Introduction
Metropolitan Anthony
In the following article and interview we
meet a living example of purity in spiritual authority.
Metropolitan Anthony of Sourozh is the head of the Russian
Orthodox Church in Great Britain, a church that sees itself as
proceeding in an unbroken lineage from the earliest days of
Christianity. Having split from the Western church in 1054,
Eastern Orthodoxy today has over 170 million followers and, with
Russia's new openness to religion, is growing in size and
influence. For many years, Metropolitan Anthony's sermons have
been broadcast by BBC radio and television, and he is well known
in Europe and Russia as "the voice and face of Orthodoxy."
Central to Orthodox Christianity is the hesychast
tradition, the esoteric practice of silent contemplation under
the direction of a staretz, or spiritual father. This
tradition is said to go back to the early saints and Christian
contemplatives known as the Desert Fathers. Metropolitan Anthony
is himself a contemplative as well as a spiritual father to many.
Through his books and talks, he has brought prayer and
spirituality to life for innumerable others. While fulfilling
the responsibilities of a patriarch in the Church organization,
Metropolitan Anthony sees union with the Divine and manifesting
this union in the world as his foremost task. His humility and
single-minded seriousness of purpose shine through in this
portrait of a rare and extraordinary human being.
It's Sunday morning. As I approach the
Russian Orthodox Church, which looks small and unimposing amid
the stately Georgian architecture of affluent Knightsbridge in
Central London, I am wondering what it will be like to meet
Metropolitan Anthony of Sourozh, the head of the Russian
Orthodox Church in Great Britain and a man regarded by many as
nothing less than a modern-day saint. In a time when organized
religion seems to have fallen into disrepute and spiritual
authorities in general are regarded with suspicion and mistrust,
what is it that attracts this man's parishioners to Christian
Orthodoxy, and why do they and so many others hold him in such
high esteem? As I pause before the pale stone front of his
church, it excites me to realize that I am about to find out.
After entering through the heavy wooden door, it takes my eyes a
moment to adjust to the dim light within. But then what strikes
me is just how many people are here for today's
service—hundreds, and they're all standing. I'm surprised to see
that there are hardly any chairs, though I find out later that
this is the norm for services in the Orthodox Church. The
atmosphere is rich with the smell of incense and the beautiful
voices of an unaccompanied choir. The walls and pillars are
covered with golden icons depicting the Orthodox tradition's
pantheon of saints. Candlelight shimmers in the darkness,
reflected by the gold of the icons. A feeling of devotion is
palpable as people pray, kneeling periodically on the bare
wooden floor, or deep in contemplation, offer a candle and kiss
the icons unselfconsciously. Partly in Russian and partly in
English, the service lasts for a good two and a half hours, by
the end of which I can hardly stand. But the people around me
look as attentive as they did at the start.
The Orthodox Church is an Eastern branch of Christianity which
has developed in near-total isolation from the Roman Catholic
and Protestant churches of the West. Prayer has always been
paramount in its tradition as a way of communion with God, and
the extraordinary lives of its many saints through the centuries
are testimony to its efficacy. In our time the Orthodox Church
is increasingly attractive to many Western Christians who feel
that it offers a depth of spiritual life not available to them
in their own traditions. I've been told that recently an
Anglican priest together with his entire congregation converted
to Orthodoxy in this very church. The priest said during the
ceremony that for him it was a homecoming.
Suddenly the congregation crowds expectantly to the front and an
elderly archbishop with a gray beard and an ornate robe and
mitre begins speaking in English. I know at once that this must
be Metropolitan Anthony. As he leans on his staff, eyes closed
and seemingly in meditation, his carefully chosen words emerge
with a natural warmth and authority. His sermon is short, but
his words command attention and have undeniable power and
authenticity:
"People usually say that a heretic is someone who holds false
and wrong views, but also I say a heretic is someone who doesn't
live what they preach. So let us examine ourselves. Why is it
that people who meet us never notice that we are limbs of the
risen Christ, temples of the Holy Spirit? Why? Each of us has
got to give his own reply to this question. Let us, each of us,
examine ourselves and be ready to answer before our own
conscience, and do what is necessary to change our lives in such
a way that people meeting us may look at us and say: 'Such
people we have never seen. There is something about them that we
have never seen in anyone. What is it?' And we could answer: 'It
is the life of Christ in us. We are His limbs. This is the life
of the spirit in us. We are His temple.' "
Suddenly the service is over and the congregation begins
to disperse. When the Metropolitan reappears after a few
minutes, the robe and mitre are gone, replaced by a plain brown
monk's habit and a well-worn leather belt. People waylay him and
ask with moving devotion for a quick word or a blessing for
their babies. As he strides purposefully towards me, I realize
how extraordinarily vigorous and solid he is for a man over
eighty years old. He takes both my hands together in his and
readily agrees to my request for an interview. Then he's gone,
disappearing out a side door.
Although we've hardly spoken, I feel that I've just met with a
fellow human being rather than with the representative of a
powerful institution. Why this is so becomes clearer to me
during another visit to the church to listen to the Metropolitan
speak at the ordination of a new deacon:
"Let us therefore pray with him and surround him with care, with
compassion, because we have sent him like a lamb among the
wolves. The wolves are all the temptations that may come with
new force to everyone who devotes his life to the service of
God. It is also those people to whom he will be sent, of whom
some will receive his words with gratitude and some will reject
them with anger, because the message he is to bring is a message
of total transparency, total surrender to God, and also of a
heroic following of Him who has said to us: 'I have given you an
example to follow.' "Listening to this, I have the feeling that
Metropolitan Anthony is speaking as much about himself as anyone
else.
Returning a few weeks later at the time we've arranged for our
interview, I'm surprised that it is the archbishop himself who
heaves open the door to greet me. Seeing him again I realize
that he is shorter than I had thought, his bearing and presence
having given the impression of a man of larger physical stature.
I follow him upstairs to the gallery, where we have to climb
through all manner of boxes and old clothes—stored here for
rummage sales—in order to get to the small space where he keeps
a makeshift desk. Since the gallery is tiered and narrow, the
seat he offers me is on a higher level than his own, so that I
find myself looking down at the head of the Russian Orthodox
Church in Great Britain and feeling slightly embarrassed by this
reversal of protocol. He seems to have no secretary or office
and appears indifferent to such material concerns. I notice that
his monk's habit is held together by a safety pin.
The Metropolitan is very welcoming, and although his gaze is
steady and penetrating, his eyes often flicker with humor. I
find him down to earth, completely natural and quick to laugh,
and I sense in him a fearlessness that must come from having
gone through the fire himself. Because he is so self-effacing,
tending to downplay his knowledge and spiritual attainment, it
is sometimes difficult to draw him out about his own inner life.
He seems to prefer sharing stories and anecdotes reminiscent of
the teaching stories of the Desert Fathers, the early Christian
ascetics of the Egyptian desert among whom the Orthodox
tradition originated. He relates with amusement that the posters
announcing a seminar he once gave at Oxford made it clear that
believers were not invited, because it is his experience that
believers think they have all the answers and tend not to be
open! Having read some of his books and listened to some of his
BBC radio and television broadcasts, I know his talks and
writings to be an extraordinary and universal testament to the
fruits of the spiritual life. But he smiles with a certain
relish as he confesses that he never went to theological
college.
The son of a Russian diplomat, Metropolitan Anthony of Sourozh
was born in 1914 and spent his early years in Russia and Persia.
Because of the revolution, his family emigrated to France, where
he eventually became a medical doctor in Paris. He recalls that
his father was a powerful spiritual influence on him as he was
growing up. Once, when he returned home late from a holiday, his
father told him that he had been worried about him. "Did you
think I'd had an accident?" he asked. But that wasn't what his
father was concerned about. "That would have meant nothing," his
father answered, "even if you had been killed. I thought you had
lost your integrity." This incident made a profound impression
on him, and has stayed with him all his life.
During the Second World War, he served in the French Resistance
as well as practicing medicine. Many of his anecdotes about the
conditions which really test an individual's devotion to truth
and readiness for self-sacrifice are drawn from his experiences
during the war. He took monastic vows secretly in 1943 and was
ordained as a priest in 1948. Soon afterward he moved in order
to serve his church in England, where he has lived ever since.
He became an archbishop in 1962, and Metropolitan (which means
bishop of a chief city, or metropolis) in 1966.
By the Metropolitan's own account, he was "aggressively
anti-church" during his teenage years in Paris, and did not
believe in God. At a certain point, while at boarding school, it
occurred to him that life would be unbearable if it had no
meaning. He allotted himself one year in which to discover
whether life did have any meaning. He decided that if at the end
of that year he had found none, he would kill himself. Months
went by and no meaning appeared. Then one day he was persuaded
to attend a talk by a priest who had been invited to address a
Russian youth group to which he belonged. He sat through the
lecture reluctantly, finding himself disturbed and repelled by
the picture of Christianity which the priest presented.
Returning home, he read through one of the Gospels to see if it
would confirm the negative impression the lecture had given him.
As he read he suddenly became aware of a mysterious and
overwhelming presence in the room. To his shock and surprise he
knew without any doubt that this was Christ. This direct
experience was, he says, the turning point of his life, and gave
him a certainty which has never left him
Man's aim, the end and vocation set before
him, is that through and beyond his own union with God, he
should make this transcendent yet ever-present God (who enfolds
and penetrates all, in whom we live and move and have our being,
but who remains unknown to the world, unknowable indeed from
without) interior and immanent in man and through man in the
world; united with his creature indissolubly, though without
confusion, distinct yet not alien, still himself, still
personal, still God—yet closer to the soul than breathing
itself. . . .
Thus, as he embarks on his course, the Christian must make his
peace with God, with his own conscience, with men and things;
relinquish all care about himself, firmly purpose to forget
himself, not to know himself, to kill in himself all greed, even
for spiritual things, in order to know nothing but God alone. .
. .
Henceforward the worshipper must free himself from the bondage
of the world by unconditional obedience—joyful, total, humble,
and immediate; he must in all simplicity seek God, without
hiding any of his wretchedness, without founding any hope on
himself, in this active self-abandonment to God which is the
spirit of watchfulness in humility, in veneration, with a
sincere will to be converted, ready to die rather than give up
the search.
Interview
WIE: What is the importance of a spiritual father or
master in guiding a sincere person who wants to go further in
their spiritual life, who wants to be serious about God?
Metropolitan Anthony: As in every walk of life, before
you can walk independently you must be taught how to walk and in
what direction. If you have someone who is more experienced than
you are, knows perhaps more or better, it's natural that you
should learn to listen. And the point of obedience, which we
always think of in terms of being like a little dog who is given
commands and obeys them—it isn't that at all. Obedience is a
word that means listening. If you learn to listen to
someone else, not only to the words he speaks but to the mood
and meaning he tries to convey, you become freer of your
self-centeredness, of your narrowness, and you become capable of
listening not only to this man but to every person, and to the
totality of life, and to God. Because unless you learn to listen
to one person you cannot learn to listen. But on the other hand,
it is not everyone who knows a little and can teach a great deal.
If you find a great spiritual guide you are lucky, but they
don't grow like grass.
WIE: In the modern world there have been many people
who've assumed the role of mentor or teacher and abused their
power, so that people have become suspicious of genuine
spiritual authority.
MA: One must learn at the same time to listen with
openness, and never to renounce one's right to say, "I cannot
follow beyond this point." Because otherwise you will obey the
guidance of people who have no basis for guidance, who have no
reason to guide you. It doesn't mean you have a right to judge
everyone, to say, "I know better." But it means that you must be
very sure that this person knows what the answer is to your
question, to the question you are asking.
WIE: I read your beautiful introduction to The Way
of a Pilgrim, the famous classic of Russian Orthodox
spirituality. You wrote there about the importance of a
relationship with a master who is well qualified to guide one on
the way.
MA: Yes, but the master doesn't always tell you, "You do
this and you do that and you will arrive at such and such a
point." At times he's an example to you, at times there is
something in him that makes you follow. I remember how I found
my spiritual father. I came to a church late for the service and
I saw a man coming out. There was in him such serenity, such
centeredness and light that I came up to him and said, "I don't
know who you are, but would you be my spiritual guide?" And
afterwards he hardly ever gave me guidance, but I'm sure he
prayed for me, and I found that I was like a little skiff tied
by a long rope to a great boat. He was moving in that direction
and I was moving behind him, but there was always this rope
between us. I saw him once or twice a year, and whenever we met
I discovered I had come to a point where he was. Not in the same
degree, but like a little circle and a big circle: both are a
circle, but there is a difference of size, of scale. Before he
died he sent a note to me, "I know now what the mystery of
contemplative silence is, I can now die." And he was dead within
three days.
WIE: He was obviously an important influence on you.
MA: Yes, but he must be ashamed of me now because I have
not born fruit of what he was. But he is really an image for me.
WIE: Often people don't like the idea of obedience to
authority, but you are talking about being inspired by and
following the example of another.
MA: If only people thought less in terms of drill and
doing what they are told, but thought instead, "If I want to
learn to play the piano, I must ask someone to direct every
finger of mine." The same is true about everything we want to
learn. You cannot learn the piano by simply banging and hoping
it will come out right.
WIE: For the Orthodox Christian and the Orthodox
Christian path, what is the ideal goal or result for a human
being?
MA: I think I would answer in a way that may sound very
stupid: to become a real human being. Because habitually we are
not real human beings, we are human animals. We develop our
intellect, we have our emotions, we have a wavering will. This
is not real harmony. This is not wholeness. The perfect
wholeness to us is the person of the Lord Jesus Christ. The aim
of the Christian life is to become disciples, people who learn
from him, not only obedient in the sense of being well drilled
but obedient in the sense of being able to listen deeply, to
understand his thought, his heart, and to grow into the full
measure of our humanity, which is His humanity.
WIE: What would it mean to grow into the full measure
of one's humanity, the full measure of Christ's humanity?
MA: I think the ideal would be to love one's neighbor
with all one's being—if necessary at the cost of one's life—and
to know and love God with all of one's being, because it is His
life and His love that finds perfect expression in us when we
are sufficiently open.
Doing the will of God is a discipline in the
best sense of the word. It is also a test of our loyalty, of our
fidelity to Christ. It is by doing in every detail, at every
moment, to the utmost of our power, as perfectly as we can, with
the greatest moral integrity, using our intelligence, our
imagination, our will, our skill, our experience, that we can
gradually learn to be strictly, earnestly obedient to the Lord
God.
Unless we do this our discipleship is an illusion and
all our life of discipline, when it is a set of self-imposed
rules in which we delight, which makes us proud and
self-satisfied, leaves us nowhere, because the essential
momentum of our discipleship is the ability to reject our self,
to allow the Lord Christ to be our mind, our will and our heart.
Unless we renounce ourselves and accept his life in place of our
life, unless we aim at what St. Paul defines as "it is no longer
I but Christ who lives in me," we shall never be either
disciplined or disciples.
Metropolitan Anthony
from Living Prayer
Reprinted with permission from
EnlightenNext magazine, Issue 9, Spring–Summer 1996.
© 1996 EnlightenNext, Inc. All rights reserved.
www.enlightennext.org
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