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lynnette atkinson's avatar

You know when the Fathers spoke about acedia with regard to monks? I really sympathised with those monks who were struggling with monastasism not because they were slothful or lazy, but the life in a desert skete was so arduous. For some of them this might be the point where they had to acknowledge that a monk's life was not for them because they actually needed people, even if they didn't realise it before. They probably came to feel that the life they had chosen was driving them mad. The heat, the solitude, the silence the monotonous round of prayers etc. However strong that we feel our faith is, we are tripped up by ourselves, by parts of ourselves that we don't realise are there till we try to walk in faith, especially if, as I have found, we try to live by the letter and thereby miss the spirit.

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Joe Whittaker's avatar

There is a technique I use, that may be of help for you when you are attacked. A priest friend I knew taught it to me. He said that if there are times when the attack on your will hits you so bad that you are struggling even to remember the rote prayers you learned as a child:

Clench your teeth together gently, keep your lips closed gently, and keep your tongue absolutely still.

Then carefully, without moving your mouth or your lips in sympathetic imitation of speaking, say the name Jesus in your mind.

Really make an effort to enunciate every syllable of His Name mentally. Do it over and over, as many times as you can.

It is a good way to exercise the will, and saying His name without moving any part of your mouth or tongue is not easy to do.

(Also, His Name itself has a subtle, hidden Power -- just like the Vial of Galadriel, His Name is a Word that is a light in the darkened mind ... when all other lights go out.)

Namárië.

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