to make Christians forget the true teaching of the Holy Fathers, a teaching
which—it is quite true—is entirely out of harmony with the false ideas which
govern modern times.
The Orthodox teaching of the Holy Fathers is not something
of one age, whether "ancient" or "modern." It has been
transmitted in unbroken succession from the time of Christ and His Apostles to
the present day, and there has never been a time when it was necessary to
discover a "lost" patristic teaching. Even when many Orthodox
Christians have neglected this teaching (as is the case, for example, in our
own day), its true representatives were still handing it down to those who
hungered to receive it.. There have been great patristic ages, such as the
dazzling epoch of the fourth century, and there have been periods of decline in
patristic awareness among Orthodox Christians; but there has been no period
since the very foundation of Christ's Church on earth when the patristic
tradition was not guiding the Church; there has been no century without Holy
Fathers of its own. St. Nicetas Stethatos, disciple and biographer of St.
Simeon the New Theologian, has written; "It has been granted by God that
from generation to generation there should not cease the preparation by the
Holy Spirit of His prophets and friends for the order of His Church."
Most instructive it is for us, the last Christians, to take
guidance and inspiration from the Holy Fathers of our own and recent times,
those who lived in condition similar to our own and yet kept undamaged and
unchanged the same ever-fresh teaching, which is not for one time or race, but
for all times to the end of the world, and for the whole race of Orthodox
Christians.
Before looking at two of the recent Holy Fathers, however,
let us make clear that for us, Orthodox Christians,
the study of the Holy Fathers is not an idle academic exercise. Much of what
passes for a "patristic revival" in our times is scarcely more than a
plaything of heterodox scholars and their "Orthodox" imitators, not
one of whom has ever "discovered" a patristic truth for which he was
ready to sacrifice his life. Such "patrology" is only rationalist
scholarship which happens to take patristic teaching for its subject, without
ever understanding that the genuine teaching of the Holy Fathers contains the
truths which our spiritual life or death depends. Such pseudo-patristic
scholars spend their time proving that "pseudo-Macarius" was a
Messalian heretic, without understanding or practicing the pure Orthodox
teaching of the true St. Macarius the Great; that "pseudo-Dionysius"
was a calculated forger of books whose mystical and spiritual depths are
totally beyond his accusers; that the thoroughly Christian and monastic life of
Sts. Barlaam and Joasaph, handed down by St. John Damascene, is nothing but a
"retelling of the Buddha story;" and a hundred similar fables
manufactured by "experts" for a gullible public which has no idea of
the agnostic atmosphere in which such "discoveries" are made. Where
there are serious scholarly questions concerning some patristic texts (which,
of course, there are), they will certainly not be resolved by referring
them to such "experts, who are total strangers to the true patristic
tradition, and only make their living at its expense.
When "Orthodox" scholars pick
up the teaching of these pseudo-patristic scholars or make their own researches
in the same rationalistic spirit, the outcome can be tragic; for such scholars
are taken by many to be "spokesmen for Orthodoxy," and their
rationalistic pronouncements to be part of an "authentically
patristic" outlook, thus deceiving many Orthodox Christians. Father
Alexander Schmemann, for example, while pretending to set himself free from the
"Western captivity" which, in his ignorance of the true patristic
tradition of recent centuries (which is to be found more in the monasteries than
in the academies), he fancies to have completely dominated Orthodox theology in
modern times, has himself become the captive of Protestant rationalistic ideas
concerning liturgical theology, as has been well pointed out by Protopresbyter
Michael Pomazansky, a genuine patristic theologian of today.1
Unfortunately, such a clear unmasking has yet to be made of the pseudo-scholar
of Russian Saints and Holy Fathers, G. P. Fedotov, who imagines that St.
Sergius "was the first Russian saint who can be termed a mystic"
(thereby ignoring the four centuries of equally "mystical" Russian
Fathers who preceded him), looks pointlessly for "originality" in the
"literary work" of St. Nilus of Sora (thus showing that he does not
even understand the meaning of tradition in Orthodoxy), slanders the great
Orthodox Saint, Tikhon of Zadonsk, as "the son of the Western Baroque
rather than the heir of Eastern spirituality,"2 and with great
artificiality tries to make St. Seraphim (who is actually so stunningly in the
patristic tradition that he is scarcely to be distinguished from the great
Fathers of the Egyptian desert) into some "uniquely Russian"
phenomenon who was "the first known representative of this class of
spiritual elders (startsi) in Russia," whose "approach to the world
is unprecedented in the Eastern tradition," and who was "the
forerunner of the new form of spirituality which should succeed merely
ascetical monasticism."3
Lamentably, the consequences of such pseudo-scholarship
often appear in real life; gullible souls who take these false conclusions for
genuine begin to work for a "liturgical revival" on Protestant
foundations, transform St. Seraphim (ignoring his "inconvenient"
teachings regarding heretics, which he shares with the whole patristic tradition)
into a Hindu yogin or a "charismatic," and in general approach the
Holy Fathers just as do most contemporary scholars—without reverence and awe,
as though they were on the same level, as an exercise is esotericism or as some
kind of intellectual game, instead of as a guide to true life and salvation.
NOT SO ARE TRUE Orthodox
scholars; not so is the true Orthodox patristic tradition, where the genuine,
unchanging teaching of true Christianity is handed down in unbroken succession
both orally and by the written and printed word, from spiritual father to
spiritual son, from teacher to disciple.In the 20th century one Orthodox
hierarch stands out especially for his patristic orientation—Archbishop
Theophanes of Poltava († 1943, February 19), one of the founders of the free
Russian Church Outside of Russia, and perhaps the chief architect of her
uncompromising and traditionalist ideology. In the years when he was vice-chairman
of the Synod of Bishops of this Church (1920's), he was widely acknowledged as
the most patristically-minded of all the Russian theologians abroad. In the
1930's he retired into total seclusion to become a second Theophanes the
Recluse; and since then he has been, sadly, very largely forgotten.
Fortunately, his memory has been sacredly kept by his disciples and followers,
and in recent months one of his leading disciples, Archbishop Averky of Holy
Trinity Monastery at Jordanville, New York, has published his biography
together with a number of his sermons.4 In these sermons may be
clearly seen the hierarch's awe and reverence before the Holy Fathers, his
discipleship toward them, and his surpassing humility which will be content
only when he is transmitting nothing of his own but only the ideas and the very
words of the Holy Fathers. Thus, in a sermon on Pentecost Sunday he says:
"The teaching of the Holy Trinity is the pinnacle of Christian theology.
Therefore I do not presume to set forth this teaching in my own words, but I
set it forth in the words of the holy and God-bearing theologians and great
Fathers of the Church: Athanasius the Great, Gregory the Theologian, and Basil
the Great. Mine only are the lips, but theirs the words and thoughts. They
present the Divine meal, and I am only the servant of their Divine
banquet."
In another sermon, Archbishop Theophanes gives the reasons
for his self-effacement before the Holy Fathers—a characteristic so typical of
the great transmitters of patristic teaching, even great theologians in their
own right such as Archbishop Theophanes, but which is so glaringly
misinterpreted by worldly scholars as a "lack of originality." In his
sermon on the Sunday of the Holy Fathers of the Sixth Ecumenical Council, given
in 1928 in Varna, Bulgaria,
he offers to the faithful "a word on the significance of the Holy Fathers
and Teachers of the Church for us Christians. In what does their greatness
consist, and on what does their special significance for us depend? The Church,
brethren, is the house of the living God, the pillar and ground of the truth
(I Timothy 3:15). Christian truth is
preserved in the Church in Holy Scripture and Holy Tradition; but it requires a
correct preservation and a correct interpretation. The significance of the Holy
Fathers is to be found precisely in this: that they are the most capable preservers
and interpreters of this truth by virtue of the sanctity of their lives, their
profound knowledge of the word of God, and the abundance of the grace of the
Holy Spirit which dwells in them." The rest of this sermon is composed of
nothing but quotes from the Holy Fathers themselves (Sts. Athanasius the Great,
Basil the Great, Simeon the New Theologian, Nicetas Stethatos) to support this
view.
The final Holy Father whom Archbishop Theophanes quotes, at
great length, in his sermon, is one close to him in time, a predecessor of his
in the transmission of the authentic patristic tradition in Russia—Bishop
Ignatius Brianchaninov. He has a double significance for us today: not only is
he a Holy Father of almost our own times, but also his search for truth is very
similar to that of sincere truth-seekers today, and he thus shows us how it is
possible for the "enlightened modern man" to enter once again the
pure atmosphere of patristic—that is, true Orthodox Christian—ideas and ways of
thinking. It is extremely inspiring for us to read, in the words of Bishop
Ignatius himself, how a military engineer burst the bonds of "modern
knowledge" and entered the patristic tradition, which he received, in
addition to books, directly from a disciple of St. Paisius Velichkovsky, and
handed down to our own day.
"When I was still a student," Archbishop
Theophanes quotes Bishop Ignatius,5
"there were no enjoyments or distractions for me! The world presented
nothing enticing for me. My mind was entirely immersed in the sciences, and at
the same time I was burning with the desire to find out where was the true
faith, where was the true teaching of it, foreign to errors both dogmatic and
moral.
"At the same time there was already presented to my
gaze the boundaries of human knowledge in the highest, fully developed
sciences. Coming to these boundaries, I asked of the sciences: 'What do you
give that a man may call his own? Man is eternal, and what is his own should be
eternal. Show me this eternal possession, this true wealth, which I might take
with me beyond the grave! Up to now I see only knowledge which ends with the
earth, which cannot exist after the separation of the soul from the
body.'"
The searching youth inquired in turn of mathematics,
physics, chemistry, philosophy, showing his profound knowledge of them; then of
geography, geodesy, languages, literature; but he finds that they are all of
the earth. In answer to all his agonized questioning he received the same reply
similar searches receive in our even more "enlightened" 20th century:
"The sciences were silent."
Then, "for a satisfactory answer, a truly necessary and
living answer, I turned to faith. But where are you hidden, O true and holy
Faith? I could not recognize you in fanaticism {Papism}which
was not sealed with the Gospel meekness; it breathed passion and
high-mindedness! I could not recognize you in the arbitrary teaching
{Protestantism} which separated from the Church, making up its own new system,
vainly and pridefully proclaiming the discovery of a new, true Christian faith,
after a lapse of eighteen centuries from the Incarnation of God the Word! Oh!
In what a heavy perplexity my soul was! How frightfully it was weighed down!
What waves of doubt rose up against it, arising from distrust of myself, from
distrust of everything that was clamoring, crying out around me because of my
lack of knowledge, my ignorance of the truth.
"And I began often, with tears, to implore God that He
might not give me over as a sacrifice to error, but that He might show me the
right path on which I should direct towards Him my invisible journey of mind
and heart. And, O wonder! Suddenly a thought stood before me… My heart went out
to it as to The embrace of a friend. This
thought inspired me to study faith in the sources—in the writings of the Holy
Fathers! 'Their holiness,' the thought said to me, 'vouches for their
trustworthiness: choose them for your guides.' I obeyed. I found means of
obtaining the works of the holy pleasers of God, and in eagerness I began to
read them, investigate them deeply. Having read some, I would take up and read
others, read them, re-read them, study them. What was it that above all else
struck me in the works of the Fathers of the Orthodox Church? It was their
harmony, their wondrous, magnificent harmony. Eighteen centuries, through their
lips, testified to a single unanimous teaching, a Divine teaching!
"When on a clear autumn night I gaze at the clear sky,
sown with numberless stars, so diverse in size yet shedding a single light,
then I say to myself: such are the writings of the Fathers! When on a summer
day I gaze at the vast sea, covered with a multitude of diverse vessels with
their unfurled sails like white swans' wings, vessels racing under a single
wind to a single goal, to a single harbor, I say to myself: such are the
writings of the Fathers! When I hear a harmonious, many-voiced choir, in which
diverse voices in elegant harmony sing a single Divine song, then I say to
myself: such are the writings of the Fathers!
"And what teaching do I find in them? I find a teaching
repeated by all the Fathers, namely, that the only path to salvation is the
unwavering following of the instructions of the Holy Fathers. 'Have you seen,'
they say, 'anyone deceived by false teaching, perishing from an incorrect
choice of ascetic labors?—then know that he followed himself, his own
understanding, his own opinions, and not the teaching of the Fathers' (Abba
Dorotheus, Fifth Instruction), out of which is composed the dogmatic and moral tradition
of the Church. With this tradition as a priceless possession, the Church
nourishes her children.
This thought was sent by God, from Whom
is every good gift, from Whom a good through is the beginning of every good
thing… This thought was for me the first harbor in the land of truth. Here my
soul found rest from the waves and winds. This thought became the foundation
stone for the spiritual building of my soul This
thought became my guiding star. It began constantly to illumine for me the very
difficult and much-suffering, narrow, invisible path of the mind and heart
toward God. I looked at the religious world with this thought, and I saw: the
cause of all errors consists in ignorance, in forgetfulness, in the absence of
this thought.
"The reading of the Fathers clearly convinced me that
salvation in the bosom of the Orthodox
Russian Church
was undoubted, something of which the religions of Western Europe
are deprived, since they have not preserved whole either the dogmatic or the
moral teaching of the Church of Christ
from her beginning. It revealed to me what Christ has done for mankind, in what
consists the fall of man, why a Redeemer was necessary, in what consists the salvation procured by the Redeemer. It
inculcated in me that one must develop, sense, see salvation in oneself,
without which faith in Christ is dead, and Christianity is a word and a name
without being put into effect! It instructed me to look upon eternity as
eternity, before which a thousand years of earthly life is nothing, let alone
our life which is measured by some half a century. It instructed me that
earthly life must lead to preparation for eternity… It showed me that all
earthly occupations, enjoyments, honor, pre-eminence—are empty toys, with which
grown-up children play and in which they lose the blessedness of eternity… All
this the Holy Fathers set forth with complete celerity in their sacredly
splendid writings.'
Archbishop Theophanes concludes his patristic exhortation
with this appeal: "Brethren, let this good thought {the taking of the Holy
Fathers as our guide} be your guiding star also in the days of your earthly
pilgrimage on the waves of the sea of life!"
The truth of this appeal, as of the inspired words of Bishop
Ignatius, has not dimmed in the decades since they were uttered. The world has
gone for on the path of apostasy from Christian Truth, and it becomes ever more
clear that there is no alternative to this path save that of following the
uncompromising path of truth which the Holy Fathers have handed down to us.
Yet we must go to the Holy Fathers not merely to "learn
about them;" if we do no more than this we are in no better state than the
idle disputants of the dead academies of this perishing modern civilization,
even when these academies are "Orthodox" and the learned theologians
in them neatly define and explain all about "sanctity" and
"spirituality" and "theosis," but have not the experience
needed to speak straight to the heart of thirsting souls and wound them into
desiring the path of spiritual struggle, nor the knowledge to detect the fatal
error of the academic "theologians" who speak of God with cigarette
or wineglass in hand, nor the courage to accuse the apostate
"canonical" hierarchs of their betrayal of Christ. We must go to the
Holy Fathers, rather, in order to become their disciples, to receive the
teaching of true life, the soul's salvation, even while knowing that by doing
this we shall lose the favor of this world and become outcasts from it. If we
do this we shall find the way out of the confused swamp of modern thought,
which is based precisely upon abandonment of the sacred teaching of the
Fathers. We shall find that the Holy Fathers are most "contemporary"
in that they speak directly to the struggle of the Orthodox Christian today,
giving answers to the crucial questions of life and death which mere academic
scholarship is usually afraid even to ask—and when it does ask them, gives a
harmless answer which "explains" these questions to those who are
merely curious about them, but are not thirsting for answers. We shall find
true guidance from the Fathers, learning humility and distrust of our own vain
worldly wisdom, which we have sucked in with the air of the pestilential times,
by means of trusting those who have pleased God and not the world. We shall
find in them true fathers, so lacking in our own day when the love of
many has grown cold (Matthew 24:12)—fathers whose only aim is to lead us their
children to God and His Heavenly Kingdom, where we shall walk and converse with
these angelic men in unutterable joy forever.
There is no problem of our own confused times which cannot
find its solution by a careful and reverent reading of the Holy Fathers:
whether the problem of the sects and heresies that abound today, or the schisms
and "jurisdictions;" whether the pretense of spiritual life put forth
by the charismatic revival," or the subtle temptations of modern comfort
and conveniences; whether complex philosophical questions such as
"evolution," or the straightforward moral questions of abortion,
euthanasia, and "birth control;" whether the refined apostasy of
"Sergianism," which offers a church organization in place of the Body
of Christ, or the crudeness of the "renovationism," which begins by
"revising the calendar" and ends in "Eastern-rite
Protestantism." In all these questions the Holy Fathers, and our living
Fathers who follow them, are our only sure guide.
Bishop Ignatius and other recent Fathers have indicated for
us last Christians which Holy Fathers are the most important for us to read,
and in what order. May this be an inspiration to us all to place the patristic
teaching as the foundation stone of the building of our own souls, unto the
inheritance of everlasting life! Amen.
1. "The Liturgical
Theology of Fr. A. Schmemann," in The
Orthodox Word, 1970, No. 6, Pp. 260-280.
2. A thesis thoroughly refuted by Nadejda Gorodetsky in Saint Tikhon
Zadonsky, Inspirer of Dostoyevsky, SPCK, London, 1951.
3. See Fedotov's introductions to the writings of these Saints in A Treasury
of Russian Spirituality, Sheed & Ward, New York, 1948.
4. A brief life of him in English may be read in The Orthodox Word,
1969, No. 5.
5. From Volume I of Bishop Ignatius' Collected Works in Russian, pp. 396-401.
Other articles by Fr. Seraphim Rose