The
mission of the Church. We all know that Christ sent the Apostles to
preach to all nations, baptizing in the name of the Father, Son and
Holy Spirit:
All
authority in Heaven and on earth has been given to me. Going, make
disciples of all the nations, baptizing them in the name of the
Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, teaching them to keep
all that I have commanded you. And behold I am with you (plural) all
the days up to the consummation of the Age. Amen. (Mat. 28, 18–20.)
Of
course the history of Christianity is intimately connected to the
missionary activity of the various Christian denominations. What we
would like to reflect on, however, is the nature of this mission of
the Church.
Let
us suppose that the Church is inserted into a city in the modern West
the population of which is in part de-churched and in part dispersed
among the various Protestant, largely, churches but also the Roman
Catholic church. What is the mission of the Orthodox Church?
To
a large extent, the various jurisdictions of the Orthodox Church view
their mission as a ministry to the members of their ‘ethnic group
of origin’. If it’s the Greeks, then they worry about the
Greeks; if it’s the Russians, they worry about the Russians. If
you’re not part of the ‘ethnic group of origin’ then we’re
not interested. And to a large extent the mission is seen in ethnic
terms: the Church is seen as a bearer of ethnic identity, even ethnic
political identity. The church can even be seen as the bearer of a
nationalist political ideal. Of course there are two major
exceptions: the Orthodox Church in America and the Church of Antioch
both have a consciously missionary orientation, largely Protestant
influenced.
The
Roman Catholic church on the other hand largely views itself in
universalistic, transnational terms—although it is certainly not
above getting mixed up in national or nationalist politics. It
largely sees its missionary work in terms of developing an
educational and/or health system that will bring unchurched locals
into contact with the Catholic church in a positive way. In this
model of evangelization, the long view is taken: the culture is to be
Catholicized by the interaction of locals with the Roman Catholic
services provided: the children who attend the Catholic school grow
up with, hopefully, a positive view of the Roman Catholic church so
that while those children might not themselves convert, the Roman
Catholic church establishes a presence in the local society and
eventually begins to make converts.
So
far we have said nothing new, although some people might dispute our
characterization of one or another Christian group’s practices.
What
we would like to reflect on here, however, is the substance of St
Paul’s remark in 2 Corinthians 5, 17-21:
If
one is in Christ he is a new creation. The ancient things have
passed; behold all things have become new. All things are from God
who has reconciled us to himself through Jesus Christ, giving us the
ministry of reconciliation. So that God was in Christ reconciling
the world to himself, not reckoning to them their sins and
establishing in us the word of reconciliation. Therefore we speak on
behalf of Christ, as interceding with God on your behalf. We beseech
on behalf of Christ: be reconciled to God. For he made him who did
not know sin to be sin on our behalf so that we might become the
righteousness of God in him.
It
is perhaps not accidental that this message is at the core of those
Protestant denominations that preach a born-again experience. And it
is also true that as we have occasionally remarked that this
Protestant born-again Christianity can be quite authoritarian, doing
psychological violence to its converts.
It
seems to us that the ministry of reconciliation of the Orthodox
Church, which includes both its mission ad extra
and its mission ad intra, is
one of love. And the key to this love is not a sentimental love—a
love which passes away—but the love given by the Holy Spirit. How
is this love given? First of all this love is encountered as the
presence of the Holy Spirit in the person preaching the Gospel. In
the Orthodox Church, the transforming effect of the staretz
or Elder is well known and well
attested. In
the West St
Seraphim of Sarov is perhaps the best-known such staretz,
although Elder Paisios of more recent times was very well known for
the transforming effect of his love on his interlocutor. Although
such startsy or Elders
may perform miracles, it is their
love which captivates and transforms the sinner, a love which is not
judgemental nor of the flesh—a love which Elder Paisios himself
called a Gospel love. This
Gospel love is clearly the
operation of the Holy Spirit in the staretz or
Elder.
Now
how do we appropriate that love for ourselves? Through Baptism.
As we have been taught by
the Fathers, it is baptism which grants us the forgiveness of sins,
cleanses our soul and puts into
our soul the Holy Spirit so that we are transformed. It is Baptism
which makes us a new creation. It is baptism which reconciles us to
God. However, as we have been taught, while Baptism grants us the
forgiveness of sins, the restoration of the image of God in
us and the pledge of the Holy
Spirit, it is up to us to put into practice the word of the Gospel
that the Kingdom of God is taken by violence: after
baptism we must make an
effort to restore our likeness to God by an
essentially ascetical endeavour. This is true for all Orthodox
Christians, not only monastics.
Moreover,
since we are human and fallible, there is the ministry of
reconciliation after our baptism through repentance, tears and the
priest.
Although
most Christian denominations maintain the same structure of belief as
outlined here
(except among Protestants concerning personal ascetical endeavour
after Baptism),
there is a quite different ‘flavour’ among various Christian
groups
as regards how
this structure is actualized. The
Roman Catholic church has historically been very rationalistic and
legalistic; the various Protestant groups can be very sentimental or
authoritarian. Here we
want to emphasize the role of spiritual
love in
the Orthodox Church. Since
this love is an operation of the Holy Spirit, it is not emotional but
spiritual. Moreover, in the Orthodox Church, the encounter with
Truth is neither humanly rationalistic nor humanly emotional. It is
the encounter of the person with the Holy Spirit within. It is the
Holy Spirit within us which bears witness to the truth of Orthodoxy,
not the rational arguments of the Roman Catholic nor the emotional or
authoritarian fixations of the born-again Protestant.
Although love can perhaps be over-emphasized—sometimes the sinner
should be reminded of the Judgement—in
a healthy conversion or repentance it is ultimately the warmth of
spiritual love
which converts the sinner to Christ. For
Christ is calling the sinner not to an authoritarian, emotionally
violent and conflicted life but to participation in the inner life of
the Holy Trinity through the Holy Spirit. Ultimately
God is a God of love. It is for love that we were created. Our
reconciliation to God is a reconciliation of the sinner to the love
of God, to the love of the Father, so
that the reconciled sinner loves God in return.
And this love is a love to the Ages. A
little earlier in 2 Corinthians 5, St Paul writes:
For
we know that if our earthly dwelling of the tent [i.e.
body] is dissolved we have a
building from God, an eternal dwelling in the Heavens not made with
hands. And for that reason we sigh in this dwelling, greatly
desiring to be clothed with our dwelling which is from Heaven; and if
clothed then we will not be found naked. And we who are in the body
sigh, weighed down since we do not wish to be unclothed but to be
clothed, so that what is mortal be
swallowed up by Life. God is
he who works us to this very
thing, he who has also given us the pledge of the Spirit. Therefore
seeing that sojourning in the body we are absent from the Lord we
always take
courage. For we walk by faith not by sight. But
we take courage and rather
look forward to departing
from the body to sojourn
with the Lord. And so
whether sojourning or departing we act with a sense of honour so
as to be pleasing to him.
For we must all appear before the judgement seat of Christ, each to
obtain that which
is appropriate to what he has done, whether good or bad.