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For an introduction to Hesychast prayer see Mother Mary's previous
article, 'Prayer of the Heart' in the
Newsletter, February 2010.
In many religions the mountain is a powerful spiritual symbol that
reaches upwards to a summit that has been called 'the place of truth'[1].
The cave, within the centre of the mountain, is hidden and secret.
In Sanskrit, the word guha denotes cave, but it is also
applied to the cavity of the heart and the heart itself.[2]
The Word
The Greek word Logos, or Word, was used in pre-Socratic
philosophy to mean the source of the principle governing the cosmos.
In Biblical Judaism it represented the creative power and medium
of God's communication with the human race. There is a wonderful
hesychast symbol in the Biblical story of the Lord appearing to
Elijah at a cave entrance on Mount Horeb. Fleeing persecution, Elijah
escaped to the desert mountain where he spent the night in a cave.
The word of the Lord came and told him to stand on the mountain
because the Lord was about to pass by. Then a powerful wind 'tore
the mountains apart', but the Lord was not in the wind. Then there
was an earthquake, but the Lord was not in the earthquake. A fire
followed, but the Lord was not in the fire.
'After the fire came a gentle whisper. When Elijah heard it,
he pulled his cloak over his face and went out and stood at the
mouth of the cave.' [3]
Elijah found the Lord not in powerful signs but in the hushed,
gentleness of a whisper (hesychia means silence or stillness).
In the New Testament Gospel of St. John, the Logos, becomes
the creative Word of God (which is God) and incarnate in Jesus.
According to Orthodox tradition, Jesus was born in a cave and it
is the earth that offers up this sacred womb-like birthplace for
the living Word.
'Today the Virgin gives birth to him who is above all being,
and the earth offers a cave to him whom no one can approach. Angels
with shepherds give glory, and magi journey with a star, for to
us there has been born a little Child, God before the ages.' [4]
The Mind
Orthodox theology makes a distinction between three activities
of the Mind. The highest is the Intellect (nous) which
understands divine truth through a personal experience of God in
the depths of the Heart; the Reason (dianoia) is the logical
faculty that uses words to analyse, reflect and draw conclusions;
the Thoughts (logosmi) are provoked by the demons and lead
to temptation to destructive action. St. John of Cronstadt wrote
'the Intellect is the servant of the heart, which is our life; if
it leads the heart to truth, peace, joy and life, then it fulfils
its destination, it is the truth; but if it leads the heart to doubt,
disturbance, torment, despondency, darkness, then it does not fulfill
its destination and is absolutely false.' 'it is necessary to purify
this source of life, to kindle in it the pure flame of life, so
that it shall burn and not be extinguished; and shall direct all
thoughts, desires and tendencies of the man through all his life.'
[5] This is a journey where our Mind descends to
the cave of our Heart, the very centre of our being where our relationship
with God is born.
The story of Elijah shows us important prerequisites for meeting
the Lord. Elijah withdrew alone to a quiet, safe place. He was not
tempted to respond to impressive, powerful signs and but instead
waited until he heard the Lord in the sound of a small whisper.
In obedience to God, he covered his face, 'You cannot see My Face;
for no man can see My face and live' [6] In Biblical
language, the face symbolizes the essence, and we are taught that
although God's essence is beyond our comprehension, we can experience
God's energies. These elements of solitary withdrawal and the practice
of obedience and discernment are advised by many teachers of hesychast
prayer. How can we train our minds to quieten down, be obedediant,
and not to respond to temptations when we live busy, noisy lives
with many responsibilities and no chance, or no inclination, to
withdraw to a remote hermitage? The Fathers have taught that when
distracting thoughts arise we should turn immediately to prayer.
'Prayer is by nature a dialog and a union of man with God. Its
effect is to hold the world together. It achieves a reconciliation
with God.' [7] 'The beginning of prayer is the
expulsion of distractions from the very start by a single thought
[8]; the middle stage is the concentration on
what is being said or thought; its conclusion is rapture in the
Lord.' 'Make the effort to raise up, or rather, to enclose your
mind within the words of your prayer; and if, like a child, it
gets tired and falters, raise it up again. The mind, after all,
is naturally unstable, but the God who can do everything can also
give it firm endurance.' [9]
The Thoughts
Temptation is not a sin until we respond to it with thoughts and
actions that fragment and separate us from God and other human beings.
The Holy Bible teaches us that sin is when 'your heart is not right
in the sight of God. Repent therefore of this your wickedness and
pray God if perhaps the thought of your heart may be forgiven you'
[10]. In Greek sin (hamartia) means 'failure
to hit the mark', 'to go astray' or, ultimately, 'failure to achieve
the purpose for which one is created' [11]. What
is necessary to still our response to temptation is not so much
to withdraw to isolation, but to quieten the passions and heal our
soul. There is no short cut or easy exercise for this; it is a lifetime's
work. How do we begin? As the biblical quotation suggests, we begin
with repentance and loving forgiveness, and we begin again and again.
When a Desert Father was asked what he did all day he answered,
"I fall and rise up, I fall and rise up". In Greek, the
word for repentance, or change of heart (metanioia) is
the same as that for prostration; the prayer that we make by bowing
down in body, mind and soul, touching the earth and rising up afresh.
The watchfulness that enables us to see our errors is similar to
Buddhist watchfulness and meditation on cause and effect. In our
healing we are helped by three Orthodox sacraments (communion, confession
and anointing with oil) and before each sacrament there are prayers
for the healing of body and soul. In a talk[12]
given in Indianapolis several years ago, Fr. Meletios [13],
Abbot of an Orthodox monastery in California, said,
'The automatic stream of thoughts is necessarily bad because
all those thoughts tend to buzz like a bunch of bees around two
themes, and one is desire, and one is fear.... But there is a
positive aspect of the Mind which I have to stress is God given,
and is beautiful and that is when we use our Minds. So it is one
thing when we use our Minds and another when our Minds use us.
When we use our Mind we are actually in the process of procreating
with God. We are acting in a God like manner.... The logosmi
are the source of all sin...Everything that's sinful will start
with a little thought - with a tiny, tiny, tiny feeling of discomfort.
That's all it is. That's where it starts...Every sinful action
starts as a feeling of discomfort as we try to plug the feeling
with an action...Over time, this stream of thoughts builds into
a sort of clump...and gradually the clump gets bigger and bigger,
and it becomes the story of you.... It's a story of you that is
the puppy who can't quite get to the food bowl. It's the story
of you who never quite gets the right job, or is never quite dealt
well by his family...and this is what I think in Orthodox terms
we can safely call ego. The ego is a clump of logosmi
stuck together.'
Fr. Meletios then suggested that monastics are given the opportunity
to live without fear, as they do not need their ego within the safety
of the monastery. Outside the monastery and church we are not free
to live ego-less lives because we are unprotected from others who
do not hold the same values. He said that is why we need monastics,
not only because they pray for us as we do our daily work, but also
because they try to realise an egoless life of love. 'Sometimes
you can go there (a monastery) and receive special healing
for your special brokenness...they just heal by love. There's nothing
esoteric, nothing weird about their life. They just love.'
The Cave
Some years ago I was blessed to stay at the Monastery of St. Catherine,
Sinai, Egypt. Two monks invited me to join them on a pilgrimage
to the cave hermitage of St. John Climacus [14],
five miles into the desert. When we arrived at the cave, the young
English monk beckoned me to enter alone, and then left to sit on
a large rock in the desert valley. Inside the cave I could see nothing;
it seemed infinitely dark. I turned to look at the entrance, but
could only see a white sheet of brilliant, morning light. Gradually
my eyes adjusted and I could see a low stone shelf, rather like
a bed, and I went to sit on it. I had never experienced such silence
before. I could only hear my body breathing and my heart beating.
After an unknown time, a loud, scratching sound burst into the silence
and made my heart jump. It was animal and nearby, but what was it?
A lizard? a snake? I had read that the Desert Fathers made friends
with lions...surely there were no longer lions in Sinai? Within
three rapid thoughts I was deciding I was in danger and should leave,
and I was also angry because the special silence of this saint's
cave had been broken. The logosmi were certainly at work
here! Then a shaft of light revealed the source of the disturbing
and frightening noise. I saw a small ant busily moving a tiny grain
of rock along the stone shelf. I smiled and relaxed, but it took
some time repeating the Jesus Prayer [15] before
I regained concentration.
The solitary life is a quiet and simplified life that removes
much temptation and stimulation. As the story of the ant suggests,
small things gain greater significance and bring great joy. However,
the solitary life itself does not dispel temptation and vice. It
is a life that has been called the 'front line of battle' with the
logosmi because the social interaction that often masks
our ills is removed and our deeper spiritual conflict is exposed.
This confrontation is why it is so important to have the help of
an experienced spiritual guide and why the solitary life is not
recommended for the young novice. This can also apply to home life.
'Watch yourselves - your passions, especially in your home life,
where they appear freely, like moles in a safe place. Outside
our home, some of our passions are usually screened by other more
decorous passions, whilst at home there is no possibility of driving
away these black moles that undermine the integrity of our soul'
[16]
The Story of Humility
'Love and humility make a holy team. The one exalts. The other
supports those who have been exalted and never falls' [17]
.
Humility is called the greatest and most difficult virtue to acquire.
It is the last step on the ascetic path that leads us to the entrance
of the cave of the Heart. In the article on hesychasm in the previous
newsletter I recounted two similar Buddhist and Christian teachings
on the Middle Way. Here I conclude with two very similar Buddhist
and Orthodox stories about humility.
The True Sound of Truth [18]
A devoted Buddhist meditator, after years concentrating on a particular
mantra, had attained enough insight to begin teaching. A few years
of successful teaching left the meditator with no thoughts about
learning from anyone; but upon hearing about a famous hermit living
nearby, the opportunity was too exciting to be passed up. The hermit
lived alone on an island at the middle of a lake, so the meditator
hired a man with a boat to row across to the island. As they shared
some tea made with herbs the meditator asked him about his spiritual
practice. The old man said he had no spiritual practice, except
for a mantra which he repeated all the time to himself. The meditator
was pleased: the hermit was using the same mantra he used himself
-- but when the hermit spoke the mantra aloud, the meditator was
horrified! "What's wrong?" asked the hermit. "I don't
know what to say. I'm afraid you've wasted your whole life! You
are pronouncing the mantra incorrectly!" "Oh, Dear! That
is terrible. How should I say it?" The meditator gave the correct
pronunciation, and the old hermit was very grateful, asking to be
left alone so he could get started right away. On the way back across
the lake the meditator, was pondering the sad fate of the hermit.
"It's so fortunate that I came along. At least he will have
a little time to practice correctly before he dies." Just then,
the meditator noticed that the boatman was looking quite shocked,
and turned to see the hermit standing respectfully on the water,
next to the boat. "Excuse me, please. I hate to bother you,
but I've forgotten the correct pronunciation again. Would you please
repeat it for me?" "You obviously don't need it,"
stammered the meditator; but the old man persisted in his polite
request until the meditator relented and told him again the way
he thought the mantra should be pronounced. The old hermit was saying
the mantra very carefully, slowly, over and over, as he walked across
the surface of the water back to the island.
The Three Hermits [19]
An Orthodox bishop was traveling by boat with pilgrims from Archangel
to the Solovetsk monastery. On the way he heard that on an obscure
little island there were three old hermits that had spent their
entire lives trying to save their souls. The bishop became intrigued
and implored the captain to stop the ship so that he could visit
them. The captain reluctantly agreed and dropped anchor near the
island. The bishop was then placed on a boat and with a group of
oarsmen sent ashore. The three hermits were dressed raggedly with
long white beards to their knees. In total humility they welcomed
the bishop, making deep bows. After he blessed them he asked them
what they were doing to save their souls and serve God. They replied
that they had no idea how to serve God. They just served and supported
each other. The bishop realized that the poor hermits didn’t
even know how to pray, since all they did was lift their arms up
toward heaven and repeat, "Three are Ye, three are we, have
mercy upon us." The bishop thought it his ecclesiastical duty
to teach the illiterate hermits the Lord’s Prayer. They, however,
were poor learners and required a whole day of instruction. But
lo and behold! During sunset as the boat left the island all the
passengers saw a sight in the distance that filled them with fright.
The three hermits were running on water as if it were dry land.
When they came by the side of the ship they implored the bishop
to remind them of the Lord’s Prayer because, poor fellows,
they had already completely forgotten it. The bishop crossed himself
in awe and told the hermits to continue their own prayers, for they
had no need for instruction. Then he bowed deeply before the old
men and asked them to pray for him as they turned and ran back across
the sea to their island. And a light shone until daybreak on the
spot where they were lost to sight.
'The Lord is so holy, so simple in His holiness, that one single
evil or impure thought deprives us of Him. Hence it follows that
the saints are all light; they are all one fragrance, like the
light of the sun, like the purest air. Lord, grant this simple
holiness to me also!' [20]
Mother Mary, St. Sunniva Skete, Fetlar, Shetland Isles, ZE2
9DJ, U.K.
oOo
1. Réne Guénon,
The Mountain and the Cave, www.studiesincomparativereligion.com
2. René Guénon, The Heart
and the Cave, published on above website.
3. 1 Kings: 19:9 Holy Bible NIV
4. St. Romanos the Melodist, Nativity
Kontakion
5. St John of Cronstadt, The Education
of the Mind, A Treasury of Russian Spirituality
6. Exodus 33:20 Holy Bible NIV
7. St John Climacus, Prayer, The Ladder
of Divine Ascent, Paulist Press, 1982
8. Ibid. Which might mean the repetition
of a single phrased prayer
9. Ibid.
10. Acts 8:21-22 Holy Bible NIV
11. Glossary, Philokalia, Faber
& Faber, 1984
12. Life as a Mystery a talk
given in 2008 at an Orthodox church in Indianapolis, USA. This is
an edited transcription. The complete talk can be heard on Ancient
Faith Radio website at: http://ancientfaith.com/specials/archimandrite_meletios_webber
13. Fr. Meletios also has a podcast 'Jottings
from a Holy Mountain' on Ancient Faith Radio.
He has written two books: 'Steps of Transformation' 2003, 'Bread
& Water, Wine & Oil' 2007, both published by Conciliar Press
14. St. John Climacus was a ...century
hermit and Abbot of St Catherine's Monastery, Sinai. He wrote The
Ladder of Divine Ascent, a very influential book on hesychast
ascetism.
15. The Jesus Prayer in its short form
is the repetition of 'Lord Jesus Christ, have mercy on me'. It is
a prayer that can be practised anywhere, but the classic pose is
seated alone on a low stool, in a quiet place, with a lowered head
and no icons or candles. Sometimes a knotted woollen or wooden beaded
prayer rope is used and traditionally monastics are given a rope
that the Abbot or Abbess used the night before their tonsure.
16. St John of Cronstadt
17. St. John Climacus
18. http://www.dharma-haven.org/tibetan/meaning-of-om-mani-padme-hung.htm
19. A story told by Leo Tolstoy and published
in The Story and its Writer: An Introduction to Short Fiction,
Ann Charters, ed., New York; St. Martin’s Press, 1987, also
in The Mountain of Silence by Kyriacos Markides, Doubleday,
2002
20. St. John of Cronstadt
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