With the passing of Archimandrite
Constantine, one may well say that a whole generation has departed. He was
perhaps the last of the Russian religious intelligentsia of the first half of
the 20th century, and in his faithfulness to Orthodoxy and the profundity of
his religious-philosophical thought showed the path the intelligentsia should
have taken but, sadly, for the most part did not take. His mature religious
philosophy may be considered the Orthodox answer to the heterodoxy of Bulgakov,
Berdyaev, and their like; but even more than this, his firm stand in Orthodox
truth has given him an influence on and an importance for English-speaking
Orthodoxy which as yet has been little appreciated.
Cyril Zaitsev (as he was known in
the world) was from a family of converted Jews; and once he became fully aware
of the truth of Orthodoxy, he manifested himself as an Israelite indeed
(John1:47), mercilessly opposed to all pretense and lying in spiritual and
intellectual life, and unbendingly upright in his confession of the chosenness
of the "New Israel," the Orthodox Church.
***
Cyril manifested himself as
rather a "conservative" even in his student days (he studied
economics and law at St. Petersburg and then abroad at Heidelberg), taking no
part in the radical student movement inspired by the enemies of the Orthodox
monarchy. But it was only after he entered government service just before World
War I that he came to realize how terribly wrong were those who wished to
"reform" Russia. He found the slanderous tales of government
corruption, inefficiency, and cynicism to be quite without foundation in the
two departments in which he was privileged to work (the Senate, Agriculture);
there he found highly qualified personnel with a profound sense of duty and
loyalty, as well as a refreshing freedom and personal initiative. "There
was a striking contrast" – he wrote much later – "between the
grandeur of our historical order of things... and the light-minded dilettantism
of our society which was dreaming-while eating the bread of our still living
and mighty 'history' - of new forms of life which doomed to destruction history
in its entirety." (Here, of course, he has in mind such philosophies as
Marxism, which would destroy the past entirely in order to establish a new
"ideal" – whose name is "Gulag.") "Russia was
destroyed," he wrote elsewhere, "not because the bureaucracy was bad,
not because the Tsar remained autocratic, or because Russia had been 'left
behind' in various ways. No, the misfortune was this: that she did not value
the values of her past... The chief misfortune was that Russia ceased to value,
as the highest value, her own age-old way of life, which had been infused with
grace by her standing for many years in church Truth... One may find dark sides
in historical Russia in all epochs... but as long as Imperial Russia stood, she
not only did not compel one to lie, she rather served truth." (One may
compare the state of the USSR today, as described by Solzhenitsyn and others,
where lying has become part of daily life for everyone.)
Even before the Revolution,
therefore, he had left the "mainstream" of the Russian
intelligentsia, which prepared both the Revolution and then when the Revolution
went rather beyond the expectations of the "liberals" – the
pseudo-Orthodox "renaissance" that later was to give itself the
appropriate name of "Parisian Orthodoxy." The unrepentant
intelligentsia, even though it seldom mentioned him by name, never forgave him
his "betrayal" of their cause (for in the "Parisian" view
all intellectuals are supposed to be "liberals"), and the
"fanatical" Orthodox views of his mature philosophy became for them
something of a symbol of all that they hated in the old Russia and in genuine
Orthodoxy.
In the Diaspora after the
Revolution Cyril Zaitsev spent the '20's and part of the '30's in Western
Europe (Prague and Paris), where he became noted as a conservative publicist,
working in close cooperation on the journals Renaissance (Vozrozhdeniye)
and Russia and the Slavs (Rossiya i Slavyanstvo) with their
editor, Peter Struve – the Russian translator of the works of Karl Marx who
came to see his error and worked after the Revolution for the restoration of
the old Russia. These organs of the "struggle for national
liberation" were conservative journals of political and literary comment
and followed the maturing of P. Struve's own thought, whose last project was
the "rehabilitation" of the great Orthodox Tsar Nicholas I, who is so
little understood even now in the West precisely because of his Orthodoxy. But
Struve never matured sufficiently to place Orthodoxy at the center of his
thought, and in this Father Constantine was far to surpass him.
In 1935 he went to the Far East,
becoming a professor of the Russian Law Faculty in Harbin and giving lectures
on literature and music (being himself an excellent pianist). Thoughts of
"national liberation" and a return to the old Russia now had little
meaning, and his thought became more and more religious and Orthodox; the
center of his philosophy, from "historical Russia," now became, much
more profoundly, "Holy Russia." He became an instructor in the Harbin
seminary, and in general he found himself far more at home in the simpler, more
fervent Orthodox world of the Far-Eastern emigration than among the Russian
intelligentsia of Western Europe. In Harbin he became a spiritual friend of
Blind Ignatius, the clairvoyant elder, with whom he would sit for hours reading
the Lives of Saints and being instructed by his holy conversation, seeing at
first hand, in the crowds who flocked to this holy elder, the closeness of the
true Orthodox spiritual tradition to the heart of the common people. To this
period belongs his first real Orthodox book, To Understand Orthodoxy – the
testimony of a man who had come to Orthodoxy through the thorny path of the
modern intellectual jungle, and now would be content with no diluted or
"modernized" Orthodoxy, but only with the true, age-old Orthodoxy by
which the whole of Russia had once lived and been great.
When the Communists came to rule
in China, Cyril Zaitsev might have been considered to be at the end of his
intellectual development and career. Hе was over sixty years old, and might
well have been content to live out his days quietly in some corner of the vast
Russian Diaspora, content enough if he could escape the fast-expanding
worldwide Communist regime. But it was precisely now that he entered his most
fruitful years, thanks to the inspiration, encouragement, and help of two
far-sighted hierarchs of the Diaspora: Archbishop John Maximovitch and Archbishop
Vitaly of Jordanville, both of whom keenly recognized the great contribution he
could make to the Russian Church Outside of Russia.
After the death of his wife, he
was ordained priest in 1945, and soon he joined the ranks of Archbishop John's
clergy in Shanghai, participating in this great hierarch's labors of Orthodox
enlightenment by giving lectures in the Shanghai cathedral on historical
Orthodox Russia. On being evacuated from China together with Archbishop John,
he was invited by Archbishop Vitaly to come to Jordanville to become editor of Orthodox
Russia, the chief Russian-language organ of genuine Orthodoxy. Here, in
1949, he received the monastic tonsure. For the next quarter-century, it is no
exaggeration to say, he was the most important single editor and publicist of
any of the Orthodox Churches, writing in any language, who upheld true and
uncompromising Orthodoxy. Let us list here only some of the accomplishments
which are owing directly to him, leaving aside the many books printed by Holy
Trinity Monastery in these years, most of which would have appeared without him.
1. Orthodox Russia. This
twice-monthly Russian-language periodical became, under Archimandrite
Constantine, the voice of genuine Orthodoxy in the 20th-century world, far
surpassing other Orthodox publications in any language in its outspokenness,
the breadth of its intellectual scope, and its upright confession of
unchanging, age-old Orthodoxy against the innovations of "Parisian
Orthodoxy" and the Russian schismatic groups of the Diaspora in general,
against the tragically soul-destroying political path of the Moscow Patriarchate,
against the increasingly open apostasy of the Patriarchate of Constantinople
and, other ecumenist Orthodox bodies; for those caught in any of these traps
set by the devil for 20th-century Orthodoxy, the blunt editorials of Fr.
Constantine became identified as the voice of the hated "Jordanville
ideology" which, although never powerful numerically, constituted a
stumbling-block to the cause of modernist "Orthodoxy," which was
eloquently exposed by this literal conscience of Orthodoxy as a preparation for
the coming of Antichrist.
2. Fr. Constantine added to the
list of Jordanville's Russian publications a monthly periodical, Orthodox
Life, for Lives of Saints and other material rather out of place in a
polemical newspaper, and – his major theological contribution – a yearly
theological review, Orthodox Way (or Path), a collection of major
articles of theology and religious thought which is also unsurpassed among
recent Orthodox theological publications in any language for the purity and
sensitivity of the Orthodoxy expressed in it, uncontaminated by modernism and
totally independent of the academic fashions which are expressed in the other
supposedly Orthodox theological publications of our day. The Orthodox writers
represented in this collection are, sadly, still almost unknown save to a small
circle of Orthodox Russians; but it is in them that is to be found a good part
of the true theological scholarship of Orthodoxy in the 20th century.
3. From the very beginning Fr.
Constantine insisted that Holy Trinity Monastery publish a regular
English-language Orthodox periodical (Orthodox Life). This was a project
far "ahead of the times" and most difficult to carry out. In 1950
English-speaking converts in the Russian Church Abroad were almost unheard of;
there was no "demand" whatever for such a publication, there was
virtually no one to write for it, and the first translators more often than not
had English as their second tongue. But for Father Constantine this was an
absolute duty for the Orthodox mission in America, of which he was intensely
conscious – despite the unfair accusations made by some against his narrow
"Russianness." Despite the early difficulties (which were not helped
by Father Constantine's own complicated literary style, difficult enough in his
native Russian!), this periodical survived and prospered, giving actually the
first real spiritual food and serious Orthodox material in the English
language, apart from a few sporadic earlier attempts. This publication has had
an incalculable importance for the Orthodox mission in America. Without it the
English-language movement of true Orthodoxy – weak and frail as it still is – would
not be what it is today, and perhaps would not exist at all.
4. Fr. Constantine wrote also a
number of major books. One may mention his Lectures in the History of
Russian Literature (Jordanville, 2 volumes, 1967-68), a compilation of his
lectures in this course at Holy Trinity Seminary in which he teaches a
principle quite unique to "literary criticism": all literature is
viewed in its relation to Orthodoxy – a principle, to be sure, which holds
valid in modern times for no country but Russia, where Orthodoxy penetrated so
deeply the national culture that even the secular writers of the last century
could not escape its influence. His articles on Russian composers in the
Jordanville periodicals also probed far more deeply than any mere "music
criticism," seeking always the very "soul" of the music, where
the composer's relation to God is revealed.
A closely related book is his Chefs-d'oeuvres
of Russian Literary Criticism (Harbin, 1938), an anthology of essays on
Russian writers by other writers, with introductions by Fr. Constantine that
place the great figures of Russian literature in the last century in their
Orthodox context and perspective. His Ethics (Harbin, 1940) is a survey
of both pre-Christian and post-Christian ethical teachings, giving a sound
Orthodox evaluation of them. In such works as these he showed that true
Orthodoxy, while 'precise and strict, is not narrow in its intellectual
outlook, and that a fully developed Orthodox world-view has a sound and
balanced approach to all manifestations of human knowledge and culture. His
last book, The Miracle of Russian History (Jordanville, 1974), is a
collection of his articles on Holy Russia and the state of Orthodoxy in the
world today.
One of Fr. Constantine's smaller
books has appeared in English: The Spiritual Face of St. John of Kronstadt (Jordanville,
1964). Written at the time of the Saint's canonization in 1964, it is largely a
compilation of quotes by those who knew him, forming an excellent spiritual
portrait of this great Saint; it is the best introduction to St. John for
English-speaking readers.
But Fr. Constantine's major work,
the masterpiece of his life, is his Pastoral Theology (Jordanville, 2
volumes, 1960-61), compiled from his seminary lectures. In this work his own
rich life-experience, his great intellectual culture, his philosophical mind,
his uncompromising stand for Orthodox truth, together with his priesthood and
monasticism accepted late in life, flowered in a pastoral work unrivalled in
the 20th century in any language. One has only to look at the "Paris"
equivalent of this book to begin to realize its greatness. The Orthodox
Pastoral Service of Archimandrite Cyprian Kern (Paris, 1957) is a course,
based largely on Western sources, on "how to be a successful worldly
priest, "always trying to catch up with the latest intellectual fashion,
following one's worldly flock while pretending to lead it, keeping up always a
proper" exterior and constantly looking at oneself in a spiritual mirror
in order to calculate how well one is keeping up one's "image." Such
an approach, totally foreign to Orthodoxy, was decisively rejected by Fr.
Constantine, whose book, born in the blood and tears of 20th-century history,
renounces every kind of fakery and affectation in order to teach Orthodox youth
how to be a true Orthodox pastor in an age of apostasy and revolution, how to
save one's soul and keep one's flock on the right spiritual path even when all
religious values and even civilization itself is falling to pieces around one.
There were those who thought that
Fr. Constantine dwelled too much on the subject of the apostasy of our days and
the coming reign of Antichrist, for which contemporary mankind is obviously
preparing itself. These, indeed – together with his uncompromising stand
against what he invariably called "Soviet Church" – were the center
of the critical side of his thought, and it was not possible to deceive his
keen mind with any of those "new" phenomena of our times which try to
pass themselves off as Orthodox; he was quick to spot the lack of Orthodox
substance in the "religious" writings of Pasternak, the
pseudo-religious Berdyaevism of some later Orthodox writers in the USSR, the
ecclesiastical fakery of the American "autocephaly." It was, however,
our times – the age of the counterfeit in religion as in everything else – rather
than his own basic views that made him seem sometimes a "negative"
thinker. But far more fundamentally his outlook, deeply Orthodox, was positive
and even optimistic. He encouraged and inspired young priests and religious
writers, both Russians and converts; was an active supporter of the
canonization of St. John of Kronstadt and, in his last years, of the New
Martyrs of Russia headed by the Royal Family; supported and encouraged the
veneration of Archbishop John Maximovitch; called for a positive and conscious
assimilation of the values of true Orthodoxy and the Orthodox past; was a firm
supporter of the much-persecuted and slandered Catacomb Church in Russia; and
even hoped for – without false hopes – a stupendous miracle: the restoration of
the Orthodox Monarchy in a renewed Holy Russia (albeit only for a short time
before the end of the world), without which, he believed, the historical forces
now in operation will lead mankind directly to the reign of Antichrist.
But Archimandrite Constantine was
above all a Christian realist and ways placed his ultimate hope, not on
anything earthly at all, but only in the Church of Christ. All the wealth of
his cultural and intellectual attainments were of value precisely because they
were placed in the correct Orthodox hierarchy of values, in which the Church
and the things of God are the ultimate value, only in subordination to which
does anything lesser have any value or meaning at all. "The only
treasure," he wrote, "which we, the leftovers of historical Russia,
possess is the joy of belonging to the true Church; it is in the power of our
conscious membership in the Russian Church Outside of Russia. What are we in
the many-colored pluralism of the free world, even of the Christian world? Less
than a small minority – a tiny grain of sand, a nothing. But in this
nothingness – from the world's point of view – we possess, inasmuch as we
belong to the true Church, the path to the blessed eternity which arises for
all of saved humanity at the Second Coming of Christ."
A great man has departed from us,
leaving a rich intellectual and spiritual heritage for us who remain with the
difficult task of being true Orthodox Christians in the darkest days of the
apostasy of the last times. In particular. American Orthodoxy has great need of
those who can absorb his Orthodox message and pass it on to others. This
message is by no means only for some intellectual elite; it is the message of
true Orthodoxy at a time when pseudo-Orthodoxy in a hundred forms threatens to
engulf us!
Father Constantine to the end
remained an "intellectual"; the task of understanding and defending
Orthodoxy was his life's work. But Orthodoxy for him was not merely the answer
to his intellectual search for truth; it became the whole of life for him, and
was reflected in everything he did. In it he found deep peace, which flowered
not only in polemical and theological works, but also in his life as priest and
monk. He was a spiritual father for many, and for years he was the only
English-language confessor at Holy Trinity Monastery. There were perhaps times
when he was a little too painfully straightforward and honest; but even this
"defect" was a proof of the wholeness of his acceptance of Orthodox
truth.
Father Constantine had suggested
to some of his students the compilation of a book on death – specifically, on
how various people have met death, thus revealing their spiritual state. In his
last years especially, he was concerned with this question, and with his own
preparation for death; for here, indeed, is the proof of the depth and fullness
of one's conversion to the truth. Suffice it to say that Fr. Constantine
himself died a peaceful and Christian death, after receiving communion of the
Holy Mysteries on that very day, on the feast of the great Father, St. John
Chrysostom – just as the monastery was beginning the celebration of the 25th
anniversary of the dedication of its cathedral the next day.
One of Fr. Constantine's
spiritual children, A. P., supplies an epilogue to his earthly life: "I
dreamed of Father Constantine the night that he died. He looked so good – 30
pounds heavier, fresh, with a bright face, although he was stooped. He asked
why he hadn't seen me for so long, gave me blessings and said that he was very
well. When I awoke, only then did I get the phone call that he had died, and I
hadn't even known of his final illness."
One may have bold hope that
Father Constantine, having carried through to the end his search for and
discovery of Christ's truth, has indeed entered into that new life which is the
answer to the feverish unrest of our unsettled times. Grant him, O Lord, eternal
rest with the saints!
Source: The Orthodox Word,
Vol. 12, No. 1 (66), January-February 1976, pp. 20-27.
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