we said that
the Church is a Hospital, a healing center. It heals man’s sick personality. If
the darkening of the nous is the real illness, then cure consists of the
illumination and livening of the nous.
There is a very telling Church hymn
in which we ask God to resurrect the mortified nous as He resurrected Lazarus.
We chant:
Let us, O faithful, imitate Martha and Mary and send to Lord godly acts
as ambassadors so that He comes to raise our nous, now lying dead in the tomb,
insensitive to negligence, not feeling fear of the Divine, not having the
energy of life, let us cry “see O Lord, and as you resurrected from horrible
captivity your friend Lazarus once, Merciful One, the same way give life to
all, offering your great mercy.
The Three
Types of Christians
The image of a healing center, a
Hospital, helps us see the task of the clerics, which is medical, and the whole
life and objective of the Church.
There are three types of men in the
Church.
The first includes the
psychologically unhealed, namely, those who are baptized, who are potentially
members of the Church, but do not activate the gift of Baptism. Indeed, Baptism
is not sufficient; observing Christ’s commandments is also required.
The second category includes those in
the process of cure, the Christians who struggle to be healed. They see the
passions in themselves; they realize the darkening of the nous and make an effort to be
cured with the means offered by the Orthodox Church.
The third category includes the cured
ones. Here belong the saints, who received the Grace of the Holy Spirit,
cleansed their hearts from the passions, reached the illumination of the nous and the vision of God. The
saints are called deified because they partake of deification. The fact that
they have been cured does not mean that they make no mistakes whatsoever on a
human level, but they have a correct orientation; they know what the Grace of
God is, and they know how to repent. Their nous is rightly directed to God, they have good
self-knowledge, they are aware of the dogmas, and in general they know exactly
the purpose of their existence.
Ways to Cure The Soul
It is now necessary to examine the
ways by which the personality of man is cured. Among other things, this
demonstrates the character and the content of Orthodox asceticism.
The first requirement is correct faith. By faith, we mean
the revealed truth. God revealed Himself to the Prophets, the Apostles, and the
saints. This truth is authentic because it is by Revelation.
Correct faith shows what God is, what
man is, what the purpose of man is, and how he can achieve communion with God.
When faith is adulterated, life is instantly adulterated; man loses his
orientation and is unable to reach his target. What happens is similar to
medical science, the curative treatment of a hospital. If the underlying theory
about a disease is wrong, the cure is also wrong, implying that such a disease
is not cured in this particular hospital.
This is why we Orthodox insist on
safeguarding Revelation. If it is altered, then our salvation is uncertain.
We should view the decisions of the
Ecumenical Councils in this perspective. The teaching that Christ is God is
associated with salvation, since only God can save man. If Christ does not have
two perfect natures, a divine nature and a human nature, our salvation is
impossible. It is the same if God does not have a divine will and a human will.
Therefore, our staying within dogmatic precision is a prerequisite of cure, of
salvation and sanctification.
The second requirement for the
therapy of the soul is awareness
of the illness. This is necessary, because once we know we are ill
we seek a doctor and a cure. Otherwise, we remain in ignorance and illness.
The same holds true of bodily
diseases. Ignorance of the disease leads to death. Knowledge of the disease,
deriving from pain, prompts us to take all necessary measures to obtain a cure.
It is a terrible thing not to know our bodily disease.
One of the greatest sins of our times
is self-love and self-sufficiency. We are contained in ourselves, having the
illusion that we are well, that we need no doctor.
The illusion of health is
the worst hypocrisy.Saint John the Evangelist said: “If we say that we have no
sin, we deceive ourselves, and the truth is not in us” (1 John 1:8).
Obviously, realizing our horrible
condition is not easy. Carnal man cannot know his passions. In fact, he thinks
that life contrary to nature, as experienced after the Fall, is natural. This
is indeed tragic.
However, there are certain ways by which man can come to know himself. Let me report some of them.
One may know his condition through
the energy of holy Grace. What happens with spiritual diseases is identical to
how bodily diseases are detected, by undergoing appropriate examinations, using
X-rays and a tomography. The uncreated Grace of God enters our soul, and then
we see our horrible distorted state and mess. In the beginning of spiritual
life, the vision of the uncreated Light is experienced negatively, that is, as
a fire burning the passions.
Another way of self-knowledge is the
study of Holy Scripture, of patristic works, of the lives of the saints. By
reading these writings, we realize God’s love and philanthropy and how far man
is able to go by the Grace of God and his own personal struggle. We might also
realize our deficiencies and weaknesses.
In this case, study functions as a
spiritual mirror. The asceticism of the saints bothers our conscience, it
throws our inaction away, it invalidates all excuses and leads us to the
observance of Christ’s commandments.
We may say that in realizing our
illness we are helped by our failures in life. When some of our supports are
lifted, when we reach a point of saying, like the Disciples on the road to
Emmaus, “But we trusted that it had been he which should have redeemed Israel”
(Luke 24:21), then we are able to really see Christ and seek the new life He
gives to the world. Personal, family, and social failures bring us to an
impasse. At that point, if we have an inner disposition, a spiritual inspiration,
associated with hope in God, this may lead us to a realization of our spiritual
condition.
Another fine method of comprehending
the illnesses of the soul is by exercising logical prayer. When we repeat with
our lips and our mind the prayer “Lord Jesus Christ, Son of God, have mercy on
me,” the Grace of God will break the outside wall of illusory good self and
reveal our wretchedness.
Because God loves us and is
interested in our salvation, He keeps sending us invitations so that we do not
lose our purpose and destination. He calls one person through Godly despair,
someone else by the illumination of the holy Light, a third one through study,
a fourth one through his encounter with a holy person who has had the
experience of the other life existing in the Church, and through various other
means.
The third requirement for our cure is
to find a therapist. We
search for the proper physician for our bodily diseases, and we should do the
same for spiritual diseases. For the former we first visit the provincial
doctor, then we go to large specialized hospitals, then we consult advanced
specialists, and finally, we visit medical school professors and doctors
abroad. We should exhibit the same, if not more, fervor for the spiritual
diseases tormenting us.
The holy Fathers state in their works
that clerics of all degrees are called healers. In many of his sermons, Saint
Gregory the Theologian refers to this point and calls the clerics healers
because they heal the psychological diseases of the people. He himself asserts
that he refused to shepherd the people and, instead, left for the desert after
his ordination as a presbyter, because he felt he was unworthy of healing the
illnesses of others, not having cured himself yet. It is significant that Saint
Gregory calls the work of Christ’s divine providence therapeutic work and
Christ a therapist of men. He calls the priesthood a therapeutic science and a
therapeutic service. He says characteristically: “We are servants and
collaborators for this therapy.”
The priests’ fundamental task is not
selling tickets to Paradise, but healing, so that when man sees God He becomes
Paradise and not Hell for man. If we examine all the sacraments and sacramental
rites available to the priest from Baptism to Holy Communion, and from
repentance to the funeral service, we will find out that they all presuppose
and aim at man’s therapy. The sacraments are not social events and rituals; the
church rites do not aim at psychological justification and the cultivation of
religious feelings, but at man’s therapy. By viewing the sacraments outside the
therapy of man’s personality, by participating in them without the cleansing of
the heart and the illumination of thenous, we
ignore the deeper purpose of church life.
It is common to hear the excuse that
a proper spiritual father for therapy has not been found. My reply is that most
of us actually need a nurse and a provincial physician, not refined surgery. We
have to begin with the spiritual father close to us, in our parish, in our
town. What is indispensable is to open our heart to God, to freely expose our
wounds and request His Grace. If God sees that we need a better and “more
scientific” physician, he will reveal him to us. Also, if our spiritual father
realizes that we need help from a more experienced spiritual father, because we
have advanced in spiritual life and have more subtle spiritual needs, then he
will recommend the way. By all means, it is basic to start confessing to
someone. We should not waste precious time in searching for an experienced
spiritual father. If needed, he will show up in due time.
What we have said is still not
sufficient. We also need a fourth way for our inner cure, and this is the
finding and implementation of the proper therapeutic treatment. In bodily diseases, if one becomes
aware of his illness and finds the best doctor, but does not follow the
recommended treatment, he fails to be cured, he does not get well. The same is
true of spiritual illnesses. Correct faith, awareness of the illness, and a
proper therapist are all prerequisites, but if we do not follow the right
therapeutic way, if we do not take proper medicine, we cannot be cured.
There are several such ways. Let me
point to what is suggested in many hymns of the Church: namely, fasting, vigils,
and prayer. I point out this method because in the effort to apply these
commandments many things emerge, and we are helped in our spiritual life. By
doing these things, we develop mourning, repentance, love for God and our
brothers, purity of the heart, and so on. This is why they are very important
means for our spiritual therapy.
Fasting aims at the exercise of both
soul and body so that they move together in the course to deification. There is
both a bodily fast and a spiritual fast. Bodily fast refers to the quality and
quantity of food, as determined by the Church. It is scientifically proven that
some meals are heavier and others are lighter for the organism. Sometimes it is
essential to fast very strictly because in this way man’s nous is detached from material
goods and turns to God.
Vigils are an effort to subordinate
the body to the soul, in the sense that it does not exceed its functions and
its mission. The Church does not share the dualistic view of Hellenistic
philosophy, according to which there exist two separate entities, a soul and a
body. Vigils, along with all other physical exercises, aim precisely at the
unity of soul and body. In any case, a lot of people stay awake for various
reasons today. So it is worthy doing this vigil for God, to stay awake for the
glory of God. Of course, in the world, vigil is not the all-night prayer of the
monks in the Monasteries, but an exercise against excessive sleep and excessive
physical comfort that breed countless evils to man’s organism. Vigil is also
closely related to the balance of the psychosomatic organism of man and to
watchfulness, which is essential in spiritual life.
Prayer is tied to fasting and vigils.
Fasting and vigils without prayer are useless. Indeed, if the Holy Spirit does
not come, all physical exercises are futile. Prayer is either worshiping, with
the entire community, or intelligent, made by man’s reason, or
noetic-of-the-heart, when the nous, in
the Holy Spirit, enters man’s heart. Then the nous and the heart unite in the power and energy of the
Holy Spirit, and this is called illumination of the nous.
In Church hymns, fasting, vigils, and prayer are called celestial gifts. They assist man in his journey to deification and sanctification. They lead the psychosomatic organism to balance. In Adam there was such a balance before the Fall. The nous was inspired by the Grace of God; it nurtured the body and then radiated the Grace to all creation. After the Fall, however, the nous was darkened. The body is fed from the creation rather than from the nous, and bodily passions show up. The soul is fed from the body, and this creates psychological passions. With fasting, vigils, and prayer these contrary-to-nature functions are corrected. This is why cleansing, illumination, and deification are expressed through these gifts.
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