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The shallow reader sees only a warning against suspicion. The deeper reader trembles, because this account unveils something far more demanding: the measure of a life so united to God that it no longer moves by ordinary instinct.
Most men protect reputation.
St. Vitalios of Alexandria did none of this.
He entered the place others cursed. He walked into darkness not to taste it, but to burn within it like hidden fire. He labored by day, ate almost nothing, gave his wages away, and spent whole nights standing in prayer for women whom society used, despised, and discarded. While others preached virtue from a distance, he purchased for them one night of freedom and filled that purchased silence with psalms, tears, prostrations, and intercession.
This is not recklessness. It is sanctity.
The prudent man says: “Protect yourself.”
The calculating man asks: “What will people think?”
The world calls such love foolish because it cannot recognize anything that does not orbit self-preservation.
What made this possible? Not mere compassion. Not personality. Not activism. Not moral zeal.
It was hypostatic life: the human person so opened to God that divine love begins to move through human faculties. The man remains man, yet his heart becomes a place where another will acts, another mercy breathes, another courage rises. He does not merely imitate Christ. Christ lives in him.
So he can go where others cannot go.
This is why the story wounds us.
We do not simply condemn others. We also love within limits. We forgive within limits. We serve within limits. We give when it costs little. We remain charitable so long as our image stays intact. We call this balance, prudence, maturity. Often it is fear wearing respectable clothing.
St. Vitalios of Alexandria accepted the loss of reputation as the price of hidden obedience. He let the city think him filthy while heaven knew him radiant. Few can bear this martyrdom. Many would rather be praised for lesser virtues than despised for greater love.
And see the fruit.
Women were restored.
One hidden man transformed a multitude.
We live in an age obsessed with visibility, explanation, branding, image, and public vindication. We cannot bear to be misunderstood for an afternoon. Yet the saints often accepted misunderstanding for years.
Why?
Because once the heart belongs wholly to God, reputation becomes dust.
The final words of the Elder are written not in ink, but on the ground. Dust speaking to dust:
Judge nothing before the time.
Not because evil is unreal.
The woman you dismiss may be one night from repentance.
If you would know whether Christ lives in you, ask not how pious you appear.
Ask this:
Can you love where there is no reward?
There begins the path of the saints.
---
Text of chat during the group:
00:03:39 Janine: Yes
00:04:07 Fr. Charbel Abernethy: Evergetinos Volume III page 2 section 2
00:05:06 Janine: Father ..do you think the Holy Spirit is dismantling us throughout our whole life? Or is it a later stage?
00:06:06 Janine: Yes..that makes sense!
00:11:20 Sam: Greetings 🙏 from Australia Father.
00:14:06 Fr. Charbel Abernethy: Evergetinos Volume III page 2 section 2
00:15:15 Sam: Quick question Fr. How can we bring love for the Desert Fathers in our church divided by modernism and other ideologies including sedevacantism
00:16:52 Sam: I often find people including priests aren't interested when I suggest books such as ladder of divine ascent.
00:17:01 Sam: Gday
00:18:59 Fr. Charbel Abernethy: Evergetinos Volume III page 2 section 2
00:31:25 Maureen Cunningham: Maybe he saw them as his daughters
00:46:14 Anthony: Should you point out that it's not a great idea for a young person to do this
00:54:54 Kate: I understand what you are saying about being courageous. What about not wanting to put ourselves in the path of temptation? Was the monk confident that he would not fall into temptation? Can we ever be sure that we would not succumb?
00:54:56 Maureen Cunningham: Mother Theresa
00:55:59 Danny Moulton: Years ago a co-worker once invited me to a Bible study and began his invitation with the words, "I don't know if you/re a Christian or not, but if you are ..." It was one of the most convicting moments of my life.
00:56:13 Joan Chakonas: What’s great about the writing and documentation of these actions of these monks is that it is such a gift of God to set forth the benefits of taking action in spite of the obvious risk.
00:59:49 Janine: Reacted to "What’s great about t…" with 🩷
01:01:08 Joan Chakonas: Reacted to "What’s great about the writing and documentation of these actions of these monks is that it is such a gift of God to set forth the benefits of taking action in spite of the obvious risk." with 🩷
01:02:36 Forrest: That humble monk securely cloaked the women with something greater than Constantine's mantle.
01:07:27 John ‘Jack’: I purchased a new business vehicle recently, it was non descriptive, plain white, I thought for a while about leaving it that way after 35 yrs in business I’m really not that concerned about the advertising aspect, but I had to admit I drove with a bit less professionalism with the blank van than I otherwise would have.
I’ve since lettered it, for my sanctities sake .
01:08:30 Forrest: Reacted to "I purchased a new bu..." with ❤️
01:17:51 Sam: Many saints have gone to the gates of hell to save souls. The common denominator is the extent of their holiness, formation and prudence plus virtues
01:20:43 Maureen Cunningham: Thank you Blessing
01:21:17 Andrew Adams: Thanks be to God! Thank you, Father!
01:21:19 Rebecca Thérèse: Thank you☺️
01:21:22 Bob Čihák, AZ: Thank you and love you, Father.
01:21:27 Julie: God bless
By Father David Abernethy4.8
8686 ratings
The shallow reader sees only a warning against suspicion. The deeper reader trembles, because this account unveils something far more demanding: the measure of a life so united to God that it no longer moves by ordinary instinct.
Most men protect reputation.
St. Vitalios of Alexandria did none of this.
He entered the place others cursed. He walked into darkness not to taste it, but to burn within it like hidden fire. He labored by day, ate almost nothing, gave his wages away, and spent whole nights standing in prayer for women whom society used, despised, and discarded. While others preached virtue from a distance, he purchased for them one night of freedom and filled that purchased silence with psalms, tears, prostrations, and intercession.
This is not recklessness. It is sanctity.
The prudent man says: “Protect yourself.”
The calculating man asks: “What will people think?”
The world calls such love foolish because it cannot recognize anything that does not orbit self-preservation.
What made this possible? Not mere compassion. Not personality. Not activism. Not moral zeal.
It was hypostatic life: the human person so opened to God that divine love begins to move through human faculties. The man remains man, yet his heart becomes a place where another will acts, another mercy breathes, another courage rises. He does not merely imitate Christ. Christ lives in him.
So he can go where others cannot go.
This is why the story wounds us.
We do not simply condemn others. We also love within limits. We forgive within limits. We serve within limits. We give when it costs little. We remain charitable so long as our image stays intact. We call this balance, prudence, maturity. Often it is fear wearing respectable clothing.
St. Vitalios of Alexandria accepted the loss of reputation as the price of hidden obedience. He let the city think him filthy while heaven knew him radiant. Few can bear this martyrdom. Many would rather be praised for lesser virtues than despised for greater love.
And see the fruit.
Women were restored.
One hidden man transformed a multitude.
We live in an age obsessed with visibility, explanation, branding, image, and public vindication. We cannot bear to be misunderstood for an afternoon. Yet the saints often accepted misunderstanding for years.
Why?
Because once the heart belongs wholly to God, reputation becomes dust.
The final words of the Elder are written not in ink, but on the ground. Dust speaking to dust:
Judge nothing before the time.
Not because evil is unreal.
The woman you dismiss may be one night from repentance.
If you would know whether Christ lives in you, ask not how pious you appear.
Ask this:
Can you love where there is no reward?
There begins the path of the saints.
---
Text of chat during the group:
00:03:39 Janine: Yes
00:04:07 Fr. Charbel Abernethy: Evergetinos Volume III page 2 section 2
00:05:06 Janine: Father ..do you think the Holy Spirit is dismantling us throughout our whole life? Or is it a later stage?
00:06:06 Janine: Yes..that makes sense!
00:11:20 Sam: Greetings 🙏 from Australia Father.
00:14:06 Fr. Charbel Abernethy: Evergetinos Volume III page 2 section 2
00:15:15 Sam: Quick question Fr. How can we bring love for the Desert Fathers in our church divided by modernism and other ideologies including sedevacantism
00:16:52 Sam: I often find people including priests aren't interested when I suggest books such as ladder of divine ascent.
00:17:01 Sam: Gday
00:18:59 Fr. Charbel Abernethy: Evergetinos Volume III page 2 section 2
00:31:25 Maureen Cunningham: Maybe he saw them as his daughters
00:46:14 Anthony: Should you point out that it's not a great idea for a young person to do this
00:54:54 Kate: I understand what you are saying about being courageous. What about not wanting to put ourselves in the path of temptation? Was the monk confident that he would not fall into temptation? Can we ever be sure that we would not succumb?
00:54:56 Maureen Cunningham: Mother Theresa
00:55:59 Danny Moulton: Years ago a co-worker once invited me to a Bible study and began his invitation with the words, "I don't know if you/re a Christian or not, but if you are ..." It was one of the most convicting moments of my life.
00:56:13 Joan Chakonas: What’s great about the writing and documentation of these actions of these monks is that it is such a gift of God to set forth the benefits of taking action in spite of the obvious risk.
00:59:49 Janine: Reacted to "What’s great about t…" with 🩷
01:01:08 Joan Chakonas: Reacted to "What’s great about the writing and documentation of these actions of these monks is that it is such a gift of God to set forth the benefits of taking action in spite of the obvious risk." with 🩷
01:02:36 Forrest: That humble monk securely cloaked the women with something greater than Constantine's mantle.
01:07:27 John ‘Jack’: I purchased a new business vehicle recently, it was non descriptive, plain white, I thought for a while about leaving it that way after 35 yrs in business I’m really not that concerned about the advertising aspect, but I had to admit I drove with a bit less professionalism with the blank van than I otherwise would have.
I’ve since lettered it, for my sanctities sake .
01:08:30 Forrest: Reacted to "I purchased a new bu..." with ❤️
01:17:51 Sam: Many saints have gone to the gates of hell to save souls. The common denominator is the extent of their holiness, formation and prudence plus virtues
01:20:43 Maureen Cunningham: Thank you Blessing
01:21:17 Andrew Adams: Thanks be to God! Thank you, Father!
01:21:19 Rebecca Thérèse: Thank you☺️
01:21:22 Bob Čihák, AZ: Thank you and love you, Father.
01:21:27 Julie: God bless

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