Inner sinfulness

External sins are the fruit of inner sinfulness. Inner sinfulness is rooted in egoism and its offspring.

- St. Theophan the Recluse

The poison of self-love…

Loving only himself, a man loves neither God nor his fellow-men. He does not even love the man that is in himself; he loves only his thoughts about himself, his illusions about himself. Were he to love the man in himself, he would at the same time love God’s image in him, and would quickly become a lover of God and man, for he would be seeking man and God in other men, as objects of his love. Self-love is not love, but is rejection of God and contempt for men, whether open or concealed. Self-love is not love but sickness, a serious illness that inevitably brings other illnesses in its train. As pox inevitably produces fever throughout the body, so self-love produces the fire of envy and anger in the whole body. A man full of self-love is full of envy of those who are better than he is, or richer, more learned or more respected by men. With envy there always goes anger, like flame with fire; a concealed anger, that flares out at times and, in so doing, reveals all the ugliness of the man’s sick heart, that has been poisoned with the poison of self-love. Today’s Gospel presents us with a clear picture of Christ’s wondrous love for mankind on the one side and the Pharisees’ ugly self-love, along with their envy and fury, on the other…

- St. Nikolai of Zica

Humility is a sure guide

May you love one another and not be embittered by reason of egotism. Humility is a sure guide; it does not allow the one who has it to strike against the reefs of carelessness and be crushed, but as a luminous guide it leads faultlessly to safety.

- Elder Ephraim of Philotheou

On egotism

A person who suffers from egotism attracts no one. And if he does attract someone he will soon go away. When one comes across a childlike spirit, innocence and holiness the bond becomes unbreakable.

- Father Amphilochios