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The Orthodox Doctrine of Causality
By Bishop Nikolai Velimirovich
ONE of the fundamental points of doctrine in which our
Orthodox Faith differs from all the philosophical systems as well as
from some non-Orthodox denominations is the conception of causality,
i.e., of causes. Those outside are prompt to call our faith mysticism,
and our Church the Church of mystics. By the unorthodox theologians we
have been often rebuked on that account, and by the atheists ridiculed.
Our learned theologians neither denied nor confirmed our mysticism, for
we never called ourselves mystics. So, we listened in wonderment and
silence, expecting the outsiders to define clearly their meaning of our
so-called mysticism. They defined it as a kind of oriental quietism, or
a passive plunging into mere contemplation of the things divine. The
atheists of our time, in Russia, Yugoslavia and everywhere do not call
any religion by any other name but mysticism which for them means
superstition. We listen to both sides, and we reject both definitions
of our orthodox mysticism, which is neither quietism nor superstition.
It is true, however, that contemplative practice-not quietism though-is
a recommendable part of our spiritual life, but it is not an all
embracing rule. Among the great Saints we find not only the
contemplative Fathers of the desert and seclusion, but also many
warriors, benefactors, missionaries, sacred writers, sacred artists,
and other persons of great activities and a sacrificial mode of
Christian life. . . And what is our answer to the atheists who call our
mystical Faith superstition? Least of all they have the right to call
it superstition since, by denying God and the soul and all the higher
intelligences, they are indeed bearers of a thoughtless and nefarious
superstition which never existed in the history of mankind, at least
not on such a scale and with such fanaticism. Now, while those who
speak of our mysticism are unable to give a satisfactory explanation of
this word, let us ourselves look to it and explain to them from our
point of view how should they understand our so-called mysticism.
Our religious mysticism is nothing misty, nothing nebulous, nothing
obscure or mystified. It is our clear and perennial
doctrine of
causality. If we have to call this doctrine by an
ism, we
may call it
personalism.
Every day and everywhere people talk of causes. They say: "This is
caused by that, and that is caused by this." That is to say : the next
preceding thing, or event, or fact, or accident is the cause of the
next succeeding one.
This is indeed a superficial and shortsighted notion of causality. We
don't wonder about this superficiality of some ignorant persons,
especially of the busy people of great cities who have little time for
deep and calm thinking. But we are astonished to find the same
superficiality with the learned and philosophically minded, as the
materialists, naturalists and even deists. And because we call their
theory of causes naive and fatalistic, they call us mystics. We
consider that all those persons be they ignorant or learned, who
believe in natural and physical causes as definite, are fatalists. Both
naturalism and materialism are teaching a blind fatalism without a
smallest door of escape or a smallest window for sunshine. We orthodox
Christians must resist this blind fatalism, as all Christians should
do, and defend our intelligent
doctrine of pe
rsonal causality of
and in the world.
This doctrine means that all causes are personal. Not only the first
cause of the world is personal (as the deists think), but personal are
all the causes of all things, of all facts, of all happenings and
changes in all the world. When we say personal, we mean intelligent,
conscious and intentional. Yea, we mean that some sort of personal
beings are causing all, or better to say, are the causes of all. That
is what personal means. I know that at this my first statement some
non-orthodox would remark: "That doctrine you are probably drawing from
your copious orthodox tradition, for which we do not care, and not from
the Holy Scripture, which we take as the only infallible source of all
truths." To this I answer: no, not at all; this doctrine is so evident
in the Holy Scripture, from the first page to the last, that I have no
need this time to quote our tradition at all.
On the first pages of the sacred Bible a personal God is specified as
the First cause, or better to say the First Causer of the world visible
and invisible. That God the Creator is personal, this is a professed
and upheld dogma not only by all Christian denominations, but by some
other religions too. We Christians, however, are privileged to know the
inner being of God, i.e., God as Trinity in persons and Oneness in
essence. We have learned to know this mystery through the momentous
revelation in the New Testament. The dogma of the Father and the Son
and the Holy Ghost means that God is trebly personally, yea supremely
personal.
But not God alone is personal. Personal are also the angels, personal
is Satan with his perverse hosts of demons, and finally personal are
men. If you carefully read the Bible, without the prejudices of
so-called "natural laws" and the supposed "accidental causes", you will
find three causal factors, and all the three personal. They are: God,
Satan and Man. They are, of course, not equal in personal attributes,
and there is no parity among them. Satan has lost all his positive
attributes of an angel of light, and has become the chief enemy of God
and Man, but still he has remained a personal being, bent though to do
evil. Man, since the original of sin, has darkened his glory and
deformed God's image in himself; yet, he has remained a personal being,
conscious, intelligent and purposefully active, wavering between God
and Satan, with his free choice to be saved by the first or destroyed
by the second.
God is activity itself. Not only he interferes now and then with His
wonders and miracles in the life of men and nations, but He is
constantly and unceasingly active in supporting and vivifying His
creation. "Being near to everyone of us", (Acts 17:27) and "knowing
even the thoughts of man", (Ps. 94, 11) He eagerly acts and reacts in
human affairs: giveth or withholds children, giveth or withholds good
harvest, approves or threatens, grants peace to the faithful and
excites war against the devil worshippers. He commands all the elements
of nature, fire and water, hail and storms, either to aid the oppressed
righteous or to punish the godless. He calls the locust, caterpillars
and worms "my great army", (Joel 2.25) which He orders to devour the
food of the sinners. He is "able to destroy both soul and body in
hell". (Mt. 10.28) He knows "the number of our hairs", and not a
sparrow shall fall on the ground" without His will and His knowledge.
All this is testified by many instances in the Bible. And this is not
all. There is no page in the Scripture which does not refer to God, yea
a personal God, His will and His diverse activities. The whole Bible
affirms that God is not only the First Causer of the world but also
that He is all the time the personal Allkee
per - Pantokrator - of the
world, as we confirm in the first article of our Creed.
Another causal factor is Satan, God's adversary, with his hosts of
fallen spirits. He is the personal causer of all evil. Ever since his
fall as Lucifer from the glory of "an anointed cherub" (Jez. 28) (Isa.
14) to the dark pit Hell,' he is unceasingly trying to infiltrate evil
and corruption into every part of God's creation, specially into man.
Envious of God and man, he is the hater of both. Christ called him "a
murderer from the beginning" (John 8.44) and also "a liar and the
father of it". He is a mighty ruler of evil and darkness, but still
subordinate, unwillingly though, to the all powerful God. Only with
God's permission he is able to harm men and to cause illness,
confusion, pain, discord, death and destruction. But the more a person
or a people sin against God, the greater power Satan gets over that
person or that people. At the Advent of our Lord Jesus Christ the whole
world was lying in evil because of Satan's terrible grasp over the
bedeviled mankind. The world then was teeming with evil spirits as
never before. Therefore, Satan dared to offer Christ all the kingdoms
of the world and the glory of them as his own. A robber and liar!
The third causal factor in this world, according to the Bible, is man.
With all his littleness and weaknesses man is the greatest prize for
which Satan is relentlessly and desperately fighting, and for which God
from the beginning was ready to die. Staggering between God and. Satan,
man is supported by God and beguiled by Satan, vacillating hither and
thither, groping for light, life and happiness in his short span of
existence on this planet. Yet, with all his seeming insignificance in
this mammoth universe, man is able to change it by his conduct.
Confucius said: "The clouds give the rain or give it not according to
men's conduct". Much more valid is this observation in Christianity
with its belief in a personal God, the Giver of rain.
By his faith and virtues, specially by his obedience to God, man
regains the dominion over all the created nature as God in creating him
entrusted to him. But by his apostasy and corruption he dethrones
himself and comes under the dominion of physical nature and becomes its
slave. Instead of commanding he is obeying the mute nature, and
fighting it for his mere existence, as you see it still now happening
in our own generation. And instead of having God as his only Master, he
got two masters over himself, Satan and nature, both tyrannizing him...
By his faith and virtue, man could have removed the mountains, tame the
wild beasts, defeat the aggressor, shut the heaven, stop calamities,
heal the sick, raise the dead. And by his sins and vices, specially by
his apostasy from God, his only loving and powerful Friend, he could
have caused the destruction of cities and civilizations, the
earthquakes, floods, pestilence, eclipse of the sun, famine and all the
innumerable evils, pleasing Satan and saddening God. Thus, following
God man becomes god, and following the devil, he becomes devil. But be
he with God or with God's adversary, man has been from the beginning
and is now the focus point of this planet and one of the three most
important causes of events and changes in the world. And thus, whatever
happens on this world's stage, it happens either by God's benevolent
will, or by Satan's evil will, or by man through his free choice
between good and evil, right and wrong.
Now, when we mention only these three causa
l factors: God, Satan, and
Man, you should not think of mere three persons, but of terrific forces
behind each
of them. Behind God - a numberless host of angels of light,
so much so that each man and nation have their own angel guardian;
behind Satan a horrible locust of evil spirits, so much so that a whole
legion of them are used to torment one single man, that one of Gadara;
behind Man, since Christ's emptying the Hades and His Resurrection,
there are by now billions of human souls who from the other world, from
the Church Triumphant, by their intercession and love, are helping us,
many millions of Christ's faithful, still fighting against the Satanic
forces for Christ and our own salvation. For our chief fight in this
world is not against natural and physical adversities which is
comparably a small fight befitting more animals than men-but as the
visionary Paul says: "Against principalities, against powers, against
the rulers of the darkness of this world", (Eph. 6.12) i.e., the
satanic forces of evil. And we Christians have been, and always shall
be, victorious over these satanic forces through Jesus Christ our
Saviour. Why through Him? Because love is greater power than all other
powers, visible and invisible. And Christ came to the earth and went
down below to the very hellish nest of the satanic hosts to crush them
in order to liberate and save men for sheer love of men. Therefore, He
could at the end of His victorious mission say: "All power is given
unto me in heaven and in earth". (Mt. 28, 18) When He says all power,
He means it literally, all power, in the first place the power over
Satan and his satanic forces, then the power over sinners, sin and
death. First of all over Satan, the causer of sin and death. "For this
purpose the Son of God was manifested that He might destroy the works
of the devil". (I John ,3, 8) Therefore, we rejoice in our belief that
our Lord Jesus Christ is the irresistible Lord. We are acknowledging
this belief in every liturgy by stamping the sacred bread for the Holy
Communion with the words IC -XC-NI-KA.
Read and reread the Gospel as much as you like, you will find in
Christ's words not a slightest suggestion of natural and physical
causes of anything and any happening. Clear as the shining sun is
Christ's revelation and teaching, that there are only three causal
factors in this world: God, Man and Satan. His chief obedience was to
His heavenly Father; His chief loving work was the healing of men's
bodies and soul, and His chief dispute with the Pharisees was about His
power of driving the evil spirits out of men and the forgiving of sins.
As to the nature and so-called natural order and laws, He showed an
unheard of absolute dominion and power. He vigorously impressed His
followers that they "were not of the world", but, said He, "I have
chosen you out of the world". (John 15, 19) Now, since the Christians
are not of this world, they certainly cannot accept the theory of the
men of this world about the impersonal, unintelligent and accidental
causes of the process of things and events. Also in our liturgical book
you find the same three personal causal factors as in the Gospel. The
same in the Life of Saints too. The same in the conviction and
consciousness of the masses of our Orthodox people.
Therefore, whoever speaks of impersonal causes of things, happenings
and changes in this world, is limiting God's power, ignoring the powers
of darkness, and despising the role and significance of man. The
Scripture does not know, and does not mention any impersonal and
blindly accidental cause of anything in the world. The Bible teaches us
quite clearly
, that the causes of all things, facts, happenings and
changes, come from higher personal beings and personal intell
igences.
And we stick to this teaching of the Holy Book. Therefore we make no
concessions to the secular, or scientific theories about impersonal,
unintelligent, unintentional or accidental causality in the world. When
I say we, I do not think only of the great Fathers of the Church, nor
of the Doctors of Divinity, nor of the learned teachers of religion,
but also of the masses of our Orthodox people all over the world. Our
Orthodox people would not say: a wolf caused the death of somebody's
sheep; nor a falling stone caused the injury of a boy; nor a tornado
was the cause of the destruction of somebody's house; nor good weather
was the cause of an abundant crop. Our people look through the screen
of the physical world into a spiritual sphere and there seek the true
causes of those happenings. They always seek a personal cause, or
causes. And though this is in per accord with the Bible's teaching,
some outsiders call us mystics, and our Faith mysticism or
superstition. In fact, our mysticism is nothing else as a deeper
insight into the spiritual realities, or intelligences, which are
personally causing whatever there is or happens, using the natural
things and elements only as their instruments, tools, channels,
symbols, or signals.
All this leads us to the following conclusions:
First of all, Christianity is a religion not so much of principles,
rules and precepts, but primarily and above all of personal
attachments, in the first place an affectionate attachment to the
person of our Lord Jesus Christ, and through Him to other members of
His Church, the living and the dead.
Secondly, our Orthodox doctrine of personal causality on the whole
range of nature and world's history is beyond any doubts the biblical
doctrine. It was wholly adopted and explained by the Fathers of the
Church, and it is kept lucidly in the consciousness of the Orthodox
people.
The benefits we are drawing from such personalism in the doctrine of
causality are manifold. By it we are stirring our mind to pierce
through the visible events into the realm of invisible intelligences
causing and dominating all the drama of the world. It sharpens more
than anything else our thinking power, our own intelligence. By it we
are constantly aware of the presence of our Friend, Christ the Saviour,
to whom we are praying, and also of our arch enemy, Satan, whom we have
to fight and avoid. It helps us enormously toward educating and forming
the strong personal, or individual, characters. It inspires us with
spirit of optimistic heroism in suffering, self-sacrificing, and in
enduring martyrdom for Christ's sake beyond description, as testified
by our Church history.
All these and other benefits do not possess the follower of the
doctrine of impersonal causality; not even the greatest of all
benefits-the knowledge of the truth.