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A Beginner's Introduction to the Philokalia

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This beginner's guide to the great 5-volume classic of Eastern Orthodox spirituality studies the many concepts addressed in the Philokalia. Each chapter focuses on a single spiritual concept explaining it as simply as possible. Chapters include - Watchfulness (Nepsis), Logismoi (Thoughts), Ascesis, Theosis, The Passion, Stillness (Hesychia), the Jesus Prayer, etc. A superb introduction to the Philokalia. Easy to read. Useful individually or studied as a group.

89 pages, Kindle Edition

First published January 1, 2004

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Anthony M. Coniaris

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Displaying 1 - 5 of 5 reviews
1 review
November 14, 2024
“Summery” of the Philokalia

I have not read the Philokalia itself, and I will not for spiritual growth until my Spiritual Father allows. However, I found this book helpful in simply understanding a basic wide spread Eastern understanding of the Faith—as a Latin Rite Catholic.
347 reviews12 followers
October 21, 2024
O lucrare monumentală scrisă impecabil despre Filocalia și despre Rugăciunea lui Iisus.
Recomand tuturor teologilor, și nu numai!!
Profile Image for Patrick Williams.
19 reviews4 followers
June 21, 2013
This book is a VERY basic and ground-level place to start before reading the four-volume Philokalia or reading other works on Eastern Orthodox Spirituality. In this book, Anthony Coniaris introduces the basic themes of the Philokalia to help you get a basic vocabulary and understanding before you move into deeper works on Orthodox Spirituality. In this book, he covers the themes of: Nepsis (attentiveness, watchfulness, inner attention); Hegemonikon (the Helsman of the Soul); Logismoi (thoughts); Ascesis (Training or discipline); Theosis; The Passions; The Gift of Tears; Hesychia (inner stillness); The Jesus Prayer; The Heart; Diakrisis (discernment); Apatheia (dispassion); Spiritual Synergy; Mnimi Theou (remembering God); The Inner Closet; The inner Flame; Purity of Heart; The Nous (the intellect); Descending with the Mind into the Heart through the Jesus Prayer and, finally, St. Nicodemus' invitation to read the Philokalia. I liked it because it is an entry level, basic approach that assumes the reader has no prior understanding of these topics. It explains them in simple, easy to understand ways and prepares the reader to be able to understand deeper works on Eastern Orthodox spiritual practices. One thing to be aware of, this is not a novel nor does it read like a nicely flowing book but, rather, it reads like an introductory text-book to teach someone the basics so be prepared to read it more as a basic text-book than a flowing novel or even flowing non-fiction work. If you want to start to delve into Eastern Orthodox spirituality, this is a very good and basic level to start at. Here is the first page on the topic, Nepsis: "One of the major emphases of the Philokalia is inner watchfulness. The authors whose works are included in the Philokalia are often called the Wakeful or Neptic Fathers because of the great emphasis they place on inner wakefulness and alertness. The Greek word "nepsis" means vigilance, alertness. Nepsis means to be completely present to where we are, just as a mother is completely present to the least sound of her baby in the crib, even as she talks on the phone or vacuums the rug. "The glory of God is a human who is fully alive", said St. Ireneaus. "Fully alive" means fully awake, alert, vigilant and attentive to God. "What is required," counsels St. Theophan the Recluse, "is constant aliveness to God - an aliveness present when you talk, read, watch or examine something.".... that is the first page (yes, the pages are small and I even actually went onto the top of the second page!). If you want an introductory level course on the major themes of Eastern Orthodox spirituality, this book is for you.
Profile Image for Keith.
349 reviews8 followers
January 16, 2015
A great introduction to the Philokalia, which is a collection of writings by church Fathers starting from around 400AD. These writings emphasize the transformation of the heart toward love. The claim is that we see things not as they are, but as we are.
Profile Image for Angela Carlson.
Author 15 books89 followers
December 22, 2015
Good, quick intro to the Philokalia. It's nice to have on hand, a bit like Cliff's Notes for the concepts presented in the Philokalia.
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