On the Veneration of the Saints
by Fr Georges Florovsky
CHRIST HAS CONQUERED THE WORLD. This victory is further unveiled and
fulfilled in the fact that He built His Church. In Christ and through Christ the
unity of mankind was brought about truly for the first time, for those who
believed in His Name become the Body of Christ. And through uniting with Christ
they unite likewise with each other in a most sincere concord of love. In this
great unity all empirical distinctions and barriers are done away with:
differences of birth in the flesh are effaced within the unity of a spiritual
birth. The Church is a new people filled with grace,
which does not coincide with any physical boundaries or any earthly
nation-neither Greeks nor Jews, and a struggle of faith, through the
"Mystery of water," through a union with Christ in the
"Mysterious font," through the "grace of becoming sons" ;
i.e. "sons of God" for Whom were all things created that are in heaven
and that are in earth." In Holy Christening the one to be enlightened
leaves "this world" and forsakes its vanity, as if freeing himself and
stepping out of the natural order of things; from the order of "flesh and
blood" one enters an order of grace. All inherited ties and all ties of
blood are severed. But man is not left solitary or alone. For according to the
expression of the Apostle "by one Spirit are we all baptized," neither
Scythians nor Barbarians-and this nation does not spring through a relationship
of blood but through freedom into one Body. The whole meaning of Holy
Christening consists in the fact that it is a mysterious acceptance into the
Church, into the City of God, into the Kingdom of Grace. Through Christening the
believer becomes a member of the Church, enters the "one Church of angels
and men," becomes a "co-citizen of the saints and ever with God,"
according to the mysterious and solemn words of St. Paul-one comes "to
mount Zion, and to the city of the Living God, the heavenly Jerusalem, and to an
innumerable company of angels, to the general assembly and Church of the
firstborn, which are written in heaven, and to God the judge of all, and to the
spirits of just men made perfect." And in this great throng he is united
unto Christ. For, "unus Christianus-nullus Christianus."* ["one
Christian-no Christian." Webmaster]
The essence of the Church is in its unity, for the Church is the Mansion of
the One Spirit. This is not an external and empirical unity or catholicity. The
Ecumenical character of the Church is not something external, quantitative,
spacial, not even any geographical quality, and does not at all depend on the
universal dispersal of believers. The visible unity of the Church is merely a
result but not a foundation for the catholicity of the Church. Geographical
"universality" is a derivative and not an essential necessity. The
catholicity of the Church was not diminished in the first ages of Christianity
when communities of the faithful were scattered like small islands, almost lost
in the immense world of unbelief and resistance. It is likewise not diminished
now when the majority of mankind is not with Christ. "Though a town or even
a province fall away from the Ecumenical Church," says Metropolitan
Philaret, "the Ecumenical Church will always remain a complete and
incorruptible body." Likewise the Church will remain Ecumenical in the
"last days" when it will be compressed into the "little
flock," when the mystery of "retreat" will be revealed and when
faith will hardly be found on earth. For the Church is Catholic according to its
nature.
If one seeks for external definitions, then perhaps the Ecumenical nature of
the Church is best expressed by the feature of its "all-timeness" (of
its running through all times). For believers of all ages and all generations,
who are alive now, who lived, and who will be born, belong to it in the same
way. They all form one body, and through the same prayer are united into one
before the one throne of the Lord of Glory. The experience of this unity through
all times is revealed and sealed in the whole cycle of Divine worship. In the
Church time is mysteriously overcome. The outpouring of grace seems to
stop time, to stop the run of minutes and seasons, to overcome even the general
order of consecutiveness and the disconnectedness of those things which took
place at different times. In a unity with Christ through grace, in the gift of
communion with the One different epochs and generations become our Spirit, men
of living contemporaries. Christ reigns equally in the Church among the departed
and among the living, for God is not God of the dead but of the living.
The Church is a Kingdom not of this world but an eternal Kingdom, for it has
an eternal King-Christ. The Church is a kind of mysterious image of eternity and
a foretaste of the Resurrection of all. For Christ the Head of the Body is
"the life and the resurrection" of His servants and brothers.
The measure of births has not yet been filled and the stream of time still
flows. The Church is still in its historical wanderings but even now time has no
power and no strength in it. It is as if the Apocalyptic moment is
forestalled-when there shall be no more time and all time shall cease. Earthly
death, the separation of the soul from the body, does not sever the tie between
those who have faith, does not part and does not separate co-members in Christ,
does not exclude the deceased from the limits and composition of the Church. In
the prayer for the departed and in the order for burial we pray Christ "our
immortal King and God" to send the souls of the departed to the habitations
of the holy, "to the abodes of the righteous," "to the bosom of
Abraham," where all the righteous are at rest. And with special
expressiveness in these parting prayers we remember and call on the hosts of the
righteous, and on the Mother of God, and on the powers of heaven, and on the
holy martyrs and on all the saints as on our heavenly co-citizens in the Church.
With powerful emphasis the all-timely and catholic consciousness of the Church
is disclosed in the order of burial. The faithful who attain to a genuine union
with Christ Himself in their struggle and in the saving "mysteries"
cannot be parted from Him even by death. "Blessed are they who die in the
Lord-their souls shall abide with the blessed." And the prayers for the
departed are a witness and measure of the catholic consciousness of the
Church.
Reverently the Church watches for any signs of grace which witness and
confirm the earthly struggle of the departed. By an inner sight the Church
recognizes both the righteous living and departed, and the feeling of the Church
is sealed by the witness of the priesthood of the Church. In this recognition of
its brothers and members who have "attained to perfection" consists
the mystical essence of that which in the Christian West is termed the
"canonization of saints," and which is understood by the Orthodox East
as their glorification, magnification and blessedness. And firstly it is a
glorification of God "Wonderous is the Lord in His saints."
"God's saints," said St. John of Damascus, "reigned over and
mastered their passions and kept uninjured the likeness unto the image of God,
according to which they were created; they of their own free will united
themselves with God and received Him into the habitation of their heart, and
having thus received Him in communion, through grace, they became in their very
nature like unto Him." In them God rests-they became "
the treasures and the pure habitations of God." In this the mystery
was accomplished. For as the ancient fathers said-the Son of God became man so
that men could be deified, so that sons of men should become sons of God. And in
the righteous who attain to love this measure of growth and "likening"
unto Christ is fulfilled. "The Saints in their lifetime already were filled
with the Holy Spirit," continues St. John of Damascus, "and when they
died the grace of the Holy Spirit was still present with their souls and with
their bodies in the graves, and with their images and with their holy ikons not
because of their nature but because of grace and its activity... the saints are
alive and with daring they stand before the Lord; they are not dead ... the
death of saints is more like falling asleep than death," for they
"abide in the hand of God"; that is, in life and in light... and 11
after He Who is Life itself and the source of life was ranked among the
dead, we consider no more as dead those who depart with a hope of resurrection
and with faith in Him." And it is not only to get help and intercession
that the Holy Spirit teaches every believer to pray to the glorified saints but
also because this calling on them, through communion in prayer, deepens the
consciousness of the catholic unity of the Church. In our invocation of the
saints our measure of Christian love is exhibited, a living feeling of unanimity
and of the power of Church unity is expressed; and, conversely, doubt or
inability to feel the intercession of grace and the intervention of saints on
our behalf before God witnesses not only to a weakening of love and of the
brotherly and Church ties and relationships but also to a decrease in the
fulness of faith in the Ecumenical value and power of the Incarnation and
Resurrection.
One of the most mysterious anticipations of the Orthodox Church is the
contemplation of the "Protecting Veil of the Mother of God," of Her
constant standing in prayer for the world, surrounded by all the saints, before
the throne of 'God. "Today the Virgin stands in the Church and with hosts
of saints invisibly prays to God for us all; angels and high priests worship;
apostles and prophets embrace each other-it is for us that the Mother of God
prays unto the Eternal God!" Thus the Church remembers the vision which was
once seen by St. Andrew, the fool for Christ's sake. And that which was then
visibly revealed remains now and will stand for all ages. The
"Contemplation of the Protecting Veil" of the Mother of God is a
vision of the celestial Church, a vision of the unbreakable and ever-existent
unity of the heavenly and the earthly Church. Arid it is also a foreseeing that
all existence beyond the grave, of the righteous and the saints, is one untiring
prayer, one ceaseless intercession and mediation. For love is the "union of
all perfection." And the blessedness of the righteous is an abiding in
love. The Great Eastern saint St. Isaac the Syrian, with incomparable daring,
bore witness to the all-embracing power which crowns a Christian's struggles.
According to his words this struggle for God acquires fulness and completeness
and attains its aim in purity-and purity is "a heart which is merciful to
every created being." And what is a heart that has its mercy? asks the
saint, and answers: "A burning of the heart for all creation for men,
birds, beasts, demons and all creatures. And from remembrance of them and
contemplation of them such a man's eyes shed tears: because of a great and
strong compassion which possesses his heart and its great constancy, he is
overwhelmed with tender pity and he cannot bear, or hear of, or see any harm or
any even small sorrow which creatures suffer. And therefore he prays hourly with
tears for the dumb animals, and for the enemies of Truth and for those who harm
him that they should be guarded and that they should be shown mercy; and also
for all the reptiles he prays, from this great compassion which is constantly
aroused in his heart in likeness to God." And if even on earth so fiery is
the prayer of saints, even with a more fiery flame it burns "there" in
the "embrace of the Father" on the bosom of Divine Love, close to God,
Whose Name is Love, Whose care about the World is Love. And in the Church
Triumphant prayers for the whole Catholic Church do not cease. As St.
Cyprian said-Christian prayer is for all the world; everyone prays not only for
himself but for all people, for all form one, and so we pray not with a
particular individual prayer but with one common to all, with one soul in all.
The whole deed of prayer must be determined by an ecumenical consciousness and
unanimous love, which includes likewise those whose names are known to God
alone. It is not characteristic of a Christian to feel himself alone and
separated from all, for he is saved only in the unity of the Church. And the
crown of all prayer is that flaming love which was expressed in the prayer of
Moses: "Forgive their sin; and if not, blot me, I pray Thee, out of Thy
book which Thou hast written... " The center of Church worship is
Eucharistic worship. Here the whole Church is united also. Here a
sacrifice is made and prayers are offered "for all and for all
things," here the whole Church is remembered the militant and the
triumphant. In the mystery-action of the Liturgy "the powers of heaven
invisibly celebrate with us," they are present and celebrate with the
celebrating priest. And unto great saints it was granted sometimes by God's
grace to contemplate in visible form that which is hidden from the sight of the
sinful-the co-celebration of the angels. Thus it is known that St. Seraphim of
Sarov on one occasion was granted to see the triumphant entrance of the Lord of
Glory surrounded by hosts of angels. Such an entrance of the Lord of Glory is
often represented in ikon form on the walls of the holy Altar, and not only as a
symbol but likewise as an indication that invisibly all this actually takes
place. And all the ikon decoration of the Church generally speaks of the
mysterious unity, of the actual presence of the saints with us. "We picture
Christ, the King and the Lord, without separating Him from His army, for, the
Army of the Lord are the saints"-said St. John of Damascus. Holy ikons are
not only images of remembrance, "images of the past and of
righteousness," not only pictures, but are actually sacred things with
which, as the fathers explained, the Lord is "present" and by grace is
"in communion 11 with them. There exists some
mysterious objective tic between the "image" and the
"Prototype," between the likeness and the one who is represented,
which is specially marked in miracle-working ikons which show God's power.
"A venerating worship" of holy ikons clearly expresses the idea of the
Church's conception of the past: it is not only a remembrance directed to
something gone, but a vision by grace of something fixed in eternity, a vision
of something mysterious, a presence by grace of those who are dead and parted
from us, "a joyful vision of a unity of all creation."
All creation has a Head in Christ. And through His Incarnation the Son of
God, according to the wonderful expression of St. Irenaeus of Lyons, "again
commenced a long row of human beings." The Church is the spiritual
posterity of the Second Adam and in its history His redemptive work is fulfilled
and completed, while His love blossoms and flames in it. The Church is a
fulfillment of Christ and His Body. According to the bold words of St. John
Chrysostom, "only then is the Fulfiller the Head when a perfect body shall
be formed." There is some mysterious movement-which started from the
awe-filled day of Pentecost, when in the face of the first chosen few it was as
if all creation received a fiery christening by the Spirit towards that last
aim, when in all its glory the New Jerusalem shall appear and the Bridal Feast
of the Lamb shall begin. In the stretch of ages the guests and the chosen are
being collected. The people of the eternal Kingdom are being assembled. The
Kingdom is being selected and set aside beyond the limits of time. The
fulfillment shall be accomplished in the last resurrection-then the complete
fulness and glory and the whole meaning of Church catholicity shall be
revealed.
From Creation and Redemption, Vol. III of the Collected Works of
Georges Florovsky (Belmont, MA: Nordland Publishing Co.), 1976, pp. 201.208.