Bulgakov’s ecumenical thought

ANASTASSY GALAHER

Charisma as curse

We normally do not think of personal charisma as a curse. Nor do

we normally think of being an original thinker as a strike against

one’s character. However, in the case of Fr Sergii Bulgakov, it is

arguable that the mesmerising nature of his personality distracted

attention from a sober evaluation of his theology. What is

mentioned repeatedly in the reminiscences of Bulgakov is the

overwhelming impact of his character, quite distinct, that is, from

the content and quality of his economic, philosophical and

theological work.

E. L. Mascall is typical in this regard in remembering

Bulgakov as ‘one who was a prophet rather than a systematic

thinker’1. Yet what is even more puzzling than this reduction of

Bulgakov to the role of ‘prophet’ is the fact that Bulgakov was

simultaneously a theological systematiser par excellence.

However, when Bulgakov’s theology gained widespread attention,

apart from a few disciples who attempted to link the thought to the

person, 2 the connection of the man to the system he built was

evaded. People complained that his sophiological system was

obscure, 3 unnecessary 4 and, most famously, gnostic, 5 and therefore

heretical. 6

Given the extremely political environment surrounding

the 1935 ‘Sophiological controversy’, in which three different

Russian church jurisdictions and many personalities clashed, a

precise evaluation of the ostensible subject of the controversy –

Bulgakov’s theology – is yet to be written, 7 let alone its relation to

the man who created it. It remains unclear what the relation of the

man was to his thought. Yet perhaps one window into this relation

may be found in his ecumenical involvement.

Ecumenism by its very nature is theology in action since it is

our conception of the Church that motivates whether we reach out 27

to other Christians or not. If we do reach out to other Christians,

then how precisely we go about this process is determined by how

we understand the divisions that separate Christians vis-à-vis the

Church. Arguably the most important, and characteristic,

expression of Bulgakov’s ecumenical thought can be found in his

June 1933 proposals for partial or limited intercommunion between

the Anglican and Orthodox Churches in the Fellowship of St Alban

and St Sergius. However, before trying to understand these

‘prophetic proposals’, as Militza Zernov described them, 8 and the

long road which led up to them, it would be wise to give a brief

sketch of the dynamic personality which animated them. I am

speaking of Bulgakov’s ‘obsessive presence’, 9 as Juliana

Schmemann has described it. This presence happened to be most

manifest, as we shall see, when Bulgakov was celebrating the

Liturgy.

‘The enigma of Fr Sergii’

The Schmemanns are a case in point when it comes to their

ambivalent response to Bulgakov as man and thinker. Neither Fr

Alexander nor his wife Juliana Schmemann was ever a disciple of

Bulgakov. Indeed, Fr Schmemann was decidedly puzzled by

Bulgakov’s dual nature as man and thinker. He believed on the one

hand that Bulgakov’s sophiology was, arguably, an idealistic

growth on Orthodoxy but, on the other hand, he felt that this

‘heresy’ was only apparent since Bulgakov had never really

adequately expressed himself, and that beneath Bulgakov’s

sophiological meanderings was the heavenly light of Truth itself,

impeded by his attempts to systematise it. He referred to this as the

‘enigma of Fr Sergii’. 10 Thus at one point in his reminiscences

about Bulgakov, entitled ‘Three Images’, he writes, ‘Let us even

admit that his teaching was “heretical” and that one must condemn

him’. 11 But, a few pages down, he asserts the essential Orthodoxy

of Bulgakov which his system almost obscured: ‘I felt with my

whole being that this man was not a heretic, but that, on the

contrary, he radiated that which is most important and most

authentic in Orthodoxy’. 12

Despite Fr Schmemann’s ambivalence about Bulgakov, both

of the Schmemanns faithfully attended Bulgakov’s 7 am Thursday

Liturgies in 1940 while Fr Schmemann was a student of

Bulgakov’s at the Institute of St Serge in Paris. Fr Schmemann

specifically lauds Bulgakov’s person in contrast to his teaching,

which he claims that he is not competent to discuss. To be sure, he

writes that during his seminars with Bulgakov he spent more time

looking at Bulgakov than listening to him. 13 Thus what sticks out

in Fr Schmemann’s mind is the spiritual presence of Bulgakov as a

person, despite his strange teaching, 14 and this was for him

expressed pre-eminently in his service at the altar. Here he saw

Bulgakov as an ancient priest or Old Testamental High Priest

serving with such beauty that it was always as if he were serving

the Liturgy for the first time. 15 Juliana Schmemann backs up the impression of Bulgakov as a highly charismatic personality given by her husband. She only knew Bulgakov at one remove and was not really familiar with his writings. Yes, she had heard of the controversy that Bulgakov wrote of a certain Sophia who was almost a ‘separate divinity’. 16

Yet despite the fact that his teaching seems to have been slightly

suspect in her mind, she remembers him at the Thursday morning

Liturgies serving alone, reverent to the point that she never saw

him smile, croaking through a voice apparatus in his oesophagus

due to his throat cancer, wearing light vestments because of his

health, and moving as if he were floating just above the ground. An

‘ecstasy’ surrounded Bulgakov in these Liturgies, the more so

since the disciples who attended them treated him like a guru. 17

Spiritual intoxication does not make for a grounded faith: Juliana

Schmemann remembers that when Bulgakov died in 1944 many of

his followers stopped going to church.

Ecumenical thought in action

It is not my object to elaborate Bulgakov’s theological

system, but to examine its historical development through the lens

of his ecumenical thought in action. 18 I wish to determine whether

there was indeed a systematic theology behind what many regarded

as a ‘dangerous, not glorious’ 19 proposal for reunion through

intercommunion and to try to trace this theology’s development in

Bulgakov’s life. What is the connection of Bulgakov’s ecumenical

theology to Bulgakov the man? Was the intercommunion proposal

a vague, albeit prophetic, call for reunification of the Churches or

an incorrect intimation of unity of the Church at and through the

chalice which is in contrast to Bulgakov’s personal sanctity? Is it

possible that through attempting to tie Bulgakov’s life to his

thought we may bridge the gap dividing the man and the thinker?

Or was Berdyaev right, as we learn from A. F. Doobie-Bateman,

when he said, ‘Fr Sergii wants to be a theologian, not a visionary;

and that is his great difficulty’? 20 Could it be that Bulgakov’s

prophetic status has been exaggerated and that he is simply a great

theologian whose place in modern thought has yet to be fully

acknowledged? Perhaps none of these alternatives holds the key to

understanding Bulgakov. For Bulgakov is like Kierkegaard’s

Abraham, the quintessential man of faith, and Bulgakov’s dual

identity, as man of faith and man of ideas, must remain to us an

irreducible enigma. However, prior to examining Bulgakovian

‘partial intercommunion’ in part two of this study it would be wise

to follow the personal path that led Bulgakov up to his proposal.

From Russian Levite to Marxist 21

Sergei Nikolaevich Bulgakov was born in Livny (Orel

province) on 16 July 1871 to a family from the Russian clerical

caste that could trace its ‘Levite blood’ 22 back to the time of Ivan

the Terrible. Bulgakov attended the local parochial school for three

years and then in 1884 was sent to the theological seminary in

Orel. However, at thirteen years old, his first year of seminary, he

had a religious crisis. This was brought about predominantly by a

period of deep questioning which the textbook theology of the

seminary could not answer. Meeting various people whose

humanism was typical of the ‘intelligentsia’ of the day increased

Bulgakov’s alienation. In the summer of 1888, at seventeen years

old, he left the seminary, refusing to go onto the theological

academy for additional training. After two years of preparation for

university he entered the faculty of law of Moscow university in

autumn of 1890, where until 1894 he studied law, economics,

philology, philosophy and literature.

Having graduated from the university with distinction,

Bulgakov immediately began graduate studies in political economy

while teaching part-time at the Moscow technical school. On

entering university in 1890 he had become interested in Marxism

and in 1895 he published a review of the third volume of Das

Kapital, published posthumously by Engels from Marx’s papers

and concerning ‘The process of capitalist production as a whole’. 23

In the same year, while travelling across the southern steppes at

sunset Bulgakov caught sight of the Caucasian mountains and had

a mystical experience, 24 a revelation of beauty, which he later saw

as his first encounter with Sophia. Unperturbed by such

movements in his spiritual depths, his first major article appeared

in 1896, entitled ‘O zakonomernosti sotsial’nykh iavlenii’, which

continued his Marxist bent of thought in arguing for history’s

regularity according to historical-material laws. 25 The following

year in Moscow appeared his first book O rynkakh pri

kapitalisticheskom proizvodstve [Concerning Markets in Capitalist

Conditions of Production], which propelled him to the status of

one of the most influential Russian Marxists of his day. In January

of 1898, he married Elena Tokmakova and their first child, a

daughter (Maria), was born in November of the same year.

The year 1898 was eventful for Bulgakov academically as

well as personally, for the university sent him, accompanied by his

family, for a two-year study trip to Europe in preparation for a

future professorship in political economy. He visited France,

England and, particularly, Germany, ‘the land of Marxism and

Social Democracy’, 26 in order to do work on issues surrounding

Marxist land reforms for the thesis which he hoped would win him

a doctorate. During this time, through the recommendation of

Plekhanov, he met Kautsky and other social democratic and

Marxist leaders, including Bebel, Braun and Adler. While visiting

the art gallery in Dresden in 1898 he had a second mystical

experience in viewing Raphael’s Sistine Madonna. Gazing at this

painting, he felt that it was looking into his very soul and, being

moved to tears, began to pray. Not surprisingly, Bulgakov was

gradually becoming disillusioned with the materialism of Marxist

thought and in his research in Europe he discovered that the

proposed land reforms of Lenin and Plekhanov did not make

economic sense, largely due to the faulty thinking of Marx on

which they were based. 27 Bulgakov’s thesis, published at St

Petersburg in 1900 in two volumes as Kapitalizm i zemledelenie

[Capitalism and Agriculture], did not win him a doctorate, as he

had intended, but only a master’s degree.

From Marxism to Idealism

Yet this minor setback did not stop him. In 1901 he was hired

to teach political economy at the Kiev school of polytechnology

while also lecturing at the university of Kiev. His public lectures

while in Kiev were so popular with young people that he attracted

to them as many as one thousand or more people at a time. Here he

remained till 1906, studying Dostoevsky and Solov’ev 28 who were

instrumental in moving him more towards his later sophiological

thinking. The universalist character of sophiology would bear fruit

in his later ecumenical work.

In 1902 Bulgakov published an article entitled

‘Samoderzhavie i pravoslavie’ [‘Autocracy and Orthodoxy’] in the

journal Osvobozhdenie which was the organ of what would later

become the socialist coalition, the Union of Liberation. 29 This

article foreshadowed both his involvement in the reformist 1917

all-Russian church council and his later ecumenical attempts to

break down Christian denominational barriers. In the article

Bulgakov called for a reformation of the Church as a part of the

process of political liberation. Political revolution in Russia would

be ‘a fundamental ecclesiastical reform’ since ‘the revolution will

simultaneously be a reformation’. 30 The Church was strangled by

caesaro-papism and had become a decrepit organisation held back

by ritualism and eighteenth-century dogma instead of being a

dynamic body capable of ecclesiastical democracy. Bulgakov

advocated a form of socialist Christianity which embraced those

outside the Church: ‘true Orthodoxy requires its sons to unite with

all those, Orthodox and non-Orthodox, religious and atheist, who

protest and resist autocracy, with all those who struggle for

freedom’. 31 The influence of Dostoevsky and Solov’ev in moving him

from Marxism to a socialist form of Christianity can be seen in his

essays (1896-1902) collected in 1903, Ot marksizma k idealizmu

[From Marxism to Idealism]. In a lecture of 1901 in Kiev that

attracted wide attention also in Moscow and St Petersburg, he

spoke approvingly of Ivan Karamazov’s doubts about the ‘theory

of progress’ which, ‘also apply to socialism, considered not merely

as an economic theory but as a general view of the world, indeed

as a religion’. 32 From Solov’ev he learned of Christianity as a

‘positive or supra-national universalism’ which did not reject

nationality like certain (Marxist) ‘negative, cosmopolitan, non-

national’ types of universalism. 33 On 2 – 4 August 1903 he attended an illegal conference on the banks of lake Constance where, along with Peter Struve, he helped found a broad-based non-revolutionary reformist coalition that has been mentioned earlier -- the Union of Liberation. 34

In 1905 this short-lived coalition published a manifesto entitled

‘Christian Brotherhood of Struggle’. When the edict of Nicholas II

granting religious freedom came in 1905 along with an abortive

revolution, Bulgakov accepted both events as an opportunity for

reform towards a Christian socialism. But through the social

catastrophe of 1905 he was able to overcome ‘the revolutionary

temptation’. 35 Bulgakov’s break with Marxism was secure by 1906. He

was now professor of economy at Moscow’s commercial institute

and lecturer at the university, when he argued, in his ‘Karl Marks

kak religioznyi tip’ [‘Karl Marx as a Religious Type’], that Marx’s

basic ‘religious motive’ was ‘militant atheism’ and this was ‘bound

to coarsen the socialist movement’ whereby ‘class hatred takes the

place of universal human love’. 36 In 1906 and 1907 he attempted to

put such universal Christian love into action while serving briefly

as a deputy in the representative assembly, the second Duma, of

1907 and in attempting to establish a Christian Socialist group

which had, amongst its many aims, the desire, as Evtuhov puts it,

‘to unite all Christians regardless of denomination’. 37 However, he

soon became disillusioned by the sectarian infighting and

extremism of the left and realised that a Christian presence in

politics was a remote ideal. 38

Returning to his father’s house

Such searching after heaven on earth could only end in

disillusionment or in a deeper and more permanent return to the

Church. It was such a return that took place in the autumn of 1908

at a remote northern skete. Here he met a starets who received him

like the father who saw the prodigal son at a distance ‘and ran and

embraced him and kissed him’ (Luke 15:20). He told Bulgakov

that his sins were like drops of water in the ocean of the divine

love. Bulgakov left pardoned, reconciled, trembling and cleansed

by his tears. At the skete’s church the next morning he sealed his

conversion with participation in the Eucharist:

I knew that I was a participant in the Covenant, that our Lord

hung on the cross and shed his blood for me and because of

me; that the most blessed meal was being prepared by the

priest for me, and that the gospel narrative about the feast in

the house of Simon the leper and about the woman who loved

much was addressed to me. It was on that day when I partook

of the blessed Body and Blood of my Lord. 39

Spurred by his new found hope in the Church, in 1909 he

contributed an article to the well known collection Vekhi: sbornik

statei o russkoi intelligentsii [Landmarks: A collection of essays on

the Russian intelligentsia] along with six other Christian converts

from Marxism (notably Nicolas Berdiaev, Semen Frank and Peter

Struve) who were dissatisfied with the intelligentsia of their day.

Bulgakov’s essay was entitled ‘Geroizm i podvizhnichestvo (Iz

razmyshlenii o religioznoi prirode russkoi intelligentsii)’

[‘Heroism and the spiritual struggle (reflections on the religious

nature of the Russian intelligentsia)’]40 , and in it he reflected on the

religious ideals of the Russian intelligentsia. He concluded that the

revolution ‘has not achieved what people expected from it’. 41 The

revolution had brought neither national reconciliation nor a

renewed state or economy, but crime and moral chaos. Without

Christian faith, he argued, revolution would only produce a

tyrannical regime. The true bearers of the folk consciousness of

Russia -- Dostoevsky, the Slavophiles and Solov’ev--understood

that the basis of the nation was ‘religio-cultural “messianism”’. 42

This messianic ideal was the conception of Russian Christianity

bringing together all peoples into a true form of internationalism,

which did not reject cultural particularity, that is,

the idea of a universal mission for the Russian Church or

Russian culture. Such an understanding of the national ideal in

no way leads to nationalistic exclusivity; on the contrary, it

alone can provide a positive image on which to ground the idea

of a brotherhood of nations, rather than a non-national,

atomistic ideal of world citizenship or the ‘proletariat’ of all

nations’, who would cut themselves loose from their roots. 43

He called the Russian intelligentsia, therefore, to return to Christ,

to the house of their fathers, the Church, as indeed he himself had

the year before, since ‘He stands at the door and knocks--at the

door of the heart of the intelligentsia, that proud and disobedient

heart. Will his knocking ever be heard?’ 44

Sophia: in dialogue with Florenskii

Bulgakov had not become a staunch member of the

ecclesiastical establishment--far from it. Indeed, he still held, as he