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Mission Monthly |
...Meditate on These Things.
Phillipians 4.8 "Fr. John believed that God was experienced ‘objectively’ only in the sacraments of the Orthodox Church."A PRODIGAL SAINT: FR. JOHN OF KRONSTADT by Nadieszda Kizenko
Because our Christian backgrounds and “experiences”
are so varied I suspect that some might feel defensive because of what St. John
reportedly believed. It is not
personal, though it is a very personal matter.
I believe it to be a topic of substance.
Apparently, so did St. John. St.
John’s priesthood spanned nearly four decades of the late 19th and
early 20th centuries. He
had to deal with religious pluralism as much as we do here in the early 21st
century. I suspect, however, that
the variety of Christian religious life, and religious life in general, in his
day was much less “cafeteria” style as it is today. Nevertheless he had to deal with Roman Catholicism,
Protestantism, the Jewish and Muslim faiths, as well as a Russian people who are
said to have been “very superstitious.”
The question that I am asking is this: Is it possible to gauge one’s
experience of God?
It is not my
intention nor am I inclined to judge the sincerity or authenticity of anyone who
makes a claim to have had an experience of God.
I am simply intrigued. I
have had my own experiences which obviously have led me to where my faith life
is today. Each of us associated
with our St. Ignatius community, regardless of his background, unquestionably
can say the same. Yet St. John
apparently makes a claim of objectivity regarding these personal and powerful
experiences. What could he possibly
have been thinking? I know that he
was a man of respect. It is said of
him that he was very engaging and considerate in faith discussions with those of
both non-Orthodox Christian and non-Christian backgrounds. I believe we can conclude that St. John did not say or
believe that God is only working in the Orthodox Church. Stories of St. John’s life tell us that he was a man of
boundless energy who made it his custom to frequently visit and travel around
his city and region. Without a
doubt he was acquainted with God-fearing, virtuous people of many different
backgrounds. What I therefore
believe he is expressing is the caution one must have in claiming a “personal
experience” of God.
An
encounter with God is a salvific moment. It
is awesome and, dare we say, charismatic. It
is worthy of repeated recollection! The
Orthodox Christian belief in a personal God clearly articulates the validity and
need for these “encounters.” These
events, however, by their very definition are based on subjective
interpretations and emotion. From
an Orthodox Christian point of view, giving oneself over to subjective
interpretation of any particular life event is spiritually precarious.
I am reminded of a saying from one of our Desert Fathers, “Whoever
guides himself spiritually has a fool for a spiritual father.” When left to a subjective determination of an experience of
God, of interpretation of Scripture, of how to pray or be disciplined in the
life of virtue, can one maintain any certainty in his conclusion?
Orthodox
Christianity is often criticized because of her rituals, her creed, her
disciplines, and as the above writer also wrote, her “thicket of
regulations;” but her stability and inner unity is unquestioned!
It is the safety born of this stability and inner unity to which I
believe St. John is referring in the objective experience of God.
Orthodox Christians must have conviction about their faith and the forms
used to communicate the grace of God. These
forms are God given, not “man made.” My question to critics of Orthodoxy is this: Do you really
prefer to trust late theological developments or, dare we say fads, over
faithfulness to the entire wisdom and experience of Christian history and
tradition? Orthodoxy is very much
aware of the condemned of Matthew 7:21-23, yet I would much rather face any
criticism of legalism than be subject to the instability of subjective,
individual interpretation. There is
form to our worship and form for our Sacraments - Baptism, the Eucharist, the
Confession of our sins and all the rest. These
forms are objective and, even more importantly, they are proven.
What any Orthodox Christian will tell you, whether cradle or convert,
once they have fully entered into the richness and authority of objective
Orthodox worship and prayer, Sacraments, patristics, lives of the Saints,
personal discipline, and theology, is that Orthodoxy is not a “religion” or
simply one expression of Christianity – it is the fullness of Truth, the
fulfillment of God’s Israel, the faith united in the undivided Trinity, the
fullness of Life!
St. John of
Kronstadt was an amazing man, priest and pastor.
There were few in his day or in ours that exemplify the zeal for God that
he possessed. His life was consumed
with prayer, liturgy, administering the sacraments, visiting the sick, writing,
arranging provisions for the poor and needy, and love in action; in my view his
life was as “charismatic” as any who might lay claim to such experience.
Still, what was the basic hope for his life?
That he might serve at the altar of God and that he might “revivify the
relation of his parishioners… to God [by making] their experience of the
sacraments more intimate and more frequent.”
For Fr. John love for God was first experienced and expressed in
obedience to the (objective) life of the Church.
This is not to count the number of times we take the Eucharist or attend
Vespers, but unless we are doing these things, intimately and frequently, our
subjective experience of God, individually or as a community, may not be what we
think it is.
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