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Where the Person Stands Alone
Hypostatic prayer in the shadow of Gethsemane “Prayer is an act of supreme freedom; it is the self-determination of the person before God.” — Sophrony of Essex There is a kind of prayer we can offer that never really costs us anything. Words that move easily. Petitions that remain at a distance. A turning toward God that still preserves something of ourselves intact. And then there is the prayer that Sophrony of Essex speaks of. Hypostatic prayer. The prayer of the person. No
Father Charbel Abernethy
Apr 303 min read


Where Satan Dwells and Christ Still Speaks
On Compromise, Hidden Idolatry, and the Fire That Searches the Heart “I am He who searches mind and heart, and I will give to each of you according to your works.” Revelation 2:23 ⸻ There is something in this passage that does not allow for distance. We are not permitted to read Pergamum and Thyatira as if they were merely places in history, tragic perhaps, but removed from us. The Lord speaks with too much precision, too much immediacy. He names where they dwell. He names wh
Father Charbel Abernethy
Apr 154 min read


The End of the Religious Self
On Repentance, Hypostasis, and the Cosmic Vision in Christ “When we ourselves have become images of Him, we ‘overcome the world’, we rise above the world’s level, we become cosmic and even supra-cosmic—in the measure of our likeness to Christ.” — Saint Sophrony of Essex ⸻ What is expressed above is precisely the inner logic of the Fathers when they speak of person , hypostasis , and the vision of Christ. What Saint Sophrony of Essex describes is not an exaltation of the relig
Father Charbel Abernethy
Apr 113 min read


The End of the Individual
On Becoming Person in Christ and Bearing the Life of All “I cannot separate myself from the humanity which begins with Adam.” — Sophrony Sakharov What we call ourselves reveals how we live. We have learned to speak of ourselves as individuals. Separate centers. Self-contained. Defined by preference, history, wounds, and rights. Even our spirituality often remains trapped within this language. My prayer. My salvation. My struggle. My peace. But the Fathers do not speak this wa
Father Charbel Abernethy
Apr 94 min read
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