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On Reading the Holy Fathers
by St. Ignatius Brianchaninov
Conversation and association with one's neighbors very much affects
a person. Conversation and acquaintance with a learned man communicates
much knowledge; with a poet, many exalted thoughts and feelings;
with a traveler, much information about countries, about the characters
and customs of peoples. It is obvious that conversation and acquaintance
with the saints communicates holiness. "With the holy man
wilt thou be holy, and with the innocent man wilt thou be innocent.
And with the elect man wilt thou be elect" (Psalms 17:25-26).
From henceforth, during the time of this short earthly life,
which Scripture has not even called "life," but rather
"journeying," let us become acquainted with the saints.
Do you want to belong to their society in heaven, do you want
to be a partaker of their blessedness? From henceforth enter into
association with them. When you go forth from the house of the
body, then they will receive you to themselves as their own acquaintance,
as their own friend (Luke 16:9).
There is no closer acquaintance, there is no tighter bond, than
the bond of oneness of thoughts, oneness of feelings, oneness
of goal (I Corinthians 1:10).
Where there is oneness of thoughts, there without fail is oneness
of soul, there without fail is one goal, an identical success
in the attaining of one's goal.
Appropriate to yourself the thoughts and the spirit of the Holy
Fathers by reading their writings. The Holy Fathers attained the
goal: salvation. And you will attain this goal by the natural
course of things. As one who is of one thought and one soul with
the Holy Fathers, you will be saved.
Heaven received into its blessed bosom the Holy Fathers. By this
it has borne witness that the thoughts, feelings, and actions
of the Holy Fathers are well-pleasing to it. The Holy Fathers
set forth their thoughts, their heart, the image of their activity
in their writings. This means: what a true guidance to heaven,
which is borne witness to by heaven itself, are the writings of
the Fathers.
The writings of the Holy Fathers are all composed by the inspiration
or under the influence of the Holy Spirit. Wondrous is the agreement
among them, wondrous is the anointing! One who is guided by them
has without any doubt whatsoever the guidance of the Holy Spirit.
All the waters of the earth flow together into the ocean, and
it may be that the ocean serves as the beginning of all the waters
of the earth. The writings of the fathers are all united in the
Gospel; they all incline towards teaching us the exact fulfillment
of the commandments of our Lord Jesus Christ; of all of them both
the source and the end is the holy Gospel.
The Holy Fathers teach how to approach the Gospel, how to read
it, how to understand it correctly, what helps and what hinders
in comprehending it. And therefore in the beginning occupy yourself
with the reading of the Fathers. When they have taught you how
to read the Gospel, then read the Gospel primarily.
Do not consider it sufficient for yourself to read the Gospel
alone, without the reading of the Holy Fathers! This is a proud,
dangerous thought. Better, let the Holy Fathers lead you to the
Gospel, as their beloved child who has received his preparatory
upbringing and education by means of their writings.
Many people, all who have senselessly and presumptuously rejected
the Holy Fathers, who have come without any intermediary, with
a blind audacity, with an impure mind and heart to the Gospel,
have fallen into fatal delusion. The Gospel has rejected them;
it grants access to itself only to the humble.
The reading of the Fathers' writings is the father and the king
of all virtues. From the reading of the Fathers' writings we learn
the true understanding of Holy Scripture, right faith, the way
of life in accord with the Gospel's commandments, the deep esteem
which one should have toward the Gospel commandmentsto say
it in a word, one learns salvation and Christian perfection.
Because of the diminishing of Spirit-bearing instructors, the
reading of the Fathers' writings has become the main guide for
those who wish to be saved and even attain Christian perfection.
(Rule of St. Nil Sorsky)
The books of the Holy Fathers, as one of them has expressed it,
are like a mirror; looking into them attentively and frequently,
a soul can see all of its shortcomings.
Again, these books are like a rich collection of medicinal means;
in them the soul can seek for each of its illnesses a saving remedy.
St. Ephphanius of Cyprus said, "A mere glance at holy books
arouses one towards the pious life." (Alphabetic Patericon)
The reading of the Holy Fathers should be careful, attentive,
and constant; our invisible enemy, who hates the voice of confirmation
(Proverbs 11:15), hates especially when this voice comes forth
from the Holy Fathers. This voice unmasks the wiles of our enemy,
his evilness, reveals his snares, his way of working; and therefore
the enemy arms himself against the reading of the Fathers by various
proud and blasphemous thoughts, tries to cause the ascetic to
fall into vain cares in order to distract him from this saving
reading, fights with him by means of despondency, depression,
forgetfulness. From this warfare against the reading of the Holy
Fathers we should conclude how saving (is) the weaponry for us,
by the degree to which it is hated by the enemy. The enemy makes
all efforts to wrest it out of our hands.
Let each personally choose for himself the reading from the Fathers
which corresponds to his way of life. Let the hermit read the
Fathers who wrote about the solitary life; let the monk who lives
in the cenobitic life read the Fathers who wrote instructions
for cenobitic monks; let the Christian who lives in the world
read the Holy Fathers who pronounced their teachings for all Christianity
in general. Let everyone, in whatsoever calling he be, draw forth
abundant instruction in the writings of the Fathers.
It is absolutely necessary that the reading correspond to one's
way of life. Otherwise you will be filled with thoughts which,
although holy, will be unfulfillable in the actual deed and will
arouse you to fruitless activity in only the imagination and desire;
the work of piety which does correspond to your way of life will
slip out of your hands. Not only will you become a fruitless dreameryour
thoughts, being in constant opposition to your sphere of activity,
will without fail give birth to turmoil in your heart, and to
uncertainty in your conduct, which are burdensome and harmful
for you and for your neighbors. By an incorrect reading of Holy
Scripture and the Holy Fathers, one can easily deviate from the
saving path into impassable thickets and deep abysses, which has
happened with many. Amen.
From Living Orthodoxy (Vol. XVII, No. 2, March-April 1995)
Books available by St. Ignatius Brianchaninov