The Orthodox Veneration of Mary
the Birthgiver of God
Saint John of Shanghai
& San Francisco

Introduction
| The
Veneration of the Mother of God During Her Earthly Life | The
First Enemies of the Veneration of The Mother of God | Attempts
of Jews and Heretics to Dishonor The Ever-Virginity of Mary | The
Nestorian Heresy and The Third Ecumenical Council | Attempts
of Iconoclasts to Lessen The Glory of the Queen of Heaven; They Are Put to
Shame | Zeal
Not According to Knowledge: The Immaculate Conception | The
Orthodox Veneration of The Mother of God
INTRODUCTION
The Orthodox Theology of
Archbishop John Maximovitch
Fr. Seraphim Rose

NOT TOO MANY years ago the Abbess of a convent of the Russian Orthodox
Church, a woman of righteous life, was delivering a sermon in the convent
church on the feast of the Dormition of the Most
Holy Mother of God. With tears she entreated her nuns and the pilgrims who
had come for the feast to accept entirely and wholeheartedly what the Church
hands down to us, taking such pains to preserve this tradition sacredly all
these centuries-and not to choose for oneself what is "important"
and what is "dispensable"; for by thinking oneself wiser than the
tradition, one may end by losing the tradition. Thus, when the Church tells
us in her hymns and icons that the Apostles were miraculously gathered from
the ends of the earth in order to be present at the repose and burial of the
Mother of God, we as Orthodox Christians are not free to deny this or
reinterpret it, but must believe as the Church hands it down to us, with
simplicity of heart.
A young Western
convert who had learned Russian was present when this sermon was delivered.
He himself had thought about this very subject, having seen icons in the
traditional iconographic style depicting the Apostles being transported on
clouds to behold the Dormition of the Theotokos;* and he had asked himself the question: are we
actually to understand this "literally," as a miraculous event, or
is it only a "poetic" way of expressing the coming together of the
Apostles for this event ... or perhaps even an imaginative or
"ideal" depiction of an event that never occurred in fact? (Such,
indeed, are some of the questions with which "Orthodox theologians"
occupy themselves in our days.) The words of the righteous Abbess therefore
struck him to the heart, and he understood that there was something deeper to
the reception and understanding of Orthodoxy than what our own mind and
feelings tell us. In that instant the tradition was being handed down to him,
not from books but from a living vessel which contained it; and it had to be
received, not with mind or feelings only, but above all with the heart, which
in this way began to receive its deeper training in Orthodoxy.
Later this young
convert encountered, in person or through reading, many people who were
learned in Orthodox theology. They were the "theologians" of our
day, those who had been to Orthodox schools and become theological
"experts." They were usually quite eager to speak on what was
Orthodox and what non-Orthodox, what was important and what secondary in
Orthodoxy itself; and a number of them prided themselves on being
"conservatives" or "traditionalists" in faith. But in
none of them did he sense the authority of the simple Abbess who had spoken
to his heart, unlearned as she was in such "theology."
And the heart of
this convert, still taking his baby steps in Orthodoxy, longed to know how to believe, which means also whom to believe. He was too much a person
of his times and his own upbringing to be able simply to deny his own
reasoning power and believe blindly everything he was told; and it is very
evident that Orthodoxy does not at all demand this of one-the very writings
of the Holy Fathers are a living memorial of the working of human reason
enlightened by the grace of God. But it was also obvious that there was
something very much lacking in the "theologians" of our day, who
for all their logic and their knowledge of Patristic texts,
did not convey the feeling or savor of Orthodoxy as well as a simple,
theologically-uneducated Abbess.
Our convert found
the end of his search-the search for contact with the true and living
tradition of Orthodoxy-in Archbishop John Maximovitch.
For here he found someone who was a learned theologian in the "old"
school and at the same time was very much aware of all the criticisms of that
theology which have been made by the theological critics of our century, and
was able to use his keen intelligence to find the truth where it might be
disputed. But he also possessed something which none of the wise
"theologians" of our time seem to possess: the same simplicity and
authority which the pious Abbess had conveyed to the heart of the young God-seeker.
His heart and mind were won: not because Archbishop John became for him an
"infallible expert" -- for the Church of Christ does not know any
such thing -- but because he saw in this holy archpastor
a model of Orthodoxy, a true theologian whose theology proceeded from a holy
life and from total rootedness in Orthodox tradition. When he spoke, his
words could be trusted-although he carefully distinguished between the
Church's teaching, which is certain, and his own personal opinions, which
might be mistaken, and he bound no one to the latter. And our young convert
discovered that, for all of Archbishop John's intellectual keenness and
critical ability, his words much more often agreed with those of the simple
Abbess than with those of the learned theologians of our time.
THE THEOLOGICAL
WRITINGS of Archbishop John belong to no distinctive "school," and
they do not reveal the extraordinary "influence" of any theologians
of the recent past. It is true that Archbishop John was inspired to
theologize, as well as to become a monk and enter the Church's service, by
his great teacher, Metropolitan Anthony Khrapovitsky;
and it is also true that the student made his own the teacher's emphasis on a
"return to the Fathers" and to a theology closely bound to
spiritual and moral life rather than academic. But Metropolitan Anthony's own
theological writings are quite different in tone, intention, and content: he
was very much involved with the theological academic world and with the
intelligentsia of his time, and much of his writing is devoted to arguments
and apologies which will be understandable to these elements of the society
he knew. The writings of Archbishop John, on the other hand, are quite devoid
of this apologetic and disputatious aspect. He did not argue, he simply presented the
Orthodox teaching; and when it was necessary to refute false doctrines, as
especially in his two long articles on the Sophiology
of Bulgakov, his words were convincing not by
virtue of logical argumentation, but rather by the power of his presentation
of the Patristic teaching in its original texts. He did not speak to the
academic or learned world, but to the uncorrupted Orthodox conscience; and he
did not speak of a "return to the Fathers," because what he himself
wrote was simply a handing down of the Patristic tradition, with no attempt
to apologize for it.
The sources of
Archbishop John's theology are, quite simply: Holy Scripture, the Holy
Fathers (especially the great Fathers of the 4th and 5th centuries), and-most
distinctively-the Divine services of the Orthodox Church. The latter source,
rarely used to such an extent by the theologians of recent centuries, gives
us a clue to the practical, un-academic approach of Archbishop John to
theology. It is obvious that he was thoroughly immersed in the Church's
Divine services and that his theological inspiration came chiefly from this
primary Patristic source which he imbibed, not in leisure hours set apart for
theologizing, but in his daily practice of being present at every Divine service. He drank in theology as
an integral part of daily life, and it was doubtless this more than his
formal theological studies that actually made him a theologian.
It is
understandable, therefore, that one will not find in Archbishop John any
theological "system." To be sure, he did not protest against the
great works of "systematic theology" which the 19th century
produced in Russia, and he made free use in his missionary work of the
systematic catechisms of this period (as, in general, the great hierarchs of
the 19th and 20th centuries have done, both in Greece and Russia, seeing in
these catechisms an excellent aid to the work of Orthodox enlightenment among
the people); in this respect he was above the fashions and parties of
theologians and students, both past and present, who are a little too
attached to the particular way in which Orthodox theology is presented. He
showed equal respect for Metropolitan Anthony Khrapovitsky
with his "anti-Western" emphasis, and for Metropolitan Peter Mogila with his supposedly excessive "Western
influence." When the defects of one or the other of these great
hierarchs and defenders of Orthodoxy would be presented to him, he would make
a deprecating gesture with his hand and say, "unimportant"-because
he always had in view first of all the great Patristic tradition which these
theologians were successfully handing down in spite of their faults. In this
respect he has much to teach the younger theologians of our own day, who
approach Orthodox theology in a spirit that is often both too theoretical and
too polemical and partisan.
For Archbishop
John the theological "categories" of even the wisest of theological
scholars were also "unimportant" -- or rather, they were important
only to the extent that they communicated a real meaning and did not become
merely a matter of rote learning. One incident from his Shanghai years
vividly reveals the freedom of his theological spirit: Once when he was
attending the oral examinations of the senior catechism class of his
cathedral school, he interrupted the perfectly correct recitation by one
pupil of the list of Minor Prophets of the Old Testament with the abrupt and
categorical assertion: "There are no minor prophets!" The priest-teacher of
this class was understandably offended at this seeming disparagement of his
teaching authority, but probably to this day the students remember this
strange disruption of the normal catechism "categories," and
possibly a few of them understood the message which Archbishop John tried to
convey: with God all prophets are great, are "major," and this fact is more
important than all the categories of our knowledge of them, however valid
these are in themselves. In his theological writings and sermons also,
Archbishop John often gives a surprising turn to his discourse which uncovers
for us some unexpected aspect or deeper meaning of the subject he is
discussing. It is obvious that for him theology is no mere human, earthly
discipline whose riches are exhausted by our rational interpretations, or at
which we can become self-satisfied "experts, "-but rather something
that points heavenward and should draw our minds to God and heavenly
realities, which are not grasped by logical systems of thought.
One noted Russian
Church historian, N. Talberg, has suggested (in the
Chronicle
of
Bishop Savva, ch. 23)
that Archbishop John is to be understood first of all as "a fool for
Christ's sake who remained such even in episcopal
rank," and in this respect he compares him to St. Gregory the
Theologian, who also did not conform, in ways similar to Archbishop John, to
the standard "image" of a bishop. It is this
"foolishness" (by the world's standards) that gives a
characteristic tone to the theo logical writings
both of St. Gregory and of Archbishop John: a certain detachment from public
opinion, what "everyone thinks" and thus the belonging to no
((party" or "school"; the approach to theological questions
from an exalted, non-academic point of view and thus the healthy avoidance of
petty disputes and the quarrelsome spirit; the fresh, unexpected turns of
thought which make their theological writings first of all a source of
inspiration and of a truly deeper understanding of God's revelation.
Perhaps most of
all one is impressed by the utter simplicity of Archbishop John's writings. It is obvious that he accepts the
Orthodox tradition straightforwardly and entirely, with no "double"
thoughts as to how one can believe the tradition and still be a
"sophisticated" modern man. He was aware of modern "criticism,"
and if asked could give his sound reasons for not accepting it on most
points. He studied thoroughly the question of "Western influence"
in Orthodoxy in recent centuries and had a well-balanced view of it,
carefully distinguishing between what is to be rejected outright as foreign
to Orthodoxy, what is to be discouraged but without "making an issue))
over it, and what is to be accepted as conducive to true Orthodox life and
piety (a point that is especially revealing of Archbishop John's lack of
"preconceived opinions," and his testing of everything by sound
Orthodoxy). But despite all his knowledge and exercise of critical judgment,
he continued to believe the Orthodox tradition simply, just as the Church has
handed it down to us. Most Orthodox theologians of our time, even if they may
have escaped the worst effects of the Protestant-reformer mentality, still
view Orthodox tradition through the spectacles of the academic environment in
which they are at home; but Archbishop John was "at home" first and
foremost in the church services at which he spent many hours every day, and
thus the tinge of rationalism (not necessarily in a bad sense) of even the
best of academic theologians was totally absent in his thought. In his
writings there are no "problems"; his usually numerous footnotes
are solely for the sake of informing where the teaching of the Church is to
be found. In this respect he is absolutely at one with the "mind of the
Fathers," and he appears in our midst as one of them, and not as
a mere commentator on the theology of the past.
The theological
writings of Archbishop John, printed in various church periodicals over four
decades, have not yet been collected in one place. Those presently available
to the St. Herman of Alaska Brotherhood would fill a volume of something more
than 200 pages. His longer writings belong for the most part to his earlier
years as a hieromonk in Yugoslavia, where he was already
noted as outstanding among Orthodox theologians. Especially valuable are his
two articles on the Sophiology of Bulgakov, one of them revealing convincingly, in a very
objective manner, Bulgakov's total incompetence as
a Patristic scholar, and the other being of even greater value as a classic
exposition of the true Patristic doctrine of the Divine Wisdom. Among his later
writings one should mention his article on Orthodox iconography (where,
incidentally, he shows himself much more aware than his teacher, Metr. Anthony, of the question of "Western
influence" in iconographic style); the series of sermons entitled
"Three Evangelical Feasts," where he uncovers the deeper meaning of
some of the "lesser" church feasts; and the article "The
Church: the Body of Christ." His short articles and sermons also are
deeply theological. One sermon begins with a "Hymn to God" of St. Gregory
the Theologian and continues, in the same exalted, Patristic tone, as an
inspired accusation against contemporary godlessness; another, spoken on
Passion Friday, 1936, is a moving address to Christ lying in the tomb, in a
tone worthy of the same Holy Father.
We begin this series
of translations with Archbishop John's classic exposition of the Orthodox
veneration of the Mother of God and of the chief errors which have attacked it. Its
longest chapter is a clear and striking refutation of the Latin dogma of the
"Immaculate Conception."
The Veneration of the Mother of
God
During Her Earthly Life

FROM
APOSTOLIC
TIMES and to our days all who truly love Christ give veneration to Her Who
gave birth to Him, raised Him and protected Him in the days of His youth. If
God the Father chose Her, God the Holy Spirit descended upon Her, and God the
Son dwelt in Her, submitted to Her in the days of His youth, was concerned
for Her when hanging on the Crossthen should not
everyone who confesses the Holy Trinity venerate Her?
Still in the days
of Her earthly life the friends of Christ, the Apostles, manifested a great
concern and devotion for the Mother of the Lord, especially the Evangelist
John the Theologian, who, fulfilling the will of Her Divine Son, took Her to
himself and took care for Her as for a mother from the time when the Lord
uttered to him from the Cross the words: Behold thy mother."
The Evangelist Luke
painted a number of images of Her, some together with the Pre-eternal Child, others without Him. When he brought them and showed them
to the Most Holy Virgin, She approved them and said: "The grace of My
Son shall be with them, " and repeated the hymn
She had once sung in the house of Elizabeth:
"My soul doth magnify the Lord, and My spirit hath rejoiced in God My Saviour."
However, the Virgin Mary during Her earthly life avoided the glory which
belonged to Her as the Mother of the Lord. She preferred to live in quiet and
prepare Herself for the departure into eternal life. To the last day of Her
earthly life She took care to prove worthy of the Kingdom of Her Son, and
before death She prayed that He might deliver Her soul from the malicious
spirits that meet human souls on the way to heaven and strive to seize them
so as to take them away with them to hades. The
Lord fulfilled the prayer of His Mother and in the hour of Her death Himself
came from heaven with a multitude of angels to receive Her soul.
Since the Mother
of God had also prayed that She might bid farewell to the Apostles, the Lord
gathered for Her death all the Apostles, except Thomas, and they were brought
by an invisible power on that day to Jerusalem from all the ends of the
inhabited world, where they were preaching, and they were present at Her
blessed translation into eternal life.
The Apostles gave
Her most pure body over to burial with sacred hymns, and on the third day
they opened the tomb so as once more to venerate the remains of the Mother of
God together with the Apostle Thomas, who had arrived then in Jerusalem. But they did
not find the body in the tomb and in perplexity they returned to their own
place; and then, during their meal, the Mother of God Herself appeared to them
in the air, shining with heavenly light, and informed them that Her Son had
glorified Her body also, and She, resurrected, stood before His Throne. At
the same time, She promised to be with them always.
The Apostles
greeted the Mother of God with great joy and began to venerate Her not only
as the Mother of their beloved Teacher and Lord, but also as their heavenly
helper, as a protector of Christians and intercessor for the whole human race
before the Righteous Judge. And everywhere the Gospel of Christ was preached,
His Most Pure Mother also began to be glorified.
The First Enemies of the
Veneration of
The Mother of God

THE MORE the faith
of Christ spread and the Name of the Saviour of the
world was glorified on earth, and together with Him also She Who was
vouchsafed to be the Mother of the God-Man,-the more did the hatred of the
enemies of Christ increase towards Her. Mary was the Mother of Jesus. She manifested
a hitherto unheard-of example of purity and righteousness, and furthermore,
now departed from this life, She was a mighty support for Christians, even. though invisible to bodily eyes. Therefore all who hated
Jesus Christ and did not believe in Him, who did not understand His teaching,
or to be more precise, did not wish to understand as the Church understood,
who wished to replace the preaching of Christ with their own human reasonings-all of these transferred their hatred for
Christ, for the Gospel and the Church, to the Most Pure Virgin Mary. They
wished to belittle the Mother, so as thereby to destroy faith also in Her
Son, to create a false picture of Her among men in order to have the
opportunity to rebuild the whole Christian teaching on a different
foundation. In the womb of Mary, God and man were joined. She was the One Who
served as it were as the ladder for the Son of God, Who descended from
heaven. To strike a blow at Her veneration means to strike Christianity at
the root, to destroy it in its very foundation.
And the very
beginning, of Her heavenly glory was marked on earth by an outburst of malice
and hatred toward Her by unbelievers. When, after Her holy repose, the
Apostles were carrying Her body for burial in Gethsemane, to the place chosen
by her, John the Theologian went ahead carrying the branch from paradise
which the Archangel Gabriel had brought to the Holy Virgin three days before
this when he came from heaven to announce to Her Her
approaching departure to the heavenly mansions.
"When Israel went out of Egypt,
and the house of Jacob from among a barbarous people," chanted St. Peter
from Psalm 113; "Alleluia," sang the whole assembly of the Apostles
together with their disciples, as for example, Dionysius the Areopagite, who likewise had been miraculously
transported at that time to Jerusalem.
And while this sacred hymn was being sung, which was called by the J ews the " G reat Alleluia,
" that is, the great "Praise ye the Lord," one Jewish priest, Athonius, leaped up to the bier and wished to overturn it
and throw to the ground the body of the Mother of God.
The brazenness of
Athonius was immediately punished: the Archangel
Michael with an invisible sword cut off his hand, which remained hanging on
the bier. The thunderstruck Athonius, experiencing
a tormenting pain, in awareness of his sin, turned in prayer to the Jesus
Whom he had hated up to then and he was immediately healed. He did not delay
in accepting Christianity and confessing it before his former
co-religionists, for which he received from them a martyr's death. Thus, the
attempt to offend the honor of the Mother of God served for Her greater
glorification.
The enemies of
Christ resolved not to manifest their lack of veneration for the body of the
Most Pure One further at that time by crude violence, but their malice did
not cease. Seeing that Christianity was spreading everywhere, they began to
spread various vile slanders about Christians. They did not spare the name of
the Mother of Christ either, and they invented the story that Jesus of
Nazareth had come from a base and immoral environment, and that His Mother
had associated with a certain Roman soldier.
But here the lie
was too evident for this fiction to attract serious attention. The whole
family of Joseph the Betrothed and Mary Herself were known well by the
inhabitants of Nazareth
and the surrounding -countryside in their time. Whence bath this man
this wisdom and these mighty works? Is not this the carpenter's son? Is not
his mother called Mary, and his brethren: James and Joseph and Simon and
Judas? And his sisters, are they not all with us? (Matt. 13:54-55; Mark
6:3; Luke 4:22.) So said His fellowcountrymen in Nazareth when Christ
revealed before them in the synagogue His other-worldly wisdom. In small
towns the family matters of everyone are well known; very strict watch was
kept then over the purity of married life.
Would people
really have behaved with respect towards Jesus, called Him to preach in the
synagogue, if He had been born of illegitimate cohabitation? To Mary the law
of Moses would have been applied, which commanded that such persons be stoned
to death; and the Pharisees would have taken the opportunity many times to
reproach Christ for the conduct of His Mother. But just the contrary was the
case. Mary enjoyed great respect; at Cana She was an honored guest at the
wedding, and even when Her Son was condemned, no one allowed himself to
ridicule or censure His Mother.
Attempts of Jews and Heretics to
Dishonor
The Ever-Virginity of Mary

THE JEWISH slanderers soon became convinced that it was almost impossible to
dishonor the Mother of Jesus, and on the basis of the information which they
themselves possessed it was much easier to prove Her praiseworthy life.
Therefore, they abandoned this slander of theirs, which had already been
taken up by the pagans (Origen, Against Celsus, I), and strove to prove at
least that Mary was not a virgin when She gave birth to Christ. They even
said that the prophecies concerning the birth-giving of the Messiah by a
virgin had never existed, and that therefore it was entirely in vain that
Christians thought to exalt Jesus by the fact that a prophecy was supposedly
being fulfilled in Him.
Jewish
translators were found (Aquila, Symmachus, Theodotion)
who made new translations of the Old Testament into Greek and in these
translated the well-known prophecy of Isaiah (Is. 7:14) thus: Behold, a young woman
will conceive. They asserted that the Hebrew word Aalma
signified "young woman" and not "virgin," as stood in the
sacred translation of the Seventy Translators [Septuagint], where this
passage had been translated "Behold, a virgin shall conceive."
By this new translation
they wished to prove that Christians, on the basis of an incorrect
translation of the word Aalma, thought to ascribe to
Mary something completely impossible a birth-giving without a man, while in
actuality the birth of Christ was not in the least different from other human
births.
However, the evil
intention of the new translators was clearly revealed because by a comparison
of various passages in the Bible it became clear that the word Aalma signified precisely
"virgin." And indeed, not only the Jews, but even the pagans, on
the basis of their own traditions and various prophecies, expected the
Redeemer of the world to be born of a Virgin. The Gospels clearly stated that
the Lord Jesus had been born of a Virgin.
How shall this be, seeing I know not a man? asked Mary, Who had given a vow of virginity, of the
Archangel Gabriel, who had informed Her of the birth of Christ.
And the Angel
replied: The Holy Spirit shall come upon Thee,
and the power of the Most High shall overshadow Thee; wherefore also
that which is to be born shall be holy, and shall be called the Son of
God (Luke 1:34-35).
Later the
Angel appeared also to righteous Joseph, who had wished to put away Mary from
his house, seeing that She had conceived without entering into conjugal
cohabitation with him. To Joseph the Archangel Gabriel said: Fear not to
take unto thee Mary thy wife: for that which is begotten in Her is of the
Holy Spirit, and he reminded him of the prophecy of Isaiah that a virgin
would conceive (Matt. 1: 18-2 5).
The rod of Aaron
that budded, the rock torn away from the mountain without hands, seen by
Nebuchadnezzar in a dream and interpreted by the Prophet Daniel, the closed
gate seen by the Prophet Ezekiel, and much else in the Old Testament,
prefigured the birth-giving of the Virgin. Just as Adam had been created by
the Word of God from the unworked and virgin earth,
so also the Word of God created flesh for Himself from a virgin womb when the
Son of God became the new Adam so as to correct the fall into sin of the first Adam (St. Irenaeus
of Lyons, Book 111).
The seedless
birth of Christ can and could be denied only by those who deny the Gospel,
whereas the Church
of Christ from of old
confesses Christ "incarnate of the Holy Spirit and the Virgin
Mary." But the birth of God from the Ever-Virgin was a stumbling stone
for those who wished to call themselves Christians but did not wish to humble
themselves in mind and be zealous for purity of life. The pure life of Mary
was a reproach for those who were impure also in their thoughts. So as to
show themselves Christians, they did not dare to deny that Christ was born of
a Virgin, but they began to affirm that Mary remained a virgin only until
she brought forth her first-born son, Jesus (Matt. 1:25).
"After the
birth of Jesus," said the false teacher Helvidius
in the 4th century, and likewise many others before and after him, "Mary
entered into conjugal life with Joseph and had from him children, who are
called in the Gospels the brothers and sisters of Christ." But the word
"until" does not signify that Mary remained a virgin only until a
certain time. The word "until" and words similar to it often
signify eternity. In the Sacred Scripture it is said of Christ: In His
days shall shine forth righteousness and an abundance of peace, until the moon
be taken away (Ps. 71:7), but this does not mean that when there shall no longer be a moon
at the end of the world, God's righteousness shall no longer be; precisely
then, rather, will it triumph. And what does it mean when it says: For He
must reign, until He hath put all enemies under His feet? (I Cor. 15:25). Is the Lord
then to reign only for the time until His enemies shall be under His feet?!
And David, in the fourth Psalm of the Ascents says: As the
eyes of the handmaid look unto the bands of her mistress, so do our eyes look
unto the Lord our God, until He take pity on us (Ps. 122:2). Thus, the
Prophet will have his eyes toward the Lord until he obtains mercy, but having
obtained it he will direct them to the earth? (Blessed Jerome, "On the
Ever-Virginity of Blessed Mary.") The Saviour
in the Gospel says to the Apostles (Matt. 28:20): Lo, I am
with you always, even unto the end of the world. Thus, after the end of the world the Lord will step away from
His disciples, and then, when they shall judge the twelve tribes of Israel upon
twelve thrones, they will not have the promised communion with the Lord?
(Blessed Jerome, op. cit.)
It is likewise
incorrect to think that the brothers and sisters of Christ were the children of
His Most Holy Mother. The names of "brother" and "sister"
have several distinct meanings. Signifying a certain kinship between people
or their spiritual closeness, these words are used sometimes in a broader,
and sometimes in a narrower sense. In any case, people are called brothers or
sisters if they have a common father and mother, or only a common father or
mother; or even if they have different fathers and mothers, if their parents
later (having become widowed) have entered into marriage (stepbrothers); or
if their parents are bound by close degrees of kinship.
In the Gospel it
can nowhere be seen that those who are called there the brothers of Jesus
were or were considered the children of His Mother. On the contrary, it was
known that James and others were the sons of Joseph, the Betrothed of Mary,
who was a widower with children from his first wife. (St. Epiphanius
of Cyprus,
Panarion, 78.) Likewise, the sister of
His Mother, Mary the wife of Cleopas, who stood
with Her at the Cross of the Lord (John 19:25), also had children, who in
view of such close kinship with full right could also be called brothers of
the Lord. That the so-called brothers and sisters of the Lord were not the
children of His Mother is clearly evident from the fact that the Lord
entrusted His Mother before His death to His beloved disciple John. Why
should He do this if She had other children besides Him? They themselves
would have taken care of Her. The sons of Joseph, the supposed father of
Jesus, did not consider themselves obliged to take care of one they regarded
as their stepmother, or at least did not have for Her such love as blood
children have for parents, and such as the adopted John had for Her.
Thus, a careful
study of Sacred Scripture reveals with complete clarity the insubstantiality
of the objections against the Ever-Virginity of Mary and puts to shame those
who teach differently.
The Nestorian Heresy and
The Third
Ecumenical Council

WHEN ALL THOSE
who had dared to speak against the sanctity and purity of the Most Holy
Virgin Mary had been reduced to silence, an attempt was made to destroy Her
veneration as Mother of God. In the 5th century the Archbishop of Constantinople,
Nestorius, began to preach that of Mary had been born only the man Jesus, in
Whom the Divinity had taken abode and dwelt in Him as in a temple. At first
he allowed his presbyter Anastasius and then he
himself began to teach openly in church that one should not call Mary "Theotokos, since She had not given birth to the God-Man.
He considered it demeaning for himself to worship a child wrapped in
swaddling clothes and lying in a manger.
Such sermons
evoked a universal disturbance and unease over the purity of faith, at first
in Constantinople and then everywhere else
where rumors of the new teaching spread. St. Proclus, the disciple of St.
John Chrysostom' who was then Bishop of Cyzicus and
later Archbishop of Constantinople, in the presence of Nestorius gave in
church a sermon in which he confessed the Son of God born in the flesh of the
Virgin, Who in truth is the Theotokos (Birthgiver of God), for already in the womb of the Most
Pure One, at the time of Her conception, the Divinity was united with the
Child conceived of the Holy Spirit; and this Child, even though He was born
of the Virgin Mary only in His human nature, still was born already true God
and true man.
Nestorius
stubbornly refused to change his teaching, saying that one must distinguish
between Jesus and the Son of God, that Mary should not be called Theotokos, but Christotokos (Birthgiver of Christ), since the Jesus Who was born of
Mary was only the man Christ (which signifies Messiah, anointed one), like to
God's anointed ones of old, the prophets, only surpassing them in fullness of
communion with God. The teaching of Nestorius thus constituted a denial of
the whole economy of God, for if from Mary only a man was born, then it was
not God Who suffered for us, but a man.
St. Cyril,
Archbishop of Alexandria,
finding out about the teaching of Nestorius and about the church disorders
evoked by this teaching in Constantinople, wrote a letter to Nestorius, in
which he tried to persuade him to hold the teaching which the Church had
confessed from its foundation, and not to introduce anything novel into this
teaching. In addition, St. Cyril wrote to the clergy and people of Constantinople that they should be firm in the Orthodox
faith and not fear the persecutions by Nestorius against those who were not
in agreement with him. St. Cyril also wrote informing of everything to Rome, to the holy Pope
Celestine, who with all his flock was then firm in Orthodoxy.
St. Celestine for
his part wrote to Nestorius and called upon him to preach the Orthodox faith,
and not his own. But Nestorius remained deaf to all persuasion and replied
that what he was preaching was the Orthodox faith, while his opponents were
heretics. St. Cyril wrote Nestorius again and composed twelve anathemas, that
is, set forth in twelve paragraphs the chief
differences of the Orthodox teaching from the teaching preached by Nestorius,
acknowledging as excommunicated from the Church everyone who should reject
even a single one of the paragraphs he had composed.
Nestorius rejected
the whole of the text composed by St. Cyril and wrote his own exposition of
the teaching which he preached, likewise in twelve paragraphs, giving over to
anathema (that is, excommunication from the Church) everyone who did not
accept it. The danger to purity of faith was increasing all the time. St.
Cyril wrote a letter to Theodosius the Younger, who was then reigning, to his
wife Eudocia and to the Emperor's sister Pulcheria, entreating them likewise to concern themselves
with ecclesiastical matters and restrain the heresy.
It was decided to
convene an Ecumenical Council, at which hierarchs, gathered from the ends of the world, should
decide whether the faith preached by Nestorius was Orthodox. As the place for
the council, which was to be the Third Ecumenical Council, they chose the
city of Ephesus,
in which the Most Holy Virgin Mary had once dwelt together with the Apostle
John the Theologian. St. Cyril gathered his fellow bishops in Egypt and together with them travelled by sea
to Ephesus.
From Antioch
overland came John, Archbishop of Antioch, with the Eastern bishops. The
Bishop of Rome, St. Celestine, could not go himself and asked St. Cyril to
defend the Orthodox faith, and in addition he sent from himself two bishops
and the presbyter of the Roman Church Philip, to whom he also gave
instructions as to what to say. To Ephesus
there came likewise Nestorius and the bishops of the Constantinople region,
and the bishops of Palestine, Asia Minor, and Cyprus.
On the 10th of
the calends of July according to the Roman reckoning, that is, June 22, 43 1, in the Ephesian Church of the Virgin Mary, the bishops
assembled, headed by the Bishop of Alexandria, Cyril, and the Bishop of
Ephesus, Memnon, and took their places. In their
midst was placed a Gospel as a sign of the invisible headship of the
Ecumenical Council by Christ Himself. At first the Symbol of Faith which had
been composed by the First and Second Ecumenical Councils was read; then
there was read to the Council the Imperial Proclamation which was brought by
the representatives of the Emperors Theodosius and Valentinian,
Emperors of the Eastern and Western parts of the Empire.
The Imperial
Proclamation having been heard, the reading of documents began, and there
were read the Epistles of Cyril and Celestine to Nestorius, as well as the
replies of Nestorius. The Council, by the lips of its members, acknowledged
the teaching of Nestorius to be impious and condemned it, acknowledging
Nestorius as deprived of his See and of the priesthood. A decree was composed
concerning this which was signed by about 160 participants of the Council;
and since some of them represented also other bishops who did not have the
opportunity to be personally at the Council, the decree of the Council was
actually the decision of more than 200 bishops, who had their Sees in the various regions of the Church
at that time, and they testified that they confessed the Faith which from all
antiquity had been kept in their localities.
Thus the decree
of the Council was the voice of the Ecumenical Church, which clearly
expressed its faith that Christ, born of the Virgin, is the true God Who
became man; and inasmuch as Mary gave birth to the perfect Man Who was at the
same time perfect God, She rightly should be revered as THEOTOKOS.
At the end of the
session its decree was immediately communicated to the waiting people. The
whole of Ephesus
rejoiced when it found out that the veneration of the Holy Virgin had been
defended, for She was especially revered in this city, of which She had been
a resident during Her earthly life and a Patroness after Her departure into
eternal life. The people greeted the Fathers ecstatically when in the evening
they returned home after the session. They accompanied them to their homes
with lighted torches and burned incense in the streets. Everywhere were to be
heard joyful greetings, the glorification of the Ever-Virgin, and the praises
of the Fathers who had defended Her name against the heretics. The decree of
the Council was displayed in the streets of Ephesus.
The Council had
five more sessions, on June 10 and 11, July 16, 17, and 22, and August 3 1. At these
sessions there were set forth, in six canons, measures for action against
those who would dare to spread the teaching of Nestorius and change the
decree of the Council of Ephesus.
At the complaint
of the bishops of Cyprus against the pretensions of the Bishop of Antioch,
the Council decreed that the Church of Cyprus should preserve its
independence in Church government, which it had possessed from the Apostles,
and that in general none of the bishops should subject to themselves regions
which had been previously independent from them, "lest under the pretext
of priesthood the pride of earthly power should steal in, and lest we lose, ruining
it little by little, the freedom which our Lord Jesus Christ, the Deliverer
of all men, has given us by His Blood."
The Council
likewise confirmed the condemnation of the Pelagian
heresy, which taught that man can be saved by his own powers without the necessity
of having the grace of God. It also decided certain matters of church
government, and addressed epistles to the bishops who had not attended the
Council, announcing its decrees and calling upon all to stand on guard for
the Orthodox Faith and the peace of the Church. At the same time the Council
acknowledged that the teaching of the Orthodox Ecumenical Church had been
fully and clearly enough set forth in the Nicaeo-Constantinopolitan
Symbol of Faith, which is why it itself did not compose a new Symbol of Faith
and forbade in future "to compose another Faith," that is, to
compose other Symbols of Faith or make changes in the Symbol which had been
confirmed at the Second Ecumenical Council.
This latter
decree was violated several centuries later by Western Christians when, at
first in separate places, and then throughout the whole Roman Church, there
was made to the Symbol the addition that the Holy Spirit proceeds "and
from the Son," which addition has been approved by the Roman Popes from
the I I th century, even though up until that time
their predecessors, beginning with St. Celestine, firmly kept to the decision
of the Council of Ephesus, which was the Third Ecumenical Council, and
fulfilled it.
Thus the peace
which had been destroyed by Nestorius settled once more in the Church. The
true Faith had been defended and false teaching accused.
The Council of
Ephesus is rightly venerated as Ecumenical, on the same level as the Councils
of Nicaea and Constantinople which preceded
it. At it there were present representatives of the whole Church. Its
decisions were accepted by the whole Church "from one end of the
universe to the other." At it there was confessed the teaching which had
been held from Apostolic times. The Council did not create a new teaching,
but it loudly testified of the truth which some had tried to replace by an
invention. It precisely set forth the confession of the Divinity of Christ
Who was born of the Virgin. The belief of the Church and its judgment on this
question were now so clearly expressed that no one could any longer ascribe
to the Church his own false reasonings. In the
future there could arise other questions demanding
the decision of the whole Church, but not the question whether Jesus Christ
were God.
Subsequent Councils
based themselves in their decisions on the decrees of the Councils which had
preceded them. They did not compose a new Symbol of Faith, but only gave an
explanation of it. At the Third Ecumenical Council there was firmly and
clearly confessed the teaching of the Church concerning the Mother of God. Previously the Holy
Fathers had accused those who had slandered the immaculate life of the Virgin
Mary; and now concerning those who had tried to lessen Her honor it was
proclaimed to all: "He who does not confess Immanuel to be true God and
therefore the Holy Virgin to be Theotokos, because
She gave birth in the flesh to the Word Who is from God the Father and Who
became flesh, let him be anathema (separated from the Church)" (First
Anathema of St. Cyril of Alexandria).
Attempts of Iconoclasts to Lessen
The Glory of the Queen of Heaven;
They Are Put to Shame

AFTER THE THIRD
Ecumenical Council, Christians began yet more fervently, both in Constantinople and in other places, to hasten to the
intercession of the Mother of God and their hopes in Her intercession were
not vain. She manifested Her help to innumerable sick people, helpless
people, and those in misfortune. Many times She appeared as defender of
Constantinople against outward enemies, once even showing in visible fashion
to St. Andrew the Fool for Christ Her wondrous Protection over the people who
were praying at night in the Temple
of Blachernae.
The Queen of
Heaven gave victory in battles to the Byzantine Emperors, which is why they
had the custom to take with them in their campaigns Her Icon of Hodigitria (Guide). She strengthened ascetics and zealots
of Christian life in their battle against human passions and weaknesses. She
enlightened and instructed the Fathers and Teachers of the Church ' including
St. Cyril of Alexandria
himself when he was hesitating to acknowledge the innocence and sanctity of
St. John Chrysostom. The Most Pure Virgin placed hymns in the mouths of the
composers of church hymns, sometimes making renowned singers out of the
untalented who had no gift of song, but who were pious laborers, such as St. Romanus the Sweet-Singer (the Melodist). Is it therefore
surprising that Christians strove to magnify the name of their constant
Intercessor? In Her honor feasts were established, to Her were dedicated
wondrous songs, and Her Images were revered.
The malice of the
prince of this world armed the sons of apostasy once more to raise battle
against Immanuel and His Mother in this same Constantinople, which revered
now, as Ephesus
had previously, the Mother of God as its Intercessor. Not daring at first to
speak openly against the Champion General, they wished to lessen Her glorification
by forbidding the veneration of the Icons of Christ and His saints, calling
this idol-worship. The Mother of God now also strengthened zealots of piety
in the battle for the veneration of Images, manifesting many signs from Her
Icons and healing the severed hand of St. John of Damascus who had written in
defence of the Icons.
The persecution
against the venerators of Icons and Saints ended again in the victory and
triumph of Orthodoxy, for the veneration given to the Icons ascends to those
who are depicted in them; and the holy ones of God are venerated as friends
of God for the sake of the Divine grace which dwelt in them, in accordance
with the words of the Psalm: "Most precious to me are Thy friends."
The Most Pure Mother of God was glorified with special honor in heaven and on
earth, and She, even in the days of the mocking of the holy Icons, manifested
through them so many wondrous miracles that even today we remember them with
contrition. The hymn "In Thee All Creation Rejoices, 0 Thou Who Art Full
of Grace," and the Icon of the Three Hands remind us of the healing of
St. John Damascene before this Icon; the depiction of the Iveron
Icon of the Mother of God reminds us of the miraculous deliverance from
enemies by this Icon, which had been thrown in the sea by a widow who was
unable to save it.
No persecutions
against those who venerated the Mother of God and all that is bound up with
the memory of Her could lessen the love of Christians for their Intercessor.
The rule was established that every series of hymns in the Divine services
should end with a hymn or verse in honor of the Mother of God (the so-called
"Theotokia"). Many times in the year
Christians in all corners of the world gather together in church, as before
they gathered together, to praise Her, to thank Her for the benefactions She
has shown, and to beg mercy.
But could the
adversary of Christians, the devil, who goeth about roaring like a
lion, seeking whom he may devour (I Peter 5:8), remain an indifferent spectator to the glory of
the Immaculate One? Could he acknowledge himself as defeated, and cease to
wage warfare against the truth through men who do his will? And so, when all
the universe resounded with the good news of the Faith of Christ, when
everywhere the name of the Most Holy One was invoked, when the earth was
filled with churches, when the houses of Christians were adorned with Icons
depicting Her-then there appeared and began to spread a new false teaching
about the Mother of God. This false teaching is dangerous in that many cannot
immediately understand to what degree it undermines the true veneration of
the Mother of God.
Zeal Not
According to Knowledge (Romans 10:2)
The corruption by the Latins, in the newly invented
dogma of the "Immaculate Conception, " of the true
veneration of the Most Holy Mother of God
and Ever- Virgin Mary.

WHEN THOSE WHO
censured the immaculate life of the Most Holy Virgin had been rebuked, as
well as those who denied Her Evervirginity, those
who denied Her dignity as the Mother of God, and those who disdained Her
icons-then, when the glory of the Mother of God had illuminated the whole
universe, there appeared a teaching which seemingly exalted highly the Virgin
Mary, but in reality denied all Her virtues.
This teaching is
called that of the Immaculate Conception of the Virgin Mary, and it was
accepted by the followers of the Papal throne of Rome. The teaching is this- that "the
All-blessed Virgin Mary in the first instant of Her Conception, by the
special grace of Almighty God and by a special privilege, for the sake of the
future merits of Jesus Christ, Saviour of the human
race, was preserved exempt from all stain of original sin" (Bull of Pope
Pius IX concerning the new dogma). In other words, the Mother of God at Her
very conception was preserved from original sin and, by the grace of God, was
placed in a state where it was impossible for Her to have personal sins.
Christians had
not heard of this before the ninth century, when for the first time the Abbot of Corvey, Paschasius Radbertus, expressed the opinion that the Holy Virgin was
conceived without original sin. Beginning, from the 12th century, this idea
begins to spread among the clergy and flock of the Western church, which had
already fallen away from the Universal
Church and thereby lost
the grace of the Holy Spirit.
However, by no
means all of the members of the Roman church agreed with the new teaching.
There was a difference of among the most renowned theologians of the West,
the pillars, so to speak, of the Latin church. Thomas Aquinas and Bernard of Clairvaux decisively censured it, while Duns Scotus defended it. From the teachers this division
carried over to their disciples: the Latin Dominican monks, after their
teacher Thomas Aquinas, preached against the teaching of the Immaculate
Conception, while the followers of Duns Scotus, the
Franciscans, strove to implant it everywhere. The battle between these two
currents continued for the course of several centuries. Both on the one and
on the other side there were those who were considered among the Catholics as
the greatest authorities.
There was no help
in deciding the question in the fact that several people declared that they
had had a revelation from above concerning it. The nun Bridget [of Sweden],
renowned in the 14th century among the Catholics, spoke in her writings about
the appearances to her of the Mother of God, Who Herself told her that She had
been conceived immaculately, without original sin. But her contemporary, the
yet more renowned ascetic Catherine of Sienna, affirmed that in Her
Conception the Holy Virgin participated in original sin, concerning which she
had received a revelation from Christ Himself (See the book of Archpriest A. Lebedev, Differences in the Teaching on the Most Holy Mother of God in the Churches of East and West)
Thus, neither on
the foundation of theological writings, nor on the foundation of miraculous
manifestations which contradicted each other, could the Latin flock
distinguish for a long time where the truth was. Roman Popes until Sixtus IV (end of the 15th century) remained apart from
these disputes, and only this Pope in 1475 approved a service in which the
teaching of the Immaculate Conception was clearly expressed; and several
years later he forbade a condemnation of those who believed in the Immaculate
Conception. However, even Sixtus IV did not yet
decide to affirm that such was the unwavering teaching of the church; and
therefore, having forbidden the condemnation of those who believed in the
Immaculate Conception, he also did not condemn those who believed otherwise.
Meanwhile, the
teaching of the Immaculate Conception obtained more and more partisans among
the members of the Roman church. The reason for this was the fact that it
seemed more pious and pleasing to the Mother of God to give Her as much glory
as possible. The striving of the people to glorify the Heavenly Intercessor,
on the one hand, and on the other hand, the deviation of Western theologians
into abstract speculations which led only to a seeming truth (Scholasticism),
and finally, the patronage of the Roman Popes after Sixtus
IV-all this led to the fact that the opinion concerning the Immaculate
Conception which had been expressed by Paschasius Radbertus in the 9th century was already the general
belief of the Latin church in the 19th century. There remained only to
proclaim this definitely as the church's teaching, which was done by the Roman
Pope Pius IX during a solemn service on December 8, 1854, when he declared
that the Immaculate Conception of the Most Holy Virgin was a dogma of the
Roman church. Thus the Roman church added yet another deviation from the
teaching which it had confessed while it was a member of the Catholic, Apostolic Church, which faith has been held up
to now unaltered and unchanged by the Orthodox Church. The proclamation of
the new dogma satisfied the broad masses of people who belonged to the Roman
church, who in simplicity of heart thought that the proclamation of the new
teaching in the church would serve for the greater glory of the Mother of
God, to Whom by this they were making a gift, as it were. There was also
satisfied the vainglory of the Western theologians who defended and worked it
out. But most of all the proclamation of the new dogma was profitable for the
Roman throne itself, since, having proclaimed the new dogma by his own
authority, even though he did listen to the opinions of the bishops of the
Catholic church, the Roman Pope by this very fact openly appropriated to
himself the right to change the teaching of the Roman church and placed his
own voice above the testimony of Sacred Scripture and Tradition. A direct
deduction from this was the fact that the Roman Popes were infallible in
matters of faith, which indeed this very same Pope Pius IX likewise
proclaimed as a dogma of the Catholic church in 1870.
Thus was the
teaching of the Western church changed after it had fallen away from
communion with the True
Church. It has introduced into itself newer and newer teachings,
thinking by this to glorify the Truth yet more, but in reality distorting it.
While the Orthodox Church humbly confesses what it has received from Christ
and the Apostles, the Roman church dares to add to it, sometimes from zeal not according to
knowledge (cf.
Rom. 10:2),
and
sometimes by deviating into superstitions and into the contradictions of
knowledge falsely so called (I Tim. 6:20). It could not be otherwise. That the gates of hell shall
not prevail against the Church (Matt. 16:18) is promised only to the
True, Universal
Church; but upon those
who have fallen away from it are fulfilled the words: As the branch cannot bear
fruit of itself, except it abide in the vine; so neither can ye, except ye
abide in Me (John 15:4).
It is true that
in the very definition of the new dogma it is said that a new teaching is not
being established,
but that there is only being proclaimed as the church's that which always
existed in the church and which has been held by many Holy Fathers, excerpts
from whose writings are cited. However, all the cited references speak only
of the exalted sanctity of the Virgin Mary and of Her immaculateness, and
give Her various names which define Her purity and spiritual might; but
nowhere is there any word of the immaculateness of Her conception. Meanwhile,
these same Holy Fathers in other places say that only Jesus Christ is
completely pure of every sin, while all men, being born of Adam, have borne a
flesh subject to the law of sin.
None of the
ancient Holy Fathers say that God in miraculous fashion purified the Virgin
Mary while yet in the womb; and many directly indicate that the Virgin Mary,
just as all men, endured a battle with sinfulness, but was victorious over
temptations and was saved by Her Divine Son.
Commentators of
the Latin confession likewise say that the Virgin Mary was saved by Christ.
But they understand this in the sense that Mary was preserved from the taint
of original sin in view of the future merits of Christ (Bull on the Dogma of
the Immaculate Conception). The Virgin Mary, according to their teaching,
received in advance, as it were, the gift which Christ brought to men by His
sufferings and death on the Cross. Moreover, speaking of the torments of the
Mother of God which She endured standing at the Cross of Her Beloved Son, and
in general of the sorrows with which the life of the Mother of God was
filled, they consider them an addition to the sufferings of Christ and
consider Mary to be our CoRedemptress.
According to the
commentary of the Latin theologians, "Mary is an associate with our
Redeemer as Co-Redemptress" (see Lebedev, op. cit. p. 273). "In the act of
Redemption, She, in a certain way, helped Christ" (Catechism of Dr.
Weimar). "The Mother of God," writes Dr. Lentz, "bore the
burden of Her martyrdom not merely courageously, but also joyfully, even
though with a broken heart" (Mariology of Dr. Lentz). For this reason,
She is "a complement of the Holy Trinity," and "just as Her Son
is the only Intermediary chosen by God between His offended majesty and
sinful men, so also, precisely, -the chief Mediatress
placed by Him between His Son and us is the Blessed Virgin." "In
three respects-as Daughter, as Mother, and as Spouse of God-the Holy Virgin
is exalted to a certain equality with the Father, to a certain superiority
over the Son, to a certain nearness to the Holy Spirit" ("The
Immaculate Conception," Malou, Bishop of Brouges).
Thus, according
to the teaching of the representatives of Latin theology, the Virgin Mary in
the work of Redemption is placed side by side with Christ Himself and is
exalted to an equality with God. One cannot go
farther than this. If all this has not been definitively formulated as a
dogma of the Roman church as yet, still the Roman Pope Pius IX, having made
the first step in this direction, has shown the direction for the further
development of the generally recognized teaching of his church, and has
indirectly confirmed the above-cited teaching about the Virgin Mary.
Thus the Roman
church, in its strivings to exalt the Most Holy Virgin, is going on the path
of complete deification of Her. And if even now its authorities call Mary a complement
of the Holy Trinity, one may soon expect that the Virgin will be revered like
God. who are building a new theological system
having as its foundation the philosophical teaching of Sophia, Wisdom, as a special
power binding the Divinity and the creation. Likewise developing the
teaching of the dignity of the Mother of God, they wish to see in Her an
Essence which is some kind of mid-point between God and man. In some
questions they are more moderate than the Latin theologians, but in others,
if you please, they have already left them behind. While denying the teaching
of the Immaculate Conception and the freedom from original sin, they still
teach Her full freedom from any personal sins, seeing in Her an Intermediary
between men and God, like Christ: in the person of Christ there has appeared
on earth the Second Person of the Holy Trinity, the Pre-eternal Word, the Son
of God; while the Holy Spirit is manifest through the Virgin Mary.
In the words of
one of the representatives of this tendency, when the Holy Spirit came to
dwell in the Virgin Mary, she acquired "a dyadic life, human and divine;
that is, She was completely deified, because in Her hypostatic being was
manifest the living, creative revelation of the Holy Spirit" (Archpriest
Sergei Bulgakov, The Unburnt
Bush, 1927,
p. 154). "She is a perfect manifestation of the Third Hypostasis"
(Ibid., p. 175), CC a creature, but also no longer a creature" (P. 19 1). This
striving towards the deification of the Mother of God is to be observed
primarily in the West, where at the same time, on the other hand, various
sects of a Protestant character are having great success, together with the
chief branches of Protestantism, Lutheranism and Calvinism, which in general
deny the veneration of the Mother of God and the calling upon Her in prayer.
But we can say
with the words of St. Epiphanius of Cyprus:
"There is an equal harm in both these heresies, both when men demean the
Virgin and when, on the contrary, they glorify Her beyond what is
proper" (Panarion, "Against the Collyridians"). This Holy Father accuses those who
give Her an almost divine worship: "Let Mary be
in honor, but let worship be given to the Lord" (same source). "Although Mary is
a chosen vessel, still she was a woman by nature, not to be distinguished at
all from others. Although the history of Mary and Tradition relate that it
was said to Her father Joachim in the desert, 'Thy wife hath conceived,'
still this was done not without marital union and not without the seed of
man" (same source). "One should not revere the saints above what is
proper, but should revere their Master. Mary is not God, and did not receive
a body from heaven, but from the joining of man and woman; and according to
the promise, like Isaac, She was prepared to take part in the Divine Economy.
But, on the other hand, let none dare foolishly to offend the Holy
Virgin" (St. Epiphanius, "Against the Antidikomarionites").
The Orthodox
Church, highly exalting the Mother of God in its hymns of praise, does not
dare to ascribe to Her that which has not been communicated about Her by
Sacred Scripture or Tradition. "Truth is foreign to all overstatements
as well as to all understatements. It gives to everything a fitting measure
and fitting place" (Bishop Ignatius Brianchaninov).
Glorifying the immaculateness of the Virgin Mary and the manful bearing of
sorrows in Her earthly life, the Fathers of the Church, on the other hand,
reject the idea that She was an intermediary between God and men in the sense
of the joint Redemption by Them of the human race. Speaking of Her
preparedness to die together with Her Son and to suffer together with Him for
the sake of the salvation of all, the renowned Father of the Western Church,
Saint Ambrose, Bishop of Milan, adds: "But the sufferings of Christ did
not need any help, as the Lord Himself prophesied concerning this long
before: I looked about, and there was none to help; I sought and there was
none to give aid. therefore My arm delivered them
(Is. 63:5)." (St. Ambrose, "Concerning the Upbringing of the Virgin and
the Ever-Virginity of Holy Mary," ch. 7).
This same Holy
Father teaches concerning the universality of original sin, from which Christ
alone is an exception. "Of all those born of women, there is not a
single one who is perfectly holy, apart from the Lord Jesus Christ, Who in a
special new way of immaculate birthgiving, did not
experience earthly taint" (St. Ambrose, Commentary on Luke, ch. 2). "God alone is
without sin. All born in the usual manner of woman and man, that is, of
fleshly union, become guilty of sin. Consequently, He Who does not have sin
was not conceived in this manner" (St. Ambrose, Ap. Aug.
"Concerning Marriage and Concupiscence"). "One Man alone, the
Intermediary between God and man, is free from the bonds of sinful birth,
because He was born of a Virgin, and because in being born He did not
experience the touch of sin" (St. Ambrose, ibid.,
Book 2: "Against Julianus").
Another
renowned teacher of the Church, especially revered in the West, Blessed
Augustine, writes: "As for other men, excluding Him Who is the cornerstone, I do not see for them any other means to
become temples of God and to be dwellings for God apart from spiritual
rebirth, which must absolutely be preceded by fleshly birth. Thus, no matter
how much we might think about children who are in the womb of the mother, and
even though the word of the holy Evangelist who says of John the Baptist that
he leaped for joy in the womb of his mother (which occurred not otherwise
than by the action of the Holy Spirit), or the word of the Lord Himself
spoken to Jeremiah: I have sanctified thee before thou didst leave the
womb of thy mother (Jer. 1:5)- no matter how much these might or
might not give us basis for thinking that children in this condition are
capable of a certain sanctification, still in any case it cannot be doubted
that the sanctification by which all of us together and each of us separately
become the temple of God is possible only for those who are reborn, and
rebirth always presupposes birth. Only those who have already been born can
be united with Christ and be in union with this Divine Body which makes His
Church the living temple of the majesty of God" (Blessed Augustine,
Letter 187).
The above-cited
words of the ancient teachers of the Church testify that in the West itself
the teaching which is now spread there was earlier rejected there. Even after
the falling away of the Western church, Bernard, who is acknowledged there as
a great authority, wrote, " I am frightened now, seeing that certain of
you have desired to change the condition of important matters, introducing a
new festival unknown to the Church, unapproved by reason, unjustified by
ancient tradition. Are we really more learned and more pious than our
fathers? You will say, 'One must glorify the Mother of God as much as
Possible.' This is true; but the glorification given to the Queen of Heaven
demands discernment. This Royal Virgin does not have need of false
glorifications, possessing as She does true crowns of glory and signs of
dignity. Glorify the purity of Her flesh and the sanctity of Her life. Marvel
at the abundance of the gifts of this Virgin; venerate Her Divine Son; exalt
Her Who conceived without knowing concupiscence and gave birth without
knowing pain. But what does one yet need to add to these dignities? People
say that one must revere the conception which preceded the glorious
birth-giving; for if the conception had not preceded,
the birth-giving also would not have been glorious. But what would one say if
anyone for the same reason should demand the same kind of veneration of the
father and mother of Holy Mary? One might equally demand the same for Her
grandparents and great-grandparents, to infinity. Moreover, how can there not
be sin in the place where there was concupiscence? All the more, let one not
say that the Holy Virgin was conceived of the Holy Spirit and not of man. I
say decisively that the Holy Spirit descended upon Her, but not that He came
with Her."
"I say that
the Virgin Mary could not be sanctified before Her conception, inasmuch as
She did not exist. if, all the more, She could not
be sanctified in the moment of Her conception by reason of the sin which is
inseparable from conception, then it remains to believe that She was
sanctified after She was conceived in the womb of Her mother. This
sanctification, if it annihilates sin, makes holy Her birth, but not Her
conception. No one is given the right to be conceived in sanctity; only the
Lord Christ was conceived of the Holy Spirit, and He alone is holy from His
very conception. Excluding Him, it is to all the descendants of Adam that
must be referred that which one of them says of himself, both out of a
feeling of humility and in acknowledgement of the truth: Behold I was conceived
in iniquities (Ps. 50:7). How can one demand that this conception be holy, when it was not the
work of the Holy Spirit, not to mention that it came from concupiscence? The
Holy Virgin, of course, rejects that glory which, evidently, glorifies sin.
She cannot in any way justify a novelty invented in spite of the teaching of
the Church, a novelty which is the mother of imprudence, the sister of
unbelief, and the daughter of lightmindedness"
(Bernard, Epistle 174; cited, as were the references from Blessed Augustine, from Lebedev). The above-cited words clearly reveal both the
novelty and the absurdity of the new dogma of the Roman church.
The teaching of the complete sinlessness
of the Mother of God (1) does not correspond to Sacred Scripture, where there
is repeatedly mentioned the sinlessness of the One Mediator between
God and man, the man Jesus Christ (I Tim. 2:5); and in Him is no sin U John 3:5); Who did no sin, neither was
guile found in His mouth (I Peter 2:22); One that hath been in all points tempted like as we
are, yet without sin (Heb. 4:15); Him Who knew no sin, He made to be sin on our behalf (II Cor. 5:2 1). But
concerning the rest of men it is said, Who is pure of defilement? No one who has
lived a single day of his life on earth (Job 14:4). God commendeth His own love toward us
in that, while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us If, while we were enemies,
we were reconciled to God through the death of His Son, much more,
being reconciled, shall we be saved by His life (Rom. 5:8-10).
(2) This teaching
contradicts also Sacred Tradition, which is contained in numerous Patristic writings, where there
is mentioned the exalted sanctity of the Virgin Mary from Her very birth, as
well as Her cleansing by the Holy Spirit at Her conception of Christ, but not
at Her own conception by Anna. "There is none without stain before Thee,
even though his life be but a day, save Thee alone, Jesus Christ our God, Who
didst appear on earth without sin, and through Whom we all trust to obtain
mercy and the remission of sins" (St. Basil the Great, Third Prayer of
Vespers of Pentecost). "But when Christ came through a pure, virginal,
unwedded, God-fearing, undefiled Mother without wedlock and without father,
and inasmuch as it befitted Him to be born, He purified the female nature,
rejected the bitter Eve and overthrew the laws of the flesh" (St. Gregory
the Theologian, "In Praise of Virginity"). However, even then, as
Sts. Basil the Great and John Chrysostom speak of this, She was not placed in
the state of being unable to sin, but continued to take care for Her
salvation and overcame all temptations (St. John Chrysostom, Commentary on John, Homily 85; St. Basil the
Great, Epistle 160).
(3) The teaching
that the Mother of God was purified before Her birth, so that from Her might
be born the Pure Christ, is meaningless; because if the Pure Christ could be
born only if the Virgin might be born pure, it would be necessary that Her
parents also should be pure of original sin, and they again would have to be
born of purified parents, and going further in this way, one would have to
come to the conclusion that Christ could not have become incarnate unless all
His ancestors in the flesh, right up to Adam inclusive, had been purified beforehand of original sin. But then
there would not have been any need for the very Incarnation of Christ, since
Christ came down to earth in order to annihilate sin.
(4) The teaching
that the Mother of God was preserved from original sin, as likewise the
teaching that She was preserved by God's grace from personal sins, makes God unmerciful
and unjust; because if God could preserve Mary from sin and purify Her
before Her birth, then why does He not purify other men before their birth,
but rather leaves them in sin? It follows likewise that God saves men apart
from their will, predetermining certain ones before their birth to salvation.
(5)
This teaching, which seemingly has the aim of exalting the Mother of God, in
reality completely denies all Her virtues. After all, if Mary, even in the womb of Her
mother, when She could not even desire anything either good
or evil, was preserved by God's grace from every impurity, and then by
that grace was preserved from sin even after Her birth, then in what does Her
merit consist? If She could have been placed in the state of being unable to
sin, and did not sin, then for what did God glorify Her? if
She, without any effort, and without having any kind of impulses to sin,
remained pure, then why is She crowned more than everyone else? There is no
victory without an adversary.
The righteousness
and sanctity of the Virgin Mary were manifested in the fact that She, being
"human with passions like us," so loved God and gave Herself over
to Him, that by Her purity She was exalted high above the rest of the human
race. For this, having been foreknown and forechosen,
She was vouchsafed to be purified by the Holy Spirit Who came upon Her, and
to conceive of Him the very Saviour of the world. The teaching
of the grace-given sinlessness of the Virgin Mary
denies Her victory over temptations; from a victor who is worthy to be
crowned with crowns of glory, this makes Her a blind instrument of God's Providence.
It is not an exaltation and greater glory, but a belittlement of Her, this
"gift" which was given Her by Pope Pius IX and all the rest who
think they can glorify the Mother of God by seeking out new truths. The Most Holy Mary has been so
much glorified by God Himself, so exalted is Her life on earth and Her glory
in heaven, that human inventions cannot add anything to Her honor and glory.
That which people themselves invent only obscures Her Face from their eyes. Brethren, take heed
lest there shall be any one that maketh spoil of
you through philosophy and vain deceit, after the tradition of men, after the
rudiments of the world, and not after Christ, wrote the Apostle Paul by
the Holy Spirit (Col. 2:8).
Such a "vain
deceit" is the teaching of the Immaculate Conception by Anna of the Virgin Mary, which at
first sight exalts, but in actual fact belittles Her. Like every lie, it is a
seed of
the
"father of lies" (John 8:44), the devil, who has succeeded by it in
blaspheme the Virgin Mary. Together
with it there should also be rejected all the other teachings which have come
from it or are akin to it. The striving to exalt the Most Holy Virgin to an
equality with Christ ascribing to Her maternal tortures at the Cross an equal
significance with the sufferings of Christ, so that the Redeemer and "Co-Redemptress"
suffered equally, according to the teaching of the Papists, or that "the
human nature of the Mother of God in heaven together with the God-Man Jesus jointly reveal the
full image of man" (Archpriest S. Bulgakov, The Unburnt
Bush, p. 141)-is likewise a vain deceit and a seduction of philosophy. In Christ
Jesus there
is neither male nor female (Gal. 3:28), and Christ has redeemed the whole human race; therefore
at His Resurrection equally did "Adam dance for joy and Eve
rejoice" (Sunday Kontakia of the First and Third
Tones), and by His Ascension did the Lord raise up the whole of human nature.
Likewise, that
the Mother of God is a "complement of the Holy Trinity" or a "fourth
Hypostasis"; that "the Son and the Mother are a revelation of the Father through the
Second and Third Hypostases"; that the Virgin Mary is "a creature,
but also no longer a creature"-all this is the fruit of vain, false
wisdom which is not satisfied with what the Church has held from the time of
the Apostles, but strives to glorify the Holy Virgin more than God has
glorified Her.
Thus are the
words of
St. Epiphanius of Cyprus fulfilled: "Certain senseless ones in their opinion
about the Holy EverVirgin have striven and are
striving to put Her in place of God" (St. Epiphanius,
"Against the Antidikomarionites"). But
that which is offered to the Virgin in senselessness, instead of praise of Her, turns out to be
blasphemy; and the All-Immaculate One rejects the lie, being the Mother of Truth (John 14:6).
The Orthodox Veneration of The Mother of God

THE ORTHODOX CHURCH teaches about the Mother of God
that which Sacred Tradition and Sacred Scripture have informed concerning
Her, and daily it glorifies Her in its temples, asking Her help and defense.
Knowing that She is pleased only by those praises which correspond to Her
actual glory, the Holy Fathers and hymn-writers have entreated Her and Her
Son to teach them how to hymn Her. "Set a rampart about my mind, 0 my
Christ, for I make bold to sing the praise of Thy pure Mother" (Ikos of the Dormition).
"The Church teaches that Christ was truly born of Mary the
Ever-Virgin" (St. Epiphanius, "True Word
Concerning the Faith"). "It is essential for us to confess that the
Holy Ever-Virgin Mary is actually Theotokos
(Birth-giver of God), so as not to fall into blasphemy. For those who deny that
the Holy Virgin is actually Theotokos are no longer
believers, but disciples of the Pharisees and Sadducees" (St. Ephraim
the Syrian,"To John the Monk").
From Tradition it
is known that Mary was the daughter of the aged Joachim and Anna, and that Joachim
descended from the royal line of David, and Anna from the priestly line.
Notwithstanding such a noble origin, they were poor. However, it was not this
that saddened these righteous ones, but rather the fact that they did not
have children and could not hope that their descendants would see the
Messiah. And behold, when once, being disdained by the Hebrews for their
barrenness, they both in grief of soul were offering up prayers to GodJoachim on a mountain to which he had retired after
the priest did not want to offer his sacrifice in the Temple, and Anna in her
own garden weeping over her barrenness-there appeared to them an angel who
informed them that they would bring forth a daughter. Overjoyed, they
promised to consecrate their child to God.
In nine months a
daughter was born to them, called Mary, Who from Her early childhood
manifested the best qualities of soul. When She was three years old, her
parents, fulfilling their promise, solemnly led the little Mary to the Temple
of Jerusalem; She Herself ascended the high steps and, by revelation from
God, She was led into the very Holy of Holies, by the High Priest who met
Her, taking with Her the grace of God which rested upon Her into the Temple
which until then had been without grace. (See the Kontakion
of the Entry into the Temple.
This was the newly-built Temple into which the
glory of God had not descended as it had upon the Ark
or upon the Temple
of Solomon.) She was
settled in the quarters for virgins which existed in
the Temple,
but She spent so much time in prayer in the Holy of Holies that one might say
that She lived in it. (Service to the Entry, second sticheron
on Lord, I have cried,
and the "Glory, Both
Now...") Being adorned with all virtues, She manifested an example of
extraordinarily pure life. Being submissive and obedient to all, She offended
no one, said no crude word to anyone, was friendly to all, and did not allow
any unclean thought. (Abridged from St. Ambrose of Milan, "Concerning the Ever-Virginity
of the Virgin Mary.")
"Despite the
righteousness and the immaculateness of the life which the Mother of God led,
sin and eternal death manifested their presence
in Her. They could not but be manifested: Such is the precise and faithful
teaching of the Orthodox Church concerning the Mother of God with relation to
original sin and death." (Bishop Ignatius Brianchaninov,
"Exposition of the Teaching of the Orthodox Church on the Mother of
God.") "A stranger to any fall into sin" (St. Ambrose of Milan, Commentary on the I I 8th Psalm), "She
was not a stranger to sinful temptations." "God alone is without
sin" (St. Ambrose, same source), "while man will always have in
himself something yet needing correction and perfection in order to fulfill
the commandment of God; Be ye holy as I the Lord your God am Holy (Leviticus
19:2). The more pure and perfect one is, the more he notices his
imperfections and considers himself all the more unworthy.
The Virgin
Mary, having given Herself entirely up to God, even though She repulsed from
Herself every impulse to sin, still felt the weakness of human nature more
powerfully than others and ardently desired the coming of the Saviour. In Her humility She considered Herself unworthy
to be even the servant-girl of the Virgin Who was to give Him birth. So that
nothing might distract Her from prayer and heedfulness to Herself, Mary gave
to God a vow not to become married, in order to please only Him Her whole
life long. Being betrothed to the elderly Joseph when Her age no longer,
allowed Her to remain in the Temple, She
settled in his house in Nazareth.
Here the Virgin was vouchsafed the coming of the Archangel Gabriel, who
brought Her the good tidings of the birth, from Her of the Son of the Most
High.
Hail,
Thou that art full
of grace, the Lord is with Thee. Blessed art thou among women ... The Holy
Spirit shall come upon thee, and the power of the
Most High shall overshadow thee. wherefore also that
which is to be born shall be holy, and shall be called the Son of God (Luke
1:28-35).
Mary
received the angelic good tidings humbly and submissively. "Then the
Word, in a way known to Himself, descended and, as He Himself willed, came
and entered into Mary and abode in Her" (St. Ephraim the Syrian,
"Praise of the Mother of God"). "As lightning illuminates what
is hidden, so also Christ purifies what is hidden in the nature of things. He
purified the Virgin also and then was born, so as to show that where Christ
is, there is manifest purity in all its power. He purified the Virgin, having
prepared Her by the Holy Spirit, and then the womb, having become pure,
conceived Him. He purified the Virgin while She was inviolate; wherefore,
having been born, He left Her virgin. I do not say that Mary became immortal,
but that being illuminated by grace, She was not disturbed by sinful
desires" (St. Ephraim the Syrian, Homily Against Heretics, 41). "The Light abode in
Her, cleansed Her mind, made Her thoughts pure, made chaste Her concerns,
sanctified Her virginity" (St. Ephraim the Syrian, "Mary and
Eve"). "One who was pure according to human understanding, He made
pure by grace" (Bishop Ignatius Brianchaninov,
"Exposition of the Teaching of the Orthodox Church on the Mother of
God").
Mary told no one
of the appearance of the angel, but the angel himself revealed to Joseph concerning
Mary's miraculous conception from the Holy Spirit (Matt. 1: 18-25); and after the Nativity of Christ, with
a multitude of the heavenly host, he announced it to the shepherds. The
shepherds, coming to worship the new-born one, said that they had heard of
Him. Having previously endured suspicion in silence, Mary now also listened
in silence and kept in Her heart the sayings concerning the greatness of Her Son (Luke 2:8-19). She heard forty days
later Symeon's prayer of praise and the prophecy
concerning the weapon which would pierce Her soul. Later She saw how Jesus
advanced in wisdom; She heard Him at the age of twelve teaching in the Temple, and everything
She kept
in Her heart (Luke 2:21-5 1). Even though full of grace, She did not yet fully understand in
what the service and the greatness of Her Son would consist The Hebrew
conceptions of the Messiah were still close to Her, and natural feelings
forced Her to be concerned for Him, preserving Him from labors and dangers
which it might seem, were excessive. Therefore She favored Her Son
involuntarily at first, which evoked His indication of the superiority of
spiritual to bodily kinship (Matt. 12:46-49). "He had concern also
over the honor of His Mother, but much more over the salvation of Her soul and
the good of men, for which He had become clothed in the flesh" (St. John
Chrysostom, Commentary on John, Homily 2 1). Mary understood this and heard the word of God
and kept it (Luke 11:27, 28). As no other person) She had the same feelings as Christ (Phil. 2:5), unmurmuringly bearing the grief of a
mother when She saw Her Son persecuted and suffering. Rejoicing in the day of
the Resurrection, on the day of Pentecost She was clothed with power from on high (Luke 24:49). The Holy Spirit Who
descended upon Her taught (Her) all things (John 14:26), and instructed (Her) in all truth (John 16:13). Being enlightened, She began
to labor all the more zealously to perform what She had heard from Her Son
and Redeemer, so as to ascend to Him and to be with Him.
The end of the
earthly life of the Most Holy Mother of God was the beginning of Her
greatness. "Being adorned with Divine glory" (Irmos
of the Canon of the Dormition), She stands and will
stand, both in the day of the Last Judgment and in the future age, at the
right hand of the throne of Her Son. She reigns with Him and has boldness
towards Him as His Mother according to the flesh, and as one in spirit with
Him, as one who performed the will of God and instructed others (Matt. 5:19). Merciful and full of love,
She manifests Her love towards Her Son and God in love for the human race.
She intercedes for it before the Merciful One, and going about the earth, She
helps men. Having experienced all the difficulties of earthly life, the
Intercessor of the Christian race sees every tear, hears every groan and
entreaty directed to Her. Especially near to Her are those who labor in the
battle with the passions and are zealous for a God-pleasing life. But even in
worldly cares She is an irreplaceable helper. "Joy of all who sorrow and
intercessor for the offended, feeder of the hungry, consolation of travellers, harbor of the storm-tossed, visitation of the
sick, protection and intercessor for the infirm, staff of old age, Thou art
the Mother of God on high, 0 Most Pure One" (Sticheron
of the Service to the Hodigitria). "The hope
and intercession and refuge of Christians," "The Mother of God
unceasing in prayers" (Kontakion of Dormition), "saving the world by Thine
unceasing prayer" (Theotokion of the Third
Tone). "She day and night doth pray for us, and the scepters of kingdoms
are confirmed by Her prayers" (daily Nocturne).
There is no
intellect or words to express the greatness of Her Who was born in the sinful
human race but became "more honorable than the Cherubim and beyond
compare more glorious than the Seraphim." "Seeing the grace of the
secret mysteries of God made manifest and clearly fulfilled in the Virgin, I
rejoice; and I know not how to understand the strange and secret manner
whereby the Undefiled has been revealed as alone chosen above all creation,
visible and spiritual. Therefore, wishing to praise Her, I am struck dumb
with amazement in both mind and speech. Yet still I dare to proclaim and
magnify Her: She is indeed the heavenly Tabernacle" (Ikos
of the Entry into the Temple).
"Every tongue is at a loss to praise Thee as is due; even a spirit from
the world above is filled with dizziness, when it seeks to sing Thy praises,
0 Theotokos. But since Thou art good, accept our
faith. Thou knowest well our love inspired by God,
for Thou art the Protector of Christians, and we magnify Thee" (Irmos of the 9th Canticle, Service of the Theophany).
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