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| Volume 7 Number 45 - Tuesday, November 15, 2005 |
A Publication of the ORTHODOX CHRISTIAN LAITY |
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The Orthodox Christian Laity
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CHRYSOSTOM
was a powerful preacher. He was fond of preaching,
and regarded preaching as the duty of a Christian
minister. Priesthood is authority, but it is
authority of word and conviction. This is the
distinctive mark of Christian power. Kings compel,
and pastors convince. The former act by orders,
the latter by exhortations. Pastors appeal to
human freedom, to human will and call for
decisions. As Chrysostom used to say himself,
"We have to accomplish the salvation of men
by word, meekness, and exhortation." The
whole meaning of human life for Chrysostom was in
that it was, and had to be, a life in freedom, and
therefore a life of service. In his preaching he
spoke persistently about freedom and decision.
Freedom was for him an image of God in man. Christ
came, as Chrysostom used to remind, precisely to
heal the will of man. God always acts in such a
way as not to destroy our own freedom. God Himself
acts by calls and exhortations, not by compulsion.
He shows the right way, calls and invites, and
warns against the dangers of wickedness, but does
not constrain. Christian pastors must act
accordingly. By temperament, Chrysostom was rather
a maximalist, sharp and rigoristic, but he was
always against compulsion, even in the struggle
with heretics. Christians are forbidden, he used
to insist, to apply violence even for good aims:
"Our warfare does not make the living dead,
but rather makes the dead to live, because it is
conducted in the spirit of meekness and humility.
I persecute by word, not by acts. I persecute
heresy, not heretics. It is mine more to be
persecuted, than to persecute. So Christ was
victorious as a Crucified, and not as a
crucifier." The strength of Christianity was
for him in humility and toleration, not in power.
One had to be strict about oneself, and meek to
the others. Yet,
Chrysostom was in no sense a sentimental optimist.
His diagnosis of the human situation was stern and
grim. He lived in a time when the Church was
suddenly invaded by crowds of nominal converts. He
had an impression that he was preaching to the
dead. He watched the lack of charity, and the
complacent injustice and saw them almost in an
apocalyptic perspective: "We have quenched
the zeal, and the body of Christ is dead." He
had an impression that he was speaking to people
for whom Christianity was just a conventional
fashion, an empty form, a manner and little more:
"Among the thousands one can hardly find more
than a hundred of them who are being saved, and
even about that I am doubtful." He was rather
embarrassed by the great number of alleged
Christians: "an extra food for fire." Prosperity
was for him a danger, the worst kind of
persecution, worse than an open persecution.
Nobody sees dangers. Prosperity breeds
carelessness. Men fall asleep, and the devil kills
the sleepy. Chrysostom was disturbed especially by
an open and deliberate lowering of standards and
requirements, even among the clergy. Salt was
losing its savour. He reacted to this not only by
a word of rebuke and reprimand, but by deeds of
charity and love. He was desperately concerned
with the renewal of society, with the healing of
social ills. He was preaching and practising
charity, founding hospitals and orphanages,
helping the poor and destitute. I le wanted to
recover the spirit of practising love. He wanted
more activity and commitment among Christians.
Christianity for him was precisely "the
Way," as it had been sometimes described in
Apostolic times, and Christ Himself was "the
Way." Chrysostom was always against all
compromises, against the policy of appeasement and
adjustment. He was a prophet of an integral
Christianity. Chrysostom
was mainly a preacher of morality, but his ethics
was deeply rooted in the faith. He used to
interpret Scripture to his flocks, and his
favorite writer was St. Paul. It was in his
epistles that one could see this organic
connection between faith and life. Chrysostom had
his favorite dogmatic theme, to which he would
constantly return first of all, the theme of the
Church, closely linked to the doctrine of
Redemption, being the sacrifice of the High Priest
Christ; the Church is the new being, the life in
Christ, and the life of Christ in men. Secondly,
the theme of Eucharist, a sacrament and a
sacrifice. It is but fair to call Chrysostom, as
he was actually called, "the teacher of
Eucharist," doctor eucharisticus. Both themes
were linked together. It was in the Eucharist, and
through it, that the Church could be alive. Chrysostom
was a witness of the living faith, and for that
reason his voice was so eagerly listened to, both
in the East and in the West; but for him, the
faith was a norm of life, and not just a theory.
Dogmas must be practised. Chrysostom was preaching
the Gospel of Salvation, the good tidings of the
new life. He was not a preacher of independent
ethics. He preached Christ, and Him crucified and
risen, the Lamb and the High Priest. Right life
was for him the only efficient test of right
beliefs. Faith is accomplished in the deeds, the
deeds of charity and love. Without love faith,
contemplation, and the vision of the mysteries of
God are impossible. Chrysostom was watching the
desperate struggle for truth in the society of his
own days. He was always concerned with living
souls; he was speaking to men, to living persons.
He was always addressing a flock, for which he
felt responsibility. He was always discussing
concrete cases and situations. One
of his constant and favorite subjects was that of
wealth and misery. The theme was imposed or
dictated by the setting in which Chrysostom had to
work. He had to face the life in great and
overcrowded cities, with all the tensions between
the rich and the poor. He simply could not evade
social problems without detaching Christianity
from life, but social problems were for him
emphatically religious and ethical problems. He
was not primarily a social reformer, even if he
had his own plans for Christian society. He was
concerned with the ways of Christians in the
world, with their duties, with their vocation. In
his sermons we find, first of all, a penetrating
analysis of the social situation. He finds too
much injustice, coldness, indifference, and
suffering and sorrow in the society of his days.
And he sees well to what extent it is connected
with the acquisitive character of the contemporary
society, with the acquisitive spirit of life. This
acquisitive spirit breeds inequality, and
therefore injustice. He is not only upset by
fruitless luxury of life; he is apprehensive of
wealth as a standing temptation. Wealth seduces
the rich. Wealth itself has no value. It is a
guise, under which the real face of man is
concealed, but those who hold possessions come to
cherish them, and are deceived; they come to value
them and rely on them. All possessions, not only
the large ones, are dangerous, in so far as man
learns to rely upon what is, by its very nature,
something passing and unreal. Chrysostom
is very evangelical at this point. Treasures must
be gathered in heaven, and not on earth, and all
earthly treasures are unreal and doomed to
corruption. "A love for wealth is
abnormal," says Chrysostom. It is just a
burden for the soul, and a dangerous burden. It
enslaves the soul; it distracts it from the
service to God. The Christian spirit is a spirit
of renunciation, and wealth ties man to inanimate
things. The acquisitive spirit distorts the
vision, perverts the perspective. Chrysostom is
closely following the injunctions of the Sermon on
the Mount. "Do not be anxious for your life,
what you shall eat, nor for your body, what you
shall put on. . ." Life is greater than
clothing or food, but it is anxiety which is the
prevailing temper of the acquisitive society. Christians
are called to renounce all possessions and to
follow Christ in full confidence and trust.
Possessions can be justified only by their use:
feed the hungry, help the poor, and give
everything to the needy. Here is the main tension,
and the main conflict, between the spirit of the
Church and the mood of the worldly society. The
cruel injustice of actual life is the bleeding
wound of this society. In a world of sorrow and
need, all possessions are wrong--they are just
proofs of coldness, and symptoms of little faith.
Chrysostom goes so far as to denounce even the
splendor of the temples. "The Church,"
he says, "is a triumphant company of angels,
and not a shop of a silversmith. The Church claims
human souls, and only for the sake of the souls
does God accept any other gifts. The cup which
Christ offered to the disciples at the Last Supper
was not made of gold. Yet it was precious above
all measure. If you want to honor Christ, do it
when you see Him naked, in the person of the poor.
No use, if you bring silk and precious metals to
the temple, and leave Christ to suffer cold and
nakedness in the outside. No use, if the temple is
full of golden vessels, but Christ himself is
starving. You make golden chalices, but fail to
offer cups of cold water to the needy. Christ, as
a homeless stranger, is wandering around and
begging, and instead of receiving Him you make
decorations." Chrysostom
was afraid that everything kept aside was in a
sense stolen from the poor. One cannot be rich,
except at the cost of keeping others poor. The
root of wealth is always in sortie injustice. Yet,
poverty was not for Chrysostom just a virtue by
itself. Poverty meant for him first of all need
and want, and suffering and pain. For this reason
Christ can be found among the poor, and he comes
to us in the guise of a beggar, and not in that of
a rich man. Poverty is a blessing only when it is
cheerfully accepted for Christ's sake. The poor
have less anxiety than the rich and are more
independent-or at least may be. Chrysostom was
fully aware that poverty can be tempting too, not
only as a burden, but as an incentive of envy or
despair. For that very reason he wanted to fight
poverty, in order not only to ease the suffering,
but to remove temptations also. Chrysostom
was always concerned with ethical issues. He had
his own vision of a just society, and the first
prerequisite was, in his opinion, equality. It is
the first claim of any genuine love. But
Chrysostom would go much further. He felt that
there was but one owner of all things in the
world-God Himself, the Maker of all. Strictly
speaking, no private property should exist at all.
Everything belongs to God. Everything is loaned
rather than given by God in trust to man, for
God's purposes. Chrysostom would add: Everything
is God's except the good deeds of man--it is the
only thing that man can own. As everything belongs
to God, our common Master, everything is given for
common use. Is it not true even of worldly things?
Cities, market-places, streets-are they not a
common possession? God's economy is of the same
kind. Water, air, sun and moon, and the rest of
creation, are intended for common use. Quarrels
begin usually when people attempt to appropriate
things which, by their very nature, were not
intended for the private possession of some, to
the exclusion of others. Chrysostom
had serious doubts about private property. Does
not strife begin when the cold distinction
mine" and "thine" is first
introduced? Chrysostom was concerned not so much
with the results, as with causes-with the
orientation of the will. Where is man going to
gather his treasures? Chrysostom was after justice
in defense of human dignity. Was not every man
created in God's image? Did God not wish salvation
and conversion of every single man, regardless of
his position in life, and even regardless of his
behavior in the past? All are called to
repentance, and all can repent. There was,
however, no neglect of material things in his
preaching. Material goods come also from God, and
they are not bad in themselves. What is bad, is
only the unjust use of goods, to the profit of
some, while others are left starving. The answer
is in love. Love is not selfish, "is not
ambitious, is not self-seeking." Chrysostom
was looking back to the primitive Church.
"Observe the increase of piety. They cast
away their riches, and rejoiced, and had great
gladness, for greater were the riches they
received without labor. None reproached, none
envied, none grudged; no pride, no contempt. No
talk of 'mine' and 'thine.' Hence gladness waited
at their table; no one seemed to eat of his own,
or another's. Neither did they consider their
brethren's property foreign to themselves; it was
a property of the Master; nor again deemed they
ought their own, all was the brethren's." How
was this possible, Chrysostom asks: By the
inspiration of love, in recognition of the
unfathomable love of God. In
no sense was Chrysostom preaching
"communism." The pattern itself may be
deceitful and misleading as any other. The real
thing is the spirit. What Chrysostom was preaching
in the cities, monks were fervently practising in
their communities, professing by deeds that God
was the only Master and owner of everything.
Chrysostom did not regard monastic life just as an
advanced course for the select, but rather as a
normal evangelical pattern intended for all
Christian. At this point he was in full agreement
with the main tradition of the early Church, from
St. Basil and St. Augustine up to St. Theodore of
Studium in the later times. But the strength of
monasticism is not in the pattern itself, but in
the spirit of dedication, in the choice of a
"higher calling." Was this calling only
for the few? Chrysostom was always suspicious of
inequality. Was it not dangerous to discriminate
between the "strong" and the
"weak"? Who could judge and decide in
advance? Chrysostom was always thinking about real
men. There was some kind of individualism inherent
in his approach to people, but he valued unanimity
most highly--the spirit of solidarity, of common
care and responsibility, the spirit of service. No
person can grow in virtue, unless he serves his
brethren. For that reason he always emphasized
charity. Those who fail to do charity will be left
outside the bridal chamber of Christ. It is not
enough, he says, to lift our hands to
heaven-stretch them to the needy, and then you
will be heard by the Father. He points out that,
according to the Parable of the Last Judgment, the
only question which will be asked then, is that
about charity. But again it was not just a
moralism with him. His ethics had an obvious
mystical depth. The true altar is the body of men
itself. It is not enough to worship at the altars.
There is another altar made of living souls, and
this altar is Christ Himself, His Body. The
sacrifice of righteousness and mercy should be
offered on this altar too, if our offerings are to
be acceptable in God's sight. The deeds of charity
had to be inspired by the ultimate dedication and
devotion to Christ, who came into the world to
relieve all want, and sorrow, and pain. Chrysostom
did not believe in abstract schemes; he had a
fiery faith in the creative power of Christian
love. It was for that reason that he became the
teacher and prophet for all ages in the Church. In
his youth he spent some few years in the desert,
but would not stay there. For him monastic
solitude was just a training period. He returned
to the world to proclaim the power of the Gospel.
He was a missionary by vocation; he had an
apostolic and evangelistic zeal. He wanted to
share his inspiration with his brethren ' He
wanted to work for the establishment of God's
Kingdom. He prayed for such things in common life
so that nobody would need to retire to the
wilderness in search for perfection, because there
would be the same opportunity in the cities. He
wanted to reform the city itself, and for that
purpose lie chose for himself the way of
priesthood and apostolate. Was
this a utopian dream? Was it possible to reshape
the world, and to overrule the wordliness of the
world? Was Chrysostom successful in his mission?
His life was stormy and hard, it was a life of
endurance and martyrdom. He was persecuted and
rejected not by the heathen, but by false
brethren, and died homeless as a prisoner in
exile. All he was given to endure he accepted in
the spirit of joy, as from the hand of Christ, Who
was Himself rejected and executed. The Church
gratefully recognized that witness and solemnly
acclaimed Chrysostom as one of the
"ecumenical teachers" for all ages to
come. There
is some unusual flavor of modernity in the
writings of Chrysostom. His world was like ours, a
world of tensions, a world of unresolved problems
in all walks of life. His advice may appeal to our
age no less than it did to his own. But his main
advice is a call to integral Christianity, in
which faith and charity, belief and practice, are
organically linked in an unconditional surrender
of man to God's overwhelming love, in an
unconditional trust in His mercy, in an
unconditional commitment to His service, through
Jesus Christ, our Lord. From
Volume Four of "Collected Works: Aspects of
Church History" This article originally appeared in St. Vladimir's Seminary Quarterly, IV, Nos. 3/4 (1955), 37-42.
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