UOC Primate: A person must gain honour of being called a son of God
His Beatitude Metropolitan Onuphry congratulated the miners on their professional day. Photo: news.church.ua
The honour of being called a son of God, a child of God, is the highest dignity that a person must gain. The Primate of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church, Holy Archimandrite of the Holy Dormition Kyiv-Pechersk Lavra, His Beatitude Metropolitan Onuphry, spoke about this in an interview for the “Pechersky Blagovestnik” published on the monastery's website.
Answering the question of how monks can achieve the degrees of spiritual perfection, which are written in the Beatitudes, in the conditions of complex modern life, the Primate gave the explanations of an experienced elder who said that "monasticism is bliss". At each level of spiritual ascent, the monk “is filled with a new form of bliss, a new measure of beatitude – and so he attains perfection."
The highest dignity, according to the word of the Archpastor, is the honour of being called a son of God.
“When the grace of God comes into the soul of a person, it fills it with such feelings as happiness, joy, and one of the main perfect spiritual feelings – a sense of peace,” said His Beatitude Onuphry. “A person is filled with God's peace, he becomes a peacemaker since he has God's peace in him and radiates it to everyone else who lives next to him. This man does not preach peace from high tribunes and pulpits, he simply brings it, the peace of God is upon him. And about such people, it is said: "Blessed are the peacemakers, for they will be called the children of God." This honour to be called a son of God, a child of God, is the highest dignity that a person must gain and attain."
The Primate added that when a person reaches this high level, “spiritually imperfect people do not understand him because of spiritual envy for no reason, but only because this person lives according to God and with God, they often persecute him, hate him, they say a lie about him. But he does not take offence at anyone, he loves his enemies, blesses those who curse him, prays for those who offend him. And it is said about such people: "Rejoice and be glad, for your reward is great in Heaven."
He stressed that people who live in the world have the same Church as those who live in a monastery – that one which Christ founded,“ and if we live according to church rules, then we learn the first degree, which says: “Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the Kingdom of Heaven."
“In worldly life, there are many people who have reached high degrees of spiritual perfection, but we, Orthodox Christians, have such a law: we do not make our achievements public, we hide them, this is how God teaches us. We will try to be faithful in order to ascend the steps of spiritual perfection so that we can be saved, and through us God can send the grace of salvation and peace to all who live next to us,” said His Beatitude Metropolitan Onuphry.
As reported, earlier the Primate spoke about the confrontations around the churches of the UOC.
Read also
Polish Church celebrates 100th anniversary of autocephaly
The official celebrations began with a Divine Liturgy at St. Mary Magdalene Cathedral in Warsaw, led by Metropolitan Sawa of Warsaw and All Poland.
Catholic hierarch: Vatican Synod is an abomination
Bishop Strickland urges U.S. bishops to oppose Pope Francis' teachings, calling them "deadly falsehoods."
"Please die, human": AI gives unexpected response to user
The Gemini neural network politely asked a user to die, claiming humanity is a burden and waste of time and resources.
By 2025, artificial intelligence may spiral out of control
The head of OpenAI has announced that soon, artificial intelligence will be self-learning and capable of solving problems at the level of human cognition.
Trump intends to eliminate government support for gender ideology
The U.S. President plans to issue an executive order that would halt gender programs in all federal agencies, banning the promotion of gender transition.
In Zhytomyr region, SBU issues suspicion to UOC clergyman over sermons
According to the investigation, the priest allegedly called on people to remain silent in response to the slogan “Glory to Ukraine!”