St.Arbucks @ THE WAY: 2008

................CHRISTMAS FOREVER...............



In an effort to avoid pontificating, here is a true story.

When I was a boy my Father used to take the whole family to work on Christmas morning.

Work was on the children’s wards, and in between the paintings of Mickey Mouse and Donald Duck, I could tell Dad was admired. Seeing young patients on this special day was odd, but it was good to see that sick children also had presents.

A hospital Santa would have one for us too. There was a drink and a mince pie. The nurses had tinsel on their hats and smiles on their faces. To this day I find the smell of disinfectant in a hospital welcoming, and Jesus can appear on the wards.

But what fascinated me as a boy was the special care baby unit, SCBU as the nurses called it. Christmas morning would find us peering at the premature babies. Their lives were as transparent as their incubators. Of course they weren’t generally awake but each near naked baby had transparent tubes leading into its nostrils or veins. Their bodies were no bigger than my own hands.

Purple feet and hands had toes and fingers so tiny that all of them might cover your fingernails. Wrists or ankles were tagged, which made the babies look so fragile they were like little birds without feathers.

Except these were humans. They might suddenly yawn or reveal a tiny tongue. There was a kind of interconnected interdependent relationship with the staff. Their very lives were open. In my mind these babies would become associated with the openness of the infant Jesus.

The word was made flesh, we say, and the fact Jesus was born means God is much more than a word, because he relates to me in the most intimate way possible, without words, he loves me through a human body as helpless as my own, and as helpless as the tiny babies.

Here is no tyrant God demanding a sacrifice, no fearful guilty conscience needing reassurance. Original goodness floods the world as perfect love drives out fear, fear which has to do with punishment.

Here God empties himself into human nature and identifies with my plight. We identify with one another. I am free to worship without fear, as we say in the Benedictus. God is lover. Two become One.

If I can get highfollutin' just for a paragraph, St Gregory of Nazianzus put it like this: “The very Son of God, older than the ages, invisible, incomprehensible, incorporeal, beginning of beginning, light of light, fountain of life and immortality … perfect likeness … he it is who comes to his own image and takes our nature for the good of our nature, and unites himself to an intelligent soul for the good of my soul, to purify like by like ... He takes on the poverty of my flesh, that I may gain the riches of his divinity. He who is full is made empty … that I may share in his fullness ... What is this mystery that surrounds us?”

But our society does away with mystery, the hospital wards have managers. Not just the hospital wards of course. Everything is measured and assessed. But the mystery of Being still surrounds us, unmeasurable.

Jesus related openly and intimately to this mystery in a very practical way. He spoke of Abba, which translates more like Daddy than like Father. And no true Dad wants his child to be dependent. To be open to the mystery is to be emptied, and to become part of something much much greater.

The incarnation of God means not just that God empties himself into a human being, but that a human being can reciprocate.

Yet often, instead of emptiness we find mundane thoughts. I might think: Am I going off message? Am I too clever? Am I not clever enough? Am I loved? Am I unloving? What do I do with these feelings? Does my backside look too big in this? We need to let this go gracefully.

It is hard to imagine Jesus asking these sorts of questions, because he is unself-conscious, which is why he commands us to lose ourselves. He relates openly and learns acceptance. He fully suffers our nature along with us, yet nature cannot be forced to fully explain Jesus, OR our own awareness.

Earlier I said that no true Dad wants his child to be dependent. But our saviour wasn’t independent either. “No man is an island entire of itself”, wrote John Donne, a Christian. And not even the Son of God, God who is a self existing being. He didn’t announce himself in physical might or temporal power. As a baby, God is interdependent, like reality itself.

That revolutionary non-violent Christian Martin Luther King once captured this: "For some strange reason” he said, “I can never be what I ought to be until you are what you ought to be, and you can never be what you ought to be until I am what I ought to be. This is the inter-related structure of all reality".

Martin Luther King would talk about being beholden to half the world over his breakfast - his tea from India, his marmalade from Europe. Everything is interconnected.

And so our sustainer is born not only in a stable in the Middle East 2,000 years ago, not in the Bible, but in this body. We cannot divorce ourselves from incarnate reality. We are spiritual beings in communion.

Christmas is not just about buying presents we can afford, but accepting the presence which we cannot escape.
Being IS communion.

Our society talks of self-fulfillment and self-potential, of valuing ourselves, but preoccupation with the self cripples relationships and replaces true communion with mere politics and religion. The flesh becomes word again. This might just be a feeling of unease or it might be something much more tragic.

A child born in Bethlehem today is literally walled in by an unholy trinity of political military and religious apartheid.

God knows we are in communion, for better or worse. Interconnected. But we turn away and put our energy into keeping things constant when all the evidence is that in communion everything is in flux. The seasons change, our bodies change, people die and are born. We try to halt happy moments, we yearn for when we were younger, when so-and-so was here, when we will finally be able to relax on holiday. We pretend we are not going to die. Our first reaction to change is to ask how it might affect us, so we waste creative energy, resisting or reacting.

Our preoccupation with the self does not lead to compassion, which is why Jesus is unselfconscious and commands us to lose ourselves, and why the gospels affirm this message. It is why a rich man is sent away unable to cope with Jesus’ suggestions. It is why St Peter is rebuked for resisting rejection. It is why the disciples squabble over their own importance. It is all just so impossible to grasp.

But that’s exactly the point.

In verses 6 & 7 of Philippians 2 we read, ‘though he was in the form of God, he did not regard equality with God as something to be exploited - grasped - but emptied himself, taking the form of a servant … and God exalted him."

The crib in which our saviour is born is like an incubator, because Life is a gift which is impossible for an individual to measure. Life is a gift to be opened, not valued. It is priceless. Interconnected. Life is a gift to be shared, because it cannot be grasped. And life does not end.

William Blake once wrote: “He who sees the Infinite in all things, sees God. He who sees the Ratio only sees himself.”

So, a very, very, very Happy Christmas to you all, and not only for today, but forever.

+++++++WHEN THE SON FINALLY SETS+++++++




A priest walked into a pub, indignant to find so many of his parishioners there. He rounded them up and shepherded them into the church. Then he solemnly said: “All those who want to go to heaven, step over here to the left.”

Everyone stepped over except one man, who stubbornly stood his ground. The priest looked at him fiercely and said: “Don’t you want to go to heaven?”

“No.” said the man.

“Do you mean to tell me you don’t want to go to heaven when you die?”

“Of course I want to go to heaven when I die. I thought you were going now!”

We all want heaven, but just like the people stepping to the left with the priest, we can be in our religious traditions but fail to embody them. And just like the man staying in the pub, we can also just fail to even enter one at all. So what are we to do with our religious traditions?

Embodying his religious tradition all the way to heaven cost Jesus his life, while the disciples deserted him. If we seek eternal life out of our own self-interest, how is this salvation?

As even Rowan Williams has recognised: “Religious practice claims to offer liberation: but if God is conceived as just another bundle of stimuli for the greedy self, and if our relationship with God takes on the character of a personal love affair with longings and raptures, rows and reconciliations, how on earth can it liberate?”

In the towns of Galilee, John the Baptist had sent his disciples to ask Jesus a question: “Are you the one who was to come, or should we expect someone else?”

And to be able to demonstrate the truth to John’s disciples, Jesus had to refer back to the past, and to his own religious tradition. When he said; “the blind receive sight,” he referred to Isaiah 29:18; “the eyes of the blind shall see”. When he said; “the lame walk,” he referred back to Isaiah 42:18; “then the lame shall leap like a deer”. When he said; “the dead are raised”, he referred to Isaiah 26:19; “your dead will live”.

It was however not enough for Jesus just to refer back to his religious tradition. The tradition had to be embodied in the eternal present, and so somehow Jesus would end up helping people to be able to see, to be able to leap, to be able to live. As a Jew, Jesus was already acquainted with the scroll, but he was somehow coming to realise Isaiah in his own life.

And here is our lesson. As Christians, we are already acquainted with our own religious tradition, but to embody it we should be somehow coming to realise Christ in our own lives. We should be: “in Christ”, as St Paul put it. To quote St Theresa of Avila: Christ has no body now on earth but yours; No Hands but yours; No feet but yours: Yours are the eyes through which Christ’s compassion looks out into the world; Yours are the feet with which he is to go about doing good; Yours are the hands with which he is to bless now.

The light of awareness should make our old texts suddenly, spiritually, present themselves anew. The word becoming flesh in us.

Meanwhile humanists have been putting posters on buses. The posters read: “There probably is no God. Stop worrying and enjoy your life.”

It is amusing that Christians are responding by creating websites called: “There probably is.” Because it is an irrelevant argument in many ways - God is being, he is the very presence giving you the ability to debate his existence or non-existence.

Therefore, as Theologian Paul Tillich has said; "to argue that he exists is to deny him."

If God is spirit, and if by Christ, we mean the divine come into human nature, a meeting ground of humanity and divinity in creation, then we can give ourselves to Christ by saying; “You are my life”. And this means the personal pronoun “I” can become a doorway to something much larger.

Not out of self-interest, but out of self-emptying.

However, this will inevitably bring us to the question of eternal life. Is eternal life what both evangelical and liberal theologians have called; “pie in the sky when we die,” or does eternal life really begin here and now? Or is that a false dichotomy anyway?

Let’s park that for a moment and come back to it.
Because I think to understand the answer to all this we need to understand sacrifice.

Embodying his religious tradition in the present meant more than death for Jesus. It meant sacrifice. Death is much more common than sacrifice. But sacrifice is rare. To understand sacrifice we understand that sacrifice isn’t giving something up, like giving up your time and your money, for example. Nor is sacrifice about being burned or stabbed on an altar. The meaning of sacrifice comes right out of two root words, sacer, meaning sacred, and facere, meaning to make.

So quite literally, when our lives are being made sacred, this is sacrifice. Now we can start to go back to eternal life.

I suggest an eternal life is a life that is being made sacred. Being made sacred is what the embodying of religion is all about. It is something done in us, rather than something which we do. So while we can help this to happen by being open to it happening, going all the way with it is generally a cost we don’t want to pay.

Hell, so to speak, is quite a common dilemma.

Take Woody Allen for example. “Would I ever be happy, if only I was happy,” he said. But we are cut off from happiness by the very hope which impels us to pursue it.

By the very definition of hope, we only hope for what we can’t currently have, and so to hope for the kingdom of heaven must necessarily mean it is beyond our reach.

But we are not beyond its reach, and this is what God’s liberating grace is.

The Celtic saints knew about it. As well talking about; “places of my resurrection”, the Celtic saints would also talk about; “thin places”, which were the places where the veil between earth and heaven lifts, and if this has ever happened to you, you will know it as a continuum, and as the very fulfillment of the Lord’s prayer - thy kingdom come, on earth, as in heaven. In other words, death is now.

Don’t take my word for it. “To live is Christ, and to die is gain”, wrote St Paul, who also said Love was greater than faith and hope.

In his Soliloques, Augustine said this of heaven; “Then it will no longer be faith, but sight”.

“In Christ,” wrote St Thomas Aquinas in his Summa Theologica, “there was perfect charity, but there was neither faith nor hope.” He didn't need them, he was in heaven.

So the answer to our question about eternal life being either now or not yet, is that the promise of eternal life not yet disappears along with our own enclosed and separated life. Life becomes God. “To live is Christ, and to die is gain”, wrote St Paul.

When God is all in all, hope and fear are gone.

If we really understand sacrifice we will not have worshipped a religious tradition, but like Jesus Christ we will have allowed one to embody us, to live us out, and to make us disappear.

This is called self-emptying, or coming to realise Christ in our own lives. This is what being made sacred is all about.

Phillipians Chapter 2 verse 5 - Let this mind be in you, which was also in Christ Jesus, who, being in the very form of God, did not consider equality with God something to be grasped, but made himself nothing.

God made himself nothing, therefore he was exalted.
But humans fear nothing.

If, in fulfilling a religious tradition, self-emptying is what God did for us, are we responding?

In the name of the creator, the redeemer, the sustainer. Amen.

Remembering Angels



As remembrance day comes each year, I remember my grandfather William, and also Einstein's statement that: "a problem cannot be solved using the same consciousness which created it."

William, see above, amazingly managed to survive the fighting in the Somme in WW1, the so-called 'war to end wars'.

His photo represents so many other soliders who (along with their families) heroically suffered and died, and still do so even today.

And yet William would also defend the rights of conscientious objectors, ironically telling one in particular to: 'stick to his guns.' The freedom to refuse to fight was one of the very freedoms which he was fighting for.

One of the very many abused WW1 objectors was shipped to France and kept in inhumane conditions which gave him dysentery before being brought before a military trial, where he was told that his papers were marked 'Death', and asked if he was going to continue to resist? 'Yes,' he said, 'Men are dying in agony in the trenches for the things that they believe in and I wouldn't be less than them.'



And as the cartoon above reminds us, humans only heroically die for their countries when other humans heroically kill for theirs.

The history of world conflict demonstrates that one man's terrorist is perceived by another man as a freedom fighter.

As our capacity for destruction grows, Einstein's quote suggests that if we wish to survive as a species, learning to inhabit other planets may not be enough.

Unless we can learn a different consciousness, the insects could outlive us on Mars too.

Non violence seems rare now, but there isn’t one early church Father who interprets Jesus as advocating anything but strict non-violence, and Christianity was a persecuted pacifist religion for hundreds of years before the Emperor Constantine adopted it as the official religion of a state built on military domination.

The sanction of the Roman Empire opened up huge areas of influence to Christianity.

But before this sanction, soldiers were not baptised. After it, only the baptised could be soldiers!

As the Professor of Patristics Andrew Louth recently put it on BBC Radio 4's 'In our time': “Christianity became the ideology of the empire, and that is something that Christians have not found easy to cope with. Christianity before Constantine was a largely pacific religion. There are lots of stories of Christians being persecuted because they refused to serve in the army. This changes dramatically in the 4th century, and the Church has to find some way of ending up blessing guns.”

Hence the just war tradition. A just war can only be fought to redress a wrong suffered, and force may not be used for economic gain. The cause must not be futile, and it is not just if disproportionate measures are required for success.

Somehow I am reminded again of the value of a faith which is not based upon an ideology. Apophasis is the knowledge that we do not know God by affirming what he is, but by subtracting what he is not.

So in Rowan William's book: 'Wrestling with Angels", Williams describes Apophatic Christianity as a: "cross for human ways of thought" and says that the human person is: "a reality beyond the bondage of a closed conceptual system."

Apophatic Christianity is: "the fruit of the graceful indwelling of the Holy Ghost, and the fulfillment of the evangelical commendation of losing one's life in order to save it."

This comes in ecstasis - the going out of oneself - and also in contemplation - the "self revelation of God in silence", which shows us the root of all our sin.

Sin comes from our: "confusion of personality with individuality, the regarding of personal being as a bundle of repeatable natural characteristics deployed by a controlling independent ego, defined in terms of its opposition to and exclusion of other egos".

In other words, human beings are falsely separated and truly One, like it or not.

And whichever country we identify ourselves with, we remain truly One, for better or worse, so that whatever we do to others, we inescapably also do to ourselves. We do our best for our country, but we are more than children of a country.

That Child of God and Christian martyr for non-violent struggle Martin Luther King put it like this: "For some strange reason I can never be what I ought to be until you are what you ought to be, and you can never be what you ought to be until I am what I ought to be. This is the inter-related structure of all reality".

The risen Christ to you all.

.........Being believed in



Most of us know how being believed in makes us feel real.

And according to Marcus Borg, a theologian, our English word believe comes from the middle English word spelled beleve or belieue. It means "to belove." Apparently if you read Shakespeare and Chaucer, and keep on replacing the word “believe” with the word “love”, it almost always works interchangeably.

Until the 17th century, when you beloved, you believed. It was to: "hold dear;" "prize," "love;" "give one's loyalty to;" "give one's self to;" "commit one's self." Belief is a relational term. No wonder then that being believed in can make us feel real.

But following the Enlightenment, the meaning of the word believe shifted and become more about giving your intellectual assent to a proposition. This sort of belief was tested and questionable. No longer was the object of relationship a person; now it was a hypothesis.

I heard someone recently questioning the virgin birth by saying: “Do you believe in the virgin birth?” Now to be sure, I do like questions. But working with the definition of “belief” above, which, remember, is “to belove”, it is one’s relationship with the Virgin Mary which matters, not one’s intellectual assent to a proposition about conception without a sperm cell. (Cloning techniques have already proven it possible anyway, but that’s beside the point!)

It’s a bit like the time I saw comedian Jimmy Carr joking on television. He said that when he was young he used to have an imaginary friend… but then when he grew up, he simply stopped going to Church. It raised a laugh.

But does imaginary always mean unreal?

Religious images are the images of a real presence. This is what makes the image of Jesus different from that of a vivid Dickensian character, or from Harry Potter. As “images” in the human mind, we think of Jesus, a Dickens character and Harry Potter as somehow “imaginary”. But Jesus is the odd one out, because his image is of a living although invisible Being.

In the sense that God is Spirit (Jn 4:24), God is not a physical visible “thing”, so God is “no-thing”. But God is still present, and though no one has seen ever seen God (1 Jn 4:12), Jesus has shown people what God would look like if anyone ever had done. A bit like lightning, which shows people electricity, or like a kite which shows people air, or like someone’s son who is “chip off the old block”, even though they have never seen his Father. Jesus is an image of the invisible. (Col 1:15)

Similarly, when we think about the Virgin Mary, we can go back to the middle English word spelled beleve or belieue, and see how “believing” in her is “holding someone dear”. We are “beloved” by the invisible Being who makes us real in the midst of life and death. As Theresa of Avila said: “All things are passing, God alone is sufficient.” That which is not in a flux, is God, and whoever remains beloved (believed in), remains real.

Fourth century Christian monk Evagrius emphasized the virtue of simplicity when he said that: “one who prays is a theologian”. And in Anglicanism, it is said that the tool used to work out belief is like a ‘three-legged stool’ made of Scripture, Tradition, and Reason. As a stool sits best on the floor, I suggest that the floor is Experience.

So may you experience God’s gift as a presence who beloves (believes) in you.

............ ONE NATION UNDER CCTV .............



Picture the scene if you will.
A conversation between Jesus, James and John.

"What do you want me to do for you?" Jesus asked.
James and John replied: "Let one of us sit at your right and the other at your left in your glory.”

“You don't know what you are asking," he replied.

As they heard this story from Mark’s gospel, the original readers could well have recalled the actual crucifixion of Jesus. Because if Mark’s gospel was written between 65–70 AD, its readers may have witnessed the very scene 30 years earlier, and if not, they would have been told about the two robbers, one on Jesus’ right, one on his left. And so, by having James and John ask Jesus for these very same places in his glory, the author offers an ironic teaching for any disciples of Christ who go seeking glory.... suffering is likely to be involved.

Remember how Roman glory seeking meant conquest through force and guile, and crucifixion was a punishment designed to subjugate, to humiliate and to destroy, all in a public and drawn out manner. There was absolutely no glory at all in being pinned up naked to lose control of your bodily functions. There was only utter powerlessness, your body left up for the crows to peck at.

And this fills us with horror precisely because it was supposed to. Asking for a place at Jesus’ side rather throws your glory into question. You might seem like just another weak fool getting himself crucified. After all, a civilisation is built on power and wisdom.

This may be why in Mark’s gospel we meet a Jesus trying to explain to James and John, and by implication to all of us, that there is a cost to his particular kind of glory. Let’s not go overboard, it needn’t mean a crucifixion, or even a violent death. Indeed, Acts 12 tells us James was put to death under the sword but we don’t know what happened to John, and some traditions have him living to a ripe old age.

But Jesus’ message about the cost of glory is clear. Whoever wants to become great must be servant, whoever wants to be first among you must be slave of All. For even the Son of Man did not come to be served, but to serve, and to give his life as a ransom for many.

Glory seeking fantasies easily end up with disillusionment and suffering.

There’s a wonderful story about a traveller who is lost at nightfall in a large wet forest, and he can see no way out of it. So in desperation he climbs up a tree, and from the top he spies a hilltop clearing with a cottage. A light is on inside and smoke is coming from the chimney. Delighted, he climbs back down and starts a very long faltering trudge towards the hilltop. Every now and again he has to climb up and down another tree to see where he is again before trudging on. It is hard work, and he is tired and hungry, so along the way he starts fantasizing about what will happen when he gets to the clearing, and how comfortable it will be in the cottage.

Maybe a man will greet him, and then there will be a roaring fire, and the man will ask his daughter to cook a warm meal. As the traveller perseveres through the dense wood his fantasy becomes more real for him all the time. Maybe after this meal by the fire the daughter is running a hot bath for him, making his bed, and even climbing into it alongside him once he is asleep. He is getting quite excited now, and his imagination is gloriously real for him. He can’t help fearing that the cottage owner will suddenly realize what has happened and burst into the room armed with a knife, and as he imagines this in his mind’s eye he is so terrified, he also imagines being forced to flee for his life, rushing half dressed back out of the cottage and into the night.

His whole self is on its guard, and just at this very moment he arrives exhausted at the cottage door, his breath visible in the cold night air. He knocks furiously, and a small smiling man with spectacles gently opens the door to him. But this is not what the lost man sees. His glorious fantasy has become his reality, and he presses his face close up to the bemused old gentleman’s and yells: “You can keep your so called hospitality, and as for your daughter, I wouldn’t go near her if you paid me!”

The implication is that many of us, much of the time, are living in our own glorious fantasy rather than living in reality, which is the glory itself, and this creates chaos and suffering - in and around us. We no longer simply trust things the way they really are, in all their glory, and we imagine we have to be on our guard instead, trying to preserve glory, or manufacture it.

Jesus tells us that if we do want glory, we must serve reality, not try to have it serve us. If you like, we should be one nation under God, not one nation under CCTV. Really participating in God, really serving God in and amoung us, and not serving our selves, valuable creations though we are, or serving our own ideas, useful tools though they can be for us.

The Cambridge theologian and liturgist Catherine Pickstock describes this experience as: “That broader context which sees the whole of reality as arriving from a divine creative source.”

“The human self,” she says, “is by definition a divided self when it is trying to enthrone its own constructs… it starts to lead a duplicitous existence … but a liturgical self acknowledges fully its complete dependence upon another being … a divine transcendent reality, and is so committed to that reality that it can’t admit any kind of division or internal contradiction … it simply says I am nothing, and I depend upon you and I worship you, and along with that comes a recognition that everything around us arrives as a gift from God.”

Jesus knows that to be truly great is to be part of that gift, and not just to belong to our suffering self, becoming the stories we manufacture, the stories which it manufactures in us. As we read in Isaiah 55:8; "My thoughts are not your thoughts, nor are your ways my ways, says the LORD. As high as the heavens are above the earth, so high are my ways above your ways and my thoughts above your thoughts".

Above and behind what visibly appears in our mind’s eye, on the closed circuit of our own personal CCTV systems, all shall be well, all is well.

When you look up at the night sky and consider your own place as a tiny fleeting speck within an unimaginably infinite cosmos evolving in God, don’t run away scared from this glorious realisation of your own insignificance. When your personal meaning dissolves and you feel lost in an empty sea of what is, this suchness makes space for a much greater glory, the kind of glory a resurrection experience must have required.

Blessed are the poor in spirit, for the kingdom of heaven belongs to them. What defines true glory and greatness is not our fantasy about it, but our trust in the invisible Other who is revealed in this very moment, where we are in a flux, and where we are, as Jesus puts it to James and John… servants of all, be a servant of All.

So the message is do be assured, and don't keep it to yourself.

CALMING of the WAVES



I must warn you I've been advised to tell some jokes and I don't know any.

But, I have brought you five or six genuine responses given to preachers at the church door by well meaning members of different congregations.

Good sermon vicar, you kept me on the verge of consciousness.

Did you know there are 240 panes of glass in the east window?

Has anyone told you what a good preacher you are? No? Think about it.

Would you say that interpretation was more pre than post millenial, and can we meet to discuss it?

Sorry I got a bit lost, who rose from the dead?

And my favourite... well it was quite a difficult passage, thanks for trying.

And public speaking can be very trying. Some years ago, at the start of a career in broadcast journalism, I went to try to interview the visiting Chinese first secretary to Hong Kong.

I was rushed and eager and trying to prove myself, and he looked so calm and happy when I arrived at the community centre that I just quickly took his arm and hurriedly went straight onto the airwaves microphone in hand to introduce him. Then I found out that he spoke only fluent Mandarin, live, and to the population of Middlesbrough, England.

But he tried his best for me by switching to pigeon English and repeating the phrase: "Hong Kong, capitalist, China communist", several times whilst looking, and sounding quite delighted with himself, and quite unlike the producer sounded, who I could hear shouting through my headphones. But when you are really trying, your mind is rushing, and I couldn't slow down, I was always rushing.

I would be meeting people I had never spoken to before, in places I had never been to before, and I never had enough time to arrange these meetings myself. For every mission assigned to me the answer to the question "When do you want this?" was 'yesterday', and the answer to "How do I get there" was: Find out on the way." Storms rose in the mind, I couldn't remember names, and I fussed over small details. This type of on the hoof last minute seat of the pants work may all be familiar to some of you too.

And it is really hard sometimes for us in our lives to know the difference between relying on ourselves and relying on God, and to know if there is a difference.

But there is a story in exodus in the Bible, where Moses asks God his name, so that Moses can tell the people who has sent him. God answers by saying to Moses: "I AM who I AM. Tell the people of Israel, I AM has sent you."

And this I AM exists in each and everyone of us, because he is the uncreated Creator who does not depend on anything, or anyone. It is no coincidence that Psalm 46 tells us to: "Be still, and know that I AM"
God, when you are still, does become clearer.

When we are each just overriding God like surging waves leaving the ocean, we each use our freewill to get lost in a big mess. After a lifetime of searching for meaning, the relentlessly questioning philosopher in the Biblical book of Ecclesiastes tells us: "All I have learned is this: God made us very simple, and we have made ourselves very complicated."

In Luke's gospel, the disciples were sailing on Galillee, when a terrific storm came up suddenly on the lake. Water poured in, and disciples were about to capsize. They had to wake Jesus: "Master, Master, we're going to drown!" Getting to his feet, he told the wind, "Silence!" And the lake became smooth as glass. Then he said to his disciples, "Why can't you trust me?" They were in absolute awe, staggered and stammering, "Who is this, anyway?"

This is I AM, the inner Christ, in the middle of a raging storm. But how are we to understand this in our own lives? In my life I remember reading the story to my son, out of a huge old children's Bible I had not opened in a very long time. In it there was a picture of Jesus wearing a blue robe, standing on the bough of the boat, holding out his hand below overcast skies. After I had read the story, my son asked me if it was true. And I had just been going through a very turbulent storm of emotions in my own life, trying to navigate in the dark for some time, and things were finally calming down and lightening up. So was the story true?

I told my son that not everyone believed the story was true, but that I did. Truth can be a really hard thing to pin down, and we don't own it. Whenever I have problems with miracles in the Bible, I remember that if the I AM can create a universe, then the I AM can also still the storms which we will meet in that universe. So for me this story is not so much about believing in the idea of miracles as it is about trusting in the miracle behind all of this stormy universe, and beyond all this change in the universe.

The Greek translation of the Bible understands God as the fulness of Being. It says all creatures receive all that they are and have from him; but he alone is his very being, and he is of himself everything that he is. He is that I AM. I AM is in you and in your neighbours. I AM is in me. I AM is also beyond the winds and the stormy sea. I AM will lead us beside the still waters.

When our will is God's will, we do not need calm conditions, because it is the trust which will make everything clear and still.
An old man, not the tall wiry looking Chinese first secretary to Hong Kong this time but a big slow Burmese man, once told me that there are four types of people in this world. There are those who are moving from darkness to light, those who are moving from darkness to more darkness, those who are moving from light to darkness, and those who are moving from light to more light.

We are all different but in the little boat of our own life experience, if we are always moving in one of these four directions, waves rise and fall and the boat can fill with water. It creaks and rolls. Spray and wind lashes and all can look lost as we try to own the truth. But in the same story, Jesus is just lying asleep in the boat. He trusts, and he asks each of us where our trust is when things are difficult. We sail into storms, and we sail out of them, providing we can show trust. And when we do trust, we won't sink.

Finally, in the Gospel of Matthew, Jesus tells us: "I AM with you always, even unto the end of the world."

- I am in that I AM.

TO CREATE EVIL - DWELL ON IT



"The theology of the devil is for those who, for one reason or another, whether because they are perfect, or because they have come to an agreement with the law, no longer need any mercy. With them (Oh grim joy!) God is "satisfied". So too is the devil. It is quite an achievement, to please everybody!

The people who listen to this sort of thing, and absorb it, and enjoy it, develop a notion of the spiritual life that is a kind of hypnosis of evil. The concepts of sin, suffering, damnation, punishment, the justice of God, retribution, the end of the world, and so on are things over which they smack their lips with unspeakable pleasure. Perhaps this is because they derive a deep, subconscious comfort from the thought that many other people will fall into the hell which they themselves are going to escape.

And how do they know they are going to escape it? They cannot give any definite reason except for the fact that they feel a certain sense of relief at the thought that all this punishment is prepared for practically everyone but themselves. This feeling of complacency is what they refer to as "faith", and it constitutes a kind of conviction that they are "saved".

The devil makes many disciples by preaching against sin. He convinces them of the great evils of sin, induces a crisis of guilt by which "God is satisfied," and after that he lets them spend the rest of their lives meditating on the intense sinfulness and evident reprobation of others."

"Let not their Jesus be a barrier between us, or they will be a barrier between us and Jesus."

- Thomas Merton (from "New Seeds of Contemplation")

APOCALYPSE NOW



"To the angel of the church in Laodicea write:
These are the words of the Amen, the faithful and true witness, the ruler of God's creation. I know your deeds, that you are neither cold nor hot. I wish you were either one or the other! So, because you are lukewarm—neither hot nor cold—I am about to spit you out of my mouth. You say, 'I am rich; I have acquired wealth and do not need a thing.' But you do not realize that you are wretched, pitiful, poor, blind and naked. I counsel you to buy from me gold refined in the fire, so you can become rich; and white clothes to wear, so you can cover your shameful nakedness; and salve to put on your eyes, so you can see. Those whom I love I rebuke and discipline. So be earnest, and repent. Here I am! I stand at the door and knock. If anyone hears my voice and opens the door, I will come in and eat with him, and he with me. To him who overcomes, I will give the right to sit with me on my throne, just as I overcame and sat down with my Father on his throne. He who has an ear, let him hear what the Spirit says to the churches."

Revelation 3:14 – end.

Our reading is from the book of Revelation, or the book of Apocalypse as it is also known. It was written towards the end of the first century, and it’s title, ‘Apocalypsis’, means to reveal, or to uncover. But, revealing and uncovering its meaning is not as straightforward as translating this ancient Greek word.

Because revelation, according to tradition, was written inside a cave, written by someone exiled, as it says in the text, upon the island of Patmos, where I have just been on holiday.

- Of course, it was all for research purposes on your behalf, you understand. I like to be well prepared for blogged sermons but secretly I couldn’t wait to return. [I look forward to preaching on the letter to the Jamaicans.]

Patmos, as one of the Dodecanese islands, is picturesque and peaceful, and marketed as the Jerusalem of the Aegean. It is a reasonably large place, very hot and very sunny, extremely beautiful, and surrounded by a bright blue sea. And half way up one of its mountains and below the castle-like Monsatery of St John the Theologian, you can still find the Holy Cave of the Apocalypse, tourist attraction and world heritage site.

Inside, out of the hot sun, an Orthodox priest tells candle lighting crowds about its traditions, provided no photographs are taken. The icon sellers do a roaring trade, and there is no hint at all of paranoia or persecution.

Not so at the time of the writer 20 centuries ago, when Patmos was part of the Roman Empire in the province of Asia, apparently used by the Romans as a place to send the empire’s convicts. In Roman Asia the emperors themselves were hailed with public inscriptions describing them in glowing terms, as ‘Saviours’ ‘Benefactors’, and even ‘Sons of God’. Emperor Domitian is said to have demanded worship as Lord and God.

And so the book of Revelation was written as a cryptic and coded re-reading of biblical tradition in the light of the death of Jesus.

Its writer, apparently stuck on Patmos, used his series of strange dreams and visions, perhaps to pose an ancient version of Monty Python’s famous question: “What have the Romans ever done for us?”

He was asking more than that, and certainly he was trying to reveal Jesus’ kind of rule as the truly immanent / imminent rule, whilst criticizing the worldy rule of the day by men such as the Emperor Nero, whom history depicted as a tyrant. Christians were to live differently.

But since then many people have interpreted Revelations strange symbols as predictions of the future, even of 21st Century geo-politics. Some of the more disturbing interpreters seem in hurry to try to force God’s hand and dispense with this world altogether.

Even putting them aside, please, there’s still no doubt that Revelations' message of a New Creation revealed by Christ has proved an enduring one right to the present day.

One children’s Bible puts it like this: “Its going to be alright,” John said, “God is making everything new again. He’s shown me his wonderful new world. One day, some day, we will all share it, God and his people together, as Jesus promised… Just as it was when the world began”.

Even the author of ‘Lady Chatterly’s lover’ DH Lawrence, who apparently referred to the book of Revelation as the “Judas Iscariot of the New Testament”, called his own dying work ‘Apocalypse’. In it, he offered his radical criticism of civilisation and his belief in a New Heaven and a New Earth.

Our reading highlights just one of a series of letters on this theme to churches of the day, the letter to the Church of Laodecia. 'He who has an ear, let him hear what the Spirit says', it ends.

But the literal Laodecia has long gone – any remains of it are now modern day Turkey. It was a very wealthy city indeed, well known for its banking, its textiles, and its medical school and eye medicine. Life was good in Laodecia. Empire and all.

This meant people thought they didn’t need anything more than their wealth and comfort. So, back on Patmos they were being perceivied as compromising themselves, and were described, as we have heard, as neither cold nor hot, but lukewarm—a condition which would cause God to ‘spit them out’

To put it another way, they would be putting themselves beyond God's reach by thinking and acting self sufficient. We are not Laodecians, but here may be the relevance of the letter to us today.


I don’t know if you have ever been to bathe in a volcanic hot spring, but there are several around the Dodecanese. The one I was in whilst on holiday, continuing the research, had piping hot underground water flowing up and out through a long channel carved into the foot of a cliff.

Let's imagine it. The water must be at least 60 degrees as it leaves the channel before opening into a warm waist high pool on the beach, like a giant Jacuzzi surrounded by rocks. Finally this hot water flows out through the rocks and into the cold waves of the sea.

It all smells of sulphur, but it isn’t at all hell. As the water flows from almost too hot to handle to too cold for comfort, what you notice is how most people crowd into the warm part in the middle, where things are just right, and just comfortable.

Out near the edges where it is either challengingly hot or bracingly cold, only a minority go. They live differently.

These few adventurers go into the cold and then back into the heat, using the place like a plunge pool of extremes. At one point someone even wedges his whole body tightly into the hot channel, and closes his eyes too see how long he can stand it.

A passer by thinks he is dead or dying, and starts prodding him.

But isn’t it possibly only these extreme experiences of our lives that are able to force us out of our comfort, and our complacency, our satisfaction and our self reliance, where purely material things are quite enough thank you, where religion, if there is any, is tame and stale, and where our true selves are very well hidden away from us, so that the apparently un-needed love of Christ can make little difference.

The Christians in Laodecia are so satisfied that God is no longer their concern. Their prosperity has blinded them to the need for a new creation - ironic in a city with an opthalmic hospital.

What already works for them is too important to them, and this is one definition of idolatry – our grasping onto something good and already created, as if it is as important as God, someone better, beyond, in other words, uncreated, transcendent, still coming, not this...

Can we cling to something good SO hard that we fail to accept something far better? A little like our friends in Laodecia, where the piped water was lukewarm, and apparently nauseous to drink, a metaphor for a self-sufficiency which doesn’t recognize any spiritual need, and for a church which won’t venture into risks.

Of course, only we can really answer the question about whether this is us, but we should ask it. Because if we are each, as individuals and as a community, effectively insulated from death, conflict, failure, and guilt, all of which can point us beyond ourselves, then we may be sleepwalking into gaining the world and losing our lives.
Exchanging freedom in the One for security in something smaller.

Do we perhaps hide ourselves from any challenge, or from subtler, deeper reality? Do we care about what the originator of life might want us to be, and to do? If we comfort ourselves, as if our death is something which can be ignored and avoided, as if our questions can all be answered, and as if our suffering can simply be anaesthetized away along with our true selves, it is just possible that we may fail to co-operate with that otherness, that other energy and spirit here, Jesus Chris's energy, and spirit.

For all people, our temporary selves are not be enough in the end, and for this reason, despite being written in a very different era under a very different situation, the letter to the Church at Laodecia may speak to us still, should we wish to hear it now rather than at the end.

Or we could close the doors and be satisfied just the way things are, and go home for tea. The alternative is to listen to the challenge of scripture. Those whom I love, it says, I rebuke and discipline. Be earnest, and repent.

Here I am! I stand at the door and knock. If anyone hears my voice, and opens the door, I will come in and eat with him, and he with me.

What DOES this mean? To relate to God as if we were eating with him, and relate this way to others and to God in others. It means a relationship of I-Thou [as Jewish philosopher Martin Buber puts it] and not I-It. No-one is to be an object to be used, controlled, or overcome. Speaking to God, not about God. Speaking to one another, not about one another. Presentness, authenticity, responsiveness, related to an eternal Thou. This is a true REVELATION, a revelation, not in predicting the future, but in living one out now, without any limits.

There is an analogy about learning to swim. Standing on the bottom will help up to a point, but if we try it in the deeper end, we drown. To be in Christ is to be freed from comforting, controllable, predictable limits.

The Republic of Reality is like a mustard seed..



A parent recently told me how she described the builders working on her house as “that bunch of cowboys!”. But the next morning her young son bounded out and greeted them with “How are you Cowboys!?”

And so she told them their boots must have reminded him of cowboy boots. For young children, the truth doesn’t need re-defining.

My young son asks me where God is, and I say “everywhere”. He asks why he can’t see God. I say God is invisible. He asks why, so I say God makes everything which is visible.

‘Oh come ouuuut God!’ he starts calling into the air.

SEEDY TALK?

In saying too much, we can create more problems than we solve. The philosopher Krishnamurti once said that the day you teach a child the name of a bird, the child will never see the bird again. Perhaps.

But, in overdefining God, we can miss him altogether. It is said about the priest Abba Agatho that for three years he carried a pebble around in his mouth until he learned to be silent.

Of course, we rightly put our trust in Jesus Christ, but in the gospels, he very rarely gives a straight answer to a straight question. Have you noticed that? He speaks in riddles and parables.

And so we should know there is a type of God talk which addresses the collapse of our human thought and language in the face of the infinite. It is called apophatic theology. It acknowledges that while God is, God is also inexpressible. Everything we say is more unlike him that it is like him.

God is not really just like a mustard seed.

But in using a mustard seed to point us to the kingdom of heaven, Jesus is not trying to say we can plant it in our garden and eat it later. Gospel parables are not intended literally. Rather he is telling us it has enormous potential, despite seeming insignificant or even imperceptible. So if we can allow it to grow it in our life, it becomes not only a new life, but the very source of all life.

Jesus said: "The kingdom of heaven is like a mustard seed, which a man took and planted in his field. Though it is the smallest of all your seeds, yet when it grows, it is the largest of garden plants and becomes a tree, so that the birds of the air come and perch in its branches."

A tiny seed within our own awareness can become big enough to support the very birds of the air. Not because heaven is an aviary, but because his spiritual dimension growing through us supports far more than us alone.

FLAT EARTH

Remember, in the world-view of Old Testament writers, heaven is the dome of the sky, the place from which God views the flat earth beneath him. While our world is a rotating globe orbiting the sun, and everything we see is expanding into space.

Jesus also tells us the kingdom belongs to children. But what’s so special about children that it is theirs? They have no political, military or economic power. There it is. Power is not really ours, and children are well aware of this. Everything is open to them, until their awareness fades.

Concepts can fade too - the Jesuit theologian Karl Rahner once asked us to imagine a world so secularized that the word ‘God’ is no longer even in the dictionary.

Even in this type of world we would still be embraced by a fundamental mystery, still facing that most basic human question: “Why is there something, rather than nothing?”

So even though we could try it for fun, I don’t think that updating Jesus’ parables about the kingdom of heaven for our time would really help us regain lost awareness.

Maybe: “The fifth dimension is like downloading free computer software which allows a person to talk live to brand new friends all across the world.”

Or perhaps: “the realm of the truth is like a freeview box given to a person to add to his television set - suddenly five channels became fifteen.”

REPUBLIC OF HEAVEN

Or since Christians don’t necessarily live in countries with kingdoms anymore we could even try: “the republic of ultimate reality is like receiving driving lessons which allow you to discover unimaginably beautiful parts of the continent which you never even knew existed.”

Perhaps instead of yeast working through flour we could pick a parable about brewing the spirit, or giving birth to the Son. The point would be the same, and it is this -

Buried in the mix of an organic process of life is a mystery ingredient. This presence, this flavour in the recipe, can change the entire dish. Jesus referred intimately to the presence as Abba, and we say ‘Our Father’.

Zoologists such as David Hay have classified spiritual knowledge in three ways - an awareness of the here and now, an awareness of mystery, and an awareness of value. None of this depends upon religious terminology. But if the earth is the Lord’s and all that is in it, and if the Lord moves in mysterious ways, we really shouldn’t be surprised to find his presence behind both religious and secular language.

Please, for example, just take a quiet moment to notice all the different colours you can see ... feel the weight of your body on the seat … your clothes on your skin the taste in your mouth … see how many different sounds you can pick up … and listen to the silence they arise from and pass back into.

NOW THEN

The 18th century French Jesuit Jean Pierre de Caussade referred to the sacrament of the present moment as that sacrament most clearly and directly in the presence of God.

But the treasure in this field is buried by dwelling on the past, regretting our errors, enjoying our memories, imagining, planning, fearing and hoping. We can endure trials with hope, and look to the future with faith, but if we can stay in the present as it is being created, they become secondary. St Paul suggests as much in 1 Corinthians 13 when he writes that Love is greater than both hope and faith.

Jesus said: "The kingdom of heaven is like treasure hidden in a field. When a man found it, he hid it again, and then in his joy went and sold all he had, and bought that field.”

That field is our very field of consciousness, and the One living God is not alive because he still survives as an idea in our society, but because he is the source and ground of all human ideas, the mind itself.

"Have you understood all these things?" Jesus Christ asked his disciples. Those who do understand, he said, will bring new treasures out of old traditions. When he spoke Jesus was not stuck in the past, and what had happened thousands of years ago was not the point then, just as it also isn’t the point now.

NO TIME FOR TERROR

As Albert Einstein once said when expressing his sympathy to a suddenly bereaved colleague of his; “for us faithful physicists, time is an illusion, even though it is a persistent illusion.”

Finally, Jesus said: "The kingdom of heaven is like a net that was let down into the lake and caught all kinds of fish. When it was full, the fishermen pulled it up on the shore. Then they sat down and collected the good fish in baskets, but threw the bad away. This is how it will be at the end of the age. The angels will come and separate the wicked from the righteous and throw them into the fiery furnace, where there will be weeping and gnashing of teeth.”

I don’t believe in trying to scare people into the kingdom, and so I suspect that the fear of God is the beginning of psychosis, and not of wisdom. But this fear of God is not like the fear of a rottweiler, it is more the awe of being, and it is true humility in the face of mystery. Whatever is behind birth and death and everything in between them is not ours to control, and so to weigh and measure the Kingdom, rather than simply to enter it, is to fail to see its greatness.

DNA has shown us we share a common ancestor biologically, but we also share one spiritual ground. There are not two creators, and so if Jesus Christ is God, then he is all embracing. So in that case, exactly why is he talking about separating the wicked from the righteous at the end of the age?

BEING ONESELF

I suspect he knows that in the end, we human beings all need to ask ourselves what matters most. Saints and sinners differ in what they think and what they do, but not in what they are.

We are all sorts of creatures, but where we are in God’s economy determines what we experience. Each of us is free to either reject the presence and power in this eternal moment, and to suffer purifying self-judgement, or to accept it, and enter liberating grace.

So Christ described the kingdom of the uncreated Originator as joyous, like a child who finds simple abandon playing in a puddle.

In heaven, everything is being re-evaluated, and so to enter this state is wise.

Why? Because it is the difference between really being lived and merely being alive.

+++++++++The ORTHODOX CHRIST+++++++++


Design by Gill Kelly, Christians Aware
Article by Fr Maximus Lavriotes, Peterhouse University of Cambridge

AN ALL-ENCOMPASSING EMBRACE

"Church-historians admit that the Orthodox Christ is more than slightly different from the Christ of the mainstream Christian traditions, even that of the so-called “orthodox churches”. He is the all-encompassing Christ, who embraces within His universal Body saints and sinners alike. Church membership never mattered to Him; neither faith nor lack of such faith in Him ever made a great difference. Not only had He practically proven Himself indiscriminate, by drawing “near unto Him all sinners” (Luk.15:1) and forming out of them His inner-circle and table–companions (Matt. 9:11), but even made Himself known in advance as “Lamb of God, which taketh away the sin of the world” (Joh.1:29). And the only sin, which the world in its entirety ceaselessly commits, is divisiveness and separation from Him, which shall be thoroughly taken away when the world shall be inevitably absorbed into Him.

A SAVED WORLD BEFORE CREATION

Indeed, the most amazing event in history was that He was born already being the Saviour of the world and was not merely destined to become the saviour of mankind in due course. The Angel’s announcement to the shepherds of Bethlehem leaves no room for doubt: the Good Tidings of Great Joy, that a Saviour is born in the city of David apply “to all people” (Luk.2:10): it is meant neither only for believers, nor just for Christians, nor for particular members of any Church… For the born Saviour has been the Saviour of the world long before His Birth, indeed, before the creation of the universe. He has saved the world before all ages, certainly before creating.

This is what many modern Christians do not want to know. This is what all Churches and denominations find ridiculous, meaningless, even threatening to their very existence. What would be the point of any Church function if indeed, without any church support, He has “finished the work” of mankind’s Salvation given Him “to do” by His Father (Joh.17:4) and that before all ages?

PROPERLY GOOD NEWS

The question they would never ask is; whether someone who has not yet saved anyone and who means to save only a few at the end of time and that only with their collaboration could ever be construed as Saviour of the world. The issue at stake, therefore, is whether medieval and modern Christians have ever believed in Christ as Saviour of the world. Were the angelic Good Tidings to the shepherds of Bethlehem true or false?

Of one accord then, all Christian denominations believe those tidings to be false and - inevitably – persist in their conviction since most churches have anointed themselves saviours of mankind and consequently face Christ as their most dangerous adversary. As Dostoyevsky has succinctly put it, they have modified the Good Tidings to safeguard an influential lifespan for their institutions. Hence, nobody in their membership can any longer be “exceedingly glad” (Mat.5:12) at the angelic message. They all sense that it must be a lie and dread having to admit that it has always been a lie. (Saviours can never be born nor become Saviours before achieving somebody’s salvation). They nonetheless realise, that it has been an utterly necessary lie. Otherwise, nobody would go to church!

This line of thought is a good guide to understanding medieval church history as well as shedding light on the ensuing social developments that occurred throughout Christian centuries. Since the Great Joy of the Good Tidings has been annulled, human life looks grey and the future of humanity seems bleak. The human race is destined to perish, aside from a slim portion of saints, unless we dare to take seriously the early Christian certainty that the world has indeed been saved before all ages, which is to say that the angelic Good Tidings to the shepherds of Bethlehem were definitely true…

EVERLASTINGLY COMPLETE IN HIM

Then, we may see rising again like a sun, that universal Great Joy which thoroughly transformed human life in primitive Christian communities; that endless Day of “joy unspeakable and full of glory” (1Pet.1:8) which Abraham and all of Christ’s Holy Ancestors “were glad to see” (Joh.8:56). The Great Joy that stems from the Vision of the Glory of God continues shining round about (Luk.2:9) saints and shepherds alike. It thus proves that holiness and innocence constitute the certainty of Salvation, a certainty of which mere mortals are deprived until their eyes see the Salvation, which Christ before all ages had “prepared before the face of all people” (Luk.2:30-31).

No one “in the region and shadow of death” (Mat.4:16) can “rejoice and be exceeding glad” without the certainty of Salvation. Yet, so many people–not necessarily Christians - celebrate Christmas worldwide without any faith in anything, while they lead completely insecure, directionless and unstable lives. The mere fact that they contrive to celebrate Christmas despite their personal precariousness, suggests that Salvation has already been vouchsafed to them. Since they were called to share in the inalienable gift of “being” by a Creator, who, has irrevocably assumed their very human being into His Divine Self, they cannot but end up becoming everlastingly “complete in Him”(Col.2:10)…

Ample evidence convincingly shows that the Eastern Orthodox Fathers’ teaching on salvation is identical with the biblical message, which the angelic Good Tidings suggest: There was no “time” when Christ did not exist or was not yet Saviour. There was no “time” when either the Eternal Saviour or His Eternal Salvation was not. No creature whatsoever can ever save either itself or whatever it cannot create! To create and to save are distinct Divine potencies or energies both of which demonstrate God’s extreme abundance in Goodness. Therefore, the Fathers inferred, Salvation is Eternal without beginning and without end, that is to say, Salvation is an uncreated Energy of God and appears under many names in the Bible, the most characteristic of which is: Kingdom of God.

INEFFABLE INTIMACY

Indeed, angelic Good Tidings once again, of such paramount significance that it was deemed necessary to be included in the Creed - to the Mother of the Saviour this time on the Day of her Annunciation - attest that Jesus “shall reign for ever and of His Kingdom there shall be no end”. (Luk.1:33).This and many similar biblical utterances have led early Fathers to the formation of a proper definition of Salvation as the state of complete identicalness with the Saviour Himself without involving either His Divine Essence or any creatural mediation.

They have proven this ineffable intimacy to be the ultimate purpose for which Christ has eternally been King and Saviour of all without exception even if His Reign over mankind implies pain and suffering for those who will be inescapably united with Him without deserving it. This makes absolute sense as human failure never became the determining factor of Divine Benevolence. As Great Eastern Theologians such as John Chrysostom, Gregory of Nazianzus, Isaac the Syrian, Maximus the Confessor, John of Damascus and Gregory Palamas have explicitly taught, Salvation never ceased being an eternal Divine Initiative. Their view excludes any possibility that by becoming disobedient to God, mankind might either have initiated or caused its own salvation by forcing God to enact, as an emergency plan, His Incarnation. This anthropocentrism has marked Christianity in the West since the middle ages. It lost sight of the fact that Christ was eternally the unmediated Saviour of the world out of utmost love for humanity. His Incarnation was not necessitated by human sin as Scholastic theologians had assumed, for in that case sin and evil would have become the motivating factors of all Divine Activities!

FULLY REALISED

As there is no past, present or future in God but only timeless Kingdom, what He wills, never remains a plan or mere intention; all His decisions are not only eternal and everlasting, but at once constitute eternally actual Reality. Their impact is fully realised even before these decisions materialise in space and time. This explains why Christ had always appeared in the form of man to the Old Testament Patriarchs and Prophets or why He is described in the Bible as the Lamb slain before the foundation of the world! That is why Salvation takes precedence over the creation of the world and Adam, Eve, and millions of righteous people have been saved through His Cross and Resurrection, ages before His Incarnation! He never needed messengers to announce all these Good Tidings to everyone. He did reveal all Himself “whenever He willed and to those He willed and as His Father willed” as St. Irenaeus has succinctly indicated commenting on Matt.11:27. His Salvation is not subject to awareness of It in order to be granted. Nothing can cancel His Eternal Will to save all humans, one way or another, as He always wanted(1Tim.2:4).The mere fact that He assumed humanity in order to be eternally united with all human beings, transcends the bleak impact of sin on our inalienably good nature, which is already deified in Him…

UTTERLY ACCESSIBLE TO ALL

The Orthodox Christ can never become the private property of any Church, human society or company. Humans are destined to be possessed of Him but cannot take possession of Him. Thus, He is still at large, elusive and dangerous to all anthropocentric religious systems, yet utterly accessible to all peoples without mediation. This is the reason why the Good Tidings to the shepherds of Bethlehem continue being proven correct for all human generations; even more so, they never ceased generating the very same Great Joy to All People down the centuries."

Unsaved Christians, saved unChristians?

Here is the truth in a little creed,
Enough for all the roads we go:
In Love is all the law we need;
In Christ is all the God we know.

(Edwin Markham)

Perhaps in Christ is all the God we know, but God cannot be confined to what we know.

As well as for his own desire that people should know God's love for them in Christ, CS Lewis is known for acknowledging truth in other faiths.

He also pointed out the differences. However in mid-evangelical flow in the book 'Miracles' Lewis wrote that even though: "We may know that only Christ can save ... we do not know that Christ can only save Christians."

This is a teaching echoed in the dogma of the Roman Catholic church, in this excerpt from Chapter 2 paras 14 - 17 of "DOGMATIC CONSTITUTION ON THE CHURCH - 'LUMEN GENTIUM' SOLEMNLY PROMULGATED BY HOLINESS POPE PAUL VI ON NOVEMBER 21, 1964":

"He is not saved, however, who, though part of the body of the Church, does not persevere in charity. He remains indeed in the bosom of the Church, but, as it were, only in a 'bodily' manner and not 'in his heart.'

All the Church's children should remember that their exalted status is to be attributed ... to the special grace of Christ. If they fail moreover to respond to that grace in thought, word and deed, not only shall they not be saved but they will be the more severely judged.

But the plan of salvation also includes those who acknowledge the Creator.

In the first place amongst these there are the Mohamedans, who, professing to hold the faith of Abraham, along with us adore the one and merciful God, who on the last day will judge mankind.

Nor is God far distant from those who in shadows and images seek the unknown God, for it is He who gives to all men life and breath and all things, and as Saviour wills that all men be saved.

Those also can attain to salvation who through no fault of their own do not know the Gospel of Christ or His Church, yet sincerely seek God and moved by grace strive by their deeds to do His will as it is known to them through the dictates of conscience.

Nor does Divine Providence deny the helps necessary for salvation to those who, without blame on their part, have not yet arrived at an explicit knowledge of God and with His grace strive to live a good life. Whatever good or truth is found amongst them is looked upon by the Church as a preparation for the Gospel. She knows that it is given by Him who enlightens all men so that they may finally have life.

But often men, deceived by the Evil One, have become vain in their reasonings and have exchanged the truth of God for a lie, serving the creature rather than the Creator. Or some there are who, living and dying in this world without God, are exposed to final despair.

Wherefore to promote the glory of God and procure the salvation of all of these, and mindful of the command of the Lord, 'Preach the Gospel to every creature', the Church fosters the missions with care and attention."

++++++ the OPTIMISM of ORTHODOXY ++++++ ..............how the West was lost...............


The Eastern and Western Churches have been travelling different courses for 1,000 years. When the Church was institutionally one, the Pope was regarded in the East as having primacy in a collegiate sense only, and it was the common decisions of the first seven ecumenical councils which decided matters.

Emperor Constantine legalised Christianity in 313, and built a replacement capital for the Roman Empire, which he called Constantinople. This set the scene for the division and parallel development of Greek and Latin Christian cultures. The empire was ordered in two halves after 345, but by 381, a common creed, the Nicene Creed, had been finalised. In the fifth century the last Roman emperor of the West was deposed, and Constantinople became the city of the empire, an increasingly Greek speaking Byzantine empire. From the sixth century, a Spanish (and then Western) addition to the Creed was demoting the importance of the Holy Spirit in Eastern eyes.

Then in 800, the Pope crowned Charlemagne ‘Emperor of the Romans’, and the Patriarch of Constantinople was soon withstanding Papal decisions, while Eastern missionaries moved into Russia. In the tenth Century the Germanic term ‘Holy Roman Emperor’ was being used, and in 1054 legates for Pope Leo IX excommunicated Constantinople. Leo had already died, but excommunication was rejected and reciprocated. Salt was put deeply into the wounds of schism in the early thirteenth century when Western crusaders took a detour in order to sack Constantinople and desecrate Eastern churches, including the Hagia Sophia Cathedral.

Loss of trust in the East and developing Papal worldly authority in Western Christendom made Unity too difficult, despite an official attempt at the council of Lyons in 1274, and another in the 15th century. It was 1999 before a Pope, John Paul II, visited an Eastern Orthodox country, Romania.

The Orthodox Catholic Church claims that the Roman Catholic Church departed from the apostolic faith, but this is not my concern. There are problems specific to Eastern as well as Western tradition, such as ingrained nationalisms.

All this time later I am interested in what the East preserved and developed. This could be a more holistic and spiritual theology which combines head and heart experientially, a beautiful liturgy which is penitential but not corporately penitential, a communal sense of Church and a corporate and optimistic eschatology. The history of monasticism is strong, and the suffering under communism would make a study in its own right.

But I cannot cover all this. Stereotypes are not truthful, but I am forced to talk of ‘East’ and ‘West’. I will concentrate on three features of Orthodox Christianity shocking to some Western Christians. But they offer a remedy to spiritual impoverishment following the ‘Great Schism’.

These are the doctrines of deification, or our becoming God, universalism, or the hope of everything being restored to God, and apophaticism, or the acknowledgement that our positive statements about God must be understood in a negative light. God is self-existing, but we are contingent and so are our thoughts.

When writing for a Western audience, this is how Gillian Crow, a leading lay member of the Russian Orthodox Church in Britain has put it:

“We are invited not to remember the events of the gospel but to be present at them … we are in God’s now, and this experience should transform our lives.

We do not seek to convince by argument, by logic, by any appeal to believe the unbelievable. We speak of what we know experientially. [This] does not make us slaves to a book … of an infallible prelate, or an academic process that reduces and deconstructs … created beings cannot understand the infinite.

Bigger! Further! Wider! Greater! God is beyond anything we can begin to understand with our finite minds. His paradise is not on the scale of a palm fringed Caribbean island. His thoughts are not confined to the Bible, nor to the canons; his presence is not confined to the church building.

To believe that our mental capacity is such that it could one day understand everything in the created universe, let alone the uncreated … is not a logical idea.”1

I will also touch on the relevance of Orthodox theology to an evolutionary world-view, another point of contact with the Western seeker.

But firstly deification. I still remember being startled to read a book in which pretentions to ‘imitate Christ’ were lampooned:

“When a monkey plays a saxophone, that doesn’t make him a musician. You can’t imitate Christ by imitating his external behaviour. You’ve got to be Christ. Then you’ll know exactly what to do in a particular situation, given your temperament, your character, and the character and temperament of the person you’re dealing with. No one has to tell you. But to do that, you must be what Christ was.”2

At that time I was not familiar with deification, and being Christ seemed a shocking heresy. The Jesuit in question was echoing Theresa of Avila: “Christ has no body now on earth but yours”3, and Gregory of Nyssa: “Likeness to God, therefore, is a definition of human blessedness.”4

Jesus says: “Why do you call me Lord and fail to do what I say?” (Lk 6:46) For Orthodoxy, being Christ is not strange because it: “sees salvation in terms of theosis, deification, rather than justification”.5

We are to become God.

This does not mean in the way Roman emperors became gods to demand allegiance. Nor does it mean becoming an Omnipotent universe creator. It does mean following the biblical calling in 2 Pet 1:4 to ‘take on the divine nature’. And this means acknowledging that as God took the form of humanity in Christ his son, our humanity can respond by receiving the full freedom of the image of God within us. The Father, the uncreated source of all material becomes both that which is perceived and that by which we perceive, and the uncreated Holy Spirit is apprehended in the very senses and concepts that make up who we are.

Although deification cannot be complete before physical death, this journey into theosis is a positive concept. Orthodoxy has not fallen into the Western theological trap of pitting faith against works. Seeing God means we must be changed, and we know not where the boundaries of this process of salvation are. We become immortal like Christ, as Adam in Genesis was supposed to be immortal, because we partake in the tree of Life, that is, in communion with God. It is in this sense we are God. We do not try to acquire knowledge of Life apart from God, as in the story of Adam and Eve, who partook of the tree of the knowledge of good or evil. Because that kind of knowledge is always a duality, while the knowledge of Life is always re-unifying.

In Orthodoxy it is the same with prayer. Particular things for people are not prayed for; but people are prayed for. Mother Gavrilia has described prayer as our saying: ‘I love you in the presence of God’.6 So while petitionary prayer is important and valid, in the East prayer is not primarily a:

“matter of asking for things … about what God has done for me … how he answered particular requests. It is rather a deep spiritual communion with God, the opening of oneself to him.”7

In this opening there is a metanoia, or repentance, but this is more than some negative kind of mere regret or apology. Metanoia is literally a change of mind, we might say a changed consciousness, such that one loses ones self-consciousness and grows into overflowing consciousness.

St Isaac of Syria (who incidentally suggested we should include demons in our prayer) described this spiritual silence:

“The saints in the world to come no longer pray, their minds having been engulfed in the Divine Spirit, but dwell in ecstasy in that excellent glory, so the mind, when it has been made worthy of perceiving the blessedness of the age to come, will forget itself and all that is here.”

In pure prayer: “all movement is at an end, and even prayer itself ceases. This is the perfecting of prayer, and it is called spiritual prayer or contemplation. It is absolute peace and rest.”8

“In it a man leaves his own being and is no longer conscious whether he is in this life or the world to come. He belongs to God and no longer to himself; he is his own master no more but is guided by the Holy Spirit.”9

“The more one is united to Him, the more one becomes aware of His unknowability, and, in the same way, the more perfect one becomes, the more one is aware of one’s own imperfection.”10

This involves a gnosis, or personal awareness, which is not to be confused with Gnosticism. There may be issues here for Western Protestantism, suspicious of asceticism as if it devalues grace by faith alone and entails contempt for the human body. This is an error. Manichean contempt for our bodily nature is alien to Orthodox asceticism, which affirms faith in grace. The embodied and created is good, and holiness is not a secret for the adept.

St Gregory Palamas affirmed:

“We do not apply the word man to body and soul separately, but to both together, for the whole man was created in the image of God.”11

But the body must be spiritualised, and become what St Paul calls pneumatikon soma, a ‘spiritual body’. (1 Cor 15:44) This is more than intellectual contemplation in this life because it is completed at the resurrection, but in this life a person resolves to co-operate in freedom with uncreated grace, and so (s)he moves past petition and beyond ecstatic experience to an understanding of the fundamental unity of human nature.

This holism also applies to the Eucharist. The popular maxim ‘we are what we eat’ is apt because there is no argument about the intellectual meaning of the Eucharist, in the way there was at the Western reformation. There is no attempt to use the intellect in opposition to the rest of life. Militant atheists today sometimes talk of religion as ‘intellectual suicide’. But this results from the Western habit of splitting off the intellect, following Descartes’ maxim: ‘I think therefore I am.’ Rather, religion should be the reintegration of the intellectual into the rest of existence, of life and of death.

Eastern theology has avoided the fall into individualism encouraged by some of Augustine’s doctrine, and then by some of Calvin’s. After Augustine the West was left thinking pre-destination was the only issue, but the idea of pre-destination is very unusual in the East. It developed out of controversy between Pelagius and Augustine.

Augustine had lived a morally questionable life, and there is a sense in his written ‘Confessions’ that his worst deeds have been ways in which God has managed to pull him back to himself. After conversion from Paganism, he reflected upon God choosing to save him, or ‘elect’ him.

But Pelagius was probably an ascetic moral reformer who arrived in Rome to find an enthusiasm for Christianity, but without a perceptible change in the life of the Christian. As a result he saw Augustine’s notion of God’s unmerited grace as an excuse for people not to take moral responsibility. If God hasn’t given me the unearned gift of grace and elected me, what can I do? So Pelagius emphasised effort and merit, but lost the argument.

Augustine, probably by over-playing his hand, seemed to over-ride the notion of our human freewill altogether. And related Western arguments continued in this vein. At the Reformation the argument was about justification through grace by faith alone versus payment to the Church in gratitude for forgiveness, which was perceived as purchase of God’s favour.

Meanwhile in the East, grace and human freedom were not separated out as opposites. They save in one action, theosis. This is our receiving and acquiring the Holy Spirit for ourselves, when we are co-operating with God’s grace.

“Grace is the presence of God within us which demands constant effort on our part; these efforts, however, in no way determine grace, nor does grace act upon our liberty as if it were external or foreign to it.”12

There is a synergy of our will with God’s will, a kind of keeping ourselves as fully tuned up as possible with the vibrations of his uncreated grace which we thereby enable ourselves to receive and be aided by. Asceticism is not opposed to grace and grace is not opposed to freewill. They are all necessary to one another in order for our salvation in the Holy Spirit to occur.

And this was similar to the understanding of Desert Father St John Cassian of Marseilles, the forerunner of St Benedict. Cassian took part in the Augustinian Pelagius debate, but because he was beyond the terms of the argument and not limiting his understanding to rational and dualistic either-or grace-effort terminology, he was “unable to make himself understood”.13

John Wesley understood. He was influenced by Eastern Fathers. In his journal he apparently regarded Ephrem the Syrian as: "the most awakened writer, I think, of all the ancients"14. Wesley used such influences to develop his own understanding of human-divine co-operation. This is reflected in the Methodist doctrine of ‘entire sanctification’, or ‘scriptural holiness’ which is John Wesley’s way to describe a spiritual transformation into perfection; and therefore arguably his own equivalent to theosis.

“It is understood as an experience of grace, subsequent to salvation, with the effect that the Holy Spirit takes full possession of the soul, sanctifies the heart, and empowers the will so that one can love God and others blamelessly in this life,” he wrote.

“One is justified and then sanctified-understood as communing with God, with the result that the holiness of God is actually imparted, not just imputed on the basis of what Christ accomplished on the cross. The power of sin in the believer's life is either eradicated or rendered inoperative as one participates in the higher life of the divine.”15

Sanctification is not an event. It is a process, and process had always been understood by Eastern Father Irenaeus, who brought in the idea of moral progress in response to Christians who wished to advance too quickly.

Irenaeus knew that although the bridging of the created and the uncreated is already understood as achieved historically by the incarnation, and individually through the potential of baptism, the reality of human experience remains:

“We actually find ourselves a long way from the vision of God which produces incorruption, and are very limited in our ability to attain it rapidly.

Human beings must attain to the divine likeness before they can overcome their mortality and realise the immortality that they possess potentially through baptism. And this involves the exercise of moral choice.

Because of God's infinite love he became what we are in order to make us what he is ... [but] it depends on our moral behaviour and on our participation in the sacraments ... adoption as sons makes human beings gods because it relates them by participation to the source of life. The progressive nature of this participation is frequently stressed ... on the moral level obedience to God produces the fruits of the spirit, for spiritual actions vivify man, that is, engraft the Spirit on to him.

Conversely, immoral behaviour impoverishes people by banishing the spirit and renders them the mere flesh and blood that will not inherit the kingdom."16

So deification or theosis is two wills becoming One, under the Holy Spirit. Christian deification was formally defined by Dionysius the Areopagite, a Syrian monk:

“The attaining of likeness to God and union with him so far as is possible.”17

This was in the sixth century, but it is very likely that deification was used in a metaphorical sense long before then. So how did it develop?

The assertion in Ps 82:6 : “you are gods!”, is interpreted by Rabbinic Judaism as a call to become immortal by observing the Torah. The gods of this Psalm were understood as the Pagan gods being addressed by God for failing to prevent injustice. They were also understood as corrupt human judges.18

Jewish Platonist Philo of Alexandria talks of God granting “to the worthy a share of his own nature, which is repose.” And though the created nature remains, an intellect possessed by divine love will forget itself utterly. For Philo then, the supreme example of one who becomes divine is Moses. He bases this on an analogy in Ex 7:1.

“The Lord said to Moses, ‘See, I have made you like God to Pharaoh’ and your brother Aaron shall be your prophet.”

Wisdom of Solomon 2:13 talks of the righteous man calling himself “a child of the Lord”, and Hos 1:10 talks of Israel as “children of the living God”. This is the Jewish heritage St Paul takes up when he describes Christians as sons of God, and he continually expresses their participatory union with Christ, in terminology such as ‘in Christ’, ‘with Christ’, ‘Christ in us’, ‘one in Christ Jesus’. In the letter to the Hebrews, believers are ‘partakers in Christ’ and in Heb 2:11, ‘he who sanctifies and those who are sanctified have all one origin.’ To my mind this last example sounds neo Platonic, a physical reality which is subject to a greater spiritual reality.

Since deification has a long history, it should be understood as a development. In 160, against a background of competition between Jews and Christians, Church apologist Justin Martyr supports the notion of deification by citing Ps 82:6. But he alters the Rabbinic exegesis mentioned earlier, and says instead that since the text goes on to mention gods falling like princes, it must have been addressed to Adam and Eve, because they fell, and Satan is a prince. He then goes on to combine this with 1 Jn 1:3, “our fellowship is with the Father and with his son Jesus”, and declares that Christians are the new Israel. Ps 82, Justin finally concludes, proved that:

“All human beings are deemed worthy of becoming gods and of having the power to become sons of the Most High, and will be judged and condemned on their own account.”21

They participate in God or not.

Justin’s pupil Tatian and after him Theophilus of Antioch also viewed the goal of human life as the spiritualization and transformation of the entire being towards resurrection by the living God. But when Irenaeus of Lyons took up the theme, he was countering the Gnostic idea of disciples escaping the corrupt material creation of an evil Demiurge, like they believed Christ had done. And the way he did this was inspired. He gave potential Gnostics a better alternative, by systematising St Paul’s idea of Christ’s becoming poor so that we might become rich. This resulted in the famous formalisation of Christian deification: “Because of his infinite love he became what we are in order to make us what he is himself.”22

Hippolytus borrowed from Irenaeus and insisted, also against the Gnostics, that a human being is not a failed god, but can become a god:

“Whatever sufferings you endured, being a man, these he gave you because you are a man, but whatever is connected with God, these God promised to bestow on you, because you have been deified and born immortal.

This is the meaning of ‘Know Thyself’, to have known the God who made you. For to ‘know yourself is concomitant with being known by him by whom you have been called.” 23

And then Clement of Alexandria develops the theme himself:

“And just as Isomachus will make those who attend to his instructions husbandmen … and Homer poets … and Aristotle men of science, and Plato Philosophers, so he who obeys the Lord and follows the prophecy given through him, is fully perfected after the likeness of his teacher, and thus becomes a god while still moving about in the flesh.”24

Clement adds that the ‘gods’ are ‘those who have detached themselves as far as possible from everything human.’25

But what can this mean? In our modern terminology, this kind of detachment from everything human is best understood not as a kind of aloof denial or pathological repression of human thought and feeling, but as a much fuller awareness of one’s own human thoughts and feelings in order that they do not then unconsciously control one’s actions, thus leading one to a fully spiritual humanity.

“In one who is perfect,” writes Vladimir Lossky, “there will remain no further room for the unconscious, for the instinctive or the involuntary, all will be illumined with divine light, appropriated to the human person who has acquired its proper character”26

Non-attachment to the world is not rejection or repression of the world.

“The passions are part of the ongoing course of the world ... love of riches; amassing of possessions; the fattening of the body … from which proceeds carnal desire; love of honours, which is the source of envy; administration of government; pride and pomp of power; elegance; popularity, which is the cause of ill-will; fear for the body. When these passions desist from their course, then correlatively the world ceases to exist.”27

One is in a dispassionate world as a result of not being ruled by one’s worldly passions. Love, from this point of view, is dis-interested and not demanding.

"Detachment without loving involvement would not be a sign of liberation but at best a form of indifferent complacency. And loving involvement without detachment seems but a barely concealed form of self-centredness."28

Origen had spoken of something like deification when he described us as contingent beings who take on the attributes of a self-existent being, or the Father, and of the intellect being deified by what it contemplates. But after his super spiritualising, Athanasius and Cyril sought to re-emphasise the role of the Church, the incarnation, and of our physical bodies partaking in the Eucharist.

It was Maximus the Confessor who then helped to establish deification as the goal of the spiritual life. He spoke of how God’s energies penetrate the world, and compared the two interpenetrating but unconfused natures of Jesus in Christology with the human and divine aspects of the Christian believer.

Finally, Symeon the New Theologian and Gregory Palamas emphasised the experiential aspect of deification in the Christian. It is a felt knowledge of and participation in the energies of God, but not in his essence.

But how is all this of use to Western Christianity?

It is sometimes stated that a belief in original goodness is a modern totem. But it is as old as the Bible and the Fathers, and I think it is something we need to recover. In Western secular society, sin has come to be seen as either meaningless, as in an advertising term which is used to sell ice cream perhaps, or as a by-word for sex. If it is remembered it is half remembered, as a polluted and purely condemnatory term used in order to deny our humanity. And probably it has been used this way. This is one reason so many spiritual seekers turn to non-Christian faiths, which seek to affirm our true potential first before allowing us to progressively see for ourselves what we must leave behind on the way.

But the notion of sin as a separation from our truest selves, the infinite ultimate and blissful reality some call God, is not only one which has meaning to Westerners seeking spirituality in a secular or non-Christian context. It is also Christian – and particularly Orthodox. When sin is communicated and understood as a separation from God in us, deification can be a positive and motivating driver. It is a potential incentive for us to be what we are meant to be – fully human, truly human, not super human. Christ is our role model in recovering our true nature as more than physical nature, as the image of God in us. Since Christ is the image of the invisible God, becoming Christ is how we are saved from ourselves.

On the apparent level, there is us, but on the actual level, there is God. But there is a peculiar difficulty, especially in the Western mind where God is conceived as wholly opposite, in trying to articulate the sense that the self is God or can ever be God. Did Christ ever say: “I am Lord”? Outside of the Hindu framework, can one ever say: “I am God” without also ending up outside the Church, on a metaphysical cross, in a tabloid, or on a mental health ward?

To put the question another way, in experience of selflessness, does the self exist? In 2 Cor 12:2-4, for example, St Paul writes:

"I knew a man in Christ above fourteen years ago, (whether in the body, I cannot tell; or whether out of the body, I cannot tell: God knoweth;) such a one caught up to the third heaven. And I knew such a man, (whether in the body, or out of the body, I cannot tell: God knoweth;) How that he was caught up into paradise, and heard unspeakable words, which it is not lawful for a man to utter."

To re-phrase the question once more - does ‘the soul’ really exist, or is the soul existence itself? In a spiritualised body, do we simply retain the convention of name form and identity, but in a deified ego-less way? Is this pantheism or pan-entheism? Does it matter?

The Orthodox answer seems to be that we are filled with God’s spirit, but are still perfected as creatures. Uncreated God and created creatures are One – and yet the Eastern doctrine of theosis became defined as ‘union (of energies) without confusion (of essence)’, in which the essential distinction between Creator and creature eternally remains. Orthodox Bishop Kalistos Ware encapsulates it well in this aphorism based on 1 Cor 15:28:

"In the Age to come, God is 'all in all', but Peter is Peter and Paul is Paul."29

This, once again, is a typically Eastern both-and, rather than a typically Western either-or. Gregory of Nyssa, a Church Father and Bishop who died in AD 395, when Augustine was 41-years-old, teaches that what humanity is doing is re-gaining its proper Self:

“The resurrection promises us nothing other than the restoration of the fallen to their ancient state. For the grace we look for is a certain return to the first life.”30

This proper Self is spoken of as Christ the bridegroom ‘restoring nature to virginal incorruptibility’, or as the soul regaining its ‘proper beauty’,31 and as the ‘original health’32 of humanity. It all gives the lie to modern Christian charges that Original Goodness is a new age import or something borrowed from ‘Buddha Nature’. On the contrary, participation in the goodness of God is central to this Church Father’s writing:

“The goodness of God is not to be found separated from our nature nor established far away from those who choose God, but it is always in each person, unknown and hidden, whenever it is stifled by the cares and pleasures of life, but found again whenever we turn our thought to him.”33

For Gregory, Gen 1:27 means there were two creations, first the creation of Adam, a generic and full ‘humankind’ in God’s image and foreknowledge, and following on from that, the continuing creation of corruptible male and female versions of this perfect spiritual body. Generic humanity in God’s image can be compared to the resurrected beings mentioned by Jesus in Lk 20:35-6, who neither marry or are given in marriage because they are equal to angels. Indeed:

“The creation of our nature is in a sense two fold: one made like to God, one divided according to this distinction [of sex]: for something like this the passage darkly conveys by its arrangement, where it first says, ‘God created man, in the image of God he created him’, and then, adding to what has been said, ‘male and female created he them’ – a thing which is alien from our conceptions of God.”34

Along with Augustine, Gregory of Nyssa believed that evil is ultimately unreality. But it took Augustine some time to discover this:

“If the devil is to blame, who made the devil? And if he was a good angel who by his own wicked will became the devil, how did there happen to be in him that wicked will … since a good Creator made him?35

Whence is evil? … I did not see the evil in my very search.36 … Where, then, is evil … Has it no being at all? Why, then, do we fear and shun what has no being? Or if we fear it needlessly, then surely that fear is evil--and indeed a greater evil since we have nothing real to fear, and yet do fear.

Therefore, either that is evil which we fear, or the act of fearing is in itself evil37 … Thou [God] didst procure for me … certain books of the Platonists, translated from Greek into Latin.38

And I asked what wickedness was, and I found that it was no substance, but a perversion of the will bent aside from thee, O God, the supreme substance.39 And being admonished by these books to return into myself, I entered into my inward soul, guided by thee.40

And I viewed all things … They are real in so far as they come from thee; but they are unreal in so far as they are not what thou art … for that is truly real which remains immutable. It is good, then, for me to hold fast to God, for if I do not remain in him, neither shall I abide in myself.41

It was made clear to me that all things are good even if they are corrupted … either, then, corruption does not harm--which cannot be--or, as is certain, all that is corrupted is thereby deprived of good. But if they are deprived of all good, they will cease to be … Evil, then, the origin of which I had been seeking, has no substance at all.42

Evil, then, ‘has no substance at all’, concludes Augustine.
But all the same, by the time of his later writing in ‘City of God’, the architect of Western Christianity was stating in no uncertain terms that the damned, human and angelic, without exception, are tortured without end:

“No reason more obvious and just, can be found for holding it as the fixed and immovable belief … that the devil and his angels shall never return to the justice and life of the saints, than that Scripture, which deceives no man, says that God spared them not, and that they were condemned beforehand by Him, and cast into prisons of darkness in Hell, (2 Pet 2:4) being reserved to the judgment of the last day, when eternal fire shall receive them, in which they shall be tormented world without end.

And if this be so, how can it be believed that all men, or even some, shall be withdrawn from the endurance of punishment after some time has been spent in it? How can this be believed without enervating our faith in the eternal punishment of the devils?”43

Despite his earlier saying evil has no substance at all, it is a distortion of good, Augustine’s teaching on the punishment without end of some human beings became the normative Western position, and Calvin even described it as pre-destined by God, the perfect Good.

Perhaps the numbness this vicious vision created later contributed to the wane of professed religion in Western Europe. Whatever the case, not all Western Christians promoted a preconceived and eternal damnation of human beings, or even eternal damnation. In the West, the unlimited hope of Universalism almost became a feminine theology, with women such as Hildegard of Bingen, Catherine of Siena, Julian of Norwich and Therese of Lisieux quietly preserving it across the second millennium.

Even in the 20th century, it made the likes of Roman Catholic Karl Rahner appear unusual. As a professed Christianity, Universalism had almost been extinguished in the West.

In Orthodox theology however, “a hope of universal salvation, based on a conviction of the boundlessness of God’s love, has never gone away”.44

After Gregory of Nyssa it was picked up by Maximus the Confessor and Isaac the Syrian, and survives amongst modern Orthodox theologians such as Bishop Kallistos Ware.45 It is expressed very well in the following conversation between St Silouan (of the Russian monastery on Mount Athos, who died in 1938) and a fellow hermit:

“God will punish all atheists. They will burn in everlasting fire.”

Obviously upset, the Staretz [Silouan] said: “Tell me, supposing you went to paradise, and there looked down and saw somebody burning in hell-fire--would you feel happy?”

“It can’t be helped. It would be their own fault,” said the hermit.

The Staretz answered with a sorrowful countenance: “Love could not bear that,” he said. “We must pray for all.”46

It should be emphasised here once again that the Eastern Orthodox are by no means all universalists, only that universalism has been more central in the ongoing development of their tradition than it has to the development of the Western tradition. In the Patristic age, Origen was Universalist, as were both Gregory of Nyssa and Evagrius, and some sixth century anti-Chalcedonian writers.47 Origen and Gregory also had a dynamic rather than a static view of after-death states. (Universalism does not abandon judgement).

“I know a man,” says St. Symeon the New Theologian, “who desired the salvation of his brethren so fervently that he often besought God with burning tears and with his whole heart, in an excess of zeal worthy of Moses, that either his brethren might be saved with him, or that he might be condemned with them.

For he was bound to them in the Holy Spirit by such a bond of love that he did not wish to enter the kingdom of heaven if to do so meant being separated from them.”48

Gregory of Nyssa’s most common citation in support of Universalism is 1 Cor 15:28:

“God will be all in all, and all persons will be united together in fellowship of the good, Christ Jesus our Lord, to whom be glory and power for ever and ever. Amen.”49

Reflecting on Paul in 1 Cor 15:28 he says that Paul is asserting:

“the unreality of evil … Either [God] will not be in everything, when something evil is left in beings, or, if it is truly necessary to believe that he will be in everything, the existence of nothing evil is demonstrated along with this belief about him.”

His description of the eschaton depends upon his belief that the finite human soul is in perpetual progress, and that humanity is unified in the very fact of being humanity. This last point is something I suspect modern physics affirms.

“If love perfectly casts out fear…then will be found unity, the result of salvation, when all have been united with one another in being grafted onto the soul good… but all will become one, adhering to the one and only good; so that through the unity of the holy spirit…tied with the bond of peace, all will become one body, and one spirit, through one hope to which they were called.”50

Gregory believed in the restoration of all to the original condition, or ‘apokatastasis’:

“When, over long periods of time, evil has been removed and those now lying in sin have been restored to their original state, all creation will join in united thanksgiving, both those whose purification has involved punishment and those who never needed purification at all.”51

He also ruled out the idea that sinners would be annihilated rather than punished. If there was annihilation, it was the annihilation of sin, and not of humanity. Commenting on Ps 59, he observes how David says:

“‘do not kill them’ but ‘bring them down’ from the height of evil to the level and even region of divine citizenship.

We learn from these things that there will be no destruction of humanity, in order that the divine work shall not be rendered useless, being obliterated by non-existence. But instead … sin will be destroyed and will be reduced to non-being.”52

Gregory believes in a perpetual progress of the soul because he conceives of God as infinite and an ‘after-life’ state as dynamic. The soul rises to God through virtue. Writing in De Mortuis Oratio, he says:

“The goal and the end of the journey… is the restoration to the original state, which is nothing other than similarity to the divine.”53

Gregory’s concept of punishment is not retributive, but purifying:

“The approach of the divine power, acting like fire, effects the disappearance of the element which was contrary to nature … when those who are plunged in vice are restored to their original state, a chorus of thanksgiving will arise from all creation … For by mingling with humanity … he effected all the results … healing the very author of vice.”54

To allow free rein to a desire to advance to progressively greater participation in God is the only real freedom, and it is never completed. The freedom to belong to yourself however is an illusion, which can end.

“Individual persons,” says Vladimir Lossky, “cannot arrive at perfection without the realization of the fundamental unity of human nature. Love of God is necessarily bound up with love of one’s fellow man.

This perfect love will make a man like Christ, for, in his created nature he will be united to the whole of humanity, while in his person he will unite the created and the uncreated, the human complex and deifying grace.”55

Once again, care must be taken to avoid stereotypes, but apophatic theology, the knowledge that whatever we say about God is more unlike God than it is like God, and the awareness of the danger of idolatry in reifying our own abstractions, has I think been maintained in Eastern Christianity to the same extent that it has been lost in Western Christianity.

In some branches of Protestantism in particular, to say that language, including the Bible, originates in mystery, can be perceived as too threatening to a kataphatic (positive) expression of the ‘Word of God’, as if the Word is somehow not of God at all, but of temporal concepts and printed pages. Apophatic theology comes from the Greek word ‘apophanai’, which literally means to say no, but apophasis is really conveying the collapse or breakdown of language in the face of the infinite – a strategy of unknowing precisely in order to know better.

The irony is that the apophatic is thoroughly Biblical. It is quite possible that its greater emphasis in Eastern Orthodoxy is due to the more predominant influence of Platonic thought in the East. But nevertheless, the ineffability of ‘God’ does not come from Plato. We have already seen how in 2 Cor 12:2-6, Paul discovers that it is forbidden to express what he has experienced.

But in Exodus, seeing God is described as fatal, and representing him as an image or taking his name in vain is described as illicit or impossible. He will not show his face to Moses, and on Mount Carmel Elijah discovers he is only known in silence.

In Gen 32-39, God, in the form of an angel, suggests that Jacob should not ask for his name. In Ex 3:14, God mysteriously refuses to divulge his identity. In Judg 13:18, an angel of the Lord declares his name to be secret. In Isa 45:15 God is “a God who truly hides himself.”

Eph 1:21 says Christ is “far above every name that is to be named”, and Phil 2:9 says God has “given him a name which is above every name”.

Jn 1:18, 6:46, 1 Jn 4:12, 1 Tim 6:16, and 1 Cor 2:9, all written after the death of Jesus, nevertheless declare that no one has ever seen God. In Col 1:15, Christ is described as the “image of the invisible”… and anyone who has a mirror will know that something invisible has no visible image.

So in the Judeo-Christian Biblical tradition, God’s name is a no name. This understanding seems to have been best preserved in Eastern Orthodoxy. Despite my earlier pillory of the architect of Western Christianity, Augustine, he was also well aware of the problem of man’s trying to proclaim God:

“Have I spoken of God, or uttered his praise, in any worthy way? Nay, I feel that I have done nothing more than desire to speak; and if I have said anything; it is not what I desired to say. How do I know this, except from the fact that God is unspeakable? But what I have said, if it had been unspeakable, could not have been spoken.

And so God is not even to be called ‘unspeakable’ because to say even this is to speak of Him. There arises a curious contradiction of words, because if the unspeakable is what cannot be spoken of, it is not unspeakable if it can be called unspeakable.

And this opposition of words is rather to be avoided by silence than to be explained away by speech. And yet God, although nothing worthy of his greatness can be said of Him, has condescended to accept the worship of men’s mouths, and has desired us through the medium of our own words to rejoice in His praise.”56

In the final prayer of ‘De Trinitate’, Augustine even asks to be delivered of the abundance of words and vain thoughts that plague him, and so despite his concentrating on rhetoric and preaching and teaching, he must also have recognised its vanity and hollowness. But did he choose to remember this insight?

St Thomas Aquinas also acknowledged God’s inexpressibility. Despite being the Prince of Western Christian theologians for centuries, he said: “we do not know what kind of being God is”,57 and towards the end of his life, when he suddenly stopped his voluminous writing and went silent, he described all of his work as: “like straw”58.

There were of course Western Christian unknowers, such as Eriugena and Nicholas of Cusa, and the author of the Cloud of Unknowing, but they were always a minority voice. And then there was Eckhart, who was an endangered voice, because he was condemned. But then so was the Pope who condemned him. Poetic or Divine justice?

The Western scholastics thought we could know a great deal about God, but in the East, apophatic Christianity which had begun in Clement of Alexandria was never minority or sporadic, or simply acknowledged in passing. It was, and still is, a clearly understood central affirmation, and theology was known to be a mystery you only enter into in order to show how another stance is wrong. (Eunomious apparently even said God is so simple we can understand him as much as he can understand himself). Clement had handed apophaticism to Gregory of Nyssa and Basil of Caesarea, and it was very strong in St. John Chysostom. It was handed on in turn through Dionysius the Areopagite and Maximus the Confessor to Gregory Palamas, whose teaching on hesychast (stillness) spirituality became so strongly opposed that it became a real test case for Eastern Orthodoxy. Palamas won the case, allowing an unspeakable experience to remain quite a normative aspect of Eastern Orthodox Christianity to this very day.

The hesychasts believed that the divine light of the transfiguration that shone in Christ’s body is also revealed in Christians. This is not supposed to be the intellectual grasp of some external object, but an inner and inexpressible participation, and far more than a cognitive void or absence. It is nothing only in the sense that it is beyond the material or intellectual thing, but it is present.

“The human mind”, wrote Palamas, “transcends itself, and by victory over the passions acquires an angelic form … One sees, but not in a negative way – for one does see something – but in a manner superior to negation.

For God is not only beyond knowledge, but also beyond unknowing … although vision be beyond negation, yet the words used to explain it are inferior to the negative way.

Such explanations proceed by the use of examples and analogies, and this is why the word ‘like’, pointing to a simile, appears so often in theological discourse; for the vision itself is ineffable, and surpasses all expression.”59

Vladimir Lossky asserts that: “there is no theology apart from experience … he who imagines that at a given moment that he has known what God is has a depraved mind, according to St Gregory Nazianzen. Apophaticism is, therefore, a criterion; the sure sign of an attitude of mind conformed to the truth.”60

And unknown truth can be disconcerting to people who have sought to find and maintain another type of security.

“Since the primary model of worthwhile knowing at the present day is provided by the natural sciences, in which it is man who controls, analyses, changes his environment, it is difficult to allow for that [apophaticism] being real knowledge, where man is less the knower than the known.”61

Richard Dawkins caricatures religion as the willingness to settle with mystery, and science as the willingness not to settle with mystery. This is an absurd parody, and it might be more accurate to say that both the militantly religious and the militantly atheist are unhappy with mystery. But it does raise the question about the type of knowledge we consider to be true. Experiential knowledge can be authenticating knowledge, just as David Jenkins once described it:

“That knowing which, in the very experiencing of the knower, carries in that experience the assurance that is indeed knowledge; i.e. that that which is thought to be being known is truly ‘there’ and is truly known. Hence it is not ‘derived’ but ‘direct’. One does not infer, or suppose, or even believe, that God exists. God is known to one as existing.”62

Experience then, a truth. The resurrection of the body of Christ in the Christian is true because it is experienced as true. This emphasis on experience does not become inherently unstable in Eastern Orthodoxy, which is paradoxically extremely conservative despite its provisional understandings. While Western Christian liberalism sometimes supposes that since there are other ways of thinking about God, we might as well abandon these ones, the Eastern Christian approach is more a case of emphasising the rather human expression of doctrine and therefore just accepting it.

Orthodox Faith illuminates everything else, it is not an alternative to everything else, and nor is it individualistic. The experienced truth of doctrine in Eastern Orthodox understanding is not supposed to be isolated from Christ, or from the wider community, or from the liturgy and sacraments, nor, for that matter, and I am quite sure Gregory of Nyssa would agree, is it supposed to be isolated from the wider communion of the universe and its One common uncreated and inexpressible ground.

This just leaves me to mention the evolutionary world-view. There is one Irenaean understanding of the story of the fall of Adam and Eve which is sometimes trivialised as a ‘fall upwards’.

There are however two ways to be innocent. The first way is as a young child. Everything is paradise, because you know no better. When children fall, it is because they don’t know what they are doing. But the second way to be innocent is to return to innocence, as a mature person who took a detour through evil before developing appreciation of Good. Humankind has ‘grown’ through suffering, aggression and lust. But why do you trouble yourself “in a house which is not your own”63, asked the Bishop of Nineveh. In an eternity, God could be at the door.

1 Crow, Gillian, Orthodoxy for Today, (London, SPCK, 2008), 1 – 33.
2 De Mello, Anthony, Awareness, (Grand Rapids, Zondervan, 1990), 96.
3 ‘Theresa of Avila, Reformer and Contemplative’ at The Society of Archbishop Justus: Biographical sketches of memorable Christians of the past, accessed at http://justus.anglican.org/resources/bio/268.html on 7/5/08
4 Nysseni, Gregorii, Opera, In Inscriptiones Psalmorum, Heine, 84 (I. I. 6); cited in Ludlow, Morwenna, Universal Salvation, Eschatology in the thought of Gregory of Nyssa and Karl Rahner (Oxford, OUP, 2000), 55.
5 Crow, Orthodoxy, 48.
6 Gavrilia, Nun, The Ascetic of Love, (Katerini : Tertios, 1999.)
7 Crow, Orthodoxy, 114.
8 Lossky, Vladimir, The Mystical Theology of the Eastern Church (London: James Clark and Co,1957), 208.
9 Lossky, Mystical, 208.
10 Lossky, Mystical, 205.
11 Palamas, Gregory, P.G., CL, 1361 C, cited in Lossky, Mystical, 224.
12 Lossky, Mystical, 198.
13 Lossky, Mystical, 198.
14 Theosis and Sanctification, John Wesley’s reformulation of a Patristic Doctrine,
A. Ephrem and the Luminous Eye, from Wesley Centre Online : by Micheal J.Christensen, , accessed on 7/5/08 at http://wesley.nnu.edu/wesleyan_theology/theojrnl/31-35/31-2-4.html
15 Christensen, Theosis and Sanctification.
16 Russell, Norman, Deification in the Greek Patristic Tradition, (New York: OUP, 2004), 107.
17 Migne, J.P (ed.), Patrologica Graeca, (Paris, 1857), 66, cited in Russell, Deification, 1
18 Russell, Deification, 11
19 Russell, Deification, 54
20 Philo, De Posteritate Cain, 27, cited in Russell, Deification, 61
21 Justin Martyr, Dialogue with Trypho 124, cited in Russell, Deification, 108
22 Irenaeus of Lyons, Adversus Haereses, 3.18, cited in Russell, Deification, 108
23 Hippolytus of Rome, Refutation of all Heresies, cited in Russell, Deification, 111
24 Clement of Alexandria, Stromateis 7. 101. 4, cited in Russell, Deification,126.
25 Clement of Alexandria, Stromateis 2. 125. 5, cited in Russell,12.
26 Lossky, Mystical, 216.
27 Isaac of Syria, Isaac of Nineveh - On Ascetical Life (New York, St Vladimir’s Seminary Press, 1989)
28 Schmidt-Leukel, Perry, Buddhism and Christianity in Dialogue: The Gerald Weisfeld Lectures 2004, (London, SCM, 2005), 236.
29 Ware, Kallistos, The Orthodox Way, 168, cited in Christensen, Theosis and Sanctification.
30 Gregorii Nysseni, Opera, In Canticum Canticorum II, vi, 318. 9-10, cited in Ludlow, Morwenna, Universal Salvation, Eschatology in the thought of Gregory of Nyssa and Karl Rahner (Oxford, OUP, 2000), 17.
31 Ibid, cited in Ludlow, Universal, 51
32 Gregorii Nysseni, De Mortuis Oratio, 15. 64.27, cited in Ludlow, Universal, 51
33 Gregorii Nysseni, De Virginitate, SC 119, 412. 2-7, cited in Ludlow, Universal, 55
34 Gregorii Nysseni, De Hominis Opificio, v 16, 8, in H Wace H and Schaff P. eds, ‘A Series of Nicene and post Nicene Fathers’ vol. v, (Parker and Co., Oxford, 1893), cited in Ludlow, Universal, 46.
35 Augustine, Confessions Ch 3, 5, at Christian Classics Ethereal Library, accessed on 01/02/08 at http://www.ccel.org/ccel/augustine/confessions.x.html
36 Ibid, Ch 5, 7.
37 Ibid.
38 It is not clear which Platonist books Augustine is referring to, but they may be a reference to the Enneads by Plotinus: "The evil which overtakes us has its source in self-will, in the entry into the sphere of process and in the primal assertion of the desire for self-ownership" (V, 1:1) Marius Victorinus (q.v. infra, Bk. VIII, Ch. II, 3-5) had translated the Enneads into Latin. - Confessions Ch 9, Ethereal Library
39 Augustine, Confessions Ch 16, cited at Ethereal Library
40 Ibid Ch 10, 16, cited at Ethereal Library
41 Ibid Ch 11, 17, cited at Ethereal Library
42 Ibid Ch 12, cited at Ethereal Library
43 Augustine, City of God, Book 21, Ch 23, cited at Ethereal Library
44 Louth, Andrew, ‘Eastern Orthodox Theology’ in Jerry Walls ed., Oxford Handbook of Eschatology (Oxford: OUP, 2008), 245.
45 Ware, Kallistos: ‘Dare we hope for the universal salvation of all?’ in The Inner Kingdom, vol 1 of the Collected Works: (Crestwood, NY : St Vladimir’s Seminary press), 193 – 215, cited in Walls, Eschatology, 245
46 Sophrony Sakharov, Saint Silouan the Athonite, trans., Edmonds, Rosemary (Essex, England: Stravropegic Monastery of St. John the Baptist, 1991) cited in Walls, Escahtology, 246
47 Daley, Brian E, The Hope of the Early Church, (Cambridge, CUP, 1991), 222.
48 Book of the Divine love, Homily LIV, I, Russian ed. of Mt.Athos, II, p. 11; Latin trans., P.G., CXX, 425, cited in Lossky, Mystical, 214.
49 Gregorii Nysseni, Opera, In Canticum Canticorum 15: 276; cited in Ludlow, Universal, 81
50 Gregorii Nysseni, In Canticum Canticorum 15: in Patrologiae: Series Graeca Prior, Migne, J.P. eds., 44 III6
51 Gregory of Nyssa, Catechetical Oration, 26, in Apokatastasis, accessed on 31 01 08 at http://www.apokatastasis.org/
52 Gregorii Nysseni, In Inscriptiones Psalmorum, Heine, 211 – 12 (2. 16. 282); cited in Ludlow, Universal, 80
53 De Mortuis Oratio, 60. 26-7, cited in Ludlow, Universal, 43,
54 Srawley, J.H, ed., Oratio Catechetica Magna: The Catechetcal Oration of Gregory of Nyssa, (Early Church Classics SPCK, London, 1917) cited in Ludlow, Universal, 85
55 Lossky, Mystcial, 215
56 Augustine, On Christian Doctrine, trans. Shaw, J.F, Great Books of the Western World, 2nd ed. (Chicago: Encyclopedia Britannica, 1990) cited in Franke, William, On What Cannot Be Said : Apophatic Discourses in Philosophy Religion, Literature and the Arts (Indiana, Notre Dame Press, 2007), 153.
57 Thomas Aquinas, Summa Theologiae, pt 1, qu. 12, art 13, ad I, cited in Cottingham, John, The Spiritual Dimension, (Cambridge, CUP, 2005), 159.
58 Thomae Aquinatis, Vitae Fontes Praecipuae, Ferrua, A. ed., (Alba : Edzioni Dominicane, 1968) cited in Franke, Apophatic, 251.
59 Allchin, A.M, The Kingdom of Love and Knowledge, the Encounter between Orthodoxy and the West, (London, DLT, 1979), 16.
60 Ibid
61 Ibid
62 Jenkins, David, Guide to the debate about God. (London : Lutterworth Press, 1966), 38-9, cited in Allchin, Kingdom, 17.
63 Orthodoxwiki : Isaac of Syria: accessed 10/06/08 at http://orthodoxwiki.org/Isaac_of_Syria