This posting is a revised excerpt from “Orthodox Perspectives on Peace, War, and Nonviolence,”
The Ecumenical Review March 2011 (63/1): 54-61.
Orthodox
moral theology does not view war as unambiguously good, let alone holy; but neither
does it require nonviolence or pacifism of the faithful.[1] The Church tolerates war as a tragically
necessary or unavoidable endeavor for the protection of the innocent, the
vindication of justice, and the establishment of peace. The soldier who kills in war is not a
murderer, but likely someone in need of pastoral ministry toward healing from
the damaging spiritual effects of the use of deadly force.[2]
Through
oeconomia, the Church’s canons are
applied pastorally in order to help particular people find spiritual healing
and advance in holiness. The peace of Christ--and the non-resistant, forgiving
love by which He brought salvation to the world—remains the norm of the
Christian life. Unfortunately, the peace
of the world as we know it relies on imperfect arrangements of political, social,
economic, and military power, which both reflect and often contribute to the
brokenness of human souls and communities. Orthodoxy calls everyone to work
toward peace, reconciliation, and justice for their neighbors. When doing so requires involvement in
warfare, the Church provides spiritual therapy for healing and guidance for
growth in holiness to those who take up arms.
The
Divine Liturgy demonstrates the legitimate role of governmental and military
power in our world. In the Anaphora of
St. Basil the Great, the priest prays for God to “be mindful…of all civil
authorities and of our armed forces; grant them a secure and lasting peace…that
we in their tranquility may lead a calm and peaceful life in all reverence and
godliness.” Immediately following are similar
appeals for God to “be mindful” of the victims of violence and oppression: “those who are under judgment, in the mines,
in exile, in bitter servitude, in every tribulation, necessity and danger…”
These
petitions indicate that the Church itself benefits from a stable and just
social order that enables the Christian community to live in peace. Of course, the Church has endured terrible
periods of persecution from wicked governments with remarkable faithfulness;
nonetheless, “a calm and peaceful life in all reverence and godliness” is
preferable to all-consuming strife that inflames passions, tempts people to
apostasy, and makes the demands of communal survival so pressing that
evangelism and other ministries suffer greatly.
It is at least in part through just and peaceable social orders that God
is mindful of prisoners, exiles, refugees, victims of crime, and other
displaced and marginalized persons.
The
Church affirms the essential goodness of all dimensions of creation, including
the embodied social existence of humanity.
Salvation is not a matter of escaping the limits of the creaturely world
or pretending that suffering in the flesh and in society is not real. The Son of God became incarnate to heal
fallen humanity, died on a cross, was buried in a tomb, descended to Hades, and
then rose again as a complete, glorified
Person--as the Victor over death. As Orthodox Christians pursue a dynamic praxis of peace, they do well not to downplay the significance of real-life struggles for justice faced by nations and societies in the name of an abstract spirituality.
Person--as the Victor over death. As Orthodox Christians pursue a dynamic praxis of peace, they do well not to downplay the significance of real-life struggles for justice faced by nations and societies in the name of an abstract spirituality.
Orthodoxy
views all dimensions of creation eucharistically. The offering of the Divine Liturgy is the
paradigm for human life in the world as we fulfill our vocation as the priests
of creation.[3] Bread and wine become the Body and Blood of
Christ through which the Church participates already in the heavenly banquet of
the Kingdom of God. Communicants are
then to live the Eucharist by offering all aspects of their lives to the Father
in union with the sacrifice of the Son by the power of the Holy Spirit. Such a
life should be characterized by peacemaking, forgiveness, and reconciliation; a
non-violent approach surely provides the most straightforward witness to the
life of Kingdom as revealed in Jesus Christ.[4] Nonetheless, the process of theosis is dynamic and open to everyone
in all walks of life and vocations; hence, the soldier, the police officer, and
others involved in the use of deadly force for the protection of the innocent
may grow in holiness and find salvation.
They do not fight holy wars and will not become saints simply due to
their success in killing enemies. [5] Their participation in violence may produce a
variety of obstacles for their faithful pursuit of the Christian life. They will need the spiritual therapies of the
Church in order to find healing for their souls from the harms they have
suffered. But as the many saints from
military backgrounds indicate, it is possible for soldiers to overcome the
damaging effects of bloodshed and to embody holiness. Fr. John McGuckin notes that “most of the
soldier saints…went voluntarily to their deaths, as passion-bearers, or
martyrs; and some of them were actually martyred for refusing to obey their
military superiors.” Those who returned
home as “righteous vindicators” did so because they conquered not only a
worldly enemy, but also “the very chaos and wickedness” of warfare and
bloodshed.[6]
Orthodox
moral theology does not view armed conflict as unambiguously good or holy. It has neither a crusade ethic nor an
explicit just-war theory. Instead, the
Church tolerates war as an inevitable, tragic necessity for the protection of
the innocent and the vindication of justice.
Peacemaking is the common vocation of all Christians, but the pursuit of
peace in a corrupt world at times requires the use of force. In such circumstances, the Church provides
spiritual therapy for healing from the damaging effects of taking life. In every Divine Liturgy, the Church prays for
the peace of the world and all its inhabitants, and participates in the
heavenly banquet of the Kingdom to which all—soldier and pacifist alike—are
invited by their Lord.
[1]See
Marian Gh. Simeon, “Seven Factors of Ambivalence in Defining a Just War Theory
in Eastern Christianity,” Proceedings: The 32nd Annual Congress of the
American Romanian Academy of Arts and Sciences, (Montreal: Polytechnic International Press, 2008).
[2]See
Fr. John McGuckin, “St. Basil’s Guidance on War and Repentance,” In Communion (Winter 2006); Aristeides
Papadakis, The Christian East and the Rise of the Papacy (Crestwood, NY:
St. Vladimir’s Seminary Press, 1994), 86-88; and “Canons of St. Basil the Great,”
“For the Peace from Above” An Orthodox Resource Book on War,
Peace, and Nationalism, H. Boss and J. Forest, eds.,
(Bialystok, Syndesmos, 1999), 45.
[3]
See Fr. Alexander Schmemann, For the Life
of the World (Crestwood, NY: St.
Vladimir’s Seminary Press, 1998).
[4]
His All Holiness, Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew, Encountering the Mystery: Understanding Orthodox Christianity Today (New York:
Doubleday, 2008), 207, 227, stresses the centrality of the pursuit of
peace to the Christian life.
[5] See Fr. John Erickson, “An Orthodox Peace
Witness?.” Fragmentation of the Church
and Its Unity in Peacemaking, eds. Jeffrey Gros and John D. Rempel (Grand
Rapids, MI: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing
Company, 2001), 48ff.
[6] Fr. John Anthony McGuckin, The Orthodox Church: An Introduction to its History, Doctrine, and
Spiritual Culture (Oxford: Blackwell
Publishing, 2008), McGuckin, The Orthodox
Church, 402. See also Fr. Webster’s
discussion of soldier saints in The
Pacifist Option, 183ff.
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