Parker’s Reviews > Divine Eros: Hymns of Saint Symeon the New Theologian > Status Update
Parker
is on page 58 of 419
So far (only seven hymns in), I'm finding this to be a mix of stirring devotional language (I've already jotted down a paraphrased excerpt from hymn #5 to use as a public prayer of confession) and uncomfortable theological speech. I already take issue with the eastern conceptualization of theosis, but his description of it as "becoming God" or being "God by adoption" just feels icky. lol
— Feb 08, 2026 02:52AM
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Parker’s Previous Updates
Parker
is on page 301 of 419
I can only hope that if and when I ever have difficulty with my congregation, that Jesus will do for me as he did for Symeon: Grant me a vision in which he warns, point-blank, that anybody who won't obey my words (to the death, even!) is essentially forfeiting their salvation.
The longer I read these poems, the more convinced I am Symeon's visions were mere dreams or hallucinations at best.
— Mar 24, 2026 03:37AM
The longer I read these poems, the more convinced I am Symeon's visions were mere dreams or hallucinations at best.
Parker
is on page 291 of 419
"And if you reject my commands and you are vexed by them,
and you consider it a shame and a dishonor
to suffer and to lay down your soul for my commands,
then why do you ask to learn how you must be saved,
and by what practices you may befriend Me?
And why do you call Me your God?
And why do you stupidly think you believe in Me?
For I willingly suffered these things for your sake."
— Mar 23, 2026 03:06AM
and you consider it a shame and a dishonor
to suffer and to lay down your soul for my commands,
then why do you ask to learn how you must be saved,
and by what practices you may befriend Me?
And why do you call Me your God?
And why do you stupidly think you believe in Me?
For I willingly suffered these things for your sake."
Parker
is on page 275 of 419
Gotta say Symeon's theological reasoning is nowhere near as strong as his eastern forefathers like Gregory of Nazianzus or Athanasius.
In hymn 34 he claims that our present union with God must be perceptible with the senses. That has to be the case because either we're united with the immortal (which we would obviously see/feel) or else God must become mortal through union with us.
— Mar 19, 2026 03:18AM
In hymn 34 he claims that our present union with God must be perceptible with the senses. That has to be the case because either we're united with the immortal (which we would obviously see/feel) or else God must become mortal through union with us.
Parker
is on page 182 of 419
At times, Symeon's prayers sounds to me like the bits and pieces I've encountered from other mystical traditions (primarily Islamic and Buddhist). I get that I'm very much a post-enlightenment Westerner, but I really don't see the appeal. Anyway, the similarities (especially with the excerpts of Islamic mysticism I've read) make me think the whole endeavor is more fleshly than its practitioners would like to admit.
— Mar 07, 2026 03:22AM

