The Christian world doesn't know Orthodoxy too well. It
only knows the external and for the most part, the negative features of the
Orthodox Church and not the inner spiritual treasure. Orthodoxy was locked
inside itself, it did not have the spirit of proselytism and did not reveal
itself to the world for many years. For the longest time, Orthodoxy did not have
such world-wide significance as did Catholicism and Protestantism. It remained
apart form passionate religious battles for hundreds of years, for centuries it
lived under the protection of large empires (Byzantium and Russia), and
preserved its eternal truth from the destructive processes of world history.
It is characteristic of Orthodoxy's religious nature
that it was not sufficiently actualized nor exposed externally, it was not
militant, and precisely because of this the heavenly truth of Christian
revelation was not distorted so much. Orthodoxy is that form of Christianity
which suffered the least distortion in its substance as a result of human
history. The Orthodox Church had its moments of historical sin, for the most
part in connection with its external dependence on the State, but the Church's
teaching, her inner spiritual path was not subject to distortion. The Orthodox
Church is primarily the Church of tradition, in contrast to the Catholic Church,
which is the Church of authority, and to the Protestant Churches which are
essentially churches of individual faith. The Orthodox Church was never subject
to a single externally authoritarian organization and it unshakenly was held
together by the strength of internal tradition and not by any external
authority. Out of all forms of Christianity it is the Orthodox Church which
remained more closely tied to early Christianity. The strength of internal
tradition in the Church is the strength of spiritual experience and the
continuity of the spiritual path, the power of super-personal spiritual life in
which every generation shakes off a consciousness of self-satisfaction and
exclusiveness and is united with the spiritual life of all preceding generations
up to the Apostles. In that tradition I have the same experience and the same
authority as the Apostle Paul, the martyrs, the saints and the whole Christian
world. In tradition my knowledge is not only personal but super-personal and I
live not in isolation but within the Body of Christ, within a single spiritual
organism with all my brothers in Christ.
Orthodoxy is first of all, an orthodoxy of life and not
an orthodoxy of indoctrination. For it, heretics are not so much those who
confess a false doctrine but those who have a false spiritual life and go along
a false spiritual path. Orthodoxy is before all else, not a doctrine, not an
external organization, not an external norm of behavior but a spiritual life, a
spiritual experience and a spiritual path. It sees the substance of Christianity
in internal spiritual activity. Orthodoxy is less the normative form of
Christianity (in the sense of a normative-rational logic and moral law) but is
rather its more spiritual form. And this spirituality and hidden-ness of
Orthodoxy were not infrequently the sources of its external weakness. The
external weakness and the insufficient development, the insufficiency of
external activity and realization affects everyone, but her spiritual life, her
spiritual treasures remained hidden and invisible. This is characteristic for
the spiritual nature of the East, in contrast to the spiritual world of the
West, which is always active and always visible but then, it not infrequently
spiritually exhausts itself because of all that activity. In the non-Christian
world of the East, India's spiritual life is especially hidden from outside eyes
and is not actualized in history. This analogy could be carried through,
although the spiritual nature of the Christian East is far different from the
spiritual nature of India. Holiness in the Orthodox world, in contrast to
holiness in the Catholic world, did not leave written monuments after itself, it
remained hidden. But this is not yet the reason why it is difficult to judge
Orthodox spiritual life from the outside. Orthodoxy did not have its Scholastic
age, it experienced only the age of Patristics. And the Orthodox Church to this
day relies on the Eastern teachers of the Church. The West sees this as a sign
of Orthodoxy's backwardness, a dying out of creative life. But this fact can be
given another interpretation: in Orthodoxy, Christianity has not been so
rationalized as it had been rationalized in the West, in Catholicism where, with
the help of Aristotle it saw everything through the eyes of Greek
intellectualism. [In Orthodoxy] doctrine has never attained such a sacred
significance and dogmas have not been so attached to mandatory intellectual
theological teachings but they were understood primarily as mystical truths. We
were less confined by the theological and philosophical interpretations of
dogmas. Nineteenth century Russia experienced a genesis of creative Orthodox
ideas [thinking] and these expressed more freedom and spiritual talent than did
Catholic and even Protestant thought.
To the spiritual nature of Orthodoxy belongs the
primordial and inviolable ontologism which first presented itself as the
manifestation of Orthodox life and only then, of Orthodox thought. The Christian
West went by ways of critical thought in which the subject was opposed to the
object, and thus the organic whole of thinking and the organic connection with
life was violated. The West is more capable of a complex unfolding of its
thinking, its reflection and criticism, its precise intellectualism. But here
was a violation of the connection between the one who knows and thinks and the
primordial and original existence. Cognition came out of life and thinking, came
out of existence. Cognition and thinking did not pass through the spiritual
wholeness of the person, in the organic unity of all his strengths. The West
accomplished great feats on this foundation but this resulted in the falling
apart of the primordial ontologism of thinking, the thinking did not enter into
the depth of substance. This resulted in Scholastic intellectualism,
rationalism, empiricism and the extreme idealism of Western thought. On the
Orthodox ground, thinking remained ontological, joined to existence, and this is
evident throughout the whole of Russian religio-philosophic and theological
thought of the XIX and XX centuries. Rationalism, legalism and all normatism is
alien to Orthodoxy. The Orthodox Church is not defined in rational concepts, it
is conceptualized only for those living within it, who are united to its
spiritual experience.. The mystical types of Christianity are not subject to any
kind of intellectual definitions, they do not have any juridical signs nor do
they have rational signs. Genuine Orthodox theologizing is theologizing on the
basis of spiritual experience. Orthodoxy almost completely lacks Scholastic
manuals. Orthodoxy understands itself through Trinitarian religion; not with
abstract monotheism but in concrete Trinitarianism. The life of the Holy Trinity
is reflected in its spiritual life, its spiritual experience and its spiritual
path. The Orthodox Liturgy begins with the words: "Blessed is the Kingdom, of
the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit." Everything begins from
above, from the Divine Triad, from the heights of the Essence, and not from the
person and his soul. In Orthodox understanding it is the Divine Triad which
descends and not the person who ascends. There is less of this Trinitarian
expression in Western Christianity, it is more Christocentric and
anthropocentric. This difference is noted in Eastern and Western patristics
where the first theologizes from the Divine Trinity and the second, from the
human soul. Thus the East first of all proclaims the mysteries of Trinitarian
dogmas and Christological dogmas. The West primarily teaches about Grace and
free will and about the ecclesiastical organization. The West had greater wealth
and a greater variety of ideas.
Orthodoxy is that Christianity wherein is a greater
revelation of the Holy Spirit. Thus the Orthodox Church did not adopt the
Filioque, which is seen as a subordination in the teaching about the Holy
Spirit. The nature of the Holy Spirit is revealed not so much by dogmas and
doctrines but by its action. The Holy Spirit is closer to us, it is more
immanent in the world. The Holy Spirit acts directly upon the created world and
transfigures creation. This teaching is revealed by the greatest of Russian
saints, Seraphim of Sarov. Orthodoxy is not only Trinitarian in essence but it
sees as the task of its earthly life, the transfiguration of the world in the
image of the Trinity and have it become pneumatic [Grk. Spiritual] in essence.
I am speaking about the depths of mysteries in
Orthodoxy and not of superficial trends in it. Pneumatologic [Grk. Spiritual]
theology, the anticipation of a new outpouring of the Holy Spirit in the world
arises easier on Orthodox soil. This is the remarkable particularity of
Orthodoxy: on the one hand it is more conservative and traditional than
Catholicism and Protestantism but, on the other hand, within the depth of
Orthodoxy there is always a great expectation of a new religious manifestation
in the world, an outpouring of the Holy Spirit, the coming of the New Jerusalem.
Orthodoxy did not develop in history for nearly the whole millennium; evolution
is a stranger to it but within it the possibility of religious creativity was
concealed, which is held in reserve for a new, not yet achieved, historical
epoch. This became evident in Russian religious trends of the XIX and XX
centuries. Orthodoxy makes a more radical division between the Divine and the
natural world, the kingdom of God and the kingdom of Caesar and does not accept
those possible analogies which are frequently evident in Catholic theology. The
Divine Energies act covertly in man and in the world. One cannot say about the
created world that it is a god or is divine, nor can one say that it is outside
the Divine. God and Divine life do not resemble the natural world or the natural
life, one cannot make analogies here. God is eternal; natural life is limited
and finite. But, Divine Energy is poured out upon the natural world, acts upon
it and enlightens it. This is the Orthodox understanding of the Holy Spirit.
Thomas Aquinas' teaching about the natural world, positing it in opposition to
the supernatural world is, for the Orthodox, a form of secularizing the world.
Orthodoxy is in principle pneumatological [Grk. Of the spirit] and in this is
its distinction. Pneumatism is the final result of Trinitarianism. Grace is not
the mediation between the supernatural and the natural; grace is the action of
the Divine Energy on the created world, the presence of the Holy Spirit in the
world. It is the Pneumatism of Orthodoxy which makes of it a more complete form
of Christianity, revealing in it the predominance of New Testamental origins
following those of the Old Testament. At its apex, Orthodoxy understands the
purpose of life as the seeking and the attainment of the grace of the Holy
Spirit, as a means of the spiritual transfiguration of creation. This
understanding is essentially opposite of the legalistic understanding in which
the Divine world and the supernatural world is the law and the norm for the
created and natural world.
Orthodoxy is primarily liturgical. It informs and
enlightens the people not so much by sermons and the teaching of norms and laws
but by liturgical services themselves which give a foreshadowing of transfigured
life. It likewise teaches the people through the examples of saints and instills
the cult of holiness. But the images of saints are not normative; to them is
granted the graceful enlightenment and transfiguration of creation by the action
of the Holy Spirit. This, not being the normative type for Orthodoxy, makes it
more difficult for the ways of human life, for history; it makes it less
attractive for any kind of organization and for cultural creativity. The hidden
mystery of the Holy Spirit's activity upon creation has not been actually
realized by the ways of historical life. Characteristic for Orthodoxy is
FREEDOM. This internal freedom may not be noticed from the outside but it is
everywhere present. The idea of freedom as the foundation of Orthodoxy was
developed in Russian religious thinking of the XIX and XX centuries. The
admission of the freedom of conscience radically distinguishes the Orthodox
Church from the Catholic Church. But the understanding of freedom in Orthodoxy
is different from the understanding of freedom in Protestantism. In
Protestantism, as in all Western thought, freedom is understood
individualistically, as a personal right, preserved from encroachment on the
part of any other person, and declaring it to be autonomous. Individualism is
foreign to Orthodoxy, to it belongs a particular collectivism. A religious
person and a religious collective are not incompatible with each other, as
external friend to friend. The religious person is found within the religious
collective and the religious collective is found within the religious person.
Thus the religious collective does not become an external authority for the
religious person, burdening the person externally with teaching and the law of
life. The Church is not outside of religious persons, opposed to her. The Church
is within them and they are within her. Thus the Church is not an authority. The
Church is a grace-filled unity of love and freedom. Authoritativeness is
incompatible with Orthodoxy because this form engenders a fracture between the
religious collective and the religious person, between the Church and her
members. There is no spiritual life without the freedom of conscience, there is
not even a concept of the Church, since the Church does not tolerate slaves
within her, but God wants only the free. But the authentic freedom of religious
conscience, freedom of the spirit, is made evident not in an isolated autonomous
personality, self-asserted in individualism but in a personality conscious of
being in a super-personal spiritual unity, in a unity with a spiritual organism,
within the Body of Christ, i.e. the Church. My personal conscience is not placed
outside and is not placed in opposition to the superpersonal conscience of the
Church, it is revealed only within the Church's conscience. But, without an
active spiritual deepening of my personal conscience, of my personal spiritual
freedom, the life of the Church is not realized, since this life cannot be
external to, nor be imposed upon, the person. Participation in the Church
demands spiritual freedom, not only from the first entry into the Church, which
Catholicism also recognizes, but throughout one's whole life. The Church's
freedom with respect to the State was always precarious, but Orthodoxy always
enjoyed freedom within the Church. In Orthodoxy freedom is organically linked
with Sobornost', i.e. with the activity of the Holy Spirit upon the religious
collective which has been with the Church not only during the times of the
Ecumenical Councils, but at all times. Sobornost' in Orthodoxy, which is the
life of the Church's people, never had any external juridical signs. Not even
the Ecumenical Councils enjoyed indisputable external authority. The
infallibility of authority was enjoyed only by the whole Church throughout her
whole history, and the bearers and custodians of this authority were the whole
people of the Church. The Ecumenical Councils enjoyed their authority not
because they conformed with external juridical legal requirements but because
the people of the Church, the whole Church recognized them as Ecumenical and
genuine. Only that Ecumenical Council is genuine in which there was an
outpouring of the Holy Spirit; the outpouring of the Holy Spirit has no external
juridical criteria, it is discerned by the people of the Church in accordance
with internal spiritual evidence. All this indicates a nonnormative nonjuridical
character of the Orthodox Church. Along with this the Orthodox consciousness
understands the Church more ontologically, i.e. it doesn't see the Church
primarily as an organization and an establishment, not just a society of
faithful, but as a spiritual, religious organism, the Mystical Body of Christ.
Orthodoxy is more cosmic than Western Christianity. Neither Catholicism nor
Protestantism sufficiently expresses the cosmic nature of the Church, as the
Body of Christ. Western Christianity is primarily anthropological. But the
Church is also the Christianized cosmos; within her, the whole created world is
subject to the effect of the grace of the Holy Spirit. Christ's appearance has a
cosmic, cosmogonic significance; it signifies somehow a new creation, a new day
of the world's creation. The juridical understanding of redemption as a carrying
out of a judicial process between God and man, is somewhat foreign to Orthodoxy.
It is closer to an ontological and a cosmic understanding of the appearance of a
new creation and a renewed mankind. The idea of Theosis was the central and
correct idea, the Deification of man and of the whole created world. Salvation
is that Deification. And the whole created world, the whole cosmos is subject to
Deification. Salvation is the enlightenment and transfiguration of creation and
not a juridical justification. Orthodoxy turns to the mystery of the
RESURRECTION as the summit and the final aim of Christianity Thus the central
feast in the life of the Orthodox Church is the feast of Pascha, Christ's
Glorious Resurrection. The shining rays of the Resurrection permeates the
Orthodox world. The feast of the Resurrection has an immeasurably greater
significance in the Orthodox liturgy than in Catholicism where the apex is the
feast of the Birth of Christ. In Catholicism we primarily meet the crucified
Christ and in Orthodoxy - the Resurrected Christ. The way of the Cross is man's
path but it leads man, along with the rest of the world, towards the
Resurrection. The mystery of the Crucifixion may be hidden behind the mystery of
the Resurrection. But the mystery of the Resurrection is the utmost mystery of
Orthodoxy. The Resurrection mystery is not only for man, it is cosmic. The East
is always more cosmic than the West. The West is anthropocentric; in this is its
strength and meaning, but also its limitation. The spiritual basis of Orthodoxy
engenders a desire for universal salvation. Salvation is understood not only as
an individual one but a collective one, along with the whole world. Such words
of Thomas Aquinas could not have emanated from Orthodoxy's bosom, who said that
the righteous person in paradise will delight himself with the suffering of
sinners in hell. Nor could Orthodoxy proclaim the teaching about predestination,
not only in the extreme Calvinist form but in the form imagined by the Blessed
Augustine. The greater part of Eastern teachers of the Church, from Clement of
Alexandria to Maximus the Confessor, were supporters of Apokatastasis, of
universal salvation and resurrection. And this is characteristic of
(contemporary) Russian religious thought. Orthodox thought has never been
suppressed by the idea of Divine justice and it never forgot the idea of Divine
love. Chiefly - it did not define man from the point of view of Divine justice
but from the idea of transfiguration and Deification of man and cosmos.
Finally, the final and most important feature of
Orthodoxy is its eschatological consciousness. The early Christian eschatology,
the anticipation of Christ's second appearance and the coming of the
Resurrection, was to a greater extent, preserved in Orthodoxy. Orthodox
eschatology means a lesser attachment to the world and earthly life and a
greater turning towards heaven and eternity, i.e. to the Kingdom of God. In
Western Christianity, the actualization of Christianity in the paths of history,
the turning towards earthly efficiency and earthly organization resulted in the
obscuring of the eschatological mystery, the mystery of Christ's second coming.
In Orthodoxy, primarily as a result of its lesser historical activity, the great
eschatological anticipation was preserved. The apocalyptic side of Christianity
had less of an expression in the Western forms of Christianity. In the East, in
Orthodoxy, especially in Russian Orthodoxy, there were apocalyptic tendencies,
the anticipation of new outpouring of the Holy Spirit. Orthodoxy, being a more
traditional, a more conservative form of Christianity, while preserving the
ancient truths, allowed for the possibility of a greater religious innovation,
not innovations of human thought which is so prominent in the West, but
innovations of the religious transfiguration of life. The primacy of the fulness
of life over the differentialized culture was always especially characteristic
for Orthodoxy. Orthodoxy did not see such a great culture which arose on the
grounds of Catholicism and Protestantism. Perhaps this is so because Orthodoxy
is turned towards the Kingdom of God which will come not as a consequence of
historical evolution, but as a result of the mystical transfiguration of the
world. It is not evolution but transfiguration which is characteristic for
Orthodoxy. Orthodoxy cannot be known through surviving theological tracts; it is
made known through the life of the Church and the Church's people, it is least
of all expressed in understanding. But, Orthodoxy must come out from its
condition of being shut up and isolated, it must actualize its hidden spiritual
treasures. Only then will it attain worldwide meaning. The recognition of
Orthodoxy's exclusive spiritual significance as a more pure form of Christianity
must not engender self-satisfaction within it and lead to a rejection of the
meaning of Western Christianity. On the contrary, we must acquaint ourselves
with Western Christianity and learn many things from it. We must strive towards
Christian unity. Orthodoxy is a good basis for Christian unity. But Orthodoxy
suffered less from secularization and thus can contribute an immeasurable amount
towards the Christianization of the world. The Christianization of the world
must not mean a secularization of Christianity. Christianity can not be isolated
from the world and it continues to move within it, without separation, and while
remaining in the world it must be the conqueror of the world and not be
conquered by it.
From "N.A.Berdyaev. Vestnik of the
Russian West European Patriarchal Exarchate", Paris 1952 .