As the End Draws Near – Silence

St. John the Baptist said of Christ that His “winnowing fork is in His hand.” (Lk 3:17) That farm implement is a tool for separating the wheat from the chaff, that is, to separate the edible part of the wheat from the husk that is to be discarded. It is, in that sense, an instrument of judgment. The character of Christ, who is the Image according to which we are created, is such that human beings are more fully revealed to be what they are as they draw near to Him (or as He himself draws near to us). There was a point in time when the eleven disciples did not know Judas to be a traitor-in-waiting. Indeed, they trusted him enough that he served as their treasurer. Christ, we are told, always knew Judas to be what he was, but patiently bore with him until he was revealed as a betrayer.

In a similar manner, I think, there is evidence that Christ also saw the other disciples to be what they were to become. Simon is named “Peter” long before he evidenced anything of a “rock-like” character. He was loud, opinionated, capable of trying to correct Christ at any number of points. There’s nothing rock-like in such behavior. Nevertheless, I suspect that, in the presence of Christ, Peter felt some stirring of the rock within himself. In His presence, those who could not walk felt the stirring of strength in their limbs, just as blind eyes strained towards the light of sight. Unbelieving individuals discovered an ability to believe they would have thought impossible. Christ’s presence reveals us.

That the winds and the seas obeyed Christ’s voice was not contrary to their nature – it was the fulfillment of their nature – as they at long last heard again the voice of Adam (now the Second instead of the First) command them. They groaned and travailed across the ages, waiting for the glorious liberty of obedience. At the voice of Christ, the winds and sea became their true selves.

I have no words of wisdom about those who are revealed to be “lost” in some manner, those for whom the presence of Christ seems to reveal their alienation from God. In my experience, this has not been a common thing. Goodness, though it seems fragile, is, in fact, quite strong and frequently victorious. That which has been alienated from God has no grace to sustain it. Nothing “energizes” it. Nevertheless, there is something of an ontological entropy that sets in from time to time, a “falling” into nothing. I recall, in the face of that, Christ’s descent into the lowest Hades so that in the furthest reaches of that dark entropy a redeeming light shinesl.

On any given day, I dare not think long or hard about this entropy. The very remembrance of it can come as an invitation to join its downward spiral. Christ warns in Scripture that the “last days” will be so difficult that very few will retain faith. I suspect that the culprit will not be pain or suffering, but simple despair. Even now, I hear its fearful, tired voice in the complaints of many.

Are we in the “last days”? In the first week of Great Lent, we sing:

My soul, my soul, arise! Why are you sleeping?
The end is drawing near, and you will be confounded.
Awake, then, and be watchful, that Christ our God may spare you,
Who is everywhere present and fills all things.

+ The First Week of Great Lent, Kontakion, Tone 6

The “end” that is drawing near is Christ Himself. It is not the machinations of governments and hidden cabals that mark the last days. That evil becomes more manifest is a secondary effect of the “drawing near” of Christ. Human events in no way determine God’s timing. If we are watching such events, our eyes are being distracted and we are likely living in delusion. Writings about such things are usually accompanied with the admonition to take care for our soul.

St. Paul’s last letter was written to the Philippians from prison. He is hopeful that he will be released, but he is also uncertain about the outcome that awaits him (he was executed). (Phil. 1:20) It is of great note that this is called his “epistle of joy.” As the end is drawing near, the brightness of his soul is increasing. He offers this advice:

Finally, brethren, whatever things are true, whatever things are noble, whatever things are just, whatever things are pure, whatever things are lovely, whatever things are of good report, if there is any virtue and if there is anything praiseworthy—meditate on these things. (Phil 4:8)

This admonition is far more than the Apostle urging us towards pleasant things. There is nothing naive within his spiritual life. This is a direction for the heart, a specific instruction that allows us to prepare ourselves for the end. Those who think on the ugliness of the world, or the rumors of terrible things and intentions, are, in fact, sleeping. It is a sleep that lulls us into a despair that will make shipwreck of our faith in ways that we cannot imagine.

There is a great spiritual battle that is being waged in the human heart. It is the battle of the true, the noble, the just, the pure, the lovely, the good report, the virtues, and the praiseworthy, all of which have true being and are upheld by the hand of God, versus the lies, the fears, the imagined danger, the ugly and the dark, all of which ultimately have no substance and will pass away like the wind. This battle is the true struggle of our time. These adversaries are the “spiritual wickedness in the heavenly places” that St. Paul describes in Ephesians 6.

There is a reason that St. Seraphim of Sarov says, “Acquire the Spirit of Peace and thousands around you will be saved.” We have, in large part, exchanged the true spiritual warfare of the heart for the ideological struggles of our age. As such, we place ourselves on a level playing field with every secular argument and action. Political temptations abound because we remain within the delusion that things of great value are being established in that process. The delusion is that so long as our goals are noble and stated correctly, the result will be equally noble and correct. St. Paul warns: “For the kingdom of God is not in word but in power.” (1 Cor. 4:20) The power (clearly referenced by St. Seraphim) is not in our arguments but in the quiet victory gained through union with the in-dwelling Christ.

It was this same power that raised Christ from the dead.

But if the Spirit of Him who raised Jesus from the dead dwells in you, He who raised Christ from the dead will also give life to your mortal bodies through His Spirit who dwells in you. (Rom. 8:11)

This is the life that saves thousands around us. I find that every time I write in this vein, there is a pushback from some that accuse me of “Quietism,” which is an odd critique from the Orthodox. “Hesychasm” is the Greek form of the same word, and is seen as the very heart of the faith – in belief and practice. The history of “Quietism” in the West is not the same as Hesychasm in the East. Still, it seems to be an easy target for criticism. We believe in our politics.

Here is a word that is worth pondering. It is from Alexander Kalomiros, the author of the article, “The River of Fire.”

Hesychasm is the deepest characteristic of Orthodox life, the sign of Orthodox genuineness, the premise of right thinking and right belief and glory, the paradigm of faith and Orthodoxy. In all of the Church’s internal and external battles, we had the hesychasts on one side and the anti-hesychasts on the other.

The very fabric of heresy is anti-hesychastic.

Again, Hesychasm is found in practice, not in rhetoric. I believe that it was Hesychasm that parted the waters of the Red Sea. It caused the walls of Jericho to fall. It has raised the dead and cleansed lepers. Demons tremble in its presence.

The Lord is in His holy temple. Let all the earth keep silence before Him.

About Fr. Stephen Freeman

Fr. Stephen is a retired Archpriest of the Orthodox Church in America, Pastor Emeritus of St. Anne Orthodox Church in Oak Ridge, Tennessee. 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.



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111 responses to “As the End Draws Near – Silence”

  1. juliania Avatar
    juliania

    “How do we regain that vision as modern people without sliding into dangerous territory?” Nathan, my apologies if you have had a better answer from Father Stephen, but your question resonated with something further I had in my thoughts, specifically that memory is an important key.

    In your early childhood experiences of Lutheran Christianity you will have had beautiful moments — hold fast to them. We are all Orthodox as children, of that I have no doubt! It seems to me that is the greatness of Dostoievski’s “The Brothers K”. Alyosha has a memory of his mother, just a fragment of a page as it is described, deep in his heart, that perhaps unknowingly separates him from his nearest brother Ivan, who doesn’t seem to have such a memory, but which, unspoken, permeates his soul. He in his last speech impresses this upon the children gathered around him that whatever they become in later life, they should hold the memory of the moment they have at that particular time, a moment of love for one another.

    It’s perhaps part of what makes hesychasm a different process from mere meditation.

  2. Fr. Stephen Freeman Avatar

    Nathan,
    It occurs to me that the prayer, St. Patrick’s Breatplate, is a good example of an Orthodox view of the natural world and certain possibilities within it. By the same token, many of the thoughts in the modern Orthodox hymn, Akathist Glory to God for All Things, are similar. It is of note to me that the Russian editor of my book (it was published in Russia a couple of years ago), asked permission to include a chapter with a Russian translation of St. Patrick’s breastplate. An excellent idea.

  3. Nathan Fischer Avatar
    Nathan Fischer

    Thank you, Father!

  4. Agata Avatar
    Agata

    Nathan,
    Thank you for initiating this interesting conversation!

    One more book for your reading list, in reference to your ” capitalism and opposing Marxist/socialist thought” corrective. It’s called “the-demon-in-democracy”, by a Polish author Ryszard Legutko (I am Polish and experienced these processes as a Polish Orthodox person, now living in the Western world).
    This book description is really good – it even references, a bit, our human nature and to what it is reduced without God…

    “The book is written from a perspective of someone who after having lived for many years under communism and then for more than two decades under a liberal democracy has discovered that those two political systems have a lot in common, stem from the same historical roots in early modernity, and accept similar presuppositions about history, society, religion, politics, culture and human nature. Moreover both political systems have some similar objectives. What communism tried to achieve with the use of most brutal measures on a massive scale has been to a considerable degree achieved in a liberal democracy through a more or less spontaneous development and more or less humane social engineering – an almost total identification of man with a political regime, politicization of culture and social relations, omnipresence of ideology, and a peculiar combination of a utopian impulse with the insistence of human mediocrity. Both systems reduce human nature to that of the common man who is led to believe himself liberated from unnecessary obligations of the past, unaware that he shackled himself with other chains which dramatically narrowed his perspective. Both the communist man and the liberal democratic man refuse to admit that there exists anything of value outside the political systems to which they pledged their loyalty and both refuse to undertake any critical examination of their ideological prejudices.”

  5. Dino Avatar
    Dino

    Juliania,
    You make an interesting point regarding ‘holy’ memories and their spiritual assistance for the soul. But this would be an action that is Spirit-led, (along with the mutual assistance of the soul’s ‘consciousness’).
    So, because of this, I wouldn’t go as far as saying that such memories might be a part of what makes ‘hesychasm a different process from mere meditation’.
    (Since, Hesychasm, in its purity, aims at the complete uprooting of all subconscious in a person.)

  6. Eric Avatar

    Thank you Father Stephen. Your words seem to bear more clarity each time I read them
    In many regards these subjects have been much on my mind of late, not least as the readings in my own tradition often seem to be ‘cut up’ to keep in tune with the current spirit of the age. So this coming Sunday we hear Christ’s ‘manifesto’ at Nazareth andno more. We finish hearing how everyone thought well of him, yet ignore the fact that within minutes they take him to throw him off a cliff. This reading seems so resonant with what you have said, and my apologies for I haven’t read your thread, but this Sunday I shall be preaching on ‘too close to home’. for every time he comes near ‘home’, be it Nazareth, or the House of His Father, his presence disturbs. Given that the House of His Father is the Human heart, it is indeed htis close approach which we find hard to bear. We want ‘the world out there’ put right, but ‘don’t come knocking on our door’. As a friend once put it in a poem, ‘don’t come to close, Jesus’. Thank you once more

  7. Eric Avatar
    Eric

    PS Doing the good that is at hand, as you put it, is of course ‘closer to home’. We easily stray in these hyper-connected days far from home, as I know all too well. Kyrie Eleison

  8. Christina Avatar
    Christina

    “I also will note that reading “River of Fire” was a key turning point in my exploration of Orthodoxy (from a Protestant background). Learning that the love of God follows us forever and ever, even to the depths of hell, made me realize that I could do nothing else than become Orthodox. Your quote by Alexander Kalomiros is also amazing. It makes me want to learn more about him.”

    Father,
    I started to read this lengthy River of Fire article not knowing what expect, only that it must be enlightening for Orthodox christians. I got several pages into it before I realized I was not grasping it, I will not give up but try again another day.
    However, is it possible that this information for me may “be bread when I am only able to digest milk” ? I am a curious and voracious reader, I have plowed easily through much longer articles and books. I can research him and see what else I can find.
    I love your Blogs and look forward to the comments, enjoy and learn from them, and your endless patience to answer questions. Thank you for all you do 🙏

  9. Fr. Stephen Freeman Avatar

    Christina,
    It’s quite possible. One thing I have learned over the years regarding reading: it’s only useful if it answers a question. The harder and more important discipline in the spiritual life is to recognize our questions.

  10. Fr. Stephen Freeman Avatar

    Here’s a question for everyone:

    How many books (say, Orthodox related) have you read more than once? More than twice? More than three times?

  11. Sunny Avatar
    Sunny

    I have shared this one with many people. Timely and on point, as always.

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