Self-knowledge is man’s foremost duty. Man, as a rational,
morally free and religious being, is a being of lofty rank and has been
destined to become like God, in Whose image he was created, and a participant
in Divine goodness and blessedness. But in order to become a divine likeness,
good and blessed, and to commune with God, man must first of all know himself.
Without self-knowledge man goes astray in his thoughts, is dominated by diverse
passions, tyrannized by violent desires, troubled about many and vain things,
and leads a disorderly, distracted life, erring in all things, wandering on the
way, staggering at every step; and he stumbles, falls, and is crushed. He
drinks every day potions of sorrow and bitterness, fills his heart with grief,
and lives an unbearable life.
He who does not know himself does not know God, either. And
he who does not know God does not know the truth and the nature of things in
general… He who does not know himself continually sins against God and
continually moves farther away from Him. He who does not know the nature of
things and what they truly are in themselves is powerless to evaluate them
according to their worth and to discriminate between the mean and the precious,
the worthless and the valuable. Wherefore, such a person wears himself out in
the pursuit of vain and trivial things, and is unconcerned about and
indifferent to the things that are eternal and most precious.
There is in man by nature the power of self-knowledge,
because man is a spiritual and morally free being, having free will and the
power of knowing…. But in order to acquire perfect knowledge of himself, man
must first will and move towards self-inquiry and make himself an object of his
study. Without willing, none of the things that ought to be done can be done.
Unless one wills, one’s moral powers remain idle, no wise
leading their possessor to knowledge. The will activates them and renders them
manifest. In man, the faculty of the will, strengthened by the faculty of
reason and that of free choice and self-control, overcomes all obstacles and
succeeds in everything: ‘I will’ becomes ‘I can’ in the man that acts with
knowledge and freedom.
Man ought to will to know himself, to know himself, to know
God, and to understand the nature of things as they are in themselves, and thus
become an image and likeness of God.
Those who know themselves are praised in adages as wise. The
writer of the Proverbs, Solomon, says: “Those who know themselves are wise;”
(Prov. 13:10) and he advises: “Know thyself and walk in the ways of your heart
blameless.” (Eccl. 11:9)
The need of knowing ourselves has been taught by both
religion and philosophy. Thales the Milesian held that the beginning of all the
virtues is self-knowledge. The Oracle at Delphi called self-knowledge “the
foremost and best part of true knowledge.” Clearly, then, self-knowledge is the
beginning of all virtue and wisdom. Now if the precept “Know thyself” is
imposed upon us by our cognitive power as a Divine law written in our mind, we
ought, as rational and morally free beings, to respect it and observe it.
He who knows himself knows his duties towards himself,
towards God, and towards his neighbor, and that piety, justice, truth and
knowledge should be for him the touchstone on which he tests all his acts that
have reference to God, to himself, and to his neighbor… He who knows himself is
never puffed up, never filled with pride, but first of all he knows his
shortcomings and faults, always comparing himself with the ideal prototype, in
the likeness of which he ought to develop himself, inasmuch as he sees how much
he falls short of it.
Source: St.
Nectarios of Aegina, by Constantine Cavarnos, Institute for Byzantine and
Modern Greek Studies, Belmont, MA, 1981, pp. 162-165.
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