by Archimandrite Aimilianos
 of Simonopetra, Mount Athos.
Nobody
 would dispute that the most important day in a person's
 life, after his birth and baptism, is that of his
 marriage. It is no surprise, then, that the aim of
 contemporary worldly and institutional upheavals is
 precisely to crush the most honorable and sacred
 mystery of marriage. For many people, marriage is an
 opportunity for pleasures and amusements. Life,
 however, is a serious affair. It is a spiritual
 struggle, a progression toward a goal—heaven. The
 most crucial juncture, and the most important means, of
 this progression is marriage. It is not permissible for
 anyone to avoid the bonds of marriage, whether he
 concludes a mystical marriage by devoting himself to
 God, or whether he concludes a sacramental one with a
 spouse.
 Today we will concern ourselves primarily with sacramental
 marriage. We will consider how marriage can contribute to
 our spiritual life, in order to continue the theme of our
 previous talk.We know that marriage is an institution established by
 God. It is "honorable" (Heb 13.4). It is a
 "great mystery" (Eph 5.32). An unmarried
 person passes through life and leaves it; but a married
 person lives and experiences life to the full.
 One wonders what people today think about the sacred
 institution of marriage, this "great mystery",
 blessed by our Church. They marry, and it's as if two
 checking accounts or two business interests were being
 merged. Two people are united without ideals, two zeros,
 you could say. Because people without ideals, without
 quests, are nothing more than zeros. "I married in
 order to live my life", you hear people say,
 "and not to be shut inside four walls". "I
 married to enjoy my life", they say, and then they
 hand over their children—if they have
 children—to some strange woman so they can run off
 to the theater, the movies, or to some other worldly
 gathering. And so their houses become hotels to which they
 return in the evening, or, rather, after midnight, after
 they've had their fun and need to rest. Such people are
 empty inside, and so in their homes they feel a real void.
 They find no gratification there, and thus they rush and
 slide from here to there, in order to find their
 happiness. 
 They marry without knowledge, without a sense of
 responsibility, or simply because they wish to get
 married, or because they think they must in order to be
 good members of society. But what is the result? We see it
 every day. The shipwrecks of marriage are familiar to all
 of us. A worldly marriage, as it is understood today, can
 only have one characteristic—the murder of a
 person's spiritual life. Thus we must feel that, if we
 fail in our marriage, we have more or less failed in our
 spiritual life. If we succeed in our marriage, we have
 also succeeded in our spiritual life. Success or failure,
 progress or ruin, in our spiritual life, begins with our
 marriage. Because this is such a serious matter, let us
 consider some of the conditions necessary for a happy,
 truly Christian marriage. 
 In order to have a successful marriage, one must have the
 appropriate upbringing from an early age. Just as a child
 must study, just as he learns to think, and take an
 interest in his parents or his health, so too must he be
 prepared in order to be able to have a successful
 marriage. But in the age in which we live, no one is
 interested in preparing their children for this great
 mystery, a mystery which will play the foremost role in
 their lives. Parents are not interested, except in the
 dowry, or in other such financial matters, in which they
 are deeply interested.
 The child, from an early age, must learn to love, to give,
 to suffer deprivation, to obey. He must learn to feel that
 the purity of his soul and body is a valuable treasure to
 be cherished as the apple of his eye. The character of the
 child must be shaped properly, so that he becomes an
 honest, brave, decisive, sincere, cheerful person, and not
 a half, self-pitying creature, who constantly bemoans his
 fate, a weak-willed thing without any power of thought or
 strength. From an early age, the child should learn to
 take an interest in a particular subject or occupation, so
 that tomorrow he will be in a position to support his
 family, or, in the case of a girl, also to help, if this
 is necessary. A woman must learn to be a housewife, even
 if she has an education. She should learn to cook, to sew,
 to embroider. But, my good Father, you may say, this is
 all self- evident. Ask married couples, however, and
 you'll see how many women who are about to marry know
 nothing about running a household.
 Once we reach a certain age, moreover, the choice of one's
 life partner is a matter which should not be put off.
 Neither should one be in a hurry, because, as the saying
 goes, "quick to marry, quick to despair". But
 one should not delay, because delay is a mortal danger to
 the soul. As a rule, the normal rhythm of the spiritual
 life begins with marriage. An unmarried person is like
 someone trying to live permanently in a hallway: he
 doesn't seem to know what the rooms are for. Parents
 should take an interest in the child's social life, but
 also in his prayer life, so that the blessed hour will
 come as a gift sent by God.
 Naturally, when he comes to choose a partner, he will take
 to account his parents' opinion. How often have parents
 felt knives piercing their hearts when their children
 don't ask them about the person who will be their
 companion in life? A mother's heart is sensitive, and
 can't endure such a blow. The child should discuss matters
 with his parents, because they have a special intuition
 enabling them to be aware of the things which concern
 them. But this doesn't mean that the father and mother
 should pressure the child. Ultimately he should be free to
 make his own decision. If you pressure your child to
 marry, he will consider you responsible if things don't go
 well. Nothing good comes from pressure. You must help him,
 but you must also allow him to choose the person he
 prefers or loves—but not someone he pities or feels
 sorry for. If your child, after getting to know someone,
 tells you, "I feel sorry for the poor soul, I'll
 marry him", then you know that you're on the
 threshold of a failed marriage. Only a person whom he or
 she prefers or loves can stand by the side of your child.
 Both the man and the woman should be attracted to each
 other, and they should truly want to live together, in an
 inward way, unhurriedly. On this matter, however, it is
 not possible to pressure our children. Sometimes, out of
 our love, we feel that they are our possessions, that they
 are our property, and that we can do what we want with
 them. And thus our child becomes a creature incapable of
 living life either married or unmarried.
 Of course, the process of getting acquainted, which is
 such a delicate issue—but of which we are often
 heedless—should take place before marriage. We
 should never be complacent about getting to know each
 other, especially if we're not sure of our feelings. Love
 shouldn't blind us. It should open our eyes, to see the
 other person as he is, with his faults. "Better to
 take a shoe from your own house, even if it's
 cobbled", says the folk proverb. That is, it's better
 to take someone you've gotten to know. And
 acquaintanceship must always be linked with engagement,
 which is an equally difficult matter.
 When I suggested to a young woman that she should think
 seriously about whether she should continue her engagement
 she replied: "If I break it off, my mother will kill
 me". But what sort of engagement is it, if there's no
 possibility of breaking it off? To get engaged doesn't
 mean that I'll necessarily get married. It means that I'm
 testing to see whether I should marry the person I'm
 engaged to. If a woman isn't in a position to break off
 her engagement, she shouldn't get engaged, or, rather, she
 shouldn't go ahead with the marriage. During the
 engagement, we must be especially careful. If we are, we
 will have fewer problems and fewer disappointments after
 the wedding. Someone once said that, during the period of
 getting to know me another, you should hold on to your
 heart firmly with both hands, as if it were a wild animal.
 You know how dangerous the heart is: instead of leading
 you to marriage, it can lead you into sin. There is the
 possibility that the person you've chosen sees you as a
 mere toy, or a toothbrush to be tried out. Afterwards
 you'll be depressed and shed many tears. But then it will
 be too late, because your angel will have turned out to be
 made of clay.
 Don't choose a person who wastes his time at clubs, having
 good time, and throwing away his money on traveling and
 luxuries. Neither should you choose someone who, as you'll
 find out, conceals his self-centeredness beneath words of
 love. Don't choose a woman as your wife who is like gun
 powder, so that as soon as you say something to her, she
 bursts to flames. She's no good as a wife.
 Moreover, if you want to have a truly successful marriage,
 don't approach that young woman or man who is unable to
 leave his or her parents. The commandment of Christ is
 clear: man leaves his father and mother, and is united to
 his wife" (Mk 10.7). But when you see the other
 person tied to his mother or father, when you see that he
 obeys them with his mouth hanging open, and is prepared to
 do whatever they tell him, keep well away. He is
 emotionally sick, a psychologically immature person, and
 you won't be able to create a family with him. The man you
 will make your husband should be spirited. But how can he
 be spirited when he hasn't realized, hasn't understood,
 hasn't digested the fact that his parents' house is simply
 a flower-pot in which he was put, to be taken out later,
 and transplanted somewhere else?
 Also, when you're going to choose a husband, make sure
 that he's not an uncommunicative type—in which case
 he'll have no friends. And if today he has no friends,
 tomorrow he'll find it difficult to have you as a friend
 and partner. Be on your guard against grumblers, moaners,
 and gloomy people who are like dejected birds. Be on your
 guard against those who complain all the time: "You
 don't love me, you don't understand me", and all that
 sort of thing. Something about these creatures of God
 isn't right. Also be on your guard against religious
 fanatics and the overly pious. Those, that is, who get
 upset over trivial things, who are critical of everything
 and hypersensitive. How are you going to live with such a
 person? It will be like sitting on thorns. Also look out
 for those who regard marriage as something bad, as a form
 of imprisonment. Those who say: But I've never in my whole
 life thought about getting married.
 Watch out for certain pseudo-Christians, who see marriage
 as something sordid, as a sin, who immediately cast their
 eyes down when they hear anything said about it.
 If you marry someone like this, he will be a thorn in
 your flesh, and a burden for his monastery if he
 becomes a monk. Watch out for those who think that
 they're perfect, and find no defect in themselves,
 while constantly finding faults in others. Watch out
 for those who think they've been chosen by God to
 correct everyone else.
 There is another serious matter to which you should also
 pay attention: heredity. Get to know well the father, the
 mother, the grandfather, the grandmother, the uncle. Also,
 the basic material prerequisites should be there. Above
 all, pay attention to the person's faith. Does he or she
 have faith? Has the person whom you're thinking of making
 the companion of your life have ideals? If Christ means
 nothing to him, how are you going to be able to enter his
 heart? If he has not been able to value Christ, do you
 think he will value you? Holy Scripture says to the
 husband that the wife should be "of your
 testament" (Mal 2.14), that is, of your faith, your
 religion, so that she can join you to God. It is only then
 that you can have, as the Church Fathers say, a marriage
 "with the consent of the bishop,"
 that is, with the approval of the Church, and not
 simply a formal license.
 Discuss things in advance with your spiritual father.
 Examine every detail with him, and he will stand by your
 side as a true friend, and, when you reach the desired
 goal, then your marriage will be a gift from God (cf. 1
 Cor 7.7).God gives his own gift to each one of us. He
 leads one person to marriage and another to virginity. Not
 that God makes the choice by saying "you go
 here", and "you go there", but he gives us
 the nerve to choose what our heart desires, and the
 courage and the strength to carry it out.
 If you choose your spouse in this way, then thank God.
 Bring him into touch with your spiritual father. If you
 don't have one, the two of you should choose a spiritual
 father together, who will be your Elder, your father, the
 one who will remind you of, and show you God.
 You will have many difficulties in life. There will be a
 storm of issues. Worries will surround you, and
 maintaining your Christian life will not be easy. But
 don't worry. God will help you. Do what is within your
 power. Can you read a spiritual book for five minutes a
 day? Then read. Can you pray for five minutes a day? Pray.
 And if you can't manage five minutes, pray for two. The
 rest is God's affair.
 When you see difficulties in your marriage, when you see
 that you're making no progress in your spiritual life,
 don't despair. But neither should you be content with
 whatever progress you may have already made. Lift up your
 heart to God. Imitate those who have given everything to
 God, and do what you can to be like them, even if all you
 can do is to desire in your heart to be like them. Leave
 the action to Christ. And when you advance in this way,
 you will truly sense what is the purpose of marriage.
 Otherwise, as a blind person wanders about, so too will
 you wander in life.
 What then is the purpose of marriage? I will tell you
 three of its main aims. First of all, marriage is a path
 of pain. The companionship of man and wife is called a
 "yoking together" (syzygia), that is, the two of
 them labor under a shared burden. Marriage is a journeying
 together, a shared portion of pain, and, of course, a joy.
 But usually it's six chords of our life which sound a
 sorrowful note, and only one which is joyous. Man and wife
 will drink from the same cup of upheaval, sadness, and
 failure. During the marriage ceremony, the priest gives
 the newly-weds to drink from the same cup, called the
 "common cup," because together
 they will bear the burdens of marriage. The cup is also
 called "union," because they are
 joined together to share life's joys and sorrows.
 When two people get married, it's as if they're saying:
 Together we will go forward, hand in hand, through good
 times and bad. We will have dark hours, hours of sorrow
 filled with burdens, monotonous hours. But in the depths
 of the night, we continue to believe in the sun and the
 light. Oh, my dear friends, who can say that his life has
 not been marked by difficult moments? But it is no small
 thing to know that, in your difficult moments, in your
 worries, in your temptations, you will be holding in your
 hand the hand of your beloved. The New Testament says that
 every man will have pain, especially those who enter into
 marriage.
 "Are you free from a wife?"—which means,
 are you unmarried?—asks the Apostle Paul. "Then
 do not seek a wife. But if you do marry, you are not doing
 anything wrong, it is no sin. And if a girl marries, she
 does not sin, but those who marry will have hardships to
 endure, and my aim is to spare you" (1 Cor 7.27-28).
 Remember: from the moment you marry, he says, you will
 have much pain, you will suffer, and your life will be a
 cross, but a cross blossoming with flowers. Your marriage
 will have its joys, its smiles, and its beautiful things.
 But during the days of sunshine, remember that all the
 lovely flowers conceal a cross, which can emerge into your
 sunshine at any moment.
 Life is not a party, as some people think, and after they
 get married take a fall from heaven to earth. Marriage is
 a vast ocean, and you don't know where it will wash you
 up. You take the person whom you've chosen with fear and
 trembling, and with great care, and after a year, two
 years, five years, you discover that he's fooled you.
 It is an adulteration of marriage for us to think that it
 is a road to happiness, as if it were a denial of the
 cross. The joy of marriage is for husband and wife to put
 their shoulders to the wheel and together go forward on
 the uphill road of life. "You haven't suffered? Then
 you haven't loved", says a certain poet. Only those
 who suffer can really love. And that's why sadness is a
 necessary feature of marriage. "Marriage", in
 the words of an ancient philosopher, "is a world made
 beautiful by hope, and strengthened by misfortune".
 Just as steel is fashioned in a furnace, just so is a
 person proved in marriage, in the fire of difficulties.
 When you see your marriage from a distance, everything
 seems wonderful. But when you get closer, you'll see just
 how many difficult moments it has.
 God says that "it is not good for the man to be
 alone" (Gen 2.18), and so he placed a companion at
 his side, someone to help him throughout his life,
 especially in his struggles of faith, because in order to
 keep your faith, you must suffer and endure much pain. God
 sends his grace to all of us. He sends it, however, when
 he sees that we are willing to suffer. Some people, as
 soon as they see obstacles, run away. They forget God and
 the Church. But faith, God, and the Church, are not a
 shirt that you take off as soon as you start to sweat.
 Marriage, then, is a journey through sorrows and joys.
 When the sorrows seem overwhelming, then you should
 remember that God is with you. He will take up your cross.
 It was he who placed the crown of marriage on your head.
 But when we ask God about something, he doesn't always
 supply the solution right away. He leads us forward very
 slowly. Sometime[s] he takes years. We have to experience
 pain, otherwise life would have no meaning. But be of good
 cheer, for Christ is suffering with you, and the Holy
 Spirit, "through your groanings is pleading on your
 behalf" (cf. Rom 8.26).
 Second, marriage is a journey of love. It is the creation
 of a new human being, a new person, for, as the Gospel
 says, "the two will be as one flesh" (Mt 19.5;
 Mk 10.7). God unites two people, and makes them one. From
 this union of two people, who agree to synchronize their
 footsteps and harmonize the beating of their hearts, a new
 human being emerges. Through such profound and spontaneous
 love, the one becomes a presence, a living reality, in the
 heart of the other. "I am married" means that I
 cannot live a single day, even a few moments, without the
 companion of my life. My husband, my wife, is a part of my
 being, of my flesh, of my soul. He or she complements me.
 He or she is the thought of my mind. He or she is the
 reason for which my heart beats.
 The couple exchanges rings to show that, in life's
 changes, they will remain united. Each wears a ring with
 the name of the other written on it, which is placed on
 the finger from which a vein runs directly to the heart.
 That is, the name of the other is written on his own
 heart. The one, we could say, gives the blood of his heart
 to the other. He or she encloses the other within the core
 of his being.
 "What do you do?" a novelist was once asked. He
 was taken aback. "What do I do? What a strange
 question! I love Olga, my wife". The husband lives to
 love his wife, and the wife lives to love her husband.
 The most fundamental thing in marriage is love, and love
 is about uniting two into one. God abhors separation and
 divorce. He wants unbroken unity (cf. Mt 19.3-9; Mk
 10.2-12). The priest takes the rings off the left finger,
 puts them on the right, and then again on the left, and
 finally he puts them back on the right hand. He begins and
 ends with the right hand, because this is the hand with
 which we chiefly act. It also means that the other now has
 my hand. I don't do anything that my spouse doesn't want.
 I am bound up with the other. I live for the other, and
 for that reason I tolerate his faults. A person who can't
 put up with another can't marry.
 What does my partner want? What interests him? What gives
 him pleasure? That should also interest and please me as
 well. I also look for opportunities to give him little
 delights. How will I please my husband today? How will I
 please my wife today? This is the question which a married
 person must ask every day. She is concerned about his
 worries, his interests, his job, his friends, so that they
 can have everything in common. He gladly gives way to her.
 Because he loves her, he goes to bed last and gets up first
 in the morning. He regards her parents as his own, and
 loves them and is devoted to them, because he knows that
 marriage is difficult for parents. It always makes them
 cry, because it separates them from their child.
 The wife expresses love for her husband through obedience.
 She is obedient to him exactly as the Church is to Christ
 (Eph 5.22-24). It is her happiness to do the will of her
 husband. Attitude, obstinacy, and complaining are the axes
 which chop down the tree of conjugal happiness. The woman
 is the heart. The man is the head. The woman is the heart
 that loves. In her husband's moments of difficulty, she
 stands at his side, as the empress Theodora stood by the
 emperor Justinian. In his moments of joy, she tries to
 raise him up to even higher heights and ideals. In times
 of sorrow, she stands by him like a sublime and peaceful
 world offering him tranquility.
 The husband should remember that his wife has been
 entrusted to him by God. His wife is a soul which God has
 given to him, and one day he must return it. He loves his
 wife as Christ loves the Church (Eph 5.25). He protects
 her, takes care of her, gives her security, particularly
 when she is distressed, or when she is ill. We know how
 sensitive a woman's soul can be, which is why the Apostle
 Peter urges husbands to honor their wives (cf. 1 Pet 3.7).
 A woman's soul gets wounded, is often petty, changeable,
 and can suddenly fall into despair. Thus the husband
 should be full of love and tenderness, and make himself
 her greatest treasure. Marriage, my dear friends, is a
 little boat which sails through waves and among rocks. If
 you lose your attention even for a moment, it will be
 wrecked.
 As we have seen, marriage is first of all a journey of
 pain; second a journey of love; and, third, a journey to
 heaven, a call from God. It is, as Holy Scripture says, a
 "great mystery" (Eph 5.32). We often speak of
 seven "mysteries", or sacraments. In this
 regard, a "mystery" is the sign of the mystical
 presence of some true person or event. An icon, for
 instance, is a mystery. When we venerate it, we are not
 venerating wood or paint, but Christ, or the Theotokos, or
 the saint who is mystically depicted. The Holy Cross is a
 symbol of Christ, containing his mystical presence.
 Marriage, too, is a mystery, a mystical presence, not
 unlike these. Christ says, "wherever two or three are
 gathered together in my name, there I am among them"
 (Mt 18.20). And whenever two people are married in the
 name of Christ, they become the sign which contains and
 expresses Christ himself. When you see a couple who are
 conscious of this, it is as if you are seeing Christ.
 Together they are a theophany.
 This is also why crowns are placed on their heads during
 the wedding ceremony, because the bride and groom are an
 image of Christ and the Church. And not just this, but
 everything in marriage is symbolic. The lit candles
 symbolize the wise virgins. When the priest places these
 candles into the hands of the newly-weds, it is as if he
 is saying to them: Wait for Christ like the wise virgins
 (Mt 25.1-11). Or they symbolize the tongues of fire which
 descended at Pentecost, and which were in essence the
 presence of the Holy Spirit (Acts 2.1-4). The wedding
 rings are kept on the altar, until they are taken from
 there by the priest, which shows that marriage has its
 beginning in Christ, and will end in Christ. The priest
 also joins their hands, in order to show that it is Christ
 himself who unites them. It is Christ who is at the heart
 of the mystery and at the center of their lives.
 All the elements of the marriage ceremony are shadows and
 symbols which indicate the presence of Christ. When you're
 sitting somewhere and suddenly you see a shadow, you know
 that someone's coming. You don't see him, but you know
 he's there. You get up early in the morning, and you see
 the red horizon in the east. You know that, in a little
 while, the sun will come up. And indeed, there behind the
 mountain, the sun starts to appear.
 When you see your marriage, your husband, your wife, your
 partner's body, when you see your troubles, everything in
 your home, know that they are all signs of Christ's
 presence. It is as if you're hearing Christ's footsteps,
 as if he was coming, as if you are now about to hear his
 voice. All these things are the shadows of Christ,
 revealing that he is together with us. It is true, though,
 that, because of our cares and worries, we feel that he is
 absent. But we can see him in the shadows, and we are sure
 that he is with us. This is why there was no separate
 marriage service in the early Church. The man and woman
 simply went to church and received Communion together.
 What does this mean? That henceforth their life is one
 life in Christ.
 The wreaths, or wedding crowns, are also symbols of
 Christ's presence. More specifically, they are symbols of
 martyrdom. Husband and wife wear crowns to show that they
 are ready to become martyrs for Christ. To say that
 "I am married" means that I live and die for
 Christ. "I am married" means that I desire and
 thirst for Christ. Crowns are also signs of royalty, and
 thus husband and wife are king and queen, and their home
 is a kingdom, a kingdom of the Church, an extension of the
 Church.
 When did marriage begin? When man sinned. Before that,
 there was no marriage, not in the present-day sense. It
 was only after the Fall, after Adam and Eve had been
 expelled from paradise, that Adam "knew" Eve
 (Gen 4.1) and thus marriage began. Why then? So that they
 might remember their fall and expulsion from paradise, and
 seek to return there. Marriage is thus a return to the
 spiritual paradise, the Church of Christ. "I am
 married" means, then, that I am a king, a true and
 faithful member of the Church.
 The wreaths also symbolize the final victory which will be
 attained in the kingdom of heaven. When the priest takes
 the wreaths, he says to Christ: "take their crowns to
 your kingdom", take them to your kingdom, and keep
 them there, until the final victory. And so marriage is a
 road: its starts out from the earth and ends in heaven. It
 is a joining together, a bond with Christ, who assures us
 that he will lead us to heaven, to be with him always.
 Marriage is a bridge leading us from earth to heaven. It
 is as if the sacrament is saying: Above and beyond love,
 above and beyond your husband, your wife, above the
 everyday events, remember that you are destined for
 heaven, that you have set out on a road which will take
 you there without fail. The bride and the bridegroom give
 their hands to one another, and the priest takes hold of
 them both, and leads them round the table dancing and
 singing. Marriage is a movement, a progression, a journey
 which will end in heaven, in eternity.
 In marriage, it seems that two people come together.
 However it's not two but three. The man marries the woman,
 and the woman marries the man, but the two together also
 marry Christ. So three take part in the mystery, and three
 remain together in life.
 In the dance around the table, the couple are led by the
 priest, who is a type of Christ. This means that Christ
 has seized us, rescued us, redeemed us, and made us his.
 And this is the "great mystery" of marriage (cf.
 Gal 3.13).
 In Latin, the word "mystery" was rendered by the
 word sacramentum, which means an oath. And marriage is an
 oath, a pact, a joining together, a bond, as we have said.
 It is a permanent bond with Christ.
 "I am married", then, means that I enslave my
 heart to Christ. If you wish, you can get married. If you
 wish, don't get married. But if you marry, this is the
 meaning that marriage has in the Orthodox Church, which
 brought you into being. "I am married" means I
 am the slave of Christ. 
 A homily delivered in the Church of St. Nicholas, Trikala, Greece, 17 January, 1971 by Archimandrite Aimilianos
 of Simonopetra, Mount Athos

 
 

No comments:
Post a Comment