Dogmas, to the Coptic Orthodox Church, are not merely theological concepts concerning God, man, church, eternal life, heavenly creatures, demon etc.., to be discussed among clergymen, scholars and laymen, but are, in essence, daily experiences each member of the church has to live. In other words, dogmas representing our faith in God through various aspects have one message, i.e. our communion with God the Father in Jesus Christ, the incarnate Word of God, by His Holy Spirit. Thus, we conceive of our redemption, and our membership of the church, a deep understanding of the Holy Bible, an acceptance of the Kingdom of God within our souls, a communion with the heavenly creatures and the experience of eternal life.
DOGMAS AND INTEGRAL CHURCH LIFE
The Christian Church is not merely a
school involved in researches and teaching dogmas, but an institution
which worships God and serves mankind. It works for the transformation
and the renewal of this world, and hopefully awaits the world to come.
Truly, the Christian Church would not be the church as we know it
without Christian dogmas. Dogmas interpret our whole philosophy of the
church through repeated practise of our faith through the holy
tradition (the holy Scriptures, worship, behavior and preaching). All
these elements represent different aspects of the one inseparable church
life.
If we look at the relationship
between the dogmas and the holy Scripture, we observe that they are not
only based on the Scripture but that any dogmas which has no base in
it is invalid. Dogmas in fact are mirrors of the holy Scripture. They
explain the holy Scriptures and attract men to enjoy its spirit.
Similarly, we can say that dogmas
are the way in which believers are guided to worship God in truth and
in spirit. True worship reveals our dogmas in simplicity.
Dogmas correlate to our ascetic
attitude. The early Alexandrian theologians and clergymen were true
ascetics, and as a result asceticism still strongly affects our
theology. This is not by denying the needs of our bodies, as some
scholars charge, but by insisting on the soteriological aspect: The
early Coptic ascetics were involved in enjoying the redeeming deeds of
the Holy Trinity, i.e. in enjoying the sanctification of the soul,
mind, body, gifts etc.. through communion with the Father in His Son
through the Holy Spirit.
Early Egyptian asceticism was
biblical. It did not hate the body, its senses and capacities nor did
it deny the human free will, or despise earthly -life and all its
properties. Coptic asceticism in its essence was not an isolation from
men, but rather enjoying unity with God. This attitude affected our
theology and dogmas, through concentration on the "deification," i.e.
the return of man to the original image of God by restoring his soul,
mind, body etc.., in preparation for Paradise.
Concerning the relationship between
dogmas and behavior or practical faith'. we have to distinguish
between only believing (without practising) and a living belief, for as
St. James says: "even demons believe" Jam. 2:19.
Concerning the relationship between
dogmas or theology as a whole and practical religious life, we can
quote Alan Richardson: "Religious people very often feel that theology
leaves a cold dead
abstraction in the place of what
was once a warm and living faith. Theology, like any other study can
become dry and academic.. The fact is that religion without theology is
as unthinkable and incomplete as theology is without religion: the two
are as complementary to one another as theory and practices.
The close relationship between
dogmas and preaching was well exercised through the ordination of the
majority of the early deans of the School of Alexandria as Popes or
Bishops of this See. Those men were well educated in theology, and
dogmas and were highly capable of preaching and practising pastoral
care.
In conclusion, the true theologian
is not merely a man who is involved in discussing or teaching dogmas,
but also one who accepts the dogmas of the church of which he is a
member. Therefore Origen calls him "a man of the church. " He is not
only a spokesman of the church but he practises its life.
Dogmas are what is believed, taught, confessed and practised.
DOGMAS AND KNOWLEDGE
One of the very important
characteristics of the church of Alexandria was her broad-mindedness
and openness of heart towards philosophers. While leaders of the church
in other countries looked at philosophy as an enemy of faith (like St.
Justin and Tertullian), our Fathers embraced philosophers with love,
treated them as children in need of the, church to help them grow
through faith into manhood. Thus the Alexandrians saw faith not as
opposite to the mind and knowledge, but as a satisfaction of mind and
an elevation of thoughts through which one could enjoy Divine
knowledge. This knowledge was thus superior to philosophical knowledge.
God grants faith to men who are His rational creatures, and He would
not destroy the minds which He created.
During the second century, St.
Clement of Alexandria, a theologian of great piety, wide reading and
classical scholarship, believed that the spiritual believer was a
Gnostic, giving the word "gnosis" (knowledge) a Christian meaning,
instead of the common meaningof that time which signified "heresy." He
says: "Gnosis is the principle and author of every action conforming to
the Logos," the grace of gnosis comes from the Father through the Son.
Faith, in our concept, embraces all human nature, it signifies not only our souls and hearts but also our minds and thoughts.
THE "DOGMA" BASED ON "TRUTH" AND "LOVE"
Dogmas, as we have seen, are the
interpretation of our experience of God, in the Crucified and Risen
Jesus Christ. This experience throughout the ages does not alter, for
Jesus Christ remains the same yesterday, today and forever (Heb.
13:18). The disciples and apostles (and bishops afterwards) did not sit
around a table and agree to teach new dogmas, but rather they preached
their Christian experience. As St. John says, "That which we have
seen and heard declare we unto you" I John 1:3. Thus all Christian
dogmas resulted from Church's experience of the Crucified and Risen
Christ, "Truth and "Love" at the same time. We receive these dogmas as
the unchangeable truth that we must holdfast, with "love."
The Alexandrian Popes (bishops) as
theologians and pastors at the same time looked to dogmas as an
expression of evangelic truth integrated with love. They were very
zealous in defending the Orthodox faith and dogmas against any heresy,
not only in Egypt but in all Christendom, offering their lives as
sacrifices on behalf of the church. They were very firm and strict
concerning the faith they had once received (2 Tim. 12,14), and some
historians accuse them of violence, but in fact they were truly loving
and kind men. St. Cyril wrote to Nestorius telling him that he would
never find a person who loved him like Cyril, but never would this love
be at the expense of his faith. He hated heresy and error but loved
the soul of the heretic and desired his salvation.
DOGMA AND THEOLOGICAL TERMS
The Alexandrian Fathers used
theological terms to explain the divine truths and their deep meanings,
and to defend the Orthodox faith against heresies, but they were not
enslaved to the terms themselves. St. Athanasius who devoted his life
to defending Christ's Godhead stated that disputes merely about words
must not be suffered to divide those who think alike.
DOGMA AND RENEWAL
The Coptic Orthodox Church is well
known as a conservative church, especially in dogmas and doctrines. At
the same time, it progresses not by embracing new doctrines or new
"articles of faith," but by explaining the same faith "once given to
the saints" (Jude 3) in a contemporary language.
OUR BELIEF IN GOD
GOD IS LOVE
"God is love" I John 4:8. He is
neither an idea that we believe in, nor a Supreme Being isolated from
mankind in His heaven far away from our world, but He is the Lover of
mankind, He granted us His divine knowledge to enjoy His love and to
touch His Fatherhood. He would like to be very near to mankind, to
unite them to Himself, to live within their souls, and grants us
participation in His Glory.
In other words, God reveals Himself
to us, not to involve us in theoretical discussions, nor to practise
His authority upon us, but to attract us to Himself as children to
their true Father in whom they find the essence of life, satisfaction,
immortality and eternal glorification.
REVELATION OF GOD
God created man in His image, as
the most perfect of His creations on earth. God did not plan to leave
man in Paradise alone, but to embrace him as His beloved, to meet him
(Gen. 18:17), and to reveal Himself, His nature, His mysteries and His
will to him.
God spoke to mankind through nature
(Rom. 1:20). As they refused to hear the voice of the natural law, He
presented His written Law through Moses and sent His prophets to them
(Heb. 1: 1,2). At last, the Incarnate Son of God came to enlighten
their inner life and to set His Kingdom within them. He came to reveal
the mystery of God, the Lover and Savior of men. His revelation has its
effect on our nature and eternal future.
MYSTERY OF GOD
"Mystery" in Christianity does not
mean that a believer takes obscure dogmas without understanding them,
or that these dogmas are unacceptable to his mind. Our minds cannot
conceive this naturally without God's grace and revelation. Mystery
does not oppose man's thinking but is supreme and inconceivable without
God's help.
God created us as rational beings.
He reveals Himself and His deeds to us, not to abolish our minds but to
elevate them so that all our human nature can accept Him and
acknowledges His mysteries.
MONOTHEISM AND TRINITARIAN FAITH
Our faith in its essence is a call
to enjoy the experience of the One God, Lover of mankind. The Old and
the New Testaments confirm the belief in the One God, but the Old
Testament deals with this matter in its passive aspect, for its aim was
to keep the believers away from idols and from practising the
abominations of nations that accompanied paganism (2 Kings 21:2; Chorn.
28:3).
The New Testament witnesses to the
One God in a positive aspect, for it does not only declare the oneness
of God but it also deepens our faith in God by revealing the
"Trinitarian" faith. In fact this faith does not oppose "Monotheism,"
but emphasizes it by revealing some mysteries of the One God and giving
interpretation to these mysteries.
THE TRINITARIAN DOGMA AND THE BIBLE
The Holy Trinity was referred to at
Jesus' baptism (Joh. 1:27-33). Besides our baptism is fulfilled in the
name of the Holy Trinity (Matt. 28:19). St. Paul benediction
enumerates the Trinity in 2 Cor. 13:14.
In the Old Testament we find the
Trisagion (holy, holy, holy) of Isaiah's Vision (6:3); and the name of
God is mentioned in plural "Elohim," even in the Deuteronomy 6:4
"unity" passage [see Gen. 1:26, 11 :7].
Is it necessary to believe in the Holy Trinity?
1. The "Trinitarian" faith solves
many problems which was caused by the absolute "monotheistic" faith.
For example, we say that God is love and His love is eternal; does this
mean that there was another being whom God loved eternally? We can not
say that He loves Himself eternally; this means He is selfish (God
forbids!). We cannot say that He eternally loved by power and not by
action, and after the creation of the heavenly and earthly beings His
love became in action; this means that creation was necessary for God
to realize His love and changes it from power to action.
What we say concerning love might be repeated in regards to other divine characteristics like peace-making, mercy etc..
Truly if we accept the Holy Trinity
as three Hypostaseis in one divine essence, this problem will be
easily solved. This faith in the One God of three Hypostasies declares
the act of love, unity and peace in God as an eternal action of the
Holy Trinity. The Father loved the Son and there was no time when the
Father did not love the Son. Love as a divine character was eternally
in power and in action, for "Love" is God Himself who loved eternally,
and was not in need of the creation to declare His characteristic' s.
God's love to us is an extension of His work and eternal loving nature.
Then the Trinitarian faith reveals God as a dynamic, personal and
communal Being and not a solid being.
2. Someone may say that the
"Trinitarian" faith may incline to "polytheism." We reply that the Son
is the Word of the Father; many religions believe that the words of God
are eternal. the Word of God is not "outside" God, but is one with
Him, as brightness that shines from the light. The Father was not
without His Word, as light is never without brightness. Thus our belief
in the Son does not mean Polytheism.
The Holy Spirit is the "Life," and the Father is the "Being." This "Being" is not separated from "Life..."
It is important to believe in God
who is "the rational, Being" one essence, eternally simple, for the
three are not separated, nor has one existed before the others. They
are like the fire which has flame, light and heat at the same time.
3. St. Clement of Alexandria
states that all expressions concerning God are used because of our
weakness and disability. In other words, we must not understand "One"
here as a number among other numbers, but it means an unspeakable
unity. "Monotheism" cannot be tasted nor understood as "Numbering," for
it makes God as a solid Being subject to numbering. St. Clement says:
[God is One, and beyond one, and above the Monad itself].
Let us not understand the Oneness of God in a material manner.
4. We should not understand the
expression "the Son" in a materialistic way as if the Son had an
essence other than that of the Father, but He is the Brightness who
never separates from the "Light.11
Can God not bring forth a Son? For
we cannot accept God as a solid, being unable to bring forth! Every
energetic essence has to bring forth something. Fire brings forth light
and radiates heat, the radio element brings forth energy, and the
human mind brings forth wise thoughts. God can never be a solid Being,
but eternally He brings forth the Son, for He is the "Light" who brings
forth "the Light." Truly a light that brings forth no light is
darkness.
Bringing forth the Son eternally
reveals the nature of God as the Loving Being, who in His infinite love
brings forth the Son offering to Him His own divine essence being One
with Him.
5. St. Athanasius clarifies that
the "Son" is called "the Word of God," to confirm the oneness of the
essence, that no one may think in two essences.
6. The unity of the Holy Trinity as a unity of love, of continuous
movement, has an effect on our lives, for we imitate the Holy Trinity through our unity together in the Holy Trinity.
7. The "Trinitarian" faith has its
effect on our daily life and on our eternal future. For through it we
acknowledge the fatherhood of God, enjoy the divine friendship of Jesus
our Savior, and the communion of the Holy Spirit. Thus, the door of
hope in the eternal glories will always be opened before us.
8. The Holy Trinity declares the
concept of "perfection," i.e., the perfection of the unity of the Holy
Trinity and not the theoretical
A the solid perfection which has no movement of love.
THE HOLY TRINITY AND HUMAN MIND
Our Trinitarian faith does not
oppose the human mind as someone may think, for if it is called a
"Mystery" this is because of our need for a divine revelation to accept
it. Even "monotheism" has many mysteries that the mind cannot
understand by itself. For example, all religious men say that God fills
heaven and earth and He in infinite, at the same time there is a
divine throne. Is this divine throne limited? How does it look like in
heaven? How can God
occupy the whole world and at the
same time He is present in every room and in every house of God, not
partially for He is undivided, but He is entirely present?
The human soul may be used as an
example to explain the Trinitarian faith. Every soul is "Existent,"
rational and alive. Although
man has one soul and its being is distinguished from its mind and its life, the three are inseparable.
Fire has three self-properties that look like the hypostasis, for it
has flame, the light that is begotten of the flame, and the heat that proceeds from it.
It was very important to reveal the
mystery of the Holy Trinity so that our salvation can be realized. The
Father, Lover of men, sent His Word incarnate to bear our sins and pay
our debts, and sent His Holy Spirit which raises us to His Glory.
Our Trinitarian faith uncovers the
real divine love, for God does not seek our destruction, or have
authority over us as some existentialists say, He is "Love," that longs
for our adoption so that we might be united with Him and share in His
eternal Glories
|
Dogma
The Church Dogmas
Langganan:
Postingan (Atom)
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar