Title: Great Spiritual Men and Women
1Great Spiritual Men and Women
2Great Spiritual Men and Women
3Macrinas Life
- Oldest of 10 children born to a wealthy, devoutly
Christian couple in Pontus. - Pursued a life of virginity.
- Was very well educated and served as the chief
teacher of her younger siblings. - Founded a womens religious community.
- Founded a hospital for the care of the poor.
- Had an enormous influence on the spiritual and
theological development of her famous brothers,
Basil the Great and Gregory of Nyssa.
4Macrinas Life
- When there was no longer any necessity for them
to continue their rather worldly way of life,
Macrina persuaded her mother to give up her
customary mode of living and her more
ostentatious existence and the services of her
maids, to which she had long been accustomed, and
to put herself on a level with the many by
entering into a common life with her maids,
making them her sisters and equals rather than
her slaves and underlings. - -- From Gregory of Nyssas
- On the Life of St. Macrina
5Macrinas Spirituality
- Christian Spirituality Comes of Age
- No disparagement of the physical realm.
- No relegation of either married life or
singleness to a secondary or less spiritual
status. - Balance between solitary and communal
spirituality. - Balance between longing for God and serving other
people.
6Macrinas Death
- For the fact was that, in her last breath, she
experienced nothing strange in the expectation of
the change and displayed no cowardice towards the
departure from life. Instead, she philosophized
with high intelligence on what had been decided
upon by her about this life from the beginning up
to her last breath, and this made her appear to
belong no longer to the world of men. For this
reason, she seemed to me to be making clear to
those present the divine and pure love of the
unseen Bridegroom which she had secretly
nourished in the depths of her soul, and she
seemed to be communicating the disposition in her
heart to go to the One she was longing for, so
that, once loosed from the chains of the body,
she might quickly be with Him. Truly, her race
was towards the Beloved and nothing of the
pleasure of life diverted her attention. - -- From Gregory of Nyssas
- On the Life of St. Macrina
7Great Spiritual Men and Women
- John Cassian
- (ca. 360 ca. 435)
8Background Desert Spirituality
- Evagrius (late fourth century)
- Praktike the struggle against ones own
passions, leading to apatheia (purity of heart) - Psychike the struggle against demons
- Theologike the pure contemplation of God
9The Struggle Toward Apatheia
- Evagrius/Cassian Gregory/Thomas
- gluttony gluttony
- fornication lust
- covetousness covetousness
- anger anger
- dejection
- weariness/sloth sloth
- vainglory envy
- pride pride
10Cassians Life
- Probably born in Dobrudja (modern Romania), and
educated in Greek and Latin. - Spent time in the Monastery of the Cave in
Bethlehem, perhaps in the mid-380s. - Spent at least a decade in Egypt among the
solitary hermits. - Fled Egypt for Constantinople during a
controversy in 399. - Fled Constantinople for Rome after 403.
- Left Rome sometime after the barbarian invasion
of 410. - Wound up in Marseilles as a priest, and there he
founded two monasteries, one for men and one for
women. - Wrote two major works on monasticism and
spiritual life, and another on the incarnation
during the Nestorian controversy.
11Cassians Spirituality
- The pursuit of apatheia (which Cassian calls
purity of heart) through seeking virtue and
avoiding extremes. - The place of solitude.
- The essence of spirituality.
12Cassians Spirituality
- If we consider also the beginning of the call
and salvation of mankind, in which, as the
apostle says, we are saved not of ourselves, nor
of our works, but by the gift and grace of God,
we can clearly see how the whole of perfection is
not of him who wills, nor of him who runs, but of
God who has mercy Rom. 916, who makes us
victorious over our faults, without any merits of
works and life on our part to outweigh them, or
any effort of our will availing to scale the
difficult heights of perfection, or to subdue the
flesh?. - --From Institutes 12.11
13Cassians Spirituality
- And further, the purity of heart that they have
acquired has taught them this above all, to
recognize more and more that they are burdened
with sin (for their compunction to their faults
increases day by day in proportion as their
purity of soul advances), and to sigh continually
from the bottom of their heart because they see
that they cannot possibly avoid the spots and
blemishes of those faults which are ingrained in
them through the countless triflings of the
thoughts. And therefore they declared that they
looked for the reward of the future life, not
from the merits of their works, but from the
mercy of the Lord, taking no credit to themselves
for their great circumspection of heart in
comparison with others, since they ascribed this
not to their own exertions, but to divine grace. - --From Institutes 12.15
14Great Spiritual Men and Women
- Gregory Palamas
- (ca. 1296 1359)
15Background Eastern Spirituality
- Apophaticism
- God is unknowable.
- Ignorance, not knowledge, is the condition of
true spirituality. - The goal of spirituality is not knowledge about
God, but vision of God. - Matt. 17 and 2 Cor. 12 are the paradigms.
16Background Eastern Spirituality
- Trinity!! Higher than any being, any divinity,
any goodness! - Guide of Christians in the wisdom of heaven!
- Lead us up beyond unknowing and light,
- up to the farthest, highest peak of mystic
scripture, - where the mysteries of Gods Word
- lie simple, absolute, and unchangeable
- in the brilliant darkness of a hidden silence.
- Amid the deepest shadow
- they pour overwhelming light on what is most
manifest. - Amid the wholly unsensed and unseen
- they completely fill our sightless minds
- with treasures beyond all beauty.
- -- From Pseudo-Dionysius, Mystical Theology
17Background Eastern Spirituality
- Hesychasm on Mt. Athos
- Transformation of the entire person through
quietness and prayer. - Jesus prayer.
- Physical posture.
- Breathing techniques.
18Gregory Palamas Life
- Born in Constantinople and also lived in
Thessalonica. - Spent time at Athos ca. 1318 and then returned
there permanently in 1331. - Came into fierce conflict with Barlaam (a
Greek-Italian monk) in 1337. - Palamas views were accepted at councils in
Constantinople in 1341, 1347, and 1351.
19Gregory Palamas Spirituality
- The monks know that the essence of God
transcends the fact of being inaccessible to the
senses, since God is not only above all created
things, but is even beyond Godhead. The
excellence of Him Who surpasses all things is not
only beyond all affirmation, but also beyond all
negation it exceeds all excellence that is
attainable by the mind. This hypostatic light,
seen spiritually by the saints, they know by
experience to exist. What it is, they do not
pretend to know. - -- From The Triads
20Gregory Palamas Spirituality
- This most joyful reality, which ravished Paul,
and made his mind go out from every creature but
yet return entirely to himselfthis he beheld as
a light of revelation, though not of sensible
bodies a light without limit, depth, height or
lateral extension. He saw absolutely no limit to
his vision and to the light which shone round
about him but rather it was as it were a sun
infinitely brighter and greater than the
universe, with himself standing in the midst of
it, having become all eye. (p. 38) - -- From The Triads
21Gregory Palamas Spirituality
- Christ is transfigured, not by putting on some
quality He did not possess previously, nor by
changing into something He never was before, but
by revealing to His disciples what He truly was,
in opening their eyes and in giving sight to
those who were blind. For while remaining
identical to what He had been before, He appeared
to the disciples in His splendour He is indeed
the true light, the radiance of glory. He was
divine before, but He bestowed at the time of His
Transfiguration a divine power upon the eyes of
the apostles and enabled them to look up and see
for themselves. - -- From The Triads
22Great Spiritual Men and Women
- Thomas à Kempis
- (ca. 1380 1471)
23Background Medieval Spirituality
- Three Kinds of Spirituality in the Middle Ages
- Sacramentalism with a strong emphasis on the
Church as the locus of our contact with the
divine. The mass is a great spectacle filling us
with awe at the greatness of God and at his
wisdom in granting to the Church hierarchy the
power of administering the sacrament. - Scholasticism a very knowledge-based approach
to spirituality, which centers around logical
consistency and sees the mind as the seat of
spiritual life - Mysticism a rejection of scholasticism in favor
of a direct experience of God (similar to Eastern
apophatic spirituality)
24Background Devotio moderna
- Geert Groote (1340-1384) and the Brethren of the
Common Life. - A movement of lay people and secular priests, not
monks or the Church hierarchy. - In part, a response to the corruption of the
Church. - Not a rejection of the Church, but such a strong
emphasis on internal devotion that the Church
hierarchy became somewhat marginalized. - Key idea a detestation of mere formal religion
and a desire for deep personal piety.
25Thomas à Kempis Life
- Born in Kempen, the Netherlands, to poor, devout
parents. - Educated from age 12 at the school of the
Brethren of the Common Life. - In 1399, joined the Augustinian monastery founded
by his older brother John. - In 1406, took monastic vows.
- Lived almost all of his long life in the
monastery.
26Thomas à Kempis Spirituality
- We are too much held by our own passions, and
too much troubled about transitory things. We
seldom overcome even one vice perfectly, and are
not set on fire to grow better every day and
therefore we remain cold and lukewarm. If we were
dead unto ourselves, and not entangled within our
own selves, then we should be able to relish
things divine, and to known something of heavenly
contemplation. Our fervor and profiting should
increase daily. But now it is accounted a great
matter if a man can retain but some part of his
first zeal. - -- From On the Imitation of Christ 1.11
27Thomas à Kempis Spirituality
- The life of a good religious person ought to be
mighty in all virtues, that he may inwardly be
such as outwardly he seems to men. And with
reason there ought to be much more within than is
perceived without. We ought daily to renew our
purpose and to stir up ourselves to fervor, as
though we had for the first time today entered
the Christian life. According to our purpose
shall be the course of our spiritual profiting
and much diligence is necessary to him who will
profit much. And if he who firmly purposes often
fails, what shall he do who seldom, or with
little firmness, purposes anything? - -- From On the Imitation of Christ 1.19
28Thomas à Kempis Spirituality
- Seek a convenient time to yourself and meditate
often upon Gods lovingkindnesses. Forsake
curious questionings, but read diligently matters
which rather yield contrition to your heart than
occupation to your head. - -- From On the Imitation of Christ 1.20
29Thomas à Kempis Spirituality
- They who love Jesus for the sake of Jesus, and
not for some special comfort of their own, bless
him in all tribulation and anguish of heart, as
well as in the highest comfort. Yea, although he
should never give them comfort, yet they would
ever praise him notwithstanding, and wish always
to give thanks. Oh, how powerful is the pure love
of Jesus, which is mixed with no self-interest,
or self-love! - -- From On the Imitation of Christ 2.11
30Great Spiritual Men and Women
- Philipp Jakob Spener
- (1635-1705)
31Background The 17th Century
- Luthers doctrine of justification by faith
- Lutheranisms emphasis on doctrine and the
institutional church in the 17th century - Descartes philosophical thought in the early
17th century
32Background German Pietism
- Sola scriptura revisited
- Lay Bible study groups (collegiae pietatis)
- Focus on personal, individual experience of God
- Strong emphasis on evangelism, missions, and
concern for the poor
33Speners Life
- He revolted against the spiritual deadness of
Lutheranism while a student at the University of
Strasbourg. - In Frankfurt, he founded a number of collegiae
pietatis. - He wrote Pia Desideria in 1675.
- In 1686 he was appointed court preacher at
Dresden, and then moved to Berlin in 1691. - In 1694 he secured the founding of the University
of Halle as a pietistic university. - Lutheran Orthodoxy opposed his efforts throughout
his life, and in 1695 he was charged with 283
counts of heresy. - In 1698 he withdrew from active life and devoted
himself to pastoral work and writing.
34Speners Spirituality
- Six major proposals for the improvement of
spiritual life - Intensified study of the Bible as the means to
enhanced personal devotion - Fuller exercise by the laity of their spiritual
priesthood - Emphasis on the practical side of Christianity,
culminating in a spirit of love - Showing charity in religious controversy, with
the aim of winning the heart rather than simply
winning an intellectual argument - Higher standards for spiritual life among
professors and students - Reform of preaching with a view toward edification
35Great Spiritual Masters
- Key Ideas Revisited
- Macrina Balance between focus on Christ and
focus on service of others - Cassian Complete reliance on God in the
spiritual quest - Palamas The paradigm of darkness being pierced
by light - Thomas à Kempis Turning inward for renewal in
faith in the midst of ones busy-ness and
external concerns - Spener The community of the faithful looking at
the Word of God together