Obstacles to Faith

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My writing and thoughts often carry me to the “edges” – to the edge of unbelief and to the edge of the depths of belief. My instinct for these places is an instinct for the obstacles to faith. Why do some believe and others not? And what is the exact nature of belief and unbelief?

There is a form of belief familiar to everyone. It is simply the manner in which we see the world. We are not particularly aware of any effort required in this exercise. We open our eyes, look, and see what we see. This perception, however, can also be clouded by many things. For some, every simple perception of the world comes colored with a mist of fear and anxiety. Things are not only what they are seen to be, but are also seen to be threats. If you have never had this experience you are blessed.

I recall my first experience of a major city – New York in 1971. I was working as a street musician along with a friend. The city was amazing – a constant feast for the eyes and senses. I had seen nothing like it. A week or so after arriving, we were mugged at knife point. What we lost financially was insignificant. What I lost was the city I had first encountered. In its place was a hostile, dangerous environment in which every face was a potential enemy, every alley way a hiding place for the next disaster. We went home.

Of course this “perception” of the world is simply the fog of psychology. But it is worth remembering how important that fog can be in how we see.

There is a way of seeing that many would describe as “seeing things as they are.” We assume that how we see things is objective, real, accurate, normal, etc. All of these take for granted an agreement concerning our perceptions. It would also be readily accepted that inner dispositions and culturally agreed ideas might distort these perceptions. The racially-divided society of my Southern childhood contained a large array of false but generally accepted (by whites) distortions of the world. Those who began speaking about equality in the 1960’s sounded, at first, like people from another planet. It is little wonder that Martin Luther King, Jr., described his vision of a world in which race was not issue in terms of a “promised land.”

These questions of perception are crucial to an understanding of faith and overcoming obstacles. Faith is a means of perception. It is an “organ” of seeing and hearing. It is the “evidence of things not seen,” or, “the seeing of unseeable things.” To “see the unseeable,” is of a piece with to “know the Unknowable.” The things of God are not obvious or clear to a darkened heart.

Our modern version of things “as they are,” is simply things understood in a “secular” manner. For the most obvious thing to modern man is that his world is a great neutral zone. God (if there is a God) can choose to make Himself present in the world, but there is nothing about the world that is inherently connected to God. The world is just the world. He lives in a fog of unbelief.

With such an assumption underlying everything that appears, it is little wonder that the vision given by faith is such a stumbling block. To perceive the world as sacrament and wonder contradicts our culture’s commonly held view.

When someone says that they “believe” in God, I’m not always sure what they mean. It is entirely possible (and even often the case) that they mean something quite different than what I would mean by the same statement. There is the acceptance of God as a theoretical construct, a mental assent, even a trusting mental assent to the existence of a higher being who loves, creates and provides for creation. That trusting assent may have a significant amount of content: the “God of the Bible,” or the “God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ,” etc. In many cases (even most), however, trusting assent to the existence of such a God does not alter the shape or nature of creation itself: it remains the same neutral, secular world. This is the situation I have described as a “two-storey universe.”

There are many versions of such a God – from the so-called literalist version of the fundamentalists, to the gentle, politically-correct God of modern liberals. Some struggle with the name of this God, wondering whether “He” should be replaced by “He/She” or other English neologisms (in one graduate school I attended, certain professors would only accept papers written in conformity with a neologistic orthodoxy – and that was over 20 years ago).

But the content of the “superior being” in the two-storey universe is relatively beside the point. Such a God, regardless of content, is not the God and Father of our Lord, God and Savior Jesus Christ: it is a lightly Christianized version of the ancient sky gods. And in the cultural perception of  modern, secularized nature, it is an endangered species. Few attacks on the Christian faith sound as silly as those of Richard Dawkins and Christopher Hitchens. Their inaccuracies and caricatures are rivaled only by the rants of the adherents whose god they despise.

But Christians would do well to listen to their critique – for the god they don’t believe in was taught them by someone. To say, “I believe in that god, only my reasons are very good,” is actually inadequate. What Dawkins, Hitchens and company reveal is an obstacle to faith. If the universe itself is the one they perceive – if it is truly inert, self-existing, self-referential and spiritually neutral, then the case against the God taught and made known in Jesus Christ is strong indeed. Positing a sky-god above and outside such a world is perhaps interesting, but it is not persuasive and, more to the point, not Christianity. David Bentley Hart has this to say about the Christian God:

To speak of “God” properly—in a way, that is, consonant with the teachings of orthodox Judaism, Christianity, Islam, Sikhism, Vedantic and Bhaktic Hinduism, Bahá’í, much of antique paganism, and so forth— is to speak of the one infinite ground of all that is: eternal, omniscient, omnipotent, omnipresent, uncreated, uncaused, perfectly transcendent of all things and for that very reason absolutely immanent to all things.

God so understood is neither some particular thing posed over against the created universe, in addition to it, nor is he the universe itself. He is not a being, at least not in the way that a tree, a clock, or a god is; he is not one more object in the inventory of things that are. He is the infinite wellspring of all that is, in whom all things live and move and have their being. He may be said to be “beyond being,” if by “being” one means the totality of finite things, but also may be called “being itself,” in that he is the inexhaustible source of all reality, the absolute upon which the contingent is always utterly dependent, the unity underlying all things.

To speak of “gods,” by contrast, is to speak only of a higher or more powerful or more splendid dimension of immanent reality. Any gods who might be out there do not transcend nature but belong to it. Their theogonies can be recounted— how they arose out of the primal night, or were born of other, more titanic progenitors, and so on —and in many cases their eventual demises foreseen. Each of them is a distinct being rather than “being itself,” and it is they who are dependent upon the universe for their existence rather than the reverse. Of such gods there may be an endless diversity, while of God there can be only one. Or, better, God is not merely one—not merely singular or unique—but is oneness as such, the sole act of being by which any finite thing exists and by which all things exist together.  From “God, Gods and Fairies,” First Things, June/July 2013


How do we perceive the “Ground of all being?” How do we perceive Him who is “beyond being?” For it is this God whom the fathers referenced in all of their writings.

The first and most important answer for Christians is that Jesus Christ is none other than the Word of the Father, the Logos of the Ground of Being, and that He has become man. In the words of St. John’s Gospel: “No one has seen God at any time. The only begotten Son, who is in the bosom of the Father, He has declared Him” (literally, “He has exegeted Him”). 

As Fr. Thomas Hopko has said on numerous occasions: “You cannot know God…but you have to know Him to know that.”

This utterly transcendent, yet truly incarnate God, also makes Himself known in the primary means of the sacraments and the life of the “community of union” (to use the phrase of St. Irenaeus). The God-Who-Cannot-Be-Known can only be known because He reveals Himself – He makes Himself known. He is not an object among objects, nor is He an idea among ideas.

The sacramental life should not be seen as discrete moments of grace dispensed by the Church, but rather as revelations of Divine Reality, gifts of the very Life of God, given to us in the means He has appointed. And the means is not arbitrary – it is itself revelatory of the relationship between the God-Who-Cannot-Be-Known and His creation.

The highly psychologized notion of “relationship” touted within much of modern Christianity is a deviation from what is established within the Scriptures and the historical life of the community of faith. It is a novelty – all too well-suited to an overly psychologized culture. In a world driven by the warring identities of 6 billion false-selves, one more relationship is simply not salvific. The false self does not have authentic relationship.

It should be obvious that we cannot perceive the true God in the manner of perception that dominates our cultural life. Faith is a means of perception that requires a change in the agent of perception. “Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see God.” The beginning of faith is a movement (which is always inherently a change) both away from our present perception and towards the God-Who-Cannot-Be-Known. It is always a movement towards authentic being.

This movement towards God is initiated in us by grace, by the power of God that draws us, that encourages us, that nurtures our longing for true existence. Dimitru Staniloae describes our response:

At the beginning this is only the simple will to believe and not to do something. So inevitably the first effort of our will in view of the good, can have only this object: to believe. As far as we are concerned, we can’t begin anywhere else, by some change for the good in our life, except to believe. And the one who wants to believe, arrives at the point where he can….

So before starting out on the.way of purification, it is necessary for man to strengthen his faith received at Baptism, by will, but since faith is a relationship of mind to God, it can’t be strengthened except by my beginning to think more often of Him, not in a theoretical way, as of a philosophical subject for study, but of Him on whom I depend for everything and Who can help me in my insufficiencies. But the thought of God is made real, or maintained by a short and frequent remembrance of Him, made with piety, with the feeling that we depend on Him. Such a thought concentrates our thoughts on God or on Jesus Christ, on what He has done for us, as the basis for the trust that He will help us now too (in Orthodox Spirituality, Kindle 2228-2233).

I am sometimes reminded of John Wesley’s famous dictum, “Do faith until you have faith.” This is not a matter of convincing ourselves of something, much less deluding ourselves. It is an action that risks, that tests a new perception. My own experience has been that of a willingness to trust (to some extent) what I can only just descry – at the very edge of vision.

This brings us back to the edges – where this article began. Although God is truly the Ground of Being, the only foundation of existence, our habit of perception acts as an obstacle for true perception. Our sight has to be drawn to the edges (even those immediately before us) where we see hints, even hints of hints, that there is a Reality that lies outside, within and beneath all that we see. That smallest perception sometimes comes with its own attendant joy, for it is Joy itself and Wonder. It is communion and union. It is purity of heart and love.

I was recently struck by this statement of the Elder Tadej of Serbia:

There are some that say that they are atheists, but there is no such thing as an atheist…. No such thing. Even the devil believes and trembles (cf. James 2:19), but he refuses to do good. There is no such thing as a person who does not believe in God, and there is no rational being on earth that does not long after life with all his heart. We will give anything to live eternally, and we all long after perfect love, love that never changes but lasts forever. God is life, He is love, peace, and joy. There are those who oppose Him, but they can do nothing to hurt Him. It is we who complicate our own lives with our negative thoughts  (Our Thoughts Determine Our Lives, 1626-1630 Kindle Edition).

 

About Fr. Stephen Freeman

Fr. Stephen is a retired Archpriest of the Orthodox Church in America. He is also author of Everywhere Present: Christianity in a One-Storey Universe, and Face to Face: Knowing God Beyond Our Shame, as well as the Glory to God podcast series on Ancient Faith Radio.


Comments

129 responses to “Obstacles to Faith”

  1. fatherstephen Avatar
    fatherstephen

    I have found St. Maximus to be hard work – but Louth’s nicely annotated volume to be readable – or at least digestible. My experience of reading in various fathers, particularly in the Greek fathers, is that they are far more digestible when you’re asking the right questions. They themselves are often developing something towards a very clear point – and can be quite far-ranging in the development. When I see what the point is – which often only comes with a lot of secondary reading first – and then personally making a connection with the point – then the pieces start falling together. I’ve also noticed, that the longer I’ve been immersed in the liturgical texts and rhythms, the more sense they make – it is, after all, an experience which we share with them to a large extent. It is a weakness of the Western rite that it does not have that commonality.

  2. Dino Avatar
    Dino

    I find that for anyone who has some experience and memories of a time/visit in Orthodox monasteries (with its intense Liturgical daily, and nightly prayer/study) these are the fondest, and indeed they prove to be an undertaking that makes increasingly clearer and more profound sense of the more difficult works of all the Fathers. That immersion, makes everything more understandable of course…

    however, Fathers such as Maximus even more, so as a lack of such experience might lead the mind to discard what it hasn’t even started to understand.
    Some specific/supporting reading is of course necessary too. In fact the most beautiful words of Maximus (or others such as Gregory the Theologian, are written in such language -sometimes ‘Homeric’, as are some of the most beautiful and theological Hymns in great Feasts, in the Matin Cannons), that few can understand without a translation next to it. There is no substitute to ruminating on the original, once you have understood it though! it is so compact and darts straight into your heart with sublime effects.

  3. fatherstephen Avatar
    fatherstephen

    Dino,
    My intro to the Fathers came in college where I majored in Classical Greek. I started reading St. Gregory the Theologian, particularly his theological poetry. I was amazed to find the Trinity embedded even in his grammar, if you will. It was sublime – and not really able to be translated! It led me towards what would become my future. It also made me think that there is far too little theological poetry in our contemporary word – serious theological poetry. The Liturgy fills some of that need – but the English translations do not do it justice.

    I recall being at Holy Cross seminary in Brookline, MA, several years ago where the services were quite well done – particularly the chant. The “pulse” of Byzantine chant (the poetry literally yields a beat) is an aspect of liturgy that largely disappears in translation. We have a setting of the Polyeleon in English that replicates this to a degree, but my congregation has yet to catch on to it.

    I think of the refrain of the Polyeleon and believe we hear the heartbeat of the universe, for His mercy endures forever!

  4. Dino Avatar
    Dino

    What a fabulous topic to spend some of that youthful energy on!
    I wholeheartedly feel what you say here Father about the English translation – especially the Polyleleon. Isn’t it remarkable how the awareness of what you describe in your last sentence is even embedded in the other aspects, such as the moving of the “Polyeleos” etc in Orthodox Monasteries during those times, such as the chanting of the ‘Polyeleon’, ‘Douloi Kyrion’ etc? We have so much help to see these hidden mysteries that it is virtually impossible to miss them!

  5. Karen Avatar
    Karen

    Father, would you recommend the study of Koine Greek for an Orthodox layperson interested in being able to access some of the Church’s teaching more readily?

  6. fatherstephen Avatar
    fatherstephen

    Karen,
    Absolutely! Any knowledge of Koine will not be wasted.

  7. Dino Avatar
    Dino

    Karen,
    I don’t know how difficult it would be for non-Greeks to learn Koine, so I am reluctant to give any advise. However, as for Greeks it should be much easier, I sincerely think it is nothing other than invaluable; it’s the language of the Liturgy, the New Testament, the Septuagint, of most early theological and ascetical writing by the Church Fathers… what other reason can one need!

  8. Mary Lanser Avatar

    After watching some of the discussion emerge here could we say that there is a certain ability to hold our understanding of Scripture and Tradition in a kind of tension, never being able to “see” God as He is fully this or that, in order to even begin to achieve an authentic faith and image of God?…that we be willing to bear, in the name of truth revealed, a kind of Christian anxiety as faith seeking understanding?

    M.

  9. Mary Lanser Avatar

    I meant to say: After watching some of the discussion emerge here could we say that there is a certain ability REQUIRED

  10. Karen Avatar
    Karen

    Thank you, Father. Good points, Dino. That’s what I thought. I will look into what is available at my alma mater and also Greek parishes near me. I’m sure my own Priest would be able to make a recommendation as well.

  11. Michael Bauman Avatar
    Michael Bauman

    My priest preached on “How to be a saint” today using St. Peter as an example because he seemingly failed so often.

    Father identified four attributes: boldness, humility especially by listening to direction without complaint, quick and deep repentance, enduring to the end.

    I was thinking about how those attributes do a lot to over come obstacles to faith.

    Can’t put it words but the sermon was really hopeful to me.

  12. Lina Avatar
    Lina

    John 8:31-32 then Jesus said to those Jews who believed Him, “If you abide in My word you are my disciples indeed. And you shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free.” NJK

    If you hold to my teaching, you are really my disciples. Then you will know the truth, and the truth will set you free.
    (I don’t know the origin of this translation. I read it in a magazine.)

    In other words, we can only know the truth by being obedient.

  13. fatherstephen Avatar
    fatherstephen

    Lina,
    This is a very important observation! We know the truth only as we actually practice the teaching.

  14. PJ Avatar
    PJ

    Mary,

    Those are wonderful articles. This really hits the nail on the head: “The Africans were down, but not out. They met again in Carthage, and wrote to Zosimus that they were determined to stand by their condemnation of Pelagius until such time as it was clearly shown that he meant by grace, *not merely an enlightenment of the intellect, showing the will what it ought to do, but a power enabling it to do it.*”

    Grace is necessary not only to desire that which is righteous, but also to execute right action. Indeed, St. Paul makes clear in Romans that the problem is not simply knowing that is good, but doing what is good. “For I do not do what I want, but I do the very thing I hate” (Rom. 7:15).

    From the Catholic perspective, the Holy Spirit illuminates the mind, but even more importantly, it purifies and restores the will, liberating it from bondage to sin and Satan, energizing it so that it has the freedom to choose that which is pious and godly. The Holy Spirit brings not only life, but power. Therefore we can truly say that while “it is God who works in [us], both to will and to work for his good pleasure” (Phil. 2:13), we are also “God’s co-workers” (1 Cor. 3:9).

    Two of Augustine’s favorite verses are Rom. 5:5: “The charity of God is poured forth in our hearts, by the Holy Spirit, who is given to us.” And: “For we are his workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God prepared beforehand, that we should walk in them” (Eph. 2:10).

    These are consonant with the entire western Christian spiritual vision, which is rooted in the gratuitous action of God in the Christian, whereby a heart of stone is replaced with a heart of flesh, so that the Christian is freely yet divinely converted to love of God and neighbor.

    Thank you very much for them.

  15. Lina Avatar
    Lina

    And God seems to be handing me people to forgive all the time, so I must need lots of practice in that area. I think He likes to work on our weak areas which probably are the most important areas from His point of view.

    or as that great old hymn, How firm a foundation, says
    “Thy dross to consume and thy gold to refine.”

    I understand that refining is done under high heat.

  16. Mary Lanser Avatar

    PJ: Happy that I could find them again and that they were still there where I saw them first!! Peter has an astonishing clarity of mind and ability to present fully and clearly to others.

    You are quite right: it is the teaching of the Roman rite and ritual of Baptism that by the power of the Holy Spirit our intellects are illumined, our will is strengthened, and our memories are purified, so that we may indeed safely ask to be forgiven as we are wont to forgive. One of the most difficult aspects of the spiritual path to theosis is the purification of the memory. Too often we forget the inclusion of the memory in those great faculties/gifts that are so integral to us as persons.

  17. Mary Lanser Avatar

    Edit: Should have said “our memory IS purified” at Baptism…meaning the capacity, not what fills it precisely.

  18. guy Avatar
    guy

    Father Stephen,

    So i’ve re-read this post and have been trying to chew on it a bit. And i’m still very confused about a lot.

    1. i really don’t think i follow your language about false selves and true selves. i found it especially interesting that you related this to 12 step programs in the comments. i, myself, have had years of involvement in a 12-step and have experienced recovery. But i still cannot relate my own experience to the terms you’re using: “true self” and “false self.” From my perspective, what i did in 12-step was bring to light bits of my personal narrative that involved hurt, suppression, and acting out. i really can’t recall any feeling of recognizing some “false self” that i had created. i can’t make sense of the bits you attribute to each. Does my true self have no memories or past or experiences?

    2. Every time i think i’m getting close to understanding your two-story language, you write something like this that ruins whatever i thought i understood. i still cannot decipher if you mean to be identifying a metaphysical problem or an epistemological problem. And even if i could find out which, i still can’t quite identify what the problem is. If it’s merely an epistemological problem you’re pointing to, then the best i can come up with is that you’re saying that people are theists when they should be something more like panentheists (slightly different from pantheists). But surely this is not what you mean, is it?

    3. On the heels of that, i don’t really understand what you mean to say about the nature of God if you’re not proposing something like panentheism. Are you?

    4. The stuff you’re saying about true relationship–the best i can come up with is just that you mean there’s a difference between the real and the imagined. A lot of Protestantism (and even Catholicism i think) encourages me to spend time *imagining* me being physically in Jesus’ presence. Perhaps while the worship band (or choir or whatever Protestant flavor the worship is) is playing, i should imagine myself holding Jesus’ hand or sitting in God’s lap or crying on Jesus’ shoulder, etc.

    i’d say i’ve recently felt more “fake” about this vestige of my Protestantism–i see more clearly now that it’s “all in my head.” A lady recently said, “why don’t you imagine putting these things you’re stressing about at the foot of the cross,” and i told her, “that would just feel like pretending to me”–to which she immediately responded in what i took to be an offended tone, “It’s not pretending!”

    Nevertheless, i’m still often at a loss about what the “real” is like. In the liturgy, i sing that Jesus comes invisibly upborne by the angelic host–He’s there in our midst. What do i do with that? It’s invisible. i can’t see Him there. Should i try picturing Him there? Then i’m back to pretending, aren’t i? So then, what do i do? Just accept that it’s true but i can’t see it? Okay, but then it seems like i’m still back in the realm of what’s in my head; how is that different than taking communion believing it’s truly the body and blood of Christ? Isn’t it necessary that i do believe that in order for me to take it in a beneficial way (and a worthy way)? If so, then isn’t what i’m thinking when i take communion a necessary component of this “true relationship” you’re talking about? i’d really appreciate some clarity here.

    5. The thing i really thought about the first time i read the post was apologetics. i’m trying to understand what Orthodoxy says about apologetics. There are so many things i read (including this post) that strongly remind me of presuppositional apologetics when i was reading heavily from Reformed/Calvinist authors who basically said that every argument an atheist could make is, itself, grounded upon ideas or concepts that necessarily presuppose the existence of the God they mean to deny. Presuppositionalists definitely make the claim that there are no atheists–only persons who are self-deceived. The difference is that the language used between Orthodox and Reformed on these matters is different, and so i’ve been hesitant to say outright that the ideas/strategies are the same. Are you familiar with this literature at all?

    Also, over the years it seems more and more to me that traditional apologetics misses the point. i haven’t personally met anyone who became a theist because of the teleological or cosmological arguments. But more to the point, if tomorrow i found out that the best version of the cosmological argument (or any other traditional “proof”) was proven invalid, i wouldn’t lose any of my faith at all. My faith is in no way staked upon these arguments that i can tell. And this seems true of everyone i’ve ever known. Does that mean faith is fundamentally unreasonable or, perhaps more accurately, a-reasonable?

  19. Dino Avatar
    Dino

    Guy,
    I assume you know that this passage is talking about the “false self” and the true “true self” (it does help) : “put off the old man with his deeds; and put on the new man, which is renewed in knowledge after the image of Him that created him. (Colossians 3:9-10)

    What’s in our head is all about ‘somewhere else’ and/or ‘sometime other than the present’…
    The true self (New Man) lives strictly in the here and the now, his seat is the heart in the reality of the present, “seeing the Lord always before him, at his right hand” and constantly being “renewed” in Christ. So, ‘putting off the old man (the old Adam) can be a task of a lifetime

  20. guy Avatar
    guy

    Dino,

    This does make sense to me, however, i didn’t think this is what Father Stephen could mean.

    What i understand you to be saying amounts to something like this: “You’ve typically lived your life wrong–you spend a lot of time imagining stuff, thinking about elsewhere and else-when. But that’s not a good thing to do. What you should do instead, especially since you converted, is develop the habit of living in the present moment.”

    Have i got you wrong? If so, then what did you mean?

    If i have you right, then i guess i thought Father Stephen couldn’t mean this because he’s mentioned several times that this isn’t about morality and more rules. i thought he meant “selves” in some sense more literal (metaphysical) than this.

  21. Dino Avatar
    Dino

    Concerning the a-reasonability -as you termed it- of Faith, what Lina said is particularly germane, Christ creates new eyes that enable us to see Him, new vision, a different perception, in which the believer beholds the Lord. Dimly first, not easy to differentiate from imagination or “self suggestion” perhaps, but progressively becoming clearer and clearer, generating undeniable fruits proving the lack of any delusion

  22. Dino Avatar
    Dino

    I think that living in the reality of the present moment – the here and now that intersects with the eternity of ‘The only One Who truly Exists’- in constant ‘Nepsis’ (watchfulness/ awareness/ prayerful vigilance) is not about morality or rules (is that what you thought? ), it is an ontological state, the one in which God is encountered personally…

  23. guy Avatar
    guy

    Dino,

    1. i guess that’s part of my confusion with Father Stephen. It’s not obvious to me that moral state and ontological states are or should be taken as different categories. Even if it is an ontological state, it’s not obvious to me that it follow that this state is “not about morality.”

    2. i guess i don’t see that it’s obvious that Paul means what you’re saying right here. i thought the context of putting off the old man had to do with sinful practices. (?)

    3. Nevertheless, say we’re talking about a purely ontological state: i still don’t see how this constitutes a different “self” than the previous ontological state. Was there not continuity of identity through both states? i still don’t understand the self talk unless it’s just metaphor. But i took it as intended to be literal when Father Stephen used it. i mean, i’m not even sure how to ask the question exactly because i didn’t understand what Father was identifying by either term in the first place.

  24. Lina Avatar
    Lina

    In one sense faith is a verb. It is living life the way God has taught us to live. It is in the doing that we learn to trust that His way works best. You can’t have faith in anything, or anyone, unless it is put to the test.

    The bottom line is how much do we trust God with our lives!!!
    Frank Sinatra used to sing, “I did it my way.” We are supposed to sing, “I did it God’s way.”

    Very simple.

  25. Dino Avatar
    Dino

    There are many ways to see this.
    For me Father’s words are the astute and succinct.
    The Pharisee is an image of the ‘old man’, pride-fully self-engrossed, occupied by ‘logismoi’ (“thoughts”), the Publican portrays the beginnings of the ‘new man’, mindful of God’s loving gaze (in the present), with but a single “thought”, an address towards the ‘Other’: “Lord!”
    A sure sign of making progress in the ‘new man’ is the hopeful, constant Joy, the joy of living (NOT secular “fun”, but a joy which is both childlike yet also “serious”). Living the now. In an unbroken, (or tirelessly “re-connected” -in the beginning) relentless pursuit of that ontological relational state we described earlier. (Nepsis)
    Of course all morals and laws are actually fulfilled –but ‘automatically’-, rather than having to think of doing this or that, observing this or keeping that….
    Because the Publican is not aware of any ‘moral’ actions (because he is -first and foremost- “in relation”), the relation-less Pharisee on the other hand is concerned with rules and regulations (first and foremost), he is concerned with “being” (what we call ontology) –being in connection, in union, in watchful awareness of Him etc etc.
    He invokes with a hearty assurance, a mixture of ‘despair from himself’ which fans the flame of his ‘total hope towards the Lord’, and joy (because he is joyful for not having to rely onto himself since his trust in the One Whose mercy he believes in, is total, and spends the rest of his life imploring it)

  26. Dino Avatar
    Dino

    There are many ways to see this.
    For me Father’s words are the astute and succinct.
    The Pharisee is an image of the ‘old man’, pride-fully self-engrossed, occupied by ‘logismoi’ (“thoughts”), the Publican portrays the beginnings of the ‘new man’, mindful of God’s loving gaze (in the present), with but a single “thought”, an address towards the ‘Other’: “Lord!”
    A sure sign of making progress in the ‘new man’ is the hopeful, constant Joy, the joy of living (NOT secular “fun”, but a joy which is both childlike yet also “serious”). Living the now. In an unbroken, (or tirelessly “re-connected” -in the beginning) relentless pursuit of that ontological relational state we described earlier. (Nepsis)
    Of course all morals and laws are actually fulfilled –but ‘automatically’-, rather than having to think of doing this or that, observing this or keeping that….
    Because the Publican is not aware of any ‘moral’ actions (because he is -first and foremost- “in relation”), the relation-less Pharisee on the other hand is concerned with rules and regulations (first and foremost), he is concerned with “being” (what we call ontology) –being in connection, in union, in watchful awareness of Him etc etc.
    He invokes with a hearty assurance, a mixture of ‘despair from himself’ which fans the flame of his ‘total hope towards the Lord’, and joy (because he is joyful for not having to rely onto himself since his trust in the One Whose mercy he believes in, is total, and spends the rest of his life imploring it)

  27. fatherstephen Avatar
    fatherstephen

    Guy,
    I use the word “moral” in a very specific, limited sense, to describe the outward conformity to a set of rules. It requires no inward change, only human effort. Thus, no God is necessary for morality – only rules and effort. It always fails but that’s what I mean. Thus, it’s not ontological, not a part of our being.

    What I’ve described is “ontological” because I’m saying it is actually a different “mode” of existence, not just another way of acting. It isn’t just “acting” because the “One-Storey” I’m describing isn’t imaginary, not just an idea, but real. I am saying that the world in which we live is permeated, united, shadowed (lots of other words come to mind) by the heavenly. The whole world is sacrament. Thus God, heaven, Truth, Reality, etc., can be accessed in the immediate. Right now and here. It is the true Christian way of living.

    Most Christians live just like secularists and think of God, heaven, truth, etc., as being somewhere else, an idea, or the realm of ideas, but think the “real” world is just stuff – a neutral zone. I would say that most people in the modern world agree with this and it is all that they see. But it is all that they see because that’s all that they believe to be true.

    I am saying that Christians, when rightly taught and nurtured, can have their eyes opened to the Real Truth of the world as God has given it to us. This eye opened way of living is the true Orthodox way of life. Our “true self” the new man renewed in the image of Christ is found in this Real World. It is not found by reforming the old man. The old man must die. The new man is a new creation. St. Paul says, “Our life is hid with Christ in God.” I’ve often paraphrased this as “Our true self is hid with Christ in God.” My ego, the self that usually think of as “me,” is generally a false self, a creation of my own imagination, memory, anxiety, lies, distortions, etc.

    I remember a friend who is in AA saying that when he drank he was convinced that he could only sell things (he was a salesman) if he’d had a drink. He was naturally reserved and shy, and it’s true that alcohol loosened him up. But the drinking self was not his true self – it was imaginary. When he got sober he also began to get real. He had to come to grips with anxieties and fears, memories, etc., that left him unable to work. And he changed. Not just a new way of acting (morality), but a new way of being (ontological). I would say in his language, that this was possible, not by his efforts, but by learning how to depend on his higher power. As an Orthodox priest I would say this differently.

    I am fairly literal in the language about self. The “true self” is indeed “hid with Christ in God,” and is virtually unknown to us.

    It is easy when considering our own death to find it frightening in that it threatens the existence of the false self. What happens to all those memories, fears, desires, kudos, etc. when I die? Does God preserve them for me? Contemplating death is also contemplating how little we know the true self, how little we therefore know Christ. My death would leave me as a “stranger” in a way. And that is, I think, somewhat frightening. In my case, I have met it in a somewhat apophatic manner. I don’t yet know anything like a serious account of my true self. It is a reality with which I am almost unacquainted.

    What I (we) can do, however, is to give myself over to what I don’t know, without fear as much as I am able (What else could I possibly do). I embrace the self to be revealed as I embrace the reality of the resurrection of Christ. I trust that the true self (which is to come) exists and will be good.

    Beloved, we are the sons of God, but it does not yet appear what we shall be. But we know that when He appears, we shall be like Him for we shall see Him as He is.

    I am crucified with Christ, nevertheless I live, yet not I, but Christ lives in me. And the life that I now live in the flesh, I live by the faith of the Son of God, who loved me and gave Himself for me.

    On a daily basis, this is the same struggle. Not to keep working on the project of improving the game of my ego – but to let him die. I do not need to preserve the false self. I need to be present, at this moment, to who I am at this moment in Christ. This moment is not the summary of the moments that have gone before – the sum total of the project of the false self – this moment is the gift of God. “If any man is in Christ, he is a new creation.” Most people read that verse and treat it metaphorically. “I’m saved! I’m a new man.” No, he means he had a religious experience and now he wants to act differently.

    No. I need to die (the false self). I need to be born anew. Right now. And right now. And right now. And right now. My life needs to be the momentary gift of God. In that gift there is no shame, no guilt, no remorse. There is utter humility because it is utter gift. And the new life, the true self, is the constant new gift of God. It is not an effort to right a new narrative. The whole need for “narrative” and the self-created identity that is its delusion, is just that, delusion. As soon as it begins, we lose the moment and start to live first in the past (remembering the last moment) and in the future (imagining some future moment) and cease to live in the present moment which is only ever where we meet reality. “Behold, now is the time of salvation.”

    Hope that’s useful.

    I’m traveling this week and will only be able to comment about once a day (usually at the end of the day). God keep all of you!

  28. Lina Avatar
    Lina

    As I read this, I remembered a time about six years ago when I was in the pits. I said to God, “I really don’t feel like this new creation that I read about in the Bible. Please make me into this new creation that you talk about.” All I can say is that He is working on it and bit by bit I am beginning to feel like a new creation. Maybe we have to learn to throw in the towel of our ego, and allow God to work in our lives.

    Another thing to do is every morning purposefully commend, commit our lives to God. On the cross, Jesus committed His spirit to God.

    Find a way that is most suitable to you which allows God to work in your life. Learn to listen to Him. He loves to send nudges. “I stand at the door and knock,” He says. “If anyone open the door I will come in and dine with him.” Rev. 3:20.

    I grew up on this hymn Samuel Wesley. I often pray the first verse especially in difficult times.

    1 Lead me, Lord, lead me in thy righteousness;
    make thy way plain before my face.
    For it is thou, Lord, thou, Lord only,
    that makest me dwell in safety.

    2 Teach me, Lord, teach me truly how to live,
    that I may come to know……. thee,
    and in thy presence serve thee with gladness,
    and sing songs of praise to thy glory.

    I think it all boils down to how much territory we want to cede to God.

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