the power of words

Saint Paraskeve icon of Kattavasia Rhodes
photo Credit Victor Lutes

How language first developed is a great mystery. What gave rise to the first words signifying the reality of God? Breath launched a meaning from the heart that passed across the vocal chords, like a violin bow. A friend of mine who is a psychiatrist and writer in Greece, Fr. Vasileios Thermos, translated a line from one of his poems. “Every word we speak is a translation from an ancient manuscript that has been lost.”

Words are magic, revelations. They do not belong to us, but pass through us and we pass through them, translating the experiences of our flesh into meaning and returning to us, changing us according to their power. It is said among the Hasidic Jews, “The Spirit seeks a body through speech.” As one of the oldest original languages in existence, there is speculation that the word for God’s name might originally have arisen out of recognition of the sacredness and mystery of the very act of breathing itself, like a whisper, a sigh, a recognition of bearing life with each breath. All living beings breathe. So it may have originally been derived from something like the in breath, (whispered) “Yaaaahhhhh… outbreath, Waaaaayyyyyy” (whispered).

Stephen Muse : Treasure in Earthen Vessels


as you treat the soul

The relationship between soul and mind is formed over a lifetime by the nature of their interaction while in the body. St. Anthony makes an important and instructive observation. “Just as you treat the soul while it is in the body, so it will treat you on leaving the body.”

Stephen Muse : Treasure in Earthen Vessels

Through the lens of eternity :: this is needfully important


keeping watch

For us in the world living ordinary lives….. we too must discover stillness and watchfulness in the cave of the heart and learn to attend to what is heard in silence while living ordinary lives in the world as she did. Deep interior prayer is not something only for the monastics or for a hermit far off in the desert.

Stephen Muse

Treasure in Earthen Vessels


the altar of the heart {anaphora}

The heart is the tabernacle where the soul encounters the Holy Spirit. Jesus said, Where your treasure is, there will your heart be also.” The greatest potential of every human being is to fulfill our calling to be the royal priesthood, who become the meeting place of the created and uncreated worlds, lifting up the gifts of creation each moment from the later of the heart as the priest does in the anaphora of the Divine Liturgy.

Stephen Muse : Treasure in Earthen Vessels

“Thine own of Thine own, we offer unto Thee, on behalf of all and for all.”


all can be saved

An afternoon in the sunflower field
my husband planted for me

Bending low to the ground in love, You have breathed into the dust and raised us up as living flesh, imprinted with Your Divine Image and the potential to become persons in Your likeness. It is a potential, not a guarantee… Achieving the likeness of God is a gift given in response to a long and arduous struggle in faith to obey in body, mind, and soul, the noetic illumination that Christ invisibly communicates to our hearts. Lest we despair of the difficulties faced along this way, St. John Climacus offers a consoling word. “Not everyone can achieve dispassion. But all can be saved and can be reconciled to God.”

Stephen Muse : Treasure in Earthen Vessels