Archive for the 'Foundations' Category

The Theology of Illness The Healing of Madness

The Theology of Illness  by Jean-Claude Larche

“This book offers us fresh insight into the mystery of evil, sin, and illness, and their place within our struggle toward holiness… It gives us renewed hope, by locating the “problem of pain” in a profoundly theological framework, in which ultimate resolution of the mystery of illness and suffering is provided by the healing touch of Christ Himself, the Physician of our souls and bodies.” – John Breck, from the Foreword.

Jean-Claude Larchet’s The Theology of Illness, already translated into several languages, now appears in English and explores biblical and patristic perspectives on sickness and redemptive suffering. The questions Larchet considers are fundamental: the origins of sin in a fallen world, its impact on physical health, and the healing of human nature by the incarnate Son of God. He explains healing as a means of glorifying God, stressing again the crucial role of prayer and sacramental grace in promoting genuine health. When illness plunges us into unfamiliar territory, even to the point of death, Larchet teaches us to marshal spiritual reserves in a society dominated by technology and materialism. In a time when the physician has been dubbed the high priest of the god of Modern Medicine, Larchet encourages us to situate these crucial experiences within the framework of their relationship to the unique reality of the Holy Trinity.
Jean-Claude Larchet is an Orthodox layman and a professor of philosophy in a French lycée in Strasbourg.

Purchase, “The Theology of Illness“, in English from Light & Life Publications

HT: Eastern Orthodox Librarian


Healing Mental Illness by Jean-Claude Larche

Moscow. January 17. INTERFAX – A Russian-language translation of “Healing Mental Illness: the experience of the first centuries in the Christian East”,
the work of the French theologian and doctor of philosophy, Jean-Claude Larche was published in Moscow.

The book is dedicated to understanding madness from the Orthodox point of view, drawing on patristic and hagiographic literature of the I-XIV centuries; it
recounts the experience of healing mental illness by holy fathers, who, unlike psychiatrists, examined the person, took into account the totality of the human
being (spirit, soul and body).

The author hopes that the experience of the Orthodox will be useful to modern psychiatry, which, being “established on the model of medical science, a priori
excludes any relationship to religion and morality, and, therefore, arrives at a dead end notes the review of the study which was published on Thursday in the
newspaper, Nezavisimaya Gazeta – Ex Libris”.

J.-C. Larche pays special attention to craziness [“fools for Christ’s sake” – yurodstvo], defining it as a voluntary choice of one who attains a certain degree of spiritual perfection; attempting to define the specifics of a fool for Christ’s sake, as compared with other feats of Christian piety; trying to understand and explain the reasons the “holy fools” to behave “foolishly”.

Russian Source:  http://www.interfax-religion.ru/print.php?act=news&id=22392

English Source:  http://groups.yahoo.com/group/OrthodoxNews/message/8451

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Thoughts and Deception

Given the personality problems presented in the immediate previous post we thought the comments by Elder Sophrony were an appropriate follow up. –editor

By Archimandrite Sophrony Sakharov

Those who want to pray with a cleansed mind (nous) must not concern fsof05themselves with the latest news from the newspapers, or read books that are irrelevant to our spiritual life – especially those books that arouse the passions – and they must not strive to learn out of curiosity whatever pertains to the lives of others. All these things bring foreign thoughts to mind, and when a person attempts to elucidate them, they confound his mind even more.

When the soul is taught love by God, then it will feel sorrow for all of Mankind, all of Creation, and will pray that everyone might repent and receive the grace of the Holy Spirit. But, should the soul lose this grace, love will abandon it (because without the grace of God, it is impossible to love one’s enemy) and that is when wicked thoughts will issue from the heart, as the Lord had said (Matthew 15:19, Mark 7:21-22).

Without the humility of Christ, Man’s nous (mind) will not be cleansed and his soul will never feel reposed in God, but will always be agitated by various thoughts that will hinder his “theory” (sighting) of God. Ah, the humility according to Christ! Those who have tried it, rush towards God, insatiably, day and night!

Ah, but what a weakling I am! I have been writing for just a short while, and yet I have quickly become tired, and my body yearns to rest. But even the Lord Himself, when He was on earth “in His flesh”, was familiar with human frailty. He, the Merciful One, would also feel weary after His journeys on foot, and He had also slept on board a boat during the tempest; and, after the disciples had roused Him from His sleep, He commanded the sea and the wind to become still, and a great calm followed. So it is with our soul, whenever we call upon the most Holy Name of the Lord: a great calm follows.

Allow us, o Lord, to glorify You, until our dying breath…..

can fall into deception, either out of inexperience, or out of pride. And if it is out of inexperience, the Lord heals the deceived one very quickly; however, if it is on account of pride, then the soul will be struggling for a very long time, until it has learnt humility and will then be healed by the Lord.

We fall into a deception, when we consider ourselves more prudent and experienced than the others – even our own spiritual father. This is what I myself had thought -in my inexperience- and this was the reason that I suffered. And I thank the Lord from my heart, because in this way, He humbled me and admonished me, and did not revoke His mercy from me. Now it occurs to me that without confessing to our spiritual father, it will not be possible to avoid deception, because it was to the spiritual father that God gave the gift of “binding and unbinding”.

If you sense light inside you or around you, do not believe in it unless you also have a deep solemnity within you for God and a love for your fellow man. However, do not be afraid; only humble yourself, and that light will disappear.

Should you see a certain vision or dream, do not trust it, for if it was from God, the Lord Himself will inform you about it. A soul that has not tasted of the Holy Spirit cannot discern where the vision comes from. The enemy will give the soul a “sweet sensation” combined with vainglory, and it is from this, that deception will have become evident.

The Fathers say that when a vision is a hostile one, the soul feels confusion or fear; but this will happen only to the humble soul that considers itself unworthy of a vision. The vainglorious person however, may not feel either fear or confusion, because he is desirous of visions and regards himself as worthy of them, which is why the enemy can easily deceive him.

Celestial things are recognized through the Holy Spirit and terrestrial things through one’s physical state. Whosoever attempts to know God through the physical mind is deceived, because God can only be known via the Holy Spirit.

If you see demons with your mind, then humble yourself and try not to look, and run as fast as you can to your spiritual Geron (Elder), to whom you have surrendered yourself. Tell him everything, and the Lord will then show His mercy on you and you will be rescued from that deception. But if you believe that you know more about spiritual matters than your spiritual father and you cease to tell him whatever is happening to you, then, because of this act of pride, inevitably, a certain trial will “befall” you, in order to restore your prudence.

Fight your enemies with humility.

When you see another mind struggling with your mind, then humble yourself and the struggle will cease.If you happen to see demons, do not be afraid, but humble yourself and the demons will disappear. But if fear does overcome you, you will not avoid suffering some harm. Be brave. Remember that the Lord can see you, if you have hinged your hopes on Him.

But, for the soul to acquire respite from the demons, it must humble itself and say: “I am worse than all the others; I am more wretched than every beast and every wild animal”.

Just as people enter a house and leave it, so do thoughts come from demons and they can leave, provided we do not hold on to them. If your thought says: “steal” and you obey, you are in this way giving the demon power over you. If your thought says: “eat as much as you want, until you are full”, and you do eat excessively, then again the demon will hold power over you. Thus, if the thought of every passion conquers you, you will end up a dwelling-place of demons. However, if you commence with the appropriate repentance, then the demons will begin to quake and be forced to leave.”

Hattip: Orthodox Outlet for Dogmatic Enquiries website

Related Article: Concerning Thoughts by St. Nicodemus of Mt. Athos

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What is the Human Nous?

Chapter 1 from Patristic Theology

by Father John Romanides

The chief concern of the Orthodox Church is the healing of the human soul. The Church has always considered the soul as the part of the human being that needs healing because She has seen from Hebrew tradition, from Christ Himself, and from the Apostles that in the region of the physical heart there functions something that the Fathers called the nous. In other words, the Fathers took the traditional term nous, which means both intellect (dianoia) and speech or reason (logos), and gave it a different meaning. They used nous to refer to this noetic energy that functions in the heart of every spiritually healthy person. We do not know when this change in meaning took place, because we know that some Fathers used the same word nous to refer to reason as well as to this noetic energy that descends and functions in the region of the heart.

So from this perspective, noetic activity is an activity essential to the soul. It functions in the brain as the reason; it simultaneously functions in the heart as the nous. In other words, the same organ, the nous, prays ceaselessly in the heart and simultaneously thinks about mathematical problems, for example, or anything else in the brain.

We should point out that there is a difference in terminology between St. Paul and the Fathers. What St. Paul calls the nous is the same as what the Fathers call dianoia. When the Apostle Paul says, I will pray with the spirit,[1] he means what the Fathers mean when they say, I will pray with the nous. And when he says, I will pray with the nous, he means I will pray with the intellect (dianoia). When the Fathers use the word nous, the Apostle Paul uses the word spirit. When he says I will pray with the nous, I will pray with the spirit or when he says I will chant with the nous, I will chant with the spirit, and when he says the Spirit of God bears witness to our spirit,[2] he uses the word spirit to mean what the Fathers refer to as the nous. And by the word nous, he means the intellect or reason. Continue Reading Here!

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Psychotherapy to Spiritual Therapy

Lecture presented on 7th European Conference of Pastoral Care and Counseling

From Psychotherapy to Spiritual Therapy: Orthodox Pastoral Counseling Center in Belgrade

Aleksandra Sajkov, psychotherapist
Aleksandar Lukić, theologian

The loss of spiritual and social values and the crisis in human relationships lasted almost 60 years. This period was marked by the rule of non-Christian ethics and morality in our country. Moreover, thousands of families have lost their homes and loved ones, while hundreds of thousands have become refugees. This is the consequence of the disintegration of the Former Yugoslavia, the wars that followed and, unfortunately, the current Kosovo tragedy.

This situation resulted in appearance of a large number of spiritual and psychological disorders. Records of the center indicate the evident increase of depression, fear, drug and alcohol abuse, marital problems, identity and relationship problems, low self-esteem, emotional deprivation and adaptation problems (especially present in the population of Kosovo refugees and displaced persons).

Feeling the need for professional help necessary in the process of overcoming the above-mentioned problems, the majority of our clients sought help in medical institutions which do not focus on the spiritual dimension of personality and are not in the position to deal with spiritual problems. As a result, their services are reduced to minimal conversation and increased use of drugs. This kind of treatment often does not suit the needs of the clients and they do not get any closer to the solution of their problems.

As an alternative to this phenomenon, emerged the need to establish a center specialising in pastoral psychology which is the union between the healing sources of faith, contemporary psychology and psychotherapy.

Orthodox Pastoral Counseling Center of the Belgrade – Karlovci Archdiocese was opened in Belgrade on 14th of April 1997 in the presence and with the blessing of His Eminence Serbian Patriarch Pavle and with the approval of the Holy Synod.

The center was founded with the aim of providing psychological help given by Orthodox Christian experts, as well as an introduction to the basics of the teachings of Christ for the sick, the weak, the discouraged and the spiritually impoverished. Collaborators of the center are highly educated and experienced experts in the fields of theology, psychiatry, sociology and psychology, who apply their wide knowledge in everyday work. Currently, 24 collaborators are employed in the center on a permanent basis.

The very fact that our center is the only one of this kind in Yugoslavia, namely, the only institution specializing in this specific branch of psychology and counseling, is surely one of the reasons for permanent increase in the number of clients using the services of the center. Our four year long experience tells us that the above-mentioned alternative would be a good way of solving existing problems. In the period from May 1997 to June 2001, 9705 individual/family counseling sessions were held in the center. The enclosed records show that the number of clients increases each month. The number of over 400 therapy/counseling sessions per month has already been reached.

The very idea of opening new similar centers involves thinking about staff, namely, specialists of different helping professions (psychologists, psychiatrists, social workers, theologians, defectologists…) who would work in these centers, adopting the postulates of pastoral counseling. In October 1999, the center founded “School for Orthodox Bases of Pastoral Counselling”. School participants are final-year students of theology, psychology, medicine and future social workers. The goal of the school is to integrate the Church into the development of secular society, introduce future professional helpers to Christian norms and values and make it possible for the members of different groups of professional helpers to get to know each other through joint work and theology and psychology–related activities. It becomes quite clear that this type of education cannot be limited to a certain period of time (one or two academic years). On the contrary, it is something that is intended to last in the future, or more precisely, as long as there is the need for such kind of help in solving different problems.

Naturally, the need for such kind of help is not limited to one region (the Belgrade-Karlovci Archdiocese), because the problems the center deals with are, more or less, present in all areas, both urban and rural. Users of the services offered by our center are not just from Belgrade. They come from other parts of Serbia, Montenegro and even from the Republic of Srpska. That’s why we came up with the idea that it would be very good to have similar counselling facilities in these regions as well. On 19 April 2001, the Montenegro – Archdiocese decided to establish Spiritual – Counseling Center “St. Basil of Ostrog” in Podgorica, which marked the next step in the process of widening the range of our activities. The new center will be founded on the same principles as its Belgrade counterpart.

In addition to its counselling and educational programs the center launched the project called “Mission”.

We were guided by the words of Apostle Paul: “And turned I to the Judean as a Judean to win them to my side: to those under the law as ruled by the law; to those outlawed turned I as an outlaw, although I am not to God outlawed, but am I in the law of Christ, to win to my side those who are out of law. To the weak turned I as a weak, to win them to my side: I was everything to everybody to save who I can”…(1.Kor.9.20-22).

Since the Center, from its onset started the activity of linking (psychology and theology, medicine, social work, pedagogy and church experience) it was only natural that the expansion of activity aspired to connect to some other fields of human knowledge, too.

There are various activities included, such as workshops named “Conversations about religion”. They came following last year’s generation of students, most of whom from other faculties (medicine, psychology, soc.work) who wanted to either gain elementary knowledge of religion, or learn more about it. Group consists of 40 – 50 participants, and the themes vary from basic religiogious issues and it’s application in every day’s life, to very complex theological questions. The relations between the Church and the State, applying Holy Fathers’ norms in everyday spiritual strangle – were the first subjects discussed. The very structure of these workshops usually is: directed discussion leading toward as much as possible concrete conclusion of a discussed issue. The goal is to be able to apply the acquired learning into day-to-day living faith, share it with the others and establish it as the foundation of personal and professional life. These dialogs take place once a week.

Public lectures were held in various cultural centers, scientific institutions and schools. Lectures were delivered by Serbian Orthodox Church dignitaries and eminent foreign and local experts in the field of pastoral psychology.

Members of our staff were invited to take part in TV and radio shows focusing on the problems that the Center and the School deal with.

We also established a web center which includes a complete Internet presentation, regularly updated with the latest news about the activities of the center and reading material on pastoral psychology. The most important part of this activity is establishing this type of communication with all the people interested in the services offered by the center.

COUNSELLING

Our concept of pastoral counseling is derived from Orthodox frame of reference, based on ontological theology and patristic anthropology. According to our opinion, pastoral counseling can’t be separated from spiritual guidance and Liturgical life.

Holistic attitude considers all three aspects of human being : body, soul and spirit.

Psychotherapy is aimed towards solving the problems of psychological and bodily nature. Moreover, it is often incapable to cope with spiritual dimensions of human being. Paradox is that psychology, in recent development, became the science without the subject : out of soul. We have developed experimental disciplines in psychology, coping with various aspects of behavior, cognitive processes, unconsciousness, but a whole soul and spirit are missing.

Therefore, the basic aim of our pastoral counseling is to move from psychotherapy to spiritual therapy which, on the other side, can’t be separated from the Liturgy as the center of our lives. In Orthodox ontological theology, Liturgy means community, and there is no community without The Holly Communion which is the center of our spiritual life. Confession, as the Holly Sacrament, is realized as the specific process of spiritual therapy, aimed to gain freedom from passions. According to our spiritual inheritance, dealing with passions means dealing and limiting the source of sins. The sin is just a symptom of underlying passion. So, there is no use of punishing the sinner: the bottom line is to guide him towards truly repentant. Spiritual father doesn` t forgive, he gives forgiveness.

When we are talking about spiritual guidance inseparable from Church, Church is realized in eschatological way, like the Body of Christ. All our activities, all our practice are the part of prolonged Liturgy. Everything leads to Liturgy, which is consider like constant and never ending process.

It’s not rare that our clients have resistance towards church, realized like religious organization. At the same time, they have no doubt in Church as the Body of Christ.

The task of psychotherapist in our Center is to help client solving the psychological problem in order to prepare him to the next level, which is always the level of spiritual guidance and incorporation in the living Liturgy.

By making priests part of our team, we provide spiritual guidance through Confession which leads to Communion.

The basic psychological assumptions of our approach are derived from the work of early Fathers. For example : Personality concept of Capadocian Fathers and the concept of Cross.

Therefore, the human being is realized as a Personality only in relation toward God and other human beings. It means that we always have to bare in mind two dimensions of the human Cross : vertical one – relation to God and horizontal one – relation to our neighbours. The bottom line of our pastoral counseling is that the most important therapeutic tool of psychotherapist is his personal style. Therapist acts more with what he really is, than what he says.

Neither all of our clients are believers, nor we force them to declare themselves in such a way. Therapist is not the rapist. Personal style, personality, real belief in resurrection and joy are more effective than anything else.

Source: Orthodox Pastoral Counseling Center in Belgrade

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Orthodoxy as Therapy

by Protopresbyter George Metallinos

If we wished to conventionally define Christianity, as Orthodoxy, we would say it is the experiencing of the presence of the Uncreated (=of God) throughout history, and the potential of creation (=mankind) becoming God “by Grace”.
Given the perpetual presence of God in Christ, in historical reality, Christianity offers mankind the possibility of theosis, just as Medical Science offers mankind the possibility of preserving or restoring his health through a specific therapeutic procedure and a specific way of life.

The writer is in a position to appreciate the coincidence between the medical and ecclesiastic poemantic sciences, because, as a diabetic and a Christian, he is aware that in both cases, he has to faithfully abide by the rules that have been set out, in order to attain both these two goals.

The unique and absolute goal of life in Christ is theosis, in other words, our union with God, so that man – through his participation in God’s uncreated energy – may become “by the Grace of God” that which God is by nature (=without beginning and without end). This is what “salvation” means, in Christianity. It is not the moral improvement of man, but a re-creation, a re-construction in Christ, of man and of society, through an existing and an existential relationship with Christ, Who is the incarnate manifestation of God in History. This is what the Apostle Paul’s words imply, in Corinthians II 5:17 : “If someone is in Christ, he is a new creation”. Whoever is united with Christ is a new creation.

That is why – Christianically – the incarnation of God-Logos – this redemptory “intrusion” of the Eternal and the Beyond-time God into Historical time – represents the commencement of a new world, of a (literally) “New Age”, which continues throughout the passing centuries, in the persons of authentic Christians: the Saints. The Church exists in this world, both as the “body of Christ” as well as “in Christ”, in order to offer salvation, through one’s embodiment in this regenerative procedure. This redemptory task of the Church is fulfilled by means of a specific therapeutic method, whereby throughout history, the Church essentially acts as a universal Infirmary. “Spiritual Infirmary” (spiritual hospital) is the characterization given to the Church by the blessed Chrysostom (†407).

Further along, we shall examine the answers given to the following questions:

What is the sickness that Christian Orthodoxy cures?

What is the therapeutic method it implements?

What is the identity of authentic Christianity, which radically separates it from all of its heretic deviations, and from every other form of religion?

1. The sickness of human nature is the fallen state of mankind, along with all of creation, which likewise suffers (“sighs and groans together” – Romans 8:22) together with mankind. This diagnosis applies to every single person (regardless whether they are Christian or not, or whether they believe or not), on account of the overall unity of mankind (ref. Acts 17:26). Christian Orthodoxy does not confine itself within the narrow boundaries of one religion – which cares only for its own followers – but, just like God, “wants all people to be saved and to arrive at the realization of the truth” (Timothy I, 2:4), since God is “the Saviour of all persons” (Timothy I, 4:10). Thus, the sickness that Christianity refers to pertains to all of mankind; Romans 5:12: “death has come upon all people, since all of them have sinned (=they have veered from their path towards theosis). Just as the fall (i.e. sickness) is a panhuman issue, so is salvation-therapy directly dependent on the inner functions of each person.

The natural (authentic) state of a person is (patristically) defined by the functioning inside him of three mnemonic systems; two of which are familiar and monitored by medical science, while the third is something handled by poemantic therapeutics. The first system is cellular memory (DNA), which determines everything inside a human organism. The second is the cerebral cellular memory, brain function, which regulates our association with our self and our environment. Both these systems are familiar to medical science, whose work it is to maintain their harmonious operation.

The experience of the Saints is familiar with one other mnemonic system: that of the heart, or ‘noetic’ memory, which functions inside the heart. In Orthodox tradition, the heart does not only have a natural operation, as a mere pump that circulates the blood. Furthermore, according to patristic teaching, neither the brain nor the central nervous system is the center of our self-awareness; again, it is the heart, because, beyond its natural function, it also has a supernatural function. Under certain circumstances, it becomes the place of our communion with God, or, His uncreated energy. This is of course perceived through the experience of the Saints, and not through any logical function or through an intellectual theologizing.

Saint Nicodemus of the Holy Mountain (†1809), in recapitulating the overall patristic tradition in his work “Hortative Manual”, calls the heart a natural and supernatural center, but also a paranormal center, whenever its supernatural faculty becomes idle on account of the heart being dominated by passions. The heart’s supernatural faculty is the ultimate prerequisite for perfection, for man’s fulfillment, in other words, his theosis, for a complete embodiment in the communion in Christ.

In its supernatural faculty, the heart becomes the space where the mind can be activated. In the Orthodox terminology codex, the mind (ΝΟΥΣ – appearing in the New Testament as ‘the spirit of man’ and ‘the eye of the soul’) is an energy of the soul, by means of which man can know God, and can reach the state of ‘seeing’ God. We must of course clarify that ‘knowledge’ of God does not imply knowledge of His incomprehensible and inapproachable divine essence. This distinction between ‘essence’ and ‘energy’ in God is the crucial difference between Orthodoxy and all other versions of Christianity. The energy of the mind inside the heart is called the ‘noetic faculty’ of the heart. We again stress that according to Orthodoxy, the Mind (ΝΟΥΣ) and Logic (ΛΟΓΙΚΗ) are not the same thing, because logic functions within the brain, whereas the mind functions within the heart.

The noetic faculty is manifested as the “incessant prayer” (ref. Thessalonians I, 5:17) of the Holy Spirit inside the heart (ref. Galatians 4:6, Romans 8:26, Thessalonians I 5:19) and is named by our Holy Fathers as “the memory of God”. When man has in his heart the “memory of God”, in other words, when he hears in his heart “the voice” (Corinthians I 14:2, Galatians 4:6, etc.), he can sense God “dwelling” inside him (Romans 8:11). Saint Basil the Great in his 2nd epistle says that the memory of God remains incessant when it is not interrupted by mundane cares, and the mind “departs” towards God; in other words, when it is in communion with God. But this does not mean that the faithful who has been activated by this divine energy withdraws from the needs of everyday life, by remaining motionless or in some kind of ecstasy; it means that his Mind is liberated from these cares, which are items that preoccupy only his Logic. To use an example that we can relate to: A scientist, who has re-acquired his noetic faculty, will use his logic to tackle his problems, while his mind inside his heart will preserve the memory of God incessantly. The person who preserves all three mnemonic systems is the Saint. To Orthodoxy, he is a healthy (normal) person. This is why Orthodoxy’s therapy is linked to man’s course towards holiness.

The non-function or the below-par function of man’s noetic faculty is the essence of his fall. The much-debated “ancestral sin” was precisely man’s mishandling –from that very early moment of his historical presence- of the preservation of God’s memory (=his communion with God) inside his heart. This is the morbid state that all of the ancestral descendants participate in; because it was no moral or personal sin, but a sickness of man’s nature (“Our nature has become ill, of this sin”, observes Saint Cyril of Alexandria – †444), which is transmitted from person to person, exactly like the sickness that a tree transmits to all the other trees that originate from it.

The inactivating of the noetic faculty or the memory of God, and confusing it with the function of the brain (which happens to all of us), subjugates man to stress and to the environment, and to the quest for bliss through individualism and an anti-social stance. While ill because of his fallen state, man uses God and his fellow man to secure his personal security and happiness. Personal use of God is found in “religion” (=the attempt to elicit strength from the divine), which can degenerate into a self-deification of man (“I became a self-idol” says Saint Andrew of Crete, in his ‘Major Canon’). The use of fellow-man -and subsequently creation in general- is achieved by exploiting them in every possible way. This, therefore, is the sickness that man seeks to cure, by becoming fully incorporated in the “spiritual hospital” of the Church.

2. The purpose of the Church’s presence in the world –as a communion in Christ- is man’s cure; the restoration of his heart-centred communion with God; in other words, of his noetic faculty. According to the professor fr. John Romanides, “the patristic tradition is neither a social philosophy, nor a system of morals, or a religious dogmatism; it is a therapeutic method. In this context, it is very similar to Medicine and especially Psychiatry. The noetic energy of the soul that prays mentally and incessantly inside the heart is a natural ‘instrument’, which everyone possesses and is in need of therapy. Neither philosophy, nor any of the known positive or social sciences can cure this ‘instrument’. This is why the incurable cases are not even aware of this instrument’s existence.”

The need for man to be cured is a panhuman issue, related firstly to the restoration of every person to his natural state of existence, through the reactivation of the third mnemonic faculty. However, it also extends to man’s social presence. In order for man to be in communion with his fellow man as a brother, his self-interest (which in the long run acts as self-love) must be transformed into selflessness ( ref. Corinthians I, 13:8 ) “love….does not ask for reciprocation..”). Selfless love exists: it is the love of the Triadic God (Romans 5:8, John I 4:7), which gives everything without seeking anything in exchange. That is why Christian Orthodoxy’s social ideal is not “common possessions”, but the “lack of possessions”, as a willed resignation from any sort of demand. Only then can justice be possible.

The therapeutic method that is offered by the Church is the spiritual life; the life in the Holy Spirit. Spiritual life is experienced as an exercise (Ascesis) and a participation in the Uncreated Grace, through the Sacraments. Ascesis is the violation of our self-ruled and inanimate through sin nature, which is coursing headlong into a spiritual or eternal death, i.e. the eternal separation from the Grace of God. Ascesis aspires to victory over our passions, with the intention of conquering the inner subservience to those pestiferous focal points of man and participating in Christ’s Cross and His Resurrection.

The Christian, who is practicing such restraint under the guidance of his Therapist-Spiritual Father, becomes receptive to Grace, which he receives through his participation in the sacramental life of the ecclesiastic corpus. There cannot be any un-exercising Christian, just as there cannot be a cured person who does not follow the therapeutic advice that the doctor prescribed for him.

3. The above lead us to certain constants, which verify the identity of Christian Orthodoxy:

(a) The Church –as the body of Christ- functions as a therapy Centre-hospital. Otherwise, it would not be a Church, but a “Religion”. The Clergy are initially selected by the cured, in order to function as therapists. The therapeutic function of the Church is preserved today, mostly in Monasteries which, having survived secularism, continue the Church of the Apostolic times.

(b) The scientists of ecclesiastic therapy are the already cured persons. Those who have not had the experience of therapy cannot be therapists. That is the essential difference between the poemantic therapeutic science and medical science. The scientists of ecclesiastic therapy (Fathers and Mothers) bring forth other Therapists, just as the Professors of Medicine bring forth their successors.

(c) The Church’s confining itself to a simple forgiveness of sins so that a place in paradise may be secured constitutes alienation and is tantamount to medical science forgiving the patient, so that he might be healed after death! The Church cannot send someone to Paradise or to Hell. Besides, Paradise and Hell are not places, they are ways of existence. By healing mankind, the Church prepares the person so that he might eternally look upon Christ in His uncreated light as a view of Paradise, and not as a view of Hell, or as “an all-consuming fire” (Hebrews 12:29). And this of course concerns every single person, because ALL people shall look eternally upon Christ, as “the Judge” of the whole world.

(d) The validity of science is verified by the achievement of its goals (i.e., in Medicine, it is the curing of the patient). It is the way that authentic scientific medicine is distinguished from charlatanry. The criterion of poemantic therapy by the Church is also the achievement of spiritual healing, by opening the way towards theosis. Therapy is not transferred to the afterlife; it takes place during man’s lifetime, here, in this world (hinc et nunc). This can be seen in the undeteriorated relics of the Saints that have overcome biological deterioration, such as the relics of the Eptanisos Saints: Spiridon, Gerasimos, Dionysios and Theodora Augusta. Undeteriorated relics are, in our tradition, the indisputable evidence of theosis, or in other words the fulfilment of the Church’s ascetic therapy.

I would like to ask the Medical scientists of our country to pay special attention to the issue of the non-deterioration of holy relics, given that they haven’t been scientifically interfered with, but, in them is manifest the energy of Divine Grace; because it has been observed that, at the moment when the cellular system should begin to disintegrate, it automatically ceases to, and instead of emanating any malodour of decay, the body emanates a distinctive fragrance. I limit this comment to the medical symptoms, and will not venture into the aspect of miraculous phenomena as evidence of theosis, because that aspect belongs to another sphere of discussion.

(e) Lastly, the divine texts of the Church (Holy Bible, Synodic and Patristic texts) do not constitute coding systems of any Christian ideology; they bear a therapeutic character and function in the same way that university dissertations function in medical science. The same applies to the liturgical texts, as for example the Benedictions. The simple reading of a Benediction (prayer), without the combined effort of the faithful in the therapeutic procedure of the Church, would be no different to the instance where a patient resorts to the doctor for his excruciating pains, and, instead of an immediate intervention by the doctor, he is limited to being placed on an operating table, and being read the chapter that pertains to his specific ailment.

This, in a nutshell, is Orthodoxy. It doesn’t matter whether one accepts it or not. However, with regard to scientists, I have tried -as a colleague in science myself- to scientifically respond to the question: “What is Orthodoxy”.

Any other version of Christianity constitutes a counterfeiting and a perversion of it, even if it aspires to presenting itself as something Orthodox.

Bibliographical Notes

* Fr. John S. Romanides, “Romans or neoroman Fathers of the Church”, Thessaloniki 1984.
* Fr. John S. Romanides, “Religion is a neurobiological ailment, and Orthodoxy is its cure”, from the volume “Orthodoxy, Hellenism… Holy Monastery of Koutloumousion Publications, Volume B,, 1996, pages 66-67.
* Fr. John S. Romanides, “Church Synods and Civilization”, from THEOLOGY, vol.63 (1992) pg.421-450 and in Greek vol.66 (1995) pg.646-680.
* Fr. Hierotheos Vlachos (presently Metropolitan of Nafpaktos), “Orthodox Psychotherapy”, Edessa 1986.
* Fr. Hierotheos Vlachos (presently Metropolitan of Nafpaktos), “Minor Introduction into Orthodox Spirituality”, Athens.
* Fr. Hierotheos Vlachos (presently Metropolitan of Nafpaktos), “Existential Psychology and Orthodox Psychotherapy”, Levadia 1995.

Also by the author, the following studies:
* Fr. G. Metallinos, “An Orthodox View of Society”, Athens 1986.
* Fr. G. Metallinos, “Theological witness of ecclesiastic worship”, Athens 1996. (N. B.: In these books one can find more bibliography)

Notes – Clarifications
1. The Uncreated = Something that has not been manufactured. This applies only to the Triadic God. The Created = Creation in general, with man at its apex. God is not a “universal” power, as designated by New Age terminology (“everything is one, everyone is God!”), because, as the Creator of all, He transcends the entire universe, given that in essence He is “Something” entirely different (Das ganz Andere). There is no analogous association between the created and the Uncreated. That is why the Uncreated makes Himself know, through His self-revelation.

2. A significant Christian text of the 2nd century, “The Poemen (Shepherd) of Hermas”, says that in order for us to become members of the Body of Christ, we must be “squared” stones (=suitable for building) and not rounded ones!

3. According to fr. John Romanides, to whom we essentially owe the return to the “Philokalian” (=therapeutic-ascetic) view of our Faith, and in fact at an academic level; “Religion” implies every kind of “associating” of the uncreated and the created, as is done in idolatry. The “religious” person projects his “predudices” (=thoughts, meanings) into the divine realm, thus “manufacturing” his own God (this can also occur in the non-Patristic facet of “Orthodoxy”). The aim is “atonement”, “placation” of the “divine” and finally, the “utilizing” of God to one’s own advantage (the magic formula: do ut des). In our tradition however, our God does not need to be “placated”, because “He first loved us” (John I’ 4:19) Our God acts as “Love” (John I, 4:16) and selfless love at that. He gives us everything, and never asks for anything in return from His creations. This is why selflessness is the essence of Christian love, which goes far beyond the notion of a transaction.

4. This is expressed by the familiar and oft-repeated liturgical chant: “Ourselves and each other, and our entire life, let us appose unto Christ our Lord”.

Proper incorporation is normally found in Monasteries, wherever they function in the orthodox tradition of course. That is why Monasteries (for example those of the Holy Mountain) continue to be the model “parishes” of this “world”.

Translation by A. N.

Source: Orthodox Outlet for Dogmatic Inquiries

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