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Quietness & Emotional Life

Daniela Dumbravã

Diakrisis Yearbook of Theology and Philosophy December 30, 2025 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.24193/diakrisis.2026.1 via OpenAlex

Summary

The study explores the concept of quietness (hēsychia) as a state that can be expressed after a period of silence, focusing on Archimandrite Sophrony Sakharov's spiritual autobiography and his discussions with the St John the Baptist monastic community. It identifies two aspects of Sophrony's experience: a continuous awareness of death and sudden moments of surprise leading to the contemplation of the Uncreated Light. The findings emphasize the phenomenology of emotions while distinguishing between experiential description and theological interpretation.

Study at a glance

Population Archimandrite Sophrony Sakharov and members of the St John the Baptist monastic community
Key finding The study distinguishes between a durative mindfulness of death and punctual surprises in Sophrony's emotional experience.

Abstract

This study asks what it means to question quietness (hēsychia): to treat a state cultivated in long silence as something that can, after an unpredictable wait, be brought to speech. Its primary witness is the spiritual autobiography of Archimandrite Sophrony Sakharov (1896–1993), read alongside the transcribed record of his Monday meetings with the monastic community of St John the Baptist in Essex and a corpus of recorded conversations, held in April 2025, with a member of that community. Working within the phenomenology of the emotions — chiefly Natalie Depraz’s account of surprise and of the foreground/background dynamics of affective life — the article distinguishes two registers in Sophrony’s experience: a durative “mindfulness of death,” the vision of the abyss that abides as a mood, and the punctual surprises that erupt against it, culminating in the contemplation of the Uncreated Light. Jean-Luc Marion’s saturated phenomenon is retained, but only to describe how such experiences are given, not to certify what gives them. Throughout, a single discipline is observed: phenomenology describes the manner of an appearing and leaves to the theological tradition the question of the reality disclosed.

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