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JOHN CASSIAN
THE TWELVE BOOKS
ON THE INSTITUTES OF THE COENOBIA
AND THE REMEDIES
FOR THE EIGHT PRINCIPAL FAULTS
BOOKS IX TO XI
BOOK IX.
OF THE SPIRIT OF DEJECTION.
CHAPTER I.
How our fifth combat is against the spirit of dejection, and of the harm which
it inflicts upon the soul.
IN our fifth combat we have to resist the pangs of gnawing dejection: for
if this, through separate attacks made at random, and by haphazard and casual
changes, has secured an opportunity of gaining possession of our mind it keeps
us back at all times from all insight in divine contemplation, and utterly
ruins and depresses the mind that has fallen away from its complete state of
purity. It does not allow it to say its prayers with its usual gladness of
heart, nor permit it to rely on the comfort of reading the sacred writings,
nor suffer it to be quiet and gentle with the brethren; it makes it impatient
and rough in all the duties of work and devotion: and, as all wholesome counsel
is lost, and steadfastness of heart destroyed, it makes the feelings almost
mad and drunk, and crushes and overwhelms them with penal despair.
CHAPTER II.
Of the care with which the malady of dejection must be healed.
WHEREFORE
if we are anxious to exert ourselves lawfully in the struggle of our spiritual
combat we ought
with no less care to set about healing this malady
also. For "as the moth injures the garment, and the worm the wood, so
dejection the heart of man."(1) With sufficient clearness and appropriateness
has the Divine Spirit expressed the force of this dangerous and most injurious
fault.
CHAPTER III.
To what the soul may be compared which is a prey to the attacks of dejection.
FOR the
garment that is moth-eaten has no longer any commercial value or good use
to which it can
be put; and
in the same way(2) the wood that is worm-eaten
is no longer worth anything for ornamenting even an ordinary building, but
is destined to be burnt in the fire. So therefore the soul also which is a
prey to the attacks of gnawing dejection will be useless for that priestly
garment which, according to the prophecy of the holy David, the ointment of
the Holy Spirit coming down from heaven, first on Aaron's beard, then on his
skirts, is wont to assume: as it is said, "It is like the ointment upon
the head which ran down upon Aaron's beard, which ran down to the skirts of
his clothing.(3) Nor can it have anything to do with the building or ornamentation
of that spiritual temple of which Paul as a wise master builder laid the foundations,
saying, "Ye are the temple of God, and the Spirit of God dwelleth in you:"(4)
and what the beams of this are like the bride tells us in the Song of Songs: "Our
rafters are of cypress: the beams of our houses are of cedar."(5) And
therefore those sorts of wood are chosen for the temple of God which are fragrant
and not liable to rot, and which are not subject to decay from age nor to be
worm-eaten.
CHAPTER IV.
Whence and in what way dejection arises.
BUT Sometimes it is found to result from the fault of previous anger, or to
spring from the desire of some gain which has not been realized, when a man
has found that he has failed in his hope of securing those things which he
had planned. But sometimes without any apparent reason for our being driven
to fall into this misfortune, we are by the instigation of our crafty enemy
suddenly depressed with so great a gloom that we cannot receive with ordinary
civility the visits of those who are near and dear to us; and whatever subject
of conversation is started by them, we regard it as ill-timed and out of place;
and we can give them no civil answer, as the gall of bitterness is in possession
of every corner of our heart.
CHAPTER V.
That disturbances are caused in us not by the faults of other people, but
by our own.
WHENCE it is clearly proved that the pains of disturbances are not always
caused in us by other people's faults, but rather by our own, as we have stored
up in ourselves the causes of offence, and the seeds of faults, which, as soon
as a shower of temptation waters our soul, at once burst forth into shoots
and fruits.
CHAPTER VI.
Thatno one comes to grief by a sudden fall, but is destroyed by falling through
a long course of carelessness.(1)
FOR no one is ever driven to sin by being provoked through another's fault,
unless he has the fuel of evil stored up in his own heart. Nor should we imagine
that a man has been deceived suddenly when he has looked on a woman and fallen
into the abyss of shameful lust: but rather that, owing to the opportunity
of looking on her, the symptoms of disease which were hidden and concealed
in his inmost soul have been brought to the surface.
CHAPTER VII.
That we ought not to give up intercourse with our brethren in order to seek
after perfection, but should rather constantly cultivate the virtue of patience.
AND so God, the creator of all things, having regard above everything to the
amendment of His own work, and because the roots and causes of our falls are
found not in others, but in ourselves, commands that we should not give up
intercourse with our brethren, nor avoid those who we think have been hurt
by us, or by whom we have been offended, but bids us pacify them, knowing that
perfection of heart is not secured by separating from men so much as by the
virtue of patience. Which when it is securely held, as it can keep us at peace
even with those who hate peace, so, if it has not been acquired, it makes us
perpetually differ from those who are perfect and better than we are: for opportunities
for disturbance, on account of which we are eager to get away from those with
whom we are connected, will not be wanting so long as we are living among men;
and therefore we shall not escape altogether, but only change the causes of
dejection on account of which we separated from our former friends.
CHAPTER VIII.
That if we have improved our character it is possible for us to get on with
everybody.
WE must
then do our best to endeavour to amend our faults and correct our manners.
And if we succeed
in correcting
them we shall certainly be at peace,
I will not say with men, but even with beasts and the brute creation, according
to what is said in the book of the blessed Job: "For the beasts of the
field will be at peace with thee;"(2) for we shall not fear offences coming
from without, nor will any occasion of falling trouble us from outside, if
the roots of such are not admitted and implanted within in our own selves:
for "they have great peace who love thy law, O God; and they have no occasion
of falling."(3)
CHAPTER IX.
Of another sort of dejection which prouces despair of salvation.
THERE is, too, another still more objectionable sort of dejection, which produces
in the guilty soul no amendment of life or correction of faults, but the most
destructive despair: which did not make Cain repent after the murder of his
brother, or Judas, after the betrayal, hasten to relieve himself by making
amends, but drove him to hang himself in despair.
CHAPTER X.
Of the only thing in which dejection is useful to us.
AND so
we must see that dejection is only useful to us in one case, when we yield
to it either in
penitence
for sin, or through being inflamed with the
desire of perfection, or the contemplation of future blessedness. And of this
the blessed Apostle says: "The sorrow which is according to God worketh
repentance steadfast unto salvation: but the sorrow of the world worketh death."(1)
CHAPTER XI.
How we can decide what is useful and the sorrow according to God, and what
is devilish and deadly.
BUT that
dejection and sorrow which "worketh repentance steadfast unto
salvation" is obedient, civil, humble, kindly, gentle, and patient, as
it springs from the love of God, and unweariedly extends itself from desire
of perfection to every bodily grief and sorrow of spirit; and somehow or other
rejoicing and feeding on hope of its own profit preserves all the gentleness
of courtesy and forbearance, as it has in itself all the fruits of the Holy
Spirit of which the same Apostle gives the list: "But the fruit of the
Spirit is love, joy, peace, forbearance, goodness, benignity, faith, mildness,
modesty."(2) But the other kind is rough, impatient, hard, full of rancour
and useless grief and penal despair, and breaks down the man on whom it has
fastened, and hinders him from energy and wholesome sorrow, as it is unreasonable,
and not only hampers the efficacy of his prayers, but actually destroys all
those fruits of the Spirit of which we spoke, which that other sorrow knows
how to produce.
CHAPTER XII.
That except that wholesome sorrow, which springs up in three ways, all sorrow
and dejection should be resisted as hurtful.
WHEREFORE
except that sorrow which is endured either for the sake of saving penitence,
or for the
sake of aiming
at perfection, or for the desire of the
future, all sorrow and dejection must equally be resisted, as belonging to
this world, and being that which "worketh death," and must be entirely
expelled from our hearts like the spirit of fornication and covetousness and
anger.
CHAPTER XIII.
The means by which we can root out dejection from our hearts.
WE should then be able to expel this most injurious passion from our hearts,
so that by spiritual meditation we may keep our mind constantly occupied with
hope of the future and contemplation of the promised blessedness. For in this
way we shall be able to get the better of all those sorts of dejection, whether
those which flow from previous anger or those which come to us from disappointment
of gain, or from some loss, or those which spring from a wrong done to us,
or those which arise from an unreasonable disturbance of mind, or those which
bring on us a deadly despair, if, ever joyful with an insight into things eternal
and future, and continuing immovable, we are not depressed by present accidents,
or over-elated by prosperity, but look on each condition as uncertain and likely
soon to pass away.
BOOK X.
OF THE SPIRIT OF ACCIDIE.(3)
CHAPTER I.
How our sixth combat is against the spirit of accidie, and what its character
is.
OUR sixth
combat is with what the Greeks call <greek>akhdia</greek>,
which we may term weariness or distress of heart. This is akin to dejection,
and is especially trying to solitaires, and a dangerous and frequent foe to
dwellers in the desert; and especially disturbing to a monk about the sixth
hour, like some fever which seizes him at stated times, bringing the burning
heat of its attacks on the sick man at usual and regular hours. Lastly, there
are some of the elders who declare that this is the "midday demon" spoken
of in the ninetieth Psalm.(4)
CHAPTER II.
A description of accidie, and the way in which it creeps over the heart of
a monk, and the injury it inflicts on the soul.
AND when this has taken possession of some unhappy soul, it produces dislike
of the place, disgust with the cell, and disdain and contempt of the brethren
who dwell with him or at a little distance, as if they were careless or unspiritual.
It also makes the man lazy and sluggish about all manner of work which has
to be done within the enclosure of his dormitory. It does not suffer him to
stay in his cell, or to take any pains about reading, and he often groans because
he can do no good while he stays there, and complains and sighs because he
can bear no spiritual fruit so long as he is joined to that society; and he
complains that he is cut off from spiritual gain, and is of no use in the place,
as if he were one who, though he could govern others and be useful to a great
number of people, yet was edifying none, nor profiling any one by his teaching
and doctrine. He cries up l distant monasteries and those which are a long
way off, and describes such places as more profitable and better suited for
salvation; and besides this he paints the intercourse with the brethren there
as sweet and full of spiritual life. On the other hand, he says that everything
about him is rough, and not only that there is nothing edifying among the brethren
who are stopping there, but also that even food for the body cannot be procured
without great difficulty. Lastly he fancies that he will never be well while
he stays in that place, unless he leaves his cell (in which he is lure to die
if he stops in it any longer) and takes himself off from thence as quickly
as possible. Then the fifth or sixth hour brings him such bodily weariness
and longing for food that he seems to himself worn out and wearied as if with
a long journey, or some very heavy work, or as if he had put off taking food
during a fast of two or three days. Then besides this he looks about anxiously
this way and that, and sighs that none of the brethren come to see him, and
often goes in and out of his cell, and frequently gazes up at the sun, as if
it was too slow in setting, and so a kind of unreasonable confusion of mind
takes possession of him like some foul darkness,(1) and makes him idle and
useless for every spiritual work, so that he imagines that no cure for so terrible
an attack can be found in anything except visiting some one of the brethren,
or in the solace of sleep alone. Then the disease suggests that he ought to
show courteous and friendly hospitalities to the brethren, and pay visits to
the sick, whether near at hand or far off. He talks too about some dutiful
and religious offices; that those kinsfolk ought to be inquired after, and
that he ought to go and see them oftener; that it would be a real work of piety
to go more frequently to visit that religious woman, devoted to the service
of God, who is deprived of all support of kindred; and that it would be a most
excellent thing to get what is needful for her who is neglected and despised
by her own kinsfolk; and that he ought piously to devote his time to these
things instead of staying uselessly and with no profit in his cell.
CHAPTER III.
Of the different ways in which accidie overcomes a monk.
AND so
the wretched soul, embarrassed by such contrivances of the enemy, is disturbed,
until, worn
out by the spirit
of accidie, as by some strong battering
ram, it either learns to sink into slumber, or, driven out from the confinement
of its cell, accustoms itself to seek for consolation under these attacks in
visiting some brother, only to be afterwards weakened the more by this remedy
which it seeks for the present. For more frequently and more severely will
the enemy attack one who, when the battle is joined, will as he well knows
immediately turn his back, and whom he sees to look for safety neither in victory
nor in fighting but in flight: until little by little he is drawn away from
his cell, and begins to forget the object of his profession, which is nothing
but meditation and contemplation of that divine purity which excels all things,
and which can only be gained by silence and continually remaining in the cell,
and by meditation, and so the soldier of Christ becomes a runaway from His
service, and a deserter, and "entangles himself in secular business," without
at all pleasing Him to whom he engaged himself.(2)
CHAPTER IV.
How accidie hinders the mind from all contemplation of the virtues.
ALL the
inconveniences of this disease are admirably expressed by David in a single
verse, where
he says, "My soul slept from weariness,"(8)
that is, from accidie. Quite rightly does he say, not that his body, but that
his soul slept. For in truth the soul which is wounded by the shaft of this
passion does sleep, as regards all contemplation of the virtues and insight
of the spiritual senses.
CHAPTER V.
How the attack of accldie is twofold.
AND so the true Christian athlete who desires to strive lawfully in the lists
of perfection, should hasten to expel this disease also from the recesses of
his soul; and should strive against this most evil spirit of accidie in both
directions, so that he may neither fall stricken through by the shaft of slumber,
nor be driven out from the monastic cloister, even though under some pious
excuse or pretext, and depart as a runaway.
CHAPTER VI.
How injurious are the effects of accidie.
AND whenever it begins in any degree to overcome any one, it either makes
him stay in his cell idle and lazy, without making any spiritual progress,
or it drives him out from thence and makes him restless and a wanderer, and
indolent in the matter of all kinds of work, and it makes him continually go
round, the cells of the brethren and the monasteries, with an eye to nothing
but this; viz., where or with what excuse he can presently procure some refreshment.
For the mind of an idler cannot think of anything but food and the belly, until
the society of some man or woman, equally cold and indifferent, is secured,
and it loses itself in their affairs and business, and is thus little by little
ensnared by dangerous occupations, so that, just as if it were bound up in
the coils of a serpent, it can never disentangle itself again and return to
the perfection of its former profession.
CHAPTER VII.
Testimonies from the Apostle concerning the spirit of accidie.
THE blessed
Apostle, like a true and spiritual physician, either seeing this disease,
which springs
from the
spirit of accidie, already creeping in, or
foreseeing, through the revelation of the Holy Spirit, that it would arise
among monks, is quick to anticipate it by the healing medicines of his directions.
For in writing to the Thessalonians, and at first, like a skilful and excellent
physician, applying to the infirmity of his patients the soothing and gentle
remedy of his words, and beginning with charity, and praising them in that
point, that(1) this deadly wound, having been treated with a milder remedy,
might lose its angry fostering and more easily bear severer treatment, he says: "But
concerning brotherly charity ye have no need that I write to you: for you yourselves
are taught of God to love one another. For this ye do toward all the brethren
in the whole of Macedonia."(2) He first began with the soothing application
of praise, and made their ears submissive and ready for the remedy of the healing
words. Then he proceeds: "But we ask you, brethren, to abound more." Thus
far he soothes them with kind and gentle words; for fear lest he should find
them not yet prepared to receive their perfect cure. Why is it that you ask,
O Apostle, that they may abound more in charity, of which you had said above, "But
concerning brotherly charity we have no need to write to you"? And why
is it necessary that you should say to them: "But we ask you to abound
more," when they did not need o be written to at all on this matter? especially
as you add the reason why they do not need it, saying, "For you yourselves
have been aught of God to love one another." And you add a third thing
still more important: hat not only have they been taught of God, but also that
they fulfil in deed that which they are taught. "For ye do this," he
says, not to one or two, but "to all the brethren;" and not to your
own citizens and friends only, but "in the whole of Macedonia." Tell
us then, I pray, why it is that you so particularly begin with this. Again
he proceeds, "But we ask you, brethren, to abound the more." And
with difficulty at last he breaks out into that at which he was driving before: "and
that ye take pains to be quiet." He gave the first aim. Then he adds a
second, "and to do your own business;" and a third as well: "and
work with your own hands, as we commanded you;" a fourth: "and to
walk honestly towards those that are without;"a fifth: "and to covet
no man's goods." Lo, we can see through that hesitation, which made him
with these preludes put off uttering what his mind was full of: "And that
ye take pains to be quiet;" i.e., that you stop in your cells, and be
not disturbed by rumours, which generally spring from the wishes and gossip
of idle persons, and so yourselves disturb others. And, "to do your own
business," you should not want to require curiously of the world's actions,
or, examining the lives of others, want to spend your strength, not on bettering
yourselves and aiming at virtue, but on depreciating your brethren. "And
work with your own hands, as we charged you;" to secure that which he
had warned them above not to do; i.e., that they should not be restless and
anxious about other people's affairs, nor walk dishonestly towards those without,
nor covet another man's goods, he now adds and says, "and work with your
own hands, as we charged you." For he has clearly shown that leisure the
reason why those things were done which he blamed above. For no one can be
restless or anxious about other people's affairs, but one who is not satisfied
to apply himself to the work of his own hands. He adds also a fourth evil,
which springs also from this leisure, i.e., that they should not walk dishonestly:
when he says: "And that ye walk honestly towards those without." He
cannot possibly walk honestly, even among those who are men of this world,
who is not content to cling to the seclusion of his cell and the work of his
own hands; but he is sure to be dishonest, while he seeks his needful food;
and to take pains to flatter, to follow up news and gossip, to seek for opportunities
for chattering and stories by means of which he may gain a footing and obtain
an entrance into the houses of others. "And that you should not covet
another man's goods." He is sure to look with envious eyes on another's
gifts and boons, who does not care to secure sufficient for his daily food
by the dutiful and peaceful labour of his hands. You see what conditions, and
how serious and shameful ones, spring solely from the malady of leisure. Lastly,
those very people, whom in his first Epistle he had treated with the gentle
application of his words, in his second Epistle he en-deavours to heal with
severer and sterner remedies, as those who had not profited by more gentle
treatment; and he no longer applies the treatment of gentle words, no mild
and kindly expressions, as these, "But we ask you, brethren," but "We
adjure you, brethren, in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, that ye withdraw
from every brother that walketh disorderly."(1) There he asks; here he
adjures. There is the kindness of one who is persuading; here the sternness
of one protesting and threatening. "We adjure you, brethren:" because,
when we first asked you, you scorned to listen; now at least obey our threats.
And this adjuration he renders terrible, not by his bare word, but by the imprecation
of the name of our Lord Jesus Christ: for fear lest they might again scorn
it, as merely man's word, and think that it was not of much importance. And
forthwith, like a well-skilled physician with festering limbs, to which he
could not apply the remedy of a mild treatment, he tries to cure by an incision
with a spiritual knife, saying, "that ye withdraw yourselves from every
brother that walketh disorderly, and not according to the tradition which ye
received of us." And so he bids them withdraw from those who will not
make time for work, and to cut them off like limbs tainted with the festering
sores of leisure: test the the malady of idleness, like some deadly con tagion,
might infect even the healthy portion of their limbs, by the gradual advance
of infection. And when he is going to speak of those who will not work with
their own hands and eat their bread in quietness, from whom he urges them to
withdraw, hear with what reproaches he brands them at starting. First he calls
them "disorderly," and "not walking according to the tradition." In
other words, he stigmatizes them as obstinate, since they will not walk according
to his appointment; and "dishonest," i.e., not keeping to the right
and proper times for going out, and visiting, and talking. For a disorderly
person is sure to be subject to all those faults. "And not according to
the tradition which they received from us." And in this he stamps them
as in some sort rebellious, and despisers, who scorned to keep the tradition
which they had received from him, and would not follow that which they not
only remembered that the master had taught in word, but which they knew that
he had performed in deed. "For you yourselves know how ye ought to be
folowers of us." He heaps up an immense pile of censure when he asserts
that they did not observe that which was still in their memory, and which not
only had they learned by verbal instruction, but also had received by the incitement
of his example in working.
CHAPTER VIII.
That he is sure to be restless who will not be content with the work of his
own hands.
"BECAUSE we were not restless among you." When he wants to prove
by the practice of work that he was not restless among them, he fully shows
that those who will not work are always restless, owing to the fault of idleness. "Nor
did we eat any man's bread for nought." By each expression the teacher
of the Gentiles advances a step in the rebuke.(1) The preacher of the gospel
says that he has not eaten any man's bread for nought, as he knows that the
Lord commanded that "they who preach the gospel should live of the gospel:"(2)
again, "The labourer is worthy of his meat."(3) And so if he who
preached the gospel, performing a work so lofty and spiritual, did not venture
in reliance on the Lord's command to eat his bread for nought, what shall we
do to whom not merely is there no preaching of the word intrusted, but no cure
of souls except our own committed? with what confidence shall we dare with
idle hands to eat our bread for nought, when the "chosen vessel," constrained
by his anxiety for the gospel and his work of preaching, did not venture to
eat without labouring with his own hands? "But in labour," he says "and
weariness, working night and day lest we should be burdensome to any of you."(4)
Up to this point he amplifies and adds to his rebuke. For he did not simply
say, "We did not eat bread for nought from any of and then stop short.
For it might have been thought that he was supported by his own private means,
and by money which he had saved, or by other people's, though not by their
collections and gifts. "But in labour," he says, "and weariness,
working night and day is, being specially supported by our own labour. And
this, he says, we did not of our own wish, and for our own pleasure, as rest
and bodily exercise suggested, but as our necessities and the want of food
compelled us to do, and that not without great bodily weariness. For not only
throughout the whole day, but also by night, which seems to be granted for
bodily rest, I was continually plying the work of my hands, through anxiety
for food.
CHAPTER IX.
That not the Apostle only, but those two who were with him laboured with their
own hands.
AND he
testifies that it was not he alone who so lived among them, lest haply this
method might
not seem important
or general if he depended only on his
example. But he declares that all those who were appointed with him for the
ministry of the gospel, i.e., Silvanus and Timothy, who wrote this with him,
worked in the same fashion. For by saying, "lest we should be burdensome
to any of you, he covers them with great shame. For if he who preached the
gospel and commended it by signs and mighty works, did not dare to eat bread
for nought, lest he should be burdensome to any, how can those men help thinking
that they are burdensome who take it every day in idleness and at their leisure?
CHAPTER X.
That for this reason the Apostle laboured with his own hands, that he might
set us an example of work.
"NOT as if we had not power; but that we might give ourselves a pattern
to you to imitate us." He lays bare the reason why he imposed such labour
on himself: "that we might," says he, "give a pattern to you
to imitate us, that if by chance you become forgetful of the teaching of our
words which so often passes through your ears, you may at least keep in your
recollection the example of my manner of life given to you by ocular demonstration.
There is here too no slight reproof of them, where he says that he has gone
through this labour and weariness by night and day, for no other reason but
to set an example, and that nevertheless they would not be instructed, for
whose sakes he, although not obliged to do it, yet imposed on himself such
toil. "And indeed," he says "though we had the power, and opportunities
were open to us of using all your goods and substance, and I knew that I had
the permission s of our Lord to use them: yet I did not use this power, lest
what was rightly and lawfully done on my part might set an example of dangerous
idleness to others. And therefore when preaching the gospel, I preferred to
be supported by my own hands and work, that I might open up the way of perfection
to you who wish to walk in the path of virtue, and might set an example of
good life by my work."
CHAPTER XI.
That he preached and taught men to work not only by his example, but also
by his words.
BUT lest
haply it might be thought that, while he worked in silence and tried to teach
them by example,
he had
not instructed them by precepts and warnings,
he proceeds to say: "For when we were with you, this we declared to you,
that if a man will not work neither should he eat." Still greater does
he make their idleness appear, for, though they knew that he, like a good master,
worked with his hands for the sake of his teaching and in order to instruct
them, yet they were ashamed to imitate him; and he emphasizes our diligence
and care by saying that he did not only give them this for an example when
present, but that he also proclaimed it continually in words; saying that if
any one would not work, neither should he eat.
CHAPTER XII.
Of his
saying: "If
any will not work, neither shall he eat."
AND now
he no longer addresses to them the advice of a teacher or physician, but
proceeds with the severity
of a judicial sentence, and, resuming his apostolic
authority, pronounces sentence on his despisers as if from the judgment seat:
with that power, I mean, which, when writing with threats to the Corinthians,
he declared was given him of the Lord, when he charged those taken in sin,
that they should make haste and amend their lives before his coming: thus charging
them, "I beseech you that I may not be bold when I am present, against
some, with that power which is given to me over you." And again: "For
if I also should boast somewhat of the power which the Lord has given me unto
edification, and not for your destruction, I shall not be ashamed."(1)
With that power, I say, he declares, "If a man will not work, neither
let him eat." Not punishing them with a carnal sword, but with the power
of the Holy Ghost forbidding them the goods of this life, that if by chance,
thinking but little of the punishment of future death, they still should remain
obstinate through love of ease, they may at last, forced by the requirements
of nature and the fear of immediate death, be compelled to obey his salutary
charge.
CHAPTER XIII.
Of his
saying: "We
have heard that some among you walk disorderly."
Then after
all this rigour of gospel severity, he now lays bare the reason why he put
forward all these
matters. "For we have heard that some among
you walk disorderly, working not at all, but curiously meddling." He is
nowhere satisfied to speak of those who will not give themselves up to work,
as if they were victims of but a single malady. For in his first Epistle(2)
he speaks of them as "disorderly," and not walking according to the
traditions which they had received from him: and he also asserts that they
were restless, and ate their bread for nought. Again he says here, "We
have heard that there are some among you who walk disorderly." And at
once he subjoins a second weakness, which is the root of this restlessness,
and says, "working not at all;" a third malady as well he adds, which
springs from this last like some shoot: "but curiously meddling."
CHAPTER XIV.
How manual labour(3) prevents many faults.
And so
he loses no time in at once applying a suitable remedy to the incentive to
so many faults,
and laying
aside that apostolic power of his which he had
made use of a little before, he adopts once more the tender character of a
good father, or of a kind physician, and, as if they were his children or his
patients, applies by his healing counsel remedies to cure them, saying: "Now
we charge them that are such, and beseech them by the Lord Jesus, that working
with silence they would eat their own bread." The cause of all these ulcers,
which spring from the root of idleness, he heals like some well-skilled physician
by a single salutary charge to work; as he knows that all the other bad symptoms,
which spring as it were from the same clump, will at once diappear when the
cause of the chief malady has been removed.
CHAPTER XV.
How kindness should be shown even to the idle and careless.
NEVERTHELESS,
like a far-sighted and careful physician, he is not only anxious to heal
the wounds of the sick,
but gives suitable directions as well to the
whole, that their health may be preserved continually, and says: "But
be not ye weary in well doing:" ye who following us, i.e., our ways, copy
the example given to you by imitating us m work, and do not follow their sloth
and laziness: "Do not be weary in well doing;" i.e., do you likewise
show kindness towards them if by chance they have failed to observe what we
said. As then he was severe with those who were weak, for fear lest being enervated
by laziness they might yield to restlessness and inquisitiveness, so he admonishes
those who are in good health neither to restrain that kindness which the Lord's
command bids us show to the good and evil,(1) even if some bad men will not
turn to sound doctrine; nor to desist from doing good and encouraging them
both by words of consolation and by rebuke as well as by ordinary kindness
and civility.
CHAPTER XVI.
How we ought to admonish those who go wrong, not out of hatred, but out of
love.
BUT again
in case some might be encouraged by this gentleness, and scorn to obey his
commands, he
proceeds
with the severity of an apostle: "But if
any man obey not our word by this Epistle, note that man and do not keep company
with him that he may be ashamed." And in warning them of what they ought
to observe out of regard for him and for the good of all, and of the care with
which they should keep the apostolic commands, at once he joins to the warning
the kindness of a most indulgent father; and teaches them as well, as if they
were his children, what a brotherly disposition they should cultivate towards
those mentioned above, out of love. "Yet do not esteem him as an enemy,
but admonish him as a brother." With the severity of a judge he combines
the affection of a father, and tempers with kindness and gentleness the sentence
delivered with apostolic sternness. For he commands them to note that man who
scorns to obey his commands, and not to keep company with him; and yet he does
not bid them do this from a wrong feeling of dislike, but from brotherly affection
and out of consideration for their amendment. "Do not keep company," he
says, "with him that he may be ashamed;" so that, even if he is not
made better by my mild charges, he may at last be brought to shame by being
publicly separated from all of you, and so may some day begin to be restored
to the way of salvation.
CHAPTER XVII.
Different passages in which the Apostle declares that we ought to work, or
in which it is shown that he himself worked.
IN the
Epistle to the Ephesians also he thus gives a charge on this subject of work,
saying: "He that stole, let him now steal no more, but rather
let him labour, working with his hands the thing that is good, that he may
have something to give to him that suffereth need."(3) And in the Acts
of the Apostles too we find that he not only taught this, but actually practised
it himself. For when he had come to Corinth, he did not permit himself to lodge
anywhere except with Aquila and Priscilla, because they were of the same trade
which he himself was accustomed to practise. For we thus read: "After
this, Paul departing from Athens came to Corinth; and finding a certain Jew
named Aquila, born in Pontus, and Priscilla his wife, he came to them because
they were of the same trade; and abode with them, and worked: for they were
tent-makers by trade."(8)
CHAPTER XVIII.
That the Apostle wrought what he thought would be sufficient for him and for
others who were with him.
Then going
to Miletus, and from thence sending to Ephesus, and summoning to him the
elders of the
church
of Ephesus, he charged them how they ought to
rule the church of God in his absence, and said: "I have not coveted any
man's silver and gold; you yourselves know how for such things as were needful
for me and them that are with me these hands have ministered. I have showed
you all things, how that so labouring you ought to support the weak, and to
remember the words of the Lord Jesus, how he said: It is more blessed to give
than to receive."(4) He left us a weighty example in his manner of life,
as he testifies that he not only wrought what would supply his own bodily wants
alone, but also what would be sufficient for the needs of those who were with
him: those, I mean, who, being taken up with necessary duties, had no chance
of procuring food for themselves with their own hands. And as he tells the
Thessalonians that he had worked to give them an example that they might imitate
him, so here too he implies something of the same sort when he says: "I
have showed you all things, how that so labouring you ought to support the
weak," viz., whether in mind or body; i.e., that we should be diligent
in supplying their needs, not from the store of our abundance, or money laid
by, or from another's generosity and substance, but rather by securing the
necessary sum by our own labour and toil.
CHAPTER XIX.
How we
should understand these words: "It is more blessed to give than
to receive."
AND he
says that this is a command of the Lord: "For He Himself," namely
the Lord Jesus, said he, "said it is more blessed to give than to receive." That
is, the bounty of the giver is more blessed than the need of the receiver,
where the gift is not supplied from money that has been kept back through unbelief
or faithlessness, nor from the stored-up treasures of avarice, but is produced
from the fruits of our own labour and honest toil. And so "it is more
blessed to give than to receive," because while the giver shares the poverty
of the receiver, yet still he is diligent in providing with pious care by his
own toil, not merely enough for his own needs, but also what he can give to
one in want; and so he is adorned with a double grace, since by giving away
all his goods he secures the perfect abnegation of Christ, and yet by his labour
and thought displays the generosity of the rich; thus honouring God by his
honest labours, and plucking for him the fruits of his righteousness, while
another, enervated by sloth and indolent laziness, proves himself by the saying
of the Apostle unworthy of food, as in defiance of his command he takes it
in idleness, not without the guilt of sin and of obstinacy.
CHAPTER XX.
Of a lazy brother who tried to persuade others to leave the monastery.
WE know
a brother, whose name we would give if it would do any good, who, although
he was remaining
in the
monastery and compelled to deliver to the
steward his fixed task daily, yet for fear lest he might be led on to some
larger portion of work, or put to shame by the example of one labouring more
zealously, when he had seen some brother admitted into the monastery, who in
the ardour of his faith wanted to make up the sale of a larger piece of work,
if he found that he could not by secret persuasion check him from carrying
out his purpose, he would by bad advice and whisperings persuade him to depart
thence. And in order to get rid of him more easily he would pretend that he
also had already been for many reasons offended, and wanted to leave, if only
he could find a companion and support for the journey. And when by secretly
running down the monastery he had wheedled him into consenting, and arranged
with him the time at which to leave the monastery, and the place to which he
should go before, and where he should wait for him, he himself, pretending
that he would follow, stopped where he was. And when the other out of shame
for his flight did not dare to return again to the monastery from which he
had run away, the miserable author of his flight stopped behind in the monastery.
It will be enough to have given this single instance of this sort of men in
order to put beginners on their guard, and to show clearly what evils idleness,
as Scripture says,(1) can produce in the mind of a monk, and how "evil
communications corrupt good manners."(2)
CHAPTER XXI.
Different passages from the writings of Solomon against accidie.
AND Solomon,
the wisest of men, clearly points to this fault of idleness in many passages,
as he
says: "He that followeth idleness shall be filled
with poverty,"(3) either visible or invisible, in which an idle person
and one entangled with different faults is sure to be involved, and he will
always be a stranger to the contemplation of God, and to spiritual riches,
of which the blessed Apostle says: "For in all things ye were enriched
in him, in all utterance and in all knowledge."(4) But concerning this
poverty of the idler elsewhere he also writes thus: "Every sluggard shall
be clothed in torn garments and rags."(5) For certainly he will not merit
to be adorned with that garment of incorruption (of which the Apostle says, "Put
ye on the Lord Jesus Christ,"(6) and again: "Being clothed in the
breastplate of righteousness and charity,"(7) concerning which the Lord
Himself also speaks to Jerusalem by the prophet: "Arise, arise, O Jerusalem,
put on the garments of thy glorY),"(8) whoever, overpowered by lazy slumber
or by accidie, prefers to be clothed, not by his labour and industry, but in
the rags of idleness, which he tears off from the solid piece and body of the
Scriptures, and fits on to his sloth no garment of glory and honour, but an
ignominious cloak and excuse. For those, who are affected by this laziness,
and do not like to support themselves by the labour of their own hands, as
the Apostle continually did and charged us to do, are wont to make use of certain
Scripture proofs by which they try to cloak their idleness, saying that it
is written, "Labour not for the meat that perisheth, but for that which
remains to life eternal;"(9) and "My meat is to do the will of my
Father."(10) But these proofs are (as it were) rags, from the solid piece
of the gospel, which are adopted for this purpose, viz., to cover the disgrace
of our idleness and shame rather than to keep us warm, and adorn us with that
costly and splendid garment of virtue which that wise woman in the Proverbs,
who was clothed with strength and beauty, is said to have made either for herself
or for her husband; of which presently it is said: "Strength and beauty
are her clothing, and she rejoices in the latter days."(1) Of this evil
of idleness Solomon thus makes mention again: "The ways of the idlers
are strown with thorns;"(2) i.e., with these and similar faults, which
the Apostle above declared to spring from idleness. And again: "Every
sluggard is always in want."(3) And of these the Apostle makes mention
when he says, "And that you want nothing of any man's."(4) And finally: "For
idleness has been the teacher of many evils:"(5) which the Apostle has
clearly enumerated in the passage which he expounded above: "Working not
at all, but curiously meddling." To this fault also he joins another: "And
that ye study to be quiet;" and then, "that ye should do your own
business and walk honestly towards them that are without, and that you want
nothing of any man's." Those also whom he notes as disorderly and rebellious,
from these he charges those who are earnest to separate themselves: "That
ye withdraw yourselves," says he, "from every brother that walketh
disorderly and not according to the tradition which they received from us."(6)
CHAPTER XXII.
How the brethren in Egypt work with their hands, not only to supply their
own needs, but also to minister to those who are in prison.
AND so taught by these examples the Fathers in Egypt never allow monks, and
especially the younger ones, to be idle,(7) estimating the purpose of their
hearts and their growth in patience and humility by their diligence in work;
and they not only do not allow them to receive anything from another to supply
their own wants, but further, they not merely refresh pilgrims and brethren
who come to visit them by means of their labours, but actually collect an enormous
store of provisions and food, and distribute it in the parts of Libya which
suffer from famine and barrenness, and also in the cities, to those who are
pining away in the squalor of prison; as they believe that by such an offering
of the fruit of their hands they offer a reasonable and true sacrifice to the
Lord.
CHAPTER XXIII.
That idleness is the reason why there are not monasteries for monks in the
West.
HENCE it is that in these countries we see no monasteries found with such
numbers of brethren: for they are not supported by the resources of their own
labour in such a way that they can remain in them continually; and if in some
way or other, through the liberality of another, there should be a sufficient
provision to supply them, yet love of ease and restlessness of heart does not
suffer them to continue long in the place. Whence this saying has been handed
down from the old fathers in Egypt: that a monk who works is attacked by but
one devil; but an idler is tormented by countless spirits.
CHAPTER XXIV.
Abbot Paul s who every year burnt with fire all the works of his hands.
LASTLY, Abbot Paul, one of the greatest of the Fathers, while he was living
in a vast desert which is called the Porphyrian desert,(9) and being relieved
from anxiety by the date palms and a small garden, had plenty to support himself,
and an ample supply of food, and could not find any other work to do, which
would support him, because his dwelling was separated from towns and inhabited
districts by seven days' journey, (10) or even more, through the desert, and
more would be asked for the carriage of the goods than the price of the work
would be worth; he collected the leaves of the palms, and regularly exacted
of himself his daily task, as if he was to be supported by it. And when his
cave had been filled with a whole year's work, each year he would burn with
fire that at which he had so diligently laboured: thus proving that without
manual labour a monk cannot stop in a place nor rise to the heights of perfection:
so that, though the need for food did not require this to be done, yet he performed
it simply for the sake of purifying his heart, and strengthening his thoughts,
and persisting in his cell, and gaining a victory over accidie and driving
it away..
CHAPTER XXV.
The words of Abbot Moses which he said to me about the cure of accidie.
WHEN I
was beginning my stay in the desert, and had said to Abbot Moses, the chief
of all the saints,
that
I had been terribly troubled yesterday by an
attack of accidie, and that I could only be freed from it by running at once
to Abbot Paul, he said, "You have not freed yourself from it, but rather
have given yourself up to it as its slave and subject. For the enemy will henceforth
attack you more strongly as a deserter and runaway, since it has seen that
you fled at once when overcome in the conflict: unless on a second occasion
when you join battle with it you make up your mind not to dispel its attacks
and heats for the moment by deserting your cell, or by the inactivity of sleep,
but rather learn to triumph over it by endurance and conflict." Whence
it is proved by experience that a fit of aceidie should not be evaded by running
away from it, but overcome by resisting it.(1)
BOOK XI.
OF THE SPIRIT OF VAINGLORY.
CHAPTER I.
How our seventh combat is against the spirit of vainglory, and what its nature
OUR seventh
combat is against the spirit of <greek>kenodox</greek><ss217><greek>a</greek>,
which we may term vain or idle glory: a spirit that takes many shapes, and
is changeable and subtle, so that it can with difficulty, I will not say be
guarded against, but be seen through and discovered even by the keenest eyes.
CHAPTER II.
How vainglory attacks a monk not only on his carnal, but also on his spiritual
side.
FOR not only does this, like the rest of his faults, attack a monk on his
carnal side, but on his spiritual side as well, insinuating itself by craft
and guile into his mind: so that those who cannot be deceived by carnal vices
are more grievously wounded through their spiritual proficiency; and it is
so much the worse to fight against, as it is harder to guard against. For the
attack of all other vices is more open and straightforward, and in the case
of each of them, when he who stirs them up is met by a determined refusal,
he will go away the weaker for it, and the adversary who has been beaten will
on the next occasion attack his victim with less vigour. But this malady when
it has attacked the mind by means of carnal pride, and has been repulsed by
the shield of reply, again, like some wickedness that takes many shapes, changes
its former guise and character, and under the appearance of the virtues tries
to strike down and destroy its conqueror.
CHAPTER III.
How many forms and shapes vainglory takes.
FOR our other faults and passions may be said to be simpler and of but one
form: but this takes many forms and shapes, and changes about and assails the
man who stands up against it from every quarter, and assaults its conqueror
on all sides. For it tries to injure the soldier of Christ in his dress, in
his manner, his walk, his voice, his work, his vigils, his fasts, his prayers,
when he withdraws, when he reads, in his knowledge, his silence, his obedience,
his humility, his patience; and like some most dangerous rock hidden by surging
waves, it causes an unforeseen and miserable shipwreck to those who are sailing
with a fair breeze, while they are not on the lookout for it or guarding against
it.
CHAPTER IV.
How vainglory attacks a monk on the right had and on the left.
AND so
one who wishes to go along the King's highway by means of the "arms
of righteousness which are on the right hand and on the left," ought by
the teaching of the Apostle to pass through "honour and dishonour, evil
report and good report,"(1) and with such care to direct his virtuous
course amid the swelling waves of temptation, with discretion at the helm,
and the Spirit of the Lord breathing on us, since we know that if we deviate
ever so little to the right hand or to the left, we shall presently be dashed
against most dangerous crags. And so we are warned by Solomon, the wisest of
men: "Turn not aside to the right hand or to the left;"(2) i.e.,
do not flatter yourself on your virtues and be puffed up by your spiritual
achievements on the right hand; nor, swerving to the path of vices on the left
hand, seek from them for yourself (to use the words of the Apostle) "glory
in your shame."(3) For where the devil cannot create vainglory in a man
by means of his well-fitting and neat dress, he tries to introduce it by means
of a dirty, cheap, and uncared-for style. If he cannot drag a man down by honour,
he overthrows him by humility. If he cannot make him puffed up by the grace
of knowledge and eloquence, he pulls him down by the weight of silence. If
a man fasts openly, he is attacked by the pride of vanity. If he conceals it
for the sake of despising the glory of it, he is assailed by the same sin of
pride. In order that he may not be defiled by the stains of vainglory he avoids
making long prayers in the sight of the brethren; and yet because he offers
them secretly and has no one who is conscious of it, he does not escape the
pride of vanity.
CHAPTER V.
A comparison which shows the nature of vainglory.
OUR elders admirably describe the nature of this malady as like that of an
onion, and of those bulbs which When stripped of one covering you find to be
sheathed m another; and as often as you strip them, you find them still protected.
CHAPTER VI.
That vainglory is not altogther got rid of by the advantages of solitude.
IN solitude
also it does not cease from pursuing him who has for the sake of glory fled
from intercourse
with
all men. And the more thoroughly a man
has shunned the whole world, so much the more keenly does it pursue him. It
tries to lift up with pride one man because of his great endurance of work
and labour, another because of his extreme readiness to obey, another because
he outstrips other men in humility. One man is tempted through the extent of
his knowledge, another through the extent of his reading, another through the
length of his vigils. Nor does this malady endeavour to wound a man except
through his virtues; introducing hindrances which lead to death by means of
those very things through which the supplies of life are sought. For when men
are anxious to walk in the path of holiness and perfection, the enemies do
not lay their snares to deceive them anywhere except in the way along which
they walk, in accordance with that saying of the blessed David: "In the
way wherein I walked have they laid a snare for me;"(4) that in this very
way of virtue along which we are walking, when pressing on to "the prize
of our high calling,"(5) we may be elated by our successes, and so sink
down, and fall with the feet of our soul entangled and caught in the snares
of vainglory. And so it results that those of us who could not be vanquished
in the conflict with the foe are overcome by the very greatness of our triumph,
or else (which is another kind of deception) that, overstraining the limits
of that self-restraint which is possible to us, we fail of perseverance in
our course on account of bodily weakness.
CHAPTER VII.
How vainglory, when it has been overcome, rises again keener than ever for
the fight.
ALL, vices when overcome grow feeble, and when beaten are day by day rendered
weaker, and both in regard to place and time grow less and subside, or at any
rate, as they are unlike the opposite virtues, are more easily shunned and
avoided: but this one when it is beaten rises again keener than ever for the
struggle; and when we think that it is destroyed, it revives again, the stronger
for its death. The other kinds of vices usually only attack those whom they
have overcome in the conflict; but this one pursues its victors only the more
keenly; and the more thoroughly it has been resisted, so much the more vigorously
does it attack the man who is elated by his victory over it. And heroin lies
the crafty cunning of our adversary, namely, in the fact that, where he cannot
overcome the soldier of Christ by the weapons of the foe, he lays him low by
his own spear.
CHAPTER VIII.
How vainglory is not allayed either in the desert or through advancing years.
OTHER vices, as we said, are sometimes allayed by the advantages of position,
and when the matter of the sin and the occasion and opportunity for it are
removed, grow slack, and are diminished: but this one penetrates the deserts
with the man who is flying from it, nor can it be shut out from any place,
nor When outward material for it is removed does it fail. For it is simply
encouraged by the achievements of the virtues of the man whom it attacks. For
all other vices, as we said above, are sometimes diminished by the lapse of
time, and disappear: to this one length of life, unless it is supported by
skilful diligence and prudent discretion, is no hindrance, but actually supplies
it with new fuel for vanity.
CHAPTER IX.
That vainglory is the more dangerous through being mixed up with virtues.
LASTLY, other passions which are entirely different from the virtues which
are their opposites, and which attack us openly and as it were in broad daylight,
are more easily overcome and guarded against: but this being interwoven with
our virtues and entangled in the battle, fighting as it were under cover of
the darkness of night, deceives the more dangerously those who are off their
guard and not on the lookout.
CHAPTER X.
An instance showing how Kin Hezekiah was overthrown by the dart of vainglory.
FOR so
we read that Hezekiah, King of Judah, a man of most perfect righteousness
in all things, and one
approved
by the witness of Holy Scripture, after unnumbered
commendations for his virtues, was overthrown by a single dart of vainglory.
And he who by a single prayer of his was able to procure the death of a hundred
and eighty-five thousand of the army of the Assyrians, whom the angel destroyed
m one night, is overcome by boasting and vanity. Of whom--to pass over the
long list of his virtues, which it would take a long time to unfold--I will
say but this one thing. He was a man who, after the close of his life had been
decreed and the day of his death determined by the Lord's sentence, prevailed
by a single prayer to extend the limits set to his life by fifteen years, the
sun returning by ten steps, on which it had already shone in its course towards
its setting, and by its return dispersing those lines which the shadow that
followed its course had already marked, and by this giving two days in one
to the whole world, by a stupendous miracle contrary to the fixed laws of nature.(1)
Yet after signs so great and so incredible, after such immense proofs of his
goodness, hear the Scripture tell how he was destroyed by his very successes. "In
those days," we are told, "Hezekiah was sick unto death: and he prayed
to the Lord, and He heard him and gave him a sign," that, namely of which
we read in the fourth book of the kingdoms, which was given by Isaiah the prophet
through the going back of the sun. "But," it says, "he did not
render again according to the benefits which he had received, for his heart
was lifted up; and wrath was kindled against him and against Judah and Jerusalem:
and he humbled himself afterwards because his heart had been lifted up, both
he and the inhabitants of Jerusalem, and therefore the wrath of the Lord came
not upon them in the days of Hezekiah."(2) How dangerous, how terrible
is the malady of vanity! So much goodness, so many virtues, faith and devotion,
great enough to prevail to change nature itself and the laws of the whole world,
perish by a single act of pride! So that all his good deeds would have been
forgotten as if they had never been, and he would at once have been subject
to the wrath of the Lord unless he had appeased Him by recovering his humility:
so that he who, at the suggestion of pride, had fallen from so great a height
of excellence, could only mount again to the height he had lost by the same
steps of humility. Do you want to see another instance of a similar downfall?
CHAPTER XI.
The instance of King Uzziah who was overcome by the taint of the same malady.
OF Uzziah,
the ancestor of this king of whom we have been speaking, himself also praised
in all things
by
the witness of the Scripture, after great commendation
for his virtue, after countless triumphs which he achieved by the merit of
his devotion and faith, learn how he was cast down by the pride of vainglory. "And," we
are told, "the name of Uzziah went forth, for the Lord helped him and
had strengthened him. But when he was made strong, his heart was lifted up
to his destruction, and he neglected the Lord his God."(1) You behold
another instance of a most terrible downfall, and see how two men so upright
and excellent were undone by their very triumphs and victories. Whence you
see how dangerous the successes of prosperity generally are, so that those
who could not be injured by adversity are ruined, unless they are careful,
by prosperity; and those who in the conflict of battle have escaped the danger
of death fall before their own trophies and triumphs.
CHAPTER XII.
Several testimonies against vainglory.
AND so
the Apostle warns us: "Be not desirous of vainglory."(2)
And the Lord, rebuking the Pharisees, says, "How can ye believe, who receive
glory from one another, and seek not the glory which comes from God alone?"(8)
Of these too the blessed David speaks with a threat: "For God hath scattered
the bones of them that please men."(4)
CHAPTER XIII.
Of the ways in which vainglory attacks a monk.
IS the case also of beginners and of those who have as yet made but little
progress either in powers of mind or in knowledge it usually puffs up their
minds, either because of the quality of their voice because they can sing well,
or because their bodies are emaciated,(5) or because they are of a good figure,
or because they have rich and noble kinsfolk, or because they have despised
a military life and honours. Sometimes too it persuades a man that if he had
remained in the world he would easily have obtained honours and riches, which
perhaps could not possibly have been secured, and inflates him with a vain
hope of uncertain things; and in the case of those things which he never possessed,
puffs him up with pride and vanity, as if he were one who had despised them.
CHAPTER XIV.
How it suggests that a man may seek to take holy orders.
BUT sometimes it creates a wish to take holy orders, and a desire for the
priesthood or diaconate. And it represents that if a man has even against his
will received this office, he will fulfil it with such sanctity and strictness
that he will be able to set an example of saintliness even to other priests;
and that he will win over many people, not only by his manner of life, but
also by his teaching and preaching. It makes a man, even when alone and sitting
in his cell, to go round in mind and imagination to the dwellings and monasteries
of others, and to make many conversions under the inducements of imaginary
exultatio.
CHAPTER XV.
How vainglory intoxicates the mind.
AND so the miserable soul is affected by such vanity--as if it were deluded
by a profound slumber--that it is often led away by the pleasure of such thoughts,
and filled with such imaginations, so that it cannot even look at things present,
or the brethren, while it enjoys dwelling upon these things, of which with
its wandering thoughts it has waking dreams, as if they were true.
CHAPTER XVI.
Of him whom the superior came upon and found in his cell, deluded by idle
vainglory.
I REMEMBER
an elder, when I was staying in the desert of Scete, who went to the cell
of a certain brother
to pay him a visit, and when he had reached the
door heard him muttering inside, and stood still for a little while, wanting
to know what it was that he was reading from the Bible or repeating by heart
(as is customary) while he was at work. And when this most excellent eavesdropper
diligently applied his ear and listened with some curiosity, he found that
the man was induced by an attack of this spirit to fancy that he was delivering
a stirring sermon to the people. And when the elder, as he stood still, heard
him finish his discourse and return again to his office, and give out the dismissal
of the catechumens, as the deacon does,(6) then at last he knocked at the door,
and the man came out, and met the elder with the customary reverence, and brought
him in and (for his knowledge of what had been his thoughts made him uneasy)
asked him when he had arrived, for fear lest he might have taken some harm
from standing too long at the door: and the old man joking pleasantly replied, "I
only got here while you were giving out the dismissal of the catechumens."
CHAPTER XVII.
How faults cannot be cured unless their roots and causes have been discovered.
I THOUGHT it well to insert these things in this little work of mine, that
we might learn, not only by reason, but also by examples, about the force of
temptations and the order of the sins which hurt an unfortunate soul, and so
might be more careful in avoiding the snares and manifold deceits of the enemy.
For these things are indiscriminately brought forward by the Egyptian fathers,
that by telling them, as those who are still enduring them, they may disclose
and lay bare the combats with all the vices, which they actually do suffer,
and those which the younger ones are sure to suffer; so that, when they explain
the illusions arising from all the passions, those who are but beginners and
fervent in spirit may know the secret of their struggles, and seeing them as
in a glass, may learn both the causes of the sins by which they are troubled,
and the remedies for them, and instructed beforehand concerning the approach
of future struggles, may be taught how they ought to guard against them, or
to meet them and to fight with them. As clever physicians are accustomed not
only to heal already existing diseases, but also by a wise skill to seek to
obviate future ones, and to prevent them by their prescriptions and healing
draughts, so these true physicians of the soul, by means of spiritual conferences,
like some celestial antidote, destroy beforehand those maladies of the soul
which would arise, and do not allow them to gain a footing in the minds of
the juniors, as they unfold to them the causes of the passions which threaten
them, and the remedies which will heal them.
CHAPTER XVIII.
How a monk ought to avoid women and bishops.
WHEREFORE this is an old maxim of the Fathers that is still current,--though
I cannot produce it without shame on my own part, since I could not avoid my
own sister, nor escape the hands of the bishop,--viz., that a monk ought by
all means to fly from women and bishops. For neither of them will allow him
who has once been joined in close intercourse any longer to care for the quiet
of his cell, or to continue with pure eyes in divine contemplation through
his insight into holy things.
CHAPTER XIX.
Remedies by which we can overcome vainglory.
AND SO
the athlete of Christ who desires to strive lawfully in this true and spiritual
combat,
should strive
by all means to overcome this changeable monster
of many shapes, which, as it attacks us on every side like some manifold wickedness,
we can escape by such a remedy as this; viz., thinking on that saying of David: "The
Lord hath scattered the bones of those who please men.(1) To begin with we
should not allow ourselves to do anything at the suggestion of vanity, and
for the sake of obtaining vainglory. Next, when we have begun a thing well,
we should endeavour to maintain it with just the same care, for fear lest afterwards
the malady of vainglory should creep in and make void all the fruits of our
labours. And anything which is of very little use or value in the common life
of the brethren, we should avoid as leading to boasting; and whatever would
render us remarkable amongst the others, and for which credit would be gained
among men, as if we were the only people who could do it, this should be shunned
by us. For by these signs the deadly taint of vainglory will be shown to cling
to us: which we shall most easily escape if we consider that we shall not merely
lose the fruits of those labours of ours which we have performed at the suggestion
of vainglory, but that we shall also be guilty of a great sin, and as impious
persons undergo eternal punishments, inasmuch as we have wronged God by doing
for the favour of men what we ought to have done for His sake, and are convicted
by Him who knows all secrets of having preferred men to God, and the praise
of the world to the praise of the Lord.
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