What is the resurrection of the dead in Orthodoxy. Resurrection of the dead

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  • Resurrection of the dead- the restoration of the physical bodies of people in a new state, which will come with the second coming. The resurrection of the dead, according to the apostle Paul, will happen in the twinkling of an eye ().

    The prologue of the resurrection of the dead is the resurrection of the God-man Jesus Christ. By His feat on the cross and death, and then subsequent, the Lord transformed human nature and opened the way of resurrection to all people.

    At the same time, the redemptive work of the God-man did not abolish the human. A person voluntarily accepts or rejects the feat of the God-man, voluntarily follows the path of repentance and purification from, or continues to develop his passions, coming into conflict with. Accepting the feat of the God-man, a Christian is called upon to repeat His life in some way - to die with Christ, to voluntarily crucify his passions and lusts in this world, to be transformed by the fulfillment of the gospel commandments. For a struggling Christian, the resurrection will turn out to be “the resurrection of life” - such a person does not come to judgment, for he has passed from death to life (). As for the person who rejected God, the resurrection will also come for him, but as a “resurrection of condemnation” ().

    Thus, in the resurrection of the dead, the restoration of human nature in its entirety will take place - human souls will unite with human bodies. However, sinners will be alienated from God by their own lack of a determined will to do good. God will indeed be in everyone, “but only in He will abide “mercifully”, and in the ungodly – ​​“unmercifully”,” says St. .

    God by His Power will raise the dead incorruptible, and the body of the resurrected will be incorruptible and immortal, as a result of which it will not need food or drink. According to St. Apostle Paul: “our residence is in heaven, from where we also expect the Savior, the Lord Jesus, who will transform our humble things in accordance with the body of His glory, as He can by the action of His power” ().

    “What kind of “lowly body” is this, which the Lord will transform according to the body of His glory?” asks St. . - It is obvious that the body that is, falling to the ground and humiliated. Its transfiguration (consists in this) that it, mortal and corruptible, will become immortal and incorruptible, not according to its own essence, but according to the action of the Lord, who is able to clothe the mortal into the immortal and the corruptible into incorruption. Following St. interpreting the same words of the apostle, the Lord “on the day of our resurrection “will transform the body of our humiliation”, which inside in the underworld (in the grave) becomes worthless dust, “and will make” it “consistent with the body of His glory”, that is, immortal life, with which He has clothed "according to the strength of His might, that He may subdue all things to Himself." St. teaches that after the resurrection, "the saved will receive a body that is unchanged, passionless, subtle, what was the body of the Lord after the Resurrection, passing through locked doors, not tired, not in need of food, sleep and drink." St., following the Holy Scriptures, speaks of the transfigured body of the righteous in symbols of light: “... What will the resurrected from the dead be like? Listen to your Lord Himself, Who says: “then the righteous will shine like the sun in the kingdom of their Father” (). Do I need to mention the brilliance of the sun? Since believers must be transformed in accordance with the lordship of Christ the Lord Himself, as the Apostle Paul testifies: “our life,” he says, “is in heaven, from that we wait for the Savior, our Lord Jesus Christ, who will transform the body of our humility, as if to be this I will conform to the body of His glory "(), - then, without a doubt, this mortal flesh will be transformed in accordance with the lightness of Christ, the mortal will be clothed with immortality, then sown in weakness will then rise in strength (cf.) ". St. also considers the bodies of the resurrected righteous to be luminous, pointing out that they will participate in the uncreated radiance with which the flesh of the Lord shone on Tabor: and become shiny. For just as the inner glory was then stretched out on the body of Christ and shone, so also in the saints the power of Christ that is within, on that day, will be poured out without - on their bodies, because even now with their mind they partake of His essence and nature.

    According to the teachings of St. Fathers, the bodies of unrepentant sinners will not become the bodies of Divine glory that the righteous will have. The bodies of unrepentant sinners will reflect the passions that nestle in them, recreate the inner world of the criminals of the Divine commandments, and will inspire disgust. According to the word of the blessed Theodoret, those who are worthy of heaven will be clothed with heavenly glory, and the unworthy, having only earthly thoughts in their thoughts, “will take on a garment corresponding to their will.”

    St. John Chrysostom remarks: “Death ... we have two kinds; therefore the resurrection must be twofold. We who died a double death are resurrected with a double resurrection. We alone have so far risen from sin, for we were buried with Him in baptism and were raised with Him through baptism. This one resurrection is deliverance from sins; and the second resurrection is the resurrection of the body.” “The resurrection of the soul is its union with the Life that is Christ,” writes St. - “just as a dead body, if it does not perceive and does not merge with the soul in some way unconfused, does not exist and is not called alive and cannot live, so the soul cannot live on its own unless it is united by an indescribable union and is not combined unmerged with God who truly is Eternal Life."

    RESURRECTION OF THE DEAD

    outlining the circumstances preceding the general resurrection of the dead and following it, on the basis of the teachings of Holy Scripture, Holy Tradition, the interpretations of the holy fathers and the reasoning of common sense, with a description of the cases of the resurrection of dead bodies set forth in Holy Scripture and committed at a later time

    Approved for publication by the Publishing Council of the Russian Orthodox Church

    Full or partial reproduction of this publication by any means, including electronic, mechanical or magnetic media, including photocopying, is allowed only with the written permission of NOVAYA MYSL PUBLISHING HOUSE LLC.

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    Foreword

    The mystery of the resurrection of the dead is great and incomprehensible to us. And it is precisely the insubordination of the resurrection to the human mind that makes believing in it so difficult for many. It is hard to imagine that not just one part of the human race will be resurrected, but in general all people. It is much easier to believe that the prophet Elijah resurrected the dead, or that during His lifetime our Lord resurrected the son of the widow of Nain, the daughter of the head of the synagogue and the brother of two sisters - Lazarus; but the doctrine of the resurrection of all people, the righteous and the unrighteous, is hard for the mind. Just think: countries of many millions are teeming with people and the soil of the earth is literally fertilized with human bodies for whole millennia, when people died, in addition to natural death, from other causes - in numerous wars, from floods and fires, from hunger and pestilence, at sea and on land , from human hands and from animal teeth - and all these multitudes, without exception, will rise from their graves - not one of those born of a woman will rest in the sleep of death forever, then the question involuntarily arises: “Is this possible?”

    In addition, let's remember what terrible places human bodies can be in! .. Many died in mines at a depth of hundreds of meters; many have been washed away by sea straits and brought into the deep caves of the ancient ocean; many are buried under the mountains that fell from volcanic upheavals and walled up in the granite of the rocks ... And where are there no remnants of a person? They are everywhere! .. And in the ground on which we walk, and in the grass that we trample, and in the trees that we cut down, and in the sources of water that we drink, and in the cereals of the field that we eat, and in the air we breathe. No one can point to even one place on the globe where the ashes of the sons of Adam would not be, or say even one wind that would not contain elusive particles of what was once called man, and show even one wave that could not would be called a solution of human remains. But be that as it may, however scattered the individual parts of the dismantled machines may be in the great workshop of the universe, the almighty Machinist will collect them and reassemble them into primitive machines, some of which will receive not only a primitive appearance, but also a renewed gilded appearance. "He will renew our lowly body so that it will be in conformity with His glorious Body."

    This means that in the resurrection of the dead one cannot see anything contrary to nature, nothing unnatural, although none of the forces now acting on our bodies is capable of producing such an effect in us, this is possible only for a force that has not yet manifested itself, for a force that is in the power of God. .

    The forthcoming general resurrection of the dead must be distinguished from the temporary resurrections of the dead, which were performed by Christ and his disciples (the resurrection of the daughter of Jairus, Lazarus, who lay in the tomb for four days, and others). It was a return to life, after which death is still inevitable. But the general resurrection from the dead will be an eternal resurrection, in which the souls of people will forever unite with their incorruptible bodies. Then the righteous will rise transfigured and enlightened.

    The glorious doctrine of the resurrection of the dead removes our sorrow for the dead believers close to us. We know that the bodily mortal composition that we put in a coffin and cover with grave dust in the dark abode of death, when the Archangel's trumpet is announced, will rise incorruptible on the bright morning of the resurrection, in a wonderful, unfading beauty, bestowed by the Creator for heavenly glory. What we sow in weakness will rise in strength; we sow in humiliation, we will rise in glory; we sow “a spiritual body, a spiritual body will arise” ... The materiality of our body will lose its rudeness and its desire for decay, and our body itself will pass from the “soul into the spiritual”, that is, it will obey not the low desires of the animal soul, but the higher will of the free spirit . At the present stage of our earthly existence, we are surrounded by infirmity: often what we desire, we cannot do, and this confirms the saying of our Lord: “the spirit is willing, but the flesh is weak” ... In our resurrected state, such a disagreement between body and spirit will disappear: the body will be just as cheerful and free as the spirit, fulfilling its every desire unconditionally in everything. Now our body, by its nature, falls under various restrictions and incapacities from which the pure spirit is withdrawn ... For example, it can move only under the same conditions under which all other animals move, with the only difference that it cannot move as fast and easy as many of them. Then it will acquire the ability, without any obstacles, by the mere inspiration of the spirit, with incredible speed of lightning to be transported through the vast space above the stars in the immeasurable universe of God. The planets will serve him only as steps on the ladder to ascend to the Throne of the eternal Father. It will be a "spiritual body" - in everything a submissive instrument of the spirit, similar to the glorious Body of the risen Lord.

    In the heart of every religious person lives the confidence to see again his blood relatives, old friends, dear acquaintances and generally good neighbors - those who, by the inscrutable will of Providence, have departed to the afterlife. This happy confidence is pleasant and dear to man as a social being. The revelation of the doctrine of the resurrection of the dead contributes to the affirmation of this confidence and its revival.

    To restore in memory the teaching of Jesus Christ and the apostles about the resurrection of the dead, to pass it through the prism of consciousness can and should be a sufficient justification for this publication.

    Chapter 1
    The incomprehensible mystery of the resurrection

    "Body of the future"

    There is one thought in the human soul, which has lain deeper than all other thoughts in it - this is the thought of one's death and the death of loved ones. “Death,” said one French historian, “was the first mystery presented to man; she set him on the path of other mysteries." But, if in relation to any other secret, we allow a skeptical question: why do you need to know it? Live without philosophizing, and take from life what you can and want to take; then in the face of this first mystery such advice is inappropriate.

    “Live,” teaches the philosophy of earthly well-being.

    “But that’s exactly what I want,” the soul answers. I want life, but I get death.

    “Good, good, I won’t think about my death, but even during my lifetime a person close to me dies: his death deprives me of the best joy of life, shouldn’t I dwell on it too?

    Yeah, try not to think about that either.

    But for this, the soul needs to stop being what it is - the human soul. This means saying to the soul: die, die before the death of the body, in order to enable this body to live a serene, “natural” life, until the appointed hour strikes for it too. Here the madness of the council reaches its climax, and the soul escapes from the clutches of this death, the second, and death the first and the first mystery again becomes a motionless phantom before it. It is impossible to break out of this circle, and man has long understood this. How did he live all these long millennia, how did he live, and what blocked this ghost from him that prevented him from living?

    There is a wonderful story among many wild tribes of Africa and the islands of the Great Ocean. The moon sends a messenger to a person (according to some versions - a hare, according to others - a chameleon) and tells him to tell the person: as I (the month) die and reborn again, so you (the person) will die and be reborn again. But this message did not reach its destination - the chameleon crawled too slowly, and the hare distorted it, conveying: as the month dies, so the person will die and will no longer be resurrected. At the same time, the month itself, which sent the first joyful news, no longer wanted to confirm it. So the man was left with bad news in his hands and with a vague hope in his heart for a new, better embassy.

    It seems difficult to convey better in figurative form those feelings that the human soul has lived and still lives in the mass today. Death and birth pass before her like links in an endless chain. “You have returned,” the savages say at the sight of a son born after the death of his father, but the thought early suggests that this descendant is not a resurrected parent, but another, independent, person who claims personal immortality. The immortality of the race, no matter how high it ranks in cult terms, is still not able to quench the thirst for individual immortality, it does not bring the news that a person will not die. Only one month fully owns this secret of personal immortality. His ashen soul does not soar for long without its light-like body - a little time passes and he again puts on it, resurrects again and again for life, resurrects not in a son, not in a descendant, but in his own renewed flesh. Here is the news of a personal resurrection, continuously streaming from heavenly heights, but it crawls across the face of the earth with a cold, deceptive radiance, like a lazy chameleon, it plays on earthly objects with unfaithful runaway hares, and not life, but death looks from everywhere with depressions of black, deep shadows. The messengers badly conveyed the testament of the month.

    But in vain they shout to man from all sides: you will die. With a look full of hope he looks straight into the face of the sender, catches his rays before they break on the ground, and feels that they bring him a different message, it does not reach his heart in a clear form, it is muffled by the hostile noise that is heard around, but he knows that if this noise stops, the voice of truth will tell him the truth, he even knows what this voice will tell him.

    Death, meanwhile, clearly triumphed: centuries and millennia passed, people were born and died, but each new grave not only did not pour into the soul new drops of despair that threatened to overwhelm the measure of its patience and faith, on the contrary, the farther, the more magnificently the funeral rituals, the more care was taken to ensure that the body rest in the afterlife. Feasts were replaced by feasts, commemoration days were included in the annual circle of holidays, the tombs were expanded and decorated, art preserved the features of the dear dead for posterity; already at the very end of the ancient period, and in the most skeptical noisy centers of education, the famous "collegia funeratica", grave-diggers' associations arose, providing a decent burial for everyone, even the poorest. Even when people died en masse, as, for example, in a war. And then it was sacrilege to leave the bodies unburied, and we remember the story of the victors at the Argenusian Islands, whom their compatriots almost executed because, in the heat of battle, they left the bodies of their fallen brothers in the sea. The earthly well-being ensured by victory was less necessary for the remaining relatives than the afterlife rest of the dead, inseparable from the rest of their bodies. These bodies smoldered and decayed into dust before the eyes of the living - people went to the aid of death and decay, they began to burn the bodies or gave them to be eaten by birds, but the ashes and bones collected in urns were kept as carefully as the embalmed corpses . If the body was lost in a foreign land, and it was impossible to get it, relatives on their native side buried a ghost, set up tombs without ashes, and they knew that this also brought eternal peace to the deceased. Eternal memory was needed, it provided reality beyond the grave, but for this, at least a grain of the tangible, at least one name, written or reverently passed down from generation to generation, was needed. It was the seed from which the whole posthumous life of the soul grew, this grain of dust clothed this soul with flesh. But how thin this flesh must have been! In fact, the soul after death was only a shadow, and only the food brought to the grave revived and embodied it for a while. Odysseus found the soul of his mother in the underworld, but a pale shadow sits mute and in oblivion. The soothsayer's voice teaches Odysseus how to awaken her:


    “I will open an easy remedy for this in a few words:
    That of the lifeless shadows, which approach the blood
    If you give it, it will start talking to you wisely; but silently
    That one will leave you, which you will not let to blood ...
    The mother approached the blood, got drunk and recognized her son.

    The mystery of heaven has now reached the earth: as I (the month) die and am reborn again, so you (man) will die and be reborn again, resurrect in the same face and in the same flesh, only transfigured, fragrant, regal, similar to the light-like body of the month.

    When heaven saw that many hearts were already ready to receive the message of the value and immortality of the body, and only pride in front of this body prevents others from receiving it, it left the proud to wander through the crossroads and sent a new faithful messenger to those who were ready to reverently approach the flesh and dust, with a pure heart to stand guard over their resurrection in the morning... The moon and the sun prepared these hearts to receive the good news, and now they were taught by a small star.

    “When they saw the star, they rejoiced with great joy. And, having entered the house, they saw the infant with Mary, His mother, and, falling down, worshiped Him, and opened their treasures. They brought Him gifts, gold, frankincense and myrrh, ”- gifts with which, both during life and after death, royal bodies were decorated, bloomed and fragrant.

    But this baby was also a great chosen one, he was selected from fourteen thousand newborn lives: such a selection had never been seen even by the Roman lake. Egypt hid him from death under the shade of their tombs and kept his living young body as carefully as they did their thousand-year-old dead. This body was a vessel of gracious gifts: it worked miracles with its clothing, breath, clothes, its voice woke up the dead, a dazzling light emanated from it. His face breathed love for all who mourn and humble, but when the love of the humble washed His feet with precious peace, He placed this waste of peace above other deeds of love. This was the beginning of his burial. But at first this body suffered for a long time, was ulcerated, devoid of appearance and grandeur. In those days, the full, resurrected month stood above the earth, the spring sun grew brighter, but it also faded in anticipation of the glory of the coming resurrection. His death was wordless, but his coffin was with the rich - a clean shroud and a hundred liters of myrrh and aloes - this was only the threshold of his burial: after the Sabbath rest, new incense was ready to pour out on him ... It could remain incorruptible and fragrant for a long time, – it has become so forever. In vain on that memorable morning, human love searched for him "among the dead" - there remained only the shrouds and sir. It itself stood alive before the disciples, as before, they touched its bones and flesh, which "the spirit does not have", put their fingers into the wounds that proud pagan beauty fears; it took food, its language taught the mysteries of the Kingdom of God, but all this - both bones and flesh - passed through locked doors, disappeared and reappeared, and finally ascended to heaven to appear again in the same way at the end of days ... It was also a new, glorious body, and, free over space and time, even after ascending to heaven, it did not leave the earth. Earthly bread and wine - the food and life of the human body - by the power of His victorious Name, became His true flesh and blood and nourished the bodies of those who believed in His resurrection, made them partakers of His eternal glory ... This was the body of the Church, whose head was the Firstborn from the dead, and the members - sons of the resurrection.

    The struggle of springs and winters is over: eternal spring blossoms in the hearts of those who believe in the first resurrection and look forward to the coming resurrection. The seal of this faith and this hope has sealed the entire life of the Church throughout all the long centuries of her earthly existence.

    This message of eternal spring reaches us and reaches us in a new, wondrous way. In Rome, in the same Rome where people once so strictly selected bodies worthy of life, now other bodies are being opened, chosen for a new better life. From the depths of the catacombs, from underground graves, where the human eye has not looked for many centuries, the eternally festive Church of the Apostolic Days emerges into the daylight of our everyday life. Protestantism looks at her in amazement: a religion of pure spirit and direct communion with God, which considers itself the direct heir of the apostolic testaments, it sees in front of it not a Protestant parish, united by the community of faith in the Crucified and alien to any traces of religious "materialism", - in front of it is the Church of icons, relics, saints, the Church of the Mother of God Intercessor, as St. Irenaeus, the royal Oranta of the catacombs. The Church of the pre-essential body and blood, the Divine members (“coelestia membra”), the Church of prayers for the departed, the living Church of the living… But the catholic ecumenical Church looks at her with the gaze of her daughter. After all, she is flesh from flesh and bone from the bones of this catacomb apostolic Church, she only rose above the earth, from the earth, when the days of persecution ended. Like spiky grass from sown seeds that bored through the earth, its domes and bell towers rose up like golden wheat of God; with a warm wind that stirs the fields, a festive blessing spreads over it, but its roots are fixed motionless in the ground ...

    Her altars stand over the relics, the faces of the saints look from everywhere, the temple is full of incense, rejoices in hymns ... With the water of baptism, the Church washes its children, anoints their bodies with peace and oil, the marriage union calls them with a grace-filled sacrament, brings them to the holy cup, nourishes them with a true body and by the true blood of the Lord, - she continues on earth the same work that she once did in the dungeons, over the tombs of the martyrs, which she learned from the first, fragrant tomb, where only for a short time the Head of her life and her Head was forgotten by the sleep of death.

    Just as I died and rose again, so you, man, will die and be reborn again - this new covenant of the Sun and truth lives now a man who once believed in the month.

    (from the book by F. Andreev "The Body of the Future". Sergiev Posad, 1914)

    The ancient world's idea of ​​the resurrection of bodies

    History presents us with a person everywhere and always in worries, in anxiety about his future. Mankind has always thought about the cradle of a child and the coffin of an old man, and has always turned its gaze beyond the limits of this cramped space.

    Everywhere the question of the future has been raised and is being raised, everywhere the answer to it has been heard and is being heard; only this answer varies depending on the degree of development of thought and education.

    Of all the things that a person knows, there is nothing more sacred to his mind than the future life; Of all the questions about the future life, none confuses the human mind so much as the question of the resurrection of the body.

    How did a person decide and solve this difficult question?

    This is what the ancient pagan world presents us this time.

    In the poetic representations of the folk fantasy of Greece, we see a gloomy look at the human body. Ulysses - the hero of Homer's poems, wants to talk with the dead.

    With his sword he digs a ditch and fills it with sacrificial blood. Obeying the power of a mysterious spell, pale shadows come one with the other and, having tasted black blood, begin to speak. Between them, Ulysses recognizes his mother.


    “Carried away (says the hero) with his heart, he wanted to hug
    I am the departed mother's soul;
    Three times my hands to her, striving with love, I extended,
    Three times between my hands she slipped
    A shadow or a sleepy dream, tearing out a moan from me.
    And then to the question of Ulysses the shadow answers:
    “My dear son, the most unfortunate among people ...
    Such is the fate of all the dead who have lost their lives.
    Strong veins no longer bind either muscles or their bones;
    Suddenly, the funeral fire destroys with piercing power
    Everything, only the hot life will leave the chilled bones:
    Just then, having flown away like a dream, their soul disappears.

    In the poems of Homer, in the thought of the ancient Greeks, there is a future for man; but this future consists in the fact that the body is destroyed by fire, and the soul, becoming a shadow, wanders in eternal darkness. However, such a gloomy view of the future is gradually brightened up by the Greek imagination, but even among the best Greek philosophers we find the gloomiest view of the human body.

    So, for example, Socrates, defining what death is, in accordance with the general belief, considers it only a renunciation of the soul from the body, which he looks at as a transient shell of the soul.

    Showing the distinguishing features of a true philosopher, he says that “a sage worthy of his name, trying to understand the truth, throughout his life more and more renounces the body, because the body with its feelings closes the truth from him and, demanding care for himself, distracts him from understanding. Is it not this detachment of the soul from the body that is called death? therefore he understands what death is.”

    If we transfer our thoughts to the vast expanses of India, Tibet, China, listen to the voice of the Brahmins, learned Buddhists and learned Chinese, from here we will bear even more sad impressions. “Life is a long fabric of sorrows and disasters, they taught there; salvation consists in not living; deep, unawakening sleep is better than any local happiness. The best desire is to stop the functions of the human body as soon as possible, to annihilate, to fall asleep, to lose the sense of one's calamities, having lost self-knowledge.

    The question of the resurrection of the body is almost the only question that humanity has neither thought nor conjectured. It is clear what impression the sermon on the resurrection of the body must have made on people who had never heard of it before. In Athens, where the speeches of Demosthenes and Aeschylus were heard, the apostle Paul walks among the astonishing temples and statues. In the squares and porticoes he preaches about the Crucified One, Who revealed the One True God, Who far surpasses the ideals of Plato. The inquisitive Athenians listen to the apostle's sermon... But as soon as the apostle began to preach about the resurrection of the dead, he only said: "there will be a resurrection of the dead, the righteous and the unrighteous," as the philosophers who listened to him immediately laughed at him, considering his teaching aimless, and some wished to listen to his teaching about resurrection at another time, that is, they made a polite hint to stop preaching about such, as it seemed to them, an absurd doctrine.

    But what seemed absurd to the pagan sages in this case was the object of faith of the Church of Christ from its very beginning to the present day.

    What is the teaching of the Church about the resurrection of the body?

    Three main questions come to the fore here: is the resurrection of the human body possible, and, if possible, what is its purpose?

    Let's answer these questions with the words of Scripture.

    That the resurrection of bodies is possible is obvious, if we take into account the omnipotence of God.

    When the Sadducees rejected the resurrection of the dead, Jesus Christ directly told them: you are deceived because you do not know the power, that is, the omnipotence of God (Matthew 22:29). Whoever eats My Flesh and drinks My Blood has eternal life, and I will raise him up at the last day (John 6:54). In addition, Jesus Christ himself showed the possibility of the resurrection of bodies when he really raised the dead even in the days of his ministry on earth, resurrected many saints in Jerusalem in the moments of his death, and, finally, resurrected himself.

    Developing the teachings of the Savior, the apostles also considered the omnipotence of God as the basis for the possibility of the resurrection of the dead: “God raised the Lord, He will also raise us up by His power,” taught the Apostle Paul (1 Cor. 6:14).

    When in the early days of Christianity this possibility seemed strange and incomprehensible to some, the Fathers and Teachers of the Church drew everyone's attention to the very experiences of God's omnipotence in nature. Here is what Tertullian says about this: “Everything in nature is renewed; everything in it begins at the same time when it ends, and for this, and for that, it ends in order to begin. Nothing perishes except for life. Everything in the world so transformed testifies to the resurrection of the dead. God revealed this even earlier in creation than in letters; He preached with his might before than with his voice.

    He sent nature to man as a guide when he was just about to send prophets. Indeed, we see that everything in nature is arranged by God in such a way that the death of one creature at the same time serves as the beginning of life for another, and for the most part - better, more perfect. How much more perfect, for example, is a multi-leaved tree in comparison with the grain, through the decay of which it receives the beginning of its being!

    What is the purpose of the resurrection of the human body? Is there any need for this resurrection?

    After the glorious victory over death, the triumph of the Conqueror of death will be completed with a just retribution - "to each according to his deeds" (Rom. 2, 6). It is not possible for God's justice to err in its definitions. But how will the just Judge pronounce his final verdict when one soul without a body is not yet a complete man? According to the teaching of the Holy Scriptures, the body is essential for a person to have a full existence: it is an instrument of the spirit. If God's justice must render to everyone for everything that was done by him during earthly life, then it must render not only the soul of man, but also the body, as an accomplice in the actions of the soul. There is no need to prove here that the body really participates in spiritual actions - and, moreover, participates not as some kind of dead tool in the hands of the artist, but as something most closely connected with the soul. This truth, clear to everyone, leads us to the conclusion that neither a body without a soul, nor a soul without a body constitute a fully developed human nature. Having in mind, therefore, on the one hand, the justice of God, on the other, our own actions and the reason for them, we cannot help but believe the words of the apostle: “for we must all appear before the Judgment Seat of Christ, so that each one may receive [accordingly] what he did while living in the body, good or bad” (2 Cor. 5:10). Our native orator St. Demetrius of Rostov speaks rather characteristically about the resurrection of the body. It represents the dispute between the soul and the body about whether the soul or the body is to blame for the crimes committed on earth. “He says,” he says, “the soul to the body: cursed are you, the accursed body, as if by your sinful leniency you have deceived me, and you have led me into cruel iniquities. The body speaks to the soul: cursed are you, my accursed soul, as you ruled me evil, and with your mind from God given to you, like reins and a bridle, you did not restrain me from evil deeds: but you deigned me in everything: and even when I desired some sin, you deigned and helped you: and they angered the Creator of our God. The soul also speaks: woe to you, my accursed body, as if you embittered your neighbor, robbed, stole a stranger, stole and killed. The body, in response, says: Woe to you, my cursed soul, for in all that you have helped me; Thou hast been my mentor and friend in everything, and I create nothing without you. So the wallpaper bickering with each other, and one reproaching and slandering the other, will be taken out to accept condemnation according to their deeds.

    Thus, the soul and the body together must suffer the deserved punishment. In fact, we have many such things that neither the soul without the body, nor the body without the soul can do.

    Whether we teach others to do good or evil, whether we help others or offend them, we do it with the help of bodily organs. And if the soul and body act together, then together they should be both rewarded and punished.

    Here is how Athenagoras, a Christian philosopher of the 2nd century, argues about this: “It cannot be,” he says, “that one soul should receive retribution for what it did with the body; for in itself it would not partake of those sins which proceed from sensual pleasures. Also, one body should not accept retribution for all deeds, because it equally submits to the power of the laws of nature, as well as to the power of reason; but for every deed, the whole person, consisting of soul and body, must receive a reward. If the bodies are not resurrected, then there will be no divine justice for either the body or the soul. The body will not be given justice, because it will not receive the slightest part in the rewards of the soul for those labors in which very much participated; and justice will not be done to the soul, since it alone will bear the punishment for many sins, which it would not have committed if it had not been in union with the body.

    Many similar judgments can be found among other defenders of Christianity, and all of them, in accordance with the teaching of the Orthodox Church, assert that on the day of the Last Judgment our body must be resurrected in order to receive worthy rewards or punishments along with the soul.

    In what state will the resurrected bodies be; what qualities will they have, and will they be the same as those of people on earth?

    That the resurrected bodies will be essentially the same as those that were united with certain souls during the present life, this follows of itself from the concept of resurrection, which, of course, does not mean the formation or creation of something new, but the restoration and revival of the same the one who died. Jesus Christ, who set the example of resurrection, was resurrected in his own body (John 20:25-27); Holy Scripture says that “all who are in the tombs will hear the voice of the Son of God” (John 5:28) and, having heard, will come to life; therefore, those bodies that are buried will be resurrected. However, being essentially the same, the properties of the bodies will be very different from the real ones. So they will not have the rudeness that they have on earth. The resurrected bodies will be thin, light-like, in the likeness of the resurrected body of Jesus, since the apostle Paul says that we “will then put on the image of a heavenly man” (1 Cor. 15:49), i.e. Jesus Christ.

    The apostle defines the particular properties of the resurrected bodies as follows: “a spiritual body is sown (i.e., dies), a spiritual body is raised, it is sown into corruption, it is raised in incorruption, it is sown not in honor, it is raised in glory, it is sown in weakness, it is raised in power. It is fitting for this corruptible to put on incorruption, and for this mortal to put on immortality (1 Cor. 15:42-44, 53); that is, our resurrected bodies will be adapted to the then state of our spirit - and will be incorruptible, indestructible and immortal.

    Let us turn to those objections that have existed and still exist against the dogma of the resurrection of bodies.

    Resurrection of the dead

    Closely connected with the Second Coming of Christ is the resurrection of the dead, which is the undoubted faith of the Church, and therefore in the Creed we confess: “I look forward to the resurrection of the dead and the life of the world to come.”

    When we speak of the resurrection of the dead, we mean by this the resurrection of bodies, that souls will again enter dead bodies, and these bodies will come to life, and thus the whole person will be recomposed. This is quite natural and justified, because, in essence, souls never die, for the immortality of the soul is a gift given by God from the beginning. Bodies die, and by the term resurrection of the dead we always mean the resurrection of bodies.

    Here one can see a different understanding of the resurrection of the dead by philosophy and Orthodox theology. Classical philosophy can never accept the view that bodies will be resurrected. She disagrees with this precisely because she believes in a soul that is immortal by nature and a body that is mortal by nature. According to the thought of ancient philosophy, the soul, immortal by nature, was previously in the world of ideas, and then was imprisoned in the body, as in a dungeon. Salvation, and therefore deliverance of the soul, is the renunciation of the body. In this understanding, the body is evil, and the confinement of the soul in the body is its fall and expresses it.

    This explains the resistance of the Athenians when the Apostle Paul at the Areopagus began to speak of the resurrection of the dead. The apostle Paul spoke of Christ, who would come to judge the world. Among other things, he said: "He has appointed a day on which he will judge the world in righteousness, by means of a Man whom he has ordained, giving proof to all by raising him from the dead." At this point the Athenians cut him off, as the Acts of the Apostles say: When they heard about the resurrection of the dead, some scoffed, while others said: We will hear from you about this another time.(Acts 17:32). This resistance is due to their misunderstanding of the idea of ​​the resurrection of dead bodies.

    But from the entire biblical and patristic tradition, it becomes obvious that the resurrection of the bodies will necessarily take place in order for the whole person to be formed. With the separation of the soul from the body, man, of course, did not lose his hypostasis.

    Below we will try to make a brief review of what the Holy Scriptures and the patristic tradition say about the resurrection of bodies and what the bodies will be like in the life that begins after the Second Coming of Christ. It will become obvious to us that this is an undoubted faith and the main place of Orthodox tradition. Indeed, the very perception by Christ of human nature and its deification, the fact that the flesh received by Christ from the Mother of God is one-divine, and also the fact that the divine and human natures in Christ are always one, points to the value of the body. The body was not evil in the beginning. It is not a prison of the soul, but a positive creation of God.

    First, we need to cite a few quotations from Holy Scripture that speak of the resurrection of bodies.

    The prophet Isaiah confesses: Your dead will live, dead bodies will rise!(Isaiah 26:19). The book of the prophet Ezekiel gives a picture of the amazing event of the resurrection of the dead, which shows how, according to the word of God, dry bones received nerves, flesh and skin. Then they were given a spirit, that is, a soul (see Ezekiel 37:1-14). This extraordinary and miraculous event shows how the resurrection of the dead will take place at the Second Coming of Christ, and therefore the Church reads this conception at the service of the burial of the Savior (on Great Saturday morning), when we return to the temple after the procession. The Resurrection of Christ is the prelude of our own resurrection, because Christ, by His death and resurrection, conquered the power of death and gave all people the future resurrection.

    The Jews had an unshakable conviction in the future resurrection of the dead. It is characteristic that Christ, when meeting with Martha, the sister of Lazarus, after the death of the latter, assured her that her brother would rise again. Martha answered him: I know that he will rise on Sunday, on the last day(John I, 24).

    The three resurrections performed by Christ (the daughter of Jairus, the son of the widow of Nain and Lazarus), as well as His own resurrection, which took place by the power of His Divinity, is a confirmation and prelude of the resurrection of all people at the time of the Second Coming of Christ.

    In the teachings of Christ we find many passages that speak of the resurrection of the dead. In one of His discourses Christ said: The time is coming when all who are in the tombs will hear the voice of the Son of God(John 5:28). He also said: I am the resurrection and the life(John 11:25).

    This teaching is received by the apostles, and it is contained in their epistles. Especially the Apostle Paul speaks many times about the resurrection of bodies in his epistles addressed to the Churches he founded. These Churches were influenced by their pagan environment, where it was widely believed that the body was evil. We present here some characteristic passages.

    In Romans he speaks of the redemption of the body, apparently referring to the resurrection of the body: And we groan within ourselves, waiting for adoption, the redemption of our body(Rom. 8:23). In Thessalonians he says that the resurrection will take place by the power of Christ at the time

    His Second Coming. The Lord Himself, with a shout, with the voice of the Archangel and the trumpet of God, will descend from heaven, and the dead in Christ will rise first.(1 Thess. 4:16).

    In the texts of Holy Scripture, we see not only the faith of the Church in the resurrection of the dead at the time of the Second Coming of Christ, but also that what there will be these bodies. We know from all Orthodox tradition that the bodies will be spiritual.

    Christ declares that people in the future life will not have the elements of carnality. It is known that after the fall, man put on corruption and death, and, therefore, the image of his conception, his gestation and feeding refers to life after the fall. But this, of course, God blessed for the sake of multiplying the human race. And after the resurrection, this state will be abolished, and people will live like angels. Christ says: Those who are worthy to reach that age and the resurrection from the dead neither marry nor are given in marriage, and can no longer die, for they are equal to the angels and are the sons of God, being the sons of the resurrection(Luke 20:35-36).

    The bodies of the saints, despite the fact that they are still here looking forward to the glory of God, because they have the uncreated grace of Christ, then they will be transformed and become bodies of glory. The Apostle Paul says that Christ our humble body will be transformed so that it will be in conformity with His glorious body(Philippians 3:21). As the body of Christ receives radiance from the Godhead, so will the bodies of the righteous also shine in heaven. There will certainly be a big difference between the body of Christ and the bodies of the saints. Because the body of the God-man has become a source of the uncreated grace of God, while the bodies of the saints themselves are sanctified by this grace of God. In addition, we know from Tradition that a person perceives deification, while Christ makes this deification.

    The apostle Paul develops the doctrine of the resurrection of the dead in his First Epistle to the Corinthians. Apparently, some Corinthians were influenced by philosophical ideas about the human body. The Apostle Paul writes that if the bodies are not resurrected, then Christ has not been resurrected from the dead (see 1 Cor. 5:12-16).

    Then he answers questions, apparently asked by the Corinthians, about how the dead will be raised and what kind of bodies they will have (see 1 Cor. 15, 35-41). In answering these questions, he uses an example from the sensory world. Man sows a small seed, and God gives that seed another body. The argument is this: a person does not sow wheat, but seed, and from the seed of this another body is produced, in accordance with the seed. The same will happen in the resurrection of the dead. By the power of Christ the resurrection of bodies will take place. And the bodies, despite their similarity, will have a different service. The dead will rise incorruptible, because, as he characteristically says, this corruptible must put on incorruption, and this mortal must put on immortality(1 Cor. 15:53).

    It is very important that the apostle Paul describes in great detail the condition of the bodies at the resurrection of the dead. He writes to the Corinthians: It is sown in humiliation, it is raised in glory; it is sown in weakness, it is raised in strength; a spiritual body is sown, a spiritual body is raised(1 Corinthians 15:43-44). Here the difference between the body before and after death and the body after the resurrection at the Second Coming of Christ is revealed.

    In this apostolic passage we see four characteristics that the body will have after the resurrection. The first sign is that the body will be incorruptible, as opposed to the biological body. The second is that the body will be glorified, as opposed to the body of dishonor. The third is that the body will be strong as opposed to a weak body. And the fourth, that this body will be spiritual, in contrast to the first body - the spiritual one. This means that while the biological body was corruptible, dishonorable, infirm and spiritual, that is, subject to the movements of the soul, the resurrection body will be incorruptible, glorified, strong and spiritual.

    If we, relying on patristic tradition, consider the teaching of the Apostle Paul, we can say that the bodies of people after their resurrection will be incorruptible, will not need food and sleep, will not be subject to change. The Fathers say that they will be like the body of Christ that came out of the tomb, unnoticed by anyone, entering the upper room and leaving it through the locked doors. It did not need food, traveled long distances, and so on. Christ ate after His resurrection, of course, not because he needed it, but so that the disciples would understand that this was not a ghost. This food was burned by His Deity, because there was no longer a digestive system and all those actions that are signs of decay and mortality.

    And the bodies of sinners will also reject corruption and death, but will not be spiritual and glorified, like the bodies of saints. The bodies of the saints will have such glory as will correspond to the condition of the soul. The Apostle Paul says: Star differs from star in glory(1 Cor. 15:41). Just as the light of the sun is one thing, the light of the moon and the stars is another, so it will be with the glory of the saints. In accordance with the purification, enlightenment and deification acquired by a person in this life, he will also shine in eternal life. There is no partiality here at all on the part of God, but the person himself will receive such grace as he is able to contain. God will send grace to everyone, and everyone will shine and sparkle in accordance with their spiritual state.

    Within the framework of this theology, we must also see that all people will acquire the same age. In one troparion we sing: "And they will all be of the same age." This means that all people will be the age of a mature person. And the infant who died at a young age, and the one who died at a great old age, will be of the same age, and, as they say, the age

    Christ. It is natural for people to acquire the age of a mature person about thirty years.

    St. Simeon the New Theologian in one of his creations writes that the souls of people who are reunited with their bodies, "each soul will find an upper room according to its dignity, full of either light or darkness." Those who kindle their lamp in this life will be in the light that never comes. Those who were impure, whose eyes of heart were blind, will not see the divine Light. The bodies of the saints will become holy vessels of the Holy Spirit. How pure they were here, so glorified, "shining, sparkling like the Light of the divine," they will rise even then.

    I could cite the teaching of many saints both about the certainty of the resurrection of bodies and eternal life, and about how the resurrection will take place. However, I will content myself with expounding the teaching of St. Gregory of Nyssa on the resurrection of bodies. Let's look at some aspects of this doctrine. I believe that this teaching is very clear and characteristic.

    First, St. Gregory of Nyssa teaches that when we speak of resurrection, or rebirth, or pre-beautification, and when we use many other names, we describe the body subject to corruption, and not the soul, which, as incorruptible, not perishing and immortal, will not be resurrect because it does not die.

    The resurrection of bodies is also connected with the resurrection of all those parts of the body that perished for various reasons. On the day of resurrection, even that part of the human body that was eaten by carnivorous birds a thousand years ago will be regained as if it had not been lost. And those members that have been eaten by whales, sharks, or any other sea creatures will be resurrected along with man. Those bodies that were burned by the fire and eaten by worms in the graves, and in general all the bodies destroyed by corruption, “whole and undamaged will be given to the earth.” All the missing parts of the body will be filled, and the person will appear as a whole. This means that we will have our own body, which, however, will not be subject to corruption and death.

    This will certainly happen, because it is connected with the creation of man by God. God did not create man to die. Death is the result and fruit of sin. And if the herder of sheep wishes his flock to be healthy and almost immortal, if the herder of oxen wishes to increase the growth of his oxen by various medical measures, if the herder of goats prays that his goats give birth to twins, and everyone generally strives for something useful, then God wants it too. It is clear from these examples that God desires to recreate "creature that has been put to corruption."

    St. Gregory of Nyssa, in this conversation, spoken on the day of Easter and dedicated to the resurrection of Christ and the resurrection of bodies at the time of the Second Coming of Christ, asserts that the resurrection of the dead will happen without fail, that it is not impossible for God, and, moreover, analyzes how this will happen . What St. Gregory said is very important, and we will briefly outline it.

    It is not impossible for the resurrection of bodies to take place. For many reasons.

    First reason. The God that raises the bodies of the dead is the same God that created man from the dust. We, says St. Gregory, consider creation to be a given, but if we reflect on it, we will see that it is something miraculous. Indeed, how did the fine dust concentrate and become flesh? And from the same substance came bones and skin, fat and hair. That is, despite the fact that there is one flesh, at the same time various members appeared. He describes the different tissue of each part of the body: the lung is soft, the liver is rough and red, the heart is hard, and so on.

    It is also very surprising that Eve came from such a small part of the body as Adam's rib. But how did the head, legs, arms and other parts of the body come out of the rib? God, who created man in this way, has the power to recreate him again and correct the decayed part of the body. After all, God Himself is the creator of both the first creation and the second embellishment. Therefore, the sign of prudence and wisdom is to believe in what God says, without examining the ways and causes, which exceeds our strength.

    The second reason. Various examples that exist in nature show us that God is omnipotent and that nothing is impossible or difficult for Him. His omnipotence is evident from the varied and complex nature. All nature loudly proclaims the greatness of God and His power. The resurrections created by Christ - the four-day Lazarus, the son of the widow of Nain and the daughter of Nair - show that it is possible to resurrect all people in this way when He so desires. The craftsman who makes one statue can make others like it. So Christ, who resurrected three people, can do the same with all people. Therefore, when asked how the dead are raised, he answers with the question: “How did the four-day Lazarus rise?”

    Not only at the first creation, but also subsequently, with the preservation of nature, strength and omnipotence are manifested.

    God's. We know that the birth of man is the fruit of the work of God. Man, by the grace of God, is conceived, carried in the womb, born and grows. Saint Gregory of Nyssa says that the resurrection of the dead can take place in the same way that a person is born. From the point of view of human logic, it is very strange how a seed, which at the beginning is formless, later takes on forms, as the parts of the human body appear. If a man is formed from a formless seed, then nothing will be incompatible with this, if the substance that is in the tombs and has a certain image is renewed in the twinkling of an eye into its former bodily constitution, and the dust again becomes a man, as it was during the first creation.

    Some people consider the resurrection of bodies and after death the composition of the body of a person from various elements incredible, and the formation of an embryo and the development of a person in his natural birth is considered a completely natural process. But if the second is possible, then the first is also possible, because the same God creates both the first and the second.

    He also gives the example of a potter who makes beautiful things out of clay. Suddenly, someone enters his workshop and smashes them. A good potter, if he wants to, can fix what happened by making again the same items that are no worse than the first. It is unreasonable to believe that the potter, who is only a small work of the power of God, can do this, and not to believe that God can recreate the dead.

    The apostle Paul uses the example of a grain of wheat. It falls into the ground and dies, but a large ear grows out of it. Saint Gregory skillfully uses this image. He analyzes in detail what happens to this little grain and how many secrets it hides in itself. He says that it is amazing how a dry grain of wheat, when it rots, works wonders, because it itself falls into the ground and grows in abundance. Recreating a person is easier than recreating a grain, because a person in resurrection does not receive anything more than he possessed.

    The Holy Fathers use many images taken from nature and present them to their flock. We see this in many of their conversations, including this conversation of St. Gregory, analyzed here. To show that the resurrection of the dead is possible, he beautifully, very realistically and clearly, in vivid colors and with undoubted writing talent, analyzes the fact that the trees are dry during winter, and with the advent of spring they bloom and become a place where birds gather to thank man. . Reptiles and snakes during winter hibernation hide in the ground, but as soon as the right time comes and thunder sounds - a call to life, they wake up and come to life. Just as snakes wake up when they hear this thunder of life, so the dead bodies of people will receive souls and be resurrected when the sound of the trumpet of God is heard.

    He perfectly describes a person from his birth to death and notices that the life of people, however, like animals, is undergoing change. A person after his birth gradually develops, acquires various abilities. When he grows up and reaches the end of his life, he becomes a baby again: he whispers in a low voice, becomes stupid and crawls with his legs and arms, as at the beginning of his life. All this shows that even before death, a person is constantly changing and renewing himself. The same, of course, will happen during the resurrection. For what is corruptible decays according to the law of decay, but all the more will it be renewed by the power and action of God.

    Yes, and sleep, which is very necessary for our daily rest, as well as awakening from sleep, point to the sacrament of the resurrection of the dead. Sleep is an image of death, and awakening is an image of resurrection. Many called sleep the brother of death, because then a person looks like an insensitive dead man who does not recognize either friends or enemies, does not notice those who are next to him. Therefore, sleepers can easily be harmed. When a person wakes up, he gradually restores his strength, as if he comes to life. If many changes and frenzies occur in a person during the day and night, then disbelief in God, who promised the “last renewal”, exposes a person who is unreasonable and quarrelsome.

    From all these examples, it is clear that the resurrection of the dead is a completely natural event. Just as we consider natural the birth of man, changes in nature, the growth of plants, and in general all those events that take place in nature, so we must consider the renewal and re-creation of man, the resurrection of the dead, to be just as natural. Because God, who created the first, can also create the last.

    Third reason. The body after the exit of the soul from it is not completely destroyed, but disintegrates “into what it is composed of”, because it is composed of four elements (elements): water, air, fire and earth. The body disintegrates, but does not disappear completely. In another chapter, we considered the views of St. Gregory of Nyssa on the fact that the soul, although separated from the body, remembers the elements and parts of its body, by the power of God it will come into contact with them at the appropriate time, collect them, and the spiritual body will be formed. This proves that, despite the separation of the soul from the body, the person (hypostasis) is not abolished.

    In the homily we are studying, St. Gregory of Nyssa says that the body does not disappear completely, but breaks up into those elements of which it consisted, “and is in water, air, earth and fire.” The fact that the archetypal elements remain and proceed to what comes from them after the disintegration of the body indicates that in general the particular is preserved. And even when these four elements that make up man have returned to their primitives, these primitives, preserving themselves, preserve the particular.

    We know very well that the whole world was created from nothing, from nonexistent matter. If it is easy for God to create something again out of nothing, then it is even easier for Him to create something from already existing elements. So, since there is an archetype, it is possible for God to create man again.

    Fourth reason. Saint Gregory of Nyssa, speaking of the resurrection of bodies, uses examples from the ideas of people of his time. Many people considered and still consider it quite natural that the properties of the bodies of decayed people be passed on to the descendants of these people. They even considered it natural that the properties of other bodies should be transferred to other bodies. However, these same people do not believe in the possibility of these properties that people possessed being renewed in them. I will cite the word of St. Gregory of Nyssa himself, because it is worthy of attention. He says something incomprehensible: "... they do not agree that the same and special properties that they once acquired are renewed and revived."

    Looking at this passage, we can see that at the time of the resurrection of the bodies, people will receive their own bodies with special characteristics. But these bodies will be transformed. The body will be resurrected "in power and incorruption," which means that it will not bear the scars of corruption, mortality, and infirmity. Of course, we do not know more details. However, what has already been said, I think, is quite expressive.

    Fifth reason. Saint Gregory of Nyssa insists that the resurrection of the dead is very necessary for the good behavior of people in this life. Because if death is the end of life, then the murderer, the adulterer, the greedy, the perjurer, the liar and the heartless will become even worse, succeed in evil. If there is no resurrection, then there is no Judgment. If there is no Judgment, then the fear of God is lost and, as a result, where the fear of God does not reason with a person, “there sin rejoices with the devil.”

    Thus, when the Church speaks of the future life and the Judgment, she increases the fear of God in people. This fear makes life more human. Therefore, the doctrine of the death and resurrection of bodies makes man an element of society. Whoever casts out this fear becomes subject to demons, becomes the plaything of all passions.

    The conclusion is that the resurrection of the dead will take place. The Word of God testifies to us about this, God revealed this to us, the saints confirm this with their lives and teachings, and the experience of mankind testifies to this. That is why we treat the human body with respect. We respect it, love it, strive to cleanse it from sins, so that it may also be glorified. Quite characteristic is the fact that the hesychasm of the holy fathers also concerned the body, which we greatly revere. This is evident from the writings of St. Gregory Palamas.

    Respect for the human body is also evident in the order of burial. The Orthodox Church does not recognize the burning or cremation of the body, but its burial. Of course, as we have already said, according to the teaching of St. Gregory of Nyssa, the burnt bodies will also be resurrected. However, if a person himself wants to burn his body, then this indicates that he does not believe in his resurrection. And it is not at all accidental that where the tradition of burning bodies dominates, the opinion prevails that the body is a prison of the soul, which must be cast aside in order for the soul to gain freedom. We respect the body, bury it and wait for its resurrection. The saints rest in anticipation of the resurrection. They "look forward to the resurrection of the dead and the life of the world to come."

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    11 . I tea the resurrection of the dead

    The eleventh article of the Creed speaks of the general resurrection of the dead, which will take place at the end of the life of our world.

    The resurrection of the dead, which we “tea” (expect) will follow simultaneously with the second and glorious coming of our Lord Jesus Christ and will consist in the fact that the bodies of all the dead will unite with their souls and come to life.

    Belief in the resurrection of the dead was expressed Abraham, at the sacrifice of his son Isaac (), Job, amidst his grave suffering: “But I know that my Redeemer lives, and on the last day He will raise my decaying skin from the ashes, and I will see God in my flesh" (); prophet Isaiah: “Thy dead shall live, dead bodies shall rise! Rise up and rejoice, cast down in the dust: for your dew is the dew of plants, and the earth will vomit up the dead” (, and 9).

    Prophet Ezekiel contemplated the very resurrection of the dead in the vision of a field strewn with dry bones, which, by the will of the Spirit of God, were united with one another, clothed tightly and animated by the spirit (Ezek. Ch. 37).

    Myself Jesus Christ He spoke more than once about the resurrection of the dead: “Truly, truly, I say to you: the time is coming, and it has already come, when the dead will hear the voice of the Son of God and those who hear will live" (). "Do not marvel at this; for the time is coming in which all who are in the tombs will hear the voice of the Son of God; and those who have done good will go out to the resurrection of life, and those who have done evil to the resurrection of condemnation ”(). Whoever eats my flesh and drinks my blood has eternal life, and I will raise him up at the last day" (6, 54).

    Answering the unbelieving Sadducees to their question about the resurrection of the dead, he said: “You are mistaken, not knowing the scriptures, nor the power of God. Concerning the resurrection of the dead, have you not read what God said to you: I am the God of Abraham, and the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob? God does not eat the dead, but the living» ().

    The Apostle Paul says: “Christ is risen from the dead, the firstborn of those who have died. For as through man, so through man is the resurrection of the dead. Just as everyone dies, so in Christ everyone will come to life.» ().

    At the time of the general resurrection, the bodies of dead people will change, in essence the bodies will be the same that we now have, but in quality they will be different from the current bodies - they will be spiritual - incorruptible and immortal. The bodies of those people who will still be alive at the time of the second coming of the Savior will also change. The Apostle Paul says: a spiritual body is sown, a spiritual body is raised... we will not all die, but we will all change, suddenly, in the twinkling of an eye at the last trumpet: for the trumpet will sound, and the dead will rise incorruptible, and we (the survivors) will change ”().

    According to the change of the person himself will change and all the visible world, namely, from the perishable will turn into the incorruptible.

    The state of the souls of people who died before the general resurrection is not the same. Thus, the souls of the righteous are in purpose eternal bliss, and the souls of sinners - in the forerunner of eternal torment. This state of the souls of the dead is determined at a private judgment, which takes place after the death of each person. This is clearly seen from the parable of the Lord Jesus Christ about the rich man and Lazarus (). The apostle Paul also points to this when he says: “I have a desire to be resolved (to die) and be with Christ, because this is incomparably better” (Philipp. 1, 23).

    Death is of great importance in the life of every person, it is the limit by which the time of exploits ends and the time of retribution begins. But since a private judgment is not final, the souls of sinful people who died with faith in Christ and repentance can receive relief in the sufferings of the afterlife and even completely get rid of them through the prayers of the Church, and also through the good deeds performed for them by the living, and especially through the offering for them of the bloodless sacrifice of the Body and Blood of Christ. For this purpose, the commemoration of the dead has been established in the Orthodox Church, which has always been performed from the very times of the apostles. This is evident from the first Christian liturgy of St. app. James: in it, the commemoration of the dead is one of its main parts.

    St. Apostle John says: “ If anyone sees his brother sinning in sin not unto death, let him pray and give him life." ().

    The Holy Apostle Paul, in a letter to Bishop Timothy, writes: “And so, first of all, I ask you to make prayers, petitions, intercessions, thanksgiving for all people, for kings and for all those in authority, in order to lead us a quiet and serene life in all piety and purity. for this is good and pleasing to our Savior God, who wants all people to be saved and come to the knowledge of the truth” (Tim. 2:1-4).

    St. Apostle James says: “Confess your deeds to each other and pray for each other in order to be healed; much can strengthened the righteous "().

    If one must pray for the living, then it is necessary to pray for the dead, because God does not have the dead: with God all are alive. The Lord Himself said: God is not the dead, but the living, for with Him all are alive" ().

    The Holy Apostle Paul wrote to Christians: “But if we live, we live for the Lord, if we die, we die for the Lord, and therefore whether we live or die, we are always the Lord's" ().

    Even in the Old Testament, it was performed for the dead. So, for example, the prophet Baruch prayed for the dead, saying: “Lord Almighty, God of Israel! hear the prayer of the dead Israel and their sons who have sinned against you ... Do not remember the iniquities of our fathers "().

    Judas Maccabee prayed and offered sacrifice for the dead soldiers ().

    The doctrine of commemoration of the dead is based both on Holy Scripture, and especially on Holy Tradition.

    Discourse on the General Resurrection of the Dead

    The truth of the general resurrection of the dead is clearly and definitely revealed in Holy Scripture. It also follows from the basic forces of our immortal spirit and from the concept of an eternal, omnipotent and all-righteous God.

    Also in Old Testament, on the basis of Divine Revelation, the righteous had faith in the general resurrection of the dead (; Isaiah 26, 19; Ezekiel 37; Daniel 12, 2; 2 Mac. 7 and others).

    And in general, all the Old Testament righteous considered themselves aliens on earth and were looking for the Heavenly Fatherland ().

    Through the prophet Hosea The Lord said: “From the power of hell I will redeem them; from death I will deliver them: Death! where is your pity? Hell! where is your victory? I will have no repentance for that ().

    When the Savior speaks about the purpose of His coming to earth, he points precisely to eternal life: “He so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish, but have eternal life" ().

    During His stay on earth, the Savior raised the dead and Himself rose from the tomb, having become, according to the word of St. Paul firstborn from the dead ().

    Apostles put the truth of the resurrection of the dead is beyond doubt and proved it by yourself close connection with the resurrection of Christ and with all the preaching of the gospel: If Christ is preached that He rose from the dead, then how do some of you say that there is no resurrection of the dead? If there is no resurrection of the dead, then Christ has not risen; and if Christ has not risen, then our preaching is vain, and your faith is also vain... And if in this life alone we hope in Christ, then we are more unfortunate than all men.But Christ is risen from the dead, the firstborn from the dead" ().

    Moreover, app. Paul points to phenomena in visible nature that convince us of the truth of the resurrection. “Someone will say: how will the dead be raised? And in what body will they come? Reckless! What you sow will not come to life unless it dies. And when you sow, you sow not the body of the future, but a bare seed, whatever happens, wheat, or whatever; but he gives him a body as he wants, and to each seed his own body ... So it is with the resurrection of the dead: it is sown in corruption, it rises in incorruption; sown in humiliation, raised in glory; it is sown in weakness, it is raised in strength; a spiritual body is sown, a spiritual body is raised "().

    The Lord Himself says: If a grain of wheat, falling into the ground, does not die, then one remains; and if he dies, he will bear much fruit" ().

    Yes, visible nature itself presents us with a marvelous genuine phenomenon.

    Grain thrown into the ground rots, collapses, smolders; - and what? Is that how it ends? No way! From there it vegetates, an ear grows with new grains, in everything similar to the decayed one. Isn't this a miracle worthy of all our attention? Is this not clear evidence that Does the wise Creator lay the beginning of life in death itself and create a new being on destruction?

    So, the mystery of the resurrection of the dead is always before our eyes. It apparently appears to us in nature and confirms our faith, and exposes our lack of faith.

    But despite this, the question may arise in our mind: “how can the dead be raised when the bodies of the dead turn to dust and are destroyed”?

    Let us also admit this, although in essence this does not happen. How will the dead be raised? Just as exactly as they began to live now.

    [Greek ἀνάστασις (τῶν) νεκρῶν], the renewal of life in the body after death.

    The idea of ​​V. m. in the ancient world

    Some myths and religions. the practices of various ancient cultures contain the idea of ​​resuming bodily life after death. These include primarily the so-called. myths about dying and resurrecting gods, such as ancient egypt. the myth of Osiris and myths similar to it about the death and awakening to a new life of Adonis, Attis, Dionysus, Baal, Dumuzi, etc. The mythology of all these deities contains a common plot, according to which they lose their divine dignity for a while, undergoing death in the fight against the forces of evil, either at the hands of the mother goddess angry with them, or their divine partner. Then, through the efforts of Ph.D. their divine relative who found and revived their body, they return to life again, defeat the enemy and restore their former status. The content of these myths, as a rule, was reflected in the festivities held periodically in honor of the deities - their main characters. The news of such traditions was comprehensively analyzed by J. Frazer, who interpreted them as agricultural fertility cults, based on the agricultural (plant) cycle. However, in present The time of such generalizations is recognized as generally problematic, primarily because of the fragmentary nature of the available sources, which, in particular, does not allow in some cases to accurately establish the frequency of repetition of these festivities.

    Belief in the victory over death won by a deity, as a rule, had no consequences for ideas about the posthumous fate of an individual. The exception is the myth of Osiris, whose fate was for the Egyptians the basis of hope for their own resurrection (Baj. 1996, p. 49-50; aka. 1997, p. 39-40). However, due to the absence in ancient Egypt. texts of instructions on k.-l. eschatology and the difficulties associated with the interpretation of the anthropological ideas reflected in them, it remains unclear whether the “resurrection” of God and the V. m. associated with it was considered as a return to the world of the living, or only as a continuation of being in the world of the dead. "Resurrected", Osiris does not return to earth, but becomes the lord of the afterlife, and the soul and spirit of the righteous after his death "leave the body and live with the blessed and the gods in heaven, but the physical body does not really come to life and never leaves the tomb" ( Budge, 1996, p. 120). V. m. in ancient Egypt. texts, it is conceived as the acquisition by the soul of a person (more precisely, by the soul of his spirit - the ancient Egyptian “khu”) of a new spiritual body (sahu), which differed from the earthly body (khat). At the same time, the proper burial and preservation of khats with the performance of all the necessary prayers and rituals ensured the development and existence of sahu. Soon after the death of everyone, the judgment of the gods awaits, after which the justified one finds happiness and bliss in the kingdom of Osiris, and the one found guilty is immediately given to be eaten by the Eater of the Dead - the monster Amamat. According to some researchers (Baj. 1997, pp. 41-45), there are grounds for assuming the belief of the Egyptians in the universal V. m. texts are not available.

    According to Vedic beliefs, the deceased, buried in compliance with all the necessary rituals, acquires a new, glorified body (Rig Veda X 15. 14); the earthly body and its mental functions disintegrate into the original elements (Rigveda X 16.3). At the same time, since ind. beliefs know neither the end of the world nor the universal V. m., the gathering and restoration of each individual, performed in heaven, begins immediately after his death. The carrier of individuality at this time is the other "I" of the deceased, his essence, form or personality. The heavenly body, unlike the earthly one, has complete freedom from all kinds of sins and mistakes. According to some ideas, the remains of the deceased after burning are connected with this glorified celestial body, according to others, the celestial body is in no way connected with the earthly one.

    In Dr. In China, overcoming death became the central idea of ​​Taoism, within which a detailed doctrine of immortality was developed. According to this doctrine, the extension of life in the body is possible through the unity of a person with Tao - the ontological fundamental principle of being and the law of everything that exists. Immortality can be achieved by one who, having set himself this task, follows a system of prescriptions, including strict regulation of nutrition and sexual relations, respiratory and physical gymnastics, a moral code and the practice of contemplation. According to Taoist teachings, in a person who consistently and correctly fulfills all the necessary prescriptions, an “immortal embryo” (xian tai) develops, which carries the basis of eternal life. In the Middle Ages In Taoist treatises, the quality of the "embryo" determines the gradation of the immortals into 3 ranks: "heavenly immortals" (tian xian) - ascended to heaven as god-like beings; "earthly immortals" (di xian) - living in special places on earth; “immortals freed from a corpse” (shi jie xian) - those who resurrected after death (cf .: Torchinov. S. 65-83).

    Evidence of the faith of the ancient Iranians in V. m. is contained in the texts of the Avesta (Yasht 19.11), the epic Bundahishn (30) and the Apocalypse Zatspram (34). According to the Bundahishna, all the dead - both righteous and sinful - will be resurrected at the end of time. Saoshyant (Soshyans) and his assistants: first the first man Gayomard and the first couple Mashya and Mashyan, then all the rest. The resurrection process should take 57 years. To Zoroaster's question about the participation of those whose bodies were “carried away by the wind and carried away by the water”, Ahura Mazda (the supreme deity of Zoroastrianism) answers that decomposed bodies are easier to restore than to create again from nothing. The resurrected will retain their lifetime appearance, so that they can be recognized by their relatives and friends. They will receive the drink of immortality prepared by Saoshyant and his assistants and become "immortal forever and ever." V. m. will be followed by judgment and the distribution of rewards or retribution to all people "in accordance with their deeds." The proximity of the doctrine of V. m., contained in the Zoroastrian texts, to the biblical one gives reason to some researchers to assume its influence on the formation of the eschatology of Judaism, Christianity and Islam (Beuys. Zoroastrians. P. 40).

    In Islamic teaching, the “day of resurrection” (yawum al-qiyama) should immediately precede the Last Judgment (Sura 23.16), after which the righteous will go to heaven, and the sinners to hell. Belief in bodily V. m. is recognized as one of the criteria for orthodoxy.

    Lit.: Brückner M . Der sterbende und auferstehende Gottheiland. Tube., 1908; Baudissin W. G. Adonis und Esmun: Eine Untersuch. z. Geschichte d. Glaubens an Auferstehungsgötter u. an Heilgötter. Lpz., 1911; Kees H. Totenglauben und Jenseitsvorstellungen der alten Ägypter. Lpz., 1926; Noetscher F. Altorientalischer und alttestamentlicher Auferstehungsglaube. Würzburg, 1928; Thausing G. Der Auferstehungsgedanke in ägyptischen religiosen Texten. Lpz., 1943; idem. Betrachtungen zur altägyptischen Auferstehung // Kairos. 1965. Bd. 7. S. 187-194; Edsman C. M. The Body and Eternal Life. Stockholm, 1946; Cumont F. The Oriental Religions in Roman Paganism. N.Y., 1956; Schmidt W. H. Baals Tod und Auferstehung // ZRG. 1963. Bd. 5. S. 1-13; Konig F . Der Glaube an die Auferstehung der Toten in den Gathas // FS V. Christian. W., 1965. S. 69-73; Potscher W. Die Auferstehung in der klassischen Antike // Kairos. 1965. Bd. 7. S. 208-215; Mayer R. Der Auferstehungsglaube in der iranischen Religion // Ibid. S. 194-207; Otto E. Osiris und Amun: Kult und heilige Stätten. Munch., 1966; Lipinskaya Ya ., Marcinyak M . Mythology of Ancient Egypt: Per. from Polish. M., 1983; Frazier D. D . Golden Bough: Research. magic and religion: Per. from English. M., 1983; Boys M . Zoroastrians: Beliefs and Practices: Per. from English. SPb., 1994; Budge E. U . Egyptian religion. Egyptian magic: Per. from English. M., 1996; he is. The Journey of the Soul in the Realm of the Dead: The Egyptian Book of the Dead. M., 1997; Cancer I. V . Myths of the Ancient and Early Middle Ages. Iran. SPb., 1998; Torchinov E. A . Taoism: The Experience of the Historical Religion. descriptions. SPb., 1998; Vasiliev L . WITH . Cults, religions, traditions in China. M., 2001; Clement K. The life of the dead in the religions of mankind / Per. with him. A. E. Makhova. M., 2002.

    E.P.B.

    V. m. in the Old Testament

    The Old Testament idea of ​​V. m. is based on the fact that God is the only master of life and death. He “deaths and makes alive, brings down to hell and raises up” (1 Samuel 2:6; cf.: Deut 32:39); He "delivers from the grave" (Ps 102:4). Thanks to Him, man can escape hell and corruption (Ps 15:10). The world around is also in His power. Myths about dying and resurrecting gods, to-rye natural cults Dr. The East was created on the basis of observations of the spring revival of life, were alien to the Israeli people. For him, the rebirth of nature, whether it occurs in the spring or at the time of the universal tempest (Ps 103:29-30), is accomplished under the influence of the life-giving Spirit of God. Yahweh can bring back to life an entire people who have realized their unfaithfulness to God, which led them to spiritual decay (Hos 6:1-2), which is exactly what happens after the Babylonian captivity, when captive Israel returns to life, like withered bones, resurrected “by the word of the Lord” (Ezekiel 37:1-14). The Lord of life will raise up Jerusalem from the dust (Is 52:1-2), revive the "dead" whom the earth will "spew out" and resurrect the "dead bodies" (Is 26:19-20). These metaphorical images, addressed primarily to the history of the Israeli people, at the same time have an eschatological perspective. They express absolute confidence in the victory over death, the “last enemy” of mankind (1 Cor 15:26): “From the power of hell I will redeem them, from death I will deliver them. Death! Where is your pity? Hell! Where is your victory? (Hos 13:14).

    Along with the prophecies about V. m., implying the whole people of God, the Old Testament revelation contains prophecies about the individual resurrection. In this regard, of particular interest is the biblical story about the “lad Yahweh”, in which the Old Testament tradition saw the image of a righteous man who suffered, like Job, undeservedly, died and was buried “with the evildoers”, however, later. returned to life and became an “intercessor” “for transgressors” (Is 53). This image had propaedeutic significance. With his help, the people of God gradually came to the idea of ​​sacrificial suffering, which could have a redemptive character. In the New Testament tradition, the “lad Yahweh” is always associated with the Messiah, whose suffering, death and return to life are given great attention in the Book of the Prophet Isaiah. There is no direct mention of the resurrection in the Masoretic text of the book. However, according to Qumran. version, the words of the prophet “He will look with contentment on the feat of His soul” (Is 53.11), referring to the “lad Yahweh”, can be read: “After the suffering of His soul, He will be satisfied with the light” (1QIsab: ; compare: LXX: ἀπὸ τοῦ πόνου τῆς ψυχῆς αὐτοῦ, δεῖξαι αὐτῷ φῶς) - and in the context of this narrative can be interpreted as a prophecy about V. m.

    Prop. Daniel announces not only the awakening from the sleep of death, but also the reward of the righteous and sinners. “Many of those sleeping in the dust of the earth,” he describes his revelation, “will awaken, some to eternal life, others to eternal reproach and shame” (Dan 12.2). The martyrdom engendered by the persecution of Tsar Antiochus IV Epiphanes reveals that faith in V. m. lives among the common people. 7 brothers, together with their mother, courageously go to death for the "father's laws", having an unshakable confidence that "the King of the world will resurrect (them. - M. I.) ... for eternal life" (2 Macc 7; 9. 11, 22). For the tormentors, “there will be no resurrection into life” (2 Macc 7:14), that is, not a resurrection in general, but a “resurrection of life,” instead of which a “resurrection of condemnation” awaits them (Jn 5:29). According to some biblical commentators (Blessed Jerome of Stridon, St. Epiphanius of Cyprus), faith in V. m. expresses rights. Job (19.25-26), but St. John Chrysostom expresses a different opinion (cf. Ioan. Chrysost. In Ep. 1 ad Cor. 38.3).

    In a hidden form, the idea of ​​V. m. is also contained in other places of the Old Testament Scripture. This was pointed out by Jesus Christ, who denounced the Sadducees: “And about the resurrection of the dead, have you not read what God said to you: “I am the God of Abraham, and the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob? God is not the God of the dead, but of the living” (Mt 22:31-32; Mk 12:26-27); app. Paul, noting the power of Abraham's faith: "By faith Abraham, being tempted, offered Isaac as a sacrifice... for he thought that God was able to raise him from the dead, and therefore he received him as a sign" (Heb 11:17-19); app. Peter, who saw in Ps 15:10 an indication of the resurrection of Jesus Christ (Acts 2:27-31).

    Patristic exegesis finds in the OT the prototypes of bud. V. m .: in the salvation of Noah in the ark (Genesis 7. 23), in the deliverance of the Israelites from the persecution of the pharaoh when crossing the Red Sea (Ex. 14), in the salvation of the prophets. Jonah from the whale, in the belly of which the prophet spent “three days and three nights” (Jonah 2. 1-11), in the miraculous deliverance of 3 Jewish men thrown by Nebuchadnezzar “into a fiery furnace” (Dan 3. 12-28 ), in the taking of the prophet. Elijah to heaven (2 Kings 2.11), etc.

    Along with the idea of ​​universal V. m. and its prototypes, the Old Testament revelation describes cases of individual resurrection of the dead: Prop. Elijah the son of a widow from the city of Sarepta (1 Kings 17:19-23), Prop. Elisha, the son of a resident of the city of Sonama (2 Kings 4. 32-37) and a dead man, whose body, at the unexpected approach of hostile Moabites, was thrown by those who buried in the cave where the prophet was buried. Elisha (2 Kings 13:20-21).

    In glory. translation of the Holy The Scriptures verb "to rise" in the expressions: "For this sake the wicked will not rise for judgment, below the sinner in the council of the righteous" (Ps 1.5); “Let God arise, and his enemies be scattered” (Ps 67.2); “Rise up, O God, judge the earth, for you have inherited it in all the nations” (Ps 81.8) - used incorrectly. In all these cases, the verb was used in the translation of ancient Greek. ἀνίστημι, with the help of which, in turn, 70 interpreters translated Hebrew. (get up, stand) Such a use should not be considered correct, because to describe the bodily return to life after death in Hebrew. and ancient Greek languages ​​that do not have, unlike Slavs. the language of the special verb "to resurrect", the verbs ἀνίστημι and not enough. In such cases, they should be accompanied by explanatory words: “from the dead”, “from the grave”, “from Sheol”, etc., which are not in Ps 1.5; 67.2; 81. 8. The consequences of this transfer were twofold. In one case (Ps 1.5) an error was introduced into the biblical teaching about V. m., according to which everyone will be resurrected and brought to judgment: both the righteous and the “wicked”. In 2 other cases (Ps 67.2; 81.8) glory. the translators ascribed to the Jews an uncharacteristic idea of ​​the resurrection of God (more precisely, the God-man), giving both psalms a messianic meaning. However, despite the admitted inaccuracy, glory. the translation of these verses was not only preserved in the biblical text, but also entered the liturgical heritage of Orthodoxy. Churches.

    V. m. in the New Testament

    A feature of the New Testament gospel about V. m. is that it always traces an inextricable link between the universal V. m. and the resurrection of Jesus Christ. At the same time, the belief that Christ has risen is for the apostles a convincing basis for faith in V. m. “If ... Christ is preached that He has risen from the dead, then how do some of you say that there is no resurrection of the dead? If there is no resurrection of the dead, then Christ has not risen” (1 Cor 15:12-13). Moreover, this faith is strengthened by Christ's testimony of Himself: “I am the resurrection and the life; whoever believes in me, even if he dies, will live” (Jn 11:25). Being the “second Adam” (cf.: 1 Cor 15.45-48), who realized the “capacity for immortality” by “obedience and integrity” (Florovskiy 1998, p. 245), Jesus Christ conquered death, the potential “capacity” to -Roy “by his disobedience revealed and realized” the “first Adam” (Ibid.). Now Christ. life must pass under the sign of the resurrection: “Rise, sleeper, and rise from the dead, and Christ will shine on you” (Eph 5:14). Earthly life, in fact, is already an anticipation of V. m., for “we know that ... we have passed from death into life ...” (1 John 3. 14). Communion to a new life takes place in the sacrament of Baptism, where a Christian, participating in the death of Christ, is buried with Him and, having passed through the burial, resurrects with Him. “We,” writes App. Paul, were buried with Him by baptism into death, so that, just as Christ was raised from the dead by the glory of the Father, so we too may walk in newness of life. For if we are united to Him in the likeness of His death, we must also be united in the likeness of His resurrection” (Rom 6:3-5). Baptismal participation in the death and resurrection of Christ finds its continuation in the subsequent life of a person who must renew the "sinful body" (Rom. 6:6). This can only be done by crucifying the “old man” with Christ (Rom 6:6). “If we have died with Christ, we believe that we shall also live with Him” (Rom 6:8; cf. 1 Tim 2:11). This faith should determine the entire subsequent life of a Christian as a “new” person, born in Christ: “If you have risen with Christ, then look for things above, where Christ sits at the right hand of God the Father. Think about things above, not about things on the earth. For you are dead, and your life is hidden with Christ in God” (Col 3:1-3). To continue this life, the Christian is given the food of immortality, taking which he "will live forever" (Jn 6:58). This food is the Flesh and Blood of Jesus Christ, Who said about it: "He who eats My Flesh and drinks My Blood has eternal life, and I will raise him up at the last day" (Jn 6:54).

    At the resurrection there will be a holistic restoration of personality. However, this restoration is not a return to the previous state in which the person remained before death. To describe it, Paul uses the image of grain thrown into the ground when sowing: this grain is just “bare grain”, and “not a future body” (1 Cor 15.37). “So it is with the resurrection of the dead: it is sown in corruption, it is raised in incorruption; sown in humiliation, raised in glory; it is sown in weakness, it is raised in strength; a natural body is sown, a spiritual body is raised” (1 Cor 15:42-44). Ap. Paul sees here a new way of human existence, the body of which becomes spiritual, incorruptible and immortal (1 Cor 15:35-53). The resurrection for the apostle is at the same time a transfiguration, the moment when the “mortal” (Rom. 8.2) and “lowly body” Christ “transforms so that it will be in conformity with His glorious body” (Philippians 3.21). Man is resurrected for eternity, because death, the “last enemy” of the human race, has been destroyed (1 Cor 15:26). Like Christ, he "dies no more"; over him "death no longer has ... power" (Rom. 6:9). In the transfigured state, there will be no need for a marriage relationship for a person; “in the resurrection they neither marry nor are given in marriage, but are like the angels of God in heaven” (Mt 22:30). The state of people after the general resurrection differs from the state of those whose resurrection cases are described in the Bible. Resurrected by Jesus Christ - right. Lazarus (Jn 11:43-44), son of a widow from the city of Nain (Lk 7:11-15), daughter of the head of the synagogue (Mt 5:35-43), Ap. Peter is right. Tabitha (Acts 9:36-41) returned to the same life they lived before their death. The mortality of their nature was not destroyed by the resurrection, so death awaited them again. At the same time, according to the "secret" of the last times, discovered by St. Paul, people who lived to see the Second Coming of Jesus Christ will not die at all: “I tell you a secret: we will not all die, but we will all be changed suddenly, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trumpet; for the trumpet will sound, and the dead will be raised incorruptible, and we will be changed” (1 Cor 15:51-52). To this secret. Paul again addresses in the 1st Epistle to the Thessalonians: “... we who are alive, who are left until the coming of the Lord, will not forestall the dead, because the Lord Himself will descend from heaven with a shout, with the voice of an archangel, and with the trumpet of God, and the dead in Christ rise before. Then we, the survivors, will be caught up together with them in the clouds to meet the Lord in the air, and so we will always be with the Lord” (1 Thess 4:15-17). Using the images of the Jewish apocalypses, ap. Paul in the quoted epistles describes the moment of the Second Coming of Jesus Christ, during which the dead will be resurrected, and the living will be changed. The consequences of this change will be the same as the consequences of V. m.: those who have changed will become incorruptible and immortal.

    A certain difficulty for understanding is the text of the book. Revelation (20:4-6), which speaks of “the first resurrection,” “the second death,” and the thousand-year reign of the righteous. Throughout the history of Christianity, this text has been understood in different ways and even gave rise to chiliastic aspirations (see Chiliasm), recognizing 2 V. m .: first, the righteous will rise and reign on earth with Christ for a thousand years, and then the resurrection of the rest of the people will come. However, such an interpretation of the text was not accepted by the Church, the patristic tradition of which, as one of the main arguments, opposed the words of Jesus Christ to it: “All who are in the tombs will hear the voice of the Son of God; And those who have done good will go out into the resurrection of life, and those who have done evil into the resurrection of judgment” (Jn 5:28-29). In accordance with this tradition, which recognizes not only bodily but also spiritual death and not only bodily but also spiritual resurrection, St. John Chrysostom remarks: “Death ... we have two kinds; therefore the resurrection must be twofold. We who died a double death are resurrected with a double resurrection. We alone have so far risen from sin, for we were buried with Him in baptism and were raised with Him through baptism. This one resurrection is deliverance from sins; and the second resurrection is the resurrection of the body” (Ioan. Chrysost. Adv. ebr. 4). The Seer, however, apparently speaks of the 1st Vessel, in which there were not the beheaded themselves “for the testimony of Jesus and for the word of God”, but only “the souls of the beheaded” (Rev. 20:4). “The decapitated lived, actually were alive, before the eyes of the seer. On earth they died, but here, in heaven, in a vision, John sees them alive ”(Lopukhin. Explanatory Bible. T. 11. S. 559-600). The bodily V. m., “the righteous and the unrighteous” (Acts 24:15), will be universal; “all that are in the tombs will come out” (Jn 5:28-29). This will happen not because of the potential ability for self-resurrection supposedly inherent in man, but because of the resurrection of Jesus Christ, which opened the way to immortality. Christ is the “firstborn of the dead” (1 Cor 15:20), who laid the “eschatological beginning” (Florovsky 1998, p. 245) of new life and V. m.

    The patristic teaching about V. m.

    The theme of V. m. for St. Fathers and teachers of the Church was so significant that many of them devoted special works to her (Athenagoras; Tertullian; Clement of Alexandria; Origen; St. Methodius, Bishop Patara; St. Ephraim the Syrian, etc.). This theme appears already in the Didache, where the first Christians confess immortality revealed through Jesus Christ (cf.: Didache. 10), and V. m. The latter, according to this monument, will not be universal; its author claims that it will take place, “but not for everyone, but as it is said: the Lord will come and all the saints with Him” (Ibid. 16), apparently believing that only “all the saints” will be resurrected.

    For St. Clement, Ep. Rimsky, the recognition of V. m. is not only a manifestation of faith in a Divine miracle, but also the result of observations of the surrounding world, in which there is a "resurrection that takes place at any time." “Day and night represent the resurrection to us; ... the great power of the Providence of the Lord resurrects the sown seeds in the form of a new crop (Clem. Rom. Ep. I ad Cor. 24); “by means of a bird” (meaning the legendary phoenix bird resurrecting every 500 years) the Lord “reveals” His promise about V. m. (Idem. 25-26). From the words of St. Clement “The Creator of all things will resurrect those who, in the hope of good faith, served Him holy” (Ibidem), it is difficult to conclude whether Rome denied. the bishop of the universal V. m., or in this case spoke only about the “resurrection of life”, without mentioning the “resurrection of condemnation” (Jn 5.29). In 2 Corinthians, attributed to St. Clement, universal V. m. is recognized. “None of you,” the author of the epistle notes, “should say that this flesh will not be judged and will not rise again” (Clem. Rom. Ep. II ad Cor. 9).

    St. Ignatius the God-bearer substantiates his belief in V. m. not only by the fact that Christians, “breaking ... bread”, eat “the medicine of immortality ... protecting from death” (Ign. Eph. 20), but also by the fact that “ the bonds, this spiritual pearl”, which he carries on himself, paradoxically break the bonds of death and lead to V. m. (Ibid. 11), which makes a person free. “I am condemned... (and) still a slave,” writes the Saint of Antioch, going to execution for confessing Jesus Christ. 4).

    Protecting Christ. the doctrine of V. m., the ancient apologists primarily paid attention to the nature of the human soul. The soul was created by God, they pointed out, and as such cannot have natural immortality. “You should not call (her. - M. I.) ... immortal,” says the martyr. Justin the Philosopher, a Christian who met him, - for if she is immortal, then she is without beginning ”(Iust. Martyr. Dial. 5). A Christian argues in terms of Hellenic philosophy, for which the immortality of the soul meant its eternity, uncreation, and even divinity. Only that which has neither beginning nor end is capable of existing infinitely, eternally “pre-existing”. The creationist understanding of the origin of the world was in conflict with the conclusion of pagan philosophy, so Christianity, represented by apologists, abandoned such an understanding of immortality. The soul does not have a source of life in itself, it is not self-sufficient. “By itself,” notes Tatian, “the soul ... is not immortal, Hellenes, but mortal. However, she may not die” (Tat . Contr. graec. 13). Tatian's last remark shows that Christians reject only "Hellenic immortality", that is, immortality by nature, and recognize immortality by grace, bestowed by the Source of life, that is, God. The soul does not have the property of immortality; she, according to schmch. Irenaeus of Lyons, participates in life, which God grants her (Iren . Adv. haer. II 34). The Hellenistic understanding of immortality is so far removed from Christ. teachings about V. m., which are under its influence, according to St. Justin, they cannot even be called Christians. “If,” he writes, “you meet such people who ... do not recognize the resurrection of the dead and think that their souls immediately after death are taken to heaven, then do not consider them Christians” (Iust. Martyr. Dial. 80) . It is generally impossible to talk about the immortality and resurrection of a person, meaning only his soul or only his body. “If neither the one (soul. - M. I.), nor the other (body. - M. I.) separately constitute a person, but only a being consisting of a combination of both is called a person, and God called a person to life and resurrection, then, as the unknown author of the treatise On the Resurrection, attributed to St. Justin, - He called not a part, but the whole, that is, soul and body. For is it not absurd, while the one and the other are connected together in their being, to keep one, and the other not ”(Iust. Martyr. De resurrect. 8). Since God, according to Athenagoras of Athens, gave “independent existence and life” to the whole person, and not “to the nature of the soul in itself (and not) to the nature of the body separately”, then after death a person ceases to exist as a person, “and so he impossible unless he rises" (Athenag. De resurrect. 15).

    The author of the treatise "On the Resurrection" identifies 3 main arguments of the modern. to him opponents of bodily V. m .: 1) it is impossible to either collect or bring back to life the body of a dead person, turned into dust and scattered over the face of the earth; 2) besides, there is no need for this, since this body is just earthly dust, defiled and stained with sins, and it would be unworthy for God to restore it; 3) the doctrine of bodily V. m. contradicts the Gospel, in which the state of the resurrected is described as an angelic state. Consistently refuting these arguments, the author of the treatise, first of all, points to the Divine omnipotence, thanks to which man was created “out of nothing”. At the same time, he denounces his opponents, using even pagan ideas about the "greatness of the power of the gods" (Iust. Martyr. De resurrect. 5). He proves the failure of the 2nd argument by means of the doctrine of creation and redemption. The dignity of the human body is very high, since the latter appears in the Divine creative act and God Himself uses "the dust of the earth" to create it. At the same time, the Creator is likened by the author of the treatise to an artist, the “work” of which, if destroyed, can be restored again from the same substance from which the first “image” was made (Iust. Martyr. De resurrect. 6-9 ). As for the angelic state of the resurrected nature, in which people “neither marry nor are given in marriage” (Mt 22:30), it should not be considered unnatural or unrealizable. In a similar state was Christ Himself and all those who led virgin lives (Iust. Martyr. De resurrect. 3). In the course of a discussion with his opponents, the author of the treatise angrily rejects their ironic remarks: “So if the flesh rises, it will rise the same as it dies: if someone with one eye dies, then one-eyed one will rise; lame to lame... Oh, hearts truly blinded by the eyes! Did they not see that on earth the blind received their sight, the lame walked according to His (Jesus Christ.-M.I.) word? The Savior did all this, firstly, in order to fulfill what was said about Him through the prophets: “The blind see, the deaf hear,” and so on. (Is 35.5); secondly, to make sure that at the resurrection the flesh will rise in its entirety ... ”(Iust. Martyr. De resurrect. 4). The author of the treatise sees one of the reasons for disbelief in V. m. in the fact that his opponents “have not yet seen the resurrected dead” (Iust. Martyr. De resurrect. 18). He tries to dispel this disbelief in the following way: suppose, he reasons, that "we did not exist in the body and someone would tell us that new bodies could be formed from a small drop of human semen." Can we believe it, he asks? Something similar happens with human bodies buried in the ground, "like seeds"; they "are able, by God's command, to rise in due time and put on incorruption" (Ibidem).

    The apologist Tatian opposes his faith in the bodily V. of m. to the faith of the Stoics in the periodic return of the world and man to their original state. For him, there are no obstacles to V. m. Even if the body burns in the fire, or perishes in the depths of the sea, or it is torn to pieces by animals, it is stored "in the treasury of the rich Lord." “King God, when he wants, will restore the essence that is visible to Him alone,” concludes Tatian (Tat. Contr. graec. 6), although he does not explain what the “essence” of a dead body is and how he understands restoring this body to its "previous state".

    As if continuing Tatian's reasoning, Athenagoras of Athens asks a more complex question than Tatian: if the animals that tore a man to pieces and ate him, themselves after. will be eaten by other people, or if there are cases of cannibalism, what will be the resurrected bodies of these people? Athenagoras' answer seems debatable. The apologist believes that the body of a person, directly or through the food of animals that enters the body of another person, is never connected with the latter in a substantial way, is not assimilated and rejected in one way or another (Athenag. De resurrect. 4-7), because the Creator human bodies "are not assigned as food to any animal", and even more so - to man. He "according to the dignity of nature determined the grave only on earth", and not in the organisms of living beings (Ibid. 8). “The bodies of people,” Athenagoras concludes, “can never connect with bodies like them, for which this food is unnatural, although it often passes through their womb due to some terrible misfortune” (Ibidem). The Athenian apologist, as well as the author of the treatise "On the Resurrection", refutes the arguments of those who believed that God could not or would not want to resurrect the bodies of dead people, while emphasizing that man was created for eternity and that death cannot become for her obstacle (Ibid. 2-3, 10, 13). Considering human deeds through the prism of Divine justice, Athenagoras notes that during the life of people, these deeds do not always correspond to adequate retribution. Observations lead him to the conclusion about the need for V. m., universal judgment and subsequent eternal life, in which a person will reap what he sowed in his earthly life (Ibid. 19). Another argument in favor of V. m. for Athenagoras is the unity of the spiritual and bodily nature of man. He talks a lot about how the state and manifestation of a person's body affect his soul, and his spiritual state affects his external behavior (Ibid. 18, 21-23); therefore, it would be unfair to lay the responsibility for the life lived by a person and his actions only on his soul. “If good deeds are rewarded,” Athenagoras writes, “then, obviously, injustice will be done to the body, which participated with the soul in the labors in doing good and does not participate in the reward for good deeds ... When (they) will be judged sin, justice will not be observed in relation to the soul if it alone is punished for those sins that it has committed, moved by the body and carried away by its aspirations or movements. ..” (Ibid. 21). Consequently, the apologist concludes, a person must rise and be judged as a spiritual and bodily being.

    St. Theophilus of Antioch compares a person to a vessel, in which “some kind of flaw” is found; such a vessel is "cast anew or remade". “So it is with a man through death; for he is destroyed in some way, so that at the resurrection he will appear healthy, that is, clean, righteous and immortal ”(Theoph. Antioch. Ad Autol. II 26).

    One should not think, notes Minucius Felix, that the body, after the death of a person, turning "into dust or moisture, into ashes or steam, disappears" without a trace, "God preserves its elements." Continuing this theme, the author of "Octavia" is one of the first in Christ. liter-re touches upon the problem of cremation of human bodies. Christians who believe in the power of God, which preserves the “elements” of these bodies until the universal V. m., are not afraid of “any harm from the burning of the dead.” They oppose cremation for another reason - because they adhere to "the ancient and best custom of burying the dead in the ground" (Min. Fel. Octavius. 34). Minucius Felix, continuing the apologetic tradition, notes that "all nature, to our consolation, inspires the thought of a future resurrection." As for the recognition of the fact of V. m., here he gives amazing evidence that in his time “very many” showed not so much disbelief in the resurrection as unwillingness to personally participate in it, because because of their immoral life “it is more pleasant for them to completely to be destroyed than to be resurrected for torment” (Ibidem).

    Similar cases were known to St. Irenaeus of Lyons. He knew heretics who would not want to be resurrected. However, “although (they) will not, they will rise in the flesh to recognize the power of the One who raises them from the dead. But they will not be counted with the righteous ... ”(Iren. Adv. haer. I 22. 1). In the 2nd book. "Against Heresies" St. Irenaeus shows the failure of the ancient idea of ​​"eternal return", which excludes the possibility of future. bodily V. m. (Ibid. II 14. 4). This possibility is opened up by the second Adam, who headed the human race and made “in Himself the beginnings of the resurrection of man” (Ibid. III 19.3), because the human body does not have the ability for self-resurrection. “Our bodies do not rise according to their own nature, but by the power of God” (Ibid. V 6.2). This force manifests itself as life, which, according to St. Irenaeus, undoubtedly stronger than death: “For if death has killed, then why does not life, by its coming, give life to a person?” (Ibid. V 12.1). An argument in favor of bodily V. m. for St. Irenaeus is also served by the very fact of the bodily resurrection of Jesus Christ. If Christianity treated the human body with contempt and professed, like paganism, only the immortality of the soul, then Christ "would not have risen on the third day, but having died on the Cross, he would have immediately ascended, leaving the body to the earth" (Ibid. V 31.1) . Recognizing the universal V. m., St. Irenaeus, however, believed that it would not be simultaneous. First, the righteous will be resurrected, who will reign on earth with Christ; when this period ends, all the rest will be resurrected (Ibid. V 34.2; 35.1).

    A detailed presentation of the topic under consideration is contained in Tertullian's polemical work "On the Resurrection of the Flesh". Its author does not disregard a single problem associated with V. m., while making a number of conclusions that coincide with the conclusions of previous fathers. During one of the polemical discussions, Tertullian used the evidence widespread in his time in favor of V. m., based on the high dignity of man, created by God Himself. In response, he heard the objection: “And the world is the work of God, and yet“ the image of this world ”, according to the testimony of the apostle,“ passes away ”(cf.: 1 Cor 7.31), and the restoration of the world is not promised" (Tertull. De resurr . 5). "If the universe ... is not restored," then the restoration of man as part of the universe loses all meaning (Ibidem). Tertullian is trying to refute this objection with the help of the doctrine of man, although a part of the universe, but such, to-paradise is not "the same with the whole." The universe is only a "servant" of man; the latter, “as her master, was created by the Lord (a Domino) so that he could be her master (dominus)” (Ibidem). It is hard to say why Tertullian did not use Christ in his refutation. the doctrine of the world in which a person lives. Claiming that "the restoration of peace is not promised," his opponent was wrong. There is such a promise in Christianity. Ap. Paul testifies that "creation itself will be set free from its bondage to corruption into the freedom of the glory of the children of God" (Rom 8:21). Then, according to the book. Revelation, "a new heaven and a new earth" will appear (Rev. 21.1), which, according to the terminology of Tertullian's opponent, will represent the "restored universe." Tertullian's idea of ​​the human body as an "anchor of salvation" worthy of both resurrection and all kinds of glorification is original. The anthropology of Tertullian defines not only a service role for the body: it is in itself “happy and glorious” if it “struggles”, “languishes”, “is exterminated by mortal torments, burning with the desire to die for Christ, just as He died for him”, if according to resurrection "can appear before the face of Christ the Lord" (Tertull. De resurr. 8). This does not contradict the words of ap. Paul: “Flesh and blood cannot inherit the Kingdom of God,” “for with flesh and blood it is not the resurrection that is denied, but the Kingdom of God,” and moreover, with such “flesh and blood” who did not put on Christ during their lifetime (1 Cor 15 50-51). In the treatise, Tertullian also opposes those who understood the expression “to rise from the dead” as an allegory, with the help of which the state of a person who has known God or the truth is described (Tertull. De resurr. 19, 22).

    For the description of V. of m. Hippolytus of Rome resorts mainly to the selection of texts from St. Scriptures relating this event (Hipp. De Christ. et Antichrist. 65-66). “The beginning (ἀπαρχή) of the resurrection of all people” (Ibid. 46) for him is the One “who gives life to all ... Who Himself is resurrection and life” (Hipp . Contr. Noet. 18). The period of posthumous stay of human bodies in the grave of St. Hippolytus considers it as a time of preparation for the V. m. At this time, the bodies are, as it were, in a melting furnace in order to be melted into new bodies (Hipp. De univ. // PG. 10. Col. 800 AC), which will be clean ( καθαρά), transparent (διαυγῆ) and light (λάμποντα) (Hipp . In Dan. 4, 56).

    Clement of Alexandria and Origen bring together the teaching of the Stoics about the world, periodically burned in fire and reborn again, with Christ. the doctrine of V. m. (Clem. Alex. Strom. V 1, 9; Orig. Contra Cels. V 20-21). The sexual distinctions of the resurrected bodies, according to Clement, will disappear; the reward for a holy life “is promised not to a husband or wife, but to a person in general, the reward is where the sexual desires, here (on earth. - M. I.) separating the two human sexes, will disappear” (Clem. Alex. Paed. I 4, 10).

    The position taken by Origen on the issue of V. m. is disputable and ambiguous. Recognizing the factual side of this event and defending it in a polemic with the pagans, he refers to the narratives of the pagan philosophers Plato about Era, who came to life 12 days after his death and told about what he saw in the underworld, and Heraclid "about a lifeless woman" who also returned to life (Orig. Contra Cels. II 16). At the same time, the Alexandrian teacher opposes those in the Holy. Scripture erroneously saw evidence against the resurrection of wicked people (Orig. In Ps. 1).

    Origen's statements about the nature of resurrected bodies are not easily generalized. On the one hand, he admits “that death produces only a change in the body; its substance, of course, continues to exist and, by the will of the Creator, will in due time be restored to life again ”(Orig. De princip. III 6. 5). In another place, he writes: “If it is necessary for us (after the resurrection. - M. I.) to be in bodies (and this, of course, is necessary), then we must not be in other bodies, but precisely in ours” (Ibid. II 10.1). At the same time, Origen comes out with sharp criticism of the supporters of a literal understanding of the Holy. Scriptures that believed that the resurrected bodies would not be "deprived of the ability to eat, drink and do all that is characteristic of flesh and blood", and even marry and bear children (Ibid. II 11. 2). On the other hand, he suggests that, according to Krom, the resurrected bodies must undergo a significant transformation. The need for it will be caused by the fact that these bodies will find themselves in fundamentally new conditions of existence. In earthly life, Origen argues, the bodies fully corresponded to the conditions in which they were. If people had the need to become water creatures, then they would have bodies "peculiar to fish." In the same way, “those who intend to inherit the kingdom of heaven and live in places different from the present must necessarily use spiritual bodies (ἀναγκαῖον χρῆσθαι σώμασι πνευματικοῖς)” (Orig . In Ps. 1 // PG. 12. Col. 1093).

    In the treatise "Against Celsus" Origen calls these bodies "heavenly" (Orig. Contra Cels. VII 32). The substance of these bodies "does not disappear or be destroyed, although it will never be what it was before" (Orig. De resurrect. // PG. 11. Col. 97). To explain how the mortal body is transformed into the resurrected body, Origen resorts to the concept expressed by the Greek. term εἶδος. With this word, it denotes a certain appearance, thanks to which the individual identity of the body is preserved both during life, when a continuous metabolism takes place in the body, constantly changing it, and after death, when the body breaks up into its component parts. Εἶδος is stable in the flow of material exchange taking place in the organism; generated by the life-giving force contained in the human seed (as in any other seed), it remains even after death, so that at the moment of V. m. to manifest its constructive effect. As a result of this action, a body will appear similar to the ethereal bodies of heavenly angels, radiating bright light (ὁποῖά ἐστι τὰ τῶν ἀγγέλων σώματα, αἰθέρια καὶ αὐγ Matοειδὲς φῶ ς - Orig. XVII). At the same time, it will no longer be visible, tangible, and even acquire the ability to “change in accordance with the place in which it will stay” (Orig. De resurrect. // PG. 11. Col. 98).

    The main opponent of Origen in the matter under discussion was the schmch. Methodius of Patara. He criticized both the very concept of eidos and its ability to preserve the individual identity of a person and the continuity of his existence. Origen's attempt to see the "appearance" of the resurrected bodies in Moses and Elijah who appeared on Tabor for schmch. Methodius is unconvincing, because "both Moses and Elijah appeared to the apostles, having no flesh, but only appearance" (Method. Olymp. De resurrect.). In addition, the appearance of these prophets took place before their resurrection and before the resurrection of Jesus Christ, who “transformed” the “lowly body” of man into a “body of glory” (cf. Phil 3:21). Since “the numerical identity of the material composition” (Florovsky . 1998, p. 429) after the resurrection, as Origen believed, is not preserved, “it must follow,” concludes schmch. Methodius, - that the resurrection will consist only (in the resurrection) of one kind ... which will be imprinted in the spiritual body ”(Method. Olymp. De resurrect.). But how, in such a case, can a species be resurrected, rhetorically asks St. Patara, “which never falls away”? (Ibidem). The strongest argument against Origen's views for ssmch. Methodius is the Incarnation and Resurrection of Jesus Christ. That is why Christ became incarnate, "and wore the flesh," in order to save and resurrect her, and not to get rid of her. Explaining the apostolic text "as we bore the image of earth, we will also wear the image of the heavenly" (1 Cor 15.49), schmch. Methodius remarks: “If anyone decides to call the flesh itself in the earthly image, and another spiritual body besides the flesh in the heavenly image, let him think in advance that Christ, the heavenly man ... wore members of the same type, the same image and the same flesh with ours. .. If He did not take on the flesh for the liberation and resurrection of the flesh, then why did He wear flesh in vain, which He did not intend to either save or resurrect? But the Son of God does nothing in vain” (Ibidem).

    St. Basil the Great in his writings repeatedly mentions the V. m. At the same time, he basically generalizes and repeats what was expressed on this topic by the previous fathers of the Church. To the question about the nature of the “resurrection body”, the Cappadocian saint answers: “At the time of the resurrection we will take on the flesh, neither subject to death nor subject to sin” (μήτε ὑπόδικον Θανάτω, μήτε ὑπεύθυνον ἁμαρτία - Basil . 3 ).

    St. Gregory the Theologian, who did not specifically deal with issues of eschatology, writes little about the universal V. m., first of all criticizing the supporters of the doctrine of the transmigration of souls, who denied the universal V. m. Gregory, their teaching is “empty bookish fun”, and his adherents are narrow-minded people, because “they either clothe the soul like a man in clothes, or indecently expose it, bothering themselves in vain, turning the wheel of the wicked Ixion, and force it to be either a beast , then a plant, then a man, then a bird, then a snake, then a dog, then a fish, and sometimes both twice, if the wheel turns like that ”(Greg. Nazianz. Carm. dogm. // PG. 37. Col. 449A) . V. m., according to St. Gregory, will be "instantaneous" (πᾶν τὸ πλάσμα συνάγουσα ἐν βραχεῖ τῷ πλάστῃ - Idem . Or. 40 // PG. 36. Col. 361A); “the last day, by a divine gesture, will gather everyone together from the ends of the earth, even if someone was turned to dust or lost members in illness” / PG. 37. Col. 1A). St. Gregory does not explain how the soul will unite with the body, because, as he notes, this is known only to God, who united and separated them (τρόπον ὃν οἶδεν ὁ ταῦτα συνδήσας καὶ διαλύσας Θεός - Or. PG 3.21 // Col. PG. 25 // Col. 7. 25 .784A).

    The position taken on the issue of V. m. St. Gregory of Nyssa, takes into account all the diversity of views on this issue and is, in the words of Archpriest. George Florovsky, "eschatological synthesis". The main attention in this "synthesis" is drawn to the anastasic views of Origen and his opponent ssmch. Methodius of Olympus. St. Gregory, as Florovsky notes, “is trying to combine both views, to combine the “truth” of Origen with the “truth” of Methodius” (Florovskiy . 1998, pp. 430-431). Like Origen, he uses the concept of eidos, but unlike the Alexandrian teacher, he recognizes the identity of the elements that make up the mortal and resurrected bodies. Otherwise, says St. Gregory, one would have to speak not about the resurrection, but about the creation of a new man. After death, the body is not destroyed, but decomposed. Its destruction would mean turning into nothing, and decomposition is a resolution again to those elements of the world of which it consisted (cf.: Greg . Nyss . Or. catech. 8; idem . Dial. de anima et resurr. // PG 46. ​​Col. 76). Mixing with the elements, the elements of the decomposed body do not “depersonalize”, but carry the signs of their former belonging to the body. A similar phenomenon is also observed during the life of a person, when his “body changes by increase and decrease ... But with any change, a distinctive appearance remains immutable in itself, which does not once and forever lose the signs placed on it by nature, but with all changes in the body showing in itself their own characteristics” (Greg . Nyss . De hom. opif. 27). Something similar can be observed in the surrounding reality. So "the habit of the animal to the house" allows him to return from the herd to his master, and "mercury spilled from the vessel ... divided into small balls, crumbles on the ground, not mixing with anything," due to which it can be easily collected again in vessel. In turn, in the soul, “like an imprint of a seal”, a “distinctive appearance” is preserved, “and after detachment from the body, some signs of our connection remain”, that is, the connection of the soul and body, which took place during the life of a person. Thanks to this, for example, the gospel Lazarus and the rich man recognized each other after their death, although their bodies were buried in a grave (Ibidem). At the moment of V. m., according to the “signs of connection”, the soul recognizes the elements of its body and unites with them. However, this connection will not be a return of a person to his former spiritual-corporeal nature. Then there will be a restoration of man "in the original state" (Wed: μηὲὲὲὲ ἕἕεΣτν ἶἶναι ἀνάστασιν, ἢ ὴν εἰς τὸ ἀρχαῖον τῆς φύσεως ἡμῶν ἀποκατάστασιν - greg. Nyss. Dial. de anima et resurr. // PG. 46 Col. 156); Interpreting the text of Genesis 3. 21, St. Gregory remarks: “We will put off this deadly and vile chiton, imposed on us from the skins of dumb animals (and hearing about the skin, I think to understand the appearance of a dumb nature, in which we put on, having mastered with passion); then everything that was on us from the skin of the dumb, we will overthrow from ourselves when we take off the chiton. And what we perceive from the skin of the dumb is carnal mixing, conception, birth, impurity, nipples, food, eruption, gradual coming to perfect age, maturity of age, old age, illness, death ”(Greg. Nyss. Dial. de anima et resurr. // P. G. 46. Col. 148). Using the traditional the apostolic and patristic image of grain and an ear, the Nyssa saint notes that “the first ear was the first man Adam”, however, later. he, and together with him we were “dried by the heat of vice” and crumbled into separate “bare” grains. However, “the earth, having accepted us, decomposed by death, in the spring of resurrection, will again show this bare grain of the body as an ear of good growth, branching, straight and stretching to heavenly heights ... adorned with incorruption and other divine signs” (Ibid. // PG. 46. Col. 157). To these signs, St. Gregory also refers to "glory", "honor", "strength", while pointing out that the body itself does not possess them; they "belong to the proper nature of God" and were given to man as the bearer of the Divine image in the act of creation (Ibidem).

    Eschatological Conversations of St. John Chrysostom, including his sermons on the Second Coming of Jesus Christ and the universal V. m., are pastoral in nature. The importance of faith in spirituality, according to the saint, can hardly be overestimated: it makes the whole earthly life of a person meaningful in essence; it fills it with “tranquility and peace”, educates a person in a responsible attitude to his deeds performed under the sign of eternity, helps to overcome the feeling of hopelessness generated by the vanity and perishability of the surrounding world. The absence of such faith deprives a person of incentives for a moral lifestyle and for the fight against evil (Ioan. Chrysost. De resurrect. 1; cf.: Idem. In Ep. 1 ad Cor. 17. 3).

    Considerable attention is paid to the question of the nature and condition of resurrected bodies by Blessed. Jerome, leading a debate about V. m. with the Origenists. Although the bodies, as he notes, will be immortal and incorruptible, these are the same bodies that were once buried in graves. They will even retain sexual characteristics, although, like angels, they will not marry (cf. Mt 22.30; Ep. 84.5, 6 // PL. 22. Col. 747-748).

    Similar views are expressed by Blessed. Augustine. Unlike St. Gregory of Nyssa, who saw in the resurrected bodies their “initial state”, he believes in the greater spirituality of these bodies, which will no longer need material food, since the resurrected flesh “will not only be the same as it is now even in the best condition health, but even such as it was in the first people before the fall. Although they would not have died if they had not sinned, nevertheless, as people, they used food, because they did not yet have spiritual, but animated earthly bodies ”(Aug. De civ. Dei. XIII 20). Continuing the thought blzh. Jerome on the Preservation of Resurrected Bodies of Sexual Characteristics, Blessed. Augustine notes that these bodies will only be freed from the "defects" generated by sin. The very difference between the sexes "is not a defect, but nature" (Ibid. XXII 17). As "lack" lust will be overcome, so that sexual characteristics will serve as an occasion not for "copulation and birth", but for the glorification of the "new beauty" of the human body (Ibidem). Concerning the age of the resurrected bodies, Blessed. Augustine made various assumptions. He did not dispute the opinion that the age of the resurrected people would be the same as that of Jesus Christ, nor that all people would be resurrected at the same age at which they died (Ibid. XXII 15-20).

    Theology of V. m.

    is one of the main divisions of Christ. anthropology, which describes a person who acquires a new mode of existence in the resurrection. In the question of the posthumous fate of man, Christ. theology fundamentally differs from the views of those ancient pagan philosophers who taught about the “restoration of everything” (ἀποκατάστασις τῶν πάντων), including man, in the “eternal return”, or “eternal repetition”. Despite the fact that “everything returns in the same image (ἐν ᾧ ἔσμεν σχῆμα)” (Florovsky . 1935, p. 161), in the ancient world, which perceived the body as a “dungeon” of the soul, this postulate did not give rise to any optimistic aspirations. This world, which has always abhorred the human body, dreamed of disincarnation; the mistake was not so much that pagan philosophers looked pessimistically at the body, in the captivity of which the soul is often really located, and it needs to be freed from this captivity. Ap. Paul, who experienced first hand the power of sin that dominates man, also exclaimed bitterly: “I am a poor man! Who will deliver me from this body of death?” (Rom 7:24). The impossibility of changing the body, which was forever doomed to bear the seal of corruption, led to the fact that it could only be abhorred or ashamed. “Why fix this mortal appearance for a long time - and that’s already enough that we now wear it,” Porfiry notes, describing Plotinus’ relationship to the body (Porphyr. Vita Plot. I). Therefore, disincarnation remained the only refuge where one could hide from the “body of death”, since neither the V. m. itself, nor the “resurrection body” found recognition. Ap. Paul, who preached about bodily V. m., for which he was called by the Athenian philosophers "sueslov" (Acts 17.18), contrasted the Hellenic wisdom with the maxim: "We, being in this hut, sigh under a burden, because we do not want to be unburdened, but put on, that the mortal may be swallowed up with life” (2 Corinthians 5:4). In this text, as St. John Chrysostom, ap. Paul “delivers a death blow to those who humiliate the corporeal nature and reproach our flesh. The meaning of his words is as follows. It is not the flesh, as he says so, that we want to lay aside from ourselves, but corruption; not the body, but death. Another is the body and another is death; another is the body, and another is corruption. Neither the body is corruption, nor corruption is the body. True, the body is perishable, but it is not corruption. The body is mortal, but is not death. The body was the work of God, but corruption and death were introduced by sin. So, I want, he says, to remove from me what is alien, not mine. And what is alien is not a body, but corruption and death that have adhered to it” (Ioan. Chrysost. De resurrect. 6).

    The conditions of sinful existence, in which man found himself, made it paradoxical to comprehend the mystery of his life and his resurrection: this mystery is revealed through the mystery of death. At the same time, it should be noted that immortality was not a property of human nature from the very beginning. Man by himself, that is, outside of God, was mortal from the very moment of creation, as a result of which he appeared in the world. “Creature,” writes St. Athanasius I the Great, - brought into the world from non-existence, still exists above the abyss of "nothing", always ready to be overthrown" (Athanas. Alex. De incarn. Verbi. 4-5). Neither "creature" in general, nor man in particular, possessed the natural property of immortality; they were only partakers of the life graciously given by its Only Source. When the connection with this Source was interrupted by sin, then, according to St. Athanasius, "the violation of God's commandment returned people to their natural state (εἰς τὸ κατὰ φύσιν)" (Ibidem), i.e., to a state of mortality. Therefore, the understanding of death as the separation of the soul from the body does not explain its whole mystery; in the true sense, death is the separation of man from God, the Giver of life. “Sin breaks the thread of life,” therefore, one can say about a sinner that he lives a “dead life” (Vasiliadis N. Sacrament of Death: Translated from New Greek Serg. P., 1998. P. 69). Such a life has no prospects: it leads a person into a dead end and gives rise to a feeling of hopelessness. And only thanks to Jesus Christ, who conquered all the anomalies of human existence, the last of which is death (1 Cor 15:26; see Art. Resurrection of Jesus Christ), the reign of death was overcome. And although the latter is still the end of earthly life, it also becomes the beginning of a new human existence. Divine wisdom and power transform the "enemy" of the human race into its benefactor. “The afterlife of man, in the understanding of St. Gregory of Nyssa, there is a path of purification, and in particular, the bodily composition of a person is purified and renewed in this circulation of nature, as if in a kind of melting furnace. And that's why the renewed body will be restored... St. Gregory calls death “beneficial,” and this is a general and constant patristic thought... Death is a tribute to sin, but at the same time healing... God in death, as it were, melts down the vessel of our body” (Florovsky, 1998, p. 432- 433). In Christ, as the Conqueror of death and hell, as the Firstborn of the new creation, there is the greatest paradox of faith: life comes through death, while being trampled on by death itself. Moreover, it is trampled not only in the incarnate Word. The Resurrection of Jesus Christ destroys the absoluteness of death. Therefore, St. John Chrysostom calls death "dormition" (Ioan. Chrysost. In Ep. ad Hebr. 17. 2). The “Last Adam” (1 Cor 15:45) restores the original integrity of creation, violated by the first Adam, and introduces man into a new higher order of being. “After the victory of Christ over death, resurrection became the general law of creation - not only mankind, but also animals, plants, stones, the entire cosmos, because each of us leads it” (Lossky V. Dogmatic Theology. S. 288). Only thanks to the resurrection of Jesus Christ "the cosmic process, the arrow of which is turned to the victory of being over non-existence, life over death, good over evil ... achieves ... the triumph of its idea" (Tuberovsky A. M. Resurrection of Christ. Serg. P ., 1916, p. 14).

    V. m. will be universal, because the mortality of human nature is overcome in Christ. Moreover, this overcoming, according to Nikolai Cabasilas, did not depend on people, just as their birth does not depend on them. However, the restoration of human nature, which acquired the property of immortality in the resurrection of Jesus Christ, should be distinguished from the restoration of life in God, which is not achieved without personal participation in this process. If the nature and content of life after the resurrection is largely determined by the person himself even before his death and, accordingly, resurrects for life in God or for the "second death" (Rev. 20.6), then "Christ's death and resurrection bring immortality and incorruption to all equally for every man has the same nature as the Man Christ Jesus” (Nicol. Cabas. De vita in Christo. II 86-96).

    At the moment of V. m., human nature will be in a transformed state. The Fathers and Doctors of the Church, describing this state in different ways, in the main expressed what they had in common with St. Paul thought: Christ "will transform our destroyed body so that it will be conformable to His glorious body" (Philippians 3:21). The fathers and teachers of the Church were one in that the resurrected body would be “spiritual,” but in understanding what constitutes a “spiritual body” (cf. 1 Cor 15:37, 44) and a “glory body” (Phil 3 21), there was no complete unity among them. In different ways, they also determined the possibility of preserving the personality of a person, his individual existence from the moment of the collapse of human nature caused by death, until the moment of V. m. However, these discrepancies show the presence of different theological opinions on questions, answers to resurrection. According to Florovsky, these are questions not so much of faith as "how much of a metaphysical interpretation" (Florovskiy 1998, p. 430).

    The mystery of V. m. begins to be revealed already in the Baptism of a person, although in this sacrament a person does not yet become immortal. The grace of Baptism, according to St. Gregory of Nyssa, only “raises to incorruption what is born in corruptible nature” (Greg. Nyss. Or. catech. 33). Baptism is only a “likeness of the resurrection”, only an “imitation” (μίμησις), and not the resurrection itself, which cannot be already because the person has not yet died (Ibid. 35). The “likeness of the resurrection” is preceded by the “likeness of death,” which also occurs in Baptism (Rom. 6:3-5). The Sacrament of Baptism is gracious and effective, it truly is a “rebirth” (ἀναγέννησις), but at the same time, according to St. Gregory of Nyssa, only the beginning (ἀρχή); bud. V. m. has in it only its "embryos" (Greg. Nyss. Or. сatech. 35). Spiritually born in Baptism, a Christian must live in cooperation with Christ, have the same “feelings” with Him (Phil 2:5), suffer with Him “in order to be glorified with Him” (Rom 8:17). Otherwise, that is, when “we ... - as St. Ignatius the God-bearer - are not ready to die voluntarily in the image of His suffering, His life is not in us ”(Ignatius Ep. ad Magn. 5), and the grace of Baptism ceases to work in us. “This is not only an ascetic or moral instruction, or just a threat. This is the ontological law of spiritual life, the law of being itself. ...The return of health to a person acquires meaning exclusively in communion with God and life in Christ. For those who are in hopeless darkness, for ... those who have cut themselves off from God, even the resurrection itself must seem groundless and superfluous” (Florovsky 1998, p. 247).

    The problem of universal V. m. in Russian religious philosophy

    Much attention was paid to this problem by Rev. Sergei Bulgakov, who comprehensively covered all the main provisions of the anastasic doctrine. His views are based on the doctrine of the resurrection of Jesus Christ. Since, according to his opinion, “The God-man is all-man,” then His resurrection “ontologically is universal”, it “includes, although it is carried out only on the last day, in the Parousia of Christ” (Bulgakov. Bride of the Lamb. Ch 3, p. 456). Objecting to N. F. Fedorov, Bulgakov emphasized that the universal V. m. is a transcendent, and not an immanent action of God in the world and, as such, is not the result of “and the achievement of cosmic and historical evolution.” By virtue of its transcendence, it turns out to be "outside of earthly time or above it." The “future century” is the “new time”, which just begins with V. m. (Ibid., p. 458). The problem of individual resurrection is solved by Bulgakov through the prism of his doctrine of the “soul of the world”, developed on the basis of his recognition of the cosmos as a “living” and “animate” whole, which is a body (Bulgakov S. Philosophy of Economics. M., 1912. Ch 1: The World as an Economy, pp. 80, 125). Therefore, "the resurrection of the dead is accomplished by God's action precisely in the soul of the world." God resurrects not only the “separate human soul”, but also the entire “whole Adam” (Bulgakov, The Bride of the Lamb, Part 3, p. 466). This does not mean that the “qualitative diversity” of people and the unique individuality of each person are destroyed in the process of V. m. “There are individual differences in the creature already at creation, they have their imprint in the whole, in the soul of the world. And these differences are fully realized at the resurrection” (Ibid., p. 467). As for the state of the resurrected body, Bulgakov did not recognize its “exact physical correspondence” to the human body before his death, since the latter experiences “empirical states” that are peculiar to him only “in this world of sin and death.” In the resurrection, a new body will arise, in which the “ideal, intelligible image of a person as a person” will be reflected (Ibid., p. 467). Thinking like St. Gregory of Nyssa, about “signs of connection”, thanks to which the soul is connected to the body at the moment of V. m., prot. Sergius tried to clarify the "general thought" "about the individual particles of the body, especially marked by the seal (σφραγίς) of the spirit living in it." In his opinion, this idea "refers not so much to the fluid matter of the body, but to the individual form, to the connection of the soul with the world's corporeal substance, the body of bodies." The concept of "the body of bodies" corresponds to the idea contained in his "Philosophy of Economics", according to which the whole universe is "the peripheral body of man." Bulgakov allowed the recognition of the existence "in the universe of a deliberate seed" atom "belonging" to the body of every person. With the help of such an atom, it is precisely “the crystallization of corporality takes place”, however, it itself is rather not a material particle, but “so to speak, an energy center that finds a place for itself in the universe and forms a mediation between the soul and the body as a world substance”. The "energy center" is located in the soul and as such is characterized by immortality. “And it is precisely to this center that the action of the soul is applied, in the resurrection acquiring new strength in itself to recreate the body and to restore the connection of the soul, and through it the spirit with the world, in which the resurrection actually consists” (Ibid., p. 469). The Transformed State of the Resurrected Man Fr. S. Bulgakov considered within the framework of the sophiological concept developed by him, since this state reveals the beauty of the created world. "The natural (same) beauty of creation and in it a person (and) is, - as he believed, - his Sophian prototype, created Sophia." Although “the whole fullness of creation” is involved in this prototype, “creature sophia”, like all creation, “is in the process of formation”. It was not finally revealed in man before the fall; in the sinner, however, this Sophianity is "only in a darkened form." Only thanks to the Incarnation of God "the Sophian prototype of every person" becomes "transparent and obvious." As for the resurrection, according to Bulgakov, it is "the final identification of man through the manifestation in him of his prototype." However, this does not end with the peculiar philosophical and anthropological concept of Prot. Sergius, the rationale for which he unsuccessfully sought in Christ. theology. Christ. the thinker goes further and elevates the "sophiion" of man to a higher metaphysical level. As the "accomplishment of creation," for him it becomes the manifestation of Divine Sophia. “In the resurrection,” concluded Fr. Sergius, - a person appears in the light of the Divine Sophia, in that Sophia, by the power of which and for the sake of which he was created. This sophia in resurrection is, as it were, a new, second act of the creation of man, “in incorruption, power and glory” (Ibid., pp. 477-478).

    Anastasic views of Vl. S. Solovyov find their basis in the philosopher's peculiar understanding of the nature of evil and progress. Solovyov was characterized, according to the fair remark of Florovsky, “a strange insensitivity of evil, until the very last years of his life ... Evil, in the perception of Solovyov, is only discord, disorder, chaos ... In other words, the disorganization of being ... Therefore, overcoming evil comes down to re-organization or simply organization of the world ... And this is already done by the power of the most natural development ”(Florovsky. Ways of Russian Theology. P. 314). Moreover, such a state of being is not only the result of the appearance of sin in the world, which in turn caused death and decay. Solovyov called “dead” already the primordial matter itself, from which the Creator creates the Universe, and he sees the struggle between life and death at all stages of the appearance of this Universe. “The continuous war between them - between the living spirit and dead matter - forms, in essence, the entire history of the universe ... What a great victory of life, apparently, was when, among the inert inorganic matter, myriads of living beings, the primary rudiments of vegetable and the animal kingdom. Living force takes possession of dead elements... But death only laughs at all this splendor... It knows that the beauty of nature is only a motley, bright cover on a continuously decomposing corpse...” (Sobr. soch. St. Petersburg, 19112. Vol. 10. p. 34). Since death, according to Solovyov, has always existed, then overcoming it is not only and not so much a process of fighting sin, but a process of the “natural development” of the world. This process is irreversible; it bears, in the words of Florovsky, "the character of natural necessity" (Florovskiy, Ways of Russian Theology, p. 315). Therefore, Solovyov firmly believed in progress and always remained a supporter of the evolutionary theory of the development of the world. He did not seem to notice the worldwide catastrophe generated by sin. For him, even the idea of ​​V. m. was quite “natural” (Letters. St. Petersburg, 1911, vol. 3, pp. 39-40). “If by miracle,” he wrote, “to understand a fact that contradicts the general course of things and therefore impossible, then the resurrection is the direct opposite of a miracle - this is a fact absolutely necessary in the general course of things; if by miracle we mean a fact that happened for the first time, unprecedented, then the resurrection of the “first-born from the dead” is, of course, a miracle - exactly the same as the appearance of the first organic cell among the inorganic world or the appearance ... of the first man among the orangutans ”(Ibid. ). Therefore, the theological problem of V. m. becomes a natural science problem for Solovyov, which brings him closer to Fedorov in this matter, although Solovyov did not adhere to the idea of ​​self-resurrection developed by Fedorov. The world, according to Solovyov, moves towards V. m. in a natural way. On this path there is a constant struggle (continuous war) between life and death. It covers the entire history of the universe and extends to the entire history of mankind, while being divided into several. stages. At the 1st stage, the “organization of visible nature” takes place, as a result of which only a partial victory of life over death is achieved. The struggle between them “enters a new phase” at the 2nd stage, which begins with the appearance in the world of a “reasonable being”, that is, a person who possesses not only “physical strength”, inevitably defeated by death, but also “strength mental”, and most importantly - “moral strength”, the infinity of which “gives life absolute fullness” (Ibid., vol. 10, p. 36). However, this fullness is realized only at the 3rd stage in the person of the God-Man, who possessed absolute “spiritual power”, with the help of which He defeated death. The Resurrection of Jesus Christ ends the 1st half of the historical process and begins the 2nd - the history of Christianity - during which the full revelation of the Kingdom of God and the birth of spiritual humanity should be realized. And the Kingdom of God "is the same as the reality of an unconditional moral order, or, which is the same, the general resurrection and restoration of all (ἀποκατάστασις τῶν πάντων)". Thus, according to Solovyov, the “gathering” of the world takes place in the process of its historical development (Ibid., vol. 8, p. 220).

    The idea of ​​V. m. is the main one in the philosophical heritage of Fedorov. For the philosopher, she is “not only alpha and omega, but also vita and all other letters of the alphabet, in a word, everything. Point out to me, - he addresses his opponent, - from my small notes at least one, which would not speak of the resurrection directly or indirectly, explicitly or covertly ... ”(Fedorov N. F. Philosophy of the common cause. M., 1913 T. 2, p. 44). In an effort to reveal the content of this idea, Fedorov tried, first of all, to establish what led a person to death. He believed that the appearance of death was caused by "a whole series of betrayals", which "mankind committed in its fall." 1st - "treason to the Heavenly Father", in which Fedorov, apparently, saw original sin - was committed "at the beginning". 2nd "consisted in leaving agriculture, i.e., the ashes of their ancestors," for the sake of life in the city; this is “treason to the clan and tribe”, since a person preferred “legal and economic” relations to family and communal relations (Ibid. Verny, 1906, vol. 1, p. 338). “Abandonment of agriculture” and “treason to the clan and tribe” paradoxically led to the fact that “man made himself dependent on fate (that is, on the annual circulation of the earth), subordinated himself to the earth.” At the same time, he also changed the commandments to “be fruitful and multiply” (Genesis 1:28), turning “reproduction ... into an unbridled generative force,” while it should be an “artistic process” of “reproducing oneself in other beings.” Fedorov likened this process to "the birth of the Son from the Father, the procession of the Holy Spirit from Him." As a result of betrayal, a person lost "those conductors" with the help of which he could carry out "transitions of phenomena from one to another" in the world. So “gradual transitions turned into upheavals, thunderstorms, droughts, earthquakes, in a word, the solar system turned into a world, into a variable star with an eleven-year or some other period of various disasters” (Ibid., p. 332). In these "treason" Fedorov saw the manifestation of sin, which reveals the difference between his understanding of sin and Christ. creeds. Although the word "sin" is found quite often in his works, it was about the nature of sin, its essence, origin and manifestation that the philosopher had rather vague and erroneous ideas. Therefore, even in death, about the reasons for which he constantly thought, according to Florovsky, he “did not feel ... the dark sting of sin” (Florovsky, Ways of Russian Theology, p. 323). “The ulcer of the fall” for him is only that “man lost his cosmic power and might” (Ibid., p. 325), as a result of which the “blind” “deadly force” of nature began to dominate the world. It was “in nature, in its unconsciousness” that Fedorov saw the root of evil (Fedorov N. F. Philosophy of the common cause. T. 1. S. 320). “Nature,” he argued, “is our common enemy, one, everywhere and always present, living in us and outside of us” (Ibid., vol. 2, p. 247). Accordingly, the overcoming of evil and victory over death are achieved only "within the limits of nature, by the forces of man and nature" (Florovsky, Ways of Russian Theology, p. 324). Although Fedorov admitted that the beginning of the resurrection was laid by Jesus Christ, bud. V. m. is not a miracle for him. It is a process of natural restoration of the dead, which must be carried out by their descendants living on earth. Fedorov called this process "the resurrection of the fathers" or "patrophication". “The resurrection of the fathers” is a “commandment”, “Divine decree”, which people are obliged to fulfill (Fedorov N. F. Philosophy of the common cause. T. 1. P. 139) in order to carry out the “immanent” resurrection (Ibid. pp. 13, 32) and avoid the resurrection of the “transcendent”, which is possible only if people do not fulfill their destiny. The "transcendental" resurrection, in contrast to the "immanent" one, will be a Divine miracle. However, this miracle will turn out to be only a manifestation of God's wrath towards unfaithful people (Ibid., pp. 486-487).

    Fedorov called "patrophication" a "common cause", in which all living people should participate for the sake of universal V. m. and the transformation of the world around. He does not describe the role of the individual in this matter, since everything personal and individual is usually assessed negatively by him. “Recognizing the personality as the central subject of the philosophy of history,” he noted, “historiosophy provides unification to the action of blind force ... The activity of personalities creates not history, but the comedy of world history” (Ibid., p. 38). This strange conclusion of Fedorov completely follows from his philosophy of the “common cause”: “the individual remains and should be only an organ of the clan” (Florovskiy. Ways of Russian theology. S. 325). Therefore, it is not surprising that Fedorov did not write anything about the spiritual transformation of the individual, about her life in Christ and about her individual resurrection. Before the “general”, everything “personal” either recedes into the background, or, most often, disappears altogether.

    The “common cause” is a two-pronged process consisting of the “regulation” of nature and the overcoming of death. It is aimed at “using the forces of all to turn the unconscious cycle” of the surrounding world “into a conscious, universal resurrection” (Fedorov N. F. Philosophy of the common cause. T. 2. P. 104).

    In the process of regulation, nature must turn "from a blind destructive force into a recreative one." And this will become possible only when, by common efforts, people introduce a reasonable principle into nature and curb its elements. Then “nature in us” will begin not only “to be aware of itself, but also to govern itself” and “it will no longer destroy anything, but in the era of blindness it will restore, resurrect everything that was destroyed” (Ibid., p. 247). Regulation is not limited to our planet. It will turn "the blind movements of the planets and the entire solar system into mind-controlled sons of men" (Ibid., p. 252). The “project” proposed by Fedorov is striking in its fantasticness. In addition to the regulation of nature, it includes the refusal of people from reproduction, because "reproduction causes the mutual extermination of creatures and carried away on the same path, on the path of extermination, and man." According to Fedorov, “the generative force is only a perversion of that force of life that could be used to restore, or resurrect, the life of rational beings” (Ibid. T. 1. P. 345). In order to overcome the “generic force” in oneself, Fedorov recommended learning to manage the “psychophysiological process” and “replacing the birth of children like oneself, one’s fathers and ancestors (atavism) with the return to the fathers of the life received from them” (Ibid., p. 442). For such a return (i.e., the resurrection of the fathers), people must "achieve ... the knowledge and control of all the molecules and atoms of the external world." This will allow them to “gather what is scattered, combine what is decomposed, that is, put it into the bodies of their fathers, which they had at their death ...” (Ibid.). They will be helped in this by the presence of a common "vibration" that exists in the molecules and in the dust of the dead and "in living beings related to the dead." Science should also contribute to the "resurrection of the fathers." Its representatives are entrusted with the duty to "search for the molecules that were part of the creatures that gave them life." In the process of such a search, natural elements are used as tools controlled by the human will (Ibid., vol. 2, pp. 273-274).

    Although the resurrection, according to Fedorov, will occur in earthly life and in a natural way, the philosopher believed that the state of the “resurrected fathers” would not be a repetition of their former state. The universal resurrection for him was "the realization of metaphysical perfection, universal happiness" (Ibid., p. 77). In another place, he wrote: “Resurrection is the fullness of mental, moral and artistic life” (Ibid., p. 207). The opportunity to achieve the transformed state of resurrected people for Fedorov was opened up in the same “common cause”, thanks to which “non-brotherhood” between people would be eliminated. Resurrection will have an impact on the entire system of the universe; it "is the transformation of the universe from chaos, towards which it is heading, into space, i.e., into the splendor of incorruptibility and indestructibility."

    Such is the "project" of the general resurrection, which Fedorov proposed to implement in fact without Divine help. This “project” was called “fantastic” by some (Zenkovsky V., Prot. History of Russian Philosophy. P., 19892. Vol. 2. S. 142), by others - “religious-magical” (Florovsky. 1998. S. 330), the third - "illusory" (Pazilova V.P. Critical analysis of the religious-philosophical teachings of N.F. Fedorov. M., 1985. P. 43).

    V. I. Nesmelov showed great interest in the idea of ​​a universal V. m. In the disclosure of this idea, he was occupied with 2 main questions: what will be the universal V. m. and what will the resurrected body turn out to be. He seeks the answer to the 1st question with the help of the apocalyptic texts of the apostles Peter (2 Peter 3:10) and Paul (1 Cor 15:51; cf.: 1 Thess 4:15, 17). Nesmelov believed that at the moment of the death of the Universe, “in the flames of the world fire”, the people inhabiting it would also die. However, at the same moment, "the spirit of each person ... forms a new body for itself in relation to the conditions of the existence of a new world." This will be possible due to the fact that "Christ will return the power of the creativeness of life" to the human spirit "as the owner of eternal human nature." Therefore, one can speak about the death of people captured by the global fire only in a relative sense: they “actually will not die, but only change,” because they creatively transform their “real” bodies “into new bodies.” As for people who died before the death of the Universe, their souls also “instantly form new bodies for themselves, and they, therefore, will rise from the dead” (V. I. Nesmelov. Science of Man. St. Petersburg, 2000. V. 2. S. 400). Thus, according to Nesmelov, Divine omnipotence, although it will manifest itself in the act of universal V. m., however, not directly, but through the “return” to the soul of a person of creative power, capable of “forming” a new body. Nesmelov understood this process as a repetition of “the same creative process of life by which the living bodies of people are formed in the present period of their earthly existence” (Ibid., p. 408). He believed that the image of grain used by ap. Paul to describe the universal V. m. (1 Cor 15. 35-45).

    Nesmelov's answer to the question of what the resurrected body will be seems to be one of the most successful in Russian. religious philosophy. Since the resurrected body is often called the “same” body with which a person lived on earth, Nesmelov tries to clarify this definition and comes to the conclusion that it does not correspond to the nature of the resurrected body. The body is not “the same” even during a person’s lifetime: while a person “lives, he does not remain unchanged for a single second, because his physical life is accomplished only through physiological metabolism, and as a result, during his earthly life, a person actually can replace several bodily organisms” (Ibid., p. 406). The assumption that the resurrected body will be the same as it was at the time of death is also untenable, because “the bodily composition of a deceased person can enter in parts into the bodily composition of countless other people ... due to the mechanical circulation of physical life” (There same, p. 403). Decaying, the body of a deceased person “may enter into the composition of a plant, and the plant ... into the body of an animal, and the body of an animal ... into the composition of the human body” (Ibid.). As a result, at the time of the general resurrection, on the one hand, “hundreds and thousands of different applicants can appear for the same elements of the bodily organization,” and on the other hand, “owners of other people's property” will appear, Nesmelov noted not without irony. Even Divine omnipotence will not be able to solve such a problem, because “God cannot, of course, deprive one person in order to make up the body of another person” (Ibid.). These considerations led Nesmelov to the following conclusion: the body will be resurrected "regardless of those material elements that during the earthly life of a person were consistently part of his material organism" (Ibid., p. 404). This conclusion, according to Nesmelov, is not contradicted by the fact of the resurrection of Jesus Christ, whose body did not undergo decay and did not mix with the elements of nature, for in this fact the most important thing is that Christ was resurrected, and not that His body did not undergo decomposition. The identity of a person before his death and after his resurrection does not require the "obligatory identity" of his dead and resurrected body, for it "is created exclusively by the unity of his personality" (Ibid., pp. 406-407). Thus, the identity of a person, according to Nesmelov, is provided by his personality, and not by the identity of the various states of his body. If we turn to the concept of "eidos", used by Origen and St. Grigory Nyssa, it can be said that Nesmelov’s personality is precisely the same eidos, with the help of which the identity of a person is achieved before and after V. m., although the identity of the elements that make up the mortal and resurrected body is not for Nesmelov was mandatory.

    Lit .: Vinogradov N . On the final fate of the world and man. M., 1887; Favorsky D., Fr. Christ. dogmas about the immortality of the soul and the resurrection of the dead in connection with the philosophy. the doctrine of the afterlife of man // ViR. 1899. V. 2. Part 1. S. 325-352, 371-388; Bogdashevsky D . AND . The reality of the resurrection of the dead according to St. app. Paul // TKDA. 1902. No. 1. S. 61-98; Strakhov P . WITH . The idea of ​​the resurrection in prechrist. philosophy consciousness // BV. 1913. No. 3. S. 453-479; No. 4, pp. 769-783 (Ibid., revised title: Resurrection. M., 1916); Florovsky G. V . On the death of the godmother // PM. 1930. Issue. 2. S. 148-187; he is. On the Resurrection of the Dead // Relocation of Souls. P., 1935. S. 135-167; he is. Dogma and history. M., 1998; Bulgakov S., prot. Bride of the Lamb. P., 1945. S. 455; Hich J. Death and Eternal Life. L., 1976; Scheffczyk L . Auferstehung. Einsiedeln, 1976; Ratzinger J. Eschatologie: Tod und ewiges Leben. Regensburg, 1990; Tikhomirov E. A . The afterlife, or the last fate of man. SPb., . Serg. P., 1999

    M . WITH . Ivanov