An exert from a sermon by St John Chrysostom:
"Some
people, if they stumble at all, or are slandered by anyone, or fall ill with a
chronic disease, gout or headache or any such ailment, at once begin to
blaspheme. They submit to the pain of the disease, but deprive themselves
of the benefit. What are you doing, man, blaspheming your benefactor,
savior, protector, and guardian? Or do you not see that you are falling
down a cliff and casting yourself into the pit of final destruction? You
do not make your suffering lighter, do you, if you blaspheme? Indeed, you
aggravate it, and make your distress more grievous. For the devil brings
a multitude of misfortunes for this purpose, to lead you down into that
pit. If he sees you blaspheming he will readily increase the suffering
and make it greater, so that when you are pricked you may give up once again;
but is he sees you enduring bravely, and giving thanks the more to God, the
more the suffering grows worse, he raises the siege at once, knowing that it
will be useless to besiege you any more. A dog sitting by the table, if
it sees the person who is eating continually throwing it scraps of food from
the table, stays persistently; but if stopping at the table once or twice it
goes away without getting anything, it stays away thereafter, thinking that the
siege is useless. In the same way the devil continually gapes at us; if
you throw to him, as to a dog, some blasphemous word, he will take it and
attack you again; but if you persevere in thanksgiving, you have choked him
with hunger, you have chased him away and thrown him back from you. But,
you say, you cannot keep silent when you are pricked by distress. I
certainly do not forbid you to make a sound, but give thanks instead of
blasphemy, worship instead of despair. Confess to the Lord, cry out loudly
in prayer, cry out loudly glorifying God. In this way your suffering will
be lightened, because the devil will pull back from your thanksgiving and God's
help will be at your side. If you blaspheme, you have driven away God's
assistance, made the devil more vehement against you, and involved yourself
even more in suffering; but if you give thanks, you have driven away the plots
of the evil demon, and you have drown the care of God your protector to
yourself."
St. John Chrysostom, "Third Sermon on Lazarus and the Rich Man," On Wealth and Poverty, trans. by Catharine P. Roth (Crestwood, NY: St. Vladimir's Seminary Press, 1984), 69-70.
St. John Chrysostom, "Third Sermon on Lazarus and the Rich Man," On Wealth and Poverty, trans. by Catharine P. Roth (Crestwood, NY: St. Vladimir's Seminary Press, 1984), 69-70.
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