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Foolishness for Christ

Foolishness for Christ (Greek: διά Χριστόν σαλότητα, Church Slavonic: оуродъ, юродъ) refers to behavior such as giving up all one's worldly possessions upon joining an ascetic order or religious life, or deliberately flouting society's conventions to serve a religious purpose—particularly of Christianity. Such individuals have historically been known as both "holy fools" and "blessed fools". The term "fool" connotes what is perceived as feeblemindedness, and "blessed" or "holy" refers to innocence in the eyes of God.[1]

Basil Fool for Christ praying. He did not wear clothing either in summer or winter. Fools for Christ often challenge accepted norms to serve a religious purpose.

The term fools for Christ derives from the writings of Paul the Apostle. Desert Fathers and other saints acted the part of Holy Fools, as have the yurodivy (or iurodstvo) of Eastern Orthodox asceticism. Fools for Christ often employ shocking and unconventional behavior to challenge accepted norms, deliver prophecies, or to mask their piety.[2]

Old Testament edit

Certain prophets of the Old Testament who exhibited signs of strange behaviour are considered by some scholars[3] to be predecessors of "Fools for Christ". The prophet Isaiah walked naked and barefoot for about three years, predicting a forthcoming captivity in Egypt (Isaiah 20:2, 3); the prophet Ezekiel lay before a stone, which symbolized beleaguered Jerusalem, and though God instructed him to eat bread baked on human waste, ultimately he asked to use cow dung instead (Ezekiel 4:9–15); Hosea married a harlot to symbolize the infidelity of Israel before God (Hosea 3).

By the opinion of certain scholars,[4] these prophets were not counted as fools by their contemporaries, as they just carried out separate actions to attract people's attention and to awake their repentance.[4]

New Testament edit

 
A God's Fool Sitting on the Snow, by Vasily Surikov, 1885

According to Christian ideas, "foolishness" included consistent rejection of worldly cares and imitating Christ, who endured mockery and humiliation from the crowd. The spiritual meaning of "foolishness" from the early ages of Christianity was closely related to that of rejection of common social rules of hypocrisy, brutality and quest for power and gains.[4]

By the words of Anthony the Great: "Here comes the time, when people will behave like madmen, and if they see anybody who does not behave like that, they will rebel against him and say: 'You are mad', — because he is not like them."[5]

Paul the Apostle edit

Part of the Biblical basis for it can be seen in the words of the Apostle Paul in 1 Corinthians 4:10, which famously says:

"We are fools for Christ's sake, but ye are wise in Christ; we are weak, but ye are strong; ye are honourable, but we are despised." (KJV).

And also:

"For the wisdom of this world is foolishness in God's sight. As it is written: 'He catches the wise in their craftiness.'" (1 Corinthians 3:19)
"For the message of the cross is foolishness to those who are perishing, but to us who are being saved it is the power of God." (1 Corinthians 1:18)
"For since in the wisdom of God the world through its wisdom did not know him, God was pleased through the foolishness of what was preached to save those who believe." (1 Corinthians 1:21)

Western Christianity edit

 
Benedict Joseph Labre

In Western Christianity there have been several saints who lived lives which were rather eccentric and seemingly foolish. Among the earliest of them is St. Nicholas of Trani a young homeless man who died in 1094 AD. He apparently never stopped repeating the phrase 'Kyrie Eleison' and behaved foolishly.[3] Similarly Blessed Peter of Foligno lived in voluntary poverty and was deemed crazy.[5]

Other notable lay men who led saintly albeit eccentric lifestyles were Blessed Peter of Trevi, Teobaldo Roggeri, Benedict Joseph Labre, St. Salaun of Brittany Ludovico Morbioli and Casimiro Barello among others. The key characteristics of foolishness for Christ in Western Christianity are sleeping rough and homelessness, a minimalistic lifestyle with very few if any possessions and a strict dedication to prayer and self-renunciation.

Some ascetics are known as mendicants and are organised into mendicant orders. The most famous example in the Western church is Francis of Assisi, whose order was known for following the teachings of Christ and walking in his footsteps. Thus, upon joining the order, Franciscans gave away all possessions and focused on preaching in the streets to the common man.

Servant of God, Brother Juniper, an early follower of the Franciscan order, was known for taking the doctrine of the Franciscans to the extreme. Whenever anyone asked for any of his possessions, he freely gave them away, including his clothes. He once even cut off the bells from his altar-cloth and gave them to a poor woman.[6] His fellow Franciscans had to watch him closely, and strictly forbade him from giving away his clothes. While such behaviors were embarrassing to his brothers, he was also recognized as a pure example of the Franciscan order and thus esteemed.

"The Little Flowers of Saint Francis of Assisi",[7] which documents the oral traditions of the Franciscans, told several stories of "Brother Juniper". The most famous of these is the story of how Brother Juniper, when he heard a sick brother request a pig's foot as a meal, Brother Juniper took a kitchen knife and ran into the forest, where he saw a herd of swine feeding. There, he quickly cut the foot off of one of the swine and carried it back to the brother, leaving the swine to die. This angered the herdsman, who complained to Saint Francis. Saint Francis confronted Brother Juniper, who joyfully exclaimed, "It is true, sweet father, that I did cut off the swine's foot. I will tell thee the reason. I went out of charity to visit the brother who is sick." Brother Juniper likewise explained to the angry herdsman who, seeing the "charity, simplicity, and humility" (Hudleston, 1953) in Brother Juniper's heart, forgave him and delivered the rest of the pig to the brothers.

Eastern Christianity edit

 
Basil Fool for Christ (1468-1552), a holy fool to whom Saint Basil's Cathedral in Moscow is dedicated
 
Misha Samuil [ru] (1848-1907), a holy fool from Pereslavl

The Holy Fool or yuródivyy (юродивый) is the Russian version of foolishness for Christ, a peculiar form of Eastern Orthodox asceticism. The yurodivy is a Holy Fool, one who acts intentionally foolish in the eyes of men. The term implies behaviour "which is caused neither by mistake nor by feeble-mindedness, but is deliberate, irritating, even provocative."[8]

In his book Holy Fools in Byzantium and Beyond, Ivanov described "holy fool" as a term for a person who "feigns insanity, pretends to be foolish, or who provokes shock or outrage by his deliberate unruliness."[8] He explained that such conduct qualifies as holy foolery only if the audience believes that the individual is sane, moral, and pious. The Eastern Orthodox Church holds that holy fools voluntarily take up the guise of insanity in order to conceal their perfection from the world, and thus avoid praise.[8]

Some characteristics that were commonly seen in holy fools were going around half-naked, being homeless, speaking in riddles, being believed to be clairvoyant and a prophet, and occasionally being disruptive and challenging to the point of seeming immoral (though always to make a point).

Ivanov argued that, unlike in the past, modern yurodivy are generally aware that they look pathetic in others’ eyes. They strive to pre-empt this contempt through exaggerated self-humiliation, and following such displays they let it be known both that their behaviors were staged and that their purpose was to disguise their superiority over their audience.[8]

Fools for Christ are often given the title of Blessed (блаженный), which does not necessarily mean that the individual is less than a saint, but rather points to the blessings from God that they are believed to have acquired.

 
The Soul of the People. Notice the old man in the background, with his arms stretched to heaven, painting by Mikhail Nesterov

The Eastern Orthodox Church records Isidora Barankis of Egypt (d. 369) among the first Holy Fools. However, the term was not popularized until the coming of Symeon of Emesa, who is considered to be a patron saint of holy fools.[2][9] In Greek, the term for Holy Fool is salos.

The practice was recognised in the hagiography of fifth-century Byzantium, and it was extensively adopted in Muscovite Russia, probably in the 14th century. The madness of the Holy Fool was ambiguous, and could be real or simulated. He (or she) was believed to have been divinely inspired, and was therefore able to say truths which others could not, normally in the form of indirect allusions or parables. He had a particular status in regard to the Tsars, as a figure not subject to earthly control or judgement.

 
Holy Rus, by Mikhail Nesterov

The first reported fool-for-Christ in Russia was St. Procopius (Prokopiy), who came from the lands of the Holy Roman Empire to Novgorod, then moved to Ustyug, pretending to be a fool and leading an ascetic way of life (slept naked on church-porches, prayed throughout the whole night, received food only from poor people). He was abused and beaten, but finally won respect and became venerated after his death.[10]

The Russian Orthodox Church numbers 36 yurodivye among its saints, starting from Procopius of Ustyug, and most prominently Basil Fool for Christ, who gives his name to Saint Basil's Cathedral in Moscow. One of the best-known modern examples in the Russian Church is perhaps St Xenia of Saint Petersburg.

Common phrases or epithets edit

 
A God's Fool, by Pavel Svedomsky

Crazy for God edit

"Crazy for God" is an expression sometimes used in the United States and other English speaking countries to convey a similar idea to "Foolishness for Christ." It has been especially connected to the Unification Church of the United States. In The Way of God's Will, a collection of sayings popular among church members, Unification Church founder Sun Myung Moon is quoted as saying: "We leaders should leave the tradition that we have become crazy for God."[11]

In 1979 Unification Church critic Christopher Edwards titled a memoir about his experiences in the six months he spent as a church member: Crazy for God: The nightmare of cult life.[12]

In 2007, author Frank Schaeffer titled his autobiography Crazy for God: How I Grew Up as One of the Elect, Helped Found the Religious Right, and Lived to Take All (or Almost All) of It Back. It tells of his upbringing as the son of a well-known evangelical minister and his later conversion to the Greek Orthodox Church.[13]

In the same year Stephen Prothero, author and chairman of Boston University's Department of Religion, wrote in the Harvard Divinity Bulletin: "I am crazy for people who are crazy for God: people nearly as inscrutable to me as divinity, who leave wives and children to become forest-dwelling monks in Thailand, who wander naked across the belly of India in search of self-realization, who speak in tongues and take up serpents in Appalachia because the Bible says they can."[14]

Modern theology edit

One of the more recent works in theology is Fools for Christ[15] by Jaroslav Pelikan. Through six essays dealing with various "fools," Pelikan explores the motif of fool-for-Christ in relationship to the problem of understanding the numinous:

The Holy is too great and too terrible when encountered directly for men of normal sanity to be able to contemplate it comfortably. Only those who cannot care for the consequences run the risk of the direct confrontation of the Holy.

The yurodivy in art and literature edit

There are a number of references to the yurodivy holy fools in 19th century Russian literature. The holy fool Nikolka is a character in Pushkin's play Boris Godunov and Mussorgsky's opera based on the play.[16][17] In Pushkin's narrative poem The Bronze Horseman, the character of Evgenii is based in the tradition of the holy fools in his confrontation with the animated statue of Peter the Great.[18]

The yurodivy appears several times in the novels of Dostoevsky. The Idiot explores the ramifications of placing a holy fool (the compassionate and insightful epileptic Prince Myshkin) in a secular world dominated by vanity and desire.[19] According to Joseph Frank "though the gentlemanly and well-educated prince bears no external resemblance to these eccentric figures, he does possess their traditional gift of spiritual insight, which operates instinctively, below any level of conscious awareness or doctrinal commitment."[20] In Demons, the madwoman Marya Lebyadkina displays many of the attributes of the holy fool,[21] as do the characters of Sofya Marmeladova in Crime and Punishment and Lizaveta in The Brothers Karamazov.[22]

Another fool-for-Christ is Grisha in Tolstoy's Childhood. Boyhood. Youth.[10] Callis and Dewey described Grisha as follows:

He was an awesome figure: emaciated, barefoot and in rags, with eyes that "looked right through you" and long, shaggy hair. He always wore chains around his neck...Neighborhood children would sometimes run after him, laughing and calling out his name. Older persons, as a rule, viewed Grisha with respect and a little fear, especially when he suffered one of his periodic seizures and began to shout and rant. At such times adult bystanders would crowd around and listen, for they believed that the Holy Spirit was working through him.[23]

Grisha's abnormal social conduct, seizures, and rants were common behaviors amongst holy fools. The esteem expressed by adults was also common. In his autobiography, Tolstoy expressed such esteem in reaction to overhearing Grisha praying:

“Oh Great Christian Grisha! Your faith was so strong that you felt the nearness of God; your love was so great that words flowed of their own will from your lips, and you did not verify them by reason. And what high praise you gave to the majesty of God, when, not finding any words, you prostrated yourself on the ground.”[23]

A further example is Kasyan in the ninth sketch from Turgenev's Sketches from a Hunter's Album.[24] The protagonist's coachman describes him as "one of those holy men," who lives by himself in the forest, strictly differentiates between eating bread which he calls "God's gift to man" and "tame creatures" on the one hand, and birds "of the free air" and creatures "of the forest and of the field" on the other hand, the latter of which he sees as being sinful.

Film references edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Frith, Uta. (1989) Autism: The Elegant Enigma. Malden, MA: Blackwell Publishing.
  2. ^ a b Parry (1999), p. 233
  3. ^ a b Gorainoff I. Les Fols en Christ... pp. 15–16; Saward J. Dieu a la folie. p. 15.
  4. ^ a b c J.- C. Larchee. Healing of mental illnesses: The experience of first centuries in the Christian East. Translated from French into Russian. Moscow. Publishing House of Sretensky Monastery, 2007. 224 pages.
  5. ^ a b Apophtegmy (Alphavitnoye sobranie). About Avva Anthony. 25 (in Russian: Memorable stories.) p. 427.
  6. ^ Frith, Uta. (1989) Autism: Explaining the Enigma. Malden, MA: Blackwell Publishing.
  7. ^ Hudleston, Dom R. (1953) The Little Flowers of Saint Francis of Assisi", 1st English translation, revised and amended. London: Burns & Oates.
  8. ^ a b c d Ivanov, S. A. (2006) "Holy Fools in Byzantium and Beyond." Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  9. ^ Holy Foolishness, by the Rev. Frank Logue, King of Peace Episcopal Church, Kingsland, Georgia, February 2002
  10. ^ a b "Foolishness-for-Christ, Article on Pravmir Portal". Pravmir.com. Retrieved 2012-01-04.
  11. ^ . Unification.org. Archived from the original on 2011-07-16. Retrieved 2012-01-04.
  12. ^ . Theologytoday.ptsem.edu. Archived from the original on 2012-02-16. Retrieved 2012-01-04.
  13. ^ . Powells.com. 2011-12-05. Archived from the original on 2011-12-05. Retrieved 2012-01-04.
  14. ^ Belief Ubracketed: A Case for the Religion Scholar to Reveal More of Where He or She Is Coming From 2009-02-11 at the Wayback Machine, Harvard Divinity Bulletin, November 6, 2007
  15. ^ Pelikan, Jaroslav (2001-11-07). Fools for Christ - Jaroslav Pelikan - Google Boeken. Wipf and Stock Publishers. ISBN 9781579108021. Retrieved 2014-03-19.
  16. ^ Volkov, Solomon (2007). Shostakovich and Stalin: The Extraordinary Relationship Between the Great ... Knopf Doubleday Publishing. ISBN 9780307427724.
  17. ^ Volkov, Solomon (2010). St Petersburg: A Cultural History. Simon and Schuster. ISBN 9781451603156.
  18. ^ Rosenshiels, Gary (2003). Pushkin and the Genres of Madness: the Masterpieces of 1833. University of Wisconsin Press. p. 112. ISBN 9780299182045.
  19. ^ Grayling, A.C. (2010). The Heart of Things: Applying Philosophy to the 21st century. Hachette UK. ISBN 9780297865643.
  20. ^ Frank, Joseph (2010). Dostoevsky: A Writer in His Time. Princeton University Press. p. 579. ISBN 9780691128191.
  21. ^ Frank, Joseph (2010). Dostoevsky: A Writer in His Time. Princeton University Press. p. 658. ISBN 9780691128191.
  22. ^ "The Way of the Holy Fools". 22 September 2008.
  23. ^ a b Birukoff, Paul & Tolstoy, Leo. (1911) Leo Tolstoy: His Life and Work. New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons.
  24. ^ Turgenev, Ivan Sergeevich (1990). Sketches from a hunter's album. Richard Freeborn (Complete ed.). London, England. ISBN 0-14-044522-6. OCLC 22736825.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)

References edit

  • Parry, Ken; David Melling; Dimitri Brady; Sidney H. Griffith; John F. Healey, eds. (1999). The Blackwell Dictionary of Eastern Christianity. Malden, MA: Blackwell Publishing. ISBN 978-0-631-23203-2.
  • Russia and the Russians, Geoffrey Hosking; ISBN 0-14-029788-X
  • Yurodstvo, by S.Kobets
  • S.A. Ivanov. (in French)
  • Georg Feuerstein. Holy Madness: The Shock Tactics and Radical Teachings of Crazy-Wise Adepts, Holy Fools and Rascal Gurus (Spirituality, Crazy-Wise Teachers, and Enlightenment). Hohm Press, 2006.
  • Marius Kociejowski The Street Philosopher and the Holy Fool: A Syrian Journey Sutton Publishing, Stroud, 2004, contains much on holy folly in both the Christian and Islamic traditions
  • Svitlana Kobets, "From the Tabennisi nunnery to Pussy Riot: female holy fools in Byzantium and Russia," Canadian Slavonic Papers 60, no. 1–2 (2018)

Further reading edit

  • Petzold, H.G. (1968): Gottes heilige Narren. Hochland 2, 1968, 97–109.[ISBN missing]
  • Petzold, H.G. (1977): "Zur Frömmigkeit der heiligen Narren". In: Die Einheit der Kirche. Festschrift für Peter Meinhold, hrsg. v. Lorenz Hein. Franz Steiner Verlag, Wiesbaden, 140–53.[ISBN missing]
  • Ewa M. Thompson, Understanding Russia : the holy fool in Russian culture, Lanham, MD: University Press of America, 1987

External links edit

  • St. Andrew, Fool-for-Christ-sake

foolishness, christ, greek, διά, Χριστόν, σαλότητα, church, slavonic, оуродъ, юродъ, refers, behavior, such, giving, worldly, possessions, upon, joining, ascetic, order, religious, life, deliberately, flouting, society, conventions, serve, religious, purpose, . Foolishness for Christ Greek dia Xriston salothta Church Slavonic ourod yurod refers to behavior such as giving up all one s worldly possessions upon joining an ascetic order or religious life or deliberately flouting society s conventions to serve a religious purpose particularly of Christianity Such individuals have historically been known as both holy fools and blessed fools The term fool connotes what is perceived as feeblemindedness and blessed or holy refers to innocence in the eyes of God 1 Basil Fool for Christ praying He did not wear clothing either in summer or winter Fools for Christ often challenge accepted norms to serve a religious purpose The term fools for Christ derives from the writings of Paul the Apostle Desert Fathers and other saints acted the part of Holy Fools as have the yurodivy or iurodstvo of Eastern Orthodox asceticism Fools for Christ often employ shocking and unconventional behavior to challenge accepted norms deliver prophecies or to mask their piety 2 Contents 1 Old Testament 2 New Testament 2 1 Paul the Apostle 3 Western Christianity 4 Eastern Christianity 5 Common phrases or epithets 5 1 Crazy for God 6 Modern theology 7 The yurodivy in art and literature 7 1 Film references 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksOld Testament editCertain prophets of the Old Testament who exhibited signs of strange behaviour are considered by some scholars 3 to be predecessors of Fools for Christ The prophet Isaiah walked naked and barefoot for about three years predicting a forthcoming captivity in Egypt Isaiah 20 2 3 the prophet Ezekiel lay before a stone which symbolized beleaguered Jerusalem and though God instructed him to eat bread baked on human waste ultimately he asked to use cow dung instead Ezekiel 4 9 15 Hosea married a harlot to symbolize the infidelity of Israel before God Hosea 3 By the opinion of certain scholars 4 these prophets were not counted as fools by their contemporaries as they just carried out separate actions to attract people s attention and to awake their repentance 4 New Testament edit nbsp A God s Fool Sitting on the Snow by Vasily Surikov 1885 According to Christian ideas foolishness included consistent rejection of worldly cares and imitating Christ who endured mockery and humiliation from the crowd The spiritual meaning of foolishness from the early ages of Christianity was closely related to that of rejection of common social rules of hypocrisy brutality and quest for power and gains 4 By the words of Anthony the Great Here comes the time when people will behave like madmen and if they see anybody who does not behave like that they will rebel against him and say You are mad because he is not like them 5 Paul the Apostle edit Part of the Biblical basis for it can be seen in the words of the Apostle Paul in 1 Corinthians 4 10 which famously says We are fools for Christ s sake but ye are wise in Christ we are weak but ye are strong ye are honourable but we are despised KJV And also For the wisdom of this world is foolishness in God s sight As it is written He catches the wise in their craftiness 1 Corinthians 3 19 For the message of the cross is foolishness to those who are perishing but to us who are being saved it is the power of God 1 Corinthians 1 18 For since in the wisdom of God the world through its wisdom did not know him God was pleased through the foolishness of what was preached to save those who believe 1 Corinthians 1 21 Western Christianity edit nbsp Benedict Joseph Labre In Western Christianity there have been several saints who lived lives which were rather eccentric and seemingly foolish Among the earliest of them is St Nicholas of Trani a young homeless man who died in 1094 AD He apparently never stopped repeating the phrase Kyrie Eleison and behaved foolishly 3 Similarly Blessed Peter of Foligno lived in voluntary poverty and was deemed crazy 5 Other notable lay men who led saintly albeit eccentric lifestyles were Blessed Peter of Trevi Teobaldo Roggeri Benedict Joseph Labre St Salaun of Brittany Ludovico Morbioli and Casimiro Barello among others The key characteristics of foolishness for Christ in Western Christianity are sleeping rough and homelessness a minimalistic lifestyle with very few if any possessions and a strict dedication to prayer and self renunciation Some ascetics are known as mendicants and are organised into mendicant orders The most famous example in the Western church is Francis of Assisi whose order was known for following the teachings of Christ and walking in his footsteps Thus upon joining the order Franciscans gave away all possessions and focused on preaching in the streets to the common man Servant of God Brother Juniper an early follower of the Franciscan order was known for taking the doctrine of the Franciscans to the extreme Whenever anyone asked for any of his possessions he freely gave them away including his clothes He once even cut off the bells from his altar cloth and gave them to a poor woman 6 His fellow Franciscans had to watch him closely and strictly forbade him from giving away his clothes While such behaviors were embarrassing to his brothers he was also recognized as a pure example of the Franciscan order and thus esteemed The Little Flowers of Saint Francis of Assisi 7 which documents the oral traditions of the Franciscans told several stories of Brother Juniper The most famous of these is the story of how Brother Juniper when he heard a sick brother request a pig s foot as a meal Brother Juniper took a kitchen knife and ran into the forest where he saw a herd of swine feeding There he quickly cut the foot off of one of the swine and carried it back to the brother leaving the swine to die This angered the herdsman who complained to Saint Francis Saint Francis confronted Brother Juniper who joyfully exclaimed It is true sweet father that I did cut off the swine s foot I will tell thee the reason I went out of charity to visit the brother who is sick Brother Juniper likewise explained to the angry herdsman who seeing the charity simplicity and humility Hudleston 1953 in Brother Juniper s heart forgave him and delivered the rest of the pig to the brothers Eastern Christianity edit nbsp Basil Fool for Christ 1468 1552 a holy fool to whom Saint Basil s Cathedral in Moscow is dedicated nbsp Misha Samuil ru 1848 1907 a holy fool from Pereslavl The Holy Fool or yurodivyy yurodivyj is the Russian version of foolishness for Christ a peculiar form of Eastern Orthodox asceticism The yurodivy is a Holy Fool one who acts intentionally foolish in the eyes of men The term implies behaviour which is caused neither by mistake nor by feeble mindedness but is deliberate irritating even provocative 8 In his book Holy Fools in Byzantium and Beyond Ivanov described holy fool as a term for a person who feigns insanity pretends to be foolish or who provokes shock or outrage by his deliberate unruliness 8 He explained that such conduct qualifies as holy foolery only if the audience believes that the individual is sane moral and pious The Eastern Orthodox Church holds that holy fools voluntarily take up the guise of insanity in order to conceal their perfection from the world and thus avoid praise 8 Some characteristics that were commonly seen in holy fools were going around half naked being homeless speaking in riddles being believed to be clairvoyant and a prophet and occasionally being disruptive and challenging to the point of seeming immoral though always to make a point Ivanov argued that unlike in the past modern yurodivy are generally aware that they look pathetic in others eyes They strive to pre empt this contempt through exaggerated self humiliation and following such displays they let it be known both that their behaviors were staged and that their purpose was to disguise their superiority over their audience 8 Fools for Christ are often given the title of Blessed blazhennyj which does not necessarily mean that the individual is less than a saint but rather points to the blessings from God that they are believed to have acquired nbsp The Soul of the People Notice the old man in the background with his arms stretched to heaven painting by Mikhail Nesterov The Eastern Orthodox Church records Isidora Barankis of Egypt d 369 among the first Holy Fools However the term was not popularized until the coming of Symeon of Emesa who is considered to be a patron saint of holy fools 2 9 In Greek the term for Holy Fool is salos The practice was recognised in the hagiography of fifth century Byzantium and it was extensively adopted in Muscovite Russia probably in the 14th century The madness of the Holy Fool was ambiguous and could be real or simulated He or she was believed to have been divinely inspired and was therefore able to say truths which others could not normally in the form of indirect allusions or parables He had a particular status in regard to the Tsars as a figure not subject to earthly control or judgement nbsp Holy Rus by Mikhail Nesterov The first reported fool for Christ in Russia was St Procopius Prokopiy who came from the lands of the Holy Roman Empire to Novgorod then moved to Ustyug pretending to be a fool and leading an ascetic way of life slept naked on church porches prayed throughout the whole night received food only from poor people He was abused and beaten but finally won respect and became venerated after his death 10 The Russian Orthodox Church numbers 36 yurodivye among its saints starting from Procopius of Ustyug and most prominently Basil Fool for Christ who gives his name to Saint Basil s Cathedral in Moscow One of the best known modern examples in the Russian Church is perhaps St Xenia of Saint Petersburg Common phrases or epithets edit nbsp A God s Fool by Pavel Svedomsky Crazy for God edit Crazy for God is an expression sometimes used in the United States and other English speaking countries to convey a similar idea to Foolishness for Christ It has been especially connected to the Unification Church of the United States In The Way of God s Will a collection of sayings popular among church members Unification Church founder Sun Myung Moon is quoted as saying We leaders should leave the tradition that we have become crazy for God 11 In 1979 Unification Church critic Christopher Edwards titled a memoir about his experiences in the six months he spent as a church member Crazy for God The nightmare of cult life 12 In 2007 author Frank Schaeffer titled his autobiography Crazy for God How I Grew Up as One of the Elect Helped Found the Religious Right and Lived to Take All or Almost All of It Back It tells of his upbringing as the son of a well known evangelical minister and his later conversion to the Greek Orthodox Church 13 In the same year Stephen Prothero author and chairman of Boston University s Department of Religion wrote in the Harvard Divinity Bulletin I am crazy for people who are crazy for God people nearly as inscrutable to me as divinity who leave wives and children to become forest dwelling monks in Thailand who wander naked across the belly of India in search of self realization who speak in tongues and take up serpents in Appalachia because the Bible says they can 14 Modern theology editOne of the more recent works in theology is Fools for Christ 15 by Jaroslav Pelikan Through six essays dealing with various fools Pelikan explores the motif of fool for Christ in relationship to the problem of understanding the numinous The Holy is too great and too terrible when encountered directly for men of normal sanity to be able to contemplate it comfortably Only those who cannot care for the consequences run the risk of the direct confrontation of the Holy The yurodivy in art and literature editThere are a number of references to the yurodivy holy fools in 19th century Russian literature The holy fool Nikolka is a character in Pushkin s play Boris Godunov and Mussorgsky s opera based on the play 16 17 In Pushkin s narrative poem The Bronze Horseman the character of Evgenii is based in the tradition of the holy fools in his confrontation with the animated statue of Peter the Great 18 The yurodivy appears several times in the novels of Dostoevsky The Idiot explores the ramifications of placing a holy fool the compassionate and insightful epileptic Prince Myshkin in a secular world dominated by vanity and desire 19 According to Joseph Frank though the gentlemanly and well educated prince bears no external resemblance to these eccentric figures he does possess their traditional gift of spiritual insight which operates instinctively below any level of conscious awareness or doctrinal commitment 20 In Demons the madwoman Marya Lebyadkina displays many of the attributes of the holy fool 21 as do the characters of Sofya Marmeladova in Crime and Punishment and Lizaveta in The Brothers Karamazov 22 Another fool for Christ is Grisha in Tolstoy s Childhood Boyhood Youth 10 Callis and Dewey described Grisha as follows He was an awesome figure emaciated barefoot and in rags with eyes that looked right through you and long shaggy hair He always wore chains around his neck Neighborhood children would sometimes run after him laughing and calling out his name Older persons as a rule viewed Grisha with respect and a little fear especially when he suffered one of his periodic seizures and began to shout and rant At such times adult bystanders would crowd around and listen for they believed that the Holy Spirit was working through him 23 Grisha s abnormal social conduct seizures and rants were common behaviors amongst holy fools The esteem expressed by adults was also common In his autobiography Tolstoy expressed such esteem in reaction to overhearing Grisha praying Oh Great Christian Grisha Your faith was so strong that you felt the nearness of God your love was so great that words flowed of their own will from your lips and you did not verify them by reason And what high praise you gave to the majesty of God when not finding any words you prostrated yourself on the ground 23 A further example is Kasyan in the ninth sketch from Turgenev s Sketches from a Hunter s Album 24 The protagonist s coachman describes him as one of those holy men who lives by himself in the forest strictly differentiates between eating bread which he calls God s gift to man and tame creatures on the one hand and birds of the free air and creatures of the forest and of the field on the other hand the latter of which he sees as being sinful Film references edit The Island also known as Ostrov a 2006 movie telling the life story of fictional Father Anatoly in 1970s Russia The Ostern Miles of Fire The character Kayom in At Home Among Strangers who quickly turns from foe to friend can be seen as such a figure In the film Andrei Rublev a jurodivyj character Durochka en little fool girl is played by director Andrei Tarkovsky s wife Irma Raush See also editAndrew of Constantinople the Fool for Christ Benedict Joseph Labre David the Dendrite Divine madness John of Moscow the Fool For Christ John the Hairy Mast Meher Baba Nicholas the Pilgrim Sign of contradictionNotes edit Frith Uta 1989 Autism The Elegant Enigma Malden MA Blackwell Publishing a b Parry 1999 p 233 a b Gorainoff I Les Fols en Christ pp 15 16 Saward J Dieu a la folie p 15 a b c J C Larchee Healing of mental illnesses The experience of first centuries in the Christian East Translated from French into Russian Moscow Publishing House of Sretensky Monastery 2007 224 pages a b Apophtegmy Alphavitnoye sobranie About Avva Anthony 25 in Russian Memorable stories p 427 Frith Uta 1989 Autism Explaining the Enigma Malden MA Blackwell Publishing Hudleston Dom R 1953 The Little Flowers of Saint Francis of Assisi 1st English translation revised and amended London Burns amp Oates a b c d Ivanov S A 2006 Holy Fools in Byzantium and Beyond Oxford Oxford University Press Holy Foolishness by the Rev Frank Logue King of Peace Episcopal Church Kingsland Georgia February 2002 a b Foolishness for Christ Article on Pravmir Portal Pravmir com Retrieved 2012 01 04 The Way of God s Will Chapter 3 Leaders Unification org Archived from the original on 2011 07 16 Retrieved 2012 01 04 Crazy for God Theologytoday ptsem edu Archived from the original on 2012 02 16 Retrieved 2012 01 04 Ink Q amp A Frank Schaeffer Powells com 2011 12 05 Archived from the original on 2011 12 05 Retrieved 2012 01 04 Belief Ubracketed A Case for the Religion Scholar to Reveal More of Where He or She Is Coming From Archived 2009 02 11 at the Wayback Machine Harvard Divinity Bulletin November 6 2007 Pelikan Jaroslav 2001 11 07 Fools for Christ Jaroslav Pelikan Google Boeken Wipf and Stock Publishers ISBN 9781579108021 Retrieved 2014 03 19 Volkov Solomon 2007 Shostakovich and Stalin The Extraordinary Relationship Between the Great Knopf Doubleday Publishing ISBN 9780307427724 Volkov Solomon 2010 St Petersburg A Cultural History Simon and Schuster ISBN 9781451603156 Rosenshiels Gary 2003 Pushkin and the Genres of Madness the Masterpieces of 1833 University of Wisconsin Press p 112 ISBN 9780299182045 Grayling A C 2010 The Heart of Things Applying Philosophy to the 21st century Hachette UK ISBN 9780297865643 Frank Joseph 2010 Dostoevsky A Writer in His Time Princeton University Press p 579 ISBN 9780691128191 Frank Joseph 2010 Dostoevsky A Writer in His Time Princeton University Press p 658 ISBN 9780691128191 The Way of the Holy Fools 22 September 2008 a b Birukoff Paul amp Tolstoy Leo 1911 Leo Tolstoy His Life and Work New York Charles Scribner s Sons Turgenev Ivan Sergeevich 1990 Sketches from a hunter s album Richard Freeborn Complete ed London England ISBN 0 14 044522 6 OCLC 22736825 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link References editParry Ken David Melling Dimitri Brady Sidney H Griffith John F Healey eds 1999 The Blackwell Dictionary of Eastern Christianity Malden MA Blackwell Publishing ISBN 978 0 631 23203 2 Russia and the Russians Geoffrey Hosking ISBN 0 14 029788 X Yurodstvo by S Kobets S A Ivanov Symeon the New Theologian as Foolishness for Christ in French Georg Feuerstein Holy Madness The Shock Tactics and Radical Teachings of Crazy Wise Adepts Holy Fools and Rascal Gurus Spirituality Crazy Wise Teachers and Enlightenment Hohm Press 2006 Marius Kociejowski The Street Philosopher and the Holy Fool A Syrian Journey Sutton Publishing Stroud 2004 contains much on holy folly in both the Christian and Islamic traditions Svitlana Kobets From the Tabennisi nunnery to Pussy Riot female holy fools in Byzantium and Russia Canadian Slavonic Papers 60 no 1 2 2018 Further reading editPetzold H G 1968 Gottes heilige Narren Hochland 2 1968 97 109 ISBN missing Petzold H G 1977 Zur Frommigkeit der heiligen Narren In Die Einheit der Kirche Festschrift fur Peter Meinhold hrsg v Lorenz Hein Franz Steiner Verlag Wiesbaden 140 53 ISBN missing Ewa M Thompson Understanding Russia the holy fool in Russian culture Lanham MD University Press of America 1987External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Foolishness for Christ nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Foolishness for Christ Holy Fools for Christ St Andrew Fool for Christ sake Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Foolishness for Christ amp oldid 1220511284, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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