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Metropolitan Anthony (Krapovitsky) Confession IntraText CT - Text |
21. Sins Against one’s Own Soul.
The spiritual father continues his exhortations: “When you put yourself mentally before
the face of God and offer repentance for your sins, then, apart from your offences against
God and against other people, you will soon perceive how you have proved to be an
unworthy proprietor of your own soul, which was given to you by God so that you could
make it capable of fruitfully serving Him and your neighbours. A soul that has already
submitted itself to God is always dissatisfied with itself, and reproaches itself not only for
obvious infringements of God’s commandments, but also for having insufficient zeal in
fulfilling them. Our penitential prayers, such as are offered by people leading a Churchcentered
life, lament first of all the sin of laziness. In the prayer, ‘O Lord and Master of
my life...’, idleness (sloth) is mentioned first, and through nine penitential weeks we
make ourselves contrite over this very sin, as we sing in church: ‘and have wasted my
whole life in laziness.’xliii Aren’t you also guilty of laziness, brother — of our Russian
laziness? Do not make peace with it; even in worldly matters it is death for the soul and
the parent of all vices, and in spiritual life even less should you submit to it. Do not try to
go to the church where the service finishes earliest, do not cut your prayers short and
besides this, always give yourself some disinterested work to do for the glory of God:
either visiting the sick, or prisons, or sewing things for the poor or for the Church, or else
earn money for a good cause or go and read to those in homes for the elderly. Then you
will come to love labour in general, and a prolonged period of inactivity will always seem
burdensome to you. Restrain yourself from idle-talk — from having conversations when
it is time to work, from visiting houses where you do not obtain anything useful or joyful
for your soul, but only want to go in order to kill time and keep away from work or
profitable reading. From idle-talking one forms the habit of lying — of not trying to say
what is true, but rather what is pleasant to the ear. Do not think that it is not particularly
important if you are easily prepared to speak untruths: all the world’s foul deeds are
unfailingly seasoned with lies and slanders. It is not for nothing that Satan is called the
father of lies. Only lies and slander could poison the mind of the Jewish people when
they cried out with one soul, ‘Crucify Him! Crucify Him!’ Without lies and slander the
French Revolution of the 18th century would neither have begun nor been brought to
completion, nor would the Pugachev rebellion in Russia, nor the contemporary (1920)
destruction of our fatherland. And then, how greatly a person is valued if he is known to
be truthful, unable ever to tell a lie. Keep a watch over your soul, so as always to speak
the truth, and if you catch yourself telling a lie, then try to correct the error you have
caused, and explain to those you were talking to that you spoke incorrectly at such a time
about such a thing. If you do this then you will estrange yourself from lying. But if you
give yourself up to it, then, quite apart from committing the sin of slander and the
discords about which we spoke earlier, you will also not avoid another shameful habit,
from which hardly anyone who calmly speaks untruths is free. By this I mean flattery,
either of the powerful or of the crowd. Elections are now won by flattery and it is through
flattery that illicit love is obtained from women and through them that people are thrown
onto the broad path — that leads to destruction. Haven’t you also committed this very
sin? This sinful flattery is particularly repulsive on the lips of contemporary man, who
boasts of his independence and love of freedom while he is in fact using these very words
to conceal his career of man-pleasing and flattery, changing his cast of mind and socalled
“convictions” several times a day, depending on the different social groups he
happens to be in. But if you are free from this sin, are you not guilty of one which is its
direct opposite, although it is often combined with flattery? I mean by this the habit of
abuse, which has now spread with horrifying force among the younger generation,
especially the revolutionaries. Many of them do not pronounce the word “and” as often as
vulgar words of abuse. This may be against the person they are talking to, in order to
make it clear to their opponents how shameless they are and so prevent their opponents
from trying to put them to shame; or else they simply sprinkle their speech with this
shameless invective to make their own souls become coarsened more quickly and so not
feel any pangs of conscience for their criminal condition. — Even if you do not abuse to
so great a degree and have not the least desire to smother your conscience, even so you
should restrain yourself from abusive words, because these will coarsen your soul and
grieve the people you talk to, even if you do not intend to offend them. The Lord is
especially angered by those who call their neighbour ‘devil’ or use the expressions ‘The
devil take you’ (or ‘him’, or ‘me’). No Christian who values his salvation will start
saying such words, even without anger.”
There is one more virtue which it is essential to acquire if you wish to move ahead
in spiritual life. This is the virtue of patience, about which our contemporaries so dislike
to hear, which is why they have destroyed both their souls and their country. However, it
is difficult to speak of the beauty of virtues at confession, since its most immediate
purpose is repentance of sins. So I will tell you about the sin of impatience. “Aren’t you
guilty of this sin? Probably a good half of the quarrels in your family have been caused
by the fact that you have not tried to restrain for a short time the feeling of irritation at
some carelessness or injustice, or at some offence you had been caused. Once there was a
monk who could not put up with life in his monastery and had definitely decided to leave
the community, but his elder advised him to write six words on a piece of paper: “I will
endure for Jesus Christ.” He told him to read them every time he was upset and felt the
desire to leave the monastery. The monk thought that no good at all would come of this,
but even so he decided to try it a few times. And what do you think happened? He was
calmed every time when he read these words, and after he had done it a few times he
stopped taking offense at the brethren altogether and understood that the very offenses
were for the most part only imaginary, and his brothers had not even wanted to offend
him. — If you prescribe yourself the podvig of patience, then you will also observe the
Church fasts, since the Councils excommunicate a Christian for two years if he does not
keep them. Observing the fasts is the best way, firstly, of acquiring the virtue of patience;
secondly. of not wasting all your earnings on your personal needs and so being able to
put something aside for charity and, finally, of keeping lustful passions in check and
having a greater inclination towards prayer and spiritual reading.”
When the priest has interrogated the sinner about everything that he found
necessary or at least about everything that he found possible in the short time of
confession, then besides giving specific advice about particular passions and sins, he
must give a short exhortation about preserving the soul from temptations. Here he must
without fail warn him of the moral agony which is caused by his terrible and sinful
habits.
“Anyone who commits a terrible sin and does not repent of it will become gloomy
and hopeless like Cain. Even before he realizes what a terrible thing he has done he
begins to feel a grief, which at first he does not understand, as Saul did. He becomes
irritable and starts finding fault with his near ones and those around him. The affection of
his children, wife and parents no longer makes him happy, but becomes burdensome for
him. If he has been engaged in some elevating occupation, either intellectual or social
work, it now seems quite foreign to his soul: he would like to get away from himself, but
there is nowhere to go. It is doubly burdensome for him to be with those whom he has
criminally deceived — his wife, for example, if he is deceiving her, or his employer, if he
is robbing him. He seeks either solitude or the company of corrupt people who have
nothing against such things as those which are weighing on his conscience. But in either
case he is seeking oblivion, and he can find this, although not for long, in drunkenness,
only to be crushed subsequently by his conscience redoubled in strength, and demanding
oblivion again and again, at the bottom of which he finds despair and often suicide, the
eternal destruction of the soul, after which even the Church’s prayers are powerless.
Blessed will be that sinner who is horrified in time at his fall, admits it to the priest and
asks forgiveness of those before whom he is guilty. But the deeper his fall has been, the
more hardened his soul becomes, and the harder it will be for him to humble himself and
repent. If you are now filled with feelings of repentance, then you should realize that
every time you repeat or aggravate your sin the feelings of repentance will grow dim and
flee from you like a morning shadow. It is not for nothing that even a sinner praying in
church grievously cries out, “No tears, no repentance have I, nor compunction. But do
Thou Thyself as God, O Savior, grant me these.”xliv If only people thought, before
resolving on committing a sin, what torment they would experience as a consequence of
it even while still here on earth, in the ordinary conditions of life, they would turn away
from temptations with as much resolve as they would from a tasty but fatal poison. “Sin
shows me sweet things, but ever makes me taste and swallow bitter.”xlv
And so, bringing his counsel to a conclusion, the spiritual father says: “Seek
spiritual joys, the joys of pure love and well doing. Force yourself to do at least
something in fulfillment of this commandment; prescribe at least some constant labour
for the glory of God and the salvation of your soul; then sin will continuously lose its
attraction for you and finally (or perhaps immediately) will become repulsive, as the
Apostle Paul writes, ‘Walk in the Spirit, and ye shall not fulfill the lust of the flesh’ (Gal.
5:16).”
Bringing to an end our exposition of advice to guide people in their struggle
against the passions and in the healing of individual sins, we do not, I repeat, make any
claim either to completeness or to a strictly systematic arrangement; for this subject is
endless, just as the variety of human characters, situations and dispositions is endless. We
will be satisfied if even a few spiritual fathers will read this and say, “Yes, now I have
found out what is the essence of my task as a spiritual father, and I think I will be able,
with God’s help, to say what is necessary even when my parishioners come to me with
attitudes, deeds and admissions about which nothing has been said here.”
However, there is something else which we consider essential to add. We have
been speaking of the spiritual curing of sinners, but we should say at least two or three
words about the spiritual guidance of the righteous. By these we do not mean those
Christians who have already subdued their passions and could teach the spiritual father
himself how to be saved; but we mean rather those who are less confirmed in virtue, but
still occupy themselves with their salvation and struggle preeminently in prayer and
fasting. They must be protected from being carried away by mysticism of the Khlyst
variety, and warned that the Holy Fathers strictly forbid people to squeeze feelings of
prayerful exaltation or compunction out of themselves or to stimulate them artificially in
any way. A person who does this is mistaking a purely physical sensation for spiritual
exaltation; his heart palpitates, his breath comes in gasps, he has spasms and so on, and
then, satisfied by such sensations, he begins to think that he is a great man of prayer, a
spiritual person, and falls into proud self-delusion. While they forbid people to force their
feelings, the fathers command us to force our attention into all the words and thoughts of
a prayer — it is better to read fewer prayers, and pay more attention. Feelings do not
depend on our will, but are sent by God as a gift of grace, which we can and should value
very highly, but we must in no way deem ourselves superior to others or boast if we
receive it. If it is long withheld from a person who prays or is taken away at times, then
he should carefully think whether he is being hindered by some unrecognized sin, a
secretly conceived passion or sinful worry over some worldly matter, and, if so, start
struggling against it. But if his memory and conscience testify that this is not so, then he
should patiently continue laboring at prayer, and the Lord will send compunction when it
will be most useful for his soul — when he stops being impatient and presumptuous. Also
the priest should persistently warn the faithful not to ask for visions and miracles, since
Christians who begin asking for these are well on the way to spiritual delusion (prelest)
and superstitions. Also, they should not be in a hurry to see the machinations of demons
at work every time they experience some failure: we are too insignificant, in the spiritual
sense, for evil spirits to take much trouble over us, since even without this we do what
pleases them. We should consider attacks demonic only when we are set upon by an
onslaught of malicious hatred, or of despondency and despair, if they have no other
cause, or of unexpected and unself-induced attacks of lust. While restraining his spiritual
children from desiring miracles and visions and demanding them from God, the priest
should remind them that they should mentally place themselves before God during
prayer. Furthermore, and this is especially important, he should remind them that not only
do we look up mentally to God during prayer, but also the Lord, as ever, is looking down
upon us, looking into our hearts, reading our thoughts and attending to our petitions and
our words of praise. This thought always drives inattention and distraction away from a
person who is praying; for if a person talking to a king pays close attention to every word
the king says and penetrates into its meaning, concentrates and is respectful, then it
follows that someone talking to the Lord, feeling the gaze of the All-Seeing One directed
upon him, will be filled with reverent trembling and holy compunction.