• Some, I know not why (for I have not learned to pry conceitedly into the gifts of God) are by nature, I might say, prone to temperance, or silence, or purity, or modesty, or meekness, or contrition. But others, although almost their own nature itself resists them in this, to the best of their power force themselves; and though they occasionally suffer defeat yet, as men struggling with nature, they are in my opinion higher than the former.

    St. John Climacus, The Ladder of Divine Ascent

  • “A small fire often destroys a whole forest; so too a small flaw spoils all our labour.”

    —St. John Climacus, The Ladder of Divine Ascent

  • “If we always see God in our minds, and always remember Him, everything appears tolerable to us.”

    —St John Chrysostom

  • Of course, it’s easy to trust God when the bush is burning, the waters are parting, and the mountains are shaking— it’s those silent years that are discouraging. But blessed is the person who does not interpret the silence of God as the indifference of God!

    —Erwin W. Lutzer, Getting Closer to God: Lessons from the Life of Moses

  • “Homesickness is just a state of mind for me. I’m always missing someone or someplace or something. I’m always trying to get back to some imaginary somewhere. My life has been one long longing.”

    —Elizabeth Wurtzel, Prozac Nation

  • “For if a man does not first sin in his mind, he will never sin in action.”

    —St. Maximos the Confessor

  • “Because I loved myself, I was loved.”

    —Erica Jong, Blood & Honey

  • “As he who carries perfumes with him makes his presence felt by the fragrance whether he wants to or not, so he who has the Spirit of the Lord is known by his words and his humility.”

    —St. John Climacus, The Ladder of Divine Ascent

  • Never delay in undertaking any work you have to do, for the first brief delay will lead to a second, more prolonged one, and the second to a third, still longer, and so on. Thus work begins too late and is not done in its proper time, or else is abandoned altogether, as something too burdensome. Having once tasted the pleasure of inaction, you begin to like and prefer it to action. In satisfying this desire, you will little by little form a habit of inaction and laziness, in which the passion for doing nothing will possess you to such an extent that you will cease even to see how incongruous and criminal it is; except perhaps when you weary of this laziness, and are again eager to take up your work. Then you will see with shame how negligent you have been and how many necessary works you have neglected, for the sake of the empty and useless ‘doing what you like’.

    Unseen Warfare
    Lorenzo Scupoli

  • “One who loves his neighbour can never tolerate slanderers, but rather runs from them as from fire.”

    —St. John Climacus, The Ladder of Divine Ascent