You are on page 1of 4

4/7/2015

Cassian'sCorner:TheEightPrincipleVices
0

Cassian's Corner
19July2012

TranslateBlog

The Eight Principle Vices


Abba Serapion, similar to his predecessor Evagrius, taught that there are eight
principle vices (5.2-3):

SelectLanguage
Poweredby

Translate

SubscribetoPosts
Emailaddress...

1) Gluttony - natural vice committed through bodily action


2) Fornication - natural vice committed through bodily action
3) Avarice (love of money) - unnatural vice caused by external circumstances
4) Anger - natural vice caused by external circumstances
5) Sadness - unnatural vice caused by internal circumstances
6) Acedia (anxiety of heart) - unnatural vice caused by internal circumstances
7) Vainglory - unnatural vice committed in thoughts apart from bodily action
8) Pride - unnatural vice committed in thoughts apart from bodily action
Before

expounding on these eight vices Abba Serapion told how the Second
Adam's defeat of Satan and these vices reversed our demise under the First Adam (5.6.1-3). In the Garden
of Eden and in the desert, Satan tempted both Adams with the vices of gluttony, vainglory, and pride (or
avarice). Adam was tempted with gluttony by taking the fruit; Christ was tempted to turn stones in to
bread. Satan tempted Adam to vainglory when he said, "Your eyes shall be opened"; likewise he tempted
Christ when he said, "If You are the Son of God, cast yourself down"; lastly Adam was tempted with pride
when Satan told him, "You shall be gods knowing good and evil", and he also similarly tempted Christ when
he showed and promised Him all the kingdoms of this world.
Each Adam brought about different outcomes by their decisions. Adam caused ruin and death, while Christ
brought resurrection and life; in Adam humanity was condemned, while in Christ humanity was freed (1
Cor. 15:22). Even the nature of their births foretold these outcomes--Adam was fashioned from dust, while
Christ was born of the Virgin Mary--the Theotokos. Since Christ made victory over the vices possible in
Him, we have to consider the nature of these vices and how to defeat them.
The first six vices are linked together in such a way that the overflow of the first sin causes the second sin,
etc, to the sixth sin of acedia. "From an excess of gluttony there inevitably springs fornication; from
fornication, avarice; from avarice, anger; from anger, sadness; and from sadness, acedia" (5.10.2). The
http://cassianscorner.blogspot.hk/2012/07/theeightprinciplevices.html

Submit

SearchthisCorner
Search

St.Cassian'sWorks
The Conferences
The Institutes

OrthodoxyOnline
Ancient Faith Radio
Daily Scripture Readings
Eighth Day Books
Lives of Saints
Monachos Orthodox Forum
Mount Athos
Orthodox Answers
Orthodox Church Locator
Orthodox Information
Center
Orthodox Prayer
OrthodoxWiki
Pravmir
Pravoslavie
Prayers by the Lake
Prologue of Ohrid
Russian Orthodox Church
Valaam Monastery
Works of Fr. John Romanides

OrthodoxBlogs
1/4

4/7/2015

Cassian'sCorner:TheEightPrincipleVices

vices can also be paired into four couplings, because each vice originates from the same passion as its
partner. Gluttony and fornication, anger and avarice, acedia and sadness, and pride and vainglory all share
special relationships with each other (5.10.5). Therefore, these eight vices must be viewed and treated
according to their root passions.
There are three kinds of gluttony and fornication. The three kinds of gluttony are eating before the
appointed time, overeating, and desiring delicate foods. The first gluttony enrages the monk against his
monastery, the second arouses fleshly desires, and the third produces avarice, which disallows solidarity
with Christ's deprivation (5.11.2). The three types of fornication are found in the union of the sexes, in

MYSTAGOGY
Persons and Events of Holy
Week

Glory to God for All


Things
The Mystical Reality of Holy
Week

Byzantine, Texas
When to celebrate Pascha

The Morning Offering


A Joyful Sorrow

sexual impurity, and in lust of soul and mind (5.11.4).

Andrea Elizabeth's
Wordpress Blog

In order to defeat the bodily vices of gluttony and fornication the soul and body must respond together

Lux Christi

(5.4.3). The bodily disciplines of fasting, vigil, and works of penance must be diligently performed to
overcome these sins. Nevertheless, the soul must be involved in concert with these bodily disciplines, or

Again and Again

Jordan
Life and Death with St.
Mary of Egypt

they are all for naught. As the Triodion points out during Clean Week Vespers, "True fasting is to put away

Day and Night

all evil, to control the tongue, to forbear from anger, to abstain from lust, slander, falsehood and perjury. If
we renounce these things, then is our fasting true and acceptable to God. Let us keep the Fast not only by

Close to Home

refraining from food, but by becoming strangers to all the bodily passions."

Logismoi

Project 365
'In the beginning was the
Act' - Goethe's Faust

The importance of defeating gluttony and fornication cannot be understated. "For one who had conquered

Life, Books & Education

gluttony could not be tempted by fornication, which proceeds from the former's repletion and from its

The Joy of Learning

root" (5.6.3). These two bodily vices must be defeated in order to defeat the rest of the vices.

On Behalf of All

Nevertheless, "it is certain that nothing has to do with utility and needs of our common nature apart from
daily food and drink" (5.8.2). We will always have to do battle with gluttony in this life, because it arises out

evlogia

of bodily necessity (5.21.3). Even the monks who have conquered other passions by their holy lives struggle

Fire and Brimstone

with great attentiveness of heart and abstinence of body against gluttony (5.8.4). We must possess

BlogArchive

moderation and contentment in order to defeat gluttony.

2012 (80)
October (6)

There are three kinds of avarice and anger. Avarice manifests itself in an inability to denounce worldly
possessions, reclaiming what we already gave away in our denunciation, and longing for what we do not
possess (5.11.6). Anger is either interior anger (), external anger (), or a long-term grudge ().

September (9)
August (11)
July (9)
The Ascetic Ideal and the
New Testament

We must condemn all types of avarice and anger with equal horror. In fact we must completely cut off

The Gulag of Pitesti

these vices by not allowing them to linger (Col. 3:8; Heb. 13:4). St. Maximus the Confessor in his First

The Eight Principle Vices

Century on Love understood this perfectly, "He who is not indifferent to fame and pleasure, as well as to
love of riches that exists because of them and increases them, cannot cut off occasions for anger. And he
who does not cut these off cannot attain perfect love."

Monasticism Question &


Answer

There are two kinds of sadness and acedia (weariness or anxiety of heart). One sadness originates when
anger has ceased or from a hurt that has been suffered or from some thwarted desire, while the second
comes from mental anguish or despair. Acedia induces either an urge to sleep or a feeling of abandonment
(5.11.8). These logismoi should not be entertained in the mind; they too must be cutoff at once.

Metropolitan Kallistos
Ware on the Jesus
Prayer
Bless the Lord - Psalm
103 (104)
The Spiritual Struggle
The Semantron
Pop (The Priest)
June (8)

The last two vices are separated from the first six vices, because they do not originate from them. Rather
vainglory and pride attack us precisely when we conquer any of the first six vices (5.10.3-4). There are two
kinds of vainglory--being uplifted by carnally external things and desiring empty praise due to spiritual and
hidden things (5.12.1). Pride also manifests itself carnally and spiritually. The temptation of spiritual pride
occurs when one has made progress against the other vices (15.12.5). Vainglory and pride are best
countered by acquiring true humility. All the methods prescribed by the Church aim towards acquiring
grace through true humility of heart (1 Peter 5:5).
These eight vices are common to all, but they attack individuals in a variety of ways. One Christian might
be dominated by pride, while another is dominated by acedia, etc (5.13). How do we best fight against these
vices without being overwhelmed? We must identify and attack our dominant vice with all diligence and
repentance. When we desire purity of heart and intensely focus on defeating one vice, we will also be
http://cassianscorner.blogspot.hk/2012/07/theeightprinciplevices.html

May (8)
April (8)
March (10)
February (9)
January (2)

PopularPosts
The Eight Principle Vices
Abba Serapion, similar to his
predecessor Evagrius ,
taught that there are eight
principle vices ( 5.2-3 ): 1)
Gluttony - natural vice c...

2/4

4/7/2015

Cassian'sCorner:TheEightPrincipleVices

watchful and careful with regards to the other vices (15.14.1, 4). The success of this battle belongs to the
Lord "for it is impossible for a person to deserve to triumph over a passion before he has understood that
he is not able to obtain victory in the struggle by his own diligence and effort, even though in order to be
cleansed he must always be careful and attentive, day and night" (5.14.2).
We must work to replace vices with virtues "for virtues cannot live together with vices" (5.23.1). Once the
virtues have defeated the vices, chastity will replace fornication, patience will replace anger, beneficial
sadness and joy will replace death-dealing sadness, fortitude will replace acedia, and humility will replace
pride (5.23.2). Then we will regain the Lord's intention for our hearts--to be possessed not by the vices but
by the virtues (5.24.2). May God the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit help us in our struggles now and

Monasticism Question &


Answer
All quotes from
Metropolitan Athanasios of
Limassol, under the
pseudonym "Father
Maximos", are from the third
chapter of The Mo...
Obtaining Discretion
We cannot obtain discretion
by ourselves--it is a gift
from God ( 1 Cor. 12:8-11 ) .
Nevertheless, we must
always seek to obtain
discre...

ever and unto ages of ages. Amen.

AboutMe
Texas Seraphim
Blessed with a
wonderful wife &
three children.
View my complete profile

"The reason that fasting has an effect on the spirits of evil rests in its powerful effect on our own spirit. A
body subdued by fasting brings the human spirit freedom, strength, sobriety, purity, and keen
discernment." - St. Ignatius Brianchaninov
"A wandering mind is made stable by reading, vigil and prayer. Flaming lust is extinguished by hunger, labor
and solitude. Stirrings of anger are calmed by psalmody, magnanimity and mercifulness. All this has its
effect when used at its proper time and in due measure. Everything untimely or without proper measure is
short-lived; and short-lived things are more harmful than useful." - Evagrius Ponticus

"My soul, my soul arise! Why are you sleeping? The end is approaching and you will be confounded.
Awake then, and be watchful, that you may be spared by Christ God, Who is everywhere and fills all
things." - Kontakion from the Great Canon of St. Andrew of Crete
"Vainglory, which seeks not the virtue itself but only praise of the virtue, labors diligently only that it might
exhibit a mask of virtue before human eyes. Thus the hypocrite stands before humanity dressed in an outer
garment of extreme deception: virtue--the essence of which he does not have at all--is seen on his
exterior, while in his soul can be seen self-satisfaction and pomposity, because he first of all deceived and
deluded himself." - St. Ignatius Brianchaninov (Homily on Clean Wednesday)
"To the lowly and humble God gives grace. That is, He gives them all that they need, all of that for which
they pray to Him in their lowliness and in their humility. Who are they, the lowly and the humble? They are
those who feel their weakness and their complete dependence on the Creator of all. They are as full as the
sea and as dependent as the sea. What water is there that is fuller than the sea and what is more dependent
on the rains and tributaries? The proud one is an enclosed well, closed off from heaven and earth and is
self-sufficient as long as it is full. When closed off and cut off, it must quickly become emptied." - St.
Nikolai Velimirovich (Homily from The Prologue of Ohrid)
You might also like:

Monasticism
Question&Answer

CherubicHymn

AForerunnerofthe
JesusPrayer

Linkwithin

http://cassianscorner.blogspot.hk/2012/07/theeightprinciplevices.html

3/4

4/7/2015

Cassian'sCorner:TheEightPrincipleVices

Posted by Texas Seraphim

Recommend this on Google

Labels: Conferences, Fasting, First Adam, Heart, Mind, Second Adam, Struggle, Temptation, V, Vices, Virtues, Will

No comments:
Post a Comment
Enteryourcomment...

Commentas:

Publish

GoogleAccount

Preview

Post a Comment

Newer Post

Home

Older Post

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

*All quotations from "The Conferences" are taken from "John Cassian: The Conferences", trans. Boniface Ramsey, 1997.

http://cassianscorner.blogspot.hk/2012/07/theeightprinciplevices.html

4/4

You might also like