Metropolitan Anthony of Sourozh
There are many passages in the Gospel in which Christ turning to a
person who is either sick in mind or in body asks a question, and
this question is always: Does thou wish to be made whole? And I
think, this phrase is important because it implies something which
is vaster, more complete than simply restoration of health: a return
to the condition that was the sick person’s before illness attacked
him. Because very often illness is the result of the way of life
which we lead, of our folly, it is the result of heredity, it is the
result of outer conditions and this is all within the compass of our
situation in a world which from a Christian point of view is a
fallen world, or if you prefer another term, a distorted world, a
world that has lost its harmony, its wholeness or has not attained
it. Whatever way you look at it our world is a broken one.
A thing that has been striking me quite a lot in the last years is
this: why does Christ ask a person, Do you want to be made whole?
Isn’t it obvious that anyone who is sane will say: Of course I do, -
with the impact, perhaps, on the word ‘of course’. Why are you
asking a silly question? Who wishes to be ill? And yet, I think, it
is a very important question because in terms of the Gospel to be
made whole means not simply getting rid of one’s physical illness
but of being reintegrated to a quality of life which one did not
possess before and which may be given us on condition. The condition
being that being made whole, being restored to health even
physically means that we must take responsibility for our bodily and
mental condition in a way in which we didn’t do it before. To be
healed physically is perhaps a small image of being restored to life
having come to the brink of death. The life which would have
continued within us without this healing act of God would have been
a life that gradually deteriorated more and more and would bring us
to dying, a gradual disintegration either of our mental condition or
of physical condition. And if we are given back a wholeness which we
had lost or perhaps which we never possessed before, it means that
the life which is ours now after healing is not simply for us to use
any way we chose, it is a gift, it is not ours in a way. We were
dead, we were dying, we are brought back to a plenitude of life and
this plenitude is not ours, it is a gift. So that in terms of the
Gospel, as far as I can see it, when Christ says: “Dost thou wish to
be made whole?”, He implies: “Supposing I do it, are you prepared to
lead a life of wholeness or do you want Me to make you whole in
order to go back to what destroyed this wholeness, destroyed you in
body and soul?” And this is a question which stands before each
patient, although most patients, practically all patients have no
idea of the question, and it stands certainly in front of each of us
when we want to be healed beyond our physical illness.
There is another aspect of wholeness restored in other situations in
the Gospel when Christ says to someone: “Go and sin no more”. I
think we must realise that when we speak of healing in Christian
terms we do not speak simply of a power possessed by God or by His
saints or by people who being neither saints nor God are possessed
of a natural gift to restore health for us to continue to live in
the way in which we lived before, to remain the same unchanged. God
does not heal us in order that we should go back to our sinful
condition. He offers us newness of life, not the old life which we
have already lost. And the new life which is offered us is no longer
ours in a way, it is His, it’s a gift of His, a present. It was Mine
to give, take it. And thinking in spiritual terms, it is true.
Because what is sin? We define sin all the time as moral
infringement but it is much more than this: it is the very thing of
which I was speaking, it is the lack of wholeness. When we think of
ourselves: I am divided - mind against heart, heart against will,
body against all the rest. We are all not only schizophrenic, but
schizo-everything, we are just like a broken mirror and so that is
the condition of sin: it is not so much that the mirror doesn’t
reflect well, it is the fact that it is broken that is the problem.
You can, of course, try to take a small piece of it and see what you
can see, but it is still a broken mirror. And this brokenness of
ours within corresponds to a brokenness in our relationships with
other people. We are afraid of them, we are envious of them, we are
greedy, what not. So it creates a whole relational sinfulness and
indeed it applies supremely to God because it all results from our
having lost our harmony with God. The saints are people who are in
harmony with Him, nothing more, nothing less, simply that. And as
the result of being in harmony with God, then they can be in harmony
within themselves and with other people.
And then I want suggest something which you may find difficult to
take: then in a way whether one is healed physically or not becomes
a secondary thing, not to our relatives, not to our friends but to
the person concerned. What matters is the wholeness restored and
once the wholeness is restored if together with it goes a physical
healing - good, if it doesn’t, it may be as good. |