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Through these words
humanity is given a relative authority to rule over nature throughout
the cosmos. The whole of creation, the heaven and earth were made our
subjects to serve and work for us. As Prof. N. Zabolotsky said:
"The creatures of God minister not to God, nor to angels, nor to
themselves, but only to man."
In view of the present situation the Church of Christ cannot remain
unmoved. It constitutes a fundamental dogma of her faith that the world
was created by God the Father, who is confessed in the Creed to be
"maker of heaven and earth and of all things visible and invisible."
In Orthodox worship there are special supplications and litanies for
`seasonable weather, for abundance of the fruits of the earth' or for
protection in the case of natural disasters. Here is a special prayer
from the service said in times of danger from earthquake:
"The earth, is without words, yet groans and cries: 'Why, all people, do
you pollute me with so many evils? The Master spares you
but chastises me entirely: understand and propitiate God in
repentance.'"
In worship the Orthodox Church conveys this profound understanding of
creation. In particular, the role of humanity as the priesthood of
creation is most clearly shown in the liturgical theology. We are able
to reshape and alter the world. In the words of Father Dimitru Staniloae,
we put the seal of this understanding and of our intelligent work onto
creation: "The world is not only a gift, but a task for man".
The whole of the universe worships and offers gifts to its Creator. In
the very shape of the churches and the placing of the icons, mosaics or
frescoes within them, we find a microcosm of the universe, which
clarifies the role both of humanity and of the rest of creation in
relation to God. For it is an expression not just of what is on earth
today, but of what exists in heaven and what is to come - the
eschatological promise and redemptive transformation of all creation
through the salvation wrought by Jesus Christ (cf. Rom. 8).
For instance, the prayers and psalms tell us of the sanctification of
all creation. Every day in our Vespers, we sing Psalm 103 which says,
"Bless the Lord all his works. In all places of His dominion, bless the
Lord, O my soul". It is captured in our blessing for all manner of
elements of creation. The blessing of the waters shows us the
sanctifying and redemptive power given to an element of creation through
the invocation of the Holy Spirit by the Church.
What is important for us, however, is that the baptismal water
represents the matter of the cosmos, the world as life of man. And its
blessing at the beginning of the baptismal rite acquires thus a truly
cosmic and redemptive significance. God created the world and blessed it
and gave it to us as our food and life, as the means of communion with
him. The blessing of water signifies the return or redemption of matter
to this initial and essential meaning. By accepting the baptism of John,
Christ sanctified the water - made it the water of purification and
reconciliation with God. It was then, as Christ was coming out of the
water, that the Epiphany - the new and redemptive manifestation of God -
took place, and the Spirit of God, who at the beginning of creation
"moved upon the face of the waters", made water - that is, the world -
again into what He made it at the beginning.
"Great art Thou, O Lord, and marvelous are Thy works, and there is no
word which sufficeth to hymn Thy wonders. For Thou, of thine own
good will, hast brought into being all things which before were not, and
by Thy might Thou upholdest creation, and by Thy providence Thou
orderest the world ...
"Before Thee tremble all the Powers endowed with intelligence. The sun
singeth unto Thee. The moon glorifieth Thee. The stars meet
together before Thy presence. The light obeyeth Thee. The deeps tremble
before Thee ...
"Thou didst come and didst save us!
"We confess Thy grace. We proclaim Thy mercy. We conceal not Thy
gracious acts."
Once more the world is proclaimed to be what Christ revealed and made it
to be - the gift of God to humanity, the means of humanity's communion
with God. This water is manifested to us as "the grace of redemption,
the remission of sins, the remedy of infirmities".
"And confer upon it the grace of redemption, the blessing of the Jordan.
Make it a source of incorruption, a gift of sanctification,
a remission of sins, a protection against disease, a destruction to
demons, inaccessible to the adverse powers and filled with angelic
strength: that all who draw from it and partake of it may have it for
the cleansing of their soul and body, for the healing of their
passions, for the sanctification of their dwellings and for every
purpose that is expedient."
Orthodox worship is about the celebration and thus the use of all
aspects of the senses. It is about sight, sound, taste, smell and touch.
Orthodox worship uses and appreciates the material - be that wood and
paint, writing materials, bread and wine or burning incense.
"I shall not cease reverencing matter, by means of which my salvation
has been achieved ..."
Just as the priest at the Eucharist offers the fullness of creation and
receives it back as the blessing of Grace in the form of the consecrated
bread and wine, to share with others, so we must be the channel through
which God's grace and deliverance is shared with all creation. The human
being is simply yet gloriously the means for the expression of creation
in its fullness and the coming of God's deliverance for all creation.
The vocation of humanity, as shown in liturgical theology, is not to
dominate and exploit nature, but to transfigure and hallow it. In a
variety of ways - through the cultivation of the earth, through
craftsmanship, through the writing of books and the painting of icons -
humanity gives material things a voice and renders the creation
articulate in praise of God.
It is significant that when, at the Eucharist, we offer back to God the
first fruits of the earth, we offer them not in their original form, but
reshaped by our hands. As Bishop Kallistos of Diokleia has said, we
bring to the altar not sheaves of wheat but loaves of bread, not grapes
but wine.
The blessings for all manner of natural elements such as the fields,
vineyards, first fruits, wheat, etc., show how the Church recognizes the
transformation of all aspects of creation through the salvation and
glorification of humanity and thus of all creation.
In the Greek Liturgy of St James this is expressed as follows:
"The heavens praise Thee, and their whole might, the sun, the moon, and
all the choir of stars, the earth, the sea and all that therein
is, the heavenly Jerusalem, the church of the firstborn that stands
written upon the heavens, the angels and archangels ..."
In the Egyptian Liturgy of St Mark there is the following Prayer:
"But keep, O Lord, our journey through this life free also from storm
and hurt unto the end. Send down refreshing rain upon the.
places that have need of it; gladden and renew through it the face of
the earth, that it may delight in the refreshing drops and become
green ... Bless, O Lord, the fruits of the earth, keep them for us free
from disease and hurt, and prepare them for our sowing and our
harvest ... Bless now also, O Lord, the crown of the year through Thy
goodness for the sake of the poor among Thy people, for the sake
of the widow and the orphan, for the sake of the wanderer and the
newcomer and for the sake of all who trust in Thee and call upon
Thy Holy Name."
To bless is to give thanks. In and through thanksgiving, we acknowledge
the true nature of things we receive from God and thus enable them to
attain the fullness God intended for them. We bless and sanctify things
when we offer them to God in a eucharistic movement of our whole being.
And as we stand before the cosmos, before the matter given to us by God,
this eucharistic movement becomes all-embracing.
We are able to bless and praise God for the world. We are defined as a "eucharistic"
animal because we are capable of seeing the world as God's gift, as a
sacrament of God's presence and a means of communion with him. So we are
able to offer the world back to God as thanksgiving: "Thine own of Thine
own we offer unto Thee ..."
This liturgical expression reflects the Orthodox vision and
understanding of our relationship both with creation and with the
Creator. We are the free agents through whom creation is offered to the
Creator. The Eucharist is the most sublime expression and experience of
creation transformed by God the Holy Spirit through redemption and
worship. In the form of bread and wine, material from creation molded
into new form by human hands is offered to God with the acknowledgement
that all of creation is God's and that we are returning to God that
which is his.
The primordial relationship of Adam to both God and Creation is restored
in the Eucharist and we have a foretaste of the eschatological state of
creation.
But when we look today at our world, we see a very different picture.
Humanity's rebellion, pride and greed has shattered the primordial
relationship of Adam. It has ignored the Church's understanding of our
role as priests of creation. By doing so, our world is facing a crisis
of death and corruption to a degree never before experienced.
We must attempt to return to a proper relationship with the Creator and
the creation, in order that the survival of the natural world can be
assured. We are called to bear some of the pain of creation as well as
to enjoy and celebrate it. That means to perform Liturgia " extra muros
", the Liturgy beyond (outside) the walls of the church, for the
sanctification of the world.
"Through heaven and earth and the sea,
"through wood and stone, through all creation visible and invisible,
"I offer veneration to the Creator and Master and Maker directly and by
itself, but it is through me that the heavens declare the
glory of God, through me the moon worships God,
"through me the stars glorify him, through me the waters and the showers
rain, the dews and all the creation, venerate God and give
him glory." St. Leontios of Cyprus
*Copyright: *Printed by Orthdruk Orthodox Printing
House, Bialystok, Poland, 1996.
Bishop Irineos is a Bishop of the Romanian Orthodox Church. This paper
was first presented to the InterOrthodox Conference on Environmental
Protection, Crete, 1991.
*Source: *The Orthodoxy and Ecology Resource Book is produced by
SYNDESMOS, The World Fellowship of Orthodox Youth.
*Editor: *Alexander Belopopsky and Dimitri Oikonomou
© 2003 Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America
www.goarch.org
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