There is perhaps no more
dangerous delusion in the spiritual life than the belief that one is close to
God simply because one appears religious, speaks about spiritual things, or
surrounds oneself with the atmosphere of holiness. The soul may learn the language
of Heaven while remaining inwardly untouched by grace.
Shakespeare wrote in Hamlet:
“One may smile, and smile, and be a villain.” In much the same way, one may
speak softly, quote the Fathers, light candles, burn incense, discuss theology,
and yet remain fundamentally unrepentant.
This is the theatre of piety.
It is the performance of
spirituality without the crucifixion of the ego.
It is religion as costume rather
than transformation.
The modern world constantly
encourages this deception. Today, “spirituality” is often presented as an
aesthetic rather than an ascetic practice. Men wish to appear profound without
enduring suffering. They want mystical feelings without obedience, peace without
warfare, holiness without confession, and salvation without repentance.
But the Orthodox life is not a
performance for men. It is surgery before God.
The saints did not become saints
because they appeared spiritual. They became saints because they accused
themselves, wept for their sins, endured humiliation, struggled against
passions, and refused to trust their own righteousness.
The Pharisees of the Gospel were
experts in the theatre of piety. Outwardly, they were exact, religious,
disciplined, and respected. Yet Christ, Who sees not appearances but hearts,
called them “whited sepulchres.” Beautiful on the outside, inwardly full of
death.
This warning was not preserved in
the Gospel merely to condemn ancient Pharisees. It was written for us.
A man can be “traditional” and
still be proud.
He can defend Orthodoxy while
hating his brother.
He can speak about the Holy
Fathers while refusing correction.
He can condemn ecumenism while
worshipping himself.
He can admire monasticism while
fleeing personal repentance.
One of the most subtle forms of
spiritual pride is the love of appearing discerning. Such a person delights in
exposing the errors of others but never descends into his own heart to see the
darkness there. He becomes a critic of everyone’s sins except his own.
Yet true repentance does not make
a man theatrical. It makes him quiet.
The repentant man does not seek
to appear spiritual because he is too busy mourning his own fallenness. Like
the Publican, he stands afar off and cries, “God be merciful to me, a sinner.”
And Christ says that this man—not the impressive religious performer—went home
justified.
The holy Fathers consistently
teach that the beginning of salvation is self-knowledge. Not psychological
self-absorption, but the painful realization of one’s distance from God.
Without this, spirituality becomes fantasy.
Many today chase spiritual
experiences while refusing the narrow path of repentance. They seek
consolations, signs, emotional highs, aesthetic beauty, intellectual
stimulation, or religious identity. But Christianity is not a hobby for refined
souls. It is death and resurrection.
The Cross comes before the
Resurrection.
This is why genuine Orthodoxy is
inseparable from repentance. Remove repentance, and what remains is merely
religious culture, ideological identity, or emotional comfort. One may preserve
the externals of religion while losing its heart entirely.
Judas himself walked with Christ,
heard His teachings, witnessed miracles, and yet remained inwardly unconverted.
Nearness to holy things does not
save a man if his heart refuses to bow.
In our age of images,
appearances, and endless self-presentation, the temptation toward theatrical
spirituality is greater than ever. Social media especially rewards
religious performance: dramatic opinions, public displays of piety, cultivated
images of holiness, spiritual branding.
Yet the saints fled
attention. Modern man seeks it.
The saint hides himself.
The actor seeks an audience.
And this is the terrifying
question each Christian must ask:
Am I struggling to become
holy, or merely to appear holy?
One question leads to salvation.
The other leads to delusion.
True repentance is not glamorous.
It often feels humiliating, hidden, dry, and painful. It strips a man of
illusions about himself. But only the broken heart can truly receive Christ.
For God is not searching for
religious actors.
He is searching for the humble.
Source: https://trueorthodox.eu/the-theatre-of-piety-on-the-illusion-of-being-spiritual-without-repentance/
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