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Metropolitan Anthony (Krapovitsky) Confession IntraText CT - Text |
9. Self-Justification.
The opposite of despair is carelessness and stony insensibility. People experience this
more often and, like despair, it is not easily cured. Of course it borders closely on weak
faith, although less decisively than the conscious doubts of a philosopher or reasoner, but
it is certainly no less stubborn, if not more so. Leo Tolstoy writes in his Confession that
he only began to think about questions of conscience and eternity in the fiftieth year of
his life, and previously he had not gotten round to this. He lived a “life like a drinking
bout,” passing from one attraction to another, and never thought deeply about questions
of eternity. Thus in confession people admit to committing adultery, to offending their
wives and parents, to deception, to total removal of their life from God’s temple, but so
lightheartedly that you will clearly see this means nothing to them, and that they are not
even thinking of beginning to struggle with these sins. This is what you must tell them:
“Although your sins are serious in themselves and would require exclusion from Holy
Communion for so many years — yet more terrible is this stupefaction of your con-
science, in the power of which you clearly experience no repentant grief over your sins.
You must know that Holy Communion can be given to you only after you promise to hate
these sins and begin to struggle with them. Otherwise you will not only not be worthy of
2 “Embittered” is a rendering of the Russian “ozlobleny.” It implies a general feeling of
antagonism and hostility towards others, including God, together with grief and
depression.
Holy Communion (which perhaps will not distress you very much in your present state),
but also, you will not remain at your present level of sinfulness. You see, none of the
world’s evildoers or criminals were born murderers or robbers, but before their first
offenses they differed from ordinary sinners only in that they did not take their sins and
mistakes to heart at all, did not repent of the offenses they had caused to others, and
whenever they were reproached by their elders or comrades they blamed someone else
for what had happened, like Adam and Eve after their fall into sin. And so you, while you
were innocent, despised adulterers, but after you fell, you began to justify yourself, and
then, when you were used to this abomination, you even boasted of it and, going even
further, you began to mock those who preserve their chastity. In a similar way the
conscience is lulled to sleep by worldly dissipation and corrupt comradeship, and it grows
ever deeper and deeper into other sins, desires and passions, and you are soon near to
daring calmly to commit criminal offenses.”
When he is admonishing such unconcerned people, both during confession and
while edifying his flock as a whole, the priest must warn them particularly persistently
against the spirit of self-justification, which is one of the principal enemies of our
salvation. Some people accepted the preaching of our Saviour and His Apostles, and
others rejected it. Within both groups there were great sinners and people of righteous
life. What were the spiritual qualities which caused them to accept or reject the Gospel of
salvation? It was almost always this: whoever had the spirit of self-justification and
considered himself a decent enough person rejected the preaching of repentance, the
preaching of the Gospel; and whoever considered himself a guilty sinner before God and
men accepted it and was saved, like Zaccheus, like the Wise Robber on the cross.
It is the same with Christians who have come to believe. The difference between
those who are being saved and those who are perishing, or are far from salvation, lies not
so much in the number of their sins, but in the inclination, or lack of it, to admit that they
are guilty and sinful. “You feel bitterly offended by your neighbour, you are convinced,
and perhaps correctly, that you are being unjustly deprived of your employment or
promotion; that you are being slandered, that your merits are unrecognized. Let us agree
that this is so. At present it is not possible to demand that you should be completely
insensitive towards all this. But, although you take these offenses to heart, remember
even more strongly and lament in your soul over the side of these events in which you
yourself sinned through laziness, malice, lying, obstinacy and so on. You will not be
justified before God by offenses that others commit against you, but you will have to
answer for your own guilt, especially if you do not wish to admit to it with repentance.
Let the Lord justify you for your repentance; do not justify yourself before Him, but
accuse yourself. Once, someone was talking to St. Tikhon of Zadonsk3 and could not find
any words with which to oppose his arguments about the faith, so he struck the saint in
the face. Then St. Tikhon himself fell at his feet and asked forgiveness for not warning
him against such a sin as striking one of God’s bishops in the face. Readiness to condemn
3 St. Tikhon of Zadonsk: A famous Russian bishop of the eighteenth century. As the bishop of
Voronezh he fought against the extreme ignorance of the local clergy and vestiges of pagan customs among
the people. He spent the last years of his life retired to a monastery in great meekness and humility. He is
the author of many very widely read spiritual works. See his life in “The Orthodox Word,” July-August,
1966.
oneself and not others is a great virtue, which not only exalts people in the eyes of God,
but also attracts the hearts of men.” Convince your spiritual children that they must fight
above all against the spirit of self-justification and condemnation of others, and explain
that if anyone comes to confession in such a spirit he will not receive any benefit from
the Holy Mystery. The benefit received from this depends on the degree of contrition of
heart. Let no one reassure himself that he is honourable or faithful to his wife or even that
he has preserved his virginity. Perhaps he is free from serious falls, but what would he be
like if he had undergone such temptations as his fallen brothers have, if he had not
received such good influences from people and books and such gifts from God, of which
others are deprived? “It is possible that in your condition they would have shown
incomparably more of their own good will towards spiritual perfection, and flourished in
various virtues and spiritual struggles. Behold those who seem to be poorer than you, and
behold those who struggle more earnestly than you for the salvation of their souls and
even pour forth constant tears of repentance. If even the great Ephraim the Syrian, who
was granted visions from God, wept profusely, then how can we sinners be strangers to a
spirit of constant repentance and self-reproach?” Admonish all your flock with such
words, but especially those who stand before you at holy confession without repentant
contrition. It is possible to be saved without many virtues, says St. Simeon the New
Theologian, but nobody has been saved who has not attained a spirit of compunction —
that is, of compunctionate repentance for one’s sins and joy over the mercy of God.