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THEOLOGY -
THE HOLY SPIRIT
By Demetrios Constantelos
From his book
Understanding the Greek Orthodox Church,
Hellenic College Press, Brookline MA, 1998
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The opening prayer in the Orthodox prayer book is directed to the Holy Spirit,
who is described as the "Paraclete" and the "Spirit of Truth," while the creed
speaks of "the Giver of Life." What is the Holy Spirit? He is the third person
of the Holy Trinity, one person of the same essence with the other two persons
of the one Christian God. The Orthodox Church has been characterized as a
pneumatological church, because she lays such great emphasis upon the work of
the Holy Spirit. She describes the whole purpose of the Christian life on earth
as the acquisition of the Holy Spirit. A saint has put it in the following
terms: "Prayer, fasting, vigils, and all other Christian practices, however good
they may be in themselves, certainly do not constitute the aim of our Christian
life: they are but the indispensable means of attaining that aim. For the true
aim of the Christian life is acquisition of the Holy Spirit of God." Fasts,
vigils, charities, and other good works done in the name of Christ are the means
of acquiring the Holy Spirit of God. The prayer life of the faithful starts with
the invocation of the Holy Spirit. Every morning the Orthodox place themselves
under the protection of the Holy Spirit when they recite the beautiful prayer:
"O Heavenly King, comforter, the Spirit of truth, who art everywhere and fillest
all things, the treasury of blessings and giver of life, come and abide in us.
Cleanse us from all impurity, and of your goodness save our souls."
But why so much emphasis on the Holy Spirit? Because the Holy Spirit is the
Spirit of God, the life-giving power of God, the promulgator of Christ's work in
the salvation and eternal destiny of man. Jesus Christ promised His apostles
that "the Holy Spirit, whom the Father will send in my name, he will teach you
all things, and bring to your remembrance all that I have said to you" (Jn.
14:2G).
The Holy Spirit continues the work of Jesus through inspired human beings. He
carries on the redemption and sanctification of man. He reveals and preaches the
good tidings through people, through prophets, the Fathers, and the saints of
the Church. The Holy Spirit speaks to man's heart and transforms him into a new
creation, through repentance and Christ's teachings.
The Holy Spirit's power leads the human person to achieve the final aim of the
Christian life, the theosis, or deification, of human nature, a notion very dear
to the Orthodox. Theosis means life in God, the transformation of a human being
into a little god within God. This notion is in perfect agreement with the
Scriptures. Once people picked up stones to cast at Christ. When Jesus asked why
they were doing this, the people answered that it was because He was insulting
God by calling himself God. And Jesus answered: "It is not written in your law,
'I said, you are gods?" (Jn. 10.34; Ps. 82.6). Thus Jesus himself calls man a
little god. This teaching has been taken over by the Fathers and the tradition
of the Church. It constitutes an important element of the eschatological
teachings of the Greek Orthodox Church.
Saint Basil the Great describes man as a creature who has received the order to
become a god; and Saint Athanasios, as is well known, has expressed it in the
classic words "God became man that man might become god." And the Church in the
hymn for Holy Thursday Matins sings as follows: "In my kingdom, said Christ, I
shall be God with you as gods" (cf. Ps. 82.6: Jn. 10.34).
The great theological quests of the fourth and fifth centuries ultimately
resulted in the affirmation that salvation is the divinisation of humanity and
its eternal presence in God, the source of its life. Damnation is exactly the
opposite, the deprivation of God's presence in the life of humanity. The
deification of the human has its beginnings here on earth, but it will reach its
fulfilment in the life to come. It is the result of man's response to the Holy
Spirit in man's life.
The Holy Spirit works in human beings in various ways, especially through the
sacraments of the Church and through reading and listening to the Holy
Scriptures. Christ promised that the Holy Spirit would teach the Church all
things necessary for man's salvation. To the end of time the Holy Spirit will be
leading the faithful and the Church into deeper and deeper understanding of the
truth of God.
The Holy Spirit guides the Church, or the community, in understanding the
meaning of Jesus' teachings, which would not otherwise be possible. Upon the
departure of Christ from the earth, the Holy Spirit came to inspire, guide, and
establish the Ekklesia and to remain with it forever. "I will not leave you
desolate," Jesus promised His disciples (Jn. 14:18). In this respect Jesus
proved different from other great teachers. Plato writes that, when Sokrates
died, his disciples "thought that [they] would have to spend the rest of their
lives orphans, as children bereft of a father, and [they) did not know what to
do about it." The Paraclete took Jesus' place and remains forever with the
disciples. It is the Spirit, then, who gives purpose in life and who remains
with the Church forever as "the Lord, the Giver of Life." .
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