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Western Culture vis-a-vis Eastern
- An Orthodox Christian Perspective
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Culture,
Celebration and Expression
It is difficult to figure out how the prevailing
assumption developed that Western cultural tradition is
more refined and civilized than is the Eastern.
Nevertheless, whatever the origin of this assumption might
have been, it seems that this has been taken for granted
for a long time. In this part of the world (western) this
is especially true, and people of both Eastern and Western
cultural backgrounds seem to
accept this assumption without question. As a result, the
Westerners have developed a certain air of superiority and
have at times demanded that those of an Eastern cultural
background renounce their
cultural tradition and conform to their prevailing
superior Western cultural practices. When in the beginning
of this century, and to some extent even now, the
Anglo-Saxon city clerk told the intimidated
immigrant that his name would not be Basil or Constantine
but William or Charles, he did not have the slightest
doubt that he was a missionary who was civilizing the
barbarians. On the other hand, the
immigrant Easterner often felt overwhelmingly embarrassed
for his barbarian background and he was very eager to
Anglo-Saxonize himself. He would change his name from
Papadopoulos to Papson, forget his mother tongue, speak to
his children in broken English, and, finally, he would
also change his religion, and become Episcopalian, because
Episcopalianism was the religion of the high class.
Even if he did not change his religion, he would try very
hard to Protestantize Orthodoxy so that it was less
barbaric. The use of incense was limited, as was lighting
candles, kissing icons, or doing
prostrations. All these were the uncouth practices of an
old grandmother; these were dismissed with disgust by
father and mother.
In everyday life many reformations were also very quickly
introduced. Those reformations had mainly to do with the
ways of expressing anger, sadness, happiness, and despair,
as well as the role and value of the human body.
Expression of anger, which was so direct with Easterners,
was strongly discouraged. Screaming or yelling, a very
common and healthy way for Easterners to express anger,
was characterized as
cannibalism, and composure and calmness became the
definite indication of refinement.
The expression of joy was also limited to controlled
smiles and celebrations, and feasting was so much
devitalized that it became difficult to know the
difference between a wake and a wedding reception.
At this point I would like to mention how this mentality
influenced Orthodox worship in the West, since Orthodox
worship is celebrating and feasting more than anything
else. The spontaneity of the faithful was suppressed and
Orthodox worship deteriorated to an orderly bore.
The expression of grief was reduced to an ugly farce. Many
non-reformed Orthodox who visited their grieving
Anglo-Saxon friends found themselves in the predicament of
being consoled by the bereaved
themselves who would try to control their visiting
friends' sobbing by repeating in disgust, "Do not cry my
dear, everything is fine."
I do not think there are many things more pathetic and
more barbaric than the mother who stands dressed in a
flowery dress with a glamorous hairdo and makeup next to
the casket of a young son or
daughter who has died a tragic death and asks with a smile
of every newcomer, "Doesn't he look beautiful?", and the
visitor replies with the same smile, "He definitely does;
they have done a beautiful job," to which the grieving
mother responds very politely, "Oh, thank you very much."
Another strong element of Western culture is a definite
dualism. For example, there is a strong contempt for the
human body which is not expressed in the crudely open ways
that some of the
ascetics express it, but in a very subtle, undetectable
way which penetrates everyday living. Most common is the
strong distaste for any bodily gestures or facial
expressions, as well as touching, which
implies that the body exists only for sexual promiscuity.
Many zealous Orthodox, especially converts, are overcome
with indignation when Orthodoxy is mixed up with cultural
or, as they call it in order to make it sound more
Sovinistic, ethnic traditions.
These people are obviously still unable to get rid of
their former error, which is probably the worst of Western
heresies, namely, the separation of religion from life and
its reduction either to a sterile religious
intellectualism or to some kind of quaint and exotic
mysticism. In reality, unless religion becomes a style of
life that is a culture which is continually experienced in
everyday life without any impressive pronouncements and
fanfare, it is only a gimmick, a game, or a "trip."
To help in understanding this point, I would like to bring
to your attention that the Anglo-Saxon cultural
characteristics I tried so hard to ridicule have a
theological origin. They were inspired by Puritanism and
pietism, those ugly monsters which were begotten out of
wedlock from the triangle of Christianity, Romanism and
European barbarism.
Spirituality:
Static or Becoming
I do not know if I can fully explain how these disastrous
distortions of Christian morality developed, but it seems
that Western Christianity very early developed the belief
that people either are Christians, which means they meet
certain standards, or they are not. Western Christian
spirituality and morality is static in that sense. The
procedure of becoming a member of the body of Christ is
similar to the procedure of becoming a member of a club.
That is, to become a member of a certain club you have to
meet certain requirements. Actually in the Orthodox Church
in America the procedure of becoming a member of the
Church is not similar to that of becoming a member of a
club but identical.
It is not probably an accident that the passage of the 5th
chapter of St. Matthew is translated in English as: "You
must be perfect." However, in Greek, the verb is in the
future tense of indicative mood and it is a promise which
implies very clearly that that perfection will be granted
through grace in the future, though in English it is in
present tense and the imperative mood which implies that
man is expected to reach perfection by himself
immediately.
As I said, I cannot trace out the origin of this notion; I
only know that Augustine was already introducing it when
if I am not mistaken, he said in his confessions that
after his baptism he had no sexual thoughts. I hate to
question Augustine's honesty, but it is absolutely
impossible for me to accept his statement. I suspect that
he made that statement because he already had the notion
that since
he was a Christian, he was not supposed to have any sexual
thoughts. The understanding of Eastern Christianity at the
same time was entirely different. Historically,
outstanding Christians with a great
reputation for wisdom, perfection, and holiness, like St.
Anthony, do not have any difficulty talking about their
sexual thoughts and temptations, even to a very old age.
The desert fathers, those giants
of Christian spirituality, report their sexual anxieties
and transgressions with an amazing simplicity and
openness. I would like to mention only one of those
beautiful stories that convey so well the desert fathers'
definite conviction that a Christian is constantly in the
process of becoming, and consequently what makes somebody
a Christian is that he is moving, that is, he is growing
spiritually, and not just that he is meeting any standards
at any specific time.
"A brother was goaded by lust, and rising at night be made
his way to an old man, and told him his thoughts, and the
old man comforted him. And revived by that comforting he
returned to his
cell. And again the spirit of lust tempted him, and again
he went to the old man. And this happened many times. But
the old man did not discountenance him, but spoke to him
to his profit, saying, "Yield
not to the devil, nor relax thy mind: but rather as often
as the devil troubles thee, come to me, and he shall go
buffeted away. For nothing so dispirits the demon of lust
as when his assaults are
revealed. And nothing so heartens him as when his
imaginations are kept secret." So the brother came to him
eleven times, confessing his imaginings. And thereafter he
said to the old man, "Show love to me, my father, and give
me some word." The old man said, "Believe me, my son, if
God permitted the thoughts with which my own mind is stung
to be transferred to thee, thou wouldst dash thyself
headlong." And by the old man saying this, his great
humbleness did quiet the goading of lust in the brother."
I said before that what, makes somebody a Christian is the
fact that he is moving, and growing; he is not stagnant,
nor has he reached a certain level of perfection as a
final point. In Christianity every single person's
standards are to some extent different from anybody
else's. The expectation for the person who is on the first
step of the ladder of perfection is to move to the second;
the expectation for the person who is on the tenth step is
to move to the eleventh; therefore, when the latter
individual is not
moving towards the eleventh step, he can be condemned,
while the first one can be saved, although he is eight
steps lower than the latter. The parable of the Pharisee
and the tax collector is a good example of that. The
Pharisee is a decent man. He is not a thief, not an
adulterer; he is a temple-goer and an ardent temple
supporter. But he is satisfied with his accomplishments,
and he believes that there
is nothing else he has to do; and, as a result, he had
become stagnant. On the other hand, the tax collector
lives an ugly life, but he realizes it; he is not
satisfied with it, and he is resolved to move. It is the
latter, not the former, who went up to his home justified,
said Christ. The whole Eastern Christian tradition has
developed on the basis of this stand. Western Christianity
seems to have missed this entirely, and it got really
caught up in its inflexible and impersonal
generalizations. It developed the
either/or Christian morality which presented very serious
problems right away, and these show up very clearly in our
times. The Christian West tried to cope with the
consequences of its either/or
generalized and standardized morality by developing two
highly destructive patterns: 1) the "appear to be" pattern
and 2) the "lowering of standards" pattern.
Two Destructive
Patterns in The West
The first, in essence, just removes the focus from trying
to be a Christian to trying to appear to be a Christian.
Very early, Western Christians realized that they would
never make it if the only way
they could be Christians would be to meet all the
standards; therefore they concentrated their efforts on
trying to appear to be the way they were supposed to be. A
good name for that tactic is hypocrisy, and it is familiar
to all legalistic and rigid moralities. Phariseeism was
exactly that, and Puritanism and pietism excelled in this
— far beyond Phariseeism. Southern Baptist piety is an
excellent contemporary example of this tactic.
The other pattern has been the lowering of the standards.
That is, if the only way you can be a Christian is to meet
all the standards, we can increase the number of
Christians by decreasing the moral standards. Our age has
witnessed much of this tactic. It started with
Protestantism and developed to a spectacular firecracker
in Roman Catholicism which responded with an overflow of
permissiveness to the recent overwhelming exodus and
indifference of its followers. I wonder which of the two
tactics has been more destructive. The first created false
people who spent their energy not to grow but to hide! The
second took the excitement out of life. All the average
American expects from himself is not to steal and not to
kill, and when he accomplishes that, he sits back doing
nothing and ends up vegetating and being bored to death.
There is not any far-reaching perspective in his life,
therefore he develops an infantile self-concern, which
leads either to depression or to breakdown. When he cannot
have instant gratification of his great oral needs, the
world falls apart. He would never have a chance to get
depressed due to sexual frustration, if he had the
far-reaching direction in his life that a certain ascetic
had, who every time he ate food, cried because he was
nurturing his corruptible body when in incorruptible soul
was starving.
That static notion of Christian morality and spirituality
penetrated the life of the Western Christian and became a
life style, which they live without being aware of it.
Since the Western notion of Christian morality was the
meeting of certain standards, a Christian was not supposed
to have any negative feelings like anger an hatred. That
notion was incorporated in the culture and eventually the
expression of anger became a sign of barbarism. Refined
people were not supposed to express or feel any anger. As
a result of this notion, anger was suppressed, and it was
transformed to all kinds of bad symptoms. Repressed anger
is a basic part of all mental disturbances. The suppressed
anger becomes devious and comes out well camouflaged and
over-destructive. This is exactly what Christ describes,
saying, "When the unclean spirit has gone out of a man, be
passes through waterless places seeking rest, but he finds
none. Then he says, `I will return to my house from which
I came.' And when he comes, he finds it empty, swept, and
put in order. Then he goes and brings with him seven other
spirits more evil than himself, and they enter and dwell
there; and the last state of that man becomes worse than
the first." (Matthew 12, 43-49)
The unclean spirit that comes out of the Easterner with
uncouth screaming and yelling, and which is repressed by
the refined Westerner, comes back bringing with him seven
spirits more evil than
himself like all kinds of neurosis, schizophrenia,
depression, religious fanaticism, and many others;
undoubtedly, the state of the psychotic refined Westerner
is far worse than the state of the
uncouth and crude, screaming and yelling Easterner.
Repressed anger has been the cause of many disasters in
human history. Many wars, revolutions, and massacres have
been the disastrous outburst of repressed anger, and
likewise many destructive effects of religious fanaticism
like the Inquisition and the dreadful murders of the
Calvinistic communities in the Middle Ages. Also, many
dictators or
stern and punitive religious leaders are moved by a
repository of repressed anger which usually refers more
appropriately to parental figures and which has been
repressed by religious and cultural inhibitions. This is
how religion becomes life, and it is lived by these people
without awareness. This is how Western Christianity has
influenced Western culture and this is how a distorted
Christianity
has caused immeasurable harm and innumerable deplorable
cases of mental disturbance with which modern psychiatry
is struggling. The therapeutic process for a schizophrenic
in essence is a process of
Easternization of the Western man; it is a process of
re-orthodoxizing the Western Christian, because Orthodox
Christianity has not accepted the "appear to be" pattern
and, although it encourages the struggle for perfection,
condemns perfectionism which is intolerance of human
imperfection and which, in the language of the ascetics,
is an indication of demonic pride.
The Image of
Christ
It is amazing how Western Christianity distorted, in this
issue, the scriptural image of Christ and presented him as
condemning human aggression and as a sickening, soft, and
effeminate man with rosy cheeks and blond wavy hair. It is
deplorable that so many Orthodox are offended by the
strong, powerful, dynamic, scriptural Christ of the
Byzantine art although they are infatuated by this
nauseating
Western Christ. It is amazing how Western Christianity
managed to visualize the fiery eyes of Christ which
"looked around" at the Pharisees "with anger," (Mark 3,5)
as sweetish and wishy-washy, how
it resolved to present as soft and effeminate, the
powerful Christ who made "a whip of cords" and drove with
it all the merchants "out of the temple" with their sheep
and oxen, and "poured out the coins
of the money changers and overturned their tables." (John
2, 13-16) It is amazing how Western Christianity managed
to describe as quiet and soft-spoken him who uttered the
dreadful "woes" and called the Scribes and Pharisees
"hypocrites," "blind fools," "blind guides," "white-washed
tombs," "serpents" and "brood of vipers" (Matthew 23) and
told his tempting disciples "Be gone Satan."
(Matthew 16, 23) It is inconceivable how Christ
disintegrated to a eunuch prince of peace although he
stated very emphatically, "Do not think that I have come
to bring peace on earth; I have not come to
bring peace, but a sword. For I have come to set a man
against his father, and daughter against her mother, and
daughter-in-law against her mother-in-law; and man's foes
will be those of his own
household," (Matthew 10, 34-36) Christ did promise peace
but not a hypocritical external peace but a real inner
peace. He said, "My peace I give to you; not as the world
gives do I give to you." (John 14,27)
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