The Spirit of Acedia, or Staying True to Our Dwelling Place

In the spiritual life, acedia arises in response to our spiritual commitments and vocations. Weariness pervades precisely in the arenas of our life that had previously been a source of great joy. Prayer feels dry and cold, when before it was rich and alive. Scripture and spiritual reading used to be inspiring. The words now seem out-of-touch and even make me feel irritable. The same liturgy, worship services, and rituals that ignited my soul’s fire become boring and laborious. In vocational marriage or vowed monasticism, the wife, husband, nun, or monk wonders what they were thinking ten, fifteen, twenty years ago when they took these vows. What did I ever see in him? Or Why did I ever think this is what I was meant to do with my life?The marriage or monastery begins to feel small and suffocating. The person afflicted with acedia spends a lot of time looking at the door and wondering what it would be like if they walked through it.

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The Spirit of Anger, or Compassion, Forgiveness and Acting from Freedom

Like Dejection, the thought of Anger is related to the frustration of the desires of ego. Whereas dejection is a sinking down, anger is a flaring out. Anger brings heat, intensity, and passion. It is activating and threatens to quickly take over one’s heart when it arises. Like the story of when I badly hurt myself, when we feed our anger it narrows our awareness, drives our actions, and blinds us to the fullness of reality.

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Purifying the Heart: What the desert elders can teach us about healing our world – and ourselves

In the fourth century, the ancient Roman world order, which had stood for a thousand years, teetered on the edge of collapse. Imperial Rome was being battered by enemies from without and rotting from corruption and social decay from within. The Roman state had become ‘Christian’ in name, whichonly furthered the resolve of Christian spiritual pioneers who stepped away from the collapsing society and fled to the wilderness. There, they built a new social order founded on radical fidelity to the God of infinite love and mercy. These pioneers became known as ‘The Desert Fathers and Mothers.’ They developed a system of spiritual practice that I believe has profound significance for our time.

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