THINKING THEOLOGICALLY
INTENT
We are not going to re-examine the already familiar list of conflicting
beliefs that separate the Western creeds from the Orthodox Christian
Church, but rather speak of the way so many people think and talk about
God — the way they "theologize" about Him. Roman Catholicism and
Protestantism have essentially the same mind — the same culture and
history — and, in the final analysis, the same religion; hence, it is
not difficult to delineate both together as "Western" in their
theological approach and trace this fact to the idea and method of law
or what we would call the "juridical concept" of religion, begun in the
universities of the Latin Middle Ages.
The theology, or rather
the approach to theologizing, in the Orthodox Christian Church, is
sharply different from the Western approach. Her theologizing is
different because her Christianity is different — and it is this, more
than any other factor, which accounts for the so-called "separation of
the Churches" — or, more precisely, the schism of the old Roman
patriarchate from the Eastern patriarchates of the Christian Church,
and ultimately the creation of the Roman Catholic Church by Charlemagne.
Thus, if our evidence has any meaning, we may characterize the Western
approach to "theologizing" as "legal" and its theologians as "lawyers."
Their aim has been the achievement of universal "righteousness" through
juridical justice, an approach that makes the concept of righteousness
moralistic in a way that many Eastern theologians would perceive as a
kind of "moral fascism." The process had been toward the rational
elucidation of faith — ordinarily defined as "assent without knowledge"
— to "the certainty of rational knowledge" actually produced by
reflective reasoning within the realm of the legal concept. Even for
fundamentalists (who claim not to theologize), the "sola scriptura"
interpretations of the Bible have been clearly shaped and formed by the
juridical legal concept.
THE "MYSTIC"
Orthodox Christian Theology
The authentic patristic theologizing of the Orthodox Church is not an
intellectual enterprise, but the struggle for the acquisition of the
Holy Spirit, as the Holy New Testament Prophet St Seraphim of Sarov
reminds us. This acquisition of the Holy Spirit leads to union with God
in Christ (theosis); thus, Orthodox theologians have been neither
academicians nor lawyers but "mystics," though in an Orthodox Christian
understanding of the word. In the West, theology has been primarily a
dialectical exercise, while in the East, it has been perceived
primarily as an ontological process, an existential experience, that
is, the theology must be shaped by a living encounter, an actual
experiencing in contemplative prayer (theoria) of the object of the
theologizing.
One of the greatest of the authentic Church
fathers, St Gregory the Theologian (328-390) presents us with a typical
example of "mystical" theologizing in his Theological Orations. In the
first Oration (I, 1-2), he spoke against "the proud ones" who "delight
in profane rhetoric, and oppositions of science falsely so-called, and
strive about words which have no profit (1Tm.6:20; 2Tm.2:14)."The proud
ones [who theologize rationalistically]" cheapen the faith and thereby
put "our great mystery" in danger of becoming of "little moment." Then,
he declares:
Not to everyone, my friends, does it belong to theologize about God; not to everyone — the subject is not so cheap and low; and also, not before every audience, nor at all times, nor on all points; but only on certain occasions, and before some people, and within certain limits.
Not by all or to all men, because it is permitted only to those who have been examined and are masters of contemplation, and who have been previously purified in soul and body, or, at the very least, are being purified. For the impure to touch the pure is, we may say, perilous, just as it is unsafe to fix weak eyes on the rays of the sun.
We are permitted to theologize only when we are free from all external defilement or disturbances, and when that which rules within us is neither confused by vexatious images. For it is necessary to be dispassionate to know God... to whom the subject is of genuine concern, and not those who make theology a matter of pleasant gossip, like any other thing, after the races or the theatre or dinner. To such men as these, idle jests and petty contradictions about this subject is part of their amusement (I, 3).
What,
according to St Gregory the Theologian and the other fathers, may we
know about God? A summary of their theology is found in Concise
Exposition of the Orthodox Faith by St John the Damascene:
We, therefore, both know and confess that God is without beginning, endless, eternal and everlasting, uncreated, unchangeable, invariable, simple, immaterial, invisible, uncircumscribable, infinite, beyond knowledge and definition, incomprehensible, good, just, creator, almighty, omniscient, sovereign judge…of one essence in three persons: the Father and the Son, and the Holy Spirit, all one in every respect save that the Father is, the Son is begotten, the Holy Spirit proceeds... (I, 2).
Perhaps nothing could more clearly reveal the mystical quality of Orthodox Christian theology than these words of Saint Gregory of Nyssa:
Seeing that you have stretched forth that which is before you with a great desire, and you never experience complete satiation in your progress, nor are you aware of any limit to the good, as your longing calls you on to ever more and more: here is a place that is so vast that he who runs in it will never be able to reach the end of his course. And yet from another point of view, this course has stability; for God said, `I will set you on the rock' (Ex.33:22). But here we have a very great paradox: motion and stability are identical. For usually speaking, one who is rising is not standing still, and the one who is standing still is not rising. But here, one arises precisely because he is stationary.
I think this idea quite fills all that we have already said. When God speaks of a place, He does not mean a space which can be quantitatively measured, but rather by using the analogy of a measurable surface, He is guiding the reader to a reality which is infinite and without limit. (St Gregory of Nyssa)
Moreover, St Gregory the Theologian says of his contemplation of the Holy Trinity:
So soon as I conceive the One I am illumined by the splendour of the Three: As soon as I distinguish Three, I am carried back into the One. When I consider any of the Three, I think of Him as the whole....I cannot grasp the greatness of the One so as to attribute a greater greatness to the rest. When I contemplate the Three together, I see but one torch, and cannot divide or measure out the undivided light.
It may be that much of the difficulty the West has with the dogma of
the Trinity arises from their desire to explain things which cannot be
explained, but can only be experienced in theoria.
ESSENCE AND ENERGY
In describing God with apophatic or negative language, St John tells
that "the hidden God" may be compared to nothing created, hence there
can be no analogia such as Augustine of Hippo erroneously taught. There
can be absolutely no analogy between God and created things, and any
attempt to make such an analogy is, without fail, idolatry. We can only
say what He is not, and hedge ourselves about to keep us from falling
into idolatry or heresy. Because He has made Himself known to the world
as the Holy Trinity, we may make references to Him in kataphatic
language as "good" or "just" or "merciful," and so forth, but such
terms have no reference to His essence and offer no analogies. As St
John Damascene observes in another passage, "It is not within our
capacity to say anything about God or even to think of Him, beyond the
things which have been divinely revealed to us, whether by the Word or
by some manifestation, or by the divine oracles, whether of the Old or
New Testaments."
This "theologizing" will gain more significance
for us when we understand that St John Damascene and both the holy
fathers before him and those after him do not come to these conclusions
about God through speculation. Speculation, incidentally, is the source
of post-Orthodox Western innovations, which led to the tampering with
the Apostolic Tradition and, consequently, to a theory of doctrinal
development among the Scholastics — a theory whose fine-tuning climaxed
in Cardinal John Henry Newman's An Essay on the Development of
Christian Doctrine (1845). For this reason, too, the West felt they had
much more to say about God's nature and so-called "attributes" than is
found either in the Scipture or the authentic holy fathers. The East
would not accept as holy fathers such writers as Origin, Tertullian,
Lactanius or Augustine of Hippo, whose theologizing introduces
neo-platonism and seeks to explore the essence and inner nature of God,
even if only by pantheistic analogies. Their theology is the child of
law and Hellenistic philosophy (even that of Tertullian who declared
the philosophers to be the "patriarchs of heretics"). It is this same
theologizing that led to the production of the filioque — the idea that
the Spirit proceeds from the Father and the Son, a model of the Trinity
nowhere found in Scripture or the fathers .
Western theologians
also pictured God in almost human, anthropomorphic terms, not in
relation to the Incarnation of the Son, but in relation to the Father
also, and to the Essence of God, on account of their "legal theology"
(as we shall see) and, because following Augustine, they did not
distinguish between God in Himself (apart from the creation) and the
arrangement of Hypostases ("Persons") upon His entering time in His
Plan for the Divine ekonomy (dispensation; providence and salvation),
for the creature — in which the Spirit proceeds from the Father through
the Son.
The Western lack of distinction between the Essence and
Energy of God is of singular importance. Like so many of the heresies
and errors in the West, this one also arose from Augustine of Hippo.
The lack of an awareness of the distinction between God's Essence and
His Energy led to a dry and rigid theology of "Essence," which was
empty of every real notion of freedom. So little can be said of the
Essence of God that no vital and valid concept of the interaction
between God and man could be elucidated. This theology must, therefore,
be formed in legal terms that express "laws" of theology, just as
science lays down the "laws of nature." This will help explain the
West's thoroughly heretical doctrine of atonement. Essence based
theology (or "Essential theology") is subject to necessity, just as
natural philosophy is subject to natural necessity. Thus Western
theology is never "ontology" but is always a phenomenology of Essence.
In this way, Western theology is an exposition of rational arguments, a
sort of legal mathematics rather than a quest for meaning.
Meaning presupposes an interaction between man and God, between the
cosmos and God. If, however, one does not theologize in terms of the
Energy of God, but only in terms of His Essence, then there can be no
such interaction. Rather, the world is filled by an absence of God, as
in Bergman's films, an absence which is the source of cosmic absurdity.
Evangelical Protestants, unable to comprehend or cope with this problem
reduced the interaction between man and God to a sentimental, pietistic
slogan, and meaningless, emotionalistic "relationship with Jesus" and
an egoistic "Christ as my own personal Saviour." The real and immediate
both personal and collective "relationship" between man and God would
remain both incomprehensible and unattainable under such circumstances
and every effort to substitute such pietistic emotionalism for the
truth can lead only to delusion and perhaps pantheism.
Finally,
the West in its "theologizing" failed to maintain the patristic witness
to the Uncreated Energies of God. This is the "mystical theology" which
reveals that in Himself God is forever hidden while through His
Energies (e.g., divine grace) He guides and protects the world. It is
by virtue of these Energies that the saved shall participate in God,
that is, the Uncreated Energy of grace, a gift of the Holy Spirit
through God the Son Who became man.
The Uncreated Energies of
God were clearly understood, though not regularly discussed in much
detail in the Church until this "mystical theology" was challenged by
the Augustinian West in the 14th century. Our holy and God-bearing
father, St Gregory Palamas (1296-1359) stepped forward to defend it at
that time. In the process of this defence, all the ancient
manifestations and expressions of the Uncreated Energy, from the
Burning Bush of Moses to the manifestations of divine grace always at
work in the Church, were given exposition in a more concrete form.
Again, St Gregory's reasoning was not legal or rationalistic, not
"scientific." Moreover, the God preached by St Gregory was not "the
most real Being" of Western rational categories as, for example, the
classification of God as the "Primal Cause." His God was beyond
rational knowledge; He is not "Being" at all. As St Gregory Palamas
mentions, God Himself presented His Person as "The One Who Is." He did
not refer to Himself as actus purus as the West does. God is beyond any
understanding of His Being, but He is still the Source of all beings
and personal hypostases.
Saint Gregory did not claim to have
discovered the distinction between "Essence" and "Energy" in God. He
was not in search of "objectivity" through methodical doubt and logic.
Neither should we forget that St Gregory was a monk and a holy man
whose success as a defender of the Faith came from God — from his vital
encounter with the indwelling Holy Spirit.
Unlike Anselm of
Canterbury, for example, who sought to prove, whenever possible, all
aspects of his religion "by reason alone," without revelation or faith,
St Gregory's theology rested upon the divine and immutable Tradition of
the Church, upon faith grounded in experiential encounter.
THE LAWYER AND THE LAWS OF NECESSITY
The Theology of the non-Orthodox West
The method of"theologizing" in the West has been described as "legal"
(and philosophical), its theologians as "lawyers." Can this assertion
be justified? Something else must be said before we address this
question. By the 12th century, medieval law, civil and ecclesiastical,
had not only become a "science," but the exemplar for all other
intellectual disciplines, including "theology." The connection between
law and theology can be seen, for instance, in their common technique.
Both practised the art of posing questions, followed by objections to
it. A contrary statement is made which favours the position implicit in
the question. Often beginning with the response, "I answer that" the
complete argument for the affirmative position is made, appealing to
logic, to more ecclesiastical and secular authorities, Scriptures,
ending with a "solution" or "conclusion" to the question. The writer,
then, answers the initial objections to his position. There is no
better use of this technique in the Latin Middle Ages than the Summa
Theologiae of Thomas Aquinas (1224-1274).
This way of reasoning
was borrowed from the canon and civil lawyers in the universities. They
adapted Roman and Germanic law and customs; and, at the same time, they
were probably inspired by thinkers of the 11th and 12th centuries, such
as Anselm of Canterbury (1033-1109) and Abelard of Paris (1079-1143),
who did not hesitate to subject the aspects of the Christian Faith to
criticism. They were the pioneers of a new era, an era which began with
the development of a new concept of the Church as a legal, corporate
entity alongside her own definition of herself as "the mystical body of
Christ."
Anselm provides us with the perfect example of
legal-juridical theologizing. In his famous Why God Became Man (Cur
Deus Homo), he hoped to provide those who implored him to write such a
work with the understanding of something in which they already believe
— that Christ is God incarnate. "Although what ought to be sufficient,"
he explains, "has been said by the holy fathers and their successors,
yet I will take pains to disclose to the inquirers what God has seen
fit to lay open to me." Anselm states that he will proceed "by
questions and answers," "objections and replies," inasmuch as this
method makes the subject "more plain to many." "Therefore, the rational
existence of the truth must first be shown, I mean the necessity, which
proves that God ought to or could have condescended to those things
which we affirm".
Why God Became Man is Anselm's "Doctrine of
the Atonement" — a term unfamiliar and alien to the Church fathers —
the reason why God had to save man through the Cross. We ought to be
aware that his teaching on this matter is an innovation, unknown to the
Christian world until his time. The theory of "the Atonement" was
indeed an attempt to interpret the Scriptures differently from the
witness delivered to the Church by the holy fathers and, therefore,
tacit in Anselm's theologizing is a view of the Church and her doctrine
as evolving and that previously non-existent doctrine could be created,
even when it radically altered the previously existing doctrine of the
Church.
Anselm abandoned the ancient belief of the Church that
Christ was our "ransom." He gave Himself as a victim to the grave in
order to accomplish the liberation of man (Mk.10:45; 1Tm.2:16). Before
we go any further, we must strongly point out that the Greek word,
lytron being used here refers to something of value being given; it
does not bear the connotation of "blackmail," but as something
completely voluntary given without constraint. In the Book of Hosea,
which we are about to quote, the term for ransom is padah which means
to "set free." As the Lord revealed to the Prophet, "I will ransom them
from the power of the grave; I will redeem them from death" (Hos.
13:14). Dying and rising voluntarily from the dead, Christ destroyed
the tyranny of the devil who controlled the human race through the
power and fear of death, "Man was all his lifetime held in bondage to
him who held the power of death" (Hb.2:14-15). Thus, having freed the
race of Adam from death and sin, Christ offered a "new creation" to God
the Father. We can redeem or ransom something only from the one who
holds it in bondage or captivity. Mankind had sold himself into bondage
through sin (Rm.7:14).
It is clear that man was "ransomed" out
of bondage to Satan by being freed from the power and fear of death
(Hb.2:14-15; 1Tm.2:5-6), whereas the Western Doctrine of Atonement
clearly states that man was redeemed from God the Father, and that this
was acccomplished by a legal fiction. It requires the notion that God
Himself is subject to immutable laws which require a juridical justice
before He is allowed to offer a fiction of forgiveness (a fiction since
punishment and forgiveness are mutually exclusive).
The ambition
of Anslem was to provide the Church with a rationalized legal
explanation of Christ's death "by necessary reasons." To summarize, He
depicted God in terms of the current legal system, as a feudal Lord who
demanded "satisfaction" for the offence done to His honour by man.
Formerly, sin was understood as an act of the passions which alienated
man from God (not God from man). In the hands of Anslem and his
Scholastic colleagues, sin was now a wrongful, that is, illegal or
illicit act, desire or thought which violated God's Justice (justitia)
— a breach of law. The "original sin" of the first man, in particular,
had everlasting consequences because it dishonoured the eternal Judge.
This also provided a novel Doctrine of Original Sin, also unheard of by
the Church fathers, who spoke of the Ancestral Sin, as a poisoning of
the stream, but never conceived of Original Sin as inherited guilt, as
the West defined it.
God's justice, Anselm shockingly asserts,
demands a "satisfaction" which no mortal can make. Man must be punished
and forfeit the blessedness for which he was created. But this would
frustrate God's purpose once again so God had to do something about it.
Who, then, could "atone" or "make up for," "pay the price for" the
offence to God's honour or, what is the same thing, the violation of
His justice? From his legalistic point of view, Anselm could not
conceive that God could simply dismiss man's guilt and its
consequences; it would be contrary to Anselm's (and the West's) concept
of His juridical justice. Only God could make satisfaction and only man
was required to do so. The answer was the God-man. He alone could atone
for the offence and fulfil the demands of divine justice. The
Incarnation of Jesus Christ is necessary, Anselm asserted, and His
Cross was necessary, if God was to be compensated. Since only the Son
is equal to the Father, only the Son of God could pay the price of sin,
reconciling man to God and thereby restore the creation to its original
purpose. In such a legal system, the reality is that what is asserted
here is that Christ redeemed man from God.
Anselm's speculation
on the Atonement (among other things) laid the foundation for a new
jurisprudence. He answered all the questions in relation to Christ's
redemption in terms of legalistic, juridical justice, legal justice,
justice as "the right order of things," or, in this case, "the order of
creation" formed by God. Anselm argued that sin, left to itself, would
constitute a deficiency in the justice of God. To be sure, God is
merciful, but from a legalistic point of view, His mercy could not be
allowed to trump His justice. In the words of Professor Berman,
Anselm's theology is a "theology of law."
Unlike this Western
theory of Atonement, the teaching of the Orthodox Church on the purpose
of the Incarnation or "God become man" is a doctrine of divine
condescension and co-suffering love. Man's salvation is not the result
of a legal transaction, but of God's co-suffering love. He looked upon
man not only as a sinner, but as a victim of the devil, a slave to
death, suffering from a sinful condition not entirely of his own
making. Unlike the Western theory of Atonement in which the Son is
punished in our place on the Cross to compensate God for His offended
majesty, in the doctrine of the Orthodox Church, Christ goes
voluntarily to Calvary to "destroying death by [His] Death and upon
those in the grave bestowing life" (Paschal Troparion).
That the
doctrine of Atonement should have been shaped in the medieval West by
concepts of legal juridicalism, while in the East, the doctrine
remained an ontological process of union with God through the Holy
Spirit, made possible by the victory of Jesus Christ and His
recapitulation of creation, is perhaps the most vivid example of the
difference between the Eastern and Western processes and approaches to
theology.
Of course, religious doctrines and liturgical forms
changed with the Protestant Reformation, but not the manner of
theologizing. Not without reason did Alexander Herzen call it "the
final stage of the Middle Ages." In fact, Western theologizing did not
really change until the 19th century when all the intellectual
disciplines were overwhelmed by a new "historical consciousness"
initiated by the German philosoper Georg Hegel (1770-1831). The ideas
of "changes" and "development" came to dominate the thinking of the
West. History explained the existence of everything explainable. Karl
Marx is the most famous example of this attitude.
From this
"philosophy of history" grew "Protestant liberalism" — the father of
which was Friedrich Schleiermacher (1768-1834). Differentiating
"liberalism" and "conservativism," Protestantism re-examined the
divinity of Christ and the inerrant Bible as the inspired word. The
former questioned and often rejected both, following rather the lead of
modern science and philosophy. Liberals held that Christianity must
now, as it has before, change to accommodate the times.
Having
subjected the Old and New Testaments to brutal analysis, liberal
theologians went in quest of the "true Jesus," "the historical Christ"
as opposed to the what they considered to be the "mythical Christ of
Faith" found in the Bible. Not a few 19th century thinkers argued that
Christianity is a religion of purely naturalistic origin which, in some
instances, depended on fraud to establish and spread its message.
Necessarily, then, these theologians and Biblical critics changed, if
they did not simply reject, everything in Christianity which they
viewed as "traditional." Yet, theologizing remained ever the same.
Theologians were still lawyers and "Christianity" was on trial (as it
still is by such essentially liberal Protestant forces as the "Jesus
Seminar" and the Ecumenical Movement.
Take up any text on the
"principles of systematic theology" and the reader (with any knowledge
of Western theology and its history) will discover no fundamental
change of spirit and method.
As a paradigm of modern
theologizing, we turn to the eminent Lutheran theologian, Bishop Gustav
Aulen (1879-1977), former Professor of Systematic Theology at the
University of Lund (Sweden). He writes that "theology" is a "science"
(albeit some deny it). Whatever the case, theologians customarily view
theology as an intellectual discipline whose only purpose is to
understand the Faith. He makes no mention of holiness as the
precondition of theologizing — whether understood as the study of
anything pertaining to religion or as only the "knowledge of God." In
his The Faith of the Christian Church, Aulen delineates "the function
of systematic theology."
First, this theology "has as its object
of study the Christian faith. The intention of the discipline is to
clarify the significance and meaning of the Christian faith with all
the means at its disposal." The task is not to prove or defend the
Faith, but to offer a critical analysis of it. "Theology" must not
pretend to tell people what they ought to believe. "Everything is
concentrated on the attempt to understand the faith and to present the
ideas and viewpoints of faith itself with the greatest possible
clarity."
Furthermore, since the Christian Church is divided,
theology is not bound by confessional limitations. Looked at this way,
"the function of systematic theology is purely scientific insofar as
its task is to clarify the significance of the Christian faith. It can
serve the Christian life only by performing this scientific study
without any secondary purpose."
We have read such words before:
"study" means to be "scientific" (as Aulen admits); and to be
"scientific" is to discover, record, verify, formulate, unafraid to use
the results of other science and philosophy, even as Aquinas used
Aristotle. As the Scholastics before him, Aulen sought to "understand
the faith." He wanted more than what the Scriptures (which rest on
faith) and the Church fathers (who have been superseded) have to offer.
Reason is his tool in the achievement of this end. His use of reason
differs in no fundamental way from Scholastic and Reform theologians,
although he would have furiously denied that his modern philosophizing
was "legal." Aulen's mind was shaped by his Western religion and
culture which never dispelled the power of law.
CONCLUSION
If the theologizing of the authentic Church fathers and the Orthodox
theologians who followed them is "mystical," it is precisely because
they never abandoned "the tradition of the Apostles." They recognize
that "theology" (knowledge of God) and the other teachings (ekonomy) of
the Church constitute "the Faith" of the Church. What they have
delivered to us by way of their writings, hymns, and icons comes from
Christ, certified in the Holy Spirit.
The saving Truth of the
Church never changes. It is today what it was when it was first
delivered to the believing community. Of course, from time to time,
when confronted with heresy, her Councils placed the Faith in words
(formulas) — such as the Symbol of Faith (the Nicean Creed) which was
recited at baptism and during the Divine Liturgy. If theologians
express theology using a vocabulary developed by earlier philosophers,
it is not with the purpose of transforming what we believe into
something we can know scientifically, but to defend, to explain, to
give it form in order to instruct her children and to let the world
know where she stands.
There is a "ladder of knowledge" even as
there is a "ladder of virtues." Some things the Church professes must
be held on faith, others human reason can prove or explain, while the
highest things are grasped only by a special knowledge — one bestowed
by the Holy Spirit. This kind of knowledge is not cognitive, but comes
by uncreated grace to the holy ones among God's Own. These are the
dispassionate (apatheia), the strugglers, men and women who, like St
Mary of Egypt, live in this world as if without being in this world. In
their contemplation of things divine, the Holy Spirit rewards them with
a vision of heavenly realms and another age; and sometime, as with St
Arsenios of Constantinople or St Symeon the New Theologian, they are
visited by God's Uncreated Light, a revelation of the future Glory
which is the destiny of His elect.
To conclude, the purpose of
Christian theologizing is not "faith becoming rational knowledge"
(fides quaerens intellectum), nor even the rational or beatific vision
of God; but "the acquisition of the Holy Spirit" Who gives "to us all
things that pertain unto life and godliness, through the knowledge
(epignoseos) of Him that has called us to glory and virtue: whereby are
given unto us exceeding great and precious promises: that by these you
might become partakers of the divine nature, having escaped the
corruption that is in the world through lust" (2Pet.1:3-4).
A BRIEF SUMMARY OF
THE NATURE OF REDEMPTION
The Orthodox concept of redemption may be briefly epitomized as
follows: the meaning of "atonement" is really "to remove (or overcome)
the cause of separation." In other words, man is separated from God by
sin (that is, by his constant "missing of the mark") and so he is in
bondage to death. Since man sins continually because of the power of
death (which is held by Satan), sin separates man from God and death
perpetuates the separation (and vice versa). By death, we fall short
(again, by "missing the mark" — sin) of our original destiny, which is
to live through unity with the Creator. We are ransomed by Christ from
the power of death, so that we can become partakers of the divine
essence and share in immortality, which is belongs to God alone.
The following summary of the Orthodox teaching about redemption is drawn from various works by Fr John Romanides:
Christ saves men, who have fallen through their own fault into the power of the devil, by breaking that power. He became Man for this purpose; He lived and died and rose again that He might break the chains by which men were bound. It is not His death alone, but the entire Incarnation, of which His death was a necessary part, that freed men from their captivity to Satan. By becoming Man, living a sinless life, and rising from the dead (which He could not have done unless He had first died), He introduced a new power into human nature. This power is bestowed on all men who are willing to receive it, through the Holy Spirit. Those who receive it are united with Christ in His Mystical Body, the Church; the corrupted human nature (the bad habits and evil desires, which St Paul calls "the old man": Rm.6:6; Eph.4:22; Col.3:9) is driven out by degrees until at last it is expelled altogether, and the redeemed person becomes entirely obedient to the will of God, as our Lord Himself was when on earth. The prisoner is set free from the inside; both his mind and body are changed; he comes to know what freedom is, to desire it and, by the Holy Spirit working within him, to break his chains, turn the key and leave the dungeon. Thus he is freed from the power of sin. God forgives him, as an act of pure love; but the condition of his forgiveness is that he must sin no more. "While we were yet sinners Christ died for us" (Rm.5:8-9) but, if we continue to be sinners, Christ's death for us will have been in vain; and we are made capable of ceasing to be sinners by the power of Christ's Resurrection, which has given us the power to struggle against sinfulness, toward moral perfection.
The advantage of this
Orthodox teaching is that it is firmly based on the New Testament. "God
was in Christ reconciling the world to Himself" (2Cor.5:19); the act of
reconciliation is effected by God in the Person of His Son, for it is
man that needs to be reconciled to God, not God that needs to be
reconciled to man. Throughout the New Testament we find the
proclamation that Christ has broken the power of the devil, to which
mankind was subject (see Lk.10:17-18); 11:22; 1Cor.15:25; Gal.1:4;
Col.2:15; 2Tm.1:10; Hb.2:14; Jn.10:11; 12:31; 16:11; 1Jn.3:8; and
frequently in Rev.). Moreover, this teaching of the atonement requires
no "legal fiction," and attributes no immoral or unrighteous action to
God. Man is not made suddenly good or treated as good when he is not
good; he is forgiven not because he deserves to be forgiven, but
because God loves him, and he is made fit for union with God by God's
own power, his own will cooperating. He is saved from the power of sin
by the risen life of Christ within him, and from the guilt of sin by
God's forgiveness, of which his own repentance is a condition.
Thus, salvation consists in the union of the faithful with the life of
God in the Body of Christ (the Holy Church) where the Evil-One is being
progressively and really destroyed in the life of co-suffering love.
This union is effected by Baptism (the Grace of regeneration) and
fulfilled in the Holy Communion of the Body and Blood of Christ, and in
the mutual, cooperative struggle of Orthodox Christians against the
power and influence of the Evil-One. This is precisely why the last
words of the "Lord's Prayer" are, "deliver us from the Evil-One," and
not "deliver us from evil."
Glory to Jesus Christ!
+Archbishop Lazar
Very interesting Archbishop. I really appreciated the section on Anselm and the difference between Christ as our ransom vs. Christ as our substitute for punishment. The Eastern view certainly brings God's mysterious and incredibly rich love to the forefront of our understanding of who he is.
blessings,
eric h janzen
Posted by: Eric H Janzen | February 21, 2008 at 12:17 AM