AS AN INSPIRATION FOR
AMERICAN ORTHODOXY
by Fr. Seraphim Rose
A talk given on September 1, 1980, at the University
of California, Santa Cruz, during the West Coast
Conference held in preparation for the thousandth
anniversary of the baptism of Russia.
I |
THE COLLAPSE OF IDEOLOGY
First of all, we are seeing in Russia the collapse
of a generally-believed ideology that underlies society and keeps it going.
The beginning of religious awakening in Russia is invariably accompanied
by a loss of trust and faith in Communism—Communism not first of all as
a political and economic system, but as a faith. This is natural,
because the first article of Communist faith is atheism, the "state
religion" of the USSR, which makes sense only as a substitute for faith
in God. Belief in God naturally is bound up with disbelief in atheism
and Communism, and that is why the religious awakening in Russia today
is not merely something personal, but takes on the character of
a national movement.
In the West, our situation is really not so different
from this as it might seem at first sight. In the West we are also
seeing the collapse of the generally-believed ideology of progress, democracy,
and so-called "enlightenment"—a secular religion which until the mid-20th
century was accepted without question by almost everyone in America and
Western Europe. The "Beat" and "Hippie" movements of the '50's and
'60's were only the beginning of an attitude of disillusionment that is
now widespread in Western society—so much so that a spokesman like Solzhenitsyn
can freely tell the West that we have lost the will to fight Communism,
not having deep enough faith in our own system.
THE DEAD-END OF CIVILIZATION
Together with the loss of confidence in a generally-accepted ideology, both in Russia and the West there is a sense that civilization has come to a dead-end. In Russia there is the feeling that Communism is finished as a power that can inspire any but a small group of merciless fanatics, that it remains in power solely by naked force—the army and secret police. In the West, the failure of will which Solzhenitsyn has rightly diagnosed is a direct result of the feeling that the West no longer has an ideology worth dying for.
THE SEARCH FOR FAITH
And finally, the collapse of a generally-accepted ideology and the sense of dead-end that this brings has led, both in Russia and the West, to a search for a way out in the form of religious belief. This is the motive power behind the "religious revival" in Russia, and also in the West. There is undoubtedly more interest in religion, more conversions (both to Christianity and to non-Christian religions) both in Russia and the free world than at any time in centuries. Of these conversions, probably the majority in Russia are to Orthodoxy; a much smaller but growing percentage in the West is to the same Orthodoxy. It is this movement of religious revival that I would now like to direct out attention to—looking first to Russia, and then to how the experience of Russia affects us in the West.
A TYPICAL CONVERSION
Let us look first in detail at one man's conversion
in Russia. We who are converts to Orthodoxy in the West can compare
and contrast our own experience of coming to the faith with this typical
conversion experience in Soviet Russia; and those of you who were "born
Orthodox" can learn the more to treasure you faith when you see through
what torments a man often comes to find it. This is the experience
of Yury Mashkov,1 an emigrant from
Russia just three years ago, who was invited to speak at the Russian Orthodox
Labor-Day conference in New Jersey in 1978, just three months after he
arrived in America. I will quote part of his talk at this gathering
and make comments on it as I go along.
He begins by saying that when he was invited to
give a talk, "I was disturbed. It seemed to me that I had nothing
to tell you. The first half of my life I was a student, and the second
half I spent in prisons and the political concentration camps of the Gulag.
Indeed, what can I say to people who are more educated than I, more erudite,
and even better informed about events in the Soviet Union?"
Here there is already a striking contrast with the
experience of us Western converts to Orthodoxy, and of most young Russians
in the West as well. Usually (if we are very interested in our faith)
we have read many books on Orthodoxy and have a broad theoretical knowledge
of it; and we have had a secure childhood and no experience of repression
or prison. But here is a man who is going to speak, unwillingly,
not out of books and a secure past, but simply out of his own experience
of suffering. Here already we can learn something.
He goes on: "Therefore I decided not to write
down my talk, but to say whatever God would place in my soul. And
then, as we were hurrying away from Bridgeport, Connecticut, in a splendid
automobile along the astonishing freeway in the midst of a luxuriant nature,
I understood that all my spiritually tormenting life in the Communist 'paradise,'
my path from atheism and Marxism to Orthodox faith and Russian nationalism,
is the only valuable information that can be of interest to you.
My life is of interest only inasmuch as it is a drop in the ocean of the
Russian religious and national rebirth."
Here again we in the West can sense a great difference
from our own experience. Some of these points may seem like small
details, but they are very revealing of our spiritual state. We in
the West have learned to take for granted splendid automobiles, freeways,
beautiful nature—we would not even comment on these things. But such
things, which represent the ease of life in our America, are unheard of
in the Soviet Union. Recently I spoke with a recent emigrant from
the USSR, and she spoke of one form of dishonesty and crime in Russia today
which is almost incomprehensible to us in the free world: when a poet can
speak beautifully about flower in a field and be silent about the fact
that this field was a place for the torture and murder of innocent people.
The whole of Russia is covered with such places today. At one such
place, the former concentration camp of Solovki, the tourists are warned
to "stay on the paths"—because some have wandered off of them and unexpectedly
found human bones sticking out of the earth—remnants of the thousands who
perished there. When this is the experience of your country, you
cannot feel at ease with beautiful cars and freeways and nature; there
is a pain in your soul that is seeking for something deeper.
"I was born (he continues) in the bloody year of 1937 in
the village of Klishev, thirty miles from Moscow (on the side of Ryazan).
My father, a blacksmith by profession, died in the war, and I do not remember
him; my mother, who worked at various jobs, was, I think, indifferent to religion.
My grandmother, it is true, was religious, but she had no authority in my eyes
because she was totally illiterate. Of course I was baptized as a child,
but in my school years I took off my cross and until the age of 25 was a convinced
atheist. After finishing the seven-year (primary) school, I had the good
fortune to enter the Moscow Higher School of Art and Industry (the former Stroganov
School), and I studied there five years out of the seven. Thus, outwardly
my life had begun very successfully
In time, I should have received
the diploma of an artist and would be able to work anywhere I wanted."
This is a typical Soviet life—but how sobering when
compared to our sheltered life in America! Born in the "bloody" years,
not of war with an outside enemy, but of Stalin's purges and liquidations,
he lost his father in the war, grew up in an atmosphere of atheism (although
with reminders of the Orthodox past, especially his Baptism), and had a
good future in store in the highly competitive Soviet school system.
All this is a far different experience from that of the youth of our Western
world. But then something happened to him.
"But the boring Soviet life and spiritual dissatisfaction
gave me no peace, and somewhere at the end of 1955, in my 19th year, there
occurred an event, outwardly unnoticeable, which however overturned my
life and (finally) brought me here. This event occurred in my soul
and consisted of the fact that I understood in what kind of society
I was living. Despite all the naked Soviet propaganda, I understood
that I was living under a regime of absolute rightlessness and absolute
cruelty. Very many students came to the same conclusion at this time,
and in time there appeared those who thought as I did, and we all considered
it our duty to tell the people of our discovery and to somehow act against
the triumph of evil."
Here, of course, there is something akin to the
idealistic youth of the West, and the awakening of an awareness of truth
and higher values which is universally experienced at this age—with the
important exception that the background of this experience in Russia is
a difficult life, suffering, and terror, while in the West it is usually
a full stomach, an easy life, and plenty of spare time. In the free
West, this youthful experience has led to the numerous demonstrations in
the past decades for various causes, some of them very low and unworthy
ones. In the USSR, however, the result is very different.
"But the KGB very carefully looks after all the
citizens of the USSR, and when on November 7, 1958 (when he was just 21
years old) we gathered at an organizational meeting to decide the question
of an underground samizdat, six of us were arrested and all who did not
repent were given the highest punishment for anti-Soviet agitation—seven
years each in concentration camp. Thus began a new path in my life."
It should be noted that there is nothing said yet
about any religious conversion; this is still only youthful idealism,
about to be tested in the Gulag.
"All of us ten were atheists and Marxists of the
'Euro-Communist' camp. That is, we believed that Marxism in itself
was a true teaching which lead the people to a bright future, to the kingdom
of freedom and justice, and the Moscow criminals for some reason did not
want to realize this teaching in life. In the concentration camp
this idea completely and forever died in all of us."
And now begins his spiritual rebirth.
"I would like to reveal a little of the process of spiritual
rebirth so that you can see how unfailingly it is proceeding in the Russian
people. It is not only I and those who were with me who have gone through
the spiritual path from Marxism to religious faith
This is a typical
manifestation for the Soviet political concentration camps." (He mentions
Vladimir Osipov and Deacon Barsanufy Haibulin as examples of those who entered
the camps as atheists and left as Orthodox believers.) "What is happening
with the Russian people? The process of spiritual rebirth has two stages.
At first we discern the essence of Marxism and are freed from any illusions
with regard to it. Under a profound and thoughtful analysis we discover
that Marxism in its essence is a complete teaching of totalitarianism, that
is, an absolute Communist slavery, and any Communist Party in any country, once
having undertaken the realization of the Marxist program, will be compelled
to repeat what the Moscow Communists have done and are doing, or else renounce
Marxism and liquidate themselves. Having understood this simple truth,
we lose the ideological basis on which we had opposed Marxist slavery.
We fall into a spiritual vacuum which draws after it an ever profounder crisis."
This experience is not too different from what happens in
the West when a young person becomes thoroughly disillusioned with the ideals
of democracy and progress, although this is usually a less extreme experience
than what happens in Russia, where Communism is virtually the "state religion."
But the next stage of "spiritual rebirth" occurs in Russia under quite different
circumstances.
"Coming to camp, we Russians are surrounded by enemies,
because the nationalists of all colors (Ukrainians, those from the Baltic
countries, Armenians, Uzbekis, and others), not understanding the historical
uniqueness of the Marxist dictatorship have gone the way of least mental
effort and identify the international power (of Communism) with the Orthodox
Monarchy and accuse us Russians of chauvinism. Thus, there is no
salvation anywhere: on one side the Communists annihilate us, on the other
the nationalists prepare the same thing for us. After being freed
from camp, our outlook is one that we could not wish for an enemy: either
to go back to camp and remain there for the rest of our lives, or dies
in a psychiatric prison, or be murdered by Chekists without trial or investigation.
"In these conditions of spiritual crises, with no
way out, there inevitably comes up the chief question of a world-view:
what am I living for if there is no salvation? And when this frightful
moment comes, each of us feels that death has really caught him by the
throat: if some kind of a spiritual answer does not come, life comes to
an end, because without God not only is 'everything permitted,' but life
itself has no value and no meaning. I saw in the camp how people
went out of their minds or ended with suicide. And I myself clearly
felt that if, after all, I came to the firm and final conclusion that there
is no God, I would simply be obliged to end with suicide, since it is shameful
and belittling for a rational creature to drag out a senseless and tormenting
life. Thus, at the second stage of spiritual rebirth we discover
that atheism, thought out to its logical end, inevitably brings a man to
perdition, because it is a complete teaching of immorality, evil, and death."
This experience is also similar to what some Western
converts have experienced; but the urgency of the life-or-death situation
in which he found himself, face to face with the Soviet apparatus of terror,
is on a deeper level than most of us here have experienced.
"A tragic end (suicide or madness) would have been
my lot too it, to my good fortune, there had not occurred on September
1, 1962, the greatest miracle in my life. No event occurred on that
day, there were no suggestions from outside; in solitude I was reflecting
on my problem: 'to be or not to be?' At this time I already realized
thoroughly the savingness of faith in God. I very much wanted to
believe in Him; but I could not deceive myself: I had no faith.
"And suddenly there came a second, when somehow for the first
time I saw (as if a door had opened from a dark room into the sunny street),
and in the next second I already knew for sure that God exists and that God
is the Jesus Christ of Orthodoxy, and not some kind of Hindu, Buddhist, Jewish,
or other God. I call this moment the greatest miracle because this precise
knowledge came to me not through reason (I know this for sure) but by some other
way, and I am unable to explain this moment rationally
And so by such
a miracle my new spiritual life began, which has helped me to endure another
thirteen years o life in concentration camps and prisons, a forced emigration,
and, I hope, will help me to endure all the difficulties of emigrant life.
"And this 'moment of faith,' this greatest miracle,
is being experienced now in Russia by thousands of people, and not only
in the concentration camps and prisons. Igor Ogurtsov, the founder
of the Social-Christian Union, came to faith not in the camps but in the
university. Religious rebirth is a typical phenomenon of contemporary
Russia. Everything spiritually alive inevitably returns to God.
And it is absolutely evident that such a saving miracle, despite the whole
might of Communist politics, can be performed only by the Almighty God,
Who has not left the Russian people in terrible sufferings and in a seemingly
complete defenselessness before many enemies."2
This detailed look at one main's spiritual experience
gives us something of a feel for what is happening in Russia today.
Let us look now at the more general picture of the Orthodox revival in
Russia today, in particular through the observations of two of its best-known
representatives, in order to see what specifically we can learn from this
phenomenon for our own Orthodox life.
ALEXANDER SOLZHENITSYN AND THE GULAG
I will speak first of Alexander Solzhenitsyn.
His is a typical Soviet life. Born one year after the Revolution,
he lost his father in World War I, studied mathematics in order to get
a job, served as a soldier in World War II, was with the Soviet army in
Germany, then was arrested in 1945 for writing disrespectful remarks about
Stalin in private letters and received a "mild" sentence for this—eight
years. At the end of his sentence in 1953 he was further sentenced
to exile for life in southern Kazakhstan, at the edge of the desert.
He contracted cancer there and nearly died from it, but was healed in a
cancer clinic. In exile he taught math and physics in primary school
and wrote prose in secret. He was rehabilitated in the de-Stalinization
era and his first book was published in Russia in 1961. His other
books were not published in Russia, but their publication outside Russia
made him a troublesome celebrity for the Soviet authorities. In 1970
he received the Nobel Prize for literature, and in 1975 was forcibly exiled
to the West, where until now he has continued to write novels and speak
to the West about the meaning of the Soviet experience in Russia.
In the course of his sufferings and imprisonment he came to Christian faith
and is an Orthodox believer.
Now living outside of Russia (in Vermont), Solzhenitsyn
in one sense is almost a symbol of the contemporary Orthodox revival in
Russia. Born with the Revolution, he underwent the sixty years of
suffering of the Russian people and emerged a victor, with a strong Christian
faith and a message for the world based on his experience. Most of what
Russia has to tell s today in the free world can be seen in Solzhenitsyn.
Here I will try to speak of the main points of this message, drawn not
from his fiction, but from his public addresses and articles.
Gulag
First of all, Solzhenitsyn has told us about Gulag.
Of course, many spoke of the Soviet slave system
before Solzhenitsyn, but the world did not listen. Only in recent
years has the world been ready to hear of this frightful reality which
Solzhenitsyn has described with tremendous power.
He speaks of Gulag not merely as the prison system
of one modern country, but as the logical end of the whole of modern history
once God has been removed from men's lives. This is not merely a
"Russian" experiment—it is the end of all peoples who remove God from the
center of life. And Gulag is an essential part of atheist society—if
you remove it, the Soviet system itself will crumble. Atheism is
based on the evil in man's nature, and Gulag is only the natural expression
of this. Russia's experience with Gulag is for the whole of humanity,
and no one should presume to comment on the nature and meaning of modern
history until he has read this book.
Spiritual Rebirth
But most of all I want to speak about an almost paradoxical
second aspect of Gulag: it reveals the evil of man's nature and the folly of
the modern dream of earthly happiness—but at the same time it is also a starting
place for man's spiritual rebirth, the condition which makes the spiritual rebirth
of Russia so much more profound than the various "spiritual revivals" of the
free world. Solzhenitsyn himself describes this in Part II of The Gulag
Archipelago:
"It has granted me to carry away from my prison years on
my bent back, which nearly broke beneath its load, this essential experience:
how a human being becomes evil and how good. In the intoxication
of my youthful successes I had felt myself to be infallible, and I was therefore
cruel. In the surfeit of power I was a murderer, and an oppressor.
In my most evil moments I was convinced that I was doing good, and I was well
supplied with systematic arguments. And it was only wen I lay there on
rotting prison straw that I sensed within myself the first strivings of good.
Gradually it was disclosed to me that the line separating good and evil passes
not through states, nor between classes, nor between political parties either—but
right through every human heart—and then all human hearts
And even
within hearts overwhelmed by evil, one small bridgehead of good is retained.
And even in the best of all hearts, there remains… an unuprooted small corner
of evil."3
How much deeper is this observation than anything
we in the West could say based on our own experience. And why is
it deeper? —Because it is based on suffering, and that is the reality
of the human condition and the beginning of true spiritual life.
Christ came to a life of suffering and the Cross, and the experience in
Russia enables those who undergo it to see this profoundly. That
is why the Christian revival in Russia is so deep.
And what of us in the West, and particularly in
America? Do we have any image that explains our situation as well
as Gulag does that of Russia? I am afraid there is an image, most
unflattering to us, which is almost our equivalent of Gulag.
It is "Disneyland"—an image which exemplifies our carefree love of "fun"
(a most un-Christian word!), our lack of seriousness, our living in a literal
fool's paradise, unaware or barely aware of the real meaning and seriousness
of life.
Anyone who has met or read the writings of people
who come from the USSR and other Communist countries, cannot but notice
how serious—sometimes to the point of grimness—these people are.
I am not saying that we should be grim like that—that would be fakery on
our part—but only that we should realize that our experience in freedom
and prosperity has to a great extent crippled us spiritually, and that
therefore we must expose ourselves to and take deeply to heart the message
of men like Solzhenitsyn. We must study the Gulag and make it, to
the extent we can, a part of our own experience.
Don't Live by Lies!
Another part of Solzhenitsyn's message to us is contained
in the title of one of his essays written in the Soviet Union: "Don't
Live by Lies!" This is his answer to the Gulag and to the dead-end
of Soviet society in general: a new revolution will not save Russia—only
a spiritual change now in each person can hope to do this.
The single most difficult thing to bear in the Soviet State, as many have
testified, is the lie of it all—not just the daily propaganda or
the constant falsification of history, but the daily dishonesty and lack
of sincerity produced by fear of the all-powerful State and by cooperation
(willing or unwilling) with the lie (the working for a socialist "paradise")
that is the basis of the whole Soviet system.
In the West we also have some experience of this
phenomenon of the daily lie, when our relationships with others are governed
more by our need to get ahead or put something over on someone. This
is a product of the growing cold of Christianity. For us also a big
part of our Christian life is the restoration of truthfulness in daily
life. But probably we do not love the truth as much as people do
in Russia—because w have not experienced the enormity of the lie which
is the Soviet system.
Back to the Earth
Still another part of Solzhenitsyn's message is often
interpreted by his critics as "romanticism," and it is probably the least
understood of all that he has to say. He wishes to restore a human
element to modern life, which has produced inhuman cities in the name of
"progress." In his Letter to the Soviet Leaders he speaks
eloquently against the "poisoned zone of asphalt and gasoline" in Russian
cities, the imitation Western skyscrapers, the "contaminated belts of wasteland
around our industrial centers," and urges a return to a "non-progressive
economy," to old-fashioned "towns made for people, horses, dogs," and a
return to the "supreme asset of all peoples"—the earth.
Of course, all this is not romanticism at all, but
common sense which becomes more evident with each day, as the exhaustion
of the world's resources and the contamination of the environment with
industrial wastes becomes ever more disastrous. Many sensitive people
in the West, including small communities of Orthodox Christians, have already
seen the necessity for a slower-paced, more human life outside the big
cities with their artificial atmosphere which is a hindrance to Christian
warmheartedness and truthfulness. The situation of our own American
farmers—who also feed many people abroad—with the declining number of farmers
and the fact that farms are becoming less and less humanly attractive,
could well give us cause to worry that we also are not using wisely the
resources of our own American earth.
Gulag is Coming Here
And a final part of Solzhenitsyn's message to us:
What has happened in Russia is coming to the West. America and the
free West must also face this universal anti-Christian phenomenon of state
atheism and its Gulag. This is the message Solzhenitsyn has given
in his American addresses, such as that at the Harvard commencement in
1978, where he castigated America for its loss of will, its love
of pleasure, its satisfaction with legalism in human relations. Let
me quote here a few passages from another address he gave in 1975, before
the meeting of the AFL-CIO in New York City:
"Is it possible or impossible to transmit the experience
of those who have suffered to those who have yet to suffer? Can one part
of humanity learn from the bitter experience of another or can it not?
Is it possible or impossible to warn someone of danger?… The proud skyscrapers
stand on, point to the sky and say: it will never happen here. This will
never come to us. It's not possible here
Humanity acts in
such a way is if it didn't understand what Communism is, and doesn't want to
understand, is not capable of understanding… The essence of Communism is quite
beyond the limits of human understanding. Its hard to believe that people
could actually plan such things and carry them out
"Communism has infected the whole world with the belief in
the relativity of good and evil
Among enlightened people it is considered
rather awkward to use seriously such words as 'good' and 'evil.' Communism
has managed to instill in all of us that these concepts are old-fashioned concepts
and laughable. But if we are to be deprived of the concepts of good and
evil, what will be left? Nothing but the manipulation of one another.
We will decline to the status of animals.
"That which is against Communism is for humanity. To
reject this inhuman Communist ideology is simply to be a human being
It's a protest of our souls against those who tell us to forget the concepts
of good a evil
"I understand that you love freedom, but in our
crowded world you have to pay a tax for freedom. You cannot love
freedom just for yourself and quietly agree to a situation where the majority
of humanity over the greater part of the globe is being subjected to violence
and oppression.
"Yet when one travels in your country and sees your free
and independent life, all the dangers which I talked about today indeed seem
imaginary. I've come a talked to people, and I see this is so. In
your wide open spaces even I get a little infected. The dangers seem a
little imaginary. On this continent it is hard to believe all the things
that are happening in the world. But gentlemen, this carefree life cannot
continue in your country or in ours. The fates of our two countries are
going to be extremely difficult, and it is better to prepare for this beforehand
"Two processes are occurring in the world today.
One is a process of spiritual liberation in the USSR and the other Communist
countries. The second is the assistance being extended by the West
to the Communist rulers, a process of concessions, of détente, of
yielding whole countries.
"We are slaves there from birth, but we are striving
for freedom. You however, were born free. If so, then why do
you help our slave owners?"4
The message of Solzhenitsyn, then, is addressed
directly to America: wake up, learn from those who have suffered, return
to the religious and moral roots of humanity, stand firmly in the good
and against evil. This is all very correct and very important, but
it is not yet the heart of what contemporary Orthodox Russia has to say
to the Orthodox of America and the West. To get to this heart of
the matter, I will now turn to another central figure of Russia's Orthodox
revival.
FATHER DIMITRY DUDKO
Father Dimitry Dudko is an Orthodox pastor placed in the
middle of the frightful Communist reality which Solzhenitsyn has described so
eloquently. His attitude is not philosophical or literary, as is Solzhenitsyn's
in his writings; his concern is only immediate and down-to-earth: how do I survive
right now, this minute, in the jaws of the anti-Christian society which has
all the weapons it wants to fight against Christian faith? And how do
I help my fellow men to do this, and above all my spiritual children?
For six or seven years now, Fr. Dimitry has been
crying out his answer in the form of sermons, articles, and even a weekly
"newspaper" (actually a parish newsletter), all addressed to his growing
flock of converts (he has baptized over 5,000 adults himself) and to anyone
who will listen.
He has done this against tremendous odds, right in the jaws
of the atheist beast, as it were. His truthfulness and fiery faith have
made many enemies—sadly enough, even among Orthodox Christians. Some have
found him too emotional, too apocalyptic, too messianic—and it is true that
such a fiery, urgent, Orthodox preaching hasn't been heard in Russia and probably
the whole Orthodox world since the days of St. John of Kronstadt; many Orthodox
people have become self-satisfied with their "correct and proper" Orthodoxy
and are somehow offended when Orthodoxy is preached and communicated so warmly
to everyone who will listen. Others are infected by the tragic suspiciousness
of our times, largely inspired by the Communist spy system, and simply do not
trust him, some even suspecting him of being a KGB agent. Still others
miss his message because they want to check each of his words for possible "heresies,"
and some of such ones have thought that he is an "ecumenist" because he has
no hostility towards non-Orthodox Christians, even though he quite clearly distinguishes
Orthodoxy from their teachings.
Against these tremendous odds, both from outside—the
atheists—and inside—his own fellow Orthodox Christians—Fr. Dimitry apparently
has "broken." Everyone now knows of his famous "confession" on Soviet
television in June when, after five months in prison and pressures we can
scarcely imagine, he publicly repudiated his articles and sermons and announced
that "I assess my so-called struggle against godlessness as a struggle
against Soviet authority."
I think it is not too difficult to understand, in
general terms, what happened to him: he was "broken," not in his Orthodox
Christian faith (which he was perhaps not even asked to give up) but in
his sense of mission. Even before his arrest he wrote of his
"sleepless nights" wen he read of how his own Orthodox Russians abroad
were attacking him and spreading innuendoes about him: Why can he speak
so openly? How can he have such contacts abroad? Why do they
let him print a "newspaper"?
How petty we can sometimes become when face to face
with such an evident miracle as Fr. Dimitry's words in these past years!
His atheist torturers undoubtedly played to the full the doubts and suspicions
and accusations of his fellow Orthodox in order, finally, to make Fr. Dimitry,
cut off from contact with even his own family, doubt his own mission to
speak the saving Orthodox word when everyone seemed to be against
him.
I think we in the free world who did not sufficiently value
and support Fr. Dimitry are at least partly to blame for his tragedy.
As far as we know, no one has been able to get into contact with Fr. Dimitry
yet, but one person who was able to speak briefly to his Matushka reports that
she could only say: "What have they done to him!?"
THE MESSAGE OF FATHER DIMITRY
But even if Fr. Dimitry's voice has now been silenced—which was obviously the aim of the atheists—his message remains for us. Let us look now at some of its main points.
The Spiritual Battle of Our Times
First of all, he looks realistically at the world
and sees a tremendous battle going on: atheism is trying to swallow faith.
He sees this first-hand in the world's first atheist state, which placed
constant pressure against believers of a kind that we can scarcely imagine,
a pressure that often erupts into crude violence.
Father Dimitry describes this battle in his Paschal
sermon in 1977: "We are in the front lines, and this front line is everywhere.
We are surrounded by atheists on all sides. There is no place where
this is no shooting going on. The press, art, theater, schools, institutions—everything
has been occupied by the atheists. The laws are all directed towards
our suffocation." As results of the influence of atheism, Fr. Dimitry
notes the low level of morals in the Soviet Union, the destruction of the
family, people's denseness to religious influence. "Throughout the
whole of Russia, one sees only the ruins of our people's inheritance, even
though they try to cover up the ruins with the boxes of standardized houses."
Fr. Dimitry himself suffered 81/2 years
of imprisonment in a concentration camp in his youth for writing a religious
poem, and in 1975 he was involved in a planned automobile "accident" that
broke both his legs and barely left him alive. He has felt the constant
pressure both of the Soviet State and the Moscow Patriarchate to stop his
religious activity. We in the free world, although we can sense the
godless air about us, are still left free to do whatever we want with regard
to religious faith. Fr. Dimitry faces this godless spirit of the
times much more directly than we do.
His answer to this battle is not a weak one, like ours is:
we are satisfied with the freedom to worship as we wish, we easily mix a few
hours weekly devoted to church matters with an overwhelming preponderance of
worldly things in our lives; few of us are really transformed by Orthodox
Christianity. But Fr. Dimitry calls on Orthodox Christians to counter-attack.
He says: "Christianity must become the content of the whole life
We must illuminate all questions with Christianity; it cannot be limited within
strict bounds. The Church at the present time must include also the club
and the workers' assembly. We must bring the Church to the life which
is outside the church building
The Christian cannot close himself
up in some kind of shell; he must be pained over the pains of others." "Everyone
who can respond must respond
Atheism is a plague. It must
be stopped—otherwise it will spread over everyone, devouring everything."
He concludes his 1977 Paschal sermon with this cry: "Hear you, all you who can
hear! We are alive! After all the frightful bombardments, we are
alive! But we need help. In whatever way you can, help us.
Do not remain indifferent. Indifference in our days is perdition, not
only for us. There should begin a decisive, final war for the liberation
from captivity, for the salvation of all alive, a universal sacred war."
And he signs this sermon: "Priest Dimitry Dudko, soldier of the Russian army."
Seeing reality in this way—that is, being really
aware of what is happening in the world, and not closing his eyes to
it as we in the free world so often do, insulated by our temporary freedom
and prosperity, Fr. Dimitry speaks in a tone that is urgent and full of
crisis. He is constantly saying: Russia is perishing, the whole world
is perishing—let us act, let us start being Christians right now!
The tone of spiritual crisis is what has "turned off" some
people in the West, even Orthodox people, from Fr. Dimitry—he is too "emotional,"
too "apocalyptic," too "messianic". How blind and insensitive we are!
This is precisely the tone of true, Apostolic Christianity—the tone of St. John
of Kronstadt, St. Cosmas of Aitolia, and all who are on fire with Christ's message
of salvation. This is precisely the tone of the Catacomb Church in Russia—the
tone of crisis and urgency in the face of overwhelming evil—and one can well
say that in Fr. Dimitry this aspect of the message of the Catacomb Church has
surfaced in contemporary Russia—a message that is absent, not only in the Moscow
Patriarchate, but in most of the Orthodox of the free world as well. Our
"Disneyland" experience in America has not equipped us to understand this sense
of urgency, but Fr. Dimitry has begun to awaken us.
And the situation is even worse than we might think; not
only is the enemy outside, he is even within our own ranks. Fr. Dimitry
writes: "Many of us have fallen into captivity… our whole front is in captivity.
And there is something even worse: There is an internal corruption of the generals
of the army. The will to resist has become paralyzed. Those who
g out to battle are hindered by their own people in league with the enemy."
Let us not feel smug because we are not in the Moscow Patriarchate, whose generals
(bishops) indeed have been corrupted and are paralyzed. The Sergianist
spirit of legalism and compromise with the spirit of the world is everywhere
in the Orthodox Church today. But we are called to be soldiers of Christ
in spite of this!
Russia's Golgotha
Solzhenitsyn spoke of Gulag—a secular term; Fr. Dimitry
speaks of Golgotha—the Christian understanding of the Soviet experience.
The central part of Fr. Dimitry's—and contemporary Russia's—message to us is
that all the sufferings inflicted by atheism have a meaning—we can find Christ
in them
Here are a few passages of Fr. Dimitry's teaching:
"In our land has occurred Golgotha; the torments of all the
martyrs begin gradually to cleanse the air
The present crucifixion
of Christ in Russia, the persecutions and mockings only lead to the resurrection
of faith in men
This gives us strength, firmness, makes us better
than we are now
Let us imagine the state of our martyrs. Did
the thought of sinning occur to them at this moment? No matter what kind
of sinners they may have been in this minute they become saints
And those
who suffer for those condemned to death also become better. How many martyrs
there have been in Russia—and therefore, how many holy feelings! Will
these holy feelings really give no fruit? And perhaps we live and will
live only by the feelings of the holy martyrs, being supported by them
In our country now is Golgotha. Christ is crucified. Golgotha is
not merely sufferings, but such sufferings as lead to resurrection and enlighten
men
Our time can be compared only with the first three centuries
of Christianity, and perhaps then it was even easier; then they did not yet
know all the refinements of subtle torture
If one compares the religious
state here and in the West, the balance is on our side. Why? Because
here we have Golgotha, and there they don't. Does an abundance of material
goods give a religious rebirth? … Here we have nothing, but if people believe
they are ready to die for their faith."
Russia's experience is for the whole world: the
martyrs are the seed of Christianity, and Russia's New Martyrs are the
source of new life for Orthodox Christians not only there, but everywhere.
Suffering, Golgotha, martyrdom is what we lack in the West, and this is
why our Christianity is so feeble; but we become stronger by learning of
and participating in Russia's suffering.
The resurrection of Russia is occurring
In fact, Fr. Dimitry is a chief witness of this resurrection. It is not
merely the fact tat he has baptized so many thousands of people who have found
Christ, or that he inspires his spiritual children to self-sacrificing Christian
life; his own voice is a proof that Orthodox Christianity is coming back to
life in Russia. He is a forerunner of resurrected Russia, and the fact
that he himself now seems to have fallen, that is, is no longer able to speak
out as he did before, is only a proof that this resurrection is still in process.
It cannot be completed while atheism still reigns in Russia and the church organization
bows down to the commands of the atheists; but it is presently underway
and in God's time will produce its full fruits, despite the immense odds against
it.
We Must Participate
But Fr. Dimitry, for all his belief and hope in Russia's
resurrection, still warns us that it will not happen without us, that
is, each Orthodox believer. In one of his final letters before his imprisonment
he wrote: "It is precisely now that, not only for those living in Russia, but
for the believers of the whole world also, the most responsible moment is approaching:
when the resurrection that has begun will touch our souls
One must
begin increased prayer for all the persecuted in Russia
All possible
help should be shown to them
If Russia is not resurrected, Golgotha
threatens the whole world, and who knows whether this Golgotha will lead to
resurrection; perhaps it will only be the Golgotha of the foolish thief.
Either resurrection or the perdition of everything—it is before such a choice
that not only Russia, but the whole world now stands."
And this is his final message to us—and the message
of all of suffering Holy Russia today.5
OTHER REPRESENTATIVES
OF THE ORTHODOX REVIVAL
I have spoken about the Orthodox revival in Russia,
but I have only mentioned three representatives of it. This is because
I wanted to discuss the quality of it rather than the quantity.
Actually, there are many touching stories that could be told of the recovery
and exercise of Orthodox faith in Russia today. The writings of Fr.
Dimitry contain many of these stories—I would advise you all to read his
book Our Hope, which has now appeared in English. We know
the names of quite a few people in Russia who have found Orthodox faith
and begun to live and suffer for it.
Among these, one could name Vladimir Osipov,
who found faith in a concentration camp after meeting a priest of the Catacomb
Church there; later he started a samizdat Orthodox patriotic publication
in the spirit of the 19th-century Slavophiles, for which he is still imprisoned.6
There is Alexander Ogorodnikov, who founded
a religious discussion seminar which was persecuted as if it were a political
conspiracy; after a year in prison for "parasitism," he is now awaiting
trial for "anti-Soviet agitation."7
Vasily Shipilov has spent the last 29 years
in psychiatric hospitals, where he has been made a cripple and is constantly
beaten for making the sign of the Cross.8
Lev Regelson, 39-year-old father of five
children, leader of a Christian seminar and author of The Tragedy of
the Russian Church, the first book from within Russia to defend the
hierarchs of the Catacomb Church and speak openly against Sergianism; he
is now arrested.9
Father Gleb Yakunin, founder of the Committee
for the Defense of Believers' Rights, a selfless worker for others despite
the needs of his own family of three children—also now in prison.10
Igor Ogurtsov, founder of the Christian Social
Union in the 1960's, who has now served 13 of his 20 year term, but, although
still only 42, will probably not live out the rest of the term due to ill
treatment.11
Archimandrite Gennady, organizer of missions
and monasteries of the Catacomb Church.
Nun Valeria, committed to a psychiatric hospital
for embroidering the 90th psalm on belts and selling them for pennies.
The list could go on and on. These are all
people born in the Soviet era, most of them young, who have found Orthodox
faith in the most impossible of conditions, and have kept it through years
of prison and torture.
The Resurrection of Russia
and Our Part in It
What do all these examples say to us?
Let us have no illusions—the kind of deep Christianity
they know is not accessible to us. We are the products of Disneyland
and a society of fakery and plastic everything—including plastic Christianity
and plastic Orthodoxy. Let us be humble enough to recognize it.
(I am not saying, by the way, that one should be forbidden to go to Disneyland
or should be constantly scowling—I am only saying that we should be aware
of our crippled state and the depth of the true Christianity of suffering.)
We can begin to become aware. We can let the
sufferings of our fellow Orthodox in Russia add a new dimension of seriousness
to our life. We must seek to find out more about them, and we must
begin to pray for them. In the early centuries of Christianity the
prayer of Christians for those undergoing imprisonment, slave-labor, and
martyrdom was a tremendous source of strength not only for those suffering,
but for those praying for them as well. It can be the same for us
today. Let us gather their names and pray for them in church and
at home.
The martyrs are the seed of Christianity.
As Father Dimitry has said many times, it cannot be that the New Martyrs
of the much-suffering Russian land will not bring froth fruit, a blossoming
of true Christianity—first of all in Russia, but also in every place that
takes the sufferings of Russian Christians to heart.
That which Russia and other countries have experienced
is coming here—in precisely what form we cannot say, and we don't need
to become hysterical over this prospect; but it is obvious that our privileged
freedom and prosperity cannot last long in a world that is ever more falling
into slavery and poverty. We have been warned. Let us learn
from the example of those who have suffered before us.
It is a law of the spiritual life that where there is Golgotha—if
it is genuine suffering for Christ—there will be resurrection. This resurrection
first of all occurs in human hearts, and we do not need to be too concerned
what outward from it might take by God's will. All signs point to the
fact that we are living at the end of the world, and any outward restoration
of Holy Orthodox Russia will be short-lived. But our inward spiritual
resurrection is what we should be striving for, and the events in Russia give
us hope that, in contrast to all the imitation and fake Christianity and Orthodoxy
that abounds today, there will yet be a resurrection of true, suffering Christianity,
not only in Russia, but wherever hearts have not become entirely frozen.
But we must be ready for the suffering that must precede this
Are we in the West ready for it? Golgotha
does not mean the incidental sufferings we all go through in this life.
It is something immense and deep, which cannot be relieved by taking an
aspirin or going to a movie. It is what Russia has gone through and
is now trying to communicate to us. Let us not be deaf to this message.
By the prayers of all the New Martyrs, may God give us the strength to
endure the trials coming upon us and to find in them the resurrection of
our souls!
1 Unknown to Fr. Seraphim and most of the people present, Yury Mashkov had died of cancer only three days before this lecture was given. (Ed. note).
2 La Reniassance Russe, 1978, no. 4, pp. 12-17.
3 Alexander Solzhenitsyn, The Gulag Archipelago Two (Harper and Row, New York, 1975), pp. 615-616.
4 Religion in Communist Dominated Areas, 1975, nos. 10-12.
5 As recently as October 10. 1987, Fr. Dimitry wrote an address
to the world, entitled "Worse Than Any Imprisonment," which he concluded
as follows:
"May God grant that a new beginning will be blessed
in our much-suffering land, and that all will be able to freely take a
breath of fresh air. I believe in the prophecies of St. Seraphim
of Sarov, that Pascha will be sung in an unscheduled time. Russia
must say a new word—I also believe in this prophecy of Dostoyevsky.
"I believe and see that the fate of the whole world
also depends on the fate of Russia. The Millennium of Christianity
in Russia is an all-Christian jubilee, a most meaningful date, and it says
a lot to the whole world. May it be so, may it be so! (Ed. note).
6 Osipov was released some time after Fr. Seraphim gave this talk. He is now publishing the magazine Zemla in Moscow. (Ed. note).
7 Ogorodnikov was released seven years after this, on February 14, 1987. (Ed. Note).
8 At last report (May 28, 1987), Shipilov is still in a psychiatric hospital in the Krasnoyarsk region. (Ed. Note).
9 Regelson, now age 47, has reportedly been released. (Ed. Note).
10 Fr. Gleb was released in March, 1987. In May he was reinstated as a priest in a parish near Moscow, but he is being closely monitored. (Ed. Note).
11 Now 50 years old, Ogurtsov is presently serving a term of exile. (Ed. Note).
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