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| Volume 7 Number 24 - Tuesday, June 14th, 2005 |
A Publication of the ORTHODOX CHRISTIAN LAITY |
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The Orthodox Christian Laity
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The Orthodox Christian News Service |
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Andrew J. Sopko, Ph.D. Historical Background
From the time of their
conversion to Christianity, beginning in the ninth
century, the Slavs were given not only their first
written language but also the potential to create
an indigenous Christian literature of their own.
The Byzantine Christian literary inheritance which
was imparted to them through the writings of the
Fathers and lives of the saints was multifaceted
in its emphases. At its center stood the reality
of God, manifested in his personal relationship
with the created order and with man in particular.
The fact that man often rejected his legitimate
relationship with God became the contrasting theme
of this literature. But despite man's indifference
and denial, God's presence in the world,
especially through Jesus Christ, gave the created
order a greater credibility and limitless
potential. The world was something that could be
believed in for "it was very good." One could
suffer for it because of its Godrootedness, just
as one could also be sanctified in it for the very
same reason. These themes recur again and again in
Slavic literature through the centuries and
especially in its contemporary manifestations. Nikolai GogolRussian literature had travelled far from its original intentions and this situation was almost single-handedly rectified by Nikolai Gogol (1809-52). In his writings, there is no life for man except in God. Only through a relationship with God can man find his true place within the created order. Most readers of Dead Souls think that the title refers only to the names of the deceased serfs which the swindler Chichkov uses in his transactions, but it also refers to the "living" characters who have turned from God and chosen the devil. The world's inherent goodness falls prey to the devil through man's folly. Man's own mediocrity and inconclusiveness, best represented by Klestakov in The Inspector General, makes the devil's work infinitely easier. As the eternal medium of banality, the devil is able to obscure totally the true meaning of the world for man and makes even the most ordinary objects and situations a tool for his ends (The Overcoat). Even such a noble enterprise as labor for artistic perfection can become demonic. Thus, the Pushkinian view of art's supremacy over morality is denied by Gogol, along with the strictly contemplative lifestyle that accompanies its manifestation. While Gogol did not reject the contemplative life outright, he knew that it must be accompanied by activism. This would, of course, bring suffering, but it would also eventually bring the sanctification of man and the world, no longer influenced by the devil. Lev TolstoyThe nihilism of Ivan Turgenev's (1818-83) Fathers and Sons, the boredom of Ivan Goncharov's (1812-91) Oblomov, and most of all the social disinterest of Lev Tolstoy (1828-1910) obviously do not fall within the Gogolian context. Tolstoy, so often presented as the quintessential Russian author, is actually one of the least Orthodox in his approach. "In all his talk about love and God, it is a little hard to know what he means by either" (Edmund Wilson). In his search for the meaning of life, he turned to his own brand of religion, reinterpreting the Gospel Words of Jesus and satirizing the Church's presentation of Christianity. While it must be admitted that Tolstoy's characters often find meaning in helping each other, there is little to guide them outside their limited moral context. Like their creator, they have no conception of the community of humanity, nor do they conceive of nature as anything more than an impersonal force much as in paganism. Fyodor Dostoevsky
There is certainly an
obvious contrast between Tolstoy and Fyodor
Dostoevsky (1821-81). Where the one never saw
anything below the surface, the other observed
everything from a spiritual plane. Rather than
just a biological process, Dostoevsky saw man as a
microcosm and continually raised questions
concerning man's relationship with God and the
cosmos. Life is tragic for him, but only because
man is not what he is meant to be. Man can
struggle with God because he is free and it is
this freedom which enables him to experience life
tragically. Characters in Dostoevsky's works who
insist on asserting only their own egos imagine
countless atrocities; some are even led to commit,
not just murder, but suicide and deicide. In
The Possessed, Shatov, in his dementia, wants
to raise the people itself to Godhead. Kirillov
advocates that, through suicide, each individual
can become God, for he mistakenly equates God with
man's fear of death. Finally and most tragically,
Stavrogin hangs himself, not because he hopes to
become God by so doing, but because it is his only
solution to having betrayed everyone and
everything. Anton ChelchovDespite its pessimism Anton Chekhov's (1860-1904) work conveys man's capacity to love his neighbor. Although he sees life as senseless, he also recognizes in man the capacity to strive for perfection and the ability for self renunciation. Unfortunately, part of the blame for the senselessness which Chekhov and more radical writers saw in life must fall on the Russian Church. As Berdyaev observed, the Church often "relegated spiritual life to another and transcendent world and created a religion for the soul that was homesick for the spiritual life it had lost." Confusion in the proclamation of the church's message brought confusion to the spiritual content of literature. Nowhere was this better demonstrated than in the rise of Symbolism and Acmeism. In its earliest manifestations, symbolism was an escapist movement. According to many of its adherents such as D.N. Merezhkovsky (1865-1941), a synthesis between a corrupt, material world and eternal values was not possible. A younger generation of symbolists, including Vyacheslav Ivanov (1866-1949), Aleksandr Blok (1880-1920), and Andrei Beley (1880-1934), tempered this view under the influence of Vladimir Solovyev's thought (1853-1900). They hoped for and wrote about an imminent end to the ongoing conflict between Christ and anti-Christ which would bring a synthesis of the two "worlds". Acmeism considered such a view wishful thinking, and its chief poets Mikhail Kuzmin (1895-1936), Osip Mandel'shtam (1891-1938) and (at least in her earlier career) Anna Ahkmatova (1889-1966) sought to emphasize the autonomy of the here and now above all else. Andrei BelyBecause of the admixture of theosophy, gnosticism and other such ingredients in these movements, discerning Orthodox content can be a difficult task. Of all those to be considered, Andrei Bely emerges as a particularly worth successor to Gogol and, in some ways, to Dostoevsky. Bely warned how the devil uses the isolated objects of reality to confuse man about the world's true nature, just as Gogol had. In Petersburg, the characters fragment reality, failing to see that the visible and invisible worlds interconnect, thereby acquiring their meaning. The crisis in contemporary civilization stems from the conflict between man's rational and non-rational activities and self-transcendence will be the only way to overcome the conflict. Suffering "crucifixion," as Korobkin voluntarily does in the first volume of Moscow, brings insight; for the two are interconnected. Refusing to give up a discovery which could destroy the world, he is tortured. In the second volume, Masks, he is "resurrected" and Gogolian activism is introduced. Paradoxically, his decision to destroy his discovery causes another's death. While he has learned, like Father Zosima, about "the responsibility of each for all, his action is as disastrous as Myshkin's" (J.D. Elworth). Aleksandr BlokThe apocalypticism of many of the Symbolists eventual became identified with the Bolshevik Revolution. The millenarian character assigned to it is best summed up in Aleksandr Blok's The Twelve, where Christ himself leads the revolutionaries. Before long, however, disenchantment set in and many writers did not look upon the course of events as either good or evil but merely as a process beyond human control. This attitude carried over into a novel such as Mikhail Sholokov's (1905-1984) Quiet Flows the Don, which basically states that the activities of men are subordinated to the judgment of nature. Such a position obviously does not fit into the Orthodox view which rejects all philosophies of natural determinism. Boris PasternakThe reassertion of Orthodox attitudes in Soviet Russian literature came only with Boris Pasternak's (1890-1960) Doctor Zhivago, which sees the coming of Christ as the only true revolution in human history. At the very beginning of the novel, Pasternak presents a parable which shows that the Russian Church had not always succeeded in continuing that revolution. Just like the corpse of Zhivago's mother, the church has become a body without a spirit. Later, Zhivago's guardian Nikolai, who personified the religious intelligentsia of the turn-of-the-century that tried to give the Church new vitality, speaks of immortality as a stronger word for a life true to Christ. The theme of a transfigured world is thus introduced with Holy Week as the central theme of the story: the moment Zhivago picks up a beam for firewood from the rubble of the revolution, his passion begins, continuing through his medical practice in the service of others, culminating with neglect of himself in abject poverty. In this way he personified the Christian ideal of self-emptying, setting not only an example for tragic Russia but also providing an image of the proper relationship between God, man and creation. Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn
Alexsandr
Solzhenitsyn's (1918- ) realism has aimed at
reducing all optimistic and utopian illusions in
order to replace these with a true concern for
humanity in all situations, especially negative
ones. The dismissal of God from the world is the
root cause of our misery. In The First Circle,
when the young girl Agniya visits an old,
deteriorating church in the Moscow suburbs, she
laments the loss of the old values in the wake of
the revolution. Because of the rejection of the
divine order, the human order suffers a similar
fate. In the same novel, the prisoner Sologdin
personifies these old values. Although his views
may result from archaism rather than from
Christianity, he realizes that the way a person
lives teaches truth rather than abstract
ideologies. Such sensitivity also leads to a
recognition of the true nature of the created
order. In The First Circle,
Kondrashov-Ivanov insists that man is not
determined by nature nor any other aspect of his
environment. Nonetheless, nature itself still
awaits man's proper cooperation for he has yet to
see its integrity, as Kostoglotov does during his
remission in Cancer Ward. After SolzhenitsynWith the departure of Solzhenitsyn from the Soviet scene, other authors have been left with the task of calling attention to the traditional values. Such writers as Vladimir Tendryakov (1923- ) and Vladimir Soloukhin (1924- ) are particularly noteworthy in this respect. Tendryakov emphasizes the countryside as the chief locale for these values, while Soulkhin stresses their Christian foundation. Official displeasure with many Orthodox-oriented writers has led to a great increase in underground (samizdat) publication. What the future holds for such writers, when they incur the Party's displeasure, is difficult to predict. The rehabilitation, however, of a writer such as Mikhail Bulgakov (1891-1940), whose Master and Margarita was published long after his death, demonstrates that attitudes do change. The novel's subplot concerning the passion and death of Christ, is so symbolic of Russia's own suffering, has now evidently become acceptable. Bulgarian LiteratureDue to historical circumstances, Bulgarian and Serbian literature have not enjoyed the same continuity as their Russian counterpart. Although a Bulgarian bishop such as Constantine of Preslav (ca. 900) stressed the need for a vernacular Christian literature from the very beginning, five hundred years of Ottoman domination brought his nation's literary development to a halt. Written hagiography and chronography gave way to completely oral genres passed from generation to generation and it was only in the mid-nineteenth century that an indigenous literary tradition was revived. Past suppression and isolation have limited the scope of contemporary Bulgarian literature but it still retains Orthodox content. Many of its stories and novels revolve around rural and village life with particular emphasis given to the centrality of the Church in people's lives. A short story such as Elin Pelin's (1877-1949) All Souls' Day provides a good example. While cosmopolitanism may not be an ingredient of this literature the themes of man's and nature's dignity are ever-present. Yordan Yovkov's (1880-1937) work incorporates not only the spirituality of the common man but also the part animals play in helping humanity fulfill its "natural role". The necessity of active suffering can also be found in Yovkov's Heroes' Heads (where revolution and renewal of nature in spring parallel each other) as well as in the work of an author such as Konstantin Konstantinov (1890- ). Ivan VazovThe greatest work of contemporary Bulgarian literature remains Ivan Vazov's (1850-1922) novel Under the Yoke. In describing the town of Byala Cherkva during an unsuccessful uprising against the Turks, he gives a profoundly Orthodox presentation. Ognyanov, the chief rebel of the story, is seen not as an ideological warrior but as "inspired by God" to serve the people as an "apostle". Even the monks of the story are activists in the best sense of the word. Abbot Nathaniel leaves a church service in order to help Ognyanov and Father Yerotei views his sacrifices for the schooling of ten boys as sacramental. The greatest self-denial in the story, however, belongs to Ognyanov's fiance Rada, who eventually dies with him. But despite all the terrible machinations of man described in the course of the action, nature retains its divine beauty, a fact to which Ognayanov himself calls attention. Serbian LiteratureUntil the end of the medieval Serbian state, not only hagiography but also royal biography formed an important part of Serbian literature. An emphasis on the great deeds of Christian rulers passed into epic poetry, particularly the legend of the battle of Kosovo (1389). Here, the necessity of an active campaign against evil is maintained even if suffering and destruction are the outcome. Following five hundred years of Turkish occupation, this theme has been reiterated in contemporary Yugoslav literature, some of whose best authors hail from Bosnia. The Bosnian Peter Kocic (1877-1916) has written stories which stress that man's fate is not decided through natural determinism. In Through the Storm, he presents the character of Relja Knezevic who, although he has lost everything through natural disaster, still retains faith in God. Even when he is killed at the end of the story, Relja is still able to transcend the situation through an act of love. A suffering love need not be flamboyant but can also be quietly faithful, as in The First Morning Service with Father , by Serbian writer Laza Lazarevic (1851-1891). In it, a faithful wife and mother demonstrate true sanctity that brings a dramatic change in her gambler-husband's life. Ivo Andric
Personal ambition as
opposed to the dignity of creation emerges as the
chief theme in the works of the greatest
contemporary Yugoslav author, the Bosnian Ivo
Andric (1892- ). Both in his short stories,
especially The Climbers, and in his
magnum opus, the novel The Bridge on the Drina,
this theme is reiterated. Creativity, a gift from
God for the earth's enhancement, becomes demonic
when used only for personal ambition. In The
Climbers, Lesko struggles to put a cross on
the church building, not to beautify it but to put
himself in the limelight. In doing so, he climbs
not towards God but towards a very different goal.
For Andric, suffering and martyrdom also possess a
creative purpose because they display man's true
nature. In The Bridge on the Drina both
man and nature suffer together simultaneously, the
villagers are recruited for forced labor on the
bridge and the trees of the nearby forest are
felled to provide scaffolding. Because the bridge
will also become a vehicle for exploitation by its
Turkish builders, both Radisav's sabotage, for
which he is executed, and the weather conditions
which slow down the work are viewed as divine
judgments by the villagers. Despite such events,
the bridge is completed and evil seemingly
triumphs. The artillery of World War I eventually
destroys it, so it is only a greater evil that
replaces it. Copyright: © 1990-1996 Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America
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