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On the Deadening of the Human Spirit
By St. Ignatius Brianchaninov (+1867)
Todays Gospel passage proclaims the actions of the holy women who followed the
God-man during His earthly sojourn, who were witnesses to His Passion and were
present at His burial. The burial took place on Friday evening. When the malice
of the Jews was being poured forth like fiery lava from fire-breathing Mount
Etna, directed not only at the Lord but also at all those close to Him; when
the holy Apostles were forced to hide themselves, or were only able to observe
the terrible event from afar; when only the most intimate disciple of love, who
was afraid of nothing, remained persistently by the Lordthen that disciple
took action who had always been a disciple in secret, and who had continually
concealed his heartfelt pledge out of fear of being persecuted by the
Sanhedrin. Josepha respected member of the Sanhedrinsuddenly trampled down
all the obstacles and vacillations and all the bewilderment that had hitherto
constrained and worried him. He came to cold, cruel Pilate and asked for the
body of Him Who had been executed by means of a shameful death. He received the
body and buried it with reverence and honor. The Gospel imparts to Josephs act
the significance of a magnanimous, courageous action. And that is just what it
was. A member of the Sanhedrinbefore the face of the Sanhedrin, which had
committed deicide; before the face of Jerusalem, which had taken part in the
deicidetook the body of the God-man, Who had been murdered by men, down from
the Cross and bore it away to a garden situated close to the city gates and
walls. Therein solitude and quiet, under the shade of the trees, in a new tomb
cut out of the solid rock face, with an abundant outpouring of fragrant spices
and myrrhhe placed the body, by which the bodies and souls of all mankind have
been redeemed, having wrapped it in the purest linens, the way a precious
treasure is wrapped and concealed.
Another member of the Sanhedrin took part in the burial: Nicodemus, who had come
to the Lord by night, and who had recognized Him as the One sent by God. Having
leaned a great stone against the door of the sepulcher (in the Gospel the low
opening into the cave is called a door), Joseph left, as one who had completed
his service satisfactorily. The Sanhedrin was watching Josephs actions. After
his departure they took care to set a guard at the sepulcher and to affix a
seal to the stone that blocked the entrance. The Lords burial was witnessed by
His persecutors and enemies. Some members of the Sanhedrin, having in a frenzy
and rage committed the greatest crime, had involuntarily performed the greatest
sacrificial offering: by sacrificing the all-holy Victim they had redeemed
mankind and had put an end to the fruitless series of archetypal sacrifices,
making those sacrifices and their statutes themselves superfluous. Other
members of the Sanhedrin, representatives of all the righteous ones of the Old
Testament, in a God-pleasing way and spirit performed the burial of the
Redeemer of men, and by this action completed and sealed the pious work of the
sons of the Old Testament. Henceforth commences the exclusive ministry of the
figures of the New Testament.
The holy women were no less courageous than Joseph in their
self-renunciation.Having been present at the burial on Friday, they did not
consider it permissible on the Sabbaththe day of restto disturb the repose in
which the Lords body slept in the sacred darkness and reclusion of the
cave-sepulcher. The women intended to pour out their zeal for the Lord by
pouring myrrh on His body. Having returned from the burial on Friday, they
straightway bought a sizable quantity of fragrant mixtures of spices and
awaited the day following the Sabbath. On that day, at the rising of the sun,
the pious women set out for the tomb. On the way they remembered that a large
stone had been rolled in front of the tombs entrance. This caused them to
worry, and the women began to speak among themselves: Who shall roll us away
the stone from the door of the sepulcher? (Mark 16:3). The stone was very
great. When they arrived at the sepulcher, to their surprise they saw
the stone rolled away. It had been moved aside by a resplendent, powerful
angel. After the Lords Resurrection the angel had descended from heaven to the
tomb that had held Him Whom the heavens could not contain. He had struck the
guards with fear, and at the same time had broken the seal and moved the heavy
stone aside. He was sitting upon the stone, awaiting the arrival of the women.
When they came he proclaimed to them the Lords Resurrection, commanding them
to inform the Apostles. Thanks to their zeal towards the God-man, thanks to
their resolution to render honor to the all-holy bodyguarded by sentries and
vigilantly watched by the hatred of the Sanhedrinthe holy women were the first
people to receive precise and reliable information about Christs Resurrection.
They became the first and most powerful preachers of the Resurrection, since
they had heard the news from the mouth of an angel. There is no partiality with
the all-perfect God: all are equal before Him, and that man who strives toward
God with great self-renunciation is made worthy of the special gifts of God, in
exceptional abundance and with spiritual beauty.
Who shall roll us away the stone from the door of the sepulcher? These
words of the holy women have a mystical meaning. It is so edifying that love
for my neighbor and desire for his spiritual benefit do not permit me to be
silent about it.
The tomb is our heart. Our heart was a temple, but it has become a tomb. Christ
enters therein by means of the sacrament of Baptism, in order to dwell within
us and act through us. Then the heart is consecrated to God as a temple. We
take from Christ the possibility of acting, and we revive our old man, when
we continually act according to the inclination of our fallen will and of our
reason, poisoned by falsehood. Christ, Who entered at Baptism, continues to
abide in us, but He is as it were wounded and put to death by our behavior. The
temple of God, not made with hands, is turned into a cramped and dark tomb. A
stone, very great, is rolled against the entrance. The enemies of God
set a watch before the tomb, and with a seal they make fast the opening that is
shut up by the stone. They seal the stone to the rock wall so that, in addition
to the weight, the substantial seal might prohibit one from touching the stone.
The enemies of God themselves keep watch to preserve this deadening! They have
deliberated and have set up every kind of obstacle to warn them in advance of a
resurrection to prevent it, to make it impossible.
The stone is that infirmity of the soul by which all other infirmities are kept
inviolable, and which the Holy Fathers call insensibility. [1] What is this
sin? Many will say that they have never even heard of it. According to the
definition of the Fathers, insensibility is the deadening of spiritual
feelings. It is the invisible death of the human soul regarding spiritual
matters and a total revitalization regarding material matters.
It happens that due to a long-term physical illness, all ones strength is
exhausted and all the bodys faculties wither. Then the sickness, not finding
food for itself, ceases to torment the bodily frame. It leaves the sick one
worn outdeadened, as it wereand incapable of activity because he has been
wasted by sufferings, because of a terrible, mute sickness which is not
expressed by any particular kind of suffering. The same thing happens in a
human soul as well. A long-standing negligent life amidst continual
distractions, amidst continual voluntary sins, in forgetfulness of God and
eternity, in forgetfulness ofor in the most superficial remembrance ofthe
Gospel commandments and teachings, removes ones feeling for spiritual matters
and deadens the soul to them. Though these spiritual matters exist, they cease
to exist for him, because his life has ceased for themall his strength is
directed only to that which is material, temporal, empty, and sinful.
Anyone who examines the state of his soul dispassionately and thoroughly will
see in it the infirmity of insensibility. He will see the extent of its
influence, he will see its severity and importance, and he will admit that it
is the manifestation and evidence of the deadening of his soul. When we want to
take up the reading of the word of God, what boredom attacks us! Everything we
read seems to be of little importance, undeserving of attention, strange! How
we wish to be quickly freed from this reading! To what is this due? It is due
to the fact that we have no feeling for the word of God.
When we stand at prayer, what dryness and coldness we feel! How we rush to
finish our superficial supplications, filled with distractions! Why is this?
Because we are strangers to God: we believe in the existence of God with a dead
faith. He does not exist for our feelings. Why have we forgotten eternity? Is
it possible that we will be excluded from the number of those who must enter
its boundless domain? Is it possible that death does not stand before us
face-to-face as it stands before other men? What is the reason for this? It is
because we have become attached with all our soul to material things. We never
think about eternity, and we never want to think about itwe have lost our
precious presentiment of it and have acquired a false concern for our earthly
sojourn. This false feeling makes our earthly life seem to us to be endless. We
are so deceived and captivated by this false feeling that we arrange all of our
actions in accordance with it. We offer up the faculties of our soul and body
in sacrifice to that which is corruptible, taking no care at all for the other
world which awaits us, even though we must without fail become eternal
inhabitants of that world. Why do idle talk, joking, judgment of our neighbors,
and biting mockery of them pour forth from us as from a spring? Why is it that
without feeling burdened we spend many hours at the most shallow entertainments
without finding satiety in them, and endeavor to replace one empty occupation
with another, while we do not want to dedicate even the briefest time to the
examination of our sins and to weeping over them? It is because we have
acquired a feeling for sin, for everything shallow, for everything through
which sin is introduced into man, and by which sin is preserved in man. It is
because we have lost the feeling for everything that introduces the God-beloved
virtues into man, and increases and preserves them in him.
Insensibility is inculcated in a soul by the world which is hostile toward God
and by the fallen angels who are hostile toward God, and with the cooperation
of our own will. It grows and is strengthened by a life that conforms to the
principles of the world. It grows and is strengthened by following ones own
fallen reason and will, ceasing to serve God, and serving God negligently. When
insensibility tarries in ones soul and becomes its nature, then the world and
the rulers of the world affix their seal to the stone. This seal consists in
the human spirits contact with the fallen spirits, in the human spirits
assimilation of the impressions produced on it by them, and in its subjugation
to the forcible influence and predominance of the rejected spirits. Who shall
roll us away the stone from the door of the sepulcher? This is a
question filled with anxiety, sadness, and bewilderment. This anxiety, sadness,
and bewilderment are felt by those souls who are making their way to the Lord,
having ceased serving the world and sin. Before their gaze is revealed, in all
its terrible magnitude and significance, the infirmity of insensibility. They
desire to pray with contrition, to read the word of God without desiring to
read other things, and to abide in continual contemplation of their sinfulness,
in continual pain over it. In a word, they want to be adopted by God, to belong
to God, and they encounter something unexpectedan opposition within themselves
that is not comprehended by the servants of the world: insensibility of heart.
Their heart, struck by their previous negligent life as if by a mortal wound,
displays no signs of life. In vain does their mind gather thoughts about death,
about Gods Judgment, about the multitude of their sins, about the torments of
hell and the delights of paradise. In vain does their mind try to smite their
heart with these thoughtsit remains without feeling for them, as if hell,
paradise, Gods Judgment, ones own transgression, and ones state of
fallenness and perdition had no relation whatsoever to the heart. It sleeps a
deep sleep, a sleep of death. It sleeps, drunk and intoxicated with sinful
poison. Who shall roll us away the stone from the door of the sepulcher?
This stone is very great.
According to the teachings of the Holy Fathers, in order to destroy
insensibility man needs a constant, patient, uninterrupted activity against
insensibility; he needs a constant, pious, and attentive life. The life of
insensibility is put to shame by such a life. But this death of the human
spirit is not put to death by mans efforts alone: insensibility is destroyed
by the action of Divine Grace. An angel of God, at Gods command, comes down to
the aid of a toiling and troubled soul, rolls away the stone of hardness from
his heart, fills his soul with contrition, and proclaims to the soul its
resurrection, which is the usual result of constant contrition. [2] Contrition
is the first sign of the quickening of the heart with regard to God and
eternity. What is contrition? Contrition is a mans feeling of mercy and
compassion for himselffor his disastrous state, his state of fallenness, his
state of eternal death. Concerning the people of Jerusalem who were brought to
this frame of mind by the preaching of the holy Apostle Peter and became
disposed to accept Christianity, the Scripture says that they were pricked in
their heart (Acts 2:37). [3]
The Lords body had no need of the fragrant myrrh of the myrrh-bearers. The
anointing with myrrh was forestalled by the Resurrection. But the holy womenby
their timely purchase of myrrh, by their early walk to the life-bearing tomb at
the suns first rays, by their disregard of the fear that had been instilled in
them by the malice of the Sanhedrin and the military watch that stood guard
over the tomb and the One buried thereinmanifested and proved by their actions
their heartfelt care for the Lord. Their gift turned out to be superfluous, but
it was recompensed a hundredfold by the appearance of the angel, who had
hitherto been invisible to the women, and by the newswhich could not fail to
be utterly trueof the Resurrection of the God-man, and the resurrection with
Him of all mankind. God does not need for Himself the dedication of our lives,
the dedication of all our strength and capabilities to His servicebut for us
it is indispensable. We offer them as myrrh at the Lords tomb. Let us
opportunely buy myrrh as an offering of love. From our youth let us renounce
all sacrifices to sin. At the price of this renunciation let us buy myrrh, as
an offering of love. Service to sin cannot be combined with service to God: the
first destroys the second. Let us not permit sin to mortify the feeling for God
and for all things Divine in our spirit! Let us not allow sin to place its seal
upon us, to receive a violent predominance over us.
He who has entered into the service of God from the days of his unspoiled youth,
and who remains in this service with constancy, submits himself to the
continual influence of the Holy Spirit. He is imprinted with the Grace-filled,
all-holy impressions which proceed from Him, and he acquires, in time, an
active knowledge of Christs Resurrection. In Christ he comes to life in spirit
and is made, by the election and command of God, a preacher of the Resurrection
to his brethren. He who through ignorance or fascination has enslaved himself
to sin, has entered into a relationship with the fallen spirits, has numbered
himself among them, and has lost within his spirit his bond with God and with
the inhabitants of heavenlet him be healed through repentance. Let us not put
off our treatment from one day to the next, that death may not steal upon us
unexpectedly; that it may not carry us off suddenly; that we may not turn out
to be incapable of entering into the habitations of unending repose and
festivity; that we may not be cast, like useless tares, into the fire of hell,
which forever burns and is never quenched. Chronic diseases are not quickly
cured, and not as easily as ignorance imagines. It is not without reason that
Gods mercy grants us time for repentance; it is not without reason that all
the saints implored God that they be granted time for repentance. Time is
needed for the blotting out of sinful impressions; time is needed to be
imprinted with the stamp of the Holy Spirit; time is needed to cleanse
ourselves from impurity; time is needed to be clothed in the raiment of the
virtues, to be adorned with the God-loving qualities with which all the
inhabitants of heaven are adorned.
Christ is resurrected in a man who is prepared for it, and the tombthe
heartagain becomes a temple of God. Arise O Lord, save me, O my God (Ps.
3:7). In this, Thy mystical and, at the same time, substantial Resurrection,
consists my salvation. Amen.