Thursday 16 May 2013

Saint Isaac The Syrian-THE DISTINCTION BETWEEN DIFFERENT KINDS OF KNOWLEDGE 2

Saint Isaac The Syrian
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YET ANOTHER DISTINCTION BETWEEN DIFFERENT KINDS OF KNOWLEDGE
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Knowledge which is concerned with the visible, or which receives through the senses what comes from the visible, is called natural. Knowledge which is concerned with the power of the immaterial and the nature of incorporeal entities within a man is called spiritual, because perceptions are received by the spirit and not by the senses. Because of these two origins (perceptions of the visible and of the spiritual) each kind of knowledge alike comes from without. But the knowledge bestowed by Divine power is called supranatural; it is more unfathomable and is higher than knowledge. Contemplation of this knowledge comes to the soul not from matter, which is outside it, as is the case of the first two kinds of knowledge; it manifests and reveals itself in the innermost depths of the soul itself, immaterially, suddenly, spontaneously and unexpectedly, since, according to the words of Christ 'the kingdom of God is within you' (Luke 17:21). It does not feed hope with any image in advance, nor can its coming be observed: but within the image imprinted in the hidden mind, it reveals itself by itself, without thought. The first kind of knowledge results from constant and diligent work of learning; the second results from right living and rational faith; the third is given only to the faith, which sets aside knowledge and puts an end to actions.

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EXPERIENCE VERSUS BOOK KNOWLEDGE
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Accept without fail words spoken from experience, even if the speaker is not learned in books. For though royal treasures may be the greatest of all on earth, yet they do not despise adding an obol taken from a beggar; and rivers are swollen by small streams to become mighty in their flow.

Memory of good things and memory of bad things show us, like a pointing finger, either the shamefulness of our thoughts, or the height of our life, and each, according to its nature, strengthens in us thoughts and movements belonging either to the right or to the left. Our traffic with them is in the secrecy of our mind; but this mental traffic depicts our life and in it we can see ourselves.

There is a love like a small lamp, fed by oil, which goes out when the oil is ended; or like a rain-fed stream which goes dry, when rain no longer feeds it. But there is a love, like a spring gushing from the earth, never to be exhausted. The first is human love; the second - is Divine, and has God as its source.

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LITURGICAL PRAYERS AND RITUALS
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Do not doubt the power of our prayers in established services, if it happens that prayers or hourly reading are not followed by strong stimulation and constant contrition.
 
Do you wish to enjoy the words of your services and to understand the meaning of the words of the Spirit that you utter? Then disregard completely the quantity of verses, take no account of your skill in giving rhythm to the lines, abandon the customary loud chanting, but let your mind sink deep into study of the words of the Spirit, till your soul is roused to heights of understanding and thereby is moved to glorify God or to salutary mourning. There is no peace for the mind in slavish work (in merely reading the set prayers); and disturbance of mind deprives it of the taste of the meaning and of understanding and disperses thoughts. Disturbance may truthfully be called the devil's chariot, for it is Satan's practice to drive the mind like a charioteer, and, carrying with him a load of passions, to enter the luckless soul and plunge it into confusion.

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MANAGING THOUGHTS FROM THE EVIL ONE
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Do not oppose the thoughts, which the enemy sows in you, but rather cut off all converse with them by prayer to God. We have not always strength enough so to oppose hostile thoughts as to stop them; on the contrary, in such attempts they frequently inflict us with a wound that is long in healing. Despite all your wisdom and all your good intentions, the enemies will succeed in dealing you a blow. But even if you conquer them, the filth of such thoughts will pollute your mind and their stench will long cling in your nostrils. But if you use the first method, you will be free of all this and of fear; for there is no help but God. 

from E. Kadloubovsky and G. E. H. Palmer, "Early Fathers from the Philokalia," (London: Faber and Faber, 1981), pp. 196 - 198

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