A Letter to My Parish

As you might know from the news or social media our Orthodox Faith has been in the news across the country. 

The New York Times recently published an article about the “surge” of people, including many young men, who’ve come to the Orthodox Church. The article was generally fair but there have been some who seem to be focused on finding elements of political activism as the major factor in people entering our Faith. This is simply not so. 

A second statement, recently amended, by a Congressman from South Carolina implied that certain elements of our Church in the US are essentially state actors on behalf of the Russian government and claimed that a delegation of American Orthodox leaders, including our own Bishop John, might use their meeting with the current administration to express their concerns regarding the persecution of the canonical Ukrainian Orthodox Church to further Russian political interests. Again, this was met with very direct refutation and the congressman involved has slowly backtracked his claims. 

Things like this should be expected as Orthodoxy begins to draw attention in the larger culture. We’re still a tiny fraction of US Christians, but our rapid growth has drawn attention and a fair amount of it can be speculative and based on a shortage of accurate information or rooted in unexamined stereotypes. People who may know little about Orthodoxy other than what they saw in the movie “My Big, Fat, Greek Wedding” are noticing us, asking questions, and sometimes making assumptions from their own worldviews rather than actually listening to authentically Orthodox leaders and people. 

My encouragement, first, is for all of us to remember that in our current cultural milieu all media has some sort of bias, and we should be careful consumers of it regardless of the source. Ask questions and don’t believe everything you see in print or on your screens as fact in and of itself. Second, and of most importance, is for all of us to faithfully and joyfully live out our Faith and be the embodied truth of what the media can at best see only in shadows. Let our love for God and neighbor worked out in our everyday lives be a living witness so that, as our Lord says, the people around us will see our good works and glorify God. —

You're not invited to the party…

not the Republican, the Democrat, Libertarian, Communist, or any of them. None of them will completely capture the fullness of Christianity.

You see, if you choose to be an observant Christian, you are, in fact, a kind of monarchist. Now it’s not the monarchy of say the British royals with all the uniforms, fancy cars, and shopping mall openings. That, like all the other pomp and circumstances that come with the kingdoms of this world, is just that, a spectacle for the sake of power, a pseudo liturgy for the kingdoms of this world.

No, you’ve chosen to ally yourself with Jesus, to make him a king not like the world makes kings but rather for the sake of love. He invites you to belong to a Kingdom, to be citizens, not simply of a nation that may or may not be here with the tides of history, but of eternity where the things we humans seek are found not with endless bureaucracies but simply in His presence.

This Kingdom, for the observant Christian, becomes, out of love, the first loyalty, the true nation, and the ultimate destination of the world. It’s precepts live within us in this world but come from beyond it and stand in critique of every other human attempt to organize ourselves, even those which are seen as just.

That doesn’t mean we don’t “taint” ourselves with the affairs of this world or absent ourselves from its workings. What we have to offer as followers of Christ is valuable for the common good and often is the only sanity in the crazy swirl of things. We give allegiances, honor human authority, and seek the best for the places in which we find ourselves along our journey.

Yet it’s not ultimate loyalty, not ultimate involvement. No country, no politician, no political party, owns our soul. None deserves our ultimate allegiance. We can and should be good citizens but we know that we belong to something more, a Kingdom where the humble and often maligned Christ already rules, a Kingdom that is destined to be the ultimate reality of the universe as we know it.

It’s that Kingdom which comes first, last and always, and everything less, no matter how good it can be, is still just that, less.

On Politics…

Politics becomes fierce and divisive precisely when people trust in it as a kind of transcendence, a structure that gives overarching meaning and direction to their lives and their world. As politics replaces God its ebbs and flows gain a significance well beyond the normal transitory flow of life. There is a kind of transcendent, even eternal, aspect to it so that wins and losses are not just things that can be changed in time but rather reflect on the core of the personhood of the people who hold the political opinions. For Christians politics is always about lesser kingdoms, temporary kingdoms, and when it achieves the substance in the Christians mind of the Kingdom of God it has warped itself into something dark and even unholy no matter how good the motives may appear to be.