In Step With Sts. Patrick and Gregory of Tours
A Homily by Fr. Seraphim Rose of Platina
EDITOR'S NOTE: As an example of Fr. Seraphim's
simple, down-to-earth approach to spiritual life, we present here
a faithful transcription of one of his "unprepared"
recorded talks. It was given on St. Patrick's day, March 17,
1977, to monks and pilgrims at the St. Herman of Alaska
Monastery.
1. A PERSPECTIVE ON ST. PATRICK
THE
CONFESSION OF ST. PATRICK is a very simple document about how
he planned to serve God and a few of the trials and sufferings he
went through. From what St. Patrick writes, we see that in his
lifetime he did not have the universal glory that surrounds him
today. He apparently did miracles and many people had great
respect for him, but he still had difficulties with bishops and
church people, and there was controversy over whether he was
doing things the way he should be doing them. This shows us that
even those who later become quite glorious have to go
throughin their own lifetimesthe same struggles that
each one of us must go through; and it's not seen until the end
whether a person even saves his soul.
It is extremely important that we look at St. Patrick, not
from the point of view of glory in the eyes of men, but as he is:
that is, spirituallyhis spiritual worth. It is of
absolutely no significance that today everybody wears green on
his day. When I was going to school, you had to do something to
anyone who didn't wear greentie him up or something. It was
obvious that those who did this had no idea of what St. Patrick
meant, or what kind of Orthodox saint he was; it was just that
the general opinion had been formed in society that he was very
important. Gradually he is deprived of all religious meaning, and
in the end the honoring of his memory becomes something close to
superstition, some kind of a totally meaningless ritual. Of
course, this is not what we should look at St. Patrick for. He
was a burning apostle of Christ, and because he was close to God,
and because God chose him, he was able to convert the whole of
Ireland's people.
All of us are very inspired by lives like his, and this makes
one want to do something oneself. What can one do? The
inexperienced convert gets the idea: "Oh! I'll go to Ireland
and do something." Of course, it will not work out. It will
not be like St. Patrick because it could only be done once. In a
small way it is possible to imitate him, but in general such
literal imitations do not work out. We should look to lives like
that of St. Patrick for some kind of inspiration or guidance as
to what we can do ourselves in our own conditions.
What is realistic? What can we do to be burning with that same
apostleship in the conditions we have today? We look around, and
we see that there does not seem to be too much of the inspiring
phenomena of St. Patrick's era: whole countries being converted,
great monastic revivals, great movements towards Orthodoxy. On
the contrary, we look around and see things which may very easily
make us discouraged. One asks why there are no great apostles
like St. Patrick today. Of course, it is very realistic
historically. There was an age of apostles, there was an age when
whole peoples were unconverted and apostles were sent out to
them. Today, virtually the whole world has heard about Christ,
and there are very few totally pagan peoples left who are not
getting the Word preached to them. In Africa, as we continue to
hear, the Orthodox Gospel is being preached to those wild tribes,
from one country to the next, in East and Central Africa. But in
most places, the peoples of the world have become rather weary,
tired, worn out people who once heard of Christianity and have
now got bored with it. It is very difficult to inspire oneself
with that. Here and there are a few converts who find that
Christianity is something fresh, that it is not the same as the
ordinary idea of it. Nevertheless, not too much is very inspiring
when you look around the world, from the point of view of
Orthodoxy.
2. THE CONDITIONS OF MODERN LIFE
There are, of course, definite reasons for this. The
conditions of the world today are quite different from what they
were in the past. The whole phenomenon of the apostasy, of the
falling away from the truth, means that people do not know how to
accept the Gospel freshly. They have already heard about it and
have been inoculated against it. Therefore, very few of
themwhen they hear the message of Orthodoxycome.
Another thing in the air today that is different from earlier
times is this "Mickey Mouse" atmosphere. It is the lack
of seriousness that one sees in the air, in just everyday
customs. For example, when people part, they say, "Take it
easy"the sort of thing that indicates: "Relax,
take it easy, there's nothing important going on. Just go along
with whatever happens." We used to say things like:
"God be with you." "Goodbye" even comes from
the word "God".
The young people of today are very much absorbed in the whole
fantasy world of television. "Mickey Mouse's" place is
even called Disneyland, Disney World. Our whole spiritual and
sober outlook is affected by thiseven religious views.
There is a very sincere fundamentalist Protestant in Florida who
has a big parcel of land right next to Disney World, and who is
going to make a replica of the Temple of Jerusalem, in order to
attract the people going to Disney World to come over there for a
spiritual thing, on the same level. They'll be saying "ah!
" and "ooh! "It will be the same thing as
all the fairy castles they saw in Disney World. This whole
atmospherethis unreal, movie-type atmosphere is very much
in, not only the air, but our very homes. It affects the whole
seriousness of life, the way children are brought upthough
children are obviously not brought up anymore. The whole idea of
bringing them up, of raising them in a certain mold, is gone now.
They just raise themselves, go into whatever influences are
around, and the result is something very unserious. This is the
chief reason why, when young people become independent, so many
of them simply go crazy and get involved with various wild
religions and drugs, why they run into crime and all kinds of mad
things. In childhood they never had down-to-earth contact, either
with spiritual life or simply with the seriousness of living from
one day to the next. That is one of the chief things that makes
our times different and much more difficult for spiritual
efforts.
Another thing is all the modern conveniences which surround us
and which, without a doubt, depersonalize and cause people to be
less concerned for each other, more concerned about things,
gadgets. The very idea of the telephone means that you can
instantly have contact with someone for the sake of a
messagenothing personal about it. If you have to go to
great lengths to get to him, your soul is different than it would
be if you just had to dial a number. All this makes our times
different and very unfavorable to any kind of spiritual activity
such as apostleship, missionary activity, leading just an
ordinary spiritual life, monastic life and the rest.
Something else also is in our air which we Orthodox Christians
have to be mindful of, and that is the weight of tradition. If we
accept all that the Church hands down to us simply as something
already accomplished, something given to us without our effort,
as if it is just there and we can take it for grantedthis
already deadens us spiritually, because everything that is high
must be fought for, must be struggled for. That is one reason why
modern conveniences only depersonalize. The whole effort to make
everything more convenient takes away the element of struggle,
which is the fabric, the fiber of life.
With all these things in view, the whole of modern life
becomes extremely oppressive. For a long time now, as far back as
William Butler Yeats, seventy-five years ago or so, everything in
the modern age had been accomplished and done, all the seeds had
been sown. The twentieth century can add almost nothing of its
own. It has only put into effect that which has already been sown
in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. The result was that
there was nothing more to do. Everything is done, it's hopeless.
As William Butler Yeats, a sensitive Irish poet, expresses it in
his poem The Second Coming:
Turning and turning in the widening gyre
The falcon cannot hear the falconer;
Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold;
Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world,
The blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere
The ceremony of innocence is drowned;
The best lack all conviction, while the worst
Are full of passionate intensity.
Surely some revelation is at hand;
Surely the Second Coming is at hand
The Second Coming! Hardly are these words out
When a vast image of Spiritus Mundi
Troubles my sight: somewhere in sands of the desert
A shape with lion body and the head of a man,
A gaze blank and pitiless as the sun,
Is moving its slow thighs, while all about it
Reel shadows of the indignant desert birds.
The darkness drops again; but now I know
That twenty centuries of stony sleep
Were vexed to nightmare by a rocking cradle,
And what rough beast, its hour come round at last,
Slouches toward Bethlehem to be born?
This is a kind of factual view of life: the worst people are
simply immersed in evil deeds and the best people are going
frantic, because there is no more spirituality left, there is
nothing left to strive for, everything is taken away, materialism
is triumphing, there is no hope for the world, and "the
beast slouches toward Bethlehem to be born"the vision
of Antichrist. The world is going hopelessly down and there is no
hope of getting out.
3. THE TIMELESS SPIRITUAL LIFE
All of this is the negative side we see surrounding us today,
and it is a very real part of the atmosphere we breathe every
day. On the other hand, we have the Orthodox Christian
revelation; that is, the revelation of God to His Church. It has
come down to us now these two thousand years, very richly, with
many testimonies of Scriptures and Holy Fathers, giving us a
definite spiritual outlook, a definite spiritual law of life. The
spiritual life and its aim do not change from one time to the
next. In fact, we know that from the very beginning, from the
time when the Gospel was first preached until now, there are
being gathered out of the world citizens of one kingdom, all
going towards the heavenly kingdom. All these citizens will speak
the same language, and know each other, because they have gone
through the one, same Orthodox life, the same spiritual struggle,
according to the laws of spiritual life.
The Holy Fathers spoke about the latter times as times of
great weakness, in which there would not be the great signs which
were performed in the early times of the apostles and in the
desert by the first monks, when thousands of miracles were being
worked, great Fathers were raising people from the dead, many
supernatural events were occurring; and these very Holy Fathers
said that this dazzling age of miracles would fade away, and in
the end there would be almost nothing at all like that. In fact,
those who would be saving themselves would seem totally
indistinguishable from everybody else, except that they would
somehow keep alive the struggle against all these temptations.
Just keeping alive the spark of the true Christian Faith, without
making miracles without doing anything out of the ordinary, would
already make them, if they endured to the end, as great as or
even higher than those great Fathers who worked miracles.
Therefore, in our times, it seems that outward activity for
Orthodox Christians is greatly limited in comparison with past
times. It seems that way. Still, the inward spiritual activity
must be just as possible for those who are willing to struggle.
And, in fact, we look around us and we see rather spectacular
examples in our century: St. John of Kronstadt, who worked
thousands of miracles, probably more miracles than anyone in the
history of the Church; St. Nectarios in Greece, a very humble
person, in complete disgrace as a bishop, but a wonder-worker
especially after his death; and our own Archbishop John [Saint
John of San Francisco, glorified in 1994], who lived and actually
walked our very soil and passed within forty miles of here many
times, undoubtedly blessing all this area, especially with the
icon of the Kursk Mother of God. And so it's obvious, in looking
at these people and realizing they are spiritual giants, that it
is possible to do something even in our evil times.
4. AWARENESS
This brings us to some of the practical considerations
concerning the qualities needed for being spiritually creative
and fruitful. There are a few important things which come to
mind. One thing is that we must see things the way they are; that
is, not go off blind, acting blindly without knowing what's going
on in the world. We must be aware that there is such a thing as
apostasy, that there are many different kinds of people who call
themselves Christians, that they are acting in different ways and
some of them are definitely in conflict with each other and with
us, and that it can't be that all of them are right and are on
the right path. We can see historically how many different kinds
of errors, wrong views, wrong kinds of actions got mixed in with
Christian faith. We see the frightful modern revolutionary
movement; that is, the movement totally away from religion,
aiming towards a great world empire of atheism, a foreshadowing
of which is seen in Communism. This is not just among the
unbelievers or among those who don't believe in the Orthodox way,
but even among Orthodox people. We look around and see that many
Orthodox people are simply, totally worldly and do not think
about the higher side of their Faith. They take it for granted.
"It's all automatic. That's what has been handed down.
There's always a priest somewhere. If he's not in this town, he's
in the next one. He has sacraments and Holy Communion. We just go
to him and get what we need and that's all.... You go home and
you're satisfied..."
By reading and getting a historical perspective, we see that
in past ages this was not considered enough, even by ordinary
laymen. They were constantly doing things out of the ordinary.
They were getting up very early in the morning. Every village had
daily services. At four or five o'clock in the morning, Matins
would begin. The people woke up and they went to church every
morning, and again to Vespers in the evening. We take many, many
Lives of Saints, and we read how they heard the church bell when
they were children. If the child was very zealous for God, he
would be the first one up in the morning and he would wake the
parents up and get them ready for church. If the father could not
go because he had to work in the fields, the child would get the
mother up and they would go to church. Sometimes he went by
himself. The whole atmosphere was penetrated with churchliness.
And now, we see worldliness. Very seldom can one find a place
where even daily services are celebrated in the world. People
have grown unaccustomed to the idea that there is supposed to be
an everyday church, everyday church services.
This, then, is one of the very great things which we see in
front of us: this worldly attitude of people who are themselves
in the Church. We must look at it realistically and see it the
way it is: apostasy, error, evil, demonic activity and
worldliness such as never before in the history of the world.
These things are all anti-spiritual, anti-Orthodox. They lead
down; and if anyone follows these paths, they do not lead one to
salvation.
Then, once having done thisthat is, having looked at
things the way they are and been realistic about themone
must learn to fight on the right battlefields. The whole
spiritual life is struggle. One must learn to know where one must
fight, what one must do. This is extremely important, because it
is very easy in the beginning stage to go totally off, by picking
up and reading a book that talks about spirituality, hesychasm,
and so on.
5. IMITATION SPIRITUALITY
Bishop Theophan the Recluse [+1894], when quoting some of the
Holy Fathers, deliberately omitted many of the passages which
dealt with the physical sides of prayer. He did this knowing
thateven in his time, the 19th centurymany people
would take those physical aspects as the end and begin imitating
without getting the essence. Therefore he just left those
writings out of his published works. Now, however, many of them
are being published in English and you can read how you are
supposed to sit on a stool with your head down, etc. People begin
to imitate; they begin to think "this is it! "and
it is a matter of fact that if you fast for a long time and do
certain exercises, you begin to have all kinds of things happen
to you. But that is not spiritual life. It is almost guaranteed,
on the contrary, that it is the activity of demons. The spiritual
life is much more serious, much more down-to-earth, and therefore
that is not the place where you are supposed to find it first of
all.
Usually one can spot people who are not serious and are
imitating. We even have a story from the early history of our
brotherhood.... In San Francisco there was one who got on fire
with the idea of the Jesus Prayer. He began adding prayer to
prayer, and he finally came to, in the morning, 5,000. Right in
the middle of the world, in the middle of the city, in the
morning, before doing anything else, before eating, he was able
to say 5,000 Jesus Prayers on the balcony, and he felt
wonderfully refreshed and inspired. It happened one morning that
somebody else came out right underneath the balcony and began
busying himself and doing something while this person was saying
his last thousand, and it so happened that this person was so put
out by this that he ended up by throwing dishes at him! How can
you deal with a person occupying himself with the spiritual life,
with the Jesus Prayer, when all of a sudden, while he is saying
it, he is able to start throwing dishes?
This means that inside of him the passions were free, because
he had some kind of deceived idea or opinion that he knew was
right for himself spiritually. He acted according to his
opinion, but not soberly, not according to knowledge; and when
the opportunity came, the passions came out. In this case
it is more profitable not to say those 5,000 Jesus
Prayers, but to do something else that is spiritual.
This, then, is not where we should be fighting the
battle. We should begin fighting the battle right on the
level of awareness, by being aware that we are surrounded by
worldly forces. We must fight them by keeping our minds
constantly up rather than down; that is, having in mind heavenly
things. (I will explain shortly what is involved in this).
For all practical purposes, in our times this means that we will
have to be a little crazy; that is, we will not be in step with
what ordinary church people are doing. We will be considered a
little, at least a little, out of the ordinary, or even
crazy. This is an absolutely essential thing. I'll
come back to this theme.
6. LOOKING UPWARD
The Holy Scriptures, the writings of the Holy Fathers, the
examples of Saint's lives, the services of the Churchall
these things have to do, not with worldliness in our daily life,
but with conducting us to heaven. By looking above to these
things, we are enabled to have zeal; that is, to see that there
is something above this routine of worldliness, which is very
boring, discouraging, and leads nowhere. But these higher
thingsthese services, tales of people who have come back
from the dead, Lives of Saints, writings of the Holy Fathers,
Holy Scriptures, the interpretations of the Holy Fathers on
passages of Scripture, which are very profound
sometimesthese things always make us very zealous, if we
have a spark of love for God within ourselves. We want ourselves
to be living in such a state and to be going to heaven. But this
zeal, by itself, must be of such a kind that it does not
come just in a spurt and then eventually fade away. It must be of
such a kind that it will last. This means the zeal must be
tempered by something deeper, and that something deeper is what
St. Seraphim calls determination; that is, zeal
that is constant and keeps goinga sort of constant point
for your whole life. It keeps you going even when you're
discouraged, because you see that there is something above
towards which you are striving, and which does not depend upon
your moods or your opinions. It is something which must be your
constant possession. It is your determination to get to heaven.
And this determination, or rather this zeal which becomes
determination, must be constant, so that it will not go up and
down and burn out.
In everything that happens, we must look at the higher side,
that is, the spiritual side; because if we are sometimes looking
at the higher side and sometimes at the lower side, we will be up
and down. And the lower side is so powerful, operating even
through what we saw in the life of St. Patrick in the golden age
of Christianity: even through bishops, through those who are
supposed to be the very ones leading the flock to heaven. They
can be contrary, because they are human beings also. They can be
actually discouraging, keeping people away from that goal in our
times, of course, it is even worse.
Therefore, if we are sometimes looking above and sometimes
below, if we are going one foot forward, one foot back, and then
one foot forward and two feet back, we will simply not get to the
gate of heaven. We must be at all times where we are in some way
looking at the spiritual reality. I have an interesting quote
from Abba Dorotheos of Gaza which we read just recently in
church, and which gives a little hint about this. He says:
"It is good, O brethren, as I always tell you, to place your
hope for every deed upon God, and to say nothing happens without
the will of God. Of course, God knew that this was good and
useful and profitable, and therefore He did it, even though this
matter also had some outward cause. For example, I could say that
inasmuch as I ate food with pilgrims and forced myself a little
in order to play the host to them, (that is, he overate)
therefore my stomach was weighed down, and there was a numbness
caused in my feet, and from this I became ill. I could also cite
various other reasons for one who seeks them. For one who seeks
them there is no lack of them. But the most sure and profitable
thing is to say: in truth, God knew that this would be more
profitable for my soul, and therefore it happened in this way.
For out of everything which God creates, there is nothing of
which it can be said that it is not good. For in the beginning He
created all, and behold, they were all very good. And so no one
should grieve over what happens, but in everything he should
place his hope in God's Providence, and be at ease."*
7. FINDING THE REAL CAUSES
There is a very interesting book from the same period of Abba
Dorotheos (the sixth century) by St. Gregory of Tours, History
of the Franks, which is all about the life at the court of
that time and religious people. There are very many interesting
lives of Saints in it, as well as the lives of the kings. The
kings of that time were particularly unedifying spectacles. They
were constantly poisoning each other. The women were even
worse.... There was one Brunehild and her sister Fredegund. They
were trying to get their sons and grandsons on the throne, and
what they didn't do to get them there! They were dragging people
by horse's tails and killing them off, and lying and cheating and
fantastic thingsvery uninspiring. But this bishop, St.
Gregory, was there and was writing a history of this people,
writing in such a way that it actually comes out very inspiring.
Behind everything there is a meaning. St. Gregory is constantly
on the lookout for comets, earthquakes, and such things. When a
king does something wrong, there is an earthquake nearby, or if
he goes and kills a person or a whole village unjustly, then
there is a famine: and St. Gregory always sees that God is
looking out. There is always something spiritual whenever
something happensa comet is seen, the king dies, etc. There
is always a connection between what happens in the world and the
moral state of the people. Even when the moral state is very bad,
all the constant earthquakes and famines and everything else
remind us that it is the wrong way to behave, and inspire people
to behave correctly. Nowadays, the historians say that this is a
horribly outmoded way of looking at things, that it is very
"quaint" and "naive" and unsophisticated, and
that of course nobody can think like that now. They think it's
very cute, in fact, to look at this after all these centuries and
to see how people used to think. "But of course," they
say, "we serious historians are looking for the real
causes." By real causes they mean what a person ate and what
it caused his feet to do and so forth. The Christian point of
view, however, is that these are not the real causes, but the
secondary causes. The real cause is the soul and God: whatever
God is doing and whatever the soul is doing. These two things
actualize the whole of history, and all the external
eventswhat treaty was signed, or the economic reasons for
the discontent of the masses, and so forthare totally
secondary. In fact, if you look at modern history, at the whole
revolutionary movement, it is obvious that it is not the
economics that is the governing factor, but various ideas which
get into people's souls about actually building paradise on
earth. Once that idea gets there, then fantastic things are done,
because this is a spiritual thing. Even though it is from the
devil, it is on a spiritual level, and that is where actual
history is made; all the external things mean nothing.
Thus St. Gregory is actually looking at history in the correct
way, because he sees that there is a first cause, which is what
God does in history and how the soul reacts to it, and that the
secondary cause is ordinary events. Therefore, whenever he sees
some great event like a comet or an eclipse, he tries to give it
meaning. At one point, in telling of a strange sign that was seen
in the sky over Gaul, he says in all simplicity, "I have no
idea what all this meant."** Of course, from the scientific
point of view we know that we can predict these things, that they
are caused by the shadow of the moon and so forth; but from St.
Gregory's point of view, why does God choose to frighten us like
this? What is the moral meaning of it? He was constantly looking above,
not below.
8. CONSTANT CHEERFULNESS
Our whole modern outlook is to look below to find the causes,
the secondary causes. The whole Christian outlook is to look
above, and that is why such people as St. Gregory as we can see
by reading their writings and their livesare constantly
cheerful. This does not mean that they are overly happy, but
rather that they are in a state of deep happiness, because they
are constantly looking above and keeping in mind, with
determination and constancy, to get to a certain place, which is
heaven, and thus they see all the details in the world in that
light. If what they see has to do with evil, with the nets of
demons, with worldliness, with boredom, with discouragement, or
just with ordinary details of living, all that is secondary and
is never allowed to be first. In fact, we are told by the Holy
Fathers that we are supposed to see in everything something for
our salvation. If you can do that, you can be saved.
In a pedestrian way, you can look at something like a printing
press which does not operate. You are standing around and
enjoying yourself, watching nice, clean, good pages come out
printed, which gives a very nice sense of satisfaction, and you
are dreaming of missionary activity, of spreading more copies
around to a lot of different countries. But in a while it begins
to torture you, it begins to shoot pages right and left. The
pages begin to stick and to tear each other on top. You see that
all those extra copies you made are vanishing, destroying each
other, and in the end you are so tense that all you can do is
sort of stand there and say the Jesus Prayer as you try to make
everything come out all right. Although that does not fill one
with a sense of satisfaction (as would watching the nice, clean
copies come out automatically), spiritually it probably does a
great deal more, because it makes you tense and gives you the
chance to struggle. But if instead of that you just get so
discouraged that you smash the machine, then you have lost the
battle. The battle is not how many copies per hour come out: the
battle is what your soul is doing. If your soul can be saving
itself and producing words which can save others, all the better;
but if you are producing words which can save others and are all
the time destroying your own soul, it's not so good.
9. DAILY SPIRITUAL INJECTIONS
Again, in everything one must be looking upward, and not
downward, at the kingdom of heaven and not down at the details of
earthly life. That is, the details of earthly life must be
second, and this looking upward must be with zeal, determination
and constancy. Constancy is something which is worked out by a
spiritual regime based upon wisdom handed down from the Holy
Fathersnot mere obedience to tradition for tradition's
sake, but rather a conscious assimilation of what wise men in God
have seen and written down. On the outward side, this constancy
is worked out by a little prayer, and we have this basic little
prayer in the church services which have come down to us. Of
course in different places they are performed according to one's
strength, more or less.
Constancy involves also a regular reading of spiritual texts,
for example at mealtime, because we must be constantly injected
with other-worldliness. This means constantly nourishing
ourselves with these texts, whether in services or in reading, in
order to fight against the other side, against the worldliness
that constantly gnaws at us. If for just one day we stop these
other-worldly "injections," it is obvious that
worldliness starts taking over. When we go without them for one
day, worldliness invadestwo days, much more. We find that
soon we think more and more in a worldly way, the more we allow
ourselves to be exposed to that way of thinking and the less we
expose ourselves to other-worldly thinking.
These injectionsdaily injections of heavenly
foodare the outward side, and the inward side is what is
called spiritual life. Spiritual life does not mean being in the
clouds and saying the Jesus Prayer or going through various
motions. It means discovering the laws of this spiritual life as
they apply to one in one's own position, one's situation. This
comes over the years by attentive reading of the Holy Fathers
with a notebook, writing down those passages which seem most
significant to us, studying them, finding how they apply to us,
and, if need be, revising earlier views of them as we get a
little deeper into them, finding what one Father says about
something, what a second Father says about the same thing, and so
on. There is no encyclopedia that will give you that. You cannot
decide you want to find all about some one subject and begin
reading the Holy Fathers. There are a few indexes in the writings
of the Fathers, but you cannot simply go at spiritual life that
way. You have to go at it a little bit at a time, taking the
teaching in as you are able to absorb it, going back over the
same texts in later years, reabsorbing them, getting more, and
gradually getting to find out how these spiritual laws apply to
you. As a person does that, he discovers that every time he reads
the same Holy Father he finds new things. He always goes deeper
into it.
10. PRESERVING ZEAL
If one has all this in mind, having the possibility of
constant spiritual nourishment, then one must say that it is not
true that the whole church situation is hopeless today and that
one can do nothing. In fact, the possible activities for today
are quite surprising and unexpected. What might come out, we
don't know, but there are all kinds of possibilities. We should
always learn to expect what is the unexpected, to be prepared for
something that might not have been the same way just a little
while ago, but that is still within the possibility of true
Christianity. This is only done by looking up and not down. We
have right in front of us an example of somebody who was like
that constantly, and that's our Archbishop John. It is obvious
that he was constantly in a different world. He himself, I recall
once, gave a sermon on the spiritual life, the mystical life, in
which he said: "We have no such thing as some of the later
saints of the Latin Church who were sort of up in the
cloudssome kind of a realm of sweetness and light and pink
cloudsthat's prelest. All of our sanctity is based
upon having your feet straight on the ground, and, while being of
the earth, constantly having the mind lifted upward." It's
obvious that Archbishop John was himself like that. He would come
from time to time to our shop next to the Cathedral [in San
Francisco], and would always have something new and inspiring to
say. He would come with a little portfolio, and would open it up
and say, "Look! Here is a picture of St. Alban and here is
his Life." He had found it somewhere. He was collecting
these things: the lives of Rumanian saints and all kinds of
different things which were very inspiring and had nothing to do
with everyday business or the administration of the diocese. In
fact, some said he was a bad administrator, but I don't know. I
doubt it, because I know that whenever anyone wrote him a letter,
that person always got a reply back in the language he wrote it
in, within a very short time; therefore, when it came to things
like that, he was very, very careful. But the first thing he was
careful about was being constantly in the other world, constantly
inspired and constantly living by that. The opposite of this is
to make even the Church into some kind of business, to be looking
at only the administrative side or the economic side or the
lower, worldly side. If you do that long enough, you will lose
the spark, you will lose the higher side. Archbishop John gave us
the example of constantly looking up, constantly thinking of the
higher things. In the end, the deeper you get into this, the more
you see that there is nothing else possible. If you are an
Orthodox Christian, you can do this and have people call you
crazy or say that you are a little bit touched, or something like
that; but still you have your own lifeyou lead it and you
get to heaven. The alternative is to be bogged down in this
boring world, which is totally overrun by machines and
conveniences and opinions. You would be surprised at how these,
opinions about what is right and what is wrong, what is the way
to act and so forth, have no contact with reality. It even
happens that there is a certain opinion in the airI'd say
it is universal among church people if they ever stopped to think
about itthat of course, when you come to church you must be
warm, because you cannot think about church services and prepare
yourself for Communion when you have to think about cold feet.
People tell us this. "It's a very great draw back,"
they say. "You cannot go and have cold feet and expect to
have any spirituality come out." This happens to be an
opinion, and it's totally off. The Holy Fathers have been living
throughout the centuries in all kinds of conditions; and, though
there is no deliberate plot of torturing oneself with cold
feetstill, this is something which helps to make one a
little more sober about the spiritual life, perhaps to help one
to appreciate what one has, and not to just take for granted that
one is going to be comfortable and cozy and that's it. In our
time, if one undertakes anything in the Church, and does not have
in mind to be looking constantly to the heavenly realm, one will
lose the spark of zeal, the interest in doing spiritual things,
and will become worldly. Worldly means dead, spiritually dead.
11. THE MIND OF THE FATHERS
It is very difficult in our times to be looking to heaven,
because of all the weight, the dead weight of worldliness which
lies upon us. If one applies oneself constantly, however, one can
begin to do it. Even with a little bit of struggle, if applied
constantly, one begins to form for oneself a whole different
viewpoint, a whole different way of looking at life, a whole
different possibility for action. Any kind of spiritual activity
that is to come out of our world today, any kind of Orthodox
missionary activity, apostleship, etc., must be on the basis of
such a view of things. It must be based on looking first at what
God wants, first at what is the higher side, first at what the
Holy Fathers think, and only then looking down at the practical
means one has to use, at money problems, and even at things like
sicknesses, because they are all sent for our good, and we have
to find how to bring the good out of them. If one does not do
that, one is weighed down, especially in our days. If a person is
in a place of leadership, such as a priest in a parish, and if he
is going to look back and look first at the people, he will see
that 99% of them are going to drag him down, because they have
their problems and passions, confessions weigh him down, and so
on. If this side becomes too important for him, it simply drags
him back and he cannot lead them to heaven. Of course, a pastor
or any kind of spiritual leader must be leading to heaven first
himself and then the others, by looking first to the other world.
We don't have to imagine what that other world is like or have
opinions about it, because we have the whole treasurymuch
of which is now available in Englishof the writings of the
Holy Fathers. Recently we have had such great fathers as Bishop
Ignatius Brianchininov (+1867), who was one of the sharpest ones
to speak about the apostasy, and also one of the greatest ones to
speak about the Holy Fathers. We must get into their language,
into their way of looking at things, because that is
Orthodoxy. Orthodoxy, of course, does not change from one day
to the next, or from one century to the next. Looking at the
Protestant and Roman Catholic world, we can see that certain
spiritual writings get out of date. Sometimes they come back into
fashion again, sometimes they go out. It is obvious that they are
bound up with worldly things, which appeal to people at one time,
or rather to the spirit of the times. This is not so with our
Orthodox holy writings. Once we get into the whole Orthodox
Christian outlookthe simply Christian outlookwhich
has been handed down from Christ and the apostles to our times,
then everything becomes contemporary. You read the words of
someone like St. Macarius, who lived in the deserts of Egypt in
the 6th century, and he's speaking to you now. His conditions are
a little different, but he's speaking right to you now, in the
same language; he's going to the same place, he's using the same
mind, he has the same temptations and failings, and there's
nothing different about him. It's the same with all the other
fathers from that time down to our century, like St. John of
Kronstadt (+1908). They all speak the same language, one kind of
language, the language of spiritual life, which we must get into.
When we do that, we can save ourselves; and, as St. Seraphim
says, "When you acquire the Spirit of Peace, the Holy
Spirit, you can save thousands around you." It is not for us
to calculate whether thousands around us will be saved. It is
only for us to acquire the Holy Spirit, and what God will do with
that is His doing.
We have yet to expect in our times many surprising things, so
we should not have the opinion that it is too late to do
anything, everything is stuck, nobody cares, the world is
collapsing.... All that is opinion, and opinion is the first
stage of prelest (deception). Therefore we should free
ourselves from being stuck in opinions, and should look at things
freshly, i.e., according to the spiritual life. Father
Nicholas Deputatov, who is obviously one who has much love for
the Holy Fathers, has read their writings, underlined them and
written them out in books. He says: When I get in a very low
mood, very discouraged and despondent, then I open one of my
notebooks, and I begin to read something that inspired me. It is
almost guaranteed that when I read something which once inspired
me, I will again become inspired, because it's my own soul that
was at one time being inspired, and now I see that it was
something which inspired me then and can nourish me now also. So
it's like an automatic inspiration, to open up something which
inspired me before.
Thus, when we think of someone like St. Patrick, our attitude
should not be merely: "Aha, that was a long time ago, that
was inspiring; but nowwell, what's the use?" On the
contrary, in the activity of St. Patrick we should see the
activity of a contemporary person, of a soul who was burning with
zeal and love for God. He has gone to that country where we are
to be citizens, if only we will strive. We are all of the same
nationality, the Christian race. St. Patrick's life should be for
us a contemporary thing, something which applies to us today.
Whatever inspiration we can take from it, is for us right now.
And however much fruit this bears, depends on how much we love
God and how much opportunity there is. The inspiration is ours
for free.
Endnotes
* The Counsels of Abba Dorotheos, chapter
12 (translated from the Russian version by Fr. Seraphim Rose).
** The History of the Franks, V, 23.
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