Before
beginning my talk, a word or two on why it is important to have an Orthodox
world-view, and why it is more difficult to build one today than in past
centuries.
In past centuries—for example, in 19th century Russia—the
Orthodox world-view was an important part of Orthodox life and was supported by
the life around it. There was no need even to speak of it as a separate
thing—you lived Orthodoxy in harmony with the Orthodox society around you, and
you had an Orthodox world-view provided by the Church and society. In many
countries the government itself confessed Orthodoxy; it was the center of
public functions and the king or ruler himself was historically the first
Orthodox layman with a responsibility to give a Christian example to all his
subjects. Every city had Orthodox churches, and many of them had services every
day, morning and evening. There were monasteries in all the great cities, in
many cities, outside the cities, and in the countryside, in deserts and
wildernesses. In Russia there were more than 1000 officially organized
monasteries, in addition to other more unofficial groups. Monasticism was an
accepted part of life. Most families, in fact, had somewhere in them a sister
or brother, uncle, grandfather, cousin or someone who was a monk or a nun, in
addition to all the other examples of Orthodox life: people who wandered from
monastery to monastery, and fools-for-Christ. The whole way of life was permeated
with Orthodox kinds of people, of which, of course, monasticism is the center.
Orthodox customs were a part of daily life. Most books that were commonly read
were Orthodox. Daily life itself was difficult for most people: they had to
work hard to survive, life expectancy was not great, death was a frequent
reality—all of which reinforced the Church's teaching on the reality and
nearness of the other world. Living an Orthodox life in such circumstances was
really the same thing as having and Orthodox world-view, and there was little
need to talk of such a thing.
Today, on the other hand, all this has changed. Our
Orthodoxy is a little island in the midst of a world which operates on totally
different principles—and every day these principles are changing for the worse,
making us more and more alienated from it. Many people are tempted to divide
their lives into two sharply distinct categories: the daily life we lead at
work, with worldly friends, in our worldly business, and Orthodoxy, which we
live on Sundays and at other times in the week when we have time for it. But
the world-view of such a person, if you look at it closely, is often a strange
combination of Christian values and worldly values, which really do not mix.
The purpose of this talk is to see how people living today can begin to make
their world-view more of one piece, to make it a whole Orthodox
world-view.
Orthodoxy is life. If we don't live Orthodoxy, we
simply are not Orthodox, no matter what formal beliefs we might hold.
Life in our contemporary world has become very artificial,
very uncertain, very confusing. Orthodoxy, it is true, has a life of its own,
but it is also not very far from the life of the world around it, and so the
life of the Orthodox Christian, even when he is being truly Orthodox, cannot
help but reflect it in some way. A kind of uncertainty and confusion have also
entered in Orthodox life in our times. In this talk we will try to look at
contemporary life, and then at Orthodox life, to see how better we might
fulfill our Christian obligation to lead other-worldly lives even in
these quite terrible times, and to have an Orthodox Christian view of the whole
of life today that will enable us to survive these times with our faith intact.
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