This list is from Fr. David W.'s blog and he posted it in 2007.
The podcast, which I mentioned recently,
by Fr. Thomas Hopko was very helpful to me then and is still helpful now.
This list on the Christian life continues to ring true for me
and it is humbling to realize, now in 2014,
how much of it I did not even understand.
Now I understand some more, but sadly only from realizing my failings
in doing much of what is written here.
That said, it is a really life giving list on the Christian life.
Sometimes we get really bogged down on how to be a Christian
and what it looks like.
*
I leave you with the list as a beautiful life-giving understanding
of what the Christian life can look like.
This list in itself I believe is a wonderful
Lenten Meditation.
*
55 Maxims from Fr. Thomas Hopko
- Be always with Christ and trust God in everything
- Pray as you can, not as you think you must
- Have a keepable rule of prayer done by discipline
- Say the Lord’s Prayer several times each day
- Repeat a short prayer when your mind is not occupied
- Make some prostrations when you pray
- Eat good foods in moderation and fast on fasting days
- Practice silence, inner and outer
- Sit in silence 20 to 30 minutes each day
- Do acts of mercy in secret
- Go to liturgical services regularly
- Go to confession and holy communion regularly
- Do not engage intrusive thoughts and feelings
- Reveal all your thoughts and feelings to a trusted person regularly
- Read the scriptures regularly
- Read good books, a little at a time
- Cultivate communion with the saints
- Be an ordinary person, one of the human race
- Be polite with everyone, first of all family members
- Maintain cleanliness and order in your home
- Have a healthy, wholesome hobby
- Exercise regularly
- Live a day, even a part of a day, at a time
- Be totally honest, first of all with yourself
- Be faithful in little things
- Do your work, then forget it
- Do the most difficult and painful things first
- Face reality
- Be grateful
- Be cheerful
- Be simple, hidden, quiet and small
- Never bring attention to yourself
- Listen when people talk to you
- Be awake and attentive, fully present where you are
- Think and talk about things no more than necessary
- Speak simply, clearly, firmly, directly
- Flee imagination, fantasy, analysis, figuring things out
- Flee carnal, sexual things at their first appearance
- Don’t complain, grumble, murmur or whine
- Don’t seek or expect pity or praise
- Don’t compare yourself with anyone
- Don’t judge anyone for anything
- Don’t try to convince anyone of anything
- Don’t defend or justify yourself
- Be defined and bound by God, not people
- Accept criticism gracefully and test it carefully
- Give advice only when asked or when it is your duty
- Do nothing for people that they can and should do for themselves
- Have a daily schedule of activities, avoiding whim and caprice
- Be merciful with yourself and others
- Have no expectations except to be fiercely tempted to your last breath
- Focus exclusively on God and light, and never on darkness, temptation and sin
- Endure the trial of yourself and your faults serenely, under God’s mercy
- When you fall, get up immediately and start over
- Get help when you need it, without fear or shame
Good to see this again. I think there should be a #56 - "When tempted to beat anyone over the head with this list; refer to #1 through 55". May the Lord have mercy upon us all.
ReplyDeleteT-A: good to see YOU again! I had once tried to email you but my email addresses for you were all sent back...
ReplyDeleteFeel free to email me! :)
God bless you this lent! and YES, may the Lord have mercy on us!!
Thank you! I will need your email address though - technology is less a mystery than it once was for me but not by much. :)
ReplyDeleteT-A: if you can write my blog email
ReplyDeleteroosjeblog AT yahoo DOT CA
that would be easiest :)
yes, many mysteries in technology for sure!! :)