quinta-feira, 26 de agosto de 2021

Saint Ignatius Brianchaninov on Political Systems

[...] Brianchaninov, for instance, wrote that on the one hand, "power is linked with force, subordination is linked with suffering. So it is today; and so it always will be." On the other hand, "Our Savior gave mankind spiritual freedom, but he didn't eliminate authority: In his time of wandering on this earth he subordinated himself to the secular management of the world, saying that this was not his Kingdom" [64] The Christian was obliged to accept with a spirit of humility the suffering that came from subordination to earthly authority, and thereby emulate the suffering of Christ. According to Brianchaninov: 

"The Savior of the world established His Kingdom on earth, but a spiritual Kingdom, which can exist in any human society, no matter what the civil system of this society is called, monarchy or republic, or anything else; because the Kingdom of Christ, being not of this world, has no relation to the civil form of the state." [65] 

Christians had to submit to the secular authorities, whatever form these might take, but there was nothing special about autocracy per se. Indeed Brianchaninov believed that "earthly power is nearly always connected with greater or lesser abuses, due to the fallen nature of man, his sin, and his limitations." [66] Still, mankind's inner freedom could be enjoyed under any form of government. "He who has spiritual freedom doesn't need civil freedom," Brianchaninov wrote, "whether he is in slavery, or prison, in fetters, or in the hands of the executioner, he is free. By contrast, even if he enjoys civil freedom, even if he enjoys complete prosperity, a man without spiritual freedom is a slave of sin and of his passions" [67]


64. Brianchaninov, “Arkhipastyrskye vozzvaniia,” 400. (http://www.xpa-spb.ru/libr/Ignatij-Bryanchaninov/pst-2-393-arhipastyrskie-vozzvaniya.html)

65. Ibid., 409–10.

66. Ibid., 412.

67. Ibid., 416.

excerpt from "Russian Conservatism" by Paul Robinson

* * * 

В литературном отношении статьи "Собеседника" – новость в русской духовной литературе. Как новость, они могут показаться особенно занимательными. Иностранная литература богата такого рода сочинениями, над составлением которых неусыпно трудится партия революции и беспорядка. Метод во всех таких сочинениях один: они, выставляя злоупотребление властию некоторых лиц, на этом основании <восстают> против всякой власти, проповедуют равенство и совершенное благоденствие человеков на земле. Революционные сочинения имели и имеют повсюду множество читателей и чтителей. Это естественно: они – произведения разгоряченного воображения, не руководимого ни благоразумием, ни отчетливым знанием, разгорячают, воспламеняют, увлекают неопытных читателей. Часто действуя, по-видимому, против одного рода власти, они всегда действуют против всех властей, по свойству своего метода 1. Неправильность заключений от частного к общему тщетно твердится и повторяется здравою логикою: большинство человеков не обращает внимания на это правило и не знает его. Ни равенства, ни совершенной свободы, ни благоденствия на земле в той степени, как этого желают и это обещают восторженные лжеучители, быть не может. Это возвещено нам Словом Божиим; доказано опытом. Несвободное состояние людей, имеющее многоразличные формы, как это должно быть известно и понятно всякому образованному, есть последствие ниспадения человечества во грех 1. Первою властию была объявлена власть мужа; первою зависимостию – зависимость жены. С этой минуты власть сопряжена с насилием, подчинение сопряжено с страданием. Такими они остаются поныне; такими останутся до окончания мира. Спаситель наш даровал человечеству духовную свободу; но Он не только не устранил никаких властей, – Сам во время своего земного странствования подчинился влиянию властей, злоупотреблявших властию, подчиняясь бремени, которое человечество привлекло на себя грехом. Господь уклонился от всякого вмешательства в временное управление миром, возвестил, что Царство Его не здешнее (Ин. 18. 36), а неправедному судии Своему сказал, что он не имел бы над Ним никакой власти, если б она не дана ему была свыше (Ин. 19. 11). Отношения власти и подчиненности рушатся с разрушением мира: тогда прекратятся начальство и власть (1 Кор. 15. 24); тогда установятся братство, равенство, свобода; тогда причиною единения власти и подчиненности будет не страх, а любовь. Таким единением поглотятся власть и подчинение: существуя, они вместе уже не будут существовать. В противоположность Слову Божию революционные писатели провозглашают уничтожение властей, равенство и братство во время жизни мира. Во Франции не раз удавалось мечтателям увлекать народ к усилиям осуществить эту мечту, могущую существовать в одном воображении. Какие же были последствия? Последствиями были потоки крови, потрясение государства внутренним беспорядком. Для исшествия из затруднительного положения народ должен был восстановлять власть и власти. Опыт доказал, что при восстановлении порядка власть облекается особенными правами и действует с особенною энергиею. "Власти от Бога учинени суть. Противляяйся власти, Божию повелению противляется", – сказал Апостол (Рим. 13. 1, 2). Невозможно слабому человеку устранить определение и распоряжение Божии. Доколе человечество подвержено влиянию греха и страстей, дотоле необходимы власть и подчиненность. Они непременно будут существовать в течение всей жизни мира: только могут являться, являются, будут являться в различных формах.


terça-feira, 24 de agosto de 2021

excerpt from "Statement on Orthodox-Roman Catholic Marriages" 1986

O seguinte é um trecho do documento

"Statement on Orthodox-Roman Catholic Marriages - Metropolitan New York/New Jersey Orthodox-Roman Catholic Dialogue, 1986"

[...]

B. O Planejamento e a Celebração da Cerimônia de Casamento 

O planejamento e a celebração da cerimônia de casamento propriamente dita apresentam certas dificuldades devido às diferenças de disciplina canônica a este respeito. De acordo com a disciplina Católico Romana, tendo as devidas dispensas, o casamento pode ser realizado na Igreja Católica Romana ou na Igreja Ortodoxa. Enquanto a maioria das províncias eclesiásticas Ortodoxas exigem que o casamento ocorra somente na Igreja Ortodoxa, as recentes decisões sinodais de duas (o Patriarcado de Moscou e a Igreja da Polônia) reconhecem a validade do sacramento do casamento realizado por padres Católicos Romanos, desde que o bispo Ortodoxo dê sua permissão. (Veja: Diakonia II: 2/67, p. 202 e III: 1/68, p. 43).

Os sacerdotes de ambas as igrejas são responsáveis por realizar o rito do matrimônio de acordo com suas respectivas disciplinas. Ambas as igrejas permitem a presença de ambos os sacerdotes, o Católico Romano e o Ortodoxo, na mesma cerimônia. Entretanto, os papéis que cada um cumpre podem diferir de acordo com as diferentes disciplinas. Estes fatos devem ser reconhecidos e explicados ao casal de modo a ajudar a promover o entendimento mútuo, se não mesmo o acordo mútuo. Se o casal solicitar a presença especial de um padre da outra igreja, o convite deve ser estendido a ele através do padre oficiante. Os seguintes regulamentos específicos de cada igreja devem ser observados.

Na Igreja Ortodoxa (de acordo com as "Diretrizes para os cristãos Ortodoxos nas relações ecumênicas", da Conferência Permanente dos Bispos Ortodoxos Canônicos nas Américas, 1973, pp. 19-22): 

1. A participação ativa do padre Católico Romano dentro do rito matrimonial não é permitida neste momento, e isto deve ser explicitado a ele no momento do convite. 

2. O padre Católico Romano deve ser convidado a usar sua veste litúrgica (vestido de coro ou alva). 

3. Deve ser-lhe dado um lugar que o distinga da congregação. 

4. No final da cerimônia Ortodoxa, o padre Católico Romano será devidamente reconhecido e apresentado. Ele poderá então conceder uma bênção ao casal e dirigir a eles palavras de exortação e de felicitações. 

5. Os casamentos mistos nunca são celebrados dentro do contexto de uma liturgia eucarística. 

6. O anúncio e a publicação do casamento devem indicar claramente a distinção entre o celebrante Ortodoxo e o padre Católico Romano convidado, evitando termos confusos como "assistido" ou "participado", mas sim indicando que o padre Católico Romano "estava presente e concedeu uma bênção".

Na Igreja Católica Romana: 

1. Quando o padre Católico Romano oficia, a participação ativa do padre Ortodoxo dentro do rito matrimonial é permitida, por exemplo, ler as Escrituras, fazer a homilia, oferecer orações e dar uma bênção. Entretanto, por respeito à disciplina atual que não permite que um padre Ortodoxo participe desta forma, o Católico Romano oficiante não deve convidá-lo a fazê-lo. 

2. O padre Ortodoxo que aceita um convite para estar presente no rito matrimonial deve ser convidado a usar o traje litúrgico permitido por sua disciplina. 

3. Deve ser dado a ele um lugar de honra no santuário. 

4. O padre Católico Romano deve reconhecer e acolher o padre Ortodoxo, de preferência no início da cerimônia de casamento; no final da cerimônia, ele deve convidar o padre Ortodoxo a oferecer orações e palavras de felicitações ao casal. 

5. Embora os casamentos Católicos Romanos-Ortodoxos possam ser celebrados em uma liturgia eucarística, tal escolha deve ser fortemente desencorajada em vista das proibições atuais relativas à partilha eucarística. 

6. O anúncio e a publicação do casamento devem indicar claramente a distinção entre o celebrante Católico Romano e o padre Ortodoxo convidado, evitando termos confusos como "uma cerimônia dupla" ou "um casamento ecumênico", mas sim indicando que o padre Ortodoxo "estava presente e ofereceu orações".

Deve-se notar em particular o fato de que no caso de casamentos Católicos Romanos-Ortodoxos, a disciplina Católica Romana (Código de Direito Canônico revisado, cânon 1127, 1) reconhece a validade do casamento de um Ortodoxo e de um Católico Romano realizado por um padre Ortodoxo. De fato, se uma dispensa adequada da forma canônica for assegurada, o casamento também é lícito. Embora a política Católica Romana permita que um padre Ortodoxo seja um oficiante do casamento em um edifício da Igreja Católica Romana, a prática Ortodoxa requer a permissão específica do bispo Ortodoxo. 

Nem a Igreja Ortodoxa nem a Igreja Católica Romana permitem duas cerimônias de casamento separadas. O consentimento comum de duas pessoas batizadas em Cristo cria uma nova união sacramental cujo significado seria destruído pela repetição do cerimonial de casamento. Ambos aderem a Cristo em fé; ambos compartilham a vida sacramental da Igreja; ambos oram no mesmo Espírito, ambos são guiados pela mesma Sagrada Escritura. Tudo isso converge para tornar este momento mais importante um evento sagrado para os noivos. Três requisitos devem ser cumpridos nos casamentos Católicos Romanos-Ortodoxos: 

1. O rito matrimonial pode ser realizado apenas uma vez, e toda indicação de duas cerimônias religiosas distintas deve ser evitada. 

2. A cerimônia deve ser realizada em um edifício da igreja Ortodoxa ou Católica Romana. 

3. O rito da celebração é o do sacerdote oficiante, e deve ficar claro que uma pessoa está oficiando em nome daquela igreja.

É a recomendação do Diálogo Católico Romano - Ortodoxo da Metropolia de Nova Iorque/Nova Jersey que algumas disposições canônicas sejam tomadas para resolver o problema que tem grandes implicações pastorais para os cristãos Ortodoxos que se casam na Igreja Católica Romana. Quando um cristão Ortodoxo se casa com um Católico Romano em uma cerimônia Católica Romana, o parceiro Ortodoxo geralmente é separado da participação nos sacramentos da Igreja Ortodoxa. A fim de corrigir a situação canônica do parceiro Ortodoxo, a disciplina atual exige que o casamento seja regularizado na Igreja Ortodoxa. Qualquer forma de regularização deve evitar dar a impressão de que o casamento que ocorreu na Igreja Católica Romana não teve um caráter fundamental sacramental. Tampouco deve implicar que uma nova cerimônia esteja ocorrendo. O objetivo é reintegrar o comunicante Ortodoxo na vida plena de sua própria Igreja e restaurá-lo a sua plena posição canônica dentro da Igreja. Na esperança de aliviar este problema canônico, este diálogo oferece algumas recomendações mais adiante para a consideração por parte das autoridades competentes. (Veja Conclusão). 

C. Aconselhamento aos casamentos Católicos Romanos - Ortodoxos sobre a vida familiar e a criação dos filhos 

A educação religiosa das crianças é de responsabilidade de ambos os pais. O casal deve ser aconselhado a considerar seriamente, antes do casamento, a educação religiosa de seus filhos. Reconhece-se que cada igreja deseja que todo esforço razoável seja feito por parte de seu próprio membro para criar os filhos dentro de sua própria comunidade. Espera-se, entretanto, que nenhum acordo prévio que excluiria a possibilidade de criar os filhos na fé Ortodoxa ou na fé Católica Romana seja firmado por qualquer das partes. Dentro do contexto do acordo que ocorre antes do casamento, as seguintes normas devem ser mantidas: 

1. Uma decisão livre deve ser tomada pelo casal para criar os filhos ou na Igreja Ortodoxa ou na Igreja Católica Romana. A prática de criar alguns dos filhos em uma igreja e outros em outra igreja está errada. Ela divide a família, fracassa em refletir a teologia e a prática de qualquer uma das igrejas, e pode levar a uma atitude de indiferença. É igualmente inaceitável negligenciar batizar e catequizar as crianças sob a presunção de que elas "decidirão por si mesmas" quando forem mais velhas. Tal procedimento muitas vezes resulta em que essas crianças tenham apenas uma fé fraca e confusa e uma vida espiritual confusa. 

2. As crianças devem ser ensinadas a amar e respeitar a igreja e as tradições religiosas do outro progenitor. Para isso, elas devem ser capazes de ir adorar ocasionalmente na liturgia e participar da vida devocional da igreja daquele progenitor. Entretanto, toda impressão deve ser evitada de criar as crianças em uma "fé cristã" sem identificá-las com uma comunidade eclesial concreta e uma tradição espiritual. 

3. Quando um parceiro não está compromissado com sua fé e aparentemente dará pouco estímulo ao treinamento religioso dos filhos ou se envolverá no mesmo, então os filhos devem ser criados na igreja do progenitor compromissado em vez de não terem nenhuma conexão com a vida sacramental de qualquer uma das igrejas. (Veja "Joint Recommendations on the Spiritual Formation of Children of Marriages between Orthodox and Roman Catholics", U.S. Orthodox-Catholic Consultation, 1980, acima das pp. 206-208). 

Embora a exposição e a participação em ambas as tradições seja desejável para a unidade da família, há uma série de pontos onde as diferenças na prática entre as Igrejas Ortodoxa e Católica Romana podem muito bem colocar problemas e devem ser discutidas durante o aconselhamento pastoral, como por exemplo: 

1. A frequência de ir à igreja, 

2. Adoração familiar em casa, 

3. Jejuns (mais numerosos e provavelmente observados com mais rigor na Igreja Ortodoxa),

4. Festas, especialmente Pascha/Páscoa e Natal, que podem ou não diferir na data da celebração e nos costumes e exigências concomitantes feitas por eles. 

Ambos os padres devem aconselhar o casal sobre questões morais relativas à vida familiar, enfatizando a semelhança de crenças e tradições, a fim de trazer a maior unidade possível na fé e na moral da família. Os tópicos de aconselhamento devem incluir respeito mútuo, moralidade conjugal (incluindo conduta pré e extramatrimonial), meios aceitos de planejamento familiar, violência familiar, divórcio, dependências químicas. Deve ser dada atenção particular aos temas do testemunho cristão em um casamento misto e espiritualidade pessoal. Sempre que necessário, os sacerdotes devem estar prontos para recomendar aconselhamento profissional ou terapia, além de seu próprio aconselhamento pastoral. É particularmente recomendado que materiais em conjunto [de diálogos entre Católicos-Ortodoxos] relativos ao casamento cristão e à vida familiar e especialmente à criação cristã de filhos sejam desenvolvidos e produzidos conjuntamente para a orientação do clero e para o uso de pessoas envolvidas em casamentos Católico Romano - Ortodoxos. 


The following is an excerpt from the document

"Statement on Orthodox-Roman Catholic Marriages - Metropolitan New York/New Jersey Orthodox-Roman Catholic Dialogue, 1986

[...]

B. The Planning and Celebration of the Marriage Ceremony 

The planning and celebration of the marriage ceremony itself pose certain difficulties because of the differences in canonical discipline in this regard. According to Roman Catholic discipline, given the proper dispen-sations, marriage can take place in either the Roman Catholic or Ortho-dox Church. While most Orthodox ecclesiastical provinces require that the marriage take place in the Orthodox Church only, recent synodal decisions of two (the Patriarchate of Moscow and the Church of Poland) recognize the validity of the sacrament of marriage performed by Roman Catholic priests provided that the Orthodox bishop gives his permission. (See: Diakonia II: 2/67, p. 202 and III: 1/68, p. 43.)

The priests of both churches are responsible for carrying out the rite of marriage according to their respective disciplines. Both churches permit the presence of both the Roman Catholic and Orthodox priest at the same ceremony. However, the roles that each fulfills may differ according to varying disciplines. These facts should be recognized and explained to the couple so as to assist in promoting mutual understanding, if not mutual agreement. If the couple requests the special presence of a priest of the other church, the invitation should be extended to him through the officiating priest. The following specific regulations of each church should be noted. In the Orthodox Church (in agreement with the "Guidelines for Orthodox Christians in Ecumenical Relations," of the Standing Confer-ence of Canonical Orthodox Bishops in the Americas, 1973, pp. 19-22): 

1. The active participation of the Roman Catholic priest within the marriage rite is not permitted at this time, and this should be made explicit to him at the time of the invitation. 

2. The Roman Catholic priest should be invited to wear his liturgical vesture (choir dress or alb). 

3. He should be given a place which distinguishes him from the congregation. 

4. At the conclusion of the Orthodox ceremony, the Roman Catholic priest will be properly acknowledged and introduced. He then may give a benediction to the couple and address to them words of exhor-tation and good wishes. 

5. Mixed marriages are never celebrated within the context of a eucharistic liturgy. 

6. Announcement and publication of the marriage should clearly indicate the distinction between the Orthodox celebrant and the guest Roman Catholic priest, avoiding confusing terms as "assisted" or "participated," but rather indicating that the Roman Catholic priest "was present and gave a blessing."

In the Roman Catholic Church: 

1. When the Roman Catholic priest officiates, the active participation of the Orthodox priest within the marriage rite is permitted, for example, reading the Scriptures, giving the homily, offering prayers, and giving a blessing. However, out of respect for the current disci-pline which does not permit an Orthodox priest to participate in this way, the officiating Roman Catholic should not invite him to do so. 

2. The Orthodox priest who accepts an invitation to be present at the marriage rite should be invited to wear the liturgical vesture permitted by his discipline. 

3. He should be given a place of honor in the sanctuary. 

4. The Roman Catholic priest should acknowledge and welcome the Orthodox priest, preferably at the start of the marriage ceremony; at the conclusion of the ceremony, he should invite the Orthodox priest to offer prayer and words of good wishes to the couple. 

5. While Orthodox-Roman Catholic marriages may be celebrated at a eucharistic liturgy, such a choice should be strongly discouraged in view of current prohibitions regarding eucharistic sharing. 

6. Announcement and publication of the marriage should clearly indicate the distinction between the Roman Catholic celebrant and the guest Orthodox priest, avoiding confusing terms like "a double ceremony" or "an ecumenical marriage," but rather indicating that the Orthodox priest "was present and offered prayers."

Particular note should be taken of the fact that in the case of Orthodox-Roman Catholic marriages, Roman Catholic discipline (revised Code of Canon Law, canon 1127, 1) recognizes the validity of the marriage of an Orthodox and a Roman Catholic performed by an Orthodox priest. Indeed, if a proper dispensation from the canonical form is secured, the marriage is also licit. While Roman Catholic policy allows an Orthodox priest to be a marriage officiant in a Roman Catholic church building, Orthodox practice requires the specific permission of the Orthodox bishop. 

Neither the Orthodox Church nor the Roman Catholic Church per-mits two separate marriage ceremonies. The common consent of two people baptized into Christ creates a new sacramental union whose root significance would be destroyed by the repetition of the wedding cere-mony. Both adhere to Christ in faith; both share the Church's sacramental life; both pray in the same Spirit, both are guided by the same Holy Scripture. All this converges to make this most important moment a sacred event for the bride and groom. Three requirements must be ob-served in Orthodox-Roman Catholic marriages: 

1. The marriage rite can be performed only once, and all indication of two distinct religious ceremonies should be avoided. 

2. The ceremony should take place in an Orthodox or Roman Catho-lic church building. 

3. The rite of the celebration is that of the officiating priest, and it should be made clear that one person is officiating in the name of that church.

It is the recommendation of the Metropolitan New York/New Jersey Orthodox-Roman Catholic Dialogue that some canonical provision be made to resolve the problem which has great pastoral implications for Orthodox Christians marrying in the Roman Catholic Church. When an Orthodox Christian marries a Roman Catholic in a Roman Catholic ceremony, the Orthodox partner usually is separated from the participa-tion in the sacraments of the Orthodox Church. In order to rectify the canonical situation of the Orthodox partner, current discipline requires that the marriage be regularized in the Orthodox Church. Any form of regularization should avoid giving the impression that the marriage which has taken place in the Roman Catholic Church does not have a funda-mental sacramental character. Nor should it imply that a new ceremony is taking place. The goal is to reintegrate the Orthodox communicant into the full life of his/her own Church and to restore him/her to full canonical standing within the Church. In the hope of alleviating this canonical problem, this dialogue offers some recommendations further on for con-sideration by the appropriate authorities. (See Conclusion.) 

C. Counseling those entering into Orthodox-Roman Catholic marriages concerning family life and rearing of children 

The religious education of children is the responsibility of both par-ents. The couple ought to be counseled to give serious consideration prior to the wedding to the religious upbringing of their children. It is recog-nized that each church desires that every reasonable effort be made on the part of its own member to raise the children within its own community. It is hoped, however, that no prior agreement which would exclude the possibility of raising the children in either the Orthodox or Roman Catholic faith be entered into by either party. Within the context of the agreement which takes place before the marriage, the following norms are to be maintained: 

1. A free decision must be made by the couple to raise the children either in the Orthodox or Roman Catholic Church. The practice of raising some of the children in one church and others in the other 

church is wrong. It divides the family, fails to reflect the theology and practice of either church, and could lead to an attitude of indifference. It is equally unacceptable to neglect to baptize and catechize children under the presumption that they will "decide for themselves" when they are older. Such a procedure very often results in those children having only a weak and confused faith and spiritual life. 

2. Children should be taught to love and respect the church and religious traditions of the other parent. Towards this end they should be able to worship occasionally at the liturgy and to participate in the devotional life of that parent's church. However, every impression should be avoided of rearing the children in a "Christian faith" with-out identifying them with a concrete ecclesial community and spiritual tradition. 

3. Where one partner is uncommitted to his/her faith and apparently will give little encouragement to the religious training of the children or become involved in it, then the children should be reared in the church of the committed parent rather than have no connection with the sacramental life of either church. (See "Joint Recommendations on the Spiritual Formation of Children of Marriages between Orthodox and Roman Catholics," U.S. Orthodox-Catholic Consultation, 1980, above pp. 206-208.) 

While exposure to and participation in both traditions is desirable for the sake of the unity of the family, there are a number of points where differences in practice between the Orthodox and Roman Catholic Churches may very well pose problems and ought to be discussed during pastoral counseling, such as: 

1. Church attendance, 

2. Family worship at home, 

3. Fasts (more numerous and probably more strictly observed in the Orthodox Church),

4. Feasts, especially Pascha/Easter and Christmas, which may or may not differ in the date of celebration and in the customs and concomitant demands made by them. 

Both priests should counsel the couple on moral issues concerning family life, stressing commonality of beliefs and tradition, in order to bring about as much unity as possible in the faith and morals of the family. Topics in counseling should include mutual respect, marital mo-rality (including premarital and extramarital conduct), accepted means of family planning, family violence, divorce, chemical dependencies. Par-ticular attention should be given to the subjects of Christian witness in a mixed marriage and personal spirituality. Whenever necessary, priests should be ready to recommend professional counseling or therapy in addition to their own pastoral counseling. It is particularly recommended that joint materials concerning Christian marriage and family life and especially the Christian rearing of children be developed and produced jointly for the guidance of the clergy and for the use of people involved in Orthodox-Roman Catholic marriages. 




sexta-feira, 4 de junho de 2021

UFO phenomenon as demons

"But the UFO phenomenon simply does not behave like extraterrestrial visitors. It actually molds itself in order to fit a given culture." - John Ankerberg, The Facts on UFOs and Other Supernatural Phenomena, p. 10

"Human beings are under the control of a strange force that bends them in absurd ways, forcing them to play a role in a bizarre game of deception." - Dr. Jacques Vallee, Messengers of Deception, p. 20

"We are dealing with a multidimensional paraphysical phenomenon which is largely indigenous to planet earth." - Brad Steiger, [cited in] Blue Book Files Released in Canadian UFO Report, Vol. 4, No. 4, 1977, p. 20

"We are part of a symbiotic relationship with something which disguises itself as an extra-terrestrial invasion so as not to alarm us." -Terrence McKenna [from a lecture]

"One theory which can no longer be taken very seriously is that UFOs are interstellar spaceships." - Arthur C. Clarke, New York Times Book Review, 07/27/75

"There seems to be no evidence yet that any of these craft or beings originate from outer space." -Gordon Creighton, Official 1992 Flying Saucer Review Policy Statement

"A large part of the available UFO literature is closely linked with mysticism and the metaphysical. It deals with subjects like mental telepathy, automatic writing and invisible entities as well as phenomena like poltergeist [ghost] manifestation and 'possession.' Many of the UFO reports now being published in the popular press recount alleged incidents that are strikingly similar to demonic possession and psychic phenomena." - Lynn E. Catoe, UFOs and Related Subjects: USGPO, 1969; prepared under AFOSR Project Order 67-0002 and 68-0003

"UFO behaviour is more akin to magic than to physics as we know it... the modern UFOnauts and the demons of past days are probably identical." - Dr. Pierre Guerin, FSR Vol. 25, No. 1, p. 13-14

"The UFO manifestations seem to be, by and large, merely minor variations of the age-old demonological phenomenon..." - John A. Keel, UFOs: Operation Trojan Horse, p. 299

"A working knowledge of occult science...is indispensable to UFO investigation." - Trevor James, FSR Vol. 8, No. 1, p.10

"Studies of flying saucer cults repeatedly show that they are part of a larger occult social world." -Stupple & McNeece, 1979 MUFON UFO Symposium Proceedings, p. 49

"The 'medical examination' to which abductees are said to be subjected, often accompanied by sadistic sexual manipulation, is reminiscient of the medieval tales of encounters with demons. It makes no sense in a sophisticated or technical framework: any intelligent being equipped with the scientific marvels that UFOs possess would be in a position to achieve any of these alleged scientific objectives in a shorter time and with fewer risks." -

Dr. Jacques Vallee, Confrontations, p. 13

"The symbolic display seen by the abductees is identical to the type of initiation ritual or astral voyage that is imbedded in the [occult] traditions of every culture...the structure of abduction stories is identical to that of occult initiation rituals...the UFO beings of today belong to the same class of manifestation as the [occult] entities that were described in centuries past." -Dr. Jacques Vallee citing the extensive research of Bertrand Meheust [Science-Fiction et Soucoupes Volantes (Paris, 1978); Soucoupes Volantes et Folklore (Paris, 1985)], in Confrontations, p. 146, 159-161

"[The occultist] is brought into intelligent communication with the spirits of the air, and can receive any knowledge which they possess, or any false impression they choose to impart...the demons seem permitted to do various

wonders at their request." - G.H. Pember, Earth's Earliest Ages and Their Connection with Modern Spiritualism and Theosophy (1876), p. 254

"These entities are clever enough to make Strieber think they care about him. Yet his torment by them never ceases. Whatever his relationship to the entities, and he increasingly concludes that their involvement with him is something 'good,' he also remains terrified of them and uncertain as to what they are." - John Ankerberg, The Facts on UFOs and Other Supernatural Phenomena, p. 21

"I became entirely given over to extreme dread. The fear was so powerful that it seemed to make my personality completely evaporate... 'Whitley' ceased to exist. What was left was a body and a state of raw fear so great that

it swept about me like a thick, suffocating curtain, turning paralysis into a condition that seemed close to death...I died and a wild animal appeared in my place." - Whitley Strieber, Communion, p. 25-26

"Increasingly I felt as if I were entering a struggle that might even be more than life and death. It might be a struggle for my soul, my essence, or whatever part of me might have reference to the eternal. There are worse things than death, I suspected... so far the word demon had never been spoken among the scientists and doctors who were working with me...Alone at night I worried about the legendary cunning of demons ...At the very least I was going stark, raving mad." - Whitley Strieber, Transformation, p. 44-45

"I wondered if I might not be in the grip of demons, if they were not making me suffer for their own purposes, or simply for their enjoyment." - Whitley Strieber, Transformation, p. 172

"I felt an absolutely indescribable sense of menace. It was hell on earth to be there [in the presence of the entities], and yet I couldn't move, couldn't cry out, couldn't get away. I'd lay as still as death, suffering inner agonies. Whatever was there seemed so monstrously ugly, so filthy and dark and sinister. Of course they were demons. They had to be. And they were here and I couldn't get away." - Whitley Strieber, Transformation, p. 181

"Why were my visitors so secretive, hiding themselves behind my consciousness. I could only conclude that they were using me and did not want me to know why...What if they were dangerous? Then I was terribly dangerous because I was playing a role in acclimatizing people to them." - Whitley Strieber, Transformation, p. 96

‘If you wanted to bypass the intelligentsia and the church, remain undetectable to the military system, leave undisturbed the political and administrative levels of a society, and at the same time implant deep within that society far-reaching doubts concerning its basic philosophical tenets, this is exactly how you would have to act. At the same time of course, such a process would have to provide its own explanation to make ultimate detection impossible. In other words, it would have to project an image just beyond the belief structure of the target society. It would have to disturb and reassure at the same time, exploiting both the gullibility of the zealots and the narrow-mindedness of the debunkers. This is exactly what the UFO phenomenon does.’

Jacques F. Vallee

* * * 

 "Mas o fenômeno OVNI simplesmente não se comporta como visitantes extraterrestres. Na verdade, ele se molda para se adequar a uma determinada cultura". - John Ankerberg, The Facts on UFOs and Other Supernatural Phenomena, p. 10

"Os seres humanos estão sob o controle de uma força estranha que os dobra de formas absurdas, forçando-os a desempenhar um papel em um jogo bizarro de engano". - Dr. Jacques Vallee, Messengers of Deception, p. 20

"Estamos lidando com um fenômeno parafísico multidimensional que é em grande parte nativo do planeta Terra". - Brad Steiger, [citado em] Blue Book Files publicado no Canadian UFO Report, Vol. 4, No. 4, 1977, p. 20

"Somos parte de uma relação simbiótica com algo que se mascara como uma invasão extra-terrestre para não nos alarmar". -Terrence McKenna [de uma palestra]

"Uma teoria que não pode mais ser levada muito a sério é que os OVNIs são naves espaciais interestelares". - Arthur C. Clarke, New York Times Book Review, 07/27/75


"Parece ainda não haver provas de que qualquer uma dessas naves ou seres sejam originários do espaço exterior". -Gordon Creighton, Flying Saucer Review Policy Statement de 1992

"Uma grande parte da literatura disponível sobre OVNI está intimamente ligada ao misticismo e ao metafísico. Ela trata de assuntos como telepatia mental, escrita automática e entidades invisíveis, assim como fenômenos como manifestação poltergeist [fantasma] e 'possessão'. Muitos dos relatos de OVNIs agora sendo publicados na imprensa popular recontam alegados incidentes que são impressionantemente similares à possessão demoníaca e fenômenos psíquicos". - Lynn E. Catoe, OVNIs e Assuntos Relacionados: USGPO, 1969; preparado sob as ordens 67-0002 e 68-0003 do Projeto AFOSR.

"O comportamento dos OVNIs é mais parecido com a magia do que com a física como a conhecemos... os modernos OVNInautas e os demônios dos tempos passados são provavelmente idênticos". - Dr. Pierre Guerin, FSR Vol. 25, No. 1, p. 13-14

"As manifestações de OVNIs parecem ser, em grande parte, apenas pequenas variações do antigo fenômeno demonológico"... - John A. Keel, OVNIs: Operation Trojan Horse, p. 299

"Um conhecimento funcional da ciência do ocultismo... é indispensável para a investigação de OVNIs". - Trevor James, FSR Vol. 8, No. 1, p.10

"Estudos de seitas de discos voadores mostram repetidamente que elas fazem parte de um mundo social ocultista maior". -Stupple & McNeece, 1979 MUFON UFO Symposium Proceedings, p. 49

"O 'exame médico' ao qual se diz que os abduzidos são submetidos, muitas vezes acompanhado de manipulação sexual sádica, é reminiscente dos contos medievais de encontros com demônios. Não faz sentido em um estrutura sofisticada ou técnica: qualquer ser inteligente equipado com as maravilhas científicas que os OVNIs possuem estaria em condições de alcançar qualquer um desses supostos objetivos científicos em um tempo mais curto e com menos riscos". - Dr. Jacques Vallee, Confrontations, p. 13

"A exibição simbólica vista pelos abduzidos é idêntica ao tipo de ritual de iniciação ou viagem astral que se encontra incorporada nas tradições [ocultistas] de toda cultura...a estrutura das histórias de abdução é idêntica à dos rituais de iniciação ocultista... os seres OVNIs de hoje pertencem à mesma classe de manifestação que as entidades [ocultistas] que foram descritas em séculos passados". -Dr. Jacques Vallee citando a extensa pesquisa de Bertrand Meheust [Science-Fiction et Soucoupes Volantes (Paris, 1978); Soucoupes Volantes et Folklore (Paris, 1985)], em Confrontations, p. 146, 159-161

"[O ocultista] é levado a uma comunicação inteligente com os espíritos do ar, e pode receber qualquer conhecimento que eles possuam, ou qualquer falsa impressão que eles escolham transmitir...os demônios parecem ter permissão para fazer várias maravilhas a pedido deles". - G.H. Pember, Earth's Earliest Age and Their Connection with Modern Spiritualism and Theosophy (1876), p. 254

"Estas entidades são espertas o suficiente para fazer Strieber pensar que elas se importam com ele. No entanto, seu tormento por elas nunca cessa. Qualquer que seja sua relação com as entidades, e ele conclui cada vez mais que o envolvimento delas com ele é algo 'bom', ele também permanece aterrorizado com elas e incerto quanto ao que elas são". - John Ankerberg, The Facts on UFOs and Other Supernatural Phenomena, p. 21

"Fiquei inteiramente entregue ao pavor extremo. O medo era tão poderoso que parecia fazer minha personalidade evaporar completamente... 'Whitley' deixou de existir. O que restou foi um corpo e um estado de medo bruto tão grande que me arrastou como uma cortina grossa e sufocante, transformando a paralisia em uma condição que parecia próxima da morte... Eu morri e um animal selvagem apareceu em meu lugar". - Whitley Strieber, Communion, p. 25-26

"Cada vez mais eu me sentia como se estivesse entrando em uma luta que poderia até ser mais do que vida e morte. Pode ser uma luta pela minha alma, minha essência, ou qualquer parte de mim que tenha referência ao eterno. Há coisas piores que a morte, eu suspeitava... até agora a palavra demônio nunca havia sido dita entre os cientistas e médicos que estavam trabalhando comigo... Sozinho à noite eu me preocupava com a lendária astúcia dos demônios... No mínimo eu estava enlouquecendo, delirando". - Whitley Strieber, Transformation, p. 44-45

"Eu me perguntava se eu não estaria nas garras dos demônios, se eles não estavam me fazendo sofrer para seus próprios propósitos, ou simplesmente para seu prazer". - Whitley Strieber, Transformation, p. 172

"Eu senti uma sensação de ameaça absolutamente indescritível. Era um inferno na terra estar lá [na presença das entidades], e mesmo assim eu não podia me mover, não podia gritar, não podia fugir. Eu permanecia tão imóvel quanto a morte, sofrendo agonias interiores. O que quer que estivesse ali parecia ser tão monstruosamente feio, tão sujo e escuro e sinistro. É claro que eles eram demônios. Eles tinham que ser. E eles estavam aqui e eu não conseguia escapar". - Whitley Strieber, Transformation, p. 181

"Por que meus visitantes eram tão reservados, escondendo-se atrás de minha consciência. Eu só podia concluir que eles estavam me usando e não queriam que eu soubesse por que... E se eles fossem perigosos? Então eu era terrivelmente perigoso porque estava desempenhando um papel na aclimatação das pessoas para eles". - Whitley Strieber, Transformation, p. 96

Se você quisesse driblar a intelligentsia e a igreja, permanecer indetectável para o sistema militar, deixar inalterados os níveis políticos e administrativos de uma sociedade e, ao mesmo tempo, implantar no fundo dessa sociedade dúvidas profundas a respeito de seus princípios filosóficos básicos, esta é exatamente a forma como você teria que agir. Ao mesmo tempo, é claro, tal processo teria que fornecer sua própria explicação para tornar impossível a detecção final. Em outras palavras, teria que projetar uma imagem bem além da estrutura de crenças da sociedade alvo. Teria que perturbar e tranquilizar ao mesmo tempo, explorando tanto a ingenuidade dos zelotas quanto a estreiteza mental dos debunkers [desenganadores]. Isto é exatamente o que o fenômeno OVNI faz". - Jacques F. Vallee


terça-feira, 18 de maio de 2021

Sufi metaphysics and Christian Orthodox trinitarism (Vincent Rossi)

The following is an excerpt from the article "Presence, Participation, Performance: The Remembrance of God in the Early Hesychast Fathers" by Vincent Rossi

[...]
Schuon outlines above several dichotomies that will undoubtedly underlie all our discussions: metaphysics-theology, intellectual-sentimental, esoterism-exoterism, unitarism-trinitarism, metaphysical transparency of forms-opaque doctrinal formalism, and above all, Divine center-human margin. All these dichotomies, or rather, hierarchical dualities, for that is what they are in fact, are rooted in the fundamental epistemic duality: gnosis (knowledge)-pistis (faith), with the former standing higher on the epistemic ladder than the latter. Knowledge-faith, according to Schuon, is the basic duality of all religious expression. Merely noting these dualities, and mechanically putting each thinker or tradition we encounter into one or the other, does not automatically lead us to perfect clarity. For example, what Schuon calls “theology” or “sentimental metaphysics” is clearly not what the early Hesychast Fathers know as theologia, which as an expression indicating union with God transcends even what Schuon calls the “highest metaphysics”. Again, what Schuon calls “extreme trinitarianism” is characteristic of each and every one of the early Hesychast Fathers with whom we will be exploring the practice of the remembrance of God.

Sufi metaphysics, as represented by a thinker like Schuon, is grounded in a logically hierarchical and essentialist conception of reality: Beyond-Being, Being, Existence. Only the Absolute, the totally unqualified, non-manifest Essence, is Beyond-Being. This is That which is “the One”. The Trinity in this conception cannot represent the totally unqualified Essence. The Trinity necessarily stands at the level of Being, the equally non-manifest but proto-determined principle of Existence. Being is thus the “realm” of the “personal” God, which is the first determination of the Absolute, called by Schuon the relative Absolute. Since the hypostases of the Trinity in this view are determinations of the One, and relative to one another, they necessarily cannot be at the level of the absolutely Absolute, but must be relative to it, that is, to the Essence, yet still absolute with respect to the created world; hence Schuon’s notion of Being as the relative Absolute. Such an approach is highly congenial to and perhaps even entirely representative of the “highest metaphysics” of the Sufis, but it is unacceptable to the Hesychasts of the Christian East, whose own understanding of the highest metaphysics is paradoxically Trinitarian, hypostatic/personalist rather than logically essentialist. This explains Schuon’s implied criticism of Christians who are “extreme” trinitarians. He is critical, not of their trinitarianism per se, but of their illogical insistence that the Trinity is the most appropriate way to speak of the Absolute (“as if the three dimensions of space were to be willed into one dimension only”), and of their insistence that Person/hypostasis in God describes the Uncircumscribable better than an essentialist metaphysics. This insistence by the Christian hesychasts is inexplicable to the logically hierarchical metaphysics of the Sufi traditionalists, in which the intellectual principle of logical non-contradiction is primary; or it is explicable in Schuon’s terms only as the stubborn insistence by “bhaktic” theologians of a “Divine right” to irrationality and illogicality. Among the Hesychasts, however, the revelational principle of paradox and antinomy is superior to the principle of logical non-contradition. The Hesychasts were not ignorant of the paradoxical nature of their Trinitarian expressions, as even a cursory reading of the Corpus Areopagiticum or the works of St Maximos the Confessor must show. Hence their trinitarianism cannot justly be characterized as “devoid of metaphysical penetration” or as a form of “sentimental” or “bhaktic” theology, impervious to the subtle gleams of metaphysical light. Furthermore, in my reading of the greatest of the hesychast masters, saints such as Dionysios the Areopagite, Maximos the Confessor, or John of Damaskos, their insistence upon and expression of Divine unity in their trinitarianism seems in no way inferior to the most radical of the unitarists of Islam. Nor does one see in their writings (and it would be easy to supply dozens of texts showing this) the slightest indication that in their “trinitarism” they are guilty of that greatest of Islamic sins against Divine Unity, association or shirk. 

[...]

The meaning of this passage pivots on the insight that for the hesychast, God is forever beyond human knowledge, and yet He somehow reveals Himself to those who seek Him with fervency and constancy. Further, though forever beyond human knowledge, to the Hesychasts of the Christian East, God is forever present, not as transpersonal Essence, which is imparticipable, or as the “first determination” of the Divine Essence, as traditionalist/Sufi metaphysics would have it, but as transcendent Person. This is the true meaning of the hesychasts’ “extreme trinitarianism”, which insists that the absolute Divine Essence, although totally beyond-being, is not an impersonal or non-personalized principle that transcends everything sequent to it, but subsists only as it is “enhypostasized” in the three Persons of the Trinity. For the hesychasts, Divine Personhood enhypostasizing the Divine Essence is the absolutely transcendent principle, not the Divine Essence as an unhypostasized principle standing alone. In the experience of the Divine presence, the Trinity expresses the absolute primacy of the trihypostatic God over the Divine Essence understood anhypostatically. Person essentialized and Essence enhypostatized, is the ultimate mystery. For the hesychasts, then, the Absolute is not transpersonal Essence, but the trans-essential and hyper-personal Godhead, that is, the tri-hypostatic hyper-essential One.

2) The certainty of the Hesychast that God is supremely present as Person leads us to the second question: Who is doing the remembering? The answer given by the Hesychasts is that the created person who is made in the image and likeness of God is capable of remembering God precisely because, like God, he is a person. A person, whether created or Uncreated, is a mystery, never totally circumscribed by a definition, that is, as an essence or a “what”. A person is not a “what” but a “who”, and “who” you are, just as Who God is, is ultimately indefinable, undetermined, and of infinite depth. To say “what” something is, is to circumscribe that something in terms of essence or essential definition; to say “who” is to speak, not of some “thing” which can be defined in terms of its essence, but of some “one”, an ultimately uncircumscribable and indefinable “who”. To say “one” in this sense is to say “who” not “what”. In this same sense, then, the Absolute One is the ultimately uncircumscribable, undetermined, indefinable Who, who is “infinitely beyond all being, potentiality, and actualization”.31 In the Trinity of the hesychasts, to repeat, essence does not transcend person but is always enhypostatized; neither does person transcend essence, as Orthodox personalist theologians like John Zizioulas seem to be saying32, but is essentialized: this is the balanced heart of the highest metaphysics of Christian theologia, not to be confused with the “sentimental metaphysics” that some Sufi traditionalists call theology. Yet the one made in God’s image may only approach God’s presence when his personhood becomes like God’s presence, that is, when his “who” becomes like God’s “Who”. Put in terms of hesychastic methodology, the human presence may be able to stand in the Divine Presence when the potentiality of the likeness to God inherent in the nature of the created person has been activated by acts of purification, asceticism, and prayer. [...] The presence of God as transcendent and uncreated Person, then, is not the conclusion of a rational judgment, but is experienced by a created person in a state of heightened or purified spiritual sensibility, and this cannot come about so long as the soul is dominated by passions of any kind. Transcendent Person gives itself to created person through an uncreated grace in which the created person participates according to the degree of his or her purification and illumination. This participation occurs through the synergy of the benevolence of the Transcendent Person and the efforts of the created person. The ultimate meaning and purpose of the human person created by God is the capacity to participate in the reality of the Divine Transcendent Person through the uncreated energies and attributes of Divine grace.

[...]

Conclusion: The Path to the Heart through the Remembrance of God— Presence/Apophasis, Participation/Apatheia, Performance/Agape 

Let us attempt to summarize what we have discovered so far about the remembrance of God according to the early masters of Hesychasm. 

1) The remembrance of God for the early Hesychasts is intimately linked with the practice of hesychia. 

2) Hesychia—the peace and stillness of heart based on the undisturbed return of the nous (the intellect or eye of the heart) to the heart caused by the liberation of the powers of the soul from the passions—is the only sure way to attain theosis. 

3) The aim of the remembrance of God is theosis (divinization) or theopoisis (deification): participation by man in the uncreated grace of God, grounded in theoria or the vision of uncreated light and attained through the energy of grace by the operation of God and the cooperation (synergy) of man. 

4) The remembrance of God is both a practice and an experience. The essence of the practice is the method of invocation of the most holy name of Jesus. The essence of the experience is participation in the Divine presence, which is signaled by an unprecedented intensification of human energy called “suffering of heart”. 

5) The remembrance of God as suffering of heart is grounded in the remembrance of death, which is the conscious experience of the ever-present boundary between our sinful mortality and the unbearable limpidity of the immortal Divine Presence. Mindfulness of death is conscious experience of sin, desire for repentance, intense compunction that leads to the concentration of the soul’s powers on the contemplation of God.

6) The basic function of the Jesus Prayer in the remembrance of God is to unify human nature fragmented by sin, because God, Whose Presence is perfect Unity, can be realized only in unity. Without the unification of all the powers of the soul, rational, appetitive, and irascible, there can be no true remembrance of God but only ignorance, forgetfulness, and self-indulgent insensitivity. 

7) The invocation of the Name of Jesus moves through several stages, of which three are fundamental: first, attentiveness (prosoche), which requires vocal recitation of the prayer; then noetic prayer (noera proseuche), in which the attention is first internalized in the nous, which then descends into the heart and becomes self-activating; and finally, the incarnation of Jesus in the heart, in which the remembrance of God becomes the ceaseless presence of Christ in the heart.

The act, that is, the phenomenon, of the remembrance of God, if it is genuine, is a paradox walking on the invisible waters of an abyss. On the one hand, the Hesychast tradition insists on the radical unknowability of God. We can know that God is, the saints insist, but we cannot know what God is. On the other hand, the Hesychasts insist equally strongly, as we have seen in the Hagioritic Tome, on true gnosis: the real experience of God in the heart. It is a kind of knowing the unknowable through an unknowing knowledge.[...] As we bring to a close our interrogation of the early Hesychast Fathers on the meaning of the remembrance of God, we are hopefully beginning to appreciate that what they understand by remembrance involves something far deeper and more meaningful than the mere thought of God in the mind or even a pious devotional prayer. To them the remembrance of God is an utterly real experience, indeed a transformative experience. If the experience of the remembrance of God does not involve an actual transformative and transfiguring confrontation with the fire of the Divine presence, a searing awareness of God as a “consuming fire” that actually reveals sin in all its starkness in the soul as it burns it up while healing and transforming the inner man, then it is not really the remembrance of God, but a state of forgetfulness in which the soul indulges itself in the illusion of religious activity while being ignorant of its own radical insensitivity to the Divine presence.

segunda-feira, 3 de maio de 2021

Florovsky on Sophia

The following is an excerpt from the article  "ΕΝΕΡΓΕΙΑ vs ΣΟΦΙΑ The contribution of Fr. Georges Florovsky to the rediscovery of the Orthodox teaching on the distinction between the Divine essence and energies" by Stoyan Tanev 

[...]

Interestingly enough, Florovsky rarely talks about Sophia. “It is particularly startling to discover that there seems to be absolutely nothing” in Florovsky’s lifetime corpus of published writing that could qualify as an explicit attack on sophiology.147 However, Florovsky’s writings abound in what can be characterised as indirect criticism of sophiology. Most of them were scholarly studies which aimed “to expose weaknesses in the theoretical or historical underpinnings of the sophiological edifice, doing so, however, without referring to the sophiological teaching by name.”148 One of the few places where Florovsky discusses the concept of Sophia is in a letter written to Bulgakov on July 4/22, 1926, where he argues that acquaintance with Palamas would have made his Sophia unnecessary: 149
“As I have been saying for a long time, there are two teachings about Sophia and even two Sophias, or more accurately, two images of Sophia: the true and real and the imaginary one. Holy churches were built in Byzantium and in Rus’ in the name of the former. The latter inspired Solovyov and his Masonic and western teachers - and goes right back to the Gnostics and Philo. Solovyov did not at all know the Church Sophia: he knew Sophia from Boehme and the Behmenists, from Valentinus and Kabbalah. And this Sophiology is heretical and renounced. That which you find in Athanasius relates to the other Sophia. And one may find even more about Her in Basil the Great and Gregory of Nyssa, from which there is a direct line to Palamas. The very terminology - ousia and energeia has its beginning in Basil the Great. I see no difficulty in this terminology. Aristotle has nothing to do with this. The basic thought of Cappadocian theology can be reduced to a precise distinction of the inner-divine Pleroma, of the Triune fullness of all-sufficient life, and it is this that is the ousia, pelagas, tis ousias in Damascene, – and: the ‘outward’ [vo vne] direction of Mercy, Grace, Love, Activity - Energeia. The entire question (speculatively very difficult) is in this distinction. In the perceptible sense, this is the explanation of the very idea of creation, as a Divine plan-will about the other, about not-God. Ousia – according to Basil the Great and according to Palamas - is unreachable and unknowable, it is ‘in light unapproachable.’ But ‘the very same God’ (Palamas’ expression) creates, that is, offers another, and for that reason is revealed ‘outward’ [vo vne]. It is this that is ‘Energy,’ ‘Glory,’ ‘Sophia’ - a non-hypostatic revelation of “the same” God. Not ‘essence,’ not ‘personhood,’ not ‘hypostasis.’ If you like, yes, - Divine accidentia, but accidentia of ‘the very same’ God or God ‘Himself.’ And it is precisely to this that Palamas’ thought leads - the accent is on the fullness and full meaning tis Theotitos. If you like, Sophia is Deus revelatus, that is, Grace. Grace - this is God to the world, pros ton kosmon (and not pros ton Theon, as in John 1:1 about the Logos). Sophia is eternal, inasmuch as it is thought - the will of the Eternal God, but it is willed - a thought about Time. There is much on this theme in Blessed Augustine. Sophia - is not only thought, ‘idea,’ kosmos noitos, but is will, power… And in God there is not, God does not have non-eternal powers and wills, but there is will about time. Sophia never is world. The world is other, both in relation to grace and in relation to the ‘original image.’ Therefore ‘pre-eternity’ and ‘pre-temporality’ of will - thoughts about time does [sic] not convert time into eternity. ‘Ideal creation,’ ‘pre-eternal council,’ toto genere is different from real creative fiat. Sophia is not the ‘soul of the world.’ This negative statement distinguishes the Church teaching about Sophia from the Gnostic and Behmenist teachings about her. Sophia is not a created subject, it is not a substance or substrata of created coming-into-being [stanovleniia]. This is gratia and not natura. And natura = creatura. Sophia - is not creatura. Along with this, it is not hypostasis, but thrice-radiant glory.”

This letter is most representative for the identification of some of the key characteristics of Florovsky’s theological approach: the rejection of Solovyov’s legacy in Russian religious philosophy; the firm foundation of his theology in Patristics starting with the theological contribution of St Athanasius the Great; the clear distinction between Divine nature and will as well as the location of the solution of the sophiogical problematics in the Palamite distinction between Divine essence and energies; and last but not least, the relevance of the doctrine of creation for Christian theology in general. Florovsky will further develop his ideas in a number of future works.150

147 Alexis Klimoff, “Georges Florovsky and the Sophiological controversy,” p. 75. 

148 Ibid., p. 76. 

149 The letter has been published in Russian: А.М. Пентковски, “Письма Г.Флоровского С.Булгакову и С.Тышкевичу,” Символ - Журнал христианской культуры при Славянской библиотеке в Париже, № 29, 1993, с. 205, and recently translated in English. The English version can be found online at: http://ishmaelite.blogspot.com/2009/05/palamas-florovsky-bulgakov-and.html (15.08.2010).

150 Georges Florovsky, “Creation and Creaturehood,” Chapter III of The Collected Works of Georges Florovsky, Vol. III: Creation and Redemption (Belmont, Massachusetts: Nordland Publishing Company, 1976), pp. 43-78; “The Concept of Creation in Saint Athanasius,” Studia Patristica, Vol. VI, Papers presented at the Third Conference on Patristic Studies, held at Christ Church, Oxford, September, 1959 (Berlin: AkademieVerlag, 1962), pp. 36-57; “The Idea of Creation in Christian Philosophy,” Eastern Churches Quarterly, Vol. 8, 1949, Supplementary issue on Nature and Grace; “St Gregory Palamas and the tradition of the Fathers,” Sobornost, Vol. 4, 1961, pp. 165- 176, and also in The Collected Works of Georges Florovsky, Vol. 1, pp. 105-120.

Excerpt from the article "The Universal Tradition" by Philip Sherrard

The following is an excerpt from the article  "The Universal Tradition" by Philip Sherrard

[...]

What, though, is less convincing about Guenon's presentation of Tradition is the idea that behind the various forms of religious tradition as we encounter them in the world stands, what he calls, a primordial and universal—purely metaphysical—Tradition of which the various re ligious traditions are as it were but local and partial expressions. The idea appears to involve a kind of circular argument. You can only obtain true metaphysical knowledge, Guenon claims, by means of initiation into it through a particular tradition in which this knowledge is en shrined or embodied. You cannot, that is to say, while standing outside all traditions, survey them as it were impartially and come to the conclu sion that this one rather than that one enshrines the Truth to a greater degree, because a capacity to recognize and realize the Truth presup poses that you have already attached yourself to a tradition and been initiated through it into the Truth. This means that your idea of the Truth, in the absolute sense, is dependent upon the degree to which the Truth, in the absolute sense, is enshrined or embodied in the tradition through which you have received your knowledge of it.

Having received your knowledge of the Truth in this way—and it is, according to Guenon, the only way you can receive it in an authentic fashion—it is surely illegitimate for you to take a further step and say that the tradition through which you have recognized and realized the Truth enshrines the Truth in a way that is more complete than the way it is enshrined in other traditions, so that this tradition—your tradition— represents the primordial and universal Tradition, the Tradition par ex cellence, while other traditions are but adaptations made in order to cater for the limitations of the capacities and temperaments of the par ticular groups of humanity to which they are addressed. To do this is, as I said, to argue round in a circle, which is a game that anyone can play at. 

Yet this is what Guenon does in identifying the metaphysical Trad ition in a primordial and universal sense with the tradition of the Ved anta, seen in the perspective of interpretation given to it by Shankara, and in using the criteria provided by this tradition in order to judge the status, with respect to metaphysical Truth in its purest form, of other traditions. 

Moreover, to say that Vedanta represents the primordial Tradi tions, and is therefore the purest and most perfect of the traditions, be cause it is the original tradition of mankind in a purely chronological sense, is only to repeat the circular argument in another form. Here there are two things to be said. The first is that this assertion about the chronological priority of the Vedanta doctrine itself begs an absolutely vital question. Because although you may say that Vedanta is the oldest spiritual tradition known to mankind, you cannot avoid the question of who you choose to acknowledge as your guide and master in the matter of the interpretation of this tradition. Guenon in fact chose Shankara (rather than, say, Ramanuja); and Vedanta in the extreme non-dualist or monist form given to it by Shankara dates from the 8th century A.D. or thereabouts. 

Yet apart from this, you can only say that Vedanta enshrines most fully the primordial tradition because it is the original spiritual tradition of mankind in a purely chronological sense if you have already accepted a theory of time according to which man's highest state of spiritual re ceptivity, and hence his most pure and perfect form of metaphysical knowledge, coincide with the opening cycle of the great cosmic cycles; and this theory of time, and of the progressive degeneration of the cy cles, is of course part and parcel of the Hindu tradition and is taken from that tradition. If you take your theory of time from, say, the Christian tradition, there is nothing to support the idea that the original state of mankind, chronologically speaking, is the most perfect state. A certain condition of spiritual vacuum is needed in order to locate the most per fect and purest form of things in the remote past, just as it is needed in order to locate it in the remote future, in the manner of Karl Marx or Teilhard de Chardin. 

You can have an idolatry with respect to the past, just as you can have an idolatry with respect to the future. If the second leads to a kind of iconoclasm in which you destroy all inherited traditional forms be cause they represent so many obstacles in the way of man's progress into the future, the first can lead to a kind of stagnation which so ties the human spirit to the revolving wheels of the accumulated habit of cen turies that it becomes impossible for it to embrace new visions, not of the future but of the ever-renewing eternal realities themselves. This is the negative, the mechanical spirit of tradition, and it is in its own way as materialist as the dreams of a Utopian future. It is blindly pious, but not spiritual. It shuts the door of prophecy and consequently of the fa culty which is the correlative of prophecy, the Imagination. Is not this why the Ishopanishad says: "Truth is both finite and infinite at the same time; it moves and yet moves not; it is in the distant, yet also in the near; it is within all objects and without them"?

Also it may be said that Guenon's idea of metaphysical realization gives virtually exclusive pride of place to the intelligence, and, as one would expect from a disciple of Shankara, he regards knowledge as the primary means of deliverance. He does not, for instance, attribute to love any place in the process of transforming the human being into the likeness of God. In fact, for Guenon, love has no metaphysical status whatsoever. As he declared at a discussion in 1924, when he had already reached full maturity, love is merely something "sentimental and in con sequence secondary". That is to say, by definition love cannot for Guenon be that by means of which man can attain perfection, or that without which he cannot achieve wisdom—because love is inseparably bound to wisdom—or that in which he rises to the heights of true con templation. I cannot believe that this typifies Hinduism in general, however much it may typify certain forms of Hinduism. 

Indeed, behind Guenon's presentation of metaphysical doctrine I think one can discern a very distinctive principle at work, one which he applied to the formulation of metaphysical doctrine with extreme rigour. This principle is evident in the status he accorded with respect to such formulation to the human reason and its logic. Put in its simplest terms, for him metaphysic, although it stands above reason, cannot con tradict reason. This is to say that, when it comes to the question of repre senting metaphysical doctrine in terms that are accessible to the human intelligence, if you can demonstrate in purely logical and rational terms that a certain metaphysical principle is and must be superior—more all inclusive, less limited and determined—than another, then this first principle on that account must stand higher in the metaphysical order than the second. Since it can be demonstrated in a perfectly logical and unambiguous manner that the metaphysical principle which is totally unqualified, impersonal and does not admit any particularization or participation is and must be more all-inclusive, less limited and less de termined than any other principle than it is possible for the human mind and its logic to conceive, then, according to this view of things, that prin ciple must be the metaphysical Absolute.

Hence, in this perspective, any tradition which does not identify the metaphysical Absolute with a principle that is totally unqualified, im personal, and so on, must be of a lower order, metaphysically speaking, than a tradition which does identify the Absolute in this way. This, as I said, is quite unambiguous, given the assumption that underlies it. What is ambiguous is why one should accept in the first place the principle of rational and logical demonstration that leads to such a conclusion. The only intelligible answer to this question is to say that you accept it be cause it is an axiom of the tradition to which you have given your adher ence, and hence it determines the manner in which metaphysical know ledge is formulated within that tradition. But this is merely another example of the same circular argument about which I have been speak ing. Because, had you given your adherence to a tradition in which this particular idea of the relationship between logic and metaphysic—the idea, that is to say, that metaphysic cannot contradict reason—is not taken as axiomatic, you would be under no compulsion to reach the con clusion which it imposes.

Yet if this concept, of a primordial Tradition in the way in which Guenon envisages it, is so hedged about with a priori assumptions that it must be seen either as an act of faith or as purely arbitrary, this does not invalidate his idea of what constitutes the main features of Tradition as such. What it does mean, on the other hand, is that the claim to speak in the name of the Tradition, whether one calls it 'universal' or 'metaphysical' or 'primordial', must be treated with considerable care; and that correspondingly the idea of a universal religion, or the propos ition that 'all Truth is one', in itself neither resolves the question of which tradition enshrines the most total revelation of the Truth, nor es tablishes the equal authority and authenticity of all the traditions. 

One must not forget that the significance that a certain tradition has for one, and the degree and firmness of the assent one gives to it, depend not so much on its demonstrable probabilities, as on the strength of one's attachment to it, or faith in it, in the first place. This by no means exempts one from the necessity of the acceptance of, and faith in, a par ticular tradition, which fulfils the conditions, as described by Guenon, that constitute a tradition, if one is to realize the spiritual potentialities that lie in the depths of each one of us; nor does it exempt one from the necessity of directing one's primary loyalty towards the tradition of one's choice and to deepening one's experience of it. Yet it also imposes on one the obligation to respect and honour signs of wisdom, sanctity and grace wherever and whenever they occur, and whatever the tradi tion that has nourished them. 

sexta-feira, 2 de abril de 2021

Comentário sobre bibliografia recomendada para o estudo de religiões comparadas e 'cosmologia' tradicional do ICLS

Comentário sobre bibliografia recomendada para o estudo de religiões comparadas e 'cosmologia' tradicional do ICLS:


Todos grifados em amarelos são autores perenialistas



Todos grifados em vermelho são autores perenialistas




Todos grifados em vermelho são autores perenialistas


Todos grifados em vermelho são autores perenialistas


Autor grifado em vermelho é perenialista


Aprender protestantismo com Jacob Boehme e E. Swedenborg?


terça-feira, 23 de março de 2021

Legacy or "Tradition"? А. Zadornov

The text below was translated by an automatic translator (DeepL) 

ПРЕДАНИЕ ИЛИ «ТРАДИЦИЯ»?

 А. Задорнов

Throughout its development, theological science, taken in its concrete, lived reality, has always been a kind of response to the challenge of those who question and demand an account of the trust of our Church. But it is no less frequent that Orthodox apologetics has to respond to the challenge of those who identify the fruits of their own unenlightened reasoning with the vision of the Church, who, skillfully using parts of this vision, pass off the resulting counterfeit as a component or even a directly necessary component of the Church's worldview. And if in the first case the positions are clear enough, the deliberate vagueness of the second case generates pernicious temptations and perplexities.


It is to the second case that the subject of this paper is traditionalism in its relation to religious studies. We will define traditionalism later; for now it is necessary to show why we consider its positions dangerous for people seeking to enter (but still on the threshold of) the Church. 

First of all, traditionalism selects (as "heresy" in fact does) those points from various religious doctrines which, if examined inattentively, give the appearance of objective similarity.

Second, traditionalism makes a claim to provide some kind of scientific knowledge, thereby basing itself on a certain type of rationality and theory of argumentation. This is why we have chosen the field of religious studies as the scientific context in which we try to show the failure of traditionalism.

Further, and this is especially important and important today, the Russian version of traditionalism directly and intentionally seeks to appear as "Orthodox traditionalism," as a bearer of the spirit of the Church's tradition. To show the real place of traditionalism and to see the illegitimacy of the claims of its representatives to speak on behalf of the Church are the main goals of this essay; all other issues (such as the political orientation of the traditionalists, etc.) are considered only in connection with and to illustrate the general task.

The fact that the influence of traditionalism even in the midst of the Church has its place, and that it is not limited to the shifting world of intellectual sympathies, can be demonstrated by one testimony: "My worldview has been formed mostly under the influence of René Guénon. Thanks to Guénon I learned to seek and love the Truth, to put it above all and not to be satisfied with anything else." [1]

These words belong to Hieromonk Seraphim Rose; sapienti sat.

* * *

Let us cite a few of the most characteristic quotations related to the concepts of traditionalism in order to find a certain invariant distinguishing the distinctive features of this phenomenon, its origin and actual position. 

The originator of the movement himself, René Guénon, expresses himself succinctly: "Primordial Tradition of the present cycle came from the Hyperborean regions. Later there were several secondary streams of this Primordial Tradition corresponding to different periods of history. At present, the true spirit of Tradition, with all that it comprises, is represented only and exclusively by the people of the East and by none other." [2]

If we transfer this formula to concrete historical realities associated with the cyclicality of civilizations and the change of the type of cultures, we get Evola's definition: "A civilization or society is "traditional" if it is governed by principles that exceed all purely human and individual elements, if the structures of this society have a heavenly origin and, in addition, if they are definitely oriented strictly vertically. On the other side of all historical forms the world of Tradition is characterized by self-identity, by essential constancy." [3] As for the religious rather than social aspect of Tradition, according to the contemporary Russian guenonist, "all traditions, as they approach their own center, overcome confessional differences and almost merge into something unified. Guénon calls it "Primordial Tradition," "Изначальным Преданием." Such Tradition, according to Henon, constitutes the secret essence of all religions. [4]In this way, Tradition turns out to be a certain totality of divinely revealed knowledge that determined the structure of all sacred civilizations. Note that this connection of a purely spiritual phenomenon (which traditionalism attributes itself to) to the specifics of former civilizations and historical communities in general is characteristic of all traditionalism in general and largely explains such a harsh "criticism of the modern world" on its part.

If we imagine the world of tradition as depicted by Guénon or Evola in the form of circles inscribed into each other, then we can consider it on several levels at once as follows: 

1) The core of Tradition, its highest aspect - esoterism, the inner content of tradition, adjoining without any intermediaries to the divine essence of revelation: "Esoteric doctrines and their direct knowledge and realization in reality (which is designated by the term 'initiation, dedication [посвящение]') constitute the core of Tradition, the basis of its true orthodoxy, its divine orthodoxy [божественного Православия] (sic!). On this esoteric level occurs what Christian tradition calls "theosis," " deification," the mysterial transformation of the "earthly" into the "heavenly. Esoterism is closely connected with the direct knowledge of the supernatural and super-natural divine Principles themselves. [5]

2) Exoterism or "the outward-facing sphere of sacred doctrines". This is the circle, which has as its center the core of tradition, "should be the sole and supreme instance of the social order" (ibid.). Moreover, as far as the relationship between esoterism and exoterism is concerned, the former must not contradict or refute the latter in any way; in other words, the existence of Gnostic-like internal and external (profane in perspective) Churches is impossible; we must admit that this principle is one of the strengths of traditionalism and its approach.

3) The caste hierarchy, the social organization of the world of Tradition. This hierarchy is built on the principle of aristocracy, i.e. qualitative differentiation, rather than economic, which is inherent in anti-sacral civilizations: "A social hierarchy based on the differentiation of the inner nature of different types of people is a necessary condition of a truly sacral civilization. Anti-hierarchical tendencies have always gone hand in hand with anti-spiritual, anti-traditional and anti-religious tendencies." [6] The theme of the elite is generally the most characteristic of traditionalism and comes from Pareto's sociology and Nietzsche's poetic innovations. Thus, Guénon says: "As things stand in the West, no one occupies the place peculiar to him according to his inner nature." [7] And Evola adds: "A structure must be formed that runs perpendicularly from top to bottom, in which the leaders will be the sole centers, and the centers of the lower organizations will be like officers among the soldiers. Naturally, such a system requires, first of all, the creation of an elite in which not authority corresponds to position, but rather position to authority, which, in turn, derives from real superiority." [8] We will return to this question when we consider the commitment of traditionalism to right-wing political regimes.

 4) The sphere of sacred art and the sacred sciences, i.e. that area which is in direct contact with the world of cultural artifacts and the consequences of human world-building activities in general. "The disappearance of sacred knowledge (and sacred art) in the modern world, the traditionalists argue, went in parallel with the narrowing of the competence of Religion and the destruction of the sacred background of the social hierarchy." [9] Here one can see the desire to return to the worldview of the Middle Ages, when both scholastic theology and the alchemical practice of "nigredo - albedo - rubedo" - and, most importantly, on an equal footing - could be the key to unlocking God's creation in the mystery of the world. Finding such a key to unlocking the world, according to Henon, serves two purposes: to connect the different levels of reality, bringing them into synthesis, and also to prepare the ground for a kind of higher knowledge, to which it is possible to ascend through the steps of the traditional sciences - astrology, alchemy, sacred geography, etc. "It is perfectly clear," writes Guénon on this subject, "that modern science can in no way serve such purposes. Therefore, all of its varieties are nothing more than "profane sciences," while the traditional sciences, because of their connection with metaphysical principles, really constitute a unified "sacred science"- "a sacred science" [науку сакральную.]" [10]

So we have the following hierarchical system, leading from sacred arts and sciences to the caste hierarchy, from the latter to the sphere of external sacred doctrines, culminating in the esoteric core of Tradition. 

In order to derive a complete definition of tradition from these four elements, it is necessary to take into account the total character of the sacredness of all its aspects: "Outside of Tradition there is nothing real at all, since its essence goes directly back to the Divine Source, and God is the sole and absolute author of reality, its Foundation and its Creator. [11]

Thus, in trying to give a preliminary definition of traditionalism, we can say the following: traditionalism is a theoretical and practical claim to consider the esoteric and exoteric aspects of religion as well as the social order and cultural-scientific forms as a total sacralized reality, outside of which there can be no genuine human existence.

* * * 
Traditionalism as it appears today has a wide variety of expressions on all four of these levels. In addition to Gaennon's direct students - Michel Valsan, Frithjof Schuon, Marco Pallis, Paul Serran, Jean Robin, Jean Tournac, Denis Roman, and others - there is a whole series of intellectuals - philosophers, artists, poets, representatives of "academic science" - imbued with ideas of traditionalism, and not necessarily in a strictly guenonian way. Such as, for example, the "Orthodox traditionalist" Jean Bies or the Islamic fundamentalist Heydar Dzhemal.

However, all of the above authors are those who are direct disciples of Henon or have been influenced by his ideas. And if you look to look at the situation from the inside, "semiotically," then we will have to answer the question of whom the traditionalists themselves enumerate as their predecessors. Here we have one very clear criterion: any figure who insists on the "crisis of the modern world," who is pessimistic about its ultimate fate, and who hates the modern profane civilization of the West, turns out to be a traditionalist. Thus, this includes people who never thought of their resemblance to certain characters in this way. Such is Joseph de Maistre, who long before Nietzsche proclaimed the "death of God" for Europe after the French Enlightenment Revolution; Such is Konstantin Leontiev, a Russian follower of the author of St. Petersburg Nights, with his criticism of Dostoevsky's "rosy Christianity"; such is also the enigmatism of French "damned poets" from Lautreamont to Rimbaud; Together with them are the early d'Annunzio and Louis Ferdinand Céline, whose novels are almost a protocol record of the deeds of the "Dark Age," and the thought intensification of Spengler and Heidegger, whose imperative "real philosophy is only possible as a human act" was put into practice by the poet Ezra Pound in Fascist Italy. If we talk about the post-war world, the traditionalists are the writers Yukio Mishima and William Burroughs, the philosophers and postmodern theorists Deleuze and Guattari, and many, many others who share the three traditionalist principles. However, hatred and "revolt against the modern world" (as Evola's work is called) are not the only issues. An essential element of traditionalism turns out to be another phenomenon on which it is necessary to dwell.

In the early eighties Mircea Eliade, who by that time had a solid reputation as a classic of modern religious studies, was nominated for the Nobel Prize in literature. He did not, however, become a prizewinner. The reason for this was not the artistic merits or shortcomings of his truly interesting novels and novellas, but an episode in his pre-war biography. In 1931 Eliade returns from India to Bucharest, where he becomes a doctor of philosophy at the local university. And at the same time the active political activity of the young philosopher begins - he becomes the intellectual head of the Bucharest club "aha", created by N. Ionescu, the ideologist of the "Iron Guard" of Captain Corneliu Zelia Codreanu. Eliade's participation in the development of the ideological program of the Iron Guard (which was a bizarre mixture of "mystical orthodoxy" with archaic "Dacian elements") was not an aberration of the philosopher's political views, or a simple application of his ideas to the sphere of concrete political life. It was a calculated path, a deliberate decision. Proof of this is the fact that Eliade did not abandon his views even when King Mihai dispersed the "Iron Guard" and imprisoned all of its major figures. Eliade, who lectured even behind barbed wire on comparative religion, did not escape the concentration camp. After his imprisonment, when Romania joined the coalition with the Reich, Eliade was sent into honorary exile by the Romanian cultural attaché in London.

This episode is one of many examples of how intellectuals protesting against modern, profane, active civilization either find themselves in collaboration with European right-wing regimes (like Hamsun [Гамсун], Ernst Jünger or Céline), or are actively involved in the fate of these regimes (like Evola, Ezra Pound or Haushofer). It is hard to say what made them associate the "restoration of the social hierarchy" with Mussolini's hysterical [истерическим] "culture-building" or, even worse, with the ideology of the Third Reich. Of course, we can hardly give full credence to the statement of Louis Pauwels, who once said, "Fascism is guenonism plus armored divisions," but there is a certain truth in his words.  The sphere of action is a ambivalent one, which does not allow for the exact realization of concrete ideas as they appear in the minds of their creators. The logic of traditionalist sympathy for right-wing political regimes was attempted several years ago by the famous Italian medievalist writer Umberto Eco in an essay with the symptomatic title "Eternal Fascism. "The term 'fascism' is everywhere," he writes, "because even if one or more aspects of the Italian fascist regime are removed, it still continues to be recognized as fascist. If we remove imperialism from Italian fascism, we get Franco or Salazar... Add the obsession with Celtic mythology and the Holy Grail cult and we have one of the most respected fascist gurus, Julius Evola." [12]

And then Eco identifies several characteristics of "eternal fascism" (ur - fuzzy), which, in his opinion, allow us to identify it with contemporary traditionalism. First, it is the cult of tradition itself, which is older than fascism itself and strives for a new syncretistic culture that disregards contradictions: "German-Fascist gnosis was nourished from traditionalist, syncretistic, occult sources. The most important theoretical source of the new Italian right, Julius Evola, mixes the Grail with the "Protocols of the Elders of Zion," alchemy with the Holy Roman Empire... The very principle of mixing Augustine and Stonehenge is a symptom of Ur-Fascism."[13] 

Other characteristics that, according to Umberto Eco, link traditionalism and totalitarianism are a rejection of modernism and the modern world in general, as well as a suspicion of intellectual activity, intolerance of disagreement and heterogeneity, and an orientation toward the frustrated middle classes. [14]

All of this may be consistent with the political regimes of pre-war Germany and Italy, but does this mean that these characteristics also apply to traditionalism? Aversion to the modern world ("the spirit of 1789" according to Eco) is not necessarily associated with obscurantism [мракобесием] and obscurantism. If we allow ourselves a somewhat playful comparison, we can say that if, according to Kant, "Enlightenment is the state of human maturity," then rejecting it is a return to the young immediacy of the Middle Ages, to that state of infancy, a return to which is impossible without renovatio rnundi. Moreover, European thought of the post-war period knows ironically the characteristic inverse relationship - the spirit of the Enlightenment with its leveling of "freedom, equality and fraternity" and the totalitarian leveling of fascism; we have in mind Adorno-Horkheimer's book The Dialectic of the Enlightenment, which reveals this relationship. Perhaps it was not necessary to elaborate on this topic, but without it one cannot understand many aspects of the doctrines of Henon and Evola or Eliade's attitude to the opposition "sacred/profane" in the modern world. Moreover, the constant accusation that these authors are associated with the dubious political movements of Europe in the early part of our truly "dark age" causes one to mistrust the meaning that modern liberal intellectuals put into the very concept of "ur-fuzzy". After all, it is not totalitarianism that they call for a universal fiscal [фискальной] system of "fighters against fascism": "Ur-fascism can appear in the most innocent forms and forms. It is our duty to reveal its essence and to point out its new forms, every day, in every part of the globe"? [15] Alas, the Orthodox know well what fascism can be seen in by its relentless seekers "in every part of the globe"...

***

"Syncretism," writes Eco in the essay quoted above, "is not simply, as the dictionaries indicate, a combination of differently shaped beliefs and practices. Here the basis of combinability is first and foremost a disregard for contradictions. 16 This disregard is done by traditionalist authors in relation to the field where the concreteness of fact prevails, i.e., first of all, history. Its traditionalist interpretation is, in general, a subject that deserves the attention of a criminologist. The theories of world conspiracies, religious and geopolitical confrontations are distinguished by the fact that they find their manifestation in areas that sometimes simply do not lend themselves to logical evaluation.

Recognition of a single Primordial tradition makes it necessary to consistently see its fragments not only in all traditional cultures and religions, but also in phenomena seemingly directly opposite - Aleister Crowley's "telemism" here is interpreted in terms of the Indian doctrine of "left hand" (or, the same thing, "way of delinquency").

"We are obliged to blend together all that opposes the modern world, 'progress'. No monopoly on truth in our catacombs, declares modern traditionalism. - No theological disputes. No doctrinal debate. "Pistis Sophia, the Bhagavad Gita, the Gospels, Marx's Capital and Guenon's Reign of Quantity are equally true and correct. There should be no factions or sects in our struggle. We are all equally robbed and rejected. We have a common enemy."

But is the existence of a common enemy a sufficient basis for such an optimistic equating of divine revelation and literary sources? Is not the Church thereby, contrary to the claims of the traditionalists themselves, only one of the many ways of "rebelling against the modern world"?

Sometimes traditionalists themselves are aware of this, demanding a fundamental revision of Guenon's doctrine in those points that cannot be regarded as adequate within the framework of classical religious studies. "Indeed," writes one of them, "there are far more similarities than differences between traditions and realities in the general contrast with modern, fully desacralized civilization. This statement is obvious. The only question is, to what extent is such cyclical convergence in the face of a common enemy a consequence of esoteric unity?" [18]

Distortions of this unity are thus not "the result of environmental errors"; they are "rooted in metaphysics. [Искажения этого единства являются тем самым не «результатом погрешностей среды»; а «коренятся в метафизике».] Genon based his scheme on an analysis of Hinduism and Islam, bringing their esoterism to a unifying synthesis as follows. A single metaphysical Tradition, constituting the essence of universal esoterism, is the inner core of all orthodox traditions. For Guenon and his followers--until today! - dogmatic religions and other forms of exoteric traditions are like "outer shells" that hide the unity of content (i.e. "esoterism and initiation") behind the apparent diversity.

In this connection, the question of the relationship between "Orthodox esoterism" (represented, according to traditionalists, by Hesychasm) and the esoterism of other religions is interesting. A. Dugin writes: "The price of recognizing the orthodoxy of other religious forms is the confirmation of their "distorted" nature and interpretation of their dogmas in the spirit and letter of the specific esoterism typical only for Hinduism and Sufism." [19] According to this author, whose approach will be discussed in more detail, the Hindu approach to Christology actually equates Christ with an avatar, which is equivalent to monophysitism. Islam, by virtue of its strict monotheism, adheres to the Nestorian Christological scheme.

Especially interesting and significant in this regard is the statement that "Christianity is counted among the Abrahamic traditions only in the Islamic perspective and in some Judeo-Christian currents. Orthodoxy cannot self-define itself in this way, since it is clearly aware of its inner spiritual nature as a Melchizedek, pre-Arahamic and supra-Arahamic tradition" (ibid). The uniqueness of Christianity is thereby not only associated with the fact of God's incarnation, but is also confirmed by the presence of an entirely different "esoteric core" in contrast to Judaism and Islam. Nevertheless, the recognition of the existence of this very hidden center in various religions keeps in force the same basic traditionalist thesis about the ramification of a single Primordial sacredness. On this, traditionalism cannot find an authentic answer to the existence of the dilemma of the development of this sacredness - either it is fragmented due to purely external, historical and cultural reasons, or there are serious metaphysical divergences. If it accepts the latter thesis, then claims of preserving the esoteric core in absolutely all authentic traditions immediately become unimportant and far-fetched. In the case when the usual perspective of "fragmentation of the One Center" is preserved for this circle of authors, the traditionalists themselves come to what can be called syncretism following Eco, or "ecumenism the other way around.". If in "classical" ecumenism the basis of convergence is proclaimed to be the minimum of their common positions (recognition of the One God, for example), in our case, on the contrary, this basis is the maximum of common esoteric "properties" inherent in each religion. In this way, the traditionalists are a mirror image of their opponents in the worldview.

The question of the relationship between traditionalist statements and what is commonly understood as "academic" or "classical" science (in our case, religious studies) is complicated. Indeed, what is to be considered authentically scientific: the dull, flatly positivistic pages of Lang's The Making of Religion and the imaginary pluralism of James' The Variety of Religious Experience or the cold statement of the decadent state of the modern world and the call for the return of the "golden age of gods and heroes" of Guénon and Evola? Of course, the inertia of purely rational knowledge favors the former.

Strictly speaking, traditionalism in this first sense gave to academic science very few names. Eliade, Schuon, partly Corbin and Dumezil. The rest are either theorists a la Guenon, or authors of completely useless "historiosophic" fantasies like M. Michel Serrano. Thus, the question should be posed differently: what elements of traditionalism were close to the scientific worldview of these authors and why did they have to reinterpret them in a strictly scientific form? To recap briefly, the perspective of the study of religion at the turn of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries gradually shifted away from the positivist clichés of Frazer and even Weber toward the comparativism of Bronislaw Malinowski or the logic of myth of Levi-Bruhl and Cassirer. The accumulation of abundant ethnographic material (collected by Malinowski, Mauss, Fers and others) and changes in the intellectual atmosphere of the European university world contributed to this: after Durkheim (the teacher, by the way, not only of Mauss, but also of Lévi-Strauss! ) and the works of the diffusionists Bastian, Ratzel or Frobenius, it was no longer possible to consider archaic cults and cultures as barbaric and excluding any semblance of logic - in contrast to the world of traditional cultures of the Mediterranean and the East.

Thus, the task of breaking through the Eurocentric dominance in religious studies had been accomplished long before the first traditionalist writings on the subject. In the pre-war period, when traditionalist religious studies proper began to take shape, the "historical particularism" of Boas and Kreber and the completely worthless evolutionism of Tylor were replaced by the Ilinski school, the school of functionalism in its classical variant. In the latter (thanks to the Redcliffe-Brown studies conducted on the Australian material) the so-called "needs theory" prevailed, the satisfaction of which is the stimulus for human activity. Satisfaction of these needs is the "function" of society, the set of which constitutes the structure. The notion of structure largely replaced the concept of culture and became a new subject of research in ethnography, social anthropology, and religious studies itself. Later, the famous Africanist Evans-Pritchard defines the essence of the structural method as the description of facts not in their "natural state," but subordinated in advance to sociological theory. Anything from value exchange (Fers) to rebellion "guarding the equilibrium of the social structure" can contribute to the maintenance of social structure. (Marx Gluckman).

What place does traditionalism occupy in this panorama of religious methodology? The British anthropologist Lucy Mayr in her time defined the development of the study of religion in the first half of our century as a movement from an understanding of religion as a system of beliefs (Fraser-Taylor perspective) through religion as a social fact (Durkheim-Malinovsky) to religion as ritualized magic (E. Litch, D. Goody, R. Horton).20 Taking this scheme into account, we can say that traditionalism begins where modern academic science ends. Indeed, it is the questions of initiation, ritual-magical transition ("rites of passage" in Van Gennep's terms) and other parts of the "esoteric core" of religions that are, as we have seen, central to traditionalism. So is the latter a kind of continuation of academic science, moving on where it stops?

To answer this question, let us consider some of the attitudes of the "classics of traditionalism. 

* * * 

As has been repeatedly noted, it is very difficult to single out any parts of Henon's purely philosophical doctrine. A Russian translator of traditionalist authors who has encountered this problem, Yu. Stefanov writes: "Guénon himself not only did not consider himself a philosopher, but denied philosophy the right to legitimate existence, calling it a product of the "anti-traditional spirit", and took every opportunity to discredit it " [21] The same words apply to Guénon's treatment of classical religious studies. Therefore, we will analyze one particular example from the "case of Henon," trying to show with its help the method of traditionalism's treatment of historical material. .

It is about Henon's dualism or, to be more precise, about his cosmic opposition of the sacral and the profane, the traditional and the anti-traditional, the modern and the archaic. The origins of this dualism are rooted in Hindu metaphysics and the perspective of cosmic cycles, the "kalpa", which are the manifestation of the "universal possibility". Each kalpa consists of subsections, manvantaras. If we imagine the latter as a circle, then each of the four segments ("yuga") of this circle shows the degradational course of manifestationalism from "pure heaven [чистoro небьтия]" (maximum spirituality) to "manifested being" (descent into matter). 

The movement of manvantara from krit yuga to kali yuga is accompanied by a gradual " densification" of the sphere of purely spiritual, the transition from a state of balance between sacred and profane to the gradual predominance and even domination of the latter in the "dark age" in which human history currently resides. 

Here a very important question emerges: is the binary opposition "sacred/secular" connected precisely with the course of history and is the violation of its relationship connected precisely with the eschatological perspective? If so, it is tempting to see here an analogy with Hellenic philosophy of history.

However, in Greek mythology, far from traditionalism, there is no concept reminiscent of the Indian "kalpa" and no concept of periodicity. "Time arises at the contacts between heaven and earth; time is an irregular sequence of divine events; outside such events time is only an earthly duration subject to any division," writes E. Golovin, a "traditionalist poet, "22. That is why the Indo-Indian "yugas" and Hesiod's "four ages" can be correlated only in a very vague symbolism. Moreover, the Pythagorean hepad numbers have no connection with time in the usual sense (according to the "Theologomena of Arithmetic" of Jamblichus). The concept of Hesiod can hardly be considered traditionalist in the guenonian sense also because it was interpreted very freely by many Greek philosophers.

And this concept is not at all applicable in the perspective of the Christian understanding of history. Of course, humanity's spiritual regression has its progressive force, increasing toward the end of time. But the very opposition between light and darkness, the very dualism of heavenly and earthly city (outside the Manichean panorama, of course) is made clear, for example, in the First Epistle of St. John the Evangelist: "Ye love not the world, neither the things of the world. But if anyone loves the world, there is no love of the Father in him..." (I Jo 2:15).

The famous Russian patrologist N. I. Sagarda in his commentary on this apostolic epistle notes that "in the concept of κόσμος (and not in the auliA/to it) one must seek a clarification of why in one case it is the object of unspeakable divine love, while in another case all human love for it is forbidden" [23]. In general, the term κόσμος is used in four different senses in this apostolic letter. In the most general sense "it is the totality of all created things, the world as an orderly and orderly whole" (ib.) - beyond any ethical definition. It is precisely the Logos-created world (J o 1:10). In a narrower sense, κόσμος is the whole sphere of human activity, "the earth itself, on which we live, together with the order and structure of earthly life." [24] By narrowing this notion even further, we get the cosmos as the totality of persons for whom revelation is intended, in concordance with the following gospel passages: "81TCH ποιείς, φανέρω σον σ ε αυτόν τ® κόσμο?" (I o V III, 12) or "έγώ είμι φ®ς του κόσμου" (I o VIII, 12).

Finally, only the fourth meaning of the word is used in the sense used in this place in the apostolic letter. This cosmos has nothing in common with the world in the first case; moreover, it is like a real anti-world: "it is the world of the will, which has fallen away from God. Its father is the devil, whose being is the negation of everything that is real and true in God - light, love and life. " [25] The essential characteristics of this anticosmos are σχοτία (I o 1:5) as the opposite of divine light, μίσευΐ / hatred (I o VII, 7) as the antithesis of love and, as the result of all, θάνατος (I o V, 24). That which is fundamentally dual and incomparable-the world of humanity and the world of sin-has been subjected to a mixture which has absorbed them and subjugated the former to the latter. As the same Sagarda writes admirably about this: "Mankind in itself has introduced the anticosmos and with it must share its fate. But some part of the cosmos-humanity has, through faith in Christ, freed itself from the chains of a god-hating anticosmos... Thus in the very realm of anti-cosmos the foundation of the kingdom of God has been laid." [26] Importantly for our theme, the sons of light themselves do not come from elsewhere, but continue to emerge from among the former children of darkness.

In this point is all the superiority of orthodox cosmology compared to the rigid-total dualism of Henon and his followers. The latter do not allow any possibility for the "clots of cosmic midnight" [сгустков космической полночи] and other "children of Kali Yuga" to join the side of light, impersonal predestination, not even Manichean, but Hindu, deprives people of the right to choose between light and darkness.Divine love knows no such hopelessness; two cosmoses, both ordinary and with the prefix "anti", coexist in human history precisely for the expression of human freedom in response to God's love. The anti-cosmos must destroy itself, no matter how much it seeks to take over the human world; even if at times it succeeds in doing so (the "iron/dark age" according to Guénon), this does not mean that it will last forever.

The opposition of these two worlds, the ability to distinguish between them, is emphasized by St. Justin (Popovich): "By its love of sin the world is so merged with evil that evil and the world sound as synonyms. And thus, love of the world creates love of sin and evil," but it is opposed by "love, which is found in all that is divine, immortal, eternal, in goodness, truth, righteousness, love, wisdom. It is a special, different world, which is entirely established on all that is divine, immortal, true, righteous, wise, and eternal." [27]

Thus, on the part of the Orthodox worldview, Henon's main thesis of religion about the parallel, non-overlapping existence of the sacred and profane worlds collapses. The world is not left to perish by impersonal cosmic forces, as it is believed by Henon and his immediate disciples. There is Someone in the present cosmos who facilitates the return of the sons of light from the realm of the anti-world. As Rilke wrote about it:

We are falling. The fall is inevitable,
But someone holds our fall in his endless tenderness
Our fall in tender hands.

The imperative of St. of the Apostle John: "Μ ή СХЩКаТЕ τον κόσμον, μηδετα έν τϋ3 κόσμω" (I o II, 16), applied to the postulates of religion, gives the direct opposite to those of Henon: in the sphere of religious analysis it is impossible to proceed from dualistic notions and, still less, to apply them to those religious systems which do not know such complete dualism and assume not the staticity of the actual state of this world, but the possibility of its dynamic change in an eschatological perspective.

* * * 
Of all traditionalists Julius Evola can be least of all classified as a historian of religion. The reason for this is not so much (or not only) his engagement with the political regime of Mussolini, but also his own ideological evolution of the "black baron" - from the nihilism and dadaism of youth, through the manifestationalism of adulthood - to the position of "man among the ruins" of his late period of work.

What lies at the heart of Evola's attitude toward religious doctrines in general and Christianity in particular? The most general premise here is the assertion that the realm of the "sacred" and the "divine" is self-sufficient and that religion only usurps it unnecessarily: "The sacred and the divine are objects of faith: this truth has been imposed on Europe in recent centuries. Our truth is different: it is better to know that you know nothing than to believe." [28] In the most unexpected way, Evola turns from a proud figure of a “metaphysician” and “kshatriya” into the same ... positivist:  "We remain faithful to the idea that in the "metaphysical" sphere it is possible to have as positive, direct, methodical, experimental knowledge as the experimental knowledge of science in the physical field." [29]

This seemingly unexpected turn has its own intellectual precedent. We are referring to that stage of Nietzsche's philosophical development, when he broke away from the Wagnerian romanticism of "the birth of tragedy," but had not yet arrived at the "superhumanity" of the Zarathustra. Such works as The Human, Too Human, and Gay Science, with their provocative reference to Lamarck and Darwin, were, for him, a logical progression. Without recourse to positivism, neither Nietzsche's Genealogy of Morality, nor Evola's "Ride the Tiger" is understandable.

According to Evola's own ideas, his reference to the "Nordic tradition" (wittily parodied by Umberto Eco in Foucault's Pendulum) was also not arbitrary from a purely factual point of view. For him, there was a specific historical period when the project of the restoration of the "sacred empire" was closest to its realization - the period of the domination of the Hohenstaufen Empire over Rome. It was characterized by the following elements: the law of order, the recognition of the supernatural, the principle of universality. Evola recognizes remnants of these elements in Catholicism, but "what attracts us to Catholicism takes us further, beyond it, to the concepts of the great pre-Christian tradition, which present a more perfect, more definite and more complete totality of these values." [30]

Let us consider two specific examples of the application of Evola's theoretical positions in the field of comparative religion: the metaphysics of sex in various religious traditions and the Tantric doctrine. In the first case, Evola considers examples that are well known from such works of orthodox authors as Vysheslavtsev's "Ethics of the Transformed Eros" and Troitsky's "Philosophy of Christian Marriage". But where, for example, in Vysheslavtsev [31] there is an incomplete, distorted anticipation of Christian love, Evola sees only degradation of the original unity: "Referring to the androgynous myth, we first of all pointed to the metaphysical original meaning of eros as an impulse to restore the unity of being in its brokenness, "dual" state... In the metaphysics of procreation and "survival in genera" we discerned the degeneration of the original sense of eros, at the same time immanent to eros. In other words, even if lousy, but still the will to existence and immortality... The key to understanding all this was given to us by the myth of Poros and Pena [Поросе и Пении] - it has long ago revealed the structure of an infinite, mortal-immortal, incurable force feeding the entire cycle of births and deaths under the sign of bios - the wounded will of incompleteness to wholeness". [32]

Further chapters of Evola's work - such as "Apparitions of Ascent in Profane Love," "Gods and Goddesses, Men and Women," "Sacralization and Awakening" and especially "Gender in the World of Initiation and Magic" - leave an extremely vague sense of total arbitrariness in the examples chosen from various religious practices and the equally unnecessary conclusions designed to justify Evola's a priori theoretical positions (just what, as we recall, U. Eco reproached traditionalism for). The impression remains that it is not the material of study that moves the researcher, but on the contrary, the conclusions made in advance force Evola to choose only what fits his concept from the really extensive material collected.

Let us now consider another example, interesting all the more because it is connected with the religious practice of Evola himself. We are talking about Tantra, which Evola understands "as a kind of synthesis of all the basic elements of the Hindu tradition, although it has a very special coloring and corresponds to a certain cyclical period, understood in terms of the metaphysics of history. 33 What is interesting is the etymology that Evola derives. The notion of "tantra" (actually "treatise"), derived from the root "tan" (continue, develop) is "that which has been accomplished." Tantrism is thus an "extension" and "final explanation" of the traditional teachings of the Vedas, Brahmans, Upanishads and Puranas. Evola's reference to a "certain cyclical period" is also important: it is the Kali Yuga. Humanity of the "dark age", according to Tantra, can find knowledge, doctrines and rituals for effective achievement of the superhuman level not in the Vedas, but precisely in Tantra. "Thus," Evola notes, "it has been argued that only Tantric techniques based on merging with Shakti (shakti-sadhana) are adequate and effective in the modern world" (ib.).

Generally speaking, Evola formulated his position on tradition and esoterism in general in the work "The Yoga of Power," and this position differs in many aspects from other directions of traditionalism and, first of all, from the line of René Guénon. He almost directly accused the latter of a kind of "traditionalist pharisaism," because "even in nominally traditional civilization a kind of compromise arises between the theoretical teaching of previous cycles and the practical degradation of the cults themselves and the human environment that adheres to these cults." [34] Thus, exactly in the Iron Age epoch the original sacral essence of esoterism, in Evola's opinion, removes its esoteric shell and appears in its true form, not always adequately perceived (as in the case of Tantra) by its adepts.

Now we can point to the following aspects of Evola's thought, which are, in a sense, the summation: 

- As in the "case of Guenon," we encounter here the original dualism of the world of the modern (profane) and the world of the traditional (sacred), the boundary between which lies not in the area of metaphysical doctrines, but in the predominance of the esoteric core over the exoteric shell; 

- At the same time, in the specific historical situation of the "dark age" the most successful form of spiritual realization is, according to Evola, radical initiatory practices - be it the phenomenon of "malamatya" of Sufi orders, sectarian хлыстовство or tantrism;

- The case of Evola particularly emphasizes the fact that, according to the Hindu tradition, a person can realize his spiritual dignity only through volitional self-determination. There are two ways of such realization, which depend on the personal qualities of the individual. The first is the "deva-yana," the "path of the gods," the path inward, where spiritual freedom is embodied in the attainment of the higher self, in becoming a "superhuman." On the contrary, the outward path (to a social group, a nation, a race, a family) - "pitra-yana" or "the way of the ancestors" - implies overcoming the limitations of the individual "through identification with a new collective being, with the community in which he dissolves and for the sake of which he lives and dies." [35]

All these religious studies efforts of Evola denounce what we have already mentioned - his a prioriism in the conclusions, the desire to "fit" the historical material to his own worldview etc. Moreover, if Guenon remained (at least in his texts) still an "academic" historian, claiming objectivity, then Evola himself does not strive for this at all.

* * * 

Among the classics of traditionalism there is only one author who is a religious scholar par excellence, and while Genon and Evola used this field only to confirm their postulates, Mircea Eliade chose the path of academism consciously. He himself remained an Orthodox believer all his life, and thus has a direct bearing on our topic.

Eliade has two themes that constantly worry him and are reflected not only in scientific works, but also in works of fiction. These are the themes of time and myth. The first of these is worth mentioning, taking the novels and stories of the Romanian traditionalist as an example. In academic circles the very existence of these novels and stories arouses surprise: why would such a serious author, an acknowledged specialist in the comparative study of the history of religion, want to put his thoughts into such an unusual form for a thinker of this kind? Explained by the desire to "distract", they suspect some kind of literary hoax, while completely overlooking the fact that there are no "ideas" in this work - the only Idea that can be there is aimed at living, not assimilation.

According to Eliade, the notions of "living" and "passage" should speak of the initiatory character of this kind of literature, the purpose of which is incompatible with the explanations of literary scholars about the "aims of the author" or his concern for the "aesthetic enjoyment" of the reader (as if this was ever a concern of the real writer). 

By the way, the history of Russian thought knows something similar - we are talking about the novels and stories of Alexey Losev, whose meaning is seen by some as imitation of Dostoevsky or a kind of a break from more serious themes of the ancient cosmos and the mythology of Cretan Zeus, in the extreme case - as interpretation of his own ideas in an artistically expressive form. Is it worth commenting on the futility of such explanations?

The theme of time, its overcoming - the main and perhaps the only one in all the story lines of Eliade's works - from the "Serampore Nights" to the novels and stories of the "Romanian cycle". The leap in time, the return of time, the passage of time - all these images betray the writer's anxious interest in the possibility of reaching the moment when "time no longer exists," when one escapes from the wheel of "eternal return." In the fact that the latter is seen by Eliade as an unequivocally negative phenomenon, it is impossible not to see the truly Christian intentions of his thought - in this regard it is enough to recall the finale of The Myth of the Eternal Return. Time is the inexorable absorption of the world and of man himself, its overcoming is the heroic destiny of the human race: "Time" is "black" because it is irrational, cruel, unmerciful. Living in time, under the power of time, is a man subject to a number of sufferings.

Thickening, "thickening" of time is a sign of strengthening of the negative beginning contained in it, seizing the human end of time: "According to the same Indian philosophy, humanity has long lived in the age of kaliyuga, i.e. in the "dark age", when all kinds of spiritual abuses and crimes are possible; in the age of the complete fall of metaphysics - the last stage of a certain concluding cycle. And it is not at all coincidental that in the title of this cosmic xxx the concepts of time, darkness and the Great Goddess..." [37]

The only people who managed to preserve in the "dark age" a direct connection with the sacred world, who actively interact with it through initiatory practices and archaic rituals, are the people of "primitive societies." We should look for what Eliade, following Durkheim and by analogy with his "social fact," would call the "basic religious fact. 

The observation of these basic actions, following from the religious consciousness of primitive tribes, allows Eliade to state the presence of sacral archetypes in human nature itself. Man is first of all a religious being, his appeal to the world of the sacred is his essence. He cannot forget this in any "dark age"; this desire for the sacred can be stifled or suppressed, but in this case it comes to the surface of human activity in literature, art, music, sometimes manifesting itself in an extremely ugly or shocking form (remember, for example, the reaction of French "religious" critics to Lautréamont).

This is why Eliade does not seek to completely deny any positive religious basis in the West, but always wishes to find under the ashes of modern European profanism the foundation of sacred knowledge, which, of course, makes him a much more appealing author than Guenon or, even more so, Evola. 

A similar role of finding elements of the sacred in the modern world is also intended to be played by Eliade's understanding of myth. Let us recall that such an understanding was formed in an era when Levi-Bruhl's concept of primitive consciousness was still valid in the religious studies milieu. The "pra-logicality" of this consciousness is characterized, as we know, by the fact that the cause-and-effect relations necessary for logical thinking were replaced by partisanship or "complicity" established between the collective and the mystical sense of the thing. 

French structuralism (let us emphasize - only after Eliade) exploded this flat understanding of mythological thinking. First of all, Lévi-Strauss distinguished between the "meaning" and the "essence" of myth.

The first is that past events that took place at a certain point in time exist outside of time. The essence of myth is not the style, not the form of narration, not the syntax, but the story it tells; myth is language, but this language operates at the highest level. In this sense, Lévi-Strauss is close to Losev, for whom "myth is a given miraculous personal history in words." 

What are the relations between myth and history, mythological thinking and the language of its expression for M. Eliade? First of all, "myth recounts a sacred history, tells us about an event that took place in the venerable times of 'the beginning of all beginnings'... It is always the story of a 'creation,' we are told how something happened, and in myth we are at the origins of the existence of this 'something." [38] And further, it is particularly important that "myth as a whole describes various, sometimes dramatic, powerful manifestations of the sacred in this world... It is as a result of the intervention of supernatural beings that man became what he is -- mortal, separated into two sexes, possessing a culture" (ibid.).

Lévi-Strauss can serve as a link in an interesting connection between Eliade's interpretation of myth and the study of fairy tale plots in Russian science. The fact is that a direct disciple of Lévi-Strauss (and thus, to a certain extent, a structuralist himself), the famous anthropologist Edmund Leach, criticized Eliade in the New York Review of Books in 1966. Leach's main subject was social structure and the possibility of applying mathematical models to study it (as demonstrated by the example of the Kachins in Political Systems of Highland Burma /1 9 5 4 /). Leach challenges the model of society as an integrated system striving for equilibrium and insists on dynamism, contradictions, and differences between the ideal norm and real practice. In Rethinking o f the Anthropology (1961), he emphasizes the limitations of the comparative approach and advocates the study of general laws, the use of symbols and formal models. In other words, by addressing the same field as Eliade, moreover by using the same themes of basic symbols and archetypes, Leach seeks to create a kind of surrogate of "positivist structuralism," for which "Eliade presents facts that cannot be empirically verified or are refuted; he often refers to obsolete or unreliable information, while 'speaking like a prophet from the heights'". [39] 

In many respects, the criticism to which the structuralist L'ich subjected the traditionalist Eliade is parallel to the claims that L'vi-Strauss himself made against the Russian scholar of the world of folklore, V. Y. Propp, and his book "The Historical Roots of the Magic Tale" (1946). In his review of it (S . Levi-Strauss. La structure et la forme / / Cahiers de I'Institut de Science economique applxquee - Serie M No. 7, 1960), Levi-Strauss approximates Propp's position to formalism. But if the latter is understood as "systematic, i.e., looking through the whole rather than through a single element, as well as sharply limiting the object of consideration, " [40] then the accusation misses the mark. This is what Propp notes when he writes: "Formal study cannot be detached from historical study and oppose them. On the contrary: formal study, a precise, systematic description of the material under study is the first condition, prerequisite of historical study and at the same time the first step of historical study." [41]

An interesting phenomenon: not understood in his worldview in the West (which was also the basis of scientific misunderstanding), Eliade is gaining recognition in Russia, both scientifically and philosophically. He is the only traditionalist author who, being Orthodox in his personal confessional choice, can prove useful for Orthodox apologetics in its dialogue with outsiders, helping the latter to understand that "only on the condition that one believes in the existence of God does one acquire freedom, and at the same time the certainty that all historical tragedies have a transhistorical meaning - even if this meaning is not always intelligible to man in his present state".[42]

* * * 

Having examined some of the premises and aspects of traditionalism, and having analyzed the worldviews of its three most important authors, we must now relate all of this to the Orthodox understanding of the problems posed by Guénon's followers.

The issue of cosmic dualism has already been discussed in the "case" of Guénon himself. Let us only add that this dualism is not just a minor aspect of traditionalism, but its main component. Without it, there would be no opposition "sacred/profane" and no opposition of the traditional society to the modern world.

Let us say unequivocally: traditionalism is outside the walls of the Church. It cannot add anything to our Tradition, to our authentic sacred patristic tradition. By analogy with Protestantism, we can only point out what is NOT in traditionalism. And what it does not have, first of all, is freedom of the human person. The world in Tradition's perception is totally predetermined and subordinated to impersonal elements of history and cosmos. Man in this arrangement can only be their obedient executor, and his entire dignity consists in amor fati. Like all Nietzscheans, the traditionalists do not want to leave it to the Creator to turn his hand to men not only in the "age of gods and heroes," but also in the truly dark age of the Kali Yuga". Hatred of the "modern world" remains at the base of this passion, giving no positive answer to the question of the ways of salvation even in a world so godless in its outward form. 

In a sense, traditionalism can be useful in propaedeutic purposes, as a guide in the world of modern culture and its phenomena which cannot be put into the usual scheme "sacred/profane". However, this also testifies to the weakness of today's apologetics in this question, since it has always taken upon itself this task of "guiding" through the world of traces of human activity.*  

* This is, in fact, what any culture is, which in this sense (in opposition to Spengler) does not differ from civilization. The fact that culture is only an artifact was aptly stated by Florensky, who called books "rows of materialized thoughts" and not thoughts themselves.

To make use of the services of "outsiders," to poke blindly through the modern sea of culture, in which "there are crap, and there are none" (Pp 103:23), in search of the remains of the sacred norms of reality, justifying such wandering by the need for "the churching of culture" (what kind of culture?), is unworthy of authentic church theology, which can repeat after Chrysostom the saint:  "I have no need to use their irrationality to defend myself, nor do I want to confirm truths with lies." [43] Traditionalism is so detailed in its analysis of the spiritual state of the "modern world," so subtle in its analysis of all its ugly and pathological phenomena precisely because it is flesh from the flesh of this world, that only in it can it find its place, parasitizing on its sins and burying its (and therefore its own) dead.

In its attempts to impose itself on the Church, contemporary Russian traditionalism simply bursts open doors, because where but in the Church can there be genuine traditionalism of Holy Scripture and rebellion against not only the modern, but also the world since the fall, in which everything is of lust, flesh, and worldly pride (1 Jn 2:16)? 

But it is in the Church that we have hope in Him who said: "He who believes in Me has eternal life" (H o 6:47). This hope removes the fear of the terrors of the "modern world" and serves as our authentic tradition of life in the Church.

Notes

1 Дамаскин (Христенсен), иером. Н е от мира сего. Жизнь и учение иеромонаха Серафима (Роуза) Платннского. М ., 1995. С. 61.
2 Рене Генон. Кризис современного мира. М ., 1991. С. 29.
3 Юлиус Эвола. Оседлать тигра / / Элементы. № 3 ,1 9 9 3 . С. 3.
4 Конец Света. Эсхатология и традиция. М ., 1997. С. 345.
5 Милый Ангел. Эзотерическое ревю. Т . 1. М ., 1991. С. 2.
6 Ibid. С. 3.
7 Рене Генон. Кризис современного мира. М ., 1991. С. 70.
8 Ю лиус Эвола. Языческий империализм. М ., 1994. С. 39.
9 Милый Ангел. Эзотерическое ревю. Т . 1. М ., 1991. С. 3.
10 Реие Геиои. Кризис современного мира. М ., 1991. С. 53.
11 Милый Ангел. Эзотерическое ревю. Т . 1. М ., 1991. С. 2.
12 Умберто Эко. Пять эссе на темы этики. С П б., 1998. С. 39.
13 Ibid. С. 40.
14 Ibid. С. 41— 42.
Ibid. С. 46.
Ibid. С. 39.
Дугин А . Тамплиеры пролетариата. М ., 1997. С. 43.
Конец Света. Эсхатология и традиция. М ., 1997. С. 346.
Ibid. С. 347.
15
16
17
18
19
20 См.: Lucy Маіг. An Introduction to Social Anthropology. Clarendon press. Oxford, 1965.
21 Стефанов Ю .Н . Рене Генон и философия традиционализма / /
Вопросы философии, № 4, 1991. С. 31.
22 Конец Света. Эсхатология и традиция. М ., 1997. С. 331.
23 Сагарда Н. Первое Соборное Послание св. апостола и евангелиста Иоанна Богослова. Исагогико-экзегетическое исследование. Полтава, 1903. С. 398.
24 Ibid. С. 399.
25 Ibid. С. 400.
26 Ibid. С. 401.
27 Архимандрит Иустин (Попович). Толкование на первое соборное Послание Св. Апостола Иоанна Богослова. М ., 1998. С. 47.
28 Юлиус Эвола. Языческий империализм. М ., 1994. С. 99.
29 Ibid.
30 Ibid. С. 141.
31 In general, Vysheslavtse is the Christian antithesis of Evola, all the more so if we consider his similar focus on the Eastern tradition (cf. his work "The Heart in Indian and Christian Mysticism"),
32 Юлиус Эвола. М етаФизика пола. М ., 1994. С. 114.
33 Ю лиус Эвола. Йога могущества / / Конец Света. Эсхатология и традиция. М ., 1997. С. 110.
34 Конец Света. Эсхатология и традиция. М ., 1997. С. 108.
35 Дугин А . Тамплиеры пролетариата. М ., 1997. С. И.
36 М .Элиаде. Миф о воссоединении / / М .Элиаде. Азиатская
алхимия. М ., 1998. С. 2 8 6 .
37 Ibid.
38 См.: Мирча Элиаде. Аспекты мифа. М ., 1995. С. 16, а также
М.Элиаде. Космос и история. М ., 1987. С. 23, 25.
39 М .Элиаде. Космос и история. М ., 1987. С. 24.
40 Почепцов Г.Г. История русской семиотики. М ., 1998. С. 248
41 М .Элиаде. Аспекты мифа. М ., 1995. С. 193.
42 М .Элиаде. Миф о вечном возвращении. С П б., 1998. С. 246.
43 Св. Иоаии Златоуст. Толковаиие на св. Матфея евангелиста. Творения. Т . VII. С П б., 1901. С. 10.