It is unfortunate that there is widespread confusion, not to
mention delusion, in the inexperienced, whereby the Jesus
Prayer is thought to be equivalent to yoga in
Buddhism, or 'transcendental meditation', and other such
Eastern exotica. Any similarity, however, is mostly external,
and any inner convergence does not rise beyond the natural 'anatomy'
of the human soul. The fundamental difference between
Christianity and other beliefs and practices lies in the
fact that the Jesus Prayer is based on the revelation of the
One true living and personal God as Holy Trinity No other
path admits any possibility of a living relationship between
God and the person who prays.
Eastern asceticism aims at divesting the mind of all that is
relative and transitory, so that man may identify with the
impersonal Absolute. This Absolute is believed to be man's
original 'nature', which suffered degradation and
degeneration by entering a multiform and ever-changing earth-bound
life. Ascetic practice like this is, above all, centred upon
the self, and is totally dependent on man's will. Its
intellectual character betrays the fullness of human nature,
in that it takes no account of the heart. Man's main
struggle is to return to the anonymous Supra-personal
Absolute and to be dissolved in it. He must therefore aspire
to efface the soul (Atman) in
order to be one with this anonymous ocean of the
Suprapersonal Absolute, and in this lies its basically
negative purpose.
In his struggle to divest himself of all suffering and
instability connected with transient life, the eastern
ascetic immerses himself in the abstract and intellectual
sphere of so-called pure Existence, a negative and
impersonal sphere in which no vision of God is possible,
only man's vision of himself. There is no place for the
heart in this practice. Progress in this form of asceticism
depends only on one's individual will to succeed. The Upanishads do
not say anywhere that pride is an obstacle to spiritual
progress, or that humility is a virtue. The positive
dimension of Christian asceticism, in which self-denial
leads to one's clothing with the heavenly man, to the
assumption of a supernatural form of life, the Source of
which is the One True, Self-revealing God, is obviously and
totally absent. Even in its more noble expressions, the
self-denial in Buddhism is only the insignificant half of
the picture. In the mind's desire to return to its merely
'natural' self, it beholds its own nakedness in a 'cloud of
divestiture'. But at this point there is a grave risk of
obsession with itself, of its marvelling at its own luminous
but created beauty, and worshipping the creature more than
the Creator (Rom. 1:25). The mind has by now begun to deify
or idolise its self and then, according to the words of the
Lord, 'the last state of that man is worse than the first'
(Matt. 12:45).
Such are the limits of Eastern styles of contemplation,
which do not
claim to be the contemplation of God, and are in fact man's
contemplation of himself. This does not go beyond the
boundaries of created being, nor does it draw anywhere near
to the Truth of primordial Being, to the uncreated living
God Who has revealed Himself to man. This kind of practice
may well afford some relaxation or sharpen man's
psychological and intellectual functions, yet 'that which is
born of the flesh is flesh' (John 3:6) and 'they that are in
the flesh cannot please God' (Rom. 8:8).
In order to be authentic, any divestiture of the mind from
its passionate attachments to the visible and transitory
elements of this life must be linked to the truth about man.
When man sees himself as he is in the sight of God, his only
response is one of repentance. Such repentance is itself a
gift of God, and it generates a certain pain of the heart
which not only detaches the mind from corruptible things,
but also unites it to the unseen and eternal things of God.
In other words, divestiture as an end in itself is only half
the matter, and it consists of human effort operating on the
level of Created being. Christianity on the other hand,
enjoins the ascetic to strive in the hope and expectation
that his soul will be clothed, invested, with the grace of
God, which leads him into the fullness of the immortal life
for which he knows he has been created.
Many admire Buddha and compare him to Christ. Buddha. Buddha
is particularly attractive because of his compassionate
understanding of man's condition and his eloquent teaching
on freedom from suffering. But the Christian knows that
Christ, the Only begotten Son of God, by His Passion, Cross,
Death and Resurrection, willingly and sinlessly entered into
the totality of human pain, transforming it into an
expression of His perfect love. He thereby healed His
creature from the mortal wound inflicted by the ancestral
sin, and made it 'a new creation' unto eternal life. Pain of
heart is therefore of great value in the practice of prayer,
for its presence is a sign that the ascetic is not far from
the true and holy path of love for God. If God, through
suffering, showed His perfect love for us, similarly, man
has the possibility, through suffering, to return his love
to God.
Consequently, prayer is a matter of love. Man expresses love
through prayer, and if we pray, it is an indication that we
love God. If we do not pray, this indicates that we do not
love God, for the measure of our prayer is the measure of
our love for God. St. Silouan identifies love for God with
prayer, and the Holy Fathers say that forgetfulness of God
is the greatest of all passions, for it is the only passion
that will not be fought by prayer through the Name of God.
If we humble ourselves and invoke God's help, trusting in
His love, we are given the strength to conquer any passion;
but when we are unmindful of God, the enemy is free to slay
us.