Introduction
We were created to live on earth unlike animals who die and
disappear with time, but with the high purpose to live with God —not for a
hundred years or so—but for eternity!
Every individual instinctively strives for happiness. This
desire has been implanted in our nature by the Creator Himself, and therefore
it is not sinful. But it is important to understand that in this temporary life
it is impossible to find full happiness, because that comes from God and cannot
be attained without Him. Only He, who is the ultimate Good and the source of
all good, can quench our thirst for happiness.
Material things can never wholly satisfy us. Indeed, we know
from experience that every item we have desired has pleased us only for a short
while. Then it became boring, and we started to desire something else. This
process of satisfaction and boredom then repeated itself many times. The most
striking example of unquenchable thirst for happiness was Solomon, the famous
King of Israel, who lived around 1000 B.C. He was so rich that all the
household utensils in his palaces were made of pure gold. He was so wise that
kings and famous people from far away lands came to hear him. He was so famous
that his foes trembled at the mere mention of his name. He could easily satisfy
any of his wishes, and it seemed that there was no pleasure that he did not
possess or could not obtain. But with all of this, Solomon could not find total
happiness to the end of his life. He described his many years of searching for
happiness and his continual disappointments in the book of Ecclesiastes, which
he began with the following phrase: Vanity of vanities, all is vanity (Ecc.
1:2).
Innumerable other wise people who were also successful in life
came to the same conclusion. It seems that in the depth of our subconscious
something reminds us that we are just wanderers on this earth and that our true
happiness is not here but there, in that other and better world known as
Paradise or the Heavenly Kingdom. Let man own the whole world and everything
that is in it, yet all this will interest him for no more than a short period,
while the immortal soul, thirsting for personal communication with God, will
remain unsatisfied.
Jesus Christ, the Son of God, came to this earth in order to
return to us our lost capacity to spend eternity in the blissful presence of
God. He revealed to people that all their evil lies in sin and that no one
through their own efforts can overcome the evil within themselves and attain
communion with God. Sin, ingrained in our nature since the fall, stands between
us and God like a high wall. If the Son of God had not descended to us through
His mercy for us, had not taken on our human nature, and had not by His death
conquered sin, all mankind would have perished for ever! Now, thanks to Him,
those who wish to cleanse themselves from evil can do so and return to God and
obtain eternal bliss in the Kingdom of Heaven.
Now we will discuss in detail how you can achieve this aim. We
will examine:
Which benefits were
granted to us by Our Lord Jesus Christ.
How Jesus Christ
lived on earth and suffered for us.
Which path leads to
the Kingdom of Heaven.
How Jesus Christ
helps us to walk along the path of salvation.
The Benefits the Lord Jesus Christ Has Granted Us
In order to evaluate the benefits given us by our Lord Jesus
Christ, let us first remember what blessings the first man Adam had while he
was sinless, and what sorrows befell him and all of mankind after his fall into
sin.
The first man, having been created in the image and likeness
of his Creator, had the most vital and close relationship with Him and
therefore enjoyed total happiness. God, having created Adam in His image and
likeness, endowed him with many of His qualities. The most important of these
was immortality. God, being all-just, created Adam sinless and pure. Being
all-blessed, He created Adam blessed also, and this blessedness or beatitude
was meant to increase in him day by day.
As the book of Genesis states, Adam lived in the most
beautiful garden (named Eden or Paradise), planted by God, and there he enjoyed
all the blessings of life. He knew no sickness nor suffering. He feared
nothing, and all beasts submitted to him as their master. Adam suffered neither
cold nor heat. Although he toiled by caring for the garden of Eden, he did so
with pleasure. His soul was filled with awareness of the Divine presence, and
he loved his Creator with his whole heart. Adam was always calm and happy and
knew no unpleasantness, sorrow, or concern. All his desires were pure,
righteous, and orderly; his memory, intellect, and all other faculties were in
harmony and were constantly being perfected. Being pure and innocent, he was
always with God and conversed with Him as with his Father, and in return God
loved him as His own beloved son. In brief, Adam was in Paradise, and Paradise
was within him.
If Adam had not sinned, he would have remained forever
blessed, and all his descendants would have enjoyed blessedness. It was for
this very purpose that God had created man. But Adam, having succumbed to the
tempter-devil, transgressed against the law of the Maker and took pleasure in
the taste of the forbidden fruit. When God appeared to Adam right after he had
sinned, Adam, instead of repenting and promising obedience henceforth, began to
justify himself and to blame his wife. Eve in turn blamed the serpent for
everything. And so it was that sin became a part of human nature, deeply
injuring it because of the lack of repentance of Adam and Eve. The existing
communion with the Maker was cut and the blessedness lost. Having lost Paradise
within himself, Adam became unworthy of the external Paradise and was therefore
banished from it.
After the fall into sin, Adam's soul darkened: his thoughts
and desires became muddled, and his imagination and memory began to cloud.
Instead of peace and joy he met sorrow, agitation, ruination, misery, and woe.
He experienced hard labor, poverty, hunger, and thirst. And after years of
unsurpassed sorrows, sickly old age began to oppress him, and death neared.
Worst of all, the devil, the perpetrator of every evil, obtained through sin
the ability to influence Adam and to further alienate him from God.
The whole of nature, which had previously served Adam as a
means to happiness, had now become hostile to him. From then on Adam and all
his descendants began to suffer from cold and heat and to experience hunger and
the effect of changes in climate and environmental conditions. Animals became
unfriendly toward people and looked upon them as enemy or prey. Adam's
descendants began to suffer from different diseases, which gradually became
more varied and severe. Men forgot that they were brothers and began to fight
with each other, to hate, to deceive, to attack and to kill each other. And
finally, after all kinds of hard labors and tribulations, they were doomed to
die, and, as sinners, to go to Hades and experience eternal punishment there.
No man, even the most talented and powerful, nor all of
mankind in unison, could ever restore what Adam lost when he sinned in Eden.
What would have happened to us and to all of mankind if Jesus Christ in His
mercy had not come to redeem us?
But we should all thank our Heavenly Father for taking pity on
us. He loves us far more than we are capable of loving ourselves. And because
of His infinite love, He has sent His only-begotten Son, our Lord Jesus Christ,
to rid us from our sins and from the snare of the devil and to lead us into the
eternal Kingdom of Heaven.
Through His teachings Jesus Christ scattered the darkness of
ignorance and all possible error and enlightened the world with the light of
the true faith. Now anyone who desires it can come to know the will of God and
attain eternal life.
By His way of life Christ showed us how to live to attain
salvation. And He also assists us constantly in everything good. By His most
precious blood Jesus washed away our sins and made of us children of God, who
were slaves of passions and the devil. Those torments we, as transgressors of
the will of God, would have had to suffer, He bore for us. By His death He
crushed the power of the devil, destroyed the power of hell, and delivered us
from death. By His resurrection He gave us life and opened the gates of
Paradise to all. Therefore, death is no longer an irreversible tragedy but a
passage from this temporary world of vanity and sorrows to the world of bright
and joyous life. By His ascension into heaven Christ glorified our nature,
enabling us to share eternal bliss with the angels and all the heavenly
creatures.
It is impossible fully to comprehend and to describe all the
benefits that the Lord has prepared for us. Let us just say that all who choose
to believe in Him and to live a Christian life will become sons of God, will
attain Paradise, where the angels and the just reside, and will see God face to
face. They will rejoice with a pure and eternal joy, knowing no weariness,
sadness, or troubles.
It is so wonderful that Jesus Christ gives these benefits not
to a chosen few but to each and every person who desires to receive them! The
path to salvation has been shown and arranged; it has been made as smooth and
level as possible. Besides this, Jesus Himself constantly helps us along the
way, so to speak, leading us by the hand. It only remains for us not to oppose
Him, not to be obstinate, but to surrender ourselves to His will. So you can
see how much Jesus Christ loves us and what great blessings He is bestowing
upon us!
Let us consider for a moment what would happen if Jesus were
to appear before us now and ask: "My children! Do you love Me for all that
I have done for you and do you value those blessings that I bestow upon
you?" Who among us would not answer Him: "Yes, Lord! I love You and
am grateful to You!"
If, then, we truly love Jesus Christ with our hearts and not
just with our words, and if we are grateful to Him, are we then not bound to
carry out what He wills for us to do? When a person truly loves his benefactor,
he expresses his gratitude by doing what pleases his benefactor.
How Jesus Christ Lived and Suffered for Us
The basis of life is love: Love the Lord your God with all
your heart, with all your soul, with all your mind and with all your strength,
and love your neighbor as yourself (Mk. 12:30-31). Because of our sinfulness,
none of us is capable of loving God and our neighbors in such a complete and
perfect manner. Only Jesus Christ truly loved everyone, even His enemies.
His infinite love was evidenced in His every word and deed.
Being the only-begotten Son of God and God Himself, Jesus Christ in His pity
for us came down from Heaven and was incarnate, becoming in everything the same
as us, except in sin. Being the Sovereign Heavenly King, before Whom all Angels
and creatures tremble, He deigned to take on the image of an ordinary person,
to restore our corrupted nature. While possessing all the treasures of the
world, He agreed to be born in poverty, lying in a manger in a dark cave.
Being the supreme Lawgiver, Jesus Christ during His earthly
life humbly submitted to all the decrees and commandments of the Jewish
religious law. Thus, on the eighth day after His birth, He submitted to
circumcision, and on the fortieth day His Mother brought Him into the temple
and there paid the redemption fee for Him, the Ruler of the Universe. As was
fitting for a boy and then later a youth, He always obeyed His earthly Mother
and helped His foster father, the elderly Joseph. Once mature, He treated the
Jewish elders and leaders with respect, as well as the Roman governors, and
paid the required taxes. He willingly lived in poverty and often, while
travelling to preach, had no place to rest His head. Christ, to Whom all nature
submits, Himself served people and even washed the feet of His disciples, who
were uneducated fishermen.
Jesus Christ constantly prayed to His Heavenly Father, even at
night when the others were asleep. On Sabbath days at a synagogue, He took part
in the communal prayers and the reading of the Scriptures, and on the major
feast days He made pilgrimages to the temple at Jerusalem.
With all His love and diligence Jesus fulfilled that
commission for which His Heavenly Father sent Him, directing everything toward
His Father's glory. He felt pity for all people, especially for the poor and
underprivileged, wished well to everyone, and was willing to bear anything in
order to ease their suffering. He bore all conceivable affronts and insults
from the ungrateful crowd with the greatest meekness, and did not vent His
anger on those who slandered Him and plotted intrigues against Him. Some who
bore Christ ill-will called Him a sinner and lawbreaker; others called Him a
carpenter's son and a shallow person; still others said He was a friend of
drunkards and sinners. On several occasions Christ's enemies attempted to stone
Him or toss Him from a mountaintop. Jewish scribes called His divine teachings
deceitful; and when He healed the sick, raised the dead, or exorcised demons,
they explained away these miracles as the deeds of an evil spirit. Some even
openly called Him possessed. The Lord Jesus, being Almighty God, could have
destroyed them all with one word. Instead, He pitied them as spiritually blind
and prayed for their welfare and for their salvation.
In brief, from His early youth till His very death, Jesus
Christ constantly did good to all people, even when, instead of being grateful
to Him, they caused Him anguish and pain. He was especially hated by the Jewish
elders, high priests, and scribes—whose mission it was to teach the people
goodness and to lead them toward faith. They worked with all their might to
keep the people from believing in Jesus as the God-sent Messiah, distorting the
meaning of the prophecies that predicted His coming. They contradicted all that
He said or did. Jesus did not grieve so much that the Jewish leaders fought
against Him as He did from the fact that they were rushing blindly toward doom,
taking the simple people along with them.
Not long before His death, Jesus worked His greatest miracle:
He resurrected Lazarus, who had already been in the grave for four days and
whose body had started to decompose. This miracle took place in the presence of
a great crowd and made an overwhelming impression on them all. After this
miracle, many of the unbelieving Jews started to believe in Jesus as the
Messiah. But the high priests and the scribes, being envious of His fame,
hastily gathered and decided to put Christ to death without delay, together
with Lazarus whom He had resurrected.
Knowing that the days of His earthly life were drawing to an
end, Christ gathered his disciples in a room near Mount Zion for the mystical
last supper. Here He instituted the Mystery of Holy Communion and gave His last
commandments to the disciples. After that He went to the garden of Gethsemane,
where He experienced His most agonizing inner sufferings. The anguish was so
great that during prayer the sweat on His face became a sweat of blood. At that
moment the soul of the Savior was immersed into a terrible darkness and horror
at the unbearable sins which He was taking upon Himself. Jesus knew that he had
to wash away with His most Holy blood all the countless transgressions of
billions of people, beginning with Adam and including all future generations.
Overwhelmed by the oppression of the world's evil, Jesus Christ exclaimed:
"My soul is exceedingly sorrowful, even to death" (Matt. 26:38).
No one can truly comprehend what the pure soul of the God-man
experienced in the garden of Gethsemane. You can imagine, however, that all the
loathsome sins of mankind were revealed to Him in all their ugliness and that
the pure soul of the God-man was shocked and depressed by this terrible sight.
Christ knew that His great sufferings and boundless love would be appreciated
by only a few, that the majority of the people would turn away from Him with
indifference, and that some would reject His teachings and would cruelly
persecute those who believed in Him. He foresaw that among His followers there
would be many hypocrites who would turn faith into a means for profit and that
there would be false teachers and false prophets who would distort His
teachings and who, because of pride and greed, would entice the faithful into
harmful sects. He foresaw that false pastors would appear, who, because of
ambition, would create schisms in the Church. Christ knew not only that many
Christians would fail to love God and live righteously but also that they would
give themselves to heinous crimes and vices, so that by their sins they would
even surpass pagans, and as a result the Christian faith would be scandalized.
In these most trying sufferings, while justice and loyalty to
His Father demanded from Christ that He destroy mankind as ungrateful and
criminal, the feelings of pity and sorrow ultimately stirred Him to accept all
sufferings and death itself to save us sinners from the power of the devil and
from eternal damnation.
While Jesus was still praying, a mob with torches and clubs,
along with some soldiers who were sent by the Jewish elders, came into the
garden. They bound Him and dragged Him, as they would an evildoer, to the high
priest for trial. The Apostles, whom He loved so much and brought so close to
Himself, faintheartedly left Him and fled. Then the leaders and all the
Sanhedrin quickly assembled at the home of the high priest, where they brought
a multitude of the most ridiculous accusations against Christ. None of these,
however, was enough to warrant a sentence of death. The high priest demanded
that Jesus, while He was under oath, state whether or not He was the promised
Messiah, the Son of God. After He affirmed that He was, the Sanhedrin accused
Him of blasphemy and sentenced Him to death. After this, the members of the
council, unable to hold back their hatred of Jesus any longer, surrounded Him
and subjected Him to beatings and all kinds of insults.
The Romans, however, had deprived the Sanhedrin of the power
to execute anyone. So, the next morning, on Friday, the day before the
Passover, the Jewish leaders brought Jesus Christ to a new trial before the
Roman governor Pontius Pilate, hoping that Pilate would affirm their decision.
Pilate, realizing that they were accusing Christ out of envy, wanted to let Him
go. But the high priests and elders threatened that they would complain about
him to the Roman emperor. Not wishing to jeopardize his career, Pilate decided
to address the people who had gathered there. Reminding the people of the
custom to free some prisoner on the eve of the Passover holiday, Pilate asked
them which of the two they would want him to set free: Barabbas or Christ
(Barabbas was a robber who had been imprisoned for some crime). While the mob
of people were talking among themselves, the Jewish leaders convinced them to
ask for Barabbas' release and to demand that Christ be crucified on the cross.
The people forgot the innumerable good deeds of Christ: from
how many of them He had exorcised demons, how many He had healed of leprosy,
blindness, weakness and other incurable diseases, how many He had turned from
debauchery to the path of goodness, and to how many of the despairing He had
returned hope.
The Roman soldiers submitted the Lord to scourging and
cursing. Finally they placed on Him a purple cloak and on His head a crown of
thorns. Pilate then brought out the wounded Christ, hoping the people would
feel pity and ask for His release. Instead they began to shout, "Crucify
Him! Crucify Him!" On hearing this, Pilate decided to give up. He
halfheartedly washed his hands as a sign of non-participation in the conviction
of an innocent man, ordered the release of Barabbas, and handed Christ over to
the Jewish leaders for them to dispose of.
The soldiers gave Christ the wooden cross on which He was to
be crucified and ordered Him to carry it to the execution site, known as
Golgotha (meaning "place of the skull"). There they removed His outer
clothing and nailed Him to the cross. Two robbers, one on either side, were
crucified with Him. Thus, in the most humiliating circumstances, as if He were
a great criminal, they executed the One Who with the divine light dispelled the
darkness of fallacies and Who with His boundless love defeated hate! Dear God!
How cruel and blind people can be!
But those who hated Christ could not satisfy their hatred.
Even on the dying Sufferer they piled more curses and with sneers demanded a miracle.
When He asked for water to quench His thirst, they gave Him vinegar. And thus,
deserted by all, wounded, bleeding and suffocating, fatigued by an unbearable
thirst, He, the one who once breathed life into the first man, died the
cruelest of deaths! Even soulless nature recoiled at this crime: the sun
darkened and the earth quaked.
For whom, then, did the Savior of the world suffer? He
suffered for all mankind, for enemies and tormentors, for those who, having
received many benefits from Him, failed to thank Him. He suffered for each and
every one of us, stubborn sinners, who daily sadden Him with our indifference,
ingratitude, hatred, lies, and wicked deeds, and who, by these innumerable
sins, crucify Him again and again.
In order to appreciate more fully the boundless love of Jesus
Christ and the extent of His sacrifice, let us remind ourselves how great He is
and how insignificant we are. Indeed, Christ is the true God, equal to the
Father and the Holy Spirit. He resides in an unreachable world, this all
powerful Creator of the universe, this immortal King before whom bow countless
hosts of angels. He is the undying fountain of life, the Lord of all that is
visible and invisible, the formidable Judge of the living and the dead. This
same Jesus suffered for us sinful and worthless creatures. Who can comprehend
this mystery of Godly Love?
The Path into the Kingdom of Heaven
The road into the Kingdom of Heaven was made by the Lord Jesus
Christ, and He was the first one who travelled it. The Bible teaches that only
he who follows Jesus can reach His Kingdom. But how can one follow Him? Hear
what our Savior says about this: Whoever desires to come after Me, let him deny
himself, and take up his cross, and follow Me (Mark 8:34).
The words whoever desires mean that Christ does not compel
anyone to follow Him. He has no need of the unwilling ones, but He desires that
each person freely follow Him. Consequently, only those who willingly choose
the Savior's path reach the Kingdom of Heaven.
Christian! Your salvation or perdition is entirely in your own
hands. In His unspeakable wisdom and love, the Lord has given you freedom to
chose what you wish, and He does not force you to do anything against your
will. Therefore, if you truly wish to follow Jesus Christ, He will show you the
way into the Kingdom of Heaven and will help you along each step. If you do not
wish to follow Him, it is your decision. But take care not to disdain the grace
of God! Pitying you, Jesus Christ knocks for a long time at the door of your
heart, waiting for your decision to save yourself. But woe to you if He, tiring
of waiting, turns His face away from you, as a hopeless son or daughter of
perdition. Then no one, neither the most powerful and influential person, nor
all the angels in heaven, will be able to help you!
That is why it is extremely important to nourish in ourselves
the desire and resolve to follow the path of salvation. To make this desire
grow in us and strengthen our resolve, we must learn where the path Christ
showed us leads and how to follow it. These questions are of such extreme
importance we will discuss them in detail.
1. First of all, a Christian must thoroughly study the
foundations of the Christian faith. To that end, you must read and reread the
Holy Scriptures on a regular basis, especially the books of the New Testament.
You must not only learn their contents but also develop an interest in their
origin, who wrote them and when, how they were preserved and have been handed
down to us, and why they are called Divine and Sacred. You must study the Holy
Books with simplicity of heart, without prejudice or excessive inquisitiveness,
not trying to discover hidden mysteries but trying to learn that which leads us
to self-improvement. Certainly all that is necessary for us to know for our
salvation is revealed quite clearly and in detail in the Scriptures.
It is important also to study our God-given faith in detail,
since he who is indifferent toward truth is in danger of becoming easy prey for
false teachers. It is so sad that many Orthodox Christians perish simply
because of their disregard for Christ's teachings. Having access to the light,
they wander in the dark.
The studying of the faith should conform to your aptitudes and
knowledge. For instance, for the serious student, in addition to studying the
Scriptures, it is also useful to become familiar with the works of the Church
Fathers and with the historical and theological books written by other Orthodox
authors. These books will help you to comprehend your faith more deeply, which
in turn will give you an opportunity to strengthen others in the Orthodox
faith, to whom these books are unavailable.
2. When you become convinced that our Orthodox faith is based
on Holy Scriptures and is not invented by people and that the Holy Scriptures
contain the true word of God, revealed by the Holy Spirit through prophets and
apostles— accept it with all your trusting heart. Believe the Holy Scriptures
without doubt or philosophizing, pushing aside all heretical explanations. If
you humbly accept Christ's truth, then your faith will become strong and will
lead you to salvation.
3. Finally, try to nourish a diligence in yourself to follow
that which is taught by the Holy Scriptures. But if you do not have such
diligence, fall down before the Savior and with a sincere prayer ask Him to
send you a zealous wish to live according to His commandments. Then, when the
grace of God starts leading you toward salvation, follow it, valiantly
repelling the snares of the devil, who will attempt to detract you from
Christ's path.
To illustrate what was just said about the path into the
Kingdom of Heaven, let's assume that unexpectedly you became the sole heir of a
rich relative. This relative, before dying, willed his magnificent mansion on
the top of a picturesque mountain to you. Loving solitude, he had not built any
roads but reached his mansion by a trail. In order to help you take possession
of the property, he left you a map of the mountain, indicating the correct
trail on it. The mountain has many other trails, none of which reached the
mansion; some lead to a dead end, and others to a steep cliff. Therefore, in
order to reach your mansion, you have to take the trail indicated by your
loving relative.
Prudence would suggest that, before undertaking such a trip,
you should carefully study the map of the mountain, obtaining all the necessary
supplies for the climb and being prepared to spend the night on the mountain,
if necessary. It would be good to ask a ranger about landmarks on the mountain
and how best to avoid losing your way or straying from the correct trail.
Certainly, being a person with common sense, you would make all necessary
preparations before setting off on this new trail.
Similarly, to reach the Kingdom of Heaven, we should determine
which path leads to it, how not to falter, what we must beware of, etc. Our map
is the Holy Scriptures and other Orthodox books; the rangers are the pastors of
the Church, whose duty it is to help the faithful on their way toward Paradise.
The provisions are the Mysteries (Sacraments) of the Church, which reinforce
our spiritual strength. Sometimes the path leading to Paradise may become
narrow, steep and overgrown with bushes, whereas other paths may seem wider and
easier to travel. It is very important not to stray from the correct path. The
Lord Jesus Christ and His Apostles repeatedly warned that there is but one path
that leads to the Kingdom of Heaven, the one given in the Gospel. All others,
especially the wide and comfortable ones, lead to perdition.
Let us now examine more closely the path indicated to us by
our Lord Jesus Christ. He said: Whoever desires to come after Me must:
Deny himself
Take up his cross
Follow Me
Thus, a follower of Christ must begin by denying himself. This
means that you must disown all bad habits, free your heart from sinful bonds
(like hunger for money, luxury, fame, power over others, etc.), squelch impure
thoughts, harbor no lustful desires, distance yourself from situations leading
to sin, and, in general, do nothing because of stubbornness or ego but do all
for the love of God and with the desire to contribute to the glory of His Holy
Name. In other words, to deny yourself is to be dead indeed to sin but alive to
God, as St. Paul has explained in Rom. 6:11.
Then, it is necessary for a disciple and follower of Christ to
take up his cross. The cross means the various difficulties and sorrows
associated with a Christian life. Crosses may be external as well as internal.
To take up your cross means to tolerate everything without complaining,
regardless of how unpleasant things might become. For example, if someone has
insulted you or laughed at you or provoked you, bear it all without anger or resentment.
Similarly, if you helped someone and he, instead of showing gratitude, made up
deceitful tales about you or if you wanted to do something good but were unable
to accomplish it, bear it without despondency. Did some misfortune befall you?
Did someone in your family become ill, or despite all your efforts and tireless
labor did you repeatedly suffer failure? Has some other thing or person
oppressed you? Bear all with patience in the name of Jesus Christ. Do not
consider yourself punished unjustly, but accept everything as your cross.
To bear your cross means not only to accept patiently all
difficulties that befall you but also to strive for spiritual perfection, as
the Scriptures teach us. For example, we must do good to others: work for the
prosperity of your parish, visit the sick and imprisoned, help the needy,
collect money for the poor, and assist in spreading spiritual enlightenment. In
other words, we must seek out tasks which will lead to the salvation and
welfare of those around us and then, with perseverance and meekness, strive in
that direction by our actions, words, prayer, and advice.
Should the prideful thought arise that you are better or
smarter than others, quickly cast it aside because it will undermine all your
good efforts. Blessed is he who carries his cross with prudence and humility,
because God will never allow such a person to perish but will guide and
strengthen him with His Holy Spirit.
In following Jesus Christ, it is not enough to carry only an
outward cross. Indeed, external crosses are borne not only by Christians but by
everyone; there exists no person free from one or more sorrows. He who wishes
to become a true disciple of Christ must also carry his own inner cross.
An inner cross comes more readily than an outer one. In a
state of repentance, you need only direct your thoughts inward to study your
soul, and instantly a multitude of crosses will appear. For instance, reflect
on how you were created and what is the purpose of your life. Are you living
according to Christ's teaching, are you accomplishing something good, are you
growing spiritually? Meditate about this in some depth, and soon you will come
to realize that you are failing in many important areas. God created you so
that with all your works, life, and being you should contribute to the
spreading of good and the strengthening of His Kingdom. You, however, have not
only failed in this, but, by your sins, you have rejected and even insulted
Christ. Reflect on what awaits you beyond the grave and on what side you will
find yourself at the Last Judgment: with the righteous or with the evildoers?
And if you seriously reflect on all this, you will naturally become distressed
and will regret your many words and deeds—and these painful feelings and the
desire for repentance will become your inner cross. If you continue attentively
to study yourself, you will find many other inner crosses. For instance, hell,
which you have so carelessly avoided considering until now, will suddenly
appear to you as a very real threat. Paradise, which the Lord has prepared for
you and which has barely crossed your mind, will vividly present itself to you
as it really is: a place of eternal and pure joy from which you have deprived
yourself by your careless way of life.
If, in spite of the inner turmoil brought about by such
reflections, you firmly resolve to repent and amend your ways and, if, instead
of consoling yourself with earthly enjoyments, you diligently pray to the Lord
to save you and you decide to surrender yourself totally to His will, then the
Lord will reveal to you more clearly the state of your soul so that you may be
totally healed. Our problem is that the actual condition of our spiritual
sickness is hidden from us under a thick mantle of self-love and passions. Only
occasionally, thanks to our conscience, do we get a glimpse of our major and
most obvious spiritual wounds.
Usually the devil, knowing how good it is for us to recognize
our moral illness, uses all his wiles to prevent us from doing so and tells us
that all is well and there is no need to worry. But when he sees that we are
really serious about becoming true Christians and with God's help are on the
way to restoring our spiritual health, then the devil uses craftier means: he
presents to us our internal illnesses in such a hopeless condition that we
become bewildered and despair of our salvation. If the Lord permitted the devil
to use this trick on all of us, few of us would find the strength to continue
the struggle. However, the Lord, as a knowledgeable physician, protects as from
despair. He heals our spiritual ulcers and encourages us as we heal.
Therefore, as the Lord restores your spiritual sight, you will
begin to comprehend more clearly that your heart is corrupt and that your
passions obstruct your path to God. You will begin to understand also that the
little good you have to your credit so far is damaged by your selfishness and
conceit. Then you will certainly grieve, and you will become frightened and
saddened: frightened because you are in danger of perishing forever, saddened
because you have declined for so long to listen to the gentle voice of God who
was calling you to salvation, and saddened because you have accomplished so
little good.
Although these inner crosses present themselves as burdensome,
do not despair and do not think that the Lord has abandoned you. No! He is
always with you and invisibly sustains you, even when you forget Him. He will
not burden you with trials beyond your capacity. Fear nothing, but with total
humbleness and devotion bear your cross and pray. He is the gentlest of fathers
that could be wished for. If on occasion He allows His faithful servants to be
tempted, it is only to remind them of their feebleness and to completely
cleanse their hearts from pride. In our hearts is where He intends to reside
with His Son and His Holy Spirit.
In time of sorrow do not seek comfort from people. Most people
are not experienced in affairs of salvation and are poor advisors. Make the
Lord your only helpmate, comforter, and tutor, and from Him alone ask help. The
man to whom the Lord sends afflictions is blessed a hundredfold, because it is
afflictions that cure our souls. In enduring sorrows, a Christian is likened to
Jesus Christ, who suffered for us. We should consider sorrows a gift from the
Lord and a sign of His care for our salvation.
If you bear your cross with perseverance and seek comfort only
from Him, then He, through His mercy, will not abandon you but will touch your
heart and will impart to you the gifts of the Holy Spirit. It is then that you
will feel an indescribable delight, a wonderful inner peace and joy such as you
have never experienced before, and at the same time you will feel an influx of
spiritual strength; prayer will become easier and your faith stronger. Then
your heart will be kindled with love of God and all people. All these are gifts
of the Holy Spirit.
When the Lord decides to honor you with such gifts, do not
consider them as rewards for your labors, and do not think that you have
attained perfection. Such thoughts come from pride. The comforts and grace of
the Holy Spirit are not rewards but gifts of divine mercy. Occasionally the
Lord allows us to get a foretaste of future blessings so that we will put forth
a greater effort in seeking His eternal Kingdom.
Finally, a disciple of Christ must follow Him. This means that
in all deeds and actions we must try to be like our Lord Jesus Christ in His
virtues. We must strive to live and act as He lived and acted. For example,
Jesus Christ always thanked His Heavenly Father and constantly prayed to Him.
Thus we also should constantly thank God and pray to Him in all circumstances,
whether successful or difficult.
Jesus Christ revered His Mother and submitted to lawful
authority. Thus we also should revere our parents and educators; we too should
respect those in positions of responsibility—provided their requests are not in
conflict with God's commandments.
Jesus Christ fervently and with love performed the task for
which His Father sent Him. We should also conscientiously and zealously perform
the duties which are laid upon us by God and civil authorities.
Jesus Christ loved everyone and did good to all. So should we
love our neighbor and do good to as many people as possible. Jesus Christ did
everything possible for the salvation of mankind. So must we do good to others,
not sparing our own well-being and time.
Jesus Christ voluntarily suffered and died for us. Therefore
we too must not grumble when some unpleasantness befalls us but be ready to
make sacrifices with humility and devotion to God. Jesus Christ not only
forgave His enemies their ingratitude and animosity but wished them well. So we
also must forgive our enemies, repaying them with good for their evil while
blessing those who revile us.
Jesus Christ, the king of heaven and earth, lived in poverty
and obtained His daily necessities through His own labor. So we also must be
industrious and content with what God has given us and not be consumed with
desire for riches for their own sake. In the words of the Savior: It is easier
for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter the
kingdom of God (Matt. 19:24).
Jesus Christ, being meek and humble of heart, never strove for
adulation but directed all toward the glory of His Father. We also must not
parade ourselves or seek recognition. For instance, do you help your neighbors,
do you give alms, do you live more piously than those around you, are you wiser
than your friends, or are you in some way above others? Do not brag about it.
Remember that all your praiseworthy attributes are not yours but gifts of God.
Yours are the weaknesses, mistakes and sins.
Following Jesus Christ means accepting with faith and
submitting to all that Christ taught without question and with simplicity of
heart. He who accepts Jesus Christ's words becomes His disciple, but he who
fulfills His commandments with complete devotion becomes His true and devoted
follower.
This is the meaning of denying yourself, taking up your cross,
and following Jesus Christ. This is the only straight path into the Kingdom of
Heaven. Christ walked this path and calls us to follow Him. There never was and
never will be any other path to salvation but this one, shown to us by Jesus!
To the beginner this path may seem too narrow and steep. But it seems this way
only because our understanding of divine blessings and happiness has become
distorted. Many of us regard the bitter as sweet and the sweet as bitter.
However, as we come closer to God, much of what seemed difficult or bitter
before will become easy or sweet, and what seemed to please before will come to
seem boring and harmful.
Of course, there will be trying periods in our life when the
path of ascension toward God will seem exceptionally difficult. Then we should
think that for every step taken there are a thousand rewards being prepared.
Sufferings along this path are momentary, but the rewards are eternal.
Therefore, do not fear the path of Christ, for a smooth and wide path ends in
hell, but a thorny and narrow one leads to Heaven.
Why did God not make the path to the Kingdom of Heaven light
and pleasant? Only God knows. Who would question His divine wisdom? He saw that
the narrow path is what we need! We who are below see only bits and pieces, but
He, Who is above all creation, sees our lives from the standpoint of eternity.
However, though not completely understanding the plans of our Creator, let us
consider the following:
1. The Kingdom of Heaven is the highest beatitude and
inexhaustible wealth. If great efforts are necessary to obtain meager and
temporary earthly advantages, then how can it be possible to obtain such a
great and eternal treasure without any effort?
2. The Kingdom of Heaven is the most coveted reward. Where
else are rewards given freely and for nothing? If we struggle to get temporary
benefits, so much more should we struggle to obtain the eternal reward.
3. We must bear our cross because we want to be with Christ
and to participate in His glory. If Jesus Christ, our Master and Teacher,
gained heavenly glory through suffering, would it not be shameful for us to
share His glory when we faintheartedly shun any trials or sorrows?
4. Besides, lifelong crosses are not the lot of Christians
alone. Everyone carries their own cross, both Christians and non-Christians,
believers and pagans. The difference is that for some, their crosses serve as a
means of attaining the Kingdom of Heaven, while for the others they bring no
such value. For the Christian, the cross gradually becomes lighter and more
joyful, while for the nonbeliever it becomes heavier and more burdensome. Why
is this so? Because where the one carries their cross with faith and devotion
to God, the other carries it with grumbling and anger.
Therefore, Christian, do not shun your lifelong cross, but, on
the contrary, thank Jesus Christ that He honored you to follow and imitate Him.
If Christ had not suffered and died, then none of us, no matter how much we
suffered and struggled, would enter the Kingdom of Heaven, for then we would
have had to suffer as slaves, and slaves deserve no rewards. Now, however, we
suffer as sons for our own salvation. O merciful Lord! How great is Thy love
for us. How great are Thy benefits to us. Thou bendest evil itself for our
benefit and salvation!
Christian! Gratitude alone to Jesus Christ, your benefactor,
obliges you to follow Him. Christ came down to earth for you. Can it be
possible that you would prefer some worldly thing to Him? For you Jesus drank
the cup full of suffering; can it be that you would refuse to suffer a little
for Him?
5. Jesus Christ redeemed us by His death, and, therefore, by
the right of redemption we belong to Him and must do all that He wills. Christ
wills only one thing: that we should attain eternal bliss.
6. Finally, we cannot avoid the narrow path into the Kingdom
of Heaven, since every man has sins and sin in itself is an ulcer that cannot
be cured without strong medicine. Suffering is the medicine with which God
cures our souls. When somebody is ill, then, regardless of his surroundings '
even though he is in the most magnificent of palaces—he will still suffer. Such
is the fate of every sinner; no matter where he settles, even in Paradise
itself, he will suffer because the elements of hell reside within him.
Similarly, a righteous person can be as happy in a shack as in a palace. When
our heart is filled with the Holy Spirit, wherever we may find ourselves, there
we will always feel joy, since Paradise is within us.
And so, brethren, if you wish to attain the Kingdom of Heaven,
you cannot bypass the path taken by Jesus Christ. Indeed, all the prophets, the
Apostles, the martyrs, the saints and countless other righteous ones walked
along this path. There is no other.
Some might object, saying, how can we who are sinful and weak
be like Jesus Christ or the saints! We live in the secular world and have
families and many responsibilities. Oh, brethren! This is a cunning excuse and
an insult to our Creator. To justify our carelessness by such reasoning means
to accuse our Maker of being unable to create us properly. After all, the
saints, like us, were not sinless at first but participated in worldly affairs,
labored and had various obligations and families to care about. Surely they
were not perfect in everything. They had their share of temptations and low
moments. Notwithstanding this, living in circumstances similar to ours and
having their ups and downs, they steered toward the main objective of their
life: the Kingdom of Heaven. Undoubtedly, we also, if we truly desire to, can
be good citizens, faithful spouses, loving parents, and simultaneously good
Christians. Our faith will not be an obstacle but, on the contrary, will aid
all our good undertakings. The essence of Christianity is pure and selfless
love, which is inspired by the Holy Spirit.
Therefore, brethren, if you wish to attain the Kingdom of
Heaven, follow the path which Jesus Christ took, and He, the all-merciful one,
will help you every step of the way.
How Jesus Christ Helps Us
While walking the path of Christ, you should not rely only on
yourself. If Jesus Christ, our Great Benefactor, had not given us help every
step of the way, no one could have reached salvation. Even the Apostles, when
left to themselves, were unable to follow Jesus and faintheartedly dispersed.
But when on Pentecost they received help from above, they joyfully followed His
path, and then neither dangers nor difficulties nor death itself could
discourage them.
What is this help given by Jesus Christ to Christians? This
help is the Grace of the Holy Spirit. God's grace surrounds us, and with it the
Lord draws us to Himself. All who wish can receive this help and become filled
with it.
The Holy Spirit, being God, equal to the Father and the Son,
is the source of life and strength. He gives to believers wisdom, inner peace
and inspiration, not according to their merits but for Jesus Christ's sake. How
the Holy Spirit helps us, what are His gifts, and how one should attract His
Grace will now be explained in accordance with the Holy Scriptures.
1. When descending upon a Christian, the Holy Spirit gives him
faith and light. No one can have a true living faith without the Holy Spirit.
Even a person most learned in Scriptures is totally blind without His
enlightenment. On the other hand, the Holy Spirit can make even the lowest
simpleton wise and disclose God's mysteries to them.
2. Descending upon a Christian, the Holy Spirit brings true
love which warms his heart. This love inspires a person to do good deeds, so
that for him there is nothing impossible or terrifying anymore. God's
commandments, which appeared to be difficult before, now become easy. Faith and
love, gifts from the Holy Spirit, are such powerful means that the person
possessing them can easily and joyfully follow the path of Jesus Christ.
3. The Holy Spirit corrects a worldly outlook and attitude, so
that a Christian is no longer overwhelmed by the temptations of this passing
world. Gratefully using what God has bestowed, a true Christian does not become
attached to anything temporary but considers himself a stranger in this world
and wishes most of all to be in contact with God. On the other hand, a person
without the grace of the Holy Spirit, despite all his learning and
capabilities, always remains a worshiper of the world and a slave of the flesh.
4. The Holy Spirit gives a Christian wisdom. This is
illustrated very obviously in the case of the Holy Apostles. Because of their
low social position, they were the most simple and unlearned of men. However,
after the descent of the Holy Spirit upon them on the day of Pentecost, they
received such wisdom and power of speech that even philosophers and orators
could not stand up to them. The Holy Spirit always teaches Christians what they
must do, and when and how they should act. Thus guided by the Holy Spirit, they
will always find the time and the means for the salvation of their soul. Amid
all the turmoils of the world and in spite of being busy, they will be able to
collect their inner self to be with and pray to God. A non-spiritual person, on
the other hand, cannot focus or pray sincerely, even in church.
5. The Holy Spirit gives Christians true joy and undisturbable
peace. They feel this peace and joy even during external difficulties and in
times of trial. People, on the other hand, who do not have the Holy Spirit, can
never truly rejoice or attain inner peace. When they enjoy themselves, they
find their joy is transient, frivolous and pitiful, and on occasion even
sinful. After their revelry, a boredom greater than ever before fills their
heart. Similarly, when a non-spiritual person feels tranquillity, this is not a
true spiritual peace but a sort of dozing or apathy. Woe to the people who do
not awaken in time and do not start being concerned with the salvation of their
soul! They will remain spiritually dead even while alive physically.
6. The Holy Spirit gives true humility. Even the most
intelligent people, if they do not possess the Holy Spirit, cannot know
themselves well enough, because their internal illness and spiritual poverty
are hidden from them. When they do something good or act honestly, they become
haughty, look down on others, and even judge those who in their opinion are
inferior to them. Through their own blindness, many self-satisfied falsely
righteous ones did not ask the Holy Spirit for guidance and strengthening, and
consequently, perished. The Holy Spirit always comes to those who ask for
enlightenment and help. As a bright ray of sun penetrates the darkness,
enhancing the smallest details found within, so does the Holy Spirit, having
descended upon people, disclose to them all the weakness and wretchedness of
their soul. Enlightened by the Heavenly light, Christians can no longer boast
about their good works, because they realize their soul needs healing and
complete renewal. This realization makes them more humble, and they begin to
repent and decide to live more carefully. They stop relying on themselves and
ask God for guidance and help.
7. The Holy Spirit grants true fervent prayer. Until they
receive the Holy Spirit, people cannot pray in a manner truly pleasing to God
because they cannot control their scattered thoughts and feelings. Christians
in whom the Holy Spirit resides, however, vividly feel the presence of God;
their prayer flows evenly, and they know how and for what to ask God. In this
inspired state, they can beseech God for anything, even the seemingly
impossible.
This is a short list of the most needed gifts of the Holy
Spirit.
In summary, it is impossible to enter the Kingdom of Heaven or
even come close to it without the assistance of the Holy Spirit. Therefore, we
should implore the Holy Spirit with all earnestness to come dwell in us and
help us, just as He helped the Holy Apostles. In order for the Holy Spirit to
be kind toward us, to descend and reside within us, it is important to know
what draws Him to us and what pushes Him away.
Jesus Christ said that the Holy Spirit blows where it wills
and you hear the sound of it, but cannot tell where it comes from and where it
goes (Jn. 3:8). This means that a person cannot force the Holy Spirit to come
to him or predict the time when He may decide to do so. You can only feel His
touch when this happens. Indeed, the book of Acts states that when the Holy
Apostles and other Christians received the gifts of the Holy Spirit, it was
always unexpectedly. He seldom descends immediately on those beseeching Him but
does so when it suits Him, as God, to do so. No one should attempt to foretell
when or what gifts, if any, he will receive or to consider himself worthy of His
descent! The Grace of the Holy Spirit is a gift of His endless mercy. And gifts
by definition are given when it suits the giver, and only those deemed suitable
by the giver.
It is the Holy Spirit Himself Who established within the
Church the means of distributing His blessings to the faithful: the Holy
Mysteries and other liturgical services. Non-Orthodox Christians are sadly
mistaken when they assert that they can always, whenever it suits them, receive
the Holy Spirit through well-known means (which are unfortunately also used
during spiritual seances and pagan mysteries). Those who dare to orchestrate
these means will not only remain empty of the divine gifts but also commit a
terrible sin against the Holy Spirit.
Anyone who considers asking the Holy Spirit for beneficial
gifts must know that these gifts are meant only for those who possess true
faith. Indeed, the Lord first of all enlightened the Apostles with the true
doctrine and then bestowed upon them the Holy Spirit. Similarly, the Apostles
did not bestow beneficial gifts upon newly baptized Christians immediately, but
only after a certain period of testing and affirmation in the true faith. That
is why the Lord called the Holy Spirit the Spirit of Truth, and His Church, the
beatified community of the faithful, is called in Scripture the pillar and
ground of the truth (1 Tim. 3:15).
Therefore, when a Christian, humbly and obediently, has
accepted Christ's faith in all its purity, without any corrections or
misinterpretations, then the following are the requirements to receive the
gifts of the Holy Spirit:
Purity of heart and
chastity
Humility
Listening to the
voice of God
Prayer
Self-denial
Reading the Holy
Scriptures
Sacraments of the
Church, especially Holy Communion
To receive gifts from the Holy Spirit, you must, first of all,
cleanse your heart of sin, self-love, and pride. The Holy Spirit always
surrounds us and wishes to fill us, but the evil nesting within us, like a
wall, impedes His path. Any sin keeps the Holy Spirit away from us, but carnal
impurity and pride are especially offensive to Him. So, if we do not want the
Holy Spirit, Whom we received in Baptism, to depart from us, or if we have
pushed Him away through our sinful life and now want Him to return, here is
what we must do:
1. Cleanse yourself with repentance and sincere confession.
Then shun all sinful thoughts and wishes. In view of the terrible lewdness of
contemporary society, a Christian must protect himself from all that may
pollute his soul and keep his flesh from lustfulness. Indeed, our body was
designed to be the temple of the Holy Spirit. When a person is clean internally
and externally, the Holy Spirit settles within him. In the presence of
chastity, the only obstacle for the Holy Spirit is your pride in your
righteousness and your regard of His gifts as your just reward. If you have
unfortunately defiled yourself, then stop sinning and repent. With a contrite
heart regret that you have offended God, your most loving Father, and strive to
live with greater vigilance. Then even you will be able to receive the Holy
Spirit.
2. One of the surest ways of attracting the Holy Spirit is by
humility. Even if you are an honest, just, good, and merciful man, in a word,
even though you may have achieved much goodness, keep considering yourself as
an unworthy servant of God. Indeed, if we examine our good works more closely,
we will see that none of them are completely beyond reproach. For example, if
we give alms or help someone, how often do we add conceited, regretful,
self-interested, judgmental, or other such unkind thoughts to our alms or help.
Of course, every good deed always remains good, even when it is imperfect. It
can be likened to gold which has value even before it is purified. But as gold
becomes more precious when an experienced craftsman purifies and works it, so
let us entrust our good deeds to the Heavenly Master that He will make them
even more valuable.
Thus, if you wish your good deeds to please God, do not boast
about them. You are not the master but only an apprentice. As craftsmanship
gives value to gold, so a pure and unselfish Christian love, which stems from
the Holy Spirit, gives value to our good deeds. Everything that is done without
Christian love, i.e., without the Holy Spirit, is not yet a fully valued good
deed. Without the Holy Spirit a person remains poor and pitiful.
But humility consists not only of realizing your unworthiness
but also of bearing the various sorrows and adversities of life with patience
and without grumbling, considering them as sent or allowed by God for our
benefit. Do not say, "How unfortunate I am!" But say, "I deserve
a still greater punishment for my sins!" And ask God not so much to
deliver you from adversities as to give you patience and courage to bear them.
3. The Holy Spirit can also be received by listening
attentively to the voice of God. God speaks to us by means of the internal
voice of our conscience and through external circumstances. It is very
important to develop sensitivity in order to hear more clearly what God
suggests to us. He, as a most loving Father, cares for you. Daily He calls you
to Himself, warns you and enlightens you. For instance, are you unhappy, has
someone offended you, has misfortune befallen you, or are you ill? In these you
can hear the voice of God, calling you to repent and improve. In time of
sorrow, instead of seeking help from others or consoling yourself by frivolous
distractions and amusements, turn to God and seek guidance and help from Him
alone.
Or suppose that you are prospering and living well and that
everything flows smoothly. Consider this also to be the voice of God. Here God
teaches you to be as merciful to those in need as He is merciful to you. It is
dangerous and sinful to ignore the voice of God, to remain unrepentant and
unimproved during times of hardship, to fail to thank God, or not to help
others when you have plenty. Even more ruinous is to do the opposite of that to
which God is leading us: to grumble and become embittered in difficult
circumstances or to forget God and live only for pleasure in fortunate
surroundings. What might then result is that God, after repeated teachings,
will turn away from you as from a stubborn child and will abandon you to your
own desires. Then passions will easily overcome you, your intellect and
conscience will become dulled, and you might reach a point at which you will
justify even your vilest crimes as natural and common human weakness. In order
to avoid such a fall, it is necessary to become sensitive to the voice of God
in the Holy Spirit and to follow His admonitions.
4. The Holy Spirit can be received through prayer. Prayer is
the simplest, surest, and most available means to receive the Holy Spirit.
Because we are composed of body and soul, they both should participate in
prayer. The primary elements of prayer are concentration and sincerity, which
are attained by inner effort. Nevertheless, the body should not remain
uninvolved; it can and must assist the soul in prayer by standing in reverence,
making prostrations, making the sign of the cross, raising the hands, and
reading the prayers aloud. Other favorable external conditions also help in
prayer: solitude, silence, ikons with burning lampadas before them, incense,
and when in church, church art and architecture along with soft and harmonious
singing, beautiful ceremonies, etc.
But to achieve concentration and warmth during prayer is not
easy. Here, first of all, it is important to establish a regular time for
prayer (for instance, mornings and evenings), and to develop stability and
patience. You should constantly overcome haste, distraction, indifference and
insincerity. In addition, you must strive to warm your heart with love for God.
Only a sincere prayer brings comfort and peace to the heart. Much effort is
necessary in order to learn to pray properly, and, as we well know, all the
righteous ones strove throughout their lives to learn the art of prayer.
Nevertheless, your personal effort is not enough. It is the Holy Spirit who
makes our prayer to be fervent and to come from the bottom of our heart. This
was well known to the saints who, inspired by the Holy Spirit, stood day and
night in prayer in sweet rapture, failing the while to notice the time fleeting
away.
Pray even though at first your prayer may be weak and
imperfect because of your sinfulness and estrangement from God. Pray with
diligence and fervor; train yourself to be sincere in your conversation with
God. Thus, little by little you will learn to pray and will start to feel a
sweet comfort. The Holy Spirit will have mercy on you and will come and reside
in you if you show faithfulness in your efforts at prayer.
The Holy Scripture teaches: Pray without ceasing (1 Thess.
5:17). How is this possible for people living in a secular world? If you are to
pray all the time, how then are you to perform your other duties? The advice of
perpetual prayer is directed not toward outward but toward inner prayer. If
desired, you can turn to God internally whether you are alone or with others.
Only he who does not want to pray will not find time for prayer.
5. Fasting and works of mercy aid prayer. The Fathers of the
Church recommend: If you want your prayer to fly up to God, then give it two wings,
fasting and almsgiving.
What is fasting and why is it necessary? Fasting is a
voluntary self-restriction in food, drink, and pleasure. The purpose of fasting
is to quiet or calm and lighten the body and to make it obedient to the soul.
Overfilled flesh demands comfort and rest, disposing us to laziness, which
hinders prayer and meditation. In the manner of an unbridled servant, the
well-fed body rises up against its master, the soul, and wants to rule over it.
While fasting, you should limit not only the type of food (dairy and meat
products) but also its amount, restricting yourself to the minimal needs of the
body. Then your fasting will become useful.
While fasting outwardly you should also fast internally,
restraining your tongue from sinful, idle chatter and moderating your desires
and your anger while driving off unkind thoughts and impure fantasies.
Experience shows that there is nothing harder than to stop the wandering of
thoughts and to direct your mind to thoughts of God and prayer. This may be
likened to the taming of wild horses who have long been stubborn and unruly.
Non-spiritual people do not even suspect how difficult it is
to control the wandering of thoughts. Being occupied with worldly affairs, they
consider their thoughts to be busy with worthwhile concerns. Only when they
begin to strive toward a spiritual life and try to reflect on spiritual topics,
do they begin to notice that their thoughts are murky. This is somewhat like
the waters of a shallow lake. As long as its surface remains undisturbed, it
looks clear; but when it is stirred, the silt from its bottom darkens the
water, making it appear murky. Likewise, in the depths of our heart there lay
various passions. Like silt, they rise and darken the soul when a Christian
attempts to expose and struggle with them. As the Holy Fathers have explained,
when people turn to God, the devil strives to darken their soul with bad
thoughts and feelings in order to confuse them and distract them from their
good intentions. But do not yield to his snares, and do not stray from the path
of salvation. Remember that no one can simultaneously think about two subjects.
If you occupy your mind with good thoughts (reading spiritual books or studying
some worthwhile subject), the bad ones will not be able to linger in your mind.
Love reveals itself in works of mercy. Among such works are to
feed the hungry, to give drink to the thirsty, to clothe the naked, to visit
and help the sick and the imprisoned, to give refuge to the homeless, and to be
concerned about orphans. All this should be done with sincere and unselfish
love, without any boasting or expectations of gratitude. The Savior teaches
regarding this: Do not let your left hand know what your right hand is doing,
that your charitable deed may be in secret; and your Father who sees in secret
will Himself reward you openly (Matt. 6:3-4).
6. The Holy Spirit may be received by piously reading and
listening to the Holy Scriptures. Being the Word of God, they hold a great
treasury of spiritual enlightenment and wisdom. The Holy Scriptures are one of
God's greatest blessings, which can be used by anyone wishing to do so. In
them, the divine wisdom is presented in such an easy, approachable manner that
even the simplest and most uneducated person can understand it. Many cases are
recorded throughout Church history and in the lives of the saints, in which the
simplest of people, while studying Holy Scripture, were enlightened, became
pious, and received abundant gifts of the Holy Spirit even while some scholars
and intelligentsia read the Holy Scripture and became confused and fell into
heresy. The difference was that while the first read it with simplicity of
heart, seeking in it spiritual direction, the second approached it with
criticism, attempting to uncover inconsistencies. Considering themselves wise
and all-knowing, these last succumbed to pride and even became false teachers.
Be aware that our small and imperfect intellect cannot encompass God's wisdom.
God enlightens those who with a pure and kind heart turn to Him in search of
enlightenment. Therefore, in reading the Holy Scriptures, lay aside all worldly
wisdom and inquisitiveness. Submit to the word and the will of Him who speaks
to you through Holy Scripture, and beseech Jesus Christ to enlighten you and
show you the path to salvation.
There are many other books besides Holy Scripture that are
beneficial for reading: the works of the Holy Fathers, the lives of the saints,
inspirational stories, sermons, and other praiseworthy writings of Orthodox
authors. From the books available to you, read those that are based on Holy
Scripture and are in accord with the teaching of the Orthodox Church. Beware of
those poisoned by heresies and non-Christian ideas.
7. Communion is another source for receiving the Holy Spirit.
Regarding it, Jesus Christ said: He who eats My flesh and drinks My blood,
abides in Me, and I in him. (He) has eternal life, and I will raise him up at
the last day (Jn. 6:54-56). When Christians partake of Holy Communion they
unite inexplicably with Jesus Christ and start partaking of His divine life.
Therefore, you must go to Communion with faith, having cleansed your soul by
repentance, with a realization of your unworthiness, and with the hope of God's
mercy. Since God is one and indivisible, when Christians accept Jesus Christ
into their heart, they accept the Holy Spirit and the Heavenly Father at the
same time and thus become a living temple of God.
As witnessed in the Acts of the Apostles and other ancient
Christian writings, the faithful of the first centuries took Communion every
Sunday, which then was called the Lord's day. Undoubtedly, because of this
constant communion with Jesus Christ, they were as "of one heart and one
soul" (Acts 4:32). My God, what a difference there is between them and us.
How many among us seldom partake of Holy Communion, sometimes avoiding it for
years!
Those who neglect to take Holy Communion do not love Jesus
Christ and will not receive the Holy Spirit, and consequently will not enter
the Kingdom of Heaven. So, for the sake of your salvation, partake of Communion
as often as possible. The Body and Blood of Christ is a true cure for many
spiritual and bodily infirmities. And who among us is perfectly healthy? Who
would not want to receive helpful relief? The Body and Blood of our Lord Jesus
Christ is the nourishment which sustains us on the path to the Kingdom of
Heaven. Is it possible to complete a long and difficult journey without
sustenance? The Body and Blood of Jesus Christ is the holiness bestowed on us
by Jesus Christ Himself for our sanctification. Who would refuse to be a
partaker of such holiness? Therefore, do not be lazy in stepping up to the
Chalice of Life, but approach it with faith and fear of God.
In summary, these are the means of receiving the Holy Spirit:
purity of heart, chastity, humility, listening to the voice of God, prayer
accompanied by fasting and charity, reading Holy Scripture, meditation, and
partaking of Holy Communion. Of course, each of these individually is effective
for receiving the Holy Spirit, but it is best to resort to all of them for our
salvation.
To this it is necessary to add that if we somehow fall into
sin and thereby distance ourselves from the Holy Spirit, we should not despair
and think that we have irrevocably lost all blessings, but let us quickly
prostrate ourselves before God with deep repentance and prayer, and the
All-merciful Holy Spirit will again return to us.
Conclusion
Without faith in Jesus Christ no one can return to God and
enter the Kingdom of Heaven. No one, even though he believe in Jesus Christ,
can regard himself to be His disciple and share His glory in Heaven if he does
not act as Jesus Christ did. And no one is able to follow Jesus Christ if he
does not receive help from the Holy Spirit.
To receive the Holy Spirit, we must use the means granted us
by God.
We should remember that the path into the Kingdom of Heaven
that has been opened to us by Jesus Christ is the only one, and there never was
and never will be another path that leads to salvation. At times this path may
appear difficult, but, again, you should remind yourself that this is the only
one that leads toward your objective. At other times the Christian will
encounter such consolations and delights on this path as cannot be found in any
worldly thing. The Lord Jesus Christ assists us on this path. He gives us the
Holy Spirit, He sends His angel to protect us, He provides instructors and
leaders, and even He Himself takes us by the hand and leads us to salvation.
If the path into the Kingdom of Heaven seems difficult, then
consider how incomparably more dreadful are the eternal torments in fiery
Gehenna. If the path toward heavenly bliss seems difficult, compare it with the
path toward earthly happiness, and you will see that the path toward earthly
happiness is not really easier at all. Just observe how much people toil to
amass earthly things, how many disappointments, fights, sleepless nights and
deprivations they bear. Or remind yourself of how much effort and expenses it
takes to achieve some meaningless and fleeting pleasure! And for what? Instead
of the expected happiness, you are left with disappointment and weariness. When
you carefully examine the heart of the matter, it becomes evident that people
stay away from the Heavenly Kingdom not because the path to it is more
difficult than the other paths of this world, but because it appears that way
to them. Besides, the devil, an experienced and crafty deceiver, misleads
people into believing that the path to salvation is difficult and the paths to
perdition are easy, and he often succeeds in this.
So, my brethren, in order to avoid eternal perdition, let us
definitely concern ourselves with our future. We know that beyond the grave
there awaits one of the following two outcomes: either the Heavenly Kingdom or
everlasting perdition in hell. There is no middle state, only everlasting bliss
or everlasting torment. As there exist only two conditions past the grave, so
there exist only two paths in this life. The one that seems wide and easy is
taken by the majority. The other that seems narrow and thorny is taken by few.
Those who follow the narrow path will be a hundredfold more happy than those
who do not.
Brethren, if any of you who walk the wide path should suddenly
die, what will happen to you? To whom shall you turn? To the Lord? You refuse
to listen to Him now, so you must expect He will refuse to listen to you then.
Now He is your merciful Father; then He will be your righteous judge. Who will
defend you against His righteous rage? Ah! How frightful it is to fall into the
hands of the living God! Therefore, concern yourselves now with the salvation
of your soul while you still have time!
Work for your salvation while it is still daylight, for the
night will come in which there will be no chance to change anything. Strive for
the Heavenly Kingdom while you can still walk. Walk even a little bit, even if
by crawling, but do it in the right direction. Then in eternity you will truly
rejoice for every step you have taken!
May the All-merciful Lord help us all in this! Glory and
thanksgiving be to Him throughout the ages of ages. Amen.