A Sermon
of
His Eminence, Metropolitan
Moses of Seattle
2006 Sunday of Saint Gregory Palamas
In the Name of the Father,
and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.
The Holy Fast is an archetype of the life
of spiritual progress.
We crossed over into the arena of fasting
by seeking mutual forgiveness, the first Sunday of the fast, we celebrated the
triumph of Orthodoxy, true glory, true worship and the conciliar Tradition of
the Church and the principle of the consensus of the Holy God-Bearing Fathers
that enlightens our path to salvation. Without the true faith, our labors are in
vain.
In fitting manner we progress to this
Sunday wherein we celebrate the feast of our Holy Father among the saints,
Gregory Palamas, who expounded the workings of Grace more than any other Church
Father. Saint Gregory was a great man of prayer and was made manifest as a
wonder-worker while still in his late twenties. This great saint of our Church
was given a special grace to articulate his mystical experiences.
From the life of Saint Gregory:
Another time, in a state of noetic prayer,
Gregory fell into a light sleep. It appeared to him that in his hands was there
was a vessel of pure milk, so full that it was flowing over the brim. Then this
milk took the form of wine, which flowed over the brim of the vessel onto his
hands and clothes, spreading abroad a wonderful fragrance. As soon as Gregory
perceived it, he was filled with holy joy.
There appeared to him a radiant youth who
said, “Why do you not pass on this wonderful drink, left by you without due
attention. This is the ever-inexhaustible gift from God.”
“To whom should I pass on this drink when
there is no on in need of it?” asked saint Gregory.
“Even if at the present moment there is no
one actually thirsting for the drink,” answered the youth, “yet, nevertheless,
you should do your duty and not neglect this gift of God. With the proper use of
which, you will have to answer before God.” With these words the wondrous vision
came to an end.
Saint Gregory interpreted it in this way:
The milk meant the ordinary gift of the word, understandable to very simple
hearts looking for spiritual instruction The turning of milk in to wine meant
that when the time comes, the Supreme-Will will ask him for deeper instructions
of the sublime Christian Faith.
Thus, things that are beyond the mind of
man, beyond the grasp of philosophical inquiry are imparted to us not by
speculation, but by men of spiritual experience. Saint Gregory defended the
Orthodox doctrine on how we participate in God, how we become partakers of God’s
uncreated energies, i.e., the holy truths of our Church regarding Theosis, or
deification.
In the days of Saint Gregory one Barlaam of
Calabria arrived in the parts of the east and spread his false teaching that God
Himself does not unite with man or enter into man’s heart, but that God creates
a grace that He imparts to man. This is because in the parts of the west they
were immersed more in the Greek philosophers than the Gospel. They tried to
force Christian revelation into Pagan Greek philosophical constructs.
Consistent with the God bearing Fathers,
Saint Gregory explained for us that only nonbeing is without operation. All
creatures have operation and activity. If one were to say that the operation or
energy of the Holy Trinity was created then the logical conclusion is that the
Holy Trinity is created (which is blasphemy). Uncreated nature has an uncreated
energy.
Thus, Essence is cause and Energy is
effect. This revealed Spiritual Truth, affects our world-view and gives us a
precise perspective on spiritual reality. God is completely distinct from His
creation, there is no similarity. We partake of life, He is the Source of life.
He brought all things into being from nothing and is Beyond Being. The Church
teaches that God is completely transcendent and unapproachable in His essence,
but we partake of His energies. The correct understanding of the distinction
between the essence of God and His uncreated energies, given unto us by the
God-bearing Fathers, is one of the greatest gifts of Orthodox theology. This
spiritual insight is the only way to properly understand the words of Saint
Peter when he says that we are called upon to, “be partakers of the Divine
Nature.” The Church has its own vocabulary and understanding, without which it
is impossible to grasp the meaning of the Holy Scriptures.
When we read in scripture of the glory of
God, His illumination, a Divine light, etc. this refers to the uncreated grace
of God that we are called to participate in. As our Savior said,
“For whosoever shall be ashamed of me and
of my words, of him shall the Son of man be ashamed, when He shall come in His
own glory, and in His Father's, and of the holy angels” (Luke 9:
26). This glory is the uncreated Energy of
God (Divine Grace) that emanates from the Holy Trinity, which both angels and
men partake.
Saint
Basil the Great expressed this quest to acquire the Grace of God thus, “The
contest for virtue is the struggle for one to become God and a son by the
illumination of the most pure light of that day which is uninterrupted by
darkness. He that shines forth with the true light has made virtue as another
sun, which having once shined upon us no longer hides itself in the west; but
having clothed all things with its illuminating power, it grants an unceasing
and perpetual light unto the worthy and makes into other suns those who partake
of that light.”
Saint Gregory also taught that we
participate in the uncreated grace of God in both soul and body, thus
overturning all of the spiritual error of the dualists, both ancient and modern.[1]
The Church teaches that when God made man He made “all things very good.” It is
sin, man’s misuse of free will that is the cause of everything wrong in
creation. Thus Christ became the New Adam that we might be made new and become
temples of the Holy Spirit. What is the significance of this spiritual truth?
Your body belongs to God.
The only variation on this is in Christian
marriage, when the two become one flesh. The husband’s body belongs to the wife
and the wife’s body belongs to the husband. For a man, every woman in the world
is his sister, unless he gets married, then he has one wife. For a woman, every
man in the world is a brother, unless she gets married, then she has one
husband. God Himself has implanted the law of attraction and He has ordained
that marriage has certain consolations that are to be reserved for marriage.
This is the definition of chastity.
The Church is a spiritual hospital and has
always offered the therapy of repentance to those who have fallen into sin. Our
contemporary problem is that there are many who, with malicious intent, wish to
change the law of God. They trivialize the body and the Christian concept of
purity and want to remove sex from the proper context. For this reason we need
to repeat to our youth again and again that popular culture has it all wrong. We
are called to become temples of the living God and these things matter. The
custom of “sowing wild oats” is a great spiritual error. Chastity is bodily
purity and godliness. One who lives in chastity has good hopes to become a
temple of the Living God, in Christ Jesus.
As Saint Peter so wisely put it in his
introduction to his Second Catholic (universal) Epistle:
Grace and peace be multiplied unto you in
the knowledge of God, and of Jesus our Lord, according as His divine power hath
given unto us all things that pertain unto life and godliness, through the
knowledge of Him Who hath called us by glory and virtue; by which are given unto
us exceeding great and precious promises, so that through these ye might be
partakers of the divine nature, having escaped the corruption that is in the
world through lust. And for this cause, by applying all diligence, add virtue to
your faith, and to virtue, knowledge, and to knowledge, continence, and to
continence, patience, and to patience, godliness, and to godliness, brotherly
affection, and to brother affection, love. For if these things be in you, and
abound, they render you neither barren nor unfruitful in the knowledge of our
Lord Jesus Christ. (2 Peter 1:2-8)
May we pay heed to these words and come to the knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ by participation in His Grace, to Whom be all glory, honor and worship, with His Unoriginate Father and All Holy Life Creating Spirit. So be it. Amen.