Too Many Worries Will Distance Us From God
We Must Not Create Too Many Fronts
People today do not live simply and for this reaison
they suffer from too many distractions.
They open too many fronts of activity and lose
themselves in endless solicitude. As for me, I just try to take care of one or
two things, and then I start thinking about something else. I never try to do
too many things at the same time. Let's say that I am thinking of doing this
particular thing. Well, first I finish it, and then I start thinking about
doing something else. For, if I do not finish what I have started, I cannot
find peace. When someone has too many things to do at once, he loses his mind.
Just thinking about all of them at once can cause someone to become schizophrenic.
Once, a young man with psychological problems came to
my Kalyvi. He told me that he suffered from a hypersensitivity, which he
inherited from his parents. I said to him, "What is this hereditary stuff
you are talking about? First of all you need to get some rest. Then you must
get back to school and earn your degree. After that, go and fulfil your
military service, and when you are done look for a job." He followed my
advice and found his way. That is how people can come to their senses.
- Geronda, I tire easily when I work. I do not know
what is to blame for it.
- What you seem to be lacking is patience. And the
rea¬son you cannot be patient is that you undertake too many things. You spread
yourself too thin and you tire easily. This makes you nervous because you have
philotimo, and when you cannot do something well, you get anxious.
When I was in the Coenobitic Monastery, there was a
monk named Isidore, who served with me in the carpenter's shop. He had no
patience at all. He would start working on a window, then he would get worried,
and stop; next he would start on a door, he would get upset and quit; and then
he started working on roofs. He would stop in the middle of something, and
leave everything un¬finished. He ended up losing some of the wood or cutting it
the wrong size. This is how one can break his back and achieve nothing in the
end.
There are some people who have limited abilities and
can do only one or two things well. When they get in-volved in too many
activities, they end up doing nothing right and drag others along too. As much
as possible, one should do one or two things only, complete them cor¬rectly,
and then, with a clear mind and a rested body, get started on something else.
For a scattered mind will not be able to do quality spiritual work. How will he
be able to remember Christ?
Do Not Give Your Heart to Material Things
- Geronda,
what do you mean when you say, "Give your legs and your hands to work but
not your heart"?
- I mean that you should not give your heart to material
things. Some people give their whole self to material things. They spend the
entire day trying to do a job well and don't think of God at all. We should not
end up there. When you work, you should use your hands and your legs, but you
should not let your mind stray away from God. You should not give all your
being, all your energy and your heart to material things. This way one becomes
a pagan, an idol worshipper. Do your best at work, but do not give your heart
to the work you do; give only your hands, your mind. Do not give your heart to
hopeless, useless things. If you do, then how will your heart leap for Christ?
When the heart is with Christ, then even the work we do is sanctified, our soul
is at rest and there is real joy in our heart. Make the most of your heart; do
not waste it.
If the heart is squandered on many insignificant
things, it will not have the endurance to feel pain for the one right thing
that it should care about. I will give my heart to a cancer patient, to someone
who is suffering. I agonize over the young people in danger. I pray that God
will enlighten them. When I have people around me, all I care for is the pain
the other person feels, and the love that we must have for each other. I am not
even aware of my own pain. Thus, one comes to forget his own troubles; his life
now takes a new direction.
- Geronda,
is it possible not to give your mind and heart to all types of work?
- When the
task is simple, it helps if the mind is not absorbed. But when the task is
complex, then it makes sense to become somewhat absorbed mentally but not to
let that take over the heart.
- How does
it take over the heart?
- How?
Well, temptation comes and puts it to sleep with "morphine"! It gets
hold of the heart with egotism. But when the heart surrenders to God, then the
intellect rests with God while the mind concentrates on the work.
- When we
speak of a "carefree" mind, what do we mean exactly?
- We mean
that when you work, you should not forget Christ. Do your work joyfully, but
keep your mind and your heart focused on Christ. If you do this, not only you
will not get tired, but you will also be able to do your spiritual work.
Work Done With Peace of Mind and Prayer Is Sanctified
- Isn't it
better, Geronda, to take your time and your job slowly in order to maintain
your calm?
- Yes,
because when we work calmly, we" maintain our serenity and then our whole
day is sanctified. Unfortu-nately, we do not realize that when we do our work
in a hurry, we become nervous. And when work is done ner-vously, it is not sanctified.
Our goal should not be to do many things and be in constant anxiety. This is a
demonic condition.
When monastic handicrafts are made with peace of mind
and prayer, they are sanctified and they also sanctify the people who use them.
Then, it makes sense for lay people to seek these handiworks from us as a
blessing. By contrast, any work made with haste and nervousness transmits this
demonic condition to others. Work done with haste and anxiety is the mark of a
very secular person. Instead of giving people a blessing, what these troubled
souls impart on others with their handiwork is their troubled state. A person's
state affects not only the work that he does, but also the materials, the wood
that he is using! The final product of a man's work reflects his spiritual
state. If he is upset and angry and swears, his work will not bring a blessing
to others. But if he chants, if he says the Jesus Prayer, his work is
sanctified. The first condition is demonic, the other is divine.
If you act with piety and pray while you are working,
you are always sanctified and everything around you be-comes sanctified. When
one has God in mind, his works and his handicrafts are also sanctified. Let us
say, for example, that I am making a box while saying the Jesus Prayer; I am
praying and at the same time working for the glory of God. My goal is not to
make boxes, and to do it quickly, to produce a lot of them and end up full of
anxiety. That would be a demonic state. We did not come to the Monastery for
this. We came to be sanctified and to sanctify whatever we do. This is the
reason why sometimes you feel like a good employee performing your assigned
tasks; you get so busy running around, doing your job that you forget to take
Christ with you. But if you begin your work with the Jesus Prayer, you will
feel like a servant of Christ. So, if you want to be sanctified and to sanctify
- When the
task is simple, it helps if the mind is not absorbed. But when the task is
complex, then it makes sense to become somewhat absorbed mentally but not to
let that take over the heart.
- How does
it take over the heart?
- How?
Well, temptation comes and puts it to sleep with "morphine"! It gets
hold of the heart with egotism. But when the heart surrenders to God, then the
intellect rests with God while the mind concentrates on the work.1
- When we
speak of a "carefree" mind, what do we mean exactly?
- We mean
that when you work, you should not forget Christ. Do your work joyfully, but
keep your mind and your heart focused on Christ. If you do this, not only you
will not get tired, but you will also be able to do your spiritual work.
Work Done With Peace of Mind and Prayer Is Sanctified
- Isn't it
better, Geronda, to take your time and your job slowly in order to maintain
your calm?
- Yes,
because when we work calmly, w£ maintain our serenity and then our whole day is
sanctified. Unfortunately, we do not realize that when we do our work in a
hurry, we become nervous. And when work is done nervously, it is not sanctified.
Our goal should not be to do many things and be in constant anxiety. This is a
demonic condition.
The Elder implies a distinction between the
rational, calculating mind and the mind that together with the heart seeks and
rests with God.
When monastic handicrafts are made with peace of mind
and prayer, they are sanctified and they also sanctify the people who use them.
Then, it makes sense for lay people to seek these handiworks from us as a
blessing. By contrast, any work made with haste and nervousness transmits this
demonic condition to others. Work done with haste and anxiety is the mark of a
very secular person. Instead of giving people a blessing, what these troubled
souls impart on others with their handiwork is their troubled state. A person's
state affects not only the work that he does, but also the materials, the wood
that he is using! The final product of a man's work reflects his spiritual
state. If he is upset and angry and swears, his work will not bring a blessing
to others. But if he chants, if he says the Jesus Prayer, his work is
sanctified. The first condition is demonic, the other is divine.
If you act with piety and pray while you are working,
you are always sanctified and everything around you be-comes sanctified. When
one has God in mind, his works and his handicrafts are also sanctified. Let us
say, for example, that I am making a box while saying the Jesus Prayer; I am
praying and at the same time working for the glory of God. My goal is not to
make boxes, and to do it quickly, to produce a lot of them and end up full of
anxiety. That would be a demonic state. We did not come to the Monastery for
this. We came to be sanctified and to sanctify whatever we do. This is the
reason why sometimes you feel like a good employee performing your assigned
tasks; you get so busy running around, doing your job that you forget to take
Christ with you. But if you begin your work with the Jesus Prayer, you will
feel like a servant of Christ. So, if you want to be sanctified and to sanctify
your work, make sure that you make the Jesus Prayer a part of everything you
do. Do you know how abundantly God will bless you then, and how many good
things and blessings He will send your way?
- Geronda,
when the task is mental, such as a translation, how can you possibly say the
Jesus Prayer to sanctify the work you are doing?
- When the
task requires mental concentration, your work will be sanctified when your mind
is focused on God. Then you will be living in the atmosphere of God, even if
you are not able to say the Prayer. When one reaches a spiritual state, he is
greatly helped by this. He does not attempt to understand the meanings of words
based on reason alone, but gets to know them by divine illumination.
- And what
happens when I must undertake this type of work, but have not yet reached such
a spiritual state?
- In that
case, you must still go ahead and do the work, but you need to pray and ask God
to enlighten you. You must do your best to find help in these divine meanings
(what divine illumination allows) and to work with piety. Make sure that you
take a short break every one or two hours and say the Jesus Prayer.
- Geronda,
especially in translation work, one has many distractions. We must consult
dictionaries, read commentaries...
-As I have already said in the past, what helps in
transla-tion work is to live on a daily basis with purified thoughts that make
a person a receptacle of Grace. Then divine in-terpretation will come from
divine illumination and not from the mind, the dictionary, or the pen. What I
am trying to say is that we must rely on the divine rather than the hu-man (on
what comes first, not on what comes second).
Too Many Worries Make People Forget God
— Geronda, does worrying about too many things take us
away from God?
- Look, let me try to explain. When a little child is
playing and is all absorbed with his toys, he is not aware that his father may
be next to him caressing him. If he interrupts his play a bit, then he will
become aware of his father's caresses. Similarly, when we are preoccupied with
too many activities and are anxiously concerned about them, when we worry too
much about worldly matters, we cannot become aware of God's love. God gives but
we do not sense it. Be careful not to waste your precious energy on redundant
worries and vanities, which will rum to dust one day. When you do this, you not
only tire your body, but you also scatter your mind aimlessly, offering God
only your fatigue and yawns at the time of prayer - much like the sacrifice
offered by Cain. It follows that your inner state will be like that of Cain's,
you will be full of anxiety and sighs provoked by the devil standing by your
side.
We must not waste aimlessly the fruit, the inner core
of our power and then leave the shells for God. The many cares of life sap the
marrow of our heart and leave nothing for Christ. If you notice that your mind
constantly wanders off to various chores that you have to do, you must realize
that you are not doing well spiritually, and this should alarm you because you
have distanced yourself from God. You must realize that you are closer to
material things than you are to God, closer to creation
than to the Creator.
Many times, unfortunately, even a monk will be
de-ceived, and draw a worldly form of pleasure from his work. It is in man's
nature to do good because his Creator is good. But the monk is striving to
transform himself from a human being into an angelic being. This is why when it
comes to material things, his work must be limited to the bare necessities, so that
he will have time for spiritual work. Then, the joy that he feels will come
from the fruit of his spiritual labour; it will be a spiritual joy, abundant
nourishment for himself and for everybody else.
Those who work too hard and are full of worries forget
God. Father Tychon used to say,
"The Pharaoh gave the Israelites too much work and just enough food to forget
God." In our days, the devil has made people lose themselves in matter and
all kinds of distractions; they work too much and they eat too much. This way
they come to forget God, and they lose
the ability or rather the will, to make good use of the freedom given to them,
and sanctify their soul. Fortunately, however, and against the devil's desires,
there is a good side to this; people are so busy that they don't have enough
time to sin as much they would have liked to.
Too Much Work and Worry Is the Mark of a Secular Monk
It is advisable for people who wish to live spiritually,
especially monastics, to avoid certain pursuits, which obstruct them from their
spiritual goal. They should not get involved in endless tasks, for there is
never an end to work. If monks or nuns do not learn to do the internal,
spiritual work, they will seek to escape in external activities. People who
attempt to complete endless tasks will end their lives with all kinds of
spiritual imperfections and while, when they reach the end of their road, they
will repent for having done so, it will be too late because their
"passport" will have already been issued. After all, it's necessary
to take time off from work, even for a short while.
When we reduce the number of our chores, there will
come, naturally, a bodily rest and a thirst for inner spiritual work, which
comforts and never tires us. Then the soul will breathe an abundance of
spiritual oxygen. Fatigue from spiritual work does not make us tired; instead,
it rests and refreshes us, because it lifts us and brings us closer to our
Loving Father, where our soul rejoices.
When physical fatigue lacks a spiritual sense, or rather,
when it is not the result of a spiritual need and therefore justified, it
rouses anger in man and makes him rough. Even the most tamed and good tempered
horse, when over-worked, will start kicking and developing a bad temper,
despite the fact that normally they are sup¬posed to become more gentle with
age.
There are some things that can always be left out, so
that spiritual matters may take precedence. Too much work and too many worries
will make a monk secular, and give him a secular sensibility. His life will
then be full of stress and secular anxiety and he will experience in this life
a portion of hell, endless cares, worries and disasters. But when the monk has
no concern for material things and is instead mindful only of his salvation and
the salvationof all human beings, then he has God as his Steward and men as his
helpers.
Do you remember the incident with Father Gerondios and his spiritual son? Father Gerondios had
asked the Panaghia to provide some water for him and his disciple to drink, and
the Panaghia, like the good Mother that She is, opened a crack in the rock wall
of the asketerio from which holy water
gushed out for them to drink. Later, the young monk began gathering stones and
soil near the spring and building terraced gardens. He became so busy with
construction, that he neglected his spiritual duties. But the water was not
enough for all these works, and so he took a chisel and widened the crack so
that more water would come out. The Panaghia then dried out thai spring and
caused the water to flow at a point much lowei from the asketerio, as if She
were telling him, "If yot want gardens and distractions so badly, go and
carry the water from afar."
Distractions and Spiritual Parasites Go Hand in Hand
- Geronda,
weren't you upset when, after having laboured hard to set up one Kelli, you
would leave it and go elsewhere?
- I would not have left without serious reason.
- And
everywhere you went you did only the necessary things?
- Yes, I did only the necessary things for down here,
so that I would have time to do the necessary things for up there, for Heaven.
If you lose yourself in earthly pursuits, you will also lose your way to
Heaven. You do one thing, and then you want to do yet another and another. And
if you get stuck in this gear, you've lost your way! Lose yourself in the world
and you will lose Heaven. As our heavenly pursuits are endless, so too are the
affairs of life here on earth. You have a choice: either you get lost on earth
or you get "lost" in Heaven. Can you imagine what it means to lose
yourself in heavenly pursuits? Oh, how I would be absorbed by the Jesus Prayer!
Has that ever happened to you?
When we work too hard and in a hurry, the result is
fatigue and distraction, and neither will help us in the spiritual life. For
they displace our vigilance and agitate our soul. Under such conditions, one is
not only incapable of praying, but he cannot even think. He cannot act with
prudence and therefore his actions are not right.
So be careful not to waste your time aimlessly,
leaving no time for your spiritual life, because you will reach a point of
being so agitated inside that you will no longer be able to do your spiritual
chores. Instead, you will try to get involved with some work, or start a
conversation, or even look to create a problem to keep you busy. When we
neglect the Jesus Prayer and our spiritual duties, the enemy gets hold of our
spiritual "heights" and he begins his assault from up there, using
both our flesh and our mind as his weapon. Thus, he renders useless our
physical and spiritual strengths, and by cutting off our communication with
God, he leads our soul to be taken prisoner by the passions.
Father Tychon used to tell monks that they should live
ascetically to free themselves from worldly cares, and not to work like
labourers and eat like men living in the world. For the monk's labour is
prostrations, fasting and prayers, not only for himself, but for all people,
both living and dead; and then, he must also do some physical labour for the
necessary things of this life, to avoid becoming a burden on others.
- Geronda, are distractions always an obstacle to the
spiritual life?
- If you are preoccupied only with what is required by
monastic obedience, even if you have some distractions here and there, you will
not suffer any harm. If your concern for the service assigned to you in the
Monastery, or for the help you provide to a Sister, does not exceed the
appropriate limits, then your only desire will be for the Jesus Prayer and your
help to others will be positive. But
if you go beyond these limits and start
adding distractions and spend your time on worthless things, then your mind
will scatter and depart from God. How can one experience the joy of God when
his mind is not focused on Him? It's easy for the heart to grow cold. When, for
instance, I happen to have visitors, even though my work is still spiritual, at
the end of the day, I feel that my heart is not the same as when I have prayed
all day long. The mind is filled with all sorts of things and it's so difficult
to remove them. Whenever you can, throughout the day, try to say the Jesus
Prayer mentally and also to chant in a low voice.
A little spiritual reading, especially before prayer,
is very helpful. It warms the soul and dispels the distractions of the day. And
then, when the soul is freed and taken to the divine realm of the spirit, the
mind moves without distractions. When we read a chapter from the Gospels or a
passage from the Gerontikon, which is short but powerful, the mind is transported
to the spiritual realm and stays there. You see, the mind is like a lively
child, running about in constant play. But when you entice it with something
sweet, it does not leave anymore.
Where distractions and worries are removed, inner
peace and spiritual success will follow. Too many worries will distance people
from God. Distractions go hand in hand with spiritual parasites and the static
can get so bad that spiritual wireless radios will not give a clear signal. A
monk who does not lead a spiritual life has no excuse. Look at the poor people
who live in the world and still try to lead spiritual lives. The monk has none
of their worries; neither rent, nor debts nor keeping a job is on his mind. And
he has his Spiritual Father close by, ready and available; the Church is right
in the Monastery. Prayer Services, Holy Unction, Supplication Services, and
Divine Liturgies - it's all there for him. A monk enjoys a carefree life and
his only concern is how to live an angelic life; he has no other goal. By
contrast, a layperson has so much to care about! He must nurture and raise his
children and, at the same time, he has to struggle for the salvation of his
soul. Elder Tryfon used to say, "Does the monk want to
attend a vigil? He can do it. Does he want to fast? He can do it. He has no
wife and children. The layman, however, cannot. He has children
If someone is born a fool, it is a blessing from God.
She enters directly into the next life without having to pass any examinations.
But if she is gifted with an intelligent mind and yet lives a foolish life, she
will have no excuse on the Day of Judgment.
Can you see in the case of Martha and Mary, mentioned
in the Gospel," how mindless care for things caused Martha to behave
somewhat impudently? It seems that in the beginning Mary was actually helping
her, but when she realized that Martha was nowhere near completing her
preparations, she left her and went to listen to Jesus. She thought to herself,
"Am I to lose time with my Christ for the sake of Martha's salads and
sweets?" As if Christ had come to their home to taste Martha's salads and
foods! It was then that Martha became annoyed and said, Lord, do You not care
that my sister has left me to serve alone?
Let us be careful, then, not to behave like Martha.
Let us pray that we will become good "Marys".
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