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Dragons Wine and Angels Bread

Gabriel Bunge

THE EVAGRIAN IMAGE OF MAN


Man is created in his intellect (nous) his personal core in the image of God: a quality he
does not lose as a fallen image or a sinner. This old man, who is destroyed as a consequence
of deceitful lusts, first of all requires a fundamental renewal in the image of his Creator,
making him a new creation in Christ, before he becomes open to accepting Gods grace. This
renewal occurs in holy baptism, and it is this new man who becomes a true receiver of the
knowledge of the Father through the Son and the Spirit, whose true image he really is.
-

Monk: the prototype of the new man


o He first turns away from all actual sins.
o Intellect: free of all sins of though and perceives the light of the Holy Trinity at the
time of prayer
o One how is separated from all and who is in harmony with all.1

The historical man is a spirit in a body ( ): an immaterial, bodiless spirit-soul


() in a material, practical body that serve as an instrument () for the practice of
goodbut also of evil.
- Body consists of four elements
- Soul consists of three parts or, since these constitute a unity, of three powers ()
o Rational (logistikn) or the intellect ()
Governing power (): it should take over leadership of the three
powers of the soul.
o Irrational part of the soul or soul
Irascible ()
Belongs to the passionate part of the soul
It is linked to the heart
When inflamed, especially with anger, it is robbed of the divine
light.
Concupiscible ()
The proneness to the passions is due to the intimate connection between the two irrational
powers and the body, which can trigger in us movements of desire and anger.
The passions
- Of the body
o Arise from natural needs
o Easily healed by the appropriate means - abstinence.
1 On Prayer (Or.) 124.

Soul, the disease of love of self ()


o Occasioned by our own person and our relationship with fellow human beings.

The Vice of Demons


No other evil makes man in particular as much like a demon as anger. For a demon is a rational
nature, which, because of an abundance of anger, has fallen away from the ascetic life. This vice
is not at all natural, but contranatural, opposed to its own created nature! Evil is never found
in mans being () but always in his behavior ().
A proud man (es. Peter and Judas) can transfer his dreams of omnipotence to others, whose
prophet he then becomes and in whose retinue he himself hopes to become great (the places
on the right and the left).
- If these vain expectations are disappointed then anger appears
- Wounded love of self suddenly turns into hatred for the one who failed and who must now
be destroyed.

Anger in the List of Eight Evil Thoughts


Acedia: the noonday demon
Is a simultaneous and perduring stirring of irsascibility and desire, whereby the former is angry
about what is at hand, while the latter yearns for what is not present
- Appears in contradictory ways:
o Lukewarm, sluggishness, indifference, and even depression
o Conscientious and eager, unrestrained activism and ascetical maximalism
- Can lead to a complete standstill of the spiritual life

The Essential definition of Vice


All vices arise from a perversion of the activitiesgood in themselvesof the souls three
powers. It is a form of unnatural and secondary working.
Natural workings of man
- Rational part applies itself to the contemplation of created things
- Concupiscible part desires virtue
- Irascible part fights to obtain it
o Courage (manliness), perseverance, Christian love that manifests itself as
meekness
o Demons attack by turning our legitimate anger against sin into anger against
the sinner.
o The souls hound meant to kill only the wolves (demons, sin), and not ot
devour the sheep.
o Remedy: spiritual love in all its various manifestations.
Anger

A passion that arises very quickly


A boiling over of the irascible part and a movement directed against whoever has
committed an injury or is thought to have done so.
o It seizes the mind and portrays to it the face of whoever has hurt it.
o Anger makes a soul bestial; through its behavior, it becomes a demon, a
basilisk.
If not healed, momentary impulse easily turns into resentment: remembrance of
evil () and/or sheer hatred (
o These are short-lived passions that last into old age.

Meekness
- Mother of knowledge
- Prayer is an offspring of meekness and angerlessness.
Gnostic
- One who speaks with God
- Experiences a heartfelt intimacy

The Consequences
The things that happen to us in sleep are for Evagrius the psychologist naturally of the
greatest significance. They are revealers of our present spiritual condition.
- Characteristic of an aroused irascibility are fear-inducing nightmares.
Interpersonal contacts are not at all excluded, but relatively seldom in anchorite life.
Special conditions had to be fulfilled for withdrawal not only from the world but also
from the monastic community itself. Whoever did not get along well with others in
community would also not get along well with himself in isolation.
Withdrawal in love purifies the heart, but withdrawal with hate bewilders it.
(Pachomius)
An Anchorite is one who lives a devout and upright life in the world that exists in his
mind. He aims at internal detachment from worldly passions. For to separate the soul
from the body lies in the power of the man who pursues virtue. This means nothing
other than to free her from the tyranny of the passions so as to let virtue live. Under
such conditions, premature withdrawal is not without harm.
Disturbed human relationships, such as those wrought by wrath, pride, or also grief
(and the depressions linked to these), have the worst consequences for the afflicted
person when he finds himself alone.

ANGER AND PRAYER

The surpassing importance Evagrius ascribes to anger in all his writings is based on its
utterly negative relation to prayer. They are mutually exclusive, like fire and water.
Negative effects of a psychological nature: obsessive fixation on an objector worse, on a
particular person who has actually or allegedly insulted us and away from whom one
cannot tear ones thoughts precisely during prayer.
Demons do not know our heart, from signs () however they recognize what is
hidden there, from whence proceed our good and evil intentions. From these signs, they
create the material of their temptations by stimulating our memory and furnishing us
with the image of one who has offended us. We then hold this image before our
eyes like an idol in order to converse with it instead of with God.
At the time of prayer, the intellect should be free of images because it is holding
converse with the immaterial and formless God. Undistracted prayer is the highest
act of the intellect.
Those who are still held by fits of anger should not strive after knowledge of more divine things.
Self-induced states which only spuriously feels without actually experiencing them. It is
pride, hiding behind this anger, that drives us to seek such imitations ( ) and not wait
to be called (as was Moses by God from the Burning Bush) but rather darinlgy to set foot in the
place of prayer.

THE BLINDING OF THE INTELLECT


Just as the body has five senses, so too does the intellect have five spiritual senses. The
spiritual organ of sight lay bare to the intellect the intelligible things as they are. Whats
more, just as our bodily organ of sight is made manifest through our bodily eyes, so too
does the intellect have two intelligible eyes through which it beholds (that is,
recognizes) God:
-

Left eye:
o Indirectly through the reasons of created natures
Right eye:
o Unmediatedly and personally that the time of prayer.
o Capable of beholding the blessed light of the Holy Trinity

Excited anger destroys this twofold perception.

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