by Metropolitan Hierotheos of Nafpaktos
(Excerpt from the Book “Orthodox Psychotherapy”)
Orthodox Pathology
John the
Evangelist, when preparing to speak of the Lord’s miraculous healing of
the paralytic, gives us a description of the pool of Bethesda and the
situation that prevailed there during the Lord’s visit. Bethesda had
five porches. “In these lay a great multitude of the sick, blind, lame,
paralyzed, waiting for the stirring of the water” (Jn. 5, 3).
The Church
too is a Pool, a spiritual Bethesda. All of us, its members, overcome by
death and decay, corruptibility and mortality with all their
consequences are waiting at this Pool, hoping for our spiritual healing.
St. John Chrysostom interprets the miracle performed by the Lord at Bethesda. He asks the question:
“What manner
of healing is this: what mystery is being intimated to us?” He answers
that the pool portrays and typifies what is going to happen in the
future, and this in fact is baptism. “He was on the point of giving
baptism, which has much power and is a very great gift, baptism which
cleanses of all sin and brings men to life, when they have been dead”.
Since
baptism is the “introductory” Mystery (sacrament) by which we enter the
Church, we can extend the symbolism to say that the Church is the
spiritual Bethesda – the spiritual sanatorium and Hospital. All
Christians, having tasted God’s love and charity towards mankind, at the
same time sense our spiritual poverty. Because God’s grace throws light
on our inner condition, we see the strength of the passions in us and
the law of sin in our members. That is why we feel ill. This feeling is
the beginning of healing, or to express it better, it is the beginning
of the vision of God, since repentance and inward grief are impossible
in a carnal man. Only a sharer in God’s grace experiences this inner
reality.
Hospitals
have special pathological clinics. And the Church, which is the
spiritual hospital, the spiritual sanatorium, has its pathological
clinic. We are not trying to create confusion about these terms, but we
firmly believe that the study of passions is pathology. So here we shall
take a longer look at the subject of passions. We shall define
“passion”, go on to distinguish between passions, and then examine as
analytically as we can the curing of the passions.
This account
is necessary because it constitutes the Orthodox ethos. We are
convinced that what one says about being Orthodox must include several
basic elements. First one must refer to the fall of man from the divine
life and the tragedy of the fallen state. Then one must speak of rebirth
through holy baptism, and the continuation of rebirth which goes on in
the Church. Teaching about rebirth is not Orthodox when it implies a
momentary event which takes place through outward faith in Christ,
because rebirth continues through our whole life, and there is no limit
to perfection, it knows no bounds. We have the case of the Apostle
Peter, who was granted to see the uncreated Light on Mt.Tabor. His eyes
were transformed and thus they saw the glory of the Lord. Yet a few days
later he denied Christ. Certainly that great moment of the Theophany
led him to repentance and weeping. His fall showed itself to be great by
contrast to the great vision. At any rate we observe here the fact that
the power of the law of sin was so strong that it led to a fall even
after the certainty of Christ’s divinity. There is the mitigating
circumstance that when the Apostle Peter saw the glory of the Lord it
was before the Baptism which took place on the day of Pentecost. The
Apostle’s nature had not yet been empowered by the energy of the Holy
Spirit.
We see the
same thing in the Apostle Paul as well. Although he felt his close
communion with Christ, so that he could say: “It is no longer I who
live, but Christ lives in me” (Gal. 2, 20), nevertheless he said,
expressing all the pain of humanity: “I see another law in my members,
warring against the law of my mind, and bringing me into captivity to
the law of sin which is in my members. O wretched man that I am! Who
will deliver me from this body of death?” (Rom. 7, 23-24).
In what
follows we shall try to look at this law of sin, the “other law”. We
believe that this chapter which we have called pathology will be one of
the most basic in this book. On a few points we shall try to be very
analytical, listing all the passions as Christ, the Apostles and the
Fathers present them, because we want to pinpoint the dreadful reality
which is plaguing us and of which, unfortunately, we are most often
unaware.
1. What the Passions are
‘Passion’ is
derived from the verb ‘páscho’, ‘to suffer’ and indicates inner
sickness. According to Philotheos of Sinai: “Passion, in the strict
sense, they define as that which lurks impassionably in the soul over a
long period”. In what follows we shall see how a sin becomes a passion.
Here we want to underline particularly the fact that when a sin is
repeated often and lurks in our soul for a long time, it is called a
passion. The Fathers go so far as to interpret the difference between
passion and sin. Passion is “the movement which takes place in the soul”
while sinful practice is “that which is manifested in the body”.
The Lord
explained his teaching about the passions at many points, and it is
recorded in the Gospels. We underline just a few passages here because
we are going to come back later. In response to the Pharisees’ question:
“Why do your disciples not walk according to the tradition of the
elders but eat bread with unwashed hands?” the Lord directed attention
to the inner man: “From within, out of the heart of man, come evil
thoughts, fornication, theft, murder, adultery, coveting, wickedness,
deceit, licentiousness, envy, slander, pride, foolishness. All these
evil things come from within and they defile a man” (Mark 7, 21-23).
Interpreting
the parable of the sower and especially referring to the seed which
fell “among thorns”, He said that the passions are those things which
choke the seed and do not allow it to be fruitful. “As for what fell
among the thorns, they are those who, hear, but as they go on their way
they are choked by the cares and riches and pleasures of life, and their
fruit does not mature” (Luke 8, 14).
The Apostle
Paul too knows that passions exist in the heart of man. Speaking of the
condition before baptism, which is a carnal life, he writes: “While we
were living in the flesh, our sinful passions, aroused by the law were
at work in our members to bear fruit for death” (Rom. 7, 5). Describing
the life of the heathen idolaters, he writes: “For this reason God gave
them up to dishonorable passions” (Rom. 1, 26).
Thus the
passions lurk in our soul and create terrible problems in our whole
being, as we shall see at many points in what follows. According to the
teaching of St. Gregory Palamas, a person who loves wrongdoing hates his
own soul, he tears apart and disables the image of God, that is, his
soul, and “he experiences suffering similar to that of madmen who
pitilessly cut their own flesh to pieces without feeling it”. Like them
he “unwittingly inflicts the most miserable sort of harm and rending
upon his own innate beauty”. Passion is a darkening and disabling and
staining of the image, the beauty of God.
In speaking
about the passions we should point out more precisely what they are. Are
they forces which enter our soul and which we should root out or are
they natural powers of the soul which have been corrupted by sin and by
our withdrawal from God? The whole biblical-patristic tradition believes
the latter. Therefore in what follows we must examine the soul and its
parts so that we can then see how these powers are corrupted.
St. Gregory
Palamas teaches that as God is Nous, Word and Spirit, so also the soul
has nous, word and spirit. The soul’s spirit is “a certain motion of the
nous which, however, involves a temporal extension in conjunction with
our word and requires the same intervals and proceeds from incompletion
to completion”. According to this Athonite saint the threefold nature of
the soul is nous, word and spirit; that of knowledge is noetic,
intelligent and sensory and the trio of the nous, as turning towards
itself and ascending towards God, is nous, knowledge and love.
Beyond these
divisions St. Gregory Palamas, archbishop of Thessaloniki, also uses
the division of the soul established at the time of the ancient Greek
philosophers. Man’s soul is one, although it has many powers. It is
divided into three parts: the intelligence, the appetitive power and the
incensive power appetitive and incensive aspects constitute the
so-called passible part of the soul, and the word is the intelligence.
So as we go on to develop the subject of the passions, when we speak
about the passible part of the soul which is defiled and must be cured,
we should understand the incensive and appetitive parts. We may add to
the teaching of these two great Fathers of the Church that of St.
Dorotheos, who, using a passage from St. Gregory the Theologian, writes
that the soul is tripartite: “It has the appetitive, incensive and
intelligent powers”.
These three
powers should be turned towards God. That is their natural condition.
According to St. Dorotheos, agreeing with Evagrios, “the intelligent
soul works naturally when its appetitive part longs for virtue, the
incensive part strives for it, and the intelligence devotes itself to
the contemplation of beings”. And St. Thalassios writes that the proper
function of the soul’s intelligent aspect is devotion to the knowledge
of God, while that of its passible (appetitive and incensive) aspect is
the pursuit of self-control and love. Nicholas Cavasilas, referring to
this theme, is in agreement with the preceding Fathers and says that
human nature was created for the new man. We have received reason “in
order that we may know Christ, our desire in order that we might hasten
to Him. We have memory in order that we may carry Him in us”, since
Christ is the Archetype for men.
According to
the above, man was not formed with passions as they function in our day
in the man of flesh who does not have the operations of the Holy
Spirit. The passions do not have essence or hypostasis. Just as darkness
has no existence in essence but is the absence of light, so it is with
passion. “It was by inclining away from the virtues through love of
pleasure that the soul prepared the way for passions and gave them a
firm place in itself’. We can put this better by saying that the
passions are a perversion of the powers of the soul. God did not form
man with the passions of dishonour. As St. John of the Ladder says,
“Evil or passion is not something naturally implanted in things. God is
not the creator of passions. On the other hand, there are many natural
virtues that have come to us from Him”. The presence of virtues is the
natural state of man, while the passions are the unnatural condition. We
have altered and perverted the energies of the soul and steered them
from their natural state to the unnatural state. According to St. John
of the Ladder, God neither caused nor created evil. “We have taken
natural attributes of our own and turned them into passions”. The same
saint gives several examples to make this clear. “The seed for
childbearing” is natural in us, but we pervert it for fornication. The
anger which God gave us against the serpent, to wage war against the
devil, is natural, but we have used it against our neighbour. We have a
natural urge to excel in virtue, but instead we compete in evil. Nature
stirs within us the desire for glory, but that glory is of a heavenly
kind, for the joy of heavenly blessing. It is natural for us to be
arrogant – against the demons. Joy is ours by nature, but it should be
joy on account of the Lord and for the sake of doing good to our
neighbour. Nature has given us resentment, but that ought to be against
the enemies of our souls. We have a natural desire for food, and not for
profligacy.
For this
reason the Fathers constantly emphasize the truth that the passions as
we know them in the fallen state are an unnatural life, an unnatural
impulse. “A culpable passion is an impulse of the soul that is contrary
to nature”. Explain ing what this unnatural impulse of the soul is, St.
Maximus calls it a “mindless love or mindless hatred for someone or for
some sensible thing”. At another point he writes that vice is a wrong
use of our conceptual images of things, which leads to misuse of the
things themselves. Taking the example of marriage, he says that the
right use of sexual intercourse is the begetting of children. A person
who seeks in it only sensual pleasure “uses it wrongly, for he reckons
as good what is not good. When such a man has intercourse with a woman,
he misuses her”. The same is true with regard to other things.
The
intelligent part of the soul of fallen man is dominated by pride, the
appetitive part of the soul chiefly by perversions of the flesh, and the
incensive part by the passions of hatred, anger and rancour.
St. Maximus,
who was concerned with the natural and unnatural life of the soul,
analysed them exhaustively. The natural powers of the soul, he wrote,
are intelligence, desire and the incensive power. The natural use of
intelligence is “movement towards God in simplest seeking”, that of
desire is “direction towards God alone in longing”, and that of the
incensive power is a “struggle to attain God alone”. That is to say,
when a person lives naturally, he wants to know God completely, he
desires only God, and he struggles to attain God, that is, to attain
communion with God. The result of this natural impulse is love. A person
united with God acquires the blessed state of love, since God is love.
Holy Scripture says: “Love the Lord your God with all your heart, with
all your soul, with all your mind, and with all your strength” (Mark 12,
30). When a person uses these three powers of his soul unnaturally, the
result for intelligence is spiritual ignorance, for desire self-love,
and for the incensive power tyranny. Thus the person becomes completely
enslaved to the devil, and the soul’s beauty is spoiled.
In another
place St. Maximus analyses what misuse is. Misuse of the intelligent
power is ignorance and stupidity. Misuse of the incensive and desiring
powers is hatred and licentiousness. The proper use of these powers
produces spiritual knowledge, moral judgment, love and self-restraint.
Therefore nothing created by God is evil. The fact that nothing natural
is evil means that evil exists when the powers are distorted by us. St.
Maximus also uses several examples. It is not foods that are evil, but
gluttony, not the begetting of children, but unchastity, not material
things but avarice, not esteem but self-esteem.
Misuse of
the powers of the soul is sin, sickness. Vice, according to St.
Dorotheos, is “a sickness of the soul depriving it of its own natural
health, which is virtue”.
Thus we can
speak of man’s sickness which must be healed. For the impurity of the
soul is that it is “not functioning according to nature” and this
condition engenders impassioned thoughts in the nous. The natural state
of man’s soul, which is health par excellence, appears when in the face
of provocations its passible aspects – that is, its incensive power and
its desire – remain dispassionate. And since the soul of man is uniform
and has many powers, for this reason when one power of the soul sickens
the rest of them also fall ill.
St. Gregory
Palamas teaches that just as misuse of the knowledge of created things
engenders ‘the wisdom which has become folly’, so also the misuse of the
powers of the soul are what engenders “the terrible passions”.
That the
passions are an unnatural impulse of the soul’s powers, a turning of the
passible and intelligent parts of the soul away from God towards
created things, is shown by the fact that when a man is inwardly healed
by the action of divine grace and his own struggle, then the passible
powers of the soul are not suppressed, obliterated, but they turn
towards God; they rush towards Him and attain knowledge and communion
with Him. St. Gregory Palamas, referring to Barlaam, who maintained that
pain and sorrow do not belong to prayer but that the passible powers,
being evil, should be mortified during prayer, teaches that there are
“blessed passions and common activities of body and soul which, far from
nailing the spirit to the flesh, serve to draw the flesh to a dignity
close to that of the spirit”. These activities are spiritual, not moving
from the body to the nous, but from the nous to the body. Therefore
when we try to obtain healing, we do not mortify the passions, but we
redirect them, as we shall explain later. The tears, sorrow, repentance
and pain, which are effective means for curing the soul, are the things
which purify the passible and intelligent part of the soul.
In closing
this section we want to stress mainly that the passions of the body are
distorted energies of the soul. When the soul lacks love and
self-control, the passions of the incensive and appetitive part of the
soul are distorted. And these passions are aroused through the senses.
The passions of the carnal life, in the sense of the absence of the Holy
Spirit, are an unnatural movement of the soul and are therefore its
dying, death and sickness.
2. Types of Passions and their Development
Now that we
have seen what the passions are, we are ready to look into how they are
classified and how they develop. At the same time we shall undertake to
list them, because we believe that this will help Christians who are
fighting the good fight. If we are to be healed of passions we need to
diagnose them.
The teaching
about passions is found not only in the patristic writings but also in
Holy Scripture. The Apostle Paul speaks of the flesh. It is well known
that according to the Apostle, a carnal man is one who is deprived of
the energies of the Holy Spirit. “The desires of the flesh are against
the spirit and the desires of the spirit are against the flesh; for
these are opposed to each other” (Gal. 5, 17). Then he defines the works
of the flesh, which are the carnal passions: “The works of the flesh
are plain: immorality, impurity, licentious ness, idolatry, sorcery,
enmity, strife, jealousies, anger, selfishness, dissension, party
spirit, envy, murders, drunken ness, carousing, and the like. I warn
you, as I warned you before, that those who do such things will not
inherit the kingdom of God” (Gal. 5,19-21).
In his
letter to the Romans the Apostle Paul lists the works of sin, the
passions, which plague our entire existence. Referring to those who
deserted God and worshipped idols, he writes: “And since they did not
see fit to acknowledge God, God gave them up to a base mind and to
improper conduct. They were filled with all manner of wickedness, evil,
covetousness, malice. Full of envy, murder, strife, deceit, malignity,
they are gossips, slanderers, haters of God, insolent, haughty boastful,
inventors of evil, disobedient to parents, foolish, faithless,
heartless, ruthless” (Rom. 1, 28-31).
He describes
to his disciple Timothy the people’s condition “in the last days”. “For
men will be lovers of self, lovers of money, proud, arrogant, abusive,
disobedient to their parents, ungrateful, unholy, inhuman, implacable,
slanderers, profli gates, fierce, haters of good, treacherous, reckless,
swollen with conceit, lovers of pleasure rather than lovers of God,
holding the form of religion but denying the power of it” (2 Tim. 3,
1-5).
The three
texts quoted show the whole situation of the man who is far from God. It
is really a psychogram, a significant X-ray view of the soul of a man
who is ruled by passions. But we shall go on to look at the analysis in
the patristic works.
According to
St. Maximus, the basic passion from which all the passions originate is
self-love. A man is self-loving who loves himself excessively and
idolizes himself. When a person’s attention is drawn away from God and
he is not interested in uniting with Him and doing His will, then he
necessarily turns towards himself, wanting to satisfy himself all the
time. “Guard yourself from that mother of vices, self-love”, says St.
Maximus. And defining self-love, he says it is “mindless love for the
body”. It gives birth to the three first and “most general of the
impassioned thoughts”, which are gluttony, avarice and self-esteem. “All
further vices are generated by these three”.
In another
place, presenting the terrible consequences of self-love, he calls it
the mother from which come many daughters. Talkativeness and gluttony
cause intemperance. Avarice and self-esteem cause one to hate one’s
neighbour. Self-love, the mother of vices, is the cause of both these
things.
In his
writing To Thalassios’ St. Maximus details the whole ancestry of
self-love, which he arranges in two categories. In one category are the
passions which lead to sensual pleasure and in the other those which
keep pain away. In the first category he places the following passions:
“gluttony, pride, self-esteem, being puffed up, avarice, tyranny,
putting on airs, boastfulness, folly, frenzy, presumption, conceit,
scorn, insult, impiety, frivolous talk, dissoluteness, licentiousness,
ostentation, light-mindedness, stupidity, violence, mocking, chatter,
unseasonable talk, indecent talk, and everything else of the sort”. In
the second category he places the following passions: “wrath, envy,
hatred, enmity, rancour, abuse, backbiting, slander, sorrow, lack of
trust, despair, disparagement of providence, listlessness, indifference,
despondency, dejection, faintheartedness, untimely mourning, tears,
melancholy, lamentation, jealousy, envy, spite, and every other
disposition that lacks any occasion for pleasure”.
St. Gregory
Palamas creates another division. In the preceding section we emphasized
that the soul is divided into three parts, the intelligent, incensive
and desiring aspects. The first evil offspring of the appetitive part is
love of possessions and the second is avarice. The offspring of the
intelligent part of the soul is love of glory, and the characteristic
mark of the incensive part of the soul is gluttony, from which comes
“all uncleanness of the flesh”. In other words, from self-love, which is
the mistress and mother of all the passions, are born the three general
passions, love of glory, avarice and self-indulgence. From these three
great passions arise all the others which defile the soul and body of
man.
St. Mark the
Ascetic, endeavouring to evaluate the passions and to find the mothers
which give birth to others, writes that there are three great giants,
and when they have been overthrown and slain, all the other powers of
the evil spirits are easily removed. These three giants are spiritual
ignorance, which is the source of all evils, forgetfulness, its “close
relation and helper”, and laziness, which “weaves the dark shroud
enveloping the soul in murk”. Laziness, forgetfulness and ignorance
“support and strengthen the other passions”.
This
difference in the three Fathers is not an essential one. Self-love,
forgetfulness, laziness and ignorance of God are the favourable climate
in which all the passions of love of glory, self-indulgence and avarice
develop. Each of the Fathers, according to his personal struggle and
according to the topic which he wanted to emphasize, noted a different
passion. The Fathers were not making a philosophy or analysing every
soul when they listed these passions, but they were always speaking from
their personal experience. It must further be emphasized that self-love
is very closely connected with ignorance, forgetfulness and laziness,
because turning one’s attention to oneself inevitably brings
forgetfulness and ignorance of God, resulting in the birth of all the
other sins – passions.
According to
St. John of Damascus, the soul has three parts: the intelligent,
incensive and appetitive aspects. The sins of the intelligent aspect are
unbelief, heresy, folly, blasphemy, ingratitude, and “assent to sins
originating in the soul’s passible aspect”. The sins of the incensive
aspect are heartlessness, hatred, lack of compassion, rancour, envy,
murder and “dwelling constantly on such things”. The sins of the
appetitive aspect are gluttony, greed, drunkenness, unchastity,
adultery, uncleanness, licentiousness, love of material things and the
desire for empty glory, gold, wealth and the pleasures of the flesh. The
same saint also lists the eight thoughts that encompass all evil, which
are naturally linked with the corresponding passions, since it is
through thoughts that the sins come into being which develop into
passions. These eight thoughts are those of gluttony, unchastity,
avarice, anger, dejection, listlessness, self-esteem and pride.
While the
division of the passions which we have examined so far is analogous to
the division of the soul, we must now go on to another division which we
find in patristic teaching. Here the passions are divided into those of
the body and those of the soul. The soul has its related passions, as
the body has the related passions of the flesh.
It is well
known in patristic teaching that before the fall man’s soul was open to
God and nourished by God’s grace. Certainly man would have to struggle
to reach full communion and union with God, but even at that time he
tasted the grace of God. Thus the soul was nourished by uncreated grace
and the body was nourished by the “soul filled with grace”. The whole
man tasted the gifts of God. Since the fall, the soul, separated from
God, the real source of life, “seeks nourishment from the body. In this
way the passions of the soul are born… The body for its part, not
finding life in the soul, turns towards external things, and as is
natural becomes enslaved to matter and imprisoned in the cycle of
corruption. Thus the pleasure-loving bodily passions appear, whereby man
struggles to draw life and joy from material things”. This is the death
of the body, and especially of the soul. If, however, through
asceticism and the life in Christ we make the effort to turn our soul
towards God in order to be nourished by Him, the body is then nourished
by the “soul filled with grace” and thus the whole man is sanctified. We
see this in the saints of the Church, in whom sometimes the bodily
functions are suspended.
According to
St. Maximus, some of the passions pertain to the body and others to the
soul. The bodily passions are occasioned by the body, while those of
the soul are occasioned by external objects. We find the same
distinction between passions in the teaching of Elias the Presbyter, who
says: “Bodily passions are one thing, passions of the soul another”.
St. John of
Damascus undertakes to list the passions of the body and those of the
soul. Those of the soul are forgetfulness, laziness and ignorance, by
which the eye of the soul is darkened and the soul is then dominated by
all the other passions. These are impiety, false teaching or every kind
of heresy, blasphemy, wrath, anger, bitterness, irritability,
inhumanity, rancour, back-biting, censoriousness, senseless dejection,
fear, cowardice, quarrelsomeness, jealousy, envy, self-esteem, pride,
hypocrisy, falsehood, unbelief, greed, love of material things, evil
desire, attachment to worldly concerns, listlessness, faint-heartedness,
ingratitude, grumbling, vanity, conceit, pomposity, boastfulness, love
of power, love of popularity, deceit, shamelessness, insensibility,
flattery, treachery, pretence, indecision, “assent to sins arising from
the soul’s passible aspect and dwelling on them continuously”. Also
wandering thoughts, self-love, the root and source of all evils which is
avarice, and finally, malice and guile.
The passions
of the body, according to St. John of Damascus, are gluttony, greed,
over-indulgence, drunkenness, eating in secret, general softness of
living, unchastity, adultery, licentiousness, uncleanness, incest,
pederasty, bestiality, impure desires and every passion which is foul
and unnatural, theft, sacrilege, robbery, murder, every kind of physical
luxury and gratification of the whims of the flesh especially when the
body is in good health. Further bodily passions are: consulting oracles,
casting spells, watching for omens and portents, self-adornment,
ostentation, foolish display, use of cosmetics, painting the face,
wasting time, daydreaming, trickery, impassioned misuse of the pleasures
of this world. Further passions of the body are a life of bodily ease,
“which by coarsening the nous makes it cloddish and brute-like and never
lets it raise itself towards God and the practice of the virtues”.
St. Gregory
of Sinai sums up the whole teaching of the Fathers about the passions of
the body and those of the soul. He writes: “Passions have different
names, but they are divided into those of the body and those of the
soul. Bodily passions are subdivided into sorrowful and sinful; the
sorrowful are again subdivided into those or sickness and those of
punishment. Passions of the soul are divided into those of the
incensive, appetitive and intelligent parts. The intelligent are
subdivided into those of imagination and those of reason. All of them
are either voluntary, through misuse, or involuntary, through necessity.
The latter are so-called non-shameful passions, which the Fathers
described as due to surroundings and natural characteristics
(dispositions). Some passions are of the body, others are passions of
the soul; some are passions of desire, others passions of the incensive
part, yet others are passions of the intelligence, some of the nous and
others of reasoning. All of these combine with one another in various
ways and have an effect on one another: the bodily on the appetitive,
those of the soul on the incensive, and again those of the intelligence
on those of the nous and those of the nous on the passions of reason and
memory”.
Despite the
enumeration and division of the passions we must observe that the
passions are not separated from one another in water-tight compartments.
One is intimately connected with another, and in that way a person is
completely defiled and deadened. Through the passions the soul becomes
sick, the nous is deadened. Thus the person becomes an idolater and
cannot inherit the kingdom of heaven. The Apostle Paul is clear and
categorical: “Be sure of this, that no immoral or impure man, or one who
is covetous (that is, an idolater), has any inheritance in the kingdom
of Christ and of God” (Eph. 5, 5).
There is
also another division of the passions. It is between monks and people in
the world. Since the way of life of the monks who practice asceticism
in monasteries differs from that of the people of the world, some
passions dominate in one situation and others in another. St. John of
the Ladder writes that in people who live in the world the root of all
evils is avarice, but in monks it is gluttony. To explain this he notes
that some of the passions begin from within and are manifested in the
body, while others come from outside into the interior of the soul. The
former usually happens in monks, “because of the lack of stimulus from
the outside”, while the latter case is usually found in those living in
the world. Likewise the passions which appear during illness are
different in monks and in people in the world. When people in the world
are ill they suffer from the passions of gluttony and fornication. The
monks, having their material support, find themselves plagued mainly by
the demons of despondency and ingratitude. Here we see that man does not
always receive the same temptations. This depends on his spiritual
condition, his way of life and other factors. The devil is resourceful
and knows how to fight each person according to his condition.
We have
previously pointed out that some of the passions are characterized as
mothers and others as daughters: some passions give birth to other
passions and some are offspring of others. St. John of the Ladder
learned from holy men that gluttony is the mother of unchastity and
self-esteem is the mother of listlessness. That is to say, when
listlessness takes hold of us, we can be sure that the passion of
self-esteem is at work. Likewise dejection and anger are daughters of
these three. Self-esteem is the mother of pride. He was also taught that
usually in mindless people there is no discretion and order, but rather
disorder and confusion. Untimely jokes are born sometimes from
unchastity, sometimes from self-esteem. Excessive sleep sometimes comes
from an easy life, sometimes from fasting, sometimes from listlessness
and sometimes from natural need. Garrulity sometimes is born from
gluttony and sometimes from self-esteem. Listlessness is sometimes born
from an easy life, sometimes from lack of fear of God. Blasphemy is
properly the child of pride, but often it comes from readiness to
condemn one’s neighbour or the untimely envy of the demons.
Hardheartedness sometimes comes from eating to satisfaction, and most
often from insensitivity and attachment. Attachment, which is adhesion
to anything sensory, comes from unchastity or avarice or self-esteem, as
well as other things. Malice comes from conceit and from anger.
Hypocrisy comes from independence and self-direction. And in general
sensual pleasure and malice are generators of all the passions.
It is
important at this point that we investigate how a sin develops into a
passion. For the Fathers, experts on this inner struggle, are not
satisfied simply with listing the passions, but they go on to record
their causes and development. According to St. Thalassios, the passions
are roused through these three things: “the memory, the body’s
temperament and the senses”. A person who fixes his nous on sensory
things, estranging himself from spiritual love and self-control and
accepting the action of the demon, becomes an object of provocation. “It
is when self-control and spiritual love are missing that the passions
are roused by the senses”.
When the
reins of the most sovereign senses are slackened, there is an uprising
of the passions, “and the energy of the most servile passions is set in
motion”. When the irrationality of the senses is loosed from the chains
of self-control, it creates the causes of the passions. In fact, as we
have observed before, when a man’s nous dallies with some sensible
thing, “it is clearly attached to it by some passion, such as desire,
irritation, anger or rancour”. Therefore the endeavour described by all
the Fathers is not to let our nous be captured by any sensory thing or
idea, because that is immediately followed by passion and disaster. The
seeds of tragedy are sown in our soul by the capture of our nous.
Likewise,
apart from the captivity of the nous, our desire plays an important role
in creating passions. St. James, the Lord’s brother, describes this
condition. “Each person is tempted when he is lured and enticed by his
own desire. Then desire when it has conceived gives birth to sin; and
sin, when it is full-grown, brings forth death” (Jas. 1, 14f). When a
brother asked Abba Sisoes “What shall I do about passions?” the Elder
answered: “Each man is tempted when he is lured and enticed by his own
desire”.
More
analytically, the development of the passions is as follows. According
to St. Maximus, first the memory brings some passion-free thought into
the nous. And when this thought lingers, passion is set in motion. The
next step is assent. Assent leads to committing the actual sin.
Hesychios
the Priest sets forth the path which passion follows. The provocation
comes first. Then follows our coupling follows with it when our own
thoughts mingle with those of the devil. Then comes our assent, and
after that “the concrete action – that is, the sin itself’. And when the
sin is repeated many times, a passion comes into being.
St. Gregory
Palamas, in the Orthodox tradition of therapeutic treatment, writes that
self-indulgence is the beginning of the bodily passions and a sickness
of the soul. In these “the first to suffer is the nous” – that is to
say, the nous is assailed first. It sets evil passions in motion.
Through the senses it brings the imagination of sensory things into the
soul and it is disposed towards these sins. The imprint of these images
is mainly through the eyes….
St. John of
the Ladder describes analytically how this thought develops until it
becomes a passion. Provocation, coupling, assent, captivity, struggle,
and passion are all different things. Analysing them, he writes that
provocation is a word or simple chance image which appears in the heart
for the first time. This is not sinful. Coupling is communion with what
has appeared either with or without passion. Still this state is
sometimes not blameworthy. Assent is the delighted yielding of the soul
to what it has encountered. This is bad or good according to the
condition of the ascetic.Captivity is a “forcible and unwilling
abduction of the heart, a permanent lingering with what we have
encountered”. Captivity is judged differently, depending on whether it
happens at the time of prayer or at some other time. ‘Struggle’ means
force equal to that which is leading the attack, that is, the soul’s
struggle and battle not to let sin be committed. This battle can earn a
crown or punishment. Finally comes passion, which, as we have said, is
something that “lies hidden in the soul for a long time” and from long
habit has prevailed on the soul to surrender to it. This passion
requires appropriate repentance or future punishment.
In addition
to this description of how thought develops into passion, the Fathers
also describe another development: how passions unfold with age. St.
Gregory Palamas says that passions develop from early childhood in the
following order. First come the passions of the appetitive part of the
soul, that is, possessiveness and greed. Little children want to grasp
things, and when they get somewhat older they want money. Later, “with
the advance of age”, the passions of the love of glory develop. Love of
glory is seen in two forms. The first is worldly love of glory, which
aims at “cosmetics and rich dress” and the second is that self-esteem
which attacks the righteous and manifests itself in conceit and
hypocrisy, through which the enemy contrives to scatter the soul’s
spiritual wealth. Finally, after possessiveness and love of glory,
self-indulgence develops – that is, gluttony “from which comes every
sort of uncleanness of the flesh”. At the same time St. Gregory Palamas
makes an interesting observation. Although self-indulgence “and natural
impulses towards procreation mark babies at the breast”, yet “they are
not signs of a sick soul”, the natural passions being blameless, since
they were created by the good God “in order that through them we might
walk in good works”. Passion is evil “when we make provision for the
flesh to fulfil its lusts”. So to sum up, we point out that according to
St. Gregory, the passions of possessiveness and greed develop in
babies, the passions of the love of glory develop in childhood, and
later come the passions of self-indulgence.
It is true
that the passions of both body and soul are hard to discern. This is
because the demons who stir them are usually hidden and we cannot
distinguish them. That is why a good therapist is needed, one who knows
the hidden inner life and is a vessel of the Holy Spirit in order to
discern and cure. This discernment is one of the great gifts of the
grace of the Holy Spirit. St. John of the Ladder, referring to the
example that often when we draw water from a well it can happen that we
inadvertently also bring up a frog, connects this with the virtues. When
we acquire virtues we can sometimes find ourselves involved with the
vices which are imperceptibly interwoven with them. He offers several
examples. Gluttony can be caught up with hospitality; unchastity with
love; cunning with discernment; malice with sound judgment; duplicity,
procrastination, slovenliness, stubbornness, willfulness, and
disobedience with meekness; refusal to learn with silence; conceit with
joy; laziness with hope; censoriousness with love again; listlessness
and sloth with stillness; acerbity with chastity; familiarity with
humility. It is clear from this that a great deal of watchfulness is
needed in order to discover the passions. For we may think that we are
being virtuous while we are really working for the devil, cultivating
the passions. We must watch out for the frog, which is usually the
passion of self-esteem. This passion defiles obedience to the
commandments.
According to
the same saint, the demon of avarice often simulates humility. And the
demon of self-esteem or self-indulgence encourages the giving of alms.
Therefore we must, above all, be watchful to discern the cunning of the
demon even while we are cultivating the virtues. He mentions a case in
which he had been overcome by the demon of laziness and was thinking of
leaving his cell. But when several men came and praised him for leading
the life of a hesychast, “my laziness gave way to self-esteem”. And then
he was amazed by the manner in which the demon of self-esteem stood up
against all the other cunning spirits. Likewise the demon of avarice
fights very hard against those who are completely without possessions.
When it fails to overcome them, it begins to tell them about the
wretched conditions of the poor, thereby inducing them “to become
concerned with material things”. Another point mentioned by the Holy
Fathers is the way in which we can detect the presence of passion. The
discerning and dispassionate Elder who will look at the impulses of our
soul and correct us certainly has an important place. But beyond this we
also have other ways of perceiving the presence and working of
passions. It is a sign that a voluntary passion is working when a person
is upset on being reproached or corrected for it. When he accepts
calmly the reproach which comes, it is a sign that “he was defeated or
unaware of it”. In other words the reproach and the upset or calm show
the existence of the passion and whether it is voluntary or not. “The
foulest passions are hidden within our souls; they are brought to light
only when we scrutinize our actions”.
In his
effort to describe accurately what passion is, St. Maximos writes that a
thing, a conceptual image and a passion are all different from one
another. A man, woman, gold, and so forth are things; a conceptual image
is “a passion-free thought of one of these things”, a passion is
“mindless affection or indiscriminate hatred for one of these same
things”. Abba Dorotheos, distinguishing between sin and passion, writes
that passions are anger, self-esteem, self-indulgence, hatred, evil
desires and the like. Sins are the actions of the passions. And so it is
possible for a person to “have passions but not to put them to work”.
From this passage we also understand that it is possible to be full of
passions without noticing it, because we did not happen to commit any
sins. This is why complete healing by a discerning and experienced
spiritual counselor is required.
In order to
complete this section, we must summarize what the terrible consequences
of the passions are. We have already said in various connections that
the passions deaden our nous. We shall want to develop this theme
further.
Resurgence of the passions “in an aged body and a consecrated soul” is a defilement of the soul.
Just as when
a sparrow tied by the leg tries to fly “it is pulled down to the
earth”, so also the nous, if it does not have dispassion, “is held back
by the passions and pulled down to the earth”. They attach the person to
the earthly.
Reprehensible passions chain the nous, “binding it to sensible objects”.
The passions
often defile the soul after a time, just as certain foods which harm
the body bring on illness after some time or indeed after some days. In
any case it is apparent also from this passage that the passions sicken
the soul.
An impassioned person’s soul is “a workshop of evil thoughts”. And such an evil soul brings forth a fund of evil.
The nous is
deadened by the passions and is impervious to advice. It will not even
accept any spiritual correction. “Every passion brings with it the seed
of death”.
The passions
are hell. The impassioned soul is punished all the time by its own bad
habit, always having the bitter memory and the painful mutterings of its
passions burning and consuming it. This torment is a beginning, it is a
small taste of another torment in those fearful places of suffering
“where the bodies to be punished will receive and inflict such varied
and terrible torment on the souls and not be destroyed, that unspeakable
fire, the darkness…”.
The rewards
for the toils of virtue are dispassion and spiritual knowledge, which
are mediators of the kingdom of heaven, just as “passions and ignorance
are mediators of eternal punishment”.
St. Gregory
Palamas, interpreting the passage which tells how the demons came out of
the demoniac and entered the swine which then fell into the sea, writes
that “the swinish life symbolizes” every evil passion because of its
impurity. “But it is especially those who go around in a tunic soiled by
the flesh who are swine”.
Thus finally
the passions completely deaden the nous and effect our punishment.
Spiritual healing is required for the nous to be freed and rejoice in
God. We shall now turn to the subject of therapy.
3. Cure of the Passions
Now that we
have become aware of the great destruction wrought in our whole
existence by the passions, we must proceed to the subject of therapy.
This is a fundamental part of the present chapter. Many of us realize
that we are ill, we have a sense of being spiritually ill, but we are
completely or partially ignorant of how to be cured. I think that
Orthodoxy, being a therapeutic science, ought to be explaining these
very topical matters. We are certain that one of the messages which the
Orthodox Church should be offering to the contemporary stumbling world
is the message of its sickness and, at the same time, of its healing.
These matters will be our concern in what follows.
First we
must clarify a few things. One is that to cure pas sions is mainly to
transform them, as we have already de scribed. Since the dispassionate
passions, the natural, blameless passions, have been perverted, it is to
be expected that with therapeutic treatment we shall change them. This
is the curing of the passions. Abba Poemen said to Abba Isaac: “We were
not taught to be slayers of the body but to be slayers of the passions”.
We must understand “slayers of the passions” in the sense of converting
the passions. Another observation is that the Fathers offer a great
deal of therapeutic treatment in their writings. Anyone reading St.
Maximus’s ‘centuries’ on love will see that they contain much
therapeutic material. I must confess that when I wanted to read this
work, I expected to find a few rules about love and a description of the
value of love. But I noticed right away that St. Maximus gives more
attention to the subject of thoughts, passions and the curing of
passions. He attaches great importance to man’s healing, because love
for God and man is “born of dispassion”. A heart which is ruled by
passions is incapable of loving. A further observation is that when the
Fathers speak of the healing of man they set forth the basic principles
of it. That is to say, they have in view the universal man and they give
various prescriptions or methods for therapy. We shall mention these in
what follows, but we must emphasize that every person needs his own
therapeutic method. This method is given by the discriminating and
experienced therapist to anyone who comes and asks, with humility,
obedience and a disposition for healing. Therefore we shall now set out
the general rules of therapeutic treatment. Every individual must
practice his own therapy under the spiritual guidance of contemporary
living organisms’.
The cure of
the sicknesses of our soul is absolutely necessary. We have already
looked at this. We have pointed out the deformed state which the
passions create in us. Many passages in Scripture refer to it.
The Apostle
Paul gives the following advice to the Colossians: “Put to death
therefore what is earthly in you: unchastity, uncleanness, passion, evil
desire and greed, which is idolatry… But now put them all away: anger,
wrath, malice, slander and foul talk from your mouth. Do not lie to one
another, seeing that you have put off the old nature with its practices
and have put on the new nature which is being renewed in knowledge after
the image of its creator” (Col. 3, 5-10).
According to
St. Maximus, the Apostle here was calling the will of the flesh
‘earth’. Unchastity’ is his word for the actual committing of sin.
Actual committing of sin is assent which is acted on and becomes sin.
‘Uncleanness’ is how he designates assent to sin. ‘Passion’ is his term
for impassioned thoughts. By ‘evil desire’ the Apostle means “the simple
act of accepting the thought and the desire”. ‘Greed’ is his name for
“what generates and promotes passions”. These ‘earthly’ things, which
are part of the will of the flesh must be put to death. When they are
put to death — and later we shall see how — and transformed, that is,
offered to God, then the old nature with its deeds and desires will be
put off and the new nature put on. It will be in the image and likeness
of God – a person.
In another
letter the inspired Apostle gives the same instructions: “Immorality and
all impurity or covetousness must not even be named among you, as is
fitting among saints. Let there be no filthiness, nor silly talk, nor
levity, which are not fitting; but instead let there be thanksgiving”
(Eph. 5, 3f).
And in
another letter he writes: “Let us have no self-conceit, no provoking of
one another, no envy of one another” (Gal. 5, 26).
All these
things show the necessity of therapy. The Christian as a dwelling place
of the Holy Trinity must not be unclean, or rather, in order to become a
temple of the Holy Spirit and for God to dwell within, the Christian
must previously have been purified spiritually, and after becoming a
temple of the Holy Spirit, he must keep it pure.
This also
shows the goal of therapy. We are not struggling simply to become good
people, adjusted to society. The aim of therapeutic treatment is not to
make people sociable and to be an anthropocentric exercise, but it is to
guide them to communion with God, and for this vision of God not to be a
fire that will consume them but a light which will illuminate them. The
Fathers are clearly aware or this aim of therapeutic treatment, but
they also know the aims which different people set. St. Maximus says
that some people abstain from passions “because of human fear”, others
through self-control, and others are delivered from passions “by divine
providence”. Abba Dorotheos makes the point by saying that one must not
wish release from passion “in order to escape its torment, but because
one truly hates it, as it is said: “I hated them with perfect hatred”.
The saints realize that some people wish to be released from passions
because they cause so much pain. But this is not the true aim of
Orthodox therapeutic treatment. The basic aim is to attain communion
with God. We do know very well that there are different spiritual ages
and conditions within the Church. Some, as the Fathers teach, keep the
word of God through fear of hell, others to gain Paradise and others do
it out of love for Christ. The first are slaves, the second are salaried
workers, and the third are children of God. We accept these spiritual
ages, but we emphasize that we are struggling to reach the third
category. Continual healing even of the aim of the treatment is
required.
It must be
pointed out that healing of the passions is not the work of man alone or
of God alone. The two must work together. This is the synergy of God
and man. Everything in our Church is theandric. At first the grace of
Christ must be given. The purification of man, which is healing, takes
place by the energy of Christ that is offered through the whole
spiritual life which the Christian lives within the Orthodox Church. In
his epistles the Apostle Paul often stresses this fact. The man of flesh
has in him the energy of the passions. But when he receives the grace
of Christ, he is freed from this old world, the world of sin. “While we
were living in the flesh, our sinful passions, aroused by the law, were
at work in our members to bear fruit for death. But now we are
discharged from the law, dead to that which held us captive, so that we
serve not under the old written code but in the new life of the Spirit”
(Rom. 7, 5f).
Only the
people of Christ, those who live in Christ, are released from the flesh
and the lust of the flesh, which constitute the world of sin: “And those
who belong to Christ Jesus have crucified the flesh with its passions
and desire. If we live by the Spirit, let us also walk by the Spirit”
(Gal. 5, 25f). When a person walks by the Spirit, that is when he has
the grace of the Holy Trinity, he is healed inwardly: “I say, walk by
the Spirit, and do not gratify the desires of the flesh. …If you are led
by the Spirit you are not under the law” (Gal. 5, 16-18). And we are
well aware that, as we indicated before, the works of the flesh are all
the passions (v. Gal. 5, 19-21).
To wage war
against sin and passion, “to struggle, yes, to continue to fight, to
inflict blows” is our own work, but to “uproot” the passions, to
transform them in an essential way, is the work of God. Just as man
cannot see without eyes and speak without a tongue or hear without ears
or walk without feet or work without hands, so he cannot “be saved
without Jesus nor enter into the kingdom of heaven”. For the soul can
contradict sin, but without God it cannot conquer or uproot evil.
The sense of
the love of God, which is communion with the grace of God, and our own
love towards God, which is a fruit of the Holy Spirit, are the things
which transform and cure the passions. To mortify the passible part of
the soul does not mean that we enclose it “idle and motionless in
ourselves”, but that we turn it from its connection with evil “to love
for God”. But this change to love for God does not happen without a life
of love. In any case when a person is ablaze with love for God, which
is a divine inspiration, his whole inner world is transformed, it is
warmed by divine grace and sanctified. “When love of God dominates the
nous, it frees it from its bonds, persuading it to rise above not only
sensible things but even this transitory life”. These things show that
healing of the passions takes place when divine grace, God’s love, is at
work. This divine grace is offered through the holy sacraments.
Likewise we want to underline the fact that the divine Eucharist and
Communion of the Body and Blood of Christ is an effective help in a
person’s effort to purify his soul. Holy Communion is a medicine of
immortality.
But in
addition to the power of Christ, which plays a very important role, the
human will must also cooperate. If this does not happen, it is almost
impossible for a person to over come passions, to overcome the demons
substantially, since “he who has conquered the passions wounds the
demons”, and “a person will banish the demon of the passion which he has
mastered”. In what follows we shall try to look at this cooperation of
the human will.
Self-knowledge
is needed first of all. It is very important; for us to be aware of our
spiritual condition. Ignorance of our illness makes us permanently
incurable. John the Evangelist writes: “If we say that we have no sin,
we deceive ourselves, and the truth is not in us” (1 Jn. 1,8).
Peter of
Damascus, specifying the eight spiritual contemplations, of which the
first seven are of this age and the eighth is of the age to come,
regards knowledge as the second: “knowledge of our own faults and of
God’s bounty”. That is to say, the knowledge of our own faults and of
God’s bounty is theoria.
Since pride
is interwoven with courage, “we must be ever on guard against yielding
to the mere thought that we have achieved any sort of good”. The Fathers
know from the great spiritual experience which they hand down, that the
symptoms of passions are not easy to diagnose with accuracy, since we
are sick and they have united with our nature. Therefore the Fathers
advise us to seek out our passions assiduously. “Watch out continually
for signs of the passions and you will discover that there are many
within you”. Regarding every passion and every virtue, especially the
passions, we must “scrutinize ourselves unceasingly to see where we are,
at the beginning, middle or end”. It is essential that this should be
done, because the spiritual life is a continuous journey and healing is
endless. We are constantly purifying ourselves in order to attain
communion with God. This is indispensable, because stagnation and
self-sufficiency are constantly lurking on our spiritual way.
Self-knowledge
is indispensable also because there are three conditions in man: “that
of activating passion, that of holding it back, and that of uprooting
it”. This is to say, it is not enough to use various therapeutic means
to stop the working of a passion, but we must transform it into love for
God and men. In order to have good self-knowledge we need outward
stillness. We must put a stop to the actual committing of sin. As long
as the senses are functioning carnally, self-knowledge is impossible.
“Hence one must watch over the nous in the presence of things and must
discern for which of them it manifests a passion”.
Knowledge of
our passions is very closely connected with repentance and confession.
The first stage of repentance is knowledge of our sins, the sense of our
soul’s illnesses. The expression of repentance is to confess our error.
We are speaking here of holy confession.
It must be
said that in the biblical and patristic texts there are two forms of
confession. The first is the noetic confession which we make in prayer
to God and the second is the confession we make to our spiritual
physician, who is also our therapist. St. John of the Ladder defines
compunction as “an eternal torment of the conscience which brings about
the cooling of the fire of the heart through noetic confession”. Noetic
confession produces compunction, and compunction gives consolation to
the heart of man. Beyond that, confession is unrestrained repentance and
it takes place in an atmosphere of repentance. It is the heart’s grief,
which produces “forgetfulness of nature”. “Confession is a
forgetfulness of nature since because of this a man forgot to eat his
bread”.
According to
St. Diadochos of Photike, we must offer to the Lord at once a strict
confession even of our involuntary failings and not stop until our
“conscience is assured through tears of love that we have been
forgiven”. Furthermore the saint exhorts us to be very watchful lest our
conscience “deceive itself into believing that the confession which it
has made to God is adequate”. He says this because when we pray to God
and confess our sins, we often do it inadequately, and thus we live in
the satisfaction that we have made our confession. This is
self-deception, so we need to be in constant readiness, for if we do not
confess as we should, we shall be seized with an ill-defined fear at
the hour of our death.
Confession
to God through prayer does not take the place of our confession of sins
to our spiritual father, nor does confession to the spiritual therapist
take the place of confession through prayer. It is essential that the
two types of confession be linked together. At any rate after confession
through prayer it is necessary also to go to the spiritual father. God
has given them the right to forgive sins: “Receive the Holy Spirit. If
you forgive the sins of any, they are forgiven; if you retain the sins
of any, they are retained” (Jn. 20, 22f). From this passage it is clear
“how great is the honour which the Holy Spirit has bestowed upon
priests”. According to St. John Chrysostom, the priests living on earth
“have been entrusted with the stewardship of heavenly things”, since
“what priests do on earth, God ratifies above. The Master confirms the
decisions of his slaves”. Therefore we need to have recourse to
spiritual physicians for our healing. “Above all let us make our
confession to our good judge, and to him alone”. Yet if the good judge
commands us to confess before all the people, we must do it, for the
basic principle is that wounds which are made known are healed. “Wounds
shown in public will not grow worse, but will be healed”. Certainly in
order for healing to succeed, a good physician is essential. All of the
confessors are able to perform the sacrament of confession, but they
cannot all heal, as some lack spiritual priesthood, as we said in
another chapter.
“If the
diagnosis of bodily illnesses is inaccurate, and in very few cases
certain, this is much more so with spiritual illnesses”. “The diagnosis
of souls is far more inaccurate”. The passions of the soul are “harder
to understand”. When a priest finds it impossible to heal, we must have
recourse to another priest, for “without a doctor, few are cured”.
The value of
confession has also been pointed out by many contemporary
psychiatrists. It is fundamental that a person should be open, not
closed within himself. In the language of the Church we say that when a
person knows how to open himself to God through the confessor, he can
avoid many psychic illnesses and insanity as well. We feel the value of
confession in practice. An existing sin tires us physically as well. We
even experience bodily illness. When we decide to make a confession, the
healing stage begins. Soul and body are flooded with calm. But of
course it is necessary to go on to make the real confession.
Since the
devil knows the value of confession, he does his best to press us not to
confess or to do it as if someone else had committed the sins, or else
to ascribe the responsibility to others. However, it takes spiritual
courage for a person to reveal his wound to a spiritual physician. St.
John of the Ladder advises: “Lay bare your wound to the healer”. And
along with the revelation of the illness, take all the blame on
yourself, saying humbly: “This is my wound, Father, this is my injury.
It happened because of my negligence and not from any other cause. No
one is to blame for this, no man, spirit or body or anything else. It is
all through my negligence”. One should not be ashamed, or rather one
should overcome the shame of sin and of laying it bare. In revealing our
inner wounds to our spiritual director, we should look and behave and
think like a condemned person. And indeed St. John advises: “If you can,
shed tears on the feet of your judge and healer as though he were
Christ”. The same saint affirms that he has seen men confessing who
showed such a humble disposition and confessed with such tearful eyes
and cries of despair that they softened the harshness of the judge and
“turned his rage to mercy”.
It is
natural to feel shame when one has to confess one’s wound, but one
should overcome it. “Do not conceal your sins”. Immediately after
confessing, laying bare, there comes an inner calm. It is reported that a
zealous monk mastered by a blasphemous thought dissolved his flesh by
fasting and vigils and yet did not feel any help. When he decided to
confess this thought to the spiritual physician and wrote it on a piece
of paper, he was healed at once. “And the monk assured me that even
before he had left the cell of this old man his infirmity was gone”.
This demonstrates the truth that confession is not a human endeavour,
but it works by the power of God. The soul is healed by divine grace.
Neither fasting nor vigil is very helpful unless it is linked with
confession.
Usually
spiritual physicians receive attacks from those confessing when they do
not make their confession with humility and self-knowledge. A spiritual
operation takes place with confession and therefore the patient resists.
But the advice of the Fathers to him is clear. “Do not be angry with a
person who unwittingly operates on you like a surgeon. Look rather at
the abomination he has removed and, blaming yourself, bless him because
by the grace of God he has been of such service to you”. Confession
extracts all the loathsomeness of our soul and this must move us, on the
one hand to compassion for ourself, and on the other hand to gratitude
towards the spiritual physician. At least whoever rejects criticism
shows the existence of passion, while anyone who accepts criticism “is
free of this fetter”.
We must
again emphasize that repentance linked with holy confession heals one’s
wound. Repentance, which is inspired by the Comforter, burns up the
heart, and where there is mourning all the wounds are healed. A person
in this state possesses the great treasure of virginity. Nicetas
Stethatos advises: “Do not say to yourself: ‘It is no longer possible
for me to regain the purity of virginity because in various ways I have
fallen into defilement and bodily passion’”. Even if a person has lost
his virginity, he can acquire it anew through the tears of a second
baptism which is repentance. Therefore the same holy Father continues:
“for where the pains of repentance are overcome by mortification and
warmth of soul, and rivers of tears flow from compunction, all of sin’s
defences fall, every fire of passion is extinguished, heavenly rebirth
takes place through the coming of the Comforter, and once more the soul
becomes a palace of purity and virginity”.
A man’s
rebirth cannot happen without submission to spiritual fathers who will
heal him in Christ: “If a person does not submit to a spiritual father”
in imitation of Christ, who submitted to His Father unto death on the
cross, it also means that “he will not be reborn”. For this rebirth
“comes about through submission to spiritual fathers”.
But often
the wretched passions of the soul are not healed immediately after
confession. A great struggle and much asceticism are required for the
soul to be freed from its passions. Essentially it is not formal
confession, perhaps made under great psychological pressures, which
brings forgiveness of sins, but freedom from passions. A person who has
not been freed from passions by the grace of Christ “has not yet
received forgiveness”. Just as someone who has been ill for many years
cannot acquire instant health, so it is not possible to overcome
passions – not even one of them – “in a quick moment”. Time and
especially ascetic life are needed, because “passions performed in
practice are also healed with practice”. So “constraint and
self-control, labours and spiritual struggles” offer dispassion.
In what
follows we shall attempt to describe the healing of the three parts of
the soul, the passions of body and soul, what things precede and what
things follow. We shall de scribe here just the general methods of
healing the soul.
In another
section we emphasized that St. Gregory Palamas, dividing the soul into
three parts, the intelligent, the incensive and the appetitive, says
that when a man withdraws from God, every power of his soul becomes
sick, and the entire soul as well. So healing is needed. Healing lies in
spiritual poverty, which the Lord blessed. “Let us too be ‘poor in
spirit’ after humbling ourselves, suffering in the flesh and having no
possessions”, so that we may inherit the kingdom of heaven. With
humility we will heal our intelligence, in which the passions of
ambition rage. We will heal our appetitive part, where the passions of
love of possessions and avarice rage, by shedding all possessions; and
we will heal our incensive part, in which the carnal passions rage, by
asceticism and self-control. It is very characteristic that St. Gregory
includes solitude and noetic hesychia among the methods of curing the
passions of ambition. “Solitude and remaining in one’s cell are an
excellent help in the curing of these passions”. And the carnal passions
are cured in no other way than through suffering of the body, and
prayer coming from a humbled heart, which is to be ‘poor in spirit’”.
The life of
triple poverty gives birth to godly mourning, which is connected with
the appropriate supplication. Mourning engenders tears. The value of
mourning for purifying a man’s nous is very great. Bodily poverty breaks
the heart. “Heartbreak is also brought about by the triple restraint of
sleep, food and bodily ease. The soul, freed of evil and bitterness
through this crushing, receives spiritual joy in their place”.
Self-reproach, which plays a great role in man’s spiritual life, is born
of this humility and bodily mourning.
Material
poverty expressed in non-possession, joined with poverty in spirit,
purifies the nous. According to St. Gregory Palamas, when the nous is
freed from the senses and rises above the flood of noise of earthly
things and turns to itself, then it sees “the horrible mask which it has
acquired through wandering in worldly things” and hastens to wash it
away with mourning. In this way the nous attains purity and enjoys peace
from thoughts. When the nous tastes the goodness of the Holy Spirit,
“grace begins, as it were, to paint the likeness on the image”. Then the
man becomes a person, since experiencing what it is to be in the
likeness of God makes us persons. At first mourning is painful, for it
is linked with fear of God, but it is very beneficial. With the passage
of time, love for God is engendered, and the likeness with it. And when
one lives grief deeply, “it brings as fruit the sweet and holy
consolation of the goodness of the Comforter”. The beginning of godly
mourning is “like trying to obtain betrothal with God”. Since betrothal
with God seems impossible, the lovers of God beat their breasts and
pray. The end of mourning is “perfect, pure nuptial union” of the soul
with God.
Therefore,
according to St. Gregory Palamas, the healing of the tripartite soul is
attained through the corresponding tripartite poverty. Poverty begets
mourning, which finds many expressions before it leads the person to
communion with God. Mourning is a purgative of the nous and the heart.
St. John of
Damascus too, as we have seen, divides the soul into three powers, the
intelligent, incensive and appetitive aspects. The therapy and cure of
the intelligent aspect is through “unwavering faith in God and in true,
undeviating and orthodox teachings, through the continual study of the
inspired utterances of the Spirit, through pure and ceaseless prayer,
and through the offering of thanks to God”. The cure and therapy of the
incensive aspect of the soul is “deep sympathy for one’s fellow men,
love, gentleness, brotherly affection, compassion, forbearance and
kindness”. And the therapy and cure of the appetitive aspect is
“fasting, self-control, hardship, a total shedding of possessions and
their distribution to the poor, desire for the imperishable blessings
held in store, longing for the kingdom of God, and aspiration for divine
sonship”.
St. John of
the Ladder’s formulation is concise: “Let us arm ourselves with the Holy
Trinity against the three by the three”, that is, in alliance with the
Holy Trinity let us arm ourselves against the three: self-indulgence,
avarice, and love of glory, by these three: self-control, love and
humility.
We have
mentioned that the Fathers call the incensive and appetitive aspects
‘passible’. Thus the soul has an intelligent and a passible part. The
intelligent part is purified by spiritual reading and prayer, the
passible part by love and self-control.
St. Mark the
Ascetic, as we have observed, regards the passions of forgetfulness,
ignorance and laziness as the three great giants. He exhorts us to heal
forgetfulness “by mindfulness of God”, to expel the destructive darkness
of ignorance “through the light of spiritual knowledge” and to drive
out laziness “through true ardour for all that is good”.
There is
also the distinction between passions of the soul and those of the body.
These passions are healed by corresponding spiritual practices. Bodily
appetites and leapings of the flesh are stopped by self-control, fasting
and spiritual struggles. Inflammations of the soul and “swellings of
the heart are cooled by reading Holy Scripture and humbled by constant
prayer. And all of these are calmed by the oil of compunction”.
In their
asceticism of healing the Fathers also set out the order in which the
warfare against the passions should proceed. According to Nicetas
Stethatos, the basic passions are self-indulgence, avarice and love of
glory, which correspond to the three aspects of the soul. As there are
three general passions, so there are three ways of fighting against
them: the initial, intermediate and final ones. “The beginner who has
entered the struggle for piety” fights against the spirit of
self-indulgence. He crushes the flesh by fasting, sleeping on the
ground, vigil and prayers at night. He overwhelms the soul by
remembrance of the punishments of hell and by the thought of death. One
who is in the intermediate struggle, that is, when he has been cleansed
from the passions of self-indulgence, “takes up arms against the spirit
of ungodly avarice”. And “he who has passed through the intermediate
with contemplation and dispassion”, who has entered the darkness of
theology, fights against the spirit of love of glory. So self-indulgence
is tackled first, then avarice and finally love of glory. This is the
order of therapy.
So far we
have listed the therapeutic means which we should use to heal the three
different powers of the soul, we have spoken of the bodily and psychical
passions, the three great giants among the passions, and so forth. Now
we must examine the general therapeutic methods which apply to all the
passions.
First of
all, one should not be agitated in this spiritual struggle. Agitation is
very harmful to the struggling soul. When a passion crowds in on us, we
must not be upset: “Allowing ourselves to be disturbed by these
experiences is sheer ignorance and pride because we are not recognizing
our own condition and are running away from labour”. We must be patient,
wrestle and call on God.
Next, it is
essential not to have great confidence in ourselves, but to turn to God.
“Being passionate, we absolutely must not trust our own heart; for a
crooked ruler makes even straight things crooked”.
Another
method is to fight the passions while they are still small. While the
offence is still small, “pluck it up before it spreads and covers the
field”. If a person is negligent when a fault seems slight, he will
later “find it an inhuman master”. A man who fights against a passion
from the start “will soon subdue it”. For obviously it is one thing “to
uproot a small plant and another to uproot a large tree”. In the
beginning cutting out passions is easy, and only a small effort is
needed, while if they grow large, if much time elapses, then “they
require more labour”. The younger they are, the easier is the struggle
against them.
We must cut
off the provocations and causes which evoke the passions. We have
already described how a thought develops into a passion. When we watch
our thoughts and reject the proposal of the evil one, we avoid
engendering and kindling passions. He who repels the provocation “cuts
off at once everything that comes after”. When our nous dallies with a
sensual object, passions are naturally born or kindled. It is necessary
to become detached from the thing by which the nous has been captivated.
Unless the nous becomes detached from this thing, “it will not be able
to free itself from the passion affecting it”. In this spiritual contest
we must draw away from vile desires and acts “and show that we are
leaving them for good”.
It is the
common patristic teaching to cut off the causes and impulses of sin.
God, the Physician of souls and bodies does not call on us to give up
“associations with people”, but to cut off the evil causes in
ourselves”. “He who hates the passions gets rid of their causes”. If he
opposes the thought, “the passion grows weak and becomes powerless to
fight and torment him” and so, “little by little, struggling and helped
by God, he prevails over the passion itself’. To summarize the subject
of cutting off the causes of passions and impulses, we can say that the
general advice of the Fathers is: “any time a passion attacks you, cut
it away at once”.
In order to
diminish the passions we need to put up a hard struggle, and then
spiritual vigilance is needed “lest they increase once more”. Again,
fight to acquire the virtues and then be vigilant in order to keep them.
So all of our efforts will be between warfare and vigilance.
The struggle
is great. It is not an easy thing to transform oneself, to cleanse
oneself from passions and fill oneself with virtues. For the
purification of man is negative and positive. According to the Fathers,
spiritual warfare is carried on by keeping the commandments of Christ,
and we know that when a person struggles to subject his body to his soul
and his soul to God, the virtues of body and soul are produced. In
fallen man the body is nourished by matter, material things, and the
soul is nourished by the body. Now the opposite should come about. We
must get rid of the unnatural state. Our soul must learn to take
nourishment from the grace of God, and the body to be fed by the
“grace-filled” soul, and then our organism will come into balance. We
achieve this by endeavouring to acquire virtues such as humility, love,
fasting, asceticism, prayer, obedience, and so forth. At this point we
would like to point out some of the virtues which are essential for our
transformation.
The pursuit
of a life of love banishes all the passions: “Strive to love every man
equally and you will simultaneously expel all the passions”.
Unceasing
prayer, “unceasingly calling on the Name of God is a medicine
destructive not only of all the passions, but also of this conduct”. And
just as a doctor places a dressing on the patient’s wound and it works
without the patient’s knowing how, so also calling on the Name of God
“removes the passions without our knowing how and why”.
St. John of
the Ladder says that the remedy for all the passions is humility. “Those
who possess that virtue have won the whole battle”. The prophet king
David (in Psalm 104), referring to the beasts of the forest, says, “When
the sun arises, they gather together and lie down in their dens”. And
St. John of the Ladder interprets this, saying that when the sun rises
in our soul “through the darkness of humility”, then “the wild beasts
gather where they belong, in sensual hearts and not in ours”. The sun of
righteousness rises through humility, and all the wild beasts of the
passions are put to flight.
Yoking the powers of the soul with the virtues will free us from the tyranny of the passions.
Subordination to the spiritual father, coupled with self-control, subordinates the wild beasts of the passions.
The
Christian struggles “to restrain his senses by frugality and his nous by
the single-word Jesus prayer”, and “thus detached from the passions he
will find himself caught up to the Lord during prayer”.
“If you want
to be free of all the passions, practice self-control, love and
prayer”. There are certain actions which stop the movement of the
passions and do not allow them to grow, and there are other actions
which subdue them and make them diminish. For instance, where desire is
concerned, fasting, labour and vigil do not allow passion to grow, while
withdrawal, theoria, prayer and intense longing for God subdue it and
make it disappear. With regard to anger, forbearance, freedom from
rancour, and gentleness, for example, all arrest it and prevent it from
growing, while love, acts of charity, kindness and compassion make it
diminish. He who has genuinely renounced worldly things, and lovingly
and sincerely serves his neighbour, “is soon set free from every passion
and made a partaker of God’s love and knowledge”.
Watchfulness,
rebuttal and prayer drive away the provocation of temptation and
everything remains inactive, that is, the provocation does not reach
assent and passion: “If the nous is attentive and watchful and at once
repulses the provocation by counter-attacking and gainsaying it and
invoking the Lord Jesus, its consequences remain inoperative”.
God has
bestowed upon man two great gifts of grace by which he may be saved and
“may be delivered from all the passions of the old man: humility and
obedience”.
The word of
God too is a helpful means of purification and release from passions.
The Apostle Paul, in speaking of the spiritual armour which every
Christian must have, refers to the word of God. “And take the sword of
the Spirit, which is the word of God” (Eph. 6, 17). We need to have the
words of God continually before our eyes. “Devote yourself ceaselessly
to the words of God: application to them destroys the passions”. In
another place St. Thalassios tells us to strive to fulfil the
commandments “so that we may be freed from the passions”. The
commandments of God refer to the tripartite soul. The commandments of
Christ “legislate for the tripartite soul and seem to make it healthy
through what they enjoin. They do not merely seem to make it healthy,
but they actually have this effect”. Then St. Philotheos mentions
several examples to make it clear. With regard to the incensive aspect
he refers to the commandment “Whoever is angry with his brother without
good cause will be brought to judgment” (Matt. 5, 22), with regard to
the appetitive aspect the commandment “Whoever looks at a woman with
lust has already committed adultery with her in his heart” (Matt. 5, 28)
and with regard to the intelligence the commandment “He who does not
renounce everything and follow Me is not worthy of Me” (cf. Matt. 10,
37f). According to St. Philotheos, Christ legislates for the tripartite
soul through the commandments. But the devil fights against the
tripartite soul, and hence he fights the commandments of Christ. If
Christ’s commandments are fulfilled, we are cleansed of our passions,
which are the bad dispositions “of our inner man”.
We have
previously emphasized that mourning, repentance and confession are among
the most effective weapons against the passions. “Those who are clouded
by wine are often washed with water, but those clouded by passion are
washed with tears”.
The various
trials and temptations in our life, that is, “involuntary causes” also
are a supplement to repentance. The virus of evil is great and requires
the purifying fire of repentance through tears. For we are cleansed from
the defilements of sin either through the voluntary sufferings of
asceticism or through involuntary trials. When the voluntary sufferings
of repentance precede, then involuntary ones, that is, great trials do
not follow. God has arranged so that if voluntary asceticism does not
effect purification, then involuntary causes “more sharply activate our
restoration towards the original beauty”. This means that many trials
which come into our life are there because we have not willingly
repented. Taking up the cross of repentance voluntarily and willingly
results in our avoiding the involuntary and unwilled cross of
temptations and trials.
Another
great weapon against passions is hesychia, mainly stillness of the nous,
about which we shall speak in another chapter. The Apostle Paul gives
assurance that “No one en gaged in warfare entangles himself in the
affairs of this life” (2 Tim. 2,4). And St. Mark the Ascetic comments
that he who wants to conquer the passions by involvement in worldly
things is like one who wants to put out a fire with straw. Certainly the
subject of hesychia and withdrawal is great and very delicate.
Withdrawal is not good for everyone. For if one has a passion hidden in
his soul he cannot be healed in the desert, since there is no object
which would evoke the passion. St. John of the Ladder says that when a
man sick with a passion in his soul attempts the solitary life he is
like one who has jumped from the ship into the sea and thinks that he
will reach shore on a plank.
The advice
of the Fathers about hesychia is not contradictory. Hesychia is “abiding
in God” and purity of the nous. This is called noetic hesychia. The
effort to minimize stimulations of the senses and to devote oneself to
prayer helps towards freedom from passions. But when a person without
special preparation and the special blessing of a discerning spiritual
director flees from men and goes off to the desert, he may not be cured.
For the desert conceals the passions of a man who goes there without
the necessary preparations instead of curing them.
So far we
have spoken of various means for curing passions in general. Now we wish
also to present several particular therapeutic methods which cure
particular passions.
According to
St. John Cassian of Rome, there are eight evil thoughts: gluttony,
unchastity, avarice, anger, dejection, listlessness, self-esteem and
pride. How are these eight thoughts, which correspond to the eight
passions, to be healed?
Gluttony is
cured by control of the stomach “to avoid over eating and the filling of
our bellies”, by “a day’s fast” and “not to be led astray by the
pleasures of the palate”.
Unchastity
is cured by guarding the heart “from base thoughts”. It is cured by
contrition of heart and “intense prayer to God, frequent meditation on
the Scriptures, toil and manual labour”. “Humility of soul helps more
than anything else”.
Avarice is cured by renunciation and poverty, as the Scriptures and the Fathers teach.
Anger, which
blinds the eyes of the heart, is cured by forbearance towards our
fellow men. Inner peace, which is the opposite of anger, “is not
achieved through the patience which others show towards us, but through
our own long-suffering towards our neighbour”. It is not enough to avoid
anger towards men, but “also towards animals and even inanimate
objects”. Likewise it is cured by restraining not only “the outward
expression of anger, but also angry thoughts”. We are not only to
control our tongue in time of temptation, but “to purify our heart from
rancour and not harbor malicious thoughts against our brethren”. The
final cure is to “realize that we must not become angry for any reason
whatsoever, whether just or unjust”.
Dejection is
cured by a warfare which should be directed “against the passions
within”. We must struggle “against the demon of dejection which casts
the soul into despair. We must drive him from our heart”. Let us
cultivate only the sorrow “which goes with repentance for sin and is
accompanied by hope in God”. That is, dejection is expelled and cured
when, by the grace of God and our own courage, we turn it into spiritual
sorrow, the sorrow of repentance. This godly sorrow prepares us and
makes us obedient and eager for every good work, “accessible, humble,
gentle, forbearing and patient in enduring all the suffering or
tribulation God may send us”.
Listlessness
is not cured in any other way than “through prayer, through avoiding
useless speech, through the study of the Holy Scriptures, and through
patience in the face of temptation”. Physical work is also needed. The
holy fathers of Egypt “do not allow monks to be without work at any
time”. They not only work for their own requirements, “but from their
labour they also minister to their guests, to the poor and to those in
prison, believing that such charity is a holy sacrifice acceptable to
God”.
Self-esteem
is multiform and subtle. It requires great attention. One must use every
method to overcome “this multi form beast”. One should not do anything
with a view to being praised by other people and, “always rejecting the
thoughts of self-praise that enter one’s heart, regard oneself as
nothing before God”.
Finally,
pride is a struggle “most sinister, fiercer than all that have been
discussed up till now”. It is cured through humility, which is achieved
through faith and fear of God, gentleness and the shedding of all
possessions. It is by means of these that we attain perfect love.
But the
enemy of our salvation, the devil, is ingenious. Therefore the Christian
who is struggling in this fight must himself be ingenious. The
shrewdness in a man shows in the ways which he employs to deceive the
devil. In the patristic writings we find many “clever” cases in which
the devil is evaded and the soul is healed.
The passions
usually tend to come back. When it seems that they have been healed or
have fled, they come back more strongly after a while. Christ’s words
about the unclean spirit are well known: “When an unclean spirit goes
out of a man, he goes through dry places, seeking rest, and finds none.
Then he says, I will return to my house from which I came’. And when he
comes he finds it empty, swept and put in order. Then he goes and takes
with him seven other spirits more wicked than himself, and they enter
and dwell there; and the last state of that man is worse than the first”
(Matt. 12, 43-45). The saints are aware of this and they take all
necessary measures.
In what follows we would like to set forth a few methods and suggestions of the Fathers.
We should
mainly fight against the dominant passion, “for until this particular
vice has been wiped out it will be useless for us to have mastered other
passions”.
When we are
fighting two passions at the same time, we should prefer to submit to
the milder one in order not to be conquered by the stronger one. St.
John of the Ladder offers two examples. Sometimes when we are at prayer,
brothers may happen to come. Then we must do one of two things, either
not receive the brothers or stop praying, for the sake of the brothers.
We should prefer to let the prayer stop because “love is greater than
prayer”. Another time, the saint says, he was in a city and while
sitting at table he was afflicted by thoughts of gluttony and vainglory;
he preferred to be conquered by vainglory (that is to be temperate and
to be praised as one who fasts) because he was more afraid of gluttony:
“Knowing and fearing the outcome of gluttony (lust) he decided to give
in to vainglory”.
Abba Joseph
teaches that sometimes it is preferable to let the passions come into us
and fight them there, and some times to cut them off right from the
start. Therefore he an swered one brother who asked him about this
matter: “Let them come, and fight with them”, saying that this was
prefer able. But to another brother who asked the same question, whether
he should let the passions approach or cut them off, he answered: “Do
not let the passions come in at all, but straightaway cut them off”.
This shows that the spiritual therapist is the one who will assign to us
the appropriate kind of struggle and battle, as well as the method,
because each person is different and each case is unique.
St. John of
the Ladder mentions ways in which one can conquer the demons. These ways
seem extreme, and it must be noted that not everyone can apply them,
but only “he who has conquered the passions”. In other words, the pure
in heart have many means for wounding the demons.
A brother
who had suffered disgrace was not at all troubled by it, but was
prayerful in his heart. However, he then began to remonstrate and lament
about the dishonours which he had undergone so that with a feigned
passion he hid his dispassion.
Another brother pretended to be eager for the position of father superior when in fact he had no wish at all for it.
Another
brother who was distinguished for his chastity went into a brothel “for
what appeared as a determination to commit sin” and enticed the harlot
to take up the ascetic life.
Another
brother was given a bunch of grapes. And after the brother who brought
them had left, the hermit ate them, seeming to stuff them in, but in
fact taking no pleasure in them, and in this way he “fooled the demons
into imagining that he was a glutton”.
Such things
were done by the so-called Fools inChrist’ in order to deceive the devil
and to benefit the brothers in various ways. But this requires a
particular purity, a particular blessing and grace from God. Therefore
St. John of the Ladder, in view of these circumstances, writes that
people who use this method should be very watchful, for “in their
efforts to fool the demons they may fool themselves”.
After a hard
struggle, by the grace of God a man can heal his passions, the pains of
his soul, and become a king. The athlete of the spiritual struggle
experiences such gifts, so he can repeat the words of Abba Joseph: “I am
a king today, for I reign over the passions”. He enjoys the life of
Christ then, for “he who has put his passions to death and overcome
ignorance goes from life to life”.
But as long
as we are in this life and bear corruptibility and mortality we have to
fight continuously. Therefore even when a man has overcome “almost all
the passions”, there remain two demons to fight the man of God. One of
them troubles the soul “by diverting it from its great love of God into a
mis placed zeal, so that it does not want any other soul to be more
pleasing to God than itself. That is to say, this demon pushes the soul
into an untimely zeal to reach perfection and for no other soul to be
more pleasing to God than itself. The other demon, with God’s
permission, “inflames the body with sexual lust”. The Lord allows this
temptation to one who is doing well in a multitude of virtues “so that
the ascetic will regard himself as lower than those living in the world”
and in this way through humility and compunction will win his salva
tion. We should fight the first of these temptations with much humility
and love, and the second with self-control, freedom from anger, and
intense meditation on death. God allows us throughout our life to be
fought by the devil in order to make us humble.
A brother
said to Abba Poemen, “My body is getting sick, and yet my passions are
not getting weaker”. Despite these things, in his effort to be purified a
man experiences the blessed state of dispassion. So we come now to
study the blessed life of dispassion.
4. Dispassion
We shall
endeavour to make our study of dispassion fairly brief, because what has
been said before also shows us the way to attain this blessed state.
The value of
dispassion for the spiritual life is very great. The man who has
attained it has come close to God and united with Him. Communion with
God shows that there is dispas sion. Dispassion, according to the
teaching of the Fathers, is “health of the soul”. If the passions are
the soul’s sickness, dispassion is the soul’s state of health.
Dispassion is “resurrection of the soul prior to that of the body”. A
man is dispassionate when he has purified his flesh from all corruption,
has lifted his nous above everything created, and has made it master of
all the senses; when he keeps his soul in the presence of the Lord.
Thus dispassion is the entrance to the promised land. The Spirit sheds
its light on him who has approached the borders of dispassion and
ascended, in proportion to his purity, from the beauty of created things
to the Maker. In other words, dispassion has great value and is
extolled by the Fathers, for it is liberation of the nous. If the
passions enslave and capture the nous, dispassion frees it and leads it
towards the spiritual knowledge of beings and of God. “Dispassion
stimulates the nous to attain a spiritual knowledge of created beings”.
Hence it leads to spiritual knowledge. A result of this spiritual
knowledge is that one acquires the great gift of discrimination. A man
in grace can distinguish evil from good, the created energies from the
uncreated ones, the satanic energies from those of God. “Dispassion
engenders discrimination”.
Our
contemporaries speak a great deal about common ownership and poverty.
But the error of most of them is that they limit poverty to material
goods and forget that it is something more than these things. When a
man’s nous is freed from everything created and ceases to be a slave to
created things and lifts itself up towards God, then he experiences real
poverty. This real poverty of spirit is obtained by the dis passionate
man: “Spiritual poverty is complete dispassion; when the nous has
reached this state it abandons all worldly things”.
But we must
define what dispassion is. From ancient times the Stoic philosophers
spoke of dispassion as mortification of the passible soul. We have
emphasized that the passible part of the soul consists of the incensive
and appetitive aspects. When these have been mortified, according to the
ancient interpretation, then we have dispassion. However, when the
Fathers speak of dispassion, they do not mean mortification of the
passible part of the soul, but its transformation. Since it is through
the fall of man that our soul’s powers are in an unnatural state, it is
through dispassion, that is, freedom from passions, that our soul is in
the natural state.
According to the teaching of the Fathers, dispassion is a state in which the soul does not yield to any evil impulses;
and this is
impossible without God’s mercy. According to St. Maximus, “dispassion is
a peaceful condition of the soul in which the soul is not easily moved
to evil”. This implies that dispassion means that one does not suffer
with the conceptual images of things. That is to say, the soul is free
of thoughts which are moved by the senses and by things themselves. Just
as in early times the bush burned with fire but was not consumed, so
also in the dispassionate man, “however ponderous or fevered his body
may be”, yet the heat of his body “does not trouble or harm him, either
physically or in his nous”. For in this case “the voice of the Lord
holds back the flames of nature”. Thus a dispassionate person has a free
nous and is not troubled by any earthly thing or by the heat of his
body. Certainly this freedom of the nous from all impulses of the flesh
and conceptual images of things is inconceivable to those who live not
in a state of dispassion but by the energies of the passions. For men of
God, however, what the world calls natural is unnatural and they
experience as natural what is called supernatural. St. Symeon the New
Theologian, confronted by accusations that it is impossible for men to
live in such supranatural states, to live in freedom of the flesh, wrote
that he who is not dispassionate does not know what dispassion is, “and
cannot believe that anyone on earth could possess it”. And this is
natural in a way, “for when a man judges the affairs of his fellows for
good or evil, he can do so only on the basis of his personal condition”.
Each one judges according to the content of life and the way in which
he lives. Anyway it is certain for those who have experience, that the
characteristic sign of a dispassionate person is “to remain calm and
fearless in all things”, since one has received from God “the strength
to do anything”.
All this is
to underline the truth that dispassion is an entirely natural state; it
is the transformation of the passible part and its return to natural
life. This was the subject of a great discus sion in the fourteenth
century between St. Gregory Palamas and the philosopher Barlaam. The
latter, condemning the type of prayer practiced by the hesychasts then
and now, insisted that dispassion is mortification of the passible part.
But St. Gregory, having personal experience of the matter and
expressing the whole experience of the Church, refuted this view. “But
we, oh philosopher, were taught that impassibility does not consist in
mortifying the passionate part of the soul, but in removing it from evil
to good, and directing its energies to divine things, turning it away
from evil things towards good things. An impassible man is one who “is
marked by the virtues, as men of passion are marked by evil pleasures”.
Men of passion subject their reason to the passions, while the
impassible man subjects the passible part of the soul, that is the
incensive and appetitive parts, “to the faculties of knowledge, judgment
and reason in the soul”. With the intelligent part of the soul, through
the knowledge of created things, spiritually understood, he will gain
knowledge of God, and with the passible part he will practice “the
corresponding virtues: with the appetitive part he will embrace love and
with the incensive part he will practice patience”. Thus dispassion is
the transformation of the passible part, its subjection to the nous,
which is by nature appointed to rule, so that one may ever tend towards
God, as is right, “by the uninterrupted remembrance of Him”. Then one
will “come to possess a divine disposition and cause the soul to
progress towards the highest state of all, the love of God”. So we
understand that the passible part is not mortified, but possesses great
power and life. In another place St. Gregory teaches that to crucify the
flesh “with its passions and desires” does not mean to mortify each
energy of the body and each power of the soul, that is to say, to commit
suicide, but to withdraw from vile appetites and practices “and to
demonstrate irrevocably this flight from them”, that is, never to return
to them, and so to become men of spiritual desires and go forward
courageously, after the prototype of Lot, who departed from Sodom. In
summary we can say that according to St. Gregory Palamas, those who are
dispassionate do not mortify the passible part of their soul but “keep
it alive and acting for the best”.
Thus
dispassion is linked with love and is life, movement. According to St.
John of the Ladder, just as light, fire and flame “join to fashion one
activity”, the same is true of love, dispassion and adoption. “Love,
dispassion and adoption are distinguished by name, and name only”.
Dispassion is closely connected with love and adoption: it is life and
communion with God.
Certainly
when we say ‘dispassion’ it does not mean that the person is not under
attack by the devil. The enemy of our life continues to pester even the
dispassionate man; for he even tempted the Lord in the desert with the
three well-known temptations. But dispassion is “to remain undefeated
when the demons attack”.
There are many stages or degrees of dispassion which we wish to mention in presenting the teaching of the Fathers.
St. Maximus
sets out four degrees of dispassion. The first type of dispassion is
observed in beginners and is “complete abstention from the actual
committing of sin”. In this stage the man does not commit the acts
outwardly. The second dispassion, which occurs in the virtuous is the
complete rejection in the mind of all assent to evil thoughts. The third
dispassion, which is complete quiescence of passionate desire, is found
in the deified, and the fourth is the complete purging even of
passion-free images, in those who are perfect. It seems from this
passage that according to the degree of a man’s purity, the
corresponding dispassion is manifested.
St. Symeon
the New Theologian divides dispassion into two categories. One is the
dispassion of the soul and the other is that of the body. “The first can
even sanctify the body by its own brilliance and the radiance of the
Spirit, but that of the body alone without that of the soul cannot be of
any benefit to the man who has it”. Yet even if a person practices
every practical virtue, he should not assume that he has attained
dispassion.
St. John of
the Ladder, who is in the tradition of the Church, writes that one man
is dispassionate and another is more dispassionate than he. The one will
loathe evil while the other will have “the blessing of an inexhaustible
store of virtues”. So it appears here too that dispassion is not only a
negative work, but also positive. It is the acquisition of the virtues,
which is a fruit of the Holy Spirit.
Nicetas
Stethatos divides dispassion into two parts. The first comes to the
contestants after they have completed practical philosophy, that is,
after the contest proper, when the passions are deadened and the
impulses of the flesh remain inactive and the powers of the soul are
moving towards the natural. The second and more perfect dispassion comes
to them with inspiration after the beginning of natural theoria.
This perfect
dispassion, which “is raised from spiritual still ness of thoughts to a
peaceful state of the nous, makes the nous very clear-sighted and
foreseeing”. The nous of the dispassionate person becomes very
perceptive of divine matters, of the visions and revelations of the
mysteries of God, and very foreseeing of human matters, when it sees
people at a distance who are about to come to him.
The Fathers
generally advise giving great attention to the subject of dispassion,
because it is possible not to be disturbed by the passions when the
objects which rouse them are absent, but once those objects are present,
the passions distract the nous. This is partial dispassion. Dispassion
has degrees, and a person who is struggling to attain it must never
stop, but struggle continually, because perfection has no end. In
general it must be emphasized that remission of sins is one thing and
dispassion is another. St. John of the Ladder writes: “Many have been
speedily forgiven their sins. But no one has rapidly acquired
dispassion, for this requires much time and longing, and God”. That is
why in another place we stressed the fact that confession alone is not
enough, but the soul needs to be healed, that is, we must acquire
partial or even complete dispassion.
From these
things it seems clear that there are several elements which distinguish
true from false dispassion. St. John of the Ladder, an expert on the
inner life of the soul and one who had the gift of discernment, writes
that the passions and the demons flee from the soul for a limited time
or permanently. But few people know the ways and causes of the
withdrawal. The first way is that the passions are made to disappear by
divine fire. Divine grace, as fire, burns up the passions and purifies
the soul. The second is that the demons draw away in order to make us
careless, so that suddenly they can attack and seize the soul. Thirdly,
the demons withdraw when the soul has become accustomed to the passions,
“when it has become its own betrayer and enemy”. It is rather like what
happens to infants “weaned from the mother’s breast, who suck their
fingers because the habit has taken hold of them”. And finally, another
dispassion comes “from great simplicity and innocence”.
Further, the
difference between true and false dispassion appears in the attitude we
have towards people. Dispassion is connected with love, and therefore
usually our attitude towards our brothers manifests true or false
dispassion. He who “cannot overlook a friend’s fault when some trial
occurs” does not have dispassion. For when the passions in the soul are
disturbed, they blind the mind, “preventing it from perceiving the light
of truth”. Nor can they discriminate between better and worse.
Changeless dispassion in its highest form is found only in those who
have attained perfect love and “have been lifted above sensory things
through unceasing contemplation and have transcended the body through
humility”. A person who has come close to the threshold of dispassion
has simple esteem for all men, “always thinks well of everyone and sees
them all as holy and pure and has right judgment about divine and human
things”. The nous of a dispassionate person is freed from all the
material things of the world “and is wholly absorbed in the spiritual
things of God. He sees the divine beauty and in a way worthy of God
prefers to frequent the divine places of the blessed glory of God, in
speechless silence and joy. With all his senses transformed, he
associates with men immaterially, like an angel in a material body”. And
when a dispassionate man speaks of the sins of a brother he does it for
one of two reasons, either to correct him or to benefit another. But if
someone reports the sins of a brother “to abuse him or ridicule him”,
he will not escape being abandoned by God and will fall into the same or
another sin and, “censured and reproached by other men, will be put to
shame”.
Perfect
dispassion is present when a person remains un moved by both the object
and the memory of it. “Virtue when habitual kills the passions, but when
it is neglected they come to life again”. Therefore a person who is
sometimes disturbed by the passions and at other times calm and at rest
is not dispassionate, but rather he is dispassionate who “enjoys
dispassion continually and, even when the passions are still present
within him, he remains unaffected by the things that provoke them”.
Another sign
of the existence of perfect dispassion in a man is when during prayer
no conceptual image of anything worldly disturbs his nous.
St. John of
the Ladder says that many of the proud who think that they are
dispassionate “find out how poor they really are only after they die”.
This
distinction between true and false dispassion brings us to the point of
examining what are the true characteristics of real dispassion.
True discernment is a mark of dispassion.
It has
previously been emphasized that a sign distinguishing true from false
dispassion is love. Now we wish to carry the distinction still further.
According to St. Maximus, “for him who is perfect in love and has
reached the summit of dispassion there is no difference between his own
and another’s things or between Christians and unbelievers, or between
slave and free, or even between male and female”. Having in view the
single nature of man, “he looks on all in the same way and shows the
same disposition to all”. Again St. Maximus says that since God is by
nature good and dispassionate and loves all men equally, “He glorifies
the virtuous man because in his will he is united to God, and in His
goodness He is merciful to the sinner; by chastising him in this life He
brings him back to the path of virtue”. He who loves does the same. He
loves the virtuous man because of his nature and his good intention; he
loves the sinner too because of his nature and through compassion.
Likewise a dispassionate man is one who harbours no rancour against
someone who has injured or slandered him. The dispassionate man loves
all people, “and does not distinguish the godly from the ungodly”. And
furthermore, the dispassionate man suffers and prays for his neighbour.
“Do not say that a dispassionate man cannot suffer affliction; for even
if he does not suffer on his own account, he is under a liability to do
so for his neighbour”.
Likewise a
person who is running towards dispassion and towards God “considers lost
any day on which he is not reviled”. That is to say, he not only is not
upset by the dishonours and insults of men, but he is upset when he is
not criticized. This shows his heart’s purity from passions, even hidden
ones.
In general
the dispassionate man is filled with the gifts of the Holy Spirit: he is
a tree full of splendid fruits, the fruits of the Holy Spirit, the
virtues. When the Fathers refer to the virtues, they do not regard them
as autonomous ethical acts but as ontological. That is, the virtues are
not good deeds or abstract values, but person, though naturally not
impersonated in the sense of being self-existent. Love is communion with
real love, which is Christ. Peace is not an abstract value, but Christ
Himself. The same is true of righteousness, and so forth. Inasmuch as
the dispassionate person has com munion with Christ, it is natural that
the virtues of Christ become his as well. We do not wish to dwell on the
subject of the virtues. We only say that just as there are passions of
the body and of the soul, so there are virtues of the soul and of the
body. And just as there are stages and degrees of passions, so there are
stages and degrees of virtues. And just as there are mothers and
daughters of passions, so there are mothers and daughters of virtues.
But we do not think that it is necessary to list them here. We refer the
reader to the following Fathers: for the virtues of body and soul we
refer to St. John of Damascus. And for the virtues which correspond to
the three spiritual ages – beginners, intermediate and advanced – we
refer to St. John of the Ladder.
When a
person is not troubled by any passion, if his heart yearns more and more
for God, if he does not fear death but regards it as sleep, then he has
attained the pledge of his salvation “and, rejoicing with inexpressible
joy, he carries the kingdom of heaven within him”.
A person
does not receive the grace of dispassion in a casual way. Intensive
effort and a great struggle are required. Therefore we are now going to
see how dispassion comes about. Indeed what we said in the preceding
section about the struggle to cure the passions shows the way to acquire
dispassion. Here we want to go over in brief the paths leading to the
land of promise, that is, the land of dispassion. We will necessarily
have to be concise, citing patristic passages.
“Humility
arises out of obedience, and from humility itself comes dispassion”. The
humility which arises from obedience brings about dispassion. If a man
proceeds by another path than this he cannot find what he desires.
Dispassion is not achieved without love. Since there are degrees of love
and since there is interpenetration of virtues, because the spiritual
life is unified and organically bound together, therefore the life of
love brings dispassion, and dispassion is closely connected with love.
Love and self-control “keep the nous dispassionate in the face of things
and the conceptual images we derive from them”. Dispassion is “the
reward of self-control”. Fasting, vigils and prayer help greatly in the
development of dispassion: “Judicious fasting and vigils, together with
meditation and prayer, quickly lead to the threshold of dispassion”,
provided that the soul is also in possession of humility, full of tears,
and burning with love for God. A rather dry and not irregular diet,
joined with charity, “leads the monk rapidly to the threshold of
impassibility”. When a person works with patience, with self-control in
all things and constant entreaty and at the same time keeps the ground
he has won, with self-reproach and the utmost humility, he will “then in
good time receive the grace of dispassion”. St. John of the Ladder says
that dispassion attained through stillness of the body does not remain
unshakeable “whenever the world impinges on it”, whereas “dispassion
achieved through obedience is genuine and is everywhere unshakeable”.
The state of purity which comes from doing God’s commandments begets
dispassion. This shows that the keeping of God’s commandments has great
value. “The keeping of God’s commandments generates dispassion”.
But through
bodily exercise alone, without faith, men cannot enter “into the
resting-place of dispassion and the perfection of spiritual knowledge”.
St. Theognostos also says clearly that when a person attains practical
virtue, he cannot approach dispassion “unless spiritual contemplation
confers on his nous illuminative knowledge and the understanding of
created beings”. This passage is very important. For today too there are
men who say that we can arrive at dispassion through practical virtue.
St. Theognostos does not accept this. It must necessarily be accompanied
by spiritual contemplation, repentance and prayer, especially ‘noetic
prayer’.
Godly sorrow
is an important help for achieving dispassion. According to St. John of
the Ladder, “For many people, mourning prepared the way for blessed
dispassion. It worked over, ploughed, and got rid of what was sinful”.
So mourning is a way of life. It cleanses the soul, purifies the nous
and makes it capable of receiving the divine consolations. This mourning
is linked with repentance, and true repentance with hatred of self. The
Lord spoke of hating our life in connection with following Christ and
gaining the kingdom of heaven. “He who loves his life will lose it and
he who hates his life in this world will keep it for eternal life” (Jn.
12, 25), and “If anyone comes to me and does not hate his father and
mother, …yes, and his own life also, he cannot be my disciple” (Lk. 14,
26). St. Gregory Palamas writes that those who live in the world should
force themselves to use the things of this world in conformity with the
commandments of Christ. Such forcing, prolonged by habit, makes it easy
for us to accept God’s commandments and transforms our changeable
disposition into a fixed state. This condition brings about a steady
hatred “towards evil states and dispositions of soul”, and the hatred
produces dispassion. So the hatred of our evil and twisted self becomes a
source of dispassion. And when man possesses dispassion, then sin does
not master him and he rests in freedom and in the law of the Spirit.
When we see
that there are some outstanding people in the spiritual life who have a
few faults and small passions, we should not be scandalized, for God in
His providence often leaves some vestiges of passions so that they will
blame themselves and obtain a wealth of humility that no one can
plunder.
This is the
great treasure of dispassion. It is connected with all the virtues and
the spiritual life. Therefore we must pray to acquire blessed
dispassion. St. John of the Ladder urges all of us who are swept by
passion to pray “ceaselessly to the Lord, for all the dispassionate have
advanced from passion to dispassion”. Indeed we should not seek this
dispassion with pride and egoism in order to have great and supranatural
gifts. For it is possible that a man should seek such a gift and be
given it by the devil in order to delude him with vanity. Therefore St.
Theognostos urges: “Do not ask for dispassion, for you are unworthy of
such a gift; but ask persistently for salvation, and with it you will
receive dispassion as well”.
In spite of
our prayer and intense struggle, it is possible that God may not permit
us to be rid of one passion, so that we may taste dispassion in part or
altogether. This happens either because we asked it of God prematurely
or unworthily or vaingloriously or because if granted it would lead to
conceit or we would become negligent or careless as a result. So we
should not be grieved “if for a while the Lord seems to allow our
requests to go unheard”. God would be delighted to make us dispassionate
“in one moment”, but His providence is for our sake, as we have said
before[248]. Besides, in the history of the Church we have
cases in which men who had dispassion asked God to take this blessing
away from them so that they could fight against the enemy. After St.
Ephrem had conquered all the passions of soul and body by the grace of
Christ, “he asked that the gift might be taken away from him” so that he
would not fall into idleness and be condemned because he no longer had
to fight the enemy[249].
Partial or
complete dispassion demonstrates the healing of the soul. The soul
attains health. The nous which was mortified by the passions revives, is
raised up. “Blessed dispassion raises the poor nous from earth to
heaven, raises the beggar from the dunghill of passion. And love, all
praise to it, makes him sit with princes, that is with holy angels, and
with the princes of the Lord’s people”[250].
Notes:
PG 59, 203. Homily 36 on John. FC 33, p. 352
Philok. 3, p. 29, 35
Nicetas Stethatos. Practical chapters, Ch. 37
150 Chapters, 40
Ibid. 36
cf. ibid. p. 144ff and Amphilochios Radovic: The Mystery of the Holy Trinity according to St. Gregory Palamas, p. 55. In Gk.
EF410.3
St. Gregory Palamas, To Xeni, Gk. Philok. 4, p. 100
St. Maximus. Philok. 2, p. 89, 35
Abba Dorotheos. CS p. 229. SC p. 478, 176
Ibid. CS p. 230. SC 480, 176
St. Thalassios. Philok. 2, p. 316, 52
Nicholas Cabasilas. The Life in Christ. Bk. 6, p. 190
Abba Dorotheos. CS p. 188
Step 26. CWS p. 238
Ibid. p. 251
Ibid. p. 251
St. Maximus. Philok. 2 p. 56, 35
Ibid. p. 67, 16
Ibid. p. 67,17
Monk Artemios Rantosavlievic: The Mystery of Salvation according to St. Maximus the Confessor, p. 130, note. (In Gk.)
Philok. 2. p. 83, 3
Philok. 2. p. 83, 4
SC p. 342,106. cf.CS p. 166
Philok.2, p. 89, 35
Palamas. EF p. 410
Triads. 2, 2, 19. CWS p. 54
Triads. 2, 2, 12. CWS p. 51
Maximus. Philok. 2, p. 59f, 65
Maximus. Philok. 2, p. 75, 59
Ibid. p. 84, 7
Rantosavlievic: The Mystery of Salvation according to Maximus the Confessor, p. 131, note.l. (In Gk..)
St. Gregory Palamas. To Xeni. Gk. Philok. 4, p. 100 ff
St. Mark the Ascetic. Writings p. 28
Philok.2, p. 337
P. Nela, Zoon theoumenon, p. 203-204, In Gk.
Philok.2, p. 59, 64
Philok.3, p. 63, 122
Philok.2, p. 335
Acrostics, 77. Writings, p. 50f
Ladder. Step 26. CWS p. 239
Ladder. Step 15. CWS p. 182
Ibid. Step 26. CWS p. 233
Ibid. Step 26. CWS p. 233
Philok.2, p. 320f, 32
Philok.2, p. 321, 34
Gk. Philok. 3, p. 274, 6
Ibid.
St. Maximus. Philok. 2, p. 65, 2
Sayings, p. 185, 44
St. Maximus. Philok. 2, p. 62, 84
Philok. 1, p. 170, 46
To Xeni. Gk. Philok. 4, p. 105
Ladder. Step 15. CWS p. 182
ToXeni. Gk. Philok. 4, p. 100-105
Ladder. Step 26. CWS p. 237
Ladder. Step 26. CWS p. 239
Ladder. Step 27. CWS
Ibid. p. 249
Abba Dorotheos. CS p. 253. SC p. 530, 202,18
St. Thalassios. Philok. 2, p. 320, 30
Philok. 2, p. 89, 42
Abba Dorotheos. Ibid.
St. Mark the Ascetic. Gk. Philok. 1, p. 114, 77
Philok. 2, p. 63, 85
St. Thalassios. Philok. 2, p. 321, 41
Ladder. Step 15. CWS p. 178
St. Thalassios. Philok. 2, p. 323, 77
St. Thalassios. Philok. 2, p. 327, 41
Abba Dorotheos. SC p. 386, 127. cf. CS p. 184
St. Maximus. Philok. 2, p. 71, 34
St. Gregory Palamas. Homily 50. EPE 11, p. 208. (In Gk.)
Sayings, p. 162, 184
Philok. 2, p. 62, 83
Ibid. p. 68,23
Abba Dorotheos. SC p. 530, 202, 16. cf. CS p. 252f, 16
St. Makarios. Homily 3, 4, CWS p. 48
Ibid.
St. Gregory Palamas. Triads. 2, 2, 23
St. Maximus. Philok. 2, 65, 3
Ladder. Step 26. CWS p. 248
Sayings, p. 168, 1
Philok. 3, p. 108
Ladder. Step 26. CWS p. 252
Ibid.
Ibid. CWS p. 239
Abba Dorotheos. CS p. 167. SC p. 346, 108
Philok. 2, p. 95f, 78
Ladder. Step 7. CWS p. 136
Ibid.
St. Diadochos of Photike. Philok. 1, p. 295
Ibid.
Ibid.
St. John Chrysostom. On the Priesthood. Ill, 4. p. 71
Ibid. p. 71f
Ladder. Step 4. CWS p. 93
Nicetas Stethatos. Natural chapters, Ch. 11
Ladder. Step 4. CWS p. 109
Ibid. p. 108
Ibid.
Ibid. p. 109
Ibid. p. 108
Ibid. Step 22. CWS p. 205
Ibid. Step 23. CWS p. 213
Ilias the Presbyter. Philok.3, p. 37, 31
Ladder. Step 23. CWS p. 208
Natural chapters. Ch. 50
Ibid. Ch. 54
Ibid. Ch. 53
St. Thalassios. Philok.2, p. 312,101
Ladder. Summary of Step 26. CWS p. 259
Nicetas Stethatos. Practical chapters, Ch. 34
Ibid.
To Xeni. Gk. Philok. 4, p. 106
Ibid. p. 103
Ibid. p. 105
Ibid. p. 108
Ibid. p. 109
Ibid. p. Ill
Ibid. p. 114
Ibid.
Philok. 2, p. 337
Ladder. Step 26. CWS p. 234
St. Thalassios. Philok.2, p. 317, 84
Philok. 1, p. 159
Nicetas Stethatos. Natural chapters, Ch. 68
Ibid. Practical chapters, Ch. 40-42
Abba Dorotheos. SC p. 406f, 141. CS p. 194f
Ibid. SC p. 526, 202, 2. CS p. 251, 2
St. Isaac the Syrian. Ascetical Homilies, 5, p. 43
Abba Dorotheos. SC p. 360,114. CS p. 173
Ibid. SC p. 360,115. CS p. 174
St. John of Damascus. Philok.2, p. 338
St. Maximus. Philok.2, p. 65, 2
St. Gregory Palamas. Triads. 2, 2, 24
St. Cassian of Rome. Philok. 1, p. 84
St. Mark the Ascetic. Philok. 1, p. 135, 119
Abba Dorotheos. SC p. 510, 190. EF p. 177, 109. cf. CSp. 243
Sayings, p. 182, 22
St. Maximus. Philok.2, p. 66, 11
St. Thalassios. Philok.2, p. 315, 39
Barsanuphius and John. Q.324. In Gk.
Ladder. Step 26. CWS p. 236
Ibid. p. 252
St. Thalassios. Philok.2, p. 310, 65
Sayings, p. 7, 36
Ilias the Presbyter. Philok.3. p. 57, 75
St. Thalassios. Philok.2, p. 312, 93
St. Maximus. Philok.2, p. 73, 47
Ibid. p. 55,27
Hesychios the Priest. Philok. 1, p. 170, 46
Barsanuphius and John. ET Q.550, p. 119
St. Thalassios. Philok. 2, p. 326, 18
Ibid. p. 313, 13
Philotheos. Philok. 3, p. 21, 16
Ibid. p. 22f
Abba Dorotheos. SC p. 154, 6. cf CS p. 80
Ladder. Step 26. CWS p. 253
Nicetas Stethatos. Natural chapters. Ch. 9
Philok. 1, p. 117,107
Ladder. Step 27. CWS p. 262
Philok. 1, p. 85
Ibid. p. 73f
Ibid. p. 75
Ibid.p.81f
Ibid.p.83ff
Ibid.p.87f
Ibid.p.89ff
Ibid.p.91f
Ibid.p.92f
Ladder. Step 3. CWS p. 86
Ibid. Step 15. CWS p. 176
Ibid. Step. 26. CWS p. 238f
Sayings p. 87, 3
Ladder. Step. 26. CWS p. 248
Sayings, p. 88,10
St. Thalassios. Philok. 2, p. 328, 53
St. Diadochos. Philok. 1, p. 294, 99
Sayings, p. 159,161
St. Thalassios. Philok. 2, p. 313, 2
Ladder. Step 29. CWS p. 282
Ibid.
Ilias the Presbyter. Philok. 3, p. 49,14
Nicetas Stethatos. Practical chapters, Ch. 90
St. Thalassios. Philok.2, p. 326, 20
St. Maximus. Philok.2, p. 107, 58
Ibid. p. 69, 25
St. Thalassios. Philok. 2, p. 318, 90
Ibid. p. 309, 40
Philok. 2, p. 56, 36
Ibid. p. 89,38
St. John of Karpathos. Philok. 1, p. 298, 3
CS 41, p. 58
CS 41, p. 58
Peter of Damascus. Philok. 3, p. 147
St. Gregory Palamas. Triads. 2, 2, 19. CWS p. 54
Ibid.
Ibid.
Ibid.p.54f
Ibid. 2, 2, 24
Ladder. Step 30. CWS p. 287
St. Diadochos of Photike. Philok. 1, p. 294, 98
Philok. 2, p. 222, 51
CS 41, p. 58
St. Theognostos. Philok. 2, p. 365, 29
Ladder. Step 29. CWS p. 283
Practical chapters. Ch. 89
St. Maximus. Philok. 2, p. 106, 53
Ladder. Step 26 summary. CWS p. 259
Ibid. Step 26. CWS p. 238
St. Maximus. Philok. 2, p. 112, 92
St. Theognostos. Philok. 2, p. 365, 29
Nicetas Stethatos. Practical chapters. Ch. 90
St. Maximus. Philok. 2, p. 95, 73
Ibid. p. 106, 54
St. Theognostos. Philok. 2, p. 364, 25
St. Maximus. Philok. 2, p. 63, 88
Ladder. Step 23. CWS p. 210
St. Thalassios. Philok. 2, p. 309, 43
St. Maximus. Philok. 2. p. 70, 30
Ibid. p. 55, 25
Ibid. p. 105, 42
Nicetas Stethatos. Natural chapters. Ch. 44
St. Mark the Ascetic. Philok. 1, p. 136,132
Ladder. Step 4, CWS p. 120
St. John of Damascus. Philok. 2, p. 334
Ladder. Step 26. CWS p. 232
St. Theognostos. Philok. 2, p. 361,12
Ladder. Step 4. CWS p. 109
St. Theognostos. Philok. 2, 364, 25
Ibid. 367,36
St. Maximus. Philok. 2, p. 89, 39
Ibid. p. 69, 25
Nicetas Stethatos. Natural chapters. Ch. 79
Abba Evagrios. Sayings, p. 54, 6
St. Theognostos. Philok. 2 p. 365f, 30
Ladder. Step 15. CWS p. 176
St. Maximus. Philok. 2, p. 112, 91
St. Thalassios. Philok. 2, p. 314, 25
Nicetas Stethatos. Gnostic chapters. Ch. 71
Philok. 2, p. 369, 46
Ladder. Step 7. CWS p. 143
St. Gregory Palamas. Triads. 2, 2, 20. CWS p. 55
Nicetas Stethatos. Gnostic chapters. Ch. 75
Ladder. Step 26. CWS p. 239
Ibid. Step 28. CCWS p. 277
Philok. 2, p. 366, 32
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