Lorenzo Scupoli, enhanced by Saint Nicodemus of the Holy Mountain, and Saint Theophan the Recluse. "Unseen Warfare".

The reason why we have wrong judgment of  the things we mentioned earlier is that we do not look deeply into them  to see what they are, but conceive a liking for them or a dislike of  them from the very first glance, judging by appearances. These likes and  dislikes prejudice our mind and darken it; and so it cannot form a.  right judgment of things as they really are. So, my brother, if you wish  to be free of this prelest in your mind, keep strict attention over  yourself; and when you see a thing with your eyes, or visualise it in  your mind, keep a firm grip on your desires and do not allow yourself at  the first glance either to conceive a liking for the thing or a dislike  for it, but examine it in a  detached way with the mind alone.  Unobscured by passion, the mind then remains in a state natural to it,  which is free and pure, and has the possibility to know the truth and to  penetrate into the depths of a thing, where evil is often concealed  under a deceptively attractive exterior and where good is sometimes  hidden under a bad appearance.
But if desire comes first and at once  either likes a thing or turns away from it, your mind no longer has the  possibility to know it rightly as it should. For if this predisposition,  or rather this passion precedes every judgment, it enters within,  becomes a wall between the mind and the thing and, obscuring the mind,  makes it form its judgment from passion. In other words, it sees it not  as it really is, which strengthens still more its original  predisposition. The further this predisposition runs ahead, or the more  it likes or dislikes a thing, the more it obscures the mind in relation  to it, until it darkens the mind completely. Then passion in relation to  this thing reaches its ultimate limits, so that it appears to a man  either as the most desirable or the most hateful of all the things he  ever liked or disliked. Thus it happens that when the rule I have  indicated is not observed, that is, when desire is not restrained from  forming likes and dislikes before a thing is properly examined, then  both these powers of the soul—mind and will—always work wrongly,  plunging ever deeper and deeper from darkness to darkness, and from sin  to sin.
So watch, my beloved, with all attention  and protect yourself from liking or disliking a thing out of passion,  before you have had time to examine it properly in the light of reason  and the just word of the Divine Scriptures, in the light of grace and  prayer, and with the help of the judgment of your spiritual father;  otherwise you may sin in taking for evil what is truly good, and for  good what is truly evil. This mostly happens in the case of certain  actions, which are good and holy in themselves, but which according to  circumstances,) namely that if they are done at a wrong time, or are out  of place, or arc not done in the right measure, cause, considerable  harm to those who do them, We know from experience what afflictions are  suffered by some through such worthy and holy deeds.
 
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