Alone – You Are Not

“Alone – You Are Not”

This is not a quote from Yoda. It is a simple statement concerning the nature of our existence. The fullness of existence is only found in communion, a mutual indwelling in which our lives are known and experienced not just in their self-contained form, but in their Interrelation to others and everything around us. True existence is a connected-ness. It is also the very place where the instability and fragility of our lives is most revealed. If we can withdraw into ourselves, it is possible to imagine that we are fine, and that the things and people around us are just noise, sometimes enjoyable and other times annoying. But we do not think of the things and people around us as if our lives depended on them.

Against this withdrawal are the words of St. Silouan: “My brother is my life.”

At the very core of Christian belief is the Trinitarian God. Trinity is not just a revelation of how we speak about God. It is also the revelation of the very character of existence. The monotheism of Islam substituted God as individual for God as Trinity. As such, it might be the first modern religion. That many modern Christians struggle with Trinitarian belief and expression is evidence of how far removed modernity is from classical Christian roots. For us, “relationship” is a word that describes how we are getting along with another individual. For the Fathers, “relation” is an expression of mutual indwelling and coinherence. This exists because that exists, and they exist in one another. That is the true meaning of relationship (or, better, interrelationship).

When Christ says, “No one comes to the Father except by me,” modern Christians take it to mean that non-Christians go to hell. It is, in fact, a statement about the nature of Trinitarian existence. No one can come to the Father apart from Christ because there is no Father apart from Christ. The Son is “Son,” because of the “Father.” But the “Father” is not “Father,” except for the “Son” (and so on).

This is true of God but is equally true of us. The limit within human existence is that we experience our personal existence as individual existence – or the temptation to do so is always present. It assumes that who we are only refers to what is within the boundaries of our skin.

A meditation: The breath we breathe. Is it part of us or is it something else? We cannot live without it. When we take it in or breathe it out, it is “our” breath. The only human existence without breath is a lifeless corpse. God “breathed” into the dust and it became a living soul. But the “breath” is also inherently the air around us. When does the air around us become “us,” and when does it cease to be “us”?

Of course, this is just a meditation on breath and air. But the same meditation could be extended to everything else around us. It could and should be extended to every person around us. If there were no relationships whatsoever, we simply would not exist. There is nothing within us that isn’t something existing in interrelationship. Nothing.

We do not create relationships, nor do we have them. We are relationships and we either perceive this and pay attention or we do not. Inasmuch as we do not, we begin moving towards non-existence – death. This is not a description of massive and universal extraversion. It is possible to be very quiet, even a hermit, and yet be profoundly aware and responsive to our existence as interrelationship.

The Scriptures say that “God is love.” They do not say that God simply “has” love. God “is” love, which makes love a matter of ontology. That God is love is perfectly consistent with His existence as Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. What we do not see clearly is that we are love, just as truly as God is love. Love is a mode of existence, indeed, the mode of existence.

“My brother is my life.” Consider the fullness of such a statement in Christ’s words, “I have come that they might have life and that more abundantly.”

I will add a note of apology and explanation. I have previously written articles that criticize the use of the word “relationship,” and, yet, here I am using it myself. The earlier articles stand, but I am here seeking to recapture the word “relationship” and use it in its older, theological meaning. Despite that vast vocabulary of English (the largest language in existence), words still create limits. I hope the reader will understand and be patient with me.

Photo by Noah Silliman on Unsplash

About Fr. Stephen Freeman

Fr. Stephen is a priest of the Orthodox Church in America, Pastor Emeritus of St. Anne Orthodox Church in Oak Ridge, Tennessee. He is also author of Everywhere Present and the Glory to God podcast series.



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110 responses to “Alone – You Are Not”

  1. Dee of St Hermans Avatar
    Dee of St Hermans

    Thank you Dino, I appreciate this.

  2. Reid Avatar
    Reid

    Father, is your point in this article one that would have been obvious to pre-modern (even pagan) societies? That is, is it one of the peculiar pathologies of modernity that we readily think of ourselves in any other way? Your title “Alone–You Are Not” makes me think of Aristotle’s famous observation, “Man is a political animal.” I was taught that Aristotle meant thereby that a man is only truly human in the context of the polis, the city–that a man in isolation, apart from the polis, is no longer even human (I’ve heard that the Greek word for a man in isolation was “idiot”). It also reminds me of the familiar African proverb “It takes a village to raise a child,” though in this case it is more like, “It takes a village to produce a man.”

  3. Christopher Avatar
    Christopher

    Father,

    Thanks for your last response. I will have to contemplate this perplexity. I may be (probably am) getting the balance wrong. I am not questioning the Mystical Body or what part of her is not secularized (sacrements, etc.) as you and Paula rightly say, but rather the horizontal = the inter-relation between the secularized flock. This might be (probably is) due to a *desire* and thus a passion and suffering on my part. We can be so disappointing to each other sometimes. We have to be patient with each other! So I will retreat into prayer and contemplation for now…

  4. Fr. Stephen Freeman Avatar

    Christopher,
    These things (stuff that involves our horizontal relationships) are always complicated, I think. People come from a wide range of backgrounds and starting places. For myself, the pastoral goal is nurturing souls in their journey towards Christ. That consists in repentance, confession, communion, etc.

    In the present atmosphere of our culture – there is a heightened sense of conflict – the so-called “culture wars.” I’m not immune to those struggles. I daresay, no one has written as thoroughly or vigorously in opposition to a secular mindset than myself. But saying that is simply a starting point. We cannot “make” anyone see anything, much less force them into some kind of position, unless we’re simply turning the Church into just another political battleground. The Church is the place of healing and new life. Therefore, to my mind, it is a place of conversion and godly persuasion. Having authored some 2,500 articles over the past 12 years is not nothing, but it’s just one voice and a drop in a bucket. The results of anything are always in the hand of God.

    There are those who sound a much more strident rallying cry in what is perceived as the Church’s necessary role in the culture wars (and such). I am who I am and what I am – mostly I’m a gentle pastor who seeks to persuade and to bind up the wounded. I am necessarily gentle – at least I intend to be. If that seems weak to some, then that is as it is.

    One of the problems, frankly, of becoming as “visible” as I am in my writing and speaking is that people think that what I’m doing is important and should be more this or more that. I guess it’s just the territory. But I am not that guy. I’m just an old priest who prays, thinks, writes, speaks and seeks to be kind and helpful. Sometimes it’s of use and sometimes it is not.

    I was recently told by a now (former) reader/commenter, that the blog had been taken over by some voices that they disagreed with. I really didn’t understand the criticism at the time – other than to hear that I am perhaps being less strident in how I treat comments than they would like. Thank God there are so many blogs out there that people can read. It was painful in that conversation to be given the feeling that I had somehow betrayed the team.

    These are very, very strange times. I primarily see the faithful being consumed by issues – and as important as the issues are – they are being consumed by them in a way that is destructive to the soul. We must cling to the truth, but the devil doesn’t mind us clinging to the truth so long as we use it to devour each other. That worries me – if for no other reason than I see a heart within myself that would gladly devour and spit out so many weak souls. There many, many people who are trying out for the role of Athanasius (as they imagine him). It’s like the various pictures of St. Nicholas striking Arius that are so popular on social media – as if that is why we love him.

    We must consider what spirit we are of.

    I write repeatedly about Christ saving us in our weakness – this is very, very hard. It is even harder for me to let Christ save someone else in their weakness. Love looks like the Cross. If I may, I am struggling to write from within the Cross of Christ – and to know nothing else.

    Thanks for your patience with me!

  5. Fr. Stephen Freeman Avatar

    Reid,
    Indeed. I think that pre-modern people who not understand us at all.

  6. Fr. Stephen Freeman Avatar

    Michael,
    Reflecting longer on your thoughts, I have edited and used primarily the term “inter-relationship.” I hope it is clarifying for people.

  7. Paula AZ Avatar
    Paula AZ

    You are a kind soul Father…and very endearing.
    It shows through in your writings and especially in your conversations with us. There may be many blogs, and your words may be comparably a drop in the bucket, but they are God sent and very valuable for us who come to eat at your table.
    I would imagine it can be trying at times. I would imagine Priests carry some heavy burdens. I think that is more so with those like yourself who are particularly tender-hearted. That is what it seems like to me.

    Anyway Father, thanks so much.

  8. Michael Bauman Avatar
    Michael Bauman

    Father, I don’t know what to say. I hope it is as good as I think it is. It has served me well in helping to make me a little less selfish.

    My father used it because it reflected his experience of the Divine and creation on the high plains of Eastern New Mexico in the early 20th century.
    He lived a pre-modern life for his first 18 years and never completely left it.

  9. Dee of St Hermans Avatar
    Dee of St Hermans

    Fr Stephen,
    I’m with Paula who speaks for us in our gratitude for your work. You always strive to speak with the voice of the Holy Spirit. And I’m grateful to have a parish family and this community in which I have a home to grow in Christ. Thank you and thank all of you.

  10. Fr. Stephen Freeman Avatar

    Michael,
    I should add, now a week or so later, that I was doing some reading this morning and was reminded just how empty and vapid the language of “relationship” has become. I should have stuck to my earlier treatments of that word and avoided it. I appreciate you raising a flag. Thanks!

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