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TRINITARIAN ANTHROPOLOGY AND THEOLOGICAL METHOD OF ST. GREGORY PALAMAS According to D. M. Rogich. Presentation by Liza Tanczyk Theology 3306 November 14, 2013. THE AUTHOR – D.M.ROGICH. Orthodox priest PhD in Theology, Duquesne University Studied with:
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TRINITARIAN ANTHROPOLOGYAND THEOLOGICAL METHODOF ST. GREGORY PALAMASAccording to D. M. Rogich Presentation by Liza Tanczyk Theology 3306 November 14, 2013
THE AUTHOR – D.M.ROGICH • Orthodox priest • PhD in Theology, Duquesne University • Studied with: • Palamite scholar J. Meyendorff at St. Vladimir’s Seminary • and hesychast bishop A.Radovich in Serbia • Visited Thessalonica, Constantinople and Mt. Athos • Author of : • Saints of the Serbian Orthodox Church • St. Gregory Palamas: Treatise on the Spiritual Life • Becoming Uncreated: The Journey to Human Authenticity • Currently in Canton, Ohio at: • Holy Trinity Greek Orthodox Church • And as Adjunct Professor, Walsh University
ST. GREGORY PALAMAS, 1296-1359 • Grew up in Constantinople, time of unrest • Latinization from west, Muslims from east • Came from wealthy family, highly educated • Lived on Mt. Athos under guidance of Nicodemus the hesychast • Wrote “Triads in Defence of the Hesychasts” in response to Barlaam of Calabria, who attacked practice of hesychasm. • Council in Constantinople upheld hesychasm. • Palamas became Archbishop of Thessalonika. • Sainthood proclaimed 9 years after his death • St. Gregory of Palamas is celebrated on the 2nd Sunday of Lent, because the victory of hesychasm is considered the “Second Triumph of Orthodoxy”.
Slide: INTRODUCTION EXPERIENCE THEOLOGY 4 LAYERS OF THE HUMAN SELF FORMS OF KNOWLEDGE DEFINITION OF RELIGIOUS EXPERIENCE THE IMAGE: ARCHETYPE AND RENEWAL THE JESUS PRAYER AND THEOSIS ANTINOMY AND DYNAMIC THEOLOGY Draws on: Preface and Chapter 2 Chapter 1 and 2 Chapter 1, p. 4-11 Chapter 1, p.11-17 Chapter 1, p.17-22 Chapter 1, p. 22-28 Chapter 1, p. 28-35 Chapter 1, p. 35-39 STRUCTURE OF PRESENTATION
INTRODUCTION • Spiritual thirst in modern society – • Search for experience of deeper prayer life • Attraction of mystic experience • “Christian of the future will either be a “mystic”, one who experienced something, or he will cease to be anything at all” – K. Rahner • Rogich tries to “translate” Palamas’ thought for the present day. • In the first 2 chapters he introduces Palamas’ paradigm: • The basic assumptions underlying his christology, and • The social-theological context • Palamas considered that Christian Tradition is in danger of becoming a stagnant “theology of repetition”, “a historical belief instead of a true experiental belief”. • This can happen if dogma is placed before spiritual practice. • Consequently, dogmatic tradition can get misinterpreted, but more importantly, it is not being experienced. • Palamas’ major thesis is that the way to contact the past is by entering into its experiences.
EXPERIENCE THEOLOGY • “The affairs of the spirit can be approached as empirically as can outer nature” • Palamas explored “experience beyond the senses”, a knowledge that is beyond “informational”. • Truth is not a concept, but the presence of God Himself • Opinions of intellectuals may be clever but false • Experience of saints is always true. • Tradition (scripture, dogmas) are not speculative; they are based on “experience of salvation”. • Patristic tradition should be practiced “in the manner of the Apostles”. • Palamas went back through Tradition to re-discover an ancient experiental methodology NEXT: Rogich attempts to “map” Palamas’ anthropological hypothesis:
KARTHIA Heart – spiritual centre of human being SOMA Body – Sends sensory data to dianoia DIANOIA Rational mind – Directs the Soma Is not helpful in knowledge of God SOUL Soul + Soma = Human created in God’s image Epithymitikon Logistikon Thymikon (Desiring) (Works with the NOUS) (Incensive) NOUS Intellect – underlying faculty of the SOUL Perceives divine truth by immediate experience 4 LAYERS OF THE HUMAN SELF
What about growing closer to God through His creation by observing the natural world via senses and with help of science? FORMS OF KNOWLEDGE • Different forms of knowledge are not mutually exclusive or in opposition to each other. • Scientific knowledge is acquired by experiment and observation. • Palamas warned against exaggerated veneration of science. • Knowledge acquired through the senses is inferior • Scientific knowledge is not necessary for salvation • In the 14th century science and rational thought were seen as contributing to the knowledge of God. • Per Aristotle: All knowledge about God is attained through the senses. (root of argument between Palamas and Barlaam) • Barlaam concluded that God is unknowable through the senses. • He challenged hesychasm’s assertion that God can be experienced in this life.
If so, can a lay person be a hesychast for 1 hr./day, and be “in the world” the rest of the time? “Hesychasm Lite”? DEFINITION OF RELIGIOUS EXPERIENCE • Experience of God is beyond physiology, astronomy, etc. • There is a unique quality in every human that enables participation in the inner mysteries of existence. • This is made possible by the presence of God’s Image in every human. • The Nous is able to transcend itself by journeying to the “Image within”. • Projection of Nous into Karthia can lead to a direct experience of God. • To Barlaam’s accusations of Messalianism and Gnosticism, Palamas insisted that: • participation in God cannot be initiated by the explorer, but is a gift of God’s grace. • hesychasm is open to all Christians; it is not the reserve of an elite.
What was the status of the Image and the “christological structure” in humanity prior to the Incarnation? THE IMAGE: ARCHETYPE AND RENEWAL • Through incarnation Christ restored divine consciousness to humanity. • Since He “clothed Himself in the body” He penetrates all matter – He is its natural form. • Consequently there is a “christological structure” inside each human. • The Image is never lost, but becomes buried under layers of sin. • Saints who have achieved theosis have attained full personhood. • Sacraments, especially baptism and eucharist, are means to regaining the Image within. • Baptism washes away sin and confers divine grace. • Eucharist unites us bodily with Christ. • Deification begins in this world and grows inexhaustibly in the world to come.
THE JESUS PRAYER AND THEOSIS “Lord Jesus Christ, Son of God, Have mercy on me, a sinner” • The practitioner is first required to reject sin and practice virtues. • Hesychastic meditation method: Head bowed with Nous directed at the Karthia. • Repetition of the Jesus prayer eventually leads to its becoming automatic, and emanating from the Karthia – a “prayer of the heart”. • Senses and rational mind are distractions. • Achieving inner stillness is a battle with the intellect that is busy with memories, fantasies, anticipations that are situated in the “outer layers of the self”. • Through inner exploration hesychasm uncovers the lie that entered human consciousness after the “fall”: that the human self is nothing more than material existence. • Spiritual gnosis, granted by God’s grace, is a transcendent union with God’s energies, an entering into “the uncreated light”.
ANTINOMY AND DYNAMIC THEOLOGY • Palamas emphasizes that antinomies are 2 sides of the same coin. • Choosing one side to the exclusion of the other leads to heresy. • Four antinomic spiritual paths: • Transcendence and immanence – God’s “otherness” and “nearness’’. Hesychast transcends oneself to experience another dimension of reality. • Logos and flesh – As Logos self-emptied to take on flesh, so human has ability to empty one’s finite self in order to reach God. • Divine and human nature – Human has potential to regain divine consciousness. The Gospel Jesus is a story about human nature transformed to a higher level of reality. • Body and soul – No implication of “immortal soul” antithetical to “evil” body. Hesychastic practice cannot be performed without a body. • Dynamic theology: Palamas was wary of historical theology becoming too static; he saw hesychasm’s experiental practice as a movement forward “with the Fathers”.