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Original Article

Cultivating Self-Control:Foundations andMethods in the ChristianTheological Tradition

James S. SpiegelTaylor University

AbstractIn the New Testament the concept of self-control or voluntary restraint of one’s desires ishighlighted as a “fruit of the Spirit,” a trait of the spiritually mature, and a hallmark ofChristian leadership. But as a Christian virtue, self-control is a product of spiritual discipline,a trait for which the Christian must engage in “strict training.” This biblical theme hasinspired a long history of Christian moral-spiritual practices aimed at cultivating self-masteryor strength of will. Here I discuss several of these as found in the writings of the DesertFathers, Augustine of Hippo, Julian of Norwich, Thomas Aquinas, John Calvin, Thomas àKempis, and John Wesley. Despite their theological diversity, these Christian thinkers areunited in the belief that self-control can and ought to be intentionally nurtured via thesystematic practice of self-denial.

Keywordsself-control, virtue, Christian theology, spiritual discipline

In the New Testament the concept of self-control or voluntary restraint of one’s

desires is highlighted as a “fruit of the Spirit” (Gal. 5:22–23), a trait of the spiritually

mature (Titus 2:2–6, 12), and a hallmark of Christian leadership (1 Tim. 3:2). But as

a Christian virtue, self-control is not a trait that one develops naturally or passively.

It is a product of spiritual discipline. In the Pauline epistles the Apostle directs his

readers to “train for godliness” (1 Tim. 4:8) and to do “strict training” (1 Cor. 9:25)

Corresponding author:

James S. Spiegel, Taylor University, 236 West Reade Ave., Upland, 46989 IN, USA.

Email: [email protected]

Journal of Spiritual Formation and Soul Care2020, Vol. 13(2) 193–210

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sagepub.com/journals-permissionsDOI: 10.1177/1939790920918881

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for the sake of virtue and the eternal rewards it brings.1 This counsel is especially

apposite when it comes to self-control, as this is a core Christian virtue, essential for

the development of many other virtues.2 Throughout church history the ways in

which Christians have sought to do this have been rich and varied. Here I intend

to explore some of the principal ways this has been done, mining resources from a

broad range of Christian thinkers: ante-Nicene church fathers, monks, mystics,

scholastics, Reformers, and later Protestant theologians. These include personal

dispositions and motivations which are critical for the pursuit of self-control as well

as methods and practices for actively nurturing this virtue, such as fasting, sacrifice,

meditation, prayer, rebuke, admonition, and moral exemplars.

I should note that many of the guidelines, methods, and practices discussed here

are not uniquely Christian. That is, some of these means of cultivating the virtue of

self-control have been used or recommended in other religious and philosophical

traditions. However, they are nonetheless distinctively Christian in the sense that

they all flow naturally from Christian moral theology. Moreover, in some ways there

is a uniquely Christian quality to the moral regimens described here, as well some of

the dispositional and motivational components. Here I hope to show that these

spiritual practices are not only biblical but have a long history of deployment among

Christian moral theologians, whose counsel and insights regarding these practices

are as useful and relevant today as they have ever been. We will see that despite their

theological diversity, these Christian thinkers are united in the belief that self-control

can and ought to be intentionally nurtured via systematic practice of self-denial.

Cultivating self-control—some distinctions

The cultivation of any virtue is a complex and complicated business. So to simplify

and clarify our discussion of the modes of cultivating self-control, it will be helpful

to make a few distinctions, each of which will be unpacked somewhat throughout the

course of this discussion. First, we may make some distinctions related to the

dialectic relationship between self and other. One of these pertains to the practice

of cultivating self-control in oneself as opposed to cultivating this virtue in another

person. We most naturally think of building this virtue in ourselves as we fast or

practice other disciplines of self-denial. But through modeling, prayer, and personal

rebuke, the virtue may be nurtured in others as well.

We may also distinguish between building self-control in the individual as

opposed to cultivating this virtue in an entire community. Again, paradigmatically,

the pursuit of growth in self-control is a mostly personal and private affair, whether

undertaken alone or between two people, such as in a mentoring or accountability

1. Unless otherwise noted, all biblical quotations in this article are taken from the New International

Version of the Bible (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1973).

2. For a discussion of how self-control is a core Christian virtue, see chapter 1 in my How to be Good in

a World Gone Bad: Living a Life of Christian Virtue (Grand Rapids: Kregel, 2004).

194 Journal of Spiritual Formation and Soul Care 13(2)

relationship (e.g. teacher–student, counselor–client, etc.). But a pastor, coach, or

even a business executive may work to instill self-control in their congregation,

team, or corporation. In fact, we might even say that to succeed in such leadership

roles, one must cultivate self-control in the community one leads.

Another distinction is that between attitudes and practices. By this I mean to

distinguish between the intentions, perspectives, or aims one might bring to the

pursuit of self-control, on the one hand, and the actual practices or disciplines one

performs in order to manifest or develop those attitudes. In a sport such as basketball

one must have an attitude of dedication and commitment to the team but must also

engage in practices of wind sprints, shooting drills, and passing drills. Similarly, in

the moral life, one can only grow in a virtue if one maintains a certain mentality

while also disciplining oneself in tangible ways.

Finally, when it comes to the intentional practices aimed at cultivating self-

control, we may distinguish between active and passive forms. There is the practice

of positive or engagement-oriented disciplines (e.g., meditation and prayer), and

there is the cultivation of self-control through negative or abstinence-oriented dis-

ciplines (e.g., fasting and sacrifice). That both active and passive disciplines should

be practiced for the development of self-control is evident in the fact that this virtue

likewise takes active and passive forms. The stingy or cowardly person must take

active steps to be virtuously generous or bold, while the recovering alcoholic must

regularly exhibit passive restraint to remain sober.

In what follows, all of these aspects of the cultivation of the virtue of self-control

will come into play in various ways. And some of these distinctions will provide

organizational structure to the discussion.

Cultivating self-control: Dispositions and motivations

From a Christian standpoint, the personal psychological foundation for cultivating

self-control lies in certain dispositions or attitudes, specifically regarding one’s life

aims and commitments. Specifically, there must be a serious devotion to God and

recognition that this devotion comes with certain costs as well as profound rewards

for those who assume the mantle of the virtuous life. In the Old Testament this theme

is evident in such charges as these: “sin is crouching at your door; it desires to have

you, but you must rule over it” (Gen. 4:7) and “like a city whose walls are broken

through is a person who lacks self-control” (Prov. 25:28). With the ministry of Christ

in the New Testament this call is presented in more severe terms, as Jesus declares,

“whoever wants to be my disciple must deny themselves and take up their cross daily

and follow me. For whoever wants to save their life will lose it, but whoever loses

their life for me will save it” (Lk. 9:23–24). Elsewhere, in the Sermon on the Mount,

Jesus says, “if your right eye causes you to stumble, gouge it out and throw it away.

It is better for you to lose one part of your body than for your whole body to be

thrown into hell. And if your right hand causes you to stumble, cut it off and throw it

away. It is better for you to lose one part of your body than for your whole body to go

Spiegel 195

into hell” (Mt. 5:29–30). Clearly, these are hyperbolic statements, the point of which

is that the Christian moral life is demanding and requires an extreme level of

commitment. The road that leads to eternal life is narrow, and few are those who

find it, as Jesus notes elsewhere (Mt. 7:14).

Coming to a proper understanding of the serious demands of the Christian moral

life is the first critical step in the Christian’s pursuit of self-control. Because this is a

countercultural teaching that is rarely emphasized (or even explicitly preached and

taught) in Western churches, it should not be taken for granted that most Christians

properly embrace it. But the contemporary American church is hardly unique in this.

The first-century church also apparently struggled to understand this, as is evident in

the Apostle Paul’s repeated emphatic exhortations to train for the righteous life.

However, in contrast to Jesus in the text cited above, Paul deploys a positive incen-

tive rather than the threat of hell to motivate his readers when he says, “Have nothing

to do with godless myths and old wives’ tales; rather, train yourself to be godly. For

physical training is of some value, but godliness has value for all things, holding

promise for both the present life and the life to come” (1 Tim. 4:7–8). Elsewhere he

makes a more expansive application of this metaphor:

Do you not know that in a race all the runners run, but only one gets the prize? Run in

such a way as to get the prize. Everyone who competes in the games goes into strict

training. They do it to get a crown that will not last, but we do it to get a crown that will

last forever. Therefore I do not run like someone running aimlessly; I do not fight like a

boxer beating the air. No, I strike a blow to my body and make it my slave so that after I

have preached to others, I myself will not be disqualified for the prize. (1 Cor. 9:24–27)

In contrast to Jesus, Paul’s metaphor of choice here is not self-mutilation but athletic

competition. Still, the import of his admonition is severe, acknowledging the need to

be harsh with oneself, even to the point of regarding one’s own body as a “slave.”

This perspective on the body and its impulses is one that remains prominent through-

out the history of Christian moral–spiritual praxis, as we will see. But, again, this is a

deeply countercultural perspective which, in addition to its inherent practical diffi-

culty, makes this teaching doubly challenging. To overcome the naturally strong

psychological and cultural resistance to this biblical teaching, the Christian can find

tremendous help and support from thinkers down through the ages who have

expounded upon these biblical teachings in diverse ways. Some have emphasized

chastened dispositions toward the self in the form of self-renunciation and mortifi-

cation of the flesh, while others have focused on reverence for God and our escha-

tological hope in Christ. Let’s consider some examples of each.

Self-renunciation and the willingness to suffer

Just as the crucifixion of Jesus is central to Christian soteriology, the general practice

of self-renunciation is a core concept in the Christian moral life, as has been noted by

196 Journal of Spiritual Formation and Soul Care 13(2)

theologians down through the ages, from the Desert Fathers to John Calvin to

contemporary times. One of the paragons of extreme self-renunciation was the

Desert Father Antony the Great. His remarkable spiritual exploits were recorded

by Athanasius, who thoroughly described Antony’s intense mortification of the

body. He typically ate just once daily and often received food only every second

or fourth day. His food was bread and salt, and he drank only water. Antony often

went without sleep, and when he did sleep, it was on a rush mat, if not the bare

ground. As for his daily activities, he spent much time doing manual labor. Antony

maintained this lifestyle of stringent self-denial because, as he put it, “the soul’s

intensity is strong when the pleasures of the body are weakened.”3

New Testament inspiration for this perspective is found in the Apostle Paul’s

declaration, “I have been crucified with Christ and I no longer live, but Christ lives

in me. The life I now live in the body, I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me

and gave himself for me” (Gal. 2:20). This theme has been expounded upon by many

Christian thinkers and has inspired countless ascetic practices. Desert Father John

Cassian calls self-renunciation “nothing but the evidence of the cross and of morti-

fication. And so you must know that today you are dead to this world and its deeds

and desires.”4 And Thomas à Kempis counsels, “unless you do violence to yourself,

you shall never get the victory over wickedness.”5 Elsewhere he writes,

Nature is loath to die, or to be kept down, or to be overcome, or to be in subjection, or

readily to be subdued. But grace studies self-mortification, resists sensuality, seeks to

be in subjection, longs to be defeated, has no wish to use its own liberty. It loves to be

kept under discipline, and desires not to rule over any, but under God to live, to stand,

and to be.6

This is strong and severe imagery, presumably inspired by Jesus’ and the Apostle

Paul’s violent imagery of self-mortification (i.e., self-crucifixion, self-eye-gouging,

and self-beating).

Lest we think of extreme self-denial as the exclusive emphasis of the ascetic

tradition, we should note that the same teaching resonates among the more staid

Protestant theologians, including John Calvin and John Wesley. Calvin goes so far as

to assert that self-denial constitutes the essence of the Christian moral life, noting

that “unless you give up all thought of self and, so to speak, get out of yourself, you

will accomplish nothing here.”7 Wesley makes the same point, in terms that have a

3. Athanasius, The Life of Antony and The Letter to Marcellinus, trans. Robert Gregg (New York:

Paulist Press, 1980), 36.

4. John Cassian, The Twelve Books on the Institutes of the Coenobia and the Remedies for the Eight

Principal Faults, trans. Edgar C. S. Gibson (London: Aeterna Press, 2015), 55.

5. Thomas à Kempis, Of the Imitation of Christ (Pittsburgh: Whitaker House, 1981), 49.

6. Ibid., 200.

7. John Calvin, Institutes of the Christian Religion, trans. Ford Lewis Battles (Philadelphia:

Westminster Press, 1960), 695.

Spiegel 197

Calvinist ring, reinforcing the need for extreme steps to restrain one’s innate incli-

nations: “Our will, depraved equally with the rest, is wholly bent to indulge our

natural corruption. On the other hand, it is the will of God that we resist and

counteract that corruption, not at some times or in some things only, but at all times,

and in all things.”8

The call to self-renunciation and mortification of the body presupposes an atti-

tude that is probably best described as a psychological paradox, and that is the

willingness to suffer. Our most basic biological drive as human beings is self-

preservation, and acquiescence to suffering seems to defy this. Though counter-

intuitive, it is a recurrent New Testament theme, as suffering unites the believer

to Christ, whose redemptive work was characterized by suffering. The Christian

must participate in Jesus’ sufferings in order to participate in his resurrection and

glory. The Apostle Paul writes, “If we are children, then we are heirs—heirs of God

and coheirs with Christ, if indeed we share in his sufferings in order that we may also

share in his glory” (Rom. 8:17; see also Phil. 3:10–11). And Peter tells us to “rejoice

that you participate in the sufferings of Christ, so that you may be overjoyed when

his glory is revealed” (1 Pet. 4:13).

Many of the greatest writers on Christian spirituality have emphasized this point,

noting that, again paradoxically, to welcome suffering is the key to finding true joy

and satisfaction. Thus, Thomas à Kempis says, “As long as it is grievous to you to

suffer, and you desire to flee it, so long shall you be ill at ease, and the desire of

escaping tribulation will follow you everywhere. If you set yourself to what you

ought, namely, to suffering and to death, it will be better with you and you shall find

peace.”9

In some cases Christian ascetics have taken this admonition to entail the appro-

priateness of actual infliction of bodily damage but fortunately this extreme has been

rejected by the mainstream Christian tradition. But what criteria are we to use to

distinguish appropriate and inappropriate forms of suffering? Wesley offers helpful

guidance in this regard when he notes that self-renunciation

does not imply the . . . literally tearing our own flesh: the wearing haircloth, or iron

girdles, or anything else that would impair our bodily health . . . but the embracing the

will of God, though contrary to our own; the choosing wholesome, though bitter,

medicines; the freely accepting temporary pain, of whatever kind, and in whatever

degree, when it is either essentially or accidentally necessary to eternal pleasure.10

Wesley’s observations evidently presuppose two delimiting criteria. One of these is

that proper self-renunciation must not be inimical to the health of one’s body. While

spiritual discipline may, and usually does, cause physical discomfort, this need not

8. John Wesley, “Self-Denial,” The Works of John Wesley, vol. 2 (Nashville: Abingdon, 1984), 242.

9. Of the Imitation of Christ, 90.

10. “Self-Denial” in The Works of John Wesley, 245.

198 Journal of Spiritual Formation and Soul Care 13(2)

and must not involve actual bodily damage. Not all hurt is harm. While the former is

appropriate, the latter is not. The other criterion assumed here by Wesley pertains to

moral necessity. There is an important difference between a willingness to suffer

when morally necessary and when it is not morally necessary. Self-discipline that is

painful should improve us morally somehow. Moreover, Wesley seems to suggest

we may “freely accept” pain even if it does involve harm to the body, even resulting

in death, if to avoid it would be immoral. Presumably he has in mind situations in

which a Christian may be asked to deny her faith or else sin in some way to avoid

injury or death.

As regards the willingness to suffer, how does this connect to self-control? To use

Paul’s terminology, how does this beating of my body effectively make it my

“slave”? One dimension of this surely pertains to the fact that self-control is often

uncomfortable, which makes for a natural deterrent of this virtue. To become accus-

tomed to suffering, even to the point of welcoming it, then, removes or at least

diminishes the force of this deterrent. One is more likely to be self-controlled when

the unpleasant consequences of displaying this virtue are not regarded as signifi-

cantly negative.

Another dimension to the psychological mechanics of suffering and self-control

has to do with the “purging” function of suffering. The great sixteenth-century

Spanish mystic St. John of the Cross expounds on this point extensively. In his

classic meditation Dark Night of the Soul he describes how the spiritual life some-

times brings a season of “purgative contemplation” that brings about a negation of

the self for the sake of God. This “dark night” is an “inflowing of God into the soul,

which purges it from its ignorances and imperfections, habitual, natural and

spiritual.”11 He explains that “inasmuch as the soul is . . . purged from the affections

and desires of sense, it obtains liberty of spirit, whereby in ever greater degree it

gains the twelve fruits of the Holy Spirit. Here, too, it is wondrously delivered from

the hands of its three enemies—devil, world, and flesh.”12 The idea here seems to be

that this dark night quells bodily desires while increasing mental acuity, bringing

about a freedom from spiritual assaults and temptations that typically draw a person

into sin. This principle can be extended beyond the acute “dark night” of contem-

plative purgation to any situation involving suffering. Pain has a way of focusing the

mind, and it naturally diminishes the allure of indulgent pleasures. Perhaps this is

what the Apostle Peter has in mind when he cryptically remarks, “whoever suffers in

the body is done with sin” (1 Pet. 4:1).

11. St. John of the Cross, Dark Night of the Soul, trans. E. Allison Peers (New York: Doubleday, 1990),

100.

12. Ibid., 86.

Spiegel 199

Holy fear and eschatological hope

Another important dimension to the Christian cultivation of virtue is motivational,

and there are two poles to this, negative and positive. On the negative side there is

the fear of God. “Holy fear,” says St. John of the Cross, “is the key and the custodian

of all the virtues.”13 On the positive side, there is the hope and promise of eternal

life, including rewards or “crowns” awaiting the faithful in the next world. This, too,

is a “custodian” of virtue. And both fear and hope are powerful reinforcements of

self-control in particular.

Proverbs 1:7 tells us “the fear of the Lord is the beginning of knowledge.” The

writer of Hebrews says, “since we are receiving a kingdom that cannot be shaken, let

us be thankful and worship God in reverence and fear in a way that pleases him”

(Heb. 12:28; ISV). And scores of biblical passages extol godly people for their fear

of God. At the same time, the Apostle John declares, “There is no fear in love. But

perfect love drives out fear, because fear has to do with punishment. The one who

fears is not made perfect in love.” So what exactly is the holy fear that should be

displayed by the devout? One dimension seems to concern deep moral respect, the

honoring of God as holy, a reverence for his absolute purity and goodness. Another

aspect has to do with acknowledgment of sovereign divine power, God’s capacity to

do whatsoever he wills. Third, the biblical concept of holy fear involves recognition

of God as judge and executor of our eternal destiny. Given God’s grace and mercy,

none of this would necessitate anything like an anticipation or anxiety over one’s

being personally condemned. But the understanding that one’s moral corruption

nevertheless warrants such condemnation and that there are those who are subjects

of such judgment and wrath should inspire a moral sobriety and seriousness.

Now, as for the positive motivational pole of the cultivation of virtue, what is

Christian eschatological hope? For one thing it means an embrace of the promise of a

glorious afterlife. This is a constant New Testament theme, reiterated by Paul when

he testifies, “I consider that our present sufferings are not worth comparing with the

glory that will be revealed in us” (Rom. 8:18) and Peter who celebrates believers’

new birth “into an inheritance that can never perish, spoil or fade. This inheritance is

kept in heaven for you, who through faith are shielded by God’s power until the

coming of the salvation that is ready to be revealed in the last time” (1 Pet. 1:4–5).

The eschatological hope also entails an acceptance of the promise of tangible

rewards in the next world, to which Paul refers when he says, “there is in store for

me the crown of righteousness, which the Lord, the righteous Judge, will award to

me on that day—and not only to me, but also to all who have longed for his

appearing” (2 Tim. 4:8; see also 1 Cor. 9:25; 1 Thess. 2:19; and James 1:12). As

to the precise nature or import of this “crown,” biblical scholars and theologians can

only speculate, but that it will be good and pleasing, all are agreed.

13. Ibid., 95.

200 Journal of Spiritual Formation and Soul Care 13(2)

So how do holy fear and Christian eschatological hope motivate self-control? I

think this happens in two major ways. First, the motivational power of Christian fear

and hope has to do with simple gratitude, an abiding thankfulness for all that we’ve

been spared and what we’ve been promised. The grateful servant is an obedient

servant, and the Christian gospel, exchanging eternal destruction for everlasting

blessedness, creates gratefulness to the extreme.

Second, Christian fear and hope reinforce a transcendent orientation, which

diminishes the allure of transitory bodily temptations. Specifically, to bear in mind

the punishments we avoid and the goods we will attain in the coming greater reality

if we persist in obedient faith can only enhance the attractiveness of virtuous choices

and provide a spur to exercise the self-control necessary to make these choices when

tempted to succumb to vice. This could be expressed in terms of cost–benefit

analysis. The passing pleasures of food, sex, and money pale in comparison to the

everlasting pleasures of eternal joy and the rewards of the afterlife. Or, negatively,

no earthly pleasures could possibly be worth the devastating afterlife consequences

of living according to fleshly vices.

Cultivating self-control: Methods and practices

In the Christian theological tradition the cultivation of self-control is not just about

the generation and maintenance of certain dispositions and motivations. It is also

about practice, the employment of specific disciplines designed to bring the believer

into active cooperation with the Holy Spirit in the process of moral growth. Some of

these disciplines involve abstinence while others involve engagement. Here I will

focus on four such disciplines that are especially effective in building self-control,

two of which involve abstinence and two of which involve certain forms of engage-

ment. None of these is entirely exclusive to the Christian tradition nor even neces-

sarily to religious practice. But all of them—fasting, sacrifice, meditation, and

prayer—are distinctive Christian practices.

Fasting

Fasting, or the voluntary abstinence from food and/or water for the sake of spiritual

growth, is an especially powerful spiritual discipline, serving diverse functions in the

moral-spiritual life of the Christian. Common biblical occasions for fasting include

seeking divine forgiveness, counsel, or strength. We see fasting on occasions of

repentance in the Old Testament “day of atonement” (Lev. 23:27), Israel’s repen-

tance of idol worship (1 Sam. 7:2–6), the repentance of Nineveh (Jonah 3), and the

repentance of the apostle Paul (Acts 9:1–9). Occasions of fasting while seeking

God’s counsel or blessing are found in the commissioning of Paul and Barnabas

(Acts 13:2–3) and those same apostles’ commissioning of elders at the churches of

Lystra, Iconium, and Antioch (Acts 14:21–23). And biblical instances of fasting to

seek divine strength are found in Jesus’ wilderness fast (Matt. 4:1–2) and where

Spiegel 201

Jesus says, according to some manuscripts, that certain demons “can come out only

by prayer and fasting” (Mark 9:29).

Among other things, fasting trains us to maintain our focus on God through

suffering, makes a statement of our moral-spiritual earnestness (especially with

prayer), and reminds us that our bodily comforts are not most important. But as a

means of cultivating self-control fasting is particularly useful, as it builds moral

strength by challenging one of the most basic human drives. By systematically

denying oneself food one intentionally places oneself in a position of weakness and

strong desire, thus at once putting one’s moral resolve to the test and improving

one’s ability to abide by that resolve. Fasting is a straightforward example of a

discipline that “buffets” one’s body. It is also comparable to athletic training, which

improves one by simulating an aspect of actual competition, like wind sprints or

basketball shooting drills. This is why the Desert Father John Cassian repeatedly

refers to the serious Christian as a spiritual “athlete.”

Cassian expounds on fasting in particular: “When the desires of the belly and of

the palate have been by these considerations overcome, and when we have been

declared, as in the Olympic contests, neither slaves of the flesh nor infamous through

the brand of sin, we shall be adjudged to be worthy of the contest in higher struggles

as well,” by which he means spiritual battles, contests against wickedness.14 Thus,

the discipline of self-denial when it comes to food is a transferrable skill. Other

Desert Fathers echo this observation, including John the Short: “If a man is sincere

about fasting and is hungry, the enemies that trouble his soul will grow weak”;15 and

Hyperichius: “Fasting is the monk’s control over sin . . . When the monk’s body is

dried up with fasting, this lifts his soul from the depths. Fasting dries up the channels

down which worldly pleasures flow.”16

However, there is a certain moderation that should be observed even in the

practice of fasting, as even the greatest Christian monks have noted. John Cassian

offers this counsel:

The general rule to be followed in the case of abstinence [from food] is this. One should

take cognizance of the state of one’s strength and body and age and allow oneself as

much food as will sustain the flesh but not satisfy its longings. There will be the greatest

danger for anyone who either restrains his appetite by excessive fasting or who opens

up his appetite by too much eating. The spirit, brought low by lack of food, loses the

vigor of its prayerfulness. Too much weariness weighs it down into unlooked-for sleep.

Or again, if it is caught in the grip of too much eating, it will not be able to utter pure

and winged prayers to God.17

14. John Cassian, Institutes, 71.

15. The Desert Fathers: Sayings of the Early Christian Monks, trans. Benedicta Ward (London:

Penguin, 2003), 22.

16. Ibid., 27.

17. John Cassian, Conferences, trans. Colm Luibheid (New York: Paulist Press, 1985), 77–78.

202 Journal of Spiritual Formation and Soul Care 13(2)

There is a delicate balance to be achieved, then, between challenging oneself too

much or too little by fasting. Cassian’s recommendation to “take cognizance” of

one’s own strength and age suggests that there is some personal relativity here, and it

takes wisdom to know just how much abstinence from food is ideal to maximize

rather than compromise one’s moral growth.

Sacrifice

The discipline of fasting is a form of voluntary surrender, but this takes other forms

as well. Anything that one gives up for the sake of spiritual growth and serving God

is generally called sacrifice. The monastic tradition, dating back to the Desert

Fathers, has been systematic in the practice of this discipline. Antony the Great

surrendered nearly all of his possessions, saying, “What benefit is there in possessing

these things that we do not take with us? Why not rather own those things that we are

able to take away with us—such things as prudence, justice, temperance, courage,

understanding, love, concern for the poor, faith in Christ, freedom from anger,

hospitality?”18 As with Cassian’s attitude toward fasting, Antony saw sacrifice of

tangible possessions as a discipline that builds self-control in other areas, including

interior attitudes having nothing to do with the impulse of greed. Antony tells us that

if we make such sacrifice a lifestyle, giving up our tangible possessions daily, “we

will not sin, nor will we crave anything, nor bear a grudge against anyone, nor will

we lay up treasures on earth, but as people who anticipate dying each day we shall be

free of possessions, and we shall forgive all things to all people.”19 Strange as it

might initially sound, the connection here should not surprise us, since to hold a

grudge, to refuse to forgive someone, is a way of clinging to what is mine; it is to

maintain one’s hold on a particular justice claim against someone. To forgive, in

contrast, is to forswear condemnation and thus to sacrifice that possession, to sur-

render one’s justifiable claim against the offender.

The Desert Fathers recommended other forms of sacrifice as well in order to

cultivate self-control in areas that transcend the physical realm. For example, the

ancient monk Evagrius quoted a hermit who said, “I cut away bodily pleasure in

order to get rid of occasions for anger. I know that it is because of pleasure that I have

to struggle with anger, my mind being disturbed, and my understanding dis-

ordered.”20 Again, depriving oneself of bodily pleasures might not immediately

appear to be a way of improving control of one’s temper. But if overindulgence

in bodily pleasure does disrupt a person’s cognitive function, then tempering such

indulgence, or abstaining altogether for periods of time, would naturally improve

one’s understanding. And to the extent that fits of anger are attributable to warped

18. The Life of Antony, 44.

19. Ibid., 45.

20. The Desert Fathers, 21.

Spiegel 203

understanding, such abstinence would be effective in combatting this vice and

building control over one’s passions.

Meditation

The use of meditation, or extended periods of intentional mental focus, especially on

spiritual truths, is another Christian discipline that transcends historical epochs and

theological traditions. John Cassian directly linked meditation to one’s capacity for

resisting temptation, stating that,

The regular reading and the continuous meditation on Scripture are undertaken so that a

spiritual turn be given to our memory. The constant singing of the psalms is designed to

produce a persistent compunction within us so that the mind, slimmed down, may not

have a taste for the things of earth and will turn, instead, to behold the things of heaven.

And if we carelessly neglect these, then of necessity the mind, filled with the squalor of

sin, turns soon and comes rushing toward the domain of the flesh.21

Such spiritual meditation creates a sort of moral inertia, which effectively reduces

the appeal of what might otherwise be serious temptations. In other words, this

discipline defeats temptation before it begins by nurturing a mind that is no longer

inclined to find immoral options appealing. Thus, unlike fasting and sacrifice, which

train the soul to decline genuinely appealing immoral choices, meditation kills

temptation at the root, by producing a mental “soil” that will not sustain the devel-

opment of illicit desires that lead to vice.

A more austere version of this same technique is to be found in the Cloud of

Unknowing. The author offers this counsel for his readers:

Lift up your heart to God with humble love: and mean God himself, and not what you

get out of him. Indeed, hate to think of anything but God himself, so that nothing

occupies your mind or will but only God. Try to forget all created things that he ever

made, and the purpose behind them, so that your thought and longing do not turn or

reach out to them either in general or in particular. Let them go, and pay no attention

them . . . When you first begin, you find only darkness, and as it were a cloud of

unknowing . . . Reconcile yourself to wait in this darkness as long as is necessary, but

still go on longing after him whom you love. For if you are to feel him or to see him in

this life, it must always be in this cloud, this darkness.22

While the author does not explicitly discuss the value of this meditation-generated

“unknowing” for building self-control, he does regard it as crucial for anyone

seeking to live a faithful Christian life, which, of course, entails consummate

21. Conferences, 52.

22. The Cloud of Unknowing, trans. Clifton Wolters (Baltimore: Penguin, 1961), 53–54.

204 Journal of Spiritual Formation and Soul Care 13(2)

self-control. Its effectiveness toward this end is evident when we consider the two

poles—negative and positive—of the unknowing meditative state. Negatively, there

is the attitude of forgetfulness of created things, including all potentially tempting

items of touch that routinely occupy our minds and entice us to indulgence or

overindulgence. As we “let them go” or “pay no attention to them,” the author tells

us to expect “only darkness,” which is perhaps a commentary on just how much of

our conscious life is consumed with the pleasures of touch. This is the unknowing

phase, but it is only the negative pole of the discipline. The positive aspect is the

complete consumption of the mind by the divine, a “humble love” of God that

eventually—presumably after much mental exertion—completely occupies the

mind. So the cloud of unknowing is really only the subtractive aspect of this disci-

pline, but it deserves special attention in the author’s study because it is a necessary

first phase in the deep contemplation of God which, due to its sheer “darkness,” is an

unfortunate deterrent to continuing meditation and discovering its great rewards.

Such rewards include profound advances in self-control, because the attractiveness

of worldly things is lost while desire for steadfast union with God is strengthened.

In addition to the desert fathers and Christian mystics, exhortations to deep

meditation are to be found in the Protestant reformers. For example, John Calvin

tells us, “Nothing is more difficult than, having bidden farewell to the reason of the

flesh and having bridled our desires—nay, having put them away—to devote our-

selves to God and our brethren, and to meditate, amid earth’s filth, upon the life of

the angels.”23 And elsewhere, he says,

We are not our own: let not our reason nor our will, therefore, sway our plans and

deeds . . . We are not our own: in so far as we can, let us therefore forget ourselves and

all that is ours . . . On the other hand, wherever denial of ourselves does not reign, there

either the foulest vices rage without shame or if there is any semblance of virtue, it is

vitiated by depraved lusting after glory.24

Here we find similar themes of turning the mind, as Cassian would put it, and the

self-forgetfulness and world-forgetfulness, as enjoined by the author of Cloud of

Unknowing, though with a particular emphasis on the divine ownership of all things.

To interiorize this fact is to build a further hedge against the allure of worldly objects

and thus fortify one’s capacity for self-restraint.

Prayer and reliance on divine providence

Lastly, there is the discipline of prayer, which is agreed upon by all Christians as

essential to the cultivation of self-control. It is interesting to note, however, that there

is little in Scripture that directly enjoins us to pray for self-control. In the “Lord’s

23. Calvin, Institutes, 693.

24. Ibid., 690–91.

Spiegel 205

Prayer” Jesus tells us to ask God to “lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from

the evil one” (Mt. 6:13). But this is not a prayer for self-control when facing

temptation so much as a plea to be spared from situations when self-control is

necessary. Nonetheless, great Christian thinkers have emphasized the need for

prayer and the reliance on the work of God when cultivating this virtue.

From the Desert Fathers to the Protestant Reformers we find a dual emphasis on

divine providence and our own responsibility when it comes to moral growth. Thus,

despite all of his instructions for cultivating humility and self-control, Thomas à

Kempis prays, “Grant me to use such refreshments moderately, and not to be

entangled with an overly great desire of them . . . Herein, I beseech Thee, let Thy

hand govern me and teach me, that there may be no excess.”25 Similarly, John

Cassian, says this: “the chief part . . . of our improvement and peace of mind must

not be made to depend on another’s will, which cannot possibly be subject to our

authority, but it lies rather in our own control.”26 Yet, just a little while later he also

recognizes that

a man’s own efforts and human exertions will never make up for the lack of the divine

gift, unless it is granted by divine compassion in answer to his prayer. Nor do I say this

to cast a slight on human efforts, or in the endeavor to discourage any one from his

purpose of working and doing his best. But clearly and most earnestly do I lay

down . . . that perfection cannot possibly be gained without these, but that by these only

without the grace of God nobody can ever attain it.27

This paradoxical theme is effectively summed up by St. John of the Cross when he

asserts, “however assiduously the beginner practices the mortification of him-

self . . . he can never completely succeed—very far from it—unless God shall work

in him.”28

The upshot here seems to be that while human effort is necessary it is not a

sufficient condition for self-control in particular or moral virtue generally. Rather,

divine providence, more specifically, the active help of the Holy Spirit, is also a

necessary (but not alone sufficient) condition for self-control, along with the other

moral virtues. We might say, then, that human effort and divine providence are

individually necessary and jointly sufficient conditions for cultivating self-control.29

All of the other disciplines discussed above—fasting, sacrifice, and meditation—

25. Of the Imitation of Christ, 147.

26. Cassian, Institutes, 114 (emphasis mine).

27. Ibid., 156.

28. Dark Night of the Soul, 60.

29. Here we may ask, exactly how does human effort to cultivate self-control connect to or interact with

the work of the Holy Spirit to develop this virtue in us? One view, with which I am sympathetic, is

that the believer’s practice of the disciplines deepens her sense of dependence, which naturally

fosters an attitude of humility. This in turn prompts one to more fully surrender to God, which

occasions the transformative work of the Spirit in the person’s life. In this way, then, the

206 Journal of Spiritual Formation and Soul Care 13(2)

involve concerted human effort in order to develop this moral skill. Cassian, à Kempis,

and St. John of the Cross, like so many others, exhort us to remember that such efforts

are effective only insofar as God wills them to be. What is unique about the discipline

of prayer for self-control is that to practice it is a tacit recognition of this fact. A prayer

for self-control, one might say, embodies, or perhaps is a microcosm of, the paradox of

cultivating virtue from a Christian theological perspective. For while it is itself a

significant, even strenuous, human endeavor (cf. Col. 4:12), the fact that one is asking

for self-control is a confession that one’s own efforts are insufficient for the task.

Cultivation of self-control: Community reinforcement

The above-discussed disciplines are effective means for individuals to cultivate their

own self-control. But in the Christian tradition such individually pursued practices

are not the only means by which self-control is to be developed. The morally serious

person will also recognize the need to help others grow in this virtue. Moreover, for

any Christian community, there will be a shared commitment to the cultivation of

self-control throughout the community.

Moral exemplars

Aristotle observed, “imitation is natural to man from childhood.”30 Thus, one sig-

nificant way that the virtues are built among fellow believers is through personal

modeling. The same practice is evident in the Old Testament literature where the

great patriarchs of Israel—Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Joseph, Moses, David, etc.—are

revered and held up as models, despite their flaws, of many critical virtues. In the

New Testament the apostle Paul twice exhorts the church at Corinth to regard him as

such an exemplar, saying, “I urge you to imitate me” (1 Cor. 4:16) and “follow my

example, as I follow the example of Christ” (1 Cor. 11:1). This latter directive

clarifies the broader context of moral inspiration, recognizing that the ultimate moral

exemplar is Christ and any modeling that fellow Christians do is merely proximate in

nature. Nonetheless, such modeling can be powerful, as moral virtues are, to some

degree, contagious through intentional imitation.

Among the Desert Fathers, the greatest moral exemplar was St. Antony. Atha-

nasius tells us that

It was not his physical dimensions that distinguished him from the rest, but the stability

of character and the purity of the soul. His soul being free of confusion, he held his

outer senses also undisturbed, so that from the soul’s joy his face was cheerful as well,

development of self-control (as well as other fruit of the Spirit) is simultaneously the consequence of

human effort and a supernatural work of the Holy Spirit.

30. Aristotle, Poetics, trans. Ingram Bywater, in The Basic Works of Aristotle, ed. Richard McKeon

(New York: Random House, 1941), 1457.

Spiegel 207

and from the movements of the body it was possible to sense and perceive the stable

condition of the soul.31

One can hardly overestimate the extent of Antony’s positive moral influence on the

Christian community, not only in his own lifetime but also on the subsequent history

of the church. While he lived, Antony’s virtue and spiritual devotion inspired a

monastic tradition that profoundly impacted Western Christianity in its early devel-

opment. And through Athanasius’ account of his life—possibly the most widely read

Christian book for 1300 years, specifically until Bunyan’s Pilgrim’s Progress—the

church has been inspired ever since.

Later Desert Fathers were quite intentional regarding the use of moral exemplars

in cultivating virtue, recognizing the power of moral example and encouraging

fellow believers to be careful regarding whom they choose to emulate. John Cassian

writes,

the examples of the perfect life of one dwelling in the congregation, which you may

imitate, should be sought from a very few or indeed from one or two only and not from

too many. For apart from the fact that a life which is tested and refined and purified is

only to be found in a few, there is this also to be gained, viz.: that a man is more

thoroughly instructed by the example of some one, towards the perfection which he sets

before him.32

Cassian’s reasons for selectivity when it comes to conscious patterning of one’s life

after that of another are interesting. His first consideration—that those whose lives

are worthy of such emulation are rare—is perhaps uncontroversial. But it poses the

practical challenge of how to identify those rare moral gems. Regarding this chal-

lenge, two general criteria are commonly used for identifying moral exemplars:

reputation and personal observation. These are straightforward enough, and as we

consult these factors in practice most of us probably implicitly affirm Jesus’ meta-

phorical recommendation that we should judge a tree by its fruit (Mt. 7:16 and Lk.

6:44). One’s moral merits are apparent by the life one leads.

Cassian’s second claim—that a person is more effectively instructed by a single

exemplar—begs for explanation. Perhaps his rationale for this is that such focus on a

single person would likely be more personal and intentional and therefore more

motivationally effective. Also, his counsel would seem to recommend the practice

of mentoring, which has a long history in the Christian tradition, going back to Jesus

and his disciples and the rabbi–student relationship dating back centuries before that.

In any case, the intentional use of moral exemplars for the cultivation of virtue, and

self-control in particular, is a significant traditional Christian practice and as valu-

able today as ever.

31. The Life of Antony, 81.

32. Cassian, Institutes, 58.

208 Journal of Spiritual Formation and Soul Care 13(2)

Rebuke and admonition

Now as to community reinforcement of virtue, this comes in both positive as well as

negative forms. Moral exemplars are certainly a positive form, as such people

constructively model the virtues and ideals we aim for. Moreover, it is a moral

pleasure to observe and imitate them. The negative forms of community reinforce-

ment, such as rebuke and admonition, might be equally important, though this form

of moral reinforcement is hardly pleasurable and in most cases is actually

unpleasant.

It is an understatement to say that the practice of rebuke has fallen out of favor in

much of the Western Christian community. So some countercultural thinking is

required here. For while in the twenty-first-century Western society the concept

of intentional community is widely accepted and even celebrated, the notion of

moral accountability and morally challenging one another is regarded with suspicion

if not outright rejection as arrogant or “judgmental.” However, throughout church

history, and throughout most of the global Christian church today, such practices

have been and are nearly universally accepted. For example, St. Augustine published

an entire treatise on the subject where he discusses the necessity and benefits of

rebuking fellow Christians.33

Long before Augustine, Clement of Alexandria had much to say about negative

moral reinforcements. In his remarkable treatise The Instructor, he writes,

“Admonition is . . . the regimen of the diseased soul, prescribing what it must take,

and forbidding what it must not. And all these tend to salvation and eternal health.”34

Clement goes on to itemize and elaborate on the various forms of admonition:

upbraiding, complaint, invective, reproof, visitation, denunciation, accusation, and

bewailing are all forms of censure, a form of loving care that lends to greater moral

understanding. He explains that “reproof and rebuke . . . are the stripes of the soul,

chastising sins, preventing death, and leading to self-control those carried away to

licentiousness.”35

Fifteen hundred years later, John Wesley would endorse the related practice of

admonition, or the issuing of moral warnings, for the same reasons:

Love indeed requires us to warn him, not only of sin, (although of this chiefly,) but

likewise of any error which, if it were persisted in, would naturally lead to sin. If we do

not “hate him in our heart,” if we love our neighbour as ourselves, this will be our

constant endeavour; to warn him of every evil way, and of every mistake which tends to

evil.36

33. A Treatise on Rebuke and Grace, published in 426 or 427.

34. Clement of Alexandria, The Instructor in Ante-Nicene Fathers, vol. 2, edited by Alexander Roberts

and James Donaldson (Peabody, MA: Hendrickson, 1994), 225.

35. The Instructor, 230.

36. John Wesley, “The Duty of Reproving Our Neighbour,” The Works of John Wesley, vol. 2, 513.

Spiegel 209

So, like rebuke, admonition is motivated by love and aimed at the moral betterment

of the person who is warned. Wesley recognizes, however, that this is no easy task, at

least for most people, though “some there are who are particularly qualified for it,

whether by nature, or practice, or grace. They are not encumbered either with evil

shame, or that sore burden, the fear of man: They are both ready to undertake this

labour of love, and skillful in performing it.”37 However much naturally inclined a

person is in admonishing others, Wesley tells us that certain qualities must be

displayed by the person who does this. Specifically, this must be done in a spirit

of love, humility, and meekness, with a dispassionate spirit and not a trace of anger,

“either in the eyes, the gesture, or the tone of voice.”38

The negative practices of rebuke and admonition are morally demanding, just as

is the positive practice of moral modeling. Both call for a complex of virtuous traits

and, when effective, inspire similar traits in others. And both are effective commu-

nity reinforcements of moral virtue, inspiring the cultivation of all of the moral

virtues, but especially self-control. This is because failures in most areas of the

moral life—resulting in the whole gamut of vices, from greed and gluttony to lust

and rage—can be analyzed in terms of the loss of self-control.

Conclusion

John Cassian once said, “the number of sins which attack us is far larger than that of

the virtues which fight for us.”39 Self-control is one of the core Christian virtues

fighting for us, and fortunately it is a transferrable skill the cultivation of which has

benefits for virtually every domain of the moral life. As we have seen, many major

Christian thinkers down through history are united in the conviction that self-control

can and ought to be intentionally nurtured by systematically practicing self-denial.

These same moral theologians have bequeathed to us a rich compendium of

resources for the development of self-control—resources that are conceptual and

practical, negative and positive, and applicable for the individual as well as com-

munities. The tools are there—blessings, as it were, from our theological forbears

and from on high. Now it is up to us to deploy them.40

ORCID iD

James S. Spiegel https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9505-7568

37. Ibid., 515.

38. Ibid., 516.

39. Cassian, Institutes, 96.

40. I want to thank two anonymous referees for many helpful comments on this article.

210 Journal of Spiritual Formation and Soul Care 13(2)

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