On
3 February 1983, in the Lavra of St. Sergius of Radonezh at Zagorsk, seat
of the Moscow Theological Academy, Metropolitan Anthony was given the
degree of Doctor of Divinity honoris causa. Below we print the text of the
address which he delivered that day in response to the conferment. The
doctorate was awarded for Metropolitan Anthony 's outstanding contribution
to the witness of Orthodoxy in his preaching, his pastoral work and
theological thought.
Many
years ago the Theological Faculty of the University of Edinburgh granted a
Doctorate of Divinity honoris causa to one of the most revered
Bishops of the Russian Church, Metropolitan Evlogy (Georgievski); in his
reply he used words which I wish to repeat in my own name: 'You are
granting me this doctorate honoris causa, I receive it amoris
causa - as an honour and with a deep joy, as it expresses the love
which unites all the members of the Russian Church, which makes us one,
who live abroad, with our Mother Church on Russian soil. I will not hide
from you that to receive this degree is a great joy for me, not that it
will give me a right to boast of it, as I know too well that I am no
scholar, not having been theologically trained; but this diploma will
testify before the Churches of the West that my word is an Orthodox word,
not a personal view but the voice of the whole Church. About ten years ago
the Presbyterian Theological Faculty of the University of Aberdeen granted
me a similar Doctorate of Divinity 'for the preaching of the Word of God
and the renewal of the spiritual life in Great Britain', and I rejoice
that I can say now that the Russian Church recognises my word as a word of
truth, of the Church's truth. I ask you to convey my deep gratitude to His
Holiness the Patriarch, and to the members of the Learned Commission and
to all those whom God has inspired to surround me with such love, and to
bestow upon me such trust. From my very early years, from the moment when
as a boy of fourteen I read the Gospel, I felt that there could be no
other task in life but to share with others that joy which can transfigure
life and which disclosed itself to me in the knowledge of God and of
Christ. And then, still a youth, I started speaking of Christ, 'in time
and out of time', at school, in the underground, in children's camps; of
Christ as he had revealed himself to me: as Life, as Joy, as Meaning, as
something so new that it made all things new; and if it were not out of
place to apply to oneself words of Holy Scripture, I could say together
with the Apostle Paul, 'Woe unto me if I do not preach' (1 Cor. 9.16).
Woe! because not to share such a miracle would be a crime before God who
had worked this miracle and a crime before men who throughout the world
are athirst, ATHIRST for a living word about God, about man, about life:
not about the life which we experience day by day, which is so dull at
times and at times so frightening, and again at times so tender, not the
life of the earth but a life of exulting plenitude, about Life Eternal
gushing like a torrent in our souls, in our hearts, enlightening our
minds, making us not only heralds but witnesses of the Kingdom of God
already come with power, deeply penetrating our soul, pervading our life.
And yet who of us, shepherds or students who prepare themselves to be
priests, can forget the words of Christ: 'By thy words thou shalt be
justified, and by thy words thou shalt be condemned' (Mt. 12.37). When by
the authority of the Metropolitan of Lithuania and Vilno, Eleferi - being
still a layman - I began to preach, I asked myself this question: How
could I speak of the things I had never done myself, about a holiness
which I had not experienced, which I could only contemplate with
reverence, awe and terror - how could I preach what I did not practise?
But later, seeing around me the terrible hunger of spirit, soul and
intellect, I remembered the words of St. John of the Ladder that there are
men who will preach the word of God although they are unworthy of their
own preaching, but who would be vindicated at the Last Judgement by those
who were renewed through their word, who became a new creation and shall
say: 'Lord, had he not preached I would never have known thy lifegiving
Truth'. At the same time, whenever we preach, we must confront the
judgement of our conscience which accuses us, our sober, severe,
implacable conscience, and before Christ our All-Merciful Saviour, who
commits to us his divine Word, which - alas! alas! we carry in earthen
vessels - we must ask ourselves what does it mean to be a Christian? On
the one hand the answer is simple: all the Gospel tells us how to live,
how to think and how to feel in order to be a Christian; but the same
Gospel and the Fathers of the Church tell us that it is not enough to do,
but that we must become another kind of person, a person for whom the
commandments are no longer orders given by God but the elan of our own
life: we must learn to become that which the Gospel reveals to us. And yet
this is not what I want to speak about today. Everyone of us must read the
Gospel deeply, discover in it those commandments, that call of God, that
appeal of God addressed to each of us and to which each can respond with
all his life, with his mind, his heart, all his soul, all his strength,
all his frailty; must find those words which are not addressed to all and
sundry but to him personally, those words which make his heart burn within
him, cast a ray of light into his mind, renew his will, through which the
power of God floods us. And we must also look attentively at that new
dimension which the Gospel, our fellowship with Christ, his love for us,
the love by which we answer his, must create, the new vision of God, of
man, of the cosmos, of the whole created world. We must look at life and
perceive it as God does. I would take as an example the Apostle Paul. You
all remember his daring words: 'Be followers of me as I am of Christ' (1
Cor. 4.16). For a long time I could not understand what it could mean, how
he could possibly say to us: 'Follow my example,' be in my image as I
claim to be an image of Christ... And suddenly it became clear to me that
this is not what he meant to say, but that he was reminding us of what had
happened to him. You know of his life as a Jew, how he persecuted Christ,
how he hunted down his disciples, how he put all the power of his mighty,
passionate soul into the destruction of all that he, whom he considered a
false prophet, had done; and how on the way to Damascus he found himself
face to face with Christ, whom he had known only as a crucified criminal,
and who now revealed himself to him as his Risen Saviour, as God come in
the flesh to save the world. At that moment all his life was utterly
changed. He did not even go to the Apostles who had preceded him; that new
Life that had opened itself up as a direct gift of God inspired him to
pour it out, to share it with others, and this at a very high cost to
himself (2 Cor. 4.7-12). You remember how Paul describes his life in his
epistles (2 Cor.11.23-29). He truly could say: 'I bear in my body the
wounds of the Lord Jesus Christ' (Gal. 6.17), 'I rejoice in my sufferings
for you and in my flesh I complete what is lacking in Christ's afflictions
for the sake of the Church' (Col. 1.24). And by doing this he did what we
all must emulate: be like him in his total conversion, which from being a
persecutor made him into a disciple, and which inspired him to respond to
the call of Christ addressed to James and John, with his whole life and
not just an assent of the lips. 'Can ye drink of the cup that I drink of?
and be baptised with the baptism that I am baptised with?' (Mark 10.38),
i.e. be merged into the ordeal which will be mine - the night on the Mount
of Olives, the events of Passion Week, the crucifixion, the dereliction of
the cross, the descent into hell.... This is what Paul calls us to when he
says, 'Be followers of me as I am of Christ': learn from me that heroic
conversion, that inspired renewal of life which makes us into new beings,
citizens of Heaven sent into the world, witnesses of Christ. And Christ
calls all of us, each of us, when he says 'Follow me'. While Christ was on
earth this call was simple - difficult, indeed, oh! how difficult!
(remember the rich young man!) - but the call was clear; leave behind all
your cares, turn away from all that occupies you and come together with me
on the roads of the Holy Land.... But what does this call mean in our
life? The very same thing: tear yourself away, turn away from everything
that makes you a bondsman of corruption, a prisoner of the earth, that
does not allow you to be free and to follow in my footsteps; first into
those depths of your own life, of your spirit, of your heart, of your mind
where alone you can find Christ the Saviour, our Living God, that Kingdom
of God which is within us; and then, having found this Kingdom, partaking
of its Life, come out on to the heroic path of the Apostles; and finally,
carrying in your flesh the dying of the Lord Jesus Christ (2 Cor. 4.10),
his total estrangement from everything that was and remains the cause of
sin, of death, of falling away from God, of our turning away from our
neighbour, grow into that full measure that will make you into an ikon,
the likeness, the word, the very presence of Christ our Saviour. Paul says
in his Epistle to the Philippians (1.21): 'To me to live is Christ'. How
often we ask ourselves what can that mean? Yet we know when we love
someone, when we are possessed by some passion, when something is so
precious to us that we are prepared to give up everything for it, that
this treasure is our life. This treasure of ours may be knowledge,
theology, our family, it may be our pride, anything indeed that holds us
in its power: it is with this irresistible force that we must be held by
Christ. He must become for us, be for us - during our whole life, at every
moment, to the measure of all the inspiration, the faith and the strength
which we possess - all the meaning of our life, in the same way as the
beloved one becomes all the meaning of the life of him who loves her, in
the same way in which a secular man can give his life, indeed his death,
for an ideal, for a task, for a cause to which he devoted himself. All
that is of Christ must be ours; and everything that bears false witness
that he lived and died in vain must become for us not only alien but
horrifying. And then shall Christ be our life. But how to achieve this? Is
it really possible? What gigantic power must we possess to accomplish such
a task? We must here remember again the Apostle Paul who tells us that he
prayed for strength and that Christ answered him: 'My grace is sufficient
for thee; for my strength is made perfect in weakness' (2 Cor. 12.9).
Human efforts will never achieve our Christian vocation: who can by his
own strength become a living limb, a particle of the body of Christ, his
continued incarnate presence on earth? Who can by his own efforts so open
up himself as to become the unsullied temple of the Holy Spirit? Who can
by his own endeavour become partaker of the Divine Nature? Who can by his
own exertions become the Son of God in the way in which Christ is the Son
of God? And yet St. Irenaeus of Lyon tells us that the glory of God, his
very splendour, is man when he reaches his fullness and perfection, and
that when we become one with Christ by the power of the Holy Spirit we
become, together with the Only-Begotten Son of God, the Son of God. No
merely human effort, no merely human struggle can accomplish this; and yet
grace can: 'With man this is impossible; but with God all things are
possible' (Mt. 19.26). Truly the power of God manifests itself perfectly
in weakness, but not in that weakness which continuously prevents us from
being Christ's own people; timidity, cowardice, and sloth, inertia,
sinfulness, the way we are attracted to things earthly and turn away from
heavenly things; - but rather in another weakness, which is suppleness,
transparency, the kind of frailty into which God can pour his strength as
the wind fills a sail that will bring the ship to harbour. We must learn
that weakness which is perfect flexibility in the hand of God, perfect
transparency, because then the power of God achieves its purpose despite
our weakness, in spite of the fact that on another plane we who preach the
Word of God are sinners also, and that we need salvation as much, indeed
perhaps more, than those, to whom we proclaim Life and Salvation. Yet in
the quotation which I made at the outset Paul says that 'for me to live is
Christ, and to die is gain' (Phil. 1.21). What is our attitude, not to
death in general, but to our own death? When I was a teenager my father
said to me: 'Learn to live in such a way that you can wait for your death
as a young man waits for the coming of his beloved one, his bride'. This
is the way Paul waited for his death, because, as he says, 'While we are
in the flesh we are separated from Christ'. However deep our experience of
God through prayer, however transfiguring the action of the sacraments, we
remain separated from Christ; between him and us there is a veil; we see
things through a darkened glass. And how we long to break through this
glass, to tear apart this veil as the veil of the Old Testament temple was
torn asunder and find ourselves beyond this veil; to see God, to know God
as he knows us, according to the promise given us through the Apostle (1
Cor. 13.12)! When we ask ourselves if we are Christ's own, this question
applies to all our life: what are we prepared to live for, day in and day
out, hour after hour, and what is there for which we are prepared to lay
down our lives? And again to lay them down day after day, hour after hour,
renouncing ourselves, taking up our cross and following Christ every step
of the road, not only in glory but on the way to the Cross. What is our
attitude to death, to our own death? Are we athirst for this encounter? Do
we see in death nothing but the end of our earthly life, or a door that
will be thrown open and admit us to the fullness of life? Paul said that
according to him to die was not to divest himself of temporary life but to
clothe himself with Eternity. Is this our faith, do we proclaim Eternity
with this kind of conviction? But Paul adds one more feature which I will
expound in my own words. Having spoken of death he adds: 'And yet it is
more expedient for you that I should live' - and he accepts to live on
(Phil. l. 22-24). Measure what that means: it means that all life was for
him an ascent to the Cross on earth; that for him death was the moment
which would open to him the gate into the blessedness of sharing the life
of the Risen Christ; and yet he is prepared to renounce even this
blessedness to bring to others the life-giving, transfiguring and saving
word of God: does he not say 'I could wish that myself were cursed and cut
off from Christ for the sake of my brother?' This is the third criterion
which I wanted to set before you, and which is before me always and
compels me to say: 'Lord, forgive; I have not yet begun to be a Christian!
Grant me to grow - of course not to the measure of Paul - in such a way
that you should be my Love, that my dream should be to meet you, to be
united to you, and that I should be ready for any sacrifice in order to
enthrone you in the hearts, the minds, the destinies and the lives of all
those for whom you lived and died'. AMEN. Sourozh. 1983. N.12. P. 1-7 |