THE ASCETIC IDEAL AND THE NEW TESTAMENT
Reflections on the Critique of
the Theology of the Reformation
© F. George Florovsky
THE SIGNIFICANCE OF THE DESERT
When our Lord was about
to begin his ministry, he went into the desert. Our Lord had options
but he selected—or rather, "was lead by the Spirit," into the desert. It
is obviously not a meaningless action, not a selection of type of place
without significance. And there—in the desert—our Lord engages in spiritual
combat, for he "fasted forty days and forty nights." The Gospel of St.
Mark adds that our Lord "was with the wild beasts." Our Lord,
the God-Man, was truly God and truly man. Exclusive of our Lord’s redemptive
work, unique to our Lord alone, he calls us to follow him. "Following"
our Lord is not exclusionary; it is not selecting certain psychologically
pleasing aspects of our Lord’s life and teachings to follow. Rather it
is all-embracing. We are to follow our Lord in every way possible. "To
go into the desert" is "to follow" our Lord. It is interesting that our
Lord returns to the desert after the death of St. John the Baptist. There
is an obvious reason for this. "And hearing [of John the Baptist’s death]
Jesus departed from there in a ship to a desert place privately"
When St. Antony goes to the desert, he is "following" the example of our
Lord—indeed, he is "following" our Lord. This in no way diminishes the
unique, salvific work of our Lord, this in no way makes of our Lord God,
the God-Man, a mere example. But in addition to his redemptive work, which
could be accomplished only by our Lord, our Lord taught and set examples.
And by "following" our Lord into the desert, St. Antony was entering a
terrain already targeted and stamped by our Lord as a specific place for
spiritual warfare. There is both specificity and "type" in the "desert."
In those geographical regions where there a no deserts, there are places
which are similar to or approach that type of place symbolized by the "desert."
It is that type of place which allows the human heart solace, isolation.
It is the type of place which puts the human heart in a state of aloneness,
a state in which to meditate, to pray, to fast, to reflect upon one’s inner
existence and one’s relationship to ultimate reality—God. And more. It
is a place where spiritual reality is intensified, a place where spiritual
life can intensify and simultaneously where the opposing forces to spiritual
life can become more dominant. It is the terrain of a battlefield but a
spiritual one. And it is our Lord, not St. Antony, who as set precedent.
Our Lord says that "as for what is sown among thorns, this is he who hears
the word, but the cares of the world and the deceit of riches choke(s)
the word, and it becomes unfruitful." The desert, or a place similar, precisely
cuts off the cares or anxieties of the world and the deception, the deceit
of earthly riches. It cuts one off precisely from "this worldliness" and
precisely as such it contains within itself a powerful spiritual reason
for existing within the spiritual paths of the Church. Not as the only
path, not as the path for everyone, but as one, fully authentic path of
Christian life.
THE GOSPEL OF ST. MATTHEW
In the Gospel of St.
Matthew (5:16) it is our Lord who uses the terminology of "good works."
" Let your light so shine before men, that they may see your good works
and
may glorify your Father who is in heaven" Contextually these "good works"
are defined in the preceding text of the Beatitudes. "Blessed are the meek,
for they shall inherit the earth." "Blessed are they who are hungering
and are thirsting for righteousness, for they shall be satisfied." ".Blessed
are the pure in heart, for they shall see God." Is it not an integral part
of the monastic goal to become meek, to hunger and thirst for righteousness,
and to become pure in heart? This, of course, must be the goal of all Christians
but monasticism, which makes it an integral part of its ascetical life,
can in no way be excluded. Are not the Beatitudes more than just rhetorical
expressions? Are not the Beatitudes a part of the commandments of our Lord?
In the Gospel of St. Matthew (5:19) our Lord expresses a deeply
meaningful thought—rather a warning. "Whoever therefore breaks one of the
least of these commandments and teaches men so, he shall be called the
least in the kingdom of heaven. And it is in this context that our
Lord continues to deepen the meaning of the old law with a new, spiritual
significance, a penetrating interiorization of the "law." He does not nullify
or abrogate the law but rather extends it to its most logical and ontological
limit, for he drives the spiritual meaning of the law into the very depth
of the inner existence of mankind.
"You heard that it was said
to those of old ... but I say to you." Now, with the deepening of the spiritual
dimension of the law, the old remains, it is the base, but its spiritual
reality is pointed to its source. "You shall not kill" becomes inextricably
connected to "anger." "But I say to you that everyone being angry with
his brother shall be liable to the judgment." No longer is the external
act the only focal point. Rather the source, the intent, the motive is
now to be considered as the soil from which the external act springs forth.
Mankind must now guard, protect, control, and purify the inner emotion
or attitude of "anger" and, in so doing, consider it in the same light
as the external act of killing or murder. Our Lord has reached into the
innermost depth of the human heart and has targeted the source of the external
act. "You shall not commit adultery. But I say to you that everyone who
is seeing a woman lustfully, has already committed adultery with her in
his heart. From a spiritual perspective the person who does not act externally
but lusts within is equally liable to the reality of "adultery." "You have
heard that it was said, ‘You shall love your neighbor and you shall hate
your enemy’. But I say to you: Love your enemies and pray for those persecuting
you so that you may become sons of your Father in heaven."
THE INADEQUACY OF THE CRITIQUE BY ANDERS NYGREN
The Christian idea of love
is indeed something new. But it is not something so radically odd that
the human soul cannot understand it. It is not such a "transvaluation of
all ancient values," as Anders Nygren has claimed in his lengthy study
Agape
and Eros. Although there are certain aspects of truth in some of Nygren’s
statements, his very premise is incorrect. Nygren reads back into the New
Testament and the early Church the basic position of Luther rather than
dealing with early Christian thought from within its own milieu. Such an
approach bears little ultimate fruit and often, as in the case of his position
in Agape and Eros, distorts the original sources with presuppositions
that entered the history of Christian thought 1500 years after our Lord
altered the very nature of humanity by entering human existence as God
and Man. There is much in Luther that is interesting, perceptive, and true.
However, there is also much that does not speak the same language as early
Christianity. And herein lies the great divide in the ecumenical dialogue.
For the ecumenical dialogue to bear fruit, the very controversies that
separate the churches must not be hushed up. Rather they must be brought
into the open and discussed frankly, respectfully, and thoroughly. There
is much in Luther with which Eastern Orthodox theologians especially can
relate. Monasticism, however, is one area in which there is profound disagreement.
Even Luther at first did not reject monasticism. Luther’s Reformation was
the result of his understanding of the New Testament, an understanding
which Luther himself calls "new." His theological position had already
been formed before the issue of indulgences and his posting of his Ninety-Five
Theses. Nygren, loyal to Luther’s theological vision, has a theological
reason for his position in Agape and Eros.
Nygren identifies his
interpretation of Agape with the monoenergistic concept of God, a concept
of God that would be correct in and of itself, for God is the source of
everything. But once we confront the mystery of creation, the mystery of
that "other" existence, that created existence which includes mankind,
we face a totally different situation. The existential and ontological
meaning of man’s created existence is precisely that God did not have to
create, that it was a free act of Divine freedom. But—and here is the great
difficulty created by an unbalanced Christianity on the doctrine of grace
and freedom—in freely creating man God willed to give man an inner spiritual
freedom. In no sense is this a Pelagian or Semi-Pelagian position. The
balanced synergistic doctrine of the early and Eastern Church, a doctrine
misunderstood and undermined by Latin Christianity in general from St.
Augustine on—although there was always opposition to this in the Latin
Church—always understood that God initiates, accompanies, and completes
everything in the process of salvation. What it always rejected—both spontaneously
and intellectually—is the idea of irresistible grace, the idea that man
has no participating role in his salvation. Nygren identifies any participation
of man in his salvation, any movement of human will and soul toward God,
as a pagan distortion of Agape, as "Eros." And this attitude,
this theological perspective will in essence be the determining point for
the rejection of monasticism and other forms of asceticism and spirituality
so familiar to the Christian Church from its inception.
If Nygren’s position on
Agape
is correct, then the words of our Lord, quoted above, would have had
no basis in the hearts of the listeners for understanding. Moreover, our
Lord, in using the verbal form of Agape—agapate—uses the "old" commandment
as the basis for the giving of the new, inner dimension of the spiritual
extension of that commandment of agape, of love. If Nygren is correct,
the "old" context of agape would have been meaningless, especially as the
foundation upon which our Lord builds the new spiritual and ontological
character of agape. Nygren’s point is that "the Commandment of Love" occurs
in the Old Testament and that it is "introduced in the Gospels, not as
something new, but as quotations from the Old Testament." He is both correct
and wrong. Correct in that it is a reference taken from the Old Testament.
Where else was our Lord to turn in addressing "his people"? He is wrong
in claiming that it is nothing but a quotation from the Old Testament,
precisely because our Lord uses the Old Testament reference as a basis
upon which to build. Hence, the foundation had to be secure else the building
would have been flawed and the teaching erroneous. Indeed, Nygren himself
claims that "Agape can never be ‘self-evident’." In making such a claim,
Nygren has undercut any possibility for the hearers of our Lord to understand
any discourse in which our Lord uses the term "Agape." And yet Nygren writes
that "it can be shown that the Agape motif forms the principal theme of
a whole series of Parables." What is meant by this statement is that Nygren’s
specific interpretation of Agape forms the principal theme of a whole series
of Parables. If this is the case, then those hearing the parables could
not have understood them, for they certainly did not comprehend Agape in
the specificity defined by Nygren, and hence the parables—according to
the inner logic of Nygren’s position—were meaningless to the contemporaries
of our Lord, to his hearers.
To be filled by the love
of and for God is the monastic ideal. In the Gospel of St. Matthew (22:34-40)
our Lord is asked which is the greatest commandment. "You shall love the
Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your
mind [understanding]. This the great and first commandment. And a second
is like it. You shall love your neighbor as yourself. In these two commandments
hang all the law and the prophets." The monastic and ascetic ideal is to
cultivate the love of the heart, the soul, and the mind for God. Anders
Nygreds commentary on this text in his Agape and Eros is characteristic
of his general position. "It has long been recognized that the idea of
Agape represents a distinctive and original feature of Christianity. But
in what precisely does its originality and distinctiveness consist? This
question has often been answered by reference to the Commandment of
Love. The double commandment, ‘Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with
all they heart’ and Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself, has been taken
as the natural starting-point for the exposition of the meaning of Christian
love. Yet the fact is that if we start with the commandment, with Agape
as something demanded, we bar our own way to the understanding of the idea
of Agape. . . If the Commandment of Love can be said to be specifically
Christian, as undoubtedly it can, the reason is to be found, not in the
commandment as such, but in the quite new meaning that Christianity has
given it . . . To reach an understanding of the Christian idea of love
simply by reference to the Commandment of Love is therefore impossible;
to attempt it is to move in a circle. We could never discover the nature
of Agape, love in the Christian sense, if we had nothing to guide us but
the double command . . . It is not the commandment that explains the idea
of Agape, but insight into the Christian conception of Agape that enables
us to grasp the Christian meaning of the commandment, We must therefore
seek another starting-point" (pp. 61-63). This is indeed an odd position
for one who comes from the tradition of sola Scriptura, for the
essence of his position is not sola Scriptura but precisely that
Scripture must be interpreted—and here the interpretation comes not from
within the matrix of early Christianity but from afar, from an interpretation
that to a great extent depends on an interpretation of Christianity that
came into the history of Christian thought approximately 1500 years after
the beginning of Christian teaching, and that is with the assumption that
Nygren is following the general position of Luther. In his analysis of
certain interpretations of what constitutes the uniqueness of Christian
love and in his rejection of these interpretations as that which determines
the uniqueness of Christian love Nygren is in part correct. "This, in fact,
is the root-fault of all the interpretations we have so far considered;
they fail to recognize that Christian love rests on a quite definite, positive
basis of its own. What, then, is this basis?" Nygren approaches the essence
of the issue but neglects the important aspect of human ontology, a human
ontology created by God. "The answer to this question may be found in the
text. . . ‘Love your enemies’. It is true that love for one’s enemies is
at variance with our immediate natural feelings, and may therefore seem
to display the negative character suggested above; but if we consider the
motive underlying it we shall see that it is entirely positive. The Christian
is commanded to love his enemies, not because the other side teaches hatred
of them, but because there is a basis and motive for such love in the concrete,
positive fact of God’s own love for evil men. ‘He maketh His sun to rise
on the evil and the good’. That is why we are told: ‘Love your enemies
... that ye may be children of your Father which is in heaven’." What Nygren
writes here is accurate. But it neglects the significance of human ontology;
that is, that we are commanded to love our enemies because there is a spiritual
value within the very fabric of human nature created by God, even fallen
nature, and that that spiritual value is to be found in each and every
man, however dimly we may perceive it. If we begin to love our enemy, we
will begin to perceive in that enemy characteristics, aspects that were
veiled, that were dimmed by the blindness of our hatred. We are commanded
to love our enemy not only because God loves mankind, not only because
God "maketh his sun to rise on the evil and the good" but God loves mankind
because there is a value in mankind. Nygren writes (p.79) that "the suggestion
that man is by nature possessed of such an inalienable value easily gives
rise to the thought that it is this matchless value on which God’s love
is set." It is perhaps inaccurate to assert that Nygren misses the central
issue that that which is of value in man is God-created, God-given. It
is more accurate to assert that Nygren rejects completely the issue, and
he does so because of his theological doctrine of God and man. This again
is part of that great divide which separates certain churches within the
ecumenical dialogue. There is a basic and fundamental difference of vision
on the nature of God and man. One view claims its position is consistent
with apostolic Christianity, consistent with the apostolic deposit, and
consistent with the teaching and life of the early Church and of the Church
in all ages. Another view begins with the Reformation. Both views claim
the support of the New Testament. Luther’s writings on the Divine nature
of love are not only interesting but valuable, not only penetrating but
in one emphasis accurate. Indeed, if one considers Luther’s doctrine
of Divine love by itself, exclusive of his other doctrines, especially
those on the nature of man, the nature of salvation, the nature of justification,
the doctrine of predestination and grace, one encounters a view not dissimilar
from that of ancient Orthodox Christianity. At times Luther can even appear
to be somewhat mystically inclined. Luther’s well known description of
Christian love as "eine quellende Liebe" [a welling or ever-flowing
love] is by itself an Orthodox view. For Luther, as for the Fathers of
the Church, this love has no need of anything, it is not caused, it does
not come into existence because of a desired object, it is not aroused
by desirable qualities of an object. It is the nature of God. But, at the
same time, it is God who created mankind and hence the love of God for
mankind, though in need of nothing and attracted by nothing, loves mankind
not because of a value in man but because there is value in man because
man is created by God. Herein lies the difference and it is indeed a great
divide when one considers the differing views on the other subjects closely
related to the nature of Divine love.
PERFECTION, ALMSGIVING, PRAYER, FASTING, AND CHASTITY
In monastic and ascetical
literature from the earliest Christian times the word and idea of "perfect"
are often confronted. The monk seeks perfection, the monk wants to begin
to become established on the path that may lead to perfection. But is this
the result of monasticism? Is it the monastic and ascetical tendencies
in early Christianity which bring forth the idea of perfection, which bring
forth the idea of spiritual struggle and striving? It is our Lord, not
the monks, who injects the goal of perfection into the very fabric of early
Christian thought. In the Gospel of St. Matthew
(5:48) our Lord
commands: "Be ye therefore perfect, as your heavenly Father is perfect"
Traditional monastic and
ascetical life has included among its activities almsgiving, prayer, and
fasting. Were these practices imposed upon an authentic Christianity by
monasticism or were they incorporated into monastic and ascetical life
from original Christianity? In the Gospel of St. Matthew it is once
again our Lord and Redeemer who has initiated almsgiving, prayer, and fasting.
Our Lord could very easily have abolished such practices. But rather than
abolish them, our Lord purifies them, gives them their correct status within
the spiritual life which is to do them but to attach no show, no
hypocrisy, no glory to the doing of them. It is proper spiritual
perspective that our Lord commands. "Take heed that you do not your righteousness
before men in order to be seen by them; for then you will have no reward
with your Father in heaven" (6:1). Therefore, when you do alms, sound no
trumpet before you, as the hypocrites do in the synagogues and in the streets,
that they may be glorified by men. Truly, I say to you, they have their
reward. But when you are doing alms, do not let your left hand know what
your right hand is doing, so that your alms may be in secret; and your
Father who is seeing in secret will reward you" (6:2-4). And prayer is
commanded to be done in a similar manner to ensure its spiritual nature.
At this juncture our Lord instructs his followers to use the "Lord’s Prayer,"
a prayer that is so simple yet so profound, a prayer that contains within
it the glorification of the name of God, a prayer that contains within
it the invoking of the coming of the kingdom of God, a prayer that acknowledges
that the will of God initiates everything and that without the will of
God man is lost. It is a prayer of humility in that it asks for nothing
beyond daily sustenance. It is a prayer of human solidarity in forgiveness,
for it asks God to forgive us only as we forgive others, and in this a
profound reality of spiritual life is portrayed, a life that unites man
with God only as man is also united with other persons, with mankind, in
forgiveness. And then there is the prayer to be protected from temptation
and, if one falls into temptation, the prayer to be delivered from it.
So short, so simple, yet so profound both personally and cosmically. Is
monasticism a distortion of authentic Christianity because the monks recite
the Lord’s Prayer at the instruction of and command of our Lord? If monasticism
used free, spontaneous prayer, then it could be faulted for not having
"followed" our Lord’s command. But that is not the case. Is monasticism
a deviation because of the frequent use of the Lord’s Prayer? Our Lord
was specific: when praying, pray this. It does not preclude other prayers
but prominence and priority is to be given to the Lord’s Prayer. Indeed,
it is certainly foreign to our Lord to restrict the frequency of prayer.
The "vain repetitions," or more accurately in the Greek, the prohibition
of "do not utter empty words as the gentiles, for they think that in their
much speaking they will be heard." This is in essence different than our
Lord’s intention. And our Lord says more on this subject, a subject considered
of importance to him. In the Gospel of St. Matthew (9:15) our Lord
makes the point that when he is taken way, then his disciples will fast.
In the Gospel of St. Matthew (17:21) our Lord explains to his disciples
that they were unable to cast out the devil because" this kind goes out
only by prayer and fasting." This verse, it is true, is not in all the
ancient manuscripts. It is, however, in sufficient ancient manuscripts
and, moreover, it is contained in the Gospel of St. Mark (9:29).
It is obvious that our Lord assigns a special spiritual efficacy to prayer
and fasting.
Chastity is a monastic and
ascetic goal. Not only an external celibacy but an inner chastity of thought.
Is this too something imposed upon authentic, original Christianity by
a Hellenistic type of thinking or is it contained within the original deposit
of apostolic and Biblical Christianity? Again it is our Lord who lays down
the path of celibacy and chastity. In the Gospel of St. Matthew (19:10-12)
the disciples ask our Lord whether it is expedient to marry. "Not all men
can receive this saying but those to whom it has been given. For there
are eunuchs who have been so from birth, and there are eunuchs who have
been made eunuchs by men, and there are eunuchs who have made themselves
eunuchs for the sake of the kingdom of heaven. He who is able to grasp
it, let him grasp it." The monastic and ascetical goal merely "follows"
the teaching of our Lord. Original Christianity never imposed celibacy.
It was, precisely as our Lord has stated, only for those to whom it was
given, only to those who might be able to accept such a path. But the path
was an authentically Christian path of spirituality laid down by our Lord.
In early Christianity not even priests and bishops were required to be
celibate. It was a matter of choice. Later the Church thought it wise to
require celibacy of the bishops. But in Eastern Christianity celibacy has
never been required of one becoming a priest. The choice to marry or to
remain celibate had to be made before ordination. If one married before
ordination, then one was required to remain married, albeit the ancient
Church witnessed exceptions to this. If one was not married when one was
ordained, then one was required to remain celibate. The Roman Church, not
the Eastern Orthodox Church, extended the requirement of celibacy to priests
and had a very difficult time attempting to enforce it throughout the ages.
One can never force forms of spirituality upon a person and expect a spiritually
fruitful result. The words of our Lord resound with wisdom—to those to
whom it is given, to those who can live in this form of spirituality.
POVERTY AND HUMILITY
Poverty is not the goal
but the beginning point of monastic and ascetical life in early Christianity.
Was this a precedent established by St. Antony, a new notion and movement
never before contained within Christian thought? Again it is our Lord who
establishes the spiritual value of poverty. In the Gospel of St. Matthew
(19:21)
our Lord commands the rich man who has claimed he has kept all the commandments:
"If you will to be perfect, go, sell your possessions and give to the poor
... and come follow me." It was not St. Antony who established the precedent.
Rather it was St. Antony who heard the word of our Lord and put it into
action, who "did the word of the Lord." It is Christ, the God-Man who has
put forth the ideal of perfection, who has commanded us to be perfect (see
also 5:48), who has put forth the ideal of poverty as a starting-point
for a certain form of spiritual life. Elsewhere in the Gospel of St.
Matthew (13:44) Christ makes a similar point, asserting that one sells
everything in exchange for the kingdom of heaven. "The kingdom of heaven
is like treasure hidden in a field, which a man found and covered up; then
in his joy he goes and sells all that he has and buys that field."
All Christianity exalts
humility. It should therefore not be a surprise if monastic and ascetical
spirituality focus on humility. In the Gospel of St. Matthew (18:4)
our Lord proclaims that "he who therefore will humble himself as this little
child, he is greatest in the kingdom of heaven." Elsewhere (23:12) our
Lord says that "whoever exalts himself will be humbled, and whoever humbles
himself will be exalted." The emphasis on humility may appear self-evident.
Behind it, however, lies a reality of the nature of God to which few pay
much attention. In the Incarnation two very core elements of any spirituality
are clearly evidenced—the love and humility of God. The idea that humility
is rooted in God may appear astonishing. The humility of God cannot, of
course, be considered in the same light as ascetical humility, or any human
form of humility. However, the human forms of humility are derived from
the very nature of God, just as the commandment to love is rooted in God’s
love for mankind God’s humility is precisely that being God he desires,
he wills to be in communion with everything and everything is inferior
to God. This has great theological significance, for it reveals the value
of all created things, a value willed by God. There is even a parallel
here with the saints who loved animals and flowers. And from this idea,
an idea intrinsically derived from the Incarnation and kenosis of
God the Son, one can clearly see the real Divine origin in action of Christ’s
teaching about "others." In the very notion of a vertical spirituality
a concern for others is presupposed. And while one is ascending to God—an
abomination for Nygren—his fellow man must be included in the dimensions
of spirituality. Through the Incarnation all forms of human existence are
sanctified. Through the Incarnation both the love and the humility of God
are made known. And man is to love God and fellow mankind because love
contains absolute, positive value, a value derived because love is the
very nature of God. And man is to experience humility, to become inflamed
by humility precisely because humility belongs also to God and hence its
value is derived from God. But to become filled innerly with love and humility
is not easy. It demands not a mere acknowledgement of the fact that God
is love and humility is Divine. Rather, it demands the complete purification
of our inner nature by God. And this is the struggle, the spiritual warfare
that must be waged to enter and maintain the reality of love and humility.
The path of monasticism and asceticism is an authentic path, a path also
ordained by our Lord.
THE WRITINGS BY ST. PAUL AND THE
INTERPRETATION OF THE REFORMATION
The writings by or attributed
to St. Paul form a critical point in the entire great divide between the
churches of the Reformation and the Orthodox and Roman Catholic Church.
The Epistle to the Romans is one of the most important references
of this controversy. This epistle and the Epistle to the Galatians formed
the base from which Luther developed his doctrine faith and justification,
a doctrine that he himself characterized in his preface to his Latin writings
as a totally new understanding of Scripture. These two works continue to
be the main reference points for contemporary theologians from the tradition
of the Reformation. It was this new understanding
of the Scriptures
that the rejection of monasticism obtained in the Reformation In general
it is not an exaggeration to claim that this thought considers St. Paul
as the only one who understood the Christian message. Moreover, it is not
St. Paul by himself nor St. Paul from the entire corpus of his works, but
rather Luther’s understanding of St. Paul. >From this perspective the authentic
interpreters of our Lord’s teaching and redemptive work are St. Paul, as
understood by Luther, then Marcion, then St. Augustine, and then Luther.
Marcion was condemned by the entire early Church. St. Augustine indeed
does anticipate Luther in certain views but not at all on the doctrine
of justification and Luther’s specific understanding of faith. It is more
St. Augustine’s doctrine of predestination, irresistible grace, and his
doctrine of the total depravity of man contained in his "novel" to quote
St. Vincent of Lerins—doctrine of original sin that influenced Luther,
who himself was an Augustinian monk.
The rejection of monasticism
ultimately followed from the emphasis placed upon salvation as a free gift
of God. Such a position is completely accurate but its specific understanding
was entirely contrary to that of the early Church. That salvation was the
free gift of God and that man was justified by faith was never a problem
for early Christianity. But from Luther’s perspective and emphasis any
type of "works," especially that of the monks in their ascetical struggle,
was considered to contradict the free nature of grace and the free gift
of salvation. If one was indeed justified by faith, then—so went the line
of Luther’s thought—man is not justified by "works." For Luther "justification
by faith" meant an extrinsic justification, a justification totally independent
from any inner change within the depths of the spiritual life of a person.
For Luther "to justify"—dikaion—meant to declare one righteous or
just, not "to make" righteous or just*—it is an appeal to an extrinsic
justice which in reality is a spiritual fiction. Luther has created a legalism
far more serious than the legalism he detected in the Roman Catholic thought
and practice of his time. Morever, Luther’s legalistic doctrine of extrinsic
justification is spiritually serious, for it is a legal transaction which
in reality does not and can not exist. Nowhere was the emphasis on "works"
so strong, thought Luther, as in monasticism. Hence, monasticism had to
be rejected and rejected it was. But Luther read too much into St. Paul’s
emphasis on faith, on justification by faith, and on the free gift of the
grace of salvation. St. Paul is directly in controversy with Judaism, especially
in his Epistle to the Romans. It is the "works of the law," the
law as defined by and interpreted by and practiced by Judaism in the time
of St. Paul. Our Lord has the same reaction to the externalization and
mechanical understanding of the "law." Indeed, the very text of the Epistle
to the Romans revels in every passage that St. Paul is comparing the
external law of Judaism with the newness of the spiritual understanding
of law, with the newness of the revelation of God in Jesus Christ through
the Incarnation, Death, and Resurrection of our Lord. God has become Man.
God has entered human history and indeed the newness is radical. But to
misunderstand St. Paul’s critique of "works," to think that St. Paul is
speaking of the "works" commanded by our Lord rather than the Judaic understanding
of the works of the "law" is a misreading of a fundamental nature. It is
true, however, that Luther had a point in considering the specific direction
in which the Roman Catholic merit-system had gone as a reference point
similar to the Judaic legal system. As a result of Luther’s background,
as a result of his theological milieu, whenever he read anything in St.
Paul about "works," he immediately thought of his own experience as a monk
and the system of merit and indulgences in which he had been raised.
It must be strongly emphasized
that Luther does indeed protect one aspect of salvation, the very cause
and source of redemption and grace. But he neglects the other side, the
aspect of man’s participation in this free gift of Divine initiative and
grace. Luther fears any resurgence of the Roman Catholic system of merit
and indulgences, he fears any tendency which will constitute a truly Pelagian
attitude, any tendency that will allow man to believe that man is the cause,
the source, or the main spring of salvation. And here Luther is correct.
Nygren’s Agape-Eros distinction is correct in this context, for any spirituality
that omits Agape and concentrates only on Eros, on man’s striving to win
God’s influence, is fundamentally non-Christian. But the issue is not
that simple. Both extremes are false. God has freely willed a synergistic
path-of-redemption in which man must spiritually participate. God is the
actor, the cause, the initiator, the one who completes all redemptive activity.
But man is the one who must spiritually respond to the free gift of grace.
And in this response there is an authentic place for the spiritually of
monasticism and asceticism, one which has absolutely nothing to do his
the "works of the law," or with the system of merit and indulgences.
ROMANS
In his Epistle to the
Romans St. Paul writes in the very introduction (1:4-5) that through
Jesus Christ "we have received grace and apostleship to bring about the
obedience of faith for the sake of his name." The notion of "obedience
of faith" has a meaning for St. Paul. It is much more than a simple acknowledgement
or recognition of a faith placed within one by God. Rather, it is a richly
spiritual notion, one that contains within it a full spirituality of activity
on the part of man—not that the activity will win the grace of God but
precisely that the spiritual activity is the response to the grace of God,
performed with the grace of God, in order to be filled by the grace of
God. And it will be an on-going spiritual "work," one which can never be
slackened, and one totally foreign from the works" of the Judaic law.
St. Paul writes (2:6) that
God "will render to each according to his works." If St. Paul was so concerned
about the word "works," if he feared that the Christian readers of his
letter might interpret "works" in some totally different way from what
he intended, he certainly could have been more cautious. But St. Paul clearly
distinguishes between the "works" of the Judaic law and the "works" of
the Holy Spirit required of all Christians. Hence, it is difficult to confuse
these two perspectives and it is significant that the early Church never
confused them, for they understood what St. Paul wrote. If anything—despite
the lucidity of St. Paul’s thought—there were tendencies at times to fall
not into Luther’s one-sided interpretation but rather to fall somewhat
spontaneously into an Eros-type of striving.
It is the "doers of the
law" who will be justified" (2:13). The notion of "doers" implies action,
activity. Elsewhere in the same epistle (5:2) St. Paul writes that through
our Lord Jesus Christ "we have had access [by faith] into this grace in
which we stand." The very idea of "access into grace" is dynamic and implies
spiritual activity on the part of mankind.
After the lengthy proclamation
of the grace of God, the impotence of the "works of the law" in comparison
with the "works" of the new reality of the Spirit, St. Paul resorts to
the traditional spiritual exhortation (6:12f). "Let not sin therefore reign
in your mortal body in order to obey its lusts. Nor yield your members
to sin as weapons of unrighteousness." The exhortation presupposes that
man has some type of spiritual activity and control over his inner existence.
The very use of the word "weapon" invokes the idea of battle, of spiritual
warfare, the very nature of the monastic "ordeal."
In the same chapter (6:17)
St. Paul writes: "But grace to God that you who were slaves of sin obeyed
out of the heart a form of teaching which was delivered to you." In the
second chapter of the Epistle to the Romans
(2:15) St. Paul writes
about the universal aspect of the "law" that is "written in the hearts"
of mankind, a thought with profound theological implications. In using
the image of the heart St. Paul is emphasizing the deepest aspect of the
interior life of mankind, for such was the use of the image of the "heart"
among Hebrews. When he writes that they obeyed "out of the heart," St.
Paul is attributing some type of spiritual activity to the "obedience"
which springs from the "heart." And to what have they become obedient?
To a form or standard of teaching or doctrine delivered to them—this is
precisely the apostolic deposit, the body of early Christian teaching
to which they have responded and have become obedient. And in so doing,
they have become "enslaved to righteousness," the righteousness of the
new law, of the life of the Spirit (6:18). And the "fruit" of becoming
enslaved to God" is precisely sanctification which leads to life eternal
(6:22). Throughout is a process, throughout is a dynamic spiritual activity
on the part of man. St. Paul becomes more explicit about the distinction
between the old and the new law (7:6). "But now we are discharged from
the law, having died in that which held us captive, so as to serve in newness
of spirit and not in oldness of letter."
St. Paul writes that we
"are children of God, and if children, also heirs, heirs on the one hand
of God, co-heirs on the other hand, of Christ" (8:17). But all this has
a condition, has a proviso, for there is the all important "if indeed."
"If we co-suffer in order that we may be glorified." Our glorification,
according to St. Paul, is contingent upon a mighty "if" and that "if" leads
us to the spiritual reality, the spiritual reality ‘of "co- suffering."
The very use of the word "co-suffer" presupposes the reality of the idea
of "cosuffering" and both presuppose an active, dynamic spiritual action
or activity on the part of the one who co-suffers, else there is no meaning
to the "co."
In the Epistle to the
Romans (12:1) St. Paul uses language that would be meaningless if man
were merely a passive object in the redemptive process, if justification
by faith was an action that took place only on the Divine level. "I appeal
to you therefore, brethren, through the compassions of God, to present
your bodies a living sacrifice, holy and well-pleasing to God, which is
your reasonable service." St. Paul is asking the Christian to present,
a
reality which presupposes and requires human activity. But not only "to
present" but "to present" the body as a living sacrifice, as holy, and
as acceptable or well-pleasing to God. And this St. Paul considers our
"reasonable service" or our "spiritual worship." The language and the idea
speak for themselves. Using the imperative, St. Paul commands us: "Be not
conformed to this age but be transformed by the renewing of the mind in
order to prove [that you may prove] what [is] that good and well-pleasing
and perfect will of God." Taken by itself and out of context this language
could be misinterpreted as Pelagian, for here it is man who is transforming
the mind, man who is commanded to activate the spiritual life. Such an
interpretation is, of course, incorrect but it reveals what one can do
to the totality of the theological thought of St. Paul if one does not
understand the balance, if one does not understand that his view is profoundly
synergistic. Synergism does not mean that two energies are equal. Rather
it means that there are two wills—one, the will of God which precedes,
accompanies, and completes all that is good, positive, spiritual and redemptive,
one that has willed that man have a spiritual will, a spiritual participation
in the redemptive process; the other is the will of man which must respond,
cooperate, "co-suffer." In 12:9 St. Paul exhorts us to "cleave to the good."
And in 12:12 he exhorts us "to be steadfastly continuing in prayer." Such
a position certainly does not exclude monastic and ascetical spirituality
but rather presupposes it.
I AND II CORINTHIANS
Celibacy is a part of the
monastic life and it too has its source in the teachings of the New Testament.
In I Corinthians 7: 1-11 St. Paul encourages both marriage
and celibacy—both are forms of Christian spirituality, and St. Paul has
much to say about marriage in his other epistles. But his point is that
celibacy is a form of spirituality for some, and it therefore cannot be
excluded from the forms of spirituality within the Church. In verse 7 St.
Paul writes that he would like all to be like him. But he realizes that
each person has his own gift from God. "I say therefore to the unmarried
men and to the widows, it is good for them if they remain as I. But if
they do not exercise self-control, let them marry" (verses 37-38). St.
Paul summarizes: "the one who has decided in his own heart to keep himself
virgin, he will do well. So, therefore, both the one marrying his betrothed
[virgin], does well, and the one not marrying will do better." The
monastic practice of celibacy is precisely not excluded by the New Testament.
Rather, it is even encouraged both by our Lord and by St Paul—and without
jeopardy to the married state. The decision cannot be forced. Rather, it
must come from the heart. And, indeed, it is not for everyone.
The comparison of the spiritual
life to that of running a race and to that of warfare is throughout the
New Testament. Without diminishing his basis of theological vision—that
it is God who initiates everything—St. Paul writes in I Corinthians
9:24-27
in a manner, which, if taken by itself, would indeed appear Pelagian, would
indeed appear as though all the essence of salvation depends
upon man.
But in the total context of his theology there is no contradiction, for
there are always two wills in redemption—the Divine, which initiates; and
the human, which responds and is, in the very response has received. "Do
you not know that the ones running in a race all run indeed. But one receives
the prize? So run in order that you may obtain. And everyone struggling
exercises self-control in all things. Indeed, those do so therefore in
order that they may receives a corruptible crown, but we an incorruptible
one. I, therefore, so run as not unclearly. Thus I box not as one beating
the air. But I treat severely my body and lead it as a slave, lest having
proclaimed to others, I myself may become disqualified." In this text we
encounter the race—the spiritual race—and the prize; we encounter the grammatical
and the thought structure of "in order that you may obtain," a structure
which implies contingency and not certainty. We encounter the race as a
spiritual struggle in which "self-control in everything" must be exercised.
And then St. Paul describes his own spiritual battle—he treats his body
severely, leads it as though it were a slave, and to what end? So that
he will not become disapproved. The entire passage is very monastic and
ascetic in its content. Despite St. Paul’s certainty of the objective reality
of redemption which has come through Christ as a Divine gift, he does not
consider his own spiritual destiny to be included in that objective redemption
which is now here unless he participates in it—and until the end of the
race. In 10:12 he warns us: "Let the one who thinks he stands, let him
look lest he falls." In 11: 28 he writes: "Let a man prove or examine himself.
. ." In the latter context the proving" or "examining" is in the most serious
of contexts, for it is spoken in connection with the Holy Eucharist, which
is spoken of so objectively that if one "eats this bread" or "drinks this
cup of the Lord" "unworthily," that person "shall be guilty of the body
and blood of the Lord" and shall "bring damnation to himself"—for that
reason, continues St. Paul, some are weak, sickly, and some have died.
But our focus here is on self-examination, on those who think they stand.
This again is an integral aspect of the monastic and ascetical life; that
is, a constant examination of one’s spiritual life In II Corinthians
13:5
St. Paul again stresses self-examination: "Examine yourselves, if you are
in the faith. Prove yourselves."
In 15:1-2 St. Paul introduces
a significant "if’ and "also." "I make known to you, brothers, the Gospel
which I preached to you, which you also
received, in which you also
stand, through which you also are saved, if you hold fast to that which
I preached to you."
In
I Corinthians 14:15
St. Paul speaks of praying with both spirit and mind, a thought that weaves
its way through monastic and ascetical literature. The use of the mind
in prayer finds its fullest expression in the controversial use of the
"mind" in the thought of Evagrius Ponticus. The text, even within its general
context in the chapter, is clear. "I will pray with the spirit, and I will
pray also with the mind; I will sing with the spirit, and I will also sing
with the mind."
St. Paul’s hymn to love,
to Agape, fills the entirety of I Corinthians 13. Despite later
interpretations of the use of the word "faith" in this chapter, specifically
the interpretations that entered Christian thought with the Reformation,
there was no misunderstanding of this "hymn to love" in the early Church
indeed, in the history of Christian thought until the Reformation it was
understand quite directly. It is only through a convoluted exegetical method
imposed by a specific—and new—theological understanding that this great
"hymn to love" had to be understood by distinguishing different meanings
attached to the word "faith." Though one speaks with the tongues of men
and of angels, though one has the gift of prophecy, though one understands
all mysteries, though one understands all knowledge, though one has all
faith "to remove mountains," though one bestows all one’s goods to feed
the poor, though one gives one’s body to be burned—though one has all this,
but not love, one is "nothing," one "becomes as sounding brass or a tinkling
cymbal," one "profits" not at all. St. Paul is quite explicit on what love
is. "Love suffers long, love is kind, love is not jealous, does not vaunt
itself, is not puffed up, does not act unseemly, does not seek its own
things, is not provoked, does not reckon evil, does not rejoice over wrong,
but rejoices with the truth. Love covers all things, believes all things,
hopes all things, endures all things. Love never falls. But prophecies—they
will be abolished; tongues—they will cease; knowledge—it will be abolished...
And now remains faith, hope, love, these three. But the greatest of these
is love." The goal of monastic and ascetical struggle, of the "ordeal,"
is love—to love God, to love mankind, to love all created things, to be
penetrated by God’s love, to participate in love, which is God and flows
from God, and to enter a union with God, with love. Often monastic literature
will speak of "achieving" this love, as though it is the work of man. But
that it not the total context of love in monastic literature, not even
in those texts which appear as though everything were nothing but a striving
on the part of man in the "ordeal." This language is spoken because it
is spontaneous with spiritual nature. This language is spoken because it
runs parallel with that assumed knowledge—that God is the source of everything.
And yet St. Paul himself often uses language which could come directly
from monastic statements. True, both would be taken out of their total
context, but it is true that the two languages are spoken—the language
referring to God as the source, as the initiator, to the grace of God,
to the gift of all spirituality; and the language which concentrates on
man’s activity, on man’s response to the love and redemptive work of God
in Jesus Christ and through the Holy Spirit. When one line of thought is
being used, it in no way denies the other line of thought. Rather, it is
precisely the opposite, for monastic and ascetical literature can only
speak about man’s activity if it is presupposed that God has accomplished
the redemptive activity in and through our Lord, that God is working in
man through the Holy Spirit. Else, all that is written is without meaning,
temporarily and ultimately. St. Paul’s command in I Corinthians 14:1
to "pursue love and eagerly desire the spiritual things" is responded to
directly by monastic and ascetical spirituality.
In
II Corinthians 2:9
St. Paul writes in the very same spirit that an abbot might employ with
his novices: "For to this end indeed I wrote—in order that I might know
your proof, if you are obedient in all things." Obedience is an important
theme and reality in the monastic and ascetic "ordeal" and that very theme
of obedience is mentioned often throughout the New Testament.
Monastic and ascetical literature
will often use the terms "fragrance" and "aroma" and again the source is
the New Testament. In II Corinthians 2:14-15 St. Paul writes: "manifesting
among us the fragrance of his knowledge in every place. For we are the
aroma of Christ to God among those who are being saved and among those
perishing, to the latter an aroma from death unto death, to the former
an aroma from life unto life."
In
II Corinthians 3:18
St.
Paul uses an expression which is often found in ascetical literature— "from
glory to glory." "But we all, with face having been unveiled, beholding
in a mirror the glory of the Lord, are being changed into the same icon
from glory to glory, even as from the Spirit of the Lord." The Greek verbal
structure throughout the New Testament cannot be stressed enough, for it
conveys a dynamic activity that is seldom found in other languages and
in translations. In this text the emphasis is on the process of "we are
being changed." Elsewhere emphasis is often on "we are being saved"—rather
than "we are changed" and "we are saved." When the objective nature of
redemption is the focus, then the Greek verbal structure uses "we are saved."
But mainly, when the process is the focus, the dynamism is expressed by
the verbal structure of "we are being saved." In this text it is significant
that the objective nature is expressed by "having been unveiled," while
the on-going process of our participation in the spiritual process of salvation
is expressed by "we are being changed." Here is expressed the dynamism
of synergy.
In
II Corinthians
4:16
St. Paul again emphasizes the dynamism and process of the spiritual reality
in man. "Our inner [life] is being renewed day by day." The monastic life
attempts to respond to such a text by the daily regulation of prayer, meditation,
self-examination, and worship—precisely to attempt to "renew" daily "our
inner" spiritual life. In 10:15 the dynamic aspect of growth is stressed
and precisely in reference to "faith" and "rule." "But having hope as your
faith is growing to be magnified unto abundance among you according to
our rule." In 4:12 St. Paul again places the inner depth of man’s spiritual
life in the "heart," something which Eastern monasticism will develop even
in its life of prayer.
The entire fifth chapter
of II Corinthians is an exceptionally important text. Here, as elsewhere,
St. Paul uses language which, when used by others, distresses sorely many
scholars working from the Reformation perspective—he uses the notion of
"pleasing God," something which some scholars find indicative of man’s
solicitation to "win" God’s favor. But when St. Paul uses such language
it passes in silence, it passes without objection—precisely because St.
Paul has established his position that God is the source of everything.
But monastic and ascetical literature also presuppose that God initiates
and is the source of everything. But it is in the very nature of daily
spiritual life in monasticism and in ascetical spirituality to focus on
man’s activity. It is precisely focus, not a theological position. "We
therefore are ambitious [to make it our goal], whether being at home or
being away from home, to be well-pleasing to him. For it is necessary
for all of us to be manifested before the tribunal of Christ in order that
each one may receive something good or something worthless, according to
what one has practiced through the body. Knowing, therefore, the
fear of the Lord, we persuade men." In II Corinthians 11: 15 St.
Paul writes that one’s "end will be according to [one’s] works." Also this
is not the only time that the New Testament uses the word "practice," a
word which becomes systematized in monasticism. After a profound exposition
on the initiative of God in the redemptive work of Christ (5:14-20), in
which St. Paul writes that "all things are of God, who, having reconciled
us to himself through Christ." St. Paul writes in verse 21: "Be reconciled
to God." Moreover, he not only uses the imperative form but also precedes
this with "we beg on behalf of Christ." His language here becomes meaningless
unless there is spiritual activity on the part of man. And what is more,
St. Paul uses a very interesting structure in relationship to the "righteousness
of God," for he writes that the redemptive work of Christ was accomplished
"in order that we might become the righteousness of God in him." Here the
significance is on "we might become" rather than "we are" or "we have become."
Implicit is a synergistic dynamism. This is further stressed in 6:1: "And
working together [with him] we entreat you not to receive the grace of
God to no purpose." And St. Paul then quotes from Isaiah 49:8 in which
it is said that God "hears" and "helps."
In
II Corinthians 6:4-10
St. Paul writes what could be a guide to monastic spiritual life. "In everything
commending ourselves as ministers of God—in much endurance, in afflictions,
in necessities, in distresses, in stripes, in prisons, in tumults, in labors,
in vigils, in fasting, in purity, in knowledge, in longsuffering, in kindness,
in a holy spirit, in unfeigned love, in a word of truth, in power of God—through
the weapons of righteousness on the right and left hand, through glory
and dishonor, through evil report and good report ... as dying, and behold,
we live ... as being grieved but always rejoicing, as poor but enrichening
[sic] many, as having nothing yet possessing all things." The vigils,
the fasting, the purity, the gnosis or knowledge—these are to be
reflected in monastic and ascetical life. Moreover, St. Paul again uses
the image of warfare and refers to the "weapons of righteousness." The
language used by St. Paul in this passage can only have significance if
man participates synergistically in the redemptive process. If the doctrine
of "righteousness" in the thought of St. Paul has only a one-sided meaning—that
is, the "righteousness of God," which is, of course, the source of all
righteousness—then why the talk of "weapons of righteousness" placed in
the very hands, both right and left, of man? If man is solely "reckoned
righteous" by the "vicarious sacrifice" of our Lord Jesus Christ, why the
need to speak of "weapons of righteousness," unless there is a second aspect
of the redemptive process which ontologically includes man’s spiritual
participation? In II Corinthians
10:3-6 St. Paul continues with
the reference to it warfare" and again stresses "obedience." "For though
walking in the flesh, we wage war not according to the flesh, for the weapons
of our warfare are not fleshly but [have] the power of God to overthrow
strongholds, overthrowing reasonings and every high thing rising up against
the knowledge of God and taking captive every design unto the obedience
of Christ."
St. Paul writes in II
Corinthians 7:1 about cleansing, about it perfecting holiness," and
about the "fear of God." After referring to our having "these promises,"
he exhorts: "Let us cleanse ourselves from all defilement of flesh and
of spirit, perfecting holiness in the fear of God." This exhortation
is precisely what monastic and ascetical life attempts to implement. In
13:9 St. Paul writes: "We pray also for you restoration."
In
order for one to be "restored," one would have to have been at a certain
level previously. The text bears witness to the dynamic nature of faith,
of spiritual life in Christ, of the rising and falling away, and then the
restoration.
In
II Corinthians 7:10
St. Paul speaks in terms quite similar to those found in monastic and ascetical
literature, for he speaks of "grief" which works "repentance" which leads
to "salvation." "For grief, in accordance with God, works repentance unto
unregrettable salvation." St. Paul contrasts this "Godly grief" with the
"grief of the world which works out death." The theme "sorrow" and "grief"
over one’s sin—precisely "grief in accordance with God" or "Godly grief"—is
a constant in monastic spiritual life.
St. Paul ends the text proper
of II Corinthians with a final exhortation. "Restore yourselves,
admonish yourselves, think the same, become at peace, and the God of love
and of peace will be with you." Here the emphasis is again on "restoration."
St. Paul’s sequence of language—if taken by itself and out of context—could
be easily misinterpreted as man causing God’s action, for he writes "become
at peace and." It is precisely that "and" that introduces
the activity of God. God "will be with you," if you achieve peace—this
is how this text could well be interpreted if we did not the possess the
body of St. Paul’s works. What could have happened to the thought of St.
Paul is what usually happens to the thought expressed in monastic and ascetical
literature.
GALATIANS
Along with the Epistle
to the Romans, St. Paul’s Epistle to the Galatians
is the other
work from the corpus of St. Paul most often quoted by the theologians of
the Lutheran and Calvinistic Reformation and those theologians who have
followed in those theological traditions. They were also the two works
most quoted by St. Augustine to support his doctrine of irresistible grace
and predestination. But one encounters the same problem in Galatians that
is, that there is a second line of thought which, by itself, could be interpreted
in a Pelagian sense. The point here is, of course, that both views are
one-sided, that the thought of St. Paul is far richer than any one-sided
interpretation allows for, far more realistic both with the glory of God
and with the tragedy of man’s experience in evil, corruption, and death.
But St. Paul not only extols the glory of God, the power and initiative
of grace but also the joyfulness of an objective redemption in which each
person must participate in order for the redemption of man to be completed.
In the first chapter of
Galatians St. Paul in verse 10 uses language which implies the seeking
of favor with God. "For now do I persuade men or God? Or do I seek to please
men?". At one point, in Galatians 4:9, St. Paul catches himself falling
into the very understandable usage of human language: "But now knowing
God, or rather, being known by God." Imprecision of language occurs even
with St. Paul.
The second chapter of Galatians
provides an illumination of the central controversial issue in the theology
of St. Paul. In context St. Paul is addressing the hypocrisy of St. Peter
in Antioch, for St. Peter ate with the Gentiles until those from the "circumcision"
party arrived from Jerusalem. At that time St. Peter withdrew from the
Gentiles, "fearing those of the circumcision." St. Paul challenges St.
Peter face to face. Again the whole controversy is between the "works of
the law" and the "works of the Spirit," between the laws of Judaism and
the spiritual laws of Christ as a direct result of his Divine redemptive
work. It is, therefore, in this context that St. Paul brings the doctrine
of justification into discussion. In verse 16 St. Paul writes: "And knowing
that a man is not justified out of works of the law but through faith of
Christ Jesus, even we believed in Christ Jesus in order that we might be
justified out of faith of Christ and not out of the works of the law because
out of works of the law all flesh will not be justified." In the Greek
construction used by St. Paul a dynamism still exists, for we believed
"in order that we might be justified" and "out of faith." This latter expression
contains breadth, expansion of spiritual life generating from faith. It
is a rich expression and its fulness and dynamism must not be diminished
by a reductionist interpretation. And the very use of "in order" has implications
theologically, as does the construction "that we might be justified." St.
Paul could very well have written that we have believed and are hence justified.
But that is not what he has written. The objective reality of redemption,
the objective reality of mankind being justified by Christ is one thing.
The subjective reality of each person participating in this already accomplished
redemptive work of justification, of being really "right" with God is another
dimension, a dimension which requires and addresses the entire spiritual
composition of man. In the very next text St. Paul writes "if seeking to
be justified in Christ." In 5:5 he can write "for we in the Spirit eagerly
expect the hope of righteousness." What is the ontological meaning of "the
hope of righteousness" if "righteousness" is "imputed" to us as though
a legal transaction, and if it is the "passive righteousness" of God which
"justifies" us? No, St. Paul’s vision is far deeper. The "hope of righteousness"
is precisely our hope to share in that objective "righteousness of God"
which is now freely given by God in and through Christ. But we "hope" because
there is "work" for us to do in order to take hold of and participate in
that righteousness eternally. God creates in his freedom. God created man
with this image of freedom. Christ accepts the Cross in freedom. Freedom
is the foundation of creation and redemption. And man’s freedom, however
weakened, can still be inspired by the free gift of Grace. And in this
freedom man must, as St. Paul writes in his
Epistle to the Philippians
2:12,
"work out your own salvation with fear and trembling." it cannot be
denied that monastic and ascetical spirituality took this seriously. In
Galatians 5:1 St. Paul writes that "Christ freed us for freedom. Therefore
stand firm."
The total theological significance
of all that took place in the coming of Christ, in the Incarnation of the
God-Man, in his life, his teachings, his death, his resurrection, his establishment
of the Church and the mystical sacramental life in the Church, his Ascension,
his sending of the Holy Spirit, and his Second Coming and Judgment—all
this has radically altered the old law of works, and the meaning was clear
to the early Church. It is true that what St. Paul says about the "works
of the law" can be applied to any form of Christianity that deviates from
the precision of the balance, that deviates from the authentic "works of
the Spirit," replacing them by a mechanical and mechanistic attitude. And
in Galatians 3:27 St. Paul immediately connects "justification by faith"
with the mystical sacrament of baptism. "For you are all sons of God through
the faith in Christ Jesus, for as many of you as were baptized into Christ,
have put on Christ." Within this context what is the distinction between
the "justification by faith" and "by faith" being "baptized into Christ,"
and, hence, having "put on Christ"?
St. Paul is addressing Christians,
those who have been baptized, those who have accepted the faith. Despite
all his language about "justification by faith," about "putting on Christ"
through baptism, about the objective aspect of redemption having been accomplished,
St. Paul still can write in Galatians 4:19 that he "travails in birth until
Christ is formed" in them. What can this mean except that the redemptive
process for man is one of struggle, one of rising and falling, one of continual
spiritual dynamism? In 5:7 he writes that they "were running well" and
asks "who hindered you?"—invoking again the image of a race.
In Galatians 5:14 St. Paul
repeats Christ’s commandment of love, a thought not foreign to St. Paul,
especially when one considers his "Hymn to Love" [Agape] in I Corinthians
13.
"For the whole law has been summed up in one expression: you shall love
your neighbor as yourself." He then distinguishes the "works of the Spirit"
from the "works of the flesh," explicitly linking the latter with the old
law. And then he again exhorts and commands from the realism of spiritual
life (5:25). "If we live in the Spirit, let us also walk in the Spirit.
What is the meaning of such an exhortation? It has a meaning based
on realism only if the "living in the Spirit" refers to the entirety of
the objective work of the redemptive work of Christ now accomplished and
available to mankind, a redemption which surrounds them by the life of
the Church in which they live but a redemption in which they must actively
participate, in which they must "walk" if they are to obtain and receive
the final work of redemption, the union of man and God in love, in goodness,
in truth. The "walk" is an obvious expression of activity, of movement
toward a goal. In Galatians 6:2 St. Paul links the commandment of love
and the "walking in the Spirit" with "the law of Christ." "And thus you
will fulfill the law of Christ." The very language of "the law of Christ"
and the "fulfilling" of that law" is theologically significant, for "the
law of Christ" refers to everything communicated to the Church through
Christ. The monastic and ascetical life is precisely such an attempt to
fulfill this "law of Christ." His concluding thought in Galatians is: "Peace
and mercy upon those many who will walk by this rule." The "new creation"
about which St. Paul speaks is both an already accomplished redemptive
reality and, for us as individuals with spiritual freedom, the "new creation"
is a reality which must be "formed," a reality which can come about only
through process, when the subjective reality of each person is "formed"
into the objective reality of the "new creation" wrought by our Lord Jesus
Christ.
EPHESIANS
In
Ephesians 1:14
St. Paul uses extremely interesting language in relationship to our "salvation"
in Christ "in whom we believed and thereafter were sealed with the Holy
Spirit "who is an earnest of our inheritance unto redemption of the possession."
The meaning here is clear: the seal of the Holy Spirit is the "deposit"
toward an inheritance of which we take possession when we acquire it. It
is a dynamic text. That possession of such an inheritance requires that
we walk in "good works" in clear in Ephesians 2:10: "For we are
a product of him, created in Christ Jesus unto good works, which God previously
prepared in order that we might walk in them." In
Ephesians 6:11
St. Paul again uses the image of warfare and of putting on the "whole armor
of God." The "walk" is evoked again in 5:8 and 5:15. "Walk as children
of the light." "See, therefore, that you walk carefully." In 5:9 he writes
that "the fruit of the light [is] in all goodness and righteousness and
truth." It is the "walking in the light" that produces "the fruit which
is [in] all goodness, righteousness and truth" and this is described as
"proving what is well-pleasing to the Lord."
In
Ephesians 5:14
St. Paul quotes from what was probably a hymn of the early Church, a text
which has the ring of a monastic motif to it. "Rise, sleeping one." And
to what purpose ought one to rise? In 5:1 he commands to "be therefore
imitators of God." In 4:23 St. Paul writes that we are "to be renewed in
the spirit of your mind" and "to put on the new man." He begs us in 4:1
"to walk worthily of the calling with which you were called." In 4:15 he
exhorts that "we may grow into him [Christ] in all respects." In 6:18 St.
Paul stresses the importance of prayer. "By means of all prayer and petition,
praying at every time." All these are aspects of the monastic and ascetical
life.
PHILIPPIANS
The
Epistle to the Philippians
contains
many expressions that directly relate to an active spiritual life. In 1:25
he speaks of "advance and joy of the faith." In 1:27 he speaks of "conducting"
oneself "worthily of the Gospel." "Stand in one spirit, with one soul striving
together in the faith of the Gospel." Here is the "striving" so disliked
by Nygren.
For St. Paul we are required
not only to believe but also to suffer. In Philippians
1:29 he writes:
"ou monon to eis auton pisteuein alla kai to hyper autou paschein."
And he refers to this as a "struggle," an "ordeal." In 2:16 he speaks of
the possibility of "running and laboring in vain." In 3:8 St. Paul speaks
of "gaining Christ," and this within the context of the "righteousness
of the law" as opposed to the "righteousness based on faith." Philippians
3:11-16
is one of the more interesting texts. "If somehow I may attain to the resurrection
out of the dead. Not that I received already or already have been perfected,
but I follow if indeed I may lay hold, in as much as I was laid hold of
by Christ Jesus. Brothers, not yet do I reckon myself to have laid hold.
But one thing [I do], forgetting on one hand the things behind, and stretching
forward on the other hand to the things which are ahead, I follow the mark
for the prize of the heavenly calling of God in Christ Jesus. Therefore,
as many as [are] perfect, let us think this. Nevertheless, to what we arrived,
let us walk by the same." Here St. Paul speaks both of laying hold of Christ
and being "laid hold of by Christ." The synergistic activity is obvious
and realistic. All the language in the passage indicates and underscores
the activity of God and the activity of man, of the objective reality of
an achieved redemption and man’s process of "laying hold," of "stretching
forward" to the ultimate goal, a goal unachievable if man does not become
spiritually active. The Greek verbal structures of "I may attain" and "I
may lay hold of" are not without meaning.
In
Philippians 4:8-9
St. Paul speaks universally as he does in Romans
1. "Whatsoever
things are true, whatsoever things are honorable, whatsoever things are
just, whatsoever things are pure, whatsoever things are lovable, whatsoever
things are well-spoken of, if there be any virtue, and if there be any
praise, consider these things." These qualities—the true, the just, the
pure, the lovable—are not qualities which have been revolutionized by the
new creation wrought by the Incarnation of the God-Man, they have not come
into existence nor been revolutionized by Christian thought. Rather, they
are within the very texture of human nature and existence, things that
every conscience knows spontaneously. What Christianity has done, however,
is to break forth a new path for mankind to participate in the true, the
just, the pure in a new way and with a new power through Christ. They now
no longer exist as ideals, as the absolute, but are existentially and ontologically
accessible to human nature through redemption. St. Paul speaks almost a
Platonic language here, and yet it is thoroughly Christian.
COLOSSIANS
In St. Paul’s Epistle
to the Colossians 1:22-23 and 29 the realism of synergy is depicted.
"But now he reconciled in the body of his flesh through his death to present
you holy and blameless and irreproachable before him, if indeed you continue
in the faith having been founded and steadfast and not being moved away
from the hope of the Gospel which you heard."
The objective reconciliation
now exists but in order to participate in it one must be found holy, blameless,
and irreproachable, and this is all contingent upon the significant "if"—"if
indeed you continue in the faith." In verse 29 we encounter the ideas of
"maturity," "labor," and "struggle" or "ordeal." "In order that we may
present every man mature in Christ, for which also I labor struggling according
to his energy energizing in me in power."
Colossians 1:10 expresses
the same idea of "worth," of "pleasing" God, of "bearing fruit in every
good work," and of "increasing in the knowledge of God." But the very power
comes from the might of the glory of God. "With all power dynamized according
to the might of his glory." Colossians
2:6-7 expresses also the
two spiritual wills and activities in the process of redemption. "As therefore
you received Christ Jesus the Lord, walk in him, and being confirmed in
the faith as you were taught."
The depth of the idea of
synergy is found not only in co-dying and co-suffering with Christ but
also in co-resurrection with him. In Colossians 3:1 St. Paul writes:
"If therefore you were co-raised with Christ, seek the things above." St.
Paul continues the use of many imperative exhortations in chapter 3. "Put
to death therefore your members on earth: fornication, uncleanness, passion,
evil desire, and covetousness which is idolatry" (5). "Put away now all
things . . ." (8). And then the command (4:2) to continue in prayer and
vigil.
I AND II THESSALONIANS
In
I Thessalonians St.
Paul continues this second aspect of the redemptive process by referring
to the "work of faith" (1:3), by expressing concern that "labor may be
in vain" (3:5), by exhorting "if you stand in the Lord" (3:8), by exhorting
that the "breastplate of faith and love" be put on (5:8), and by commanding
to test everything, to hold fast to what is good, to abstain from every
form of evil (5:21-22). In 3:10 St. Paul writes: "Praying exceedingly night
and day ... to adjust the shortcomings of your faith." Why the need to
adjust the shortcomings of faith, if faith "alone" is the sole criterion
of salvation, as is held by certain schools of theology rooted in the tradition
of the Reformation? In 4:4-5 St. Paul writes interestingly. "For this is
the will of God: your sanctification . . . that each one of you know how
to possess his vessel in sanctification and honor." The goal here of the
spiritual life in Christ is sanctification and the significant text is
to "know how to possess" this "vessel." Such language expresses the dynamism
of a synergistic process of redemption. In 5:9 St. Paul uses the expression
"unto the obtaining of salvation." In II Thessalonians
2:14 St.
Paul uses the expression unto obtaining of the glory of our Lord." In II
Thessalonians 1: 11 St Paul prays that they may be deemed worthy of
the calling and that they may fulfill every "good pleasure of goodness
and work of faith in power."
I AND II TIMOTHY
In
I Timothy 1:5-6
we read: "Now the end of the charge is love out of a pure heart and a good
conscience and unpretended faith, from which things some, missing aim,
turned aside." In 1:18-19 the image of warfare is again used. "This charge
I commit to you, child Timothy ... in order that you might war by them
the good warfare, having faith and a good conscience, which some, thrusting
away, have made shipwreck concerning the faith."
I Timothy 2:1-3 has
the same intensity of spiritual activity found in monastic and ascetical
literature: "I exhort, therefore, first of all, that petitions, prayers,
intercessions, and eucharists be made on behalf of all men, on behalf of
kings and all those in high positions, in order that we may lead a peaceable
and quiet life in all piety and seriousness. This is good and acceptable
before God our Savior, who wishes all men to be saved and to come to a
full knowledge of truth." The same emphasis continues in 4:7-10, especially
the expressions "exercise yourself" and "for unto this we labor and struggle."
I
Timothy 6:11-12 again stresses the "struggle," that "laying hold" of
that which has been objectively accomplished in redemption. "Struggle the
good struggle of the faith, lay hold on eternal life." And in the verse
preceding this one is commanded "to pursue righteousness, piety, faith,
love, endurance, meekness." What spiritual meaning can the "pursuit of
righteousness" have unless it in fact indicates that, although the "righteousness
of God" is established in Christ Jesus, we still must actively struggle
in spiritual warfare in order to "lay hold on" this "righteousness"? Already
in I Timothy 5:9 it is clear that "widows" of a certain age had a special
place within the spiritual life of the Church. "Let a widow be enrolled."
Enrolled into what? It is obviously a special activity within the spiritual
life of the Church to which widows were enrolled, already a special form
of spiritual activity in the earliest life of the Church.
In
II Timothy 1:6
both the objective reality of the gift of redemption and the subjective,
individual work necessary to "lay hold on" this redemptive work are clearly
apparent. "I remind you to fan the flame of the gift of God, which is in
you." The synergy of redemption is spoken of in 2:11-12 with the all significant
"if." "For if we co-died with him, we shall also co-live with him; if we
endure, we shall also co-reign with him." In 2:21 sanctification is contingent
upon self-purification. "If, therefore, anyone purifies himself ... he
will be a vessel unto honor, having been sanctified." In 2:22 again we
are exhorted to "flee youthful lusts" and "to pursue righteousness, faith,
love, peace" and the "calling on the Lord" must be done "out of a pure
heart." In 4:7 the path of salvation is presented again as a struggle.
"I have struggled the good struggle, I have finished the course, I have
kept the faith."
HEBREWS
The
Epistle to the Hebrews
is
rich in its thought on both aspects of redemption—on the work of God, and
on the spiritual struggle on the part of man. In 3:14 the language is striking.
"For we have become sharers of Christ, if indeed we hold fast the beginning
of the foundation until the end." In 4:1 the idea is similar. "Let us fear,
therefore, lest a promise being left to enter into his rest, any of you
seems to have come short." The idea of "entering this rest" is continued
in 4:11. "Let us be eager, therefore, to enter into that rest, lest anyone
falls in the same example of disobedience." In 6:1 "the beginning" of the
process is spoken of, accompanied by the exhortation: "let us be borne
on to in maturity." In 6:11 one must show eagerness to the "full assurance
of the hope unto the end!". The same exhortations of "let us" are found
throughout Hebrews. In 10:22-23 it is: "Let us approach with a true
heart" and "Let us hold fast the confession of our hope unyieldingly."
In 11:1 a definition of
faith is proferred. "Now faith is the foundation of things being hoped,
the proof of things not being seen." This definition of faith is often
dismissed too readily. It is a deep idea, especially when considered in
its original Greek structure. Faith is the "foundation," the "reality"
upon which the "hope" of the Christian faith is built. And in its reality
it contains the very proof, the evidence of the heavenly kingdom. The entire
eleventh chapter reveals that "faith" was active under the "old law," although
the faith of and in Christ is of deeper ontological significance precisely
because it is the foundation into a new reality not available under the
"old law." After a lengthy exposition of examples of " faith" under the
"old law," the Epistle to the Hebrews in 12:1 engages in an exhortation
that concerns the very spiritual activity of the new faith. "Putting away
every hindrance and the most besetting sin, let us run through endurance
the struggle set before us." The reality of "discipline" is stressed in
Hebrews,
especially in 12:7: "Endure unto disciple." And that one can "fail
from the grace of God" is clear from 12:15.
I AND II PETER
In
I Peter 1:9 it
is not the beginning of faith or faith in general which results in salvation
but it is precisely the "end of faith" which "obtains" salvation. Purification
and obedience are dominant themes in
I Peter. "Having purified your
souls in the obedience of truth unto an unpretended brotherly love, love
one another earnestly from the heart (1:22). The process of growth in the
spiritual life is stressed in 2:2: "in order that ... you may grow into
salvation." The "war" between lust and the soul is spoken of in 2:11: "I
exhort you as sojourners and aliens to abstain from fleshly lusts, which
war against the soul." In II
Peter 1:4 a profound
theological thought is expressed. The promises which God has given are
great and precious; corruption is in the world because of lust; and man
can not only escape this corruption but also become partakers or participators
in the Divine nature, an idea which is developed in early Christian and
in Eastern Orthodox theological thought, an idea which lays the foundation
for the doctrine of theosis,
of divinization. "He has given
to us precious and very great promises in order that through these you
become partakers of the Divine nature, escaping from the corruption that
is in the world by lust." Precisely because of this we are instructed in
the following verses to supplement our faith, and then the dynamic
spiritual process of growth is presented. "And for this very reason bringing
in all diligence, supply in your faith virtue, and in virtue [supply] knowledge,
and in knowledge [supply] self-control, and in self-control [supply] endurance,
and in endurance [supply] piety, and in piety [supply] brotherly love,
and in brotherly love [supply] love."
In
II Peter 1:10
there is mention of one’s "calling" and election." And yet in the very
same text one is exhorted to be "diligence" precisely to make this "calling
and election" firm. "Be diligent to make your calling and election firm."
And in 2:20-22 the falling away from the "way of righteousness" is not
only possible, but it actually takes place, and it is worse than had one
not known the "way of righteousness" at all. And the texts speaks about
those who had a "full knowledge of the Lord." "For if, having escaped the
defilements of the world by a full knowledge of the Lord and Savior Jesus
Christ, these persons again have been defeated, having been entangled,
the last things have become to them worse than the first. For it was better
for them not to have fully known the way of righteousness than, fully knowing,
to turn from the holy commandment delivered to them. It has happened to
them."
THE EPISTLES OF ST. JOHN
In the three Epistles
of St. John we encounter the same language, the same reality of the
two aspects of redemption. The same "ifs" are there, the same emphasis
of purification (see I John 3:3), the same language about "pleasing God,"
and the same emphasis on "keeping the commandment" and "not sinning." There
is an organic link between loving God and keeping his commandments—the
full range of the commandments of Christ.
THE EPISTLE OF ST. JAMES AND LUTHER’S EVALUATION
Luther’s attitude toward
the Epistle of St. James is well known. In fact, Luther positioned
not only James at the end of the German Bible but also
Hebrews, Jude,
and
Revelation. And his criterion was that they lacked evangelical "purity."
He was not the first to do so. His colleague at Wittenberg, upon whom Luther
later turned, Carlstadt, had distinguished among the books of the New Testament—and
the Old Testament—before Luther took his own action. As early as 1520 Carlstadt
divided the entirety of Scripture into three categories: libri summae
dignitatis, in which Carstadt included the Pentateuch as well as the
Gospels; libri secundae dignitatis, in which he included the Prophets
and fifteen epistles; and libri tertiae dignitatis.
Luther rejected the Epistle
of St. James theologically but of necessity retained it in the German
Bible, even if as a kind of appendix. The ending of Luther’s Preface
to
his edition of the German Bible, which was omitted in later editions, reads
in the German of his time: "... for that reason St. James’ Epistle
is
a thoroughly straw epistle, for it has indeed no evangelical merit to it."
Luther rejected it theologically "because it gives righteousness to works
in outright contradiction to Paul and all other Scriptures ... because,
while undertaking to teach Christian people, it does not once mention the
passion, the resurrection, the Spirit of Christ; it names Christ twice,
but teaches nothing about him; it calls the law a law of liberty, while
Paul calls it a law of bondage, of wrath, of death and of sin."
Luther even added the word
"alone"—allein—in Romans 3:28 before "through faith" precisely
to counter the words in James 2:24: "You see that a man is justified by
works and not by faith only." What is more is that Luther became very aggressive
and arrogant in his response to the criticism that he had added "alone"
to the Biblical text. "If your papist makes much useless fuss about the
word sola, allein, tell him at once: Doctor Martin Luther will have
it so and says: Papist and donkey are one thing; sic volo, sic jubeo,
sit pro ratione voluntas. For we do not want to be pupils and followers
of the Papists, but their masters and judges." Luther continues in a bantering
manner in an attempt to imitate St. Paul in the latter’s response to his
opponents. "Are they doctors? So am I. Are they learned? So am I. Are they
preachers? So am I. Are they theologians? So am I. Are they philosophers?
So am I. Are they writers of books? So am I. And I shall further boast:
I can expound Psalms and Prophets; which they cannot. I can translate;
which they cannot . . . Therefore the word allein shall remain in
my New Testament, and though all pope-donkeys should get furious and foolish,
they shall not get the word out." In some German editions the word "allein"
was
printed in larger type! Some critics of Luther’s translation have accused
him of deliberately translating inaccurately to support his theological
view. As early as 1523 Dr. Emser, an opponent of Luther, claimed that Luther’s
translation contained "a thousand grammatical and fourteen hundred heretical
errors." This is exaggerated but the fact does remain that there are numerous
errors in Luther’s translation.
Indeed, the entire Reformation
in its attitude towards the New Testament is directly in opposition to
the thought on this subject of St. Augustine, who was highly esteemed in
many respects by the Reformation theologians and from whom they took the
basis for some of the theological visions, especially predestination, original
sin, and irresistible grace for Luther and Calvin. On this subject, as
on some many others, there is no common ground between Luther and Calvin
on the one hand and St. Augustine on the other. St. Augustine wrote: "I
should not believe the Gospel except as moved by the authority of the Church."
It should be pointed out that Calvin did not take objection to the Epistle
of St. James.
Luther was so caught up
in the abstraction of a passive righteousness, so infuriated by his experience
as a monk in practicing what he would refer to as "righteousness of works,"
so caught up in attempting to create a specific meaning to one line of
the thought of St. Paul that he misses the very foundation from which the
theological thought of St. James comes forth—and that is the initiative
and will of God. Luther’s criticism that St. James does not mention the
passion, the resurrection, and the Spirit of Christ is inane, for his readers
knew the apostolic deposit—there was no need to mention the very basis
and essence of the living faith which was known to those reading the epistle.
Such a criticism by Luther reveals the enormous lack of a sense for the
historical life of the early Church, for the Church was in existence and
it is from the Church and to the Church that the epistles are written.
Historically, the Church existed before any texts of the "new covenant"
were written. The Church existed on the oral tradition received from the
apostles, as is clearly revealed from the pages of the New Testament itself.
The very foundation of the
theological vision of St. James is the will of God. In 1:17-18 St.
James writes: "Every good giving and every perfect gift is from above,
coming down from the Father of lights, with whom change has no place, no
turning, no shadow. Having willed, he brought us forth by the word of truth
that we should be a kind of firstfruits of his creatures." In 4:15 St.
James writes: "You are instead to say: if the Lord wills, we will both
live and will do this or that." One theologically weak text in the Epistle
of St. James is in 4:8: "Draw near to God and he will draw near to
you." Taken by itself it has a Pelagian ring to it. And in monastic and
ascetical literature one often encounters such expressions. But the meaning
in both this epistle and in monastic and ascetical literature
must be
understood within their total context. Once the synergism of the redemptive
process takes place in the human heart, then the existential reciprocity
of grace and response is so dynamic that one can, as it were, use such
expressions, precisely because it is assumed that God has initiated and
that grace is always at work in the human heart, in all the depths of the
interior of man as well as in external life. The text in the Epistle
of St. James must be understood within the context of 1:18 and 4:15.
Moreover, it is to be noted that this text is preceded by "Be subject,
therefore, to God." In being "subject to God," a relationship is already
in place, a relationship which presupposes the initiative of God and the
response of man.
The
Epistle of St. James
contains
many expressions that will be used in monastic and ascetical life. Temptation
(1:14), the passions (4:1), purifying, cleansing, humbling oneself (4),
and "be distressed and mourn and weep" (4:9). The excoriating words against
the rich (5:1-6) underguird the monastic vow of poverty.
THE LIFE OF THE EARLY CHURCH
The life of the early Church
as described in the Acts of the Apostles is so clear that no analysis
or presentation of texts is necessary to demonstrate that the essentials
exist for a form of spirituality similar to that of monastic and ascetical
Christianity. Mention should also be made of the life of St. John the Baptist:
"It is on solid grounds that a student of monastic origins like Dom Germain
Morin upheld his apparent paradox: it is not so much the monastic life
which was a novelty at the end of the third century and the beginning of
the fourth, but rather the life of adaptation to the world led by the mass
of Christians at the time when the persecutions ceased. The monks actually
did nothing but preserve intact, in the midst of altered circumstances,
the ideal of the Christian life of early days ... And there is another
continuous chain from the apostles to the solitaries and then to the cenobites,
whose ideal, less novel than it seems, spread so quickly from the Egyptian
deserts at the end of the third century. This chain is constituted by the
men and women who lived in continence, ascetics and virgins, who never
ceased to be held in honor in the ancient Church."