Pilgrim Traveller

thoughts on life’s journey…

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“Go to your cell…”

Posted by David Ward on 12/11/2012
Posted in: Community, Monastic spirituality, Personal thoughts, Relationships, Solitude and silence. Tagged: acadia, Christian, Christianity, Desert Fathers and Mothers, desert monasticism, distraction, John Cassian, John Cassian "Institutes", Prayer, relationships, spirituality, St Anthony, weariness. Leave a comment

“ The man is trying hard to pray. He’s desperate to get sorted out, but every time he tries to pray it just seems so hard.

Sometimes he feels desperately tired…sleep seems a more attractive proposition than prayer, and no matter how hard he tries his eyelids heavy and his mind dulls. Even the tried and tested ways to prayer…daily office, lectio…seem to be as dry as dust.

On the rare occasions he does pull himself into an attitude of prayer, the prayer turns into a list of critical and judgemental tirades against the people in this place who have caused his present situation. He feels ashamed and gives up.

Other times he just has too much to do to pray. He wants to be up and out, meeting people, using his time well, full of distraction and action.

He begins to feel that as long as he stays where he is, his relationship with God will suffer and will never be right again. Perhaps he was wrong to settle here in the first place…perhaps he misheard what God said.

One day, he’s reading some of the sayings of the Desert Fathers and Mothers and comes across a story of St Anthony that holds out a glimmer of hope.”

To be continued…

Staying in the ‘cell’ and praying is one of the most difficult things to do when acedia strikes. We are faced by the twin enemies of either weariness or over-business, as methods to either forget how we feel or to find some kind of pleasant distraction. A critical spirit, uncertainty about our calling and even a sense of God’s disapproval hangs over us like a cloud.

“ And so the wretched soul, embarrassed by such contrivances of the enemy, is disturbed, until, worn out by the spirit of acedia…it either learns to sink into slumber, or…accustoms itself to seek for consolation under these attacks in visiting some brother, only to be afterwards weakened the more by this remedy which it seeks for the present” John Cassian “Institutes” Chapter 3

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A run-in with the noonday demon…

Posted by David Ward on 08/11/2012
Posted in: Community, Monastic spirituality, Personal thoughts, Relationships, Solitude and silence. Tagged: acedia, Change, Christian, Christianity, Church, Community, depression, Desert Fathers and Mothers, desert monasticism, Faith, friends, monastic spirituality, places, relationships, unspiritual. Leave a comment

“The man has decided to stay. Despite all the setbacks he’s encountered in the place and its community, he likes it there. Staying there, sharing the life and love of God is what he wants to do. It will be worth the time and effort, because God has put him in this place. Over time, he feels that he might even put down deep roots of love there.

Time passes. Things have not been easy, but his determination to love and serve God and the people of that place has carried him along.

One day he wakes up and everything seems to have changed. He seems to have lost focus on his commitments, and, frankly, the place is boring him. It seems to be cramping his style, restricting his gifts and not allowing him to be the person God has made him to be. The people he has been determined to serve seemed unconcerned whether he’s there or not.

The man runs a quick personal inventory…this seems like and yet unlike the feelings and symptoms of depression. He’s not depressed…what’s going on?

He feels weary and unmotivated…little wonder, he thinks, when he has spent himself in this place for so little fruit.

It suddenly becomes clear to him that many of those he had been working with lacked his own determination and calling. He sees them as unspiritual and self- seeking, caring more for building their own kingdoms than the kingdom of God.

He decides to spend more time alone with God in his ‘cell’, in order to weigh the motives of his own heart and to be refreshed by close communion with The Lord he loved.

This proves harder than he imagined.”

To be continued…

The man in our story had encountered what the desert monastics of old called “the noonday devil”, who comes and attacks us after we’ve made our decision to stay and as the heat of the day,  or rather the constant heat of many days, sets in.

Although its original context was that of hermits in the desert, it has meaning for all those who determine to stay in a place of God’s choosing, for good or ill.

They had a name for it…they called it Acedia (literally, a lack of caring), and recognised it for the dangerous and debilitating spiritual sickness that it was. John   Cassian writes at length about the symptoms and cure of Acedia in his Institutes.

“Acedia, which we may term weariness or distress of heart. This is akin to dejection, and is especially trying to solitaries, and a dangerous and frequent foe to dwellers in the desert…and when this has taken possession of some unhappy soul, it produces dislike of the place, disgust with the cell, and disdain and contempt of the brethren   who dwell with him or at a little distance, as if they were careless or unspiritual.” John Cassian, “Institutes”, Chapters 1 and 2

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A time of change…

Posted by David Ward on 07/10/2012
Posted in: Pilgrimage, Prayer and liturgy, Solitude and silence. Tagged: Change, destination, Faith, journey, life as pilgrimage, Prayer, travelling. 1 Comment

Lord, help me now to uncluttered my life, to organise myself in the direction of simplicity. Lord, teach me to listen to my heart; teach me to welcome change, instead of fearing it.

Lord, I give you these stirrings inside me. I give you my discontent. I give you my restlessness. I give you my doubt. I give you my despair. I give you all the longings I hold inside. Help me to listen to these signs of change, of growth; help me to listen seriously and follow where they lead through the breath-taking empty space of an open door.

 

Quoted from: “Common Prayer – a liturgy for ordinary radicals”

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