Sometimes
it is so difficult to remain awake and alert during our morning or
evening prayers. Is it because we are tired from work or school or is
there another dimension to the problem? St Cassian may have an
interesting insight to our common problem. Abba Cassian (360-435),
better known in the West as St. John Cassian who wrote “Institutes” and
“Conferences,” two of the best-known classics of monastic writing,
joined a monastery in Bethlehem as a young man and later left it with a
fellow monk, Germanos, to travel abroad to Egypt and Syria to study
monasticism. The books which resulted from these travels have made Abba
Cassian one of the best known writers on monastic spirituality in both
the eastern and western traditions of Christianity. The Church
commemorates St John Cassian on 29 February.
Abba
Cassian related a story about another elder living in the desert, that
he had asked God to grant him never to become sleepy during a spiritual
conference, but, if someone uttered slanderous or useless words, to be
able to go to sleep at once, so that his ears should never be touched by
that poison. This elder also said that the devil, enemy of all
spiritual instruction, works hard to provoke useless words.
He
used the following example, “Once when I was talking to some brothers
on a helpful topic, they were overcome by sleep so deep, that they could
not even move their eyelids any longer. Then, wishing to show them the
power of the devil, I introduced a trivial subject of conversation.
Immediately, they woke up, full of joy. Then I said to them with many
sighs, ‘Until now, we were discussing heavenly things and your eyes were
heavy with sleep, but when I embarked on a useless discourse, you all
woke up with alacrity. Therefore, brothers, I implore you to recognise
the power of the evil demon; pay attention to yourselves, and guard
yourselves from the desire to sleep when you are doing or listening to
something spiritual.’”
“The Sayings of the Desert Fathers,” (Kalamazoo, Michigan: Cistercian Publications, 1975),
p. 114
www.pantanassamonastery.org
http://www.orthodoxpath.org/saints-and-elders-counsels/sleepiness-and-prayer/
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