St Gregory of Sinai. "On Stillness: Fifteen Texts. Different Ways of Psalmodizing." From Philokalia, Vol. 4.
10. So, lover of God, attend with care  and intelligence. If while engaged in spiritual work you see a light or a  fire outside you, or a form supposedly of Christ or of an angel or of  someone else, reject it lest you suffer harm. And do not pay court to  images, lest you allow them to stamp themselves on your intellect. For  all these things that externally and inopportunely assume various guises  do so in order to delude your soul. The true beginning of prayer is the  warmth of heart that scorifies the passions, fills the soul with joy  and delight, and establishes the heart in unwavering love and  unhesitating surety. The holy fathers teach that if the heart is in  doubt about whether to accept something either sensory or conceptual  that enters the soul, then that thing is not from God but has been sent  by the devil. Moreover, if you become aware that your intellect is being  enticed by some invisible power either from the outside or from above,  do not trust in that power or let your intellect be so enticed, but  immediately force it to continue its work. Unceasingly cry out: ‘Lord  Jesus Christ, Son of God, have mercy’, and do not allow yourself to  retain any concept, object, thought or form that is supposedly divine,  or any sequence of argument or any color, but concentrate solely on the  pure, simple, formless remembrance of Jesus. Then God, seeing your  intellect so strict in guarding itself in every way against the enemy,  will Himself bestow pure and unerring vision upon it and will make it  participate in God and share in all other blessings.
What is of God, says St Isaac, comes of  itself, without you knowing when it will come. Our natural enemy - the  demon who operates in the seat of our desiring power - gives the  spirit-forces various guises in our imagination. In this way he  substitutes his own unruly heat for spiritual warmth, so that the soul  is oppressed by this deceit. For spiritual delight he substitutes  mindless joy and a muggy sense of pleasure, inducing selfsatisfaction  and vanity. Thus he tries to conceal himself from those who lack  experience and to persuade them to take his delusions for manifestations  of spiritual joy. But time, experience and perspicacity will reveal him  to those not entirely ignorant of his wiles. As the palate  discriminates between different kinds of food (cf. Eccles. 36:18,19), so  the spiritual sense of taste clearly and unerringly reveals everything  as it truly is.
 
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