FRIENDS OF MOUNT ATHOS BOOK REVIEWS
© 1996
The Living Witness of the
Holy Mountain: Contemporary Voices from Mount Athos. Translated with introduction and notes by Hieromonk
Alexander (Golitzin). South Canaan, PA: St Tikhon's Seminary Press, 1996. 311
pages. Price p/b £18.75. ISBN 1-878997-48-3. Available in the UK from Orthodox
Christian Book Service, 95 Spencer Street, Birmingham B18 6DA.
Here is an anthology of some
of the best of modern Athonite spiritual writing. English readers, including
this reviewer, may have felt frustrated at hearing that the Holy Mountain is
once again functioning as the spiritual heart of Orthodoxy and yet being able
to read so little evidence of the fact, at least in English. Our frustration is
ended by the publication of this variegated garland.
The
volume has been assembled (and most of its contents translated) by Priest Monk
Alexander (Golitzin) who was tonsured at Simonopetra and now teaches theology
at Marquette University in the United States. Fr Alexander may have left the
Holy Mountain in body, but he has surely not done so in spirit. His devotion to
his Athonite fathers and brothers and to the paradise that they inhabit shines
through on every page. European readers should not be deterred by the book's
dedication to the translator's fellow Orthodox in North America: it has a
universal appeal. In his Preface Fr Alexander reveals that his motive in
preparing the book is to counter the reaction of those readers in the West who
question the 'relevance' of an institution that is 'so old and so lacking in
apparent social utility' as Mount Athos: 'In a world of Silicon Valleys who
needs a Holy Mountain?' The answer is eloquently spelled out on the pages that
follow.
An
introductory chapter on 'Athos, Past and Present' sets the scene for the
spiritual texts that follow. Fr Alexander invites those familiar with the
history of Athos and the place of monasticism in the Orthodox Church to skip
these preliminaries and proceed directly to the body of the book. He should not
be so modest. His 'Capsule History' is highly pertinent to what follows and
well worth reading. His defence of the monastic life in a world obsessed with
productivity ('Why Monks?') is as cogent as any I have read.
Part
One ('On the Way to the Holy Mountain') comprises two chapters, both from the
pen of Archimandrite Placide (Deseille). The first ('Stages of a Pilgrimage')
is his spiritual autobiography, charting a journey that began with his entry
into a Cistercian monastery at the age of sixteen and reached a climax with his
baptism and subsequent tonsure at Simonopetra some thirty-four years later. His
insistence that he has not 'changed Churches' but rather returned to the
'common source' of the Church of Christ is persuasive. But his plea that the
plurality of Orthodox jurisdictions in France today be seen as a unifying
factor in the spirit of Athonite pan-Orthodoxy has a hollow ring in the wake of
Estonia 1996. His other piece, 'Mount Athos and Europe', can have left his
audience (representatives of the EEC) in no doubt as to the vital role that
Athos can expect to play in the Europe of today.
Part
Two ('The Garden of the Theotokos, Portal of the Kingdom') is a mixed bag
consisting of three short documents: an anonymous piece on 'The Garden of the
Mother of God'; a biographical sketch of St Simon the Myrrh-Flowing, extracted
from the Orthodox Synaxarion
compiled by Priest Monk Makarios of Simonopetra; and 'The Tomos of Mount Athos
in Defense of the Hesychasts', written by St Gregory Palamas and signed by all
the leading Athonites in 1340-1. The last sits a little uneasily in the present
collection and does not make easy reading; but it is a fundamental text for all
that has happened since, so it is very useful to have it here.
Thus
prepared by a lengthy but necessary novitiate, the reader can at last immerse
himself in the wisdom of the Fathers, for here, in Part Three, 'we arrive at
the heart of the Holy Mountain'. In a piece entitled 'The Light of the Holy
Mountain' Fr Makarios of Simonopetra embraces the reader and transports him
like a pilgrim to Athos where he is 'no longer alone in the world, but... a
member of a vast family... an adopted son of the Mother of God'. This leads
naturally into 'A Contemporary Athonite Paterikon' - a compendium of spiritual
anecdotes, 'a few pearls of an inexhaustible treasure', wonderfully evocative
of the oral tradition of Athonite spirituality that naturally forms part of
nearly every conversation on the Holy Mountain. Just to give a taste of it, I
quote one paragraph from the stories about Fr Joseph the Hesychast (d. 1959):
During this period, in spite
of all his efforts, he could not get past the stage of vocal prayer. As soon as
he would stop repeating aloud 'Lord Jesus Christ, have mercy on me...', his
concentration would break up in different thoughts. One day, as he was looking
toward Athos to ask the Mother of God to help him in his distress, he saw
suddenly a flash of light, accompanied by a violent wind, burst forth from the
chapel of the Transfiguration which is located on the peak of the mountain. The
radiance bent in an arc from its point of origin directly to Father Joseph,
penetrating right to his heart: 'I immediately felt altogether transformed. I
was filled with light and could no longer feel whether I had a body or not. At
that point, the prayer began to repeat itself in my heart with the steadiness
and regularity of a clock.' He re-entered his cave and sat down, his chin upon
chest, to follow the prayer in his heart. But then he was carried off in
ecstasy. He felt he had found himself transported to heaven, to a place where
there reigned an indescribable calm and peace. One thought alone came to him
'Oh God, make it so that I never return to the world, but stay here always,
with you.' From that time on the prayer never stopped resonating in his heart.
In
Part Four, 'The Spiritual Father', the reader is at last introduced to
Archimandrite Aemilianos, Abbot of Simonopetra, a revered figure and one of the
principal movers in the current revival on Athos. Beginning as a solitary
hermit at the Meteora, he has become a father to hundreds of monks and
thousands more in the outside world. There is no one better equipped to discuss
'The Role of the Spiritual Father in an Orthodox Monastery', an interview given
for the film Athos, 1000 Years Are as a Day (1981). His next piece, on 'Martyrdom: Foundation of
Orthodox Monasticism', was a conference paper delivered in Thessalonica in
1980. From yet another context follows 'Mount Athos: Sacred Vessel of the
Prayer of Jesus', extracts from a sermon delivered at the cathedral of Drama in
1983. These are but the appetizers preparing us for the abbot's pi¸ce de
rˇsistance - 'The Experience of the
Transfiguration in the Life of the Athonite Monk' - a poetic hymn to light,
deeply learned, profoundly theological, a powerful example of charismatic
writing - Athonite spirituality at its very best!
Fr
Aemilianos is as much loved off the Holy Mountain as on it, and nowhere more so
than at the women's monastery at Ormylia. The final part of the book, 'Saint
Herman of Alaska: Athos in America, and America's Gift to Athos', demonstrates
how, in the life and work of St Herman, the Athonite tradition has travelled
not just to Russia but even to the uttermost limits of the earth. Some 150
years after his death the saint has completed the circle of his pilgrimage with
the return of his relics to Greece, and the book ends with two sermons by Fr
Aemilianos celebrating their reception at Ormylia.
I
hope that I have conveyed an impression of the rich repast that awaits the
reader of this admirable book. The translator has discharged his role with
consummate skill and humility. He writes well himself; and he has the gift of
making words written or spoken in another language sound as fresh as when they
were first uttered. The annotations are scholarly without being turgid (but the
list of monasteries currently directed by disciples of Fr Joseph the Hesychast
on p.289 n.18 should include Vatopedi); and the Annotated Bibliography is
invaluable. The illustrations, drawn by Fr Tikhon, are delightfully apposite.
Anyone wishing to know more about the spiritual traditions of Mount Athos
should buy this book.
GRAHAM SPEAKE
Oxford