Tuesday, August 2, 2011
Uh oh - crazy thought (that also ties several other blog-thoughts together, too)
So, I just picked up this book of sayings of the desert fathers. You know - figured I'd take a gander - see what they have to offer. And - it's CRAZY. These dudes were so severe, and it's all demons and devils and what not. I am tempted to dismiss it out of hand as just the "hallucinations" resulting from weeks with no food and little water and an incessant desert sun. And then somewhere between these thoughts I realized its not really ok for me to think along such lines (of dismissal based on the interpretation of 'hallucinations'). I keep using quote marks around 'hallucinations' because that is just what we neuro-scientists categorize them as, when, on the contrary, the phenomenon presents itself as: In order to be able to see the spiritual realm, you need to fast. Clear and simple with no neuro-schmeuro nonsense. This surface (yet deepest [eidos]) interpretation is also far more compatible with the world the New Testament speaks of. So - all of the sudden I am left dumb-founded that maybe it's all real: all the monks' stories, all the crazy demons and what not. And if this is the case - then I need to re-adjust my life accordingly! For starters - maybe giving fasting a try. (So bloody difficult!) Also - reading classic Christian texts with much more credulity than my skeptical modern eyes usually afford them. But most of all - clinging ever tighter to the Christ who is my savior!
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The Life of St. Anthony by St. Anthanasius was pretty encouraging to me on a very particular point: having no fear in the face of evil because of Christ's total victory, and then acting that out in practice. On many other points, it's a cringer (i.e. how Anthony "always" or "never" did well or badly - descriptions of his inner state of minds, etc. that cannot be based in anything directly, and are more, well, hagiographic - even for hagiography - than what I might like).
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