Letters of Archbishop Theophan of Poltava.
What does it mean to say "we are all in prelest"?

You write, "When I was reading the  writings of Bishop Ignatius Brianchaninov, the following questions came  to mind: On page 230 it is written that we are all in prelest; why then,  when someone speaks of 'a man in prelest', is this attributed a special  meaning? and how should one treat such a person?
In order to understand the expression  "we are all in prelest," it is necessary to consider the following. The  ancient ascetics regarded "repentance or lamentation of one's sins" as  their primary ascetic labor. Many of their sayings concerning this have  come down to us. I will cite a few of these in confirmation of [Bishop  Ignatius'] writings.
"A brother said to Abba Sisoes: I perceive that the remembrance of  God (mental prayer) ever abides in me. The elder said: It is not so  extraordinary that your mind is constantly turned toward God; what is  extraordinary is when a person considers himself the worst of all  creatures" (Ignatius Brianchaninov, Patericon, 4)."When Abba Arsenius the Great passed away, and St. Poemen heard of his repose, he shed abundant tears and said: Blessed are you, Abba Arsenius, because you wept over yourself during this life! One cannot help but weep, either here according to his own will, or against his will in the torments of hell" (Patericon, 29).
The more advanced a man is in holiness,  the deeper is his awareness of his own sinfulness. Conversely, the less  refined a man is, the weaker is his awareness of his own sinfulness. In  the majority of people Such an awareness is altogether absent. This is  why they do not understand the ascetic labor of repentance and do not  feel any need for it. Because they do not understand this labor and feel  no need to repent, one may say that all such people are in prelest. And  inasmuch as we have but a limited awareness of our sinfulness, one may  say that we are all in prelest !
Sophia 11/23/1927
What constitutes "prelest proper"?
..St. Isaac the Syrian wrote about this  kind of prelest: "The effect of the cross is twofold; the duality of its  nature divides it into two parts, One consists in endurin~ sorrows of  the flesh which are brought about by the action of the excitable part of  the soul, and this part is called activity. The other part lies in the  finer workings of the mind and in divine meditation, as well as in  attending to prayer, etc.; it is accomplished by means of the desiring  part of the soul and is called contemplation. The part of the soul by  dint of its zeal, while the second part is the activity of soulful love,  in other words, natural desire, which enlightens the rational part of  the soul. Every man who, before perfectly mastering the first part,  switches to the second, attracted out of weakness--to say nothing of  laziness, is overtaken by God's wrath because he did not first mortify  his members which are upon the earth (Col. 3:5). In other words, he did  not cure his thoughts of infirmities by patiently bearing the cross, but  rather dared in his mind to envision the glory of the cross" (Word 55).
It is evident from  these words of Isaac the Syrian that what we call prelest proper exists  when a man starts trying to live above his capabilities. Without having  cleansed himself of passions, he strives for a life of contemplation and  dreams of the delights of spiritual grace. Thus the wrath of God  befalls a man; because he thinks too highly of himself, God's grace is  withdrawn from him and he falls under the influence of the evil one who  actively begins to tickle his vainglory with lofty contemplation and  [spiritual] delights...
Briefly, the  difference between "general prelest" and prelest in the particular sense  of the word can, on the basis of the above. be expressed thus. General  prelest is forgetting and not noticing one's sinfulness. That which we  call prelest proper is attributing to oneself righteousness when it does  not actually exist. If a man thinks he is righteous, then his  righteousness is not divine, but diabolical, foreign to the grace of God  and to humility. One should recall the famous saying of Abba Poemen the  Great: "I prefer a man who sins and repents to one who does not sin and  does not repent. The first has good thoughts, for he admits that he is  sinful. But the second has false, soul-destroying thoughts, for he  imagines himself to be righteous" (Bp. Ignatius, Patericon, 75).
Sophia, 11/24/1927 
(Archbishop Theophan's letters translated from the Russian by Antonina Janda)
 
No comments:
Post a Comment