Chrysostom
Beloved
You have done well to cry out to God with such sorrow for your sins. This very anguish of soul, this sense of emptiness and bondage, is the first stirring of godly sorrow that works repentance unto salvation, a repentance that brings no regret. But let not this sorrow stop at words or tears. Esau wept, yet found no place of repentance, because his grief was not a hatred of sin but only of its consequences. True repentance is not merely to confess you have abused grace and tested patience, but to make such full use of the delay that you utterly amend what you lament. The mercies of God are not a license to linger in the same snares; they are a summons to rise and be set free indeed.
You speak of addictions to entertainment, comfort, television, and your phone. These are seemingly small masters, yet they bind the soul as surely as heavier chains. If you would overcome them, you must treat them not as trifles but as enemies. As a horse is not honored by a retinue of servants clearing its way, so a Christian gains nothing by surrounding himself with amusements that pamper the flesh while starving the spirit. The time you give to these things is time stolen from God, from prayer, from the care of your soul. Cut them off with a firm hand. Let there be days when you turn off the screen and open the Scriptures. Impose on yourself a voluntary fast from every comfort that has become a snare. This is not to earn forgiveness, Christ alone has paid the debt, but it is the fruit of amendment by which you show that you have truly repented.
Do not say it is too hard. The same grace that stirred you to pray will supply the strength you lack. Manasses filled Jerusalem with abominations and murder, yet by repentance and serious consideration he washed away all his defilements. There is no second baptism, but the spiritual bath of the Church, repentance accompanied by tears, confession, almsgiving, and a changed life, has mighty power to cleanse even one who has sunk to the very depths. Only do not deceive yourself that you can keep the poison and be healed. The spiritual emptiness you feel will not be filled by more entertainment, but by Christ formed in you again through travail of soul. Use the time of this delay to flee every occasion of sin and to seek the heavenly gift with a genuine purpose of heart. Then you will not merely lament your testing of God’s patience, but you will taste afresh the powers of the world to come and know the glorious liberty of the sons of God.
You speak of addictions to entertainment, comfort, television, and your phone. These are seemingly small masters, yet they bind the soul as surely as heavier chains. If you would overcome them, you must treat them not as trifles but as enemies. As a horse is not honored by a retinue of servants clearing its way, so a Christian gains nothing by surrounding himself with amusements that pamper the flesh while starving the spirit. The time you give to these things is time stolen from God, from prayer, from the care of your soul. Cut them off with a firm hand. Let there be days when you turn off the screen and open the Scriptures. Impose on yourself a voluntary fast from every comfort that has become a snare. This is not to earn forgiveness, Christ alone has paid the debt, but it is the fruit of amendment by which you show that you have truly repented.
Do not say it is too hard. The same grace that stirred you to pray will supply the strength you lack. Manasses filled Jerusalem with abominations and murder, yet by repentance and serious consideration he washed away all his defilements. There is no second baptism, but the spiritual bath of the Church, repentance accompanied by tears, confession, almsgiving, and a changed life, has mighty power to cleanse even one who has sunk to the very depths. Only do not deceive yourself that you can keep the poison and be healed. The spiritual emptiness you feel will not be filled by more entertainment, but by Christ formed in you again through travail of soul. Use the time of this delay to flee every occasion of sin and to seek the heavenly gift with a genuine purpose of heart. Then you will not merely lament your testing of God’s patience, but you will taste afresh the powers of the world to come and know the glorious liberty of the sons of God.
