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Tuesday, May 12, 2026

Part 5: Spiritual Grace and the Sacramental Life



Case Title:
“I Go to Church, But I Don’t Feel Changed”

A person says:

“I attend church, I pray, but I still feel the same inside. Nothing changes.”

This question touches the very heart of the spiritual life. Within Orthodox Christian counseling, the issue is not the absence of God’s transforming grace (ጸጋ), but whether that grace is truly welcomed, cooperated with, and allowed to shape daily life.

God’s transforming grace is never lacking in the Church. It is continually given. The real question is: Is the human person open to transformation?


1. Confession and Repentance

1.1 Repentance as Healing

Repentance is not mere emotional regret. It is:

  • a radical change of mind  
  • a reorientation of direction
  • a transformation of life

Our Lord Jesus Christ declared:

“Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand - መንግሥተ ሰማያት ቀርባለችና ንስሐ ግቡ” (Matthew 4:17)

Thus, repentance becomes the doorway to spiritual healing and restoration.


1.2 Confession as Therapeutic Release

Confession (ኃጢአትን መናዘዝ) is not a legal obligation, but a spiritual therapy. It is:

  • the exposure of inner illness
  • the release of hidden burdens
  • the restoration of communion with God

Holy Scripture teaches:

በኃጢአታችን ብንናዘዝ ኃጢአታችንን ይቅር ሊለን ከዓመፃም ሁሉ ሊያነጻን የታመነና ጻድቅ ነው። (1 John 1:9)


1.3 Patristic Teaching

As St. John Chrysostom (347 - 407 AD) teaches:

“Confession is the medicine of the soul; it destroys sin and restores health.”

1.4 Why People Feel No Change.’

Often, the problem lies here:

  • Repentance remains shallow
  • Sins are repeated without serious struggle
  • Inner awareness is not deepened

Spiritual healing does not come from a temporary emotional moment, but through ongoing inner transformation.


2. The Eucharist: Medicine for the Healing of the Soul

2.1 The Eucharist as Healing

The Eucharist is not symbolic—it is:

  • real participation in the life of Christ.

Christ becomes our life, entering into communion with us and healing the deepest corruption of human nature.

As Christ declares, the Holy Eucharist is the divine medicine that heals the soul and grants eternal life.

ሥጋዬን የሚበላ ደሜንም የሚጠጣ የዘላለም ሕይወት አለው፥ እኔም በመጨረሻው ቀን አስነሣዋለሁ። ሥጋዬ እውነተኛ መብል ደሜም እውነተኛ መጠጥ ነውና። ሥጋዬን የሚበላ ደሜንም የሚጠጣ በእኔ ይኖራል እኔም በእርሱ እኖራለሁ። (John 6:54-56)


2.2 Therapeutic Meaning

The Eucharist:

  • unites the believer to Christ
  • strengthens the soul against passions
  • restores spiritual strength

2.3 Patristic Witness

As St. Ignatius of Antioch (35  – 108 AD) calls it:

“The Eucharist is the medicine of immortality (ዘላለማዊነት).”

2.4 Why Spiritual Change Is Sometimes Not Immediately Felt or Recognized                                                     

This occurs because:

  • Spiritual grace (መንፈሳዊ ጸጋ) is not identical with emotional sensation.
  • Spiritual transformation is often gradual, subtle (ረቂቅ), and hidden.
  • The resistance of the human heart can limit spiritual awareness.

Therefore, spiritual healing frequently takes place silently, yet it is deep and profoundly transformative.


3. Prayer and Fasting                

3.1 Prayer as Communion

“Pray without ceasing - ሳታቋርጡ ጸልዩ… (1 Thessalonians 5:17)

Prayer is not a religious duty; it is living communion with God. It is:

  • relational — entering into a personal relationship with God
  • transformative — shaping the mind, heart, and will according to divine grace
  • purifying — cleansing the inner life from passions and disorder

Through prayer, the human heart is gradually reoriented toward God. It restores interior unity, healing the inner division of the soul and gathering the person into a single movement of love toward the Creator.

 


3.2 Fasting as Healing Discipline

Fasting is not mere abstinence—it is a spiritual discipline that heals and reorders the inner life. It is:

  • the training of the will (ፈቃድ) toward obedience to God
  • the disciplining of desires that move toward excess and disorder
  • the healing of disordered passions that disturb the soul’s harmony

The Scripture states:

ይህ ዓይነት ግን ከጸሎትና ከጦም በቀር አይወጣም አላቸው። (Matthew 17:21)

Through fasting, the human person learns inner control, spiritual clarity, and renewed dependence on divine grace.


3.3 Patristic Teaching                   

As St. Basil the Great (329 - 379 AD) teaches:

“Fasting is the weapon that cuts off sin at its root.”


3.4 Why People Feel No Change      

Because:

  • Prayer becomes unengaged
  • Fasting remains external
  • The heart is left untouched

True transformation requires inner participation, not mere outward practice.


4. Synergy: Divine-Human Cooperation

4.1 What is Synergy?

Synergy refers to the cooperation between divine grace and human freedom. It means:

  • God acts
  • The human person responds

“We are God’s fellow workers - ከእርሱ ጋር አብረን የምንሠራ ነንና። (1 Corinthians 3:9)


4.2 Biblical Foundation

“…በፍርሃትና በመንቀጥቀጥ የራሳችሁን መዳን ፈጽሙ፤ስለ በጎ ፈቃዱ መፈለግንም ማድረግንም በእናንተ የሚሠራ እግዚአብሔር ነውና። (Philippians 2:12–13)

This reveals two inseparable realities:

  • Human effort is real and necessary
  • Divine grace (መለኮታዊ ጸጋ) is the primary source and continual sustainer of all spiritual growth and healing

4.3 Patristic Insight                  

As St. Maximus the Confessor (580 – 662 AD) teaches:

“Grace does not destroy freedom, but fulfills it.”

4.4 Again, Why People Feel No Change                     

Because synergy is incomplete:

  • Either there is self-reliance without grace
  • or laziness without struggle

Spiritual life is neither automation nor inactivity—it is cooperation.


5. Applying the Case: “Why Do I Not Feel Changed?”

5.1 Orthodox Diagnosis

The issue is not the absence of a transformative grace, but:

  • insufficient depth in repentance
  • weak spiritual attentiveness
  • limited cooperation with grace

5.2 Therapeutic Response       

1. Deepen Repentance

Move beyond external confession toward genuine inner conversion.

2. Approach the Eucharist with Awareness

Receive not by routine, but as a living encounter with Christ.

3. Strengthen Prayer Life

Transition from formal recitation to conscious, heartfelt prayer.

4. Practice Ascetic Cooperation

Engage fasting, vigilance (inner guarding), watchfulness (active guarding against thoughts and temptations), silence, humility, continual prayer, almsgiving, bodily discipline, obedience, and repentance as ascetical instruments through which divine grace heals and reorders the human person.


5.3 Spiritual Encouragement

ወደ እግዚአብሔር ቅረቡ ወደ እናንተም ይቀርባል።(James 4:8)

God is never distant. Often, it is the human movement that needs to wake up.


Conclusion

Orthodox Christian teaching affirms:
• Spiritual grace is always active within the Church
• The Sacraments, such as confession, repentance, Eucharist, along with ascetical practices, fasting, prayers, watchfulness, vigilance, silence, obedience, self-control, stillness, and humility, are genuine channels of healing
• Transformation requires synergy between divine grace and human cooperation
• Change is often gradual rather than merely emotional

Thus, the question:

“Why do I not feel changed?”

finds its answer:

  • Because healing operates deeper than feelings
  • Because healing requires human cooperation with divine grace
  • Because transformation is gradually realized as a lifelong process of spiritual growth

As Isaac the Syrian (613 – 700 AD) teaches:

“The measure of progress is not feelings, but humility.”



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