The Tradition of Being Human

Being human is a cultural event. No one is human by themselves and no one becomes human without the help of those around them.

This is so obvious it should not need to be stated, but contemporary human beings often imagine themselves to be their own creation. The exercise of individual freedom is exalted as the defining characteristic of our existence: “I am what I choose to be.” To suggest that most of who and what we are is beyond the realm of choice would seem to be a heresy, an insult to the modern project.

The primary mode of cultural education is not choice – rather – it is tradition. Most of what and who we are is “handed down” to us (literally “traditioned”). For the most part it is an unconscious process – both for the one who delivers the tradition as well as for the one who receives it. From the smallest actions of speaking to a baby, slowly passing on language, to the highest actions of belief and understanding, the vast majority of what forms and shapes us will have come through a traditioning. Free choice is largely exercised within the tradition: chocolate and vanilla are choices but both exist within the same tradition of ice cream.

We’re often not very aware of the “tradition” in which we live. A student in a classroom would readily agree that the words of a teacher or professor were a “traditioning” of sorts. But they will fail to notice that how the room is arranged, how the students sit, what the students wear (or don’t wear), how the professor is addressed, how students address one another, what questions are considered appropriate and what are not, and a whole world of unspoken, unwritten expectations are utterly required in the process. The modern world often imagines that “online” education is equivalent to classroom education since the goal is merely the transmission of information. But the transmission of information includes the process of acquiring the information and everything that surrounds it. Those receiving the “tradition” online will have perhaps similar information to those receiving it in a classroom – but they will not receive the same information.

This reduction of the world to information is a common error of the modern period. The world and data-about-the-world are considered to be the same thing. The reduction of the world to information is the reduction of what it means to be human. And the result is a diminished person.  – As an aside, a weakness in the Artificial Intelligence project is its mistaken notions about the nature of information.

The Christian faith is neither immune from nor above this cultural requirement. From the most simple forms of Evangelicalism to the fullness of Orthodoxy, traditioning is the primary form of religious enculturation. It is simply how people learn. The denial of the role of tradition does not remove tradition from its place, it simply narrows the field of vision such that people become unaware of what they are doing. You can pretend that tradition plays no role in your life or your beliefs, but that pretense is itself something that is traditioned.

Years ago, an Anglican priest friend visited a Baptist Church for the first time in his life. He had never seen this most common form of Protestant Evangelicalism. I laughed the next week when he describe his experience. “I went in the Church and I wasn’t sure where to bow!” He said. “There was no Cross!”

The same experience could have been reversed as a Baptist might describe his dismay at crossings and bowings and the like. But something is  being taught and transmitted by such actions (or their lack). The Evangelical might complain that he sees “idolatry,” while their absence, for a liturgical Christian, can convey a lack of the presence of God or a lack of respect for the things of God.

To learn to be a human is to live in a tradition. 

In Orthodoxy, Tradition is both conscious and unconscious. It is conscious in that its reality is acknowledged and considered carefully. It is unconscious in that most of it operates in a manner that is not frequently discussed. It is both what things are done and how they are done.

But above this is the understanding of the Holy Spirit itself as the Tradition.

But the anointing which you have received from Him abides in you, and you do not need that anyone teach you; but as the same anointing teaches you concerning all things, and is true, and is not a lie, and just as it has taught you, you will abide in Him. (1Jo 2:27)

I’ve often wondered at how people think the Holy Spirit is supposed to “teach us all things.” Early in my Christian life I thought there should be some sort of inner urging or near-voice whispering, “Walk this way…”  But time has taught me that such promptings are often rooted well outside of God. Some would dryly suggest that the anointing of the Spirit guides us solely through the Scriptures. But that inevitably means that the cultural matrix of the world precedes the Spirit and shapes the reading of Scripture.

There is, instead, the teaching of Orthodox Christianity that offers the whole of the faithful people of God as the place in which and within which the Spirit forms and shapes us.

He who possesses in truth the word of Jesus can hear even its silence. (St. Ignatius of Antioch)

The life of the Church, lived in continuity with the gospel, bears within it the ever-renewing life of the Holy Spirit. The Spirit is that which gives shape and informs the Church (and its ethos). It is this inner life and ethos that is recognized regardless of the outward culture in which it is incarnate. Over time, the Church-as-ethos, forms and shapes even the culture in which it lives.

All of this is deeply challenged in the modern world, for every ethos that is not the ethos of commerce and consumption is challenged. Religious believing is allowed a place within the ethos of commerce and consumption – as a form of ideas to be consumed or sold. Thus evangelism in the modern world is often pursued in terms of our consumer culture. But this distorts the gospel. To “choose” the gospel reduces the Kingdom of God to something that can be comprehended. We cannot freely choose what we do not understand.

If the “gospel” that you have embraced was received in a manner that can be described as “consumption,” then you have yet to perceive the gospel or to hear the truth as it is in Christ.

When the presentation of the gospel becomes an invitation to choose, the cultural message, the “ethos” of such a gospel is saying something that is profoundly untrue and the gospel itself has been changed. There are indeed choices to be made along the path to salvation, but the gospel itself transcends such moments.

The pattern in the early Church for the proclamation of the gospel involved an invitation to a way of life. That invitation was not followed by immediate initiation – but by preparation. The process of catechesis (learning) often lasted as much as three years. It was closer to the process required for becoming the citizen of a new country than to marketing and consumption. The same process, or a similar tradition, remains the proper manner of evangelization.

The gospel is given to human beings. St. Paul uses terms such as “revealed” to describe the nature of the gospel. Indeed, even on a personal level he uses such language:

But when it pleased God, who separated me from my mother’s womb and called me through His grace, to reveal His Son in me, that I might preach Him among the Gentiles…(Gal 1:15-16 NKJ)

We must not think of St. Paul’s revelation as consisting of nothing more than a decision on the road to Damascus. For he goes from there to Damascus and is baptized. He spends an unknown length of time in what he calls “Arabia” with no purpose described. But he returned to Damascus and remained there for three years. Then he made his first post-conversion journey to Jerusalem and met with the leaders there.

And the context of St. Paul’s conversion is already the same ethos shared by the disciples – Judaism. The new ethos into which he is baptized is a refinement and fulfillment of what he already knows.

Modern persons are formed in an ethos that is often alien to the gospel – and it is an ethos that destroys the soul. Loneliness, compulsion, and bondage to the passions through the materialist culture of consumerism leave us hungry – but ill-prepared for spiritual food. Salvation (understood in the fullest sense of the word) requires spiritual formation. We must learn and be formed by the Tradition of the Spirit in the ethos of Christ’s self-sacrificing way of life.

The Church itself rightly exists only when it is the embodiment and expression of that way of life – only when it can nurture human persons within its womb and give birth to gods, to paraphrase the fathers.

This inner life and power of formation, experienced as ethos, is the manifestation of Christ’s promise of the Spirit. This is the guidance into all truth, in the only way that is truly human. We are not thinkers or choosers. Human beings live – we rightly live in a manner that is itself a fullness. Only a fullness of life, a living ethos given as tradition can truly form human beings. We have never been formed in any other way, nor can we be.

Therefore, brethren, stand fast and hold the traditions which you were taught, whether by word or our epistle. Now may our Lord Jesus Christ Himself, and our God and Father, who has loved us and given us everlasting consolation and good hope by grace, comfort your hearts and establish you in every good word and work. (2Th 2:15-17)

Just so.

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.



by

Comments

26 responses to “The Tradition of Being Human”

  1. Jeanie Murphy Avatar
    Jeanie Murphy

    One of my favorite quotations is from G.K. Chesterton, that master of quotations: “Tradition is the democracy of the dead.”

  2. Dee of St Herman Avatar
    Dee of St Herman

    I think, Father, sometimes we forget how important ethos is, and how we come by it. Truly, it is a way of learning lived only among people as you describe. Even the smallest facial and behavioral nuances convey such traditions and might suggest whether someone is an Orthodox person or a priest.

    At one point, I saw a video of you sitting with someone who, by simple appearances (priest vestments, for example), might have conveyed they were Orthodox. Yet somehow when they spoke, I knew that they were not. Eventually, it came out in the conversation that they were not Orthodox. But I still wondered how I knew.

    There are also Orthodox, I will not specify, but in communion in the Orthodox Church, who have decided to change traditions. They are also (please forgive me) not so easily recognizable as Orthodox. I will not elaborate, but it can be jarring. I have no intention to judge, but I recognize my lack of familiarity with what I have been taught both in catechism and through years of experience with the traditional ethos.

    Lord have mercy on us all as we cope with secular culture.

  3. Esmée Noelle Covey Avatar
    Esmée Noelle Covey

    What baffles and intrigues me is why some children who are born and raised Orthodox remain practicing Orthodox Christians throughout their lives, while others do not – even within the same families. It seems that somehow either the Orthodox tradition is not being effectively passed on, or some other tradition from the wider, broader culture is superseding the tradition of Orthodoxy their parents gave them.

  4. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Dee,
    I think I know the video you’re describing. It was a Q&A session at the conference where I spoke. The conference was sponsored by a Byzantine Catholic group (I had a blessing from my bishop to speak there). It was an interesting experience for me, perhaps because Byzantine Catholics share a great deal in common with the Orthodox (historically, they were once Orthodox who had entered union with Rome). The commonality also had “borders” in which you could sense a difference in ethos. And that’s very hard to describe from the outside.

    Having been an Episcopal priest for 20 years prior to becoming Orthodox, I was very aware of the notion of “ethos.” It’s actually quite strong among historical Anglicans (Episcopalians). The truth was, I never quite fit (for a variety of reasons). My godfather, an Orthodox priest, once laughed at me and said, “You were never an Anglican. You were angry Orthodox in the wrong place.” That’s probably quite accurate. I’ve never felt so at home as I have in Orthodoxy – with the bonus that I got to quit being angry.

    The ethos of Orthodox has its own variations (primarily due to ethnic influences). Those differences are not significant – or at least do not go to the heart of Orthodoxy itself. As I travel and speak, I follow the first blessing given me by the late Archbishop Dmitri. “Go wherever you’re asked.” With very few exceptions, I’ve adhered to that directive. May God give us grace!

  5. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Esmêe,
    In hindsight (as a man in his 8th decade), I see that almost nothing has the power of ethos – the culture that permeates our lives. Very few things are as difficult as nurturing a child (successfully) in the life of the Church when the surrounding culture is hostile and as powerful and permeating as our own. A dear friend of mine (an Orthodox journalist) has spoken quite persuasively on the power of the internet culture (and the ever-present smart phone). It’s like being hard-wired into something that seeks to drown out God.

    In contrast, we are, in fact, hard-wired for God. We are created in His image for the purpose of union with Him. All of this requires lots of love, patience, and many, many prayers!

  6. Esmée Noelle Covey Avatar
    Esmée Noelle Covey

    I agree that parenting is the most difficult, most important, and least appreciated “job” in Western society. I truly feel for parents, especially in today’s world.

  7. Dee of St Herman Avatar
    Dee of St Herman

    Yes Father, I think you have the correct situation I’m referring to. I’m glad you go where you’re invited! Hopefully your way of living and speaking the Orthodox Way might have a positive influence, enticing your listeners into the Church, God willing!

  8. Matthew Avatar
    Matthew

    What do we make, then, of all the evangelicals (for example) who “made a decision” for Christ?

  9. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Matthew,
    It’s a very thin theology, unlikely, I fear, to withstand the winds of culture if the winds are blowing the other way. All of us live in something of a storm. I don’t despise the shelter that comes along. However, the voluntaristic account of being human is extremely naive (it seems to me). How, exactly, that “thin-ness” will reveal itself is anybody’s guess.

    A short observation: “Falling away” is something I’ve seen here and there over the course of the years (including among the Orthodox). It’s a phenomenon that is rarely a “decision.” It’s more like a process (it’s cultural). There may come a point at which a “decision” is made and announced, but it was already happening before it “happened.” I suspect the end of a marriage looks like that (quite often). It is a precipice we could recover from, but the journey of recovery will be a sort of “enculturation” is it is to last and take hold.

  10. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Dee,
    We’re asked to bear witness to what we know. The rest is in the hands of God. But I’ve had some very interesting conversations…

  11. Matthew Avatar
    Matthew

    Thank you Fr. Stephen.

    I guess at the end of the day it is a “fullness” versus “thin-ness” issue. Milk versus that of meat.

    I was baptized as a baby in the Catholic Church. I now believe and accept that initiation into the Church and into the Christian faith is through the sacrament of baptism. That is truly the place where one is born again.

    That said, my baby baptism meant nothing to me when I was about 15 or 16 and asked my mother if I could leave the Church. It wasn´t until the age of 26 that I made a “decision” for Christ in an evangelical sense. The rest of my spiritual journey most of you in the space already know.

    Theologically I may be incorrect, but I think there has to be a moment in time and space when one begins to cooperate with the grace God has already given them. This is not to say that we, through rational assent, attempt to do what only God alone can do. I´m simply saying that, I think, as one cooperates with God´s grace as bestowed most fully through the liturgical and sacramental life of the Church, one begins to shed “thin-ness” in whatever form and begins to embrace the “fullness” of becoming truly human.

  12. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Matthew,
    The way I think about it is that thinking, deciding, and cooperating (and other similar things) are themselves part of “who we are.” As such, they are important to the fullness of life. It’s that I don’t think they are as utterly central as our culture imagines…they are insufficient to the fullness.

    It sounds perfectly “normal” to me that someone at age 15 or 16 might turn their back on something given to them as a child – particularly if that has not been sufficiently nurtured. An adult cannot live on baby food, for example (or, we would certainly turn our backs on it in favor of something else).

    The liturgical and sacramental life of the Church can do a great deal (more than we imagine), but its fullness is more truly revealed when we are eagerly embracing it and engaging with it in a mature manner – indeed.

  13. Mallory Avatar
    Mallory

    Thank you, Fr. Stephen. As usual, your writing illuminates what has been on my mind already. I am forever grateful. I have noted before that I’m in a tough circumstance, raising a toddler while in the midst of caring for my sick mother who is an emotionally abusive alcoholic. Her rages have escalated, to the point that I am doing my best to arrange a new situation if I have to, but with little resources to do so. It is clear to me now that this is the “tradition” I, without choosing it, was born into: almost all of the women in my family line–on both sides!–ended up deeply unhappy, rageful, addicted and making life pretty much miserable for everyone around them. Naturally, the big question is: how do I escape this fate? And, much more importantly to me, how can I make sure my daughter is not caught by these dark forces and is free? I suppose being conscious is one step, but as you make clear, Christ working in us isn’t something one can intellectually “get” or decide or will. So then is it a combination of personal will while knowing that only through God can these generational chains truly be broken? It also begs the question: who or what set us up in these homes? Millions of people live trapped in abusive situations for the simple reason of survival. If you really think about it, what a terrible system. Even absurd. You can’t be free just because for whatever reason you don’t have money? We don’t take care of our mothers or children. We throw them to the wolves and basically tell them to figure it out. It is hard to understand why God would put the most vulnerable in such a toxic soup.

    I’d like to add another note, I hope it’s relevant: in order to get my financial footing back since having to leave my corporate job to raise my child, I have just started using AI on the advice of a friend. I have always said AI is demonic–yet, here I am, using it to try to free myself from the prison of my own personal “tradition”/family. And, to my astonishment, it is helping me in real, practical ways–in a much more practical and compassionate way than my friends and family have thus far. I think the real danger is that AI becomes a replacement for human connection not only through the fault of technological progression and the culture at large, as you put it correctly in a comment “drowning out God”, but also because we as humans (it seems) are becoming less compassionate, more unwilling to help the drowning person nearby, and are so individually focused that AI is there to pick up the slack in a sense–however poorly. Does this make sense? I would love to hear your thoughts and corrections. I am seeking only Christ and the truth!

  14. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Mallory,
    You are clearly in a difficult situation. Human suffering is an inherent part of human freedom (things are allowed to be terrible). Knowing that, however, is not something that brings comfort to the soul. It’s simply true.

    I’m glad that you’ve found some help (like information) through AI. It has its uses. It sounds to me like you could use very practical human help as well. Years ago, I served in a large parish that had a couple of volunteer social workers who helped out with very practical needs. It taught me just how useful that profession is. It might be that there are agencies in your area who provide social workers for helping with practical problems – family/childcare/adult care, etc. It’s worth investigating.

    It’s also the case that many small parishes (pretty typical in Orthodox America) lack the resources to be of much use with complicated family issues. But, your priest might have some referral suggestions for social work sorts of resources.

  15. Michelle Avatar
    Michelle

    Fr Stephen,

    You wrote, “A short observation: ‘Falling away’ is something I’ve seen here and there over the course of the years (including among the Orthodox). It’s a phenomenon that is rarely a ‘decision.’ It’s more like a process (it’s cultural). There may come a point at which a ‘decision’ is made and announced, but it was already happening before it ‘happened.’ I suspect the end of a marriage looks like that (quite often). It is a precipice we could recover from, but the journey of recovery will be a sort of ‘enculturation’ is it is to last and take hold.”

    What do we do if we find ourselves in the painful process of this falling away, of this great divorce?

    I’m a convert to ROCOR with a dual cultural upbringing. On my mother’s side, I’m a registered member of the DAR and enjoy the many privileges of being blue-blooded nobility in a small, wealthy pastoral town. On my father’s side, I’m Orthodox — our family fled Eastern Europe before the Great War and found refuge in this most gorgeous country with very hospitable, well-cultivated families, such as my mother’s.

    I love my family (both sides) and my church (ROCOR), but there’s a disconnect.
    ROCOR exists because of the culture of America.
    But we’re supposed to become enculturated to ROCOR…?

    There are many wonderful things about ROCOR (the Church!). But there are also many, many wonderful things about America (including its generations-long webs of relationships, country living, ethos of giving, etc.).

    To the extent possible, I would like to see any and all Orthodox influencers celebrate the ‘good humus’ of the USA and its people. If we can read more about the positive aspects of American culture in the online Orthodox sphere, it might help hierarchs in the GOA and ROCOR feel more comfortable in adapting to those positive parts of American culture.

    I’m afraid that converts to non-English speaking parishes will eventually fall away, like me. It’s not even primarily a language issue, although after 7 years I still can’t pray the Our Father in church nor do I know how to respond “Truly He is Risen!” It’s a matter of the generations-long web of relationships that I’m embedded in, the American ethos of giving and helping out, the land itself and presence of God… and leaving all of that, to be forced to become what feels like a foreigner in my own home. I understand that some of the enculturation needs to take place on my part, but if it’s all foreign while also being in America… it just feels like reading more books, being more disconnected from my actual neighbors… a form of “Ultradox Protestantism” … to me. I just want to stay home with people I love, even if they’re Methodist or Presbyterian or Baptist. They don’t know anything about Orthodoxy, just that they were raised by their families and friends to go to those particular churches. If that’s not some kind of Orthodox ethos right there — obedience, love your family, love your tradition, etc., I’m not really sure what is.

    Thank you, Michelle

  16. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Michelle,
    What you’re describing in your ROCOR parish is actually fairly rare these days: A parish that is culturally Russian (of some sort) in America. There’s a lot of Greek parishes that are ethnically Greek. But, in a growing number of places, where the bulk of a congregation is convert, there’s a slow process of watching the parish become both Orthodox and American. There’s nothing inherently anti-Orthodox about American culture, though we have many enculturated habits and beliefs that run counter to the gospel. People sin regardless of their ethnic background.

    On the other hand, it’s also possible that you’ll find yourself in conflict – caught between an ethnic parish and a non-Orthodox ethnic culture to which you’d prefer to belong.

    My older brother joined the Sons of the American Revolution (we qualify), but I never did. I don’t have time for it. My extended family that is still living are not Orthodox. They’re everything else or nothing. Neither, however, do they constitute a culture that I’d want to be part of (they’re scattered all across the country).

    It is possible, no doubt, to live as a bridge between cultures, bringing the best of both worlds into contact with each other. Ethnic parishes have a hard time surviving across generations in America. They either find a way for their children to be Orthodox in America, or they die out – the ethnic tie often becomes thinner with each generation.

    May God give you grace in all things.

  17. Mark Spurlock Avatar
    Mark Spurlock

    Hi Michelle,

    “I just want to stay home with people I love, even if they’re Methodist or Presbyterian or Baptist. They don’t know anything about Orthodoxy, just that they were raised by their families and friends to go to those particular churches. If that’s not some kind of Orthodox ethos right there — obedience, love your family, love your tradition, etc., I’m not really sure what is.”

    Coming from a completely Protestant background myself, I very much understand this want. In my own case, however, I feel that–whereas nothing is wrong, of course, with loving your family and (your) tradition–it can lead to a too comfortable view of Christianity, my relationship to God, and my relationship to other human beings.

    Christ refers to being a “stranger” in Matthew 25:35. Throughout His ministry, the example we see is to associate with the outcasts, whether the poor, prisoners, those of another ethnicity, or ostracized for their profession. His disciples are likewise told to forsake their families for His sake.

    These are hard expectations and challenges. Most of my life I have preferred avoiding them and even after all these years and becoming more certain through Orthodoxy they are essential to calling oneself Christian, I struggle. Not murdering anyone, on the other hand, has been relatively easy, so not everyone fights the same battles with the self 🙂

    Father Stephen writes: “It is possible, no doubt, to live as a bridge between cultures, bringing the best of both worlds into contact with each other.”

    I am not fortunate in the second cultural background that you have, but I do try to bridge some of the divide between those in my family who are devoutly Protestant and Orthodox beliefs they often have only a few vague impressions of.

    Becoming “a foreigner in our own home” is in my judgment seeing the world more clearly and less through a glass darkly. It’s a good thing! I, too, would have great difficulty going to a parish regularly that did not use English, but sometimes being reminded that most of the world’s inhabitants have never been culturally like us is salutary.

  18. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Michelle,
    It is not ROCOR to which you are to be enculturated – but Orthodoxy. Learning that distinction is important – but not always easy. The more “ethnic” a local parish might be (particularly when different than the surrounding culture) the easier it is to mistake its ethnicity for its Orthodoxy. Thus, for some, Orthodoxy=Greek, or Orthodoxy=Russian. Neither are quite correct – or, perhaps – both are “putting the cart before the horse.”

    But, easy Christianity is no Christianity. We are asked by Christ to take up our Cross. We pray for discernment and grace in that struggle.

  19. Michelle Avatar
    Michelle

    Dear Fr Stephen and Mark,

    Thank you both <3

    Michelle

  20. ML Avatar
    ML

    Mallory

    I have also been in a bad situation while trying to protect a little child. It was hard in every way. I still struggle to understand how God allowed it when I prayed through whole nights, fasted, begged for protection, and turned to church (evangelical) leaders for help that ended up causing more harm. The one good thing I have seen come from it so far was an education in human behaviour that allowed me to recognize someone else in a bad situation and help them. I have no words of wisdom, only to say I hear you and pray for protection for you and your little one.

    Fr. Stephen, I have loved your writing for several years but am a ‘lurker’ in these conversations, reading but usually lacking confidence to join in. Raising autistic children, I have often thought about how it is we pass on what it is to be human, because my children have the wonderful gift of being more deeply immersed in direct experience of the world than in the human social realm. There is that quote about ‘give me a child until the age of 7 and I will give you the man’; it follows with something I have read about children up to around 7 years having a measurable difference in brainwave patterns compared to adults, showing a pattern associated with a meditative state. Maria Montessori wrote of the child as having an ‘absorbent mind’. In our homes and churches, when we strive to preserve traditions and teachings, when we stay within the ethos that has been passed down to us, we are guarding our children’s inheritance of how to exist as a human, in relationship with others, with God, and in the world.
    When I was a child, my parents surrounded me with good things and good people, and taught me the idea of discernment, so that I could learn to judge what fits in my life and what doesn’t. When I found your blog, I recognized it as something that fits. I know as I read your writing that you are seeing the world and what is true in it in the same way as my father. It is a deeper culture, something that is beyond a worldly background or ethnicity.

  21. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    ML,
    That is one of the kindest things anyone has ever said to me. We are doubtless shaped by our environment (much of which is also hidden). I was raised in a largely secularized home (nominally Baptist but with little practice). I never saw anyone in the home praying (except for the rare blessing at meals) or reading the Scriptures. We did not talk about God or religion. There was tension, emotional explosions, and always a threat of violence. As an old man, I can see how all of that shaped certain things within me – but I also marvel at grace. All of my environment, genetics, etc., are the “clay” which God has used for my shaping. I think I’m still pretty lumpy and there are more than a few rocks and gritty sand that interfere with the whole process. Grace is greater than all these.

    I long for beauty. I marvel at the miracles of grace that abound everywhere. May God fill us with wonder!

  22. Matthew Avatar
    Matthew

    This doesn´t really have anything to do with the topic at hand, but I wanted to share a quick comment about this blog.

    While I have struggled in the past being one of the few Catholics on a thoroughly Orthodox blog, I still find this a very positive and encouraging space.

    You have created something here, Fr. Stephen, that from my perspective doesn´t really exist on the internet I peruse daily. We are able to discuss topics here in a very, very cool and collected way. I think we really do learn from one another and there is no vitriol whatsoever. That is a very rare thing in comment sections on the internet.

    So from that standpoint I am very thankful for this space. Be blessed everyone!

  23. Preston Avatar
    Preston

    Beautifully said, Father. Something I’d like to share. I just recently got done reading (and chewing on) Alasdair Macintyre’s “After Virtue.” It’s very dense and deep compared to my usual reading fare and it’s took me a bit to grasp the main points he was making. But now some new things are sticking out to me from the Gospels.

    I’m sure you’re familiar with the standard Evangelical Protestant canard about “traditions of men.” But in it’s original context, this term is not a statement about where or when a specific practice originated, but about how it is being used. The “Korban” practice Christ denounces in the Gospels was not, in fact, an extra-Scriptural accretion but a fully attested and legitimized part of the written Torah. Its purpose was the consecration of one’s property or possessions to the service of the Tabernacle. It had been transformed into a “tradition of men” through misuse—that is, it was no longer oriented towards its original telos, but was now a self-serving means of evading the duty to honor and provide for one’s parents. Christ was not calling for the abolishment of traditions, but for their recovery and regeneration in light of their proper ends: the formation of people who live in faithful, just, and loving relationship with God and others.

    This, to me, shifts the entire terms of the debate. Calling something an “accretion” solely because of when and where it entered the life of the church misses the point. “New” or “later” traditions and practices often arise as part of the church’s ongoing response to history—but they can still be God-breathed products of the Holy Spirit that legitimately express the apostolic deposit of faith (“unchanging” does not mean “static”). Conversely, you can find traditions with a very ancient (and even Scripturally attested) pedigrees that have degenerated into “traditions of men” by being fragmented and disconnected from their proper ends. The answer is not to throw them away, but to restore them to life by re-orienting them to those ends.

  24. Drewster2000 Avatar
    Drewster2000

    “Free choice is largely exercised within the tradition: chocolate and vanilla are choices but both exist within the same tradition of ice cream.”

    I’m pretty sure that should be put up on a billboard somewhere.

  25. Robert Avatar
    Robert

    And when tradition is rejected we’re left with the schizophrenic dichotomy of libertarian freedom and social constructionism of Liberal Modernity. Tradition is the synthesis: how we live together in Reality.

  26. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Robert,
    Indeed. To be human is to have a traditioned existence (it’s handed down to us). To live ignoring those who have come before us is simply a choice to live as a blind person – because somebody-something is always traditioning us.

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 so much Fr. Stephen. One particular summary comment explains so much about what you have been teaching over the…

  2. Dear Father, Thank you for revealing the history of conversion of eastern Catholics to Orthodoxy in the OCA. I hadn’t…

  3. Thank you Fr. Stephen, that is interesting about the OCA church history, I had associated it more with Russia, didn’t…

  4. Thanks Dee. I’ll check out the documentary. I remember Fr. Stephen talking about the Shire, but I forgot what he…


Read my books

Everywhere Present by Stephen Freeman

Listen to my podcast



Categories


Archives