…you should know the prophecy of the ancient Fathers, that in the last times monastics will be saved not through spiritual exploits, but through the endurance of sorrows. To such an extent is this true and needful that the surest sign of God’s favor and God’s love for a person is the multitude of sorrows and sicknesses which befall him.
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When we become unduly distressed at falling ill, we should recognize that our soul is still the slave of bodily desires and so longs for physical health, not wishing to lose the good things of this life and even finding it a great hardship not to be able to enjoy them because of illness. If, however, the soul accepts thankfully the pains of illness, it is clear that it is not far from the realm of dispassion; as a result it even waits joyfully for death as the entry into a life that is more true.
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FOR all the long years of this present life disappear when you have regard to the eternity of the future glory: and all our sorrows vanish away in the contemplation of that vast bliss, and like smoke melt away, and come to nothing, and like ashes are no more seen.
John Cassian, Institutes
CHAPTER XII: That no toil is worthy to be compared with the promised bliss. -
‘Sometimes seeing their fault distresses them more than the thing that disturbs them, for unable to help themselves they are affected by earthly happenings even though these may not be very burdensome.’
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“I’m the last thing tethering you to reality, yet your only way of escaping it.”
I’m a Short Afternoon Walk and You’re Putting Way Too Much Pressure on Me -
“A sick man only wants one thing, a healthy man wants 10,000 things.”
—Confucius -
“Our circumstances don’t change, but we change.
The Lord said we *will* have tribulation and that we *may* have peace.”
—Fr. Daniel Fanous
