Spiritual Deception - ”Taking Stock of our Struggle”
The issue of spiritual deception is a most important one for
those who seek union with God. We are engaged in a spiritual struggle in
a world that is oriented to deceive us, convincing us that there is not really
a struggle.
Without a doubt, the overriding spiritual challenge we all
face today is one of misplaced goals based on a limited vision embedded in the
norms of our secular society. What we seem to be seeking is
self-satisfaction. We attend seminars, watch TV shows, surf internet
sites, and read books to examine ourselves, but for what purpose? To
discover how to be happy and content with ourselves. Is this not
true? We are constantly encouraged to examine ourselves, to become our
“true” self. We live in a world where the primary focus is on ourselves
and our self-evaluation of our well being. This focus is based in large part on
the “simplistic belief that one can be whatever one wishes to be, however one
wishes to be it, so long as one does not harm others.”
The “goal of all our self-examination seems to be the
discovery of the “me” with whom to be happy and satisfied.” This orientation is
also embedded in the New Age and self-help movement. “These programs
still orbit around the central point of self-satisfaction and contentment with
the true self…. often times they do involve calls to change and
transformation…” They “espouse a certain nuance: that between false
self-love and true self-love, with one being bound by flaws and problems, and
the other being authentic and exalted…” We experience a “direct call for
self-assessment and change so that the false self being lived at present… can
be shed in favor of the true self, which is the ready object of love….” The
“true self one aims to discover and love through shedding such false
selves is still one defined by one’s will and desires….” The “root of both is
the same: satisfaction gained through contentment in self, as defined by the
self.”
This ongoing quest of self-satisfaction is the result of a
secular world view where “one sees the world, and the human life within it,
primarily or wholly, in terms of “the ‘things of this age’––of worldly visions
separated from the theological vision of the Church” that that aims at God’s
Kingdom. The current world “ ...sees sin more and more as an outdated
conviction of moral behavior; demons as old-fashioned…” We “describe that the
world one knows to be simply psychological factors; heaven and hell as outmoded
myths aimed at enforcing moral codes….” We deny the demonic forces that are at
play.
We fail to generally recognize that the “world is the work
of a Creator, that it is the venue of growth for a creature who has an opponent
in that growth, that it is moving toward judgment, redemption and
renewal. Without these things, the impetus for a call to genuine change
into the sanctifying life of the Creator is easily lost…. This mentality is a
deception and a trap to the Christian.”
Saint Basil the Great warns us as follows:
Be attentive to yourself (Deut. 15:9). That
is, observe yourself carefully from every side. Let the eye of your soul
be sleepless to guard you. You walk in the midst of snares (cf. Sirach 9:13). Hidden
traps have been set by the enemy in many places. therefore observe
everything, that you may be saved like a gazelle from traps and like a bird
from snares (Prov.
6:5)
In today's world, “The overarching goal is the now.
The human person is to instigate whatever helps, whatever modifications to his
life and lifestyle may bring about a deeper satisfaction with whom and what he
is. He is charged not to become something else (except inasmuch as he may
be prompted to shed certain attributes which keep him from being who he really
is at his core), but to become happy with the self that currently lies hidden.”
Wait a minute. What is the focus of the life of a
Christian supposed to be. Is it this preoccupation with the self?
Is life about self-satisfaction? No!
“How far this is from Christian calling!… Christianity is a
life rooted in Christ’s own. Its charge is not to live for self but to
live for Christ; and its goal is not satisfaction but transformation. The
Christian is called to become, to enter into a newness of life that is
another’s––that is Christ’s. He is to discover the “self” of his current
existence, precisely so that he can work to change it into a life not defined
by his will, but defined and made real by another––by God Himself. The
life in Christ is a life of transformation into a New Person. It is a
life that works toward resurrection, when the body of this death shall pass
away (cf. Rom 7:24) and the glorified man will know the Lord of glory.”
The Christian task is not to simply engage in
self-examination for the purpose of self-satisfaction, but to struggle against
the forces of evil, engaging in spiritual warfare as the Apostle Paul
frequently says. But, by today’s view, this struggle is not real. It is
seen as delusional. How often do we discuss our struggle with evil forces? How
often, outside of a sermon on Sunday, do we think about the self-sacrifice
demanded of us for our salvation, or our true aim to be united with Christ in
eternal life? Instead, in many ways, we are told over and over to forget the
archaic ideas the Church teaches, but to think for ourselves and get rid of these
outdated foolish notions the church says are truths. After all, we are
told, they are only ideas imposed on us by organizations that want to control
us. By Christians standards, this way of thinking says the devil has already
won the battle. The effect is we are no longer willing to engage in the
spiritual battle. We forsake our ascetical disciplines of old and instead
follow the doctrine of self-satisfaction.
We must wake up! The spiritual struggle is real. It is
central to our Christian teachings. We need to refocus our vision from the
pleasures of this world to God’s Kingdom and economy. After all the Lord
told us clearly, “Seek first the Kingdom of God and His righteousness, and
all these things be added unto you (Matt
6:33).
Saint John Chrysostom writes,
[The Lord] came to do away with the
old things, and to call us to a greater country. therefore he does all,
to deliver us from things unnecessary, and from our affection of the
earth. For this cause He mentioned the heathens also saying that the
Gentiles seek after these things (Matt 6:32)––they whose whole labor is for the
present life, who have no regard for the things to come, or any thought of
heaven. But to you the chief things are not these which are present, but
other than these. For we were not born for this end, that we should eat
and drink and be clothed, but that we might please God, and attain unto the
good things to come. Therefore as things here are secondary in our labor,
so also in our prayer let them be secondary. Therefore He also said, Seek
the Kingdom of Heaven and all these thing shall be added unto you.”
“If we are to struggle authentically toward our
sanctification and redemption, this orientation toward and into the Kingdom
must become paramount in us. Every act must be considered from the
perspective of that future life and its attainment. When we do not act in
such a way, we reduce our choices and our behaviors to the limited perspective
of this brief sojourn. Rather than see the context of our behaviors, actions,
and decision as the eternal life of God’s abiding Kingdom, we see it as the
short span of this life, and adjust or whole vision and wold view accordingly.”
Saint Innocent of Alaska says
Jesus Christ, the Son of God, came
to this earth in order to return to us our lost capacity to spend eternity in
the blissful presence of God. He revealed to people that all their evil
lies in sin and that no one through their own efforts can overcome the evil within
themselves and attain communion with God. Sin, ingrained in our nature
since the fall, stands between us and God like a high wall. If the Son of
God had not descended to us through His mercy for us, had not taken on our
human nature, and had not by His death conquered sin, all mankind wold
have perished for ever! Now, thanks to Him, those who wish to
cleanse themselves from evil can do so and return to God and obtain eternal
bliss in the Kingdom of Heave.
Now what is this sinfulness we face? It is this
self-centered outlook we have where we seek only self-satisfaction and
determine our moral standards based on our own internal views. We have
made ourselves into little gods where we set our own moral standards to fit
with our own self-determined ideas. We ignore God, his teachings as
revealed to us and as taught by the Church. We have forgotten that we are
called to surrender to God, to give up our self-centeredness, to do as the
Lords’ s prayer says, “Thy will be done on earth as it is in Heaven.”
This involves a struggle against evil forces. These forces are real. To
combat them we need the help from God. We need the help and assistance which
can only be found in the Church.
If we can recognize our sinfulness “our life can be offered more
wholly to the Lord, Who will make our lives His own. Self-will can be
gradually overcome, so that we begin more fully to live that reality o identity
in Christ which His own prayer proclaims: that we cry, “Our Father,” as, by
nature, only His Son can do. This is what it means for man to live in
Christ. He is born up in Christ’s life, through union with Him made a
child of the Father. … Chris leads us our of separation
from God, away from a “self” defined by our will and passions, into a new life
that is the work of His hands, the fruit of His will, the created glory
of His eternally, unending and glorious life.”
From he Orthodox Word, #263 published by the St. Herman of Alaska Brotherhood
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