Bishop Palladius. "The Lausiac History".
Chapter XXVI. Heron
There was a certain Heron, a neighbour  of mine, an Alexandrian by race, an excellent young man, of good natural  ability and pure in his life. He also after many toils was attacked by  pride and flung off all restraints and cherished presumptuous sentiments  against the fathers, insulting even the blessed Evagrius by saying:  "Those who obey your teaching are dupes; for one should not pay heed to  any teachers except Christ." He even abused Scripture to serve the  purpose of his folly and would say: "The Saviour Himself said, 'Call no  man teacher upon the earth.'" His mind became so darkened that he too  was afterwards put in irons, since he was unwilling even to attend the  mysteries - truth is dear.
He was excessively abstemious in his  mode of life, so that many who knew him intimately declared that he  frequently went three months without eating, being content with the  communion of the mysteries and any wild herbs that might be found. And I  too had an experience of him when I went to Scete with the blessed  Albanius. Scete was forty miles away from us. In the course of those  forty miles we ate twice and drank water three times, but he without  eating anything went on foot and said by heart fifteen psalms, then the  long psalm, then the Epistle to the Hebrews, then Isaiah and part of  Jeremiah, then Luke the Evangelist, then the Proverbs. And things being  so, yet we could not keep up with him as he walked. Finally, driven as  it were by fire, he could not remain in his cell, but went off to  Alexandria, by (divine) dispensation, and, as the saying goes, "knocked  out one nail with another." For of his own free will he fell into  indifference, but afterwards found salvation involuntarily. For he  frequented the theatre and circuses and enjoyed the diversions of the  taverns. And thus, eating and drinking immoderately, he fell into a mire  of concupiscence. And when he was resolving to sin he met an actress  and had converse with her. In consequence a carbuncle developed on his  private parts, and for six months he was so ill that the parts rotted  away and fell off. Later, restored to health without those parts and  returned to a religious frame of mind, he came and confessed all these  things to the fathers. A few days after he fell asleep before he had  returned to work.
 
No comments:
Post a Comment