November 28, 2009 at 12:09 am (Orthodox)
St. Hesychios the Presbyter – On the Jesus Prayer
July 18, 2010 at 9:14 pm (Orthodox)
The devil, with all his powers, ‘walks about like a roaring lion, seeking whom he may devour’ (1 Peter 5:8). So you must never relax your attentiveness of heart, your watchfulness, your power of rebuttal, or your prayer to Jesus Christ our God. You will not find a greater help than Jesus in all your life, for He alone, as God, knows the deceitful ways of the demons, their subtlety and their guile.
Let your soul, then, trust in Christ, let it call on Him and never fear; for it fights, not alone, but with the aid of a mighty King, Jesus Christ, Creator of all that is, both bodiless and embodied, visible and invisible.
The more the rain falls on the earth, the softer it makes it; similarly, Christ’s holy name gladdens the earth of our heart the more we call upon it.
Those who lack experience should know that it is only through the unceasing watchfulness of our intellect and the constant invocation of Jesus Christ, our Creator and God, that we, coarse and cloddish in mind and body as we are, can overcome our bodiless and invisible enemies; for not only are they subtle, swift, malevolent and skilled in malice, but they have an experience in warfare gained over all the years since Adam. The inexperienced have as weapons the Jesus Prayer and the impulse to test and discern what is from God. The experienced have the best method and teacher of all: the activity, discernment and peace of God Himself.
From The Philokalia, Vol. I, translated & edited by GEH Palmer, et al, p 169 (On Watchfulness and Holiness, sayings 39-42)
On Attention and Distraction
November 28, 2009 at 12:01 am (Orthodox)
Tags: Attention, distraction, holy fathers, Jesus Prayer, Mark 13:21, Matthew 26:41, St. Ignatius Brianchaninov
St. Ignatius Brianchaninov
The sons of the world consider distraction to be something innocent, but the holy fathers recognize it to be the origin of all evils. The person who has given up to distraction has, concerning all subjects and even the most important ones, a very light most superficial understanding. One who is distracted is usually inconstant. The feelings of his heart usually lack depth and strength; and therefore, they are not solid but transitory. As a butterfly flits from flower to flower so also a distracted person passes from one earthly satisfaction to another, from one vain care to another.
How to say the Jesus Prayer
September 28, 2009 at 9:14 pm (Orthodox)
Tags: heart, Hesychasm, Hierotheos, Jesus Prayer, monk, noetic, nous
Five Stages
The Jesus Prayer: “Lord Jesus Christ, Son of God, Be Merciful”
Each stage has its own grace and an interplay and interdependance one with and upon the other.
- Firstly. The reciting of the Jesus Prayer out loud. We repeat the Jesus Prayer with our lips while trying at the same time to focus our attention on the words of the prayer.
- Secondly. Then the nous takes the Jesus Prayer and says it noetically . Our whole attention is found again in the words but it is concentrated on the nous [the soul’s attention, the Eye of the soul]. When the nous gets tired then we start again to vocalize the prayer with the lips. After the nous has been rested we start again to concentrate our attention there.St. Neilos advises: Always remember God and your nous will become heaven.
- Thirdly. The Jesus Prayer then comes down into the heart. Nous and heart are now united and combined with each other. Attention is centered in the heart and it is immersed again into the words of the Jesus Prayer which has an invisible depth.
- Fourthly. The Prayer becomes now self-activating . It is done while the ascetic is working or eating or discussing or while he is in church or even while he is sleeping. “I sleep but by heart waketh” is said in the Holy Scriptures (Song of Songs 5:2).
- Fifthly. Then one feels a divine soft flame within his soul burning it and making it joyful . The grace of Christ lives in the heart. The Holy Trinity is established. “We become the habitation of God, when He lives within us, established in the memory. Thus we become the temple of God when Remembrance of His is not disturbed by earthly cares, and mind is not distracted by unexpected thoughts. Fleeing all that, the Friend of God withdraws into Him, chasing away the passions which invite intemperate thoughts, and occupying himself in a way which leads to virtue.” (Saint Basil the Great) Thus he feels the Divine Presence within himself and this grace passes through the body which becomes dead to the world and is crucified . And this is the extremist stage which is sometimes connected with the Vision of the Uncreated Light of the Holy Trinity.
Archimandrite Hierotheos Vlachos
“A Night in the Desert of the Holy Mountain”
Birth of Theotokos Monastery, Levadia, ISBN: 960-7070-04-6
Time for prayer
September 27, 2009 at 6:34 pm (Orthodox)
Once, an abbot of a certain monastery, founded by St. Epiphanios, Bishop of Cyprus, visited the Saint and said with some satisfaction,”With your blessing Master, we have not neglected the prayer-rule you gave us. We read the first, the third, the sixth and the ninth hour most willingly.”
“And what do you do during the other hours?” the Holy Hierarch said in surprise. “Do you not occupy yourself with prayer? If you do not, then you are not monks.
Seeing the abbot’s puzzlement the Holy Bishop explained. ” whoever belongs to the order of monks is duty bound to occupy himself in psalmody and prayer. Even though the Prophet David was both a king and a warrior, he prayed in the evening, at midnight he got up from his bed to glorify God together with the angels. We still find him in prayer before dawn. As soon as day breaks, he raises up his heart to give thanks to his Creator. He prayed yet again in the morning , and at midday and he knelt down to call on God. He himself tells us that he praised the Lord seven times a day.”
One of the Fathers said…
January 25, 2009 at 12:06 pm (Orthodox)
Tags: prayer
“The Christian who only remembers to speak with God when it is the given time for prayer, has not yet learnt how to pray.”
