Bishop Palladius. "The Lausiac History".
Chapter XXV.  Valens.
There was a man named Valens, a Palestinian by race, but Corinthian in his character - for St. Paul attributed the vice of presumption to the Corinthians. Having taken to the desert he dwelt with us for a number of years. He reached such a pitch of arrogance that he was deceived by demons. For by deceiving him little by little they induced him to be very proud, supposing that angels met him.
There was a man named Valens, a Palestinian by race, but Corinthian in his character - for St. Paul attributed the vice of presumption to the Corinthians. Having taken to the desert he dwelt with us for a number of years. He reached such a pitch of arrogance that he was deceived by demons. For by deceiving him little by little they induced him to be very proud, supposing that angels met him.
One day at least, so they told the tale,  as he was working in the dark he let drop the needle with which he was  stitching the basket. And when he did not find it, the demon made a  lamp, and he found the needle. Again, puffed up at this, he waxed proud  and in fact was so greatly puffed up that he despised the communion of  the mysteries. Now it happened that certain strangers came and brought  sweetmeats to the Church for the brethren. 
So the holy Macarius our priest received  them and sent a handful or so to each of us in his cell, among the rest  also to Valens. When Valens received the bearer he insulted him and  struck him and said to him: "Go and tell Macarius, 'I am not worse than  you, that you should send me a blessing.' So Macarius, knowing that he  was the victim of illusion, went the next day to exhort him and said to  him: "Valens, you are the victim of illusions. Stop it." And when he  would not listen to his exhortations, he retired. So the demon,  convinced that he was completely persuaded by his deception, went away  and disguised himself as the Saviour, and came by night in a vision of a  thousand angels bearing lamps and a fiery wheel, in which it seemed  that the Saviour appeared, and one came in front of the others and said:  "Christ has loved you because of your conduct and the freedom of your  life, and He has come to see you. So go out of the cell, do nothing else  but look at his face from afar, stoop down and worship, and then go to  your cell." 
So he went out and saw them in ranks  carrying lamps, and antichrist about a stade away, and he fell down and  worshipped. Then the next day again he became so mad that he entered  into the church and before the assembled brotherhood said: "I have no  need of Communion, for I have seen Christ to-day." Then the fathers  bound him and put him in irons for a year and so cured him, destroying  his pride by their prayers and indifference and calmer mode of life. As  it is said, "Diseases are cured by their opposites."
 
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