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The Celestial Husbandry
Reflection on The Ascetical Homilies of St. Isaac the Syrian Homily 21:11-18 St. Isaac opens the door to a world of unyielding seriousness, where prayer is not sentiment or softness but labor of soul and body. He remembers an elder who had tasted the tree of life through decades of sweat and inward death, and from that seasoned mouth he learned a truth that shatters complacency: a prayer without toil is a stillborn thing. If the body does not ache and the heart does not brea
Father Charbel Abernethy
2 days ago3 min read


“Silence Where the Soul Unravels”
“The highest form of prayer is to stand silently in awe before God.” St. Isaac was not speaking about an achievement. He was not describing the fruit of spiritual brilliance or a refined mystical technique. He was naming the moment a soul collapses into truth. When all words die. When self-justifications crumble. When the mind’s scaffolding falls away and there is nothing left but a naked heart trembling in the presence of the One who has always been there. This silence is no
Father Charbel Abernethy
3 days ago3 min read


When God Keeps the Soul in His Memory
Synopsis of Tonight’s Group on The Ascetical Homilies of St. Isaac the Syrian Homily 5 paragraphs 24-28 St Isaac reveals a truth that is both luminous and frightening. He tells us plainly that nothing shapes the soul more profoundly than the afflictions God allows. In prosperity, the heart drifts. It forgets that it is a creature, and begins to imagine that the strength of its own hand has gained these things. In comfort, the soul becomes dull. In praise, it becomes intoxicat
Father Charbel Abernethy
Nov 193 min read


The Wound That Becomes Light
The Ascetic Therapy of St. Isaac the Syrian: A Reflection on Homily 5 There is a mystery buried in the heart of suffering that few dare to face. St. Isaac the Syrian looked straight into it and saw not cruelty, not punishment, but the slow work of divine healing. What we call pain, he called mercy in disguise. The soul, he said, cannot be made whole until it is first broken. The wound must be exposed before it can be filled with light. For St. Isaac, affliction is not the mar
Father Charbel Abernethy
Nov 123 min read


TONIGHT at 7:30pm EST via Zoom - The Ascetical Homilies of St. Isaac the Syrian
Topic: Continuing Homily 5 on Refraining from engaging in that which disquiets the mind; avoiding pride while protecting one's dignity and identity in Christ; affliction and the constant remembrance of God through prayer."
Father Charbel Abernethy
Nov 121 min read


The Vigil of the Heart: On Hesychia and the Fruit of Watchfulness
A reflection on St. Isaac the Syrian, Homilies 20:4–12 and 21:1–11 St. Isaac the Syrian speaks with the deep and experiential authority of one who has lived the word “hesychia,” not as theory but as the very air his soul breathed. In these passages, he opens the inner meaning of silence, night vigil, and the unbroken remembrance of God. What emerges is a vision of ascetic life as a slow, patient flowering of grace in the soil of obedience, attentiveness, and compunction. The
Father Charbel Abernethy
Nov 115 min read


The Bread of a Single Book
The soul does not grow by variety but by depth. One modern elder has said there is no need to read many books: the Scriptures, The Ladder, The Evergetinos, and the Ascetical Homilies of St. Isaac are sufficient. These few, he said, contain the entire path: from the first trembling desire for repentance to the ineffable union of the heart with God. It is not the abundance of reading that sanctifies a person, but the capacity to interiorize one word and let it descend into t
Father Charbel Abernethy
Nov 103 min read


Two New Podcasts Posted!
On The Evergetinos and The Asceetical Homilies of St. Isaac the Syrian
Father Charbel Abernethy
Nov 81 min read


The Mercy That Wounds to Heal
Synopsis of Tonight’s Group on The Ascetical Homilies of St. Isaac the Syrian Homily 5 paragraphs 19-23: God has no need of anything, yet St. Isaac tells us that He rejoices whenever a man comforts His image and honors it for His sake. The divine joy is found not in what is given but in the mercy that reflects His own. When the poor come to us, it is not their need that is the test but our response to the image of God standing before us. To refuse them is to turn away grace i
Father Charbel Abernethy
Nov 53 min read
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