God does not need our fasting. He
does not even need our prayer. The Perfect cannot be thought of as suffering
any lack or needing anything that we, the creatures of His making, could give
Him. Nor does he crave anything from us, but, says John Chrysostom, He allows
us to bring Him offerings for the sake of our own salvation.
The greatest offering we can present
to the Lord is our self. We cannot do this without giving up our own will. We
learn to do this through obedience, and obedience we learn through practice.
The best form of practice is that provided by the Church in her prescribed fast
days and seasons.
Besides fasting we have other
teachers to whom we can show obedience. They meet us at every step in our daily
life, if only we recognize their voices. Your wife wants you to take your
raincoat with you: do as she wishes, to practice obedience. Your fellow-worker
asks you to walk with her a little way: go with her to practice obedience.
Wordlessly the infant asks for care and companionship: do as it wishes as far
as you can, and thus practice obedience. A novice in a cloister could not find
more opportunity for obedience than you in your own home. And likewise at your
job and in your dealings with your neighbour.
Obedience breaks down many barriers.
You achieve freedom and peace as your heart practices non-resistance. You show
obedience, and thorny hedges give way before you. Then love has open space in
which to move about. By obedience you crush your pride, your desire to
contradict, your self-wisdom and stubbornness that imprison you within a hard
shell. Inside that shell you cannot meet the God of love and freedom.
Thus, make it a habit to rejoice when
an opportunity for obedience offers. It is quite unnecessary to seek one, for
you may easily fall into a studied servility that leads you astray into
self-righteous virtue. You may depend upon it that you are sent just as many
opportunities for obedience as you need, and the very kind that are most
suitable for you. But if you notice that you have let an opportunity slip by,
reproach yourself; you have been like a sailor who has let a favourable wind go
by unused.
For the wind it was a matter of
indifference whether it was used or not. But for the sailor it was a means of
reaching his destination sooner. Thus you should think of obedience, and all
the means that are offered us by the Holy Trinity, in that way.
And so God provides us with guides
and teaches us the practice of obedience, conforming us to His will. It is an
apprenticeship of the Spirit – Who is everywhere present and filling all
things.
From The Enlargement of the Heart by
Archimandrite Zacharias Zacharou
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