One of the greatest
                                  spiritual gifts that Elder Paisios
                                  gave me was his guidance along the
                                  mystical path of the Jesus Prayer.
                                  This started at the beginning of our
                                  acquaintance and continued until his
                                  repose twelve years later. The Jesus
                                  Prayer consists of the repetition of
                                  the phrase "Lord Jesus Christ, have
                                  mercy on me."' The Jesus Prayer is not
                                  recited as a Mantra, but as a prayer
                                  to the Person of Christ.
                        
 Prayer, as I
                                  learned, is a relationship between two
                                  persons, God and man, who move towards
                                  each other. Thus, the swiftness or
                                  slowness with which a person advances
                                  in prayer depends on both the human
                                  and divine wills. Neither the freedom
                                  of God in His sovereignty nor the
                                  freedom of man in his free choice are
                                  ever violated. For his part, man
                                  offers his good intention, his labors,
                                  and his desire to draw near to God.
                                  God, in turn, offers His grace...
 When yogis claim
                                  that the Jesus Prayer resembles their
                                  own mantras, they are in fact trying
                                  to fit the Jesus Prayer into their own
                                  Procrustean bed. Of course, there are
                                  similarities, but there are also
                                  enormous differences-both a table and
                                  a horse have four legs, but to
                                  conclude that they are consequently
                                  the same would be an error of the
                                  crudest sort. But this is just the
                                  kind of error the yogis make when they
                                  claim that the Jesus Prayer is a kind
                                  of mantra. A brief examination of the
                                  essential differences between the
                                  Jesus Prayer and a mantra should
                                  provide those with an open mind the
                                  wherewithal to draw the proper
                                  conclusions.
 First, consider how
                                  the Orthodox tradition understands the
                                  meaning of the Jesus Prayer: "Lord
                                  Jesus Christ, have mercy on me." The
                                  word "Lord" is the name for God most
                                  frequently encountered in the Old
                                  Testament in the oft-repeated formula
                                  "Thus saith the Lord ..." or in the
                                  commandments: I am the Lord thy God.
                                  When Orthodox Christians call Jesus
                                  Christ, "Lord," they are confessing
                                  that He is the God of the Old
                                  Testament Who spoke to the
                                  patriarchs-Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.
                                  The Word is the Person who gave the
                                  law to Moses. In other words, the One
                                  who spoke to the prophets was none
                                  other than the second Person of the
                                  Holy Trinity, Who later took flesh and
                                  was united with human nature in the
                                  Person of Jesus Christ. Furthermore,
                                  when we say "Lord Jesus Christ"-with
                                  faith, with all our heart's
                                  strength-we come under the influence
                                  of the Holy Spirit, as Saint Paul
                                  says: No man can say
                                    that Jesus is the Lord but by the
                                    Holy Spirit (1 Cor 12:3).
 Having recognized
                                  the existence of the true personal God
                                  outside and beyond his own self, from
                                  this God a Christian asks "mercy." The
                                  elder once told me, "Mercy contains
                                  all things. Love, forgiveness,
                                  healing, restoration, and repentance
                                  all fit within the word 'mercy."' It
                                  is the mercy of God that brings about
                                  repentance, purification from the
                                  passions, the illumination of the nous, and, in the end,
                                theosis. From my journey I
                                  have learned that salvation comes from
                                  the mercy of Christ, the unique Savior
                                  of mankind, rather than from my
                                  intelligence, my prideful endeavors,
                                  or the techniques of yoga. Salvation
                                  and theosis are so very
                                  precious that it is impossible for
                                  anyone to make any effort or do any
                                  ascetic labor that would be equivalent
                                  to even the smallest fraction of their
                                  value.
 Indeed, from my
                                  conversations with other fathers who
                                  were laborers in the Jesus Prayer and
                                  from my own experience, I know full
                                  well that prayer is a gift from God.
                                  Nothing is accomplished by human labor
                                  alone, for Christ said, Without Me ye can
                                    do nothing (John 15:5), and as the
                                  Apostle James bears witness, Every good gift
                                    and every perfect gift is from
                                    above, and cometh down from the
                                    Father of lights (James 1:17) Even
                                  as God granted us existence, in the
                                  same way He gradually grants us to
                                  know Him and be united with Him
                                  through prayer, leading us ultimately
                                  to life eternal.
 Now, consider how
                                  the yogis view a mantra. First of all,
                                  there are many mantras, and each
                                  refers to one of the many gods of the
                                  Hindu pantheon such as Krishna, Rama,
                                    Vishnu, or the goddess Kali. There is not one
                                  standard explanation given by yogis
                                  for the mantras; rather, their
                                  explanations are tailored to the
                                  receptivity of each listener. For
                                  beginners who are not disposed to
                                  worship idols, yogis give a
                                  pseudo-scientific, mechanistic
                                  explanation: they claim that the
                                  benefit accrued by repeating the
                                  mantra is due to certain frequencies
                                  produced by its pronunciation, which
                                  cause spiritual vibrations that
                                  activate spiritual centers within man.
                                  (However, the existence of such
                                  centers in man can only be taken on
                                  faith-if someone willingly chooses to
                                  believe such a claim.) For those who
                                  are inclined towards psychological
                                  interpretations, the yogis present the
                                  repetition of a mantra as a type of
                                  auto-suggestion that enables the
                                  practitioner to program his inner
                                  world according to positive models.
                                  When addressing those who have become
                                  more involved with Hinduism and now
                                  believe in many gods, the yogis claim
                                  that the worshipper receives the
                                  blessing of whatever god is being
                                  invoked.
                        
                              
                              
                              
                              
                              
                              
                              
 What constitutes
                                  the infinite distance separating the
                                  Christian Jesus Prayer from the Hindu
                                  mantra, however, is that which lurks
                                  behind the name of the god being
                                  invoked in a mantra and invited into
                                  the soul. Through the mouth of the
                                  Holy Prophet David, God declares, All the gods of
                                    the nations are demons (1 Psalm 95:5)––In
                                  other words, behind the names Krishna, Rama, or Shiva are demons lying
                                  In wait. Once they are invoked by the
                                  use of the mantra, the door is open
                                  for the devil to begin his theatrical
                                  productions, using sounds, images,
                                  dreams, and the imagination in general
                                  in order to drag the practitioner
                                  deeper into deception.
 Another significant
                                  difference between the Christian Jesus
                                  Prayer and the Hindu mantra is the
                                  diametrically opposed viewpoints of
                                  the two faiths regarding techniques
                                  and the human subject. I recall a
                                  conversation I had with Niranjan after
                                  he had given me permission to begin to
                                  practice some supposedly powerful yoga
                                  techniques. I said to him, "It's fine
                                  practicing the techniques, but what
                                  happens to the human passions of
                                  greed, lust for power, vainglory, and
                                  selfishness? Aren't we concerned about
                                  them?" "They disappear," he replied,
                                  "through the practice of the
                                  techniques." "Do they just disappear
                                  like that, on their own?" I asked.
                                  "Yes, they disappear automatically,
                                  while you are practicing the
                                  techniques."
 What an astonishing
                                  assertion: physical exercises can wipe
                                  out the inclinations that a person's
                                  soul acquired in life through
                                  conscious choices. But, in reality,
                                  man, as a self-determining and free
                                  moral agent, can change the conscious
                                  aspect of his personality and his
                                  moral sense only by the use of his own
                                  free will to make conscious decisions
                                  in real-life situations. Any external
                                  means to automatically induce such a
                                  change in a person's consciousness
                                  without his consent circumvent man's
                                  free will, obliterate his volition,
                                  and destroy his freedom, reducing man
                                  to a spineless puppet manipulated by a
                                  marionettist's strings. Hinduism's
                                  relentless insistence on properly
                                  performed techniques with automatic
                                  results degrades man by depriving him
                                  of his most precious quality: the
                                  self-governing free will. It restricts
                                  the boundless human spirit within a
                                  framework of mechanical methods and
                                  reflexes.
 Orthodox Christian
                                  Faith, on the contrary, recognizes and
                                  honors the gift of human freedom as a
                                  divine trait. This recognition and
                                  approach help man to be actualized as
                                  a free being. Precisely on account of
                                  the human freedom to choose, man's
                                  often- unpredictable responses can't
                                  be limited to the mechanical reflexes
                                  of a closed system, but can
                                  innovatively turn in any spiritual
                                  direction that he, as a free subject,
                                  wills. This is why Orthodoxy is not
                                  adamant about techniques and methods.
                                  In freedom and with respect, Orthodoxy
                                  seeks the human heart, encouraging the
                                  individual to do what is good for the
                                  sake of the good, and pointing out the
                                  appropriate moral stance of the soul
                                  before God, which an individual can
                                  then freely choose to embrace.
 Genuine spiritual
                                  development entails a deepening
                                  familiarity with God and with one's
                                  own self, acquired through moral
                                  choices that a person freely makes in the
                                  depths of his heart. Spiritual
                                  progress is a product of man's way of
                                  relating to himself, to his fellow
                                  man, and to God by the good use of his
                                  innate moral freedom. This is why
                                  Christ calls out, If any man wills
                                    to come after Me, let him freely
                                    deny himself (Matt 16:24)––that
                                  is, without being deceived, without
                                  being psychologically compelled, and
                                  without being forced, all of which are
                                  inappropriate to the spiritual
                                  nobility of Christian life.
 Father Porphyrios
                                  had a small parrot that he taught to
                                  pray in order to illustrate the
                                  absurdity of some Christians' empty
                                  repetition of the words of prayer, as
                                  well as the ridiculousness of the
                                  opinion commonly presented in Eastern
                                  religions that someone can make moral
                                  advances by physical exercises or
                                  breathing techniques. Every so often,
                                  the parrot would mechanically say,
                                  "Lord, have mercy." The elder would
                                  respond, “Look, the parrot can say the
                                  prayer, but does that mean that it is
                                  praying? Can prayer exist without the
                                  conscious and free participation of
                                  the person who prays?"
The Gurus, Young
                                  Man, and Elder Paisios by Dionysios
                                  Farasiotis, St Herman of Alaska
                                  Brotherhood, 2008, pp 276-285


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