A Healing Faith

A Healing Faith – January 30th, 2019

There is a stark difference between the Christianity that certain Protestant pundits uphold, and that of the Orthodox faith. They see and treat the Christian faith a Juridical terms, and treat it more so a moral code that must be upheld.

This is not, and never has been the patristic treatment or view of the Christian faith.

The Church is the Hospital for our very souls, and her doctrines and theology a therapeutic science working towards that end. We see our faith in a divine medicine.

As the priests – the pastors of the Church – are responsible for those under them, there is a reason that we do not have open communion. The Church may be the hospital for the soul, but if we do not follow the prescriptions of the Church, then no healing will take place, just as if you don’t follow the orders of your regular doctor.

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What is the value of a Human life?

Human Life – January 27th, 2019

What is the value of a human life?

What does it mean to value something? As in most languages, most words take on their specificity within the context they are used. Value, as a tangible attribute, is the degree of importance, usefulness, or worth that something is regarded to have. When asking most people across the current cultural milieu what it means for something to have value, the vast majority of respondents would likely reply with regard to something’s monetary value, or market worth. Yet, does something have value simply because of its net or market worth? It is not entirely the monetary amount attached to an item that gives it value, for an item has value particularly when someone owns it (self valuation of the object owned), or another person wants it (coveting an item not owned).

The monetary value of an item is often subjective, and determined by outside factors. One such set of factors driving the value of most market goods is the law of supply and demand. Simply put, the prices of items are determined by the varying degrees of supply and demand, and their subsequent fluctuations. For example, if supply is high, and demand is low, the cost will be low. If demand is high and the supply is low, the cost will be high. Yet, this law seems not to apply in unique and niche markets, where the price of an item can be determined by any number of external factors. Though, for rare and unique items, one of a kind items, whether they be collectibles, cultural artifacts, or other items that cannot be repeated or duplicated, what price can be attached to these? Most people would call these items priceless, for what value can be given to an item unique in its existence.

Things have value, and we value these things because they have value, whether that is of a monetary nature, or its usefulness and what it contributes to our own lives. As such our personal valuation of an item is based upon two questions: 1) What will it cost me? And 2) What can it provide for me? In a materialistic cultural framework, these are the two questions that drive our perceived value of any given thing. So, people desire these things based on how little the answer to number one is versus the greater response within the answer to number two. It is in effect a social adaptation to the supply and demand model. Though, we run into a problem when we try to apply this model to determine the value of a human life, because it at once runs into an immediate contradiction, and the fact that human beings are not things. Let us address the latter point, before addressing the former.

Human beings are not things, but people have reduced themselves to treating other human beings as things, as objects. The reason behind this is due to where one’s desires lie. If you love a thing, you will become a thing. If you love a person, you will become a person. As the cultural milieu in which we live is largely materialistic, most people have fallen in love with things – the car they drive, the house they live in, the “toys” they have, and all the other accoutrements in this life. People love things, and as such they have reduced their own humanity, or perhaps their understanding of humanity, to that of a thing. Humans are no longer unique and individual persons, but things whose value is determined by what one can provide for them.

The devaluing of the human person is why others are so easily able to kill others; so easily able to break another person, whether physically, psychologically, or emotionally; are so easily able to “buy” and use people (i.e. prostitution, slavery, etc) for their own pleasure or purposes; so easily discard and replace people like cogs in a machine; so easily able to ignore the plight of the homeless, the needy, the suffering, and the interred, because to them if a human being cannot otherwise provide something of value or importance to an individual, then they have no value.
The devaluing of the human person is why we are so easily able to discard millions of unborn children, and not even bat an eye about it at a cultural or societal level. They are not yet born, so they do not yet have value. They are not yet born, so they cannot possibly provide the other person any service or material of worth. Humanity, or the understanding of humanity, has been reduced to a thing, so in the eyes of our cultural milieu, the unborn child is not human.

Yet, a human being is not a thing.

So what value can be given to a human life? I cannot even begin to answer this question without first establishing what human life means, and I can only do that through the lens of the Church, within which lies my entire understanding of the whole human being.

In Christian Anthropology, we understand man (ἄνθρωπος) to be created in the image and likeness of its creator. He is a being created with both body and soul. It is with this and in this image and likeness that man stands apart from the rest of creation. So we all begin unique in our humanity alone.

When we look at human DNA, the complex lattice work of deoxyribonucleic acid that exists in all life, we come to the realization that every single human being is unique. No human being has the same DNA as another human being (genetic anomalies and exceptions aside). So, biologically, we are all unique individuals. On top of biology, each human being develops into his own unique and individual person, with unique personalities and character traits, attributes, appearances, and various cognitive and creative qualities. Many aspects are shaped and molded by the environment in which that person exists. So, the end result is that you have a unique human person that cannot be recreated or duplicated – one of a kind. People may be similar to one another, but always unique.

So, what is the value of human life? If we attach the same value construct as previously established, we can only come to one conclusion: Priceless. Yet, this is not the way in which the cultural milieu sees the value of other human beings. So, there now exists a cognitive dissonance between the social construct in which we now live, and the means in which we apply that to the value and understanding of human life.

The Christian Anthropological understanding of the human person is the only one that makes any sense any longer. We are all unique persons living and existing in communion with one another, and should be coexisting in a cooperation of perfect love. We all have value because we are all made in the image and likeness of God. Yes, we are broken individuals, but this is why the Church has always been regarded as a hospital for the human soul, and her theology a therapeutic science towards that end. We hold each other up, contributing our own gifts and material goods to the good and benefit of the whole, to the aid and benefit of that of all His Holy Church, the body of Christ, the collection of people living in communion with one another.

A human being is priceless. Each Human being is a unique person beyond value.. Even those most empty, damaged, corrupted, and broken are not to be discarded, for all have worth and importance. We do not know the value of a piece when reassembling something shattered until we get to the end. We are human beings, collectively pieces of a broken humanity, unique and beyond valuation, marching towards completion in and with God. We are not things, and those who see humanity as things, will be discarded as things in the end.

Poem – God Reigns

Poem – God Reigns – January 27th, 2019

The God who reigns
Rains down on us all.
Each drop holding Him
As much as he holds them
Like all creation, all
that he has made.
No drops falling, lacking,
God’s will and guiding hand.
Soaked from head to toe
As the God who reigns
Rains down on me.

Societal Repentance

Societal Repentance – January 26, 2019

There is a prevalent attitude of “mind your business” that has permeated our society, our culture. We ignore the failures of others and ourselves, we make no effort to pick the other up, and we seem to care little if we ourselves fall again. Even today, when fights break out, accidents occur and people whip out their cell phones with little regard for the other, so we essentially have created blinders to the plight of other people. While these are not moral failings, these are symptoms of the greater issue. .This attitude of going through life with blinders is largely in part how we ended up where we are today as a society. We don’t address our problems, we simply ignore them. This is why the days of public mourning and fasting are gone, because no one wants to recognize and repent of their mistakes. All we have left are the days of excess, and now our social consciousness has forgotten what it means to accept our failures. Instead, everyone is told they are a winner, in spite of their failures.

Beauty

Beauty – January 22, 2019


Plato has said that Beauty is a convincing power of truth. God is beautiful, for he is indeed called the beautiful one, but beauty’s attestation to truth is but one reason why the Evil One labors to use beauty to such great affect.

“Beauty exist to reach us and make us capable of receiving the message in a way that convinces us totally: to the extent each of us is capable of receiving the message, as completely as we can contain, but completely.” ~Met. Anthony Bloom.

With that being said, what is beautiful to the beholder is wholly dependent on what resides in the heart, for it is there that these messages dwell, and here we find our longing for beauty, whatever that may look like. Our desire and sense of beauty comes from that which we hold within our own hearts, for it is in the heart where beauty dwells. An acceptance or recognition of beauty through intellect or passion is simply an aesthetic pleasure, but true beauty lies just beneath the surface of love, and it is what we love that we find truly beautiful.

Reductionism of faith

Reductionism of faith – January 19, 2019

There is a frequent and standing argument that the Christian faith has been made complicated amidst its own simplicity, modern mainstream and commercialized Christianity fighting against the Orthodoxy of the faith in favor of simpler, yet often heretical ideals.  Over the course of two thousand years, the faith has not been made more complicated, but simply the divine light of revelation has shown upon what is and what always was, all to the benefit of our increased understanding of the whole. So, It seems to me that there is an oversimplification of faith being argued for, a reductionism to a simple intellectualism, a mental ascent alone, whereby Christ no longer becomes incarnate in the world in which we life. Unfortunately, this is what we are seeing today across much of Christianity, and is a source of myriad social ills we face today.

It is only the Church, and the hierarchy within that are required to know the details of her theology, and it is the duty of the laity to listen, and follow. Yet, out of an inflated sense of individuality and is preservation, or of pride, no one wants to follow that which was left behind, and instead follow their own conception of truth. This is why Church hopping is so endemic, people look for the Church that fits them best, instead of fitting them, for the life of Christ is the clothing that we wear. One size fits all.

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Categories: Faith

Sufficient Pressure

Sufficient Pressure – January 18, 2019

First I want to apologize for the slight rambling quality of this post. I am a very logic oriented individual, and while I exist quite well within the mystery and cloud of unknowing, sometimes something sparks and intellectual train of thought that causes me to connect the dots between the Cataphatic and Apophatic sides of the theological fence. Here is the latest instance of the ramblings of an Orthodox Deacon 🙂

I was introduced to Nowak’s evolvability equation this evening. It is the idea (at least in my understanding of it) that the means for the replication of life to emerge are molecules subject to forces of selection and mutation. When I heard this, my mind thought of sufficient pressures and conditions in order for life to emerge in inhospitable or changing environments. After this, my mind immediately moved to recent scientific announcements that echo what the Church has already known and practiced for nearly two thousand years.

Recently science has shown that fasting twice a week is of great benefit to our health, and this is something that Christians have practiced since the first century, and even the Jews for centuries before them. It has been revealed that frankincense and myrrh are a psychoactive anti depressant, and this is burned in every divine liturgy and prayer service, which serves towards the healing of soul and body. Beauty is a convincing power of truth, as Plato would say, and “exists to reach us and make us capable of recieving the message in a way that convinces us: to the extent each of us is capable of receiving, the message, so completely as we can contain in, but completely” (Bloom); and nearly all Orthodox Churches are adorned in great beauty via architecture, hymns, icons and the like, all directing us to “Godward” gaze to encounter His divine light. We set our services to chants and singing, not only presenting our services amidst a procession of aural beauty, but to put words to music helping us engrave them into our memories, writing the words onto our very hearts. The Christian creation story, Creation ex Nihilo, is the only one that makes sense within existing scientific ideologies. The Christian understanding of the human being, a divine-human Anthropology, is the only one that brings wholeness to humanity, and personhood. Sometimes it feels as though science is only now starting to catch up to faith, even though many seem to argue the opposite.

Going back to Nowak’s evolvability equation, though not a direct parallel to the initial understanding and meaning of the equation, I see all these things mentioned, the prescriptions of the Church, directing us to the willing submission to sufficient pressures and conditions to make us right for the conditions of life after death, the pressures of asceticism, sacrifice, and existence apart from this world. That it is only within these conditions, the prescriptions of the Church, and life within the Church, that will prepare us properly for what lies beyond our final breath. If we cannot abandon this world, the comforts of this world, our attachments of this world and all the things therein, then when we fall into our eternal rest, we will forever be looking back with eager longing for what is gone, missing the divine light shining eternally in our presence. We look away from God, and never experience the joy of divine love, for He is love.

Psalmody #2 – Prayer of Repentance.

Psalmody #2 – Prayer of Repentance – January 17, 2019

Oh Lord, I am not worthy of your love.

I am most unworthy to receive the gifts you have given me.

I do not praise you as I should, and I do not pray likewise.

I am not mindful of your presence in all things.

I am a wretched sinner, Lord; I am deserving of death.

I am not worthy to receive the light you shine,

rather appearing to prefer the darkness before me.

Why cannot I not turn away from myself oh Lord,

and leave behind the fetters of sin that hold me.

My very soul is disquieted within me, it weeps

My very soul sheds many tears for my many sins,

for they are great in iniquity, and even greater in number.

Like the stars in the sky, so are my misdeeds,

and the darkness behind them consumes me.

Yet I know that your light shines brightly, uncreated,

and you alone can dispel the darkness that consumes.

You alone are the light unto all nations, and all people.

I will step out from the darkness of the shadow of my sins,

and bring your light into where the darkness dwells.

I pray, Oh Lord, that I shine brightly, but shine

Not of myself, or my word, or my works, I pray

That I shine because of nothing of myself, but because of you,

I pray that I will shine the light of your truth,

that all would be enkindled in the warmth of your love,

As long  as I carry that light within me,

I pray the shadow of my sin nevermore consumes me.