Paul Kingsnorth | April 27, 2025
I haven’t been well these last
few days, and have not been able to write my usual Sunday Pilgrimage
instalment. I hope to be back on the road next week. Instead, I’m offering up
this essay, which was recently ‘printed’ in the Free Press in the US. It’s about
the life of a pioneering American Orthodox figure whose journey has both
intrigued and inspired me.
Last year I was invited to give a
talk about Christianity and nature at Canisius University in Buffalo, New York.
After the talk, I took some questions from the audience. One of the questions,
asked in sweet innocence, was a deadly honeytrap for a visiting Englishman:
“What do you think of America?”
I had just been talking about the
dangers to the soul of the technological culture of Silicon Valley, and the
impact of its machine-like ways of thinking on the world, so I said the first
thing that came into my head. This is rarely a good idea, especially in public.
“America is Babylon,” I said.
Then, remembering I was speaking to an audience of Americans, I quickly added a
qualification.
“It’s Babylon,” I said, “but it
might also be the place that counters Babylon. It’s as if one force somehow
begets the other. After all, California is home to Silicon Valley, but it’s
also home to the monastery of Seraphim Rose.”
Somebody else in the audience put
their hand up.
“Who’s Seraphim Rose?” they
asked.
It was a fair question. The
strange name I had conjured is hardly widely known. It is the name of a man who
in many ways embodied the twentieth-century West’s aching search for meaning. A
man who pushed himself out of the desert of modern materialism, through a
banquet of “alternative spiritualities,” and into an ascetic, monastic life in
the oldest and most traditional stream of Christianity: the Eastern Orthodox
Church. Seraphim Rose is the unofficial patron saint of lost Western people,
and only America could have made him.
Today, with the Orthodox Church
in the U.S. growing faster than it ever has, and with young people flooding
many of its parishes, interest in his life and work has reached new heights.
Sales of his books continue to grow, his grave has become a place of pilgrimage,
and there are more and more persistent calls for him to be recognized as a
saint of the Church. Slowly and quietly, he may be helping to remake America.
Eugene Rose was born into a
middle-class family in San Diego in 1934. Shy, intense, and clever, he became
disillusioned, as he grew, with both the materialism of consumer America, and
with what he regarded as the shallow, worldly Christianity of his suburban
upbringing that did nothing to challenge it. After graduating magna cum
laude in Chinese philosophy from Pomona College in Southern California,
Eugene went on to study for a master’s degree at Berkeley, where he wrote an
acclaimed thesis on the Tao Te Ching. Fiercely intelligent, he consumed
philosophy, history, and theology at a rate of knots, in search of both truth
and meaning, but none of it seemed to answer his questions: What was truth?
What was life for? And what should he do with his?
One thing Rose did become sure
about as a young man was that religion was a lie. Baptized a Methodist, he had
grown to reject the Christian faith as empty and meaningless. He had read
Nietzsche, he had met Jack Kerouac, and by the time he was a student he was
cursing God in drunken fits of rage for having created an empty and meaningless
world. Later, Rose described such passionate atheism as a “spiritual state… a
real attempt to grapple with the true God whose ways are so inexplicable even
to the most believing of men.”
If there was no God, though, what
was there? The blossoming counterculture of San Francisco offered different
kinds of answers, and the young Eugene threw himself into it with gusto. For a
while he studied under the “beatnik guru” Alan Watts, who he believed might
have the answers to his growing spiritual questions. But Eugene became
disillusioned with Watts, whose pseudo-Eastern combination of booze, acid, Zen,
and yoga came to seem like yet another example of the consumerism that was
devouring his country.
The ’50s and ’60s counterculture
as a whole presented the same problem: However much music, drink, drugs, or sex
Rose experimented with, the void inside him just kept growing. “Disease,
suffering, death,” he wrote in a letter to a friend, “these are reminders,
convenient reminders, that man most profoundly is not of this world… Whatever
the ‘eat, drink, and be merry’ school says, self-conscious man must face this
problem.”
In the mid-1950s, when he was in
his early 20s, Rose met another young seeker, Jon Gregerson. Gregerson was a
Finnish-born Russian Orthodox Christian; he was also to become Rose’s lover. As
part of Eugene’s endless search for meaning, one day he went along with his
partner to the Russian Orthodox Cathedral in San Francisco. It was an
experience that would alter the course of his life.
It was Easter—Pascha, in
Orthodox terminology—and the cathedral was holding a night service. The
Orthodox liturgy is over a thousand years old, and the Paschal service is
particularly deep and intense. Typically, it will last for several hours on
either side of midnight, culminating in a priest emerging from the altar into a
blacked-out church, holding a single candle and declaring “Christ is risen!”
The overall effect, especially after the week of heavy fasting that the
Orthodox Church prescribes, can be extremely powerful. Rose had never seen—or
felt—anything like it. “Something happened to me,” he later wrote of his visit,
“that I had not experienced in any Buddhist or other Eastern temple; something
in my heart said that I was home; that my search was over.”
After years of exploring every
idea he could find in search of truth, he had seen something he never expected:
“That Truth was not just an abstract idea, sought and known by the mind, but
was something personal—even a Person—sought and loved by the heart,” he wrote
later. “And that is how I met Christ.”
Eugene threw himself into a new
exploration of Orthodox Christianity with the same intensity he had applied to
his searches through Zen, Taoism, and perennialism. Just as he had previously
taught himself Chinese in order to study the Tao, now he taught himself the
Slavic languages in order to understand the Russian Orthodox hymns. Attending
the cathedral regularly, he met its archbishop, John, who had recently arrived
in San Francisco from Shanghai, where he had lived after fleeing his Russian
homeland during the Bolshevik revolution. In China, John served as bishop under
the Japanese occupation, later working in a refugee camp after the communist
revolution and then fleeing to Paris, before being appointed bishop of San
Francisco in 1962. Throughout it all, he refused to sleep in a bed, ate just
one meal a day, went barefoot, and gave all he had to the poor.
St. John of San Francisco—as he
now is—was an entrancing figure for the young Eugene, like an ancient saint who
had walked into the modern world. In Russian Orthodoxy, and especially in the
figure of St. John, he had found what he was looking for: a faith that
emphasized not self-indulgence but self-sacrifice. This was no new claim—it
was, he came to understand, the very foundation of Christianity, but it had
been lost in the modern, comfortable versions of the faith with which he had
grown up.
“Let us not, who would be
Christians, expect anything else from [life] but to be crucified,” he later
wrote, “and we must be crucified outwardly, in the eyes of the world; for
Christ’s kingdom is not of this world.”
If there is a secret to the
growing significance, and the growing veneration, of Rose as a modern Christian
figure, it is perhaps the insight that he gained from watching St. John at
work—that suffering and struggle are the key to wisdom and truth.
When Eugene Rose was received
into the Orthodox Church in 1962, it was both the end of a spiritual search and
the beginning of a remarkable transformation. Eugene was a man who never did
anything by halves, and now that he had discovered what he considered to be the
true faith and the true church, he wanted to explore it in its fullness. Above
all, he wanted to be transformed by it.
In the cathedral, he befriended
another young Orthodox newcomer, Gleb Podmoshensky, and soon they were hatching
plans. By 1964, they had opened a bookstore in San Francisco dedicated to
selling Orthodox texts. A year later they purchased an antique, hand-operated
printing press and set to work producing their own magazine, The Orthodox Word,
featuring stories of ancient forest-dwelling saints, lessons from the Desert
Fathers, and teachings from Christian texts.
Reading and writing about the
lives of ancient saints who had fled to the Russian wilderness to live for God
alone, Eugene and Gleb felt a pull to do the same. In 1967, they bought a
parcel of land in the wilds of northern California near the small hamlet of
Platina, and formed a Christian brotherhood named after St. Herman of Alaska,
America’s first Orthodox saint. Soon, the brotherhood became a monastery. It
was a simple, stark, and unworldly place. Most of it was built by hand by
Eugene and Gleb, using wood from abandoned mining shacks. There was no running
water, electricity, or telephone, but there were bears and rattlesnakes
aplenty. Here, both men were tonsured as monks by St. John of San Francisco.
Eugene took the name Seraphim, and Gleb became Herman. Father Seraphim Rose was
born.
For the next 15 years, Seraphim
Rose used his life at the monastery to effect his own personal transformation
and that of the nascent Orthodox faith in the U.S. He lived a severe, ascetic
life in a small wooden cabin he built himself, sleeping on boards, never
cutting his hair or beard, fasting regularly, and dedicating himself to prayer.
It was a harsh existence, but one that seemed to deeply energize him. He was
beginning to experience the paradox of ascetic Christianity that the monks of
the Egyptian desert had noticed and taught a thousand years before: that the
more you sacrifice for God, and the simpler your life, the more freedom and joy
is available to your soul. The less attached you are to the world, the closer
you come to God.
This was, and remains, a message
so alien to modern consumer cultures as to be almost incomprehensible to many.
But not, it turned out, to all. Slowly, more young men came to the monastery,
seeking a radical Christian life away from the outside world, many of them
drawn in by reading The Orthodox Word, which the brotherhood
continued to produce. Like Rose before them, they sought a meaning that their
culture could not give them.
Working by candlelight in his
often-freezing wooden cell, Rose began to translate and then write his own
books: God’s Revelation to the Human Heart, Orthodoxy and the Religion of the
Future, The Soul After Death, and other works poured out of him. During the
1970s, with Russian communism in full force, these titles were produced in samizdat
translations in the USSR, where many remain bestsellers today. In the West,
meanwhile, Rose’s teachings and writings are growing in popularity—and in some
cases, relevance. Orthodoxy and the Religion of the Future, for example, is a
blistering examination of the role that digital technology and fashionable
occultism will play in the coming of the Antichrist. In the age of WitchTok,
and a burgeoning neo-paganism among the young and very online, it’s hard not to
read it and shiver.
Writings like this made Rose a
controversial figure in some quarters. Some of the claims he made in his books
are argued over by theologians, and in some circles he is seen as an extremist
or even a fanatic, for the ascetic lifestyle he insisted on leading, for his
particular interpretations of Orthodox theology, and for his radical
condemnations of what he regarded as the corrupt nature of modern society. In
many ways, the criticism is understandable: Rose was a man driven to seek the
truth at almost any cost to himself, and he brooked no compromise with a
rapidly secularising world which likes its Christianity to be cosy and
unthreatening. In the eyes of that world, his life and work do indeed seem
extreme or even inexplicable—but then, so did the life of Jesus, and all of his
apostles.
As Father Seraphim, he took
literally Christ’s call to leave the world and head for the kingdom instead. In
this, he may have been closer to historical Christianity, with its litany of
martyrs, saints, and ragged desert fathers and mothers, than many of his
comfortable critics. As the Orthodox scholar David Bentley-Hart has put it,
“one thing in remarkably short supply in the New Testament is common sense. The
Gospels, the epistles, Acts, Revelation—all of them are relentless torrents of
exorbitance and extremism.” It is, in fact, precisely this lack of sensible,
worldly “moderation” that has made Seraphim Rose an increasingly significant
spiritual figure in modern America more than forty years after his untimely
death.
That death came unexpectedly in
the early 1980s, when Rose was in many ways at the height of his powers.
Working in his cell, he began to feel a series of excruciating pains in his
abdomen. His fellow monks wanted him to see a doctor, but Rose refused for
several days. Eventually, when the pains became unbearable, he was taken to
hospital, where it was found that a blood clot had killed part of his
intestines. It soon became clear that his illness was fatal. The monastic
brotherhood gathered around him in his hospital bed, holding an all-night vigil
and singing hymns as he slipped in and out of consciousness. He died in
September 1982, aged 48.
The end of Rose’s life, though,
was to be the beginning of his reputation, which continues to grow among many
who see him as an inspiring and uncompromising example of a genuine, unworldly
Christianity. Today, there is a growing thrum of support for the notion that
Seraphim was, and is, a saint, and that the Orthodox church should recognize
him as one. Whether or not that happens, his life and works seem more and more
relevant by the year, as the culture war continues, the materialism of the West
intensifies, and as young people in particular begin seeking older, deeper, and
more serious forms of faith in order to fill the void of meaning that has
opened up around them. The endless political arguments and cultural divisions
of the modern West, which seem only to grow, can easily disguise what Rose saw
beneath: a spiritual void. Without a wider and deeper meaning to life—which in
Rose’s view meant without Christ—only nihilism beckons. More and more people,
especially the young, seem to agree.
Eugene Rose, who became Father
Seraphim, was in this sense an American spiritual pioneer. He was prepared to
throw everything off—even his own life—to find the truth that he had always
sought so passionately, regardless of what the world thought of him. “When I
became a Christian,” he once said, “I voluntarily crucified my mind, and all
the crosses that I bear have been only a source of joy for me, I have lost
nothing, and gained everything.”
Source: https://paulkingsnorth.substack.com/p/california-son
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