Personal Story: Himalayan Ascent to Christ
When we
come to know God as Person, we begin to see His hand at work not only in the
circumstances of our daily lives, but also in the events of our past which have
led us to the present moment. We see how from partial truths He has led us to
the fullness of Truth, and how He continues to lead us into a more profound
realization of that Truth. As Fr. Seraphim Rose wrote, when we come to Christ
“no real truth we have ever known will ever be lost.”
Surrounded
by five of the highest peaks in the Himalayas, I was standing at 14,000 feet
gazing at the Annapurna mountains as the sun rose. My trek in Nepal had begun a
few weeks previously and this was its culmination. As I stood staring at the
pristine beauty soaring above me, a thought entered my mind and refused to
budge: “What’s the point?” My ego immediately retorted to this random thought,
“What’s the point! What do you mean, ‘What’s the point?’ The point is you hiked
all this distance to see these mountains, now enjoy it!” Still the thought
plagued my mind. Yes, it was one of the most beautiful things I had ever seen,
and I was joyful at the moment, but where would those feelings be tomorrow when
I was no longer so greatly inspired? The happiness of this world could never
bring me satisfaction. It should have been apparent throughout my life, but it
took my climbing to the top of the world for me to finally accept it. And that
was my first step toward Christ and Orthodoxy.
Until
that point my entire adult life had been a secular one devoted to satisfying
sundry passions. I had finished University at the age of 21 with plans of going
into business while at the same time pursuing a career in art. Within a year I
seemed well on the way to reaching my goal. I was then living in London,
employed by IBM. My position was secure and a promotion was imminent. My
private life was similar to that of many of my generation: casual
relationships, pursuit of comfort, and constant diversions to preserve myself
from any self-reflection.
At about
the same time my older sister became an Orthodox nun in Alaska. Whether it’s a
coincidence or not I’m not sure, but from that time on my passion for worldly
pursuits began to wane. Surveying my co-workers, no one seemed to be truly
happy or content. That elusive quality of satisfaction was never present but
always tantalizingly just around the corner. Travelling, sports, drinking with
the “lads” all became more and more mundane. Every Monday the same question:
“How was your weekend?” Every Friday again: “Any plans this weekend?” London became
greyer and greyer and the steady drizzle never managed to wash away the grime.
Instead
of looking deeper into the causes of my boredom, I placed the blame firmly on
the shoulders of corporate culture. I assumed that my disdain for the world was
due to the pursuit of monetary gain. So I quit IBM, packed my bags and returned
to America. Cherishing my disdain for prosperity and social acceptance, I began
my descent into Bohemia. Oddly enough, I failed to notice that the same rules
that govern acceptability in corporate life were applicable to the alternative
scene. Substitute a leather jacket for a suit, a tatoo for a rolex, and a
pierced eyebrow for cufflink and you still have the same man.
I began
the pursuit of a Masters degree in art and found a job at the Museum of Modern
Art. My artwork consisted of large custom-made canvases covered in thick layers
of tar. Tar had not been used as an artistic medium before, so my work was
instantly popular. I strove to be passionate about obscure modern philosophers,
post-punk shows and late-night parting, but it all wearied me. I assumed that
something was wrong with me. Why did I find it impossible to seriously discuss
a gallery exhibit featuring a basket of crushed aluminum cans and underwear
stretched on pieces of wire? Why did I find no joy in watching a performance
artist squawk like a chicken for fifteen minutes? Fortunately, I quickly
wearied of my “alternative life-style,” and right then a friend phoned me
asking if I wanted to go to Japan. I had always had an interest in Asian
cultures, and I esteemed myself a floater par excellence, so within a month I
found myself in Kyoto, Japan.
I quickly
acclimated to my new surroundings. Within two weeks I was enrolled in a
language course and had found a position teaching English. It was peculiar to
be in a country where one could leave their car running while they went into a
store and not worry about it being stolen. Honesty was the norm and it
initiated a change in me. My conscience began to return to life. I felt an immense
relief, when I began to do simple things like paying the proper toll on the
subway. It was a mere adherence to the law without any deeper understanding,
but it was the catalyst for subtle changes, and I began to breathe more easily.
Living in
the ancient capital of Japan exposed me to two thousand years of tradition on a
daily basis. I had grown up in the suburbs of southern California (the oldest
building in my neighborhood being ten years old); here I was living next to a
thousand year-old temple which had served countless emperors. The temples,
gardens, and customs began to feed a soul that had consumed far too much tar.
Naturally attracted to the beauty of the traditions, I commenced upon a phase
of dabbling in Zen Buddhism. For my easily distracted and impatient mind it was
too much. In a Zen temple there is only one correct way of performing any
action and it must be done precisely. My bows were too violent, my posture
never erect, and my socks never clean enough. The priest shuddered at my appearance.
Perfection was demanded and I came up far short. I finally stopped not because
of my inadequacy, but because of the utter lack of joy I felt there. It was all
too mechanical: push the right buttons and attain enlightenment. There was a
calmness I felt after meditating, but did this really help anyone else? I
supposed I could attain this state with much less effort through a
tranquilizer.
Three
years passed, my Japanese was adequate, and I felt I had gleaned everything
useful from the culture. The challenge of surviving in a foreign culture had
disappeared, my salary was high, my job easy, I could see myself becoming
complacent. It would be very easy to pass the next forty years in this very
warm niche that I had carved out. I quit my job, gave up my house and began my
slow journey back to America.
I
travelled all over Asia from Vietnam down to Singapore with no clear
destination in mind. The excitement of new places and travelling companions
kept me distracted most of the time, but before bed the dull pain of emptiness
would return. I was still desperately searching for that element that was
missing in my life. I travelled to the remote sacred places of the Buddhists
and the Hindus; by the time I reached them I was already planning the next
stage in my trip. During my travels through Burma, I visited a temple on the
edge of Mandalay. Thousands of steps led up the side of a mountain to the
temple which overlooked the entire city. As I made my ascent, I perceived a
Buddhist monk next to me matching my stride. He was in his fifties, short,
slightly plump, with a ruddy cheerful countenance. He introduced himself and we
continued our climb. Arriving at the summit we sat on a wall of the temple
talking as the sun set over Mandalay. After some introductory pleasantries, I
turned the subject to the political situation in Burma (Burma is presently
under a harsh military dictatorship) which murdered a large segment of the
population after riots against corrupt policies in the late eighties). He
sighed and looked upon me with a disappointed gaze, “Why do you want to talk
about that?” I mumbled an excuse to cover the true reason, which was to display
my knowledge of serious subjects. He steered the conversation in a completely
different direction. “Last week I saw a movie called ‘Jesus of Nazareth.’ What
a wonderful life!” For the next ten minutes he extolled the virtues of Christ.
I was being proselytized by a Buddhist monk, not to convert me to his religion
but to Christianity. I was dumbfounded. I had thought myself far above
Christianity since I was in high school, and here was a pagan giving me back
what I had rejected. Because of the words of a simple Burmese monk, I was
awakened to the fact that perhaps there was something more to Christianity than
the veneer I had rejected. I still was not compelled at that point to make a
serious investigation into Christianity, but the seed-bed was being prepared.
A short
time passed and I travelled on to Nepal, where I was to meet some friends for a
trek in the Himalayas. I arrived some time before them, and decided to spend
the interim in a Tibetan Buddhist monastery. I found one a short distance from
Katmandu, which offered courses in English. I went as a cultural tourist,
sampling the next dish at the smorgasbord of world religions.
I arrived
skeptical of everything, expecting to find lots of spaced out new-agers. After
the first few days my opinions were completely altered. This wasn’t a feel-good
chiliastic religion; these were people honestly struggling to attain the truth.
I was astonished to learn that they believed in hell. Who in this modern age
believes in hell? But for them it was the natural outcome of a wasted life. I
was intrigued. I began to listen more carefully as further doctrines were
disseminated. The core of the religion is the idea that all beings live in a
transitory realm of desire and suffering. All suffering is created by chasing
after that which is impermanent; instead one must look toward that which is
permanent: the truth. The only way to attain this is to cease clinging to ones
ego, and instead to live for others. Only when we put others’ happiness above
our own can we have happiness ourselves. I was stunned: after 27 years of being
told, “Do whatever feels good,” the Tibetans were telling me that whatever
feels good will probably make you miserable in this life or the next. This was
a revolutionary idea to me, but at the same time I had a vague feeling I had
heard it somewhere before.
After a
few weeks at the monastery, I left to go trekking with my friends who had now
arrived in Nepal. We took a bus across country and began our trek into the
Annapurna mountain range. With full packs we ascended to 14,000 feet over the
next two weeks. The scenery was stunning, the terrain changing from fertile
valleys to dense forests, to snow covered summits. The hiking was drudgery at
times, as we would ascend 1,000 feet and then enter a valley where we would
descend the same amount. The beauty of creation was astonishing, but every
night as I lay down to sleep that old feeling of missing something reappeared;
I assumed this would vanish once I arrived at the base of the Annapurnas.
We
reached our destination one afternoon, breathless and more than a bit
disappointed. The entire area was swallowed by a huge cloud bank which we were
inside. We explored the glaciers and spent time huddled next to a stove in a
small tea hut. By night there was no sign of a cloud break. We went to sleep
and were awakened just before dawn with the news char the weather had cleared.
I came outside and one of the most astonishing sights in the world greeted my
eyes. The sun slowly rose over the top of the world, which I felt I could reach
out and touch. Then that dastardly thought arose in my mind, “What’s the
point?” Then it dawned on me: this whole trip had been done for my own
gratification. As soon as the momentary high was gone, I would be back in my
own normal state. I had struggled with blisters, bad knees and giardia, and for
what? To see an exalted, but in the end just another pretty view. Had this
improved me as a person or helped anyone else? No, it had merely fed my ego; I
had acquired excellent fodder for conversation at parties. Where had all my
high Buddhist ideals gone? At that moment I realized my life had to be
dedicated to some higher principle than earthly pleasure. I decided to return
to the monastery.
I spent
the next few months studying Tibetan Buddhist philosophy and meditation
techniques. Still there were certain elements I had trouble accepting. The
doctrine of Karma seemed to allow for no free will in man; ones decisions to do
good or evil were always controlled by previous actions. How would it be
possible to break free, if every decision was predetermined? If one had sinned
since beginningless time as they believed, how could one ever purify oneself in
such a short life? In some ways, what was so difficult was that it was so
logical; it seemed devised by a human mind. Still the philosophy of
self-sacrifice had rooted itself in me, even if I had failed to act upon it; I
knew I could no longer live the life I had.
While at
the Tibetan Buddhist monastery, I began reading The Way of a Pilgrim. I saw in
the pilgrim the manifestation of self-abnegation and compassion that I had
found in Tibetan Buddhism, yet it came from the Christian tradition I had been
raised with. Why had I never heard about this in my Catholic church growing up?
Stranger still was the fact that my sister was a Russian Orthodox nun and yet I
knew nothing of the religions mystical qualities. I decided that perhaps I was
not ready to become a Buddhist and that I should inquire further into my own
heritage.
After
being hit on the head enough times, I finally came to the conclusion that all
of my travels were rather pointless and that I needed to return home and anchor
myself. I had plans to meet friends in Egypt for Christmas, but I found a
cheaper flight to Istanbul and thought that would be a good departure point for
Western Europe and the U.S. The carrier was Aeroflot. A few days later it
registered in my mind that Aeroflot was the Russian airline and my sister was
living in Moscow. I thought perhaps they might have a stop-over in Moscow. It
turned out they did. Within a few days I had a three-week stopover and a visa
for Russia. I flew into Moscow on St. Herman’s day.
My sister
greeted me at the airport and thus began my three-week crash course in
Orthodoxy. A new world began to open to me. I was in a land where people died
for Christ, and the intersession of the saints was a normal event. This was not
an empty Christianity viewed as a social obligation. These were people who had
endured incredible hardships in suffering for the truth.
I began
reading volumes on Orthodoxy, visiting churches, and civilly discussing with my
sister the differences in Orthodox and Buddhist tenets. She kept on coming back
to the same point: Christianity has the truth in the form of a person. I failed
to understand the importance. Force or person, I could not see the difference.
Then I
met Fr. Artemy, a well-known Moscow priest with a huge congregation. He is a
self-sacrificing man, whose entire life is dedicated to Christ and the
spreading of the Gospel. We arrived at his church during the Saturday-night
vigil. We found him hearing confessions surrounded by a crowd of fifty to a
hundred people waiting to confess. I stood at the edge of the circle and before
much time had passed I was pulled into its center by Fr. Artemy. With eyes
closed, hands on my shoulders he began speaking to me. When he wished to
emphasize a point, he would ram his forehead into mine. As he spoke to me in a
highly florid English, I had the overwhelming impression that this priest, whom
I had never met, knew much more about me than he should. What truly shook me
was the feeling that he was urgently concerned with my soul, as though he had a
personal stake in it. He spoke to me for ten minutes while the babushkas
impatiently began tightening in on us. He continued talking, telling me that my
experience in Nepal had been given me by God to pull me out of materialism. Then
he told me why Christianity was the true faith: only it had a personal God. I
still failed to understand the importance of this fact, but I left feeling
lighter, although I had said almost nothing.
In the
barren sepulchre of Moscow a new world began to open to me. The oppression of
the city weighed little on me, as I realized that the heavenly realm of God and
His saints was actually closer than the gray slab buildings dominating the
city. I visited the St. Sergius Lavra and for the first time was able to
venerate the relics of a saint. In those “dead bones” there seemed to be more
life than in all of southern California. My stay culminated with Nativity at
the Valaam Metochion. I felt as though I was surrounded by what appeared to be
ordinary people, yet they remained with one foot in heaven. Christianity may be
a religion of intangible faith, but I seemed to be receiving tangible
verification everywhere I turned.
A few
days later I left Moscow. Before my departure, my sister chastised me, saying,
“My dear, if you can spend three months sitting with the Buddhists, you can at
least spend one standing with the Orthodox.” Which is exactly what I did.
Increasing the pace of my return, I arrived in California two months later. On
the eve of Annunciation I travelled up the rough dirt road to the St. Herman of
Alaska Monastery. The first thing that struck me, having just come up from San
Diego, was the fact that these monks were anachronisms in the twentieth
century. Who heard of giving up comfort and possessions in these times? It was
the middle of Lent and it was clearly visible that these men were in the midst
of spiritual warfare. Sobriety permeated the monastery. They seemed ready to
die for the truth, and that was not something I had seen at IBM, Art School or
in Japan. There was suffering in those places, but were they willing to give
everything for the one thing needful? After all I had seen, I still did not
have a firm belief in God, but I knew these monks saw something and I wanted
it.
Lazarus
Saturday arrived. On this day the Church commemorates Christ raising Lazarus
from the dead after four days. I was awakened early to attend Liturgy at a
nearby convent, followed by a meal there. After I awoke, I immediately fell
back asleep. When I finally did rise from my bed, I found the entire monastery
empty. Not a soul remained. As I wandered through the monastery, the verse,
“Behold the Bridegroom cometh at midnight, and blessed is that servant whom he
shall find watching,” ran through my head. And chat was exactly what had
occurred both physically and spiritually. God had knocked and offered me a
feast, but I had remained reticent. Had God finally closed the door on me? I began
the descent down the mountain, hoping to hitch-hike to the convent. As I walked
I contemplated the events of the morning, and it seemed obvious that God had
allowed me to be left behind to rouse me from my indecision. Then it finally
hit me, what was meant by a personal God. Why would an impersonal force send me
such a clear message for the salvation of my soul? If it was impersonal, why
should it care what happened to me? Love cannot exist except between people. A
force cannot love (and I challenge you to try to love an impersonal force).
Therefore I came to the conclusion that God had to be a Person. As I arrived at
this deduction, I heard a car approaching me from behind: it was our only
neighbor on the mountain. I flagged him down and by a strange “coincidence” it
happened that he was making his once-a-week trip to the store which neighbored
the convent. I arrived in time for Liturgy.
Two years
have passed and I am now a ryassophore monk, an anachronism if you will. My
struggles have not ceased, but my days of wandering are at an end. I sometimes
mourn over my wasted past, but when I look more closely I see God’s hand
guiding me through even the most barren of times. Now He has brought me here
for a reason, but that must still be revealed.
An article
by Ryassophore Monk Adrian
Originally published in Orthodox Word
magazine No. 190
Source:
http://silouanthompson.net/2008/05/himalayan-ascent-to-christ/
CONVERSATION
Theology and Mysticism in the Tradition of the Eastern Church
It is our
intention, in the following essay, to study certain aspects of eastern
spirituality in relation to the fundamental themes of the Orthodox dogmatic
tradition. In the present work, therefore, the term 'mystical theology' denotes
no more than a spirituality which expresses a doctrinal attitude.
In a
certain sense all theology is mystical, inasmuch as it shows forth the divine
mystery: the data of revelation. On the other hand, mysticism is frequently
opposed to theology as a realm inaccessible to understanding, as an unutterable
mystery, a hidden depth, to be lived rather than known; yielding itself to a
specific experience which surpasses our faculties of understanding rather than
to any perception of sense or of intelligence. If we adopted this latter
conception unreservedly, resolutely opposing mysticism to theology, we should
be led in the last resort to the thesis of Bergson who distinguishes, in his
Deux Sources, the 'static religion' of the Churches from the 'dynamic religion'
of the mystics; the former social and conservative in character, the latter
personal and creative.
To what
extent was Bergson justified in stating this opposition? This is a difficult
question, all the more so since the two terms which Bergson opposes on the
religious plane are rooted in the two poles of his philosophical vision of the
universe—nature and the elan vital. Quite apart from this attitude of Bergson,
however, one frequently hears expressed the view which would see in mysticism a
realm reserved for the few, an exception to the common rule, a privilege
vouchsafed to a few souls who enjoy direct experience of the truth, others,
meanwhile, having to rest content with a more or less blind submission to
dogmas imposed from without, as to a coercive authority. This opposition is
sometimes carried to great lengths, especially if the historical reality be
forced into a preconceived pattern. Thus the mystics are set up against the
theologians, the contemplatives against the prelates, the saints against the
Church. It will suffice to recall many a passage of Harnack, Paul Sabatier's
Life of St. Francis, and other works, most frequently by protestant historians.
The
eastern tradition has never made a sharp distinction between mysticism and
theology; between personal experience of the divine mysteries and the dogma
affirmed by the Church. The following words spoken a century ago by a great
Orthodox theologian, the Metropolitan Philaret of Moscow, express this attitude
perfectly: 'none of the mysteries of the most secret wisdom of God ought to
appear alien or altogether transcendent to us, but in all humility we must
apply our spirit to the contemplation of divine things'. To put it in another
way, we must live the dogma expressing a revealed truth, which appears to us as
an unfathomable mystery, in such a fashion that instead of assimilating the
mystery to our mode of understanding, we should, on the contrary, look for a
profound change, an inner transformation of spirit, enabling us to experience
it mystically. Far from being mutually opposed, theology and mysticism support
and complete each other. One is impossible without the other. If the mystical
experience is a personal working out of the content of the common faith,
theology is an expression, for the profit of all, of that which can be
experienced by everyone. Outside the truth kept by the whole Church personal
experience would be deprived of all certainty, of all objectivity. It would be
a mingling of truth and of falsehood, of reality and of illusion: 'mysticism'
in the bad sense of the word. On the other hand, the teaching of the Church
would have no hold on souls if it did not in some degree express an inner
experience of truth, granted in different measure to each one of the faithful.
There is, therefore, no Christian mysticism without theology; but, above all,
there is no theology without mysticism. It is not by chance that the tradition
of the Eastern Church has reserved the name of 'theologian' peculiarly for
three sacred writers of whom the first is St. John, most 'mystical' of the four
Evangelists; the second St. Gregory Nazianzen, writer of contemplative poetry;
and the third St. Symeon, called 'the New Theologian', the singer of union with
God. Mysticism is accordingly treated in the present work as the perfecting and
crown of all theology: as theology par excellence.
Unlike
gnosticism, in which knowledge for its own sake constitutes the aim of the
gnostic, Christian theology is always in the last resort a means: a unity of
knowledge subserving an end which transcends all knowledge. This ultimate end
is union with God or deification, the theosis of the Greek Fathers. Thus, we
are finally led to a conclusion which may seem paradoxical enough: that
Christian theory should have an eminently practical significance; and that the
more mystical it is, the more directly it aspires to the supreme end of union
with God. All the development of the dogmatic battles which the Church has
waged down the centuries appears to us, if we regard it from the purely
spiritual standpoint, as dominated by the constant preoccupation which the
Church has had to safeguard, at each moment of her history, for all Christians,
the possibility of attaining to the fullness of the mystical union. So the
Church struggled against the gnostics in defence of this same idea of
deification as the universal end: 'God became man that men might become gods'.
She affirmed, against the Arians, the dogma of the consubstantial Trinity; for
it is the Word, the Logos, who opens to us the way to union with the Godhead;
and if the incarnate Word has not the same substance with the Father, if He be
not truly God, our deification is impossible. The Church condemned the
Nestorians that she might overthrow the middle wall of partition, whereby, in
the person of the Christ himself, they would have separated God from man. She
rose up against the Apollinarians and Monophysites to show that, since the
fullness of true human nature has been assumed by the Word, it is our whole
humanity that must enter into union with God. She warred with the Monothelites
because, apart from the union of the two wills, divine and human, there could
be no attaining to deification—'God created man by his will alone, but He
cannot save him without the co-operation of the human will.' The Church emerged
triumphant from the iconoclastic controversy, affirming the possibility of the
expression through a material medium of the divine realities—symbol and pledge
of our sanctification. The main preoccupation, the issue at stake, in the
questions which successively arise respecting the Holy Spirit, grace and the
Church herself this last the dogmatic question of our own time—is always the
possibility the manner or the means of our union with God,, All the history of
Christian dogma unfolds itself about this mystical centre, guarded by different
weapons against its many and diverse assailants in the course of successive
ages.
The
theological doctrines which have been elaborated in the course of these
struggles can be treated in the most direct relation to the vital end—that of
union with God to the attainment of which they are subservient. Thus they
appear as the foundations of Christian spirituality. It is this that we shall
understand in speaking of 'mystical theology'; not mysticism properly
so-called, the personal experiences of different masters of the spiritual life.
Such experiences, for that matter, more often than not remain inaccessible to
us: even though they may find verbal expression. What, in reality, can one say
of the mystical experience of St. Paul: '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 an 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 venture to pass any judgement
upon the nature of this experience it would be necessary to understand it more
fully than did St. Paul, who avows his ignorance: 'I cannot tell: God knoweth.'
We deliberately leave on one side all question of mystical psychology. Nor is
it theological doctrines as such that we propose to set forth in the present
work, but only such elements of theology as are indispensable for the
understanding of a spirituality: the dogmas which constitute the foundation of
mysticism. Here, then, is the first definition and limitation of subject, which
is the mystical theology of the Eastern Church.
The
second limitation circumscribes our subject, so to say, in space. It is the
Christian East, or, more precisely, the Eastern Orthodox Church, which will
form the field of our studies in mystical theology. We must recognize that this
limitation is somewhat artificial. In reality, since the cleavage between East
and West only dates from the middle of the eleventh century, all that is prior
to this date constitutes a common and indivisible treasure for both parts of a
divided Christendom. The Orthodox Church would not be what it is if it had not
had St. Cyprian, St. Augustine and St. Gregory the Great. No more could the
Roman Catholic Church do without St. Athanasius, St. Basil or St. Cyril of
Alexandria. Thus, when one would speak of the mystical theology of the East or
of the West, one takes one's stand within one of the two traditions which
remained, down to a certain moment, two local traditions within the one Church,
witnessing to a single Christian truth; but which subsequently part, the one
from the other, and give rise to two different dogmatic attitudes,
irreconcilable on several points. Can we judge the two traditions by taking our
stand on neutral ground equally foreign to the one as to the other? That would
be to judge Christianity from a non-Christian standpoint: in other words, to
refuse in advance to understand anything whatever about the object of study.
For objectivity in no wise consists in taking one's stand outside an object
but, on the contrary, in considering one's object in itself and by itself.
There are fields in which what is commonly styled 'objectivity' is only
indifference, and where indifference means incomprehension. In the present
state of dogmatic difference between East and West it is essential, if one
wishes to study the mystical theology of the Eastern Church, to choose between
two possible standpoints. Either, to place oneself on western dogmatic ground
and to examine the eastern tradition across that of the West—that is, by way of
criticism—or else to present that tradition in the light of the dogmatic
attitude of the Eastern Church. This latter course is for us the only possible
one.
It will,
perhaps, be objected that the dogmatic dissension between East and West only
arose by chance, that it has not been of decisive importance, that it was
rather a question of two different historical spheres which must sooner or
later have separated in order that each might follow its own path; and,
finally, that the dogmatic dispute was no more than a pretext for the breaking
asunder once and for all of an ecclesiastical unity which had in fact long
ceased to be a reality.
Such
assertions, which are heard very frequently in the East as in the West, are the
outcome of a purely secular mentality and of the widespread habit of treating
Church history according to methods which exclude the religious nature of the
Church. For the 'historian of the Church' the religious factor disappears and
finds itself displaced by others; such, for instance, as the play of political
or social interests, the part played by racial or cultural conditions,
considered as determining factors in the life of the Church. We think ourselves
shrewder, more up to date, in invoking these factors as the true guiding forces
of ecclesiastical history. While recognizing their importance, a Christian
historian can scarcely resign himself to regarding them otherwise than as
accidental to the essential nature of the Church. He cannot cease to see in the
Church an autonomous body, subject to a different law than that of the
determinism of this world. If we consider the dogmatic question of the
procession of the Holy Spirit, which divided East and West, we cannot treat it
as a fortuitous phenomenon in the history of the Church. From the religious
point of view it is the sole issue of importance in the chain of events which
terminated in the separation. Conditioned, as it may well have been, by various
factors, this dogmatic choice was—for the one party as for the other—a
spiritual commitment a conscious taking of sides in a matter of faith.
If we are
often led to minimize the importance of the dogmatic question which determined
all the subsequent development of the two traditions, this is by reason of a
certain insensitivity towards dogma—which is considered as something external
and abstract. It is said that it is spirituality which matters. The dogmatic
difference is of no consequence. Yet spirituality and dogma, mysticism and
theology, are inseparably linked in the life of the Church. As regards the
Eastern Church, we have already remarked that she makes no sharp distinction
between theology and mysticism, between the realm of the common faith and that
of personal experience. Thus, if we would speak of mystical theology in the
eastern tradition we cannot do otherwise than consider it within the dogmatic
setting of the Orthodox Church.
Before
coming to grips with our subject it is necessary to say a few words about the
Orthodox Church, little known down to the present day in the West. Father
Congar's book Divided Christendom, though very remark able in many respects,
remains, despite all his striving after objectivity, subject, in those pages which
he devotes to the Orthodox Church, to certain preconceived notions. 'Where the
West,' he says, 'on the basis at once developed and narrow of Augustinian
ideology, claimed for the Church independence in life and organization, and
thus laid down the lines of a very definite ecclesiology, the East settled down
in practice, and to some extent in theory, to a principle of unity which was
political, non-religious, and not truly universal. To Father Congar, as to the
majority of Catholic and Protestant writers who have expressed themselves on
this subject, Orthodoxy presents itself under the form of a federation of
national churches, having as its basis a political principle—the state-church.
One can venture upon such generalizations as these only by ignoring both the
canonical groundwork and the history of the Eastern Church. The view which
would base the unity of a local church on a political, racial or cultural
principle is considered by the Orthodox Church as a heresy, specially known by
the name of philetism. It is the ecclesiastical territory, the area sanctified
by more or less ancient Christian tradition which forms the basis of a
metropolitan province, administered by an archbishop or metropolitan, with the
bishops from every diocese coming together from time to time in synod. If
metropolitan provinces are grouped together to form local churches under the
jurisdiction of a bishop who often bears the title of patriarch, it is still
the community of local tradition and of historical destiny (as well as
convenience in calling together a council from many provinces), which
determines the formation of these large circles of jurisdiction, the
territories of which do not necessarily correspond to the political boundaries
of a state. The Patriarch of Constantinople enjoys a certain primacy of honour,
arbitrating from time to time in disputes, but without exercising a
jurisdiction over the whole body of the oecumenical. Church. The local churches
of the East had more or less the same attitude towards the apostolic
patriarchate of Rome—first see of the Church before the separation, and symbol
of her unity. Orthodoxy recognizes no visible head of the Church. The unity of
the Church expresses itself through the communion of the heads of local
churches among themselves, by the agreement of all the churches in regard to a
local council—which thus acquires a universal import; finally, in exceptional
cases, it may manifest itself through a general council.
The catholicity of the Church, far from being the privilege of any one see or specific centre, is realized rather in the richness and multiplicity of the local traditions which bear witness unanimously to a single Truth: to that which is preserved always, everywhere and by all. Since the Church is catholic in all her parts, each one of her members—not only the clergy but also each layman—is called to confess and to defend the truth of tradition; opposing even the bishops should they fall into heresy. A Christian who has received the gift of the Holy Spirit in the sacrament of the Holy Chrism must have a full awareness of his faith: he is always responsible for the Church. Hence the restless and sometimes agitated character of the ecclesiastical life of Byzantium, of Russia and of other countries in the Orthodox world. This, however, is the price paid for a religious vitality, an intensity of spiritual life which penetrates the whole mass of believers, united in the awareness that they form a single body with the hierarchy of the Church. From this, too, comes the unconquerable energy which enables Orthodoxy to go through all trials, all cataclysms and upheavals, adapting itself continually to the new historical reality and showing itself stronger than outward circumstances. The persecutions of the faithful in Russia, the systematic fury of which has not been able to destroy the Church, are the best witness to a power which is not of this world.
The catholicity of the Church, far from being the privilege of any one see or specific centre, is realized rather in the richness and multiplicity of the local traditions which bear witness unanimously to a single Truth: to that which is preserved always, everywhere and by all. Since the Church is catholic in all her parts, each one of her members—not only the clergy but also each layman—is called to confess and to defend the truth of tradition; opposing even the bishops should they fall into heresy. A Christian who has received the gift of the Holy Spirit in the sacrament of the Holy Chrism must have a full awareness of his faith: he is always responsible for the Church. Hence the restless and sometimes agitated character of the ecclesiastical life of Byzantium, of Russia and of other countries in the Orthodox world. This, however, is the price paid for a religious vitality, an intensity of spiritual life which penetrates the whole mass of believers, united in the awareness that they form a single body with the hierarchy of the Church. From this, too, comes the unconquerable energy which enables Orthodoxy to go through all trials, all cataclysms and upheavals, adapting itself continually to the new historical reality and showing itself stronger than outward circumstances. The persecutions of the faithful in Russia, the systematic fury of which has not been able to destroy the Church, are the best witness to a power which is not of this world.
The
Orthodox Church, though commonly referred to as Eastern, considers herself none
the less the universal Church; and this is true in the sense that she is not
limited by any particular type of culture, by the legacy of any one
civilization (Hellenistic or otherwise), or by strictly eastern cultural forms.
Moreover, eastern can mean so many things: from the cultural point of view the
East is less homogeneous than the West. What have Hellenism and Russian culture
in common, notwithstanding the Byzantine origins of Christianity in Russia?
Orthodoxy has been the leaven in too many different cultures to be itself
considered a cultural form of eastern Christianity. The forms are different:
the faith is one. The Orthodox Church has never confronted national cultures
with another which could be regarded as specifically Orthodox. It is for this
reason that her missionary work has been able to expand so prodigiously:
witness the conversion of Russia to Christianity during the tenth and eleventh
centuries, and, at a later date, the preaching of the Gospel across the whole
of Asia. Towards the end of the eighteenth century Orthodox missions reached
the Aleutian Islands and Alaska, passed thence to North America, creating new
dioceses of the Russian Church beyond the confines of Russia, spreading to
China and Japan. The anthropological and cultural variations which one
encounters from Greece to the remotest parts of Asia, and from Egypt to the
Arctic, do not destroy the homogeneous character of this kinship of
spirituality, very different from that of the Christian West.
There is
a great richness of forms of the spiritual life to be found within the bounds
of Orthodoxy, but monasticism remains the most classical of all. Unlike western
monasticism, however, that of the East does not include a, multiplicity of
different orders. This fact is explained by the conception of the monastic
life, the aim of which can only be union with God in a complete renunciation of
the life of this present world. If the secular clergy (married priests and
deacons), or confraternities of laymen may occupy themselves with social work,
or devote themselves to other outward activities, it is otherwise with the
monks. The latter take the habit above all in order to apply themselves to
prayer, to the interior life, in cloister or hermitage. Between a monastery of
the common life and the solitude of an anchorite who carries on the traditions
of the Desert Fathers there are many intermediate types of monastic
institution. One could say broadly that eastern monasticism was exclusively
contemplative, if the distinction between the two ways, active and
contemplative, had in the East the same meaning as in the West. In fact, for an
eastern monk the two ways are inseparable. The one cannot be exercised without
the other, for the ascetic rule and the school of interior prayer receive the
name of spiritual activity. If the monks occupy themselves from time to time
with physical labours, it is above all with an ascetic end in view: the sooner
to overcome their rebel nature, as well as to avoid idleness, enemy of the
spiritual life. To attain to union with God, in the measure in which it is
realizable here on earth, requires continual effort, or, more precisely, an
unceasing vigil that the integrity of the inward man, 'the union of heart and
spirit' (to use an expression of Orthodox asceticism), withstand all the
assaults of the enemy: every irrational movement of our fallen nature. Human
nature must undergo a change; it must be more and more transfigured by grace in
the way of sanctification, which has a range which is not only spiritual but
also bodily—and hence cosmic. The spiritual work of a monk living in community
or a hermit withdrawn from the world retains all its worth for the entire
universe even though it remain hidden from the sight of all. This is why
monastic institutions have always enjoyed great veneration in every country of
the Orthodox world.
The part
played by the great centres of spirituality was very considerable not only in
ecclesiastical life but also in the realm of culture and politics. The
monasteries of Mount Sinai and of Studion, near Constantinople, the monastic
republic of Mount Athos, bringing together religious of all nations (there were
Latin monks there prior to the schism), other great centres beyond the bounds
of the Empire such as the monastery of Tirnovo, in Bulgaria, and the great
lavras of Russia—Petcheri at Kiev and the Holy Trinity near Moscow—have all
been strongholds of Orthodoxy, schools of the spiritual life, whose religious
and moral influence was of the first importance in the moulding of peoples newly
converted to Christianity. But if the monastic ideal had so great an influence
upon souls, it was , nevertheless, not the only type of the spiritual life
which the Church offered to the faithful. The way of union with God may be
pursued outside the cloister, amid all the circumstances of human life. The
outward forms may change, the monasteries may disappear, as in our own day they
disappeared for a time in Russia, but the spiritual life goes on with the same
intensity, finding new modes of expression.
Eastern
hagiography, which is extremely rich, shows beside the holy monks many examples
of spiritual perfection acquired by simple laymen and married people living in
the world. It knows also strange and unwonted paths to sanctification: that,
for instance, of the 'fools in Christ', committing extravagant acts that their
spiritual gifts might remain hidden from the eyes of those about them under the
hideous aspect of madness; or, rather, that they might be freed from the ties
of this world in their most intimate and most spiritually troublesome expression,
that of our social 'ego'. Union with God sometimes manifests itself through
charismatic gifts as, for example, in that of spiritual direction exercised by
the starets or elder. These latter are most frequently monks who, having passed
many years of their life in prayer and secluded from all contact with the
world, towards the end of their life throw open to all comers the door of their
cell. They possess the gift of being able to penetrate to the unfathomable
depths of the human conscience, of revealing sins and inner difficulties which
normally remain unknown to us, of raising up overburdened souls, and of
directing men not only in their spiritual course but also in all the
vicissitudes of their life in the world .
The
individual experiences of the greatest mystics of the Orthodox Church more
often than not remain unknown to us. Apart from a few rare exceptions the
spiritual literature of the Christian East possesses scarcely any
autobiographical account dealing with the interior life, such as those of
Angela of Foligno and Henry Suso, or the Histoire d'une ame of St. Teresa of
Lisieux. The way of mystical union is nearly always a secret between God and
the soul concerned, which is never confided to others unless, it may be, to a
confessor or to a few disciples. What is published abroad is the fruit of this
union: wisdom, understanding of the divine mysteries, expressing itself in
theological or moral teaching or in advice for the edification of one's
brethren. As to the inward and personal aspect of the mystical experience, it
remains hidden from the eyes of all. It must be recognized that it was only at
a comparatively late period, towards the thirteenth century in fact, that
mystical individualism made its appearance in western literature. St. Bernard
speaks directly of his personal experience only very seldom—on but a single
occasion in the Sermons on the Song of Songs—and then with a sort of
reluctance, after the example of St. Paul. It was necessary that a certain
cleavage should occur between personal experience and the common faith, between
the life of the individual and the life of the Church, that spirituality and
dogma, mysticism and theology, could become two distinct spheres; and that
souls unable to find adequate nourishment in the theological summae should turn
to search greedily in the accounts of individual mystical experience in order
to reinvigorate themselves in an atmosphere of spirituality. Mystical
individualism has remained alien to the spirituality of the Eastern Church.
Father
Congar is right when he says: 'We have become different men. We have the same
God but before him we are different men, unable to agree as to the nature of
our relationship with him." But in order to estimate accurately this
spiritual divergency it would be necessary to examine it in its most perfect
manifestations: in the different types of sanctity in East and West since the
schism. We should then be able to give an account of the close link which
always exists between the dogma which the Church confesses and the spiritual
fruit which it bears. For the inner experience of the Christian develops within
the circle delineated by the teaching of the Church: within the dogmatic
framework which moulds his person. If even now a political doctrine professed
by the members of a party can so fashion their mentality as to produce a type
of man distinguishable from other men by certain moral or psychical marks, a
fortiori religious dogma succeeds in transforming the very souls of those who
confess it. They are men different from other men, from those who have been
formed by another dogmatic conception. It is never possible to understand a
spirituality if one does not take into account the dogma in which it is rooted.
We must accept facts as they are, and not seek to explain the difference
between eastern and western spirituality on racial or cultural grounds when a
greater issue, a dogmatic issue, is at stake. Neither may we say that the
questions of the procession of the Holy Spirit or of the nature of grace have
no great importance in the scheme of Christian doctrine, which remains more or
less identical among Roman Catholics and among Orthodox. In dogmas so
fundamental as these it is this 'more or less' which is important, for it
imparts a different emphasis to all doctrine, presents it in another light; in
other words, gives place to another spirituality.
We do not
wish to embark on a 'comparative theology'; still less to renew confessional
disputes. We confine ourselves here to stating the fact of a dogmatic
dissimilarity between the Christian East and the Christian West, before
examining certain of the elements of the theology which forms the foundation of
eastern spirituality. It will be for the reader to judge in what measure these
theological aspects of Orthodox mysticism can be of use for the comprehension
of a spirituality which is alien to western Christianity. If while remaining
loyal to our respective dogmatic standpoints we could succeed in getting to
know each other, above all in those points in which we differ, this would
undoubtedly be a surer way towards unity than that which would leave
differences on one side. For, in the words of Karl Barth, 'the union of the
Churches is not made, but we discover it'.
An
article by
Vladimir Lossky
Source: http://orthodoxinfo.com/general/lossky_intro.aspx
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The History of the Svensk-Pechersk Icon of the Mother of God
The
Svensk-Pechersk Icon of the Mother of God was written by the Monk Alypii of
Pechersk (+ c. 1114, Comm. 17 August, under which see the account about him).
On the icon is depicted the Mother of God, sitting upon a throne, and upon Her
knees is the God-Infant. At the right side of the throne stands the Monk
Theodosii, and on the left – the Monk Antonii of Pechersk. Until the year 1288
it was situated at the Kievo-Pechersk monastery, where it was glorified by
miracles, and in 1288 it was transferred to the Bryansk Svensk monastery, named
in honour of the Uspenie (Dormition) of the MostHoly Mother of God, in accord
with the image. The Chernigov prince Roman Mikhailovich, then at Bryansk, fell
blind. Hearing about the miracles worked by the icon of the Monk Alypii, the
prince sent to the monastery a courier with a request to send him at Bryansk
the icon for his healing. They dispatched the icon together with a priest along
the River Desna.
During
the time of sailing the boat came in to land at the right bank of the River
Svena. After lodging for the night they went to the boat to make prayers before
the icon, but they did not find it there, and they saw it upon an hill opposite
the River Svena. The icon stood on an oak amidst the branches. News of this
reached prince Roman, and they led him to the icon on foot. The prince prayed
fervently before the icon and vowed to build on that spot a monastery,
bestowing on it all the land which could be seen from the hill. After the
prayer the prince regained his sight. At first he saw the footpath, then nearby
objects, and finally all the surroundings. Having made an enclosure for the
icon, the prince had a molieben served, and then all that were gathered made
the foundations for a wooden church in honour of the Uspenie of the MostHoly
Mother of God. The tree, on which the icon set, they cut up and used as wood
for other icons. And then was established a feastday of the Svensk Icon of the
Mother of God on 3 May.
The icon
was glorified by healings of the blind, demoniacs, and was a protector from
enemies.
Translated by Fr. S. Janos
Source: https://www.holytrinityorthodox.com/calendar/los/May/03-07.htm
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Advice Regarding Prayer Before and After Work
Everything that happens should lead us to God
and say, “Nothing happens without God’s will; God knows what is good and
profitable, and that is why it happens as it does.” — Abba Dorotheos
The
orchards of Valaam… So much has been said and written about them. But the flood
continues of exclamations and puzzled questions about how people can grow
vegetables and exotic fruits in conditions described as “extremely high-risk
agricultural”, and even produce amazingly abundant harvests. What is the
secret? Do the Valaam monks know something that is hidden from the rest of the
world? What gives them the strength to transform nature and create with their
hands paradisal foliage on bare rocks?
Growing
potatoes, making cheese, and farming trout are all vitally important, but not
the most important thing for monks. As opposed to strong collective farms and
agribusinesses, the brothers’ agricultural obediences have, to use modern
language, different ideological foundations—nothing in the monastery is done
without prayer and hope in God’s will, and everything is directed toward the
acquisition of humility and peace of soul.
“Thy will be done, on earth as it is in
heaven.”
A
believing person lives with the thought that God watches after each of us, just
as each of the five sparrows sold for two farthings, and firmly remembers the
Gospel words, Fear not therefore: ye are of more value than many sparrows (Lk.
12:7). The true Christian, and especially the monk, firmly knows and is sure
that his earthly life belongs completely to the Creator: As the Lord lives,
there shall not fall to the ground one of the hairs of his head (1 Kings
14:45). In the New Testament is written, Are not two sparrows sold for a
farthing? and one of them shall not fall on the ground without your Father. But
the very hairs of your head are all numbered. Fear ye not therefore, ye are of
more value than many sparrows (Matt. 10:29-31). Without His will, not even a
hair can fall from our head (cf. Lk. 21:18).
It is better not to lose the seven-eighths in
order to preserve the one-eighth
Even a
person who is distant from the Church has thousands of proofs that there are
times when all goes not as calculated or planned; sooner or later something
happens to clearly prove that it is illusion and self-deception to be sure that
all plans are carried out with total control over the situation. That is why a
believer always asks in prayer for God’s blessing and help before beginning
every work. This hope not in oneself but in the Heavenly Father grants us
unselfish joy in even the smallest victory, and gives us the strength with
humility to accept defeat—even very great defeat. And this applies to any work,
be it painting icons, or growing grapes on rocks and pineapples in a
greenhouse.
However,
prayer alone will not save us; it has to be joined with the fulfillment of
God’s will—everything that is placed upon each of us in our everyday lives. In
the sweat of thy face shalt thou eat bread (Gen. 3:19); some teach children,
some build houses, sew shoes, or conduct a train. Valaam monks always had to
obtain their daily bread through labor; after all, nothing about the nature and
climactic conditions on the archipelago offered any hope of an easy life. No,
there was never an easy life on the island even during the most favorable
years. And tragic events in the monastery’s history are countless. Each time
the brothers had to raise the monastery from ruins, carefully restoring and
preserving the former and creating the new. It is not possible to walk this
hard path without peace in the soul—A sacrifice to God is a broken spirit, a
heart that is broken and humbled, God will not despise (Ps. 50:19).
As in
centuries and decades ago, behind every church or skete built, or every tomato
grown in the greenhouse, are everyday obediences. It is hard for a layperson to
believe that the monk cutting the hay or milking the cow has a good university
education, but is now joyfully and lightheartedly “spinning the cow’s tail” in
a monastery. And what is most amazing is that the labors of these former
city-dwellers bring forth a wide array of tangible fruits.
We
repeat: Every work that a believer begins should have God’s blessing. But this
blessing does not visit the stiff-necked and self-willed, but only the humble
and meek. In Abba Dorotheos’s Instructions we read, “Thus, if you are doing any
kind of work and wish to fulfill it completely and entirely, then strive to
fulfill the work itself, which as I have said, is the eighth part of what is
sought, and at the same time preserve your own state of soul unharmed, which
constitutes seven-eighths. But if fulfilling your work, your service becomes
distracted and you depart from the commandments and harming yourself or another
by quarrelling, then it is better not to lose the seven-eighths in order to
preserve the one-eighth.”
Then with
a pure heart we fall down in prayer to the Lord, so that we would not depart in
anything from His holy will, and that He would give us the strength to overcome
difficulties. And whoever has the zeal to fulfill God’s will in everything will
have bolder prayer before God.
Prayer is not a spell but a request for help
Thus,
every work begins with a prayer to the Lord. In the Orthodox Church it is customary
to turn in prayer to the Holy Spirit. We can pray briefly, “O Lord, bless!” But
it is better not to be lazy, and spend a little time calling out for God’s
help. It is good to learn these prayers by heart and repeat them to ourselves
when necessary.
Having
prayed before the beginning of a new work, we should complete it honestly and
wholeheartedly. After all, prayer is not a spell but a request for help, and
the saints will not do anything without our participation. Prayer gives us
strength, but it doesn’t do away with the need to do what’s required of us in
the best way possible. Even the apostles earned their own living, and endured
want, heat, and cold.
After
finishing the workday or completing a job, we mustn’t forget to give thanks for
the help received. After all, in everyday life the words, “thank you”, are the
norm. Giving thanks helps us also avoid such sins as pride. Otherwise, one
might decide to ascribe success to his own strength, and this is not far from
catastrophe.
Giving
thanks for something good rendered is necessary, even if it didn’t all turn out
exactly as we would have liked it to—after all, every God-pleasing work is
simply bound to be successful. This is the very testimony of the Valaam
orchards, blossoming and bearing fruit despite the climate, poor soil, and
decades of neglect.
The
teacher and instructor of monks, Abba Dorotheus, writes, “No matter what, I
always do what I can according to my strength and render it all to God.” And,
“Humility consists in ascribing your labors to God.” Isn’t this the secret of
Valaam’s paradisal greenery? Isn’t this also the secret to a happy life in the
world—in perfect humility, hope in God, and in a peaceful, joyful heart?
Prayer at the Commencement of Any Work
Though
the prayers of our holy fathers, O Lord Jesus Christ, our God, have mercy on
us. Amen.
Heavenly
King, Comforter, Spirit of Truth, Who art everywhere present and fillest all
things, Treasury of good gifts and Giver of Life, come and abide in us, and
cleanse us of all impurity, and save our souls, O Good One.
Holy God,
Holy Mighty, Holy Immortal One, have mercy on us. (thrice)
Glory to
the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Spirit, now and ever, and to the
ages of ages. Amen.
Most Holy
Trinity, have mercy on us. O Lord, wash away our sins, O Master, pardon our
transgressions. O Holy One, visit and heal our infirmities, for Thy Name's
sake.
Lord,
have mercy. (3 times.)
Glory to
the Father, and to the Son and to the Holy Spirit, now and ever, and to the
ages of ages. Amen.
Our
Father, Who art in heaven, hallowed be Thy Name. Thy Kingdom come. Thy will be
done, on earth as it is in heaven. Give us this day our daily bread. And
forgive us our debts as we forgive our debtors. And lead us not into
temptation, but deliver us from the evil one.
O Lord
Jesus Christ, Only-begotten Son of Thy Eternal Father, Thou hast said with Thy
most holy lips: "Without Me, you can do nothing." My Lord and my God,
in faith I embrace Thy words with my heart and soul, and bow before Thy
goodness; help me, a sinner, to do in union with Thee this work which I am about
to begin, in the Name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit.
Amen.
Prayer After the Completion of Any Work
Glory,
both now.
Thou, O
my Christ, art the sum and fullness of all that is good; fill my soul with joy
and gladness, and save me, for Thou alone art all-merciful. Amen.
It is
truly meet to bless Thee O Theotokos, ever blessed and most blameless and
Mother of our God. More honorable than the cherubim, and beyond compare more
glorious than the seraphim, who without corruption gaveth birth the God the
Word, the very Theotokos, Thee do we magnify.
Glory to
the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Spirit, now and ever, and to the
ages of ages. Amen.
Lord,
have mercy. (3 times.)
Dismissal:
O Lord Jesus Christ, Son of God, through the prayers of Thy most pure Mother,
our holy and God-bearing fathers, and all the saints, have mercy on us. Amen.
Before the beginning of the workday, we can
pray to the saints:
To the
Mother of God, the intercessor for all mankind.
To our
guardian angel; he is called to protect our body from illness, and our soul
from temptation. But we mustn’t forget that bad thoughts and deeds make angels
leave us.
To the
saint whose name we were given at holy Baptism.
To Saint
Nicholas, who was also a zealous laborer, and always helped his neighbor no
matter how hard it was.
To St.
Triphon, who always helps people fulfill their duties well; and to other
favorite saints.
This
article was prepared through the efforts of the brothers of Valaam Monastery,
and their website volunteer, Natalia Rogozhina.
Translation
by Nun Cornelia (Rees) from Valaam.ru
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