In his writings the Elder speaks about the unexpected advent of the divine Light, which “embraces us with…love”. Later he speaks of “continuous vision of the light”, which stayed with him “for three days”, and on another occasion remained with him “for two weeks”. Here we should recall the teaching of St Gregory Palamas, which we saw above, about illumination and the continuous vision of the Light. This grace, like the grace of experiencing Gethsemane, was a great gift which, as he confesses, “continues…to this day, increasing all the time”. He lived through that period when he was in the Light, and the Light was in him, as a natural state. He goes on to speak about the loss of God’s grace, of the retreat of “the Spirit of the Lord”, of the departure for a long time of “the vision of heavenly Light”, of being forsaken by the Light and of drifting away from “the celestial radiance”.
The unrestrainable impetus towards painful repentance drew his soul “to insatiable prayer — the sort of prayer where the soul is unremembering, thinks of nothing, but, unbridled, reaches out to God, invisible yet beloved; inapprehensible yet known; inaccessible yet near.”
At the arrival of even one proud thought, he was deprived of the Light. He writes: “Time and again I would pray, drowning in tears of repentance, and then somewhere close by, in the air still, a vain thought would come and I would rise to my feet bereft – tears gone, soul desolate, body vigorous, spiritual life no more.” This, however, taught him how to deal courageously with proud thoughts while they were still approaching. He writes: “After many such disasters the slightest sign of the enemy’s approach would fill me with dread and I would redouble my cries of repentance — Ό Lord, the murderers are come, save me’. Then it was that I understood why the Fathers disliked praise: if praised, even the most perfect of them did not escape damage tcuheir love of God.”
This is why he wrote that “the imaginative mind is not suited to theology.” Anyone who wishes “to stand before God with dipure mind’ must distance himself from “the sphere of the imagination”.
Father Sophrony testifies to way in which the soul ascends to God:
The Elder’s writings also identify the basic reason for losing the Light of divine grace, which is called abandonment by God, Godforsakenness. Generally speaking, man cannot endure theoria for long on account of his corruptibility and mortality. God also providentially arranges this deprivation because of someone’s immaturity, and so that he will freely respond even better, by emptying himself more completely and by drinking the cup that He drank. Thus the soul is humbled and its knowledge of the ways of God increases.
He writes:
Some may regard it as madness to renounce rational analysis at such times, on the grounds that God gave us the ability to reason. This is what Barlaam used to say, and he described the vision granted to the Prophets as “inferior to understanding”. The Elder refutes this view very effectively by writing that, when “this madness'”, that is to say, this refusal to rationalise, left him, he understood the inestimable loss caused to his spiritual being.
On other occasions the loss of this great grace was due to a subtle proud thought. The Elder was helped by the writings of the Fathers, because he found in them something similar to his own experience. On the other hand, this spiritual reading and knowledge also had its dangers, because, as he writes, “I was plunged into a complex struggle with my self-conceit”, and then “the vision of heavenly Light” would depart, “perhaps for a long time”. He would “suffer deep sadness” on this account.
After the loss of the undying life that he had known during the vision of the uncreated Light, he would return to his previous state and, of course, his repentance and mourning continued. The deified ascend from illumination of the nous and unceasing noetic prayer to theoria of God, and when for various reasons this theoria comes to an end, they return to noetic prayer. After the loss of theoria of the Light, which is the light of the Kingdom of God and eternal life, profound sorrow would fill the Elder’s soul and a kind of distress or alarm would enter his heart. He characterises this loss, especially when caused by subtle thoughts of pride and rational processes, as a “calamity”, as “irreparable loss to my spiritual being”.
0 comments:
Post a Comment