maximos the confessor, chapters on love 1.1-20 (structure and analysis)

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Fr. Maximos (Constas) Seminar on St. Maximos the Confessor: The Four Hundred Chapters on Love Holy Cross Greek School of Theology Fall Semester 2011 The monastic literary genre of the Centuries is often considered to consist in a generally random (not to say incoherent) collection of “chapters” (κεφλαια), sayings, and aphorisms, without significant internal structuring or deeper patterns of overarching argumentative forms. A close reading of Maximos the Confessor’s Chapters on Love, however, will readily enable us to question and ultimately reject such assumptions. As the following analysis demonstrates, far from being a fragmented and disjointed collection of gnomic material, the Chapters on Love presents us with a carefully crafted treatise in which accumulative, intertextual, and unfolding “spiral” concepts reveal deeper structures of thought. The following is focused solely on the first 20 chapters of Maximos’s First Century; interested students are encouraged to explore the remaining 380 aphorisms, and add to our knowledge of this well known but understudied treatise. I.1: Thesis Maximos’ first word is love. This initial sentence summarizes the work as a whole, and sets forth the basic contrast between the life of passion and divine life. At the same time, it marks a major reworking of the theology of Evagrios, and thus a bold statement of the Confessor’s aim: to modify the fundamental principles of the Evagrian spiritual tradition. I.1: Ἀγπη ν ἐστι *διθεσις ψυχῆς ἀγαθ, καθ᾽ ἣν οὐδὲν τῶν ὄντων τῆς τοῦ Θεοῦ γνσεως προτιᾷ ἀδνατον δὲ εἰς **ἕξιν ἐλθεῖν τατης τῆς ἀγπης, τὸν πρς τι τῶν ἐπιγεων ἔχοντα ***προσπθειαν. I.1: Love is a good *disposition of the soul, according to which it prefers none of beings to the knowledge of God. It is impossible to reach the **lasting possession of this love if one has a ***passionate attachment to any worldly thing. The disposition of “love” is disabled by the human prospatheia (“attachment”) to earthly things. Here, the word apatheia is the link between this sentence and the next, as if Maximos were saying: “If love is supreme, and if its acquisition is obviated by prospatheia, then it is important to know what apatheia is, and to discover its place within the larger structure of spiritual experience.” I.2-I.3: Elucidation I.2: ΑΓΑΠΗΝ ὲν τκτει *ἀπθεια ἀπθειαν δ, ἡ εἰς Θεὸν **ἘΛΠΙΣ τὴν δὲ ἐλπδα, ὑποονὴ καὶ ακροθυα τατας δ, ***περιεκτικὴ ἐγκρτεια ἐγκρτ ειαν δ, ὁ τοῦ Θεοῦ φβος τὸν δὲ φβον, ἡ εἰς τὸν Κριον ΠΙΣΤΙΣ. I.2: LOVE is engendered by *dispassion; dispassion by **HOPE in God; hope by patience and long

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Maximos the Confessor, Chapters on Love 1.1-20 (Structure and Analysis)

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  • Fr. Maximos (Constas)

    Seminar on St. Maximos the Confessor: The Four Hundred Chapters on Love

    Holy Cross Greek School of Theology Fall Semester 2011

    The monastic literary genre of the Centuries is often considered to consist in a generally random (not to say incoherent) collection of chapters (), sayings, and aphorisms, without significant internal structuring or deeper patterns of over-arching argumentative forms. A close reading of Maximos the Confessors Chapters on Love, however, will readily enable us to question and ultimately reject such assumptions. As the following analysis demonstrates, far from being a fragmented and disjointed collection of gnomic material, the Chapters on Love presents us with a carefully crafted treatise in which accumulative, intertextual, and unfolding spiral concepts reveal deeper structures of thought. The following is focused solely on the first 20 chapters of Maximoss First Century; interested students are encouraged to explore the remaining 380 aphorisms, and add to our knowledge of this well known but understudied treatise.

    I.1: Thesis

    Maximos first word is love. This initial sentence summarizes the work as a whole, and sets forth the basic contrast between the life of passion and divine life. At the same time, it marks a major reworking of the theology of Evagrios, and thus a bold statement of the Confessors aim: to modify the fundamental principles of the Evagrian spiritual tradition.

    I.1: * , ** , ***.

    I.1: Love is a good *disposition of the soul, according to which it prefers none of beings to the knowledge of God. It is impossible to reach the **lasting possession of this love if one has a ***passionate attachment to any worldly thing.

    The disposition of love is disabled by the human prospatheia (attachment) to earthly things. Here, the word apatheia is the link between this sentence and the next, as if Maximos were saying: If love is supreme, and if its acquisition is obviated by prospatheia, then it is important to know what apatheia is, and to discover its place within the larger structure of spiritual experience.

    I.2-I.3: Elucidation I.2: * , ** , , *** -

    , , . I.2: LOVE is engendered by *dispassion; dispassion by **HOPE in God; hope by patience and long-

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    suffering; these are engendered by ***all-embracing self-mastery; self-

    mastery from fear of God; fear of God from FAITH in the Lord.

    Having pointed to the summit of the ladder (i.e., love) in I.1, Maximos shows us in I.2 the seven steps that lead to this summit, and thus we begin at the top of the ladder and descend to its origin and foundation (i.e., faith in the Lord). This is at once an ascetical, moral, and spiritual ascent, which suggests something of the ecstatic movement by which love impels the person onward, or rather which very force love is. Note the triad of faith, hope, and love (1 Cor 13:3). Note also Maximoss use of something like hysteron proteron (a rhetorical device that reverses the natural order of events), so that the verb and the noun follow the direct object. (I have translated the active verb as passive in order to maintain the nouns in their original positions). The link between I.2 and I.3 is faith. I.3: ** * .

    I.3: He that has faith in the Lord fears punishment; he that fears punishment masters his **passions; he that masters his passions patiently endures hardships; he that patiently endures hardships will have hope in God; hope in God separates from every earthly attachment; the intellect thus separated will have love for Go

    Having conducted us to the bottom of the ladder, Maximos does not leave us there, but in I.3 brings us back to the summit, this time giving us information about the actual role or function of each virtue (note the shift from to ), so that we learn that our attachments are sundered by the power of hope,* which separates the intellect from it unhealthy attachments to earthly things, and which, as we have already seen in I.1 & I.2, enables us to love God.

    I.4: Knowledge I.4: * .

    I.4: He who loves God prefers knowledge of Him to all things brought into being by Him, and through *desire ceaselessly adheres to it.

    Maximos now returns to the language and themes of I.1, and states that the knowledge of God is pursued ceaselessly through desire (or longing, i.e., ). Note again the shift from noun to participle. The focus is now on knowledge (not mentioned in I.2-3) and its relation objects or beings, which is the link to I.5.

    I.5: God and the cosmos Having come back to the nexus of love, knowledge, and being, the mention of beings (and things brought into being, and the way in which knowledge and love stand in relation to them), prompts a turn to creation. I.5: ,

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    . I.5: If all things have come into being by God and for God, then

    God is superior to whatever has come into being through Him; the one who forsakes the superior by devoting himself to inferior things shows that he prefers before God the things made by God.

    I.5 stresses the superiority and excellence of God over all created realities, establishing a hierarchy of values between the things of the world and God (which cannot be unrelated to the moral hierarchy of I.2-3). Here, God and all that is sequent to Him are clearly distinguished, and the reader can immediately see where he or she stands in this clear ordering of reality. I.5 is an antithesis to I.1, since now we see the person who has forsaken what is superior and is engrossed in inferior things, which reveals his preference for material things over God.

    I.6: Cosmos and microcosm The main point of I.5 is given an additional twist in I.6, for among the created things that we can value more than God is our own body (as a kind of anti-microcosm); note that the point of view and primary motivating factor is love, and not disdain or scorn for the material world or the body. I.6: .

    I.6: He that has his mind fixed on the love of God disdains all visible things and even his own body as something alien.

    For Maximos, love for the body (the link between I.6 and I.7) is more or less identical with original sin (cf. Letter 2), which means that love for God was the original condition of Adam before the fall. As we are quickly coming to see, all the constituent elements of Maximos discourse figure in a larger chain (or progression, or structure), and thus we are next told (I.7) that the body also has a place within this framework.

    I.7-I.9: Idolatry I.7: , .

    I.7: If the soul is superior to the body, and if God is incomparably superior to the world He created, he that prefers the body to the soul and the world to the God who created it differs in no way from idolaters.

    A reversal of I.6, working with the same scale of values. Maximos elsewhere states that idols are not naturally inherent in visible things, but are from the devil, who gives them idolized forms (eidolo-poioumena), for the purpose of deception (QD 30). Operative here is the root meaning of eidolon, i.e., image, which comes from eidos, and denotes a phantom, or any insubstantial form or a merely reflected image; according to Epicurus, it is the film given off by any object and conveying an impression to the eye. Consequently eidolon is the memory image, the noema (or mental representation), which attaches itself both to the mind and the image, cf. II.31.

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    I.8: - ,

    . I.8: He that separates his intellect from love and devotion to God and keeps it tied to any sensible thing is the one who prefers the body to the soul and things that are made to God their creator.

    I.9: , .

    I.9: If the life of the intellect is the illumination of knowledge and this is born of love for God, then it is well said that there is nothing greater than love (cf. 1 Cor 13:13).

    This general theme of I.7 is repeated in .8, although from within, or from above, which is to say that, whereas .7 spoke simply of a preference for material things, .8 describes the distraction of the intellect from the love of God, due to attachment to a sensible object (cf. I.1); these distractions/attractions are both related to physiological and psychological states (i.e., sensation, consciousness, etc.), but they are also moral, since they represent a particular stance within the moral order, and they are often a rejection of that order. Every distraction is therefore a kind of fall, a movement away from the prosedreia of the intellect in God. .9 continues the theme of the intellect, showing us the opposite side of the situation described in .8. Here, knowledge is the light of the intellect, and this light is generated by love, which means nothing is greater than love.

    I.10-12: Ecstasy I.10: * **, -. *** -, , , -.

    I.10: When in the *eros of its love for God the intellect **goes out of itself, then it has no perception at all either of itself or of any beings. For being illumined by the divine and ***infinite light, it remains insensible to all that that has been brought into being by Him, just as the eye of the senses does not perceive the stars when the sun has risen.

    I.11: ,

    , * . I.11: All the virtues assist the intellect in the pursuit of divine eros, but than them all does pure

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    prayer. By it the intellect is given wings to go ahead to God and

    *becomes outside of all beings.

    I.12: - - , - , , - .

    I.12: When through love the intellect is ravished by divine knowledge and, being outside of beings, has a perception of divine infinity, then, according to the divine Isaiah, it is struck and comes to an awareness of its own lowliness, and says with conviction the words of the prophet: Woe is me, because I am pierced at heart, because, being a man and having unclean lips, I live in the midst of a people with unclean lips, and the king the Lord Sabaoth I have seen with my eyes.

    I.10-12 bring this first cluster of sentences to its climax, and eros is now mentioned for the first time in this work. The phrase: the eros of agape (Polycarp Sherwood: the burning love of charity; George Berthold: the full ardor of love; Philokalia: the intensity of love for God) is slightly unusual: as far as I know, it appears only in the Macarian homilies (a minor source for Maximos). At this level, the intellect is said to become insensitive to, or without feeling (aisthesis) for created things, but this is a purely experiential description, and not a moral or psychological one: i.e., it is not insensitivity to ones neighbor, but rather the liberation of the intellect from the deception of sense-perception and sensible objects. This understanding of the text is supported by the metaphor Maximos uses, which is physiological and empirical: the eye no longer sees the stars after the sun has risen. I.11 provides more information about factors that contribute to the acquisition of divine eros, especially the virtues and pure prayer (cf. I.49; II.6-7; III.44; IV.51), which lead the intellect ecstatically to stand outside of beings. For Evagrios, pure prayer is imageless prayer, which is the intellects highest form of intellection. This is followed by the ekdemia of the intellect (cf. II.28; III.20), which is a direct rejection of the Evagrian model.

    I.13-20: Love in action Here begins a new set of themes, concerned with concrete behavior. Having touched on the various underlying philosophical foundations, Maximos now turns to ethics. Thus: I.13 speaks of love for all; I.14 might not, at first glance, seem to fit the pattern, but the vices mentioned here (sensuality and hatred) are ultimately social diseases, which becomes clear in I.15, where Maximos states that these lower vices are a sign of estrangement from divine love, while I.16 reveals that these teachings are simply the ethical commandments of Christ and the Gospel, i.e., the commandment to love one another. (In the Ambigua, Maximos will develop this further, so that the virtues become an actual incarnation or embodiment of the divine in the virtuous man.) This is followed by I.17-19, passages which are modeled on the Beatitudes (and thus ethical teachings), and recapitulate earlier themes (universality of love, non-attachment, transcendence of intellect, etc.); I.20 does something similar, but in more detail, returning to the theme of idolatry.