Report of Archbishop Vitaly of Montreal to the Council of Bishops in 1983
Our pastors and their flock live
in contemporary conditions of a particular spirit, which can be called, without
the slightest exaggeration or any kind of mystical enthusiasm, pre-apocalyptic.
There is no longer anywhere in the whole universe a single ruler or government
that governs its people, by the mercy of God, by the grace of the Holy Spirit.
The restraining anointed one of God has been taken away from the earth. The
Constantinian era of grace-filled rule has come to an end. The last book of
Holy Scripture has been opened in life—the Revelation of the holy Apostle John
the Theologian. The heir of the Byzantine Empire, the Orthodox Russian state,
no longer exists. The whole world has been divided between two forces: on the
one hand—militant godless communism, and on the other—the so-called democratic
Western world, in which freedom still faintly glimmers. The latter, outwardly,
for the superficial observer, is fragmented into countless Christian and
non-Christian religions and sects, but inwardly it is bound together, as if
with cement, by the spirit of Antichrist.
In the Providence of God, the
grace-filled epoch of rule by Orthodox sovereigns was given to us so that we
might quietly, freely, and consistently save our souls. The anointed one of God
protected us from the unbearable fiery temptation which has now fallen upon the
whole world in the form of communism and Masonry. But we, through our
sinfulness, became absorbed in vanity. Each one occupied himself with his own
craft, his own profession. Doctors, lawyers, engineers, and even simple masters
of every kind of work on earth turned their earthly occupations into their
religions, giving to them all their time, their strength, and their heart.
For their Orthodox faith, such
people had very little space left, if anything remained at all—often only the
formal performance of rites, and even that only because it had to be done,
because it was customary, because all society lived that way, and one could not
fail to keep pace. The Son of God descended from heaven; the Almighty God
became Man in order to deify us. Whole hosts of righteous ones, prophets,
wonderworkers, and fools-for-Christ passed through our boundless land. The Lord
sent us remarkable preachers and profound theologians; the works of all the
holy fathers were published, and the Holy Scripture—from pocket format to
magnificent liturgical books. Brochures, leaflets, and prayer books were
distributed in the millions or sold to our people for mere pennies. In all the
dioceses journals and missionary leaflets were printed. And all this, like the
prophecies of old, began to grow weak before the boundless vanity into which
our people were sinking. Our Russian literature, in the apt expression of
Professor Andreyev, always being a kind of spiritual pulpit, vividly reflected
the spiritual process of the gradual spiritual fall of our people. From the
carefree “old-world landowners,” sunk in the indulgence of culinary pleasures,
there began to arise individual boorish Bolsheviks like Nozdryov, and not far
beyond there already appeared the outline of the ideological atheist
Verkhovensky, from whom there is only one step to Lenin. And what is to be done?
In our, perhaps bold, opinion,
the Lord, in order to lead our people out of this dead end of vanity, which is
gradually plunging them to the very bottom of hell, commands His angelic host
to open the gates of hell and to release upon our people, and after them upon
the whole universe (“for judgment begins with My house”), demons who would
sting men and awaken them from their sinful sleep. By this final and extreme
providential measure, the Lord wishes to bring His people, His own people, to
their senses and to lead them out into the light of God. To all the careless
laborers who have become absorbed in earthly affairs, sooner or later—and to
each one individually—the fatal question will be put: with whom is he? With
Christ or with the demon? And this question will be posed not by a bishop, not
by a priest, from whom they are accustomed to hear all this and whom they no
longer listen to, but by the demon and through his servants, upon whom will
depend all the success of earthly life, all the wealth, all the earthly glory
of these masses of men absorbed in vanity. What a shock there will be for them,
what an upheaval!
“Thou hast made all things in
wisdom, O Lord,” and Thou dost make them so. The Lord has compelled the demons
to bring the world, which has been absorbed in vanity, to its spiritual
essence; and that essence is this: that the Almighty Lord exists, that demons
exist, that the Kingdom of Heaven exists, that hell exists, and that this world
passes away like a mist. And when such a fatal question is posed, every human
soul will tremble, will be entirely changed, will be shaken, yet it must make
the inevitable choice; and there will no longer be any place for spiritual
neutrality. It will no longer be possible to remain as if aside; it will no
longer be possible to maneuver spiritually, to evade, or to hide. No one will
be able any longer to take refuge anywhere; everyone will be found, everyone
will be brought out from the darkness, from the corners, and there will be an
end to every kind of spiritual diplomacy and temporary neutrality. The choice
is simple and clear: light or darkness, Christ or Belial.
Your Graces! We have already
entered the beginning of the era of this great choice. From beneath our very cathedras
the souls of men are being stolen from us; they are being eaten away from
within, leaving us only an empty, barren shell. We must know this. This is the
pressing reality of the world problem of our days. The temptation is burning,
fiery. It stands before us openly, and therefore in this there is both the will
of God and God’s permission. We shall be witnesses of astonishing changes in
people. Those known to us until now, seemingly pious people, will suddenly
become traitors, completely changing their spiritual countenance; and on the
contrary, those who until now seemed asleep will become zealots of piety even
unto death. Only those will choose Christ and stand on the side of the Lord who
personally love Christ—those for whom Christ the Savior and Provider is
everything in all things, day and night.
The Lord has permitted all evil
forces to take such power upon the earth, such temporary earthly
almost-omnipotence, and this situation dictates to us archpastors the
application of the most important, eternally effective tactic—to unite all our
flock to the almighty grace of God, the Holy Spirit. There are no longer any
who assist us in this our pastoral labor: there is no restraining anointed one
of God holding back evil, there is no genuine Christian society, and no
Christian school. Even the legislation once inspired by the Holy Gospel
throughout the Christian world is being replaced, diminished, or simply
abolished. We are alone. Before the Archangel’s trumpet shall sound to all born
of the earth the great “Let us attend” at the terrible Coming of Christ, we
must now say to our flock our own archpastoral “Let us attend,” revealing the
picture not of a coming trial, but of the temptation already acting, of the
inevitable choice. Let us not deceive ourselves, nor indulge in any illusions:
a great multitude of the Orthodox will not endure such a burning trial and will
fall with a great fall. Before the earth and all the works that are in it are
burned up, everything light and superficial will burn away—everything that
trusts in wealth, success, and earthly glory—and there will remain only those
who sincerely love Christ, devoted to Him even unto death… loving only Him,
their Savior, and no one and nothing else.
Before such a formidable picture
of evil already triumphing, it is incumbent upon us archpastors not only to
speak a strong word to our flock, but also to set into action all the richness
of the gifts of the Holy Spirit, who always abides in the Church of Christ. All
our flock has already been made partakers, through all the sacraments, of the
grace of the Holy Spirit, and it is fitting for us only, by every accessible
means of pastoral labor, to kindle this fire into a flame, to do everything
within our power so that, according to the word of the Apostle Paul, we may
become all things to all men, that we might save some. As concrete measures, it
is necessary to convince all the faithful to abandon the old practice of
partaking of the Holy Mysteries only once a year, if anyone still to this day
adheres to this little commendable custom. All our pastors should be persuaded
themselves to pray before performing the holy mystery of confession, so that
the Lord may grant them the gift of love, wisdom, compassion, and mercy. Our
entire flock should also be instructed concerning the necessity of praying
before going to confession, so that the Lord may grant them the gift of the
Holy Spirit of true repentance, the gift of compunction, contrition for their
sins, the gift of tears that wash our souls with the water of the second
baptism—which our confession ought to be, and not a momentary acknowledgment of
one’s sins.
It would also be good for all our
publishing houses to print everything that is best, most penetrating, and not
routine, that has ever been written in Orthodox spiritual literature about
confession and the communion of the Holy Mysteries, this source of the rebirth
and renewal of every Christian soul. This must be preached before every fast;
lectures must be given about it; small and large gatherings should be organized
not only for youth but for everyone, both great and small. At such gatherings
it is necessary not only to read lectures, as their organizers often become
carried away with, but above all to direct attention to the purely spiritual
and formative side of the gathering. Several days should be devoted to
questions that a person often carries in his soul for many years without
receiving a true Orthodox answer to them. Then a living connection will arise
between the souls of the visitors and the pastors; the entire gathering will
become prayerful; with each day more and more people will be preparing for
communion; and with the daily services it will sooner resemble not a conference
but a pilgrimage—which will be the highest summit of the spiritual success of
such a gathering.
The aforementioned fiery
temptation is already in action and is about to knock at the door of every
pastor and every member of the flock. Therefore, pastors must be very vigilant
and, as far as possible, visit those among their parishioners who stand upon
the ladder of social or material success—those to whom this spiritual ultimatum
will first be presented. When visiting them, it should be pointed out that a
day will come in their lives when, in their ascent from success to success,
they will reach their “ceiling,” and then this ultimatum will be set before
them point-blank, and they will feel themselves standing on the edge of a sharp
knife. Of course, Your Graces, let us not deceive ourselves: no prior
knowledge, however painstaking, however exhaustive of all the twists of evil,
knowledge of all the corridors of the underground of hell, will save anyone or
rescue anyone, but only a living, personal, fervent love for our Savior, the
Lord Jesus Christ. In life one has had occasion to observe how the most subtle
investigators of the dark powers ended their existence miserably in their very
ranks.
Such are the conditions of
contemporary life in which our pastors and our flock live.
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