“All of today’s Western education… is permeated with pagan principles that are at enmity with Christianity. All who come into contact with it and affiliate with it even in the least become, to a greater or lesser degree, enemies of Christ.”
St. Theophan the Recluse belongs to the category of saints who only fully reveal themselves in our modern times. During the soviet years his works were not published, and therefore the circle of people to knew and venerated the holy hierarch [in Russia] was not broad.
Thanks to the works of Archimandrite Giorgiy (Tertyshnikov) who began collecting and studying St. Theophan’s spiritual heritage, materials were gathered for his canonization [by the Moscow Patriarchate], and in 1988 at the Local Council of the Russian Orthodox Church, this saint was glorified.
St. Theophan the Recluse. Photograph.
While in seclusion, St. Theophan followed with great attention all the events that were happening in Russia and the world. He considered that the foundation for preserving the nation was the Orthodox faith and diligent service to the fatherland.
In reading the sayings of St. Theophan on contemporary society, education, and upbringing, we may be surprised and amazed at how relevant and pressing his words sound for modern man. The saint lived in times when freethinking and liberal ideas were being broadly disseminated in society. The liberals, just as today, were proclaiming “faith in man” and “freedom”, demanding “equality and brotherhood”, organizing demonstrations and parades, and shaking the nation’s foundations in any way they could.
The process of degradation in society begins, as a rule, with the destruction of education. Just as a hundred years ago, we are often trying on “suits sewn in the Western manner”, becoming simpletons who do not understand our own native heritage:
“All of today’s Western education… is permeated with pagan principles that are at enmity with Christianity. All who come into contact with it and affiliate with it even in the least become, to a greater or lesser degree, enemies of Christ.”
St. Theophan considered any infatuation with the West to be dangerous, not only for a person’s faith and morality, but also for the entire Russian nation. In this context, the call rings out with particular acuteness in his homily, “On the Protection of the Mother of God” delivered October 1, 1863:
“Stop living like the French and the heterodox and again take on a pious, Orthodox Christian life!”
With deep anxiety the saint wrote about the spread of faithlessness in Russian society:
“Sorrowful is not only the perversion of morals, but also the apostasy from the manner of confession that is being ascribed to Orthodoxy. Has there ever been in the Russian language blasphemy against God and His Christ? Yet now people not only think it, but also speak it, and write it, and print much that is in opposition against God. Do you think that this will remain without consequences? No. He Who lives in the heavens will answer us with His wrath, and will wipe us away with His fury.”
Many of the saint’s words, filled with bitterness and pain for Russia, sound truly prophetic if we recall the terrible events that swept against Russia at the beginning of the twentieth century. Rejection of God, forgetfulness of the Church, apostasy from the faith — according to the saint’s words, these things shake a nation’s foundations and lead to its destruction. Here are some lines from a letter he wrote in 1881, written only a few days after the murder of Emperor Alexander II:
How did the French Revolution happen? First, materialistic views were spread. They shook people’s Christianity and general religious convictions. Then came rampant unbelief. “There is no God; man is just a glob of mud; there’s nothing to expect beyond the grave.” Regardless of the fact that a glob of mud can be trampled down by all, they spouted off, “Don’t silence us!” “Don’t touch us!” “Give us freedom!” And they gave it to them! Demands ensued — somewhat reasonable, then half-crazy, and then insane. And everything got turned upside-down. What about us? Materialistic views here are becoming more and more predominant and mainstream. They haven’t yet taken power, but they are taking it. Unbelief and immorality are also spreading. Demands for freedom and criminality are being freely expressed. This would mean that we are on the path to revolution. What should we do? We need to cut off free expression of such things — shut the mouths of journalists and newspapers. We should proclaim unbelief to be a state crime, and forbid materialistic views under penalty of death.
Some of the saint’s contemporaries accused him of excessive strictness and a lack of dialogue with apostates. It is well known how heatedly and decisively the saint spoke against the Pashkovites,1 and against the religious-philosophical teachings of Lev Tolstoy, about whom he wrote: “He has no God, no soul, nor anything holy.”
Today there are also voices calling us to “soften” moral norms even to the acceptance of depravity and perversion, which are waging war with the Church because it protects its flock by calling depravity and perversion by their true names. The saint explains that “strictness” belongs not to him but to Christianity, which “must abide eternally and unchangeably.”
In 1954, for the sixtieth anniversary of the saint’s repose, Bishop Averky (Taushev) wrote a book with the telling name: The Proclaimer of God’s Punishment upon the Russian People, in which he noted the holy hierarch’s extraordinary gift of perspicacity:
“While living in the depths of his seclusion, … [St. Theophan] could see with his spirit the terrible catastrophe gathering against the Russian people who were wavering in their Orthodox faith, and could feel in his bones that horrible, bloody abyss into which they were falling headlong. Everything that Bishop Theophan foretold, as we can see now, came true…”
1 The Pashkovites, also called “Redstockists”, were one of the first communities of evangelical Christians in Russia. The movement of evangelical Christians in Russia arose under the influence of the preaching of Lord G. V. Redstock, who arrived in St. Petersburg in 1874 at the invitation of the Russian aristocracy. Soon after V. A. Pashkov became one of Redstock’s followers, sermons began to be given in Russian, which led to a significant expansion of Redstock’s audience (Great Russian Encyclopedia).