Showing posts with label Illumination. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Illumination. Show all posts

Saturday, January 20, 2024

How do our sins affect our knowledge of God? Insights from Saint Symeon


Saint Symeon, a significant figure in Eastern Orthodox theology, teaches that our sins erect a barrier between us and God, impeding our spiritual connection with Him. This barrier, he explains, can only be surmounted through persistent repentance. While this barrier exists, Symeon asserts, “It cuts us off from the light, leaving us to grope in darkness." 

We must know ourselves before we can expect to know God who is so incomparably superior to us. 

Symeon says, 

For to speak about God and divine things without illumination, while deprived of the Holy Spirit, simply shows our ignorance—and rightly so, for if we knew ourselves accurately, we would never reckon ourselves worthy to look at heaven to see the light of the world, not even to walk on earth; instead we would run to bury our selves under the dirt.

According to Saint Symeon, those who speak of God with pride, lacking the Holy Spirit's guidance, engage in pseudo-theology, relying solely on worldly wisdom. The Scriptures affirm that wisdom belongs to God alone, and as fallible beings, we all need repentance and heartfelt confession. This journey involves seeking a spiritual mentor who can guide us towards a sincere confession before God. Symeon's vision of repentance encompasses trust in one's spiritual mentor, obedience in daily tasks, care for others, and following the teachings of Jesus Christ. True repentance, he suggests, dispels ignorance and fosters a deeper understanding of God. "Becoming rich in the communion of our faith" is achieved through repentance, which purifies us and invites the Holy Spirit's illumination.

This journey of spiritual growth takes place within the Church and aligns with the teachings of Holy Scripture. It is a humble path, following in the footsteps of Jesus.

Saint Symeon warns against following unenlightened preachers. He advises avoiding those who have not been spiritually purified and who lack a deep, mystical understanding of God's commandments. He references biblical examples like Elijah, who was taken to heaven in a chariot of fire (2 Kings 2:11), and Jesus, who ascended with a host of angels, to illustrate the need for divine assistance in elevating our minds to understand heavenly mysteries. We should adhere to the teachings of the Apostles and be wary of those who rely solely on philosophy and intellectual arguments, as their understanding is limited.

Symeon concludes with a vision of spiritual fulfillment: “There lies the tranquil abode of incorruptible life, the joyful gathering of those who celebrate in the Spirit. To them be all glory, honor, and adoration, now and forever, and through the ages.” This is the ultimate destination for those who walk the path of humility and spiritual insight.

Reference: https://maksimologija.org/2020/11/16/st-symeon-the-new-theologian-theological-discourse-2/

Wednesday, July 7, 2010

Summary of the the Stage of Illumination

The first phase of Orthodox Spirituality as outlined by Fr. Dimitru Staniloae was Purification.  He sees this as the necessary prelude to the second phase called Illumination.  The fist phase involves ascetical practices to cleanse us of our passions, liberating the mind for contemplation on the Divine.


Part Two: Illumination


In the phase of Illumination we learn to gain a new kind of knowledge that goes beyond mental concepts.  We first begin to see the divine intent in all things, discovering their truth and purpose, the logoi.  In this we see the handiwork of God in all things.  As we pursue this level of contemplation we begin to realize the limits of our knowledge and mentally classify our knowledge of God as not this or not that, but something beyond that is not subject to our normal powers of reason.  We discover and enter the higher reaches of the mind that is above reason.  Seeing that our conceptual knowledge is limited and inadequate we lose our ego-centered self and face an abyss of unknown.  This involves a letting go of all our concepts and discovering the pure self deep within our being, in the heart.  The way we bridge this abyss and enter into this mystical state and knowledge is thorough pure prayer.  With our focus on Jesus, we enter into the chamber of the inner heart and rest in the stillness that we find there.  We are bathed in knowledge that is higher and not subject to classification by concepts.  We lack words to describe this kind of knowledge.  We are now prepared to receive the gift of the Divine light and our union with God.


Reference: Orthodox Spirituality by Dimitru Staniloae

Monday, July 5, 2010

Illumination: Mental Rest or Stillness of the Mind



We have been discussing the highest elements of Orthodox Spirituality that are of necessity preceded by much work to tame the passions.  The stage we have arrived at is one where the mind is still and at rest. This is a stage one attains prior to receiving the gift of the divine light, but involves a strong feeling of God's presence.


Fr. Dimitru outlines the characteristics of this standstill of mental activity:
1. This cessation is produced because the mind has reached the peak of all objects received by thought and has given up all understanding, no matter how well defined; it has realized that no definite thought whatsoever can see God... It realizes that its activity no longer has any purpose, but on the contrary, that it is harmful because it brings it down once again to finite things.
2.We can draw two conclusions: First, the experience of God by the motionless of the mind is superior to the consciousness gained by the affirmation or negative activity.  Secondly, this shows that this inactivity ins't a simple inertia or insensibility, but an experience of the divine reality which it doesn't try to define further.
3. The mind has left all things behind, even its own function which it had directed toward these things.  It finds itself now before the Master, at the end of the earth, looking intensely and astonished at the ocean of life which is contained in Him.
4. It has given up all things and stands motionless, praying that a vessel will be sent to bring it into the open sea, which will open the door for it.  This reveals a state of great love before the divine infinity.
5. In the measure that the warmth of prayer has grown, so has the love, that it might reach its fullness in pure prayer, the highest step of prayer. This love also remains after the ceasing of pure but unlimited prayer; love will constitute together with the coming of the Spirit to help, the bridge of crossing from the coast of created land, to the vastness of the divine ocean.
6. The experiencing of the feeling of the boundless divine mystery, the state of boundless prayer and the warm firm love for God are other characteristics which distinguish this apophaticism from negative theology, in which the intellect is more active.


Finally, he again cautions us:
This experience isn't reached without a freedom from all cares, from those intended to produce pleasure, or from all that can cause pain or need.  Now once that the feeling of this divine ocean is reached, it controls man with such charm, that he remains quiet in tasting it, unaffected by anything from the outside.




Reference: Orthodox Spirituality, pp 294 - 299

Saturday, July 3, 2010

True Meaning of "Theology" - Wisdom from Elder Paisios


I interject this teaching by Elder Paisios into our series on Orthodox Spirituality to provide another perspective from a truly holy man about the meaning of "theology." He too emphasizes the need to ascesis as a prerequisite to being made aware of the Divine Energies of God.  He has a way of putting very esoteric thoughts in such a simple and earthy manner.

Elder Paisios of Mt. Athos on “Theology”:

Theology is the word of God, which is apprehended by pure, humble and spiritually regenerated souls, and not the beautiful words of the mind, which are craft ed with literary art and expressed by the legal or world ly spirit.

Just as a beautiful statue cannot talk, manufactured words are unable to speak to the soul of a man, except if the listeners are very worldly, and pleased simply by charming conversation.

Theology that is taught like a science usually examines things historically and, consequently, things are understood externally. Since patristic ascesis and inner experience are absent, this kind of theology is full of un certainty and questions. For, with the mind one cannot grasp the Divine Energies if he does not first practice ascesis and live the Divine Energies, that the Grace of God might be energized within him.

Whoever thinks that he can come to know the mysteries of God through external scientific theory, resembles the fool who wants to see Paradise with a telescope.

Those who struggle patristically become empirical theologians through the visitation of the Grace of the Holy Spirit. All those who have an external education, in addition to the internal enlightenment of the soul, may describe the divine mysteries and interpret them correctly, as did many Holy Fathers.

If, however, one does not become spiritually related to the Holy Fathers and wants to take up translating or writing, he will wrong both the Holy Fathers and himself, as well as the people, with his spiritual cloudiness.

Neither is it right for someone to theologize using someone else’s theology, because he will resemble an impotent man who adopts others’ children, presents them as his own and pretends to be the father of a large family. The Holy Fathers took the divine word or personal experiences from their hearts; they were the result of spiritual battles against evil and the fire of temptations, which they confessed humbly or, out of love, wrote down in order to help us. They never kept this love for them selves, acknowledging, likewise, that humility and all the divine gifts are of God.

Those who present the gifts of God as their own are the most insolent and most unjust of the world, for they wrong God and, even more, their own selves. In this way they cause themselves to be deprived of Divine Grace so that they won’t be judged as being more un grateful and so they won’t be destroyed due to their great vainglory.

Those who are grateful towards God for everything and constantly attend to themselves humbly and look after God’s creatures and creation with kindness, theologize and thus become the most faithful theologians, even if illiterate. They are like the illiterate shepherds who observe the weather in the countryside, day and night, and become good meteorologists.

Those who live simply, with kindness and good thoughts, and have acquired inner simplicity and purity, regard the supernatural very simply, as natural, for everything is simple to God. He does not use greater power for the supernatural and less for the natural, but the same power for everything. He Himself is very simple and His Son revealed it to us on earth with His holy simplicity.

When purity comes to man and simplicity with its fervent faith and devotion arrives as well, then the Holy Trinity takes up His abode within us. With this divine enlightenment one easily finds the keys to divine mean ings, so as to interpret the Spirit of God in a very simple and natural way, without causing an intellectual headache.

Depending on the purity or guile that one possesses, analogous interpretations are made, and one is benefited or harmed accordingly. Oftentimes, one may cause harm due to his inexperience, even if acting with good intentions. For example, a person does not know that white wine also exists apart from red, and pours red paint into it to seemingly make it better, and, in this way, poi sons people. But even if he is not inexperienced or deceitful, but works only from human justice and logic, he will once again wrong the Spirit of God, and, as a result, harm himself and others.

With human logic and justice we also hear the complaints of the laborers of the first and third hour in the Gospel, who believed that they were unjustly treated. God, however, the beholder of the hearts of men, with the subtlety of His divine justice, also rewarded the laborers of the eleventh hour for the anguish they suffered before finding work. God would have even given to the laborers of the eleventh hour a greater re ward, out of His divine righteousness, full of mercy and love, because the poor ones suffered greatly in soul and were more fatigued than those, who, for more hours, were exhausted physically. But we, wretched people that we are, cannot fit God’s divine justice into our limited mind, just as His infinite kindness cannot fit inside our limited love. Therefore, God’s love was limited to giving everyone the same agreed reward, so as not to scandalize more those who loved their self more than their fellowmen. If He told them: “I am not doing you wrong; we agreed on this amount…”. He meant that: “I am a boss with noble love and divine justice which you cannot understand” and not: “I am boss and 1 take no one into consideration”. For God is our Father and we are His children, and all people know of His fatherly love; He was crucified in order to redeem and restore us to Paradise.

If we could go out of our self (the love for our self), we would also escape from the gravity of the earth and see everything in reality, with a divine eye, clearly and profoundly. That is why it is necessary for one to leave the world for the desert, struggle with humility, repentance and prayer, be deserted by his passions, remove his spiritual “rusts” and turn into a good conductor in order to receive the Divine Grace and become a true theologian.

If we don’t remove the rust from our spiritual cables, we will constantly be short circuited, full of world ly theories, doubts and questions. Then we cease theologize, being found in a condition of worldliness, but will speak historically, or examine things legally and mathematically. Namely, we will examine how many nails were used to crucify Christ and how many soldiers were present when He was crucified without proceeding to the essence of things: that Christ was crucified for our own sins, in order to redeem us, and suffered more than all of the Holy Martyrs put together. Although He helped the Martyrs with His divine power, He did not employ His divine power for Himself at all and suffered terrible pains out of love, having both of His two hands and His two legs pierced with nails. Whether they crucified His two legs with one or two nails has no importance, inasmuch as both were nailed and He suffered the pain and drank the vinegar, that He might sweeten us again in Paradise, eternally close to Him, as our Loving Father.

(Taken from the Epistles of Elder Paisios)

Friday, July 2, 2010

Illumination: Knock and the Inner Door Will Be Opened

It is only though much effort that we become capable to lift ourselves above the realm of reason and concepts.  Transcending reason is essential to know God, because God does not resemble things or concepts.


Fr. Dimitru Staniloae writes,
Our thinking subject (our mind) is the highest sovereign which we encounter in the world; it raises itself over all the order of objects and avoids being grasped in any way.  So it is the only entity which is like God.  Therefore to raise ourselves in some way to an understanding of God, we must somehow understand the thinking subject in the created world.
Here is a passage from Evagrius that many Fathers quote,
When the mind, unclothing itself of the old man, puts on that of grace, it sees in the time of prayer its state like that of a sapphire or of the heavenly color.  This state Scripture calls the place of God, seen by the elders of Israel on Mt. Sinai.
Fr. Dimitru tells us about the view of Saint Gregory of Nyssa
According to him, the cleansed heart sees God, not as a person apart, but he sees Him mirrored in himself.  The heart or "the man within which the heart calls Lord" reflects God by its nature.  But sin, covering it, has also covered the One mirrored in it.  As soon as we cleanse it and it sees itself, it also sees God as some see the sun in a mirror, without turning to Him in order to see Him in His hypostasis.
It is when the mind, purified, enters into this inner part of our being called the heart that it meets Christ.  It here in this inner most chamber of our being that we experience an unlimitedness that cannot be captured by concepts and used by reason.


Fr, Dimitru says that in face of this new experience we are dumbfounded.
First, this dizziness or astonishment in the face of an abyss means a paralysis of the powers of the mind, to the extent that it can no longer move forward.  The abyss in front of it is a great darkness. Secondly, it realizes that this abyss isn't entirely a region of our being, neither a void in the sense of an absence or a reality whatsoever.  It isn't darkness strictly speaking.  Rather it represents in continuity or by contact with the unlimitedness of our subject, the infinite depths.  For us, it also represents the unlighted depths of divinity.
When are able to enter into this abyss, where our mind seems to lose its boundaries, we, instead of feeling a void, begin to recognize the divinity in it.  It is the condition of total apophaticism where we have abandoned not just the contents of our mind but also all of its content.  This is the point where the Fathers tell us that we receive as a gift from God the vision of the divine light.


Fr. Dimitru tells us,
Arriving at our pure intimacy, we experience the infinite but personal presence of God hidden under the veil of the most complete darkness, just as many times we feel that somebody is near us, because we feel it, but we can't see anybody.
This is the condition of pure prayer. With mental prayer we try to find, by using the name of Jesus, the place in our heart, or that center within us that is beyond reason.  Our prayer seeks to find Jesus in this most inner place.  Gradually, it becomes to know with certainty that it has met Jesus. (Don't be mistaken, this is not an image like we see on an icon, not an object of any kind, but is indescribable.) It is then, only through our inner prayer, that we experience God as subject and do not limit Him by any mental concepts.  We become aware of our own nothingness and our dependence on God for our existence.


Fr. Dimitru says,
He penetrates into the content of our subject; He fills it and overwhelms us so much so that we forget ourselves.
It up to us to continually knock at the door our the heart.  We must continually try and open it.  We have to make the knocking heard.  This is the place were Christ dwells within each of us.  He will open the door because we have purified ourselves and call out His name and show our need for Him.

Reference: Orthodox Spirituality, pp 286 -293

Thursday, July 1, 2010

Illumination: Mind Beyond Reason


The notion that prayer of the heart takes us beyond all concepts and is essential to approach God raises some important questions. This is often described as an emptying of the  mind or a stillness of the mind. But doesn't our mind always need to have something to do?  Our Church Fathers affirm that it is truly possible to totally empty the mind of all its thoughts and concepts.  Then, how is it that we can have our mind  not involved with thoughts and concepts but still occupied?  Even when we are engage in negative theology we are still filling our mind with concepts, albeit they be negative ones about attributes of God.  We are still activating reason based on known concepts. The answer is prayer. Prayer fills the mind with God.

Fr. Dimitru Staniloae says,
Prayer alone succeeds in making this work complete by removing from the mind all definite content whatsoever.  It occupies the mind with the infinite, with God; in other words, it fills it in a positive and experiential way with the apophatic.
To further understand this we need to distinguish between mind (nous) and reason (logos) in the  writings of our Fathers.

Reason is the faculty that conceives things by assigning them to concepts or what are also called logoi.  It is these concepts that are the objects of our reason.

The mind is more than reason.  It is the faculty that thinks contents without restraining them to concepts. Reason is used by the mind which is a much higher a power.

So, to go beyond reason is to appeal to the highest part of our mind which operates without concepts.

Fr Dimitru compares this to the Divine mind.  He writes,
Reason comes from the mind just as the divine Logos is continually born from the Father, who is the first Mind (nous).  Therefore in the divine mind is the principle of all things, so too the mind in man is the principle of all things, so of reason too.  It is therefore the basis of the human subject, which is beyond delimited contents.
So as we go within to the place of the inner self, we go beyond what is possible to grasp with reason.  Our "self" is beyond reason and all concepts.  It is not limited by the images and conditions that make up our ego-self. What ever concepts we use to describe our "self" there is always more. To know our true being we must go beyond all concepts using the higher powers of our mind.

Fr. Dimitru says,
Things and concepts are a curtain which shut off our view, not only of God, but also of the basis of our subject.... The mind should be able to see its own self as in a mirror... Yet images and concepts cover the mirror with a wall which must be pierced...
The main point is that to know our true self and to join in union with God we need to go beyond our reason, beyond all concepts, to the highest part of our mind which does not rely on concepts; that part which controls even reason. Reason and concepts are limiting, incapable of grasping the infinite.  Knowing this truth about our own being leads to knowledge about God that is beyond reason.  This is the aim of all our ascetic preparation, to get beyond all that keeps us focused on the things of this world  which we understand through reason and concepts about them. This starts by controlling our passions, and then engaging in pure prayer where we come to recognize our true being which is beyond all reason.  Then we can grasp the truth about God.


Reference: Orthodox Spirituality, pp 284 -286

Wednesday, June 30, 2010

Illumination: Entering Within






The process that leads us to pure prayer is difficult to explain.  We are relegated to ideas such as negative theology, prayer in the heart and pure prayer.  Fr. Dimitru Staniloae does an excellent job of explaining this important step in our spiritual journey, which involves facing the abyss, darkness, a vast chasm and so forth. It is a process that involves going beyond reason, rising to the use of a higher mind that does not rely on concepts. It is a step beyond negative theology.

Fr. Dimitru writes,
In negative theology we make an abstraction of the world only by reason and not totally even then, because when we negate one of God's attributes we think about what we negate. 
So, negative theology is like a first step into this unknown space.  At this stage we begin to realize the unknowability of God through reason.  While we do so we realize the reality of His inner presence.

He continues,
In mental prayer we turn away from all things and submerge ourselves in ourselves; we make an existential abstraction, total and lasting, by all that we are.
It is through mental prayer that we will make this final journey to be filled with the joy of the divine light and a higher knowledge of the divine though a union with God.  There is a step beyond apophatic or negative theology which occurs through prayer.  As we enter into mental prayer we enter into the depths of our inner being. We discover our true self and open the doors or our heart to knowledge of God.

He continues,
In the prayer made in the heart we not only negate the world and think of it at the same time, but pure and simple we totally forget the world with our whole being.  We are left only with ourselves and not with our superselves with our traits and properties which can be seen or thought about in definite concepts. Rather we remain with our "I" from the depths, unconstrained by the thought of things, which can't be seen or defined by any concept whatsoever. We find ourselves only with the simple consciousness of the presence of the self, of its indefinable realities.
As we enter the heart in prayer, which is the center of our being or our spirit, we leave the realm of concepts, reason and our normal mental processes.  We now face the the pure self in its simplest form, free of mental concepts.  What makes up our ego-self disappears.  We are stripped or all the images we have created to make up our self-image.  We are free and pure to face our Creator.

Saint Gregory Palamas says,
In prayer the mind gradually abandons all relations with created things: first with all things evil and bad, then with neutral things capable of conformity to either good or ill, according to the intentions of the person using them.
All the Holy Fathers tell us, according to Fr. Dimitru, that the absolutely essential condition to approach the mind of the infinite God is to leave behind all perceptible and intelligible things. This we are able to do, after preparation where we conquer our passions, in mental prayer.

Reference: Orthodox Spirituality, pp. 283-284

Monday, June 28, 2010

Illumination: Developing Pure Prayer



Fr. Dimitru next shows us the different ways to lift our minds to pure prayer.  He outlines the teachings of the following Saints. 

Saint John Chrysostom:
He teaches the return of the mind to the heart and the repetition of a short prayer addressed to Jesus.

St. Simeon the New Theologian: The Method of Holy Prayer and Attention
He outlines four levels of prayer:
1. Prayer accompanied with imagination.
2. Prayer which concentrates on the words of the prayer not accepting images or other sensations.
3. Guarding the heart and praying from the depths of the heart, calling on Jesus Christ, without distraction from passions, and with obedience to a spiritual father.
4. The final level is when the mind remains motionless in contemplation of God.

Nicephorus the Monk:
He recommends that we seek the heart from the very beginning and to coordinate our saying of the prayer with the breath, persistently reciting the prayer addressed to Jesus.

Gregory of Sinai:
Saint Gregory provides detailed instructions for the body and mind. He advises that the Jesus Prayer should be recited with both mind and mouth.
"It is necessary only to speak quietly and without agitation, so that somehow the mind doesn't trouble the feeling and attention of the mind and hinder them.  this until the mind, getting used to this work will make progress and receive the power of the spirit to be able to pray fully and persistently.  Then it is no longer necessary to speak with the mouth, but neither is it possible; then it is  enough to carry on the work with the mind."
He also instructs us to divide the Jesus prayer in half, repeating each half by itself for a time. (Lord Jesus Christ Son of God -- Have mercy on me a sinner)

Callistus and Igantius:
They add the idea of thinking of death, the judgment, the reward of good works and the punishment of evil.

Nicodemus the Aghiorite:
He emphasizes the need to give the mind something to do with the meditation of the Jesus Prayer. He also gives details on the use of the breath in prayer.

Fr. Dimitru concludes his discussion suggesting we focus on the simpler method of John Chrysostom, which is the recitation of the Jesus Prayer without the complications of body movements, positions or control of breathing.

He then reviews the lessons from the Way of the Pilgrim, a story of a Russian pilgrim who sought to find how to pray unceasingly and learned to recite the Jesus Prayer more and more each day until it became a constant prayer. It is a gripping and powerful story.

Fr. Dimitru Stailoae says,
The Jesus prayer becomes gradually a mental prayer, also the content of the mental prayer is also Jesus...   
It becomes mental prayer when there is no longer the need for either words, or methods, and the  mind is occupied with it unceasingly, along with the heart.
The practice of the Jesus prayer is important for our spiritual growth towards theosis. Some say it is essential.

For those looking for information about how to practice the Jesus prayer, I suggest you go to the website www.OrthodoxPrayer.org/Jesus Prayer.html  Here you will find useful information and links to many articles. Also there are many posts on this blog regarding the Jesus Prayer.  This link will lead you to some of them.

Reference: Orthodox Spirituality, pp 262 -282

Saturday, June 26, 2010

Illumination: Pure Prayer



The virtue of prayer brings about the mystery of our union with God, because prayer is the tie of rational creatures with the Creator. - Saint Gregory Palamas

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Pure Prayer is the bridge we seek to union with God and to be participants in His divine light.  It is prayer that enables us to cross the great abyss when realize God is beyond all mental concepts and involves a higher knowledge.  It is a step that is beyond apophaticism or negative theology.

Fr. Dimitru Staniloae writes,
Pure prayer is an ecstasy of interior quietness, a total cessation of thought in the face of divine mystery, before the divine light descends to the mind thus stopped by astonishment.
This pure prayer is only given to us once we have mastered our passions.

Fr. Dimitru says,
Pure prayer is made only after the mind has been raised from the contemplation of visible nature and from the world of concepts, when the mind doesn't have any image or form or concept.
It is called pure because it does not have and object and does not involve any words.  This is also called by the Church Fathers as the Prayer of the mind, or noetic prayer, where the mind is free and we are face to face with God.

Fr. Dimitru gives us a couple of conditions for reaching this level of prayer:
1. The mind must withdraw from things outside and focus on what is within, to its heart.  It is in this place called the heart, the center of our soul where we find God.
2. One should use only a few words addressed to Jesus to assure a remembrance of Him and to focus the mind on its goal.  He says, "even the most pure prayer must keep the thought of the presence of Jesus."  He advises us that the common prayer of this nature is the Jesus Prayer :Lord Jesus Christ, Son of God, have mercy on me a sinner."

With the mind focused on the heart we will find that the mind no longer looks for external things. With its focus on the name of Jesus it is guarded by any sinful thoughts.  But there is a struggle involved against evil forces.

Fr. Dimitru says,
It must struggle much with the thoughts around it, to make its way toward it (the heart) and to open it... The mind with difficulty regains the habit of looking toward God... Then it lives His presence directly, or feels itself in His presence.
This state of prayer involves the opening of the heart.  We feel the pleasure of constantly remembering His name and being within with His love.

St. Diadochos writes,
Grace itself then thinks together with the soul and cries or together with it: "Lord Jesus Christ." [Because immediately]... we need His help to unite and gladden all our thoughts with His ineffable Sweetness, that we might be moved with all our heart to the remembrance and love of our God and Father.
Next: Method for the facilitation of pure prayer

Reference: Orthodox Spirituality, pp 255 - 261

Friday, June 25, 2010

illumination: Positive Theology is a Companion to Apophatic Theology


Every reality, concept or symbolic image mirrors God as well as awakens in us the proof or unexplainable feeling that God is totally different... they confront us with an infinite abyss of divine reality which we can't grasp with our minds.... But our mind, faced with this abyss still doesn't give up looking at things... and finds they don't give it the means to describe the abyss... Finally the mind realizes that not one is is suitable. Fr. Dimitru Staniloae 
Apophaticism is a stage where reason become aware of its limits. It does not mean that we must abandon all the concepts we have learned as being useless, but we accept their limits in knowing God and negate them in this context.

Fr Dimitru says,
Therefore negative theology doesn't eliminate the enriching of our spirit with concepts ever higher and more enhanced.  It also measures divinity with them and always finds it incomprehensible...
We need to first develop these concepts, because to negate we need something to negate.  So as our positive knowledge increases so does our ability to approach the unknowable God.

Fr. Dimitru says,
It is true that positive theology is a theology of the finite, but far from excluding the infinite, it makes the ascent to Him possible.  Only if it is used without negative theology does it have but a limited character... . We must have first tried, and continually be trying to approach the divinity with the rems of positive theology in order to know that they don't fit and consequently negate them...
So because of the fact that by His hidden nature God is unknowable but by His works which come into the world and are mirrored in their created effect, He is knowable, stands for the necessity of expressing God antinomically, in other words in positive terms, immediately replaced by the negative.  thus on one hand we must say that God is life, according to His life-creating power which He has manifested by working in the world, on the other hand we must say that He isn't life, because the hidden nature from which the life-giving power comes and acts in the world, isn't identified with this, but is greater than it.
Affirmative theology expresses the grain which can be taken from the "nature " of truth––negative theology, the consciousness or evidence that these grains aren't everything, that by them the knowledge of the truth isn't finished.  It expresses the consciousness or evidence of the inexhaustible mystery, which as such is the inexhaustible source of the truths which will be known in the future.  Positive theology strikes the balance of the truths already known.  Negative theology gives the assurance for the knowledge of the future.

Reference: Orthodox Spirituality, pp 245 - 254 

Thursday, June 24, 2010

Illumination: Facing the Abyss



After a long and arduous struggle to tame the passions, we receive the gift of contemplation to seek the truth in all of God's creation. Along this path we continually have feelings of God's presence, but we now come to a place where we realize that we can't know God. We recognize that there is a limit to our mental ability to grasp truth. We yearn for union with Him and to be united with His divine light. But, our attempts to understand Him elude us.  We begin to think in terms of what God is not, developing what is called an apophatic sense. We begin to sense that there is an alternative path to a fuller knowledge of Him, one that goes beyond the mental concepts we have trusted in so far.  This alternative is what the theologians have described as apophaticism.


Fr. Dimitru Staniloae says,
After the knowledge, by the intermediacy of nature, of the divine logoi and energies, the knowledge of the divine revealed energies follows.  Of course, the knowledge of these energies is accompanied especially in the second case, by apophaticism.  Furthermore, the knowledge of the energies enveloped in nature is accompanied by the consciousness of the unknowability of he divinely revealed energies; and the knowledge of them goes together with the consciousness of the absolute incomprehensibility of the divine nature.  This apophaticism is present at the same time as knowledge, or alternatively, on both steps, but is more accentuated on the second.
As I have personally contemplated the truth of God as found in His creation, I sense this gap between what I can know and what there is to know.  I am left with a divine "feeling" that I don't really understand. I feel as if I cant fully know the truth about that which I observe. Occasionally I come to a place where I momentarily let go of my mental concepts and this feeling intensifies, but, almost instantly, I snap back like I am afraid of losing reality.  It feels like a temporary loss of consciousness.  Its appears as a void, a silence, a great abyss, one I am not quite ready to master.  It seems like everything will be negated. I react and withdraw to a more comfortable place. I realize I am not yet prepared for this next step.

Fr. Dimitru describes this condition where we begin to feel the unexplainable divine energies as the first step of apophaticism.  The next step he describes as follows:
The moment we leave behind every consideration of concepts taken from nature and every preoccupation even to negate them when we therefore also raise ourselves beyond negation, as an intellectual operation, and beyond some apophatic feeling of them, we enter a state of silence produced by prayer.
This a a critical transition in our spiritual growth. We may experience a void, silence, darkness, a state of intense prayer or a total quietness of our mind.  To progress we have to make a total surrender to God and enter into this unknown area. We must face the abyss. It is a total surrender of our ego-centeredness, of the control that our mind uses based on worldly concepts.  

Fr Dimitru says,
The mind reaches the abyss which separates its knowledge from God, but it is still here on the human side. But carried off by God, it goes over there, to the vision of the divine light. 
There is a large chasm we need to cross and our faith must be total to cross it.  On the other side is the divine light and the union with God we seek.

Fr Dimitru says,
Certainly the vision of the divine light is also accompanied by an apophaticism, which we could call the third step.  But it is no longer an apophaticism in the sense of a void, as previous steps.  First it consists of the consciousness of the one who sees it;: that it can't be contained in concepts and expressed in words. Secondly, that beyond it is the divine being, which remains totally inaccessible.  But it has a positive content of knowledge higher than knowledge of apophatic knowledge, a feeling of higher experience and of natural feeling.... the vision of the light means that it has carried the mind across the abyss which separates us and God.
Fr. Staniloae has more to say on this. Next.

Reference: Orthodox Spirituality, pp 237 - 244 

Wednesday, June 23, 2010

Illumination: Going Beyond Knowledge - Apophatic Knowledge

As we begin to approach an understanding of God we find that we cannot understand Him.  He is beyond our mental grasp.  This leads us to a critical step in our spiritual journey.  We need to go beyond all mental concepts to know God. This step is referred to as one requiring apophatic knowledge.  It is a mystical way of knowing that transcends the logical mind.


We began our journey with a  positive approach to knowing God only to find that this does not lead us to knowing Him.

Fr. Dimitru says,
So at the beginning the affirmative way is less dependent on the consciousness of the ineffable character of God;  later it is more so. After a long ascent, it becomes almost totally dependent on the consciousness of the inability to comprehend and express God in concepts.
Instead of identifying positive attributes of God we begin to try and use negative ones.  This is a way of expressing our feeling of the incomprehensibility of God that develops as we ascend in our spiritual growth.  It refers to an experience that cannot be described in positive terms, an experience that is referred to by the Church Fathers as vision of God or the divine light.  It is not a rejection of the idea of knowing God.  But one that is part of a transition to the realization that there is a higher kind of knowledge that permeates our being when we come into contact with God.

V. Lossky captures this idea in his well known book Mystical Theology where he explains the teaching of Dionysius the Areopagite (Acts 17:34).  
Fr. Dimitru summarizes it as follows:
Dionysius distinguishes two possible theological ways.  One––that of cataphatic or positive theology––proceeds by affirmations; the other ––apophatic or negative theology––by negations.  The first leads us to some knowledge of God, but in an imperfect way.  The perfect way, the only way which is fitting in regard to God, who is of His very nature unknowable, is the second––which leads us finally to total ignorance.  All knowledge has as its object that which is.  Now God is beyond all that exists. In order to approach Him, it is necessary to deny all that is inferior to Him, that is to say, all that which is. ... It is by unknowing that one may know Him who is above every possible object of knowledge. Proceeding by negations one ascends from the inferior degrees of being to the highest, by progressively setting aside all that can be known, in order to draw near to the Unknown in the darkness of absolute ignorance.
This is a major transition because we have to give up all we have conceived, all that was useful in our earlier spiritual development, so we can continue on our path to union with God.

Saint Dionysius writes,
One must abandon all that is impure and all that is pure.  One must then scale the most sublime heights of sanctity leaving behind all the divine luminaries, all the heavenly sounds and words.  It is only thus that one may penetrate to the darkness wherein He who is beyond all created things makes His dwelling.
This approach, called apophatic, is an attitude of mind which does not allow the formation of concepts about God. It is based on a mystical experience and not gained through a method of abstract thought.  It requires proper preparation and a purification.

Lossky summarizes as follows:
Unknowability does not mean agnosticism or refusal to know God.  Nevertheless, this knowledge will only be attained in the way which leads not to knowledge but to union––to deification.  Thus theology will never be abstract, working through concepts, but contemplative: raising mind to those realities which pass all understanding...
The knowledge of the divine nature is above knowledge.

Saint Gregory Palamas says,
It shouldn't be called knowledge, because it is much higher than all knowledge and the viewpoint from knowledge.
It is the lived embodiment of the unknowability of God.

Reference: Orthodox Spirituality, pp 230 - 236

Tuesday, June 22, 2010

Illumination: Spiritual Understanding of Scripture





Man has the absolute need for these two things, if he wants to keep the right way to God without error: the spiritual understanding of Scripture and the spiritual contemplation of God in nature."
Saint Maximus the Confessor


Saint Maximus also tells us that for a spiritual understanding of Scripture it is essential to go beyond the literal understanding.  He writes,
He who doesn't enter into the divine beauty and glory found in the letter of the law falls under the power of the passions and becomes the slave of the world.
This means we must first be worthy of the Spirit and able to enter into a spiritual relationship with the words to gain deeper spiritual understanding of Scripture.

Fr. Dimitru Staniloe says,
The spiritual understanding.... requires preparation as well as the knowledge of the logoi or the living words and present workings of God by things.  Those who are full of passions, to the extent that they are glued to the visible surface of things, are also glued to the letter of the Scripture and its history... the wall which blocks the road to God, rather than being transparent for them or a guide to Him.
This implies that the most useful study of Scripture comes after we have conquered our passions.  Before this we are apt to make self-serving and highly subjective interpretations of Scripture.  This is why it is not advised for Orthodox Christians to engage in their own study or interpretation of Scripture, but instead to rely on the interpretations given to us by the Church Fathers and study in the context of the Church with the assistance of her clergy.

Scripture is divine word and the proper understanding of it involves a limitless depth and a universal validity for every age and every person.  To gain this universal understanding requires the ability to hear the words as if they are spoken by God, to us personally and at the present time.

Fr. Dimitru says,
It means that when I read the letter I hear God himself speaking to me and to us today, or about me and us, and about our duties... means to see the constant relationship between God and us, and to live it in the way it affects me at the present moment....
This is not a subjective interpretation but one that is universal and the same for all persons.  Spirit must penetrate the words of the Scripture, allowing them to be understood from our inner being.  This inner understanding is from Spirit and not the intellect that becomes available to us once we are purified of the passions which blind us to the selfless truth of things.

The Scripture gains meaning from a virtuous life and a life in the Church.  The readings of the Church Fathers help us give clear meaning to the words.

Fr. Dimitru says,
Scripture... has depths which lead to the divine infinite and make the Person of the divine Word felt.  This wisdom makes way of an infinite progress in the deeper study of the Scripture and in the increasing accentuated feeling of Christ... The progress in the deeper study of Scripture is in proportion to our progress in the life according to the Spirit, in proportion to our purification from the egotism of the passions.
This is why when we read Scripture time and time again it takes on new and deeper meanings.  As we progress spiritually, progressively revealing the influence the passions have on us, repenting and correcting our ways, gaining in self-control, we see new depths in Scripture.  The Scripture has not changed, but our perception of it changes and deepens. Once we have reached the state of dispassion where the passions no longer have any control over us we enter into the spiritual nature of Scripture and it becomes in a real way the voice of God.

Fr. Dimitru says,
In this way all things in Scripture not only become contemporary, but in some way a biography of our relationship with God.  In this sense the events of salvation of the life of Jesus become present events which happen in the depths of my life... He is resurrected in me when I reach the state of dispassion.  He is transfigured for me when I become worthy of seeing the divine light.  He penetrates into me in a hidden way at baptism. He is the effective force which guides and empowers my whole ascent along which He becomes increasingly more transparent in me by my gradual deification, making me like Him by the dialogical communication with Him...
For the spiritual man, in the depths of Scripture... the Spirit sustains his efforts of purification and illuminates for him everything around that they might become transparent symbols of divinity.  All things give him the consciousness that  "In God we live and move, and have our being," (Acts 17:28) as Saint Paul told us in Athens.

Reference: Orthodox Spirituality, pp 224 - 229 

Monday, June 21, 2010

Illumination: Steps Needed to Discern Truth

"Preparation is necessary because our reason, in every condition of our life, doesn't remain invariable with the same capacity to objectively capture the truth."


The following are the steps outlined by Fr. Dimitru Staniloae to return to the way of truth.


1. The first is faith.  We need to be obedient to God's commandments.


2. Second, is a long term effort to direct our lives and to explain things in the world in light of our faith.
This involves the steps of purification outlined earlier.  We need to gain control over the passions, gain a life of virtue, and give up seeing things as objects for egoistic satisfaction.


3. Third, we need the experiences of life gained by the first two steps.
This develops valid value judgments and legitimizes an explanation of things and their logoi having their source in God.  We learn that a life directed only on fleshly things is a distortion of the full reality.  We realize a life of faith and observe the truth of life.  We understand that discernment is based on more than what we can learn from our own rationalization or judgment.  We begin to realize the logoi in things are also logoi in God.  Our discrimination of logoi becomes ever clearer.


4. Fourth, with this increased sharpness of mind our discernment is accelerated.  We can see what is evil or good in a thing or event at our first glance. With a long habit of such discernment we realize logoi do not consist of fleshly utility but in a revelation of a spiritual sense––a divine intention.  This is all gained gradually as a gift of the Holy Spirit.


5. Finally, we develop the capacity to grasp the rational relationships of things and events with the logoi of other things and events.


Fr. Dimitru concludes this chapter,
For  man to know the Logos from nature and Scripture, something necessary for him if he wants to reach perfection, he must understand both of them "in spirit" going beyond their material covering.


Reference: Orthodox Spirituality, pp 214 - 223