Dark Matters
Evagrius and the Logismoi — When Demons Became Thoughts What if spiritual warfare is not first fought in dramatic encounters—but in the quiet movements of the mind? In the late fourth century, Evagrius Ponticus withdrew from the intellectual centers of the Christian world into the Egyptian desert, convinced that the most dangerous battles were not external but interior. There, among the desert fathers, he developed one of the most influential frameworks in Christian history for understanding temptation, discernment, and demonic influence—not as spectacle, but as thought. In this episode of Dark Matters, Dr. Luke Bray explores Evagrius’ teaching on the logismoi—the intrusive thought-patterns through which demonic intelligences sought to unsettle the soul. Drawing from Evagrius’ own writings and the lived experience of the desert monks, this episode traces how early Christianity understood thoughts as spiritually charged movements, shaped by memory, desire, bodily weakness, and unseen suggestion. In this episode, you’ll explore: • Why Evagrius believed not every thought originates from the self • How the eight logismoi map predictable patterns of spiritual attack • The role of attention, imagination, and memory in demonic provocation • Why discernment—not confrontation—was considered the highest spiritual virtue Further Investigation (HDC-Optimized): • Praktikos and Chapters on Prayer — Evagrius Ponticus • The Eight Evil Thoughts — Evagrius Ponticus • Evagrius Ponticus: The Praktikos & Chapters on Prayer — Robert E. Sinkewicz (translator & commentator) This episode is part of the ongoing research and teaching work of Stratias Ministries, dedicated to biblical theology, historical clarity, and spiritual formation. Learn more at https://www.stratiasministries.org [https://www.stratiasministries.org/], and explore the full Dark Matters series at https://www.stratiasministries.org/dark-matters [https://www.stratiasministries.org/dark-matters]. Note: This episode approaches Evagrius’ writings as historical and theological sources within early Christian demonology and ascetic practice. It is not intended as devotional material or a guide for spiritual or therapeutic practice.
9 episodios
Comentarios
0Sé la primera persona en comentar
¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Dark Matters!