From the Detailed Rules for Monks by Saint Basil the Great
How shall we repay the Lord for all his goodness to us? |
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Saint Basil the great |
What
words can adequately describe God’s gifts? They are so numerous that
they defy enumeration. They are so great that any one of them demands
our total gratitude in response.
Yet even though we cannot speak of it worthily, there
is one gift which no thoughtful man can pass over in silence. God
fashioned man in his own image and likeness; he gave him knowledge of
himself; he endowed him with the ability to think which raised him above
all living creatures; he permitted him to delight in the unimaginable
beauties of paradise, and gave him dominion over everything upon earth.
Then, when man was deceived by the serpent and fell
into sin, which led to death and to all the sufferings associated with
death, God still did not forsake him. He first gave man the law to help
him; he set angels over him to guard him; he sent the prophets to
denounce vice and to teach virtue; he restrained man’s evil impulses by
warnings and roused his desire for virtue by promises. Frequently, by
way of warning, God showed him the respective ends of virtue and of vice
in the lives of other men. Moreover, when man continued in disobedience
even after he had done all this, God did not desert him.
No, we were not abandoned by the goodness of the Lord.
Even the insult we offered to our Benefactor by despising his gifts did
not destroy his love for us. On the contrary, although we were dead,
our Lord Jesus Christ restored us to life again, and in a way even more
amazing than the fact itself, for his state was divine, yet he did not
cling to his equality with God, but emptied himself to assume the
condition of a slave.
He bore our infirmities and endured our sorrows. He
was wounded for our sake so that by his wounds we might be healed. He
redeemed us from the curse by becoming a curse for our sake, and he
submitted to the most ignominious death in order to exalt us to the life
of glory. Nor was he content merely to summon us back from death to
life; he also bestowed on us the dignity of his own divine nature and
prepared for us a place of eternal rest where there will be joy so
intense as to surpass all human imagination.
How, then, shall we repay the Lord for all his
goodness to us? He is so good that he asks no recompense except our
love: that is the only payment he desires. To confess my personal
feelings, when I reflect on all these blessings I am overcome by a kind
of dread and numbness at the very possibility of ceasing to love God and
of bringing shame upon Christ because of my lack of recollection and my
preoccupation with trivialities.
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