Seen
from below, the spiritual life seems to be an incessant combat, an ‘invisible
struggle’, where every pause becomes a regression. Seen from above, it is the
acquisition of the gifts of the Holy Spirit. This double movement stands out
clearly in the prayer addressed to the Holy Spirit: ‘Purify us from all stain,’
but also ‘Come and dwell within us.’
This
purification begins by a very realistic vision of one’s state. ‘Know thyself’
was the ascetic teaching of Socrates. ‘No one can know God unless he first
knows himself’ (Philokalia). ‘The one who has seen his sin is greater
than he who raises the dead. He who has seen himself is greater than he who has
seen the angels’ (St. Isaac the Syrian).
A
man’s vigorous penetration into the darkness of his heart of hearts, though it
is a formidable undertaking, gives him the power to judge himself. He must make
the descent supplied with an ascetic scaphander, the spirit of discernment, in
order to explore its caverns peopled by phantoms, and to seize in action his
perverted will and his anticipated death, in short, his irremediable natural
deficiency.
This
is the triple barrier of nature, sin, and death that the Lord passed through
for us all. The vision must be brief, instantaneous, in order to avoid all
pleasure in sorrow or despair. Sin is never a subject of contemplation; we must
rest our glance on what obliterates it—grace. The soul can now truly utter the
cry: ‘From the abyss of my iniquity I invoke the abyss of your mercy.’
Paul
Evdokimov, The Struggle With God
Reflection – This
was one of Catherine Doherty’s favorite books, particularly in the last twenty
years of her life. It was one of several works of Russian theology and
spirituality that helped her greatly to clarify her own Russian religious
expression. She read these books quite often at our daily post-lunch communal
spiritual reading, and read this one in particular several times. One of our
somewhat less Russian-theology-inclined members refers to that period in MH as
‘The Struggle With The Struggle With God.’
It really is, though, a grand book by a
great author. This excerpt tackles the thorny issue of self-knowledge in the
spiritual life. A scaphander, incidentally, is an old-timey word for scuba gear
(I had to look it up myself). We cannot go diving down into the dark abysses of
the self without the ascetic scaphander of discernment.
I have often seen this in my priestly
ministry, that people will go into themselves without that scaphander, and it
is not a pretty picture. Pathological introspection, ceaseless and exhausting
self-examination, scrupulosity, self-condemnation, self-hatred, despair, or the
flip side of it which is a collapse into laxism and mediocrity—all of these are
the result of striving for self-knowledge without the whole ascetic framework
which protects us from these pitfalls.
As Evdokimov says (and he is simply
representing the whole spiritual tradition of Christianity here), no one can
know God unless he first knows himself, and knowledge of our sins is utterly
necessary to make spiritual progress. But at the same time, to know oneself and
one’s sin there is a degree of knowledge of God needed, as we cannot really
look at ourselves honestly without some assurance that mercy and love is given
us in that place. My understanding of scuba diving is that divers generally do
not go diving alone. The same holds true in the spiritual life—we cannot and
must not plunge into the abyss of self without the Spirit of God to accompany
us.
The other great pitfall is what he
refers to as ‘the pleasure of sorrow and despair.’ Spiritual masochism is a
reality, and a perilous one indeed. We can derive great pleasure (I have seen
it!) in beating ourselves up for our sins, imagined and real. There is
something about the genuine vision of our own sinfulness that fascinates us,
cobra-like. We can get very caught up in the precise taxonomy and endless
contemplation of our wretchedness, and this does us great spiritual harm.
The knowledge of our sin is meant to be
a doorway we pass through immediately into the knowledge of God’s merciful love
and grace. It is a necessary doorway—no way around it!—but it is just a
doorway, not a destination. ‘Sin is never a subject of contemplation’ – that is
great spiritual wisdom right there, folks.
From the abyss of sin and
self-knowledge we cry out to the abyss of God’s mercy and love. Deep is
calling on deep in the roar of waters (Ps 42). We need to know the one deep
to get to the other deep; we need to go scuba diving with Jesus, so that we
know from just what kind of depth of misery Jesus has pulled us. But we can’t
do any of it without him, and we must not go into those depths unaided and
unguided, nor stay there one second longer than we need to, to know the merciful
saving love of God.
A couple of thoughts consistent with your reflection. In my experience I mostly do not need to go looking for my sinfulness rather it come to me as a fork in my road where a spiritual presence marks the way of obedience and myself chooses the wrong road where I actively or passively transgress into the recognition of my sin. The best defense against the tendency toward to much introspection or beating one'self up is a Christian brother or sister confidant and guide.
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