A brother, being tempted by
a demon, went to a hermit and said, “those two monks over there live together
sinfully.” But the hermit knew that a demon was deceiving him. So he called the
brothers to him. In the evening he put out a mat for them, and covered them
with a single blanket, and said, “they are sons of God, and holy persons.” But
he said to his disciple, “Shut this slandering brother up in a cell by himself;
he is suffering from the passion of which he accuses them.”
Nicodemus, on of [the
members of the Pharisees] who had gone to [Jesus] earlier, said to them, “Does
out law condemn a man before it first hears him, and finds out what he is
doing?” They answered and said to him, “You are not from Galilee also, are you?
Look and see that no prophet arises from Galilee.” Then each went to his own
house. (John 7: 52-53)
.
. .
There is an entire section
of the topical collection of the sayings of the desert fathers devoted to
‘non-judgment’—and that is in addition to the groups of sayings on ‘nothing
done for show’ and ‘humility.’ The desert ascetics—and the fathers have more to
say about this than the mothers—insisted on humility as the defining
characteristic of the monastic life. To accuse another brother or sister of a
sin, and to complain of it to one’s superior, was a sure sign that something
was lacking in the accuser rather than the accused. Certainly there are a great
many cases of monks falling into sin and doing penance, but in those instances
the monk is convicted of his sin, often by the humility and charity of his
fellows, or of his superior.
It is much easier to be
like the Pharisees, and rest easy in the certainty that we know where prophets come from, and we know not to trust someone who
comes from some other quarter. Jesus’s authenticity as a prophet was ruled out
before he was even given a hearing: “Can anything good come out of Nazareth?”
Apparently not: Galilee had never produced any prophet, and the Pharisees were sure
that the Scripture said nothing about a prophet to come out of Galilee.
Nicodemus, while hesitant, demonstrates a kind of openness and discernment that
the desert ascetics would probably have welcomes. Listen and evaluate, he
suggests; let’s not jump to conclusions without any evidence.
What we think we ‘know’ can
be so deceptive—like the “slandering brother” in the saying, we are quicker to
accuse than to confess. Lent offers us a chance to turn that critical gaze
toward our own souls, and look carefully; to examine our consciences and see
whether we ought to confess our own sins, rather than accuse our brothers and
sisters in Christ.
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