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This is the costliest book the author has written. Fr. Seraphim of Platina's militant following that has review bombed this work is not content to post one-star reviews; they have also seen that positive reviews of this work, and others by the same author, are taken down if they can at all dislodge them. They do not want you reading this author and especially not this book! This book is very little about Fr. Seraphim and very much about a problem recognized by Fr. Seraphim in the axe-wielding Western converts who continue to wreak convertitis in his name. It has numerous extended quotations, one perhaps being taken from St. Seraphim himself... About this bookThis book is written primarily to document a large-scale behavior problem. It is also meant to provide a preliminary analysis of what is going on. The movement is Protestant converts to Orthodoxy who are still fundamentalists and rally under the banner of Fr. Seraphim.In Fr. Seraphim's The Place of the Blessed Augustine in the Orthodox Church, Abbot Herman's preface reads: "FATHER SERAPHIM ROSE was by nature a warm-hearted man. Often he used to say, 'It is noble to defend the underdog.' He felt obliged to defend those who were considered by society to be somehow in the wrong. He believed that God was not necessarily on the side of those who are considered right, and that those who are dismissed and held in a negative light are in a position to be pitied. The latter, said Fr. Seraphim, are the ones whom Jesus Christ came to save; and therefore when he saw them being looked down upon, he took their side..."Our Lord Jesus Christ said: Judge not, that ye be not judged (Matt. 7:1). Psychologically, this means that in each act of judging another, the judge identifies the negative aspect in himself which he does not like, and thus projects it onto the other, thereby receiving gratification. He thinks that in this way he is getting rid of that negative aspect of himself, whereas in reality he is only breeding and nurturing it."Our contemporary converts have a tendency to do likewise. They quickly [become] Orthodox, and then assume that by their conversion they have automatically become infallible. Thus they feel free to point out in others what in reality are their own faults, disguising this as righteous judgment. Instead of humbly seeing their own shortcomings, which are the outgrowth of preceding generations of Western apostasy, they often carry their Western legalism in the midst of the Orthodox Church, and as a result they deform the ancient Orthodox tradition and substitute it with modernism. In Russia this sickness has been identified by the term "renovationism." If the course of contemporary converts will continue in the renovationist style, making Orthodoxy fit into their own mentality rather than vice versa, then their understanding of Orthodoxy will end up as a kind of "anti-Western" legalism, or to put it another way, Western legalism in an Eastern Orthodox guise. As Fr. Seraphim saw, this very legalism lies at the core of the "Eastern Orthodox" attacks on Blessed Augustine, and he wanted to avoid it at all costs."The more the author reads of Fr. Seraphim, the more wondering there is if Fr. Seraphim might be appalled by those who were under the banner of "Blessed Seraphim Rose." The author has refrained from praying, "Fr. Seraphim of Platina, protect me from your followers!" but now wonders if Fr. Seraphim now stands before the throne of God and would welcome such prayers."Our contemporary converts have a tendency to do likewise. They quickly [become] Orthodox, and then assume that by their conversion they have automatically become infallible," reasonably describes many of this book's reviews, and the amount of poison to be found in them leaves the author to wonder if Fr. Seraphim would see him as an underdog.
It's a lovely feeling to be a big fish in a small pond, but it's a slightly different experience being a shark in an inflatable wading pool.(This book represents one profoundly gifted list of things he wished someone would have told him, and that he would like others to learn at a less costly price than he paid through experience.)If this book is successful, it will succeed as a good first word and not as any kind of last word: complete triumph would amount to, in letter and in spirit, being superseded by a "community wiki." The author is only too well aware that the collection is not in any way perfect.It is intended to stand in the tradition of wisdom literature-a tradition older than the Bible and newer than Seven Habits of Highly Effective People-and address the special needs within the profoundly gifted community. (Profound giftedness is often called "severe giftedness," especially within the community, because there's enough difference to serve up a nasty backswing.) In that sense, for lack of anything better, it is to the author's knowledge pioneering and intended to open a conversation that would continue in other wisdom literature intended for that special need. And hint at what wisdom literature might look like for addressing that need.The author prays all the best for you, and hopes to shine a little light, even if it is just a little bit of light he has to give. People interested in the profoundly gifted experience might also read C.J.S. Hayward, Orthodox Theology and Technology: A Profoundly Gifted Autobiography.
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