Putting on the mind of Christ
Garvey, John
OF SEVERAL MINDS JOHN GARVEY PUTTING ON THE MIND OF CHRIST It's very scary A few Sundays ago the Gospel reading in the Orthodox church was Matthew's story of the encounter of the rich young man...
...Like "the sins of the fathers are visited on the children," it is not about God's sense of justice...
...Of course, it is our faith that Jesus' death has overcome death itself, that we do not leave those we have loved, that death does not cancel us...
...Philippians 2:5-7) Richness in the form of possessions is in this context a metaphor, and more than a metaphor...
...This idea-that we are called to become divine-means in the context of Christianity that we are to empty ourselves, as Christ did...
...This doctrine of deification is central to Orthodoxy, and to the mysticism of the West (for example, in The Cloud of Unknowing, the Letter of Private Direction, and the writings of Saint John of the Cross...
...To be rich is not only to have more than you need, it is to hold on to that which makes you secure...
...When the young man says that he has kept the Commandments, even that hardest one, we have no reason to think he was not telling the absolute truth...
...That's the only note of hope here, or for that matter anywhere...
...When Jesus says "take up your cross" the implication is that the cross will be there whether we take it up or not...
...It isn't possible for men, Jesus says, but with God all things are possible...
...And we do in fact use physical possessions in the same way...
...In this sense they are both metaphorical and more than metaphorical...
...When you see people at the edge of death you understand that there is little you can do for them...
...After all, the young man can be saved simply by keeping the Commandments...
...How will we deal with it...
...The person who holds on to any self-image, any sense of personal importance, or is pleased to be a CEO, a bishop, or a well-regarded poet, is holding on to a kind of wealth...
...but he has to go farther to become perfect...
...Riches represent the attempt we make never to come to this moment...
...Jesus tells him that to be saved he must keep the Commandments, including the most difficult one of all, "You shall love your neighbor as yourself...
...It is entirely natural to fear all of this, and it seems foolhardy to think of abandoning it all, in the hope that God will take care of you...
...The subversive thing about Christianity is that there is no point at which we could really know that we have given it all up...
...Jesus revealed what we are to be...
...This is followed by the statement that it is hard for the rich to enter the kingdom of heaven, though with God all things are possible...
...I think this misses the point, which is a somewhat frightening one...
...This passage has often been used to make a distinction between the life of the ordinary Christian and the life of the committed ascetic...
...and come, follow me...
...What is increasingly clear to me is that whether we choose to give it all up or not, it will all be taken from us anyway...
...We are left as the disciples were when they asked, "Who then can be saved...
...Jesus' prayer in Gethsemane, said when he was "greatly distressed and troubled," should make it clear that we cannot expect to meet this moment without difficulty...
...They are metaphorical in that they need not be possessions...
...though he is divine by nature, we become divine by adoption...
...You have nothing between you and hunger, between you and illness, between you and death...
...What happens if you sell everything you have...
...Saint Athanasius said that God became human so that human beings might become God...
...We will be crucified in any event...
...All of these things distract us from something absolutely unavoidable...
...But finally it is about a kind of law that obtains in the fallen world...
...In fact the rich try to hold on to something that cannot really be held on to, and if we need to empty ourselves in order to be like the one who assumed our nature so that we could assume his, that grasping will keep us from being able to join him...
...OF SEVERAL MINDS JOHN GARVEY PUTTING ON THE MIND OF CHRIST It's very scary A few Sundays ago the Gospel reading in the Orthodox church was Matthew's story of the encounter of the rich young man with Jesus...
...You can bring them what the church has to bring-the sacraments, Scripture, words of consolation that often seem, in context, pretty hollow- because the dying person knows that you have not been where she is, which is to say the place where you lose everything you have ever known and leave everyone you have loved...
...I had always thought of the passage about the rich young man as having something to do with Christian ethics, the relationship between rich and poor, and of course this is also present in the passage...
...Asceticism is certainly involved here, but it is not seen as a special vocation, and deification is seen as the state to which all are called, a complete restoration of the communion with God which is broken by sin...
...To be divine, in Christian terms, means that (in Saint Paul's words) we must "have this mind among ourselves, which is yours in Christ Jesus, who though he was in the form of God, did not count equality with God a thing to be grasped, but emptied himself...
...Jesus then tells him, "If you would be perfect, sell what you possess, give it to the poor, and you will have treasure in heaven...
...But having that faith, feeling it when confronted with death is, to put it mildly, no easy thing...
...it is simply a fact...
Vol. 122 • October 1995 • No. 17