Orthodox Outlet for Dogmatic Enquiries | Society |
This is a reposting of an article from several years back. Its
thoughts seem appropriate for our present time as a nation. I pray
it is of some help.
Can a nation ever sin? If so, how can it be forgiven?
The stories and prophetic writings of the Old Testament are replete
with examples of national sin. There are certainly stories of God
dealing with individuals, but, on the whole, His attention seems to
be directed to Israel and other nations as a whole. The promises and
pledges are made to a collective people and the chastisement falls
on the whole nation as well. Our modern sensibilities, rooted in a
fundamental commitment to individualism, recoil from this collective
treatment. And we are not the first to complain.
In Genesis 18, Abraham argues with God about the cities of Sodom and
Gomorrah. The Lord has threatened to destroy the cities on account
of their sins. Abraham raises the troubling question:
“Would You also destroy the righteous with the wicked? Suppose there
were fifty righteous within the city; would You also destroy the
place and not spare it for the fifty righteous that were in
it? Far be it from You to do such a thing as this, to slay the
righteous with the wicked, so that the righteous should be as the
wicked; far be it from You! Shall not the Judge of all the earth do
right?” (Gen 18:23-25)
Thus, this question has had a prominent place in the thoughts of the
faithful since the very beginning. In Abraham’s conversation with
God, he asks if God would spare those cities even if only
fifty righteous were found. God agrees. With continued pleading,
Abraham takes the the number down to 10 righteous (and stops). And
the Lord says that He would spare the cities for the sake of just
10. Alas, less than ten were found. But we do not upbraid God that
He was willing to spare the unrighteous for the sake of a mere
handful.
There is a mystery contained within the entire exercise of that
conversation. For the truth is, none of us stands alone. No one
stands free of the actions of others. Our lives are deeply
connected. We are ourselves the offspring of many generations, and
we carry within us ever so much that was not of our own choosing.
Our inheritance is tainted – both for good and for ill.
Fr. Thomas Hopko describes some of this as “generational” sin. To
understand this requires that we remember that sin is not a legal problem.
It is not about what is fair or unfair. It is about a mystical
burden that we experience as debt, hindrance, oppositional weight,
weakness, brokenness and corruption, or just the starting place of
our lives. Virtually everything in our lives is gifted to us, and
there are many “gifts” that we would prefer never to have received.
It is part of our incarnational existence. We are the offspring of
others. To have an embodied existence in space and time is to have a
body burdened with the DNA of eons and a family and culture that is
both the product and carrier of history. Our own existence is a
consequence of everything that has come before us. We cannot rightly
suggest that such a contingent existence comes free.
Of course, many historical burdens become the targets of political
attention. No human being, no ethnic or national group is without
sin. Some sins are more recent and obvious than others. But our
accusers can never plead innocence. Acknowledging this does nothing
to remove our burdens.
In the 20th century, there have been some notable national crimes
that have, in some way, been acknowledged. Japan renounced its
military in response to the atrocities and errors of the Second
World War. Germany paid reparations to Israel and enacted numerous
laws renouncing and restricting the scourge of Nazism. Many war
criminals were punished. The Russian government, with no outside
political pressure, not only acknowledged many of the crimes of its
Communist past, but also built memorials and rebuilt churches (often
returning properties that had been taken away) in an effort of
public repentance.
It has rightly been noted that “history is written by the victors.”
It is therefore the case that we more easily repent for the sins of
history’s vanquished and leave the writing to the victorious. But
the burden of sin as historical reality remains. Unaddressed, the
sins of the past become the problems of the present. Many of the
most enduring conflicts in the modern world represent centuries of
unresolved issues and the inherited burden of our ancestral legacy.
Often the legacy of history is carried on in competing narratives.
We do not always know or rightly remember the details of what
happened, but we know all too well the emotional burden of its
trauma. Hatred can be a very ancient thing.
And it is to trauma that I want to direct our attention. Trauma is a
word for the damage we suffer in extreme circumstances. It can occur
as a result of natural disaster, or war – any time and place in
which we are endangered, injured, or exposed to terrible actions.
People do not experience war and then walk away as though nothing
had happened. The war stops outwardly, but it continues inwardly.
This experience is as old as mankind itself. Trauma sometimes leaves
people emotionally and even physically crippled.
Among ancient peoples, the trauma of life was met with liturgy –
rituals, both public and private that sought to restore them to
their right minds, to appease the wrath of the gods or the spirits
of their enemies. The collective psyche of a whole people was set
right through various actions and beliefs that worked to make peace
and re-establish righteousness.
Modernity has very few such rituals. The secular state, presiding
over competing and disparate groups has almost nothing to which it
can appeal that serves as catharsis or repentance, or even
thanksgiving. Sport (such as the Super Bowl) comes closest to public
liturgy in modern America, but it serves nothing transcendent,
nothing permanent. It cannot heal or speak to the needs of a nation.
The outcome of this lack is an inability for nations and often
individuals to be healed of their trauma. The wounds of lost wars or
historical sins remain unaddressed, erupting from time to time as
renewed trauma in the national psyche.
Studying parish ministry in seminary, I was introduced to the
phrase, “recurrent latent cycling.” It was meant to describe a
struggle within the life of a parish that erupts periodically, that
is, in fact, the same struggle. It might be around a new presenting
issue – but it was still the same struggle. Healing the parish
required a discernment of what was actually going on – to bring
something that was latent into the light of day.
Nations (and individuals) who ignore their wounds and griefs do not
leave them behind – they bring them forward and repeat their battles
endlessly. Subsequent generations who never knew the first cause,
become the unwitting bearers of the latent violence and destruction
that they have inherited.
Though Orthodoxy does not generally use the term “original sin,” it
doesn’t thereby deny the reality of the inherited burden of sin. The
growing study of epigenetics would suggest that we may even inherit
such burdens genetically.
The medicine we have received from Holy Tradition for this on-going
sickness is repentance. Of course, it is very difficult for
nations to repent, though there would easily be services for such in
the Orthodox tradition. However, the shame associated with national
or collective sin is often denied or retold in other ways. Without
repentance, nations are doomed to relive, repeat or act out the
bitterness of their trauma.
There is, of course, another way. It was first expressed in the
prophetic words of the High Priest Caiaphas as he contemplated the
Jesus problem:
“You know nothing at all, nor do you consider that it is expedient
for us that one man should die for the people, and not that the
whole nation should perish.” (Joh 11:49-50)
The death of Christ on the Cross becomes the public liturgy for the
sin burden of Israel. Of course, He was the public liturgy for the
sin burden of the whole world. But there was a principle articulated
in His sacrifice – that one man could die for the whole. This is not
a substitutionary legal event. Rather, it is the mystery of
coinherence and koinonia. “He became what we are that we might
become what He is,” the Fathers said. It has also been the knowledge
of the Church that we are invited into that selfsame sacrifice.
Buried into His death in Baptism, we are united to His very
crucifixion. United with Him in the grave, we journey with Him into
Hades, and there, brave souls make intercession for the sins of the
whole world, and with Him set souls free. The Elder Sophrony
describes such brave souls as Christ’s “friends.”
For at least as long as the days of Abraham, we have had
intercessors who saved the cities and nations of the wicked. Their
prayers were effective because they prayed in union with the one
mediator and true advocate, Christ our God.
Abraham was God’s friend. As God visited with him, He said:
“Shall I hide from Abraham what I am doing, since Abraham shall
surely become a great and mighty nation, and all the nations of the
earth shall be blessed in him?” (Gen 18:17-18)
This is God’s inauguration of Abraham as an intercessor for the
nations. The greatest friends of God have always taken up this same
intercessory role. Through Christ and the prayers of our holy
fathers, God preserves the world and saves the nations from the full
brunt and weight of their history.
There are thus two kinds of people: those who are the weight of
history, and those who join themselves to Christ in their repentance
and bear the weight of history. This latter role is the true life of
the Church and the heart of her who prays, “On behalf of all, and
for all.”
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Article published in English on: 04-06-2020.
Last update: 04-06-2020.