May you, reader, be blessed and enlightened and encouraged in your struggle by the wisdom contained in this book, to the glory of the All-Holy Trinity and the salvation of your soul.
Bishop Basil of Wichita and Mid-America (Antiochian Archdiocese)
This book will be marked up and well-worn by those who own it and no doubt shared with other Christians who long for a well of renewal and blessed retreat.
Very Rev. Dr Chad Hatfield, President of St Vladimir s Seminary
Defeating Sin will help readers better understand the disease that troubles the human soul. Fr Joseph David Huneycutt provides invaluable aids in the spiritual life. He arms readers for spiritual warfare by giving them the tools to help them repent, to turn away from the passions and toward the virtues, and to make a thorough confession.
Providing both the diagnosis and a course of spiritual therapy, Defeating Sin investigates the nature of the passions and the saving grace of the virtues. Many fundamental questions are
What led to the fall of the devil and his angels?
What led to the fall of Adam and Eve, our first parents?
What causes our own falls?
How can we identify the deceptions and temptations of the enemy?
How do we get up when we fall?
How can we struggle toward God-pleasing solutions to our problems?
There's an old adage that Medical Students read about dread diseases in their studies, and self-diagnose themselves with every possible ailment. I felt the same way when I read this book - it's an exploration of the Seven Deadly Sins (easily rattled off if you remember the mnemonic "Pale Gas") and their corresponding inverses, the Seven Virtues, and you definitely see yourself in every word written. Gulp. It's not really what I'd classify as a book, though. It is really lecture notes for a retreat on this topic. I'd love to attend one of the retreats. Thank you to my dear friend who loaned me this book, it is definitely good Lenten reading.
This is an excellent book to assist the reader in making their Confession through the use of the mnemonic PALE GAS to remind us of the Seven Deadly Sins (Pride, Anger, Lust, Envy, Greed, Avarice, and Sloth) and their corresponding virtues. Also valuable is the analogy of the two trees in the Garden of Eden. The Tree of Life, which was forbidden to humankind, reappears on Calvary. Paradoxically, the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil appears good to us while the Tree of Life, in the form of Christ crucified, appears to be death when it is in fact the only path to light and life.
This is an excellent volume on the passions and their opposing virtues. I highly recommend it to everyone who has struggled in the past or has given up and settled into living with the passions. I especially found the imagery of the Two Trees, especially the final chapter "The Two Trees," which is a perfect tool to use in groups or on one's own to reflect on the struggles of overcoming the passions.
Above all else, I recommend reading this and talking to one's spiritual father in order to receive instruction for what one should do.
While I am not part of the Orthodox Church, I found this book to be well written and easy to understand. Fr. Honeycutt does an excellent job of showing what is at the root of all sin and how we should seek the virtues to live a life that pleases our Heavenly Father. The examples he gives from his retreats are extremely helpful. I highly recommend this book for anyone who is seeking a closer walk with our Heavenly Father.
Imminently practical distillation of Patristic wisdom and psychology for the cure of the passions. This work will be of tremendous service to Orthodox Christians and Christians of other traditions seeking guidance for the spiritual healing of the passions.
I thought this was a good read during Great Lent about vice and virtue from an orthodox perspective. Highly quotable of the church fathers, yet still readable, I think I'll be coming back to this every year or so around the fasts.