Putting
words on a page often helps to clarify our thinking. In writing The Forgotten Faith: Ancient
Insights for Contemporary Believers from Eastern Christianity (Cascade
Books, 2013), I attempted to present key Orthodox insights in ways that average
Americans could appreciate them, not as exotic or abstract ideas, but as
invitations to the abundant life found in Jesus Christ. To connect with people today, we have to
begin where they live, so to speak, which may require making some unusual
connections. So here we go…
Food,
sex, and athletics are probably more real to most people in our society than is
the Lord. Contrary to the assumptions
of popular culture, true Christianity is not an escape from the world as know
it to an invisible and imaginary realm. Our
Orthodox faith does not require us to abandon or condemn any dimension of life,
but instead to offer all that we are and do for fulfillment, blessing, and
healing. There is no part of our
existence that is intrinsically evil or cut off from the good news of our
salvation. We become more fully who God created
us to be through the practices of our Orthodox faith in the world as know it.
Take
eating and drinking, for example. The
biblical story of the corruption of humanity and the entire creation begins
with the abuse of food in the Garden of Eden.
There was nothing wrong with the fruit of the vine, but Adam and Eve
chose to use it to satisfy their self-centered desires instead of obeying God
and growing closer to Him. Jesus Christ set right the place of food by using
bread and wine as Communion, as the menu of the Heavenly Banquet. Almost all of us struggle with passions
related to overindulgence in food and drink of one form or another. The Lord does not save us by condemning what
we tend to abuse, but instead by Himself becoming our food and drink. He fulfills the original role of the fruits
of creation in giving life and strengthening our relationship with God and one
another.
Orthodox
Christians fast, not because there is something wrong with food itself, but
because there is something wrong with each of us personally and
spiritually. In other words, we have
followed Adam and Eve in using these blessings for something other than their
intended purposes and, consequently, have become slaves to our distorted
desires. No wonder that so many people
today are obese, have eating disorders, or develop diabetes due to an unhealthy
diet. By learning to discipline our
appetites a bit on fast days, we gain some experience in controlling other
self-centered desires for pleasure or simply getting our own way. We can direct the money saved by eating a
humble diet to serving Christ in the poor, even as we grow in humility when we
find it hard to be content with broccoli and tofu instead of steak and eggs. It is through the struggle to discipline our
desires that we become more fully the people God created human beings to be in
the first place.
If fasting is not a sufficiently touchy topic,
let’s turn now to sex. As the lyrics of
both country music and rap demonstrate, the temptations in this area of life
are powerful even as the consequences of our missteps in it are grave. Since contemporary American culture has lost
all sense of chastity, it is imperative that Orthodox believers—especially our
youth—are solidly grounded in traditional Christian teaching and practice about
holiness in the relationship between man and woman. Unfortunately, movies, music, the internet, and
other forms of media celebrate corrupt ways of living that lead people very far
from the paths to the Kingdom that Jesus Christ blessed and the saints have
exemplified. Though it is terribly unpopular
to say today, we must bear witness to the countercultural view that sexual
intimacy should occur only within marriage between one man and one woman. Here two persons become one and, in the normal
course of things, bring a new person into the world from their embodied love
for one another. Not simply a matter of
morality or biology, we encounter a profound image of the Holy Trinity in the Christian
family, for distinctive persons share a common life and love. Our aim in sexual ethics is higher than enhancing
public health or securing consent between the parties involved, for marriage
and celibacy are both means of participating in the eternal life that Christ
has brought to the world. We should not be surprised that the One who created
us as man and woman also directs us how to use our sexuality for our salvation.
To embrace anything less is to distort
what it means for human beings to be in the image and likeness of God as male
and female.
Despite what the advocates of the sexual revolution maintain,
there is nothing new under the sun. St.
Paul dealt with just about every form of human decadence imaginable in Corinth,
and Jesus Christ taught a sexual ethic in the Sermon on the Mount that still
challenges even the most righteous to grow in purity of heart. Whether we are married or celibate, we all
have more than enough challenge to fight our own passions and keep a close
watch on our thoughts and desires. The
self-righteous judgment of anyone else is simply not our concern. Again contrary to popular opinion, it is
possible—and it is imperative for Orthodox believers-- to maintain the ancient
Christian vision of sexuality and marriage without becoming like the Pharisees. Both St. Photini (the Samaritan woman at the
well in John 4) and St. Mary of Egypt, for example, got off to a bad start in
this regard, but ultimately became great saints of the Church. Thank God, there is hope for us all to become
more fully who God intends us to be.
Given the skimpy costumes and suggestive movements of some
cheerleaders and dance teams today, there is at least some connection in
popular culture between sex and athletics.
Though we rarely think of sports in relation to religion, there are also
some similarities between gatherings of fans and of worshippers. Both congregate as a community to take on a
collective identity that they show by what they say and do. Orthodox stand up, raise their voices, and
make distinctive hand gestures (i.e., cross themselves) in a familiar pattern,
as do fans of many sports. Where I live in West Texas, high school football
fans drive long distances, sit or stand in blazing heat or bitter cold, and
then arrive back home in the middle of the night. Truth be told, many sports
fans make a much greater offering of time, energy, and effort for their teams
than many Orthodox do for the worship of the Church. There is no question that more families and
kids make participation in athletics a higher priority than participation in
the worship of God. Some who cannot
imagine making time for vespers or matins, for example, think nothing of
enduring the hardships of sports practice for hours in very hot or cold
temperatures.
It is all a matter of priorities, of course. Human beings are going to worship something,
and in our culture athletics has become a god to many people. There is certainly nothing wrong with sports
in and of itself, but the excessive focus that so many place on it should serve
as a reminder that the true race is not for the perishable crown of the praise
of others, but for the imperishable crown that God gives to His true and
faithful servants. Instead of judging anyone, we should be reminded by the
dedication of sports enthusiasts that it is human nature to sacrifice for what
we love and to take joy even in daunting tasks that require discipline and
steadfast commitment. If athletes and
fans devote so much for what amounts to healthful entertainment, how much more
should Orthodox Christians devote themselves to fighting their passions, serving
Christ in their neighbors, and participating in the collective worship of the
Church as a foretaste of the Heavenly Banquet?
Let’s
be clear: To worship the stomachs,
sexual desires, and athletic abilities of human beings is simply to commit
idolatry and degrade ourselves. In
contrast, to offer them and every other dimension of our life and world to God
is to embrace the calling to grow in the divine likeness. That’s not an escape from reality; instead,
it is our pathway to real life in a universe created, redeemed, and sustained
by God. All creation finds its proper
place and fulfillment in Him, including you and me.
This is a woundeful and succinct article. Thank you Fr. Philip
ReplyDeleteThis should be food for thought for all of us. Your insight is appreciated Fr. Philip.
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