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The Risk in Creation
To produce something new
is always a gamble, and God’s creation of man in His image and after His
likeness involved a certain degree of risk. It was not that He risked
introducing an element of instability or shock into His Eternal Being but
that to give man god-like freedom shut the door against predestination in
any form. Man is at full liberty to determine himself negatively in relation
to God- even to enter into conflict with Him. As infinite love, the Heavenly
Father cannot abandon man whom He created for eternity, in order to impact
to him His divine plenitude. He lives with us our human tragedy. We
appreciate this risk, so breath-taking in its majesty, when we contemplate
the life of Christ on earth.
After long study of Michelangelo’s Last Judgment in the Sistine Chapel I
discovered a partial analogy in the fresco with my conception of the
Creation of the world. Look at Christ in the fresco, at the gesture He is
making. Like some prize champion He hurls into the abyss all who have dared
to oppose Him. The whole vast surface teems with people and angels trembling
with fright. Suspended in some cosmic expanse, all are engrossed less with
their own plight than with the wrath of Christ. He is in the centre and His
anger is terrible. This, to be sure, is not how I see Christ. Michelangelo
possessed great genius but not for liturgical subjects.
Let us reconstruct the fresco. Christ, naturally, must be in the centre, but
a different Christ more in keeping with the revelation that we have of Him:
Christ immensely powerful with the power of unassuming love. He is not a
vindictive gesture. In creating us as free beings, He anticipated the
likelihood, perhaps the inevitability, of the tragedy of the fall of man.
Summoning us from the darkness of non-being, His fateful gesture flings us
into the secret realms of cosmic life. ‘In all places and fulfilling all
things,’ He stays for ever close to us. He loves us in spite of our
senseless behaviour. He calls to us, is always ready to respond to our cries
for help and guide our fragile steps through all the obstacles that lie in
our path. He respects us as on a par with Him. His ultimate idea for us is
to see us in eternity verily His equals, His friends and brothers, the sons
of the Father. He strives for this, He longs for it. This is our Christ, and
as Man He sat on the right hand of the Father.
In the beginning God creates our spirit as pure potential. What follows does
not depend altogether on Him. Man is free to disagree, even to resist Him. A
situation arises in which we ourselves determine our eternal future- always,
of course, in relation to Him: without Him, we should not exist. And if we
seek a hallowed eternity which essentially appertains to Him alone, then our
every action, all our creative activity, must most certainly proceed not
separately from Him but together with Him and in Him.
Born as pure potential, our spirit must go on to actualise our being as
hypostasis. We need to grow, and this growth is linked with pain and
suffering. However strange it may seem, suffering is imperative for the
preservation of life created from nothing. If animals did not feel hunger,
they would never make any effort to find food but would simply lie down and
die. Similarly, acute discomfort compels primitive man to look for
nourishment. Then, as he advances towards rational cognition, suffering
discloses to his contemplative mind both his own imperfection and that of
the world around him. This forces him to recognise the necessity for a new
form of creative effort to perfect life in all its manifestations. Later, he
will arrive at a certain perception of Supreme Being which will inspire his
soul to seek for better knowledge of Him. And so on, until he realises that
this Primordial Being, Whom apprehension first caused him to esteem, does
not refuse congress with him; and in the light of this contact death is seen
as an absurdity, the very possibility of which must be found against
relentlessly. And history has shown that many of those who waged this war
with unflagging energy, even while they were still here on earth in spirit
beheld the eternal kingdom of the Living God, and passed from death to
unending life in the Light of Divine Being.
Let us consider again the dramatic gesture of ‘our’ Christ casting man whom
He has created free, like a wonderful seed, into the world prepared for him.
The movement is that of a sower throwing seed into the earth that has been
ploughed and made ready.
The foundation-stone of our Christian theology is the revelation: ‘In the
beginning was the Word…and the Word was God…All things were made by him; and
without him was not any thing made that was made. In him was life’ (John
1.1, 3, 4). But contemporary science postulates that in the beginning was
hydrogen, and from this atom, by an evolutionary process over milliards of
years, everything else developed. The scientific principle- the
objectification of the cosmos together with objective knowledge- is
applicable only where the laws of nature prevail absolutely. It is not clear
on what basis many scientists reject the possibility of other forms of
being- of free, non-determined being. We know that Primordial Being lies
outside the preserves of science, which can tell us nothing even of the
meaning of our existence.
At all events, with both schools of thought, which differ so radically from
each other, we notice two opposite tendencies in the human soul. Those on
the one hand who abhor the, to them pointless, suffering associated with
life on earth and, by extension, dislike existence in general, feel
strangely drawn to the mysterious all-pervading quiescence of non-being.
Others try to follow Christ; to dominate our earthly frailty and attain
divine eternity, employing in their efforts to penetrate more profoundly
into the secrets of unoriginate Being methods which may seem intolerably
absurd. ‘Not for that we would be unclothed, but clothed upon, that
mortality might be swallowed up of life’ (2 Cor. 5.4) - the opposite of the
philosophy and ascetic theory of divestment of being.
We Christians accept the wondrous gift of life with thanks-giving. Called by
Christ, we strive for the fullest possible knowledge of the Primary Source
of all that exists. From our birth onwards we gradually grow and enter into
possession of being. Christ is for us ‘the way, the truth, and the life’
(John 14.6). With Him our path lies through a great and intricate spiritual
culture: we traverse cosmic chasms, more often with much suffering but not
seldom in rapture as understanding increases. For a while the growing
process is bound up with our physical body; but the time soon comes when,
liberated from terrestrial chains, mind and spirit can continue their
progress towards the Heavenly Father. We know that He loves us and because
of this love reveals Himself to us without limit. It may still be only
partly but we know that in Him is our immortality; in Him we shall arrive at
everlasting Truth. He will grant us the indescribable joy of sharing in the
very Act of the Divine creation of the world. We hunger for complete unity
in Him. He is Light, Beauty, Wisdom, Love. He gives the noblest meaning to
our life and the bliss of boundless gnosis.
The kind of personal being that we received at our birth- being as
potentiality which we have in part already realised- could never develop
from the hydrogen atom, in however many myriad years and whatever miraculous
and unforeseen ‘hazards’ might happen. The ontological distance is too vast
between the atom state of material being and that state of being which we
already possess and which we are certain will be perfected and fulfilled.
It is natural that as Christians we should be exploring together in the
perspective of the Gospel emphasis on our personal relationship with God.
When the Holy Spirit by taking up His abode in us accords us to live the
love commanded of us by Christ, we know in our bones that this is the only
normal state for our immortal spirit; that in this state we comprehend the
divine universality of Christ and His precepts. This is the Truth, the like
of which leaves no room for doubt in heart or mind. It is the salvation
taught us by the Church. (I speak now not of the ethical but of the
ontological content of the Gospel.) This love is essentially a Divine Act,
the power of which never diminishes but continues eternally in its
plenitude.
When He took on our nature in its fallen state Christ, the Logos of the
Father, restored it as it was and is for ever in the creative will of the
Father. The incarnation of the only-begotten Son is the manifestation of the
Divine in our form of being. Now is revealed the mystery of the way to
salvation.
O GOD the Father Who art ever blessed;
Who hast called us to eternal glory in Jesus Christ,
Christ without sin, Who bore the sins of the world,
And laid His life on the cross that we might live for ever;
Who in the weakness of human flesh
made manifest the image of Thy perfection-
We beseech Thee, Father all-Holy,
fill us from on high with Thy strength,
that we may follow in His steps.
Make us like in goodness to Thy Son
in this proud, inconstant age,
that the way of Thy Truth suffer no blasphemy
because of our untruth,
nor be profaned by the sons of the adversary.
Archimandrite Sophrony Sakharov (2001) (2nd ed.) His Life is Mine. Chapter
3: The Risk in Creation. New York: St Vladimir’s Seminary Press.

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