Source: Orthodox Life, Vol. 26, No. 1 (Jan-Feb, 1976), pp. 27-31.
The Orthodox Church, in
accordance with the love for man which characterizes her, permits prayer for
those who have cut themselves off from her, i.e., for heretics and schismatics.
But prayers in what regard? Prayers that they convert to the Orthodox Faith
before the end of their lives.
Thus in the Prayers of
Intercession we pray: "Illumine with the light of grace all apostates from
the Orthodox Faith, and those blinded by pernicious heresies, and draw them to
Thyself, and unite them to Thy Holy, Apostolic, Catholic Church." From
this it is clear that the Orthodox Church permits prayer for those who have
departed from the holy faith—prayer for their conversion. But what can one say
about those who have departed from this life? Does the Church pray for such
persons in her divine services? In the services of the Orthodox Church there is
no prayer for persons who have died in heresy. Quite the opposite, on the First
Sunday of Great Lent, in the Service of Orthodoxy, our holy Church pronounces
anathema, i.e., excommunication on all heretics and apostates from Orthodoxy.
How is it then, we ask, that the Church at one and the same time anathematizes
and prays for apostates? "The non-Orthodox by their very non-Orthodoxy
have excommunicated themselves from the Mysteries of the Orthodox Church. Metropolitan
Philaret of Moscow stated that not commemorating them during the Liturgy and
removing their names from the diptychs (the Synodikon, or lists of names
to be commemorated; i.e., the lists of those with whom the Orthodox are in
communion) is in full accord with and flows logically from their
excommunication. We might note here that removal from the diptychs reminds us
that the names of the non-Orthodox should not be commemorated at any Orthodox
Service. It may be objected that this is certainly very strict, but what can we
do? We cannot force the Lord to mercy with prayer! For our God is a jealous God
(Ex. 20:5); The Lord is righteous and loves righteousness (Ps. 10:7). There
have been cases when He Himself forbade prayer for certain persons: He said to
His prophet Jeremiah about His people: do not pray for these people, and do not
ask that they be shown mercy, and do not pray, do not approach Me concerning
them, for I shall not hear you (Jer. 7:16). Now this command of the Lord refers
to persons who are still alive, and who consequently still have the chance to
repent. And the Prophet did not dare to disobey the word of the Lord by justifying
his prayer for them as love for mankind.
It is to be noted that here we
have in view prayer for the non-Orthodox offered by the Church. To permit such
prayer in the Orthodox Church during a divine service would cause scandal, at
least for those with a weak conscience. If such persons were to hear petitions
in an Orthodox Church for the health or repose of Roman Catholics or
Protestants, they could come to the conclusion that it really does not matter
what you believe. And through this there would be ever more and more frequent
apostasy from the Orthodox Church, if not formally, then at least in spirit.
And this would be the greatest woe, for then, imperceptibly, the person thus
led astray becomes Orthodox in name only, and in actual fact one who does not
believe correctly or even does not believe at all. In the same way, persons of
other confessions, seeing that the Orthodox Church prays for them, will come to
the same conclusion about the equality of all confessions of faith. And this
can distract those non-Orthodox who desire to be united with the Orthodox
Church, for they will say the Orthodox pray for them anyway.
However, in speaking about the
strictness of the Orthodox Church concerning the commemoration of the
non-Orthodox, we do not mean to say that our Holy Orthodox Church commands us,
her children, not to pray for them at all. She only forbids us to pray according
to our own whims, to pray in whatever manner might come into our heads. Our
Mother the Orthodox Church teaches us that everything we do, including prayer
itself, must be done decently and in a proper manner (I Cor. 14:40). We pray at
all the divine services for all the various nations and races and for the whole
world, more often than not without us knowing or understanding this. We pray
just as our Lord Jesus Christ taught His Apostles to pray in the prayer He
taught them: Thy kingdom come; Thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven!
This all-embracing petition gathers within itself all the needs of ourselves
and of all our brothers in the faith and even those of the non-Orthodox. Here
we beg the All-good Lord even for the souls of the deceased non-Orthodox, that
He might accomplish with them that which is well-pleasing to His holy will. For
the Lord knows immeasurably better than we to whom to show what mercy.
And so, O Orthodox Christian,
whoever you may be, either a laymen or a priest of God, if during some service
of the Church there comes upon you the zeal to pray for some non-Orthodox close
to you, then during the reading or chanting of the Lord's Prayer, sigh for him
before the Lord and say: "Thy holy will be done in him, O Lord!" and
limit yourself to this prayer. For thus you are taught to pray by the Lord
Himself. Thus, to pray for the non-Orthodox in the Public prayers of the Church
on an equal basis with Orthodox Christian, i.e., to commemorate their names in
churches just as the names of Orthodox Christians are commemorated, is not in
accord the traditions of our One Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church. Thus do
we speak and so do we act. And this is in no wise out of hatred for the
non-Orthodox or because we do not wish them well, but because our willful
prayer for them will not be pleasing to God, will be without benefit for their
souls and will become a sin for those who pray thus.
We can see a clear example of
this in Saul, king of Israel. He had to all appearances done a good deed when,
before the opening of hostilities with the Philistines, he turned to God with
prayer and offerings of sacrifices. But since he acted in this case in his own
way, without awaiting the prophet of God, Samuel, as he had been told, he not
only did not attract God's good will and blessing upon himself, but earned
instead God's anger and punishment.
And now a few words about private prayer.
There is scarcely more than one example in the Orthodox Church of how the
personal prayer of a saint of God aided the souls of the deceased non-Orthodox,
even of pagans. St. Macarius of Egypt tells the following of himself:
"Once, while travelling across the desert, I found the skull of a certain
dead person lying on the ground. When I struck the skull with a palm branch, it
spoke to me and I asked it: 'Who are you?' The skull replied: 'I was the chief
priest of the idols and pagans who were in this place; and you are Macarius,
the Spirit-bearer. When you, taking pity on those who suffer in torment, pray
for us, we sense a certain relief.'" The elder asked him: "What is
the relief and what the torment?" And the skull said to him: "As far
as heaven is above the earth, so much is there fire beneath us, and we
ourselves stand from head to foot in the midst of the fire. None of us can see
another's face, for the face of each of us sees the back of someone else. But
when you pray for us, then each of us sees in part the face of another... This
is our relief!" The elder began to weep and said: "Unhappy the day on
which this man was born!" The elder further inquired: "is there not
some other, more terrible torment?" The skull answered: "Beneath us
there is a torment still more terrible." The elder asked: "And who is
to be found there?" And the skull replied: "As we did not know God,
we are shown a measure of mercy, but those who knew God and turned away from
Him (of course with false wisdom in matters of faith and with a careless
life)—they are beneath us." After this, the elder took the skull and
buried it in the earth.
From this story of the blessed
father we see first of all that his prayer for the pagans suffering in the fire
was not public prayer in church, but private prayer. This was the prayer of the
solitary desert-dweller, praying in the secret chamber of his heart. Moreover,
this prayer can serve in part as a reason for us Orthodox Christians to pray
for the living and deceased non-Orthodox in our private prayers. The saint did
not inform us how he prayed for the pagans, but being a great saint of God, he
undoubtedly attained great boldness in his prayers to the Lord. St. Macarius
prayed for the pagans not in a prayer of his own fancy, but as he was taught by
the Spirit of God dwelling in his pure heart, the Spirit Which taught him to
pray for the whole world, for all peoples, living and dead, as this is a
regular characteristic of the loving hearts of all the saints of God. As the
Holy Apostle Paul wrote to the Corinthians: Our heart is enlarged; ye are not
straitened in us (2 Cor. 6:11).
Thus can we now agree that
Orthodox Christians may indeed pray for the non-Orthodox, both living and
dead—in private prayer at home; but here we repeat again and again, not in
prayers according to one's own designs, not in such as might come into one's head,
but according to the direction of persons experienced in spiritual life.
In this instance the direction of
such people is as follows. There was an occasion during the life of the Optina
Elder Leonid (Lev in the Great Schema), who died in 1841. The father of one of
his disciples, Paul Tambovtsev, had died an unhappy and violent death by
suicide. The loving son was deeply grieved by this and poured out his sorrow
before the elder thus: "The hapless end of my father is a heavy cross for
me. I am now upon a cross whose pain will accompany me to the grave. While
imagining the terrible eternity of sinners, where there is no more repentance,
I am tortured by the image of the eternal torments that await my father who
died without repentance. Tell me, father, how I can console myself in this
present grief?" The elder answered, "Entrust both yourself and your
father's fate to the will of the Lord, which is all-wise, all powerful. Do not
tempt the miracles of the All-high, but strive through humility to strengthen
yourself within the bounds of tempered sorrow. Pray to the All-good Creator, thus
fulfilling the duty of the love and obligation of a son." Question:
"But how is one to pray for such persons?" Answer: "In the
spirit of the virtuous and wise, thus: 'Seek out, O Lord, the perishing soul of
my father: if it is possible, have mercy! Unfathomable are Thy judgements. Do
not account my prayer as sin. But may Thy holy will be done!' Pray simply,
without inquiring, entrusting your heart to the right hand of the All-high. Of
course, so grievous a death for your father was not the will of God, but now it
rests completely in the will of Him Who is able to hurl both soul and body into
the fiery furnace, of Him Who both humbles and lifts up, puts to death and
brings to life, takes down to Hell and leads up therefrom. And He is so
compassionate, almighty and filled with love that before His highest goodness
the good qualities of all those born on earth are nothing. You say, 'I love my
father, therefore I grieve inconsolably.' That is right. But God loved and
loves him incomparably more than you. And so, it remains for you to entrust the
eternal lot of your father to the goodness and compassion of God, and if it is
His good will to show mercy, who can oppose Him?"
This private prayer for use in
one's own room at home, given to this disciple by the Elder Leonid who was
experienced in the spiritual life, can serve Orthodox Christians as an example
or paradigm of prayer for some non-Orthodox persons close to us. One can pray
in the following manner: "Have mercy, O Lord, if it is possible, on the
soul of Thy servant (Name), departed this life in separation from Thy Holy
Orthodox Church! Unfathomable are Thy judgments. Do not account this prayer of
mine as sin. But may Thy holy will be done!"
We do not know (and to no one of
us has it been revealed) what or how much benefit such a prayer can bring to
the non-Orthodox. But from experience it has been learned that surely it eases
the burning sorrow of the person praying for the soul of one close to him who
died outside the Orthodox Church. For according to the word of the Psalmist: a
broken and contrite heart God will not despise (Ps. 50:19). The more humble and
self-abasing the prayer, the more hopeful and beneficial.
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