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St Vladimir's Orthodox Theological Seminary - Events - Commencement Commencement
2002 |
In
the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit.
This Seminary, or rather, Academy, is the inheritor of a great tradition of the great theological schools of Russia and Paris in the last centuries. Of course, we are at least subliminally aware of this, but it is important to remember most specifically that this inheritance is not so much found in books and lectures as in persons and examples. These persons and examples have been notable, and they have been real characters. They have been well-formed and distinct personalities. True, they wrote and continue to write, but their writing is not just a cerebral exercise, it is the product of their life's experience. It is the result of an experience focused on the daily liturgical worship in the chapel, and primarily the Divine Liturgy. It is part of an inheritance which wishes to serve the Saviour by living, as much as possible, according to the gospel.
There is such a dangerous tendency in our life nowadays to live in the head, to be cerebral, and to compartmentalize. It is inevitable that we face this struggle, since it is the character of the society in which we live. We swim in this water, and it is extraordinarily difficult not to become just like this water — all the moreso if one be a convert, and has come from that water. But this school of fish of which we are part is not given just to swim in this water: it is given to clean this water, and to transform this water. Maybe we might be compared to snails, which do this kind of work, since we generally move so slowly about it! Regardless, our task is not to become part of our environment, but to work with the Lord in changing and transforming it into what it was supposed to be, but did not know the way. This is a part of what the Lord is saying to us when He says that we are in the world but not of it.
Finding that balance is probably most of a lifetime's work. That balance is for us, also, not an option. It is part of who we are. The Orthodox way (this term, of course connects us to the first Christians) is about just that—balance. We do not find it in ourselves, and we certainly do not find it in the world around us. Yet we are called to live it, for by living it we are using perhaps one of the most fundamental evangelical tools. Love, self-emptying love, love like the Saviour's, goes with this “middleness.” It sounds strange, but it can actually be a compliment to address someone as "your mediocrity". I remember I was recently at a colloquium, taking place about the same time as a political summit in Quebec City, behind fortified fences, about which there was the usual violence. The question was posed: where do the Orthodox stand — with those inside the fence, or with those outside the fence ? The answer was: "With those on the fence".
So why, you may ask, is the bishop spouting vague platitudinous statements, and staling the obvious to us?
I have repeated some plain and obvious fundamentals because, as you that are graduating are now completing your studies, you are leaving the bosom of this protecting and supportive community, and you are going out to the various places to which God has called you. You begin in earnest, in whatever capacity in the Church, to serve Christ and feed His sheep, in one or another ministry, whether it be in pastoral leadership, in teaching, in singing, in serving in other ways. All of what you have learnt in the last years, you will need not only to call upon time after time, but to build on in continual reading and reflection. And if you try to do all this without relying constantly on the fundamentals, you will have great difficulties. No matter how much you know about your faith, no matter how well-read you are, no matter what a strong vision you have of how things should and could be; without the fundamentals of prayer, of worship, of self-emptying love, without a real balance, you will find that your efforts can be fruitless. I hope, too, that by this time you have learnt and understood that the virtue of obedience is part of this foundation, and part of the fruit of this self-emptying love. Without being able to offer this loving obedience to the Saviour, without being therefore able to offer this loving obedience to those in authority within the Church, there is the same danger of not bearing the good fruit.
This is what is such a great concern for us all about maintaining balance in the love of Christ. Everything has to be tempered with this love. We can know and understand everything, but without this love, without Christ in the center of everything, this knowledge and understanding can wither, empty. As you should have been finding your daily source of life and focus in the worship in the chapel, so should you maintain this habit from hereon in your daily life. Even if you do not have a Church in which to serve or pray daily, you have your home, you have your room, you have-your place of prayer, which you must be careful not to neglect. Always it is crucial to take care of the foundation of our life. I have enough experience of my own in not having paid attention to witness to you that you waste a great deal if these things are not attended to vigilantly. Without this vigilance it is easy to make a lot of silly, and even stupid mistakes. If your desire is truly to share what you have learnt and experienced here, for the sake of building up the Church, for the sake of saving souls, for the sake of being a bringer of light and life, then do not neglect the foundations. Be careful to nurture love in your heart. Be vigilant that you live always in forgiveness with everyone.
It is critically important for us to know where we have come from, and where we are going. This does not mean simply that, having studied the history of the Church, and knowing the current events of the Church, we can make some judgments. This plays its part. But I have in mind far more the importance of knowing the personalities who have carried this history, and how this history has come to us through these persons. It is important to look at the persons who have taught us and to take their good examples, because others will be looking at us and taking our examples, too. Let us learn from the personal struggles of those who have been teaching us and forming us. Let us look at their self-sacrificing obedience for the love of Christ, and their readiness to take much less in worldly terms for the sake of feeding the lambs who, in this place, are the students. Let us look at the example of Father Hopko who is now retiring from the Deanship of this Seminary. Let us see how he has taken the best from his predecessors, those great and famous lights of this community, and how he has shared it with us in lectures and in living example, in anecdotes and inspired sermons. Let us look at the important manner in which he has set us an example, as he has been distilling what he has learnt, and in speaking and in writing, making it all accessible to those who have not been able to nave such a heritage, or who have not such an education. Let us look at his history of desiring to feed the sheep. Let us look and learn as we see that he does put these foundations first in his life, how he has openly shared his struggles in living the repentant life. Let us look at how he daily remembers those who have asked hymn to pray for them, and how he manages somehow to keep a correspondence with human beings.
(Here let me reminisce about how Father Hopko took time, when I was newly-ordained, to take me to Jamaica Plains, to teach me, the nervous neophyte, how to serve, while he was cantor. These tutorials strengthened me for what was to come: serving at Ss Cosmas and Damian’s before Metropolitan Ireney and Archbishop Nikon, and serving for a year almost daily at New Valamo in Finland, in the presence of the saintly Archimandrite Simforian, and sometimes Archbishop Paul.
Let us look and learn, and let us do the same as far as we are able with God's help. And mostly, let us remember to give thanks to God.
Let us look similarly at the example of our Father, Metropolitan Theodosius, who has lived a similar life of obedience, going where he was asked, doing what he was told, remembering his inheritance, speaking about his ancestors, passing on what he was given, serving in love, being near to his people, serving, again, in love. Let us see how, in the course of the Metropolitan's life there have been many times of testing. Let us remember the most famous and, perhaps, the most useful of his inherited sayings: "measure seven times, and cut once". Let us remember how he has been so quietly kind and materially supportive to many a person, many a cleric in dire need, how he has rescued many.
Let us look at the lives of both of these servants of the Church, together with the lives of the other faculty and staff members. Let us remember their loving service, and how they persevere in this loving service, even when it is not appreciated, even when it is rejected. Let us remember how they with love for Christ continue even if they are not understood, and that they do it for the sake of feeding the sheep, for the sake of exercising their gifts as God has given them, that they do it out of loving obedience.
Let us look and learn from all these God-loving and God-serving, and I dare say God-pleasing persons, because it is in their footsteps that we all tread. I can say we with confidence, because I too am their student. Let us look at them and remember that God is with them, as He is with us, when we are facing difficulties, when we are misunderstood, when we are rejected, and especially when others speak evil about us. Let us look and learn, and remember, as we embrace our various calls from the Lord, that we must take care of our foundations, in order to put all that we have learnt and experienced into fruitful practice. Let us remember each other in prayer, and let us support and encourage, and protect one another in our mutual service. Let us work together for the sake of the love of our Saviour Jesus Christ. Let us commend ourselves, therefore, and each other, and all our life unto Christ our God, glorifying Him together with His Father who is from everlasting, and His Holy, Good, and Life-giving Spirit, now and ever, and unto ages of ages.
AMEN!