Love God, Love Others

Ronn is the Pastor at Beneva Christian Church in Sarasota, Florida.

Wednesday, May 8, 2013

Stillness

Be like an astute businessman: make stillness your criterion for testing the value of everything, and choose always what contributes to it.     - Evagrius

Do you desire, then, to embrace this life of solitude and to seek out the blessings of stillness  If so, abandon the cares of the world, and the principalities and powers that lie behind them; free yourself from the attachment to material things, from domination by passions and desires, so that as a stranger to all this you may attain true stillness. - Evagrius

_____________________________________________________________________

Evagrius Ponticus was born into a Christian family in the small town of Iberia, in the Roman province of Pontus. He was educated in Neocaesarea, where he began his career in the church as a lector under Basil. Around 380 he joined Gregory of Nazianzus in Constantinople, where he was promoted to deacon and eventually to archdeacon. When Emperor Theodosius I convened the Second Ecumenical Council in 381 AD, Evagrius was present, despite Gregory's premature departure.

According to the biography written by Palladius, Constantinople offered many worldly attractions, and Evagrius's vanity was aroused by the high praise of his peers. Eventually, he became infatuated with a married woman. Amid this temptation, he is said to have had a vision in which he was imprisoned by the soldiers of the governor at the request of the woman's husband. This vision, and the warning of an attendant angel, made him flee from the capital and head for Jerusalem.

For a short time, he stayed with Melania the Elder and Tyrannius Rufinus in a monastery near Jerusalem, but even there he could not forsake his vainglory and pride. He fell gravely ill and only after he resolved to become a monk was he restored to health. After being made a monk at Jerusalem in 383, he joined a cenobitic community of monks in Nitria, but after some years moved to Kellia. There he spent the last fourteen years of his life pursuing studies under Macarios the Great and Macarius of Alexandria.  - Wikipedia

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.