Category: KNOWLEDGE

  • I’m so learned, but I don’t know how to live.

  • “I feel I change my mind all the time. And I sort of feel that’s your responsibility as a person, as a human being — to constantly be updating your positions on as many things as possible. And if you don’t contradict yourself on a regular basis, then you’re not thinking.”    

    —Malcolm Gladwell

  • “Welcome words of truth and to never reject criticism uncritically.”

    —St. Mark the Ascetic


    “Are you listening to what I’m saying, or are you just being offended?”

    Fr. Anthony Messeh


    “Do not excuse yourself or refuse to be corrected by all; listen to every reproof with a serene countenance; think that God utters it.”

    —St. John of the Cross


    If it hurts to hear it, look for the truth in it.

    @naval


    But if any one’s conscience attacks him, he himself is responsible for it, not my words.

    Saint John Chrysostom, On the Vanity of Riches
    HOMILY TWO
    After Eutropios, having been found outside the church, was taken captive

  • Anger squanders knowledge,
    Forbearance gathers it in.

    Evagrius Ponticus

  • I decided quite a long time ago that when I write, I will only write that which is meaningful to me personally. If it happens to be meaningful to someone else, this is encouraging and provides the reason for continuing to maintain this blog.

    —Fr. Sergei Sveshnikov, Putting My Mouth Where My Writing Is

  • But in order to pronounce a book bad it is not enough to discover that it elicits no good response from ourselves, for that might be our fault.

    —C.S. Lewis, An Experiment in Criticism


    There is an unconscious antagonism in us to anything that threatens our ingrained prejudices, and challenges us to grow. Because we are reluctant to admit our intolerance of a different viewpoint, we project the problem onto the text and proclaim, “This is a hard saying and who can bear with it?” We blame the text for our unwillingness to receive.

    —Fr. Michael Casey, OCSO


    “There is no book so bad…that it does not have something good in it.”

    —Miguel de Cervantes Saavedra, Don Quixote

  • “In this world, you must be oh so smart, or oh so pleasant. Well, for years I was smart. I recommend pleasant.”

    Elwood P. Dowd | Harvey (film)

  • “How deluded we sometimes are by the clear notions we get out of books. They make us think that we really understand things of which we have no practical knowledge at all.”

    —Thomas Merton

  • “Why do we all know so much? And why do we feel the unbearable urge to tell each other that we know so much? It’s as if we are burdened by the question of what to do with thought, by our brains, by the very weight of the organ…”

    Infinite Resignation
    Eugene Thacker

  • If you fall under discipline, know for sure that this is a great profit, for God chastises the soul that has forgotten its weakness and has been puffed up by its talents and success. This is carried on until it realizes its weakness, especially when God does not provide in tribulation a way of escape. He besieges the soul from all sides and embitters it with inward and outward humiliation, whether by sin or by scandal, until it abhors itself, curses its own intelligence, and disowns its counsel. Finally, it surrenders itself to God, feeling crushed and lowly. At such a time, it becomes easy for man to hate himself. He even wishes it to be hated by everybody. This is the way of true humility. It leads to total surrender to divine plan. It ends up with freeing one’s soul from the tyranny of the ego, with its deception, its stubbornness, and its vanity.

    —Matthew the Poor, Orthodox Prayer Life