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Title: The Christian Teaching
Author: Leo Tolstoy
Date: 1895
Language: en
Topics: religion
Source: Original text from http://www.revoltlib.com/?id=10495, 2021. From WikiSource, Translated "with God's spirit" by EarthlyFireFlies.org, 2020.

Leo Tolstoy

The Christian Teaching

Introduction

I have lived until the age of fifty, thinking that that the life of a

human, which occupies the time between his birth and death, is all his

life; and that therefore the goal of a human is his happiness in this

mortal life. So I tried to find this happiness. But the longer I lived,

the more evident it became to me that this happiness does not and cannot

exist. That happiness which I was looking for I could not reach, yet

that one which I gained, immediately ceased to be happiness.

More and more misfortunes have happened, and the inevitability of death

became more and more obvious to me. And I understood that after this

meaningless and unhappy life, nothing waits for me but suffering,

illness, old age and annihilation. I asked myself, ‘What is this for?’

but did not receive an answer. I despaired.

What some people told me, and of what I sometimes tried to convince

myself, namely, that I must wish for happiness not for myself alone but

for others, for closed ones and for all people, — that did not satisfy

me because, firstly, I could not sincerely wish for happiness for others

as much as I do for myself; secondly, and chiefly, because others, just

like myself, were also doomed to unhappiness and death. And therefore

all my efforts toward their happiness were futile.

I despaired. But then I thought that my despair might be caused by the

fact that I'm different, and that other people know what they live for

and therefore they do not despair. So I began to observe other people;

but they, like myself, did not know what they lived for. Some tried to

silence their ignorance in the aimless round of life; some reassured

themselves and others that they believed in various religions they were

indoctrinated with since childhood, although it was impossible to

believe in what they believed, it was so foolish. And many of them, as

it seemed to me, only pretended they believed, but deep down they did

not believe.

I could no longer continue to hustle and bustle, for no hustle could

hide the question always open in front of me. And I could not start

again believing the religion which I was taught in my childhood, which,

once I have matured in mind, has left me by itself. But the more I

learned, the more I grew convinced that in this religion there could not

be possibly truth, that there is only hypocrisy and selfish aims of the

deceivers, and the weakness of mind, stubbornness and the fear of the

deceived. Not to mention the inner contradictions of this teaching, —

its meanness, its brutality in professing God punishing people with

eternal torments. (All these contradictions, absurdities and cruelties I

exposed in detail in my work, The Criticism of Dogmatic Theology, where

all the Church dogmas and theses, as taught in our theology, are

examined in sequence.) The main thing that did not let me believe in

this doctrine was knowledge that beside the Orthodox Christian teaching,

asserting itself being the only true one, there existed the second

teaching of Christianity — the Roman Catholic; the third — the Lutheran;

the fourth — the Dissent, and all the various Christian teachings, each

of which asserted itself as the only true teaching.

I also knew that beside these Christian teachings, non-Christian

teachings also existed — Buddhism, Brahmanism, Mohammedanism,

Confucianism, and others, also asserting themselves to be true, and all

other teachings – to be erroneous.

I could neither return to religion I was taught in my childhood, nor

believe any of those professed among other nations, because all of them

had the same contradictions, absurdities, miracles, denial of all other

religions and, most importantly, the deceit, demands for blind trust in

their teaching.

So, I have convinced myself that among the existent religions I will not

find an answer to my question nor ease my suffering. My despair was so

great that I was on the verge of suicide.

At this point, the salvation came. From childhood I had retained a vague

idea that the Gospel has the answer to my question. In this teaching, in

the Gospel, despite of all the perversions which it has been subjected

to in the doctrine of the Christian Church, I felt truth. And as the

last effort, after discarding all the interpretations of the Gospel

teaching, I began to read the Gospels and to penetrate their meaning.

And the more I penetrated the meaning of this book, the more I grasped

something new, quite different from what Christian churches teach, but

answering the question of my life.

And finally, the answer became completely clear. This answer was not

only clear, but unquestionable; because, firstly, it matched entirely to

the requirements of my reason and heart, and secondly, when I came to

understand it, I saw that this was not just my special interpretation of

the Gospel (as it might appear), nor even the special revelation of

Christ, but the very answer to the question of life which more or less

clearly was expressed by the best people of mankind, before and after

the Gospel, starting from Moses, Isaiah, Confucius, ancient Greeks,

Buddha, Socrates, up to Pascal, Spinoza, Fichte, Fuerbach and all those,

often unnoticed and not famous people, who sincerely, instead of just

believing the teachings, thought and spoke about the meaning of life.

So, in this understanding of truth I discovered from the Gospel, I not

only was not alone, but I was together with all the best people of the

past and of our time. I became confirmed in this truth, and at peace,

and after that lived happily 20 years of my life, and now with gladness

approach death.

And this answer to the meaning of my life, which gave me complete

comfort and joy of life, I want to pass to people. I am with one foot in

grave, due to my age and health condition, and therefore worldly

considerations have no meaning to me. Even if they had, I know that this

explanation of my beliefs will not contribute to my worldly welfare nor

people’s kind attitude toward me, but, on the contrary, may only disturb

and upset both unbelievers who demand from me fictional work rather than

pondering over faith, and believers who are enraged at my religious

writings and blame me for them. In addition, most likely, this writing

will become known to people only after my death. And so what prompts me

to do what I'm doing is not greed, not fame, not worldly considerations,

but only the fear of not fulfilling of what He, who sent me into this

world and to Whom I am waiting for my return at any hour, wants from me.

I therefore ask all those who will read this: read and understand my

writing, putting aside, as I did, all worldly considerations, and

bearing in mind only the eternal source of truth and goodness by the

will of which we came into this world, and very soon, as corporeal

creatures, will vanish from it; and, without haste and irritation,

understand and discuss what I say; and, in case of disagreement, correct

me not with contempt and hatred but with empathy and love; and in case

you agree with me, remember that if I tell truth, this truth is not mine

but of God, and it’s just accidentally part of it goes through me, just

as it goes through each and every one of us when we know truth and

transfer it to others.

Part 1 : Ancient teachings and Christian understanding of life

1. Ancient teachings

1. People always, from the earliest times, have felt the misery,

instability, and meaningless of their existence, and looked for

salvation from the misery, instability, and meaningless in belief in God

or Gods who would rescue them from various calamities in this and after

life and give them the well-being they desired yet couldn’t obtain in

this life.

2. Therefore, from the ancient times among different nations there were

different preachers who taught people about what the God or Gods are who

can save people, and about what they need to do to please the God or

Gods in order to get the reward in this or future life.

3. Some religious teachings taught that God is the Sun personified in

various animals; others taught that Gods are the Heaven and Earth; the

third ones taught that God has created the world and chosen a favorite

nation from all; the fourth ones taught that there are many gods and

that they participate in the affairs of people; the fifth ones taught

that God, by adopting the image of man, came down to Earth. And all

these teachers, by mixing truth with deceptions, demanded from people

not only abstinence from the actions regarded as evil and performance of

actions regarded as good, but also sacraments, sacrifices, and prayers,

which were, more than anything else, supposed to provide people with

their well-being in this world and in the future.

2. The inadequacy of the ancient teachings

1. But the longer people lived the less these teachings satisfied the

demands of human soul.

2. Firstly, people saw that happiness in this world, to which they were

driven to, was not attained, despite the fulfilment of the requirements

of God or gods.

3. Secondly, with the spread of education, the credibility of what

religious teachers preached about God - about the future life and its

rewards, not corresponding to the modern learned notions of the world -

weakened and weakened.

4. Thirdly and chiefly, people’s confidence in these various teachings

weakened because the people, through getting into closer relationship

with each other, learned that religious teachers in every country preach

their own peculiar doctrine as the only true one and deny all others.

And people, after discovering this, naturally concluded that none of

these teachings was truer than another, and therefore that none of them

can be accepted as indisputable and infallible truth.

3. The necessity of a new teaching suitable to the degree of

enlightenment of mankind

1. Unattainability of happiness in this life, the growing enlightenment

of humanity, and the relationships of the people between each other as a

result of which they came to know the religious teachings of other

nations, caused people’s confidence in the doctrines they were preached

to become weaker and weaker.

2. Meanwhile, the need for an explanation of the meaning of life and

resolving the contradiction between the pursuit of happiness and life,

on one hand, and the increasingly clear awareness of the inevitability

of disaster and death, on the other hand, became more and more pressing.

3. A person desires the well-being of himself, he sees the meaning of

his life in it; but the longer he lives the clearer he sees that this

well-being is not possible for him. The person desires life, and the

continuation of life, but sees that he and all that exists around him

are doomed to inevitable destruction and disappearance. Human possesses

logic and seeks a reasonable explanation of the phenomena of life, but

finds no rational explanation either of his own or anyone else's life.

4. If in ancient times the understanding of this contradiction between

the desire for human life that demands for well-being and its

continuation and the inevitability of death and suffering was accessible

only to the best minds, like Solomon, Buddha, Socrates, Laozi and

others, then in the recent time it became truth available to all; and

therefore the solution of this contradiction became necessary more than

ever.

5. And exactly at that time when the need to solve the contradiction

between the pursuit of happiness and life, together with the realization

that they are unattainable, had become so painfully essential to

humanity, the solution was given to people in Christian teaching, in its

true meaning.

4. What is the solution of the contradiction of life, and the

explanation of its meaning, given by Christian teaching in its true

meaning?

1. Ancient teachings, by their assertions of the existence of God as a

creator, preserver, and redeemer, tried to mask the contradiction of

human life; but Christian teaching, by contrast, shows people this

contradiction in all its power, shows them that it must take place, and,

out of the acknowledgment of this contradiction, derives the solution.

This contradiction is as follows.

2. On one hand, a human is indeed an animal and cannot cease to be an

animal while he dwells in the body; on the other hand, he is a spiritual

being denying all the animal demands of a human.

3. During the first period of his life, a human lives without

comprehending that he lives; so he lives not by himself, but what lives

through him is that force of life that lives in everything we know.

4. A human begins to live by himself only when he becomes conscious

about that he lives. And he is conscious about that he lives when he

knows that he desires for the well-being of himself and that the other

beings have the same desires. Reason awakened in him gives him this

knowledge.

5. Having found out that he lives and desires for the well-being of

himself and that the other beings have the same desires, the human also

inevitably discovers that the well-being he desires for his own separate

being is unattainable; and that, instead of the well-being he desires,

he has to face inevitable suffering and death. The same awaits all other

beings. And there a contradiction emerges, which human tries to resolve

so that his life as it is would have a reasonable meaning. He wants his

life to continue to be as it was before the awakening of his reason,

i.e. entirely animal, or else that it should be purely spiritual.

6. The person desires to be either a beast or an angel, but he can be

neither one nor the other.

7. And here it comes the solution to this contradiction that Christian

teaching provides. It tells the person that he is neither a beast nor an

angel but an angel being born of the beast — a spiritual being born out

of the animal one. And that all our existence in this world is nothing

else but this process of birth.

5. What constitutes the birth of spiritual being?

1. As soon as a person wakes up to conscience awareness, this

consciousness tells him that he desires well-being; and as his

conscience awareness is awakened in his separate being, it seems to him

that his desire for well-being is meant for his separate being.

2. But that same conscience awareness, which showed him himself as a

separate being desiring blessing for himself, also shows him that this

separate being is inadequate for that desire for well-being and life

which he attributes to that desire. He sees that this separate being can

have neither well-being nor life on its own.

3. "Then what does have true life?" - He asks himself and sees that true

life is neither in himself nor in those beings that surround him but

only in that which desires well-being.

4. And having discovered this, the person no longer regards himself as a

carnal and mortal being isolated from others, but regards himself as

that being (inseparable from others, spiritual, and therefore not

mortal) which is revealed to him by his conscience awareness.

This constitutes the birth of new spiritual being in a human.

6. What is that being that is getting born in human?

1. The being, which was revealed to the human by his conscience

awareness, is the desire for happiness, is that same desire for

happiness which earlier constituted the purpose of his life, with the

difference that the desire for happiness of his former self related to

one separate physical being and was not conscious of itself; whereas the

present desire for well-being is conscious of itself and relates not to

anything separate but to all that exists.

2. In the first period of the awakening of reason, it seemed to the

human that the desire for well-being, which he recognises as his real

self, relates only to that body in which it is enclosed.

3. But the clearer and firmer his reason becomes, the clearer it

appears, as soon as the person becomes conscious of himself, that his

true self is not his body (which is devoid of true life) but the desire

for well-being by itself - in other words, the desire of well-being of

all existing.

4. The desire of well-being of all existing is what gives life to all

that exists, is what we call God.

5. The being which is revealed to a person by his consciousness, the

being that is getting born, - is what gives life to all that exists, -

is God.

7. God, according to Christian teaching, recognized by a human

within himself

1. According to old teachings, in order to know God, a human had to

believe what other people told him about God: how God has allegedly

created the world and people, and then revealed Himself to them;

whereas, according to Christian teaching, a human recognises God

directly within himself through his own consciousness.

2. Consciousness reveals to the human that the essence of his life is in

the desire of well-being of all existing, something inexplicable and

inexpressible in words, and, at the same time, the closest and most

understandable to a human.

3. The initial desire for well-being appears in a human as the life of

his separate animal being; then - as the life of those beings he loves;

then, and after his conscious awareness gets awakened in him it

manifests as the desire of well-being of all existing. And this desire

of the well-being of all existing is the source of every life, is God;

as it is said in the Gospel that God is love.

8. God, according to the Christian teaching, recognized by a human

outside himself

1. But beside God which is recognized, according to Christian teaching,

within himself as the desire of well-being of all existing – love, - a

human, also according to Christian teaching, acknowledges it outside

himself, - in all that exists.

2. Being aware in his separate body of that spiritual and inseparable

being of God, and seeing the presence of the same God in everything

alive, a human cannot but ask himself: why God, spiritual being, one and

indivisible, has enclosed himself in the separate bodies of beings, and

in the separate body of a human.

3. Why would spiritual and whole being divide itself? What for the

divine essence is confined in the conditions of separateness and

physicality? Why is the immortal enclosed in the mortal, and bound up

with it?

4. There can be only one answer: there is higher will, the motives of

which are unattainable to a human. And this higher will has placed a

human, and all existing, in this position. This same cause, for some

reason incomprehensible to a person, enclosed itself, the desire of

well-being of all existing – love, - in beings separate from the rest of

the world, — is that same God which human recognizes within himself,

also recognizable outside himself. So God, according to the Christian

teaching, is that essence of life which a human recognizes both within

himself and in the whole world as the desire for well-being, and at the

same time, is the cause by which this essence is enclosed in the

conditions of an individual bodily life.

God, according to the Christian teaching, is the father who, as we are

told in the Gospel, has sent into the world his son alike himself, for

the fulfillment of His Will in him, - the well-being of everything

existing.

9. Confirmation of truth of the Christian understanding of life by

the outward manifestation of God.

1. God is manifested in a reasonable human as the desire of well-being

of all existing - in separate beings, each of whom is aspired to each

own well-being.

2. Although it is not known and cannot be known to a human why it was

necessary for the complete spiritual being, God, to manifest Himself in

a human as the desire of well-being of all existing, and in separate

beings - as the desire for each own well-being, a human cannot but see

that both of them converge toward one close, definite, attainable and

joyful to a person purpose.

3. This purpose is revealed to a person by observation, by scripture,

and by reasoning. Observation shows him that all progress in human life

(as far as it is known to us) has consisted only in the fact that people

and other living beings, previously separated and hostile to one

another, are becoming more and more connected and tie together by

consent and cooperation. The scripture shows the human, what all wise

men of the world have taught, that humanity must move from division to

unity; as a prophet said that all people must be taught by God and

spears and swords be beaten into sickles and ploughs; and, as Christ

said that all should be one like ‘I am one with the Father’. Reasoning

shows the person that that the greatest well-being of people, to which

all people aspire, can be obtained only by the most union and concord

among people.

4. Therefore, although the ultimate purpose of the world's existence is

hidden from a human, he nevertheless knows what constitutes the

immediate work of the world's development, in which he is called to

participate; this work is the replacement of division and discord in the

world with union and harmony.

5. Observation, scripture, and reason show the human that this is the

essence of the work of God, in which he is called to participate, and

the inner urge of that spiritual being, which is in getting born within

himself – love - leads him in the same direction.

6. The inner urge of the spiritual essence, being born in a person,

consists solely in the increase of love within himself. And this

increase of love is that what drives the work being committed in the

world: the replacement of division and discord with union and harmony, —

that what Christian teaching calls the establishment of the kingdom of

God.

7. So, if a person has any doubts in truthfulness of the Christian

definition of the meaning of life, the concurrence of human’s inner

aspirations with the course of life of the world would confirm its

truthfulness.

10. What is life in this world as revealed to a human by Christian

teaching

1. When a person is getting born to new life, he realizes that in his

separate from others being is enclosed the desire for well-being not

only of himself but of all that exists, - love.

2. If this desire for the well-being of all existing, this love, was not

enclosed in a separate being, it would not know about itself and would

always remain equal to itself; but being placed in the limits of a

separate being — human, — it is aware of itself and its limits, and

tends to break what binds it.

3. By its nature, love, the desire for well-being, tends to embrace all

that exists. Naturally, it expands its limits by love at first to one's

own family – wife, children, then to friends, then to one's fellows,

countrymen; but love does not get satisfied with this and seeks to

embrace everything existing.

4. In this incessant expansion of the limits of love, which constitutes

the essence of the birth of spiritual being, is the essence of true

human life in this world. The whole existence of a human in this world,

from birth till death, is nothing but the birth of spiritual being in

him. This this incessant birth is what in Christian teaching is called

the true life.

6. It is possible to imagine that what composes our body, which

currently appears as a separate being and which we love in preference to

all other beings, sometime in the past, lower, life was only a

collection of beloved objects that love has united into one, so that in

this life we already feel it to be ourselves; in the same way, our

present love to what is feasible to us will in the future life comprise

one whole being, which will be intimate to us just as our body is now.

("In my Father's house are many abiding places.")

11. How does true life revealed by Christian teaching differs from

the former life?

1. The difference between personal life and true life is this: personal

life aims to increase the enjoyment of outer life and to prolong it; and

this goal, despite all the efforts, is never attained, because human has

no control over external conditions that hinder the enjoyment, nor over

all sorts of disasters that may at any time hit him. Whereas the purpose

of the true life, which consists in expanding and intensifying of love,

cannot be hindered by anything because all external causes such as

violence, illness, suffering, which hinder the achievement of the goals

of the personal life, contribute to the achievement of the spiritual

purpose.

2. This difference is similar to the difference between those workers

who were sent to the master's Garden, as it was told in the Gospel’s

parable, and decided that the garden belongs to them and so they

withheld fruits from their master, and those who recognize themselves as

his workers and perform what was assigned by their master.

Part 2 : Sins

1. In order to fulfill his destiny, human must increase love within

himself and manifest it in the world; and this increase and

manifestation of love in the world is what is necessary to accomplish

the work of God. But what a human can do to manifest love?

2. The foundation of a person’s true life is the desire for the

well-being of all existing. Love in a person is enclosed within the

limits of a separate being, and therefore it is naturally tends to

expand those limits; so a person does not need to do anything to

manifest love, it strives for its own manifestation; a person only needs

to remove obstacles to its progression. What are these obstacles?

3. The obstacles that make it difficult for a person to manifest love

are in the human body, in his separateness from other beings: in the

fact that a person, beginning his life from infancy during which he

lives only animal life of a separate being, even later on, when reason

is already awakening in him, cannot completely get away from striving to

benefit his separate being, and so he commits acts opposite to love.

13. Implication of obstacles to the manifestation of love

1. The desire for the well-being of all existing, love, in its strive

toward its manifestation, encounters obstacles to this manifestation in

the human body, and particularly because the human reason, which sets

the love free, awakens in the person not at the time of his appearance

in this world, but after certain time, when he has already grown the

habits of animal life. Why is this?

2. A person cannot but ask himself this question: Why a spiritual being

– love - is enclosed within a separate being of a human? And different

teachings answer this question differently. Some, the pessimistic,

respond that the enclosure of spiritual being within human body is a

mistake which must be corrected by the destruction of the body,

destruction of animal life. Other teachings say that the assumption of

the existence of spiritual being is a mistake that must be corrected by

the acknowledgment only of the existence of the body and its laws.

Neither of these views resolves the contradiction, they just deny the

legitimacy: the first one - of the body, the second - of the spirit.

Only the Christian teaching resolves it.

3. To the suggestion of the tempter that Christ should destroy his life

if he must not, at his will, satisfy all the demands of the animal

nature, Christ answers that one must not resist the will of God, who has

sent us into life as separate beings, but that in this life of separate

being we must serve God alone.

4. According to Christian teaching, to resolve the contradiction of

life, one should neither to destroy the life of the separate being,

which would be contrary to the will of God who has sent it, nor to

submit to the demands of the animal life of the separate being, which

would be contrary to the spiritual source that constitutes the true self

of a human, but to serve God alone in that body which contains the true

self of a human.

5. The true self of a human is infinite love, living in him and

constantly striving to increase, which constitutes the essence of his

life. This love is enclosed within the limits of animal life of a

separate being, and tends to constantly liberate itself from this being.

6. This liberation of the spiritual being from animal individuality,

this birth of spiritual being, is the true life of each individual and

of all humanity.

7. Love in every one and in all mankind is like steam confined in a

boiler: the steam expands, pushes the pistons and produces work. As for

the steam to produce its work it needs the resistance of walls,

similarly for love to produce its work it needs the resistance of the

limits of separate being in which it is enclosed.

14. What a human must not do, to live true life?

1. A person, during his infancy, childhood, and sometimes even later,

lives like an animal, fulfilling the will of God which he perceives as

the desire to benefit his own separate being; and he knows no other

life.

2. Having awakened to conscious awareness, the person, although knows

that his true life is in his spiritual being, continues to feel himself

in a separate body, and, out of the learned habits of animal life,

commits acts contrary to love and intended to benefit his separate

being.

3. By doing so, the person deprives himself of the benefits of true life

and does not attain the goal of benefiting his separate being to which

he aspires, and therefore, by doing so he commits sins. These sins

constitute the inborn obstacles to the manifestation of love in people.

4. The obstacles are even bigger because former generations, having

committed sins, pass the habits and practices of their sins onto the

next generations.

5. So every person – because of both factors: having acquired since

childhood the habit of living for his separate being, and also because

the same habits of living for oneself passed down to him by his

ancestors, - is always affected by sins, which inhibit his manifestation

of love.

15. Three origins of sins

1. There are three origins of sins that get in the way of love.

a) Sins that result from the ineradicable tendency of a human, while he

lives in the body, toward benefiting himself — innate, natural sins.

(b) Sins that result from the traditions of human institutions and

practices aimed at increasing the benefits of individuals - inherited,

societal sins.

(c) Sins that result from the aspirations of an individual toward the

greater and greater benefiting of his separate being – personal, or

devised, sins.

2. The essence of innate sins is that people believe that their

well-being is in preserving and increasing of the animal well-being of

separate entity. Any activity aimed at increasing the animal benefits of

one’s personality is an innate sin.

3. Inherited sins are those that people commit using existing,

established by people who lived before them, approaches of increasing

the well-being of an individual. Any use of institutions and practices

established for benefiting of one’s personality is an inherited sin.

4. Personal, or devised, sins are those sins which people commit when,

in addition to the inherited practices, they invent new means of

increasing the well-being of each separate self. Any human invention of

the new means of increasing the benefits of a separate being is a

personal sin.

16. The classification of sins

1. There are six sins that stand on the way of manifesting love in

people:

i. The sin of sensual lust, which consists in arranging for oneself

sensual pleasures derived from the satisfaction of one's needs.

ii. The sin of idleness, which consists in freeing oneself from the

labor necessary to meet one’s needs.

iii. The sin of greed, which consists in acquiring for oneself

opportunities for the satisfaction of one’s needs in the future.

iv. The sin of lust for power, which consists in subjugating the ones

alike oneself.

v. The sin of sexual lust, which consists in arranging pleasures for

oneself to satisfy sexual lust.

vi. The sin of intoxication, which consists in producing unnatural

arousal of one's physical and mental faculties.

17. Sin of sensual lust

1. A human has to meet his bodily needs, and in the unconscious state

he, like any other animal, satisfies them, neither refraining and nor

adding to them, and in this satisfaction of needs he finds his

well-being.

2. But, upon awakening to conscious awareness, it seems to the person

that the well-being of his separate individual comes down to the

satisfaction of his needs, and he devises the means of increasing

pleasures from the satisfaction of his needs. He tries to keep the means

of pleasurable satisfaction of needs devised by his predecessors, and by

himself invents new, even more pleasurable, means of gratification. This

constitutes the sin of sensual lust.

3. When a person eats or drinks before getting hungry, when he dresses

not to protect his body from cold, when he builds a house not to shelter

himself from weather but to increase the pleasures of satisfying his

needs, he commits the innate sin of lust.

4. When a person was born and raised in the habits of excesses in drink,

food, clothing, housing, and continues to exploit this superfluity in

his life while maintaining these habits, then such a person commits the

inherited sin of lust.

5. When a person, already living in luxury, comes up with additional,

not used by the people around him, more pleasant means of satisfying

needs: instead of old simple food and drink introduces new, more

refined; instead of former clothes, covering his body, obtains new, more

fine; instead of a smaller, simple home, builds a new one, with new

decorations etc. - such a person commits a personal sin of lust.

6. The sin of lust - inborn, inherited, or personal - consists in the

fact that while striving after the well-being of his own separate entity

via gratification of his own needs, the person, by reinforcing these

needs, impedes his birth to new spiritual life.

7. Furthermore, the person acting this way does not reach the goal he

strives for because any increase of needs reduces the chances of

satisfying the lust, and weakens the pleasure itself of satisfying. The

more frequently a person satisfies his hunger and the more refined food

he consumes is, the less pleasure he will derive from food. The same

goes in regards to the gratification of all other animal needs.

18. The sin of idleness

1. A human, just like an animal, needs to practice his strengths. These

strengths are naturally directed toward the provisioning of the items

necessary to satisfy his needs. After work purposed on this, a human,

like any animal, needs rest.

2. In an unconscious state a human, just like an animal, while

provisioning the items necessary for his life, alternates work with

rest, and in this natural rest finds satisfaction.

3. But, upon first awakening of his reason, the human dissociates work

from rest, and after finding rest more enjoyable than work, tries to

reduce labor and prolong rest, coercing other people by force or

trickery to serve his needs. This is the sin of idleness.

4. When a person, using the works of others, rests when he could still

work, he commits the innate sin of idleness.

5. When a person was born and still lives in an environment where he

exploits the work of others, being in a position where he himself has no

need to work, and he supports such order of things: not working and

using the works of others, then such a person commits the inherited sin

of idleness.

6. When a person, having been born and continues to live among those who

is used to exploit the labor of others, and invents the means to further

free himself from the work he previously performed, and lays this work

onto others, when a person who used to clean his own clothes now makes

others to do this for him, or who used to write his own letters, or kept

his own accounts, or ran his own business, compels others to do that,

and uses free time for rest or recreation, then such a person commits

the personal sin of idleness.

7. The fact that every human cannot do all for himself by himself, and

that the division of labor often improves and facilitates work, cannot

justify liberating oneself from work in general or from heavy work in

favor of light work. Every product of labor that a human enjoys requires

from him certain work and neither easing of his labor nor complete

liberation from it.

8. The sin of idleness, innate, inherited, or personal, consists in the

fact that a person, by quitting to work himself and exploiting the labor

of others, does the opposite of what he was intended for, since the true

well-being is only achieved via the act of serving.

9. Besides, the person who acts so fails to obtain even the pleasures he

seeks, as the pleasures of rest are attained only after labor. And the

less one works, the less enjoyment he gets from rest.

19. The sin of greed

1. The position of a human in the universe is that his bodily existence

is secured by general laws to which he is subjected like all animals. A

person who yields to his instinct must work; and the sole purpose of his

work is the satisfaction of his needs, and such work is always more than

enough to secure his existence. A human is a social animal, and the

fruits of his labor accumulate in society; so that, if only there were

no sins of greed, every person unable to work would always have all the

essential to meet his needs. And therefore the Gospel expression about

not worrying about tomorrow and living like the birds of heaven is not a

metaphor but a statement of the existing law of any animal social life.

The same is said in the Quran that there is no animal in the world to

which God would not give sustenance.

2. But to a human, even after his conscious awakening, it still

continues to seem for long time that his life comes down to the

happiness of his separate being, and as this being lives in time so he

takes special care to insure the satisfaction of the future needs of

himself and his family.

3. This special provisioning of his and his family needs for the future

is only possible by withholding the items of consumption from other

people, which is called a property. And for this acquisition, retention,

and increase of the possessions a human directs his efforts. This

constitutes the sin of greed.

4. When a human regards food which he has prepared or received from

somebody and stored for tomorrow, or clothing, or winter shelter for

himself or his family as exclusively his own, then he commits the innate

sin of greed.

5. When a person of awakening consciousness finds himself in the

circumstances where he regards certain objects as exclusively his own,

despite the fact that they are not necessary for sustaining his life and

withholds them from others, he commits the inherited sin of greed.

6. When the person, already owing the items necessary to ensure the

future satisfaction of his and his family needs, and, possessing the

items superfluous to the sustainment of his life, makes new and new

possessions and keeps away them from others, then this person commits

the personal sin of greed.

7. The sin of greed, whether an innate, inherited, or personal, is that,

in an attempt to secure future well-being of his separate self, and by

obtaining for this purposes possessions and withholding them from other

people, the person is doing the opposite of what he intended for:

instead of serving people, he takes away from them what they need.

8. Moreover, the person acting this way never reaches the goal he seeks,

because future is not in the power of a human, and a human may die at

any moment. By spending certain present on unknown future that might

never come, he makes an obvious mistake.

20. The sin of lust for power

1. A human, like an animal, is put in the conditions that any

satisfaction of his needs makes him get into fight with others.

2. The animal life of a human is sustained only to the detriment of

other beings. Fighting is natural property and the law of animal life.

And the human living animal life, prior to his conscious awakening,

finds his well-being in this fight.

3. But once the person wakes up to conscious awareness, at the first

time of this awakening it seems to him that his well-being will increase

if he will subjugate and conquer as many other beings as possible, and

the human puts his efforts to subjugate other people and beings to

himself. This constitutes the sin of lust for power.

4. When a person, to defend his individual well-being, considers

fighting necessary and fights against those people and beings who want

to subjugate him, then such a person commits an inborn sin of lust for

power.

5. When a person was born and grew up in certain conditions of power,

whether he was born the son of a king, a nobleman, a merchant, or a

wealthy peasant, and, keeping this status, does not stop the fight,

sometimes hidden but always necessary to maintain his position, then he

commits an inherited sin of lust for power.

6. When a person, already in known constant state of fight, wants to

increase his well-being and power and gets into new conflicts with

humans and other beings, when he attacks a neighbor to steal his

possessions, his lands, or tries through the acquisition of permits, a

diploma, or a rank take higher position than it currently has, or,

wishing to increase his property, gets into a fight with competitors and

workers, or gets into a fight with other nations, then such a person

commits a personal sin of lust for power.

7. The sin of the lust for power, whether an inborn, inherited, or

personal, is that a human, by putting his efforts toward achievement of

the welfare of his separate being through fighting, does directly the

opposite to what constitutes true life. Instead of increasing love

within himself, i.e. eliminating obstacles that separate him from other

beings, he multiplies them.

8. In addition, by getting into a fight with people and other beings, a

human achieves the contrary to what he seeks. Coming into a fight, he

increases the likelihood that other beings will attack him, and that

instead of subjugating others, he will be subjugated by them. The more a

human advances in fighting, the more tension he causes.

21. The sin of sexual lust

1. A human has a primal instinct for reproduction: sexual drive; and a

human in the animal state, by yielding to it, by copulating, fulfills

his purpose in that, and in this fulfillment of his purpose he finds his

well-being.

2. But upon the awakening of consciousness, it seems to the human that

the satisfaction of this desire may increase the welfare of his separate

being, and he enters into sexual relationship not with the purpose of

procreation but for personal satisfaction. This constitutes the sin of

sexual lust.

3. The sin of sexual lust is different from all other sins: while the

complete abstinence from other innate sins is impossible and only their

reduction is attainable, the complete abstinence from sexual sin is

doable. This is because the total abstinence from satisfying personal

needs (food, clothing, shelter) destroys that same individual, the same

as with the lack of any rest, any property, and any drive; but the

abstinence from satisfying sexual desire, the chastity - of one,

several, or many people - does not end the human race, which sexual

drive is supposed to maintain, because the abstinence of one, several,

or many people from sexual relationship does not cause the downfall of

the human race. So the satisfaction of sexual needs is not necessary for

every human: each individual is given a choice of abstaining from it.

4. It is like each person is given a choice of two ways of serving God:

either, by staying free of married life and its consequences, to fulfill

by his own life in this world everything that God has assigned a human

to fulfill, or, by realizing his powerlessness, to transfer a portion of

this task or at least the possibility of accomplishing the unfulfilled

task to his born, nourished, brought up offspring.

5. Because of the distinction of sexual drive from other needs, there

are two different degrees of sexual sin, depending on which of the two

directions a person chooses.

6. In the first direction, when a human wants, by remaining chaste, to

devote all his efforts to serving God, then any sexual intercourse will

be considered the sin of sexual lust, even aimed at the birth and

upbringing children, the most pure and faithful marriage will be an

innate sin for a person who has chosen the way of chastity.

7. For such a person, any continuation of the sexual intercourse with

the purpose of giving birth and upbringing children, even within

marriage, will be an inherited sexual sin; and the liberation from this

inherited sin for such a person will be the cessation of sexual

relationship.

8. A personal, or devised, sin for such a person will become getting

into a sexual relationship with a person other than to whom he is

already married.

9. For a person who has chosen the way of serving God by means of

procreation, an inborn sin will be considered any sexual intercourse

without the aim of procreating, as is happens in cases of prostitution,

random affairs, and with the marriages of convenience, of profit, of

amatory exploits.

10. An inherited sin for the person taking the direction of procreation

will be such sexual intercourse from which children cannot be born or

when the parents are unable or unwilling to bring up the children born

of their marriage.

11. When the person who has chosen the second way of serving God, via

procreation, whether male or female, being already in sexual

relationship with one person, enters into similar relationships with

others, not for the sake of forming a family but to increase the

pleasure arising from sexual intercourse, or tries to prevent

childbearing, or indulges in unnatural vices, then such a person commits

a personal sin of sexual lust.

12. The sin, i.e. mistake, of sexual lust for a person who has chosen

the way of chastity, is that he, being able to choose the highest

purpose and to use all his efforts to serve God, i.e. for the expansion

of love and the attainment of the highest well-being, descends to the

lowest level of life, and deprives himself of this blessing.

13. For a person who has chosen the direction of procreation, a sexual

sin, or a mistake, consists in that, when he deprives himself of having

children, or, at least, of family relationship, he deprives himself of

the highest benefits of sexual life.

14. In addition to this, people, in trying to maximize the pleasure of

sexual intercourse, as with all the gratifications of needs, the more

they give in to the lust, the more they diminish the natural pleasure.

22. The sin of intoxication

1. In the natural state, it is common to a human, just like to any

animal, to come, under the influence of external causes, into a state of

arousal, and this temporary excitement gives pleasure to the person in

the animal state.

2. But when a human wakes up to his consciousness, he notices the causes

which have led him into this state of excitement, and tries to reproduce

and intensify these causes in order to recreate this state in him, and

for that purpose he prepares for himself, and takes in his stomach or

inhales, a substance which produces such arousal, or arranges such

surroundings, or performs the particular movements which bring him to

this condition. This constitutes the sin of intoxication.

3. The distinction of this sin in that, whereas all other sins only

distract the human born to the new life from the activity pertaining to

his nature by reinforcing his desire to continue his animal life, and do

not weaken and do not disrupt the functioning of his mind, the sin of

intoxication not only weakens the activity of the mind, but temporarily,

and sometimes permanently, damages it; so that the person propelling

himself into the state of excitement with the use of tobacco, wine,

certain grand setting or vigorous movements, as the Dervishes and other

religious fanatics do, often in these conditions commits not only acts

attributed to animals, but acts which in their insanity and brutality

are not characteristic of animals.

4. The only inborn sin of intoxication takes place when a person, having

received pleasure from a certain state of arousal, whether produced by

food, drink, or surroundings affecting his sense of sight or hearing, or

certain movements, does not refrain from what produces this state of

intoxication. When a person, unconsciously, without intention of

exciting himself, eats refined food, drinks tea, beer, or cider, adorns

himself or housing, dances or plays, he commits an inborn, natural sin

of intoxication.

5. When a person was born and raised in certain habits of intoxication:

habits of consuming tobacco, wine, opium, habits of grand shows -

public, family, or church - or habits of certain kinds of movements:

gymnastics, dance, bows, jumping, etc., and maintains these habits, then

such a person commits an inherited sin of intoxication.

6. When the a person, having been brought up in certain habits of

regular intoxication and is accustomed to them, introduces, imitating

others or coming up with new ways of intoxication himself: after tobacco

starts to smoke opium, after the wine drinks vodka, introduces new grand

celebrations with new increased influence of pictures, dances, light,

music, or introduces new techniques for bodily excitatory movements:

gymnastics, cycling, etc., then this person commits a personal sin of

intoxication.

7. The essence of the sin of intoxication - innate, inherited, or

personal - is that the person, instead of using all his efforts to

eliminate everything that might dim his consciousness that reveals to

him the meaning of his true life, strives, on the contrary, to weaken

and obscure this consciousness by external means of confusion.

8. In addition, the person who acts this way, achieves the opposite

effect from what he strives for. The arousal produced by external means

is getting weaker with each new application of the excitement, and,

despite the increase of the applications of the excitement, destroying

health, the ability to excite himself weakens more and more.

23. The consequences of sins

1. Sins are the obstacles to manifestation of love.

2. Sins do not only hamper the manifestation of love, but also cause

great calamities to people. These calamities are twofold: the first ones

affect those who fall victims to sin; the second cause other people to

suffer. The calamities that afflict those who commit sins, are:

effeminacy, satiety, boredom, depression, apathy, anxiety, fear,

suspicion, anger, hatred, bitterness, jealousy, powerlessness and all

sorts of painful diseases. The calamities that afflict others are:

theft, robbery, torture, beatings, murders.

3. If there were no sins, there would be no poverty, no satiety, no

debauchery, no stealing, no robbery, no murder, no executions, no wars.

4. If it was not for the sin of lust, there would be neither poverty

among the disadvantaged, no boredom or fear among the affluent, there

would be no wasting of efforts to guard the pleasures of the affluent,

no diminishing of the spiritual powers of the needy, no constant

inherent struggle between the two classes that promotes envy and hatred

in the first one, and contempt and fear in the latter; neither would

this enmity break out periodically in the acts of violence,

assassinations, revolutions.

5. If it wasn’t for the sin of idleness, there would be, on one hand, no

people exhausted by work, and on the other hand, no people spoiled by

laziness and incessant entertainment; there would be no division of

people into the two hostile camps: surfeited and hungry, idle and

exhausted by work.

6. If it wasn’t for the sin of greed, there would be not at all that

violence that is committed by some people over others in order to

purchase and retain goods; there would be no theft, robbery, confinement

in prisons, exile, forced labor, execution.

7. If it wasn’t for the sin of lust for power, there would not be those

enormous useless wastes of human energies in order to overcome each

other and to maintain power; would be no pride or dullness of the

winners, nor flattery, deception, or hatred of the defeated; there would

be no divisions - family, social, or national - with resulting from them

quarrels, fights, murders, wars.

8. If it was not for the sin of sexual lust, there would be no slavery

of woman, torturing of her, and at the same time, pampering and

perversion of her; there would be no quarrels, fights, or killings based

on jealousy, would be no reducing of woman to the tool of satisfaction

of the body lust, the prostitution; would be no unnatural vices; no

weakening of bodily and spiritual powers, no those terrible diseases

that afflict humans now; there would be no neglected children or

infanticide.

9. If it wasn’t for the sin of intoxication with wine, tobacco, opium,

stimulating intensified movements, and partying, - people would not be

reckless in their sins. There would be less than one percent of those

quarrels, fights, robberies, adulteries, murders that happen now,

especially under the influence of the weakening of people’s spiritual

powers; there would be no wastes of energies not only on unnecessary,

but on directly harmful matters; people would not get into stupor, would

not get mutilated as it often happens to the best people, spending their

lives with no use to others and as a burden to themselves.

Part 3 : Temptations

1. The devastating effects of the sins for individuals committing them,

as well as for society among which the sins are committed, are so

obvious that since ancient times people saw that sins lead to disasters,

they preached and published laws against sins, and punished for them:

forbade to steal, kill, debauch, smear, drink; but, despite the

prohibition and executions, people continued and continue to sin,

ruining their life and lives of those close to them.

2. This is happening because of such false justifications according to

which there exceptional circumstances in which sins are not only

forgivable but necessary. These false justifications are what is called

temptations.

3. Temptation in Greek means a trap, a snare. Indeed, temptation is a

trap into which a human is enticed under the guise of goodness, and,

having been caught in it, dies in it. That is why it is said in the

Gospel that temptations should enter the world, but woe unto the world

because of the temptations, and woe to him through whom they come.

4. Because of these temptations, false excuses to sins, people do not

get rid of sins, and continue to sink in them, and worst of all, raise

young generations in them.

It is in the consequence of these temptations — these deceptive

justifications — that people do not turn from their sins, but continue

sinking in them, and worst of all, raise young generations in them.

25. The origin of temptations

1. The birth of a human to new life happens not at once but gradually,

just as the physical birth: the pangs of birth alternate with stops and

returns to the previous position, - the manifestation of spiritual life

alternate with the manifestations of animal life; sometimes the person

gives himself up to serving God and sees his well-being in it, other

times he returns to his personal life and looks for the well-being of

his own being, and commits sins.

2. Having committed sin, the person realizes the incompatibility of his

act with the requirements of the conscience. While the person only wants

to commit a sin, this conflict is not evident yet. But as soon the sin

is committed, the discord is revealed, and the person wishes to

eradicate it.

3. The only possible way to eradicate the discord of the act and of the

situation in which the person enters as a result of the sin is by using

his mind to justify the committed act and the situation.

4. The only way to justify the discord of the sin with the requirements

of the spiritual life is by justifying the sin by the requirements of

spiritual life. That is what people do, and this mental exercise of

people is called the temptation.

5. From the time when the realization of the contradictions between

animal and spiritual life is revealed in people, since people began to

commit sins, people started inventing excuses for them, i.e., the

temptations, and, consequently, the practices of the same excuses for

sins, i.e. of temptations, were established among people, so that a

person does not need to invent any excuses for his sins, - they are

already invented before him, and he only needs to accept ready, compiled

temptations.

26. The classification of temptations

1. There are five temptations destroying people: 2. 1) the personal

temptation, or preparation; 2) 3) the temptation of family, or the

temptation of procreation; 4) 5) the temptation of busyness, or the

temptation to usefulness; 6) 7) the temptation of fellowship, or the

temptation of loyalty; 8) 9) the temptation of the state, or the

temptation of the common good. 10) 2. The personal temptation, or the

temptation of preparation, takes place when a person committing sins

uses an excuse that he is preparing for an activity which in the future

must be useful to people.

3. The temptation of family, or procreation, takes place when a person

committing sins excuses himself with the well-being of his children.

4. The temptation of busyness, or usefulness, takes place when a person

committing sins excuses himself with the need of carrying out and

completing of the initiated by him and useful to people work.

5. The temptation of fellowship, or loyalty, takes place when a person

committing sins excuses himself with the well-being of those people with

whom he had entered into an exclusive relationship.

6. The temptation of the state, or the temptation of the common good,

takes place when a person committing sins excuses himself with the

well-being of many people, a nation, the humanity. This temptation is

expressed by Caiaphas when he demanded the execution of Christ in the

name of the well-being of many.

27. The personal temptation, or the temptation of preparation

1. "I know that the meaning of my life is not in serving myself but in

serving God or people; but in order to successfully serve people," -

says the person who fell for this temptation, - “I can allow some

digressions from the requirements of my conscience, if they are

necessary for my improvement that is preparing me for the future

activity useful to people; first I need to learn, first need to finish

my term of service, first need to improve my health, first need to

marry, first need to provide the means of living in the future, and so

far I can't quite follow the demands of my conscience, but when I finish

that, then I’ll begin to live exactly as my conscience requires."

2. By acknowledging the need of taking care of his personal life for

sake of the most effective service to people and for the manifestations

of love in the future, the person serves his own self, committing sins -

of lust, and idleness, and property, and power, and even sexual lust,

and intoxication - not regarding those sins as notable because he lets

himself do them only for a while, during the time when he directs all

his efforts to prepare himself to actively serve others.

3. Having started to serve his self, preserving, strengthening and

perfecting it, the person naturally forgets the purpose for which he

does this, and gives up his best years, and sometimes the whole life, to

such preparation for the service that never comes.

4. Meanwhile, the sins he permitted himself for the sake of good purpose

become more habitual and comfortable, and the person, instead of the

intended activities useful to people, spends lifetime in sins that kill

his own life and entice other people and hurt them. This is the

temptation of preparation.

28. The temptation of family, or of procreation

1. People, when enter family relationship, mostly women, are tend to

think that their love for family and children is the same what their

reasonable consciousness asks of them, and therefore, if in the family

life they have to commit sins to satisfy their family needs, such sins

are forgivable.

2. And, have convinced themselves of this, such people regard as

acceptable, in the name of family love, not only to excuse themselves

from the requirements of fairness to other people, but also, with the

confidence that they are acting rightly, commit, for the sake of the

well-being of their children, the greatest cruelty against strangers.

3. "If I had no wife, husband, or children,” - say people who fall for

this temptation, - “I would have lived quite differently and did not

commit those sins; but now, in order to raise children, I cannot live

otherwise. If we didn't live this way and did not commit these sins, the

human race would cease to exist".

4. And, by this reasoning, the person quietly robs people of the fruits

of their labor, makes them work hard to detriment of their lives,

deprives people of their land and - the most striking example - robs a

child of its milk, in order for its mother to feed his own baby, and he

does not see any evil in what he does. This is the essence of the

temptation of family, or of reproduction.

29. The temptation of busyness

1. A human, by his nature, must exercise his mental and bodily

strengths, and to exercise them he chooses an activity.

2. Every activity requires certain actions in a certain time, so if

these actions are not performed in due time, then the useful to people

work gets ruined without bringing any benefit to anyone.

3. "I need to finish tilling my field with seeds already sown; if I

won’t do this, both seeds and my work will be wasted with no use to

anybody. I need to complete my work by this deadline; if I won’t finish

it, the work that could be useful will be wasted. I have a factory

running that produces necessary to people goods and keeps ten thousand

workers employed; if I interrupt its work, the goods will not be

produced and people will lose their jobs,” say people who fall for this

temptation.

4. And, by having concluded this, the person not only does not leave his

field untilled to help his neighbor to pull out his horse stuck in

swamp, not only does not drop his urgent work to sit for a day by a sick

person’s bedside, not only does not stop the factory work that destroys

people’s health, but he is willing to use his neighbor's misfortune to

till his land, ready to withdraw another person from the care after a

sick in order to finish his own work on time, ready to ruin the health

of several generations of people, only to have the well processed goods

made. This is the essence of the temptation of busyness, or usefulness.

30. The temptation of fellowship

1. Having entered, accidentally or on purpose, into certain equal

conditions, people tend to separate themselves with people in the same

conditions from anyone else, and to consider themselves, to preserve the

advantages of people in these exceptional circumstances, as being

obliged to retreat from the demands of their own conscience and not only

to prefer the benefits of their own people to the benefits of others,

but even to do evil to people in order not to break the allegiance to

“their own”.

2. “These people clearly do the wrong thing, but these are our fellows,

and therefore it is necessary to hide and justify their wrong affairs.

What they ask me to do is immoral, meaningless, but all my fellows have

decided on this, and I cannot fall behind them. It may cause a

suffering, a disaster to outsiders, but to us and our fellowship it will

be favorable, and therefore it is necessary to act this way.”

3. There is a variety of such fellowships. Such is the partnership of

two murderers or thieves going on their business and considering their

loyalty to partners, for the commitment of the attempted business, as

more binding than faithfulness to conscience, which condemns the

attempted business; the same are the fellowships of students of

educational institutions, of trade workers, of regiments, of scientists,

of clerics, of rulers.

4. All these people consider allegiance to the institution of their

partnership as more binding then the fidelity to the requirements of

their conscience in relation to all other people. This is the essence of

the temptation of fellowship, or of loyalty.

5. The distinction of this temptation is that in the name of it the most

wild and irrational actions are committed, like dressing oneself up in

some special, strange clothes and attributing to these clothes some

special importance, and the acts like poisoning oneself with wine, beer;

and very often, in the name of the same temptation causing hostility of

one partnership to another, terrible acts of brutality are committed -

fights, duels, murders, etc.

31. The temptation of state

1. People live in a certain social order; and this order, just like

everything in the world, constantly changes, according to the growth of

consciousness in humans.

2. But people, especially those for whom existing order is more

advantageous than for others (and the existing order is always more

profitable for some people than for others), believe that the existing

order benefits all people, and thus, in order to maintain these benefits

for all the people, they not only believe that it is acceptable to

violate the love for some people, but they consider it fair and good to

commit the greatest atrocities in order to maintain the existing order.

3. People have established the right of ownership, and some own both

land and tools, while others have neither. And this unfair possession by

some, not the working people, of lands and the tools of labor is

considered to be that order which must be guarded and for which it is

considered fair and good to lock, to execute people who violate this

order. Similarly, because of the danger that a neighboring nation or a

ruler can attack our people and conquer and destroy and alter the

established order, it is considered fair and good not only to promote

the establishment of army, but also to be prepared to murder other

people and to kill them.

4. The distinction of this temptation is that, whereas in the name of

those first four temptations people retreat from the demands of their

conscience and commit isolated bad deeds, for the sake of the temptation

of state the most horrible evil is committed, such as executions and

wars, and the most atrocious crimes against the majority are carried

out, like previous slavery and current withholding of land from workers.

People would not commit these atrocities if they did not invent the

practices by means of which the responsibility for these atrocities is

distributed among people so that no one feels the severity of it.

5. The technique of distributing such responsibility, so that no one

feels the severity, consists in recognizing the need for authority,

which for the sake of its citizens must prescribe these evildoings; but

subordinates, for the sake of benefit of all, must fulfill the

requirements of the authority.

6. "I really regret that I have to prescribe the seizure of the products

of labor, imprisonment, exile, penal servitude, execution, war, i.e. the

massacre, but I am obliged to do so, because people who gave me the

power require this from me,” say people who are in power. “If I seize

properties from people, take people away from their families, lock,

execute, if I kill people of a foreign nation, desolate them, shoot into

women and children in a city, I do that not on my own responsibility,

but because I fulfill the will of the supreme power which I promised to

obey for the common benefit". This is the temptation of state, or of the

common good.

32. The consequences of temptations

1. Sins are the consequences of habits (inertia, animal life). Fully

charged animal life cannot stop even when reason gets already awakened

in the person and the person realizes the futility of animal life. The

person already knows that animal life is meaningless and cannot give him

well-being, but out of old habit he keeps seeking meaning and happiness

in the pleasures of animal life: in satisfying sophisticated artificial

needs, in permanent idleness, in the increase of property, in the power

over others, in sexual lust, in intoxication, and directs his mind

toward the attainment of these ends.

2. But sins bring their own punishment: very soon the person feels that

the well-being he sought this way is not unattainable. And the sin loses

its appeal. So, if it wasn’t for the excuses for sins – the

temptations, - people would not get sunk in their sins and would not to

bring them to extremes they are brought now.

3. If it was not for the temptations of preparation, the temptation of

family, the temptation of busyness, the temptation of the state, not

even the most coldhearted person would, in the midst of the needy people

dying from the lack of necessities, be able to indulge in the excesses

which rich people do now; the rich would not come to the state of

complete physical idleness in which, bored, they now live, forcing often

the old, children, and weak to do work they need for themselves. If it

was not for the temptation of property, people would not, without

meaning, without a goal, spend their life energies on acquiring more and

more possessions which cannot be used; and people suffering from a fight

would not cultivate it in others. If it was not for the temptation of

fellowship, there would be not one percent of the corruption that takes

place now, people would not be so obviously and pointlessly ruining

their bodily, mental powers by intoxicating substances, which do not

increase but reduce their energies.

4. Because of human sins there is poverty and overwork of some people,

and satiety and idleness of others; because of sins there is inequality

of possessions, there are struggles, quarrels, litigations, executions,

wars; because of sins there are tragedies of depravity and brutality of

people; but because of temptations there is establishment, consecration

of all this: legalization of poverty and the suppression of some people,

and the satiety and idleness of others, the legalization of violence,

murders, wars, debauchery, drunkenness and exalting them to those

terrible dimensions, which they have reached now.

Part 4 : Religious deception and the means of deliverance from it

1. If it were not for temptations, people would not continue to live in

sins, since every sin punishes itself: people of previous generations

would point to their descendants on the destructiveness of sins, and

subsequent generations would be raised without falling into habit of

sin.

2. But a human has used given to him reason not to learn from sin in

order to get rid of it but to justify it; and temptation has appeared,

and sin is legalized and rooted.

3. But how could a person with awakened reason take lies for truth? In

order for a person not to see a lie and take it for truth, his mind must

be perverted, because not perverted mind accurately distinguishes lies

from truth, and this is its purpose.

4. Indeed, the mind of people raised in human society is never free from

perversion. Every person raised in human society inevitably undergoes

the perversion of religious deception.

5. Religious deception is committed when people of former generations,

by various artificial means, inspire their descendants with

understanding of the meaning of life based not on reason but on blind

trust.

6. The essence of religious deception is that the concepts of faith and

trust are deliberately intermixed and substituted one for another: it is

asserted that a human cannot live and think without faith, which is fair

enough; and the definition of faith, - i.e. recognition that there is

something that is perceived by his reason but cannot be defined by mind,

such as God, the soul, goodness, - is substituted with the concept of

trust that there is God in a certain form, in three persons, who at

stated time has created the world and opened to people certain things at

certain places and through certain prophets.

34. The origin of religious deception

1. The humanity is slowly but nonstop moving forward, i.e. toward

greater and greater understanding of truth about the meaning and

significance of its life and toward the establishment of life in

conformity with this clarified consciousness. And therefore the

understanding by humans of their life and the human life itself are

constantly changing. People more sensitive to truth understand life in

accordance with the supreme light which is appeared in them, and

according to this light arrange their lives; people less sensitive hold

on to their old understanding of life and to the old order of life, and

try to defend it.

2. So in the world, next to people pointing out to the most recent

progressive expression of truth and trying to live according to this

expression of truth, there are always people who cherish the old

anachronistic and already needless understanding of it and the former

orders of life.

35. How religious deceptions are committed

1. Truth does not need outward confirmation and is freely accepted by

all to whom it is passed; but deception requires special techniques

through which it could be conveyed to humans and be absorbed by them;

and therefore, for carrying out of religious deception, those who commit

it, in all nations, use always the same techniques.

2. These are five techniques: 1) misinterpretation of truth, 2) belief

in miracles, 3) establishment of intermediaries between a human and God,

4) impact on outer senses of a human, and 5) indoctrination of children

with false belief.

3. The essence of the first technique of religious deception is to

verbally accept not only the validity of truth opened to people by the

latest preachers, but to recognize the preacher himself as Holy

supernatural entity, to deify the preacher, to attribute to him the

performance of various miracles, and to hide the essence of the opened

truth, so that it would not only not disrupt the prior understanding of

life, but, on the contrary, would endorse it. Such misinterpretation of

truth and deification of its preachers have been practiced in all

nations, with any appearance of new religious doctrine. This way the

teaching of Moses and Jewish prophets was misinterpreted. With the same

misinterpretation Christ reproached Pharisees, by telling to them that

they sat on the Moses seat and neither enter the Kingdom of God

themselves nor allow others to enter. The same way the teachings of

Buddha, Lao Tse, Zarathustra were misinterpreted. The same

misinterpretation is done to the Christian teaching in early times of

its adoption by Constantine when pagan temples and deities were

converted to Christian and Mohammedanism appeared as counteract against

the pseudo-Christian polytheism. Mohammedanism underwent and undergoes

the same misinterpretation.

4. The second technique of religious deception is to influence people

that following our God-given reason in our search for truth is a sin of

pride, that there's another, more reliable, way of cognition: the

revelation of truth transferred by God directly to chosen people,

accompanied with certain signs, miracles, i.e. supernatural events that

confirm the trustworthiness of the transfer. It is inspired what one

needs to believe not his reason but miracles, i.e. what is contrary to

reason.

5. The third technique of religious deception is to assure people that

they cannot have direct relationship with God, which every human feels

and which became especially clear to Christ who recognized a human as a

son of God, that for the communication with God an intermediary or

intermediaries are required. To play the role of such intermediaries,

prophets, saints, Church, scripture, elders, dervishes, Llamas, Buddhas,

hermits, any clergy are placed. No matter how different all of these

intermediaries, the essence of mediation is that direct connection

between human and God is not recognized, but, on the contrary, it is

assumed that truth is not available to a human but only may be accepted

through the belief in intermediaries between him and God.

6. The fourth technique of religious deception is that, under the

pretext of committing allegedly required by God deeds: prayers,

sacraments, sacrifices, they collect together a lot of people, and via

subjecting them to various stupefying effects, inspire lie on them,

while dressing it as truth. They impress people with the beauty and

grandeur of temples, the splendor of ornaments, utensils, clothes,

glitter lighting, the sounds of singing and organs, incense,

exclamations, and while people are under this charm, make efforts to

impress upon their souls lies presented as truth.

7. The fifth technique is the most brutal, because it consists in giving

a child, - who asks seniors lived before him and having opportunity to

learn wisdom prior to currently living people, - an answer about what is

this world and his life, and what is the relationship between the first

and the latter, the answer containing not what these elders think and

know, but what people who lived thousands of years ago thought, and in

which no adult believes any longer and cannot believe. Instead of the

spiritual, essential for him, food which the child asks for, he is given

a poison ruining his spiritual health, from which he can recover only

with the greatest efforts and sufferings.

8. A child, waking up to his conscious life with clear, uncluttered

mind, ready to accept, and at heart albeit vaguely but is aware of the

truth of life, i.e. his position and the purpose in it (human soul is

Christian by nature, in the words of Tertullian, the father of Church);

the child asks his grown-up parent: what is his life? How does he

correspond to the world and its beginning? And his father or his teacher

is not telling him that little and unquestionable truth that he knows

about the meaning of life, but confidently tells that what deep inside

he recognizes as not true, - if he is a Jew, he says that God has

created the world in six days and opened the whole truth to Moses by

writing with his finger on the rock that you've got to keep the oaths,

remember the Sabbath day, circumcise, etc.; if his father is an

Orthodox, Catholic, Lutheran Christian, - that Christ, the second

person, has created the world and come down to Earth to atone for the

sin of Adam with his blood, etc.; if he's a Buddhist, - that the Buddha

flew to heaven and taught people to destroy life in them; if he is a

Mohammedan, than Mohammed flew to the seventh heaven and learned there a

law under which belief in fivefold prayer and visiting Mecca will bring

paradise for a man in the future life.

9. And, knowing that different people inspire their children with

different beliefs, parents and teachers convey each their own peculiar

superstitions, while knowing deep inside that this is only a

superstition, - still pass their superstitions to innocent, trusting

children at the age when impressions are so strong that they will

already never fade.

36. Evil resulting from religious deception

1. Sins, by making a person at times commit deeds contrary to his

spiritual nature, contrary to love, delay his birth to new true life.

2. Temptations lead a human to sinful life by justifying sins, so that

he already commits not isolated sinful deeds but lives animal life

without seeing the contradictions between it and true life.

3. Such a position of the human is only possible when truth is perverted

by the ongoing religious deception. Only the person with mind perverted

by religious deception is not able to see the lies of temptations.

4. And therefore religious deception is the foundation for all the human

sins and disasters.

5. The essence of religious deception is what in the Gospel is called

blasphemy against the Holy Spirit, and it is said that this action

cannot be forgiven, i.e. never, in any life, can be not destructive.

37. What must a person do to live according to the teaching of

Christ?

1. In order to live according to the teaching of Christ, a person must

remove the obstacles to true life, that is, the manifestation of love.

2. These obstacles are sins. But sins cannot be destroyed until the

person frees himself from temptations. And only the person who is free

from religious deception can break free from temptations.

3. And therefore, in order to live according to the teaching of Christ,

a person needs, first of all, to free himself from religious deceptions.

4. Only having freed himself from religious deceptions, can a person

break free from the deceptions of temptations; and only having

understood the deceptions of temptations can a person free himself from

sins.

38. Liberation from religious deception

1. In order to break free from religious deception in general, a person

needs to understand and remember that the only means of cognition a

human has is his reason, and therefore any sermon asserting anything

contrary to reason is a deception, an attempt to remove the only given

by God to a human tool for acquiring knowledge.

2. In order to be free from religious deception, a person must

understand and remember that there isn’t and cannot be any, except

reason, instrument of knowledge – so that whether he wants it or not,

every person believes only his reason, and that therefore people who

tell that they believe not their reason but Moses, Buddha, Christ,

Muhammad, the Church, the Koran, the Bible, deceive themselves because

whatever they believe, they believe not the one who transfers them the

truth they believe in, - Moses, Buddha, Christ, Bible, - but believe the

reason that tells them that they should believe Moses, Christ, the Bible

and should not believe Buddha and Mohammed, Bible, or vice versa.

3. Truth cannot enter the person by any other way rather than by reason,

and therefore a person who thinks he knows truth by faith and not by

reason only deceives himself and wrongfully uses his reason on something

it is not intended to, - to solve questions about whom to believe among

those who transfer the doctrine presented as truth, and who should not

be trusted. But reason is given not to decide who to believe and who not

to believe, and it cannot decide on that, but to verify the validity of

what is being offered to him. Reason can always do this and it is

designed for that.

4. Misinterpreters of truth typically tell that reason cannot be trusted

because reason of different people asserts different things, and that

therefore for unification of people it is better to believe in

revelation, confirmed by miracles. But this claim is directly opposite

of truth. Reason never makes different claims. It always, in all people,

claims and denies the same.

5. It is only beliefs that claim each different from another: one - that

God has revealed himself on Sinai and that he is the God of the Jews;

and the other - that God is Brahma, Vishnu, and Shiva; and third - that

God is Trinity: father, son and holy spirit; and fourth - that God is

the heavens and the Earth; and fifth - that truth is opened by Buddha;

and the sixth - that all of it was opened by Muhammad, - only these

faiths divide people, but reason always in everybody says the same.

6. When they say that reason can lie and to prove that bring discordant

claims by different people about what God is and how to serve him, then

those who say this - make intentional or unintentional mistake by mixing

reason with speculations and fantasies. Speculations and fantasies can

really be infinitely diverse and different, but mind conclusions are

always the same for all people at all times. Speculations and fantasies

about how the world or sin has occurred, and what will happen after

death can be infinitely different, but the conclusions of reason on

whether it is true that three God together constitute one, whether is it

true that a person has died and then rose again, whether is it true that

a person walked on the water or in his body flew to the sky, or that by

consuming bread and wine I consume body and blood, - the conclusions of

reason in regards to these questions are always the same for all people

and throughout the world and are undoubtedly always correct. Whether

they tell that God walked in a flame of fire, or that the Buddha flew on

the rays of the Sun, or Mohammed flew to the Heaven, or Christ walked on

water etc., reason of all people everywhere and always gives the same

answer: that is not true. But to questions whether: Is it fair to treat

others the way you want them to treat you? Is it good to love people and

forgive them their offenses and be compassionate? - reason of all people

at all times says: Yes, this is right, this is good.

7. And therefore, in order not to fall for religious deceptions, a

person must understand and remember that truth is open to him only in

his reason, given by God to humans to understand God's will, and that

implanting distrust toward reason carries in itself the desire to

deceive and the greatest blasphemy.

8. This is general way of liberating oneself from religious deceptions.

But in order to be free from religious deceptions, it is necessary to

know all kinds of these deceptions and beware of them, confront them.

39. Liberating from religious deception indoctrinated from childhood

1. In order for a human to live according to the teachings of Christ, he

must first break free from religious deception in which he was brought

up, - whether it was religious deception of Hebrew, Buddhist, Japanese,

Confucian, or Christian.

2. And to break free from religious deception in which a person is often

raised from childhood, a person should understand and remember that

reason is given to him directly from God and only it can unite all

people, while human religions do not connect but divide people, and

therefore he should not only not to fear of any doubts and questions

raised by reason when it questions indoctrinated from childhood beliefs,

but rather carefully expose to the examination, and comparison with

other creeds, all those beliefs that were transferred to him since

childhood, and recognize as fair only that which does not contradict

reason, no matter how impressive it is presented and how old is the

conveyed religion.

3. Having subjected beliefs, indoctrinated into him since childhood, to

the court of reason, the person, wanting to free himself from religious

deception which was inspired in him in childhood, must boldly and

unconditionally reject everything that is contrary to reason, not for a

moment doubting that what is contrary to reason cannot be true.

4. Having freed himself from religious deception, indoctrinated in him

since childhood, a person, who wishes to live according to the teachings

of Christ, must not only by word, by example, or by silence not to

contribute to the deception of children, but by all means expose this

deception, according to Christ, who pitied children for the deceptions

to which they are being exposed.

40. Getting rid of religious deception produced by impacting on

outer senses

1. Having freed himself from religious deception indoctrinated in him

since childhood, a person should beware of deception produced by

deceivers of all peoples by means of impacting on the external senses.

2. In order not to fall for this deception, a person must understand and

remember that truth, to be disseminated and assimilated by people, does

not require any gears or decorations, and that only lies and deceptions,

in order to be perceived by people, need special conditions of

transferring them; so all sorts of festive services, processions,

decorations, incense, singing etc. not only do not indicate that it is

truth that is passed that under these conditions, but, on the contrary,

serve as a sure sign that where these techniques are used it is not

truth but a lie is conveyed.

3. To avoid falling under the deception of the impact on outer senses,

people should remember the words of Christ that one needs to serve God

not in some known location, but in the spirit and truth, and who wants

to pray must go not into a temple, but lock himself in the privacy of

his room, knowing that any splendor in worshiping God has deception for

its purpose, and the more fascinating the service the more brutal

deception is, and therefore he must not only not to participate in the

stupefying religious ceremonies, but wherever possible expose their

deception.

41. Letting go of the deception of mediation

1. Having freed himself from the second deception, of the impact on

outer senses, a human must still beware of the deception of mediation

between him and God, which, if he only allows it, will certainly conceal

prayer from him.

2. To not to fall for the deception of mediation, a person should

understand and remember that God opens himself only directly to human

heart and that every broker standing between people and God, be it one

person, a congregation of persons, a book or a legend, icon, relics,

Church, Christ, not only hides God from the person but does the worst

evil that can befall a human, namely that the human regards as God that

what is not God.

3. As soon as a person lets himself believe in any mediation, he has

deprived himself of the only opportunity of authenticating knowledge and

opened the possibility of perceiving any lie to be truth.

4. Only due to instituting mediation between people and God those

terrible deceptions become possible to perpetrate and are being

perpetrated, as a result of which reasonable and kind people pray to

Christ, God, Buddha, Muhammad, Saints, relics, icons.

5. In order not to fall for this deception, a person must understand and

remember that truth is open to him primarily and most reliably not in a

book, not in a legend, not in any assembly of people, but in his own

heart and mind, just as Moses told when he declared to the people that

they should look for the law of God not over sea, nor in the sky, but in

their own hearts, and how Christ told this to Jews, saying “you do not

know truth because you believe the legends of a man, but not the one He

has sent.” And what God sent to us is reason – the only and infallible

tool of cognition that is given to us.

6. To not to fall for the deception of mediation, the person should

understand and remember that truth can never be opened all at once, that

it gradually opens to people, and opens only to those who look for it,

and not to those who, by believing what the allegedly infallible brokers

convey to them, think that possess it; and therefore, in order not to

expose himself to the danger of falling for the most terrible delusions,

a person should not accept anyone as infallible teacher but seek truth

everywhere, in all traditions of mankind, and validate them by his own

reason. Having freed himself from this deception, the person must, in

word and deed, reprove the deception of mediation committed over others.

42. Letting go of belief in miracles

1. But even having freed himself from the deception indoctrinated from

childhood, and not falling for the deception of influence by impressive

ceremonies, and not recognizing the mediation between him and God, a

human will still not be free from religious deception and will not be

able to understand the teachings of Christ, if he does not get rid of

belief in the supernatural, the miraculous.

2. Some say that miracles, i.e. the supernatural, are committed in order

to unite people; meanwhile, nothing separates people like miracles

because each religion asserts its own miracles and rejects the miracles

of other religions. And it cannot be otherwise: miracles, i.e. the

supernatural, are infinitely varied, and only the natural is always and

everywhere the same.

3. And therefore, to be free from the deceptions of belief in magic, a

person must recognize as true only that what is natural, i.e., in

accordance with his reason, and recognize as lie all that is unnatural,

that contradicts reason, knowing that everything that is presented as

such is human hoax, such as deceptions of any modern miracles, healings,

raisings of the dead, miracle-working icons, relics, transubstantiation

of bread and wine, etc., as well as the wonders that can be found in the

Bible, in the Gospels, in Buddhist, Mohammedan, Lao-Tzean, and other

books.

43. Letting go of the deception of misinterpretation of truth

1. After letting go of the deception of mediation, a person needs to

break free from the deception of misinterpretation of truth.

2. In whatever belief a person was raised: in Islamic, Christian,

Buddhist, Jewish, or Confucian, - in any teaching of faith, a human runs

into an assertion of indisputable truth recognized by his reason, and

next to it - statements contrary to reason, presented as equally valid.

3. In order to rid himself of this religious deception, a person should

not get confused when the truths, some of which are accepted by reason

and others not accepted by it, are presented as being equally authentic,

of the same origin, and seemingly inextricably connected with each

other; but he must understand and remember that any revelation of truth

to people (i.e. any new understanding of truth by one of the most

advanced people) always so impressed people that it got wrapped into a

supernatural form, and so inevitably to each manifestation of truth

superstitions were added; and therefore for the understanding of truth

it is not only unnecessarily to take everything that is conveyed about

the revelation of truth, but, on the contrary, it is necessary to

separate the conveyed lies and fiction from truth and reality.

4. Having separated truth from superstitions attached to it, let the

person understand and remember that superstitions intermixed with truth

are not only not as sacred as truth itself, as it is preached by people

who find their gains in these superstitions, but, on the contrary, they

constitute the most devastating and harmful phenomenon that hides truth

and to the destruction of which a human must put all his strengths.

Part 5 : Avoiding Temptations

1. Having freed himself from religious deceptions, a person would be

able to comprehend the teachings of Christ if it weren't for

temptations. But – even being free of religious deception and having

understood the meaning of the teaching of Christ, the human is always in

danger of falling into temptations.

2. The essence of all temptations is that a person, awakened to

consciousness, experiences splitting and suffering because of the

committed sin, and wants to destroy the splitting and the suffering

following it, not by conquering the sin but by justifying it.

3. And the justification of a sin can't be anything but a lie.

4. And therefore, to avoid falling into a temptation, a person, first

and foremost, needs not to be afraid to acknowledge truth, and to know

that this acknowledgment cannot distance him further from well-being,

whereas the opposite, the lie, is the main source of sin and moves him

away from well-being.

5. So, to avoid temptations a human must, first of all, not to lie and,

above all, not to lie to himself, care not so much about not lying to

others as much as about not lying to himself by hiding from himself the

motives for his own actions.

6. In order not to fall into temptations, and arising from the

temptations habit of sin, and downfall, a person should not be afraid to

repent of his sins, and should know that repentance is the only way of

liberation from sin and the subsequent tragedies.

7. This is an overall approach to ensure that the person does not fall

into temptations in general. But in order to be able to avoid every

single temptation, you must clearly understand what constitutes its

deception and what harm it causes.

45. The deception of personal temptation, or the temptation of

preparation

1. The first and most common temptation that traps a human is personal

temptation, the temptation of preparing for life instead of living it.

If a person does not come up with excuses for sin himself, then he will

always find an excuse already invented by people who lived before him.

2. "Now I can temporarily deviate from what I should do and what my

spiritual nature demands, because I'm not ready," says a person. “But

after I prepare myself, the time will come, and then I'll start living

already quite in accordance with my conscience."

3. The trick of this temptation is that the person retreats from life in

the present, the only real life, and projects it into the future, while

the future does not belong to a human.

4. The distinction of the deception of this temptation is in the fact

that as a person is able to anticipate the next day, then he must

anticipate the day after the next, and after, and after... And if he is

able to foresee all of these, then he can foresee his inevitable death,

too. In the anticipation of his imminent death, he cannot keep preparing

for the future in this finite life, because death defeats the meaning of

what the human prepares for in this life. The person who sets his mind

free cannot but see that the life of his separate being does not make

sense and therefore no preparations for this being could be made.

5. On the other hand, the deception of this temptation is evident

because a human cannot prepare himself for the future manifestation of

love and of service to God: human is not a tool that somebody else uses.

You may sharpen an ax and have no time to use it, someone else will use

it; but no one can utilize a person except himself, because he himself

is a tool, constantly working and perfecting itself only at work.

6. The harm of this temptation is that the person who has fallen into it

lives neither true nor even temporary life in the present and projects

his life into the future, which never comes. By thinking to perfect

himself for the future, the individual misses the only available to each

person opportunity to perfect himself in love, which can only take place

in the present.

7. In order not to fall into this temptation, a person must understand

and remember that there is no time to prepare, that he must live in the

best way now, as he is; and that the perfecting is in love, and this

perfecting is done only in the present.

8. And therefore he must, without postponing, live every moment with all

his strengths, in the now, for God, i.e. for all who makes demands upon

his life, knowing that at any moment he may be deprived of the

possibility of this serving and that precisely for this exact continual

service he came into the world.

46. Deception and harm of the temptation of busyness

1. Any person, while performing certain work, involuntarily gets

preoccupied with it, and it seems to him that for the sake of the work

he can skip doing what is required of him by his conscience, that is,

God.

2. The trick of this temptation is in the fact that any human work may

turn out useless or may be interrupted and remain unfinished; whereas

the work of God, which is accomplished by a human through the

fulfillment of the will of God, can never be useless nor be interrupted

by anything.

3. And the harm of this temptation is that, assuming that any work, -

whether it is plowing of scattered seeds or the liberation of the whole

nation from slavery - is more important than that which often seems the

most insignificant to human judgment, work of God, i.e. immediate help

and service to one’s neighbor, there will always be cases that need to

be finished before fulfilling the requirement of the work of God; and

people will forever excuse themselves from serving God, i.e. from the

doing the work of life, by substituting serving the dead for serving the

living.

4. The harm of it is that, having fallen into this temptation, people

will always put off serving God until they are free from all the cares

of the world. And people are never free of the cares of the world. In

order not to fall into this temptation, a person must understand and

remember that every human affair, which is finite, can't be the goal of

his true infinite life, and that such a goal can only be participation

in the endless work of God, consisting in the greatest manifestation of

love.

5. And therefore, in order not to fall into the temptation of busyness,

a human must never do his own work that violates the work of God, i.e.

love for people; must always be ready to drop any work as soon as the

committing the work of God is required of him: to be like an employee

hired to do master’s work and allowed to run his own affairs only when

master's cause does not demand his efforts and attention.

47. The deception and harm of the temptation of family

1. This temptation justifies people’s sins more than any other. People

might be free from the temptation of preparation to life and the

temptation of busyness, but a rare person, especially a woman, is free

from the temptation of family.

2. This temptation appears when people, in the name of their exclusive

love of their own families, consider themselves being free from

obligations to other people and serenely commit sins of greed, idleness,

lust, not regarding them as sins.

3. The trick of this temptation is that animal instinct, the drive to

procreate, which is legitimate only in so far as it does not violate the

love of people, is taken as a virtue that justifies sins.

4. The evil of this temptation is that this temptation more than any

other augments the sin of property, intensifies struggle between people

by exalting animal instinct of the love for one’s own family as merit

and virtue, diverts people from the opportunity of discovering the true

meaning of life.

5. In order not to fall into this temptation, a person not only must not

cultivate in himself the love for his own family, must not regard this

love as virtue, and must not yield to it, but on the contrary, knowing

the temptation, must always be on guard against it, to not to sacrifice

the godly love for the family love.

6. One can love one’s enemies, unattractive people, or strangers without

reservation, and altogether give one's self up to this love, but he

cannot love the members of his own family that way, because such love

leads to blindness and to the justification of sins.

7. To not to fall into this temptation, a person must understand and

remember that love only then is true love, which gives life and

well-being, when it neither seeks nor expects nor hopes for recompense,

just as no other manifestation of life expects recompense for its

existence; and that love for his own family is an animal instinct and is

good only so long as it is kept within the limits of the instinct and so

long as the person does not sacrifice his spiritual demands for its

sake.

8. And therefore, in order not to fall for this temptation, a person

should endeavor to do for any stranger the same that he wishes to do for

his family, and not to do for his family anything that he is not ready

and cannot do for any stranger.

48. The deception and harm of the temptation of fellowship

1. Having separated themselves from others and tied themselves together

under certain exceptional conditions, people think that, if they

maintain these conditions, they are doing such a good job that it

exempts them from the general demands of their conscience.

2. The trick of this temptation consists in the fact that, by entering

into fellowship with a certain small number of people, people

distinguish themselves from the natural communion of all people, and

therefore violate the most important natural duties in the name of

made-up ones.

3. The harm of this temptation consists in the fact that people who have

bound themselves together in a partnership are guided not by common laws

of reason but by their own exclusive rules, depart further and further

from those reasonable principles of life common to all people, becoming

less tolerant and more cruel to all outside their fellowship, and thus

deprive themselves and others of true well-being.

4. To avoid falling into this temptation, a person must understand and

remember that the rules of fellowships established by people may vary

infinitely, be infinitely changeable and contradictory, that no rule

artificially set by people should bind him if it may be contrary to the

law of love, and that every exclusive union of people limits the circle

of communication and deprives the person of chief condition of his

well-being, the opportunity of loving communion with all people in the

world.

5. And therefore one must not only refrain from joining any societies,

fellowships, and associations, but, on the contrary, avoid anything that

may exclude him and others from the rest people of the world.

49. Deception and harm of the temptation of state

1. This, the most brutal, deception is transferred to people in the same

way as false religion, - by two means of deception: the indoctrination

of children with lies, and the influence exerted on people's feelings by

external solemnity. Almost all people living in governmental states,

upon their awakening to consciousness, find themselves already entangled

in state temptations and live in belief that their nation, their state,

their fatherland is the best, special people, state, fatherland, and for

the benefits and success of which they should blindly obey the existing

government and, at the behest of the government, torture, injure, and

kill their fellows.

2. The deception of this temptation is that a person, supposedly for the

sake of the well-being of the nation, can refuse the demands of his

conscience and his moral freedom.

3. The evil of this temptation is that once a person allows the

possibility of learning and understanding what constitutes the

well-being of many people, there is no limit to assumptions about that

that well-being of many is, which can be derived from any act, and

therefore any act can be justified, and once the person believes that

for the good of the many in the future you can sacrifice well-being and

life of one man, there are no limits to evil that can be committed in

the name of such consideration. The first assumption - that people are

capable of knowing what constitutes the future well-being of many - has

been responsible in former times for torture, inquisition, and slavery,

and in our time - for the courts of law, prisons, and land ownership.

Based on the second assumption of Caiaphas, Christ was murdered in the

old time, and now executions and wars are killing millions.

4. In order not to fall into this temptation, a person must understand

and remember that he, before belonging to any nation or people, belongs

to God, as a member of the worldwide kingdom, and he cannot shift the

responsibility for his actions on anyone else, and he is always

personally responsible for them.

5. And therefore a person must never, under any circumstances, prefer

people of his own nation or state – to those of another nation or state,

under no considerations, as to the future well-being of many, must he

commit evil to his neighbors; and he must not feel obligated to obey

anyone in preference to his own conscience.

Part 6 : Battling sins

1. But, having freed himself from religious deception and escaped

temptations, a human still falls into sins. A person with awakened

consciousness knows that the meaning of his life is only in serving God,

and yet he commits sins out of habit, impeding both the manifestation of

love and the attainment of true well-being.

2. How can a person battle a sinful habit?

3. There are two means of battling sinful habits: first, to clearly

understand the consequences of sins - that sins do not bring the purpose

for which they are committed, and do not increase but rather decrease

the animal well-being of the separate individual; secondly, to know

which sins a human must begin to deal with, i.e. which to handle first,

and which - after.

4. And therefore, firstly, it is always necessary to clearly understand

and remember that the position of a human in the world is that every

search for his personal well-being, once he woke up to the conscious

awareness, deprives him of that well-being, and that, on the contrary,

he receives well-being only when he does not think about his personal

well-being and gives all his energy to serving God. “You must search for

the kingdom of God and his righteousness, and the rest will be added

onto you.”

5. And, secondly, to combat sinful habits more successfully, it is

necessary to know to which sin we must direct our attention first: not

to start battling from the sin which has its root in another unconquered

sin, and to know the connection and the succession of the sins among

themselves.

51. Priorities in battling sins

1. There is a connection and sequence of sins, according which one sin

leads to others or interferes with liberation from them.

2. A person cannot get rid of any sins for as long as he falls into the

sin of intoxication; he cannot free himself from the sin of ambition if

he yields to that of greed; and cannot be freed from the sin of greed

while he yields to the sin of idleness; he cannot be freed from sexual

sin if he falls into the sin of lust and idleness; and he cannot be

freed from the sin of ambition and greed so long as he yields to the sin

of lust.

3. This does not mean that one should not strive against every sin at

all times, but it means that for the success in battling sins it is

necessary to know with which one to begin, or rather with which should

not begin to make the battle successful.

4. It is only the battling sins in the wrong order that makes this

battle unsuccessful and often leads the person battling sins into

despair.

5. The sin indulging which makes conquering any other sin impossible is

the sin of intoxication, any of it, whether it is by the means of

stupefying substances, impressive surroundings, or fast vigorous

movements; the intoxicated person can conquer neither laziness, nor

lust, nor sexual propensities, nor lust for power. And therefore, to be

able to fight other sins, a person must first free himself from the sin

of intoxication.

6. The next sin from which a person must free himself in order to be

able to battle with sensual lust, greed, ambition, sexual lust is the

sin of idleness. The freer a person is from the sin of idleness, the

easier it is for him to abstain from the sin of sensual lust, greed,

ambition, sexual lust, and the lust for power: the person who works does

not need more complex means of fulfilling his needs, does not indulge in

possessions, is less eager to fall into the temptation of sexual lust,

and has neither motives nor leisure time to fight.

7. The next after this is the sin of lust. The more abstemious a person

is in food, clothing, housing, the easier it is for him to be free from

the sin of greed, the lust for power, sexual lust. Satisfied with

little, he does not need possessions, abstinence helps with conquering

sexual lust, and, having little needs, he has no reasons to fight.

8. The next after these sins is the sin of greed. The freer will a

person be from this sin, the easier it will be for him to refrain from

the sin of sexual lust and the sin of fighting. Nothing encourages the

sin of sexual lust as the superfluity of property, and nothing causes so

much fighting among people.

9. Following after this, and the last one, is the sin of fighting,

included in all sins, and is caused by all other sins, and the greatest

liberation from which is only possible upon liberation from all the

preceding sins.

52. How to battle sins

1. It is only possible to combat sins in general by knowing the sequence

of sins, by starting to fight, first of all, those without which we

cannot fight the others.

2. But even in the fight against every single sin, one should start with

those manifestations of sins refraining from which is in the power of

the person, of which the person has not made the habit yet.

3. Such sins, among all kind of sins – of drunkenness, and idleness, and

sensual lust, and greed, and power, and sexual lust - are the personal

sins, the ones that a person makes for the first time, and have not yet

made habits of them. And therefore, the person must free himself, first

of all, from them.

4. Only having freed himself from these sins, i.e. having ceased to

invent new means of increasing his personal pleasures, should the person

start combating with habits, traditions, established in his environment

sins.

5. And only after overcoming these sins, can a person begin to battle

the sins which are innate.

53. Battling the sin of intoxication

1. The purpose of a human life is the manifestation and increase of

love. This increase occurs only after the person realizes his true

divine self. The stronger his awareness of his true self, the greater is

his well-being. And therefore anything that opposes this awareness, as

any excitement does by increasing the false perception of his isolated

life and weakens the consciousness of the true self (which any

intoxication does), impedes the true well-being of a human.

2. But, in addition to the fact that any type of intoxication obstructs

the true well-being of a person awakened to consciousness, any

intoxication deceives the person and not only does not lead to increase

of his individual well-being, which he seeks through the stimulation,

but always deprives him from even the animal pleasures that he had.

3. A person who is still at the level of animal life, or a child with

not yet awaken consciousness, indulging in any arousal - smoking,

drinking, solemnity, dancing, - gets full satisfaction from the produced

arousal and does not need the repetition of this arousal. But a person

with awakened reason notices that any excitement suppresses the activity

of his reason and removes the pain caused by contradiction between the

demands of his animal and spiritual nature, and therefore he requires

repetition and reinforcement of the intoxication, and requires more and

even more of that, to completely quiet down that awakened reason in him,

which is only possible to do by destroying completely, or at least

partly, the bodily life. So a reasonable person, by getting indulged in

this sin, not only does not receive the expected benefits, but falls

into the most varied and cruel disasters.

4. A person who is free from intoxication uses for his bodily life all

the powers of his mind that are given to him, and can reasonably choose

what is best for the well-being of his animal existence, but a person

indulging in intoxication loses even those mental powers which are given

to an animal to avoid harm and receive pleasure.

5. Those are the consequences of the sin of intoxication for a person

committing it; but for others the consequences of it are particularly

harmful, firstly, because producing the effect of intoxication requires

huge expenditure of efforts, so that a large share of labor of mankind

is spent on the production of intoxicating substances and on the

preparation and building of intoxicating ceremonial actions,

processions, services, monuments, temples, all sorts of celebrations;

secondly, because smoking, wine, exhilarating movements, and especially

solemnity make thoughtless people under their influence to commit the

most absurd, coarse, detrimental, and mean acts. This is what the person

undergoing the temptation of any intoxication needs to know and always

to keep in mind.

6. No one, while living in the body, can completely destroy in himself

the possibility of raising of temporary intoxication from eating,

drinking, or special environmental conditions, or exhilarating

movements, and, as a result of these factors, the increase of animal

perception and weakening of consciousness. But while a person cannot

completely destroy this capability of arousal, everyone can bring it

down to the lesser extent. And this is the essence of the upcoming

battle of any person with the sin of intoxication.

7. In order to free himself from the sin of intoxication, a person must

understand and remember that certain degree of excitement in certain

times and under certain conditions is natural to a human as an animal,

and that when his consciousness awakens, he should not only not look for

these excitements, but try to avoid them and look for a more peaceful

state, in which the activity of his mind can manifest itself in all its

power, that activity, following which makes it possible to achieve the

greatest well-being, both for himself as well as for people and

creatures connected with him.

8. In order to achieve this state, a person must start with not growing

in himself that sin of intoxication to which he is accustomed and which

has become the habit of his life. If he has already included into his

customary life certain habits of intoxication, repeated at certain times

and recognized by all around him as necessary, let him keep these

habits, but not to introduce new ones by imitating others or by

inventing them himself: if he got used to smoking cigarettes, let him

not get used to cigars or opium; if he got used to beer or wine, let him

not get used to stronger intoxicants; if got used to doing low bows

during prayers at home or in church, or to jumping and dancing during

worship, let him not get used to new actions. If he got used to

celebrate some holidays, let him not celebrate new. Let him not to

increase those means of arousal to which he got used to, and he will

have already done a lot for freeing himself and others from the sin of

intoxication. If only people would not introduce new forms of sin, sin

would vanish, because sin begins when there is no habit and it is easy

to defeat it, and there are always have been, are, and will be people

who freed themselves from sin.

9. If the person has already firmly acknowledged the insanity of the sin

of drunkenness, and firmly decided not to increase those habits of

intoxication which became habitual to him, let him quit smoking,

drinking, if he has those habits; let him cease to participate in the

festivities and celebrations in which he participated; let him stop

doing the exhilarating movements, if he is accustomed to do them.

10. If the person frees himself from those artificial habits of

intoxication, in which he has been living, let him begin to free himself

from those states of arousal which certain food, drink, movements, and

environment produce in him, which any human is prone to.

11. Although a human, while in the body, will never completely escape

the condition of arousal and intoxication produced by food, drink,

movements, and surroundings - the degree of these conditions can be

reduced to minimum. And the more the person, awakened to consciousness,

will free himself of the condition of intoxication, the clearer will be

his mind, the easier it will be for him to deal with all the other sins,

the more he will receive the true well-being; and the more physical

well-being will be added to him, the more he will be contributing to the

well-being of other people.

54. Battling with the sin of idleness

1. A person with awakened consciousness is not an independent,

self-satisfying creature that would be capable of having his own

independent welfare, but a messenger of God, for whom well-being is only

possible to the extent that he fulfills the will of God. And therefore

for a human to serve his individual being is as unreasonable as it is

unwise for an employee to serve his instrument of work, preserve his

shovel or scythe, rather than to use it for intended work; as it is said

in the Gospel: "who preserves his carnal life will lose his true life;

and only by spending one’s carnal life you can obtain the true life".

2. To force other people to work to satisfy one’s own needs is as

unreasonable as an unwise employee would destroy or spoil instruments of

work of his coworkers in order to preserve or improve his own instrument

which he must use to produce the work to which both he and his fellows

are assigned.

3. But, in addition to the true well-being from which the person who

frees himself from labor and dumps it on other people deprives himself,

such a person also deprives himself of that bodily animal pleasures,

which are intended for a human who does the normal physical work

necessary for the satisfaction of his needs.

4. A person will get the greatest benefits for his separate being by

exercising his strengths and rest, when he lives according to his

instincts like an animal, working and resting just as much as it is

required for his animal life. But as soon as he artificially dumps his

work on others and arranges for himself artificial rest, he will not get

pleasure from the rest.

5. The working person gets true satisfaction from rest; the idle person,

instead of rest which he wants to arrange for himself, experiences

constant uneasiness; and, in addition to that, this artificial idleness

kills the source of his pleasure – his health, so that, by relaxing his

own body, he deprives himself of the opportunity to work, and hence of

the aftereffects of work – of true rest, and causes in himself severe

diseases.

6. Those are the consequences of idleness for the person committing this

sin; for other people the consequences of that sin are detrimental, 1)

because, as the Chinese saying says, if there is one person who does not

work, then there's another one dying of hunger; 2) because the

thoughtless people, having not experienced that frustration which idle

people have, try to imitate them, and, instead of good feelings toward

them, they experience envious, unkind feelings. This is what every

person wanting to battle the sin of idleness should know.

7. In order to get rid of the sin of idleness, a person must clearly

understand and remember that every time he liberates himself from work

that he used to do, he does not increase but reduces the well-being of

his separate personality and produces unnecessary evil toward other

people.

8. It is impossible to destroy in a separate human animal being the

desire for rest and an aversion to work (according to the Bible,

idleness was bliss, and work was punishment), but to reduce this sin and

to bring it to the lowest degree is something that a human must strive

for, in order to rid himself of this sin.

9. To rid himself from the habit of sin, a person should start from not

avoiding any labor that he performed before: if he used to clean his

dress, washed the linen, he should not dump it on somebody else; if he

managed to live without some things, products of labor of other

people, - he should not buy them; if he used to go about on foot, he

should not ride; if he used to carry his own suitcase, he should not

give it to porter etc. All of it may seem so insignificant, but if

people avoided doing that, they would get rid of a large number of their

own sins and misery resulting from them.

10. Only when a person is able to refrain from liberating himself from

the work he used to perform earlier and from dumping it onto other

people, he can successfully start battling the hereditary sin of

idleness. If he is a peasant, then he should not force his feeble wife

to do what he has leisure to do himself, not to hire an employee as he

did before, not to buy the product of labor which he used to purchase

and without which others manage to get around; if he is rich – to

dismiss the servant and tidy up his things by himself, and not to buy

expensive dresses if he used to do that before.

11. If a person has managed to conquer idleness he accustomed to from

childhood, and descended to the working level at which people around him

live, only then can this person begin to successfully combat the innate

sin of idleness, i.e. work for the well-being of other people when

others rest.

12. The fact that human life became so complicated as a result of the

division of labor that a person cannot satisfy his own and his family's

needs all by himself, and that it became now impossible in our world to

avoid using the products of someone else's labor, still, this cannot

prevent a person from striving toward the condition where he would give

people more that he takes from them.

13. In order to ensure that, the person must, firstly, perform for

himself and for his family all he can get done; and, secondly, while

serving other people, choose not the work he likes and which many people

want to do, as it comes to everything related to managing people,

lecturing, entertaining them; but those works that are routinely needed,

unattractive, and from doing which all people refuse, as with any kind

of tough and dirty work.

55. Battling with the sin of sensual lust

1. The purpose of a human is to serve God by increasing love in himself.

The less needs the person will have, the easier it will be for him to

serve God and people, and therefore the more true benefits he will

receive through the increase of love in himself.

2. But in addition to the benefits of true life, which a human receives

in proportion to the degree of his freedom from the sin of lust, his

condition in the world is such that if he gives in to his needs only to

the extent that is necessary, and does not direct his mind to the

increase of the pleasures of satisfying his needs, then this

satisfaction gives him the greatest well-being attainable in this

regard. But with each increase of his needs, whether they are satisfied

or not, the welfare of worldly life inevitably diminishes.

3. The greatest benefit from satisfaction of his needs – in food, drink,

sleep, clothing, shelter – a person receives when he satisfies them like

an animal, instinctively, and not to get pleasure but in order to

eliminate the growing dissatisfaction: the greatest pleasure from food a

human gets not when he eats refined foods but when he is hungry, and

from clothing - not when it is very beautiful but when he is cold, and

from home - not when it is luxurious but when he takes refuge in it from

the weather.

4. A person who uses rich dinner, clothes, or home exceeding his needs

receives less pleasures than a person who uses the simplest food,

clothing, home but after he gets hungry, cold, wet; so complicating the

means of satisfying needs and their abundance do not increase the

well-being of a personal life but reduces it.

5. Excess in satisfying needs deprives a person from the most source of

the pleasure in satisfying needs: it destroys the health of the

organism; no food brings pleasure to the patient with weakened stomach,

no clothes and no home can warm up bloodless delicate bodies.

6. Those are the consequences of the sin of sensual lust for the person

committing them; for people surrounding him its impacts are that,

firstly, people in need are deprived of those goods which are consumed

by the ones who are in luxury; secondly, all those cowardly people, who

see the excesses of the extravagant ones yet do not see their

sufferings, lured by their status and are tempted by the same sin, and,

instead of experiencing natural joyful brotherly feelings toward all,

they experience painful jealousy and dislike toward the extravagant

ones. That is what a person must know in order to successfully combat

the sin of sensual lust.

7. It is impossible to eliminate the desire to increase pleasure of

satisfying needs in a separate human being while he lives in the body,

but a person can bring this desire down to minimum, and this the essence

of battling the sin.

8. For the greatest liberation from the sin of lust, a person must first

clearly understand and remember that any sophistication in satisfying

one’s own needs will not only increase but reduce his will-being and

produce unnecessary evil in other people.

9. To free himself from the habits of this sin, a person should start

with the decision not to increase his own needs, not to change what he

was accustomed to, not to imitate and not to invent new wants; not to

start drinking tea when he lived and was healthy without tea; not to

build new palace when he lived in the old one. This refraining may seem

so little, but if only people would just refrain from doing that, 90

percent of human sins and sufferings would have disappear.

10. Only by firmly refraining from introducing new luxuries in his life

can a person begin to battle the inherited sins; a person who is used to

drink tea and eat meat, or a person accustomed to the champagne and fine

horses, little by little, can unlearn that what is superfluous, and

transition from more luxurious habits to more frugal ones.

11. And, only by having unlearned the luxury habits and descended down

to the degree of the poorest people, can the person begin to deal with

the innate sins of sensual lust, i.e. reduce his needs to the level even

with the most poor and moderate people.

56. Battling with the sin of greed

1. The true well-being of a human is in the manifestation of love, and

at the same time a human is put in a position that he never knows when

he will die, and so every hour of his life can be the last one; and so

no one reasonable person can violate love in the present for the sake of

providing for the future, which may never come. But this is exactly what

most people do by trying to acquire possessions and to keep them away

from other people, to secure the future for themselves and their

families.

2. But, in addition to the fact that people, by doing so, deprive

themselves of true well-being, they do not attain even those benefits

for their separate being that are always accessible to a human.

3. It is in human nature to satisfy his needs by his own labor, and even

to store objects for his needs as some animals do, and, by doing so, a

human attains the highest possible well-being for his separate being.

4. But as soon as the person starts to claim exclusive rights to those

stored or otherwise acquired articles, the well-being of his individual

does not only decrease, but is being replaced by the suffering of this

being.

5. The person who relies, in ensuring of his future, on his own work, on

the mutual assistance of people, and, most importantly, on such

arrangement in the world in which people are just as provided in their

life as celestial birds or wild flowers are, he can peacefully give in

to all the joys of life; but the person who started securing his own

future property, cannot have a moment of peace.

6. First of all, a human never knows for how long he will need to

provide for himself: for one month, one year, ten years, for the next

generation; secondly, the cares about his property distract him more and

more from simple joys in life; thirdly, he is always afraid of

possibility that those possessions can be captured by other people, and

always struggles to keep and increase the goods he has acquired, and, by

giving his whole life to taking care of the future, he loses his real

life.

7. Those are the consequences of the sin of property for the person

committing it; and for the people around him its effects are:

deprivations as a result of the seizures.

8. It is almost impossible to eliminate in oneself the desire to retain

exclusively for oneself the essential items - clothing, tools, a piece

of bread for tomorrow; but to bring this inclination to a minimum is

possible, and in this bringing the sin of property down to the lowest

degree is the essence of battling this sin.

9. And therefore, in order to free himself of the sin of property, an

individual should clearly understand and remember that the ensuring of

his future by acquisition and retention of possessions will not increase

his well-being but will diminish it, and will cause great unnecessary

evil to those people among whom these possessions are acquired and

withheld.

10. And in order to deal with the habit of this sin, you need to begin

with not increasing the assets you have in an attempt of ensuring

future, whether it be millions of pounds or dozens of bags of rye for a

year's consumption. If only people understood that their well-being and

life, even animal life, is not secured by possessions, they would not

increase at the expense of others that what everyone considers his own,

and then a big part of the disasters that afflict humans would

disappear.

11. Only when a person is already able to refrain from increasing his

property, can he successfully start freeing himself from what he owns,

and, only having freed himself from everything inherited, can he begin

to battle the inborn sin, i.e. to give others what is considered

necessary for the support of life itself.

57. Battling with the sin of lust for power

1. "Kings reign over the nations and exercise their authorities over

them, but not what it shall be among you, - who wants to be first, he

shall be the servant to all," the Christian teaching says. According to

the Christian teaching, a human is sent to the world in order to serve

God; and serving God is fulfilled by manifesting love. And love can only

be manifested through serving people, and therefore every struggle of a

person, awakened to conscious awareness, with other beings, i.e.

violence, the desire to make another person commit an act contrary to

his own will, is opposite to human purpose and obstructs his true

well-being.

2. But, in addition to the fact that the person, awakened to conscious

awareness and coming to grips with other beings, deprives himself of the

benefits of true life, he does not even reach those benefits for his

single being which he aspires to.

3. A human, living only animal life, like a child or an animal, fights

with other creatures only for as long as his animal instincts require

this struggle: robs a piece from another only when he is hungry, and

drives the other one away from his place only when he has no place,

applies only physical strength for this fight, and, after defeating or

being defeated in the fight, stops it. And, in doing so, he gets the

highest welfare which is available for him as a single being.

4. But that is not what happens to a person with awakened reason, coming

into the fight: the person with awakened reason, coming into the fight,

uses for it all his mind and makes fighting his purpose, and therefore

he never knows when he will stop it, and after his victory, he gets

carried away by the desire for further victories, triggering hate in the

defeated, which poisons his life if he is the winner; or if he gets

defeated, he suffers himself from humiliation and hatred. So a Homo

sapiens, by entering a fight against other creatures, not only does not

increase the benefits of his individual being, but reduces it by the

sufferings he has himself produced.

5. A person who avoids fighting, who is submissive, firstly, is free and

can put his efforts into what attracts him, secondly, by loving others

and humbling himself before them, causes love in them and therefore can

enjoy those benefits of worldly life which he encounters; but a person

with awakened reason who enters a fight inevitably gives already his

whole life to the efforts to fight, and, secondly, by fighting, he

causes fighting back and hatred in other people, and cannot peacefully

enjoy those benefits he won by the fight, so he has to protect them

nonstop.

6. These are the consequences of the sin of fighting for the person

committing it; for those around him the consequences of the sin are in

all kinds of sufferings, deprivations, experienced by the defeated, and

most importantly, in the feeling of hatred that they cause in people

instead of natural loving brotherly feeling.

7. Although a human will never, while he lives, free himself from the

conditions of contention, but the more he succeeds in liberating himself

from them according to his powers, the more true well-being he attains,

the more earthly well-being will follow him, and the more he will

contribute to the good of the world.

8. And therefore, in order to get rid of the sin of fighting, a human

must clearly understand and remember that his true spiritual as well as

temporal animal well-being will be the more abundant the less he will

fight with people and all other creatures; and the more submissive and

humble he will be, the more he will develop a habit of turning the other

cheek to whoever hits him, and of giving his coat to whoever takes his

shirt.

9. In order not to fall into the habit of sin, a person should start

with not increasing in himself that sin of fight in which he lives: if a

person is already in a fight with animals or human beings to the degree

that all his life is supported by this fight, then let him continue this

fight without increasing it, but let him not enter into the fight

against other creatures, and he will have already done a lot to rid

himself of the sin of fight. If only people would not increase their

fight, fighting would be further and further eliminated, because there

are always people who further and further refrain from fighting.

10. If a person has attained that level of living without increasing of

fighting with those around him, then let him work to reduce, weaken the

condition of inherited fight in which every person coming into life

lives.

11. If the person will be able to free himself from the fight in which

he grew up, let him then endeavor to free himself from that tendency to

strive innate in every person.

58. Battling with the sin of sexual lust

1. The purpose of a human is to serve God through the manifestation of

love to all creatures and people; but a human who yields to the lust of

love weakens his strengths and distracts himself from serving God and

therefore, by indulging in sexual lust, deprives himself of the

well-being of true life.

2. But, in addition to the fact that a person who yields to sexual lust

in any form deprives himself of true well-being, he does not even obtain

the benefits he is looking for.

3. When a person lives in a faithful marriage, engages in sexual

intercourse only when there can be children, and responsibly raises

children, inevitable result for the mother becomes sufferings and cares,

for the father - cares about the mother and child, and mutual - cooling

of affection and frequent quarrels between spouses, and between parents

and children.

4. But when a person enters into sexual intercourse not with the goal of

having and upbringing children, avoids having them, and when he, having

children, does not take care of them, and changes the objects of his

love, then the attainment of his individual well-being becomes less

possible, and the person inevitably undergoes sufferings, the more

brutal the more he yields to the sexual passion: resulting in the

weakness of his physical and spiritual powers, in quarrels, and in

illnesses. And there is no consolation that spouses living in the

rightful marriage have – of family, all its help and joy.

5. Those are the consequences of the sin of sexual lust for the

committing it; for other people they are in the following; firstly, the

person with whom the sin is committed bears the same consequences of the

sin: the loss of both true and temporary well-being, and the same

suffering and illnesses; to the rest they are: in the destruction of

children in the bud, infanticide, abandonment of children without care

and education, and the terrifying evil destroying human souls -

prostitution.

6. No one living creature can eliminate in himself the desire for sex,

including human, except in rare cases. It cannot be otherwise, since

this sexual lust is responsible for the existence of the human race, and

therefore, while the Higher Will needs the existence of the human race,

lechery will take place in it.

7. But the sexual lust can be reduced to the lowest extent, and some

people can bring it to a complete chastity. And in this reduction and

bringing it to the lowest degree, and even to chastity for some people,

as it is said in the Gospel, is the essence of battling with the sin of

sexual lust.

8. And therefore, in order to get rid of the sin of sexual lust, a

person must understand and remember that sex is the necessary condition

of life of any animal and human as animal, but the awakened

consciousness aroused in the human requires from him the opposite, i.e.

complete abstinence, total celibacy, and the more he will indulge in

sex, the less he will receive not only true but also temporary animal

well-being and the more he will bring suffering to himself and to other

people.

9. And, in order to combat the habit of sin, a person should start with

not increasing in himself that sin of sexual lust in which he is now. If

the person is chaste, let him not violate his chastity; if he is

married, let he remains faithful to his spouse; if he has intercourse

with many, let he continues to live that way but not to invent unnatural

sexual practices. Let he do not change his condition and do not increase

his sin of sexual lust. If only people did that, their sufferings would

end.

10. If the person has succeeded in refraining from new sins, then let

him work to reduce that sin of sexual lust in which he abides now: let

the chaste person in practice battle with his mental sin of sexual lust,

let the married one strive to reduce and regulate his sexual

interaction. Let the one who knows many women, and a woman who knows

many men become faithful to their chosen partners.

11. And if the person is able to free himself from those habits of

sexual lust in which he currently abides, then let him strive to break

free from those inborn tendency to sexual lust with which each human is

born.

12. Although only rare people can be completely chaste, let each person

understand and remember that he can always be more chaste than he was

before, and can return to the chastity he has violated, and, according

to his strengths, the more he will be able to reach the complete

chastity, the more he will attain the true well-being, and the more

earthly welfare will follow him, and the more he will contribute to the

well-being of people.

Part 7 : Special means of battling sins

1. In order to not to fall into deception, you must trust no one and

nothing but only your reason; in order not to fall into temptation, you

must not justify the actions that are contrary to truth, to life; in

order not to fall into sin, you should clearly recognize that sin is an

evil and deprives human of not only his true well-being, but also of his

personal well-being and produces evil in people; and, moreover, you need

to know the consecutive order in which you need to combat sins.

2. But people know that and still fall into sins. This happens because

people don't know clear enough who they really are, what constitutes

their true "self", or forget about it.

3. And in order to get to know yourself more and more, clearer and

clearer, and to be mindful of who you are, there is one powerful tool.

And this tool is prayer.

60. The prayer

1. Since ancient times, it was recognized that a human needs prayer.

2. Prayer was, for people of old times and remains for many people now,

an appeal - in certain situations, in certain places, in certain actions

and words – to God or gods with the purpose of appeasing them.

3. Christian teaching does not recognize such prayers, but teaches that

prayer is essential, not for the deliverance from worldly disasters or

the acquisition of worldly goods, but for strengthening the person in

his battle against sins.

4. To combat sins, a person needs to understand and remember his

position in the universe; and, upon taking every action, he needs to

assess it in order not to fall into sin. In both cases, the person needs

prayer.

5. And therefore there are two applications of the Christian prayer: the

one that clarifies the person’s position in the universe is the

occasional prayer; and another, which accompanies each of his action,

brings it to God’s judgment, takes it through the test, is the continual

prayer.

61. Occasional prayer

1. Occasional prayer is the prayer by means of which a person, in his

best moments, abstracts himself from all worldly influences, and evokes

in himself the clearest consciousness of God and his attitude toward

him.

2. This is the prayer that Christ says in Matthew chapter 6; in contrast

to wordy and public prayers of the Pharisees, which he brings up as an

example of how not to pray, Christ calls solitude being an essential

condition for it.

3. The "Our Father" prayer, as well as Christ’s prayer in Gethsemane

garden, show us how to pray and what that true occasional prayer should

be, which, by clarifying the human consciousness about the truth of

one’s life, about his attitude toward God, and his purpose in the world,

increases his spiritual strengths.

4. Such a prayer may be an expression in your own words of your attitude

toward God; but such a prayer was expressed, and always will be for all

people, as a repetition of statements and thoughts of people who lived

before us and who had voiced their attitude toward God, and as spiritual

unity with these people and with God. Christ prayed that way, by

repeating the words of the Psalm; and we are truly praying when we

repeat the words of Christ, and not only of Christ, but of Socrates,

Buddha, Lao Tse, Pascal and others, when we experience that spiritual

state which these people have experienced and expressed in those

statements that have reached us.

5. And therefore the true occasional prayer will be not the one that

requires certain hours and days, but only that which we use in the

moments of our highest spiritual state, such moments that come to every

human being, which are sometimes caused by suffering or by the proximity

of death, sometimes come without any external motive, moments that the

person must cherish as highest treasure and use them to greater and

greater clarification of his own consciousness, because it is only in

these moments that our movement forward and closer to God is

accomplished.

6. Such prayer may not be committed in meetings, nor accompanied by

external influences, but requires complete solitude, conditions free

from external, distracting effects.

7. This prayer is the prayer that shifts the person from the lower state

of life to his higher state: from animal to human, from human to God.

8. It is only through this prayer the person gets to know himself, his

divine nature, and feels those limits that confine his divine nature,

and, feeling them, strives to break them, and by this desire expands

them.

9. This is the prayer that, by clarifying his consciousness, makes sins,

in which the person lived before, impossible for him, and reveals to him

as sin that which didn't seem sinful to him before.

62. Continual prayer

1. In his progression from animal life to true and spiritual life, in

his birth to new life, in his battle with sin, every person is always at

sin in three different ways. Some sins he has already overcame. They are

like chained beasts, which only from time to time, by growling, remind

of themselves that they are still alive. These sins are left behind.

Other sins are those that the person has just noticed; such are the

deeds that he was doing all his life, not seeing them as sins, the

sinfulness of which he has just realized after clarifying his

consciousness through the occasional prayer. The person sees the

sinfulness of these acts, but he is so used to do them; he has, so

recently and not so clearly, seen the sinfulness of those acts that he

does no try to fight them yet.

And there is a third kind of actions sinfulness of which the person

clearly sees, which he already fights, and which he sometimes commits,

yields to sin, and sometimes does not commit and thus defeats sin.

2. To combat these sins comes the continual prayer. This prayer serves

to remind the person at all times of his life, during all his actions,

of what his life and well-being is; and therefore in those acts of life

in which the person is still able to conquer his animal nature by

spiritual consciousness, this prayer helps him.

3. The continual prayer is the constant awareness of God's presence,

i.e. constant, during his mission, realization by the envoy of the

presence of the Sender.

4. The birth to the new life, liberating himself from the bonds of the

animal nature, freeing himself from the sin is achieved by only slow

efforts. Occasional prayer, through illuminating the human

consciousness, opens his sin to him. At first this sin seems unimportant

to him, acceptable, but the longer the person lives the more persistent

becomes the need to free himself from sin. And if only the person does

not fall into temptation covering sin, he inevitably comes to grips with

sin.

5. But from the first attempts to overcome sin, the person feels

powerless: sin attracts to itself by all the weakness of the habits of

sin; and nothing the person can use to counter sin except his

realization that to sin is wrong, and the person, while knowing that

what he is doing is bad, continues to do this wrong deed.

6. There is only one way out of this situation. Some religious teachers

see it in a special force known as grace, which supports the person in

his struggle with sin and is acquired through certain performances

called sacraments. Other teachers see solution from this situation in

faith in redemption accomplished for people by Christ the God. Still

others see solution in prayer to God for strengthening the person’s

powers in his fight against sin.

7. But neither first nor second or third way makes the person’s fight

against sin easier. Despite of the bliss of sacraments, the faith in the

atonement, or the pleading prayer, each person, who sincerely began

battling sin, cannot but feel all his weakness before the power of sin

and the hopelessness of fighting it.

8. The hopelessness of this struggle looks overpowering especially

because the person, once he understood the deceptiveness of sin, wants

to get rid of it immediately, to which he is encouraged by various false

teachings - about sacraments, redemption, etc., and, after feeling

powerless to free himself, he right away disregards those little efforts

which he could make to free himself from sin.

9. And meanwhile, just as all great upheavals in the material world

happen not suddenly but through slow and gradual shedding or growth, in

spiritual world the liberation from sin and advance toward perfection is

accomplished only by slow resistance to sin – by eliminating the

smallest pieces of it, one after another.

10. It is not in human power to get rid of the sin that grew into a

habit over the course of many years, but it is totally in his power not

to do acts which involve him in the sin, to reduce the attractiveness of

the sin, to set himself into the impossibility of committing the sin,

“to cut off the hand and pluck out the eye that seduce him”. And to do

it every day and every moment; and for him to be able to do this, he

needs the continual prayer.

63. What can a person living the Christian life expect in the

present?

1. There are religious teachings that promise people following them

total and perfect well-being, not only in the future, but in this life.

There is even such understanding of the Christian teaching. People who

understand Christian teaching this way say that you only need to follow

the teaching of Christ: deny yourself and love people, and your life

will be incessant joy. Other religious teachings look at life as endless

and necessary sufferings that a person must endure, hoping for the

rewards in his future life. And there is similar understanding of the

Christian teaching: some people see life as continual joy, others – as

continual sufferings.

2. Neither of these understandings is correct. Life is neither joy nor

suffering. Life may appear to be joy or suffering only to the person who

regards his “self” as a separate being; only for this separate “self”

can there be joy or suffering. But life, according to the Christian

teaching in its true sense, is neither joy nor suffering but the birth

and growth of the true spiritual “self“ of the person, in which can

neither be joy nor pain.

3. According to the Christian teaching, human life is the constant

growth of consciousness of love. And because the growth of human soul –

the increase of love – is in constant process, so is the work of God,

which is accomplished by this growth, in constant process in the world,

and so the person who understands his life the way that the Christian

teaching instructs - as the growth of love for the establishment of the

Kingdom of God – he can never be unhappy or unsatisfied.

4. On the path of his life, there may be joy and suffering for his

animal personality, which the person can't not to feel, can’t not to

rejoice at and can’t not to suffer from, but he never can feel the

complete happiness (and therefore he may not long for it), and he can

never be unhappy (and therefore cannot be afraid of sufferings and

cannot desire to avoid them if they stand in his way).

5. A person living the Christian life, does not attribute much value to

his joys, does not see them as the fulfillment of his desires but only

as accidentally occurring on his life journey phenomena and sees them as

something that by itself accompanies the one who seeks the Kingdom of

God and His righteousness; and he regards his sufferings not as

something that should not happen, but, on the contrary, as equally

necessary in the life phenomenon as friction at work, knowing that as

friction is a sign of the ongoing work, so as suffering is the sign of

the produced work of God.

6. A person living the Christian life is always free, because the very

same that constitutes the meaning of his life – the removal of obstacles

obstructing love, and, as a consequence of that, the growth of love and

the establishment of the Kingdom of God, - is the same what he always

wants and what inevitably takes place in his life; he is always calm

because nothing can happen to him that he does not want.

7. You do not need to think that a person living the Christian life

always experiences such freedom and peace of mind, that he always

receives joys as something accidental, without getting excited about

them, does not want to retain them, and regards his sufferings as a

necessary condition for the progression of the life. The Christian may

temporarily get carried away by joys, trying to produce and retain them;

he may be temporarily troubled by sufferings, regarding them as

something needless which could be avoided, but when he loses joy, or

when he is in fear or in the pain of suffering, the Christian

immediately regains his Christian dignity, recalls his mission, and then

both joys and sufferings take their proper meaning, and he again becomes

free and calm.

8. So even from the worldly point of view, the position of the Christian

is not worse but better than that of the non-Christian. "Seek the

Kingdom of God and His righteousness, and all the rest will follow

you" - means that all worldly pleasures are not closed from the

Christian but quite available to him, with the only difference that

whereas joys of the non-Christian may be artificial and transgress to

satiety and sufferings, and therefore are regarded by him as unnecessary

and hopeless, - for the Christian the same joys are more simple,

natural, and, therefore, strong; they can never produce satiety or

sufferings, can neither be so painful nor appear so meaningless as they

do to the non-Christian. This is the position of the Christian in the

current life; but what can the Christian expect in the future?

64. What can a person expect in the future?

1. A person living in this world in his corporeal shell cannot imagine

his life differently rather than in space and time, and therefore he

naturally asks, where he will be after his death.

2. But this question is incorrect: the divine nature of our soul,

spiritual, independent of time and space, in this life enclosed in the

body, upon leaving this body, ceases to be limited by space and time,

and therefore you cannot say about this entity that it will. It is. As

Christ said: "Before Abraham was, I am". And so all of us. If we are, we

have always been and will be. We are.

3. The same is in regards to the question about where we will be. When

we say ‘where’, we talk about the place where we're going. But the

notion of a place was derived only with the separation from the rest in

which we have been placed. With our death this separation will

disappear, and therefore for people living in this world we will be

everywhere or nowhere. We will be that for which there is no place.

4. There are many different predictions about what and where will be

after death; but all of them, from the roughest to the most

sophisticated, cannot satisfy a reasonable person. Bliss, voluptuousness

of Mohammad is too rough and obviously incompatible with true

understanding of human and God. Similarly, incompatible with the concept

of God of love is the ecclesiastical idea of heaven and hell.

Reincarnation is less crude idea, but similarly holds on to the idea of

separateness of an individual; the concept of Nirvana eliminates all the

roughness of reincarnation, but violates the requirement of reason – the

reasonableness of existence.

5. So neither idea about what will happen after death gives an answer

that would satisfy a reasonable person.

6. And it could not be otherwise. The question is set incorrectly. Human

mind, which is able to think only in terms of space and time, wants to

give an answer to what will be outside of these conditions. Reason knows

one thing: that there is our divine essence, and that it grew in this

world. And, having reached a certain stage of its growth, it has come

out of these conditions.

7. Will this entity continue to function separately again? Will this

increase of love cause a new division? All these are guesses, and there

may be many of such guesses, but none of them can be credible.

8. One thing is certain and undoubted is what Christ said when he was

dying: "Into thy hands I commend my spirit". Precisely that, when dying,

I go back to where I came from. And if I believe that what I came from

is reason and love (these two properties I know), then I am joyfully

returning to it, knowing that I will be well. And not only I do not

regret, but I am rejoiced over the transition that is ahead for me to

make.