THE unity of the Church
follows of necessity from the unity of God; for the Church is not a
multitude of persons in their separate individuality, but a unity of
the grace of God, living in a multitude of rational creatures,
submitting themselves willingly to grace. Grace, indeed, is also given
to those who resist it, and to those who do not make use of it (who
hide their talent in the earth), but these are not in the Church. In
fact, the unity of the Church is not imaginary or allegorical, but a
true and substantial unity, such as is the unity of many members in a
living body.
THE Church is one, notwithstanding her division
as it appears to a man who is still alive on earth. It is only in
relation to man that it is possible to recognize a division of thc
Church into visible and invisible; her unity is, in reality, true and
absolute. Those who are alive on earth, those who have finished their
earthly course, those who, like the angels, were not created for a life
on earth, those in future generations who have not yet begun their
earthly course, are all united together in one Church, in one and the
same grace of God; for the creation of God which has not yet been
manifested is manifest to Him; and God hears the prayers and knows the
faith of those whom He has not yet called out of non-existence into
existence. Indeed the Church, the Body of Christ, is manifesting forth
and fulfilling herself in time, without changing her essential unity or
inward life of grace. And therefore, when we speak of "the Church
visible and invisible," we so speak only in relation to man.
II - The Visible and Invisible Church
THE Church visible, or
upon earth, lives in complete communion and unity with the whole body
of the Church, of which Christ is the Head. She has abiding within her
Christ and the grace of the Holy Spirit in all their living fulness,
but not in the fulness of their manifestation, for she acts and knows
not fully, but only so far as it pleases God.
INASMUCH as the earthly and visible Church is not the fulness and
completeness of the whole Church which the Lord has appointed to appear
at the final judgment of all creation, she acts and knows only within
her own limits; and (according to the words of Paul the Apostle, to the
Corinthians, 1 Cor. 5.12) does not judge the rest of mankind, and only
looks upon those as excluded, that is to say, not belonging to her, who
exclude themselves. The rest of mankind, whether alien from
the Church, or united to her by ties which God has not willed to reveal
to her, she leaves to the judgment of the great day. The Church on
earth judges for herself only, according to the grace of the Spirit,
and the freedom granted her through Christ, inviting also
the rest of mankind to the unity and adoption of God in Christ; but
upon those who do not hear her appeal she pronounces no sentence,
knowing the command of her Saviour and Head, "not to judge another
man's servant" (Rom. 14.4).
III - The Church on Earth
FROM the
creation of the world the earthly Church has continued uninterruptedly
upon the earth, and will continue until the accomplishment of all the
works of God, according to the promise given her by God Himself. And
her notes are: inward holiness, which does not allow for any admixture
of error, for the spirit of truth and outward unchangeableness lives
within her as Christ, her Preserver and Head does not change.
ALL
the notes of the Church, whether inward or outward, are recognized only
by herself, and by those whom grace calls to be members of her, To
those, indeed, who are alien from her, and are not called to her, they
are unintelligible; for to such as these, outward change of rite
appears to he a change of the Spirit itself, which is glorified in the
rite (as, for instance, in the transition from the Church of the Old
Testamcnt to that of the New, or in the change of ecclesiastical rites
and ordinances since Apostolic times). The Church and her members know,
by the inward knowledge of faith, the unity and unchangeableness of her
spirit, which is the spirit of God. But those who are outside and not
called to belong to her, behold and know the changes in the external
rite by an extternal knowledge, which does not comprehend the inward
knowledge, just as also the unchangeableness of God appears to them to
be changeable in the changes of His creations. Wherefore the Church has
not been, nor could she be, changed or obscured, nor could she have
fallen away, for then she would have been deprived of the spirit of
truth. It is impossible that there should have been a time when she
could have received error into her bosom, or when the laity,
presbyters, and bishops had submitted to instructions or teaching
inconsistent wilh the teaching and spirit of Christ. The man who should
say that such a weakening of the spirit of Christ could possibly come
to pass within her knows nothing of the Chnrch, and is allogether alien
to her. Moreover, a partial revolt against false doctrines, together
with the retention or acceptance of other false doctrines, neither is,
nor could be, the work of the Church; for within her, according to her
very essence, there must always have been preachers and teachers and
martyrs confessing, not partial truth with an admixture of error, but
the full and unadulterated truth. The Church knows nothing of partial
truth and partial error, but only the whole truth without
admixture of error. And the man who is living within the Church
does not submit
to false teaching or receive the Sacraments from a false teacher;
he will not, knowing him to be false, follow his false rites. And the
Church herself does not err, for she is the truth, she is incapable of
cunning or cowardice, for she is holy. And of course, the
Church, by her very unchangeableness, does not acknowledge that to be
error, which she has at any previous time acknowledged as truth; and
having proclaimed by a General Council and common consent, that it is
possible for any private individual, or any bishop or patriarch, to err
in his teaching, she cannot acknowledge that such or such private
individual, or bishop, or patriarch, (1) or successor of theirs, is
incapable of falling into error in teaching; or that they are preserved
from going astray by any special grace. By what would the earth be
sanctified, if the Church were to lose her sanctity? And where would
there be truth, if her judgements of today were contrary to those of
yesterday? Within the Church, that is to say, within her members, false
doctrines may be engendered, but then the infected members fall away,
constituting a heresy or schism, and no longer defile the sanctity of
the Church.
(1) As
for instance, Pope Honorius, whose teaching was condemned at the sixth
General Council.
lV - One, Holy,
Catholic, Apostolic
THE Church is
called One, Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic; because she is one, and
holy; because she belongs to the whole world, and not to any particular
locality; because by her all mankind and all the earth, and not any
particular nation or country, are sanctified; because her very essence
consists in the agreement and unity of the spirit and life of all the
members who acknowledge her, throughout the world; lastly, because in
the writings and doctrines of the Apostles is contained all the fulness
of her faith, her hope, and her love.
FROM this it
follows that when any society is called the Church of Christ, with the
addition of a local name, such as the Greek, Russian, or Syrian Church,
this appellation signifies nothing more than the congregation of
members of the Church living in that particular locality, that is,
Greece, Russia, or Syria; and does not involve any such idea as that
any single community of Christians is able to formulate the doctrine of
the Church, or to give a dogmatic interpretation to the teaching of the
Church without the concurrence therewith of the other communities;
still less is it implied that any one particular community, or the
pastor thereof, can prescribe its own interpretation to the others, The
grace of faith is not to be separated from holiness of life, nor can
any single community or any single pastor be acknowledged to be the
custodian of the whole faith of the Church, any more than any single
community or any single pastor can be looked upon as the representative
of the whole of her sanctity. Nevertheless, every Christian community,
without assuming to itself the right of dogmatic explanation or
teaching, has a full right to change its forms and ceremonies, and to
introduce new ones, so long as it does not cause offence to the other
communities. Rather than do this, it ought to abandon its own opinion,
and submit to that of the others, lest that which to one might seem
harmless or even praiseworthy should seem blameworthy to another; or
that brother should lead brother into the sin of doubt and
discord. Every Christian ought to set a high value upon unity in the
rites of the Church: for thereby is manifested, even for the
unenlightened, unity of spirit and doctrine, while for the enlightened
man it becomes a source of lively Christian joy. Love is the crown and
glory of the Church.
V - Scripture
and Tradition
THE Spirit of
God, who lives in the Church, ruling her and making her wise, manifests
Himself within her in diverse manners; in Scripture, in Tradition, and
in Works; for the Church, which does the work of God, is the same
Church which preserves tradition and which has written the Scriptures.
Neither individuals, nor a multitude of individuals within the Church,
preserve tradition or write the Scriptures, but the Spirit of God,
which lives in the whole body of the Church. Therefore it is neither
right nor possible to look for the grounds of tradition in the
Scripture, nor for the proof of Scripture in tradition, nor for the
warrant of Scripture or tradition in works. To a man living outside the
Church neither her scripture nor her tradition nor her works arc
comprehensible. But to the man who lives within the Church and is
united tn the spirit of the Church, their unity is manifest by the
grace which lives within her.
DO not works
precede Scripture and tradition? Does not tradition precede Scripture?
Were not the works of Noah, Abraham, the forefathers and
representatives of the Church of the Old Testament, pleasing to God?
And did not tradition exist among the patriarchs, beginning with Adam,
the forefathers of all? Did not Christ give liberty to men and teaching
by word of mouth, before the Apostles by their writings bore witness to
the work of redemption and the law of liberty? Wherefore,
between tradition, works, and scripture there is no contradiction, but,
on the contrary, complete agreement. A man understands the Scriptures,
so far as he preserves tradition, and does works agreable to the wisdom
that lives within him. But the wisdom that lives within him is not
given to him individually, but as a member of the Church, and it is
given to him in part, without altogether annulling his individual
error; but to the Church it is given in the fulness of truth and
without any admixture of error. Wherefore be must not judge the
Chulrch, but submit to her that wisdom be not taken from him.
EVERY one that
seeks for proof of the truth of the Church, by that very act either
shows his doubt, and excludes himself from the Church, or assumes the
appearance of one who doubts and at the same time preserves a hope of
proving thc truth, and arrriving at it by his own power of reason: but
the powers of reason do not attain to the truth of God ,
and the weakness of man is made manifest by the weakness of his proofs.
The man who takes Scripture only, and founds the Church on it alone, is
in reality rejecting the Church, and is hoping to found her afresh by
his own powers: the man who takes tradition and works only, and
depreciates the importance of Scripture, is likewise in reality
rejecting the Church, and constituting himself a judge of
the Spirit of God, who spake by the Scripture. For Christian knowledge
is a matter, not of intellectual investigation, but of a living faith,
which is a gift of grace. Scripture is external, an outward thing, and
tradition is external, and works are external: that which is inward in
them is the one Spirit of God. From tradition taken alone, or from
Scripture or from works, a man can but derive an extrernal and
incomplete knowledge, which may indeed in itself contain truth, for it
starts from truth, but at the same time must of ncccssity be erroneous,
insomuch as it is incomplete. A believer knows the Truth, but an
unbeliever does not know it, or at least only knows it with an external
and imperfect knowledge. (2)
The Church does not prove herself either as Scripture or as tradition
or as works, but bears witness to herself, just as the Spirit of God,
dwelling in her, bears witness to Himself in the Scriptures. The Church
does not ask: Which Scripture is true, which tradition is true, which
Council is true, or what works are pleasing to God: for Christ knows
His own inheritance, and the Church in which He lives knows by inward
knowledge, and cannot help knowing, her own manifestations. The
collection of Old and New Testament books, which the Church
acknowledges as hers, are called by the namc of Holy Scripture. But
there are no limits to Scripture; for every writing which the Church
acknowledges as hers is Holy Scripture. Such pre-eminently are the
Creeds of the General Councils, and especially the
Niceno-Constantinopolitan Creed. Wherefore, the writing of Holy
Scripture has gone on up to our day, and, if God pleases, yet more will
be written. But in the Church there has not been, nor ever will be, any
contradictions, either in Scripture, or in tradition, or in works; for
in all three is Christ, one and unchangeable.
(2) For this reason, even he who
is not sanctified by the spirit of grace
may know the truth even as we hope that we know it: but this knowledge
is in itself nothing but an hypothesis, more or less sound as an
opinion, logical conviction, or external knowledge, which has nothing
in common with inward and true knowledge, with faith which sees the
invisible. And whether we have faith or no is known to God alone.
VI
- Confession, Prayer and Deeds
EVERY action
of the Church, directed by the Holy Ghost, the Spirit of life and
truth, sets forth the full completeness of all His gifts - of faith,
hope, and love: or in Scripture not faith only, but also the hope of
the Church, is made manifest, and the love of God; and in works
wellpleasing to God there is made manifest not only love, but likewise
faith and hope and grace; and in the living tradition of the Church
which awaits from God her crown and consummation in Christ, not hope
only, but also faith and love are manifested. The gifts of the Holy
Spirit are inseparably united in one holy and living unity; but as
works well pleasing to God belong more especially to love, and prayer
wellpleasing to God belongs more especially to hope, so a Creed well
pleasing to God belongs more especially to faith, and the Church's
creed is rightly called the Confession or Symbol of the Faith.
WHEREFORE it most be
understood that Creeds and prayers and works are nothing of themselves,
but are only an external manifcstation of the inward spirit. Whereupon
it also follows that neitber he who prays nor he who does works nor he
who confesses the Creed of tbe Church is pleasing to God, but
only he who acts, confesses, and prays according to the spirit of
Christ living within him. All men have not the same faith or the same
hope or the same love; for a man may love the flesh, fix his hope on
the world, and confess his belief in a lie; he may also love and hope
and believe not fully, but only in part; and the Church calls his
faith, faith, and his hope, hope, and his love, love; for he calls them
so, and she will not dispute with him concerning words; but what she
herself calls faith, bope, and love are the gifts of the Holy Spirit,
and she knows that they are true and perfect.
VII - The Creed
HOLY Church confesses
her faith by her whole life; by her doctrine, which is inspired by the
Holy Ghost; by her Sacraments in which the Holy Ghost works; and by her
rites, which He directs. And the Niceno-Constantinopolitan Symbol is
pre-eminently called her Confession of Faith.
IN the Niceno-Constantinopolitan Symbol is comprised
the confession of the Church's doctrine; but, in order that it might be
known that the hope of the Church is inseparable from her doctrine, it
likewise confesses her hope; for it is said: 'we look for', and not
merely, 'we believe in,' that which is to come.
THE Niceno-Constantinopolitan Symbol, the full and
complete Confession of the Church, from which she allows nothing to be
omitted and to which she permits nothing to be added is as follows: "I
believe in one God, Father, Almighty, Maker of Heaven and Earth, and of
all things visible and invisible: And in one Lord Jesus Christ, the
only-begotten Son of God, begotten of the Father before all ages; Light
from Light, True God from True God, begotten, not made; of one essence
with the Father, through Whom all things were made: Who for us men, and
for our salvation, came down from Heaven, and was incarnate by the Holy
Spirit and the Virgin Mary, and became Man: And was crucified for us
under Pontius Pilate, and suffered and was buried: And He rose on the
third day according to the Scriptures: And ascended into Heaven, and
sits at the right hand of the Father: And He is coming again with glory
to judge the living and the dead, And His Kingdom will have no end: And
in the Holy Spirit, the Lord, the Giver of Life, Who proceeds from the
Father, Who with the Father and the Son is equally worshipped
and glorified, Who spoke by
the Prophets: And in One,
Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church. I confess one Baptism
for the remission of sins. I look for the Resurrection of Dead: And the
Life of the Age to come. Amen."
THIS
confession, just as also the whole life of the Spirit, is
comprehensible only to one who believes and is a member of the Church.
It contains within itself mysteries inaccessible to the inquiring
intellect, and manifest only to God Himself, and to those
to whom he makes them manifest for an inward and living, not a dead and
outward, knowledge. It contains within itself the mystery of the
existence of God not only in relation to His outward action upon
creation, but also to His inward eternal being, Therefore the pride of
reason and of illegal domination, which appropriated to itself, in
opposition to the decree of the whole Church (pronounced at the Council
of Ephesus), the right to add its private explanations and human
hypotheses to the Niceno-Constantinopolitan Symbol is in itself an
infraction of the sauctity and inviolability of the Church. Just as the
very pride of the separate Churches, which dared to change the Symbol
of the whole Church without the consent of their brethren, was inspired
by a spirit not of love, and was a crime against God and the Church, so
also their blind wisdom, which did not comprehend the mysteries of God,
was a distortion nf the faith; for faith is not preserved where love
has grown weak. Wherefore the addition of the words filioque contains a sort of
imaginary dogma, unknown to any one of the writers well pleasing to
God, or of the Bishops or successors of the Apostles in the first ages
of the Church, and not spoken by Christ our Saviour. As Christ spoke
clearly, so did and does the Church clearly confess that the Holy Ghost
proceedeth from the Father; for not only the outward, but also the
inward, mysteries of God were revealed by Christ, and by the Spirit of
Faith, to the holy Apostles and to the holy Church. When Theodoret
called all who confessed the procession of the Holy Ghost from the
Father and the Son blasphemers, the Church, while detecting his many
errors, in this case approved his judgment by an eloquent silence, (3) The Church does not deny
that the Holy Spirit is sent not only by the Father, but also by the
Son; the Church does not deny that the Holy Ghost is communicated to
all rational creatures not only from the Father but also through the
Son; but what she does reject is that the Holy Chost had the principle
of His procession in the Godhead itself, not merely from the Father,
but also from the Son. He who has renounced the spirit of love and
divested himself of the gifts of grace cannot any longer possess inward
knowledge - that is, faith - but limits himself to mere outward
knowledge; wherefore he can only know what is external, and not the
inner mysteries of God. Communities of Christians which had broken away
from the Holy Church could no longer confess (inasmuch as they now
could not comprehend with the Spirit) the procession of the Holy Ghost,
in the Godhead itself, from the Father only; but from
that time they were obliged to confess only the external mission of the
Spirit into all creation, a mission which comes to pass, not
only from the Father, but also through the Son. They preserved the
external form of the faith, but they lost the inner meaning and the
grace of God, as in their confession, so also in their life.
(3) Silence on the part of
the Church in not rejecting a writer is of great significance; but this
silence becomes a decisive sentence when the Church does not reject a
decision brought against a doctrine of any sort, for in not rejecting
the decision she maintains it with all her authority.
VIII - The Church and Its Mysteries
HAVING
confessed her faith in the Tri-hypostatic Deity, the Church confesses
her faith in herself, because she acknowledges herself to be the
instrument and vessel of divine grace, and acknowledges her works as
the works of God, not as the works of the individuals of whom, in
her visible manifestation [upon earth] she is composed. In this
confession she shows that knowledge concerning her essence and being is
likewise a gift of grace, granted from above, and accessible to faith
alone and not to reason.
FOR
what would be the need for me to say, "I believe," if I already knew?
Is not faith the evidence of things not seen? But the visible Chuch is
not the visible society of Christians, but the Spirit of God and the
grace of the Sacraments living in this society. Wherefore even the
visible Church is visible only to the believer; for to the unbeliever a
sacrament is only a rite, and the Church merely a Society. The
believer, while with the eyes of the body and of reason in her outward
manifestations only, by the Spirit takes knowledge of her in her
sacraments and prayers and works well pleasing to God. Wherefore he
does not confuse her with the society which bears the name of
Christians, for not every one that saith, "Lord, Lord," really belongs
to the chosen race and to the seed of Abraham. But the true Christian
knows by faith that the One Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church will
never disappear from the face of the earth until the last judgement of
all creation, that she will remain on earth invisible to fleshly eyes,
or to the understanding which is wise according to the flesh, among the
visible society of Christians, exactly in the same way as she remains
visible to the eye of faith in the Church beyond the grave, but
invisible to the bodily eyes. But the Christian also knows, by
means of the faith, that the Church upon earth, although it is
invisible, is always clothed in a visible form; that there neither was,
nor could have been, nor ever will be a time in which the sacraments
will be mutilated, holiness will be dried up, or doctrine will be
corrupted; and that he is no Christian who cannot say where, from the
time of the Apostles themselves, the holy Sacraments have been and are
being administered, where doctrine was and is preserved, where prayers
were and are being sent up to the throne of grace. The Holy Church
confesses and believes that the sheep have never been deprived of their
Divine Pastor, and that the Church never could either err for want of
understanding - for the understanding of God dwells within her - or
submit to false doctrines for want of courage - for within
her dwells the might of the Spirit of God.
BELIEVING
in the word of God's promise, which has named all the followers
of Christ's doctrine the friends of Christ and His brethren, and
in Him the adopted sons of God, the Holy Church confesses the paths by
which it pleases God to lead fallen and dead humanity to reunion in the
spirit of grace and life. Wherefore, having made mention of the
prophets, the representalives of the age of the Old
Testament, she confesses Sacraments through which, in the Church of the
New Testament, God sends down His grace upon men, and more especially
she confesses the Sacrament of Baptism for the remission of sins, as
containing within itself the principle of al1 the others; for through
Baptism alone does a man enter into the unity of the Church, which is
the custodian of all the rest of the Sacraments.
CONFESSING one Baptism for the remission of sins, as a
Sacrament ordained by Christ Himself for entrance into the Church of
the New Testament, the Church does not judge those who have not entered
into communion with her through Baptism, for she knows and judges
herself only. God alone knows the hardness of the heart, and He
judges the weaknesses of reason according to truth and mercy. Many have
been saved and have received inheritance without having received the
Sacrament of Baptism with water; for it was instituted only for the
Church of the New Testament, He who rejects it rejects the whole Church
and the Spirit of God which lives within her; but it was not ordained
for man from the beginning, neither was it prescribed to the Church of
the Old Testament. For if any one should say that circumcision was the
Baptism of the Old Testament, he rejects Baptism for women, for whom
there was no circumcision; and what will he say about the Patriarchs
from Adam to Abraham, who did not receive the seal of circumcision? And
in any case does not he acknowledge that outside the Church of the New
Testament, the Sacrament of Baptism was not of obligation? If he will
say that it is on behalf of the Church of the Old Testament that Christ
received Baptism, who will place a limit to the loving-kindness of God,
who took upon Himself the sins of the world? Baptism is indeed of
obligation: for it alone is the door to the Church of the New
Testament, and in Baptism alone does man testify his assent to the
redeeming action of grace. Wherefore also in Baptism alone is he saved.
MOREOVER,
we know that in confessing one Baptism, as the beginning of all
Sacraments, we do not reject the others: for, believing in the Church,
we, together with her, confess Seven Sacraments, namely, Baptism, the
Eucharist, Laying on of Hands, Confirmation with Chrism, Marriage,
Penance, and Unction of the Sick. There are also many other Sacraments;
for every work which is done in faith, love, and hope, is suggested to
man by the Spirit of God, and invokes the unseen Grace o God. But thc
Seven Sacraments are in reality not accomplished by any single
individual who is worthy of the mercy of God, but by the whole Church in
the person of an individual, even though he be unworthy.
CONCERNING
the Sacrament of the Eucharist the Holy Church teaches that in it the
change of bread and wine into the Body and Blood of Christ is verily
accomplished. She does not reject the word 'Transubstantiation';
but she does not assign to it that material meaning which is assigned
to it by the teachers of the Churches which have fallen away, The
change of the bread and wine into the Body and Blood of Christ is
accomplished in the Church and for the Church. If a man
receive the consecrated Gifts, or worship them, or think on them with
faith, hc verily receives, adores, and thinks on thc Body and Blood of
Christ. If he receive unworthily he verily rejects the Body and Blood
of Christ; in any case, in faith or in unbelief, he is sanctified or
condemned by the Body and Blood of Christ. But this Sacrament is in the
Church and not for the outside world, not for fire, not for irrational
creatures, not for corruption, and not for the man who has not heard
the law of Christ. In the Church itself (we are speaking of the visible
Church), to the elect and to thc reprobate thc Holy Eucharist is not a
mere commemoration concerning the mystery of redemption, it is not a
presence of spiritual gifts within the bread and wine, it is not merely
a spiritual reception of the Body and Blood of Christ, but is His true
Body and Blood. Not in spirit alone was Christ pleased to unite Himself
with the faithful, but also in Body and in Blood; in order that that
union might be complete, and not only spiritual but also corporal. Both
nonsensical explanations concerning the relationship of the holy
Sacrament to elements and irrational creatures (when the Sacrament was
instituted for the Church alone), and that spiritual pride which
despises body and blood and rejects the corporal union wilh Christ, arc
equally opposed to the Church. We shall not rise again without the
body, and no spirit, except thc Spirit of God, can be said to be
entirely incorporeal. He that despises thc body sins through pride of
spirit.
OF the Sacrament
of Ordination the Holy Church teaches that through it the grace which
brings the Sacraments into effect is handed on in succession from the
Apostles and from Christ Himsclf: not as if no Sacrament could be
brought to effect otherwise than through Ordination (for every
Christian is able through Baptism to open the door of the Church to an
infant or a Jew or a heathen), but that Ordination contains within
itself all the fulness of grace given by Christ to His Church. And the
Church herself, in communicating to her members the fulness of
spiritual gifts, in the strength of the freedom given her by God, has
appointed differences in the grades of Ordination. Thc Presbyter who
performs all the Sacraments exccpt Ordination has one gift, the Bishop
who performs Ordination has another; and higher than the gift of the
Episcopate there is nothing. The Sacrament gives to him who receives it
this great significance that, even if he be unworthy, yet in performing
his Sacramental service his action necessarily proceeds not from
himself, but from the whole Church, that is, from Christ living within
her. If Ordination ceased, all the Sacraments except Baptism would
also cease; and the human race would be torn away from grace: for the
Church herself would then bear witness that Christ had departed from
her.
CONCERNING
the Sacrament of Confirmation with Chrism the Church
teaches that in it the gifts of the Holy Ghost are conferred upon the
Christian, confirming his faith and inward holiness: and this Sacrament
is by the will of the Holy Church performed not by Bishops only, but
also by Presbyters, although the Chrism itself can only be blessed by a
Bishop.
OF the
Sacrament of Marriage the Holy Church teaches that the grace of God,
which blesses the succession of generations in the temporal existence
of the human race and the holy union of man and woman for the
organization of the falnily, is a sacramental gift imposing upon those
who receive it a high obligation of mutual love and spiritual
holi-ness, through which that which otherwise is sinful and material is
endued with righteousness and purity. Wherefore the great teachers of
the Church, the Apostles, recognize the Sacrament of marriage even
amongst the heathen: for while they forbid concubinage, they confirm
marriage between Christians and heathens; saying that the man is
sanctified by the believing wife, and the wife by the believing husband
(I Cor. 7. 14). These words of the Apostle do not mean that an
unbeliever could be saved by his or her union with a believer, but that
the marriage is sanctified: for it is not the person, but the husband
or wife, who is sanctified. One person is not saved through another,
but the husband or the wife is sanctified in relation to the marriage
itself. And thus marriage is not unclean, even amongst idolaters; but
they themselves know not of the grace of God given unto them.
THE
Holy Church through her ordained ministers acknowledges and blesses the
union, blessed by God, of husband and wife. Wherefore marriage is not a
mere rite but a true Sacrament. And it receives its accomplishment in
the Holy Church, for in her alone is every holy thing accomplished in
its fulness.
CONCERNING
the Sacrament of Penance the Holy Church teaches that without it the
spirit of man cannot be cleansed from the bondage of sin and of sinful
pride: that he himself cannot remit his own sins (for we have only the
power to condemn, not to justify ourselves), and that the Church alone
has the power of justifying, for within her lives the fulness of the
Spirit of Christ. We know that the first-fruits of thc Kingdom of
heaven, after the Saviour, entered into the sanctuary of God by the
judging of himself, that is to say, by the Sacrament of Penance; for he
said, "for we receive the due reward of our deeds"; and he received
absolution from Him who alone can absolve, and does absolve by the
mouth of His Church.
OF
the Sacrament of Anointing with consecrated oil [i.e. Unction af the
Sick] the Holy Church teaches, that in it is perfected the blessing of
the whole fight (2 Tim. 4. 7) which has been endured by a man in his
life upon earth, of all the journey which has been gone through by him
in faith and humility, and that in Unction of the Sick the divine
verdict itself is pronounced upon man's earthly frame, healing it, when
all medicinal means are of no avail, or else permitting death to
destroy the corruptible body, which is no longer required for the
Church on earth or the mysterious ways of God.
IX - Faith and
Life in Church Unity
THE
Church, even upon earth, lives, not an earthly human life, but a life
of grace which is divine. Wherefore not only
each of her members, but she
herself as a whole, splemnly calls herself "Holy." Her visible
manifestation is contained in the Sacraments; but her inward life in
the gifts of the Holy Spirit, in faith, hope, and love. Oppressed and
persecuted by enemies without, at times agitated and lacerated within
by the evil passions of her children, she has heen and ever will be
preserved without wavering or change wherevcr the Sacraments and
spiritual holiness are preserved. Never is she either disfigured or in
need of reformation. She lives not under a law of bondage, but under a
law of liberty. She neither acknowledges any authority over her, except
her own, nor any tribunal, but the tribunal of faith (for reason does
not comprehend her), and she expresses her love, her faith, and her
hope in her prayers and rites, suggested to her by the Spirit of truth
and by the grace of Christ. Wherefore her rites themselves, even if
they are not unchangeable (for they are composed by the spirit of
liberty and may be changed according to the judgement of the Church)
can never, in any case, contain any, even the smallest, admixture of
error or false doctrine. And the rites (of the Church) while they are
unchanged are of obligation to the members of the Church; for in their
observance is the joy of holy unity. External unity is the unity
manifested in the communion of Sacraments; while internal unity is
unity of spirit. Many (as for instance some of the martyrs) have been
saved without having been made partakers of so much as one of the
Sacraments of the Church (not even of Baptism) but no one is saved
without partaking of the inward holiness of the Church, of her faith,
hope, and love: for it is not works which save, but faith. And faith,
that is to say, true and living faith, is not twofold, but single.
Wherefore both those who say that faith alone does not save, but that
works also are necessary, and those who say that faith saves without
works, are void of understanding: for if there are no works, then faith
is shown to be dead; and, if it be dead, it is also untrue; for in true
faith there is Christ the truth and the life; but, if it be not true,
then it is false, that is to say, mere external knowledge. But can that
which is false save a man? But if it be true, then it is also a living
faith, that is to say, one which does works; but if it does works, what
works are still required?
THE divinely
inspired Apostle saith: "Show me thy faith of which thou boastest
thyself by thy works, even as I show my faith by my works. Does he
acknowledge two faiths? No, but exposes a senseless boast. "Thou
believest in God, but the devils also
believe". Does he acknowledge that there is
faith in devils? No, but he detects the falsehood
which boasts itself of a quality which even devils possess. "As the
body," saith he, "without the soul is dead, so faith without works is
dead also." Does he compare faith to the body and works to the Spirit?
No, for such a simile would be untrue; but the meaning of his words is
clear. Just as a body without a soul is no longer a man, and cannot
properly be called a man, but a corpse, so faith also that does no
works cannot be called true faith, but false; that is to say, an
external knowledge, fruitless, and attainable even by devils. That
which is written simply ought also to be read simply. Wherefore those
who rely upon the Apostle James for a proof that there is a dead faith
and a living faith, and as it were two faiths, do not
comprehend the words of the Apostle, for the Apostle bears witness not
for them, but against them. Likewise when the Great Apostle of the
Gentiles says, What is the use of faith without love, even of such a
faith as would remove mountains?" (Cp. 1 Cor. 13.2) he does not
maintain the possibility of such faith without love: but assuming its
possibility he shows that it would be useless. Holy Scripture ought not
to be read in thc spirit of worldly wisdom, which wrangles over words,
but in the spirit of the wisdom of God, and of spiritual simplicity.
The Apostle, in defining faith, says "it is the evidence of things
unseen, and the confidence of things hoped for" (not merely of things
awaited, or things to come), but if we hope, we also desire, and if we
desire, we also love; for it is impossible to desire that which a man
loves not. Or have the devils also hope? Wherefore there is but one
faith, and when we ask, "Can true faith save without works?" we ask a
senselcss question; or rather no question at all: for true faith is a
living faith which does works; it is faith in Christ, and Christ in
faith.
THOSE
who have mistaken a dead faith, that is to say, a false faith, or mere
external knowledge, for true faith, have gone so far in their delusion
that, without knowing it themselves, they have made of it an eighth
Sacrament. The Church has faith, but it is a living faith; for she has
also sanctity, But if one man or one bishop is necessarily to have the
faith, what are we to say? Has he sanctity? No, for it may be he is
notorious for crime and immorality. But the faith is to abide in him
even though he be a sinner. So the faith within him is an eighth
Sacrament; inasmuch as every Sacrament is the action of the Church in
an individual, even though he be unworthy. But through this Sacrament
what sort of faith abides in him? A living faith? No, for he is a
sinner. But a dead faith, that is to say, external knowledge, is
attainable, even by devils. And is this to be an eighth Sacrament? Thus
does departure from the truth bring about its own punishment. (4)
(4) An
infallibility in a
dead faith is an error in itself, so its deadness is expressed in the
fact that this infallibility is bound up with objects of inanimate
nature, with a place of residence, or with dead walls, or with diocesan
succession, or with a chair. But we know who it was that in the time of
Christ's sufferings sat in the chair of Moses.
WE
must understand that neither faith nor hope nor love saves of itself
(for will faith in reason, or hope in the world, or love for the flesh
save us?), No, it is the object of faith which saves. If a man believes
in Christ, he is saved in his faith by Christ; if he
believes in the Church, he is saved by the Church; if he believes in
Christ's Sacraments, he is saved by them; for Christ our God is in the
Church aud the Sacraments. The Church of the Old Testament was saved by
faith in a Redeemer to come. Abraham was saved by the same Christ as
we. He possessed Christ in hope, while we possess Him in joy. Wherefore
he who desires Baptism is baptized in will; while he who has received
Baptism possesses it in joy. An identical faith in Baptism saves both
of them. But a man may say, "if faith in Baptism saves, what is the use
of being actually baptized? If he does not receive Baptism,
what did he wish for? It is evident that the faith which desires
Baptism must be perfected by the reception of Baptism itsclf, which is
its joy. Therefore also the house of Cornelius received the Holy Ghost
before he received Baptism, while the eunuch was filled with the same
Spirit immediately after Baptism (Acts 10, 44-47, 8.38, cf, 2. 38). For
God can glorify the Sacrament of Baptism just as well before, as after,
its administration. Thus the difference between the opus operans and opus operatum disappears. We know
that there are many persons who have not chrislened their children, and
many who have not admitted them to Communion in the Holy Mysteries, and
many who have not confirmed them: but the Holy Church understands
things otherwise, christening infants and confirming them and admitting
them to Communion. She has not ordaine'd these things in order to
condemn unbaptized children, whose angels do always behold the face of
God (Matt, 18:10); but she has ordained this, according to the spirit
of love which lives within her, in order that the first thought of a
child arriving at years of discretion should be', not only desire, but
also a joy for sacraments which have been already received. And can one
know the joy of a child who to all appearances has not yet arrived at
discretion? Did not the prophet, even before his birth, exult for joy
concerning Christ (St, Luke I. 41)? Those who have deprived children of
Baptism and Confirmation and Communion are they who, having inherited
the blind wisdom of blind heathendom, have not comprehended the majesty
of God's Sacraments, but havc required reasons and uses for everything
and, having subjected the doctrine of the Church to scholastic
explications, will not even pray unless they see in the prayer some
direct goal or advantage. But our law is not a law of bondage or of
hireling service, labouring for wages, but a law of the adoption of
sons, and of love which is free.
WE
know that when any one of us falls he falls alone; but no one is saved
alone. He who is saved is saved in the Church, as a member of her, and
in unity with all her other members. If anyone believes, he is in the
communion of faith; if he loves, he is in the communion of love; if he
prays, he is in the communion of prayer. Wherefore no one can rest his
hope on his own prayers, and every one who prays asks the whole Church
for intercession, not as if he had doubts of the intercession of
Christ, the one Advocate, but in the assurance that the whole Church
ever prays for all her members. All the angels pray for us, the
apostles, martyrs, and patriarchs, and above them all, the Mother of
our Lord, and this holy unity is the true life of the Church. But if
the Church, visible and invisible, prays without ceasing, why do we ask
her for her prayers? Do we not entreat mercy of God and Christ,
although His mercy preventeth our prayer? The very reason that we ask
the Church for her prayers is that we know that she gives the
assistance of her intercession even to him that does not ask for it,
and to him that asks she gives it in far greater measure than he asks:
for in her is the fulness of the Spirit of God. Thus we
glorify all whom God has glorified and is glorifying; for how should we
say that Christ is living within us, if we do not make ourselves like
unto Christ? Wherefore we glorify the Saints, the Angels, and the
Prophets, and more than all thc most pure Mother of the Lord Jesus, not
acknowledging her either to have been conceived without sin, or to have
been perfect (for Christ alone is without sin and perfect), but
remembering, that the pre-eminence, passing all understanding, which
she has above all God's creatures was borne witness to by the Angel and
by Elizabeth and, above all, by the Saviour Himself when He appointed
John, His great Apostle and seer of mysteries, to fulfil the duties of
a son and to serve her.
JUST
as each of us requires prayers from all, so each person owes his
prayers on behalf of all, the living and the dead, and even those who
are as yet unborn; for in praying, as we do with all the Church, that
the world may come to the knowledge of God, we pray not only for the
present generation, but for those whom God will hereafter call into
life. We pray for the living that the grace of God may be upon them,
and for the dead that they may become worthy of the vision of God's
face. We know nothing of an intermediate state of souls, which have
neither been received into the kingdom of God, nor condemned to
torture, for of such a state we have received no teaching either from
the Apostles or from Christ; we do not acknowledge Purgatory, that is,
the purification of souls by sufferings from which they may be redeemed
by their own works or those of others: for the Church knows nothing of
salvation by outward means, nor any sufferings whatever they may be,
except those of Christ; nor of bargaining with God, as in the case of a
man buying himself off by good works.
ALL such
heathenism as this remains with the inheritors of the wisdom of the
heathen, with those who pride themselves in place, or name, or in
territorial dominion, and who have instituted an eighth Sacrament of
dead faith. But we pray in the spirit of love, knowing that no one will
be saved otherwise than by the prayer of all the Church, in which
Christ lives, knowing and trusting that so long as the end of time has
not come, all the members of the Church, both living and departed, are
being perfected incessantly by mutual prayer. The Saints whom God has
glorified are much higher than we, but higher than all is the Holy
Church, which comprises within herself all the Saints, and prays for
all, as may be seen in the divinely inspired Liturgy. In her prayer our
prayer is also heard, however unworthy we may be to be called sons of
the Church. If, while worshipping and glorifying the Saints, we pray
that God may glorify them, we do not lay ourselves open to the charge
of pride; for to us who have received permission to call God "Our
Father" leave has also been granted to pray, "Hallowed be Thy Name, Thy
Kingdom come, Thy will be done." And if we are permitted to pray of God
that He will glorify His Name, and accomplish His Will, who will forbid
us to pray Him to glorify His Saints, and to give repose to His elect?
For those indeed who are not of the elect we do not pray, just as
Christ prayed not for the whole world, but for those whom the Lord had
givcn unto Him (St, John 17), Let no one say: "What
prayer shall I apportion for the living or the departed, when my
prayers are insufficient even for myself?" For if he is not able to
pray, of what use would it be to pray even for himself? But in truth
the spirit of love prays in him, Likewise let him not say: "What is the
good of my prayer for another, when he prays for himself, and Christ
Himself intercedes for him?" When a man prays, it is the spirit of love
which prays within him. Let him not say: "It is even now impossible to
change thc judgement of God," for his prayer itself is included in the
ways of God, and God foresaw it. If he be a member of the Church his
prayer is necessary for all her members. If the hand should say that it
did not require blood from the rest of the body, and that it would not
give its own blood to it, the hand would wither, So a man is also
necessary to the Church, as long as he is in her; and, if he withdraws
himself from communion with her, he perishes himself and will cease to
be any longer a member of the Church. The Church prays for all, and we
pray togethcr for all; but our prnyer must be true, and a true
expression of love, and not a mere form of words. Not being able to
love all men, we pray for those whom we love, and our prayer is not
hypocritical; but we pray God that we may be able to love all and pray
for all without hypocrisy. Mutual prayer is the blood of the Church,
and the glorification of God her breath. We pray in a spirit of love,
not of interest, in the spirit of filial freedom, not of the law of the
hireling demanding his pay. Every man who asks: "What use is there in
prayer?" acknowledges himself to be in bondage. True prayer is true
love.
LOVE
and unity are above everything, but love expresses itself in many ways:
by works, by prayer, and by spiritual songs. The Church bestows her
blessing upon all these expressions of love. If a man cannot express
his love for God by word, but expresses it by a visible representation,
that is to say an image (eikon), will the Church condemn him? No, but
she will condemn the man who condemns him, for he is condemning
another's love. We know that without the use of an image men may also
be saved and have been saved, and if a man's love does not require an
image he will be saved witlhout one; but if the love of his brother
requires an image, he, in condemning this brother's love, condemneth
himself; if a man being a Christian dare not listen without a feeling
of reverence to a prayer or spiritual song composed by his brother, how
dare he look without reverence upon the image which his love, and not
his art, has produced? The Lord Himself, who knows the secrets of the
heart, has deigned more than once to glorify a prayer or psalm; will a
man forbid Him to glorify an image or the graves of the Saints? One may
say: "The Old Testament has forbidden the representation of God"; but
does he, who thus thinks he understands better than Holy Church the
words which she herself wrote (that is, the Scriptures), not see that
it was not a representation of God which the Old Testament forbade (for
it allowed the Cherubim, and the brazen serpent, and the writing of the
Name of God), bnt that it forbade a man to make unto himself a god in
the similitude of any object in earth or in heaven, visible or even
imaginary?
IF a man
paints an image to remind him of the invisible and inconceivable God,
he is not making to himself an idol. If he imagines God to himself and
thinks that He is like to his imagination, he maketh to himself an idol
- this is the meaning of the prohibition in the Old Testlnent. But an
image [eikon] (that is to say, the Name of God painted in colours), or
a representation of His Saints, made by love, is not forbidden by the
spirit of truth. Let none say, "Christians are given over to idolatry";
for the spirit of Christ which preserves the Church is wiser than a
man's calculating wisdom. Wherefore a man may indeed be saved without
images, but he must not reject images.
THE
Church accepts every rite which expresses spiritual aspiration towards
God, just as she accepts prayer and images [eikons], but she recognizes
as higher than all rites the holy Liturgy, in which is expressed all
the fulness of the doctrine and spirit of the Church; and this, not
only by conventional signs or symbols of some kind, but by the word of
life and truth inspired from above. He alone knows the Church who
kno'ws the Liturgy. Above all is the unity of holiness and love.
X - Salvation
THE Holy
Church, in confessing that she looks for the Resurrection of the dead
and the final judgement of all mankind, acknowledges that the
perfecting of all her members will be fulfilled together with her own,
and that the future life pertains, not only to the spirit, but also to
the spiritual body; for God alone is a perfectly incorporeal Spirit.
Wherefore she rejects the pride of those who preach a doctrine of an
incorporeal state beyond the grave, and consequently despise the body,
in which Christ rose from the dead. This body will not be a fleshly
body, but will be like unto the corporeal state of the Angels, inasmuch
as Christ Himself said that we shall be like unto the Angels.
IN
the last Judgement our justification in Christ will be revealed in its
fulness; not our sanctification only, but also our justification, for
no man has been or is as yet completely sanctifed, but there is sti1l
need of justification. Christ worketh all that is good in us whether it
be in faith or in hope or in love; while we only submit ourselves to
His working, but no man submits himself wholly. Therefore there is
still need of justification by the sufferings and blood of Christ. Who,
then, can continue to speak of the merits of his own work, or of a
treasury of merits and prayers? Only those who are sti1l living under a
law of bondage. Christ works all good in us, but we never wholly submit
ourselves, none, not even the Saints, as the Saviour Himself has said.
Grace works all, and grace is given freely and to all, that none shall
be able to murmur, but not equally to all, not according to
predestination, but according to foreknowledge, as the Apostle says. A
smaller talent indeed is given to the man in whom the Lord has foreseen
negligence, in order that the rejection of a greater gift should not
serve to greater condemnation. And we do not increase the
talents which have been intrusted to us ourselves, but they are put out
to the exchangers, in order that even here there should not be any
merit of ours, but only non-resistance to the grace which causes the
increase. Thus the distinction behveen "sufficient" and "effectual"
grace disappears. Grace worketh all. If a man submits to it the Lord is
perfected in him, and perfects him; but let not a man boast himself in
his obedience, for his obedience itself is of grace. But we never
submit ourselves wholly: wherefore besides sanctification we ask also
for justification.
ALL
is accomplished in the consummnation of the general judgement, and the
Spirit of God, that is, the Spirit of faith, hope, and love, will
reveal Himself in all His fulness, and every gift will attain its
utmost perfection; but above them all will be love. Not that it is to
be thought that faith and hope, which are the gifts of God, will perish
(for the'y are not separable from love), but love alone will preserve
its name, while faith, arriving at its consummation, will then have
become full inward knowledge and sight; and hope will have become joy;
for even on earth we know that the stronger it is, the more joyful it
is.
XI - Unity of Orthodoxy
BY the will
of God the Holy Church, after the falling away of many schisms, and of
the Roman Patriarchate, was preserved in the Greek Dioceses and
Patriarchates, and only those communities can acknowledge one another
as fully Christian which presserve their unity with the Eastern
Patriarchates, or enter into this unity. For there is one God, and one
Church, and within her there is neither discussion nor disagreement.
AND
therefore the Chnrch is called Orthodox, or Eastern, or Greco-Russian;
but all these are only temporary designations. The Church ought not to
be accused of pride for calling herself Orthodox, inasmuch as she also
calls herself Holy. When false doctrines shall have disappeared, there
will be no further need for the name Orthodox, for then there will be
no erroneous Christianity. When the Church shall have extended herself,
or the fulness of the nations shall have entered into her, then all
local appellations will cease; for the Church is not bound up with any
locality; she neither boasts herself of any particular see or
territory, nor preserves the inheritance of pagan pride; but she calls
herself One Holy Catholic and Apostolic; knowing that the whole world
be1ongs to her, and that no locality therein possesses any special
significance, but only temporarily can and does serve for the
glorification of the name of God, according to His unnsearchable will.