We live in a complex world that grants simplicity a certain charm but favors sophistication. Many people are embarrassed or even offended by the thought that others might characterize them as simple. Even as Orthodox Christians, we may admire simplicity in others but we seldom make a conscious effort to nurture it in ourselves, quite forgetting that the Lord said plainly: Except ye be converted and become as little children, ye shall not enter into the kingdom of heaven. (Matt. 18:3)
This neglected virtue is well
illustrated by the life of Father Dimitrios Gagastathis, a simple Greek village
priest of our time. If he had difficulty composing a sermon, his feelings of
inadequacy were unfounded. As a priest-monk from Patmos wrote to him:
…What difference
does it make if you don’t possess titles of worldly wisdom. Take for instance
Saint Spyridon- what was he? A simple man, most simple, a former shepherd. But
nevertheless, he put Arius to shame. Not to mention Saint Anthony, the
completely illiterate doctor of the desert! You, too, Father Dimitrios,
possessing simplicity of heart and an ardent love towards the Lord, you attract
the grace of the Holy Spirit, the Comforter. Besides, the Lord called you to
work in a fold of simple men, villagers, who can understand you and you can
understand them. You have had with the Lord’s Grace a great effect on their
souls as a genuine priest and a true servant of the Lord.
From the time he was born, in
1902, Papa-Dimitri lived in the small village of Platanos on the Thessalian
plain. His family was poor, and before finishing the elementary grades he left
school to work as a shepherd. In 1921 he was drafted into the army. He served a
three-year term and then returned to school, completing the sixth-grade
equivalency required to become a priest. After an additional six months’ study
at a seminary, in May 1931, he was ordained to the priesthood. Papa-Dimitri was
married and had nine daughters. He served in the Church of the Archangels, the
parish of his youth, his pastoral work complicated by alternate threats from
local communist rebels, German occupying forces, and hostile Turks. In 1966 he
was diagnosed with cancer. An operation in 1969 provided him a few years’ reprieve,
but the disease returned, finally claiming his life on January 16/29, 1975.
To move beyond these bare facts
is to glimpse behind the veil, drawn closed by our sins, into the spiritual
realm that is revealed to those of holy life. For Papa-Dimitri there was no
perceptible boundary between the earthly and spiritual realms. In his autobiographical
notes, he describes numerous of his encounters with angels, saints, and demons
in a manner that leaves the reader amazed – as much by the writer’s
guilelessness as by the incidents themselves.
From his childhood, it was
evident that Papa-Dimitri belonged to God’s chosen. He loved the services at
the Church of the Archangels, and even his games reflected his desire to become
a priest: he built “churches” and performed various “services,” imitating what
he observed while helping in the altar. As a youth he would take his flock and
withdraw to some remote area to pray undisturbed. He consciously avoided
worldly associations and strengthened his faith by studying the lives of saints
and “whatever Christian book I could find.”
As he continued to build on this
foundation, he became subject to demonic attacks. “One night,” he writes, when
he was still a shepherd, demons came to his hut “in the form of a violent wind
and with many cries to sweep me off along with the hut and destroy me.” On
another occasion, he had shut up the sheep and was going to church when, “Satan
appeared to me in the form of a huge dog in an attempt to hinder me…”
When he became a priest, he
frequently served at night. “It’s at night and on an empty stomach that one can
pray better,” he observed. As many as thirty villagers, plus children, would
join him for these nocturnal liturgies. The demons made evident their
displeasure, trying by all means to disturb and discourage this practice.
“One night, as I was doing my
usual service, some time after midnight, I heard shouts, songs, dancing and
music. Most strange – given also that it was snowing outside and it was very
cold. I went out and what should I see: The demons were having a wedding! I
smiled slightly. I made the sign of the cross over them and said: ‘Wherever the
grace of the Holy Archangels falls, the power of the devil is routed!’ as well
as ‘Let all adverse powers be crushed under the sign of Thy Precious Cross!’
They all vanished immediately.”
“Several other times the demons
attacked me: once in the form of a boar, another time in the form of a dog
trying to pass under my legs while I was reciting the Salutations of the
Theotokos, and still another time, in the form of a tall black man who attempted
to strangle me while I was on my way to the Archangels to pray. In every
instance, I prayed and they disappeared.”
Papa-Dimitri’s faith in the power
of the Archangels proved itself repeatedly. He was serving liturgy one night
when the demons “came into the church and started overturning the chairs. The
archdemon came into the sanctuary, shut the window and grabbed me by the throat
to strangle me. I asked help from the Archangels, and when the rooster crowed
in the morning, they all went away.”
Another time, after a successful
exorcism, “the demon got spiteful because we had chased it away, and came into
the room while I was sleeping to devour me. It came … in the form of a herd of
pigs… As soon as they entered the room and I heard their wild cries, I shouted,
‘Archangel Michael, save me!’ And behold, what a wonder! a young man killed the
largest pig by his sword and told me: ‘Don’t be afraid, I’m with you!’ I saw
him at the door with the sword… Of course, it was his duty to save me, because
I have been serving in his church sixty years now, both as sexton and as a
priest.”
His closeness with the angels and
the saints gave him a wonderful boldness in addressing them. “Tonight I want a
miracle,” he would say to them, or, “Why do you stand idle? Give a helping
hand.”
Among his writings we read, “The
simple man is neither wicked nor can he think anything wicked. He bears no
resentment. He is like a child.” Papa-Dimitri himself was like a child in this
regard: he never thought evil of another. Because of this, he was at first
taken in by the pro-communist guerrillas with their patriotic slogans, and he
and his villagers began supplying them with food and clothing. Very soon,
however, his error was revealed to him, and he determined to preach against
communism, which he saw was an enemy of the Church, country, and family. He
realized that in so doing he was placing his life in danger, but after praying
to the Archangels to assist him in this struggle, all fear immediately left
him. Papa-Dimitri possessed great authority among the villagers, and the
communists were anxious to destroy him. Several times Papa-Dimitri was
sentenced to be executed, and several times he took leave of his family, fully
expecting he would never again see them in this world, but each time he was miraculously
delivered.
Once, when the guerrillas were
pursuing him, he hid in the mountains, wandering for days without food or
shelter. He finally met up with two nationalist soldiers: “At night we heard
wolves howling. A whole pack was coming our way. From the depths of my soul, I
entreated Christ, the Theotokos, and Archangels to help us. Suddenly, I saw an
unknown man walking around the pack and turning it away.”
He was alone again, still
wandering and thoroughly exhausted, when he came to a swollen stream: “I tried
to cross it, but I just couldn’t. I remained there for a while entreating the
saints to help me. While I was praying, I heard a strong bluster, and I saw a
young radiant rider passing in front of me and greeting me. I neither saw nor
heard anything else-just the greeting-and, all of a sudden - O great wonder! - I
was on the other bank of the river.”
At one time the guerrillas
thought to entice Papa-Dimitri by offering him an office. They were going to
give him a horse and four bodyguards if he would go around the villages and
preach communism. On hearing of this proposal from the villagers, Papa-Dimitri
turned to the Archangels: “They want to destroy me, but you thwart all their
machinations!” When the communists came with the written order, he refused
point-blank: “I just can’t do it. Such a job requires an educated and
experienced man. And anyway, I’ve declared openly that I want to die as a
priest, not as a clown. I won’t take this job. Be it now or never, I’m ready to
die for Christ any time you wish!”
In the village lived a teacher
who was a communist sympathizer and who had worked to have Papa-Dimitri
eliminated. The tables turned and he was arrested by the nationalists. He was
being hauled off to be executed when he saw Papa-Dimitri: “Pastor, help! Save
me!” he cried. “I perceived that God presented me with my enemy to test me,”
writes Papa-Dimitri in describing the incident. He ran alongside the soldiers,
trying to persuade them not to punish the teacher, but they were unwilling to
change the order. Finally, he said, “I’ll sacrifice myself together with him! I
have to, since the Lord said, I lay down my life for the sheep (John 10:11).”
When they saw the priest’s determination, the soldiers released their prisoner.
Afterwards Papa-Dimitri told the teacher simply, “Be a good Christian. I
deserve no thanks; give thanks to God and glorify Him!” The persecution of the
communist guerrillas was difficult to endure, but even more hurtful to
Papa-Dimitri were the conflicts he experienced with his presbytera. She tried
to persuade him to be more like “other priests,” those who, for the sake of
their own safety, compromised with the communists, if only for the sake of
appearances. Every time he set out on a forty-day series of Liturgies, she
tried to hinder him, telling him that it was unnecessary, that it would
undermine his health. Under the influence of a worldly visitor, she argued with
Papa-Dimitri to allow their daughters to dress more fashionably, accusing him
of wanting them all to become nuns. When their younger daughter left to join a
convent without telling her mother, the latter berated Papa-Dimitri, and for
hours gave him no peace. Through prayer and patience, Papa-Dimitri weathered
these outbursts and frequently witnessed a remarkable, and speedy, change of
heart in his presbytera. He realized that these conflicts were temptations. His
presbytera was at heart a good woman: she came to appreciate their daughter’s
decision, and during Papa-Dimitri’s final illness she read for him the cycle of
services and never left his side. As for Papa-Dimitri, he was grateful:
“Anyway, what I suffered from her did me actually good. She worked to give me a
wreath, so that I also might expect some wage from God.”
Papa-Dimitri always had candy for
children and money for the needy. He organized religious excursions for young
people. It was said that he had a “restless love” and sought to bring everyone
to Christ. One of the doctors who attended him during his final
illness observed:
“He would never turn away anyone
who came to see him, no matter how tired he was. He always had a good word, a
piece of advice, for everyone. Or he would relate a miracle from his life,
repeating each time, ‘Our faith’s alive, my children, our religion’s alive!’
and giving glory to God, while tears flowed from his eyes.”
In June 1962, Papa-Dimitri
visited the Holy Mountain at the invitation of the Most Holy Theotokos herself.
There he was present at a gathering of hierarchs and clergy, when the
Archbishop of Athens turned to the assembled company and said, indicating Papa-Dimitri:
“Take a good look at this elder. We need priests like him!”
Gleanings from the Writings of
Papa-Dimitri
- The purpose of whatever prayers and services we do is
to come closer to God and get to love Him more.
- God saved us from communism, but Satan delivered us
to materialism.
- Both clergy and laity today have lost spirituality.
They constantly talk only about material and political things.
- No one can hold two watermelons under one arm. That
is, no one can seek office and be humble at the same time.
- Prayer is a telephone, a wireless, by which one
communicates directly with God. You dial the number on the telephone of
prayer to speak with God and He answers. You hear Him clearly, you feel
Him very close.
- Where there is no love and obedience to the local
bishop, everything is ruined.
- Miracles happen every minute, but we don’t perceive
them because we are stone-hearted.
- Soft-heartedness and simplicity are what’s needed.
Never be afraid for a man who loves. In him God dwells.
Compiled with excerpts from Papa-Dimitri
Gagastathis, the Man of God (1902-1975), translated and edited by Dimitrios
N. Kagaris, Orthodox Kypseli Publications, Thessalonika, 1997.
Source: Orthodox America,
Vol. XVIII, No. 5, Issue 161, January 2000.
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