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Glossary›Philokalia

Glossary

Philokalia

A landmark anthology of Orthodox Christian spiritual texts compiled in 1782, guiding practitioners in hesychasm, the Jesus Prayer, and the path to union with God.

What is Philokalia?

The Philokalia is a collection of texts written between the fourth and fifteenth centuries by spiritual masters of the Orthodox Christian tradition. The title derives from the Greek words philos (love) and kallos (beauty or goodness), meaning “love of the beautiful” or “love of the good.” The Philokalia is the foundational text on hesychasm (“quietness” or “stillness”), an inner spiritual tradition with a long history dating back to the Desert Fathers. The Philokalia includes works by thirty-six influential Orthodox authors from the fourth to fifteenth-centuries such as Maximus the Confessor, Peter of Damascus, Symeon the New Theologian, and Gregory Palamas. The collection addresses contemplative prayer, watchfulness of the mind, purification from passions, and the cultivation of inner stillness as pathways toward theosis—deification or union with God.

Origins & Lineage

Two Greek monks compiled it in 1782: St. Nikodemos of the Holy Mountain and St. Makarios of Corinth. The collection was compiled in the 18th century by Nicodemus the Hagiorite and Macarius of Corinth based on the codices 472 (12th century), 605 (13th century), 476 (14th century), 628 (14th century) and 629 (15th century) from the library of the monastery of Vatopedi, Mount Athos. The Philokalia was compiled by Saints Nicodemos the Hagiorite (1749–1809) and Makarios of Corinth (1731–1805), both monks on Mount Athos, and first published in Venice in 1782.

The compilers did not write new material; they gathered patristic wisdom that had been preserved in monastic libraries for centuries. Their aim was to revive contemplative prayer and hesychastic practice amid the pressures of modernity and Western influence on Orthodox life. The earliest translations included a Church Slavonic language translation of selected texts by Paisius Velichkovsky (Dobrotolublye, Добротолю́бїе) in 1793, a Russian translation by Ignatius Bryanchaninov in 1857, and a five-volume translation into Russian (Dobrotolyubie) by Theophan the Recluse in 1877. These translations sparked a spiritual renaissance across the Slavic Orthodox world, influencing the startsy (spiritual elders) of Optina Monastery and the broader monastic revival in nineteenth-century Russia.

How It’s Practiced

The Philokalia offers instruction in hesychasm, a tradition of contemplative stillness and watchfulness. The practices include contemplative prayer, quiet sitting, and recitation of the Jesus Prayer. The Jesus Prayer—“Lord Jesus Christ, Son of God, have mercy on me, a sinner”—is repeated continuously, often synchronized with the breath, to guard the mind from distractions and cultivate attentiveness to the presence of God. Practitioners are taught nepsis (watchfulness or vigilance), observing thoughts and passions without attachment, and cultivating apatheia (freedom from disordered passions) as a precondition for deeper contemplation.

The texts describe a threefold path: praktike (the active life of ascetic struggle and virtue), physike (contemplation of creation and natural law), and theologike (contemplation of God). Practices involve prolonged silence, fasting, prostrations, and the recitation of the Psalter and liturgical prayers. Some texts describe advanced states of prayer, including tears of compunction, visions of divine light, and experiences of mystical union. While traditionally taught and practiced in monasteries, hesychasm teachings have spread over the years to include laymen.

Philokalia Today

The book is the “principal spiritual text” for all the Eastern Orthodox churches, and the Philokalia has exercised an influence far greater than that of any book other than the Bible in the recent history of the Orthodox Church. Modern seekers encounter the Philokalia through English translations by G.E.H. Palmer, Philip Sherrard, and Kallistos Ware (published in five volumes beginning in 1979), which have made the texts accessible to Western readers. Annotated selections and study guides have also been produced for those new to Orthodox spirituality.

The Philokalia is studied in Orthodox monasteries worldwide, and its teachings are transmitted through spiritual direction with an experienced elder or confessor. Retreats focusing on hesychastic prayer are offered at Orthodox monasteries and retreat centers, often incorporating instruction in the Jesus Prayer, silent meditation, and liturgical worship. Next to the Bible, the Philokalia is the most widely read book in the Orthodox world today by monks and laypeople alike. It is rapidly gaining popularity among Roman Catholics and Protestants. Online resources, podcasts, and courses on Orthodox spirituality frequently reference Philokalic teachings.

Common Misconceptions

The Philokalia is not a single coherent manual but an anthology of diverse voices spanning eleven centuries, each with distinct theological emphases and spiritual techniques. It is not a beginner’s text; many writings presume familiarity with monastic life, Scripture, and the liturgical tradition. The Philokalia is not intended for solitary self-direction—Orthodox tradition emphasizes that hesychastic practice should be undertaken under the guidance of an experienced spiritual father to avoid delusion or spiritual pride.

The Philokalia is also not a “meditation technique” in the contemporary secular sense. Its practices are embedded within a sacramental and ascetic framework that includes fasting, confession, the Eucharist, and obedience to a spiritual director. The collection does not promise instant enlightenment or emotional consolation; it describes a rigorous, lifelong struggle against the passions and a slow transformation of the heart.

How to Begin

Those new to the Philokalia should begin with secondary introductions rather than the full anthology. The Philokalia: A Classic Text of Orthodox Spirituality (edited by Brock Bingaman and Bradley Nassif) offers scholarly context. Philokalia: The Eastern Christian Spiritual Texts—Selections Annotated and Explained by Allyne Smith provides accessible excerpts with commentary. The Way of a Pilgrim, a nineteenth-century Russian narrative influenced by Philokalic teaching, offers a vivid portrait of the Jesus Prayer in practice.

For direct engagement with the Philokalia, readers might start with Volume 1, which includes texts by Evagrius Ponticus, John Cassian, and Mark the Ascetic on basic ascetic practice and watchfulness. Seekers are encouraged to connect with an Orthodox parish, attend services, and request spiritual counsel from a priest or experienced layperson familiar with hesychastic tradition. Online resources from Ancient Faith Ministries and Orthodox podcasts provide accessible introductions to Philokalic spirituality and the Jesus Prayer.

Related terms

symeon the new theologianchristian contemplative prayerapophatic theologycloud of unknowingbenedictine spiritualitychanting meditation
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