[faithandlife] A LIVING BRIDGE BETWEEN EAST AND WEST

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From: charles scott <crscottblu@...>
Date: Thu, 20 Nov 2003 06:04:15 -0800 (PST)
faith expressed in symbols is better

Brothers+

This interview of Cardinal Thomas Spidlik reveals a
man not only filled with knowledge and experience in
regard to Orthodoxy but also with a sharp mind and
good humor.

Charles+ 
-------------------------------------

A Life Dedicated to Unity of Eastern and Western
Christians

Interview with Cardinal Thomas Spidlik

VATICAN CITY, NOV. 18, 2003 (Zenit.org).- Among the
unexpected new cardinals installed last month was
Father Thomas Spidlik, a Jesuit from the Czech
Republic, whose life has been a veritable bridge
between Eastern and Western Christians. 

A professor at the Pontifical Oriental Institute,
Cardinal Spidlik lives and works in Rome's Aletti
Center, which promotes personal contacts with scholars
of Eastern Europe. In the 1990s he carried out
important missions to Russia, which included a meeting
with President Boris Yeltsin and Russian Orthodox
Patriarch Alexy II in 1992. 

In 1995, the priest preached the Spiritual Exercises
for the Pope and the Roman Curia, and encouraged the
Holy Father to write the encyclical "Ut Unum Sint" on 
ecumenism. 

Q: Eminence, you were born in Moravia, present-day
Czech Republic, where Sts. Cyril and Methodius carried
out their mission among the Slavs, at a time when the
Church was not yet divided. Has this geographic and
spiritual closeness to the apostles of the Slavs
influenced your priestly vocation and your mission to
become a mediator between Western and Eastern culture?


Cardinal Spidlik: When I received the Holy Father's
letter announcing that I had become a cardinal I
thanked him profoundly and I said with all sincerity, 
that for me, personally, this was not so important as,
at my age, I can no longer lead a diocese. I am a bit
older than the Pope. 

But I thanked him very much because with this gesture
the Church wishes to recognize the validity of Eastern
spirituality with which I have been concerned for such
a long time. This is also the way the gesture was
interpreted in the East. 

I have received many congratulatory letters from the
Orthodox who know me well and with whom I have many
personal relations. They have understood that with 
this gesture the Church of Rome wished to recognize
the validity of Eastern spirituality, which also
serves for the union of Europe. 

I once told the Russian Minister of Culture that when
Sts. Cyril and Methodius arrived in Rome they received
many privileges that no one had ever received before,
because it was hoped that these Slavs could be a
bridge between the Europe that was about to split. 

Unfortunately, in the ninth century Europe was already
so divided that the Slavs themselves split between
Christians of the Latin and Byzantine rites. Today,
instead, given that the West and East are so far
apart, the whole of Europe should become a bridge. 

Europe, which seeks to unite economically and
politically, should also think of uniting spiritually.
Here, Eastern spirituality is of great importance.
This fact is recognized by the Church. 

Q: Despite your Jesuit formation, your life and
activity were always oriented toward the East. 

Cardinal Spidlik: I went to Holland for my theology
studies, but then Communism arrived and I could no
longer return to Czechoslovakia, so I came to Rome.
When I finished my studies in spirituality at the
Pontifical Oriental Institute, my predecessor, Father
Hoser, who had founded the chair of Eastern
spirituality, chose me as his successor. 

While there, I was dedicated to very many studies;
many were translated into different Eastern languages.
Not too long ago, for example, a little book of mine
was published in Baghdad. It was necessary to have
Saddam Hussein's permission. 

The Orthodox have also translated all my books. They
use my books for the schools of theology. I have also
received the title "honoris causa" from several 
Orthodox faculties of Eastern countries. Some years
ago, I talked with Alexy II, the patriarch of Moscow,
for more than an hour. We spoke only of spirituality, 
and left politics and all diplomatic contacts aside. 

Q: Eminence, you have written 140 books and more than
600 articles. Which are your most important and
best-known books? 

Cardinal Spidlik: My book on "Eastern Spirituality,"
for example, was translated into Russian and, after
three weeks, 3,000 copies had already been sold. 

My book on "The Russian Idea" was addressed, instead,
to Westerners, because the Russians themselves regard
as too modern the authors of which I speak in this 
book, for example Bulgakov and Florenski. 

I heard that François Mitterrand had my book,
translated into French ["L'Idee Russe"] in the
hospital when he was already very ill. I hope he
didn't die because of it. The Pope has also read it. 

Q: Eminence, you were chosen in 1995 to preach the
Spiritual Exercises to the Holy Father and the Roman
Curia. 

Cardinal Spidlik: Yes, the Pope thanked me for having
spoken on Eastern spirituality during those Exercises.


After the Spiritual Exercises, the Pope had the idea
to create a new chapel in the Vatican where every year
the Spiritual Exercises could take place, given 
that the Sistine Chapel is always frequented by
tourists. This new chapel, called later Redemptoris
Mater, should be a place where there "is breathing
with two lungs." 

This concept was coined by the famous Russian poet
Viaceslav Ivanov, who, when he joined the Catholic
Church, said: "I do not cease to be Orthodox. I simply
wish to breathe with two lungs." 

The chapel was then decorated by my fellow-brother
Jesuit painter Marco Rupnik and the Russian Orthodox
artist Alexander Kornooukhov, with a mosaic decoration
that represents a meeting between the two artistic
traditions, a semi-abstract modern style and the more
traditional painting of Russian icons. 

Q: In the Spiritual Exercises, you also mentioned
Vladimir Soloviev's book on "The Antichrist." Did you
wish to make an allusion to the timeliness of this 
book for our days? 

Cardinal Spidlik: Soloviev was certainly a very
prophetic man. He had some incredible views, but it
must all be understood in a symbolic sense. What I
think is very timely in Soloviev's philosophy is when
he says that the whole culture is divided: Philosophy,
natural sciences, mysticism no longer communicate
among themselves. A union can no longer be effected
among these sciences; only encyclopedias and Internet
are created. 

Where can union be found? Soloviev found the answer in
Dostoyevsky who said: Beauty will save the world.
Union can be found in art. Therefore, here in the 
Aletti Center we foster Christian art, not Christian
science, because faith expressed in symbols is better
than abstract concepts. 

Q: It is said that Soloviev converted to Catholicism
before dying. Is this true? Because, according to the
Orthodox, this isn't the case. 

Cardinal Spidlik: He too, like Ivanov, did not wish to
cease to be Orthodox. He simply recognized the primacy
of the Pope. Is there anything lacking to be a
Catholic? This is enough. 

Another example: I went to see a dear Romanian friend
of mine, the great Orthodox theologian Staniloe,
shortly before his death. He told me he could not 
understand the infallibility of the Pope. 

I then replied: You and I are also infallible. He was
amazed at my answer, so I explained: When I say during
the Mass: "This is my body ..., this is my blood ..."
or when I say: "I absolve you from your sins," these
are infallible words and this is also the Pope's
infallibility, nothing else. 

Then Staniloe said: If infallibility is understood in
this way, then it is easier to comprehend. Not only is
the Pope infallible when he speaks in the name of 
the Church, but so is the Mother when she tries to
speak of God to her child. The priest is infallible in
the sacraments and the Pope is also infallible when he
speaks in the name of the great sacrament, of the
whole Church. 

Q: In the same year, 1995, the encyclical "Ut Unum
Sint" was also published, in which the Pope speaks
much about the need for a rapprochement between the 
Churches, especially a reconciliation with the
Orthodox Church. The Exercises you preached then must
have had a great influence on the encyclical that was
about to be published. 

Cardinal Spidlik: I don't know, but after the
Exercises I wrote an article, which appeared in Polish
in L'Osservatore Romano, saying that the Pope, himself
also a Slav, understands the personal aspect very
well, that is, that a person's life takes precedence
over theories. This is the fundamental aspect of Slav
spirituality. 

I always say: The Greeks knew God through Nature. For
them the great universe was like a clock that had need
of a clock-maker. The Hebrews know the God of 
history because for them God is someone that leads
them through history. 

Today, the problem is that everyone is concentrated on
the human individual. Therefore, it is necessary to
know God starting from the person himself, because 
man is the image of God and God is recognized in the
image. This anthropological aspect is very important
today and is also present in the Pope's philosophy. 

Q: What can we Westerners learn from the rich Eastern
spirituality? 

Cardinal Spidlik: It is not that something is lacking
to us Westerners. Rather, there are different accents
in the two spiritual traditions. Some aspects are 
more emphasized in the West and others in the East. 

For example, I personally had much difficulty in
accepting the spirituality of the Heart of Jesus or
talk about the human heart. For us Westerners it was 
always more important to let the intellect and will
speak; feelings seemed too banal for us. We denigrated
the heart. 

Instead, in the Bible there is much talk about the
heart; the Holy Spirit dwells in the heart of men.
Therefore, 10 years ago, my first book, in which I
speak about the importance of the heart, caused
perplexity and difficulty, because it seemed to abound
in sentimentalism. But now it is generally accepted,
and very soon the Italian translation will be
published by the Vatican Press. 

The book is about the famous Russian hermit Theophane
the Recluse, and the subtitle is, precisely, "The
Prayer of the Heart." 

I once took part in a congress in Crete with the
Orthodox, and my contribution was to speak on the
"prayer of the heart of St. Francis of Assisi and St.
Ignatius of Loyola." An Orthodox friend of mine, a
professor of Salonika, told me that I should not speak
on this issue because prayer of the heart is a
typically Orthodox expression of prayer. 

However, I replied: If I show that prayer of the heart
also exists in the Western tradition, will you buy me
a bottle of wine? And in the end I won. 
Therefore, we also have this spiritual richness, but
our technical terminology has become too rationalistic
and therefore we have created too rigid categories.
Now it is necessary to return to the heart. 

Q: But this theological debate already existed in the
medieval age, when the monks of Mount Athos who
practiced the spirituality of hesychasm, that is,
prayer of the heart, argued with Western theologians,
influenced by the Scholastic theory. 

Cardinal Spidlik: Yes, of course, but the arguments
also existed between the Franciscans and Dominicans.
These comparisons between different spiritualities 
served to specify the meaning of a certain term, but
then these useless arguments arose. Instead, it is
necessary to seek to understand in what sense
theologians use certain terms, if this isn't clear, we
could continue this discussion until 
morning. 

Q: Perhaps it was also language problems that created
these misunderstandings: 
The Greeks did not understand Latin, and vice versa. 

Cardinal Spidlik: I say that this is also a problem
today. Peoples mix with one another, their mentalities
are so different. If there is no effort to understand
the different mentalities, constant fanaticisms will
arise. Fanaticism stems 
from the fact that a term is absolutized without
thinking how the other understands it. 

For example, I once saw Vietnamese in the United
States who had left the Catholic Church to follow a
sect because they understood the ceremony there
better. Once I was in the Congo and I gave a course on
Slav spirituality to seminarians of Kinshasa, and the
Africans told me that this approach was easier for
them to understand than the abstract concepts of
French theology. They felt it was closer to their
mentality. 

Therefore, when Christianity is transmitted in the
African or Asian countries it is necessary to try to
penetrate their mentality. 

Q: Turning once again to the Orthodox Church ... 

Cardinal Spidlik: Be careful, I don't like this
distinction between Orthodox and Catholics. I never go
to visit the Orthodox, but go to visit friends. And my
friends always receive me well. I don't like these
categories, these generalizations, because every man
is different. If we are not friends, how can we
discuss these topics? 

It is necessary to make friends. Without trust the
faith cannot be discussed. It is not a mechanical
thing. 

Q: Today, in fact, the Pope has received President
Putin in the Vatican. A few days ago, Putin said in an
interview with [the Italian daily] Il Corriere della
Sera that his mission does not consist so much in
inviting the Pope to Russia but, rather, in helping
the two Churches to come closer. What do you think of
this mission of President Putin? 

Cardinal Spidlik: This is the work of politicians, but
it is not my work. Once, when I was able to accompany
President Yeltsin's wife and the wife of Foreign
Minister Ivanov to the Redemptoris Mater Chapel,
explaining to them the idea behind that chapel, Mrs.
Ivanov told me that she had read my book on the
Russian mystics in French. Then I also gave her my
book "L'Idee Russe." 

I do not hold politics in contempt, but in the end it
is a question of creating personal relations. 

Q: But the Pope's great wish is to be able to visit
Russia before he dies. 

Cardinal Spidlik: The newspapers say this. But why
shouldn't a Slav Pope wish to meet with Slavs? Every
Christian should want Christians to be united, and the
Pope can also want this. But how it's brought about,
will depend on other circumstances.


* * *



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