Would you like me to list also the paths of repentance? They
are numerous and quite varied, and all lead to heaven.
A first path of repentance is the condemnation of your own
sins: “Be the first to admit your sins and you will be justified.” For this
reason, too, the prophet wrote: “I said, I will accuse myself of my sins to the
Lord, and You forgave the wickedness of my heart.” Therefore, you too should
condemn your own sins; that will be enough reason for the Lord to forgive you,
for a man who condemns his own sins is slower to commit them again. Rouse your
conscience to accuse yourself within your own house, lest it become your
accuser before the judgment seat of the Lord.
That, then, is one very good path of repentance. Another and
no less valuable one is to put out of our minds the harm done us by our
enemies, in order to master our anger, and to forgive our fellow servants’ sins
against us. Then our own sins against the Lord will be forgiven us. Thus you
have another way to atone for sin: “For if you forgive your debtors, your
heavenly Father will forgive you.”
Do you want to know of a third path? It consists of prayer
that is fervent and careful and comes from the heart.
If you want to hear of a fourth, I will mention almsgiving,
whose power is great and far-reaching.
If, moreover, a man lives a modest, humble life, that, no
less than the other things I have mentioned, takes sin away. Proof of this is
the tax-collector who had no good deeds to mention, but offered his humility
instead and was relieved of a heavy burden of sins.
Thus I have shown you five paths of repentance: condemnation
of your own sins, forgiveness of our neighbor’s sins against us, prayer,
almsgiving, and humility.
Do not be idle, then, but walk daily in all these paths;
they are easy, and you cannot plead your poverty. For, though you live out your
life amid great need, you can always set aside your wrath, be humble, pray
diligently, and condemn your own sins; poverty is no hindrance. Poverty is not
an obstacle to our carrying out the Lord’s bidding, even when it comes to that
path of repentance which involves giving money (almsgiving, I mean). The widow
proved that when she put her two mites into the box!
Now that we have learned how to heal those wounds of ours,
let us apply the cures. Then, when we have regained genuine health, we can
approach the Holy Table with confidence, go gloriously to meet Christ, the King
of Glory, and attain the eternal blessings through the grace, mercy, and
kindness of Jesus Christ, our Lord.
Through the prayers of the holy hierarch John, O Christ our
God, have mercy on us and save us. Amen.
Saint John Chrysostom, Patriarch of Constantinople
Synaxarion of the Lenten Triodion and
Pentecostarion.
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