The Moving Words of the Bedridden Monk Sophronios from Crete Who Suffers from an Incurable Disease
July 16, 2018
Bema Orthodoxia
The bedridden monk Sophronios, who suffers from terminal Motor Neuron Disease, recently gave a moving interview to Crete TV with the help of an eye-tracking typing system.
Q: They say that pain completes human existence. Do you experience this — and how?
A: Pain is a great school and teaches self-knowledge, which leads to knowledge of one’s brother and ultimately to knowledge of God. Pain humbles you, and through humility our heart softens and opens to God and to our fellow human being. I communicate with people all over the world who suffer from physical or psychological illnesses. With God’s help, through my experience on the bed of pain, I understand them — even if only a little — so that I may tell them a comforting word, a word of our Christ. Today there is so much loneliness in the world, and turmoil and fear. We Christians, who have the gift from God of knowing Christ, must share with our fellow human being the joy, the peace, and the love which is Christ. Is this not the goal of our existence — that we all be saved?
Q: What would you say to someone who wants to undergo euthanasia?
A: Life is a gift from God to all of us. I understand this better than ever now that I am in bed. None of us came into life by our own will. So how can you bring an end to your life, when in essence it does not belong to you? In my opinion this is the problem of our era: it cultivates in modern man a self-centered way of life, cut off from the social whole — from the family, the neighborhood, the homeland, etc. — with the result that we think we are independent, self-directed in this world. I think it is a mistaken view of life that leads the person of our time from “self-deification” to suicide. I understand that the patient does not want to become a burden to others or does not want loved ones to see him suffer. It is very humiliating — I know this very well. But the humble one has the Kingdom of God, not the egotist.
Bema Orthodoxia
The bedridden monk Sophronios, who suffers from terminal Motor Neuron Disease, recently gave a moving interview to Crete TV with the help of an eye-tracking typing system.
Q: They say that pain completes human existence. Do you experience this — and how?
A: Pain is a great school and teaches self-knowledge, which leads to knowledge of one’s brother and ultimately to knowledge of God. Pain humbles you, and through humility our heart softens and opens to God and to our fellow human being. I communicate with people all over the world who suffer from physical or psychological illnesses. With God’s help, through my experience on the bed of pain, I understand them — even if only a little — so that I may tell them a comforting word, a word of our Christ. Today there is so much loneliness in the world, and turmoil and fear. We Christians, who have the gift from God of knowing Christ, must share with our fellow human being the joy, the peace, and the love which is Christ. Is this not the goal of our existence — that we all be saved?
Q: What would you say to someone who wants to undergo euthanasia?
A: Life is a gift from God to all of us. I understand this better than ever now that I am in bed. None of us came into life by our own will. So how can you bring an end to your life, when in essence it does not belong to you? In my opinion this is the problem of our era: it cultivates in modern man a self-centered way of life, cut off from the social whole — from the family, the neighborhood, the homeland, etc. — with the result that we think we are independent, self-directed in this world. I think it is a mistaken view of life that leads the person of our time from “self-deification” to suicide. I understand that the patient does not want to become a burden to others or does not want loved ones to see him suffer. It is very humiliating — I know this very well. But the humble one has the Kingdom of God, not the egotist.








