Readings
from the Early Fathers on
Spiritual Warfare
Why does God put up
with evil in the world?
.
by
John Chrysostom (354-407 AD)
Why does error
have a free rein and why does God allow the
wicked to disturb the existence of so many
people?
First of all, before trying to understand,
we need to put ourselves in front of the
incomprehensible wisdom of God. One who is
firmly anchored in God does not suffer any
loss, even if attacked by a thousand waves
and a thousand storms. On the contrary, he
emerges stronger.
There is a reason, however, which I can
venture to suggest.
In the first place, scandals are permitted
so that the rewards of the righteous may not
be diminished. That is why God said to Job:
'Do you not understand that I
have treated you in this fashion so that
your righteousness may be made manifest?'
(Job 40:8).
But there is another reason why the wicked
are left at large: so that they may not be
deprived of the advantages of conversion
from their evil ways, which certainly could
not happen if they had been rendered
incapable of doing evil. In this way, St
Paul, the penitent thief, the prostitute,
the tax collector and many others were
saved.
You may speak to me about those who have
been scandalized. Well and good. But I then
speak to you about those who have benefited
from the scandal by winning glory, and I
repeat my point: the existence of careless
and lazy people would not justify leaving in
a state of inferiority keen and wide-awake
people who are capable of richly deserving
their eternal recompense. A great wrong
would be done to them if they were not given
the chance to strive.
[Excerpt from On Providence, 12, I
(SC79, pp.I83ff.)]
.
God has created nothing evil
.
by John
Cassian (360-430
AD)
Never let
us try to maintain that God has created
anything that is intrinsically bad. We
read in Scripture: 'And God saw everything
that he had made and behold, it was very
good.' (Genesis 1:31)
Perhaps someone is asserting that God
created the devils as they are, or that
right from the beginning he assigned them
their role of deceiving and ruining human
beings? If so, he is contradicting
Scripture and insulting God by thinking of
him as the inventor and creator of evil.
In reality, before forming the visible
world, God made the spiritual powers of
heaven so that they might unceasingly give
thanks and praise to their Creator,
knowing that they had been made from
nothing and were destined for the glory of
heavenly felicity.
In fact, the Lord himself says of these
powers: 'When the morning stars sang
together and all the sons of God shouted
for joy.' (Job 38:71)
The beginning of every thing is Christ in
whom the Father has created all that
exists. We read in Scripture: 'All things
were made through him, and without him was
not anything made that was made.' (John
1:3) And again: 'In Christ all things were
created, in heaven and on earth, visible
and invisible ... all things were created
through him and for him.' (Colossians
1:16)
[excerpt from Conferences
by Cassian, 8, 6ff. (SC54, PP.I4ff.)]
.
Why does God allow testing and
temptation?
by Maximus the Confessor (580-682
AD)
One can distinguish five reasons why God
allows the devils to attack us: first, so
that from attack and counter-attack we may
become practised in discerning good from
evil.
Second, so that our virtue may be maintained
in the heat of the struggle and so be
confirmed in an impregnable position.
Third, so that as we advance in virtue we
may avoid presumption and learn humility.
Fourth, to inspire in us an unreserved
hatred for evil through the experience we
thus have of it.
Fifth, and above all, that we may attain
inner freedom and remain convinced both of
our own weakness and of the strength of him
who has come to our aid.
[Excerpt from Centuries on Charity
by Maximus the Confessor, 2, 67 (SC9, p.114]
The devil
does not have full power
.
by John
Damascene (675-749 AD)
Among the angelic powers the chief of the
terrestrial order, the one to whom God had
entrusted the task of looking after the earth,
was not evil by nature, he had not received any
trace of evil from his Creator. He was
good.
However, he did not maintain the light and
the honor that God had given him. By a
deliberate act of his own free will he
rebelled against the Creator. He turned his
face away from goodness and fell into evil.
Evil in fact is merely the absence of good, as
darkness is the absence of light.
A host of angels placed under his command
followed him in the fall. Despite their
angelic nature, they also freely plunged from
goodness down to evil and became wicked.
The devils cannot do anything against us
without God's permission. But with God's
permission they are powerful. All wickedness,
all the passions are inspired by them. But
listen: God allows them to suggest sin to a
person, but they cannot force him to do it. We
ourselves are responsible for accepting or
rejecting their seductive suggestions.
[excerpt from The Orthodox Faith,
2, 4]
.
The devil's strategy
.
by Ambrose
of Milan (339-397 AD)
The devil demonstrates simultaneously his
weakness and his wickedness.
He is unable to harm anyone who does not harm
himself. In fact, anyone who denies heaven and
chooses the earth is, as it were, rushing
towards a precipice, even though running of
his own accord.
The devil, however, starts working as soon as
he sees someone living up to faith's
commitments, someone who has a reputation for
virtue, who does good works.
He tries to worm vanity into him, to make it
possible for him to be puffed up with pride,
become presumptuous, lose trust in prayer and
not attribute to God the good that he does but
to take all the credit himself.
[excerpt from On the Gospel
of St Luke 4, 25]
Let us be
wholly absorbed by grace
by
Pseudo-Macarius (4th century)
Inside us evil is
at work suggesting unworthy
inclinations. However, it is not in us
in the same way as, to take an
example, water mixes with wine. Evil
is in us without being mixed with
good.
We are a field in
which wheat and weeds are growing
separately. We are a house in which
there is a thief, but also the owner.
We are a spring which rises from the
middle of the mud, but pours out pure
water.
All the same, it
is enough to stir up the mud and the
spring is fouled. It is the same with
the soul. If the evil
is spread, it forms a unity with the
soul and makes it dirty. With our
consent, evil is united with the soul;
they become accomplices.
Yet there comes a
moment when the soul can free itself
and remain separate again: in
repentance, contrition, prayer,
recourse to God. The soul could not
benefit from these habits if it were
always sunk in evil.
It is like
marriage. A woman is united with a man
and they become one flesh. But when
one of them dies, the other is left
alone.
But union with
the Holy Spirit is complete. So let us
become a single spirit with him. Let
us be wholly absorbed by grace.
[Excerpt from Homily
by Pseudo-Marcarius, 16, I (PG34,
613)]
.
We conquer the enemy by conquering
ourselves
by Leo
the Great (400-461 AD)
In the days of Saul and
David, it was when the Israelites fell into
sin that the Lord allowed the Philistines to
oppress them. In order to regain the
ascendancy over their enemies, the people
were ordered to fast. The Israelites
understood very well that they deserved all
they had to endure at the hands of the
Philistines because they had neglected God's
commands and given themselves over to evil
practices. It was no use for them to try to
win their freedom by taking up arms; they
first had to get rid of their sins. And so
they began to discipline themselves and to
conquer the desires of the flesh in order to
be able to conquer their opponents. When
they fasted their oppressors gave way before
them, whereas when they indulged all their
appetites the enemy held them in
subjection.
It is the same with us
today. We have our own struggles and
conflicts, and we can win by using the same
tactics. The Israelites were attacked by
human beings; we are attacked by spiritual
enemies. We can conquer by bringing our
lives into line with God's will for us; then
our enemies will give way before us. It is
not their power but our lack of
self-discipline that makes them a threat to
us, and we shall weaken them by overcoming
ourselves.
We must ask God's help
in this warfare, because our only means of
conquering the enemy is to conquer
ourselves. How often we come into conflict
with our own lower nature, with those
unspiritual, unregenerate attitudes that
Scripture calls the flesh! What the flesh
wants is opposed to what the spirit wants,
and what the spirit wants is opposed to what
the flesh wants. If the desires of the flesh
are the stronger, then our spiritual
faculties will be dragged down to the level
of our lower nature and will be enslaved
where they ought to be masters. But if we
are determined to serve the Lord and find
our joy in his gifts, if we trample
underfoot our instinctive tendency to
gratify ourselves and refuse to allow sin to
rule in our mortal bodies, then our spirit
will be in control and no strategy of the
Evil One will be able to overthrow us. True
peace and freedom can only be ours when the
flesh is ruled by the spirit and the spirit
is guided by the will of God.
The spark
of divine love within you
.
by Basil
the Great (330-379 AD)
Love of God is not something that we can be
taught. We did not learn from someone else how
to rejoice in light or want to live, or to
love our parents or guardians. It is the same,
perhaps even more so, with our love for God:
it does not come by another’s teaching. As
soon as the living creature (that is, man)
comes to be, a power of reason is implanted in
us like a seed, containing within it the
ability and the need to love. When the school
of God’s law admits this power of reason, it
cultivates it diligently, skillfully nurtures
it, and with God’s help brings it to
perfection.
For this reason, as by God’s gift, I find you
with the zeal necessary to attain this end,
and you on your part help me with your
prayers. I will try to fan into flame the
spark of divine love that is hidden within
you, as far as I am able through the power of
the Holy Spirit.
First, let me say that we have already
received from God the ability to fulfill all
his commands. We have then no reason to resent
them, as if something beyond our capacity were
being asked of us. We have no reason either to
be angry, as if we had to pay back more than
we had received. When we use this ability in a
right and fitting way, we lead a life of
virtue and holiness. But if we misuse it, we
fall into sin.
This is the definition of sin: the misuse of
powers given us by God for doing good, a use
contrary to God's commandments. On the other
hand, the virtue that God asks of us is the
use of the same powers based on a good
conscience in accordance with God's
command.
Since this is so, we can say the same about
love. Since we received a command to love God,
we possess from the first moment of our
existence an innate power and ability to love.
The proof of this is not to be sought outside
ourselves, but each one can learn this from
himself and in himself. It is natural for us
to want things that are good and pleasing to
the eye, even though at first different things
seem beautiful and good to different people.
In the same way, we love what is related to us
or near to us, though we have not been taught
to do so, and we spontaneously feel well
disposed to our benefactors.
What, I ask, is more wonderful than the
beauty of God? What thought is more pleasing
and satisfying than God's majesty? What desire
is as urgent and overpowering as the desire
implanted by God in a soul that is completely
purified of sin and cries out in its love: I
am wounded by love? The radiance of the
divine beauty is altogether beyond the power
of words to describe.
[Excerpt
from the Longer Rules of Basil the
Great (Resp.
2,1: PG 31, 908-910)]
Selection of quotes are
from Drinking
from the Hidden
Fountain, A
Patristic Breviary, by Thomas
Spidlik.
First
published as Breviario
Patristico by Piero
Gribaudi Editore, Turin, Ital
(c) 1971 Piero Gribaudi Editore
Turin. First published in
English in 1992 by New City, 57
Twyford Avenue, London, English
translation by Paul Drake. First
American publication 1993 by
Cistercian Publications, WMU
Station, Kalamazoo, Michigan. |