I'll need some thoughts from you to continue. Something to get started here.
Ok....well I rather like the first prayer when he makes references to the fact that many people are content to rely on crutch, and that true devotion to God requires one to rise above that kind of mentality. As he stated, only the strong are able to do good and devote themselves to God.
It's also pretty ironic since the analogy to a crutch is a common Atheist cliche used to deingrate people of faith.
It reminds me of what Søren Kierkegaard stated in
Sickness Unto Death:
"There is so much talk about being offended by Christianity because it is so dark and gloomy, offended because it is so rigorous, etc., but it would be best of all to explain for once that the real reason that men are offended by Christianity is that it is too high, because its goal is not man’s goal, because it wants to make man into something so extraordinary that he cannot grasp the thought."
This theme is certainly well expressed by St. Bishop Nikolai Velimirovich in these prayers.
In fact I notice several parallels between this and the writings of Kierkegaard, even if Kierkegaard was commenting from the Lutheran as opposed to the Orthodox tradition of Christianity. That is, the basic theme of solitary union with God.
I can relate to this concept on many deep levels, but at the same time I also stress the importance of the interhuman in spiritual matters. I also follow in the path of my namesakes in stressing the connection between temporal and eternal salvation.
I greatly appreciate the spiritual richness of the Christian East, including examples such as this. As I stated, many members of my family are of the Eastern tradition, and there was a mixing of Eastern and Western traditions in my family. So in many ways I can relate to both worlds.
But at the same time, it also shows me how very much my spiritual heart lies within the Western tradition. This is especially true in regards to Western Christian mysticism.
Perhaps when you're done commenting on this, I can show you examples of Western mystics like St. John of the Cross; and you can better appreciate and compare the two traditions.
