{"id":11067,"date":"2017-12-26T12:33:45","date_gmt":"2017-12-26T20:33:45","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.orthodoxytoday.org\/blog\/?p=11067"},"modified":"2020-05-03T09:53:44","modified_gmt":"2020-05-03T16:53:44","slug":"on-the-character-of-men-and-on-the-virtuous-life-170-texts-philokalia-vol-1","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.orthodoxytoday.org\/blog\/2017\/12\/on-the-character-of-men-and-on-the-virtuous-life-170-texts-philokalia-vol-1\/","title":{"rendered":"On the Character of Men and on the Virtuous Life: 170 Texts (Philokalia, Vol 1)"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><img decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignright size-full wp-image-11068\" src=\"https:\/\/www.orthodoxytoday.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2017\/12\/St_Anthony-Great_01.jpg\" alt=\"St. Anthony the Great Character of Men and the Virtuous Life\" width=\"333\" srcset=\"https:\/\/www.orthodoxytoday.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2017\/12\/St_Anthony-Great_01.jpg 555w, https:\/\/www.orthodoxytoday.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2017\/12\/St_Anthony-Great_01-233x300.jpg 233w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 555px) 100vw, 555px\" \/>by St. Anthony the Great &#8211;<\/p>\n<p><strong>1.<\/strong> Men are often called intelligent wrongly. Intelligent men are not those who are erudite in the sayings and books of the wise men of old, but those who have an intelligent soul and can discriminate between good and evil. They avoid what is sinful and harms the soul; and with deep gratitude to God they resolutely adhere by dint of practice to what is good and benefits the soul. These men alone should truly be called intelligent.<\/p>\n<p><strong>2.<\/strong> The truly intelligent man pursues one sole objective: to obey and to conform to the God of all. With this single aim in view, he disciplines his soul, and whatever he may encounter in the course of his life, he gives thanks to God for the compass and depth of His providential ordering of all things. For it is absurd to be grateful to doctors who give us bitter and unpleasant medicines to cure our bodies, and yet to be ungrateful to God for what appears to us to be harsh, not grasping that all we encounter is for our benefit and in accordance with His providence. For knowledge of God and faith in Him is the salvation and perfection of the soul. <!--more--><\/p>\n<p><strong>3.<\/strong> We have received from God self-control, forbearance, restraint, fortitude, patience, and the like, which are great\u00a0and holy powers, helping us to resist the enemy\u2019s attacks. If we cultivate these powers and have them at our disposal,\u00a0we do not regard anything that befalls us as painful, grievous or unbearable, realizing that it is human and can be\u00a0overcome by the virtues within us. The unintelligent do not take this into account; they do not understand that all\u00a0things happen for our benefit, rightly and as they should, so that our virtues may shine and we ourselves be crowned\u00a0by God.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n4.<\/strong> You should realize that the acquisition of material things and their lavish use is only a short-lived fantasy, and\u00a0that a virtuous way\u00a0of life, conforming to God\u2019s will, surpasses all wealth. When you reflect on this and keep it in mind constantly, you\u00a0will not grumble, whine or blame anyone, but will thank God for everything, seeing that those who rely on repute\u00a0and riches are worse off than yourself. For desire, love of glory and ignorance constitute the worst passion of the\u00a0soul.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n5.<\/strong> The intelligent man, examining himself, determines what is appropriate and profitable to him, what is proper\u00a0and beneficial to the soul, and what is foreign to it. Thus he avoids what is foreign and harmful to the soul and cuts\u00a0him off from immortality.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n6.<\/strong> The more frugal a man\u2019s life, the happier he is, for he is not troubled by a host of cares; slaves, farm-workers or\u00a0herds. For when we are attached to such things and harassed by the problems they raise, we blame God. But because\u00a0of our self-willed desire we cultivate death and remain wandering in the darkness of a life of sin, not recognizing our\u00a0true self.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n7<\/strong>. One should not say that it is impossible to reach a virtuous life; but one should say that it is not easy. Nor do\u00a0those who have reached it find it easy to maintain. Those who are devout and whose intellect enjoys the love of God\u00a0participate in the life of virtue; the ordinary intellect, however, is worldly and vacillating, producing both good and\u00a0evil thoughts, because it is changeful by nature and directed towards material things. But the intellect that enjoys the\u00a0love of God punishes the evil which arises spontaneously because of man\u2019s indolence.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n8.<\/strong> The uneducated and foolish regard instruction as ridiculous and do not want to receive it, because it would\u00a0show up their uncouthness, and they want everyone to be like themselves. Likewise those who are dissipated in their\u00a0life and habits are anxious to prove that everyone else is worse than themselves, seeking to present themselves as\u00a0innocent in comparison with all the sinners around them. The lax soul is turbid and perishes through wickedness,\u00a0since it contains within itself profligacy, pride, insatiate desire, anger, impetuosity, frenzy, murderousness,\u00a0querulousness, jealousy, greed, rapacity, self-pity, lying, sensual pleasure, sloth, dejection, cowardice, morbidity,\u00a0hatred, censoriousness, debility, delusion, ignorance, deceit and forgetfulness of God. Through these and suchlike\u00a0evils the wretched soul is punished when it is separated from God.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n9.<\/strong> Those who aim to practice the life of virtue and holiness should not incur condemnation by pretending to a\u00a0piety which they do not possess. But like painters and sculptors they should manifest their virtue and holiness\u00a0through their works, and should shun all evil pleasures as snares.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n10.<\/strong> A wealthy man of good family, who lacks inward discipline and all virtue in his way of life, is regarded by\u00a0those with spiritual understanding as under an evil influence; likewise a man who happens to be poor or a slave, but\u00a0is graced with discipline of soul and with virtue in his life, is regarded as blessed. And just as strangers traveling in a\u00a0foreign country lose their way, so those who do not cultivate the life of virtue are led astray by their desires and get\u00a0completely lost.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n11.<\/strong> Those who can train the ignorant and inspire them with a love for instruction and discipline should be called\u00a0molders of men. So too should those who reform the dissolute, remodeling their life to one of virtue, conforming to\u00a0God\u2019s will. For gentleness and self-control are a blessing and a sure hope for the souls of men.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n12.<\/strong> A man should strive to practice the life of virtue in a genuine way; for when this is achieved it is easy to\u00a0acquire knowledge about God. When a man reveres God with all his heart and with faith, he receives through God\u2019s\u00a0providence the power to control anger and desire; for it is desire and anger which are the cause of all evils.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n13.<\/strong> A human being is someone who possesses spiritual intelligence or is willing to be rectified. One who cannot\u00a0be rectified is inhuman. Such people must be avoided: because they live in vice, they can never attain immortality.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n14.<\/strong> When the intelligence is truly operative, we can properly be called human beings. When it is not operative, we\u00a0differ from animals only in respect of our physical form and our speech. An intelligent man should realize that he is\u00a0immortal and should hate all shameful desires, which are the cause of death in men.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n15.<\/strong> Every craftsman displays his skill through the material he uses: one man, for instance, displays it in timber,\u00a0another in copper, another in gold and silver. Likewise we who are taught the life of holiness ought to show that we\u00a0are human beings not merely by virtue of our bodily appearance, but because our souls are truly intelligent. The\u00a0truly intelligent soul, which enjoys the love of God, knows everything in life in a direct and immediate way; it\u00a0lovingly\u00a0woos God\u2019s favor, sincerely gives Him thanks, and aspires with all its strength towards Him.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n16.<\/strong> When navigating, helmsmen use a mark in order to avoid reefs or rocks. Likewise those who aspire to the life\u00a0of holiness must mark carefully what they ought to do and what they ought to avoid; and, cutting off evil thoughts\u00a0from the soul, they must grasp that the true, divine laws exist for their profit.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n17.<\/strong> Helmsmen and charioteers gain proficiency through practice and diligence. Likewise those who seek the life\u00a0of holiness must take care to study and practice what conforms to God\u2019s will. For he who so wishes, and has grasped\u00a0that it is possible, can with this faith attain incorruptibility.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n18.<\/strong> Regard as free not those whose status makes them outwardly free, but those who are free in their character and\u00a0conduct. For we should not call men in authority truly free when they are wicked or dissolute, since they are slaves\u00a0to worldly passions. Freedom and happiness of soul consist in genuine purity and detachment from transitory things.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n19.<\/strong> Keep in mind that you must always be setting an example through your moral life and your actions. For the\u00a0sick find and recognize good doctors, not just through their words, but through their actions.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n20.<\/strong> Holiness and intelligence of soul are to be recognized from a man\u2019s eye, walk, voice, laugh, the way he spends\u00a0his time and the company he keeps. Everything is transformed and reflects an inner beauty. For the intellect which\u00a0enjoys the love of God is a watchful gate-keeper and bars entry to evil and defiling thoughts.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n21.<\/strong> Examine and test your inward character; and always keep in mind that human authorities have power over the\u00a0body alone and not over the soul. Therefore, should they command you to commit murders or other foul, unjust and\u00a0soul-corrupting acts, you must not obey them, even if they torture your body. For God created the soul free and\u00a0endowed with the power to choose between good and evil.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n22.<\/strong> The intelligent soul endeavors to free itself from error, delusion, boastfulness, deceit, from jealousy, rapacity\u00a0and the like, which are works of the demons and of man\u2019s evil intent. Everything is successfully achieved through\u00a0persistent study and practice when one\u2019s desire is not impelled towards base pleasures.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n23.<\/strong> Those who lead a life of frugality and of self-privation deliver\u00a0themselves from dangers and have no need of protection. By overcoming all desire, they easily find the path that\u00a0leads to God.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n24.<\/strong> Intelligent men have no need to listen to much talk, but should attend only to that which is profitable and\u00a0guided by God\u2019s will. For in this way men regain life and eternal light.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n25.<\/strong> Those who seek to lead a life of holiness, enjoying the love of God, should free themselves from presumption\u00a0and all empty and false self-esteem, and should try to correct their life and way of thinking. For an intellect that\u00a0steadfastly enjoys the love of God is a way of ascent to Him.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n26.<\/strong> There is no profit in studying doctrines unless the life of one\u2019s soul is acceptable and conforms to God\u2019s will.\u00a0The cause of all evils is delusion, self-deception and ignorance of God.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n27.<\/strong> Concentration on holiness of living, together with attentive-ness to the soul, lead to goodness and the love of\u00a0God. For he who seeks God finds Him by overcoming all desires through persistence in prayer. Such a man does not\u00a0fear demons.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n28.<\/strong> Those who are deluded by worldly hopes, and know how to practice the life of holiness only in theory, are\u00a0like those who employ drugs and medical instruments without knowing how to use them or bothering to learn.\u00a0Therefore, we must never blame our birth, or anyone but ourselves, for our sinful actions, because if the soul\u00a0chooses to be indolent, it cannot resist temptation.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n29.<\/strong> A man who cannot discriminate between good and evil has no right to judge who is good and who evil. The\u00a0man who knows God is good. If someone is not good, he knows nothing of God and never will; for the way to know\u00a0God is by means of goodness.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n30.<\/strong> Men who are good and enjoy the love of God rebuke evildoers to their face. But when evil-doers are not\u00a0present, such people neither criticize them nor allow others to do so.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n31.<\/strong> When talking with others all harshness should be avoided; for modesty and self-restraint adorn an intelligent\u00a0person even more than a young girl. An intellect that enjoys the love of God is a light that shines on the soul, just as\u00a0the sun shines on the body.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n32.<\/strong> Whatever passion arises in your soul, remember that those who have correct judgment, and want to keep\u00a0secure what they have, take delight not in the ephemeral acquisition of material things, but in true and sound beliefs.\u00a0It is these that make them happy. For wealth may be seized and stolen by more powerful men,\u00a0whereas holiness of soul is the only possession which is safe and cannot be stolen, and which saves after death those\u00a0who have it. Fantasies about wealth and other pleasures do not delude those who understand this.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n33.<\/strong> Those who are inconstant and uninstructed should not argue with intelligent men. An intelligent man is one\u00a0who conforms to God and mostly keeps silent; when he speaks he says very little, and only what is necessary and\u00a0acceptable to God.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n34.<\/strong> Those who pursue a life of holiness, enjoying the love of God, cultivate the virtues of the soul, because the\u00a0soul is their own possession and an eternal delight. In addition, whenever possible they take pleasure in such\u00a0transitory things as come to them through God\u2019s will and gift. Even if these things are rather scanty, they use them\u00a0gladly and gratefully. Luxurious meals nourish the body; but knowledge of God, self-control, goodness,\u00a0beneficence, devoutness and gentleness deify the soul.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n35.<\/strong> Rulers who use force to make men undertake foul and soul-corrupting acts have no dominion over the soul\u00a0because it is created with freedom of will. They may fetter the body, but not the power of decision, of which the\u00a0intelligent man is the arbiter through God who created him. Because of this he is stronger than any authority,\u00a0necessity or force.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n36.<\/strong> Those who consider it a misfortune to lose children, slaves, money or any other of their belongings, must\u00a0realize that in the first place they should be satisfied with what is given them by God;\u00a0and then, when they have to give it back, they should be ready to do so gratefully, without any indignation at being\u00a0deprived of it, or rather at giving it back \u2013 for since they have been enjoying the use of what was not their own, they\u00a0are now in fact returning it.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n37.<\/strong> A good man does not sell his inner freedom for money, even if he happens to be offered a huge sum. For\u00a0things belonging to this life are like a dream, and the fantasies of wealth are uncertain and short-lived.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n38.<\/strong> Those who are truly men must endeavor to live with holiness and love of God, so that their holy life shines\u00a0before others. Since men take pains to decorate white garments with narrow purple stripes which stand out and\u00a0attract attention, how much more assiduously should they cultivate the virtues of the soul.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n39.<\/strong> Sensible people should examine carefully both their strength\u00a0and the degree of alertness of their soul\u2019s powers; in this way they should make ready to resist the passions in\u00a0accordance with the strength implanted in their nature by God. It is self-control which resists beauty and all desire\u00a0harmful to the soul, it is fortitude which resists pain and want; it is forbearance which resists abuse and anger; and so\u00a0on.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n40.<\/strong> A man cannot become good and wise immediately, but only through much effort, reflection, experience, time,\u00a0practice and desire for virtuous action. The man who is good and enjoys the love of God, and who truly knows Him,\u00a0never ceases to do ungrudgingly all that accords with His will. Such men are rare.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n41.<\/strong> Men of dull wits should not despair of themselves and become lazy, disdaining the life of virtue and of love\u00a0for God as being unattainable and incomprehensible to them. They should, instead, exercise such powers as they\u00a0possess and cultivate themselves. For even if they cannot attain the highest level in respect of virtue and salvation,\u00a0they may, through practice and aspiration, become either better or at least not worse, which is no small profit for the\u00a0soul.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n42.<\/strong> Through his intelligence man is linked to that power which is ineffable and divine; and through his bodily\u00a0nature he has kinship with the animals. A few men \u2013 those who are perfect and intelligent \u2013 endeavor both to root\u00a0their mind in God the Savior and to keep their kinship with Him; and this is manifest through their actions and\u00a0holiness of life. But most men, being foolish in soul, have renounced that divine and immortal sonship, turning towards a deadly, disastrous and short-lived kinship with the body. Concerning themselves, like animals, with\u00a0material things and enslaved by sensual pleasures, they separate themselves from God; and through their desires\u00a0they drag down their soul from heaven to the abyss.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n43.<\/strong> The man of intelligence, being deeply concerned for participation in the divine and union with it, will never\u00a0become engrossed with anything earthly or base, but has his intellect always turned towards the heavenly and\u00a0eternal. And he knows it is God\u2019s will that man should be saved, this divine will being the cause of all that is good\u00a0and the source of the eternal blessings granted to men.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n44.<\/strong> When you find someone arguing, and contesting what is true and self-evident, break off the dispute and give\u00a0way to such a man, since his intellect has been petrified. For just as bad water ruins good\u00a0wines, so harmful talk corrupts those who are virtuous in life and character.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n45.<\/strong> If we make every effort to avoid death of the body, still more should it be our endeavor to avoid death of the\u00a0soul. There is no obstacle for a man who wants to be saved other than negligence and laziness of soul.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n46.<\/strong> Those who scorn to grasp what is profitable and salutary are considered to be ill. Those, on the other hand, who comprehend the truth but insolently enjoy dispute, have an intelligence that is dead; and their behavior has\u00a0become brutish. They do not know God and their soul has not been illumined.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n47.<\/strong> God, by His Logos, created the different kinds of animals to meet the variety of our needs: some for our food,\u00a0others for our service. And He created man to apprehend them and their actions and to appraise them gratefully.\u00a0Man should therefore strive not to die, like the non-rational animals, without having attained some apprehension of God and His works.\u00a0One must know that God is omnipotent; nothing can resist Him who is omnipotent. For man\u2019s salvation, out of\u00a0nothing He created and creates by His Logos all that He wills.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n48.<\/strong> Celestial beings are immortal because they have divine goodness within them; whereas earthly beings have\u00a0become mortal because of the self-incurred evil within them. This evil comes to the mindless through their laziness\u00a0and ignorance of God.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n49.<\/strong> Death, when understood by men, is deathlessness; but, when not understood by the foolish, it is death. It is not\u00a0this death that must be feared, but the loss of the soul, which is ignorance of God. This is indeed disaster for the\u00a0soul.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n50.<\/strong> Evil is a passion found in matter, and so it is not possible for a body to come into being free from evil. The\u00a0intelligent soul, grasping this, strives to free itself from the evil burden of matter; and when it is free from this\u00a0burden, it comes to know the God of all, and keeps watch on the body as being an enemy and does not yield to it.\u00a0Then the soul is crowned by God for having conquered the passions of evil and of matter.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n51.<\/strong> When the soul has come to recognize evil it hates it like the stench of a foul beast; but he who does not\u00a0recognize evil loves it, and it holds him captive, making a slave of its lover. Then the unfortunate and wretched man\u00a0can neither see nor understand his\u00a0true interest, but imagines that this evil is an adornment, and so he is happy.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n52.<\/strong> The pure soul, because of its innate goodness, is illumined and made resplendent by God; and then the\u00a0intellect apprehends what is good and begets thoughts that accord with God\u2019s will. But when the soul is defiled by\u00a0evil, and God turns away from it, or rather the soul separates itself from God, evil demons enter its thought\u00a0processes and suggest unholy acts to it: adultery, murder, robbery, sacrilege and other such demonic acts.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n53.<\/strong> Those who know God are filled with good impulses; desiring the heavenly, they despise worldly objects. Such\u00a0men neither like nor are liked by many people. Consequently numbers of idiots not only hate but also ridicule them.\u00a0And they patiently endure all that comes from their poverty, knowing that what seems to many to be bad, for them is\u00a0good. For he who comprehends the celestial believes in God, knowing that all are creatures of His will; whereas he\u00a0who does not comprehend the celestial never believes that the world is a work of God and was made for man\u2019s\u00a0salvation.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n54.<\/strong> Those who are full of evil and drunk with ignorance do not know God, and their soul is not watchful. God is\u00a0spiritual; and though He is invisible, He is clearly manifest in visible things, as the soul is manifest in the body. And\u00a0just as it is impossible for a body to subsist without a soul, so it is impossible for any thing that is visible and has\u00a0being to subsist without God.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n55.<\/strong> Why was man created? In order that, by apprehending God\u2019s creatures, he might contemplate and glorify Him\u00a0who created them for man\u2019s sake. The intellect responsive to God\u2019s love is an invisible blessing given by God to\u00a0those whose life by its virtue commends itself to Him.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n56.<\/strong> A man is free if he is not a slave to sensual pleasures, but through good judgment and self-restraint masters the\u00a0body and with true gratitude is satisfied with what God gives him, even though it is quite scanty. If the soul and the\u00a0intellect that enjoys the love of God are in harmony, the whole body is peaceful even against its wishes;\u00a0then, should the soul so want, every bodily impulse is extinguished.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n57.<\/strong> When men are not satisfied with what they need so as to remain alive but desire more, they enslave\u00a0themselves to passions that disturb the soul, inflicting upon it thoughts and fantasies that what they have is\u00a0inadequate. And just as tunics that are too large\u00a0hinder runners in a race, so the desire for more than one needs does not allow one\u2019s soul to struggle or to be saved.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n58.<\/strong> Any circumstance in which a man finds himself unwillingly is a prison and a punishment for him. So be\u00a0content with whatever circumstances you may now be in, lest by being ungrateful you punish yourself unwittingly.\u00a0This contentment can be achieved in but one way: through detachment from worldly things.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n59.<\/strong> Just as God has given us sight in order that we may recognize visible things \u2013 what is white, and what black \u2013\u00a0so, too, He has given us intelligence in order that we may discern what benefits the soul. Desire, detached from the\u00a0intelligence, begets sensual pleasure, and does not allow the soul to be saved or to attain union with God.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n60.<\/strong> What takes place according to nature is not sinful; sin always involves man\u2019s deliberate choice. It is not a sin\u00a0to eat; it is a sin to eat without gratitude, and not in an orderly and restrained manner such as will enable the body to\u00a0be kept alive without inducing evil thoughts. It is not a sin to use one\u2019s eyes with purity; it is a sin to look with envy,\u00a0arrogance and insatiable desire. It is a sin to listen not peacefully, but angrily; it is a sin to guide the tongue, not\u00a0towards thanksgiving and prayer, but towards backbiting; it is a sin to- employ the hands, not for acts of\u00a0compassion, but for murders and robberies. And thus every part of the body sins when by man\u2019s own choice it\u00a0performs not good but evil acts, contrary to God\u2019s will.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n61.<\/strong> If you doubt that every act performed is observed by God, you must reflect that although you are a man and\u00a0but dust, nonetheless you can watch and perceive many places at the same time; how much more, then, can God\u00a0observe, since all things appear to Him as a mustard seed appears to man, and He gives life and food to all creatures\u00a0as He wills?<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n62.<\/strong> When you close the doors of your dwelling and are alone, you should know that there is present with you the angel whom God has appointed for each man; the Greeks call him the personal daemon. This angel, who is sleepless\u00a0and cannot be deceived, is always present with you; he sees all things and is not hindered by darkness. You should\u00a0know, too, that with him is God, who is in every place; for there is no place and nothing material in which God is\u00a0not, since He is greater than all things and holds all men in His hand.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n65.<\/strong> If soldiers remain loyal to Caesar because he feeds them, how\u00a0much more ought we to try ceaselessly to give thanks to God with lips that are never silent, and to praise Him who created all things for man\u2019s sake?<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n64.<\/strong> A virtuous way of life and gratitude towards God are fruits of man that are pleasing to God. The fruits of the\u00a0earth are not brought to perfection immediately, but by time, rain and care; similarly, the fruits of men ripen through\u00a0ascetic practice, study, time, perseverance, self-control and patience. And if, because of all you do, anyone should\u00a0ever think that you are a devout man, distrust yourself so long as you are in the body, and think that nothing about\u00a0you is pleasing to God. For you must know that it is not easy for anyone to keep himself sinless until the end.<\/p>\n<p><strong>65.<\/strong> Nothing is more precious to man than intelligence. Its power is such as to enable us to adore God through\u00a0intelligent speech and thanksgiving. By contrast, when we use futile or slanderous speech we condemn our soul.\u00a0Now it is characteristic of an obtuse man to lay the blame for his sins on the conditions of his birth or on something\u00a0else, while in fact his words and actions are evil through his own free choice.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n66.<\/strong> If we try to cure bodily passions in order to avoid the ridicule of people we chance to meet, how much more\u00a0should we try to cure the passions of the soul; for when we are judged face to face by God we shall not wish to be\u00a0found worthless and ridiculous. Since we have free will, although we may desire to perform evil actions, we can\u00a0avoid doing so; and it is in our power to live in accordance with God\u2019s will. Moreover, no one can ever force us to\u00a0do what is evil against our will. It is through this struggle against evil that we shall become worthy to serve God and\u00a0live like angels in heaven.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n67.<\/strong> If you so wish, you are a slave of the passions; and if you so wish, you are free and do not yield to the\u00a0passions. For God created you with free will; and he who overcomes the passions of the flesh is crowned with\u00a0incorruption. If there were no passions there would be no virtues, and no crowns awarded by God to those who are\u00a0worthy.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n68.<\/strong> Those who know what is good, and yet do not see what is to their benefit, are blind in soul and their power of\u00a0discrimination has become petrified. Hence we should pay no attention to them, lest we too become blind and so are\u00a0constrained to fall heedlessly into the same faults.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n69.<\/strong> We should not become angry with those who sin, even if what they do is criminal and deserves punishment.\u00a0On the contrary, for the sake of justice we ought to correct and, if need be, punish them ourselves or get others to do\u00a0so. But we should not become angry or excited; for anger acts only in accordance with passion, and not in\u00a0accordance with good judgment and justice. Moreover, we should not approve those who show more mercy than is\u00a0proper. The wicked must be punished for the sake of what is good and just, but not as a result of the personal passion\u00a0of anger.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n70.<\/strong> To gain possession of one\u2019s soul is the only acquisition which is safe and inviolable. It is achieved through a\u00a0way of life that is holy and conforms to God\u2019s will through spiritual knowledge and the practice of good actions. By\u00a0contrast, wealth is a blind guide and a foolish counselor, and he who uses wealth in an evil and self-indulgent\u00a0manner loses his obtuse soul.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n71.<\/strong> Men must not acquire anything superfluous or, if they possess it, must know with certainty that all things in\u00a0this life are by nature perishable, and easily plundered, lost or broken; and they must not be disheartened by\u00a0anything that happens.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n72.<\/strong> You should know that the body\u2019s sufferings belong to it by nature, inasmuch as it is corruptible and material.\u00a0The disciplined soul must, therefore, gratefully show itself persevering and patient under such sufferings, and must\u00a0not blame God for having created the body.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n73.<\/strong> Those who compete in the Olympic games are not crowned after achieving victory over their first opponent,\u00a0or their second or third, but only after they have defeated every one of their competitors. In the same way, therefore,\u00a0all who wish to be crowned by God must train their souls to be disciplined in respect not only of bodily matters, but\u00a0also of love of gain, rapacity, mode of life, envy, self-esteem, abuse, death and all such things.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n74.<\/strong> We should not pursue a godly and virtuous way of life in order to win human praise, but we should choose it\u00a0for the sake of our soul\u2019s salvation: for death is daily before our eyes, and human affairs are unpredictable.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n75.<\/strong> We can choose to live with self-discipline, but we cannot become wealthy simply by an act of choice. Must\u00a0we then condemn our soul by pursuing or even desiring a wealth which we cannot acquire by an act of choice, and\u00a0which in any case is but a short-lived fantasy? How foolishly we act, not realizing that the first of all the virtues is humility, just as the first of all the\u00a0passions is gluttony and desire for worldly things,<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n76.<\/strong> Intelligent people must ceaselessly remember that by enduring slight and passing sufferings in this life, we\u00a0gain the greatest joy and eternal bliss after death. Therefore, if a man falls when struggling against the passions and\u00a0wishing to be crowned by God, he should not lose heart and remain fallen, despairing of himself, but should rise and\u00a0begin again the struggle to win his crown. Until his last breath he should rise whenever he has fallen; for bodily toil\u00a0is a weapon used by the virtues, and brings salvation to the soul.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n77.<\/strong> If they are worthy, ordinary people and ascetics are provided through the circumstances of their life with the\u00a0opportunities to be crowned by God. Hence, during this life they must make their faculties dead to all worldly\u00a0things; for a dead man never concerns himself with anything worldly.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n78.<\/strong> A soul engaged in spiritual training, being deiform, must not cower with fear in the face of the passions, lest it\u00a0be derided for cowardice; since if it is disturbed by fantasies of worldly things, the soul strays from its course. For\u00a0the virtues of the soul lead to eternal blessings, while our self-willed vices result in eternal punishments.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n79.<\/strong> Man is attacked by his senses through the soul\u2019s passions. The bodily senses are five: sight, smell, hearing,\u00a0taste and touch. Through these five senses the unhappy soul is taken captive when it succumbs to its four passions.\u00a0These four passions are self-esteem, levity, anger and cowardice. When, therefore, a man through sound judgment and reflection has shown good generalship, he controls and defeats the passions. Then he is no longer attacked but\u00a0his soul is at peace; and he is crowned by God, because he has conquered.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n80.<\/strong> When people come to an inn, some receive beds; others, having no bed, sleep on the ground, and these too\u00a0snore just as much as those who sleep on beds. But when, after their night\u2019s stay, they leave the inn early next\u00a0morning, all set off alike, each taking with him only what belongs to him. In the same way, all who come into this\u00a0life, both those who live modestly, and those who enjoy wealth and ostentation, leave this life like an inn: each takes\u00a0with him none of its pleasures and riches, but only his own past actions whether good or bad.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n81.<\/strong> If you are in a position of high authority, do not lightly threaten someone with death, knowing as you do that\u00a0by nature you, too, are subject to death and that the soul sheds the body as if shedding its last garment. Since you\u00a0know this, be gentle and merciful, always giving thanks to God. For he who has no compassion has no virtue.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n82.<\/strong> To escape death is impossible. Knowing this, those who are truly intelligent and practiced in virtue and in\u00a0spiritual thought accept death uncomplainingly, without fear or grief, recognizing that it is inevitable and delivers\u00a0them from the evils of this life.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n83.<\/strong> We must not hate those who ignore the way of life which is good and conforms to God\u2019s will, and who pay no\u00a0heed to the teachings that are true and divine. Rather, we must show mercy to them as being crippled in\u00a0discrimination and blind in heart and mind. For in accepting evil as good, they are destroyed by ignorance; and,\u00a0being wretched and obtuse in soul, they do not know God.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n84.<\/strong> Do not try to teach people at large about devoutness and right living. I say this, not because I begrudge them\u00a0such teaching, but because I think that you will appear ridiculous to the stupid. For like delights in like: few \u2013\u00a0indeed, hardly any \u2013 listen to such instruction. It is better therefore not to speak at all about what God wills for man\u2019s\u00a0salvation.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n85.<\/strong> The soul suffers with the body, but the body does not suffer with the soul. Thus, when the body is cut, the soul\u00a0suffers too; and when the body is vigorous and healthy, the soul shares its well-being. But when the soul thinks, the\u00a0body is not involved and does not think with it; for thinking is a passion or property of the soul, as also are\u00a0ignorance, arrogance, unbelief, greed, hatred, envy, anger, apathy, self-esteem, love of honor, contentiousness and\u00a0the perception of goodness. All these are energized through the soul.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n86.<\/strong> When meditating on divine realities, be full of goodness, free from envy, devout, self-restrained, gentle, as\u00a0generous as possible, kindly, peaceable, and so on. For to conform to God through such qualities, and not to judge\u00a0anyone or to say that he is wicked and has sinned, is to render the soul inviolate. One should search out one\u2019s own\u00a0faults and scrutinize one\u2019s own way of life, to see whether it conforms to God. What concern is it of ours if another\u00a0man is wicked?<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n87.<\/strong> He who is truly a man tries to be devout; and he is devout\u00a0when he does not desire what is alien to him. Everything created is alien to man. He is superior to all creatures because he is an image of God. A man is the image of God when he lives rightly and in a way that conforms to God.\u00a0But he cannot live like this unless he detaches himself from worldly things. Now a man whose intellect enjoys the\u00a0love of God is fully aware that everything beneficial to his soul and all his devoutness come from this detachment.\u00a0Such a man does not blame another for sins he himself commits. This is the sign of a soul in which salvation is at\u00a0work.<\/p>\n<p><strong>88.<\/strong> Those who contrive to gain possession of transitory things by force are also attached to their desire to act\u00a0viciously. They ignore the death and destruction of their own soul, and do not consider what is to their interest or\u00a0reflect on what men suffer after death because of wickedness.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n89.<\/strong> Evil is a passion adherent to matter, but God is not the cause of evil. He has given men knowledge and\u00a0understanding, the power of discriminating between good and evil, and free will. It is man\u2019s negligence and\u00a0indolence that give birth to evil passions, while God is in no way the cause. The demons, like most men, have\u00a0become evil as a result of the free choice of their own will.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n90.<\/strong> The man who lives devoutly does not allow evil to slip into his soul; and, no evil being present, his soul is safe\u00a0from danger and harm. Such a man is dominated neither by demon nor by fate, for God delivers him from all evil\u00a0and, protected like a god, he lives unharmed. If he is praised, he laughs within himself at those who praise him; if he\u00a0is execrated, he does not defend himself against those who mock him, and he never gets angry at what they say.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n91.<\/strong> Evil clings closely to one\u2019s nature, just as verdigris to copper and dirt to the body. But the coppersmith does\u00a0not create the verdigris, nor do parents create the dirt. Likewise, it is not God who has created evil. He has given\u00a0man knowledge and discrimination so that he may avoid evil, knowing that it harms and punishes him. Thus when\u00a0you see someone enjoying power and wealth, mind you are never deluded by some demon into thinking him happy.\u00a0Quickly bring death before your eyes, and you will never have a desire for any evil or worldly object.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n92.<\/strong> Our God has granted immortality to those in heaven, but for those on earth He has created mutability, giving\u00a0life and movement to the whole of creation; and all this for man\u2019s sake. So do\u00a0not be ensnared by the worldly fantasies of the demon who insinuates evil recollections into the soul, but\u00a0immediately call to mind the blessings of heaven and say to yourself: \u2018If I so wish, it is in my power to win even this\u00a0struggle against passion; but I shall not win if I am set on fulfilling my own desire.\u2019 So struggle in this way, since it\u00a0can save your soul.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n93.<\/strong> Life is the union and conjuncture between intellect, soul and body, while death is not the destruction of these\u00a0elements so conjoined, but the dissolution of their inter-relationship; for they are all saved through and in God, even\u00a0after this dissolution.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n94.<\/strong> The intellect is not the soul, but a gift of God that saves the soul; and the intellect that conforms to God goes\u00a0on ahead of the soul and counsels it to despise what is transitory, material and corruptible, and to turn all its desire\u00a0towards eternal, incorruptible and immaterial blessings. And the intellect teaches man while still in the body to\u00a0perceive and contemplate divine and heavenly realities, and everything else as well, through itself. Thus the intellect\u00a0that enjoys the love of God is the benefactor and savior of the human soul.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n95.<\/strong> When the soul is in the body it is at once darkened and ravaged by pain and pleasure. Pain and pleasure are\u00a0like the humours of the body. But the intellect that enjoys the love of God, counterattacking, gives pain to the body\u00a0and saves the soul, like a physician who cuts and cauterizes bodies.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n96.<\/strong> There are some souls which the intelligence does not control, and the intellect does not govern, in such a way\u00a0as to check and restrain their passions \u2013 that is, pain and pleasure. These souls perish like mindless animals, since the\u00a0intelligence is carried away by the passions like a charioteer who loses control over his horses.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n97.<\/strong> The greatest sickness of the soul, its ruin and perdition, is not to know God, who created all things for man\u00a0and gave him the gifts of intellect and intelligence. Winged through these gifts, man is linked to God, knowing Him\u00a0and praising Him.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n98.<\/strong> Soul is in the body, intellect is in the soul, and intelligence is in the intellect. When God is known and praised\u00a0through all these, He makes the soul immortal, granting it incorruptibility and eternal delight; for God has granted\u00a0the gift of being to all creatures solely through His goodness.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n99.<\/strong> God, being full of goodness and ungrudging bounty, not only\u00a0created man with free will but also endowed him with the capacity to conform to God if he so wishes. It is the\u00a0absence of wickedness in man which conforms him to God. If, then, man praises the good actions and virtues of a\u00a0soul which is holy and enjoys the love of God, and if he condemns ugly and wicked deeds, how much more so does\u00a0God, who wishes for man\u2019s salvation.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n100.<\/strong> Whatever is good man receives from God, who is goodness itself: this is why man was created by God. But\u00a0he attracts evils to himself out of himself and out of the wickedness, desire and obtuseness within him.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n101.<\/strong> The unintelligent soul, though immortal and the master of the body, becomes the body\u2019s slave through\u00a0sensual pleasure. It does not realize that what delights the body harms the soul; but, stupid and obtuse, it seeks out\u00a0such delight.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n102.<\/strong> God is good, man wicked. There is no evil in heaven, and no goodness on earth. Therefore the intelligent\u00a0man chooses the better part and acknowledges the God of all; he thanks and praises God, and before death he hates\u00a0the body; and he does not allow his evil senses to carry out their desires, for he knows their destructiveness and their strength.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n103.<\/strong> The wicked man delights in excess while he despises justice. He takes no account of the uncertainty,\u00a0inconstancy and brevity of life, nor does he reflect that death cannot be bribed and is inexorable. And if an old man\u00a0is shameless and stupid, he is like rotten wood and no use for anything.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n104.<\/strong> We savor pleasure and joy to the degree to which we taste affliction. One does not drink with pleasure\u00a0unless one is thirsty, nor eat with pleasure unless hungry, nor sleep soundly unless very drowsy, nor feel joy without\u00a0grief beforehand. Likewise we shall not enjoy eternal blessings unless we despise transient things.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n105.<\/strong> Intelligence is the servant of the intellect: whatever the intellect wills, the intelligence conceives and\u00a0expresses.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n106.<\/strong> The intellect sees all things, including the celestial. Nothing darkens it except sin. To the pure intellect\u00a0nothing is incomprehensible, just as for the intelligence nothing is beyond expression.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n107.<\/strong> By virtue of his body man is mortal; and by virtue of his intellect and intelligence he is immortal. Through\u00a0silence you come to understanding; having understood, you give expression. It is in\u00a0silence that the intellect gives birth to the intelligence; and the thankful intelligence offered to God is man\u2019s\u00a0salvation.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n108.<\/strong> He who says foolish things has no intellect, for he speaks without understanding. So learn what it befits you\u00a0to do in order to save your soul.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n109.<\/strong> The intelligence which is wedded to the intellect and which gives help to the soul is a gift of God. But the\u00a0intelligence which is full of babbling and which investigates the measurements and distances of sky and earth, and\u00a0the size of the sun and the stars, characterizes a man who labors in vain. Fruitlessly vaunting himself, he pursues\u00a0what is without profit, as if wishing to draw water with a sieve; for no man can resolve these matters.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n110.<\/strong> Only the man who pursues holiness, who knows and glorifies God who created him for salvation and life,\u00a0can perceive heaven and understand heavenly things. For a man who enjoys the love of God is fully aware that\u00a0nothing exists without God. God, being infinite, is everywhere and in all things.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n111.<\/strong> As man comes naked out of his mother\u2019s womb, so the soul comes naked out of the body. One soul comes\u00a0out pure and luminous; another, blemished by faults; a third, black with its many sins. Thus the soul that is\u00a0intelligent and enjoys the love of God reflects and meditates on the evils that follow death, and leads a devout life in\u00a0order not to be entangled with them and so condemned. But unbelievers, fools that they are, commit impious and\u00a0sinful acts, ignoring what is to come.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n112.<\/strong> Just as when you leave the womb you no longer remember what pertains to the womb, so when you leave the\u00a0body you no longer remember what pertains to the body.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n113.<\/strong> When you left the womb you grew in bodily strength and excellence; equally, when leaving the body, if you\u00a0are pure and unblemished you will grow in strength and incorruptibility, living in heaven.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n114.<\/strong> Just as the body has to be born when it has completed its time in the womb, so the soul has to leave the body\u00a0when it has completed in the body the time assigned to it by God.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n115.<\/strong> According to how you treat the soul while it is in the body, so will it treat you when it leaves the body. He\u00a0who has treated his body here softly and indulgently has treated himself ill after death. For, like a fool, he has\u00a0condemned his soul.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n116.<\/strong> Just as a body cannot grow perfectly if it leaves its mother\u2019s\u00a0womb in a crippled state, so a soul cannot be saved or united with God if it leaves the body without attaining to\u00a0knowledge of God through a virtuous way of life.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n117.<\/strong> The body, when it is united with the soul, comes from the darkness of the womb into the light. But the soul,\u00a0when it is united with the body, is bound up in the body\u2019s darkness. Therefore we must hate and discipline the body\u00a0as an enemy that fights against the soul. For over-indulgence in foods and delicacies excites the passions of vice in\u00a0men, whereas restraint of the belly humbles these passions and saves the soul.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n118.<\/strong> The body sees by means of the eyes, and the soul by means of the intellect. A body without eyes is blind, and\u00a0cannot see the sun shining on earth and ocean or enjoy its light. Likewise the soul without a pure intellect and a holy\u00a0way of life is blind: it does not apprehend God, Creator and Benefactor of all, or glorify Him, and it cannot enjoy\u00a0His incorruptibility and eternal blessings.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n119.<\/strong> Ignorance of God is obtuseness and stupidity of soul. For ignorance gives birth to evil, while from\u00a0knowledge of God comes that goodness which saves the soul. If you are anxious to cut off your desires through\u00a0watchfulness and knowledge of God, then your intellect will be concentrated upon the virtues. But if, drunk through\u00a0ignorance of God, you try to fulfill your evil desires for self-indulgence, you will perish like a beast because you disregard the evils that will befall you after death.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n120.<\/strong> Providence is manifested in events which occur in accordance with divine necessity \u2013 such as the daily rising and setting of the sun, and the yielding of fruits by the earth. Law, similarly, is manifested in events which occur in\u00a0accordance with human necessity. Everything has been created for man\u2019s sake.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n121.<\/strong> Since God is good, whatever He does. He does for man\u2019s sake. But whatever man does, he does for his own\u00a0sake, both what is good and what is evil. Do not be astonished at the well-being of the wicked: you must realize that\u00a0just as states employ executioners and, while not approving their terrible profession, use them to punish those who\u00a0deserve it, in the same way God allows the wicked to tyrannize others in the worldly sphere as a means of punishing\u00a0the impious. Afterwards He delivers the wicked also to judgment, because they have made people suffer in order to\u00a0serve not God, but their own wickedness.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n122.<\/strong> If those who worship idols knew and understood in their hearts what they worship, they would not be\u00a0beguiled away from true reverence. Instead, seeing the beauty, order and divine providence of what God has made\u00a0and is making, they would have acknowledged Him who created all this for man.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n123.<\/strong> Man, in so far as he is bad and unjust, is capable of killing. But God never ceases granting life even to the\u00a0unworthy. Bounteous and full of goodness by nature, He willed that the world should be made and it was made. And\u00a0it is made for man and his salvation.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n124.<\/strong> A true man is one who understands that the body is corruptible and short-lived, whereas the soul is divine\u00a0and immortal and, while being God\u2019s breath, is joined to the body to be tested and deified. Now he who has\u00a0understood what the soul is regulates his life in a way that is just and conforms to God; not submitting to the body,\u00a0but seeing God with his intellect, he contemplates noetically the eternal blessings granted to the soul by God.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n125.<\/strong> God, being eternally good and bounteous, gave man power over good and evil. He made him the gift of\u00a0spiritual knowledge, so that, through contemplating the world and what is in it, he might come to know Him who\u00a0created all things for man\u2019s sake. But the impious are free to choose not to know. They are free to disbelieve, to\u00a0make mistakes and to conceive ideas which are contrary to the truth. Such is the degree to which man has power over good and evil.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n126.<\/strong> God has ordained that the soul should be filled with intellect as the body grows, so that man may choose\u00a0from good and evil what conforms to God. A soul which does not choose the good has no intellect. Hence, all bodies\u00a0have souls, but not every soul has intellect. An intellect enjoying the love of God is present in the self-controlled, the\u00a0holy, the just, the pure, the good, the merciful and the devout. The presence of intellect helps a man towards God.<\/p>\n<p><strong>127.<\/strong> One thing alone is not possible for man: to be deathless. But it is possible for him to attain union with God,\u00a0provided that he realizes that he can do so. For if he seeks God with his intellect, with faith and love and through a\u00a0life of holiness, man can enter into communion with God. [This should be understood as referring to the body and not to the soul; indeed, the body will also be rendered\u00a0deathless after the final resurrection [note by St Nikodimos].<\/p>\n<p><strong>128.<\/strong> The eye perceives the visible; the intellect apprehends the invisible. The intellect that enjoys the love of God\u00a0is the light of the soul. He who has such an intellect is illumined in his heart, and sees God with his intellect.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n129.<\/strong> No good man is immoral; but if a man is not good, he will certainly be evil and a lover of the body. The first\u00a0virtue is to reject the demands of the flesh. If we detach ourselves from transitory, corruptible and material things \u2013\u00a0by our own free choice and not through lack of means to indulge in them \u2013 this makes us heirs of eternal and\u00a0incorruptible blessings.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n130.<\/strong> If someone possesses intellect, he knows himself and what he is; and he knows, too, that man is subject to\u00a0corruption. And he who knows himself knows all things: he knows that all things are created by God and made for\u00a0man\u2019s salvation. For it lies in man\u2019s power correctly to apprehend all things and to hold correct beliefs concerning\u00a0them. Such a man knows with certainty that those who detach themselves from worldly things must endure some\u00a0slight hardship in this present life, but after death they receive from God eternal blessedness and peace.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n131.<\/strong> Just as the body is dead without the soul, so the soul without the intellect is inert and cannot receive God.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n132.<\/strong> Only to man does God listen. Only to man does God manifest Himself. God loves man and, wherever man\u00a0may be. God too is there. Man alone is counted worthy to worship God. For man\u2019s sake God transforms Himself.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n133.<\/strong> For man\u2019s sake God has created everything: earth and heaven and the beauty of the stars. Men cultivate the\u00a0earth for themselves; but if they fail to recognize how great is God\u2019s providence, their souls lack all spiritual\u00a0understanding.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n134.<\/strong> Goodness is hidden, as are the things in heaven. Evil is manifest, as are earthly things. Goodness is that with\u00a0which nothing can be compared. The man who possesses intellect always chooses what is best. Man alone, by virtue\u00a0of his intellect, can attain an understanding of God and His creation.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n135.<\/strong> The intellect manifests itself in the soul, and nature in the body. The soul is divinized through the intellect,\u00a0but the nature of the body makes the soul grow slack. Nature is present in all bodies, but intellect is not present in\u00a0every soul; and so not every soul is saved.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n136.<\/strong> The soul is in the world because it is begotten; but the intellect transcends the world, because it is\u00a0unbegotten. The soul which understands the world and wishes to be saved constantly reflects upon this as her\u00a0inviolable rule: the time for combat and testing is now, and it is not possible to bribe the Judge, and a man\u2019s soul\u00a0may be either saved or lost through some small and shameful indulgence.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n137.<\/strong> On earth God has established birth and death; and in heaven, providence and necessity. All things were made\u00a0for the sake of man and his salvation. Since God is not Himself in need of any good thing, it was for man that He\u00a0created heaven, earth and the four elements, freely granting to him the enjoyment of every blessing.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n138.<\/strong> The mortal is inferior to the immortal, yet the immortal serves the mortal: thus the four elements serve man,\u00a0through the inherent goodness of God the Creator and His love for man.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n139.<\/strong> A man whose destitution deprives him of the power to inflict harm is not therefore to be regarded as holy.\u00a0But when someone has the power to inflict harm yet refrains from doing so, out of reverence for God sparing those\u00a0who are weaker, he is greatly rewarded after death.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n140.<\/strong> Through the love of God our Creator, there are many ways that bring men to salvation, converting their souls\u00a0and leading them up to heaven. For men\u2019s souls are rewarded for virtue and punished for sin.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n141.<\/strong> The Son is in the Father, and the Spirit is in the Son, and the Father is in both. Through faith man knows all\u00a0the invisible and intelligible realities. Faith involves a voluntary assent of the soul.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n142.<\/strong> Men who are forced by need or circumstance to swim across a great river emerge safely if they are sober and\u00a0watchful; and even if there are violent currents and they are briefly submerged, they save themselves by grasping the\u00a0vegetation that grows on the banks. But if they happen to be drunk, then however well trained they may be as\u00a0swimmers they are overcome by the wine; the current sucks them under and they lose their life. In the same way the\u00a0soul, finding herself dragged down by the currents of worldly distractions, needs to regain sobriety, awakening from\u00a0sinful materiality. She should come to know herself: that, though she is divine and immortal, yet\u00a0to test her God has joined her to a body, short-lived, mortal and subject to many passions. If, drunken with\u00a0ignorance, indifferent to her true self, not understanding what she is, she lets herself be dragged down by sensual\u00a0pleasures, she perishes and loses her salvation. For, like the current of a river, the body often drags us down into\u00a0shameful pleasures.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n143.<\/strong> When the soul endowed with intelligence firmly exercises her freedom of choice in the right way, and reins\u00a0in like a charioteer the incensive and the appetitive aspects of her nature, restraining and controlling her passionate\u00a0impulses, she receives a crown of victory; and as a reward for all her labors, she is granted life in heaven by God her\u00a0Creator.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n144.<\/strong> The truly intelligent soul is not disturbed when she sees the success of the wicked and the prosperity of the\u00a0worthless. Unlike the stupid, she is not deluded by the gratification enjoyed by such people in this life. For she\u00a0understands clearly the inconstancy of fortune, the uncertainty and brevity of life, and the unbribability of the Judge;\u00a0and she is confident that God will not fail to provide her with the nourishment she needs.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n145.<\/strong> The life of the body, and the enjoyment of great wealth and worldly power are death to the soul. But toil,\u00a0patient endurance, privation accepted with thankfulness, and the death of the body are life and eternal delight to the\u00a0soul.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n146.<\/strong> The soul endowed with intelligence, indifferent to the material world and this swiftly-passing life, chooses\u00a0the delight of heaven and the eternal life that is conferred on her by God because of her holiness.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n147.<\/strong> People with filthy clothes soil the coats of those who rub against them. Likewise, the immoral and wicked,\u00a0when they come into contact with the simple-minded and speak to them about evil, defile such people\u2019s souls\u00a0through their talk.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n148.<\/strong> The beginning of sin is desire, and this destroys our soul. The beginning of salvation and of the heavenly\u00a0kingdom for the soul is love.<\/p>\n<p><strong>149.<\/strong> Just as copper, when it has long lain unused and idle, and has not been cared for properly, deteriorates and\u00a0becomes unserviceable and ugly with verdigris, so it is with the soul when she remains idle, neglecting holiness of\u00a0life and conversion to God. By her evil actions she deprives herself of God\u2019s protection; and just as\u00a0copper is rotted away by verdigris, so is she rotted away by the evil that idleness produces in the material body, and she becomes ugly, unserviceable and incapable of attaining salvation.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n150.<\/strong> God is good, dispassionate and immutable. Now someone who thinks it reasonable and true to affirm that\u00a0God does not change, may well ask how, in that case, it is possible to speak of God as rejoicing over those who are\u00a0good and showing mercy to those who honor Him, while turning away from the wicked and being angry with\u00a0sinners. To this it must be answered that God neither rejoices nor grows angry, for to rejoice and to be offended are\u00a0passions; nor is He won over by the gifts of those who honor Him, for that would mean He is swayed by pleasure. It\u00a0is not right to imagine that God feels pleasure or displeasure in a human way. He is good, and He only bestows\u00a0blessings and never does harm, remaining always the same. We men, on the other hand, if we remain good through\u00a0resembling God, are united to Him; but if we become evil through not resembling God, we are separated from Him.\u00a0By living in holiness we cleave to God; but by becoming wicked we make Him our enemy. It is not that He grows\u00a0angry with us in an arbitrary way, but it is our own sins that prevent God from shining within us, and expose us to\u00a0the demons who punish us. And if through prayer and acts of compassion we gain release from our sins, this does\u00a0not mean that we have won God over and made Him change, but that through our actions and our turning to God we\u00a0have cured our wickedness and so once more have enjoyment of God\u2019s goodness. Thus to say that God turns away\u00a0from the wicked is like saying that the sun hides itself from the blind.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n151.<\/strong> The truly devout soul knows the God of all. True devotion is simply to do God\u2019s will. This means to gain\u00a0knowledge of God by being free from envy, self-restrained, gentle, as generous as possible, kindly, not quarrelsome,\u00a0and by acquiring whatever else accords with God\u2019s will.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n152.<\/strong> The knowledge and fear of God are a cure for material passions. As long as ignorance of God is present in\u00a0the soul, the passions remain incurable and rot the soul away; for evil in the soul is like a festering wound. God is\u00a0not responsible for this, since He has given to man spiritual understanding and knowledge.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n153.<\/strong> God has filled man with spiritual understanding and knowledge, for He seeks to purify man from his\u00a0passions and deliberate\u00a0wickedness; and in His love He desires to transform the mortal into the immortal.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n154.<\/strong> The intellect in a pure, devout soul truly sees God the unbegotten, invisible and ineffable, who is the sole\u00a0purity in the pure of heart.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n155.<\/strong> Holiness, salvation and a crown of incorruption are given to the man who bears misfortunes cheerfully and\u00a0with thankfulness. To control anger, the tongue, the belly and sensual pleasures is of the utmost benefit to the soul.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n156.<\/strong> God\u2019s providence controls the universe. It is present everywhere. Providence is the sovereign Logos of God,\u00a0imprinting form on the unformed materiality of the world, making and fashioning all things. Matter could not have\u00a0acquired an articulated structure were it not for the directing power of the Logos, who is the Image, Intellect,\u00a0Wisdom and Providence of God.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n157.<\/strong> Desire that has its origin in the mind is the source of dark passions. And when the soul is engrossed in such\u00a0desire, she forgets her own nature, that she is a breath of God; and so she is Carried away into sin, in her folly not\u00a0considering the evils that she will suffer after death.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n158.<\/strong> Godlessness and love of praise are the worst and most incurable disease of the soul and lead to her\u00a0destruction. The desire for evil signifies a lack of what is good. Goodness consists in doing with all our heart\u00a0whatever is right and pleasing to the God of all.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n159.<\/strong> Man alone is capable of communion with God. For to man alone among the living creatures does God speak\u00a0\u2013 at night through dreams, by day through the intellect. And He uses every means to foretell and prefigure the future\u00a0blessings that will be given to those worthy of Him.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n160.<\/strong> For one who has faith and determination, it is not difficult to gain spiritual understanding of God. If you wish\u00a0to contemplate Him, look at the providential harmony in all the things created by His Logos. All are for man\u2019s sake.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n161.<\/strong> A man is called holy if he is pure from sin and evil. The highest attainment of man\u2019s soul and that which\u00a0most accords with God\u2019s will is for there to be no evil in him.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n162.<\/strong> A name designates one particular thing or person. Thus it is foolish to think that God, who is one and unique,\u00a0has any other name,\u00a0The name \u2018God\u2019 designates Him who has no origin, and who created all things for man\u2019s sake.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n163.<\/strong> If you are conscious of sinful actions in yourself, cut the sinfulness out of your soul by thinking of the\u00a0blessings that you hope to receive. For God is just and compassionate.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n164.<\/strong> A man knows God and is known by Him in so far as he makes every effort not to be separated from God;\u00a0and he will succeed in this if he is good in every way and refrains from all sensual pleasure, not because he lacks the\u00a0means to indulge such pleasure, but because of his own determination and self-control.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n165.<\/strong> Do good to one who wrongs you, and God will be your friend. Never slander your enemy. Practice love,\u00a0restraint and moderation, patience, self-control and the like. For this is knowledge of God: to follow Him through\u00a0humility and other such virtues. These are the actions not of every man, but of one whose soul possesses spiritual\u00a0understanding.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n166.<\/strong> Because some people impiously dare to say that plants and vegetables have a soul, I will write briefly about this for the guidance of the simple. Plants have a natural life, but they do not have a soul. Man is called an intelligent\u00a0animal because he has intellect and is capable of acquiring knowledge. The other animals and the birds can make\u00a0sounds because they possess breath and soul. All things that are subject to growth and decline are alive; but the fact that they live and grow does not necessarily mean that they all have souls. There are four categories of living beings.\u00a0The first are immortal and have souls, such as angels. The second have intellect, soul and breath, such as men. The\u00a0third have breath and soul, such as animals. The fourth have only life, such as plants. The life of plants is without\u00a0soul, breath, intellect or immortality. These four attributes, on the other hand, presuppose the possession of life.\u00a0Every human soul is in continual movement.<\/p>\n<p><strong>167.<\/strong> When images of some sensual pleasure arise in you, watch yourself so as not to be carried away by it. Pause\u00a0a little, think about death, and reflect how much better it is consciously to overcome this illusory pleasure.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n168.<\/strong> Just as passion is present in the process of generation \u2013 for whatever comes into being in this world must\u00a0also perish \u2013 so likewise evil is present in every passion. Do not therefore say that God is powerless to extirpate evil:\u00a0to say that is to talk stupid\u00a0nonsense. All these passions pertain to materiality; yet there was no need for God to extirpate matter. He has,\u00a0however, extirpated evil from men for their own good, by granting them intellect, understanding, spiritual\u00a0knowledge, and the power to discern what is good, so that, realizing the harm that comes from evil, they may avoid\u00a0it. But the fool pursues evil and is proud of doing so: he is like someone caught in a snare, who struggles helplessly in its toils. So he is never able to look up, and to see and know God, who has created all things that man may be\u00a0saved and deified.<\/p>\n<p><strong>169.<\/strong> Mortal creatures know in advance that they must die, and they resent the fact. The saintly soul is granted\u00a0immortality because of her holiness, but mortality befalls the foolish and unhappy soul because of her sins.<br \/>\n<strong><br \/>\n170.<\/strong> When you go to bed with a contented mind, recall the blessings and generous providence of God; be filled\u00a0with holy thoughts and great joy. Then, while your body sleeps, your soul will keep watch; the closing of your eyes\u00a0will bring you a true vision of God; your silence will be pregnant with sanctity, and in your sleep you will continue\u00a0consciously to glorify the God of all with the full strength of your soul. For when evil is absent from man, his thankfulness\u00a0is by itself more pleasing to God than any lavish sacrifice. To Him be glory through all the ages. Amen.<\/p>\n<hr \/>\n<p>From the <strong>Appendix<\/strong> of The Philokalia Volume 1.  <em><strong>The Philokalia<\/strong><\/em>\u2014 Greek for &#8220;love of the beautiful &#8211; holy &#8211; exalted&#8221;\u2014 was first assembled at Mount Athos by Ss. Nicodemus of the Holy Mountain and Makarios of Corinth. It is a collection of writings, centering on practicing the virtues and spiritual living.  It is an important spiritual and theological resource for all Orthodox Christians that complements the Holy Scriptures and other writings of the Apostles, Saints, and Fathers of the Orthodox Church.<\/p>\n<p><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"aligncenter size-full wp-image-11068\" src=\"https:\/\/www.orthodoxytoday.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2017\/12\/St_Anthony-Great_01.jpg\" alt=\"St. Anthony the Great Character of Men and the Virtuous Life\" width=\"555\" height=\"714\" srcset=\"https:\/\/www.orthodoxytoday.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2017\/12\/St_Anthony-Great_01.jpg 555w, https:\/\/www.orthodoxytoday.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2017\/12\/St_Anthony-Great_01-233x300.jpg 233w\" sizes=\"auto, (max-width: 555px) 100vw, 555px\" \/><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>by St. Anthony the Great &#8211; 1. Men are often called intelligent wrongly. Intelligent men are not those who are erudite in the sayings and books of the wise men of old, but those who have an intelligent soul and can discriminate between good and evil. They avoid what is sinful and harms the soul; &#8230; <a title=\"On the Character of Men and on the Virtuous Life: 170 Texts (Philokalia, Vol 1)\" class=\"read-more\" href=\"https:\/\/www.orthodoxytoday.org\/blog\/2017\/12\/on-the-character-of-men-and-on-the-virtuous-life-170-texts-philokalia-vol-1\/\" aria-label=\"Read more about On the Character of Men and on the Virtuous Life: 170 Texts (Philokalia, Vol 1)\">Read more<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":497,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_monsterinsights_skip_tracking":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_active":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_note":"","_monsterinsights_sitenote_category":0,"generate_page_header":"","footnotes":""},"categories":[68,5,130,126,157],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-11067","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-christianity","category-orthodox-christianity","category-orthodox-church","category-theology","category-wisdom"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.orthodoxytoday.org\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/11067","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.orthodoxytoday.org\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.orthodoxytoday.org\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.orthodoxytoday.org\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/497"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.orthodoxytoday.org\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=11067"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.orthodoxytoday.org\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/11067\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.orthodoxytoday.org\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=11067"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.orthodoxytoday.org\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=11067"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.orthodoxytoday.org\/blog\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=11067"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}