Baptism and
Grace
by Fr.
Gregory Telepneff
The Reverend Father Gregory
Telepneff, Th.D., is a member of the Adjunct Faculty in Theology and Religious
Studies, Anna Maria College, and former Visiting Scholar, Harvard Divinity
School.
The late Metropolitan Philaret
(Drozdov) of Moscow, of blessed memory, was more than once in his lifetime
quoted to the effect that the Grace of God was not totally absent from
non-Orthodox Christians; yet, when pressed to accept inter-Communion with Anglicans
or Catholics, he declared this to be impossible. Evidently, the issue is more
complicated than it seems to be at first glance, and the Metropolitan felt that
there were quite serious differences separating Orthodoxy from the Western
confessions, nonetheless. In this century, however, much has been made of the
apparent discrepancies between the consistent Russian practice of avoiding
re-baptism, in contrast to the fairly consistent Greek propensity for
re-baptism. Some twenty years ago, Bishop Kallistos (Ware), in a chapter from
his book Eustratios Argenti: A Study of
the Greek Church Under Turkish Rule, apparently quite logically explained
that the variation in Russian and Greek practice was not based upon any
theological differences, but, rather, merely upon different uses of oikonomia. Still, many Orthodox today
are not satisfied with this position, and refer to the statements of recognized
holy men, such as Metropolitan Philaret, in support of their contention that
non-Orthodox Christians do indeed "have some grace." Moreover, one
may say that the testimony of a holy man, though perhaps not always infallible,
is formidable nonetheless. One may indeed contend that many times such holy men
poetically sense certain matters of faith that defy totally "logical"
verbal explanations [1]. Still, it does not seem to me that there is
necessarily any theological difference between Greek and Russian thought with
regard to grace and non-Orthodox baptisms. By reference to a few pertinent
Patristic quotations, I hope to explain this.
Let us begin with a recent
article by Mr. John Erickson [2], in which he writes several things of interest
concerning this matter. I should like to make reference to two of his points in
particular. First, it seems he misses one rather essential point in St. Basil
when he endeavors to offer this Father as an example of a more
"moderate" Orthodox Patristic voice. Erickson claims that St. Basil
"accepts" the baptisms of certain Novationists (cf. pp. 120-22). Now, St. Basil certainly understands in his
statements that to baptize twice—that is, a second time "validly," as
it were—is considered a sin in Orthodoxy. And yet St. Basil writes further,
concerning Encratites (a dualistic gnostic group):
I deem therefore that since
there is nothing definitely prescribed as regards them [Encratites] it was
fitting that we should set their baptism aside and if any of them appears to
have left, he shall be baptised upon entering the Church. If however this is to
become an obstacle in the general economy of the Church, we must again follow
the others who economically regulated the Church [i.e., and not re-baptize]. (Canon 1)
Also, in his forty-seventh
canon, St. Basil states that Encratites and Novationists (the latter being
those, according to Mr. Erickson, whose baptism is "accepted") come
"under the same rule"—so the parallel in these two cases is obvious.
Would the Great Basil so lightly, as it seems, treat the possibility of
committing a grave sin in repeating this Holy Mystery, if he meant by the word
"accept" that such baptisms were valid? Obviously not. He does not
say that such baptisms are "valid"; in "accepting" them, he
simply acknowledges their Orthodox form. And
here is the mistake that Mr. Erickson makes—one which should not be made.
Yet elsewhere in his article,
Erickson states that we Orthodox cannot totally deny the charismatic
significance of non-Orthodox baptism—looking at it as if it were no different
from a pagan act (except, of course, in the case of an extreme heretical sect).
One might, in support of this, cite the words of Metropolitan Philaret.
Although his interpretation of St. Basil's foregoing reference was certainly
off the mark, and while one may say that not all of the conclusions that
Erickson draws in his article are fully Orthodox, this latter statement of his
does make sense and is compelling. We are, then, back to the issue of the
Russian and Greek practices and the ostensible disparity between what makes
sense to us, as supported by Metropolitan Philaret, and St. Basil's
understanding that, while we may accept the "form" of some baptisms,
this does not mean that we, as Orthodox, recognize them as valid. Mr.
Erickson's approach does not solve this dilemma for us.
In order to reconcile these
seemingly discordant views of non-Orthodox baptism, let us define what Orthodox
baptism is and does. Then let us define what grace is and what it does. We
shall cite here St. Diadochus of Photiki:
Before holy Baptism, grace
encourages the soul from the outside, while Satan lurks in its depths, trying
to block all the noetic faculty's ways of approaching the Divine. But from the
moment that we are reborn through Baptism, the demon is outside, grace is
within. Thus whereas before Baptism error ruled the soul, after Baptism truth
rules it. Nevertheless, even after Baptism Satan (can) still act upon the
soul....
If my reading of the Holy
Fathers is correct, what the saving acts of Christ make possible is the
appropriation of grace by man himself—making "grace his own," which
in turn totally renews and transforms the entire person. That is to say, a real
metaphysical, ontological change can now take place in the baptized person,
if—as St. Gregory Nyssa tells us in his Catechetical
Oration—he lives virtuously and makes his baptism effective in Faith and
the spiritual life.
In saying what we have about
grace and baptism, we have not said that non-Orthodox are totally without
grace, indistinguishable from pagans. No indeed. If I understand St. Maximos
correctly, Christ (and hence grace) can be found in virtue itself. A virtuous
man takes on grace by virtue of virtue, since virtue proceeds from spiritual
reality. Of course, without the radical ontological transformation that takes
place in the Mysteries (Sacraments) of the Church, such grace cannot be
appropriated and cannot be made "one's own." Nevertheless, as we see
in the words of St. Diadochus, grace is still present— though acting from
without, rather than from within. And so, it is this internal-external
distinction which separates Orthodox baptism from non-Orthodox baptism: the
Orthodox baptism does what Christ, the Apostles, and the Church always intended
it to do—it transforms man from within, totally renewing the true human nature
and opening the way for potential communion with the divine.
Thus, Metropolitan Philaret
was not wholly mistaken in his desire to attribute some "charismatic"
significance to non-Orthodox baptism. If, in the theological climate of Latin
influence on the Russian Orthodox Church at the time, his words are a bit
overstated, what he could not express with perfect theological precision he
nonetheless knew intuitively and poetically. While he knew that a non-Orthodox
baptism itself was not efficacious (since he would not allow intercommunion
with the heterodox), he knew fully well that the virtuous act of faith in
Christ which we see in non-Orthodox baptisms was something in the eyes of God.
What that something is, he perhaps was too quick to say. It is not the
renewing, metaphysically-transforming thing that Orthodox baptism is, but it is
powerful enough that even Roman actors, mocking the Christian Mysteries, were
often converted to Christ by simply enacting the ritual of baptism.
It is Orthodox baptism—and
Orthodox baptism alone—which begins to fulfill the saving work of our Lord in
the human person in the fullest sense. Whereas a believer can be led to
repentance (even St. John the Forerunner baptized a baptism of repentance), only
in the baptized Orthodox Christian can there be restoration to the true self
and recovery from a state of corruption and stain—only an Orthodox baptism can
restore the ontological integrity of man (cf.
St. Athanasios, On the Incarnation).
We may note that several of
the great Fathers of the Church (including Sts. Basil, Augustine, and Gregory
the Theologian) have implied that the "charismatic," as distinct from
the "sacramental," boundaries of the Church may not completely
coincide with the canonical ones. There may be aspects and dimensions of the
Church which have not been revealed to us by God. Indeed, we see a parallel
between these implications and our Christian understanding that the Church in
"embryo" existed among God's chosen people, the Israelites. One may
also cite, as part of these "shady" areas, St. Basil's contention
that some schismatics are not to be considered wholly outside the Church (Canon
1). And the late Father Georges Florovsky notes that the Church has categories
of people, such as catechumens and penitents, [3] who are perhaps not full
members of the Church, and yet certainly are not regarded as heathens. We are
not simply being polite when we insist that non-Orthodox Christians be called
Christians.
When the Russians receive
non-Orthodox by Chrismation, then, they are doing so with a keen eye toward the
charismatic grace outside Orthodoxy, but not with a view of accepting
"sacramental" grace in the non-Orthodox. Greeks, when they practice baptism,
are not denying this charismatic grace, but are emphasizing that it is not the grace of the Mysteries. In
essence, we see oikonomia differently
exercised in these instances. There is no discrepancy in these two traditions.
The only discrepancy arises when we mistakenly try to attribute to the
Fathers—St. Basil, for example— views which they do not have (the Fathers
cannot really be understood as "moderate" or "extreme" with
regard to matters such as baptism), or when we try to make the difficult
question of where grace, of whatever kind, is or is not a simple one.
We are not, in the end,
preserving the purity of the Holy Faith when we attempt to prove that the
fullness of grace and true baptism exist outside the Orthodox Church. That this
is being done increasingly by converts to Orthodoxy should prompt us to think
about whether we are conveying to those who come to Orthodoxy the fullness of
the Church's teaching. Creating
of Orthodoxy an ecumenical religion that it is not is ultimately the most
harmful thing for converts. They are building
their own stones from the crumbs that they are offered in these hard days. On
the other hand, we do disservice to the Providence of God when we do not
understand the depth and subtle nature of Orthodox Patristic thought. The
Fathers have a deep and profound unity to their witness, but it must be studied
and understood with care and charity. It does not compromise our stand for the
uniqueness and primacy of Orthodoxy to admit that there are many non-Orthodox
confessors of Christ who shame us. The Royal Path demands that we have great
zeal for the Faith, yet not limit the workings of Divine Providence.
For those who find in our
views the proverbial "closet ecumenism," we would only stress that
ecumenism, as we have pointed out, is a total distortion of Orthodox teaching.
For those who would claim that we believe that salvation is relative, we would
cite the words of the Fathers above and our own belief that the fullness of
life in Christ can only be found in Orthodoxy—and that fullness is the very
nature of Christianity. And to those who would wish that the Orthodox Church
were not what she must always be —the very criterion of Truth and the Church of
the Apostles, the only Church of Christ—, we would only say that they have yet
a long way to go before they are truly Orthodox.
Endnotes
1. When Greek
and Russian holy men seem to disagree on matters, we must seek beyond the
inadequacies of language and see the noetic unity of their thoughts. Only then
do we see the profundity of theological truths at a higher level, in which
discrepancies and opposites become the same.
2. St. Vladimir's Seminary Quarterly, No.
2, 1985.
3. It is
interesting to note, too, that Sts. Chyrsostomos and Gregory the Theologian
both tell us that the unbaptized infants are saved, but that they are not on
the same level as those who have striven and suffered for the Faith.
Source: Orthodox Tradition, Vol. III, No. 1,
1986.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.