(18/31 May 1953)
Holiness is the fruit of a man's efforts and the gift of the
Holy Spirit. Holiness is reached by him who wears a cross and wages warfare in
the name of Christ against the obstacles to holiness, to becoming akin to
Christ. These obstacles are sins, sinful habits, firmly rooted in the soul.
Struggle against them is the major work of a Christian, and in so far as he
purifies his soul, so far will he receive of the Holy Spirit.
St. Seraphim taught the acquisition of the Holy
Spirit, and he genuinely acquired it, for the Most Holy Mother of God
recognized him as being her own. And the faithful, sincere seekers of the Truth
and the Light (as was Motovilov), saw how this great Godpleaser shone with the
light of holiness because of their reverence.
How varied are the paths of saints! At the throne
of God, in front of everyone is the Most Holy Mother of God, more glorious than
the seraphim and all the angels and archangels who stood firm, remaining
faithful to God through the fearful struggle that was raised against God by the
most radiant of them all, Lucifer, which means Light-bearer, who is now the
devil, in other words, the one cast down to the deepest
darkness. In this struggle the bright angels came so close to God that it is
already impossible for them to step back or become separated from Him.
All the pleasers of God are like the angels in
their love and devotion. Just as the angels, they waged war against the dark
forces, and became strengthened in the love of God. All of the prophets of the
Old Testament lived in such a struggle. Godlessness prevailed; the Law of God was
forgotten. The world persecuted them because they interfered with its sinful
life. They hid in the "depths of the earth." The world hated them.
The prophet Isaiah was sawed in two by a wooden saw; the prophet Jeremiah was
trampled in a swamp. And in such surroundings they stood fast in faith and
devotion. All righteous ones were sorrowful in the world because they were
strangers to the sinful world. All of the apostles suffered in one way or
another. Righteous men left for the desert. What made them saints? Suffering?
Not suffering alone makes saints, but striving towards God, the love of God,
and the labor of overcoming obstacles to holiness, which is
the fruit of man's labor and the gift of the Holy Spirit.
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