|
Life of Our Holy Father, St. Poimen
The Great
The Monk Poimen the Great
(Abba Poimen) was born in about the year 340 in Egypt. With his two
brothers, Anubios and Paisios, he went into one of the Egyptian monasteries,
and all three accepted monastic tonsure. The brothers were such strict
ascetics that when their mother came to the monastery to see her children,
they did not come out to her from their cells. The mother stood there for a
long time and wept. Then the Monk Poimen said to her through the closed door
of the cell: "If thou bearest with the temporal parting from us now, then in
the future life wilt thou see us, since we do hope upon God the
Lover-of-Mankind!" The mother was humbled and returned home.
Fame about the deeds and virtues of the Monk Poimen spread throughout all
the land. One time the governor of the district wanted to see him. The Monk
Poimen, shunning fame, reasoned thus: "If dignitaries begin coming to me
with respect, then also many of the people will start coming to me and
disturb my quiet, and I shalt be deprived of the grace of humility, which I
have found only with the help of God." And so he relayed a refusal to the
messenger. For many of the monks, the Monk Poimen was a spiritual guide and
instructor. And they wrote down his answers to serve to the edification of
others besides themselves. A certain monk asked: "Ought one to veil over
with silence the sin of a transgressing brother, if perchance one see him?"
The elder answered: "If we reproach the sins of brothers, then God will
reproach our sins, and if thou seest a brother sinning, believe not thine
eyes and know, that thine own sin is like a wood-beam, but the sin of thy
brother is like a wood-splinter, and then thou wilt not come into distress
and temptation." Another monk turned to the saint, saying: "I have
grievously sinned and I want to spend three years at repentance. Is such a
length of time sufficient?" The elder answered: "That is a long time." The
monk continued to ask how long a period of repentance did the saint reckon
necessary for him -- a year or forty days? The elder answered: "I think that
if a man repenteth from the depths of his heart and posits a firm intent to
return no more to the sin, then God would accept also a three-day
repentance." To the question, as to how to be rid of persistent evil
thoughts, the saint answered: "If a man has on one side of him fire, and on
the other side a vessel with water, then if he starts burning from the fire,
he takes water from the vessel and extinguishes the fire. Like to this are
the evil thoughts, suggested by the enemy of our salvation, which like a
spark can enkindle sinful desires within man. It is necessary to put out
these sparks with the water, which is prayer and the yearning of the soul
for God."
The Monk Poimen was strict at fasting and did not partake of food for the
space of a week or more. But others he advised to eat every day, only but
without eating one's fill. For a certain monk, permitting himself to partake
of food only on the seventh day but being angry with a brother, the saint
said: "Thou wouldst learn to fast over six days, yet cannot abstain from
anger for even a single day." To the question, which is better -- to speak
or be silent, the elder said: "Whoso doth speak on account of God, doeth
well, and whoso is silent on account of God -- that one doth act well." And
moreover: "It may be, that a man seems to be silent, but if his heart doth
judge others, then always is he speaking. But there are also those, who all
the day long speak with their tongue, but within themself they do keep
silence, since they judge no one."
The saint said: "For a man it is necessary to observe three primary rules:
to fear God, to pray often and to do good for people." "Malice in turn never
wipes out malice. If someone doeth thee bad, do them good, and thine good
will conquer their bad." One time, when the monk with his students arrived
at an Egyptian wilderness-monastery (since he had the habit to go about from
place to place, so as to shun glory from men), it became known to him, that
the elder living there was annoyed at his arrival and also was jealous of
him. In order to overcome the malice of the hermit, the saint set off to him
with his brethren, taking along with them food as a present. The elder
refused to come out to them. Thereupon the Monk Poimen said: "We shall not
depart from here, until we are granted to see and pay respect to the holy
elder," -- and he remained standing in the bright heat at the door of the
cell. Seeing such perseverance and lack of malice on the part of the Monk
Poimen, the elder received him graciously and said: "It is right what I have
heard about you, but I see in you the good deeds and an hundred times even
more so." Thus did the Monk Poimen know how to extinguish malice and provide
good example to others. He possessed such great humility, that often with a
sigh he said: "I shalt be cast down to that place, whither was cast down
Satan!"
One time there came to the saint a monk from afar, to get his guidance. He
began to speak about sublime matters difficult to grasp. The saint turned
away from him and was silent. To the bewildered monk they explained, that
the saint did not like to speak about lofty matters. Then the monk began to
ask him about the struggle with passions of soul. The saint turned to him
with a joyful face: "Here now thou well hath spoken, and I must speak for it
needs answer," -- and for a long while he provided instruction, as to how
one ought to struggle with the passions and conquer them.
The Monk Poimen died at age 110, in about the year 450. Soon after his death
he was acknowledged as a saint pleasing to God and received the title "the
Great" -- as a sign of his great humility, modesty, uprightness, and
self-denying service to God.
|
|