Monday, November 26, 2012

How to Read the Scriptures (St. Ephraim) text and translation


From  sayings St.  Maximus collected of the saints (91 PGM).
ΤΟΥ ΑΓΙΟΥ ΕΦΡΑΙΜ
Of St Ephraim,
Πῶς χρή ἀναγινώσκειν, ἤ ἀναγινώσκοντι προσέχειν.  
How (we) need to read, or pay attention to someone reading.
Ὅταν ταῖς θείαις Βίβλοις προσομιλεῖς, μή ἁπλῶς ἔσο κατεσπουδασμένος ἐπιτρέχων ἐξ ἐπιπολῆς καί διών παρέργως τά γεγραμμένα· 
Whenever you  familiarize yourself with the divine books,  do not simply hastily run  through them curiously  hunting out the things that have been written,

 ἀλλά κἄν δέοι πολλάκις, καί δίς καί τρίς τά αὐτό ἐπελθεῖν εἰς ἀκρίβειαν, μή παραιτήσῃ

 Even if it would be necessary many times, even  two or three to go over the same things, don’t stop  intreating.
Πλήν ἀλλά καί μέλλων ἀναγινώσκειν, ἤ ἀναγινώσκοντι προσέχειν ἑτέρῳ, δεήθητι πρότερον τοῦ Θεοῦ, «Κύριε, λέγων Ἰησοῦ Χριστέ, διάνοιξον τά ὦτα καί τούς ὀφθαλμούς τῆς καρδίας μου, τοῦ ἀκοῦσαι τῶν λόγων σου καί συνεῖναι, καί τό θέλημά σου ποιῆσαι.

But to go further, and when you are about to read, or to  give heed to another reading,  you need first to entreat God, saying  Lord Jesus Christ, open   the ears and eyes of my heart, to hear your words and to understand and to do  your will. 

Πάροικος ἐγώ εἰμι ἐν τῇ γῇ, μή ἀποκρύψῃς ἀπ' ἐμοῦ τάς ἐντολάς σου. Ἀποκάλυψον τούς ὀφθαλμούς μου, καί κατανοήσω τά θαυμάσια ἐκ τοῦ νόμου σου».
I am a stranger in the earth,  hide not thy commandments from  me. Open  thou  mine eyes that I may behold wondrous things out of thy law.

Thursday, November 15, 2012


Second Peter.1:1-2 Salutations, The Faith of Jesus Christ  saves. Transcription of an informal study

Saint  Peter, prior to his departure from this world,  penned his last pastoral address to his struggling Christian communities in Asia.
He was fulfilling the pointed charge given to him by Christ, “feed my sheep.”  Indeed ,as a good shepherd,  he would soon be laying down his life for his sheep,  being crucified,  tradition  says,  for his belief in Christ.

What particularly occupied him  was that  after his departure wolves would enter into the Christian  community and disrupt them by bringing in  heresy, that is false teaching,  encouraging loose living, thereby causing Christians to fall  from grace,  denying Christ and therefore bringing judgment upon themselves and a multitude of many other errors which we will look at.  In a short letter of three chapters of 61 verses  he attempts then  to establish  his flock  one more time before his departure.

And so, the Apostle  begins following the standard epistle greeting desiring  God’s blessing  upon the readers.

“Simon Peter  a servant and an apostle of Jesus Christ,  to them that have obtained like precious faith  with  us by the righteousness of God and Jesus our Savior.  According as his divine power has given unto us  all things that pertain unto life and godliness through the knowledge of him that hath called us to glory and virtue.”

His readers  have  been  given the gift of faith , a faith he notes which is given  by  God’s righteousness. 
  “En dikaiosune  tou Theou”  Faith  finds it’s source in  God’s righteousness.  Righteousness is a term misunderstood.  Dikaiosune is the greek  word usually translated as righteousness.  In  the Septuagint,  the Greek version of the OT,  it’s the equivalent of God’s steadfastness to fulfill His promises. For instance. David cries in Ps. 142:11 En th  dikaiosunh  sou  eisakouson mou.  In your righteousness hear me.
The Hebrew text  says in your  steadfastness,  b-amunah(the same root  for the word amen), hear me.
God’s  righteousness is His steadfast faithfulness.

Peter is saying then that we have  faith,  we trust God,  because  God   has been faithful  in  manifesting His love to  us.  We love Him because He first loved us (I Jn).  We believe because  He is faithful  to us,  and desires us to enter into  covenant with Him,  to enter into communion.  

Now st Paul  mentions this several times in his epistles. The famous verse on justification.
“Now the just shall live by  faith”  quoted in Romans 1:17.  This is a quote from  Habbakuk  2:4.  I want you  to notice the precise septuagint rendering.
“O de dikaios ek pistews  mou  zhsetai”
The righteous  are delivered,  they  live  from  God’s faith.  Ek  pistews  mou.

We are saved by God’s faith, more accurately, His faithfulness.  I am saved because God  faithfully intervenes and grants  deliverance.  Not because I in myself (note  the key phrase in myself) perform  anything.  What is from  flesh  is flesh,  what is born  of Spirit is Spirit.

This  was Paul’s argument in the epistle to the Romans. 3:3-5
God’s promise was that Israel  would be saved. Yet the ethnic  Jews did not believe. They were blinded.  So how is God faithful then?  Notice this quip.
“What then?  If  some did not believe,  shall their  unbelief  make the faith  of God without  effect? God forbid let God but true and every man a liar.”
We are saved by God’s faithfulness not our own. Although, I will address synergy in another post seeing Peter does abundantly here as well.

This underscores a truth  Peter is making  which  he will state later in this opening.    The idea that this faith  comes from  God’s energy or activity.  

Notice Peter says, “God has given  unto us all things that pertain to life and godliness through  the knowledge of Him that called us  through  glory and virtue.”
Faith  is a manifestation (phanerosis) of His divine energy.
Paul  argues it this way  in his letter to the Corinthians.12:5-10
Now there are diversities of gifts, but the same Spirit. 5And there are differences of administrations, but the same Lord. 6And there are diversities of operations, but it is the same God which worketh all in all. 7But the manifestation of the Spirit is given to every man to profit withal. 8For to one is given by the Spirit the word of wisdom; to another the word of knowledge by the same Spirit; 9To another faith by the same Spirit;...11But all these worketh that one and the selfsame Spirit, dividing to every man severally as he will”  After all, faith is a fruit of the Spirit.

Faith  is specifically  said to be an  energy of God, a manifestation of His presence and work  within us. 

But while  faith  is a manifestation  of God’s Spirit this gift, like all others,  is dependent upon our  synergy,  our cooperation  with God (Which  we will address later).

Faith is a fruit of God’s Sprit.  It is something  uncreated. We must reach  out and take of the tree of life, of Jesus Christ, and taste this grace.
We may object and say  reaching out is the act of faith.
Did the Master say  in vain to seek gifts?  And yet faith is a one of the three main  gifts given (and told to be sought after)-  faith , hope and love being preeminent.  When  we touch  Christ we can  share in His faith  love and hope  and go beyond ourselves.  Men  in this world  have a belief-  devils  even believe and tremble.  But they do not have the faith of Christ.  That is proper to the Lord Himself  and He will  grant it when  we seek  Him.

Is our  faith weak?  There  is a remedy.  There is a balm in Gilead to  assuage us. 

Christ has promised, “ask and you will receive.”  Let us  remember that St.  Paul  tells us,”Covet the best gifts.”  We can  desire the gift of faith,  we can  by grace take the kingdom  of heaven  by violence and beg the Master for the crumbs from His table.

Is our faith  wavering? Let us not abandon  our first hope. And let us fear of not entering His kingdom.  For  “with many of them -the Jews who did not believe-  God was not well pleased, but overthrew them in the wilderness.”

Above all, let us fear of not pleasing the Master.
“For without faith  it is impossible to please Him.”  There is not greater loss than  the grace of His glance,  His satisfaction  expressed to  us.

May the Lord God strengthen the holy and pure faith of devout Orthodox Christians, and of His Holy Church, this city and parish, from all ages to all ages. Amen.

Sunday, July 29, 2012

If only I could change! Looking at Jesus, the Key to Metamorphosis




The good news of  the Christian  message  is Christ came to set us free  from  bondage to our desires. We don’t set ourselves free.  It  is Christ who sets  us free,  it is the Physician who heals , not the patients. As Christ said, “whoever  practices  sin is a slave to sin.  If the Son  shall set you  free,  you will be free indeed.”  By the power of the Holy Spirit,  we can be free from  our desires.  The church calls this  apaqeia, dispassion.
Transformation, or metamorphosis,  starts by  having  a renewed mind  or spirit  yielded to God’s Spirit.  Paul writing to the Romans  said,  “metamorfousqai  th anakainwsei tou nooj umwn.”  Be metamorphasized  by the renewal  of your mind, nous.
But  how  is our mind  renewed?  How are  we changed,  metamorphed?
We see transformation  typified in the mount of Transfiguration.
17 After six days Jesus took with him Peter, James and John the brother of James, and led them up a high mountain by themselves. There he was transfigured before them. His face shone like the sun, and his clothes became as white as the light. Just then there appeared before them Moses and Elijah, talking with Jesus.
Peter said to Jesus, “Lord, it is good for us to be here. If you wish, I will put up three shelters—one for you, one for Moses and one for Elijah.”
While he was still speaking, a bright cloud covered them, and a voice from the cloud said, “This is my Son, whom I love; with him I am well pleased. Listen to him!”
When the disciples heard this, they fell facedown to the ground, terrified. But Jesus came and touched them. “Get up,” he said. “Don’t be afraid.” When they looked up, they saw no one except Jesus. (Mt.17:1-8)
Besides  falling asleep  on their watch,  the disciples did two things here.  First,  they were told  to  listen to the Son.  Secondly,  they  looked at the Son.
To  be transformed- transfigured to His image-  we must listen  to the Son.  God  speaks to us every day. “Today  if you will hear his voice harden not your hearts,”  Is the warning we hear.  He  asks us to  yield  our hearts to Him  every moment and thereby enter into communion with Him.
He also  exhorts us to  look at Him.  We are to “look unto  Jesus the Author and finisher of our faith.”
And, as we stare into  His face  we are filled with the warmth of His love,  of His grace.
For, “we all with unveiled faces beholding as in a glass the glory of the Lord are metamorphed  into the same image from  glory to glory, even as by the Spirit of the Lord.” (2 Cor.3:18)
  Nature teaches this!  Just like  looking at the Sun  brings warmth,  and can  burn,  so  looking at Christ,  casting  the eye of our soul to Him,  affords us a glance of the rays of His mercy  and love.  For He is the Sun  of righteousness (Malachi 4:2)
Our hearts are restless till we find the Face of God  and are filled with His grace.  Let us listen to the Son  of God, get up into the mountain alone,  away from the world’s desires and look for the Face of God, until  He have mercy on us.  In this way,  we celebrate  the Feast of Transfiguration this August.  Let us be transfigured,  radiant from  God’s glory.  So much  so that as the people had to hide from  Moses’ face when  he came down  from  Mount Sinai after seeing God’s glory,  people might also pause  because they see we are not the same, but changed by the shining of God’s glory.

Friday, July 27, 2012




When God  tells us  to go into the desert.  When  we  don’t have a wilderness  tabernacle endowment.
The miracle of the five thousand , familiar to all, has a very practical import.  Besides attesting to the dynamic power and divinity of Christ,  it shows us  how God transforms our fatigue and faithlessness.
Grief and fatigue are facets of life few avoid.  As the prophet Job  said, ” man is born  into  trouble as the sparks  fly upward.”  Indeed,  the sorrows of life only multiply in old  age,  Moses  testifying, “the days of our years are threescore years  and ten;  and if by reason of strength  they  are eighty,  yet is their strength labor and sorrow;  For it is soon  cut off, and we fly away.” Ps.90:10
Consider the events prior to this  miracle and we can  see how  the disciples became worn down.
  1. Few faithful. Every one rejected the preaching of Jesus, and was unbelieving.  (Mt.13:58)  This Galilean  ministry  was a low point in the ministry, and the disciples, no doubt, started to feel some discouragement.
  2. A friend’s death. The greatest prophet among  men  was just slain, leaving  the disciples forlorn.
  3. False disciples.The people wanted to follow Him, Jn.6:2, only to see a miracle.  False disciples
  4. Empty coffers.  They  just had a preaching tour  and there were no  contributions.  They  were left with  bread and fish.  Of course, there is probably another story going on here with Judas.
The disciples  were at a low point.  How does Christ  raise them  up and reveal Himself  to them? How does He grow their faith and refresh them?
1.They got alone with God,  away  from  the crowds.  

30 The apostles gathered around Jesus and reported to him all they had done and taught. 31 Then, because so many people were coming and going that they did not even have a chance to eat, he said to them, “Come with me by yourselves to a quiet place and get some rest.”  Mk.6:30-31
Nothing beats a retreat.  It is like  charging  the phone.  If it is on  all day ,  at the end it is dead.  Are we any different?  Even Christ  had to  go into the desert to  spiritually recharge (Mk.1:35)  When  He was touched power- dunamis  left His body( Lk.8:46).  The same happens to us.  We are depleted of God’s sustaining and strengthening grace as we walk in this world.

2. God  forced them to look on the needs of others. 

 As soon as the retreat started, they were interrupted by people needing help.  When  we spend  time with Christ,  and His virtue is with us,  people will reach out.
The disciples  learned to  look on the needs of others, not on their own  needs.  Christ  was moved with compassion here,  the disciples were moved by fatigue.  They  asked Him  to send the people away.  Instead,  He says, “Feed them!”
3. God forced them  to look to Him  and allow others to be involved in the ministry. 
 God put them  in a position  of faith.  They had no money.  They  had to trust God to provide.  They  had no  tabernacle wilderness endowment,  not even two  pennies.  They had no food.  In fact,  the food they  got was from  some little boy.  God used a lad to  feed the disciples and 5 thousand.  
The disciples grew by this experience. They saw God’s provision, being transformed from  grief  into  faith. The next pericope, that is of Peter walking on water, shows they  were transformed,  although  but to a degree.  Having seen the miracle  He takes a step of faith. 
We will be brought into the wilderness of life,  of temptation.  Sometimes all alone,  after having lost  loved ones,  wealth,  family, jobs.  Let us not  turn  back,  but wait for the blessing  and God’s provision.  Then, having seen the hand of the Lord, we will dare by God’s grace to step  out  like Peter and follow Christ miraculously.

Friday, April 27, 2012

Perpetual Pascha




Christ is Risen! This is our joyful proclamation, but the celebratory exclaim soon starts losing it’s vigor and meaning for us. In fact, the Sunday after Pascha is Thomas Sunday. We doubt the resurrection, as Thomas did, and so the Church reads this gospel to reinforce our faith. After all, faith comes by hearing and hearing by the word of God.

Pascha however, is meant to be lived or rather experienced every day, not just once a year. We shouldn't allow the Paschal light to be blown out in our lives and then  wait till next year to  think about this unwaning light. The Risen Lord has made this Communion with Him possible. How? Well, we need to ask ourselves what did the Resurrection of Christ do and how do we share in it?

The Purpose of the Resurrection

Humanity, because of Adam’s sin, was placed under the sway of the evil one. As St. John  says,  "the whole world  lies in the wicked one." Christ’s resurrection delivers us however from this power and gives us His personal Presence.
Just as Moses led the people  through the Red Sea and swallowed up  Pharoah,  so  Christ as the true Moses, leader,  passes us through  the floods of God's judgment  and  swallows up  the adverse powers, the devil,  as He did Pharoah.
He proceeds to  bring us into the Promised Land.

We can experience this delivering power every moment in our lives when we surrender to Him.   Pharoah, the devil,  is swallowed up in victory, as death  was,  when  we like the Israelites follow  the Head of God's people and walk  with Him.
When we obey the liturgy, “let us commit ourselves and one other and our whole lives to Christ our God,” then we enter into communion with Christ and experience His power to deliver us from sin and our passions.

Pascha should be perpetual- He has trampled down death by death. Do we submit our selves to the King of Kings and allow Him to trample down death in our own hearts and desires? Truly the Lord is Risen! Truly He is the Lord. Let’s not let the light of the Resurrection wane in our lives.


Wednesday, April 25, 2012

St Symeon the Theologian. Three Methods of attention/prayer

The Christian revelation is intensely personal  and practical.  The heart yearns for a union with God that transcends mere intellect.  St Symeon  in this classic text pithily  describes  how we enter into  communion with the Thrice Holy Trinity.



The Three Ways of Attention and Prayer

[Introduction]

There are three ways of attention and prayer, by which the soul can be lifted and become spiritually exhaulted, or crumble and perish. If these three ways are used appropriately and at the right time, the soul will be lifted, whilst if they are used unreasonably and at the wrong time, the soul will perish. Attention therefore should be tied and inseparable to prayer, in the way that the body is tied and inseparable to the soul. Attention should have the lead and mind for enemies as a guard, and fight sin, and resist evil thoughts of the soul. It should be then succeeded by prayer, which will destroy all those evil thoughts which attention fought against earlier, since attention alone is not able to do this.

It is this war of attention and prayer on which both life and death of the soul depend. By attention that we keep our prayer safe and therefore we progress: if we do not have attention to keep it clear and we leave it unguarded, then it is inflected by evil thoughts and we become wicked and hopeless. Hence, the ways of attention and prayer are three, we ought to explain the features of each one and leave the choice to whoever may wish to find salvation.


[The first way of attention and prayer.]

The features of the first way are these: one stands to pray by raising his hands towards the sky together with his eyes and mind. He imagines divine concepts, the good things of Heaven, the armies of the holy angels, the residences of the saints and, in short, he gathers in his mind all that he has heard from the Holy Scriptures. He recalls them in the time of his prayer looking at the sky, and he exhorts his soul to what seems to be love and eros of God. Sometimes he even has tears and cries. In this way his soul gradually becomes proud without realising it, thinking that what he does is by the grace of God's compassion for him. Hence he pleads God to always grant him worthy of such deeds which are, however, signs of error.

A good thing ceases to be good, when it is carried out in the wrong way or at the wrong time. To such an extent this is the case here that, if this person finds perfect solitude, it will be impossible for him not to lose his mind. Should this not happen, it will still be impossible for him to acquire any virtues or detachment from the earthly. By this method are misled all those who see the Light with their bodily eyes, sense perfumes with their sense of smell, hear voices with their ears and so on. Some of them have been possessed, moving senselessly from one place to the other. Others have been misled by accepting the Devil who was transformed and appeared to them as an angel of light, and they have remained uncorrected until the very end, without wanting to hear any advice from their brothers. Some of them were even incited by the Devil and committed suicide, whilst others were crumbled and others became insane. Who can describe the various illusions of the Devil by which he misleads them!

Every reasonable person can understand the kind of damage that comes from this first way of attention and prayer. If it happens that someone by being accompanied by brothers (since these evils usually happen to those who are on their own) does not suffer any of the things we described, he nevertheless spends all his life with no spiritual improvement.


[The second way of attention and prayer.]

The second way is this: when someone concentrates his mind in himself, detaching it from all that is earthly, guarding his senses, and gathering his thoughts so that they are not scattered to the vain things of the world. Sometimes he examines his thoughts and sometimes he pays attention to the words of the prayer he recites. Sometimes he returns to his thoughts that were trapped by the Devil and were drawn to that which is evil and vain, and sometimes with much effort and struggle he comes back to himself, after being defeated and possessed by some weakness.

Having this battle and war with himself, he cannot find peace nortime to do the virtuous good deeds and receive the crown of righteousness. For this man is like the one who fights a war against his enemies in darkness and night; who hears the voices of the enemy and suffers being stabbed, yet he cannot see clearly who they are, where they came from and how, and why they are attacking him. For this damage is caused by the darkness in his mind and the confusion in his thoughts and therefore he can never escape from his enemies, the demons, so that they will stop defeating him. The piteous suffers in vain, for he loses his reward being possessed by vanity without realising it, by thinking he is attentive. Many times he condemns the others and accuses them, praising himself and thinking that he is worthy to become shepherd of rational sheep, guiding others. He is like the blind person who promises to guide other blind people!

This is the second way; anyone who wishes to find salvation needs start by learning the damage that it causes to the soul, and be cautious. This second way is, nevertheless, better than the first, for the sky with Moon is better than the dark night without it.


[The third way of attention and prayer.]

The third way is indeed strange and difficult to explain, whilst,to those who are not aware of it, it is often incomprehendable, appearing unreal and impossible that any such thing can happen. This is because in these days the third way is not found in many, but rather in very few. As I understand, this virtue abandoned us together with obedience, since it is the obedience one shows to his spiritual father which makes one trully free, leaving all the cares to him and staying away from the struggles of this world, whilst being a diligent artisan of this third way. (That is, if one finds a real spiritual father who has no error!) Thus he who dedicates himself and all the care to God and the spiritual father, by real obedience is no longer living his own life where he does his own wishes, but is free from any struggle of the world or his body. By what ephemeral thing then, can this person ever be spirtually defeated or enslaved, or what care or concern could he ever have? It is therefore by this way, together with obedience, that the devices and machinations of the demons to distract the mind towards many and various thoughts, are all defeated and dissolved. One's mind then stays free, and has plenty of space and chance to examine the thoughts brought by the demons, having a greater dexterity to expel them and offer his prayers to God with a clean heart. This is the beginning of the true way of life and those who do not make such a start are struggling in vain, even without knowing it.

The beginning of the third way is not by looking up to the sky, raising the hands, having your mind in heaven and asking for help from there. As we have said, these are of the first way and they are false. Nor is it to guard the senses with the mind and concentrate exclusively on this, whilst neither being attentive nor seeing the inner wars of the soul conducted by the enemies. These are all of the second way. He who uses them is trapped by the demons and is unable to revenge those who trapped him, whilst the enemies are always fighting him both secretly and openly, making him proud and vain.

But you, my friend, if you seek your salvation you should start in this way: after the perfect obedience which we said you should have to your spiritual father, you should then conduct all your deeds with a clear conscience, as if you had God in front of you, for conscience can never be clear without obedience. You should keep your conscience clear towards these things: God, spiritual father, other people and earthly things. Towards God, it is an obligation to keep your conscience clear by avoiding the things you are aware that He neither likes nor give Him any joy. Towards your spiritual father you should do the things he orders you to do, doing nothing more and nothing less, living according to his plan and wish. As for the other people, you should keep your conscience clear by not doing to them any of the things you hate and do not wish them to do to you. Towards the earthly it is your obligation to restrain yourself from abuses, using them all appropriately, food as well as drinking and clothes. In short, you should do everything as if you had God in front of you, making sure that your conscience does not restrain nor condemn you for not doing something right. This is the beginning of the true and firm route of the third way of attention and prayer.

The third way of attention and prayer is then this: the mind should guard the heart in the time of prayer and always stay inside it. From there, from the depths of the heart, it should then lift up the prayers to God. For once it tries inside the heart and tastes and is soothed--as the Lord is good!--then the mind will never want to leave the place of the heart. It will there repeat the words of Peter the apostle: "It is wonderful for us to be here!" [Mt 17:4, Mk 9:5, Lk 9:33] Then it will always wish to look inside the heart, remaining there and pushing aside and expelling all the concepts which are planted by the Devil. To those who have not realised this work of salvation and remain unaware of it, this will most of the times seem very hard and unpleasant. But those who have tasted its sweetness and enjoyed the pleasure inside the depths of their hearts, they all cry together with Paul: "What could ever come between us and the love of God?" [Rm 8:38-39]

Our holy fathers have listened the Lord who said that from the heart come evil intentions, murder, adultery, fornication, theft, perjury, slander [Mt 15:19] and how these are the things that make a man unclean. [Mt 15:20] Further, they have listened to the part of the gospel where we are ordered to clean the inside of cup and dish first so that the outside may become clean as well. [Mt 23:26] They therefore left aside any other spiritual work and concentrated exclusively on guarding the heart, being confident that through this they would easily achieve all other virtues, whilst without it no virtue can be preserved. This practice was called by some fathers 'serenity of the heart', whilst others named it 'attention', others 'sobriety' and 'detainment', others 'examination of the thoughts' and 'guarding of the mind'; for they were all absorbed in this, and by this they were found worthy to accept the divine virtues.

It is for this that the Ecclesiastes says: Rejoice, O young man, in thy youth; and let thy heart cheer thee in the days of thy youth, and walk in the ways of thy heart blameless and clear, and prevent your heart from thoughts. [Eccl. 11:9 (LXX)] The same is said in the Proverbs: If Devil makes an assault on you, do not let him enter your place, [Eccl. 10:4 (LXX)] where 'the place' means the heart. The Lord Himself tells us in the Gospel that we must not worry, [Lk 12:29] in other words not to scatter our minds here and there. Again, in a different passage He says: Happy are those poor in spirit, [Mt 5:3] meaning that happy are those who never acquired any concern of this world in their hearts and are free from all earthly thoughts. All our holy fathers wrote much on this, so may he who wishes to read their works look for those written by St. Mark the Ascetic, St. John of Klimax, St. Hesychios, Philotheos of Sinai, Abba Hesaites, Barsanouphios the Great and many others.

In short, he who is not attentive to guard his mind cannot be cleansed in his heart and be therefore worthy to see God. He who is not attentive can never be poor in spirit nor can he ever mourn and cry, or become gentle and peaceful, or hunger and thirst for justice, or become merciful, peacemaker, or persecuted in the cause of right. [Mt 5:3-10] It is quite impossible to acquire any virtue by any means other than attention. It is attention that you should mostly take care of, to be able then to understand the things I am saying. If now you wish to learn the way to achieve this, I will tell you.

There are three things you should preserve beyond anything else: disinterest in everything reasonable or unreasonable and vain, in other words detachment from everything; then clear conscience in everything, as we have said, by not causing its judgement for anything; finally complete peace, having your mind detached from anything earthly. When you have all these, find a place quiet, seat alone in a corner, shut the door [Mt 6:6] and cease your mind from anything ephemeral and vain. Press your chin on to your chest so that you can have your attention in yourself, with both eyes and mind. Hold your breath slightly to concentrate your mind and then, having all your mind there, try to find the place of your heart. In the beginning, what you will discover is darkness, much callousness and evil. But then, after having practised this method of attention a lot, night and day, you will find--great wonder!--an incessant happiness! The mind, through struggle, will have finally reached the place of the heart, where you will see the things you have never seen or known. There you will see the heaven which is within you, inside the heart, and you will find yourself enlightened, full of all grace and virtue.

From there on, if any kind of evil thought ever appears from any direction, before even being considered or take shape, you will immediately push it aside and dissolve it by the name of Jesus with his prayer: "Lord Jesus Christ have mercy on me." Hence forth the mind will begin to bear grudge and animosity against the demons, being in an incessant war. It will raise its justified wrath and hunt them, attack them, dissolve them. As for the things following beyond that, those you may find out yourself, with God's help, through your effort and the attention of your mind, keeping Jesus in your heart with His prayer: "Lord Jesus Christ have mercy on me." That is why a Church-father used to say: "Stay in your cell and that will teach you everything!"


[QUESTION. Why is it not possible to achieve all this through the first and the second way?]

ANSWER. Because we are not using them as we should. St. John of Klimax compares these ways with a ladder of four steps and explains: There are those who lessen their weaknesses and humble them, others who chant, praying with their voices, others who are absorbed in the spiritual prayer and others who reach observance. Those therefore who wish to climb these steps, do not start from the top one coming down but begin from the lower ones and go upwards. They step on the first step and then on the second, then on the third one and finally on the fourth. It is by this way that one is able to be lifted from the earth and ascend to heaven. First of all one needs to fight to diminish and cease his weaknesses. Only then he should become absorbed in chanting: praying with his voice. It is once one has diminished his weaknesses that prayer brings pleasure and sweetness to the tongue, and he may be considered near to and appreciated by God. Then one needs to start praying with his spirit, and finally he will reach observance. The first is of the beginners, the second of those who are increasing their virtues, the third of those who have reached the fulfilment of virtue, whilst the fourth belongs to the perfect.

The beginning, therefore, is nothing else but the diminution and cessation of the weaknesses, which are not diminished in the soul in any other way but through attention and guarding of the heart. It is the heart where they come from, as our Lord says, the evil thoughts that make a man unclean, [Mt 15:19-20] and it is there where guard and attention is needed. Once weaknesses are totally diminished by the resistance of the heart, then the mind comes to yearn and seek the way to reconcile with God, extenting its prayer and becoming further absorbed in it. Through this desire and prayer, the mind is strengthened and dismisses all the thoughts that have surrounded it in order to find their way into the heart, and fights them with prayer. Then starts a war and the evil demons resist with great distress, causing confusion and giddiness in the heart, exploiting its weaknesses. However, by the Name of Jesus Christ they are all dissolved and melt like wax in the fire. Even after being cast out and having left the heart, demons do not relinquish but disturb the mind externally, through the senses. Nevertheless, the mind will very quickly feel the tranquillity which is within, for they have no power to disturb the depths of the mind but only the surface. To escape completely from this war and stop being confronted by the evil demons is impossible. This belongs to the perfect and those who trully left everything behind and became wholly dedicated to the prayer of the heart.

He who therefore uses these means accordingly, each one at the right time, after having cleansed his heart from weaknesses he can then become dedicated in chanting, and fight the thoughts, and look up at the sky with his sensual eyes (if he feels the need to do that some time) and stare to it with the spiritual eyes of the soul, and pray honestly and truthfully, as it is appropriate. Looking at the sky should nevertheless be avoided, for the danger of evil demons who are there, who are called spirits of the air. These can cause various different delusions, and so we ought be cautious. This is the only thing that God asks us to do: to have our heart cleansed through prayer. According to the Apostle, if the root is holy then the branches and the fruit are likewise holy. [Rm 11:16] Without the way which we have described, he who raises his eyes and mind to heaven and imagines various concepts, is bound to see creations of his imagination, things false and untrue, coming from his unclean heart.

As we have repeatedly said, the first and the second way do not bring any spiritual advancement. When we want to build a house, we do not make the roof first and then lay the foundation--for this is impossible!--but we firstly lay the foundation, then build the house and then add the roof. We should do the same in spiritual matters: first lay the foundation, which is to guard the heart and cast out its weaknesses; then build the spiritual house, which is to cast out the evil spirits fighting us through our senses; finally, having overcome the war as soon as possible, add the roof, which is to depart from all things earthly, and give ourselves completely to God. Thus we complete our spiritual house in Christ our God, to whom all glory is due, unto the ages of ages. Amen.-

Monday, March 5, 2012

Living in the love of the Holy Trinity. The Divine Dance Class- Perichoresis

    Perfect love is the desire of every heart. To paraphrase a blessed teacher of the Church Augustine, “God has created a God shaped void in every heart.” The Church  has understood this emptiness as God’s invitation  for a man  to enter into  a divine relationship with Him. This is where the teaching of the Trinity is so  important to our faith.

     The Father has eternally loved His only begotten Son. The Son in return  loves the Father unconditionally.  After all, the Son is the perfect reflection of Him.

By the grace of baptism and our struggle against the passions,  we enter into this divine relationship.

“As many as received Him  to them  He gave the power to become the sons of God.” (John 1:12)

This same love the Father has for the Son is experienced by us when  we surrender to Christ. Since we are in the Son it is communicated to us.

Jesus said in John 15:21,“Whoever has my commands and keeps them is the one who loves me. The one who loves me will be loved by my Father, and I too will love them and show myself to them.”

The  Father pours then His love into  our heart.

“For the love of God is poured into our hearts by the Holy Spirit who is given unto us.”(Romans 5:5)

Then  the Son  in us reciprocates that love.  As the Apostle Paul explained:
“Because we are sons,  God has sent forth the Spirit of His Son  into our hearts crying, Abba, Father.”(Galatians 4:7)

This is what eternal  life truly is.  It is not just living forever,  but living forever in the light of God’s countenance, in the light of His uncreated love and light.
Eternal life is truly knowing the Father  experiencing that relationship.  Christ in His intercession  at Gethsemane said:

“This is eternal life,  that they might know you the only true God and Jesus Christ your Son whom you have sent.” (John 17:3)

This Pascha  we proclaim, “Come receive the light!”  It is an open  invitation from  God  to  experience the light  of the resurrection  glory-  the light of His uncreated love and relationship  that we are called to embrace.

Two  Fathers of the Church, St Cyril of Alexandria  John of Damascus,   liked the word perixorhsij and applied it to our relationship with God.  Life with God is a wonderful  divine dance.  Dancing  can be difficult.  The steps  take time to learn, we are awkward at first.  The same is true  of walking with God-  it will be awkward and we will fall as we learn  this dance. But let’s not give up, the love of God the Father is worth  it.