Is the Universe Tragic?

Harrowing_of_hell_Christ_leads_Adam_by_the_hand._On_scroll_in_border,_the_motto_'Entre_tenir_Dieu_le_viuelle'_(f._125)_CroppedTragedy is among the older forms of story-telling. The ancient Greeks can be said to have perfected it, and theorized about it with great care. One need only read the plays of Aeschylus or Sophocles to come away with a deep appreciation of the very nature of tragedy. I will not offer anything like the sophisticated analysis of Aristotle. However, I will make a single observation that seems apt in thinking about the Christian gospel. Tragedy seems to turn on a situation that admits of no satisfactory solution. Once the problem is introduced, the contradiction and insolvable problem are bound to arise. The play simply need let things transpire and the tragedy occurs.

In Sophocles’ Antigone, the curse of a wicked king has set a tragedy in motion. Antigone’s brother, Polynices, has been killed while leading an attack on the city of Thebes (seeking to take the throne from his brother). The next king, Creon, decrees that no honors may be given to Polynices’ body. It is to lay exposed to the sun and the animals. To do otherwise, it is decreed, will carry the penalty of stoning.

This is the tragedy: the duty to a brother is in conflict with a duty to the state. Antigone fulfills her obligation to her brother, and the tragedy ensues.

Another tragedy can be found in the book of Judges. Jephtha makes a rash oath before God, saying that if God will grant him victory over the people of Ammon, he will sacrifice the first thing he sees coming through the door of his house when he returns. It creates the requirements for tragedy. The first thing he sees is his only child, his daughter. She is made a sacrifice.

Similar to this is the rash promise of King Herod to give his step-daughter, Salome, anything she asks if she will “dance” for him. She requests the head of John the Baptist. Herod is forced into a tragic decision by the stupidity of his promise.

Such situations, Antigone’s duty to her brother versus the lawful decree of the King, Jephthah’s rash oath before God, Herod’s wicked promise to Salome, are all predicated on contradictions. In popular parlance we say that we are “stuck between a rock and a hard place,” or “between the devil and the deep, blue sea.” If you will, the setting of tragedy is created by some impossibility. In a tragic play, or movie, so soon as we hear or perceive the impossibility, we begin to anticipate the inevitable, tragic moment. It not only can happen – it must happen.

This is a troubling meditation for me when I consider an eternal condemnation to hell. (Please do not misunderstand me and accuse me of a universalism that is not intended.) However, it is appropriate to ask that if one outcome for some creatures is eternal suffering that can never possibly end, is this not an inherently tragic quality to the Christian account of creation?

I am well familiar with the problems of free-will. But think with me. In the beginning of the movie, I warn the children about the danger of the pond on the farm, and even relate stories of terrible things that have happened there. It seems inevitable (cue the scary music) that someone is eventually going to drown, or worse. And someone in the theater is shouting, “Drain the pond!”

Does the universe and its inhabitants, as created, have an irretrievably dangerous spot, which, however avoidable, will not be avoided by all? For those unfortunate individuals, is creation not simply tragic?

This, I think, is, in large part, the thought behind most historical treatments of the apokatastasis, the “restoration of all things” (Acts 3:21). That passage is itself worth quoting:

Repent therefore and be converted, that your sins may be blotted out, so that times of refreshing may come from the presence of the Lord, and that He may send Jesus Christ, who was preached to you before, whom heaven must receive until the times of restoration [apokatastasis] of all things, which God has spoken by the mouth of all His holy prophets since the world began. (Act 3:19-21)

Such statements are, of course, balanced by those referring to hell. But does an “eternal” hell fit with the apokatastasis of all things? Or is it an asterisk of tragedy that must be carried on forever?

I have been very keenly aware of internet controversy surrounding the topic of universalism. Several of my dear friends have written very well on the topic. Several other friends have also offered rebuttals. I regret that those rebuttals have been marked with ad hominem assertions about liberalism and other such things – which, at least in the case of those known to me – are simply not true. I have also been told by others that I myself am a universalist heretic because I allow the conversation to take place. God forgives us all.

But there are certain aspects of the conversation that are worth having. For one, it is beyond doubt that a number of major fathers held to a final apokatastasis that admitted of no tragedy (therefore, a true apokatastasis). While it is also true that a form of apokatastasis was condemned either by the 5th Council or by a letter appended to it.

Over my years of writing, I have noted a persistence to the notion of apokatastasis within Orthodoxy despite any condemnations to the contrary and have tried to account for it. St. Gregory of Nyssa, for example, cannot be accused of some modern liberalism, and yet he famously holds to an apokatastasis of all things. What is the source of this persistence?

I think the source is an instinct regarding the tragic, particularly in the light of Christ’s Pascha. It is also worth noting, I think, that the strongest adherents to a full apokatastasis were monastics. It was primarily in the deserts of Egypt and Palestine that pockets of “Origenism” persisted for a long time. How is it that those most keenly aware of their own sins, were often the most keenly hopeful for the restoration of all? And if their hope were some blithe, liberalization, why did they persist in the most difficult of ascetical practices?

I think one answer is found in the union of a believer with those in hell. The more fully one is united to the death of Christ (and His descent into hell), the more comes the awareness that no one will be saved unless Christ saves them. Additionally, there will be no solace in the thought, “But I have freely chosen Christ!” because true self-emptying and humility will confess that we have not “chosen” Him at all. It is the confession that “if I can be saved, then so can all.”

This tends to be where the conversation breaks down. I do not know how, having reached the depths of kenosis and unity with the whole of Adam, anyone could stand back and point to anything within them that somehow makes them to be numbered among the sheep rather than the goats. The weakness of considering oneself among the sheep is the tendency to somehow minimize one’s own sin. “Yes, I sinned, but not enough to be condemned to hell (i.e. I repented enough).” But how is this at all consonant with the confession that one is the worst of all sinners? Do you really mean it?

I give way to those who argue the 5th Council as well as the statements regarding hell in the Scriptures. However, the Elder Sophrony has a different take. He describes Christ as having turned the “pyramid” of this world upside-down. Its peak is now its base, and thus Christ takes the lowest point. Fr. Zacharias of Essex says that this is inspired by Christ’s words:

‘The Son of Man came not to be ministered unto but to minister, and to give His life as a ransom for many’ [Matt. 20: 28]. He took upon Himself all the weight of the pyramid and as the Apostle says, ‘became a curse for our sake’ [cf. Gal. 3: 13]. God ‘for our sake made Him to be sin who knew no sin’ [2 Cor. 5: 21], and ‘spared not His own Son but gave Him up for us all’ [Rom. 8: 32]. The motivation for all this is of course that ‘Jesus […] having loved His own who were in the world, loved them unto the end’ [John 13: 1].

From Christ, Our Way and Our Life.

It is said that Olivier Clement once asked Elder Sophrony what would happen if a person does not agree to open his or her heart and accept the love of God. Sophrony replied, “You may be certain that as long as someone is in hell, Christ will remain there with him.”

The hope for the salvation of all is, in this understanding, nothing more than a hope for my own salvation. And though we may somehow seek to distance ourselves into some sort of spiritual objectivity and pronounce on the salvation of some and the condemnation of others, the clear teaching of the spiritual fathers would always lead us to number ourselves among the latter and never among the former.

Thus, we may ask, “Will there be some who are lost?” The answer is, “Yes. Me.”

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

109 responses to “Is the Universe Tragic?”

  1. Thomas B Avatar
    Thomas B

    Thank you, Father. I will kneel before Christ’s icon and ask that He makes me an Orthodox just like you did. I was baptised aged 40 days’ old and still to this day I have struggled with faith, with the depth and wealth of Orthodoxy.

    My thoughts are that the tragic elements of the earthly life are not so tragic when put in perspective: do I choose to live with humility, fasting, refusing my own will, serving and seeking forgiveness, with thankfulness for all things? Pain will be inevitable, but in this sense, it will be voluntary.

    The involuntary pain of all of these examples you so eloquently presented and those offered by the co-readers of this blog is also a gift. There is nothing tragic about the pain that leads to salvation if you consider it from an eternal standpoint.

    With permission, I will use the anecdote/parable in your introduction; it makes for a wonderful metaphor or everyday struggle! Your blessing.

  2. Fr. Stephen Freeman Avatar

    Paul,
    It is to Christ Himself that I look for salvation and every certainty. The sacraments are a means of grace, but I see and understand the character of that grace only in the face of Christ. The grace of Baptism is given to us to save us, not in order to destroy the unbaptized. Everyone who is saved is saved by grace – the Divine Energies of God. The normative means of grace is given to us in the Church. Is there grace that works outside the Church? Absolutely. “In Him we live and move and have our being.” He sustains everything. Everything that exists, exists by grace.

    But my assurance of salvation is that God wants it. He is not trying to set up obstacles in our way nor make this impossible. We may be certain, as well, that we have never “done enough.” One of the false understandings of synergy is that we somehow contribute something to our salvation. Our synergy is our “cooperation” with grace, but not something in addition to grace. We can add nothing to the work of God. “At the end of the day” we should say, “I am, at most, an unprofitable servant.”

    If someone can be saved apart from the Orthodox Church (some will say), why bother? It’s not true that we are saved apart from the Church. The Church is what salvation looks like. But is grace at work moving all things towards the union with God that is the Church? yes. Will that happen in ways that we don’t see here and now or in this lifetime? Apparently so, but we don’t have a lot of information about that. What we know is the Church. This, Christ has given to us.

  3. Christopher Avatar
    Christopher

    Been quite busy lately and just now reading this – it is good to catch up a bit with your writings Father!

    “ For one, it is beyond doubt that a number of major fathers held to a final apokatastasis that admitted of no tragedy (therefore, a true apokatastasis) “

    I think this is an important point – but not in the way you set up here: Why is the tragic character of this creation in it’s “fallen” state necessarily (and dialectically) opposed to “restoration”? Why do you have to negate hell (or define it in a way that the Church does not because the Church explicitly speaks of the eternity of hell, it’s insufferable character, etc.) in order to have a “true” (as opposed to a “false” one I assume) apokatastasis? Seems to me the terms and the assumptions behind them are driving the conclusion in a certain direction, and one can not be “dialectical” and “ontological” at the same time 😉 An “ontology” that wants to negate suffering, death, and hell (as opposed to affirming it’s “ultimate” or “ontological” meaning in it’s very lack of meaning) misses something – namely our experience of suffering, death, and hell, and of course the most Holy Tragedy of them all, the Cross.

    “Over my years of writing, I have noted a persistence to the notion of apokatastasis within Orthodoxy despite any condemnations to the contrary and have tried to account for it….What is the source of this persistence? “

    As far as I can tell, this has more to do with a strain of Orginistic foundation/tendencies that have never been fully dealt with, mostly it seems due to historical circumstances: since the collapse of the Roman Empire only the most pressing of dogmatic controversies have been dealt with, and even then not in the “robust” manner of earlier controversies, etc.

    “ It was primarily in the deserts of Egypt and Palestine that pockets of “Origenism” persisted for a long time. How is it that those most keenly aware of their own sins, were often the most keenly hopeful for the restoration of all? And if their hope were some blithe, liberalization, why did they persist in the most difficult of ascetical practices? “

    Actually, describing this in this way with “liberalism” is not correct –Origenism is in fact a “conservatism” of an older cultural/philosophical “environment”. It is difficult for us to overestimate the influence of Neoplatonism and it’s historical cultural impact – sort of like how modern man does not really see the ground he stands on because he is walking around looking at other things. Modern man has no idea who Descartes and Kant were, even though they are at the root of every thought he has (about anything significant). In a similar manner, you are right to point out that these were left over “pockets” of a long lasting and influential “root” of something that other parts of the Church (and even the wider world) had visited and eventually left because it found it wanting/unsatisfactory.

    I count this particular unchecked strain of Orginistic thought (even if it is a novel variation on the theme – as modern Universalism like to point out) on Heaven/Hell (the very opposition itself just fits too neatly into a Neoplatonic “intuition” does it not?) of the Nyssa/Isaac/modern Orthodox “universalists” as simply an artifact of the tragedy of the Church “in the world” where sin is what it is, the historical circumstances of the Church and her hierarchy are what they are, etc. In a properly function hierarchy (or at least one with a real “catholic” Empire behind her) would have censored this long ago.

    Trying to obscure all this into “mystery” does not hide the underlying philosophy (of the Nyssa/Isaac/universalist Orgenistic strain). Part of the tragic character of Origenism (which shows it is philosophy and not Christianity) is it’s “backward looking” character – a “back to the garden” (and of course the very word “restoration” has this meaning) where even our very bodies are created (paradoxically by God) in the image of the fall/hell (see Nyssa’s idiosyncratic and non-sacramental views on sex and marriage). Christianities “return” is to God, and thus is “new” (always new), whereas Neoplatonism is return from the chaos of personhood to the negation of a philosophical simplicity.

    Someone once said that the RC want to reduce Catholicism to Augustine and Aquinas. Orthodox universalists want to reduce Orthodoxy to Nyssa and Isaac. Of course God and the mystery of our Salvation, Heaven, and yes even Hell are larger than even these Fathers.

  4. Christopher Avatar
    Christopher

    Oh dear, I did not see what all the fuss was until after I posted the above as I have been away from the blog scene for about a month. Bravo to Fr. Lawrence for attempting to articulate the now out of style “infernalist” Tradition.

    I also read D.B. Hart’s “God, Creation, and Evil: The Moral Meaning of creatio ex nihilho”. Hart is a faithful disciple of Origen if there ever was one. I now have to openly question if Nyssa (and Isaac) is anything near what Hart and other modern “Orthodox universalists” make him out to be (although I suspect they may be at least in part right based on my direct reading of him). When you start out with philosophical necessities such as “Yet, paradoxically perhaps, this means that the moral destiny of creation and the moral nature of God are absolutely inseparable…” well, you end up in yet another “ism”. Here, Hart has privileged “moral destiny/nature” above Personhood (of both God and man). I will have to get that stamp that reads “For Research Purposes Only” for certain books now in my library 🙂

    Then there is this Dr. Moore, who clearly enjoys being abstruse, though I almost enjoy reading him as he helps flush out the philosophical foundations of both Hart and the “universalist” position (though this is not his intent of course). It’s all a darn shame as they say, and as usual we are left asking “where are the bishops?” (answer: still recovering from the fall of the Empire 😉 )

  5. Fr. Stephen Freeman Avatar

    Christopher,
    Good and salient points…things I think about myself, believe it or not. I do not agree viz. Hart being an Origenist. He is a careful thinker. But the point of privileging “nature” over “person” is worth some long pondering. I thought Fr. Lawrence’s response to be weak and unreflective and including some ad hominem assumptions that are simply untrue and uncharitable.

    Where I come down is not on the Isaac/Nyssa question – though they are not unimportant. Rather, it is the persistence within the mind of the spiritual fathers (such as St. Silouan and the Elder Sophrony) of God addressing hell (or something like that). Neither of them speak in an abstract manner but in the manner of actually engaging the question within the compass of their spiritual experience – where it is the stuff that produces saints. This latest article of mine is an invitation to trod the path of St. Silouan and the Elder Sophrony, rather than simply engaging in the debate (on one side or the other).

    When the day is over, and all I have done is have a conversation or two on the matter, there is an emptiness, even the emptiness of hypocrisy – if the day has not included serious engagement in prayer at the level of the heart and an actual union with Christ in His trampling down death by death. This is the meaning of my word “swine discussing the meaning of pearls.”

    In the case of at least one major writer who advocates a patristic understanding of the apokatastasis, I have stood with him in hell and prayed. And I know that is the point from which he writes. I respect that more than any opinion that is offered from elsewhere. At least he’s in the fire.

    My suggestion, certainly the intent of this article, is to follow the word of St. Gregory the Theologian (not Nyssa): If Christ descends into hell, go with Him. That is the place, through intercession and love, to engage this question. If there is not to be a final restoration and healing of all, then I do not want it to be because I didn’t pray for it. We have to stand with Abraham and pray for the unrighteous in Sodom. That is where the love of Christ should put us. There are dangers to be found both in dismissing the hope as uncanonical and in so proclaiming the hope that you feel no need to pray. And that is my point. Perhaps if I had said it that succinctly, we wouldn’t be having this dialog.

  6. Byron Avatar
    Byron

    There are dangers to be found both in dismissing the hope as uncanonical and in so proclaiming the hope that you feel no need to pray.

    Forgive me, Father, but I think you are spot on here. It is the nature of our modern world/society to require an extreme point of view one way or another (I think of James Carville’s book, “We’re Right; They’re Wrong”). If one does not do so then they are often considered “wishy-washy” or weak or told they don’t know of what they are speaking. Battle lines have to be drawn in the sand for the modern mind.

    Finding a middle ground, especially one that involves tension between two views, is a surprisingly effective way to communicate with others. I have found that, in various discussions on “hot” topics such as abortion, etc., I can enter into a dialogue by recognizing the tension between the two extremes and discussing the topic from there. It is really a recognition of the other party’s viewpoint and a way to impart grace to another person. This inclines them to listen, even if they do not agree. Love opens doors, as it were. Just my thoughts.

  7. Karen Avatar
    Karen

    My suggestion, certainly the intent of this article, is to follow the word of St. Gregory the Theologian (not Nyssa): If Christ descends into hell, go with Him. That is the place, through intercession and love, to engage this question. If there is not to be a final restoration and healing of all, then I do not want it to be because I didn’t pray for it. We have to stand with Abraham and pray for the unrighteous in Sodom. That is where the love of Christ should put us. There are dangers to be found both in dismissing the hope as uncanonical and in so proclaiming the hope that you feel no need to pray. And that is my point. Perhaps if I had said it that succinctly, we wouldn’t be having this dialog.

    Amen.

    A couple weeks ago another Orthodox podcaster and writer entered the fray to condemn even a “hope” for universal salvation. She made an equation of “hoping” for the restoration of all and “assuming” it (without supporting this). I’m probably one of the poster children among commenters for championing this *hope,* precisely because what I *assume* is the Final Judgment and my own condemnation therein (just as the Tradition teaches). But I would find it impossible and even sinfully presumptuous to pray as St. Silouan and many other Athonite fathers have prayed were there no possibility whatsoever through the prayers of the Church and the grace of God that such a prayer be answered.

  8. Christopher Avatar
    Christopher

    ‘When the day is over, and all I have done is have a conversation or two on the matter, there is an emptiness, even the emptiness of hypocrisy…This is the meaning of my word “swine discussing the meaning of pearls…My suggestion, certainly the intent of this article, is to follow the word of St. Gregory the Theologian (not Nyssa): If Christ descends into hell, go with Him. That is the place, through intercession and love, to engage this question….Perhaps if I had said it that succinctly, we wouldn’t be having this dialog.”

    I hear you Father, and I appreciate your take on this. I might disagree with you one or two points as to who (and how) is doing the squealing, but you provide a perspective (actual Christian acesis) for a way up and over the stumbling block. To add my own side of bacon, I think it is incumbent upon us to go with Him into hell – and He is a Person – we don’t go into hell with a “restoration” or some set of principles/understandings that sum the equation and get us out. You talked about Dostoevsky’s Ivan and facing Theodicy, the problem of evil, etc. It occurs to me that when we face good and evil only on their own terms, we end up in a reduction where we pull down Love and Life into a dialectic of good and evil. Like Ivan (and Hart), you then have to find a way to out (sum the philosophic equation) or reject God altogether.

    Thankfully, we have the Tree of Life (in the form of a Cross) that transcends the implacable paradox of good AND evil existing beside a Good God, God creating a creation where in evil is real, etc. So when the “…the philosopher smacks up against the exegete…” (as Fr. Lawrence puts it) I put aside these philosophical necessities that are so important to the philosopher (for as Dr. Moore rightly points out the equation must be summed or a “monstrous” God is the result – Ivan perhaps says it best).

    p.s. I am using “philosophy” here to point to a particular fleshed out assumptions/system that are behind the working hypothesis of the current players (Hart, etc.). I believe it to be a variation of the old Origenistic theme obviously. I don’t use the term philosophy to mean “inquiry” or “asking questions in cogent manner”, etc.

  9. Luke Avatar
    Luke

    Thank you for this. A friend forwarded your blog to me recently.

    I stumbled upon apokatastisis in 2015. Then I spent the rest of 2015 studying the subject and am now a believer. Thank God.

    This unveiling will continue to spread throughout the Christian world because it is truly the Gospel. We are all being recovered to Him!

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *


Subscribe to blog via email

Support the work

Your generous support for Glory to God for All Things will help maintain and expand the work of Fr. Stephen. This ministry continues to grow and your help is important. Thank you for your prayers and encouragement!


Latest Comments

  1. Thanks for your answer, Father. I keep saying that the effort to build the building really has to be a…

  2. Dee, Vladimir Lossky used (or coined) the phrase “participatory adherence” as his definition of faith. It is a kind of…

  3. Father, I believe the ‘work’ in your last comment to Matthew might be simply the work of the will to…


Read my books

Everywhere Present by Stephen Freeman

Listen to my podcast



Categories


Archives