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By Saint Theodore of the Studium
The time has come for the sowing of earthly seed, of corn and
of other things. We see men going forth to work from the end
to the beginning of the night, taking all care that they may sow
what is best and most productive, that the needs of the body may
be supplied. And shall we, the husbandmen of spiritual seed,
sleep our time away, and neglect to sow what we should? How
then should we bear everlasting hunger? What excuse can we
give for our idleness?
Let us awake, then, and sow more zealously and more plentifully
than the sowers of natural seed! For he that soweth sparingly
shall reap sparingly, and he that soweth in blessing shall reap blessings.
What do we sow! Petitions, prayer, supplications, thanksgivings, faith,
hope, love. These are the seed of piety, and by them the soul is
nourished.
With the natural seed the husbandman can only be patient,
awaiting the early and the latter rain. But of our seed we are
the masters to cause rain and dew -- our weeping and contrition --
at our will, and as much as pleases us. Since this is within our
choice, I beseech you, brethren, let us also sow much and let us
water very much, and let us increase the fruits of righteousness
that when the spiritual harvest of the unseen world shall come,
we may fill our hands and our laps with sheaves, and may cry
aloud: "The blessing of the Lord is upon us. We have blessed
you out of the house of the Lord. Thou shalt eat the labours
of thy hands. Thou art blessed, and it shall be well with thee."
So far about these things. I wish to remind you, brethren, that the
nights swell out as the days diminish. And as by watchings the body
declines, so by much sleep does the flesh grow in fatness. And as
the flesh becomes fat, the passions increase along with it. What
shall we say then? Each of you has a psalm, an exercise, a prayer.
Let all things be attended to in order, all for the edification of the
soul, for the strengthening of the spirit, that Satan may not tempt you
by intemperance.
But I say this not as to sleep alone, but also as to food and drink,
and it may be as to other things. To keep to a fixed order without
deviation is the best means to keep ourselves whole and uninjured.