Metropolitan Anthony of Sourozh. Transaction
passing people like trees.—Mark 8:22-26. This is how we see each other
Other. Rarely, rarely do we miraculously get away from ourselves and see
man as he is. And we see what it is in two ways. On the one hand,
On the other hand, we see in him the image of God, his eternal indelible beauty, on the other hand,
We see, sometimes with pain and horror, how this image is desecrated and
disfigured, as if we were looking at an icon that has been disfigured,
deprived of its primeval beauty and glory.
The second Sunday reminds us of Zacchaeus (Luke 19:1-10). He was looking for
to see Christ. We do not know what prompted him, but it was hardly simple curiosity,
because it would not allow him to endure the ridicule of the people around him.
Imagine: a rich and well-known person living in a small town,
but small in stature, he suddenly, like a boy, climbs a tree. How many
There was ridicule around him! But it was so important for Zacchaeus to see Christ, even though
to look into His face, that He has neglected all this and has conquered vanity without
some kind of feat, struggle, but complete indifference to what they can say about him
people to think, it was so important for him, so necessary to contemplate
Savior. And he saw Him. Of all the crowd, Christ noticed only Zacchaeus,
for he, by his striving towards Him, has conquered in himself all fear of
people, every false shame, endured ridicule, mockery, — just to see
Christ. And Christ called him and stayed in his house.
Vanity, as St. John of the Ladder says, is impudence before