The Place of Holy Relics
in the Orthodox Church ;
St. Justin Popovich
Without doubt, matter is represented in the human body in a manner which
is most puzzling, most mysterious, and most complex.
The brain: What wondrous
mysteries pass between its physical and spiritual parts! How vast is the
experience of the human race. In no manner can one ever fully comprehend or
grasp these mysteries. Indeed, little of this is accessible to the human senses
or intellectual investigation. So it is also with the heart of man, formed as
it is entirely and solely from cosmic mysteries. So formed, too, are every
cell, every molecule, every atom. Everyone and all are set on their mystical
path toward God, toward the God-Man. Inasmuch as it was created by God, the
Logos, matter possesses this same theocentricity. Moreover, by His advent into
our earthly world, by His all-embracing condescension as God and Man for the
redemption of the world, the Lord Christ clearly demonstrated that not only the
soul, but matter also was created by God and for God, and that He is God and
Man; and for it, matter, He is all and everything in the same manner as for the
soul. Being created by God, the Logos, matter is, in its innermost core,
God-longing and Christ-longing.
The most obvious proof of this is the fact that God the Word has become
Incarnate, has become man (St. John 1:14). By His Incarnation, matter has been
magnified with Divine glory and has entered into the grace- and
virtue-bestowing, ascetic aim of deification, or union with Christ. God has
become flesh, has become human, so that the entire man, the entire body, might
be filled with God and with His miracle-working forces and powers. In the
God-Man, the Lord Christ, and His Body, all matter has been set on a path
toward Christ —the path of deification, transfiguration, sanctification,
resurrection, and ascent to an eternal glory surpassing that of the Cherubim.
And all of this takes place and will continue to take place through the Divine
and human Body of the Church, which is truly the God-Man Christ in the total
fullness of His Divine and Human Person, the fullness "that fills all in
all" (Ephesians 1:23). Through its Divine and human existence in the
Church, the human body, as matter, as substance, is sanctified by the Holy
Spirit and in this way participates in the life of the Trinity. Matter thus
attains its transcendent, divine meaning and goal, its eternal blessedness and
its immortal joy in the God-Man.
The holiness of the Saints—both the holiness of their souls and of their
bodies—derives from their zealous grace- and virtue-bestowing lives in the Body
of the Church of Christ, of the God-Man. In this sense, holiness completely
envelopes the human person—the entire soul and body and all that enters into
the mystical composition of the human body. The holiness of the Saints does not
hold forth only in their souls, but it necessarily extends to their bodies; so
it is that both the body and the soul of a saint are sanctified. Thus we, in
piously venerating the Saints, also venerate the entire person, in this manner
not separating the holy soul from the holy body. Our pious veneration of the
Saints' relics is a natural part of our pious respect for and prayerful
entreaty to the Saints. All of this constitutes one indivisible ascetic act,
just as the soul and body constitute the single, indivisible person of the
Saint. Clearly, during his life on the earth, the Saint, by a continuous and
singular grace- and virtue-bestowing synergy of soul and body, attains to the
sanctification of his person, filling both the soul and body with the grace of
the Holy Spirit and so transforming them into vessels of the holy mysteries and
holy virtues. It is completely natural, again, to show pious reverence both to
the former and to the latter, both to soul and body, both of them holy vessels
of God's grace. When the charismatic power of Christ issues forth, it makes
Grace-filled all the constituent parts of the human person and the person in
his entirety. By unceasing enactment of the ascetic efforts set forth in the
Gospels, Saints gradually fill themselves with the Holy Spirit, so that their
sacred bodies, according to the word of the holy Apostle, become temples of the
Holy Spirit (I Corinthians 6:19; 3:17), Christ dwelling by faith in their
hearts (Ephesians 3:17) and by fruitful love also fulfilling the commandments
of God the Father.
Establishing themselves in the Holy Spirit through
grace-bestowing ascetic labors, the Saints participate in the life of the
Trinity, becoming sons of the Holy Trinity, temples of the Living God (II
Corinthians 6:16); their whole lives thus flow from the Father, through the
Son, in the Holy Spirit. By piously venerating the holy relics of the Saints,
the Church reveres them as temples of the Holy Spirit, temples of the Living
God, in which God dwells by Grace even after the earthly death of the Saints.
And by His most wise and good Will, God creates miracles in and through these
relics. Moreover, the miracles which derive from the holy relics witness also
to the fact that their pious veneration by the people is pleasing to God.
The pious veneration of holy relics, based on their miraculous nature,
originated from Divine Revelation. Even in the Old Testament God deigned to
celebrate with miracles the holy relics of certain of those who were
well-pleasing to Him. Thus, by the touch of the holy relics of the Prophet
Elisea, a dead man was resurrected. The tomb and bones of this Prophet, who had
prophesied to Jeroboam the destruction of idolatrous altars, were greatly
revered in Judea. The Patriarch Joseph also left a testament to the sons of
Israel to preserve his bones in Egypt and, during their exodus, to carry them
to the promised land (Genesis 50:25).
The New Testament raised the human body to the sublime and divine heights,
endowing it with a glory which the Cherubim and Seraphim do not possess. The
Good News of the New Testament concerning the body—the significance and goal of
the human body—is that, together with the soul, it achieves and inherits
immortal life in Divine eternity. The Lord Christ has come to deify, to make
Christ-like, the entire man, that is, the soul and body, and this by the
resurrection, insuring thereby victory over death and eternal life. No one ever
elevated the human body as did the Lord Christ by His bodily resurrection, the
ascension of His body into heaven, and its eternal session at the right hand of
God the Father. In this way, the Resurrected Christ extended the promise of
resurrection to the nature of the human body—"having made for all flesh a
path to eternal life." Thus man now knows that the body is created for
eternity through union with the God-Man and that his divine work on earth is to
struggle, with the soul, for eternal life; to struggle, with all those means
that convey grace and virtue, to make himself grace-filled, fulfilled by Divine
grace, and created anew as the temple of the Holy Spirit, the temple of the
Living God.
Bearing in mind that this New Testamental notion of the human body has
been achieved and realized in the persons of the Saints, Christians show a
pious veneration for the bodies of the Saints, towards holy relics, the temples
of the Holy Spirit, Who by God's grace abides within them. But Holy Revelation
indicates that by God's immeasurable love for man, the Holy Spirit abides
through His grace not only in the bodies of the Saints, but also in their
clothing. So it is that the handkerchiefs of the holy apostle Paul healed the
ill and expelled unclean spirits (Acts 19:12). With his mantle the Prophet
Elias struck the water, separating the waters of the Jordan, and along the dry
bed of the river crossed the Jordan with his disciple Elisea (IV Kings 2:8).
The prophet Elisea did the very same thing, himself, with the same mantle,
after the taking-up of Elias into heaven (IV Kings 2:14). All this has its
verification and source in the Divine power that rested in the garments of the
Savior, which encompassed His most pure and Divine body. Moreover, by His
inexpressible love for man, the Divine Lord allows the servants of His Divinity
to work miracles not only through their bodies and clothing, but even with the
shadow of their bodies, which is evident in an occurrence with the holy apostle
Peter: his shadow healed an ill man and expelled unclean spirits (Acts
5:15-16).
The eternal good news of Holy Revelation about sacred relics and their
pious veneration is proved, and is continually being proved, by Holy Tradition
from Apostolic times to the present day. Innumerable are the sacred relics of
the holy Chosen Ones of God throughout the Orthodox world. Their miracles are
innumerable. The pious veneration of these relics by Orthodox Christians is
everywhere to be found. And without doubt this is because the holy relics,
through their miracles, incite the Orthodox toward their pious veneration. From
the very beginning, in Apostolic times, Christians piously preserved the
honored relics of the Holy Forerunner and the holy Apostles, so that these
could be preserved even for us. As well, during the times of persecution the
sacred remains of the bodies of the holy Martyrs were taken away by Christians
and hidden in their homes. From that time until now, the sacred relics of the
holy Chosen Ones of God have, by their miracles, poured forth the immortal joy
of our faith into the hearts of Orthodox Christians. The proofs concerning this
are countless. We shall cite only several.
The way that the holy relics of the Saints were translated and greeted is
in a touching manner described by St. Chrysostomos in a eulogy on St. Ignatios:
"You, inhabitants of Antioch, have sent forth a bishop and received a
martyr; you sent him forth with prayers, and received him back with crowns; and
not only you, but all the cities which lay between. For how do you think that
they behaved when they saw his remains being brought back? What pleasure was
produced! How they rejoiced! With what laudations on all sides did they beset
the crowned one! For as with a noble athlete, who has wrestled down all his
antagonists, and who comes forth with radiant glory from the arena, the
spectators receive him, and do not suffer him to tread the earth, bringing him
home on their shoulders and according him countless praises. So also every city
in turn received this Saint from Rome, and bearing him upon their shoulders as
far as this city, escorted the crowned one with praises, hymning the
champion.... At this time the holy Martyr bestows grace to the very same
cities, establishing them in piety, and from that time to this day he enriches
this city."
Speaking of the miraculous power of holy relics, Saint Ephraim the Syrian
relates the following concerning the holy Martyrs: "Even after death they
act as if alive, healing the sick, expelling demons, and by the power of the
Lord rejecting every evil influence of the demons. This is because the
miraculous grace of the Holy Spirit is always present in the holy relics."
During the finding of the relics of Saints Gervasius and Protasius, St.
Ambrose, in speaking to his listeners, relates this with pious enthusiasm:
"You know—indeed, you have yourselves seen—that many are cleansed from
evil spirits, that very many also, having touched with their hands the robe of
the Saints, are freed from those ailments which oppressed them. You see that
the miracles of old times are renewed, when through the coming of the Lord
Jesus grace was more abundantly shed forth upon the earth, and that many bodies
are healed as it were by the shadow of the holy bodies. How many napkins are
passed about! How many garments, laid upon the holy relics and endowed with the
power of healing, are claimed! All are glad to touch even the outside thread,
and whosoever touches it will be made whole."
Speaking of the miracles produced by holy relics, the blessed Augustine
says: "To what do these miracles witness, but to this faith which preaches
Christ risen in the flesh and ascended with the same flesh into heaven? For the
martyrs themselves were martyrs, that is to say, were witnesses of this
faith.... For this faith they gave their lives, and can now ask these benefits
from the Lord in whose name they were slain. For this faith their extraordinary
constancy was exercised, so that in these miracles great power was manifested
as the result. For if the resurrection of the flesh to eternal life had not
taken place in Christ, and were not to be accomplished in His people, as predicted
by Christ..., why do the martyrs who were slain for this faith which proclaims
the resurrection possess such power? ...These miracles attest this faith which
preaches the resurrection of the flesh unto eternal life."
Saint Damascene, summarizing the life-giving teaching of Holy Scripture
and Holy Tradition concerning the pious veneration of holy relics, preaches in
a Cherubic manner from the altar of his God-bearing and Christ-like soul:
"The Saints have become according to grace that which the Lord Christ is
according to nature. That is, they have become gods according to grace: pure
and living habitations of God. For God says: 'I will dwell in them, walk in
them, and I will be their God' (II Corinthians 6:16; Leviticus 16:12). The Holy
Scriptures likewise say: 'the souls of the righteous are in God's hand, and
death cannot lay hold of them' (Wisdom of Solomon 3:1). For death is rather the
sleep of Saints than their death. Further: 'Precious in the sight of the Lord
is the death of His Saints' (Psalm 119:6). What, then, is more precious than to
be in the hand of God? For God is life and light, and those who are in God's
hand are in life and light. Further, that God dwells even in their bodies in a
spiritual manner the all-divine Apostle attests: 'Know ye not that your bodies
are the temples of the Holy Spirit dwelling in you?' (I Corinthians 3:16). And,
'the Lord is Spirit' (II Corinthians 3:17). Thus, the evangelical truth: 'If
anyone destroy the temple of God, him will God destroy—for the temple of God is
holy, and ye are that temple' (I Corinthians 3:17). Surely, then, we must
ascribe honor to the living temples of God, the living dwelling-places of God.
These, while they lived, stood with boldness before God. The Lord Christ
granted us the relics of the Saints to be fountains of salvation unto us,
pouring forth manifold blessings and abounding in sweetly fragrant oil. Let no
one disbelieve this! For if water burst in the desert from the steep and solid
rock according to God's will (Exodus 17:6), and from the jawbone of an ass to
quench Samson's thirst (Judges 15:14-19), is it then unbelievable that fragrant
oil should spring forth from relics of the holy Martyrs? By no means, at least
to those who know the omnipotence of God and the honor which He accords to His
Saints. According to the Old Testament law, everyone who touched a dead body
was considered impure (Numbers 19:11). However, the Saints are not dead. For
from the time when He Who is Himself Life and the Author of life was counted
among the dead, we do not call those dead who have fallen asleep in the hope of
the resurrection and with faith in Him. For how could a dead body work
miracles? And how, through the holy relics, are demons driven off, diseases
dispelled, the sick made well, the blind restored to sight, lepers cleansed,
temptations and tribulations overcome; and how does every good gift come down
from the Father of lights (St. James 1:17) to those who pray with sure
faith?"
The universal faith of the Church concerning the pious veneration of holy
relics was confirmed by the God-bearing Fathers of the Seventh Ĺ’cumenical Synod
in its decrees: "Our Lord Jesus Christ granted to us the relics of Saints
as a salvation-bearing source which pours forth varied benefits on the infirm.
Consequently, those who presume to abandon the relics of the Martyrs: if they
be hierarchs, let them be deposed; if however monastics or laymen, let them
merely be excommunicated."
....That a pious veneration of the holy relics is a constituent part of
the salvation rendered by the God-Man is also evidenced by the following facts:
from the depths of sacred antiquity, churches were built on the graves and
relics of Saints, and the holy Liturgy is performed only on antimensia, in
which are placed parts of the holy relics. Moreover, the divine service books,
especially the Menaion, are replete with prayers and hymns which refer to the
pious veneration of holy relics....
All in all, the mystery of holy relics is at the heart of the universal
mystery of the New Testament: the incarnation of God. The full mystery of the
human body is explained by the incarnation, the embodiment of God in the
God-Man, the Lord Jesus Christ. For this reason, then, the Gospel message
concerning the body: "The body for the Lord, and the Lord for the
body" (I Corinthians 6:13). And through a human body also the entire
creation, all of matter, received its divine significance, the universal
meaning of the God-Man. By man, who is sanctified in the Church by the holy
mysteries and the holy virtues, the creation and even matter are sanctified,
united to Christ. There accrues to this also a joy—the myrrh-streaming property
of many relics. This wonder of myrrh has been given to the holy relics in order
to indicate that Christians are truly "a sweet-savour of Christ unto
God" (II Corinthians 2:15), sweet-smelling to God and to heaven. The truth
of the Gospel is that the sin of man is a foul odor before God and every sin
pleases the devil. Through the holy mysteries and holy virtues, Christians
become "a sweet-savour of Christ unto God." For this reason, then,
the holy relics of the Saints pour forth myrrh.
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