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The Teaching of Gregory Palamas on
Man
[From the etext library of the
Church of Greece]
Panayiotis Christou
The Teaching of Gregory Palamas on Man
Transcribed by The Holy Monastery of Theomitor,
Kifisia.
The anthropology of Saint Gregory Palamas is the nerve
centre of his theology. His entire system aims at nothing else than the
description and definition of the relations among men and of each
individual man’s relation with God. He follows man in his striving
between the worldly and the divine, the created and the uncreated, and
shows the way by which he may reach the state of the uncreated. And it
is just this state that becomes man since he is not only a
recapitulation and an ornament of the whole creation [i]; but also image
of the Triune God for whom the uncreated kingdom was prepared since the
foundation of the world [ii].
All physical life and existence is a created result of
the divine energy. But the fact that even man is likewise such a created
result does not equate him with the other animals. In man, elements of
the ultramundane were added and finally the divine uncreated breath
[iii] was given.
The human body, consisting of matter, belongs to the
category of material creatures. The human soul, consisting of
ultramundane elements, differs from the soul of animals in that it is
firstly essence and then energy; whereas the soul of animals is a simple
operation which does not exist in itself but dies together with the
body.[iv] As an independent essence the human soul is not dissolved with
the body, but lives by itself after the separation; as a spiritual
,essence even though created, it is immortal.[v]
A variety of opinions is found among the fathers as to
the manner in which the soul is linked to the body. Gregory, in spite of
his repeated reference to the Macarian opinion that it seats in the
heart, seems to prefer the opinion of ,Gregory of Nyssa, according to
which the soul is dispersed throughout the whole body as a dynamic
element which holds the body together, contains its providential powers
and vivifies it [vi].
The main powers of the soul: nous, logos. and pneuma
(intellect, reason, and spirit) are simple functions, expressing it as a
unique whole.[vii] They are not essences. Whenever Gregory speaks of the
intellect as an essence,[viii] he evidently means the soul itself. His
use of Macarian terms seems to influence some of his anthropological
formulations and such an influence [ix]a may explain his insistence on
the opinion that the main fleshly organ of the intellect is the heart.
But of course this formulation also served other aims. It emphasizes the
close connection between the two elements of the human organism since
the bodily element is biologically nourished by the heart. Such an
emphasis serves to avoiding the predomination of scholastic
intellectualism in theology. In any case, Gregory's occasional use of
the word 'heart' in a broader sense must not be overlooked. In
interpreting Psalm 32, 15, he says, "let us take here the
expression 'heart created by Him' as meaning the inner man.[x]
Reason is closely connected with the intellect, from
which it is derived, and is sometimes identified with it [xi]; so that
to distinguish one from the other, as Gregory does, seems some kind of
technical enterprise. Lastly, the spirit comes forth from both intellect
and the reason, and exists within both. It is the eros of the intellect
towards the reason which vivifies the body[xii].
Gregory gives a broad and dynamic character to the
much discussed expression "according to the image". He finds
image in the whole existence of man and refers it to the Trinity. Man is
a creature according to the image not vaguely of God, but concretely of
the Triune God, since he has been created by the energy of the whole
Trinity and may receive the divine light emitted from the whole Trinity,
His intellect, reason and spirit constitute an inherent unity,
corresponding to the unity of the persons of the divine Trinity, i.e.
Nous, Logos, and pneuma (Intellect, Reason, and Spirit). As within
divinity the Nous begets the Logos, and the Pneuma precedes as the eros
of the Nous towards the Logos, so within man, ` the intellect bears the
reason, and the spirit is projected as the eros of the intellect towards
the reason. And as the Holy Spirit vivifies the world; so the human
spirit vivifies the body[xiii]. Thus the image is extended to the whole
man, including the body. The real meaning of Gregory’s teaching on
this point is: the capability of man to be elevated into a genuine
spiritual personality, as an image and symbol of the personality of God.
One could call this image microtheos rather than microcosmos. This is
the natural state of man.
Moreover the first man had received another gift: the
divine spirit which is not a created thing, as are the rest of man’s
elements, but an ineffable uncreated divine energy. The final
destination of man is to be assimilated with the divine archetype[xiv]
and united with God in one substance,[xv] so that he may be called
"another God"[xvi] Now this destination could be achieved only
through that infusion of the divine spirit, by which man was clothed
with the divine glory and became a participant of the divine splendour.
This is the supernatural state of man. Whether man
abides near or far from God depends, as it does for the rest of the
reasonable beings, in his will, which means that it is a voluntary, not
a natural condition [xvii] He is receptive of contrary spiritual
qualities, goodness and evil, and may turn towards either[xviii].
Abiding in goodness means preservation of the divine spirit and of
participation in God. Turning towards evil means moving away from God,
and such a movement is equal to the death of the soul [xix] God neither
created nor caused the death of the soul and of the body[xx] Death is
the fruit of sin which was produced by the will of man.[xxi]
Man received from the beginning the gift and the duty
to live eternally in both soul and body. But life is worthless leas,
except when it springs from participation in the life of God .[xxii]
Life to the body is granted by the human spirit and real life to the
soul is granted by the divine spirit. That is why the abandonment of the
soul by the vivifying divine spirit causes its spiritual death, just as
the abandonment of the body by the vivifying human spirit causes its
physical death.[xxiii] The soul, when removed from God, only technically
preserves its immortality[xxiv]'
The devil, having first, moved away from God, was also
the first to be subjected to spiritual death. And he succeeded in
seducing man to disobedience therefore to spiritual death.[xxv] The
death of the body is an inevitable consequence of the spiritual death of
the soul, which is extended to the human spirit: the power which
vivifies the body. But while this death seems natural under these
conditions it is at the same time a beneficial concession of God to man,
which aims at canceling the perpetuation of evil and sin.[xxvi]
All descendants of Adam are subject to death, because
the whole of mankind submitted itself to sin. We must not read into the
fall as formation of inheritable guilt, or collective responsibility.
The fact of the fall has effected the whole structure and state of man,
the natural as well as the supernatural. And this is the reason why the
fall of first man becomes the fall of all men.
The fall withdrew from man the divine spirit which was
infused in him and consequently his likeness to God. It ended his
participation in the glory of the life of God. But the image of God
remained untouched[xxvii] .The fact that it, appears now somewhat dim is
due to that loss of likeness, which once rendered it completely clear
and gave to it its full meaning.
This is the non-natural state of man.
Gregory, without being pessimistic about the abilities
of the fallen man, considers them as limited. Man can serve himself in
respect to his worldly needs, but cannot serve himself spiritually. He
has the will to perform the commandments of God and can know Him
partially through the observation of creation through his intellectual
reflection. But, he is unable to know God completely and to meet Him,
which is the final object of his life. This good is granted only by the
uncreated light [xxviii]which is unapproachable to the fallen man.
The untreated light is divine grace. Meyendorff [xxix]connects
the teaching of Gregory on the operation of grace with the incarnation
of the Logos. Romanides[xxx] refutes this thesis and maintains that
grace operated even in Old Testament times, as the classical example of
Moses proves Certainly, grace, which proceeds not from Christ alone but
from the whole Trinity, existed and operated at all times. It did not
however become a possession of fallen man until after the incarnation of
Logos. In Old Testament times grace, operated incidentally and
apocalyptically. Fallen man having already lost the divine spirit, could
not participate in it permanently. Since the incarnation grace operates
permanently and becomes subject to participation by man, if he receives
the divine spirit anew.
Only a renovation and a restoration of human nature
according to its archetype [xxxi] could bring the necessary radical
change in the course of mankind. And this change was realised through an
unprecedented event : the incarnation of God. "The most excellent
of all, Gregory says, or rather the incomparably excellent event is the
incarnation of our Lord Jesus Christ, and especially its last episodes:
the salutary passion and the resurrection"[xxxii].
The nature which was assumed by Christ is not that of
the species, i.e. the entire human nature, but that of an individual
which did not exist by itself previously, but took existence in the
hypostasis of the Logos and was united to Him in one hypostasis,[xxxiii]
It was only this individual nature which contained the fullness of
divinity [xxxiv]. And it was transubstantiated and deified as a first
fruit of our kind [xxxv]. So a new root was created, capable of
imparting life to its offshoots. The transubstantiation of the human
nature of Christ is physical. The change brought about in man by the
renovation is also physical; but the connection of men to that root is
not physical as is the connection with the old root of Adam. The
connection to the new root is secured by willing participation in the
renovation.[xxxvi]
Thus we find ourselves before a new state of man, a
state which supersedes the simple restoration to the conditions before
the fall, for it constitutes a transference to heaven [xxxvii]. Man
before the fall certainly possessed the enlightenment of the divine
light; but now the human nature assumed by Christ was seated on the
throne of God and thence attracts men to Itself. The archetype of males
is now John the Forerunner, and that of females, the Virgin Mary[xxxviii].
If physical life is a result of the divine energy
according to Gregory, then the god-like life of man is a participation
in the divine energy itself[xxxix] a participation which leads to
theosis, deification.
The first of the basic factors which determine the
course of theosis is the concentration of the intellect. Here lies one
of the main points around which the acute polemics between Gregory
Palamas and Barlaam Calabros was concentrated. The latter, though not a
thoroughgoing platonist in all his anthropology, put forth a strictly
neoplatinic thesis concerning prayer. -He called for removal of the
intellect from the body and mortification of the passive part of the
soul, so that the intellect could be devoted to ecstatic prayer and
communion with God. This was the only way to attain the true light;
since the attachment of the intellect to the common operation of the
body and the passive part of the soul fills it with darkness instead of
light[xl]. Barlaam considers such an ecstatic condition as well as the
grace of deification as thoroughly natural[xli] Gregory, on the
contrary, characterizes this opinion as the source of all error, both
philosophical and theological [xlii].He calls for concentration of the
operation of the intellect inside the body[xliii];or rather inside man
as a whole. The body is not something worthless. Why that which may
becomes a dwelling ; place of God, should not be worthy of having the
intellect, as dweller? Such are the presuppositions with which the
Hesychasts cast out the law of sin and introduced the power of the
intellect into man. They gave to each function whatever is proper to it:
to the sensitive, temperance; to the passive, love; and to the
reasonable, sobriety.[xliv]
The concentration of the aims neither at acquisition
of learning nor at mere theologizing. To Gregory, theology is an
insufficient means for approaching God, because it is "word"
or "reason" about. God, while he himself seeks for
contemplation of God above "word" and "reason".
Theology in its positive and scholastic form, as knowledge and
understanding of God, cannot be the goal of the movement of the
intellect towards God. Nor in its apophatic form as submersion in the
divine darkens should it be the only path for a Christian to pursue. In
either form it must be superseded. A man may think of a city as much as
he likes, but he will never acquire an exact picture of its structure,
unless he visits it. A man may think of gold all the time but he will
never possess gold, unless he takes it in his hands. Likewise, no matter
how much one reflects on God, one can not acquire the divine treasures.
One can acquire these only by experiencing the divine realities[xlv] by
reaching the vision of God-the theoptia-which surpasses theology just as
the possession of an object surpasses the mere knowledge [xlvi]of it.
Here a second factor is introduced: unceasing mental
prayer. Gregory does not altogether reject ecstasy but gives to it its
appropriate content. Since he considers even material things as gifts of
God, he cannot refuse to give to the body a place in the spiritual
experience. This is a thesis of eastern spirituality which may be traced
back to Diadochos and Macarios. Gregory sees the exaltation of man to be
brought about by an intense effort of the intellect, while the whole man
participates in the divine gifts. The peak of this exaltation is
communion with God, during which the human powers continue to function.
In this sense, ecstasy is an operation by which the hõçéáç powers
are elevated above their standard and which proceeds to the divine
condescension. Indeed just as God condescends to man, so man ascends to
God, in order that their meeting might be achieved[xlvii].
Prayer is the condition of ecstasy. It possesses the
power to elevate man from earth to heaven and to bring him before
God[xlviii]. The question is here not one of mere emotion. The whole man
is seized by abundant light, the uncreated light of the divine glory
which is eternally emitted from the Trinity. The light of mount Tabor,
the light which is seen now by the Hesychasts, and the substance of the
blessings of the life to come are three phases of one and the same
spiritual event composed in a timeless reality [xlix].
The uncreated light is not an object which can be
sensually perceived. It exceeds both sense and understanding. But in
spite of this, both soul and body participate in its vision. How does
this become possible? Gregory, following of Photius [l], expounds a
theory according to which the intellect in its elevation acquires a new
spiritual sense; and this sense is the light itself. The intellect, when
it is seized by the divine light and enters into it, becomes itself
light. Therefore in reality it is the light that sees the light [li].
'Thus man surpasses the state of ecstasy and reaches
union with God and theosis. In this new condition there is beginning and
progress but no end. Progress is endless[lii]. Although the element of
the endless includes in itself the notion of imperfection, just and pure
men may be called "gods", since they participate in God. They
are, however, imperfect gods, and ones not identified or assimilated
with the one God in essence [liii] That which is participated in is not
His essence. Any thing which is participated in is divided, while the
divine essence as a simple entity is indivisible; therefore, that which
is here participated in is God's divisible energy [liv].
In order to understand Gregory’s thought correctly,
we may use a comparison. Man has the soul as an essence, whose functions
are, as we said before, the intellect, the reason and the spirit.. If we
now posit that a man participates in the intellect, the reason and the
spirit of another man, then the functions of these two men are
identified; but this does not bring about as well an identification of
the essence of the souls of the two men. Such a thing is impossible.
Thus on a higher level the spiritual man attains to the energies of God,
but remains alienated from his unapproachable essence.
Whenever man does not participate actively in
uncreated divinizing grace, he remains a created result of the creative
energy of God. His sole relation with God is that of a creature to the
creator. But whenever he participates in divinizing grace, he acquires
supernatural qualities and, without ceasing to be a created being by
nature, he is transferred from the category of creatures to another
position. God and man have then life as a common uncreated energy, the
former as the natural source, the latter as a vessel of grace .So each
man becomes a being without beginning and, end; anarchos and ateleutetos,
in the words of Gregory [lv],which go back to Maximos the Homologetes,
he enters into the untreated kingdom which is the glory of God [lvi]
The establishment of the kingdom has already begun in
this world. The soul of man, having been raised by the acquisition of
the divine spirit anew, tastes the experience of participation in the
divine light and glory. This is an actual experience which makes man a
member of the kingdom of God.
However, this participation will be completed only
after the second coming,[lvii] which will abolish the death of the body.
The connection of the new man with God remains indissoluble even after
the separation of the soul from the body, as the divinity of Christ
remained inseparable from his humanity even in his death. Whatever
happened to God-Man may be repeated in man. The body will be raised in
order that man might be renovated wholly[lviii] and assumed into
heaven.[lix] It is the assumption and not the resurrection that is the
divinizing gift par excellence to the just.
The resurrection of the sinners consequently has a
different meaning. 1t. is also a part of the restoration of the creation
but from an opposite point of view. Physical death was for the human
race a beneficial concession of God which aimed at canceling the
perpetuation of the evil. Now this gift is taken away, and the
resurrection of the sinners becomes their torment.
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[i] Hom. 26,1,ΕΠΕ
10,152.
[ii] Cap. 24,Chrestou ,V 48.
[iii] Op. Cit.
[iv] Cap. 31,Chrestou V, 51f.
[v] Cap. 45, Chrestou V61.
[vi] Cap. 61, Defense of Hesychasts, 3, 2, 22,
Chrestou I ,P. 673. This is the view of Gregory of Nyssa and Dionysius
Areopagita.
[vii] Apodicticos 2, 9, Chrestou I, p. 397.
[viii] Defense of Hesychasts 1, 2, 5, Chrestou I,p.
85.
[ix] Cf. MAKARIUS, Hom. 15,20, PG 29, 589 B.
[x] Defense of Hesychasts 2, 3, 62, Chrestou I, p.
595.
[xi] Cf. Cap. 33, Chrestou, V 52: «the reasonable and
intellectual soul has life as essence». Also Defense of Hesychasts 1,
2, 3, CHRESTOU I p.396.
[xii] Cap. 38, Chrestou,V 56.
[xiii] Cap. 35-39, Chrestou V 53-57.
[xiv] Defense of Hesychasts 1, 1, 22, Chrestou
I,p.386.
[xv] Cap. 24,Chrestou,V 48.
[xvi] Apodicticos 2, 9, CHRESTOU I p. 85.
[xvii] Cap. 51, Chrestou,V 65.
[xviii] Cap. 33, Chrestou, V52.
[xix] On Divine Participation 8, Chrestou II, p.144.
[xx] Cap. 47, Chrestou, V 62.
[xxi] Cap. 51, Chrestou,V65.
[xxii] Antirreticos against Acindynos 2,7,18, Chrestou
III,18.
[xxiii] Hom. 16, 7,ΕΠΕ
9,432.
[xxiv] To Xene, 9, Chrestou V,197.
[xxv] Hom. 16, 7
ΕΠΕ 9, 432.
[xxvi] On Divine Participation 8, Chrestou II, p. 144.
[xxvii] Cap. 39, Chrestou,V 56f.
[xxviii] Defence of Hesychasts 2, 3, 66, Chrestou I
,p.598.
[xxix] J. MEYENDORFF, Introduction à l’ étude de
Grégoire Palamas, Patristica Sorbonensia 3,Paris 1959,p.213 ff.
[xxx] J. ROMANIDES, «Notes on Palamite Controversly»
Greek Orthodox Theological Review 9 (1963-1964) 236 ff.
[xxxi] Defensw of Hesychasts 1, 1, 5, Chrestou I,
p.365.
[xxxii] Hom. 41,II,
επε 10,57.
[xxxiii] Hom. 5,2,
ΕΠΕ.9, 144.
[xxxiv] Defense of Hesychasts 3, 1, 15, Crestou I,
p.646.
[xxxv] Op. Cit. 3, 1, 15, Chrestou I, p. 629.
[xxxvi] Hom. 16,
ΕΠΕ 9,422-481.
[xxxvii] Cap. 54, Chrestou, V67.
[xxxviii] Defense of Hesychasts, 1, 1, 4, Crestou I,
364.Hom. 53, OECONOMOS P.170.
[xxxix] On Divine Participation 19, Chrestou II,p.
154.
[xl] Defense of Hesychasts 2, 2, 17, Chrestou I, p.
524-525.
[xli] Op. Cit. 3, 1, 26, Chrestou I, p.638.
[xlii] Op. Cit. 1, 2, 4, Chrestou I,p.397.
[xliii] Cf.Basil the Great, Epist. 2, PG. 32,228A.
[xliv] Defense of Hesychasts 1, 2, 2, Chrestou I, p.
394.
[xlv] Op. Cit. 1, 3, 15, Chrestou I, p.445.
[xlvi] Op. Cit. 1, 3, 42, Chrestou I, p. 453.
[xlvii] Op. Cit. 1, 3, 47, Chrestou I, p. 458.
[xlviii] Hom. 2, 3,
ΕΠΕ 9,49.
[xlix] Defense of Hesychasts 1, 3, 43, Chrestou I, p.
455.
[l] Cap. Gnostica 40. Cf. Dionysius Areopagita, De
Nom. 4, 9, PG 3, 705.
[li] Defense of Hesychasts 1, 3, 9, Chrestou I, p. 419
[lii] Op. Cit. 2, 3, 35, Chrestou I, p.596.
[liii] Theophanes 16, Chrestou II, p. 241.
[liv] Op. Cit. 21, Chrestou II, p. 247.
[lv] Defense of Hesychsts 3, 3, 8, Chrestou I, p.
686.MAXIMOS, Capita de charitate 3, 25, PG 90, 1024 C.
[lvi] On Divine Participation 20, Chrestou II, p. 154.
[lvii] Hom. 26, 12,
ΕΠΕ 10, 166.
[lviii] To Xene 14, Chrestou V 199.
[lix] Hom. 22, 15-16,
ΕΠΕ10-16.
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