The Orthodox Church's perspective on Suicide

edited December 1969 in Faith Issues
As many of you may be aware, there have been some heated discussions regarding the controversial issue of suicide and the consequent fate of Judas with respect to his own suicidal actions.

The crux of the problem as I see it, is that many choose to make themselves an authority such that their opinion becomes elevated above that of the Church. This is, strictly speaking not Orthodox. A healthy debate on doctrinal/moral/spiritual issue, is one which involves Church tradition and which appeals to the Church’s authority; a superfluous debate is one which neglects Church tradition and opposes Church authority.

I will thus now put forward the Church’s opinion on this matter, and if others would like to engage with the following authorities then please feel free to do so. If someone would like to share other Church traditions or authorities that need to be taken into consideration, then by all means, please feel free to share them with us.

To summarise the Orthodox Church's position on this issue as established by His Holiness Pope Shenouda III, His Grace Bishop Youssef, Fr Tadros Malaty, the Church Canons, the Church Fathers, and the views of the Eastern Orthodox tradition, as shown in the material pasted below:

1) Suicide is murder, and a direct contravention of the sixth commandment.

2) Suicide means that one dies in their sin, and hence is incapable of repenting; as such the Church refuses to perform a proper burial and even refuses to pray over the deceased.

3) Suicide is blasphemy of the Holy Spirit, for one has resisted God's Grace and died in sin without repentence.

4) The only exception to all of the above, is if the suicide victim commited such an act due to serious mental illness or disorder.

5) God alone knows all the facts of the suicide victim's circumstances, and thus He alone judges according to His infinite wisdom, mercy, and justice. As such, we should not conclude upon the fate of a particular suicide vitcim, we only speak in general according to Church tradition and authority.

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His Holiness Pope Shenouda III states in his book The Ten Commandments Volume III, in Chapter 6 Committing Suicide:

"Suicide is a form of murder. Man does not own his own life nor does he have the liberty to do anything he likes with it. It is owned by Christ, for when He redeemed our lives by His own Blood, He bought man's life which then became His. He created it from nowhere. It is a gift that cannot be thrown away, but should be used for the glory of God's name. That is why the Church does not conduct a funerary mass for an individual who commits suicide, simply because death takes place after the commission of a crime of murder. Such a person dies after committing a sin which he does not give himself a chance to repent for. Still, we can make an exception to this rule in the case of a person who proves to be completely insane when committing suicide, since an insane person should be absolved from whatever wrongdoing he does.

In addition to the crime of committing suicide, we also have other crimes such as losing hope and getting filled with despair...Hope is one of the three major virtues mentioned by St Paul in: "And now abide faith, hope, love, these three; but the greatest of these is love." (1 Cor. 13:13). A pious man should never lose hope for God's mercy. So, if ever one commits suicide, this means one has lost all hope and has fallen to the pit of despair which in itself is a sin. It also signifies that one has lost hope for God's mercy and for His power to interfere and to dispose of desperate situations. All this is nothing but lack of faith in God's love, care and attention.

Committing suicide also signifies lack of endurance. It also signifies disbelief in life after death. A person committing suicide believes that death is going to help him put an end to all his trouble, which is not true, for if he ever believed in life after death, he would be aware that by killing himself he would go to hell where he is liable to find endless torture. Therefore, committing suicide does not end one's problems, but rather brings up worse problems and more complicated dilemmas. It is as if one came out of a pit to fall into a deep well! The one who commits suicide never thinks of life after death, for if he knew about it he would be afraid to kill himself.

Committing suicide is neither a spiritual nor a practical solution for problems. A person who commits suicide often has a nervous or mental health problem and is unable to think
properly. His mind may get perplexed or stagnate before a problem. He is unable to think but gets confused and incapable of finding a way out. Thus, he commits suicide. Suicide is an actual destruction of the soul.


His Holiness reiterates and makes explicit the Church’s position on those who commit suicide in his book Many Years With People’s Questions, in Chapter 33 Those Whom The Church Does Not Pray For, pages 151-153:

Who commits suicide has lost faith in the other life thinking that death will end his troubles. He does not believe that death opens before him another life in which he is received as murderer and will go to Hades and will suffer torments harder than his troubles on earth. If he has such a belief he would fear death instead of seeking it as a solution.

And:

The only exception for not praying for the person committing suicide is the case in which his madness is established.

If the person who commits suicide has complete mental disorder, he will not be responsible for his behaviour. Likewise, if he has no will nor freedom, because responsibility requires that one be wise, free and willing.


And:

We leave the matter concerning the person who committed suicide in God's hands who is the Most Merciful. We should trust that when God judges anyone, He takes into consideration all his circumstances; whether the mental, psychological or nervous. God judges according to His limitless wisdom and knowledge. This is beyond our responsibility as Church.

According to this last paragraph as quoted from His Holiness; there are many factors to take into consideration which God alone according to his infinite wisdom may know, and hence justification of the proposition that we cannot conclude on matters regarding anyone’s eternal fate, even if they have committed suicide, for to put it bluntly, we are not God.

As His Holiness stated above, the Church does not pray over the one who commits suicide. According to the Church canons, purposeful suicide and the assistance of such an act are depicted as grave sins. According to Canon 14 of St Timothy of Alexandria, the perpetrator of calculated suicide who “has done so as a result of human offense or for any other reason due to weakness of will” i.e. performed out of despair, resentment or any other incident of faintheartedness, should not be granted a proper Orthodox Christian burial or even a liturgical ommemoration .

According to Fr Tadros Malaty in his commentary on The Epistle of St John (2001), page 54:

“The tradition of the Greek Fathers stated that the sin which leads to death is the sin which one deliberately commit and with no repentance. That is why the church does not pray for those who commit suicide, for they insist to be in despair.”

His Grace Bishop Youssef of the Coptic Orthodox Diocese of the Southern United States, states in relation to the matter of suicide:

1. Suicide: This is not a simple sin but a compound one . It includes breaking of more than one commandment given to us by the Lord our God. A person who commits suicide has rejected life and thus rejected God's love. He has lost trust in the Lord Jesus Christ. Suicide involves committing a double murder or killing; not only his own body but also his soul. The Holy Book of 1 Corinthians 6:19-20 states that our body is the Temple of the Holy Spirit., therefore, damaging this Temple is a sin.

Suicide is an act of despair and loss of hope. St. Paul says, "Now hope does not disappoint, because the love of God has been poured out in our hearts by the Holy Spirit who was given to us" (Rom 5:5). So losing hope is rejecting the Holy Spirit and His work in us, which is really a sort of blasphemy against the Holy Spirit.


Source: http://suscopts.org/q&a/index.php?qid=632&catid=372

His Grace Bisho Youssef elaborates upon his position in his article titled Suicide:

The Church teaches that all life is sacred, that through His death on the Cross, the Lord Jesus Christ had transformed suffering so that all people could draw closer to God and others through it, and that people who killed themselves prematurely are rejecting the power and love of God. Further, the Orthodox Church purports that people who take complete control of their lives are blocking out God and every other human being. One who commits suicide is completely self-absorbed and denies the possibility that God can take care of their difficulties and transform them into something positive and meaningful. A person who commits suicide has rejected life and God's love.

……

The sixth commandment states, "Thou shalt not commit murder." The Holy Bible strictly forbids murdering anyone. Those who commit suicide will be judged as murderers (of themselves). Suicide is actually worse than murder for in killing another human being one is killing only the body, whereas in suicide one is killing both the body and the soul. Suicide prevents the possibility of repentance thereby jeopardizing salvation. This is contrary to the will and authority of God. The seriousness and permanence of suicide has to always be remembered.

I Corinthians 6:19-20 states that our body is the Temple of the Holy Spirit, thereby damaging this Temple is a sin. Broadly applied, anything that damages this Temple, smoking, drinking, and suicide, all are considered sinful. Galatians 6:7-8 states "Do not be deceived, God is not mocked; for whatever a man sows that he will also reap. For he who sows to his flesh will of the flesh reap corruption but he who sows to the Spirit will of the Spirit reap everlasting life."

Suicide is a violent act against the teachings of the Church. Matters of life and death are not ours to control. The exception to suicide being an "uncontrolled" act of violence against God, is the mentally ill person who cannot reasonably assume responsibility for his actions. A mentally ill person is responding to hallucinations, delusional thoughts, or other bizarre thought processes.

......

With this blatant disregard of life, and the lack of conscious repentance associated with suicide the Orthodox Church cannot pray over the body of a suicidal individual who has induced his own death.


Source: http://www.suscopts.org/literature/literature.php?subaction=showfull&id=1076781246&archive=&start_from=&ucat=3&;

St. Augustine along with many other early Church Fathers , determined that the act of suicide was an unrepentable sin, and hence blasphemy of the Holy Spirit. He viewed the forbiddance of suicide as the natural implication and extension of the fifth commandment. Augustine condemned five different motivations for suicide: 1) guilt over sins of the past, 2) a desire to go to heaven, 3) to escape from or avoid temporal earthly difficulties and problems, 4) to evade the sinful actions of another, and 5) to avoid committing sin.

Though not a canonised Saint of the Orthodox Church, Thomas Aquinas had later defended the prohibition of suicide in Augustine’s footsteps, upon three grounds: 1) Suicide is contra to natural self-love, which has the aim to preserve us, 2) Suicide damages the community which the individual was a part of, 3) Suicide violates our very duty to God, for God has given us the gift of life and in taking our lives we interfere with and violate His right and prerogative to determine the duration of our earthly existence.

The early Church Father St Jerome categorically stated that Christ would not receive the soul of one who commits suicide. [Saint Jerome, Letters 39:3, translated by Charles Christopher Mierow (Newman Press: 1963)]. St Ambrose and St Jerome make however an interesting exception to their otherwise absolute and inclusive condemnation: those who commit suicide in order to preserve their chastity.

It should also be noted that the Coptic Orthodox Church’s stance on this issue is the same as that of the Eastern Orthodox Church. According to the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America:

Suicide is the taking of one's own life. The Orthodox Church has, over the centuries, taught that we do not have the right to take our own lives, since life is a gift from God which we are called upon to preserve and enhance. Hence, the Church considers direct suicide, when a person destroys his or her life with his or her own hand, to be the most serious kind of murder, because there is no opportunity for repentance. The canons and practice of the Church thus prohibit a Church burial to a person who has committed suicide. However, if it can be shown that the person who has committed suicide was not mentally sound, then, upon proper medical and ecclesiastical certification, the burial can be conducted by the Church. In cases, however, where the deceased held a philosophical view affirming the right to suicide, or allowed despair to overcome good judgment, no such allowance can be made.

Source: http://paul.goarch.org/en/ourfaith/articles/article7101.asp

And:

The Orthodox Church denies a Church funeral to a person who has committed suicide, unless a doctor certifies that such a person has lost his or her sanity. Physician-assisted suicide is considered the same as suicide.

Source: http://www.goholytrinity.org/sacramental/sacramental13.php

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Peace.

Comments

  • Ok, I get the point here. But what if its this situation. Somebody shoots themself with a gun. Now we all know that you don't always necassarily die right away. You have some time. What if something happens during that time that makes the person repent and regret shooting himself. Is he forgiven? (Iqbal, I am very and truley sorry for bringing this up again, I just want to know what would happen according to the exact situation I stated).

    P.S. This is not a particular person, rather a situation that crossed my mind.
  • to answer ur question,
    its so unlikely that a situation like that can actually occur. lets be realistic and think about it.

    someone shoots themselve because they want to commit suiside. they have left the lord all together (both the love and presence of the lord have gone). with that in mind, how can somebody in their last second who is in a situation like this think, hold on, what have i done?? can god accept me. they have left god, why are they seeking him in the last second??

    ok, lets jus say the situation does happen, god is the only one who knows the answer if he can accept them in paradise (eg- the right thief).

    we can't sit here and decide where the person will live their eternal life. either in heaven or hell. but our god is a merciful god, so anything is possible

    i hope i made sense lol ;)
    take care

    -mazza
  • oh an iqbal

    ur response was awsome :)
  • Christ4life,

    I think point 5) of my brief summary of the position of the Orthodox Church, answers your question:

    5) God alone knows all the facts of the suicide victim's circumstances, and thus He alone judges according to His infinite wisdom, mercy, and justice. As such, we should not conclude upon the fate of a particular suicide victim, we only speak in general according to Church tradition and authority.

    It is the point made specifically by His Holiness in the first book from which I quoted him. We do not know the heart or condition of the one who dies, and hence we cannot presume their eternal fate according to our own limited perception of the facts. According to the Bible, Christ accepts genuine and sincere repentance. A problem is that people have a false conception of repentance as if it is mere regret or remorse; however these are merely factors which lead to genuine repentance; they are not repentance in and of themselves.

    As such, even according to your hypothetical situation, we would not be able to conclude anything, nor do I really see the point. There is obviously a lot more facts to consider than the mere fact that the hypothetical victim in question regretted his action in the period between his very act and his death. Only God knows, and only God judges according to His Goodness.

    People should simply be content with that, and they should stop endeavoring to reason and understand things which are by nature beyond our intellectual comprehension and understanding. Do not worry about Judas, or any hypothetical person X, just concern yourself with your own salvation, and take a lesson from the insightful authorities quoted above who speak by the Spirit of God in wisdom, and who preserve the tradition of the Church as she received it from the Apostles – learn that your life is sacred, and that one should always hope and never despair; learn that repentance is a key to our salvation, and that the act of taking your life may deprive you of that opportunity etc. etc. In other words, adopt the principles inherent in this discussion for the sake of your own spiritual development and knowledge, and do not worry about or concern youself with how they apply to others.

    Peace.
  • Mazza,

    Thank you, however, my post was not my own work; I simply researched and compiled the opinions of the Orthodox Church on this matter as they are represented by the Church Fathers and Heirarchs.

    With regards to your response to Christ4Life's query:

    ok, lets jus say the situation does happen, god is the only one who knows the answer if he can accept them in paradise (eg- the right thief).

    That's a brilliant answer. As I have said before, we know the general law (i.e. that suicide is unforgiveable - though there are exceptions according to one's mental state), however we cannot apply it to any particular individual for we do not possess God's infinite attributes. We do not judge one's eternal destination period.

    Peace.
  • Thanks a lot, mazza and Iqbal. See, unfortunately, I didn't read the whole article when I asked my question. Sorry about that. I now have learned my lesson...
  • don say that
    every1 here wants to learn so don apologize ;)
  • I don’t know why we are here talking about suicide when I really wanted to talk abiut Judas.
    In any case, I thank Iqbal for starting this new topic on the 18th. I also thank him for his research into the topic of suicide as we know it today through the Orthodox Church. However, my query, and it is a query in the search for knowledge and answers, is not to do with suicide today and how this fits within the Orthodox Church, for I know this very well before Igbal’s research through my work. Thanks anyway. My query is specific to Judas and that time in history.
    I have no ideas as to when the Coptic Orthodox Church started, however, we can be sure that this was well after the death of Judas.
    Judas as many other Jews at that time had the Old Testament and the 10 commandments to follow. Judas was not privileged to the wise teaching of our Coptic Orthodox Church for this came later.
    Sticking to the Old Testament and the 10 commandments can anybody find anything to do with suicide?
    Perhaps there are other books, commandments or laws that I may have over looked? !!
    My limited research tells me that there is a commandment to do with not killing. However, before we get into a heated debate about the meaning of killing (taking of other life or one’s own, etc…), can I ask people to help me establish the following two things:

    1) The rules applicable in those days? I have the Old Testament and the 10 commandments. Please let me know if there are any others that I should look at.

    2) The only reference I have at that time to do with the taking of a life is “Thou shall not Kill” and does not mention the taking of one’s own life.

    Remember I am not talking about a suicide in the past 2005 but before that time.
  • Deano,

    However, my query, and it is a query in the search for knowledge and answers, is not to do with suicide today and how this fits within the Orthodox Church, for I know this very well before Igbal’s research through my work. Thanks anyway. My query is specific to Judas and that time in history.

    The Church does not advocate a theory of moral relativism. Suicide, as is murder (being a form of murder itself), was as wrong in the day of Judas as it was in the early patristic era, and as it is today. That suicide in contrast to murder is “destruction to the soul” (as His Holiness states) is related to the fact that suicide is a type of murder (sin) for which one is not able to repent. Repentance was as relevant to one’s salvation in the day of Judas as it is today.

    The reason we do not apply the general rule to Judas or any other particular person is because, as His Holiness Pope Shenouda III states:

    "We leave the matter concerning the person who committed suicide in God's hands who is the Most Merciful. We should trust that when God judges anyone, He takes into consideration all his circumstances; whether the mental, psychological or nervous. God judges according to His limitless wisdom and knowledge. This is beyond our responsibility as Church."

    Sticking to the Old Testament and the 10 commandments can anybody find anything to do with suicide?

    The command of “Thou Shall not kill”, prohibits suicide. Suicide is the killing of ones’ self, as opposed to the killing of others; however, it is killing nonetheless, which is the point St Augustine of Hippo makes. As you would surely know, being an Orthodox Christian and all, there is no such thing as private interpretation of the Scriptures; Tradition is the interpretive tool, and as such, this interpretation of that particular verse stands without contradiction. According to Jewish tradition Genesis 9:5 was also an implicit prohibition of suicide. Neither Orthodox Jews nor Orthodox Christians were “Sola Scripturists”; such an heretical concept wasn’t around till the Protestant reformation.

    Peace.
  • Dear Mike,

    The old Protestant habit of quoting certain verses and thinking we can understand them by themselves without the teachihg of the Church can be a dangerous one, and never more so than in cases like this.

    The Word became Incarnate in order to save sinners, and we are all sinners, so He came to save us all - not an elect, not only 'good' people, but sinners like you and I. To be saved we need first to be part of God's Church, then we need to partake of His body and His blood, and we need always to repent and try to amend our lives and to live according to His commandments. Will we fail again and again? Are we human? Yes, and Yes! Should we therefore despair because 'we shall never be saved'? No, a thousand times no.

    Look at Judas and St. Peter. In the night that He was betrayed, or rather gave Himself over to His enemies, both Apostles betrayed Him - Peter three times! Judas despaired at what he had done and took it upon himself to deliver judgement, abandoning in his prideful despair all hope of repentance. St. Peter humbly confessed his sinfulness and recognised his weakness, repented and went out and tried to do better.

    So, Mike, be like St. Peter and not Judas. We all, in little ways, betray Him and fail to live up to our calling as Christians. That's why we have the Church - it is a spiritual hospital for our sins and in it we shall be healed - if we are humble and confess to our sins. Never think that you are lost - that is a temptation of the Devil.

    As Iqbal wisely said, only God makes the final judgement, do not presume to take upon yourself that judgement. He loves you and He wants you to be saved; you have to do your bit now!

    In Christ,

    Anglian
  • [quote author=Iqbal link=topic=2121.msg32734#msg32734 date=1121664183]
    Mazza,

    Thank you, however, my post was not my own work; I simply researched and compiled the opinions of the Orthodox Church on this matter as they are represented by the Church Fathers and Heirarchs.

    With regards to your response to Christ4Life's query:

    ok, lets jus say the situation does happen, god is the only one who knows the answer if he can accept them in paradise (eg- the right thief).

    That's a brilliant answer. As I have said before, we know the general law (i.e. that suicide is unforgiveable - though there are exceptions according to one's mental state), however we cannot apply it to any particular individual for we do not possess God's infinite attributes. [b][b]We do not judge one's eternal destination period.
    [/b][/b]

    Peace.


    Dont you think by not allowing a funeral service for those who commit suicide  We are judging one's eternal destination period
  • About judas, Christ said he was in the lowest part of hades. Now if you are judging christ saying it was wrong of him to do that because in the old testament it doesn't talk about suicide then your wrong. For two reasons. First because we are not god, and he alone knows what's in the heart. For sure he knew judas was wrong because as he said he is in the lowest part of hades. I was watching miracle court last night, and they said something i really liked. If we understood everything god did, we would be god. My last point is that, even though christ's teachings were WRITTEN after judas dies, Judas was still a disciple present when jesus talked about everything in the new testament because the new testament is all quotes and stories of jesus' life and his teachings. So judas did in fact know that suicide was wrong, because like i said, he was WITH christ and he even heard the voice of god say this. 
  • [quote author=Iqbal link=topic=2121.msg32724#msg32724 date=1121661003]
    As many of you may be aware, there have been some heated discussions regarding the controversial issue of suicide and the consequent fate of Judas with respect to his own suicidal actions.

    The crux of the problem as I see it, is that many choose to make themselves an authority such that their opinion becomes elevated above that of the Church. This is, strictly speaking not Orthodox. A healthy debate on doctrinal/moral/spiritual issue, is one which involves Church tradition and which appeals to the Church’s authority; a superfluous debate is one which neglects Church tradition and opposes Church authority.

    I will thus now put forward the Church’s opinion on this matter, and if others would like to engage with the following authorities then please feel free to do so. If someone would like to share other Church traditions or authorities that need to be taken into consideration, then by all means, please feel free to share them with us.

    To summarise the Orthodox Church's position on this issue as established by His Holiness Pope Shenouda III, His Grace Bishop Youssef, Fr Tadros Malaty, the Church Canons, the Church Fathers, and the views of the Eastern Orthodox tradition, as shown in the material pasted below:

    1) Suicide is murder, and a direct contravention of the sixth commandment.

    2) Suicide means that one dies in their sin, and hence is incapable of repenting; as such the Church refuses to perform a proper burial and even refuses to pray over the deceased.

    3) Suicide is blasphemy of the Holy Spirit, for one has resisted God's Grace and died in sin without repentence.

    4) The only exception to all of the above, is if the suicide victim commited such an act due to serious mental illness or disorder.

    5) God alone knows all the facts of the suicide victim's circumstances, and thus He alone judges according to His infinite wisdom, mercy, and justice. As such, we should not conclude upon the fate of a particular suicide vitcim, we only speak in general according to Church tradition and authority.



    Very very well said Iqbal.

    So, out of curiosity, (if u can just confirm) Euthanasia is wrong? U agree?
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