Orthodox
Heritage Vol. 10,
Issue 07-08
ON
DESPONDENCY
Bishop
Arsenins Zhadanovsky (+1937).
Despondency
springs from various sources, primarily from our physical illnesses. In this
case, despondency is suppressed by spiritual inspiration, spiritual interests.
The spirit is willing, but the flesh is weak, it says in Scripture. The holy
Apostle Paul was beset by a physical infirmity: there was given to me a thorn
in the flesh, the messenger of Satan to buffet me, lest I should be exalted
above measure. (II Cor. 12:7). Saint John Chrysostom takes thorn in the flesh
to mean a severe headache. However, the same Apostle Paul testifies: / take
pleasure in infirmities, in reproaches, in necessities, in persecutions, in
distresses for Christ's sake: for when I am weak, then am I strong (II Cor.
12:10), because he was wholly caught up in serving the Lord. Our bodily infirmities
and the resultant despondency can be overcome only by the strengthening grace
of God.
Despondency
can also stem from a reduction of the powers of the soul, from loss of faith,
from moral falls, from our sinfulness. The counsel in such cases is "to
take a hair of the dog that bit you," i.e., replace unbelief with firm
belief in the Lord, change your bad ways to good ways, work to become morally
renewed, spiritually energized and born again; repent and partake of the Holy
Mysteries of Christ, and you will destroy despondency. To this second type of
despondency can also be referred cases when it arises from grief, illnesses and
misfortunes. Here, too, one can discern insufficient faith in the Lord and His
Providence, and an excessive attachment to earthly things.
There is yet
another type of despondency, one that afflicts people who are troubled by
carnal sin. Here despondency is rooted, on the one hand, in a sickly condition,
in physical weakness, and on the other hand, in spiritual faintheartedness, in
spiritual emptiness. The remedy for this type of despondency lies partly in the
physical strengthening of the organism. However, this type of despondency is
very persistent and can turn into a chronic disposition. This is undoubtedly
due to the fact that the underlying causes have disordered our entire psyche:
they dull the memory and enfeeble the will. For this reason, we must draw upon
ourselves as much of God's all-healing power as possible, for it alone is
capable of restoring spiritual and physical strength.
Further,
despondency can also be a kind of testing that comes to us as we walk towards
the Lord.
In spiritual life, this type of despondency is quite common. Here,
explain the holy ascetics, the grace of God conceals itself for a time in order
to train a person to strengthen his spiritual forces, and, at the same time, to
compel him to seek the Lord more zealously and to love Him more ardently, for
only in Him is there peace and true happiness. This type of despondency is
overcome by means of internal warfare. One must struggle against despondency,
chase it away, not succumb to it; one must pray, compelling oneself if
necessary, because despondency stifles all desire for prayer; one must entreat
the Lord to banish from us despondency by Thy holy angels drive away from me
demonic despondency (fourth Prayer Before Sleep of Saint Makarios the Great).
This latter
type of despondency affects people who are not firmly grounded in spiritual
life. However, it also strikes those renowned for their spiritual experience,
when they are seized by a spirit of conceit and spiritual pride—from which may
God protect us. In such cases, despondency is not so much a form of testing as
it is a form of punishment by God, and often this despondency results in grave
consequences: in a complete falling away from the Lord, in despair, and even
suicide. However, in all types of despondency our physician is the Lord, and
understandably so, for the Lord is our comfort, our joy, our gladness and our
consolation.
One must not
delay in warring against despondency, for the next step after despondency is
despair—which leads to perdition. The melancholy and despondency that visit us
from time to time are precursors of that melancholy that will prevail in the
last times; as it says in the word of God, there will be great tribulation,
such as was not since the beginning of the world. Now just imagine the
spiritual state of the people of the last times!...
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