A Beautiful Heart – The Acquisition of Grace

Finally, brothers, whatever is true, whatever is honorable, whatever is just, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is commendable, if there is any excellence, if there is anything worthy of praise, think about these things. Phil 4:8

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Some people tell me that they are scandalized because they see many things wrong in the Church. I tell them that if you ask a fly, “Are there any flowers in this area?” it will say, “I don’t know about flowers, but over there in that heap of rubbish you can find all the filth you want.” And it will go on to list all the unclean things it has been to.

Now, if you ask a honeybee, “Have you seen any unclean things in this area?” it will reply, “Unclean things? No, I have not seen any; the place here is full of the most fragrant flowers.” And it will go on to name all the flowers of the garden or the meadow.

You see, the fly only knows where the unclean things are, while the honeybee knows where the beautiful iris or hyacinth is.

As I have come to understand, some people resemble the honeybee and some resemble the fly. Those who resemble the fly seek to find evil in every circumstance and are preoccupied with it; they see no good anywhere. But those who resemble the honeybee only see the good in everything they see. The stupid person thinks stupidly and takes everything in the wrong way, whereas the person who has good thoughts, no matter what he sees, no matter what you tell him, maintains a positive and good thought. – St. Paisios

America in the 19th century was a hotbed of new ideas. The nation was moving quickly from its original agrarian roots towards becoming a great industrial giant. It was the land of invention and the creation of wealth. Seemingly inexhaustible resources invited the world to its shores to join the great modern experiment. America was not Europe and it felt no need to uphold the past. New was good, indeed, new was better.

Among the “new” things of that era were new religious ideas. An interesting group of those ideas fall under the heading of the powers of the mind. It was the great century of electricity and it seems only inevitable that such a force would become a power image for spiritual energy. Already in the late 1700’s, there arose “electrotherapists.” One such physician, T. Gale of upstate New York, who used electricity for the cure of mental and physical diseases, described it as the “soul of the universe.”

For Gale, his fellow electrotherapists, and their numerous patients, electricity was a material current of divine love; matter and spirit, nature and grace, were different aspects of a single reality. God, for Gale, was the “spiritual sun” whose love was “spiritual nutrition”; electricity was that spiritual substance in material form, “participation of the same element as the natural sun diffused through all the natural world.” There was, in Gale’s view, “no animation in the natural world” except by the heat of the “ethereal fire.” Echoing [Jonathan] Edwards, Gale believed that the discovery of electricity and its divine healing properties augured a worldwide Christian millennium. (McCarraher, The Enchantments of Mammon, p. 136)

Another figure of note was Phineas Quimby (1802-1866). He was fascinated with electricity – but also with “mesmerism,” and “positive thinking.” He is considered one of the founders of “New Thought.” Among his patients were Mary Baker Eddy, the founder of Christian Science. The historical threads that connect such figures to healing ministries (such as John Alexander Dowie, the founder of Zion, Illinois) as well as various movements (including Pentecostalism and the various “revivals” of that century) are an interesting trip through the backroads of American culture. Most of the present incarnations or inheritors of these movements have cleansed their histories and present a very different account of themselves. Nevertheless, when a televangelist throws the Holy Spirit like a baseball, knocking rows of people to the ground, he stands firmly in a tradition that goes back to these very roots.

It is with this background in mind that I offer some observations on the importance of thoughts in the Orthodox spiritual tradition. The small story from the life of St. Paisios points towards the importance of good thoughts, as does St. Paul’s admonition in Philippians. There is also the book on the life of the Elder Thaddeus of Serbia entitled, Our Thoughts Determine Our Lives. Heard in the wrong way, such admonitions easily sound like an Orthodox version of positive thinking. However, the object of such admonitions and examples is not on the thoughts themselves, but on the heart.

I often think that in our contemporary times we are tempted to become “electric Christians.” We “send out thoughts and prayers” as though they were radio signals. We gather as many people who will agree to join us in prayer as though its power and effectiveness were somehow increased if more people “generate” it. It is a powerful image, and our thoughts in that direction are not intentionally wrong. But prayer and matters of the Spirit are not electrical forces (nor even like electrical forces). The Holy Spirit is quite silent for the most part (Jn. 16:13). Nevertheless, the Spirit is a person – not a force to be used. It is not for us to create such false images in an effort to explain what cannot be known.

The admonitions regarding our thoughts are not about the thoughts as such. Rather, they are about the state of our hearts. The heart that is filled with beauty, that considers God above all things, is an oasis for a world thirsting in ignorance. The presence of an abundant heart creates a possibility for those around it, a resource of grace if they choose to receive it.

We have many examples of the opposite. Angry words beget angry words and actions. Hopelessness and suspicion easily spread across a population. Scandal and slander, gossip and dark thoughts towards others, all create a heart that becomes a home for darkness. Such things do not radiate out like a force, but, in our globally-connected world, they are shared all too often and find welcome homes within others. All of us are far more easily prey to such things than we might imagine. As such, we do well to pay attention to our heart and to the things that we nurture there.

St. Paul is quite clear: naming what is true, honorable, just, pure, and lovely, he says, “Think on these things.” This is a conscious effort that often proves to be a battle. A number of the Fathers even suggest that we “make excuses” for our enemies so that we might think well of them, also.

Christ said:

A good man out of the good treasure of his heart brings forth good; and an evil man out of the evil treasure of his heart brings forth evil. For out of the abundance of the heart his mouth speaks. (Lk. 6:45)

St. Macarius noted:

As the eye is little beyond all the members, and yet contains the heaven, the stars, the sun, the moon, cities, and other creatures; for all these are seen under one, are formed and imagined in the pupil of the eye. Thus also the heart is a little vessel. And yet there are dragons, and there are lions, the poisonous beasts, and all the treasures of wickedness, and there are rugged ways, and precipices. In like manner there is GOD, there are the angels; there is the life and the kingdom; there is the light, there are the treasures of grace: there are all things. (H.18.9)

There are all things.

About Fr. Stephen Freeman

Fr. Stephen is a retired Archpriest of the Orthodox Church in America. He is also author of Everywhere Present: Christianity in a One-Storey Universe, and Face to Face: Knowing God Beyond Our Shame, as well as the Glory to God podcast series on Ancient Faith Radio.



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16 responses to “A Beautiful Heart – The Acquisition of Grace”

  1. Lamar Powell Avatar
    Lamar Powell

    I read this to my wife and somewhere beyond halfway, she looked at me and said “Puddleglum!”
    She then expounded on the purity of his heart despite words that we always found so ironically negative. I think perhaps what you tell us directly, Lewis was showing us thru irony

  2. Matthew Avatar
    Matthew

    In what ways does a heart acquire grace? Through the Eucharist and the other sacraments clearly … but what are some other ways and are these ways any less effective in some sense?

  3. Dee of Sts Herman and Olga Avatar
    Dee of Sts Herman and Olga

    Matthew,
    In Orthodox prayers said before the receiving of the Eucharist there is a reference to the burning fire expected and potentially experienced. For some this will not feel like grace or not feel anything at all. The receiving of grace depends on the condition of the heart.

    A terrible blow may be experienced in grief and terrible pain but in patience and love may be perceived as grace.

    Prayer in communion in Christ is paramount. Loving enemies is the first step in His commandments.

  4. Dee of Sts Herman and Olga Avatar
    Dee of Sts Herman and Olga

    Father this article reminds me very much of Christ’s words describing the Kingdom is taken by violence. The perseverance to look for the flowers takes a strong heart and mind. I pray for and ask for such loving and violent inadherance. Christ mentions that His yoke is light. But that comes with loving submission to His will. In the ethos of this culture, it is impossible without His help.

  5. Dee of Sts Herman and Olga Avatar
    Dee of Sts Herman and Olga

    I’ll add one more thing. A lot of people don’t like hospitals but end up being grateful for them under circumstances of deep need.

  6. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Lamar,
    Lewis is more fun…

  7. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Matthew,
    I think of us as “swimming in grace.” It’s not that we need more around us – but that we ourselves need to open, to receive it. Not just that, but that God is at work, always and at all times to nurture that openness in our hearts. The sacraments of the Church provide a means and a discipline for us to pay attention, to practice repentance, to yield to grace. But the possibilities are also endless. Prayer, paying proper attention to what is around us, keeping the commandments, even in a small way. I think, for example, of the easy efforts we can practice to simply be a kind presence to others around us – and the list can go on.

  8. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Dee,
    I often think that we are oblivious to the grace that is at work always, everywhere, and in all things, including our lives. Only God is self-sustaining. We do not have “life” in ourselves as a private property. It is a gift – a gift of grace.

    The state motto of South Carolina (it’s on my license plate) is: Dum Spiro Spero – “While I breathe, I hope.” I think about grace in simple things like the act of breathing. We are being sustained at every moment (which we take for granted). The best practice to heal this habit is to give thanks always and for all things. It sounds so simple.

  9. Dee of Sts Herman and Olga Avatar
    Dee of Sts Herman and Olga

    Father the words you said to Matthew, that we are swimming in grace is so wonderfully said! Thank you and our Lord for your own beautiful heart!

  10. Dee of Sts Herman and Olga Avatar
    Dee of Sts Herman and Olga

    Father, I read your comment just after my last submission. Indeed what you’re saying is so true. Thank you for your response.

  11. Matthew Avatar
    Matthew

    Thanks so much Dee and Fr. Stephen.

    The reason I ask about the acquisition of grace today is because I recently returned from a nice afternoon out with my niece. She is 9 years old and my wife and I took her to see the new Smurfs movie. As cute and fun as it was, I was concerned with the overall message my niece was receiving from the film. I think they got some things right; good ultimately wins – it´s better to be on the side of peace and harmony rather than evil – each person has a calling, etc. The idea of truth of one´s purpose and existence residing inside even a Smurf was compelling, but overall the message was that there is no higher power who actually is this internal truth. Good and evil being hardwired into a universe of which the question of origin is left unanswered was also a theme in the film. As I would have said in my evangelical days – the Smurfs movie was truth mixed with lies.

    So … even if the movie didn´t live up to my philosophical and theological demands, did my young niece receive grace through such an animated adventure of good versus evil? After the movie as we were waiting for the bus, I asked my niece a few questions about the origin of goodness and very gently reminded her to always be on the side of truth, beauty and goodness. We then enjoyed a fun double-decker bus ride home.

    I hope this uncle did right by his very special niece.

  12. Dee of Sts Herman and Olga Avatar
    Dee of Sts Herman and Olga

    Sometimes, Father, there are memories that surface —witnessing the death of my father as he struggled to breathe and live after he was crushed in a car accident. He cried out like Christ. I usually do not speak of my experiences such as these on this blog. Everything that I had witnessed or seen in churches I attended up to and after did not come near to express the God of this life I witnessed. Is God the God of pain and suffering? And yet this was the beginning of the path (and a long one at that) to find Him.

    I agree with everything you have said. And you are indeed expressing an Orthodox phronema. The grace of God is always with us. But the path to realizing this can be difficult. Sometimes we mistakenly believe we are cursed. But it is only the gospel of prosperity that would suggest such things.

  13. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Matthew,
    I suppose people can derive good (grace) even from something that has a distorted intention. The writers are secularists – no reference to God – no reference to anything that could critique or correct whatever spin they want to put on goodness. We have already seen secularists try to spin traditional moral teachings as “evil.” They are currently drawing on a fair amount of borrowed capital, but leaving out whatever they wish and adding on other stuff.

    The grace your neice received might have to do with the kindness of an uncle more than the movie itself. I expect almost nothing out of Hollywood itself. It’s God is money.

  14. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Dee,
    I certainly believe that the grace of God is manifest even in suffering (He has made all of it His own). Christ was crucified in the accident that killed your father, for example. However, to know that takes great grace. I do not think we could see this, or even begin to see this, except as we see it made manifest in the Crucified Christ Himself. It’s where we begin.

  15. Dee of Sts Herman and Olga Avatar
    Dee of Sts Herman and Olga

    Dear Father,
    Amen

  16. Matthew Avatar
    Matthew

    Thanks so much Fr. Stephen.

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