What Happens After Death - The Toll Houses
halsall (halsall@BWAY.NET)
Wed, 28 Aug 1996 08:51:52 -0400 Here is an file on the issue of Tollhouses. I gather that the issueis quite controversial - with much discussion on the Orthodox listserv.Paul Halsallorigin: http://silver.ucs.indiana.edu/~hckarlso ... on"Blessed are the pure in heart, for they will see God"(Matthew 5:8). Within the beatitudes, Jesus told His followersthat they need to be pure in their heart in order to see God.This vision of God is one of the blessings that pure souls shallgain as a reward of their purity. St. Paul speaks of the futureglory in I Corinthians 13:12, "For now we see in a mirror,dimly, but then we will see face to face." On this vision, St.Augustine said "This vision is reserved as the reward of ourfaith..." (City of God 507). This vision allows one to haveglory within the presence of God. The glory allows one to"...participate, according to our slender capacity, in Hispeace..." (City of God 507). The soul which has the BeatificVision participates in God's glory. Yet to do so, the soul needsto be pure, so that there will be a capacity within the soul toexperience this glory. St. Augustine called the purification andpreparation the soul undertakes a journey: "The Soul must bepurified that it may have the power to perceive the light, and torest in it when it is perceived. And let us look at thispurification as a kind of journey, or a voyage to our nativeland" (On Christian Doctrine 525). How is the soul able to bepurified, and end its journey with the promised rest? ChristianTradition, both from the Greek East and the Latin West, has hadseveral individuals who reflected upon the traditions of theChurch. These individuals, trying to protect the traditions thathave been handed down to them, have helped to clarify ChurchTradition. With these clarifications, both the Eastern andWestern Traditions have given their versions of this journey ofthe soul, and an overall Christian Tradition can be ascertained.In both the East and in the West, the journey of the soul istwofold. The soul begins its journey in connection with the bodyand continues its journey while outside of this connection. Bothalso agree that the ultimate end is for the reunification of thebody and the soul, to be placed either with glory in heaven or intorment in hell. For many, if not most, of those who will havetheir soul totally purified, it will be completed in the lifethat is to come (that is, after the soul has left the body, butbefore the final judgement). St. Symeon the New Theologian, oneof the greatest mystics that the East has produced, stated thatit is possible to obtain some of the glory while the soul isstill within the body. For those who do not, they must not losehope. If they do not lose hope, they will eventually obtain thatglory. "Even though they do not succeed entering into the lightas long as they are in the body, at least they depart withserious hopes. They will obtain it little by little, but theywill obtain it" (qtd. in Krivocheine 205). That journey wherethe soul gains "little by little" the participation with thelight after soul departs from the body is understood slightlydifferently in the East and in the West. Because of thesedifferences, both Eastern Orthodox and Catholic theologians haveoften overlooked each other's beliefs, or try to show how theother has strayed from the overall Christian Tradition. Yet thephilosophical and textual background for each Tradition isultimately the same. For the Eastern Orthodox, the preliminaryjudgement of the soul after death is emphasized. The Catholicemphasis is upon the restoration of the soul to a purified state.Though with different emphasis, the Eastern Orthodox Tradition onthe soul after death does include purification, the the CatholicTradition does acknowledge a preliminary judgement on the soul.After examining the Eastern Orthodox and the Catholic Traditionsseparately, there is the need to examine the overall Traditionwhich is being explained, and to find the common ground betweenthe Eastern and Western explanations. In doing so, it will beshown that instead of greatly conflicting testimonies ofChristian Tradition, the Eastern and Western reflections arecomplements of each other, helping to better explain the complexChristian Tradition on the soul after death.IIThe Toll Houses"Reflect on the dreadful reckoning that is to come, how theharsh keepers of the toll houses will bring before us one by onethe actions, words and thoughts which they suggested but which weaccepted and made our own." Such is the warning of St. Theodorosthe Great Ascetic in his "A Century of Spiritual Texts"(Philokalia 25). This warning reflects the Eastern belief thatthe soul will receive a preliminary judgement after death, andthe place of that judgement is a place called the toll houses.Accordingly, the soul will try to ascend into heaven. On its wayit will be stopped and encounter the toll houses. At the tollhouses, there is traditionally up to twenty different trials thatthe soul will face by the demonic powers that rule the air. Atthe trials, the soul will have the aid of angels, but the demonicpowers will both accuse the person trying to enter into heaven ofsins, and will try to tempt the soul with more sins. There willbe one sin that is being examined for each "booth" or "trial."If the demonic power prevails, the soul is said to be draggeddown to hell, and the soul then has entered its state from thepreliminary judgement. At each booth, if the person prevailsthrough the help of the angels, the soul advances to the nextstage, until at last it is freed and able to enter into heaven.The souls, both during its advance, and the ones dragged to hell,are able to be affected by the petitionary prayers of the Church.The soul in hell is not necessarily doomed there forever. Therewill be some souls which will be judged worthy of eternalsuffering at the final judgement, but until the last judgement,souls can be affected, purified, and able to be finally judgedworthy of glory at the final judgement. The sufferings can alsobe ended before the final judgement, if the soul is purifiedbefore then. Not all souls will be able to be so purified, butall souls are seen as being able to have their sufferingslessened in intensity.The basis for the Eastern belief on the toll houses comesfrom many sources: Scripture, Church Fathers, and the lives ofmany Saints. The belief that there are demonic powers in theair, trying to prevent souls from entering into heaven can beseen within Christian Scripture. In Ephesians 2:2, St. Paulspeaks of the "ruler of the power of the air," who is Satan.Later within the same epistle, St. Paul wrote, "For our struggleis not against enemies of blood and flesh, but against rulers,against the authorities, against the cosmic powers of thispresent darkness, against the spiritual forces of evil in theheavenly places" (Ephesians 6:12). Ephesians 6:12 describes thepowers who are fighting against the Christian as "forces of evilin the heavenly realms," that is demonic powers in the air. Thefact that these demonic powers are fighting with souls which aretrying to ascend to heaven, can be seen within many texts. Onecan find vivid descriptions of this struggle within the textswritten about the lives of many Saints. An example is found inthe biography of St. Antony as written by St. Athanasius:And his understanding was opened, and he understoodthat it was the passing of souls, and that the tallbeing who stood was the enemy who envies the faithful.And those whom he caught and stopped from passingthrough are accountable to him, while those whom hewas unable to hold as they passed upwards had notbeen subservient to him." (Athanasius, 213-214).Sources for belief in the toll houses come from homilies of manyChurch Fathers. St. Cyril of Alexandria, in a homily written todescribe the soul's journey after death, wrote, "The holy angelshold the soul; passing with them through the air and rising,it encounters the houses which guard the path from earth toheaven, detaining the soul and hindering its ascent further."(qtd. in Rose 74 ). St. Macarius, an ascetic of the fourthcentury, describes the demonic attack on the soul after death."And when they pass out of the body, if they are not completelypurified, they are not permitted to go up into the mansions ofHeaven there to meet their Master. For they are driven down bythe demons of the air." (Pseudo-Macarius 222) With these andother references (from various important Church Fathers such asSt. John Chrysostom, St. John Damascene, and St. Ephraim), thejudgement of the soul in the toll houses is in the EasternTradition.The judgement given after death is seen only as apreliminary judgement. The soul is seen as being eventually sentto hell, or as being free to move its way into heaven. If the soul isdragged down into hell, this is not necessarily the end of itsjourney. Until the final judgement, the Orthodox see that thereis still a possibility of change within the soul, which is oftenaccomplished through the prayers of faithful Christians, and withthe practice of commemoration of the dead at the Divine Liturgy.This belief is explained by the following quote from lateArchbishop John Maximovitch. "Until then [the final judgement]changes are still possible in the condition of the souls,especially through the offering for them the Bloodless Sacrifice(commemoration at the Liturgy), and likewise by other prayers"(qtd. in Rose 187). That there are souls who are purified afterdeath, Archbishop Maximovitch also said, "Many who died inrepentance, but who were unable to manifest this while they werealive, have been freed from tortures and have obtained repose"(qtd. in Rose 190). The Orthodox acknowledge that after thepreliminary judgement, some of the souls who were judged worthyof torture were released from their pains. The emphasis is on theplacement of the soul through the judgement of the toll housesinto that initial state of the soul after death. The possiblefreedom of the soul from the prison it is put into is accepted,but not fully described.While the soul which is "found to have wounds from wrestlingor any stains or effects of sin" is "detained" (St. Basil qtd. inRose 34), the souls of the Saints are able to be lifted up toChrist. This is done through a quick progression of the tollhouses, where the demonic forces have no means to accuse theSaint of sin, and no means to tempt the Saint into sin. The tollhouses are seen as a completion of the trials that the soulundergoes on earth, and the Saints are found to be successfulbefore their death in this contest. A Nineteenth Century RussianBishop, Ignatius Brianchaninov, said this quite clearly:The great saints of God pass through the aerial guardsof the dark powers with such great freedom becauseduring earthly life they enter into uncompromisingbattle with them and, acquiring victory over them,acquire in the depths of their heart complete freedomfrom sin... (qtd. in Rose 83).The souls of those who have been purified by the time they havedied, are able to go face to face to their beloved. It is onlyfor those who have not totally been made purified but are on thepath to purification that the preliminary judgement brings asuffering which is able to complete the purification.The teaching of the toll houses is summarized by RussianOrthodox Hieromonk Seraphim Rose in his book The Soul AfterDeath.What is certain is that there is a testing by demons,who appear in a frightful but human form, accuse thenewly-departed of sins and literally try to seizethe subtle body of the soul, which is grasped firmlyby angels; and all of this occurs in the air above usand can be seen by those whose eyes are open tospiritual reality (Rose 69).
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From: ZPASTATE@aol.com
Date: Sat Jul 19, 2003 5:47 pm
Subject: A Brief Patristic Consensus On The Doctrine Of The Toll Houses
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The Argument for the Toll-House Theory
Fr. Seraphim relies heavily on the exegesis and writings of Bishop Ignatius Brianchaninov for support of the tollhouse theory. The following quote from Bishop Ignatius is a good example:
"The space between heaven and earth, the whole azure expanse of the air which is visible to us under the heavens, serves as the dwelling for the fallen angels who have been cast down from heaven…. The holy Apostle Paul calls the fallen angels the spirits of wickedness under the heavens (Eph. 6:12), and their chief the prince of the powers of the air (Eph. 2:2). The fallen angels are dispersed in a multitude throughout the entire transparent immensity, which we see above us. They do not cease to disturb all human societies and every person separately; there is no evil deed, no crime, of which they might not be instigators and participants; they incline and instruct men towards sin by all possible means. Your adversary the devil, says the holy Apostle Peter, walketh about like a roaring lion, seeking whom he may devour (I Peter 5:8), both during our earthly life and after the separation of the soul from the body. When the soul of a Christian, leaving its earthly dwelling, begins to strive through the aerial spaces towards the homeland on high, the demons stop it, strive to find in it a kinship with themselves, their sinfulness, their fall, and to drag it down to the hell prepared for the devil and his angels (Matt. 25:41). They act thus by the right which the have acquired." (Brianchaninov, vol. III, pp. 132-133).
Bishop Ignatius goes on further to say "For the testing of souls as they pass through the spaces of the air there have been established by the dark powers separate judgment places and guards in a remarkable order. In the layers of the under-heaven, from earth to heaven itself, stand guarding legions of fallen spirits. Each division is in charge of a special form of sin and tests the soul in it when the soul reaches this division. The aerial demonic guards and judgment places are called in the patristic writing the toll-houses, and the spirits who serve in them are called tax-collectors." (Brianchaninov, vol. III, p. 136).
The following are a sample of quotes from both patristic and liturgical sources, which are given as evidence that the tollhouse theory is the historical teaching of the Church:
"Then we will need many prayers, many helpers, many good deeds, and a great intercession from angels on the journeys through the spaces of the air. If when travelling in a foreign land or a strange city we are in need of a guide, how much more necessary for us are guides and helpers to guide us past the invisible dignities and powers and world-rulers of this air, who are called persecutors and publicans and tax-collectors." (St. John Chrysostom-Homily on Patience and Gratitude)
"Daily have death before our eyes and take care how to accomplish the departure from the body and how to pass by the powers of darkness that are to meet us in the air. When the soul leaves the body, angels accompany it; the dark powers come out to meet it, desiring to detain it, and testing it to see if they might find something of their own in it. (St. Isaiah the Recluse-Homily 5 and 17)
"When the fearful hosts come, when the divine takers-away command the soul to be translated from the body, when they draw us away by force and lead us away to the unavoidable judgment place - then, seeing them, the poor man… comes all into a shaking as if from an earthquake, is all in trembling…. The divine takers-away, taking the soul, ascend in the air where stands the chiefs, the authorities and world-rulers of the opposing powers. These are our accusers, the fearful publicans, registrars, tax-collectors; they meet it on the way, register, examine, and count the sins and debts of this man - the sins of youth and old age, voluntary and involuntary, committed in deed, word, and thought. Great is the fear here, great the trembling of the poor soul, indescribable the want which it suffers then from the incalculable multitudes of its enemies surrounding it there in myriad's, slandering it so as not to allow it to ascend to heaven, to dwell in the light of the living, to enter the land of life. But the holy angels, taking the soul, lead it away."
(St. Ephriam the Syrian, Collected Works (in Russian), Moscow, 1882, vol. 3, pp. 282-385.)
"O Virgin, in the hour of my death rescue me from the hand of the demons, and the judgment, and the accusation, and the frightful testing, and the bitter toll-houses and the fierce prince, and the eternal condemnation, O Mother of God." (Tone 4, Friday, 8th Canticle of the Canon at Matins.)
"When my soul shall be about to be released from the bond with the flesh, intercede for me, O Sovereign Lady … that I may pass unhindered through the princes of darkness standing in the air." (Tone 2, Saturday, Canticle 9)
I would conclude the support of the tollhouse theory with a quote by Metropolitan Macarius of Moscow: "Such an uninterrupted, constant, and universal usage in the Church of the teaching of the toll-houses, especially among the teachers of the 4th century, indisputably testifies that it was handed down to them from the teachers of the preceding centuries and is founded on apostolic tradition." (Metropolitan Macarius of Moscow, Orthodox Dogmatic Theology, vol. 2, p. 535.)