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St. Syncletike[1] |
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Saint Syncletike was from Alexandria in Egypt. She lived eighty-three years in virginity and asceticism, and became the leader and teacher of many nuns. What Saint Anthony the Great was to men, she became to women: a model of mortification of the flesh, of patience in afflictions, and of wise instruction; for this, she is known a "Amma," a title corresponding to "Abba." Towards the end of her long life, she was stricken with an exceedingly painful disease, which she endured with faith and magnanimity. She reposed in the middle of the fourth century. It is said of Saint Syncletike that she was the virgin who hid Saint Athanasius from the Arians for more than a year in the environs of Alexandria, and it is to Saint Athanasius that her life is ascribed (PG 18:1488-1557). Amma Syncletica[2],
a hermitess who lived in third and fourth century Egypt. Amma Syncletica
was a native of Macedonia and educated in Egypt. She was a rich young woman
of high social status who had many suitors, but refused them all. She
eventually sold all that she had, cut her hair as a sign of her consecration
to God, and fled her parents' home with her blind sister, moving to the
family tomb outside Alexandria. As women disciples began to gather around
her, a monastery developed with Amma Syncletica as their spiritual mentor.
In great asceticism, with countless hours of vigils and prayers, this holy
woman lived to the age of eighty, leaving this life to live forever with her
King in about 350. Her counsels to the nuns have always been regarded as
true spiritual pearls, the wisdom she attained coming not from reading, but
through suffering and pain, through constant meditation and spiritual
converse with the divine world. -- Amma Syncletica said, "In the beginning there are a great many battles and a good deal of suffering for those who are advancing towards God and afterwards, ineffable joy. It is like those who wish to light a fire; at first they are choked by the smoke and cry, and by this means obtain what they seek (as it is said: 'Our God is a consuming fire' [Hebrews 12:24]); so we must also kindle the divine fire in ourselves through tears and hard work." -- She also said, "Just as the most bitter medicine drives out poisonous creatures so prayer joined to fasting drives evil thoughts away." -- Se also said, "Do not let yourself be seduced by the delights of the riches of the world, as though they contained something useful on account of vain pleasure. Worldly people esteem the culinary art, but you, through fasting and thanks to cheap food, go beyond their abundance of food. It is written: 'One who is sated loathes honey' [Proverbs 27:7]. Do not fill yourself with bread and you will not desire wine." -- Blessed Syncletica was asked if poverty is a perfect good. She said, "For those who are capable of it, it is a perfect good. Those who can sustain it receive suffering in the body but rest in the soul, for just as one washes coarse clothes by trampling them underfoot and turning them about in all directions, even so the strong soul becomes much more stable thanks to voluntary poverty." -- She also said, "If you find yourself in a monastery, do not go to another place, for that will harm you a great deal. Just as the bird who abandons the eggs she was sitting on prevents them from hatching, so the monk or the nun grows cold and their faith dies when they go from one place to another." -- She also said, "Many are the wiles of the evil one. If he is not able to disturb the soul by means of poverty, he suggests riches as an attraction. If he has not won the victory by insults and disgrace, he suggests praise and glory. Overcome by health, he makes the body ill. Not having been able to seduce it through pleasures, he tries to overthrow it by involuntary sufferings. He joins to this, very severe illness to disturb the faint-hearted in their love of God. But he also destroys the body by very violent fevers and weighs it down with intolerable thirst. If, being a sinner, you undergo all these things, remind yourself of the punishment to come, the everlasting fire and the sufferings inflicted by justice, and do not be discouraged here and now. Rejoice that God visits you and keep this blessed saying on your lips: 'The Holy One has chastened me sorely but has not given me over unto death' [Psalms 118:18]. You were iron, but fire has burnt the rust off you. If you are righteous and fall ill, you will go from strength to strength. Are you gold? You will pass through fire purged. Have you been given a thorn in the flesh? [II Corinthians 12:1]. Exult, and see who else was treated like that; it is an honor to have the same sufferings as Paul. Are you being tried by fever? Are you being taught by cold? Indeed Scripture says: 'We went through fire and water; yet God has brought us forth to a spacious place' [Psalms 66:12]. You have drawn the first lot? Expect the second. By virtue offer holy words in a loud voice. For it is said: 'I am afflicted and in pain' [Psalms 69:29]. This share of wretchedness will make you perfect. For it is said: 'The Holy One hears when I call' [Psalms 4:3]. So open your mouth wider to be taught by these exercises of the soul, seeing that we are under the eyes of our enemy." -- She also said, "If illness weighs us down, let us not be sorrowful as though, because of the illness and the prostration of our bodies, we could not sing, for all these things are for our good, for the purification of our desires. Truly fasting and sleeping on the ground are set before us because of our sensuality. If illness then weakens this sensuality, the reason for these practices is superfluous. For this is the great asceticism: to control oneself in illness and to sing hymns of thanksgiving to God." -- She also said, "When you have to fast, do not pretend illness. For those who do not fast often fall into real sicknesses. If you have begun to act well, do not turn back through constraint of the enemy, for through your endurance, the enemy is destroyed. Those who put out to sea at first said with a favorable wind; then the sails spread, but later the winds become adverse. Then the ship is tossed by the waves and is no longer controlled by the rudder. But when in a little while there is a calm, and the tempest dies down, then the ship sails on again. So it is with us, when we are driven by the spirits who are against us; we hold to the cross as our sail and so we can set a safe course." -- She also said, "Those who have endured the labors and dangers of the sea and then amass material riches, even when they have gained much desire to gain yet more. They consider what they have at present as nothing and reach out for what they have not got. We, who have nothing that we desire, wish to acquire everything through the fear of God." -- She also said, "Imitate the publican, and you will not be condemned with the Pharisee. Choose the meekness of Moses and you will find your heart which is a rock changed into a spring of water." -- She also said, "It is
dangerous for anyone to teach who has not first been trained in the
'practical' life. For if someone who owns a ruined house receives guests
there, harm is done because of the dilapidation of the dwelling. It is the
same in the case of someone who has not first built an interior dwelling;
loss is caused to those who come. By words one may convert them to
salvation, but by evil behavior, one injures -- She also said, "Those
who are great athletes must contend against stronger enemies." -- She also said, "As long as we are in the monastery, obedience is preferable to asceticism. The one teaches pride, the other humility." -- She also said, "We must direct our souls with discernment. As long as we are in the monastery, we must not seek our own will, nor follow our personal opinion, but obey our elders in the faith." -- She also said, "It is
written, 'Be wise as serpents and innocent as doves' (Matthew 10:16). Being
like serpents means not ignoring attacks and wiles of the devil. Like is
quickly known to like. The simplicity of the dove denotes purity of
action." -- She also said, "In the
world, if we commit an offence, even an involuntary one, we are thrown into
prison; let us likewise cast ourselves into prison because of our sins, so
that voluntary remembrance may anticipate the punishment that is to come." -- She also said, "Just as it is impossible to be at the same moment both a plant and a seed, so it is impossible for us to be surrounded by worldly honor and at the same time to bear heavenly fruit." -- She also said, "My children, we all want to be saved, but because of our habit of negligence, we swerve away from salvation." -- She also said, "We must arm ourselves in every way against the demons. For they attack us from outside, and they also stir us up from within; and the soul is then like a ship when great waves break over it, and at the same time it sinks because the hold is too full. We are just like that: we lose as much by the exterior faults we commit as by the thoughts inside us. So we must watch for the attacks from people that come from outside us, and also repel the interior onslaughts of our thoughts." -- She also said, "Here below we are not exempt from temptations. For Scripture says, 'May you who think that you stand take heed lest you fall' (I Corinthians 10:12). We sail on in darkness. The psalmist calls our life a sea and the sea is either full of rocks, or very rough, or else it is calm. We are like those who sail on a calm sea, and seculars are like those on a rough sea. We always set our course by the sun of justice, but it can often happen that the secular is saved in tempest and darkness, for he keeps watch as he ought, while we go to the bottom through negligence, although we are on a calm sea, because we have let go of the guidance of justice." -- She also said, "There is a grief that is useful, and there is grief that is destructive. The first sort consists in weeping over one's own faults and weeping over the weakness of one's neighbors, in order not to destroy one's purpose, and attach oneself to the perfect good. But there is also a grief that comes from the enemy, full of mockery, which some call accidie. This spirit must be case out, mainly by prayer and psalmody." |
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