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Metropolitan Anthony (Krapovitsky) Confession IntraText CT - Text |
12. Pride and Vainglory.
We have already mentioned that anger is often linked with another passion — pride.
Now we will go so far as to say that anger does not often appear as an independent or
fundamental passion in the human heart. Most often anger expresses the dissatisfaction of
another passion, or even of the casual desires that a person may have from time to time.
In the latter case, anger is called impatience or obstinacy, which in turn are expressions of
a general self-love, lack of brotherly love and lack of desire to attend to oneself and
struggle with oneself. The stronger a passion is in a person, the quicker and more fiercely
it turns into anger when it is not satisfied. Thus the vainglorious and lovers of money
become envious, the lustful become jealous, the gluttonous become over-critical and
irritable, and so on. In general, anger is an indication of various sinful passions, and one
can find out about these by noticing when a person begins to get angry: if it is during a
conversation about fasting and sobriety, then he sins with the passion of overeating and
drunkenness; if it is on occasions when he loses money — love of money; if during talks
about the saints’ feats of humility — he is proud, and so on. This is why we began our
instructions to spiritual fathers with the struggle against anger, as it is an involuntary
indicator of other passions. A person’s enslavement to them is expressed first of all as
enslavement to anger, which bursts out even with very cunning people who are otherwise
able to hide their passions and keep quiet about their bad habits.
Perhaps it will seem to the reader that we have spoken too long about anger and
its sinfulness; but here we have also given some indications about struggle with all
passions in general, and so perhaps we will be able to express our thoughts about other
passions more briefly. However, we must forestall one objection that priests will
probably raise: “Is it possible, even in a confession lasting ten minutes, to enter into such
depths of the human soul? People talk about their sins, sinful deeds, and am I going to
explain to them about passions?” Yes, explain this to them beforehand in sermons, then at
confession they will understand what you mean from only a few words. These subjects
are very close and comprehensible to the soul of an Orthodox Christian, even of an
illiterate one. But it should be understood that in confession, since it is so short, you
should say as much as you can manage, and leave the rest for sermons in church (without
personal allusions, of course) — and for private conversations with your parishioners.
Here it is a great thing if you can direct the spiritual gaze of your parishioner into his soul
and its infirmities — its sinful passions, dispositions, and not to deeds alone.
While adducing reasons for the struggle with the passions of anger and malice, we
touched on pride and vainglory, which are closely linked with them. However, this
enemy of God and our salvation will not be crushed unless the warrior of Christ, having
come to his spiritual father with repentance, is given a weapon aimed precisely at this
enemy. With our contemporaries, educated and half-educated and, of late, even with the
uneducated, the sin of pride does not appear as a fall, a stumbling, but it is their constant
state. Consequently they do not consider it to be a sin. But what are “noble self-love,” “a
feeling of one’s own worth,” “honor” — if not this pride which is repugnant to God.
People call these feelings “noble pride,” “lawful pride,” but there is only one sort of pride
— demonic. The Elder Makary of the Optina Hermitage explained this to a landlord, who
was bewailing to him that his son had married a serf girl, and thus offended the “noble
pride” of the whole family. I have written and spoken much against this spiritual
blindness which, alas, has even made its way into textbooks of moral theology and
adduces an uncomprehending reference to the words of St. Paul, who said that it would
be better for him to die than that any man should make his glorying void (1 Cor. 9:15).
But anyone who has taken the trouble to read this statement will see that the glory is here
understood to be from God, and that in the future life.
Of course, it is not only our contemporaries who suffer from pride: only the saints
are free of it, but those of Adam’s descendents who have not crucified their passions bear
this burden in themselves and have to struggle with it until they are freed from its weight.
But the disaster of our contemporaries is that they do not consider it to be a sin, although
it is cursed by God — just as those deeply sunk in a life of dissolution do not consider
either lust or adultery to be sins. On the contrary, if a young person is distinguished by a
forgiving nature and does not seek revenge on those who offend him, he not infrequently
has reproaches and mockery hurled at him even by his own parents, being called a
worthless person who does not even defend his own honor. Probably our own
contemporaries would treat Christ the Savior with the same contempt, as well as the
Apostles and Martyrs who unmurmuringly endured beatings and every kind of
humiliation.
A spiritual father must at least try to ensure that the penitent recognizes as sinful
every word and act instigated by this feeling. There are two different kinds of pride —
vainglory and inner or spiritual pride. The first passion seeks after human praise and fame
but the second, a subtler and more dangerous feeling, makes people so full of confidence
about their own virtues that they do not even wish to seek human praise, but are satisfied
by the pleasure of contemplating their own imagined virtues. Of this type are Byronismxv
as well as Mephistophelesxvi and the demons beloved by European writers.
Vainglory is the more amusing feeling, in that people laugh at it, and so it is
easier, if not to overcome it, then at least to understand that it is shameful and start
struggling with it. But how? The penitent should be reminded of Christ’s words in the
Sermon on the Mount, when He said that the struggles of a vainglorious man are not
pleasing to God (Mt., Ch. 6); and also of the condemnation of the Pharisees (in the
twenty-third chapter of St. Matthew). This is the way in which thoughtless people who do
not notice the sinfulness of their motives should be brought to their senses. But we must
also be very careful about something of which, alas, we take no care at all, and this
applies not just to spiritual fathers but to all members of the clergy. We must be very
careful that we ourselves do not motivate people with vainglory, especially those giving
money to the Church. Indeed, we cannot but admit that a good half of the most abundant
offerings on which churches, schools, orphanages and hospitals are built, are made at the
instigation of vainglory, stirred up in rich people by the clergy, not infrequently even
those in bishop’s orders. Vainglory which has been humbled or is struggling with
humility in the soul of a Christian, deserves incomparably greater condolence or heartfelt
sympathy. Frequently people who are reverent and humble-hearted will confess to you
that they are haunted by thoughts of vainglory when making donations, serving the sick,
or even when showing a good, loving attitude towards them, and finally, when they sing
or read well in church and people praise them for it; when they preach sermons, study
diligently at school, and so on, and so on. Often good monks, noticing such thoughts in
themselves, ask their elder’s or spiritual father’s permission to stop their useful service on
the kliros (i.e. singing and reading) or in the altar; and lay people — to stop their social
and philanthropic activities.
This, of course, was one of the principal motives that hermits had in refusing to be
made bishops and even fleeing from people when they became famous among them. For
this same reason even now several educated archimandrites refuse to become bishops,
and monks refuse to be ordained to the priesthood. What, then, should a spiritual father
say when a Christian puts forward such ideas? Exactly the same answer as the famous
elders of Optina, Makary and Amvrossy, gave to such a question. One should not refuse
an obedience which is useful to the Church, in accordance with God’s commandments
and to which you are called by your superiors and by the gifts that God has given you. Do
a useful job, and as for the thoughts of vainglory which force their way into your heart,
reproach yourself and oppose them — but not by abandoning the job. Carry on with the
useful work, but not with the sinful thought, even when the work demands one thing and
the thought demands the opposite, which will unfailingly happen soon and frequently.
Not only the Lord, but also people who observe life intelligently can always see who is
genuinely working for the sake of what has to be done and who is working out of
vainglory: which teacher is loving towards his pupils, trying to inspire them to labour and
struggles, and which is trying to obtain glory for himself or, as they say, “popularity”:
which writer is writing for the triumph of right and in order to teach people what is good,
and which is writing to please the crowd, for his own vainglory and “for filthy luchre’s
sake” (Titus 1:11). And so teach people to test their consciences after every special feat
and even after every obligatory labour; for example, was the motive of vainglory present
during prayer, and to what extent? Then offer repentance for this sin, but do not abandon
the work. If he does this, a Christian will soon see that he often has to choose between the
demands of his work (and duty) and the demands of vainglory, that he must constantly
choose the first and suppress the second. Besides this, as he becomes strengthened in
struggling for the good, a Christian is gradually freed from self-love in general and,
consequently, from all kinds of vainglory.
What should be said to people who are proud in the strict sense of the word, who
think so highly of themselves that they do not even seek praise from people? “What are
you proud of: your mind, beauty, noble birth, talents? But surely all this is not from
yourself, but from the Creator, and the Creator can take all this away from you, as He has
taken away everything from the “great” people in the present revolution. But what is
most terrible of all, He can take away even your mind. Remember Nebuchadnezzar’s
punishmentxvii and humble yourself before God, before the fate of Napoleon and Wilhelm
overtakes you. And let every Christian who excels above others in something keep a
watch on himself and struggle with every kind of self-exultation, remembering his sins
and passions and the humble dispositions of the Holy Apostles and others who pleased
God. It is useful to mention an account like this from the Spiritual Meadow (or another
patristic book). “I saw,” recounts an elder, “in a monastery a brother who was still young,
but renowned for his struggles and for his gentleness. Before my eyes he was offended
and even insulted, but he calmly kept silent throughout and even the expression of his
face did not change in the slightest. ‘Brother, who taught you to be so gentle?’ I asked,
moved to compunction.
‘Are they really worth my anger?’ he answered. ‘These are not people, they are
just beautiful dogs, and they are not worthy of my being upset by them’. Then my joy
(continues the elder) changed into deep grief for this perishing brother, and I went away
from him in horror, praying for him and for myself.”
It is also necessary to fight against pride by acts which are opposed to it. It is
especially important in this case to force oneself, as we have said, to ask forgiveness of
those we have offended, and also to bear punishments at school unmurmuringly.