Monday, May 19, 2014

SACRAMENTAL THEOLOGY OF THE SYRIAN ORTHODOX CHURCH

SACRAMENTAL THEOLOGY OF THE SYRIAN ORTHODOX CHURCH
                                               (Revd.Dr.B.Varghese)                                           

The word mysterion
                   The liturgical celebrations known as ‘sacraments’ in modern languages are called ta mysteria (=mysteries) in Greek or roze (=mysteries) in Syriac. The corresponding Hebrew word is sodh, which has been rendered as mysterion  in the Septuagint. The Hebrew word sodh means secret or confidential speech or an intimate conversation between God and man or between man and man.  Sodh also refers to the ‘heavenly assembly’ where decisions and decrees concerning the destiny of ma are made. Prophets are admitted to this secret heavenly assembly to hear its decrees. Thus sodh conveys the notion of intimate friendship and corporate existence.
              The corresponding Aramaic word is rash, a Persian loan word, which appeared first  in the Aramaic sections of the Book of Daniel, and rendered into Greek as mysterion.(Dan. 2:18; 27; 28; 29; 30; 47 etc).  In Daniel, rash is the secret meaning of a dream that God reveals to Daniel. It is an eschatological mystery, a veiled announcement of future events, pre-destined by God, hose unveiling and real meaning are reserved to God alone and one who is inspired by God.
               In the Wisdom of Solomon (2:22),  the expression   secret purposes of God “ refers to the saving designs of God, and idea reflected in the New Testament. The Old Testament ideas associated to sodh or rash  were influential in shaping the New testament concept of mystery.
                  In the New Testament, mysterion (rozo) refers to the nature and experience of the Kingdom of God, which is above all a corporate existence. Togetherness in Christ.  However, the reality of this life with God is manifested only to those who are redeemed in Christ; and to those who are outside of Christ, it still remains as a mystery: “ To you has been given the mystery of the kingdom of God, for those outside everything in parables “ (Mk. 4:11; cfr. Lk. 8:10; Math 13:11).
 St Paul uses the word more than 20 times and three texts are representative: Rom. 16:25-26; Eph. 1:9-10; Col. 1:10.
(1). The revelation of the mystery which was kept secret for long ages, but is now disclosed, and through the prophetic writings, is made known to all nations (Rom. 16:25-26).
(2). ‘For he has made known to us in all wisdom and insight the mystery of his will, according to his purpose which he set forth in Christ as plan for the fullness of time to unite all things in him, things in heaven and things on earth’ (Eph. 1:9-10).
(3). ‘The mystery hidden for ages and generations, but now made manifest to his saints’ (Col. 1:26).
            Thus for Paul, ‘mystery’ refers to God’s plan ‘hidden for ages and generations, but now made manifest to his saints. The mystery consists of God’s will revealed in Christ, ‘to unite all things in him’ (Eph 1:9-10).  Thus mysterion refers to God’s plan for man’s salvation as well as its revelation.
             Mystery in New Testament expresses the ‘drama of redemption’, ‘the drama of truth’, to use the words of Clement of Alexandria. The apostles are “the ministers of Christ and stewards of the mysteries of God” (1 Cor. 4:1), because through the preaching of the Gospel and celebration of the mysteries of the Eucharist and baptism, they continue the ministry of  Christ, that is, bringing humanity into one community.
             Mystery implies an intimate union with Christ. Thus in Ephesians(5:32), it has been used to designate the intimacy of the relationship between Christ and the Church.
Mysterion – Sacramentum
              In the Latin Vulgate, the word  sacramentum is used to translate ‘mysterion’. The Latin word sacramentum is derived from sacrare (= to dedicate or sanctify). With its meaning “to dedicate” it came to be used to mean ‘an oath’. Thus the oath taken by soldiers was designated as sacramentum, as they called upon gods in binding themselves to service.
            Tertullian was the first to use it for Christian rites and applying it to the Christian’s oath of Baptism, by which he becomes a soldiers of Christ. [Tertullian understood the meaning of baptism in terms of a military oath.].
             The Indo-European root s-kar implies the idea of bringing something to perfection, especially by performing a ritual act. Thus the Sanskrit word samskara (root: s-kar)  means ‘bringing to perfection. It is interesting to note that Pseudo-Dionysius Areopagite (c.500) spoke of mysteria as ‘perfections’ (telotys).
             However, it is to noted that the Latin word sacramentum does not convey the rich meaning of the Greek mysterion or the Syriac rozo.
Definition of the ‘Sacrament’
              No definition of the concept of mysterion or sacrament is found in the early Chrristian writings. None of the     Ecumenical Councils had provided a definition. In the Malankara Orthodox Church, Vattasseril Geevarghese Mar Dionysius   gives the following definition: Sacraments are visible signs of invisible grace’ instituted by Christ for the salvation of humanity (Mathopadesha Sangathikal : ‘Elements of the Religious Teachings’). As this booklet was used as a catechism in the Malankara Church for a few decades, this definition had taken deep roots in the minds of the bishops, clergy and the lay people until a few years ago. This definition was certainly borrowed from the Anglican Book of Common Prayer (BCP). In fact we find the following definition in the BCP: “Sacrament is a outward and visible sign of an inward and spiritual grace given unto us, ordained by Christ himself, as a means whereby we receive the same and a pledge to assure us thereof”.
             This definition of Latin origin, could be traced back to Augustine, who defined sacrament as ‘visible sign of invisible grace’ (signum visible gratiae invisibilis). Augustine’s idea of sacrament includes Creed and the Lord’s Prayer.  The scholastic definition of sacraments always revolves around the words  ‘sign’ and  ‘grace’.
Syriac tradition
             In the east, one cannot find a clear and systematic definition of ‘sacrament’ as in the West. Since the sacraments are divine mysteries, the Eastern Church fathers preferred to abstain from giving any rational definition. In their understanding, sacrament is not a ‘thing’, but it is primarily an act, a celebration. It is a liturgical celebration or a liturgical act of the Body of Christ.
               The Syriac word rozo does not mean merely a ‘mystery’ or a hidden thing. Its root raz means ‘to celebrate’, ‘to symbolize’. A sacrament is a ‘celebration’ or a ‘symbolization’ of a hidden and invisible reality. The anamnesis of the Anaphora of Mathew the Shepherd (Mathai Royo) reads: “ Whenever you celebrate (ܡܬܐܪܙܝܢ ܐܢܬܘܢ ) these (mysteries), you perform the remembrance of my death and resurrection”.
                 A Sacrament is the celebration of the mystery of the death and resurrection of our Lord. It is celebration of our salvation in Christ. A prayer of the benediction of the baptismal water provides another example of the use of the word raz:
ܚܘܐ ܐܢܘܢ.... ܡܝ̈ܐ ܕܡܬܐܪܙܝܢ ܒܡܘܬܗ ܘܩܝܡܬܗ ܕܝܚܝܕܝܐ ܒܪܐ ܕܝܠܟ.
“Show forth this water, that which symbolizes the death and resurrection of your only-begotten Son”.
             In the sacrament, Church, the body of Christ, symbolizes or re-presents the death and resurrection of our Lord. The mysteria  or sacraments are ‘symbols’ (raze) that represent realities. The celebration or ‘the showing forth’ is the sacrament, not the elements, though the elements are an integral part of the mystery. Sacraments are corporate liturgical acts of the Body of Christ. Rozo (mysterion) is primarily an act of Christ through His Body, the Church. It is a ‘symbolic act’ of the Body of Christ.
             For the Church fathers, each mysterion is a reflection of the prototype; it is an antitype. Through the antitype we gaze upon and experience the prototype, the divine realities, which are otherwise beyond sensual perception . Thus St John Chrysostom says: “ This is called a mystery, because we look at one thing and believe another” (Hom. On 1 Cor. 7:1).
                 A Sacrament is the re-presentation of an eschatological reality in time and space. Theodore of Mopsuestia (+428) underscores the eschatological dimension of a sacrament.
“Every sacrament (rozo) is an indication in signs (othwotho) and symbols (roze) of invisible and ineffable things” (Hom. 12,2: On Baptism).
Again Theodore says: “ In the sacrament (rozo), there are the signs of things which already happened and those which will happen” (Hom. 12:1, On Baptism).
A sacramental celebration is rooted in the incarnation, death and resurrection of our Lord. At the same time it is oriented towards the future; towards its fulfillment in the coming Kingdom of God. The incomprehensible and ineffable mystery of the incarnation is re-presented and celebrated in a sacrament. In a sacramental celebration, we are either initiated into that mystery or we participate in it.
                  The great mystery of our incorporation into Christ and our participation in the death and resurrection of Christ are expressed through baptism. The baptismal water is manifested as the tomb in which the old man of sin dies and is buried, and the tomb from which the new man is risen. The baptismal water becomes the womb from which we are ‘born from water and spirit’. Through Chrismation, we participate in the anointing of Christ and we receive the Holy Spirit as our own anointing. Baptism and the Eucharist are the sacraments which manifests our participation in the life of Christ and our abiding in Christ.
                Church itself is the manifestation of the kingdom of God. The Foretaste of the life in the kingdom is made available in the sacraments . Our oneness in Christ, the life of the new man, Christified and pneumatized is experienced in the sacramental celebrations. In the sacramental celebration we see everything in relation to our ultimate destiny, our life with and in the presence of the Triune God.
                Sacraments represent twofold movement between God and man. In the Church, the Body of Christ, through the Sacraments, our human nature enters into a union with the divine nature. They are divino-human actions which transform and purifies our human nature.
               The Orthodox Church always emphasizes the centrality of the Eucharist. Dionysius the Areopagite says, it is “the sacrament of the sacraments”, because all other sacraments are celebrated in the Eucharistic context.
                  Church as the Body of Christ, shares in the mystery of God. Therefore the mystery of God is manifested in every aspect of the life of the Church.. Sacraments are the manifestations of the unique mystery of the Church, in which God shares divine life with humanity, redeeming man from sin and death and bestowing upon him the glory of immortality.
                 Sacramentality cannot be limited to some special liturgical acts. Worship itself is a sacramental act. Every aspect in the life of the Church, manifests the unique mystery of Christ. It is because of this broader understanding of the sacramentality that the Orthodox Church is reluctant to limit the number of sacraments to seven.
Number of Sacraments in the East
                   In the Patristic period, there was no technical term to designate ‘sacraments’ as a specific category of Church acts. The term mysterion was used primarily in the wider and general sense of mystery of salvation. Only in a secondary manner, this term was used to designate the particular actions which bestow salvation. In this secondary sense, it was used concurrently with such terms as ‘rites’ or ‘sanctification’. However, the term was never used a limited number of rites (‘seven ‘sacraments’, for example).  The noted Byzantine scholar Timothy Ware (Bishop Kallistos Ware) has rightly noted: “ The Orthodox Church never formally committed itsef to any strict limitation of the number of sacraments”.
                   It was the Latin West that first limited the number of Sacraments to seven. This was mainly because of historical and theological reasons. The Scholastic theologians suggested various lists of sacraments, often disregarding the liturgical context in which the sacraments are celebrated. Under the influence of the Medieval fascination for symbolic numbers, leading scholastic theologians argued for a list of seven sacraments, which was finally accepted by the Council of Trent (1545-675). The concerns of the Council of Trent was to counter the theological issues raised by the Protestant Reformers, who generally accepted only Baptism and Eucharist as the Sacraments instituted by Christ. Under the Latin influence, the Eastern theologians also began to speak of seven sacraments. In fact no Ecumenical Council has limited the number of Sacraments to seven.
                 The early Church fathers never made systematic theological treatises on the ‘sacraments’.  Fathers like Cyril of Jerusalem was interested on giving a Mystagogical exposition of baptism, Myron and Eucharist.  St John Chrysostom’s Catechesis was an exposition of the meaning of baptism, of which anointing was an integral part. Their exposition of the sacraments was mainly catecheses addressed to the Catechumens or the neophytes. Their comments on the other sacraments were to be understood in the pastoral context in which they were made.
                Pseudo-Dionysius the Areopagite was the first to compose a theological treatise on the sacraments (or “perfections”). He comments on six “perfections” of the Church without limiting the number. Dionysius comments on them in the following order: Baptism, Eucharist,  Consecration of Myron, Ordination, Monastic Tonsure and Funeral service. The list of Dionysius was widely accepted in the East, both among the Chalcedonians and the Non-Chalcedonians. Among the six perfections, Dionysius underscores the importance of the Eucharist, which he calls ‘Perfection of the perfections’ (or ‘Sacrament of the sacraments’). The Byzantine theologians like Theodore the Studite (+ 826) followed the list of Dionysius.
                  During the Middle Ages, the Greek theologians also began to speak of seven sacraments, obviously under Latin influence. The doctrine of ‘seven sacraments’ appears in the Byzantine East for the first time in the Profession of faith required from the Emperor Michael Paleologus by the Pope Clement IV in 1267. This profession of faith was drafted by Latin theologians.
                The strict numbering of the sacraments was widely accepted among the Eastern Christians after the 13th century. According to John Meyendorff, this acceptance was not only due to the influence of Latin theology, but also because of the medieval and Byzantine fascination with symbolic numbers. The number seven was usually associated with the seven gifts of the Spirit in Isaiah 11:2-4 (LXX). But among the Byzantine authors who accept the ‘seven sacraments’ we find different competing lists., with some differences.
               Towards the end of the 13th century, the monk Job (“Job the Sinner”- Hamartolos) gives a list of seven sacraments: Baptism, Eucharist, Myron, Ordination, Marriage, Monastic Profession, Anointing of the Sick and Penance. He considered the anointing of the sick and penance as one sacrament, and included the Monastic tonsure in the list.
             In the 15th century, Simeon of Thessalonica ( +1429) wrote a treatise on ‘the Seven  Holy Sacraments” (PG. 155, 175-696): There are seven gifts of the Holy Spirit, says Isaiah (11:2); therefore there are seven churchly  mysteries, through which the Holy Spirit works; they are Baptism, Chrismation, Eucharist, Penance, Ordination, Marriage and the Anointing of the Sick”. Simeon admits the sacramental character of the monastic tonsure, but classifies it together with penance.
                In the 15th century, Metropolitan Joseph of Ephesus said: “ I believe that the sacraments of the Church are not seven, but more”. He gives a list of ten. In addition to the traditional seven, he adds consecration of the church, funeral ad Monastic tonsure in his list.
                 Obviously the Byzantine Church never committed itself formally to any specific list. Many authors accept the standard series of seven sacraments, while others emphasize the exclusive and prominent importance of  baptism and the Eucharist. Thus Gregory Palamas (+ 1359) says that “in these two (sacraments) our whole salvation is rooted, since the entire economy of the God-man is recapitulated in them”. Nicholas Cabasilas (+1365) composed his famous book The Life in Christ as a commentary on Baptism, Chrismation and the Eucharist.

Syrian Orthodox tradition:
                There is no official or authoritative list of sacraments in the Syrian Orthodox Church. In the modern times, leading prelates usually speak of seven sacraments, certainly under the Roman Catholic influence. Generally speaking, the list of  Pseudo-Dionysius the Areopagite was widely accepted, as Syriac writers has translated the Dionysian corpus several times and his influence was decisive in shaping the Syrian Orthodox Sacramental theology. The 13th century polymath Gregorios Abu’l Faraj Gregorios (1226-1286), in his theological compendium Mnarez kudshe (Light of the Sanctuary, sixth base) spoke of five sacraments in the following order: Ordination, Consecration of Myron, Baptism, Eucharist and Funeral. In his work called Zalge     (‘Rays’), which is in fact a summary of the previous work, Bar Hebraeus added benediction of the  church as the sixth sacrament. Thus, it is evident that Bar Hebraeus, who is still one of the greatest authorities in the Syrian Orthodox tradition, was less concerned on the strict numbering of the sacraments. In his famous Nomocanon (ktobo d-hudoyo) he has collected the ancient canons on the sacraments and gives directions concerning their administration and celebrations. He presents the sacraments in the following order: Consecration of the Church (ch.1:16), Baptism (ch.2), Myron (ch. 3), Eucharist (ch. 4), Funeral (ch.6), Ordination (ch.7) and Marriage (ch.8).
East Syrian tradition:
             In the East Syrian tradition, we find list of sacraments only in the later writers. Abdiso ( or Ebed Jesus (+ 1318) was probably the first to give a list of seven sacraments. Though the number seems to have been inspired by the teachings of the Latin missionaries, the list is not at all identical with that of the Latins. Thus in the small treatise: Marganita (‘Book of the Pearl”) Abdisho gives the following list: Ordination, Baptism, Oil of anointing, Eucharist, remission of sins, Holy Leaven (Malka) and the Sign of the Cross. This list has no parallel in the East Syrian tradition as witnessed by Abdisho’s predecessors.
              Abdisho’ contemporary Patriarch Timothy II (1332) wrote a book called  The Seven Pillars of the Rites of the Church and gives a different list of seven mysteries: Laying on of hands, Consecration of altars, Baptism, Eucharist, Monastic Tonsure, Funeral, Betrothal and Marriage. Timothy does not say why he prefred the list of seven. However, he puts distinction between principal sacraments and secondary sacraments. In the principal sacraments, the Holy Spirit operates directly. They are four in number: laying on of hands, consecration of the altar, baptism and Eucharist.
Conclusion:
                  “Even today, the number seven has no absolute dogmatic significance for Orthodox theology; but it is used primarily as a convenience in teaching” ,  says Kallistos Timothy Ware, The Orthodox Church,  p. 282). While all seven are true s sacraments, they are not all of equal importance. There is a certain “hierarchy” among them. The Eucharist stands at the heart of all Christian life and experience in a way that the Anointing of the Sick does not. Among the seven, baptism and Eucharist occupy a special position.
                  On the other hand, when we talk of “seven sacraments”, we must never isolate the seven from many other actions in the Church, which also possess a sacramental character.The Latin Church calls them ‘sacramentals’, which include the rites such as monastic profession, the blessing of water at Epiphany, funeral, and the anointing of a king.
                      The Orthodox Theology does not distinguish between Sacraments and sacramentals. There are a great number of minor blessings which are also of a sacramental nature: Blessing of a house, blessing of corn, wine, oil, of any object or element. ‘Seven sacraments’ could signify that God is bound to bestow grace only through them. Limiting the number of sacraments, could limit the grace and the work of God.
                      The whole Christian life must be seen as a single mystery, or one great sacrament, whose different aspects are expressed in a great variety of acts, some perfomed but once in a man’s life, others perhaps daily.
               
             
                






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