Delivered by Archbishop [Metropolitan] Chrysostomos of Etna [+2019] in the Lecture Hall at Synod [in Resistance] Headquarters, Kolonos (Athens), Greece, on the Second Sunday of Great Lent, the Feast Day of St. Gregory Palamas. Translated from the Greek by Bishop Auxentios.
Source: Orthodox Tradition, Vol.
XVII (2000), No. 4, pp. 14-21.
Your Eminence, Metropolitan Cyprian,
our beloved Father in Christ;
Your Graces;
Brothers and Sisters in Christ:
At the request of our
Metropolitan and Father, out of obedience, and asking the intercession of the
Saint, the blessing of His Eminence, and your forgiveness for my shortcomings
and the obvious lack of eloquence in my short homily, I would like to say a few
simple words about the basic teachings of St. Gregory Palamas, Archbishop of
Thessaloniki.
This second Sunday of the Great
Fast and, as well, our monastery in California—which is a dependency of the
Holy Monastery of Sts. Cyprian and Justina—are dedicated to the memory of St.
Gregory Palamas, who, as we sing in his Troparion, was a great
Teacher of the Church, a defender of theologians, and a luminary of Orthodoxy.
That is to say, St. Gregory Palamas, by his life and with his teachings,
expresses the catholic and oecumenical truth of Christianity and guides us to
the criterion of the Faith, the Orthodox Church. During his life in this world,
he tried to preserve the authenticity and purity of the words of the Holy
Fathers, just as he protects us now, from the other world, in our humble but
indispensable efforts in our own age to safeguard the legacy of the Fathers of
the Church. Today, some seven hundred forty years after his repose, we are
still illuminated in our Orthodox Faith by the beauty of this great and
important example of those enlightened men and women who, by Grace, Christ
unites to Himself, His light thus shining in their persons. And, indeed, in
the synaxarion for the Feast of St. Gregory Palamas, we read
that, from the very day of his Ordination, the Divine Light of the Savior
continually showed forth on his countenance.
I am not an accomplished
theologian, and I do not have the necessary gifts to set forth for you the
profound spiritual essence of the teachings of St. Gregory Palamas. This gift
from on high you may see in the work and daily life of our Metropolitan; and,
to be sure, a number of the events in the life of St. Gregory Palamas are
similar to those in the life of our spiritual Father (I could also,
incidentally, draw parallels between the gifts of the Saint and those which I
see in the Metropolitan), since God's elect—while each individual may, in his
path towards deification by Grace (theopoiesis), remain true to the
idiosyncrasies of his character or personality—draw their identity from the
universal and archetypical Person of Christ, Who renders us, when He unites us
by His love to His Body, authentic, genuine persons through the restoration of
the image of God in our sinful hearts.
Therefore, once again because of
my lack of gifts and theological knowledge, I will simply describe that which I
do not actually know and that in which I am inexperienced. I do not believe
that we have anything to lose by my poor words, since, first, I am speaking
with the blessing and by the command of my spiritual Father, the Metropolitan
(that is, out of obedience); and second, because I do not think that the mere
description of spiritual things is without significance all together. In truth,
even the Holy Scriptures, despite errors in our thinking in this regard
produced by the influence of Protestant theology on the contemporary teachings
of our Holy Church, do not contain the Glory of God, but
rather—though with the power of the Holy Spirit and in a perfect manner—describe the
Glory of God, leading us to an encounter with the reality of life in Christ,
wherein by Grace the Lord Himself reveals to us His Glory. With the help of God
and with the blessing of our spiritual Father, then, perhaps I can, with my few
descriptive words about the teachings of St. Gregory Palamas, bring you to an
elementary awareness of the theological treasury of this physician of the soul
of man, who, unfortunately, is still not so well known in the contemporary
Church, despite the importance of his teachings for the witness of the Catholic
Church of Christ, that is, the Orthodox Church.
By way of introducing my subject,
let me say that the teachings of St. Gregory Palamas constitute a perfect
manifestation of the catholic, or universal, truth of our Faith. His
teachings express the fullness of Christian cosmology, anthropology, and
theology (using the precise definition of the word theologia) and
constitute a magnificent solution to the dilemmas of Western philosophy. The
wisdom of St. Gregory Palamas, in fact, is based on profound theological
principles: revealed truths that eventually lead us, and clearly so, to the
scientific revolution in theoretical physics that began, in many ways, with
Einstein and which, of late, has reached a stage where it theorizes that
physical matter, the material of the physical world, is what we might call
metaphysical; that is, that it is comprised not simply of atomic particles, but
of elements of immaterial light energy (something which has a clear connection
to the teachings of St. Gregory Palamas, as we shall see). These imperfect
theories of theoretical physics demonstrate to us that the Teachers of Orthodoxy
live that about which our scientists only speculate (if at times fruitlessly
so, at least from a spiritual standpoint); but they also tell us that God, Who
is everywhere present and fills all things, reveals Himself, on account of His
love, even in nature and in the secular efforts of mankind to find basic
meaning in the world and to discover the ultimate aim of life.
Thus, in the catholic and
oecumenical—and I use these words, too, with their literal and ecclesiastical
meaning—teaching of St. Gregory Palamas, we discover a perfect statement of the
universality of Orthodoxy.
Before examining briefly the
specific teachings of St. Gregory, I must point out two basic things.
First, St. Gregory
Palamas was not just an educated Teacher of the Church who spoke in theoretical
terms about the Divine revelation and vision of God through the treatment of
the ills of the soul of man. He was not just a great philosopher who expressed
the doctrines of the Church with singular intellectual precision, as many say
today on account of the current rediscovery of the teachings of St. Gregory
Palamas in the realm of academic theology. He was, of course, literate and
educated; in fact, he was a genius with incredible academic skills. When I read
him through the eyes of a former psychologist, I put him on the level of
Einstein, to whom I earlier referred. St. Gregory was, in my humble opinion,
the most brilliant man of his age. But knowledge is one thing, while wisdom is
another, the latter coming forth solely from experience in the spiritual life
and through a revealed knowledge of God. St. Gregory Palamas did not theologize
in a theoretical way, with the goal of analyzing theological ideas philosophically.
Quite the contrary. Just as the Fathers of the Church baptized classical Greek
philosophy in order to preach the ineffable truth of Christianity in the
language of philosophy (thus making philosophy the slave of Christianity, and
not Christianity the slave of philosophy, as happened in Scholastic philosophy
in the West, after the tragic breaking-away of the Papists from the Orthodox
Church), so St. Gregory baptized his educational accomplishments, making them a
slave of the Church. The Divine Palamas, again, did not theologize in an
academic sense, but from within his spiritual experience; that is, from within
the living experience of the Church.
This fact is exceedingly
important, since it allows us to see in a correct way, not only the teachings
of St. Gregory Palamas, but the general significance of education in the
Church. Education, when it adorns our exposition of the Christian Faith, is extremely
important for the Christian community. The highly educated Fathers of the
Church wrote magnificently about theology. But the spiritual experience which
they describe in their words is precisely the same experience as that of wholly
illiterate Fathers and Saints of the Church. We thus have the examples of many
Saints and holy personages in the Church who, rich in wisdom but lacking
literary gifts, transmitted their wisdom to us through spiritual disciples more
gifted in letters.
Indeed, our Lord Himself, the
Source of both Divine and human wisdom, left with us not a single
written word from His hand. Everything of His life we read
in the words of His Divine Disciples. This shows us that in the Church, which
is ruled by humility, education does not distinguish one person from another.
The man of God is distinguished by his wisdom, which is a gift from God that
enlightens both the educated and the uneducated man with the same Divine
knowledge. For this reason, the educated man of God is not ostentatious in
revealing his abilities, unless it is to help the Church or to help some other
enlightened Father who does not have the gift of literary expression.
For example, St. Athanasios, the
Patriarch of Alexandria, considered St. Anthony the Great, who was wholly
illiterate, his teacher. And St. Anthony showed great honor to the person of
St. Athanasios. We are mistaken if we believe that, because of the humility of
St. Athanasios (who felt and said that St. Anthony had surpassed him in the
knowledge of God), this great Patriarch did not have spiritual knowledge. St.
Anthony considered Athanasios his own teacher, just as the Patriarch considered
St. Anthony his teacher. The Patriarch had the gift of the written word; but
his experience and wisdom were the very same experience and wisdom that St.
Anthony possessed. These things united them in Christ, such that they spoke,
taught, and preached with the same mindset [phronema—Trans.], the
same knowledge, the same spirit, and the common mind of Christ. They were
separated only by their personal characteristics and gifts. Nothing else.
Likewise, the teachings of St. Gregory Palamas and the teachings of the
simplest Fathers of the Desert differ, not in essence, but only in
presentation, owing to the inimitable philosophical and literary gifts of St.
Gregory Palamas.
Second, I must insist
that the idea, widely spread by certain contemporary theologians in Russia,
that St. Gregory Palamas created, in his epoch, a new and innovative theology
is utterly ignorant and based on nothing even resembling decent scholarship.
This idea is at very best laughable. As the great Russian theologian, Father
Georges Florovsky, emphasized repeatedly in his lectures, the teachings of St.
Gregory Palamas are a virtual recapitulation [anakephalaiosis—Trans.]
of the teachings of the Fathers of the Church, if not the Holy Gospels,
rendered in the nomenclature of his age; they are a synopsis of the Neptic
tradition of the Church, which the Lord Himself bequeathed to us in His life of
asceticism, a witness which was perfected on the Cross and which blossomed
forth in the Resurrection and its restoration of human nature. As His Eminence,
Metropolitan Ierotheos of Nafpaktos has written, and quite correctly, St.
Gregory Palamas was a synthetic theologian, in the sense that he knew and
employed all of the theology of Orthodoxy. He thus underscores the opinion of
Father Georges.
Now, then, a few specific words
about the teachings of St. Gregory Palamas—about his magnificent synopsis of
the Christian Faith: this ontological philosophy of life. As I told you
earlier, I am not really a theologian; nor do I have personal knowledge or
experience of the lofty gifts of the Spirit about which St. Gregory writes.
What little I know, I know from my study of Byzantine history and from the
perspective of the psychological presuppositions that I see in the teachings of
St. Gregory Palamas, and I can express myself only from such platforms. I ask
your forgiveness, should I commit some error in my summary of that synopsis
of Orthodox soteriology which is, in reality, the theology of St.
Gregory Palamas. You must measure my words against the light of spiritual men
and women, who live empirically that which I only understand, however
imperfectly, from an historical, psychological, and entirely theoretical
standpoint. Thus, some basic elements from the teachings of St. Gregory
Palamas.
The fall of man. Man
was created in the image of God. The disobedience of our forefathers darkened
that image of God in man, and therefore, having lost his communion with God,
man was separated from the source of life and perfection. As a result of this
fall, man came under the dominion of sin and death. However, the fall of man
did not entirely destroy the image of God within him, and thus, even in the
life of sin, the love of God still acts within the human being, creating in his
soul a nostalgia for the life for which our All-Good God created him. And this
nostalgia is the source of the human need and search for God and the holy. From
a psychological standpoint, we may say that man is ill, suffering because of
his alienation from the ontological road which God set out for him. The
symptoms of his illness are sin and his inclination towards things—with the aid
of the Devil and the evil spirits, who resent the image of God which persists
even in sinful men and women—that damage his soul and which even more greatly
darken the image of God within him.
The restoration of the image
of God in man. By His sacrifice on the Cross, and by His Incarnation,
the God-Man Christ, Perfect God and Perfect Man, restored the image of God in
man, endowing him with the possibility of returning to the communion with God
that he enjoyed before the Fall. Christ became man, so that man might be made,
by Grace, god (to paraphrase a Patristic maxim that appears often in the early
Church Fathers); that human beings might participate in the Divine Energies of
God, Who, in His Essence, naturally transcends even existence and Whom man
cannot understand or grasp. God is all that is and all
that is not. (Paradoxically, as an aside, those who say that they do
not believe that God exists thereby recognize, in accordance with the apophatic
theology of the Church, that God does, in fact, exist, since, by affirming that
which is not, they have accepted one of the definitions of God, if only in a
limited way. This is an interesting point, and it exposes both the illogical
nature of atheism and the limitations of a theology that does not understand
God in His transcendence of human cognition itself.) Hence, by the Grace of
Christ, man may become, not God, of course, but a god by Grace and adoption.
This deification (theosis), or theopoiesis, to use the
more ancient terminology of the Fathers, takes place through the cure of man's
infection by sin and by the restoration of God's image within him, owing,
again, to the ontological restoration of human nature by the Resurrection of
the Lord, Who, in His life in this world, provided us, by His example, with a
vision of the spiritual methods by which we might treat our spiritual illness.
Despite His perfection, He became, in His love, an example for the treatment of
our sin.
The methodology of spiritual
therapy. Man, if he wishes to restore the image of God within him and
return to the path which God set out for us at the beginning—that the human
being might be taken from glory to glory—, must imitate Christ in His manner of
life; that is, a man or woman must fast, remain pure in soul and body (and this
purity honors and encompasses, naturally, the mystery of marriage), sacrifice
himself for his brother and friend, and live unceasingly in love. The imitation
of Christ entails, it goes without saying, a change in one’s life, or metanoia [repentance;
that is, a conscious turning from a life of sin to the life of Christian
virtue—Trans.]; one must cultivate, in his whole being, the nostalgia
for the next life that dwells in his heart, knowing that this life is but a
preparation for that other life (something which even the ancient Greek
philosophers knew and understood). Thus, we see all things with our eyes
directed towards Heaven, to the end that we produce in our minds a kind of
passionlessness (passivity), accepting the good and the bad as though they were
the same.
From a practical standpoint, we
find in the Mysteriological [sacramental] life of the Church, especially by
regular confession and frequent Communion, the medicine of immortality, which
helps us to return the spiritual mind [nous—Trans.], through its
cleansing and purification, to the heart (from which, through the effects of
sin, the nous is separated and alienated), wherein, as St.
Gregory tells us, there resides the repository of the Holy Spirit. Our evil
thoughts separate us from the heart and, likewise, from God. However, when the
spiritual mind returns to the heart, through the control of our thoughts,
through the therapeutic application of the Mysteries, and by the recitation,
unceasingly and continuously, of the entreaty which we make on the prayer
rope [proseuche tou komboschoiniou—Trans.], that is, Lord Jesus
Christ, Son of God, have mercy on me, a sinner, the mind is enlightened by the
uncreated and immaterial light of God. The light of the heart purifies the
mind, in turn, and gives it the power to see the image of God within the receptacle
of the heart, which is the well-spring of joy. It is for this reason that St.
Gregory Palamas continually had on his lips the words, Illumine my darkness.
When a person controls his evil
thoughts, he comes to see, in this effort, the influence of sin on his life;
this knowledge, in turn, creates a sadness [penthos] in the mind (a
certain kind of spiritual depression or melancholy), and the mind is purified
by way of this sadness, too, since such repentant sadness naturally incites in
man a desire for the contrasting joy of God; and thus, he turns his mind to the
joy of Grace, which is the therapeutic Light of God. In this way, in his mind,
in the Mysteriological life of the Church, and in his heart, the human being is
literally bombarded, because of the ineffable power of the love of God, by the
Light of Christ. He comes to live, in his sadness and in his
joy (accepting both with passivity), a positive life that leads to deification,
which is the restoration of communion with God, the cleansing of the image of
God within him, the salvation of his soul, and the vision of uncreated Light,
which, as I have said, fills both the mind and the soul. And this first step
towards the life in God leads us, by the Grace of God, to a state of joy that
ultimately surpasses even the joy which the first-created ones knew before the
Fall, as St. Symeon the New Theologian tells us.
The consequences of the
treatment of the spiritual illness of man. When a person clears away
the outer covering of sin from his mind, communing with God in his heart, he
finds silent peace [hesychia] in his life (and for this reason the
teachings of St. Gregory Palamas are called Hesychasm), the gifts of
clairvoyance and working miracles, and all of the other gifts of the Holy
Spirit. But above all, he acquires the ability to show love to everyone: to his
friends, to his enemies, to animals, and even to the dust on which he walks. He
becomes a small Jesus Christ within Jesus Christ, a god by Grace within
the Divine Energies of the Triune God, an Angel (above the Angels) on earth.
But the deification of a man also has consequences for his fellow man. Every
man who is enlightened, that is, who is saved (for St. Nicodemos the Hagiorite
equates deification, the enlightenment of man, with the salvation of his soul),
helps his fellow human beings, and even those (the majority of Christians and
other people, unfortunately, who will not come to union with God through a rebirth
in Christ) who are lost. Every man or woman who unites himself or herself to
Christ enlightens the universe and extends the boundaries of God's love. And
this love reaches to Hades, where those who are not united to God are tortured,
not by the wrath of God (for God is love and desires the salvation of all
mankind), but by their inability to accept and respond to the love of God, a
love which is especially fervent in the depths of Hell. The extension of God's
love by the salvation of His elect is the comfort of the damned, since every
man who accepts and acts within the love of God exalts the whole of humanity in
general.
Again, I ask that you forgive my
necessary oversimplification of the teachings of St. Gregory Palamas, many
elements (and essential elements) of which I could not cite in my poor words.
I am sure that I have
sufficiently tired you with my clumsy presentation. I thank you for your
patience, in that respect. Nonetheless, I hope that, with the blessing of our
Metropolitan and Father, I have left you with something positive and useful in
my words.
Forgive me.
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