15.
Summarize your
understanding of the difference between the Orthodox and the Augustinian
doctrines of the fall and the first human sin. Be sure to discuss the two
concepts of the fate of unbaptized children.
Up to a point, Orthodoxy, Rome and classical
Protestantism are all in fairly close agreement concerning the ancestral sin
(or what Western Christians call the original
sin). God gave Adam a free will either to accept or reject his calling to
live in union with divine law and rule over all creation. Adam was seduced into
thinking that he could become like God solely by his own effort and will, and
he rejected his calling and turned aside from the path marked out for him by
God. The fall lay in Adam's disobedience to the will of his Creator; he
elevated his own will against God's, and in so doing,
he separated himself from God.
Adam's rebellion resulted in a new
form of existence: disease and death entered in. In turning away from God, Who
is immortality and life, man defiles his humanity with evil and puts himself in
a state contrary to nature. This unnatural condition eventually led to the
disintegration of Adam's physical being and to his physical death, and the same
consequences extended to all his descendants, to the whole human race. As St. Paul repeatedly insists, we are all
members of one another, and if one member suffers, the whole body suffers.
Thus, by virtue of this mysterious unity of all mankind, not only Adam, but the
whole human race becomes subject to mortality.
The disintegration also goes beyond
the mere physical level: since man was cut off from God, Adam and his
descendants were brought under the rule of evil and death. All humans share the
same tragic fate: all are born into a world that “lies in wickedness” (1 Jn 5: 19),
one “groaning in travail” (Rom 8:22); all are born into a
devil's princedom where it is easy to do evil and hard to do good.
Man's will is weakened and perverted by what the Greeks call desire and the Latins concupiscence. All human beings are
subject to these spiritual effects of the ancestral sin.
Beyond this juncture, East and West
are not in complete agreement as Blessed Augustine of Hippo's teaching on grace
and free will is not in harmony with the consensus
Patrum, the consensus of the Fathers. Blessed Augustine was the only main
theologian in the early Western Church had, whereas in the Eastern Church there were many. Thus, theology in
the East was more balanced, including the theology on salvation. The Orthodox
Church holds a less exalted view of the state of man prior to the fall, and it
also sees the consequences of the fall in less severe terms than the West.
Where Augustine (and thus the West) held that man fell from a state of all
wisdom and knowledge, Orthodoxy believes that Adam fell from a state of
undeveloped simplicity. Thus the East is less severe than the West in its
judgment of Adam's transgression.
Undoubtedly the fall resulted in the
darkening of man's mind and the impairing of his willpower so that he could no
longer hope to attain the likeness of God. However, Orthodoxy does not teach
that Adam's fall deprived man completely of God's grace (although after the
fall, grace acts on man from the outside rather than from within). Orthodoxy
rejects Calvin's view that after the fall man was completely depraved and
entirely lacking in good desires. Orthodoxy likewise rejects Augustine's view
that man is under “a harsh necessity” of committing sin, and that “man's nature
was overcome by the fault into which it fell, and so came to lack freedom” [On
the Perfection of Man's Righteousness, IV-9]. This pessimistic view came
from the belief that the human race was not only wounded by Adam's
transgression, but also inherited his guilt and thus was deprived of God's
grace. (At the end of his life, Augustine wrote an entire book of retractions,
in which he deferred to the judgment of the Church all he had ever written).
Even though God's likeness can be distorted by sin, man still remains created
in the image of God, and that image can never be destroyed. In the words of a
hymn sung at the Orthodox funeral service for the laity: “I am the image of
Thine inexpressible glory, even though I bear the wounds of sin.” And because
man still retains the image of God, he
still retains a free will, however restricted in scope it becomes because
of sin. St. Dositheus, Patriarch of Jerusalem, explained that even after the
fall, God “takes not away from man the power to will — to will to obey or not
to obey Him” [Confessions, Decree
iii]. Upholding the idea of synergy, Orthodoxy rejects any interpretation of
the fall which discards the idea of human freedom.
The idea of original guilt taught by Augustine (and which is still accepted in
a mitigated form by the Roman Church) is rejected by the vast majority of
Orthodox theologians. An occasional Augustinian view on the fall would creep
into some Orthodox literature in times past, but it usually took place as a
result of Western influence, such as the Scholastic influence on Kievan Russia at
the time of Peter of Moghila. Most Eastern theologians hold that men
automatically inherit the corruption and mortality of Adam, but not Adam's
guilt. Men are guilty only insofar as they choose to imitate Adam.
Most Western Christians hold that
nothing a man does in his fallen and unredeemed state can be pleasing to God
since all actions are tainted by original guilt. The Anglican Church teaches
that works before justification have the nature of sin and cannot be pleasing
to God, and likewise the Latin Church speaks of justificatio prima and justificatio
secunda, and the impossibility of man's actions being pleasing to God
before Baptism and justification. All Orthodox would be very hesitant to think
in these terms, for Orthodoxy's view of fallen mankind is nowhere near as harsh
and condemnatory as the Augustinian or Calvinist view.
Also, Orthodoxy has never taught
that unbaptized infants, because of their taint of original guilt, are
condemned to hall (a view advocated by Augustine and many others in the West),
nor has Orthodoxy ever maintained that they go to limbo. According to Roman Catholic theology, limbo, from limbus infantum or puerum, is a place
where babies are consigned who died without actual sin (personal sin), but who
did not have their original sin washed away in Baptism. The word limbus first appeared in Thomas Aquinas'
Summa Theologica, which declares that
unbaptized infants are “excluded from the full blessedness of the beatific
vision.” This teaching was declared de
fide by the Second Council of Lyons (1274) and confirmed by the Council of
Florence (1439), and the teaching is generally accepted by Roman theologians.
St. Gregory of Nyssa wrote a
treatise entitled Concerning Infants
Snatched Away Prematurely. In it, this Father states that infants departed
from life neither find themselves in a painful state nor become equal to those
who have struggled to be purified by every virtue. They are in God's providence.
St. Gregory adds that anyway, the journey to God and participation in the uncreated
light constitute a natural state of the soul, and infants cannot be deprived of
these things. He concludes by noting that by the power of divine grace, infants
can attain deification.
Even though Orthodoxy believes that
man retained a free will after the fall and still was capable of good works,
the East would certainly find common ground with the West in the belief that
man's sin has set up a barrier between God and man, a barrier that man can
never break down by his own efforts. Sin stood in the way of union with God,
and man needed to be saved. Because man could not draw near to God, God came to
man. As Bishop Alexander of Buenos Aires and South America of the Russian
Church in Exile instructs in this regard: “Inasmuch as people, having sinned
out of thoughtlessness and having fallen away from God, turned out to be too
weak to repulse the onslaught of the powers of darkness, the Son of God was
obliged to come into our world and to raise up a war against them.”
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