Mercy and love transcend race, nationality, and religious affiliation
Metropolitan Cyprian of Oropos and Fili (+2013)
Editor’s Note: The following article, while it addresses the phenomenon of resistance
to burgeoning foreign immigration in contemporary Greece, is certainly apropos
of America, a country which—though built on the labor and toil of immigrants—has
also seen, in recent times, the unfortunate emergence of a spirit of
inhospitality towards more recent immigrations.
• Ideologizing a disdain for
foreigners. The recent mass influx of refugees into our country,
particularly from Afghanistan, has occasioned great confusion and has also
demonstrated that those “Greek Orthodox’’ who are opposed to the new identity
cards [which do not indicate one’s religious affiliation and are, for this
reason, viewed by a vocal faction in Greece as an attempt by the state to
undermine the Orthodox identity of the country—Trans.] and who have
organized public protests over the matter, with certain laudable exceptions
(such as the residents of Zakynthos), do not evidence a Christian heart and
have failed to keep in mind what it means to be a Christian.
We are not merely addressing, of
course, the issue of the legal obligation of the government, which—on
the basis of international conventions—is prevented from expelling any refugee
who declares that he has been persecuted and that his life is likely to be in
danger if he returns to his homeland.
Nor, in addition, are we only
distressed by the shamelessness of the police authorities [in violation of the
foregoing international conventions—Trans.], one agency of which
even went so far as to issue a deportation order to a new mother with her
twenty-day-old baby...! (To go where...?)
What is, in our view, by far more
alarming is the fact that a disdain for foreigners is being turned into an
ideology—in the name of Orthodox tradition, no less!—, to the unbelievable
extent that a well- known clergyman has been vehemently condemned for providing
free relief to hundreds of children of illegal immigrants, very few of whom are
Orthodox (the majority of them being Muslims, Catholics, and Protestants), and
that the following truly shocking question has been posed: "Are we
going to allow a few clergy who are ignorant of our Orthodox Tradition to save
their souls while they destroy Greece ?"
• Love is Christocentric. The
ethos of the Orthodox Church is Christocentric. It is the teaching of the
Fathers, proclaimed in deed and word, "always, everywhere, and by
all," that
the members of
the Orthodox Church are called to function as the active hands of Christ. As
the eyes of Christ, which are filled with understanding. As the attentive ears
of Christ. As the heart of Christ, which is filled with love for all mankind,
in all of its needs and all of its concerns, demonstrating, by their deeds,
that they are members of the Body of Christ. They are called to show this love
and understanding towards mankind, not only theoretically, but also in concrete
terms and in practice. For, it is precisely their bodies, through which love
towards humanity is manifested in specific and practical ways, that have become
members of Christ. Love should be extended towards other people in a corporeal
way, since it is in their bodies that Orthodox Christians have become, or can
become, members of Christ. [1]
The "neighbor" in the
parable of the Good Samaritan is embodied in the person of our fellow man,
regardless of race, nationality, or religion. [2] The aim of our Lord’s
astonishing reply to the question posed by the lawyer in that parable was
precisely to demolish the exclusive "boundaries" of love established
by the Hebrews, who regarded as their “neighbor” only those who were of the
same nation and religion as themselves.
Our Lord and God Jesus Christ,
Whose Divine heart becomes our own heart through the Holy Mysteries of our
Church, was, and lived as, a "refugee": He descended from Heaven to
earth, took refuge in Egypt, lived as a "stranger," and has
continued, throughout the centuries, to knock on our doors as a "stranger,"
in the person of our "neighbor."
Now, in view of this, what
racial, national, or religious "walls" are capable of preventing
exuberant waves of love from pouring out of our hearts—the very heart of
Christ—in all directions?
• St. Akakios and the
Persians. On April 9, we celebrate the memory of St. Akakios, who was
Bishop of the Armenian city of Amida at the beginning of the fifth century.
During the war between the Romans
and the Persians (421-422), the Byzantines had captured seven thousand
prisoners, whom they refused to feed or to release.
So, St. Akakios summoned his
clergy and addressed the following words to them, among others:
Our God needs
neither dishes nor cups, for He neither eats nor drinks.... Since our Church
possesses many gold and silver vessels, which derive from the generosity of the
Faithful, it is our duty to ransom the prisoners with these and to feed them.
And that is what happened: the
treasures were melted down, the prisoners were ransomed, given food, and sent
back to their king with the necessary provisions for the return journey.
King Baranos V of Persia was so
amazed by this magnanimous act of St. Akakios that he asked to meet the most
holy Hierarch in person. [3]
• St. Gregory Palamas and the
Turks. The very splendor of Christian love and "mercy"—over and
above race, nationality, and religious affiliation—expresses, in addition, the
“oeconomy” of God, as St. Gregory Palamas wrote to his Church flock with regard
to his captivity under the Turks (March 1354-Spring 1355):
It seems to me
that, because God has ordained things in such a way that Christians and Turks
are intermingled, and that I am a prisoner of the Turks, that God’s Providence
and the works of our Lord Jesus Christ...are being made manifest to them (the
Turks) as well..., such as to be without excuse before His future and most
dread Tribunal. [4]
* * *
Woe to us, if our "national
identity" should continue to adulterate the Christocentrism of our
Orthodox ecclesiastical ethos, which rises above nationality!
Woe to us, if the dust of the "statistical
triumph" (!) of "signatures" [on petitions submitted to the
Greek government by those protesting against the new identity cards—Trans.] continues
to prevent the inscription, in the hearts of Christians, of the "New Name,"
[5] which is unceasingly inscribed by the Holy Spirit and which renews our
identity through the "New Commandment" [6] of love for our neighbor
without conditions, limits, or boundaries!
Notes
1. Dumitru Staniloae, Για ενα ’Ορθόδοξο Οϊκονμενισμό
[Towards an Orthodox Ecumenism] (Piraeus: 1976), p. 103.
2. St. Luke 10:25-37.
3. Socrates Scholastikos, Ecclesiastical History, Vol.
VII, ch. 21 (Patrologia Graeca, Vol. LXVII, cols. 782B-784A); see also
the Θρησκευτική και Ηθική’Εγκυκλοπαίδεια, Vol. I, col. 1169.
Unfortunately, the memory of St. Akakios is passed over by the standard Synaxaristai
and calendars of Saints.
4. St. Gregory Palamas, “Epistle to His Church,” §3, in Συγγράμματα
[Writings], Vol. IV, p. 121.
5. Cf. Revelation 3:12.
6. St. John 13:34.
Original Greek source: Άγιος Κυπριανός, No. 304
(September-October 2001), pp. 65-67.
English source: Orthodox Tradition, Vol. 19 (2002),
No. 2, pp. 7-9.
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