Also
related to the foregoing is the teaching of both Holy Scripture and
the holy Fathers about the taxing of souls. At this point we shall
examine the subject thoroughly, as it has a bearing on the terrible
mystery of death. We find this topic in the whole biblico-patristic
tradition and it corresponds to a reality which we need to look at
in order to prepare ourselves for the dreadful hour of death. What
follows is written not in order to arouse anxiety, but to prompt
repentance, which has joy as its result. For he who has the gift of
the Holy Spirit and is united with Christ avoids the terrible
presence and activity of the customs demons.
According to the teaching of the Fathers of the Church, the soul at
its departure from the body, as well as when it is preparing to
leave, senses the presence of the demons who are called customs
demons, and is possessed with fear because of having to pass through
customs.
Of
course we must say from the start that the customs demons have no
sovereignty over the righteous, those who have united with Christ.
The righteous not only will not go through "customs-houses", but
they will also not be in fear of that. We shall see all this better
when we compare the teaching of the Fathers. The characterisation of
the soul's passage through the demons as customs is taken from the
tax collectors of that time. We may look briefly at this subject in
order to understand why the Fathers characterise the soul's passage
through the demons as customs.
In
ancient times the name of tax gatherer was given to those who
purchased the public taxes from the State and then collected them
from the people" [48]. The tax
gatherers were divided into two classes. The first class comprised
the so-called "publicans ('confiscators') or tithe collectors", who
were the wealthiest class and the force of authority, and the second
comprised the "tax collectors". The publicans were the general
public collectors, who had bought the taxes from the State, while
the tax collectors were their salaried servants, who collected the
taxes from the people and gave them to the publicans.
The
tax collectors were unjust because they collected larger taxes than
had to be paid to their masters. That is why they had a very bad
reputation in ancient communities. Plato said that the tax
collectors were oppressive, not so much when they collected duties
from the visible imports, "but when in looking for what was hidden
they meddled in other people's equipment and freight". Therefore
when Theocritus was asked what were the fiercest beasts, he
answered: "in the mountains, bears and lions, and in the cities, tax
collectors and sycophants".
The
tax collectors, in their effort to collect as many taxes as they
could—and especially in order not to let some people escape who
could not accept the very heavy and unjust tax—contrived various
means: they would lie in wait in narrow roads and seize passers-by,
forcing them to give what they owed. It was very unpleasant and
odious to the people of that time.
It
is just this familiar and odious image which the Fathers used in
order to give the people of that time an understanding of the
terrible mystery of death and of the terrible things that unfold
when the soul is being prepared for departure, especially when it is
leaving the body. St. Macarius of Egypt would say expressively:
"Like the tax collectors who sit in the narrow roads and seize the
passers-by and the oppressed, so also the demons watch carefully and
grab hold of souls. And when they pass out of the body, if they are
not completely purified, they are not permitted to go up into the
mansions of Heaven there to meet their Master. For they are driven
down by the demons of the air" [49].
The
image of the tax collectors certainly belongs to the reality of that
time. But the teaching that the demons try to seize a man's soul at
its departure is mentioned in many texts of Holy Scripture and of
the Fathers of the Church. We have already seen that after death the
souls of the righteous are received by the angels and the souls of
sinners and the unrepentant are received by the demons. With the
malice which all the demons have against men, they would like to
dominate everyone and have them in their power for ever. But they
cannot have authority over the righteous.
A
basic passage which the Fathers of the Church interpret as referring
to the customs demons is what Christ said shortly before His
Passion: "for the ruler of this world is coming, and he has nothing
in me" (John 14, 30). The ruler of this world is the devil. He is
called the ruler of the world not because he is really the ruler and
final authority in the whole world, but because he dominates the
world of the unjust. Christ declares that the devil has no authority
over Him. He is surely referring here to the devil and death.
St.
Paul, referring to the spiritually dead who were deprived of the
grace of God, writes: "And you He made alive, who were dead in
trespasses and sins, in which you once walked according to the ways
of this world, according to the prince of the power of the air, the
spirit who is now at work in the sons of disobedience" (Eph. 2,
1-2). This passage indicates that men are deadened by sins and the
work of the devil.
Likewise the devil is characterised as the prince of the power of
the air because he is in the atmosphere and is constantly waging war
on men. It is precisely this image which the Fathers have in view,
saying that when the soul leaves the body and passes through the air
towards heaven, it meets the ruler of the air. The passage also
mentions that this ruler is working now too in the sons of
disobedience.
There are many passages in the Old Testament which the Fathers use
to indicate what is called the souls' payment of customs duties. I
should like to mention two of them. One comes from a psalm of David
in which the Prophet King speaks to God and says: "0 Lord my God, in
you I put my trust; save me from all those who persecute me; and
deliver me, lest they tear me like a lion and rip me to pieces, with
no one to rescue me" (Psalm 7, 1-2). The other passage is in the
book of the Prophet Jeremiah, where it says: "there seemed to be a
fire burning in my bones; I was wearied and could not endure, for I
heard many mocking me on every side" (Jer. 20, 9-10).
Now
that we have quoted the most basic passages interpreted by the
Fathers, we shall go on to their teaching about the "taxing" of
souls. We should say that we will first compare their teaching about
the taxing and then speak of the mystical interpretation of this
condition. As will be seen more clearly in what follows, the souls
of the righteous are not in fear, since they have the grace of God,
and the demons have no power over them. The souls of the unrepentant
are in anguish, being subject to the influence of the demons and to
the action of the passions as well. There are demons, but the
customs payment also means the action of the passions. We should
never forget this point, because to be unaware of it creates false
conceptions. The reader of this chapter must be particularly careful
in studying the patristic teaching.
St.
Basil the Great, interpreting the passage from the Psalms: "save me
from all those who persecute me; and deliver me, lest they tear my
soul like a lion" (Psalm 7, 2-3), says that the brave men who have
struggled throughout their lives against the invisible enemy,
towards the end of their lives "will be searched by the ruler of the
age" in order to hold them captive if they are found to have wounds
or stigmata or imprints of sins. But if they are found uninjured and
unstained, then "as they are invincible and free, Christ will give
them rest". Therefore he who is under the power of death, since he
knows that "One is He who saves, One is He who redeems", cries out
to Christ the Saviour: "deliver me in that time of searching, lest
they tear my soul like a lion". And Christ, since he was free of
sin, said: "now the ruler of this world is coming and he will have
nothing in me"; for man, however, it is enough to say that the ruler
of the world is coming and he will have "few and small things" in
me" [50].
The
hour of death is terrible because then the person recalls his sins,
but also because he sees frightening things. St. John Chrysostom
bears witness that there are many men who recount terrible visions,
which the departing one cannot repel. They are so terrible that "his
very bed shakes violently, and he gazes in fear at the bystanders".
That
is to say, his very body is shaken by his soul's fear, and he makes
many disturbed movements. St. John Chrysostom adds that if we are
frightened by the sight of terrible men, how much more frightened we
will be when at the departure of our soul from the body we see
"angels threatening us and stern powers". The soul which is parted
from the body wails uselessly, in vain
[51].
St.
Symeon the New Theologian speaks about this, emphasising especially
that he who has God's Light conquers the demons that come near him,
for the demons are burnt by the divine Light. This is the case even
now, as far as the person is in the vision of God and is clothed in
God's Light. It will be much more the case when a person's soul is
leaving his body. St. Symeon says that the Christian has no benefit
from the spiritual struggle which he is going through if the devil
is not set ablaze by the Light of God. And this means that the
essence and aim of the spiritual life is to be united with the
Light. St. Symeon writes:
"If
the prince of darkness, when he comes, does not see Thy glory
accompanying me and is not utterly confounded—he, the darkness,
consumed by Thy inaccessible Light—and if all the hostile powers
with him do not flee on seeing the mark of Thy seal, while I pass
through, trusting in Thy grace perfectly intrepid, and approach Thee
and bow down what is the use of that which is going on in me now?"
[52].
The
demons that want to seize a person's soul even at the last moment
are characterised by St. Diadochos of Photike as tartar rulers, that
is to say, rulers of hades. A person who loves God will not be in
fear, for love casts out fear, and he will freely outdistance "the
tartar rulers". The soul of a man who rejoices in the love of God,
at the hour of death, "is lifted with the angels of peace above all
the hosts of darkness" [53].
Thus
the holy Fathers are not satisfied just to emphasise the existence
of the demons and their aggressive rage against men, but they also
emphasise the way in which we can escape their threats. By
confessing his sins completely a person is released from cowardice
and fear, is filled with the love of Christ, and so he is freed from
the evils of the demons. The devil has no power over him.
Abba
Isaiah calls the demons which approach the soul when it is leaving
the body "rulers of darkness" and "rulers of evil". He teaches that
when a man's soul leaves his body, the angels travel with it. But
then the powers of darkness also go out to meet it and to dominate
it. At that moment the angels do not fight with the demons but wall
the person round with the good deeds that he has done. When the
person has conquered the demons because of the good deeds which he
has done in his life, then "the Angels will rejoice with him when
they see him, freed from the powers of darkness". That is why Abba
Isaiah exhorts us to love peace, to have love towards men, to think
of God and His righteousness, to ignore need for the world and its
honour, and so forth [54].
The
Sayings of the Desert Fathers contain the teaching of Theophilos the
Archbishop on the subject we are dealing with. He says that at the
time of departure a court case takes place between the angels and
the demons. The demons present "all the sins committed either
deliberately or through ignorance from birth to this last hour", and
they make accusation against the person. Likewise the angels bring
up the good deeds which the soul of the particular person has done.
Then the soul under judgement is in great fear. If the demons win,
it hears the words: "Take away the ungodly soul, that it may not see
the glory of God". But if it comes out the victor and is given
freedom, the demons are put to shame and the angels receive the soul
and guide it "into that unspeakable joy and glory"
[55].
We
find these views in many patristic texts. Hesychios the Priest prays
that when the ruler of darkness comes, he may find our misdeeds few
and petty [56]. He teaches that when
the soul has Christ with it, "He will speedily avenge it"
[57].
Likewise St. Theognostos says that the righteous soul rises to
heaven, going in peace "to meet the radiant and joyful angel that
comes down for it and travelling with him unimpeded through the air,
totally unharmed by the evil spirits"
[58].
The
holy Fathers teach all these things not from their imagination, but
from enlightening experiences. Sometimes other holy men have
revealed these things to them, and at other times they themselves,
illumined by God, have had such frightening experiences.
Antony the Great once reached the point of personally seeing such
dreadful things. In his cell he went into rapture and then saw
himself go out of his body and walk in the air, obviously led by
angels. Some bitter and terrible demons prevented them from
ascending to heaven and sought a reason for several deeds. Then
those leading Antony the Great fought with the terrible demons,
saying that God had forgiven him all his deeds from his birth and
that they should accuse him only of what he had done from the moment
when he became a monk. "Then when they had accused him and not
proven him wrong, his way became free and unhindered"
[59].
In a
dreadful story of Antony the Great the following is told: During the
night a voice wakened him and urged him to go out of his cell and
look. Then in fact he saw someone "tall, without bodily form and
dreadful", who was the devil, standing straight with his hands
raised, preventing some from ascending by keeping hold of them, and
gnashing his teeth at others because they had escaped and were
ascending to heaven. It was revealed to Antony the Great that this
dreadful spectacle was "the passage of souls"
[60].
St.
John of the Ladder describes a terrible spectacle seen by the hermit
Stephen, who was an ascetic on Mt. Sinai, near the cave of the
Prophet Elijah. On the day before his death, while his eyes were
open, he went into ecstasy and began to took to the right and left
of his bed. Those present heard him answering as if he were being
interrogated. Sometimes he said: "Of course it is true. That was why
I fasted for so many years". Or again: "Yes, that is correct, but I
wept and served my brothers". Or again: "No. You are accusing me
falsely. "Or sometimes: "Quite right. No, I have no excuse. But God
is merciful". And St. John of the Ladder adds that "this unseen and
relentless interrogation was a truly awful and frightening
spectacle". Worst of all was the fact that they accused him of
things which he had not done" [61].
From
what we have cited it seems that the whole tradition of the Church
speaks of the existence of the customs demons, the spirits in the
air, which fight a man with hatred and evils not only throughout his
life, but especially before and after his soul's departure from the
body.
In
the tradition of the Church, however, it is seen clearly, that the
demons have no mastery over the men of God, because those who have
put on God do not go through such a martyrdom. If the ruler of the
world has no power over Christ, this is also true of those men who
are united with Him. This is why the Fathers advise us to live
within the Church, with repentance, confession and spiritual works,
that we live and die in the Church with the orthodox faith and the
prayers of our Fathers, so that the ruler of darkness and the
spirits of evil may not have power over us.
In
any case it is a fact that during the soul's departure from the body
a great battle goes on, chiefly in people who have insufficient
purification. The terrible thing is that many people in our time die
without being aware of the shocking hour of death. That is to say,
the illnesses of our time, as well as the powerful pharmaceutical
culture, distort man's psychosomatic constitution and make it
difficult for him to go through these crucial hours with fitting
attention, fear of God and prayer. Of course medicines do help us
not to feel the pain of our illnesses, but they also alter our whole
psychosomatic constitution; they do not allow us to realise what is
going on and to seek God's mercy.
These hours are very crucial. This is why all who fear God and have
spiritual knowledge of the crucial moments pray to be made aware of
the events of that time. It is a real opportunity for the person to
repent of all that he has committed, to seek God's mercy. To be
watchful at this frightful hour is the most important work. That is
why the Church prays for God to deliver us from "sudden death".
But
we must look at the existence of the customs houses from two sides.
One side is the demons' malice and the other is the existence of
passions. In the patristic teaching we find that there is also
another interpretation of the customs houses. Without, of course,
overlooking the teaching about the existence of the rulers of
darkness and the spirits of evil, I would also like us at this point
to turn our attention to the mystical teaching of the Fathers of the
Church about the customs-houses.
We
also said before that when a person's soul is about to leave the
body, the memory of the sins which he has committed in his life
comes back to him. It is a truly intolerable state. St. John
Chrysostom speaks of it. He says that on the last day of a person's
biological life "sins contort his soul", they stir up his soul. This
refers to passions which "move up from below the heart"
[62]. The passions seek satisfaction,
but the person cannot respond. It is a terrible state.
This
insatiable desire of the soul is intensified even further when the
soul is separated from the body. St. Gregory of Nyssa attributes
this kind of interpretation to his sister Macrina. He says that as
it happens with people who have remained in filthy places for a long
period of time, that they are not released from the odiousness of
the dirt even if they live in clean air afterwards, the same happens
to the soul when it parts from the body. Lovers of the flesh, even
if they have turned to the incorporeal and refined life, are unable
to free themselves from the carnal odour. Precisely then the soul
becomes more materalised and in that way "they are in great
distress". St. Gregory adds that if what some people say is true,
that the shadowy shapes of the departed are seen in the vicinity of
the graves, this is an indication that the soul does not want to be
parted from the life of the flesh even after it has left the body.
The parable of the Rich Man and Lazarus, in which the Rich Man,
finding himself in Hades, seems to be thinking about his relatives,
indicates that the souls of lovers of the flesh really cannot part
from the passions which constitute the carnal life
[63].
We
know from the Orthodox Tradition that there are passions of the body
and passions of the soul. Since there is unity between soul and
body, there is also a relationship between the passions of soul and
body. The passions of the soul work through the bodily senses. When
the soul is released from the body, it cannot satisfy its passions.
Ungratified passions produce intolerable pain and a suffocating
condition. They stifle the soul. This is the real hell and a
frightful affliction. For this reason the holy Fathers advise us to
cleanse our souls from the passions while we are in the present
life, so that the soul may be released and freed after its
departure. It should be satisfied and attracted to God Himself.
There is also another problem for the soul after its departure from
the body. St. Gregory of Nyssa teaches that all nature is attracted
to what is like it, to its relatives. So too the soul is drawn
towards the divine and is related to it, since man is related to God
and contains within himself copies of the archetype. After leaving
the body, the soul is light, without any bodily pain, and therefore
it is easy and pleasant to proceed towards what attracts it, towards
God. But if the soul is held down by material habits and by the
nails of the passions, then it undergoes suffering in the way in
which the body suffers during earthquakes, when it is not only
crushed by the weight of the earth but can also be pierced by
various pointed objects which are in the earth
[64].
It
is just this which constitutes the torment of the soul. It
experiences a dreadful bifurcation, we could say. On the one hand,
it wants to ascend towards God and unite with Him, since it is His
image. On the other hand it is impeded by the passions which riddle,
press and torment it. And this view is one part of the
interpretation of the holy Fathers concerning the customs houses.
The
torment of a soul which is parted from the body is described in a
wonderful and realistic way by Abba Dorotheos. He says that during
this life the soul is comforted through being distracted by the
passions. It can feel great sorrow and dreadful pain, but by means
of the body and the passions it can take comfort and ease its pain.
In such a melancholic and frightful state the person "is fed,
drinks, sleeps, meets and associates with friends", that is to say
he is entertained by persons dear to him. Thus he is comforted in
part and can more easily forget the deepest problem which worries
him. But when the soul leaves the body, "it is alone with its own
passions and, in short, is always tormented by them". At this time
the soul is burning with the annoyance of the passions, it is
distracted by them and cannot be mindful of God. This is a real
tragedy, for at this time, because there is no body either, it
cannot feel even the slightest comfort.
In
what follows Abba Dorotheos takes an astonishing example. Suppose
someone was shut up in a dark cell with no food or drink for three
days without sleeping or meeting anyone, or psalmodising, or
praying, or thinking of God at all. Then he would know "what the
passions do to him". Actually in such a situation the soul and the
whole man is infuriated. We are assured of this by various people
who experience the agony of places of torture and frightful
imprisonment. If this is the case even while the soul is linked with
the body, how much more so when it has left the body and is isolated
with its passions.
Abba
Dorotheos also makes use of the image of the sick person with a
burning fever. This of course creates many other problems as well,
especially if the person has a melancholic and ill-tempered body.
The same thing happens with the impassioned soul. "The conflict
arising from its own bad habits punishes it all the time, the memory
being always embittered, the mutterings of its passions constantly
emerging, always burning it and enraging it". If one adds to this
torment and suffering of the soul the terrible places of Hell and
the demons and the fire and the darkness, and so forth, then one can
understand the suffering and torment of the soul after its departure
and its sojourn in Hades and Hell".
The
things that we have said so far show just what those customs houses
are that are spoken of in the patristic texts. On the one hand, they
are the passions of the soul which, because of the non-existence of
the body, cannot be satisfied, and therefore stifle the soul. On the
other hand, they are the evil demons which have gained mastery over
passionate people, and it is natural that after the soul's departure
they have greater mastery over them. The righteous people, who
during their lives have purified their souls and bodies from
passions of the soul and body and have been clothed in the pledge of
the Spirit and united with God, escape the power of the customs
houses, since the demons have no power over them. The souls of the
righteous are led, free and undistracted, towards God, with whom
they are united.
So
the whole problem is not to be afraid of the customs demons, but as
long as we live, to cure our soul and our whole being of passions,
to partake of the uncreated grace of God, so that the departure of
our soul from our body may be a matter of joy and delight.
Of
course there are some who maintain that such notions as customs
houses and aerial spirits have come into Christianity from Gnostic
theories and pagan myths which prevailed during that period.
There is no doubt that such views can be found in many Gnostic
texts, in pagan ideas which are found in Egyptian and Chaldaean
myths. However it must be emphasised that many Fathers adopted the
teaching about customs houses, but they cleared it of idolatrous and
Gnostic frames of reference and placed it in the ecclesiastical
atmosphere. The holy Fathers were not afraid to do such creative
work.
It
is a fact that the Fathers were working creatively and productively
when they took many views and theories from the pagan world, but
gave them an ecclesiastical content. It is well known that the
Fathers took the teaching about the immortality of the soul, about
the ecstasy of man and the dispassion of the soul and body, the
teaching about the tripartite soul and many other things from the
ancient philosophies, as well as from ancient traditions, but
clearly they gave them another content and a different perspective.
We cannot discard the teaching about the immortality of the soul
just because the ancient philosophers spoke of it. We must look at
the content which the holy Fathers gave to it.
Therefore what happened to other topics happened also to the subject
of the customs houses. It is true that ancient traditions and
heretical views spoke of "rulers of the astral sphere", about "gates
of an astral journey", about "aerial spirits", and so forth. We find
several of these phrases in the Bible and in patristic texts. As we
have mentioned in this chapter, many Fathers of the Church speak of
customs houses and aerial spirits, but they have given them
different content and different meanings. The patristic teaching
about customs houses must be interpreted within the following four
points.
First. The
symbolic language of the Bible requires the necessary
interpretation. Anyone who only keeps to the images used distorts
the Gospel message. For instance, we must say that words in the
Bible can be misinterpreted if we only look at their theological
meaning. The same thing is true in the case of the customs houses.
We should not be thinking only of today's customs houses, through
which everyone has to pass at the national borders. The symbolic
image is intended to present something, but it must be interpreted
in an orthodox way.
Second. There
are demons, which are dark angels. They are persons and therefore
have freedom, and with God's permission, but also through the wrong
use of freedom by man, they have been able to dominate him. That is
to say, after the soul's departure from the body, the demons demand
to possess a soul which they have mastered because of its
unrepentance. In Christ's well-known parable about the foolish rich
man there is the sentence: "Fool! This night your soul will be
required of you; then whose will those things be which you have
provided?". According to the patristic interpretation it is the
demons who demand possession of the soul of the foolish rich man
after its departure from the body.
Third. The
demons have no authority over the men of God. All who are united
with God and have within their soul and heart the uncreated energy
of God are outside the control of the demons. So the deified will
not go through the so-called customs houses.
Fourth.
According to the teaching of the Fathers, as we have seen before,
the demons, which are real spirits, act by means of the passions.
The fact that the passions cannot be gratified after the soul's
departure from the body is a suffocation of the soul.
When
we examine the customs houses in these theological frames, the use
of this teaching is not inappropriate. But if we have other
conceptions, we are on the wrong path.
Endnotes
48. See extended analysis in G.
Konstantinou: Dictionary of holy Scriptures, ed. Grigori, op. 966
(Gk).
49. Macarius of Egypt: Homily 43, 9,
CWS p. 222.
50. Basil the Great: Homily on Psalm
7, 2. PG 29, 232B, D.
51. John Chrysostom: Homily 44 on
Matthew, EPE 11, p. 170 (Gk).
52. SC 174, p. 310.
53. Diadochus of Photiki: On
spiritual knowledge, 100, Philokalia 1, p. 295.
54. Evergetinos, op. cit. p. 101f.55.
Ibid. p. 102f.
56. Hesychios: On watchfulness and
holiness 161, Philok. 1, p. 190.
57. Ibid 149, p. 188.
58. Theognostos: On the practice of
the virtues 61, Philok. 2, p.
59. Evergetinos, op.,cit. p. 99.
60. Ibid. p. 100.
61. John of the Ladder: Step 7, CWS
p. 142.
62. John Chrysostom: Homily 44 on
Matthew, EPE 11, p. 168 (Gk).
63. Gregory of Nyssa: On the Soul and
the Resurrection, Ch. 6, SVS p. 76.
64. Ibid. p. 83.
65. Dorotheos: Discourse 12, Fear of punishment,
CS 33, p. 183f.Source:
Taken From the book
“Life
After Death”,
written by Metropolitan Hierotheos of Nafpaktos, (Levadia, Greece: Birth of
the Theotokos Monastery, 1995), pp. 62-80. translated by. Esther Williams.