Tuesday, 26 August 2008

Fr. Seraphim's Biographies 1993 vs. 2003


This post has 3 parts:


Part 1 - From: St. Pachomius Library
Part 2 - [Hieromonk Ambrose]/Fr. Alexey Young's 1994 Review of Not of This World
Part 3 - From Joanna



From: St Pachomius Library
Fr. Seraphim Rose
XX Century

"Eugene Rose was a California intellectual with conservative cultural views and a difficult private life who initially was attracted to the doctrine of Perennialism and immersed himself in Chinese Buddhism. However, he came into contact with Russian Orthodoxy and rejected both exoteric Buddhism and esoteric ecumenism to become a disciple of St. John Maximovich. As the monk (later hieromonk) Seraphim, he helped Fr. Herman Podmoshensky found a monastic community which eventually became the St. Herman Brotherhood; the two also published the influential conservative magazine Orthodox Word. An educated convert monk who spoke and wrote mainly in English, Fr. Seraphim was somewhat unusual in the mid-century ROCOR, and by the time of his early repose in 1982 was an extremely well-known but rather controversial figure. Intensely critical of nearly everything in post-Schism Western culture, he was nevertheless far more interested than many of his contemporaries in trying to baptise the modern world, and rather than ignore the ambient civilisation he continually inspected it through the patristic lens. In particular, he was among the first Orthodox theologians "of the postmodern age" in that he saw no important distinction between "high" and "low" culture: both were equally a part of life, and equally in need of Christ."
-Norman Hugh Redington


Fr. Damascene Christensen: Not of This World, (1993) and Father Seraphim Rose, (2003). Platina, Calif.: St. Herman Brotherhood, 1993 and 2003. Monumental hagiographic biography. The change in title between editions reflects an extensive revision of the text, due in part to the availability of new sources and in part to the Platina monastery's transition from independent to canonical* Orthodoxy and the consequent change in the biographer's political and ecclesiological opinions.
source: St Pachomius Library http://www.voskrese.info/spl/Xseraf-rose.html

*the left wing always thinks of itself as "canonical" -jh




* * *




Hieromonk Ambrose (Alexey) Young's Review of Not of This World
written 1994


Many of us-his spiritual children and his readers-had long wished for a biography of Fr. Seraphim. Some, assuming that such a work would be only a straightforward account of his remarkable life and thought, were asked to share our personal memories for such a study. Last summer [1993], Not of This World: The Life and Teachings of Fr. Seraphim Rose, was published. And, indeed, the biographer, Fr. Damascene (Christensen) has managed to integrate a massive amount of material. He narrates Fr. Seraphim's life skillfully, and we learn many things about Fr. Seraphim-especially his pre-Orthodox life-that we did not know before. This, in spite of the fact that Fr. Damascene himself hardly knew Fr. Seraphim, and was only baptized at the time of Fr. Seraphim's death. The book is also filled with photographs that help to make the man and his times come to life. Not of This World is, however, both a treasure and a disappointment, a joy and a sadness, an inspiration and a scandal. The purpose of this review is to examine these contradictions.


Some may ask: how can this reviewer-Fr. Alexey Young-possibly give an objective evaluation of Not of This World? After all, as a spiritual son of Fr. Seraphim (and co-worker with him on a number of projects), Fr. Alexey is perhaps too close to his subject. Also, Fr. Alexey was for many years closely associated with the St. Herman of Alaska Skete (where Fr. Seraphim lived) in Platina, California. The third, and, perhaps the most serious criticism of all: five years ago Fr. Alexey left the Russian Church Abroad, and he is no longer in a position to speak with any credibility.


May I say forthrightly that it is precisely because of these objections that I am in a position to write an honest review of this biography. First, while I knew the man, trusted him, and believed he achieved righteousness, I was not blind to his weaknesses-nor would he have wanted me to be. Fr. Seraphim had a horror of "guru-ism." He never demanded blind or unquestioning obedience, and he would have been appalled by statements such as one printed on the back of the book jacket: "Without Fr. Seraphim we'd all be dead." In a letter to me he once described himself, in an obviously understated way, as only an "elder brother," one who had taken a few more steps along the path than I had.1 He often made suggestions but always added, "do what you think is best." He himself always preserved a kind of polite but definite "distance" between himself and others, so that it was possible for us to view him objectively. He was not a cold or arrogant men, yet he did not permit any kind of what we would now call "co-dependance" between himself and others.


Secondly, I was an outside witness to a number of the events described in this book; most of those I did not personally see, were described to me by Fr. Seraphim himself, either in person or by letter. Although the St. Herman Skete was a very important influence in my life, I found it impossible to support the transient whims and peculiar ecclesiology of the Skete's then-Abbot, Fr. Herman (Podmoshensky), when, after Fr. Seraphim's death, he entered into an almost paranoid combat with his ruling hierarch, Archbishop Anthony of San Francisco and Western America. Fr. Herman was ultimately suspended and then defrocked by the Russian Church Abroad-after a series of provocations by Fr. Herman that would have horrified Fr. Seraphim, and which would never have been tolerated, had he lived. Thirdly, my own departure from the Russian Church Abroad to another jurisdiction had nothing to do with Fr. Herman and the Skete's troubles, nor did I follow him into his present ecclesiastical affiliation. Nor was I rejecting the priceless spiritual formation I so generously received in the bosom of the Church Abroad. In fact, in my present-day contacts with clergy and laity of other jurisdictions, I gladly and proudly defend the Church Abroad when she is criticized.


Lastly, since the book's appearance last summer, I have been contacted by a score of people around the country who, not having known Fr. Seraphim, but seeing that I am quoted in the biography many times, have asked my opinion of the book and its accuracy. I have felt an urgent responsibility to speak truthfully and set the record straight.


In a certain sense, this biography is actually three books in one. The first concerns Fr. Seraphim's early life and his intellectual and spiritual development up to the time of his conversion to Orthodoxy (approximately 250 pages). The second deals at length with his life as an Orthodox Christian -as a layman, monk, priest, writer, and teacher (more than six hundred pages). The last and, blessedly, shortest section (about 150 pages) concerns events that occurred after his repose-primarily Fr. Herman's activities and troublesome new directions. The word is not hagiography, but biography, and so it naturally contains much material of a personal and even seemingly trivial nature-in order to "fill out" the man as completely as possible, especially in his youthful, formative years.


Before discussing these three sections, it is important to note that this biography is at its best when Fr. Seraphim is allowed to speak for himself. Since he left behind a considerable body of published work, was a prolific letter-writer, and also kept a private journal, we can know something of what he was experiencing, thinking, and feeling about many things, both in his own life and in the larger life of the Church.2 In these parts of the book-and they are many-we recognize the Fr. Seraphim we knew and so warmly remember.


But, unfortunately, there are also a number of critical places where we do not hear Fr. Seraphim's "voice"; nor do we really hear the voice of Fr. Damascene, the author, either. Instead, we are subject to the views and interpretations of Fr. Herman, the co-founder of the St. Herman Skete and Fr. Seraphim's monastic brother-and not all these ideas were shared by Fr. Seraphim. Anyone who knows Fr. Herman can quickly identify these passages-and, unfortunately, there are many. Fr. Herman's speaking and writing style is quite distinctive, a style not at all shared by the author or Fr. Seraphim, who wrote and spoke in a very unsentimental and lean manner. Perhaps these sections were simply dictated to Fr. Damascene, who then edited and corrected them, incorporating them into the text. In any case, what we get in some passages is not the unadorned Fr. Seraphim, but Fr. Herman's own version of him.


Fr. Damascene's use of pseudonyms for certain people-usually bishops and other leading figures in the Church Abroad whom Fr. Herman does not happen to like-is unscholarly, childish, and offensive. One can understand that it would be appropriate to change the names of less important individuals, to protect their privacy, but to do this with well-known, public figures makes no sense, since most readers know, or can easily discover, who these people really are. Frankly, it is cowardly to change the names of only those who are being criticized, slandered, and held up to ridicule. In some ways, the first part of this book is the most important and the most positive. It is refreshing-especially for those who knew the mature Fr. Seraphim only in his last years-to see that as a boy and young man he had a girlfriend, favorite pets and music; he participated in sports, he both smoked and sometimes drank too much-like so many young people. On a broader level, his is the story of a young man, typically American, middle-class, generically Protestant, who very much reflected the anxious post-World War II soul-searching of many of his generation, and even many today in the post-Vietnam generation. In fact, most who read this section will find in it a disturbing mirror of their own overly-intellectual, skeptical, and self-destructive lives. It is precisely this that is so inspiring and encouraging for the modern reader: he can see how a man (the future Fr. Seraphim) can go from the darkness of intellectual pride and agnosticism (at times even atheism) to simple hope and belief.


In his early twenties, he was influenced by the philosopher and writer, Guenon, from whom he learned the meaning and disastrous effect of "modernism" on Western civilization and became convinced "that the upholding of ancient tradition was valid and not just a sign of being unenlightened, as the modernists would claim. Whereas the modern mentality viewed all things in terms of historical progress, Guenon viewed them in terms of historical disintegration."3 This discovery actually prepared him for his later encounter with Orthodox Christianity, a traditional religion with a very old but very functional world-view.


When, finally, he discovered True Christianity in his late twenties, he saw quite quickly and lucidly that because Orthodoxy is the Living Truth, it is also "all-or-nothing"-"a scandal and insult to the 'wisdom' and instincts of 'this world'."4 He particularly saw this in the person of Blessed Archbishop John Maximovitch, with whom he came into frequent contact, but who was regarded by a few as a "scandal" precisely because he took Orthodox Christianity so literally and lived it so uncompromisingly.5


Whereas this first section of the biography is instructive and encouraging, the second is sometimes inspiring but is, at times, deeply troubling and bewildering. Inspiring because it deals with Fr. Seraphim's actual entrance into the Church and his ever-deepening discovery of Orthodox piety and practice, patristics and spirituality and-above all-his encounter with and deep love for the rich monastic tradition of Russian Orthodoxy, in particular the Optina and Valaam traditions, which became a constant source of spiritual consolation and encouragement. The events surrounding the founding of The Orthodox Word and the establishment of the St. Herman of Alaska Skete in the mountain wilds of northern California are informative and fascinating.


ƒIt was during this period, also, that Fr. Seraphim "hit his stride" in terms of using his intellectual and pastoral talents for the greater good of the Church. He was able to identify and understand the "convert phenomenon" but, more than this, began to realize that the most important thing about controversies and problems in the Church (a constant temptation for converts, especially) is how to understand and view them from the calm perspective of eternity, without being drawn into passionate arguments for this or that figure, "party," or ideology. These are extremely valuable insights and principles by which we can and should live today-and they are all contained in this book. The tragedy, however, is that in the last several months or so of Fr. Seraphim's life, his monastic partner and "inspirer," Fr. Herman, began to go in a quite different direction, a direction that ultimately took him, after Fr. Seraphim's death right out of the Church.


Much is made in this biography of the "oneness of mind" that existed between Frs. Herman and Seraphim. Undoubtedly this did exist, especially in their early years together. They certainly shared a common vision of what their life and work should be, and out of this came a constant and fruitful stream of edifying books, articles, translations, etc. many of which have become widely known, and some of which have been translated into other languages (particularly Russian). Because of their shared commitment, many-possibly hundreds-converted to the Faith.


This biography does not tell us, however, that in the last years this fabled "oneness of mind" began to break down significantly. Substantive disputes about the future of the Skete and its work occurred with more and more frequency as Fr. Herman developed a more idiosyncratic and flamboyant attitude that grieved and worried Fr. Seraphim. He told me and others about this himself.


On one occasion, about six months before he died, he said that he was never happier than when Fr. Herman was off on one of his many "trips"-for then, he said, "we have peace, quiet, and order at the Skete." Clearly, something had gone wrong. One of their disagreements concerned the question of establishing a monastery in Alaska, on St. Herman's own island. Although the book says that Fr. Seraphim gave his permission for this on his deathbed, the facts are actually quite different. Regrettably, we must now speak of this episode in detail.


About three months before Fr. Seraphim died, Fr. Herman came to see me at my home. He was in an extremely agitated state. He took me aside and said that he and Fr. Seraphim had just had a "terrible fight." "Fr. Seraphim," he said, "doesn't understand me! I don't know what will happen, now, in the future." He explained that the argument concerned a possible future monastic establishment in Alaska, a venture that Fr. Herman was eager to pursue, but one for which Fr. Seraphim refused to give his blessing, although he did bless Fr. Herman to spend Pascha on Spruce Island, which he did.


Is it possible that Fr. Seraphim on his deathbed finally did give his blessing to proceed with this plan, as the biography maintains? It is very unlikely-for two reasons: first, shortly after Fr. Seraphim was admitted to the hospital he was put on life-support systems, including a respirator-which meant that he was unable to talk. He was also in and out of consciousness-as all of us who were there can testify. Secondly, and more serious: several months later Fr. Herman himself told me that the very last words spoken to him by Fr. Seraphim were: "I'm finished with you. Damn you!" Fr. Seraphim's uncharacteristically angry words bespeak a mind deeply troubled over Fr. Herman's general behavior and suggest that there was more going on than any of us suspected at the time. Needless to say, none of this is in the biography.


This work contains an enormous, almost obsessive, amount of "anti-bishop" talk. Much of this is petty and gossipy and seems to bespeak some kind of unresolved psychological conflict with authority figures on Fr. Herman's part. None of these nasty remarks come from Fr. Seraphim himself, however. It appears to be an interpolation by the author and/or Fr. Herman. Nor did I ever hear during Fr. Seraphim's lifetime any such talk at the Skete-except, once, around 1973, from Fr. Herman. I had written a series of articles called "What is a Bishop?" Fr. Herman urged that I not write any more such articles. When I asked why, he only replied: "We shouldn't make so much of bishops. They can get 'big heads'."


I thought very little about this at the time because, in all of my own publication and missionary work, both Fathers had always spoken well of Archbishop Anthony (who also spoke very appreciatively of them to me!). Furthermore, they always insisted that I do nothing without his blessing. But in 1987, on the only occasion I saw Fr. Herman after 1984, when I asked him if he had gone under a bishop of another jurisdiction, he replied tartly: "Who needs bishops? All they do is cause trouble. They are the enemy of the Holy Spirit!" When I said that he sounded like an Old Believer he responded, "I don't need a bishop!" (As it happened, however, he had already secretly left the Russian Church Abroad and placed himself under the uncanonical and completely unrecognized "Bishop" Pangratios. Interestingly, a few years later when he visited Russia, he did not disdain to accept an award from the Patriarch of Moscow.)


Many of the alleged "encounters" between Vladika Anthony and the Fathers-often described as angry attempts on the Archbishop's part to control and "squash" them-are simply exaggerations or outright misrepresentations. Fr. Seraphim himself told me about many specific occasions when Vladika visited the Skete, was "pleased" with them and their work, and was happy to be with them, even if only briefly, in their seclusion and peace.


At other times he mentioned minor and normal disagreements or misunderstandings with their ruling hierarch-but these were always worked out and there was never any sense of enmity in those days, such as this book portrays. Naturally,the Archbishop had an appropriate responsibility for pastoral oversight, and he wished to be consulted and kept informed about various projects and plans. There may even have been times when he did not completely understand certain goals and aspirations of the Fathers. But this is all quite normal, as anyone who has worked for an employer in the world knows.


In any case, the portrayal of Vladika Anthony as some kind of "ecclesiastical monster" or tyrant does not ring true to anyone who knows him. His own repeated, sincere, and long-suffering attempts to make peace with Fr. Herman for more than four years after Fr. Seraphim's death-all of which were angrily rejected by Fr. Herman-bear witness to Vladika's true character and need no further defense or explanation.


Similarly, although Fr. Damascene's book is filled with sly remarks and attacks against the Church Abroad, I never heard any criticism of the Synod from Fr. Seraphim. Quite the contrary. Although he did caution against putting too much trust in the outward, external "institution" of the Church, Fr. Seraphim wrote the following to me on October 18/31, 1972: "Our [Synod of] bishops on the whole are better than any others we know about, and probably no different from the bishops of the last 2000 years, through whom the Holy Spirit has led His Church." He went on to write that we must "become the bishops' best helpers-for we are working together with them in the true service of the Church's 'organism,' the Body of Christ. If we thereby sometimes suffer misunderstandings and offenses from each other (and we are guilty of this, not just bishops!), the Church gives us the spiritual means to forgive and overcome these." This is a radically different view from that given in this biography.


The final chapters, which deal with the sad and, frankly, terrible events that occurred after Fr. Seraphim's repose, and which have no business being in this biography, are a disservice to his memory, and are nothing more than a one-sided apologia for Fr. Herman's decision to leave the Church. By "one-sided" is meant that he (through the author) simply does not tell the whole truth. For example, no mention is made of the fact that charges of a moral nature were brought against him about eighteen months after Fr. Seraphim's death. The Archbishop treated these accusations against Fr. Herman with utmost discretion, with all his heart he did not want not believe them and did not press these particular charges against Fr. Herman. (It is a fact, however, that Fr. Herman's alleged problems in this area actually surfaced shortly before Fr. Seraphim's death, and were known to him, undoubtedly contributing to the overwhelming sense of sadness that precipitated his final illness and repose, and which may explain his last words to Fr. Herman.)


The narrative leads the reader to conclude that Fr. Herman left the Church Abroad because his hierarch "persecuted" him and wanted to "seize" the Skete and its property-something he had supposedly long coveted. Not only is this not true, but the actual charges against Fr. Herman concerned legitimate matters of "insubordination and disobedience," and it was for these that he was ultimately defrocked.


In general, this self-serving one-sidedness demonstrates the way in which many incidents have been exaggerated, distorted, and made to serve the private ideology of Fr. Herman. It is a poison that came into full "flower" only after Fr. Seraphim's death, when he was no longer present to provide the needed "balance" to Fr. Herman's exuberant personality-a personality that gave so much to the Church in his healthier, obedient days, and which was greatly valued by so many, but which later came to possess the ugly qualities that he is now so quickly to ascribe to others in the Church Abroad or, indeed, to anyone who does not completely agree with him.7


Finally, what can be said about this biography of Fr. Seraphim? As was pointed out earlier, where Fr. Seraphim is allowed to speak for himself, in lengthy quotations from his writings, the book is magnificent because Fr. Seraphim-his mind, his soul-was so rare, so wonderful and "good" a human being. In this sense, it is an important work. But the biography is extremely flawed because it has been made to serve the interests of Fr. Herman's own bitterness, and to justify or excuse his grave and unresolved personal problems. The average reader, who does not know all of the principal people involved, will have difficulty sorting this out, if he even can do so at all.

Archpriest Alexey Young

NOTES:
1. Fr. Alexey saved twelve years of Fr. Seraphim's letters of spiritual direction, written to him both as a layman and, later, as a priest. Orthodox America is now preparing these letters for publication.
2. N.B: While we can trust the accuracy of all those things published before Fr. Seraphim's death, we cannot be sure, for obvious reasons, that the excerpts in this book from his private journal are his original and unedited thoughts and jottings. Nor, because of Fr. Herman's present anti-Synod bias (which manifests itself only after Fr. Seraphim's death), can we now ever be sure of this.
3. Christensen, Monk Damascene, Not of This World: the Life and Teachings of Fr. Seraphim Rose.
4. Ibid.
5. The relics of Blessed Archbishop John (who will be canonized by the Church Abroad in the summer of 1994-the same jurisdiction and hierarchy that, according to this biography, "persecuted" him!) were recently found to be whole and incorrupt. Unfortunately, Vladika John's struggles are wrenched out of their proper context and given a meaning they actually did not have at the time-a literary "technique" that occurs frequently in this book. For further information about the alleged "treatment" of Vladika John, see a review of this biography by Novice Sergey in Orthodox Life, Vol. 43, No. 5.
6. For the full text of the Ecclesiastical Court's decision, see Orthodox Life, op. cit.
7. In a letter Fr. Herman wrote to a layman in Britain during this time, he said that even Fr. Alexey Young had "betrayed" him. In fact, on the last occasion I visited him at the Skete, in 1984, I begged him on my knees and in tears to make his peace with the Archbishop and not jeopardize all of the work he and Fr. Seraphim had done. 

source: Orthodox America
http://www.roca.org/OA/126-127/126p.htm




* * *


From Joanna:

In an earlier post I said that I have both biographies of Fr. Seraphim, and that if I had to give up one of them, it would be the rewrite.  Why? Obviously from the above reviews the revision is superior.  Right?  At least at first glance it appears so.


But the revision has a hidden danger.  People who read the rewrite come away with the idea that Fr. Seraphim was headed towards World Orthodoxy [political left wing extreme] just before he died in 1982.  That is a serious false impression. It is just not true. Fr. Seraphim would no sooner join the left wing as he would the right wing. He was firmly cemented on the Royal Path.


The Royal Path is somewhat invisible.  So it is not unusual for there to be confusion.  Some people see Fr. Seraphim in the left and others see him in the right, depending on their perspective.  They do the same thing to St. John Maximovitch. The idea here for us is to strive to see him as he really was.  Our goal is to discern the Royal Path in truth and not in imagination.


My first objection to the revision is the near elimination of the chapter on Renovationism, which denounces the left wing. 


Here is what really happened:


Soon after Fr. Seraphim became Orthodox he encountered the renovationists.  He boldly denounced their errors.  This attracted the super-correct who fiercely oppose the renovationists.  Their warrior-like zealotry was aroused to such a degree that Fr. Seraphim had to give a great deal in the opposite direction to rectify the situation.  At one point he even sighed with regret that he had given the super-correct the wrong impression.  The renovationists then took that rectifying and regret as their justification and proclaimed that Fr. Seraphim was really on their side.  Then he died.  Today there are renovationists who say he was on their side, and there are super-correct who say he was on their side.  Wrong.  And wrong.


Fr. Seraphim was on the Royal Path.  He saw both renovationism and super-correctness as a spiritual disease  –the same disease, just flip sides of the same coin.  He stressed warm-heartedness as a cure. But this got misinterpreted, too.  A warm heart does in no way condone a betrayal of the Faith.  To condone a betrayal of the Faith is to be cold-hearted towards God.  We know from Scripture that love for God and love for brothers is inseparable.


The best way –the love for God and man way – to help seekers find the Royal Path is to be on it ourselves, and to be an example.  We can not be an example of the Royal Path if we ourselves are not on it.  Fr. Seraphim's life as a whole can be seen as one which maintained the struggle to keep to the Royal Path.  The original version of the biography, Not Of This World, does a better job of presenting Fr. Seraphim's Orthodox life as a whole and in balance.  Not leaning to the left or the right.


The original version also does a better job of presenting Fr. Seraphim's and Archbishop Averky's speculations and foresight that it would only become increasingly harder to tread the Royal Path in the future.  Their sorrow over this helps us who are in this future generation to place ourselves in context with the ongoing battle with the Mystery of Iniquity.  We need to beware to not fall for the idea that the struggle is over, that better days are here, that the Mystery of Iniquity doth not work anymore. 


This is a false idea of the renovationists called "chiliasm"  –the idea that we are building a better Orthodoxy free from the problems of the past –that we can sit back now and enjoy our church with ease – that our church does not need defending – that we only need to bask in the delights that the church offers us.


This is against the Holy Fathers' teaching of the church being two parts: the Church Triumphant in heaven and the Church Militant on earth.  The more the renovationists pretend everything is fine and ignore what is happening, the more shrill becomes the shrieking of the super-correct.  Which in turn causes the renovationists to ignore all the more, and on and on resulting in increased isolation for both extremes.  Both extremes practice isolation, but in different ways. This is another subject, and I don't want to get off track...


So, to conclude: The 2003 rewrite is available for a reasonable price from sjkp.org
The original Not Of This World is harder to come by, but not impossible. Try Amazon or EBay, but the price is usually high, like $80. 
Three chapters from Not Of This World are online here:




And to conclude again I want to repeat a warning and extend it to all things regarding Fr. Seraphim published after his death, by any author, not just this book and not just Fr. Herman...


"While we can trust the accuracy of all those things published before Fr. Seraphim's death, we cannot be sure, for obvious reasons, that the excerpts in this book from his private journal are his original and unedited thoughts and jottings. Nor, because of Fr. Herman's present anti-Synod bias (which manifests itself only after Fr. Seraphim's death), can we now ever be sure of this."

also see:

Thursday, 21 August 2008

Made Perfect in Faith

Recommended Book:

Made Perfect in Faith
Sermons on the Lives and Works of Fifty Holy Church Fathers

by Father James Thornton

In this homiliary, Father James Thornton introduces fifty of the greatest Fathers of the Orthodox Church. Eschewing the dry language of history and the recondite language of theology alike, Father James opts to present his subjects in the pious language of hagiography. He thus renders the Church Fathers immediately accessible to all, challenging us to ask ourselves about them, in our own spiritual lives: “Seest thou how faith wrought with...[their]...works, and by works was faith made perfect?”

ISBN 0–911165–60–6
340 pp.
$17.95

To 0rder: http://www.ctosonline.org/lives/MP.html

Table 0f Contents:
Preface and Acknowedgementsl
Sermon 1 The Holy Church Fathers
Sermon 2 Saint Clement, Bishop of Rome
Sermon 3 Saint Polycarp, Bishop of Smyrna
Sermon 4 Saint Ireanæus, Bishop of Lyons
Sermon 5 Saint Ignatios the God-Bearer, Bishop of Antioch
Sermon 6 Saint Justin the Philosopher
Sermon 7 Saint Hippolytos, Bishop of Rome
Sermon 8 Saint Cyprian of Carthage
Sermon 9 Saint Anthony the Great
Sermon 10 Saint Athanasios the Great, Archbishop of Alexandria
Sermon 11 Saint Methodios, Bishop of Patara
Sermon 12 Saint Hilary, Bishop of Poitiers
Sermon 13 Saint Martin the Merciful, Bishop of Tours
Sermon 14 Saint Cyril, Archbishop of Jerusalem
Sermon 15 Saint Ambrose, Bishop of Milan
Sermon 16 Saint Gregory the Theologian, Archbishop of Constantinople
Sermon 17 Saint Basil the Great, Bishop of Cæsarea
Sermon 18 Saint Gregory, Bishop of Nyssa
Sermon 19 Saint John Chrysostomos, Archbishop of Constantinople
Sermon 20 Saint John Cassian the Roman
Sermon 21 Saint Ephrem the Syrian
Sermon 22 Saint Cyril, Archbishop of Alexandria
Sermon 23 Saint Patrick, Bishop of Armagh
Sermon 24 Saint Vincent of Lerins
Sermon 25 Saint Romanos the Melodist
Sermon 26 Saint Benedict of Nursia
Sermon 27 Saint Gregory the Dialogist, Pope of Rome
Sermon 28 Saint John of the Ladder
Sermon 29 Saint Maximos the Confessor
Sermon 30 Saint Isaac the Syrian, Bishop of Nineveh
Sermon 31 Saint Bede the Venerable
Sermon 32 Saint John of Damascus
Sermon 33 Saint Theodore the Studite
Sermon 34 Saint Photios the Great, Patriarch of Constantinople
Sermon 35 Saint Symeon the New Theologian
Sermon 36 Saint Sava I, Archbishop of Serbia
Sermon 37 Saint Gregory Palamas, Archbishop of Thessalonica
Sermon 38 Saint Mark Evgenikos, Metropolitan of Ephesus
Sermon 39 Saint Kosmas of Aitolia
Sermon 40 Saint Makarios, Archbishop of Corinth
Sermon 41 Saint Nikodemos the Hagiorite
Sermon 42 Saint Seraphim of Sarov
Sermon 43 Saint Theophan the Recluse, Bishop of Vladimir
Sermon 44 Saint John of Kronstadt
Sermon 45 Saint Nectarios of Ægina, Metropolitan of Pentapolis
Sermon 46 Saint Tikhon Patriarch of Moscow
Sermon 47 Blessed Philotheos of Longovarda
Sermon 48 Saint John the Wonderworker, Archbishop of San Francisco
Sermon 49 Saint Nicholas, Bishop of Zica
Sermon 50 Saint Justin of Celije
Sermon 51 Blessed Philaret, Metropolitan of New York
Bibliography
Index of Names

Excerpts from Preface & Acknowledgements and Chapter 1:
The series of sermons of which this book is comprised was delivered ... beginning on Meatfare Sunday 2004 and ending on the Sunday of the Prodigal Son in 2005 ... [that is, a sermon for a year of Sundays excluding Pascha Sunday -jh]

... Saints of many different ethnic and national backgrounds , encompassing representatives both of the Eastern and of the Western regions of the Church, were deliberately selected to demonstrate the œcumenicity and catholicity of the 0rthodox Church...

In the 0rthodox Church, we often speak of "the Holy Church Fathers." We quote their words in sermons, commentaries, essays, and books. We regard them as preeminent interpreters of Holy Scripture. We study their lives. We celebrate their memories on their Feast Days throughout the year, We pray for their intercession before God. Their teachings and example, set upon the foundation of the Holy Gospels, form the structure of the 0rthodox way of life and the 0rthodox world view.

In the realm of theology, the Holy Fathers rank first. Modern 0rthodox theologians struggle to acquire "the mind ol the Fathers," that is, to acquire their ways of thinking, ways of thinking that describe not only intellectual processes, but, much more significantly, patterns of thought that flow directly out of lives lived in sanctity. Since the teachings of the 0rthodox Church and the 0rthodox way of life are found in the lives and works of the Church Fathers...

... a Church Father ... is of one mind with all Holy Fathers of his own age and of past ages ...


[The chapters 2 - 51 are arranged to start with the earliest first generation of successors to the first Apostles and end with the most recent Holy Fathers of our own lifetime -jh]

Monday, 4 August 2008

Orthodoxy and the Religion of the Future

BOOK:
Orthodoxy and the Religion of the Future
by Fr. Seraphim Rose

I recommend owning a copy. 
$15 postpaid from SJKP.org

This easy-to-read book accomplishes a lot.  There have been numerous printings since it was first printed in 1975. Here is the skeleton of the 1983 edition Table of Contents:

Preface
Introduction
Ch. I - Monotheistic Religions
Ch. II - The Power of the Pagan Gods
Ch. III - A Fakir's "Miracle" and the Prayer of Jesus
Ch. IV - Eastern Meditation Invades Christianity
Ch. V - The Spirit of Eastern Cults
Ch. VI - Understanding UFO's
Ch. VII - The Charismatic Revival as a Sign of the Times
Ch. VIII - The Spirit of the Last Times
Epilogue: Towards the 198O's. Jonestown and the 198O's.
Index
[More recent editions have at least one more epilogue.]


Introduction online here:
Chapters I thru V are online here: 
Chapter VI on UFO's:
Chapters VII & VIII are online here: 

This paragraph below is omitted from the last section of the concluding chapter in the online version.  AND it has been rewritten in the newer edition.  This is how Fr. Seraphim said it originally:


Ch. VIII - The Spirit of the Last Times
E. "Little Children, It is the last Hour"
[John 2:18]

Unknown to the fevered Orthodox "revivalists," the Lord has reserved in the world, even as in the days of Elijah the Prophet, seven thousand men who have not bowed the knee to Baal [Rom. 11:4] -- an unknown number of true Orthodox Christians who are neither spiritually dead, as the Orthodox "charismatics" complain that their flocks have been, nor the pompously "spirit-filled," as these same flocks become under "charismatic" suggestion. They are not carried away by the movement of apostasy nor by any false "awakening," but continue rooted in the holy and saving Faith of Holy Orthodoxy in the tradition the Holy Fathers have handed down to them, watching the signs of the times and traveling the narrow path to salvation. Many of them follow the bishops of the few Orthodox jurisdicitions that have strong stands against the apostasy of our times: the Catacomb Church of Russia, the Russian Church Outside of Russia, the True Orthodox Christians [Old Calendarists] of Greece.* But there are some left in other jurisdictions also, grieving over the ever more evident apostasy of their hierarchs and striving somehow to keep their own Orthodoxy intact;** and there are still others outside of the Orthodox Church who by God's grace, their hearts being open to His call, will undoubtedly yet be joined to genuine Holy Orthodoxy. These "seven thousand "are the foundation of the future and only Orthodoxy of the latter times.
-Orthodoxy and the Religion of the Future
1983 edition, page 220

* The the Catacomb Church and the True Orthodox Christians [Old Calendarists] of Greece that Fr. Seraphim refers to, are not the same super-correct fragments we see today with their claims to be the Catacomb Church and to be "true." 

** The omission is deliberate because it is obvious that Fr. Seraphim is referring to the world Orthodox jurisdictions.  It is part of today's "rewriting" of Fr. Seraphim to make it appear that he would have today approved of Platina's move into world Orthodoxy.  They say that Fr. Seraphim was becoming "soft-hearted" towards world Orthodoxy as he grew in the faith, and his earlier writings did not reflect this "later acquired" degree of "soft-heartedness".  This is how they justify censoring him after his death. 

   The truth is that this has nothing to do with soft-heartedness.  Fr. Seraphim never "revised" his earlier teachings, instead he built upon them, as a firm foundation.  He was never lukewarm about Orthodoxy.  He never started growing "soft-hearted" towards sin or apostasy.

   Trying to "have your cake and eat it too" is not the Royal Path.