July 15

God is one because there is one Divinity: unoriginate, simple, beyond being, without parts, indivisible. The Divinity is both unity and trinity — wholly one and wholly three. It is wholly one in respect of the essence, wholly three in respect of the hypostases of persons.
For the Divinity is Father, Son and Holy Spirit, and is in Father, Son and Holy Spirit. The whole Divinity is in the whole Father and the whole Father is in the whole Divinity….
The whole Son is in the whole Divinity and the whole Divinity is in the whole Son; the whole Son is both the whole Divinity and in the whole Divinity….

The Divinity is not partially in the Holy Spirit, nor is the Holy Spirit part of God. For the Divinity is not divisible; nor is the Father, or the Son, or the Holy Spirit incomplete God.

On the contrary, the whole and complete Divinity is completely in the complete Father; the whole and complete Divinity is completely in the complete Son; and the whole and complete Divinity is completely in the complete Holy Spirit….

Therefore the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit are one God. The essence, power and energy of the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit are one, for none of the hypostases or persons either exists or is intelligible without the others.

                                                                      ~St Maximos the Confessor

If you make a habit of listening to spiritual teaching, your intellect will escape from impure thoughts.

God alone is good and wise by nature; but if you exert yourself your intellect also becomes good and wise through participation.

                                                                                                     ~St Thalassios the Libyan

July 14

The manna which was given to Israel in the desert (Exodus 16:14-35) is the Logos of God. Those who eat it find that it supplies every spiritual delight. It is blended to suit every taste in accordance with the different desires of those who eat it, for it has the quality of every kind of spiritual food. Thus, to those who through the Spirit have been born from above by means of incorruptible seed (John 3:3-5), it comes as pure spiritual milk (1 Peter 2:2); to the weak it comes as vegetables (Romans 14:2) sustaining the soul’s passible aspect (passionate aspect; incensive and appetitive); to those in whom the soul’s organs of perception have been trained by long practice to distinguish between good and evil it serves as solid food (Hebrews 5:14).

The Logos of God also has other infinite powers which cannot be encompassed in this world. If at death a man is worthy to be put in charge of many things or all things because in this world he has been faithful in small things (Matthew 25:21), he will also receive all or some of these other powers of the Logos. For the most exalted of the divine gifts of grace bestowed in this world is scant and minimal compared with those that are held in store for us.

                                                    ~St Maximos the Confessor

July 13

Self-love–that is, friendship for the body–is the source of evil in the soul….

For the deiform (Godlike) soul to abandon the Creator and worship the body is an act of depravity.

You were commanded to keep the body as a servant, not to be unnaturally enslaved to its pleasures.

Break the bonds of your friendship for the body and give it only what is absolutely necessary.

Enclose your senses in the citadel of stillness so that they do not involve the intellect (nous) in their desires.

The greatest weapons of someone striving to lead a life of inward stillness are self-control, love, prayer and spiritual reading.

                                  ~St Thalassios the Libyan

July 12

He who has been trained by the prophet’s words not only refrains from the outward fulfillment of the passions but also renounces all assent to them in his soul. He is not content simply to appear to abstain from sin in the inferior part of himself, the flesh, while secretly allowing its free rein in his superior part, the soul.

He who has truly embraced the life of the Gospel has made himself immune to both the promptings and performance of evil, and pursues every virtue in action and thought. He offers a sacrifice of praise and thanksgiving (Psalm 116:17), for he has been set free from all disturbance produced by the passions and liberated from mental warfare against them; and he feeds his soul with the hope of the blessings held in store, his one unquenchable delight….

                                              ~St Maximos the Confessor

July 11

He who yields to the pleasures of the body is neither diligent in virtue nor readily receptive of spiritual knowledge. For this reason he has no one–that is, no intelligent thought–to put him into the pool when the water is disturbed (John 5:7), that is, into a state of virtue capable of receiving spiritual knowledge and of healing every sickness.

On the contrary, although sick, he procrastinates because of laziness and is forestalled by someone else, who prevents him from being cured. And so he lies there with his illness for thirty-eight years.

He who does not contemplate the visible creation so as to discern God’s glory in it, and does not reverently raise his inner vision to the noetic world, quite fittingly remains ill for the number of years specified.

For the number thirty, understood with reference to nature, signifies the sensible world, while with reference to the ascetic life it signifies the practice of the virtues. The number eight, understood mystically, denotes the intelligible nature of incorporeal beings, while understood in terms of spiritual knowledge it denotes the supreme wisdom of theology.
Whoever does not advance towards God by these means remains paralyzed until the Logos (Christ Jesus) comes to teach him how he can obtain prompt healing, saying to him, ‘Rise, take up your bed and walk’ (John 5:8); that is to say, the Logos commands him to upraise his intellect from the love of pleasure which dominates him, to shoulder the body of the virtues and to go home, that is, to heaven.

Better that the higher should raise the lower up to virtue on the shoulders of ascetic practice than that, through soft living, the lower should drag the higher down into self-indulgence.

                                                           ~St Maximos the Confessor

July 10

He who does not envy the spiritually mature and is merciful to the wicked has attained an equal love for all….

Spiritual commerce consists in being detached equally from the pleasures and the pains of this life for the sake of the blessings held in store….

To each virtue there is an opposing vice; hence the wicked take vices for virtues.

                              ~St Thalassios the Libyan

July 9

He who stands in awe of God searches for the divine principles that God has implanted in creation; the lover of truth finds them.

Rightly motivated, the intellect will find the truth; but motivated by passion it will miss the mark….

Only spiritual conversation is beneficial; it is better to preserve stillness than to indulge in any other kind.

                          ~St Thalassios the Libyan

July 8

Guard yourself from hatred and dissipation, and you will not be impeded at the time of prayer….

Stillness, prayer, love and self-control are a four-horsed chariot bearing the intellect (nous) to heaven….

Our Lord and God is Jesus Christ, and the intellect (nous) that follows Him will not remain in darkness (John 12:46).

                                      ~St Thalassios the Libyan

July 7

A man keeps his soul undefiled before God if he compels his mind to meditate only on God and His supreme goodness, makes his thought a true interpreter and exponent of this goodness, and teaches his senses to form holy images of the visible world and all the things in it, and to convey to the soul the magnificence of the inner principles lying within all things.
                                                                  ~St Maximos the Confessor

An all-embracing and intense longing for God binds those who experience it both to God and to one another….

Love alone harmoniously joins all created things with God and with each other.

                                    ~St Thalassios the Libyan

July 6

God is the origin, intermediary state and consummation of all created things, but as acting upon things and not as acted upon, which is also the case where everything else we call Him is concerned. He is origin as Creator, intermediary state as provident ruler, and consummation as final end. For, as Scripture says, “All things are from Him and through Him, and have Him as their goal” (Romans 11:36)….

God, it is said, is the Sun of righteousness (Malachi 4:2), and the rays of His supernal goodness shine down on all men alike. The soul is wax if it cleaves to God, but clay if it cleaves to matter. Which it does depends upon its own will and purpose. Clay hardens in the sun, while wax grows soft. Similarly, every soul that, despite God’s admonitions, deliberately cleaves to the material world, hardens like clay and drives itself to destruction, just as Pharoah did (Exodus 7:13). But every soul that cleaves to God is softened like wax and, receiving the impress and stamp of divine realities, it becomes ‘in the spirit the dwelling place of God’ (Ephesians 2:22).

                                               ~St Maximos the Confessor