By St. Silouan
the Athonite
Adam, father of
all mankind, in paradise knew the sweetness of the love of God; and so when for
his sin he was driven forth from the garden of Eden, and was widowed of the
love of God, he suffered grievously and lamented with a great moan. And the
whole desert rang with his lamentations, for his soul was racked as he thought,
'I have distressed my beloved God'. He sorrowed less after paradise and the
beauty thereof; for he sorrowed that he was bereft of the love of God, which
insatiably, at every instant, draws the soul to Him.
In the same way
the soul which has known God through the Holy Spirit, but has afterwards lost
grace experiences the torment that Adam suffered. There is an aching and a deep
regret in the soul that has grieved the beloved Lord.
Adam pined on
earth, and wept bitterly, and the earth was not pleasing to him. He was
heartsick for God, and this was his cry:
My soul wearies
for the Lord,
and I seek Him in
tears.
How should I not
seek Him?
When I was with
Him my soul was glad and at rest,
and the enemy
could not come nigh me;
But now the
spirit of evil has gained power over me,
harassing and
oppressing my soul,
So that I weary
for the Lord even unto death,
And my spirit
strains to God,
and there is
naught on earth can make me glad,
Nor can my soul
take comfort in any thing,
but longs once
more to see the Lord,
that her hunger
may be appeased.
I cannot forget
Him for a single moment,
and my soul
languishes after Him,
and from the
multitude of my afflictions I lift up my voice and cry:
'Have mercy upon
me, O God. Have mercy on Thy fallen creature.'
Thus did Adam
lament, and the tears steamed down his face on to his beard, on to the ground
beneath his feet, and the whole desert heard the sound of his moaning. The
beasts and the birds were hushed in grief; while Adam wept because peace and
love were lost to all men on account of his sin.
Adam knew great
grief when he was banished from paradise, but when he saw his son Abel slain by
Cain his brother, Adam's grief was even heavier. His soul was heavy, and he
lamented and thought:
Peoples and
nations will descend from me, and multiply, and suffering will be their lot,
and they will live in enmity and seek to slay one another.
And his sorrow
stretched wide as the sea, and only the soul that has come to know the Lord and
the magnitude of His love for us can understand.
I, too, have lost
grace and call with Adam:
Be merciful unto
me, O Lord! Bestow on me the spirit of humility and love.
O love of the
Lord! He who has known Thee seeks Thee, tireless, day and night, crying with a
loud voice:
"I pine for
Thee, O Lord, and seek Thee in tears.
How should I not
seek Thee?
Thou didst give
me to know Thee by the Holy Spirit,
And in her
knowing of God my soul is drawn to seek Thee in tears."
Adam wept:
The desert cannot
pleasure me; nor the high mountains, nor meadow nor forest, nor the singing of
birds.
I have no
pleasure in any thing.
My soul sorrows
with a great sorrow:
I have grieved
God.
And were the Lord
to set me down in paradise again,
There, too, would
I sorrow and weep - 'O why did I grieve my beloved God?'
The soul of Adam
fell sick when he was exiled from paradise, and many were the tears he shed in
his distress. Likewise every soul that has known the Lord yearns for Him, and
cries:
Where art Thou, O
Lord? Where art Thou, my Light?
Why hast Thou
hidden Thy face from me?
Long is it since
my soul beheld Thee,
And she wearies
after Thee and seeks Thee in tears.
Where is my Lord?
Why is it that my
soul sees Him not?
What hinders Him
from dwelling in me?
This hinders Him:
Christ-like humility and love for my enemies art not in me.
God is love
insaturable, love impossible to describe.
Adam walked the
earth, weeping from his heart's manifold ills, while the thoughts of his mind
were on God; and when his body grew faint, and he could no longer shed tears,
still his spirit burned with longing for God, for he could not forget paradise
and the beauty thereof; but even more was it the power of His love which caused
the soul of Adam to reach out towards God.
I write of thee,
O Adam:
But thou art
witness,
my feeble
understanding cannot fathom thy longing after God,
Nor how thou
didst carry the burden of repentance.
O Adam, thou dost
see how I, thy child, suffer here on earth.
Small is the fire
within me, and the flame of my love flickers low.
O Adam, sing unto
us the song of the Lord,
That my soul may
rejoice in the Lord
And be moved to
praise and glorify Him
as the Cherubim
and Seraphim praise Him in the heavens
And all the hosts
of heavenly angels
sing to Him the
thrice-holy hymn.
O Adam, our
father, sing unto us the Lord's song,
That the whole
earth may hear
And all thy sons
may lift their minds to God
and delight in
the strains of the heavenly anthem,
And forget their
sorrows on earth.
The Holy Spirit
is love and sweetness for the soul, mind and body. And those who have come to
know God by the Holy Spirit stretch upward day and night, insatiable, to the
living God, for the love of God is very sweet. But when the soul loses grace
her tears flow as she seeks the Holy Spirit anew.
But the man who
has not known God through the Holy Spirit cannot seek Him with tears, and his
soul is ever harrowed by the passions; his mind is on earthly things.
Contemplation is not for him, and he cannot come to know Jesus Christ. Jesus
Christ is made known through the Holy Spirit.
Adam knew God in
paradise, and after his fall sought Him in tears.
O Adam, our
father, tell us, thy sons, of the Lord.
Thy soul didst
know God on earth,
Knew paradise
too, and the sweetness and gladness thereof,
And now thou
livest in heaven and dost behold the glory of the Lord.
Tell of how our
Lord is glorified for His sufferings.
Speak to us of
the songs that are sung in heaven, how sweet they are,
For they are sung
in the Holy Spirit.
Tell us of the
glory of the Lord,
of His great
mercy and how He loveth His creature.
Tell us of the
Most Holy Mother of God,
how she is
magnified in the heavens,
And the hymns
that call her blessed.
Tell us how the
Saints rejoice there, radiant with grace.
Tell us how they
love the Lord,
and in what
humility they stand before God.
O Adam, comfort
and cheer our troubled souls.
Speak to us of
the things thou dost behold in heaven.
Why art thou
silent?
Lo, the whole
earth is in travail.
Art thou so
filled with the love of God that thou canst not think of us?
Or thou beholdest
the Mother of God in glory,
and canst not
tear thyself from the sight,
And wouldst not
bestow a word of tenderness on us who sorrow,
That we might
forget the affliction there on earth?
O Adam, our
father,
thou dost see the
wretchedness of thy sons on earth.
Why then art thou
silent?
And Adam speaks:
My children,
leave me in peace.
I cannot wrench
myself from the love of God to speak with you.
My soul is
wounded with love of the Lord and rejoices in His beauty.
How should I
remember the earth?
Those who live
before the Face of the Most High
cannot think on
earthly things.
O Adam, our
father, thou hast forsaken us, thine orphans,
though misery is
our portion here on earth.
Tell us what we
may do to be pleasing to God?
Look upon thy
children scattered over the face of the earth,
our minds
scattered too.
Many have
forgotten God.
They live in
darkness and journey to the abysses of hell.
Trouble me not. I
see the Mother of God in glory -
How can I tear
myself away to speak with you?
I see the holy
Prophets and Apostles,
and all they are
in the likeness of our Lord Jesus Christ, Son of God.
I walk in the
gardens of paradise,
and everywhere
behold the glory of the Lord.
For the Lord is
in me and hath made me like unto Himself.
O Adam, yet we
are they children!
Tell us in our
tribulation how we may inherit paradise,
That we too, like
thee, may behold the glory of the Lord.
Our souls long
for the Lord,
while thou dost
live in heaven and rejoice in the glory of the Lord.
We beseech thee -
comfort us.
Why cry ye out to
me, my children?
The Lord loveth
you and hath given you commandments.
Be faithful to
them, love one another, and ye shall find rest in God.
Let not an hour
pass without ye repent of your transgressions,
That ye may be
ready to meet the Lord.
The Lord said: 'I
love them that love me,
and glorify them
that glorify me.'
O Adam, pray for
us, thy children.
Our souls are sad
from many sorrows.
O Adam, our
father, thou dwellest in heaven
and dost behold
the Lord seated in glory
On the right hand
of God the Father.
Thou dost see the
Cherubim and Seraphim and all the Saints
And thou dost
hear celestial songs
whose sweetness
maketh thy soul forgetful of the earth.
But we here on
earth are sad, and e weary greatly after God.
There is little
fire within us with which to love the Lord ardently.
Inspire us, what
must we do to gain paradise?
Adam makes
answer:
Leave me in
peace, my children, for from sweetness of the love of God I cannot think about
the earth.
O Adam, our souls
are weary, and we are heavy-laden with sorrow.
Speak a word of
comfort to us.
Sing to us from
the songs thou hearest in heaven,
That the whole
earth may hear and men forget their afflictions.
O Adam, we are
very sad.
Leave me in
peace.
The time of my
tribulation is past.
From the beauty
of paradise and the sweetness of the Holy Spirit
I can no longer
be mindful of the earth.
But this I tell
you:
The Lord loveth
you, and do you live in love
and be obedient
to those in authority over you.
Humble your
hearts, and the Spirit of God will live in you.
He cometh softly
into the soul and giveth her peace,
And bearth
wordless witness to salvation.
Sing to God in
love and lowliness of Spirit,
for the Lord
rejoiceth therein.
O Adam, our
father, what are we to do?
We sing but love and
humility are not in us.
Repent before the
Lord, and entreat of Him.
He loveth man and
will give all things.
I too repented
deeply and sorrowed much that I had grieved God,
And that peace
and love were lost on earth because of my sin.
My tears ran down
my face.
My breast was wet
with my tears, and the earth under my feet;
And the desert
heard the sound of my moaning.
You cannot
apprehend my sorrow,
nor how I
lamented for God and for paradise.
In paradise was I
joyful and glad:
the Spirit of God
rejoiced me, and suffering was a strange to me.
But when I was
driven forth from paradise
cold and hunger
began to torment me;
The beasts and
the birds that were gentle and had loved me
turned into wild
things
And were afraid
and ran from me.
Evil thoughts
goaded me.
The sun and the
wind scorched me.
The rain fell on
me.
I was plagued by
sickness and all the afflictions of the earth.
But I endured all
things, trusting steadfastly in God.
Do ye, then, bear
the travail of repentance.
Greet tribulation.
Wear down your bodies. Humble yourselves
And love your
enemies,
That the Holy
Spirit may take up His abode in you,
And then shall ye
know and attain the kingdom of heaven.
But come not
night me:
Now from love of
God
have I forgotten
the earth and all that therein is.
Forgotten even is
the paradise I lost,
for I behold the
glory of the Lord
And the glory of
the Saints
whom the light of
God's countenance maketh radiant
as the Lord
Himself.
O Adam, sing unto
us a heavenly song,
That the whole
earth may hearken
and delight in
the peace of love towards God.
We would hear
those songs:
Sweet are they
for they are sung in the Holy Spirit.
Adam lost the
earthly paradise and sought it weeping. But the Lord through His love on the
Cross gave Adam another paradise, fairer than the old - a paradise in heave
where shines the Light of the Holy Trinity.
What shall we
render unto the Lord for His love to us?
Source: St.
Silouan the Athonite, by Archimandrite Sophrony.
http://www.johnsanidopoulos.com/
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