Quotes

A collection of scriptural meditations from Saints and Fathers of the Church.

St. Macarius of Optina, Letters... on Prayer
You describe how bitterly you regret the inefficacy of your prayers. Beware: to wish for consolation or revelation in prayer is a sure sign of pride. Pray humbly, in perfect simplicity, seeking salvation only through forgiveness, & having faith that God will extend to you His mercy – as He did to the publican.
St. Macarius of Optina on Prayer
The joint prayer of husband and wife is a great force.
St. Macarius of Optina on Prayer
Whenever our prayer subtly conceals that sharp icicle, our pride, it acts as a poison and can only lead us further away from God.
St. Macarius of Optina on Prayer
Pray humbly. If you should proudly think your prayer agreeable to the Lord and worthy of being answered, take it from me that it won’t be heard.
St. Macarius of Optina on Prayer
Pray simply. Do not expect to find in your heart any remarkable gift of prayer. Consider yourself unworthy of it. Then you will find peace. Use the empty cold dryness of your prayer as food for your humility. Repeat constantly: I am not worthy; Lord, I am not worthy! But say it calmly; without agitation.
St. Macarius of Optina on Prayer
Bear in mind that prayer alone, unaccompanied by moral improvement, is useless.
St. Macarius of Optina on Prayer
Do not attempt to assess the quality of your prayer. God alone can judge its value. To us, our own prayer must always appear so poor an effort, so inadequate an achievement, that the cry of the publican spontaneously rises from our lips.
St. Macarius the Great on Prayer
Unless humility and love, simplicity and goodness regulate our prayer, this prayer – or, rather, this pretence of prayer – cannot profit us at all. And this applies not only to prayer, but to every labor and hardship undertaken for the sake of virtue.
St. Macarius the Great on Prayer
The head of every good striving and the pinnacle of all corrections is to persevere in prayer, by which we may ever obtain, through entreaty of God, all the other virtues as well. By prayer those who are worthy partake of the sanctity of God and spiritual activity and the union of the mind with the Lord in unutterable love. He who constantly forces himself to endure in prayer is roused by spiritual love to Divine fervor and flaming desire towards God, and he receives, according to his measure, the grace of spiritual, sanctifying perfection.
St. Macarius the Great on Prayer
The most important thing in any good effort and the height of all activities is to persevere in prayer, by means of which we can always acquire through supplication the other virtues from God as well.
St. Mark the Ascetic on Prayer
If a man tries to overcome temptations without prayer and patient endurance, he will become more entangled in them instead of driving them away.
St. Maximus the Confessor on Prayer
The one who prays ought never to halt his movement of sublime ascent toward God. For just as we should understand the ascent ‘from strength to strength’ as the progress in the practice of the virtues, ‘from glory to glory’ (2 Cor. 3:18) as the advance in the spiritual knowledge of contemplation, and the transfer from the letter of sacred writing to its spirit, so in the same way the one who is settled in the place of prayer should lift his mind from human matters and the attention of the soul to more divine realities.
St. Moses the Blakc, Ancient Fathers of the Desert on Prayer
‘If our prayer is not in harmony with our deeds, we labor in vain,’ Abba Moses often told the young monks. ‘How are we to accomplish such harmony?’ they asked him one day. ‘When we make that which we seek fitting to our prayer,’ explained the saint. ‘Only then can the soul be reconciled with its Creator and its prayer be acceptable, when it sets aside all of its own evil intentions.’
St. Nectarios of Aegina on Prayer
Prayer is truly a heavenly armor, and it alone can keep safe those who have dedicated themselves to God. Prayer is the common medicine for purifying ourselves from the passions, for hindering sin and curing our faults. Prayer is an inexhaustible treasure, an unruffled harbor, the foundation of serenity, the root and mother of myriads of blessings.
St. Nilus of Sinai, Early Fathers from the Philokalia on Prayer
Pray firstly to be purified of passions, secondly to be freed from ignorance and forgetfulness, and thirdly to be delivered from all temptation and forsaking.
St. Nilus of Sinai on Prayer
Prayer is a remedy against grief and depression.
St. Nilus of Sinai on Prayer
Do not be always wanting everything to turn out as you think it should, but rather as God pleases; then you will be undisturbed and thankful in your prayer.
St. Nilus of Sinai on Prayer
Everything you do in revenge against a brother who has harmed you will come back to your mind at the time of prayer.
St. Nilus of Sinai on Prayer
Go, sell all that belongs to you and give it to the poor and taking up the cross, deny yourself; in this way you will be able to pray without distraction.
St. Nilus of Sinai on Prayer
Whatever you have endured out of love of wisdom will bear fruit for you at the time of prayer.

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